South County Community Tennis Association: S. Kingstown News
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Tennis Coordinator: Sandy Sweet since 2001
Website: www.skrc.org
Email: tennis@skrc.org
Leagues, Lessons, Camps, Tournaments,
Drop In Tennis, Jr Olympics
24 Courts: 12 are lit
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Spring: April 28 - June 19
Summer: June 30 - August 21
Fall: September 15 - October 30
LESSONS:
WINTER...SPRING….SUMMER….FALL LOOKING FOR LESSONS…..WE HAVE IT ALL!
Classes are broken down by ages:
4 to 6 Tiny Tot
6 to 12 Little League: Beg. - Int.
10+ Juniors: Int. - Adv.
18+ Adults: Beg. thru Adv.
50+ Seniors
SUMMER CAMPS - 8 Sessions
Three different types of camps will be offered this summer: Ages 8-14, Ages 13-18, and a High School Girl’s Camp.
Camps start June 23rd!
South Kingstown Tennis Staff:
Sandy Sweet: Tennis Coordinator since 2001, USPTR member, Founder of the South County Community Tennis Association (SCCTA), USTA Rhode Island Board member, and USTA RI Jr. Team Tennis Indoor League Administrator.
Andy Carr: USPTR certified instructor, SK High School Varsity Tennis Coach, with 9 consecutive state championships. RI Interscholastic Coach of the Year & ‘07 USTA New England High School Coach of the Year.
Alex Chavez: USPTR coach and former SK player, has been an assistant for 3 years. Works with all tennis levels and ages.
Jordan Goldson: has taught for the department for 3 years. Works with all tennis levels and ages.
Stephen Mook: USPTA certified instructor with 5 years teaching experience. Works with all tennis levels and ages.
Russ Wyatt: USPTA certified instructor, Narragansett High School Varsity Tennis Coach, with many years teaching experience. Works with all tennis levels and ages.
Monday, April 28
Annual JV Boys Doubles Tennis Tournament at Slater Park, Saturday April 26
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| 08 SK High School JV Players; L to R: James Anderson, Matt Beatrice, Adam Littlefield, Kevin Babcock, Jon Gorman Ben Barbera, Andrew Sharkey, Vishakh Gopu, Justin Gennari, Ross Bouchard, Gabe Plummer, Coach Jerri DiCamillo |
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| Kevin Babcock & Adam Littlefield; Winners Ben Barbera & Andrew Sharkey; Finalist |
Thirty Four teams participated from 9 RI High Schools - Cumberland, LaSalle, Wheeler, Cranston West, Notrh Kingstowb, Barrington, South Kingstown, Mount St Charles and Prout.
Winners - Front - l to r Kevin Babcock/Adam Littlefield versus - Behind l to r Ben Barbera/Andrew Sharkey 8-5
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| Gabe Plummer & Ross Bouchard; Consolation Winners |
Sunday, May 25
South Kingstowns Carr is a high-school tennis legend before his time
High School Sports News 01:00 AM EDT on Sunday, May 25, 2008
South Kingstown boys tennis coach Andy Carr, left, consults with Cliff Bueno deMesquita, one of his players during Friday’s state title match.
The Providence Journal / Glenn Osmundson
You can’t plan on becoming a high school coaching legend at 38 years of age.
Legends are built over a period of time, usually a lifetime.
You need to direct a lot of your teams to state championships to become a high school coaching legend and normally there isn’t enough time to do it before your 40th birthday — especially if you’re coaching at a public high school these days.
You can’t expect to develop the type of hometown reputation where, even though you’re still in your 30s, everybody from grammar school kids to grandparents knows you’re the coach.
You can’t, that is, unless you’re South Kingstown’s Andy Carr.
Friday afternoon, Carr, the head coach of the South Kingstown boys tennis team, directed the Rebels to their 10th consecutive Division I state title.
It’s the longest string of undisputed, consecutive state titles by a public high school sports team in the 70-plus years that the R.I. Interscholastic League has been holding state team competition. True, Coventry High has 16 straight state championship wrestling banners hanging on its gymnasium wall, but in 1990, the ninth year of that string, the Oakers shared the state crown with Warwick Vets.
The South Kingstown tennis team has been the only Division I champion for a straight decade.
You don’t win state team tennis titles without some great individual players, and Carr certainly has had some of the best players in Rhode Island in his lineup over the years. In six of the last nine years, a South Kingstown player has won the state singles title. But ask the South Kingstown players, the parents, school administrators, even opposing coaches, why the Rebels keep winning and they will tell you the foundation of their amazing success is Carr.
He’s now in his 13th year as the Rebels’ mentor and has directed his teams to titles in 11 of those 13 seasons. In his first year as head coach in 1996, South Kingstown won the Division II state title. A year later, the Rebels moved up to Division I, and in 1999 they began their record title run.
He takes teenagers who have been playing the individual sport of tennis since they were in kindergarten and gets them to think in terms of team pride, even with some teammates who hadn’t picked up a tennis racket before they reached high school. The star singles players have provided numerous points through the years, but several times the deciding points in state-title matches have come from singles or doubles players who didn’t start playing tennis until Carr, a South Kingstown middle school teacher, introduced them to the sport in either middle or high school.
Carr doesn’t have a name for it, but for a decade South Kingstown tennis players haven’t had any problem understanding his coaching philosophy.
“It’s the expectations he puts on his players. He expects you to excel in school and outside of school. I’m not sure other coaches do that,” said Kyle Burke, the Rebels’ top singles player and the defending state singles champion.
“Everyone is serious at practices because he expects you to behave as an adult,” Burke continued. “That’s what makes the difference in terms of maturity when we come out on the court and are ready for the pressure. We have been put under pressure all season by the team, the coach and the legacy we are trying to fulfill.”
Somehow, a member of Generation X with a Greatest Generation work ethic has convinced New Millennium teenagers to buy into the philosophy that hard work can be enjoyable.
“It’s very important to his kids. They really care,” Terry Lynch, South Kingstown athletic director, said about Carr’s quest for constant improvement. “He does all the little things. You go to one of his practices in the gym when it’s raining out and it’s just like being choreographed. They are doing all kinds of things to get better. He just works at it so hard. It’s very important to him, and his kids really respect him. What he says is gospel.”
In a sense, it’s a coaching career that may have been predestined. After all, he grew up as a coach’s son.
His father, Ray Carr, had a 30-year coaching career that included coaching football, wrestling and tennis at North Kingstown High, as well as a highly successful tenure as the Community College of Rhode Island tennis coach in the 1980s and early 1990s.
“My father has been the biggest influence on me by far, but I first got into it because I love the sport,” said Andy Carr, who started his coaching career as a South Kingstown assistant a year after he graduated from the URI in 1993.
“I had no idea what it was going to be like,” said Carr, an All-State tennis player at Narragansett High. “You get into it because you like athletics, and I like to compete. It’s another way of competing, even though you’re not playing. But I appreciate it so much more now than I did when I first started in the ’90s. The experience and the influence you can have on kids. … It’s definitely worth all the time we put in.”
He never planned it to be more than an athletic exercise, but in the process he and his players have done more than simply put a bunch of championship hardware in the South Kingstown High trophy case. The high school tennis team has become a South Kingstown source of pride.
“Our town rallies around us,’ said Burke. “If anyone mentions tennis in our town they immediately think of our high school team. I think the community should rally around the high school, and I don’t think you get that with private schools.”
“We have good people who support the program and are excited about tennis,” said Carr. “They have a good [recreation] program down in South County. If you can get a few good athletes every year that get into it, you have a good program.”
And, if you have a 38-year-old coaching legend.
South Kingstown boys tennis coach Andy Carr, left, consults with Cliff Bueno deMesquita, one of his players during Friday’s state title match.
Sunday, May 25
Rebels make it 10 straight state titles in Division I
High School Sports News 07:23 AM EDT on Saturday, May 24, 2008
Andrew Burnap after clinching a win at 3rd singles
The Providence JournaL / Glenn Osmundson
PAWTUCKET –– It never seems to come easy, but in the end the state’s top boys high school tennis title always comes to South Kingstown — at least for the past decade.
The Rebels made it 10 in a row yesterday as they completed a perfect season with a 5-2 victory over Barrington in the title match of the Division I state tourney at Slater Park.
The Rebels picked up the four points they need for the title by sweeping the four singles matches then added another point with a victory in the second doubles match en route to their 16th victory in 16 matches this season.
In the past couple of years, the Rebels won the state title match after losing to their title-round opponent during the regular season. This year, South Kingstown defeated Barrington twice during the regular season, but just like their 4-3 victory in the first regular-season meeting, nothing came easy for the Rebels yesterday.
Heck, even the Rebels’ top player –– state singles champion Kyle Burke –– was forced to work longer than normal before he registered South Kingstown’s first point of the match.
Burke, who will play in the title match of the state singles tournament tomorrow, rolled to a 6-0 victory in the opening set of his first singles match against Will Conaway and also took a 4-1 lead in the second set. But then Conaway began slicing and chipping his way back into contention.
Employing an extremely effective slice backhand, Conaway battled back to deadlock the set at 5-5. Then, after Burke took a 6-5 lead and had match point in the 12th game, Conaway battled back and even the set again at 6-6.
Conaway actually was only two points away from deadlocking the match as he took a 5-4 lead in the 12-point tiebreaker. But Burke, who is undefeated this season, closed out the match by winning three straight points.
Burke’s victory evened the team score at 1-1. Barrington had jumped out to a quick 1-0 lead when the Eagles’ top doubles team of Sam Jerome and Ben Lucock posted a 6-1, 6-3 victory over the Rebels Aaron Carey and Andrew Shumate.
Burke’s straight-sets victory took better than 90 minutes and it was more than 30 minutes later before another match finished. Finally, Andrew Burnap gave South Kingstown a 2-1 lead with a 7-6 (7-5), 6-4 victory over Matt DelSesto at third singles. A few minutes later, Jake Bueno-deMesquita upped South Kingstown’s lead to 3-1 with a 6-3, 6-4 victory over Jeff DeNunzio at second singles.
“Those were huge victories,” South Kingstown coach Andy Carr said of Bueno-deMesquita and Burnap’s triumphs. “Those were two matches that on paper could have gone either way. When we got those two points, along with Kyle’s victory, that put a lot of pressure on Barrington.”
The honor of clinching the title went to sophomore Cliff Bueno-deMesquita and he certainly put in a full day’s work en route to his victory at fourth singles. Bueno-deMesquita, the younger brother of Jake, posted a 6-3 decision in the first set of his match with Gates Jerome, but then Jerome evened the issue with a 7-5 victory in the second set. Jerome also battled back and sent the third set into a tiebreaker after trailing by as much as 4-1. But Bueno-deMesquita quickly took the lead in the tiebreaker en route to a 7-4 victory.
That gave South Kingstown a 4-1 lead and the title. A few minutes later the Rebels second doubles team of Eric Troob and Mike Mulroy made it 5-1 with a 6-3, 6-4 victory. The duo of Pat McLaughlin and Sam Triebwasser registered Barrington’s second point with a straight sets victory at third doubles.
“They came a long way,” Carr offered about the 2008 Rebels who lost four starters from last year’s state championship team, including two of last year’s top four singles players.
Burke, SK def. Conaway, 6-0, 7-6 (7-5); J. Bueno-deMesquita, SK, def. DeNunzio, 6-3, 6-4; Burnap, SK, def. DelSesto, 7-6 (7-5), 6-4; C.Bueno-deMesquita, SK, def. G. Jerome, 6-3, 5-7, 7-6 (7-4); S. Jerome-Lucock, B, def. Aaron Corey-Andrew Súmate, 6-1, 6-3; Troob-Mulroy, SK, def. Chris Robinson-Tom VanHentenryck, 6-3, 6-4; McLaughlin-Triebwasser, B, def. Yosuke Kurokawa-Alex Kam Division I Boys Tennis
S. Kingstown 5 v Barrington 2
Andrew Burnap after clinching a win at 3rd singles
The Providence JournaL / Glenn Osmundson
Sunday, May 25
Quick start propels Exeter-West Greenwich Scarlet Knights to state tennis crown
High School Sports News 07:24 AM EDT on Saturday, May 24, 2008
PAWTUCKET –– The Exeter/West Greenwich boys tennis team has gone from taking tennis lessons to celebrating tennis championships.
“The program is relatively new, probably about eight years. We struggled for numbers for years, but now we spend more time practicing rather than teaching,” Exeter/West Greenwich coach John Krom said after the Scarlet Knights captured the Interscholastic League Division IV title with a 4-3 victory over Woonsocket yesterday at Slater Park.
“I’m so excited for the seniors,” Krom continued. “Last year we only won three matches. This year we had an abundance of freshmen come in and they just all jelled together.”
The Scarlet Knights, who finished third in Division IV-South during the regular season with a 9-4 record, settled the issue quickly yesterday with victories in the four singles matches.
The four Exeter/West Greenwich singles victories came in straight sets. Freshman Ryan Gouveia gave the Scarlet Knights their first point with a 6-3, 6-1 victory over Martin McGeehan at first singles.
Jim Glendinning and Reid Brackenbury, two of the Scarlet Knights’ seven seniors, followed with 6-4, 6-2 and 7-5, 6-1 victories at second and third singles respectively. Freshman Sean Farrell then clinched the title with a 6-3, 6-4 victory at fourth singles.
“Our singles really came up strong for us,” said Krom. “Woonsocket is such a tough team. My number three was down five-love in the first set and came back and won it, 7-5. Then (he) won the second set, 6-1.”
Exeter/West Greenwich had earned its berth in yesterday’s title with a 5-2 victory over West Warwick, the IV-South regular-season co-champion, in the semifinal round.
“I’m just so proud of those guys. They continued to battle,” said Krom.
Woonsocket picked up its three points by sweeping the doubles after Exeter/West Greenwich had clinched the title.
Gouveia, EWG def. McGeehan, 6-3, 6-1; Glendinning, EWG, def. Chris Vongkameko, 6-4, 6-2; Brackenbury, EWG, def. Alvin Loud, 7-5, 6-1; Farrell, EWG, def. Daniel Robillard, 6-3, 6-4; Dan Southising-John Chansyna, W, def. Jake Peterson-Matt Laperriere, 6-4, 6-1; Damien Whitfiels-Jon Leak,W, def. Isham Picillo-Kyle Farrell, 7-6 (8-6), 4-6, 10-3; Andrew Sounraj-Mike Inthisensouk, W, def. Dan Barbour-Brendan Dumican, 6-3, 6-2.Division IV Boys Tennis
Exeter/WG 4 vs Woonsocket 3
Monday, March 17
Tennis Breakfast to beneift South Kingstown Tennis, March 29th at Applebee's!
Saturday, March 1
2007 USTA New England Award Winners: Andy Carr of South Kingstown!
Saturday, March 1
| High School Coach of the Year | Andy Carr | South Kingstown HS | RI |
| School Tennis Program of the Year | Central Falls HS | Central Falls | RI |
| State Association Volunteer of the Year | |||
| Rhode Island | Mike Gorman | Greenville | RI |
USTA New England has a comprehensive awards program that recognizes excellence on and off the tennis court. Each year, we honor deserving players, programs, volunteers and facilities at our Awards Luncheon in March and Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony in June.
We accept nominations for our annual awards year-round. To make a nomination, simply print and will out the nomination form below and return it to our office by January 1, 2009 (submission instructions included on the form). You may nominate one person/program per award, and may only nominate each person/program for one award per year. Make sure to include information about why you feel your nominee is a good choice for the award. Our awards committee will use the information in its decision making process. Incomplete or missing information can affect a nominee's eligibility!
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| PASA - NE NJTL of the Year: South County CTA is one of the providers in this program! Hillary Salmons (PASA), Ron Friedman USTA NE President Joeley & Billy from Gilbert Stuart Middle School |
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Andy Carr - NE HS Coach of the Year from |
Saturday, June 21
2007 RI SPORTS AWARDS by Cox Sports Television




