Houston Race 4 Eight IV Stop #3 Houston: Finals Sunday Wrap Up

Posted on Jan 25 2015 - 1:00pm by DV

Houston preview boiler pic 5Houston Race 4 Eight IV Stop #3 Houston: Finals Sunday

Houston’s Race 4 Eight IV Stop #3 concluded with two scintillating finals, as a resurgent Sean Lenning challenged six-time Race champion Paul Brady and former top 8 pro Tyler Hamel challenged three-time Race 4 Eight Elite 8 finisher Naty Alvarado. The WPH also held a special junior handball clinic for over a dozen collegiate handball players.

Race 4 Eight Finals: Brady vs. Lenning

Sean Lenning reached the #1 WPH Race 4 Eight ranking in January of 2012, but saw his ranking plummet in the past year. Lacking in confidence and motivation, Lenning’s ranking dropped to #9 entering Houston’s Race 4 Eight IV Stop #3. A rededicated and rejuvenated Lenning entered Houston on the heels of back-to-back first round losses in the “Space City” in 2013 and 2014, but tiebreaker victories over Vic Perez and Mando Ortiz and a dominating performance over Luis Moreno in the semifinals announced Lenning’s return to the top of the sport.

Paul Brady entered Houston on an eight-match Race winning streak, capturing the first two stops of the R48 IV season at the Simple Green U.S. Open and Tucson. Brady’s overall Race record entering Sunday’s final was a staggering 27-1. “The Gunner” cruised to Houston’s final with two-game sweeps over Luis Cordova, Daniel Cordova, and Emmett Peixoto.

Paul Brady looked to be more comfortable than at any point during the event early in the final, quickly seizing a 10-2 first game lead. Brady moved effortlessly from side-to-side, gliding across the court to retrieve virtually every Sean Lenning kill shot attempt, while executing his own rally-ending shots. Brady clinched game one in just 12 minutes, 15-5. Game two was no different, as Brady pounced on Lenning from the start. “Sean Lenning can only be Sean Lenning when he is being Sean Lenning,” stated 30-year pro tour stalwart Dan Armijo from the finals gallery. “When Sean has played a few difficult rallies he doesn’t have the conditioning to hit his kills.”

Brady punctuated his dominant performance with a behind-the-back retrieve, followed by a back wall kill when leading 8-3 in game two to deflate any hope that Lenning may have had to make a comeback. “Playing Paul is just different,” declared Lenning after the match. “Just his presence (on the court) makes a big difference.”

Brady scored seven of the final nine points of the match to wrap up his third consecutive Race title and seventh overall Race title, 15-7, 15-5.

“I am always motivated to play well and I’m doing it for myself now,” revealed Brady while collecting his WPH crystal. “I am looking forward to San Francisco and I really want to win the Player’s Championship.”

Houston R48 IV Finishes:

1st: Brady

2nd: Lenning

tie 3rd: Peixoto/Moreno

5th: D. Cordova

6th: Fink

tie 7th: Ortiz/Chavez

9th: Cooney

10th: L. Cordova

tie 11th: Ruiz/Iglesias

tie 13th: Bernhard/Selestow/Perez/Montijo

Senior Race 4 Eight Finals: Alvarado vs. Hamel

Naty Alvarado was seeking his first Senior Race 4 Eight title of the season after dropping the SR48 final in Tucson two months prior. Alvarado faced Houston’s Tyler Hamel in a rematch of the inaugural Senior Race 4 Eight final in 2013, won by Alvarado. Although a part-time player in his early 40’s, Tyler Hamel still possesses the incredible skills that made him one of the most consistent and dangerous pros on the tour from the mid 1990’s until 2008. Alvarado is still ranked in the top five on the Race 4 Eight tour, a testament to his fitness, talent, and love for the game.

Alvarado entered the final as the huge favorite and raced to a 9-4 lead in the one game final. Hamel employed his two-decades worth of pro tour experience and guile to stay within striking distance, tying the score at nine. Alvarado displayed glimpses of brilliance mixed with errors, executing 14 kill shots and making 13 unforced errors en route to a 15-11 halftime lead. Alvarado caught fire in the second half, building a seemingly insurmountable 23-15 lead. Undaunted, Hamel scored five consecutive points, including his 20th point on a left-handed Alvarado shank that seemed to indicate an Alvarado meltdown. Alvarado regrouped, earning a side out and scoring two quick points on laser reverse hops and first-strike kills.

“Tyler is a great player and I knew he wasn’t going to make it easy,” revealed Alvarado during the post match trophy presentation. “My back wall wasn’t great and I was a rusty and my serve really bailed me out. I am very happy to have won.”

Marcos Chavez defeated Andy Schad in an entertaining third place match, 25-12.

Houston SR48 III Finishes

1st: Alvarado

2nd: Hamel

3rd: Chavez

4th: Schad

5th: Meiring

6th: Holmes

10859450_876171489070745_1345866270_nJunior WPH Clinic

WPH Coach Ashley Moler led a group of 15 enthusiastic college and junior players in a special Junior WPH clinic focusing on the warm-up, footwork and strategy. “I really had a great time working with the group,” revealed Moler. “Most of the players have only been playing for three months and they all got a lot out of clinic.” The WPH is proud to present junior and collegiate handball clinics at every Race 4 Eight stop throughout the year, as well as over 600 junior handball clinics across the U.S. and Canada throughout the year.

Congratulations!

Congratulations to Houston R48 tournament sponsor Ron Cole for being inducted into the Southwest Handball Hall of Fame. Ron Cole is one of handball’s most generous donors and staunch supporters. “I just love this game,” revealed Cole. “I have made friends with so many great people over the past 40 years and I was so fortunate that so many of them came to my induction this weekend.” Ron was inducted for not only generously donating his money and time to the sports, but also for winning dozens of national doubles titles with seven different partners.

Thank you

Thank you to Omar Lemus for organizing an incredible event, Ron Cole for so generously supporting the event and treating players and fans to several incredible evenings on the town, the Houston Handball Club, the WPH for broadcasting the event on ESPN, David Vincent, David Fink, Linda Manning, Kris Gurrad, Jeff Kastner, and Matt Titaino.

To follow all of the action from Houston, click here: http://www.r2sports.com/tourney/home.asp?TID=13119

Leave A Response

You must be logged in to post a comment.