A streak snapped, and a goal realized

FALLS VILLAGE — The legendary winning streak, the balance of power, the inside track to the league title  —  it had all come down to this: a final doubles match under the late afternoon sun and the nervous gaze of the hill-strewn spectators.    

Junior Justin Gomez and senior Moustafa Saqir of Housatonic Valley Regional High School had won the first set over their opponents from Nonnewaug, 6-3. Now they were leading 5-0 in the second, closing in on the victory and pushing Nonnewaug’s 49-game winning streak to the edge of the cliff. 

The two teams had split the first four matches of the day, rendering this final clash the decisive one. By now, with the outcome all but sealed, the Housy players could sense the victory, could feel it in their very grasp. They were hopping up and down with every rally, cheering with every point, the boys — “a mini family,” as Coach Jeff Tripp would describe them later — too giddy to contain themselves.   

Upon match point, they inched down the hillside toward the court, lured by something bigger than each one of them. Something they could probably not explain. But it was real, this magnetism, it was plainly visible in this unspoken display of solidarity. 

Then, with Gomez manning the baseline and Saqir attacking the net, a return from Nonnewaug’s front player fell short. A fleeting moment of silence, a wondrous reckoning, was quickly broken by mighty applause, as the Housy supporters  —  led by the players — thrust their arms in the air and high-fived one another with glee, whooping and shouting and smiling from ear to ear. 

Gomez and Saqir enjoyed a brief celebration themselves, then approached the net to shake hands with their opponents. After exchanging congratulations on a well-fought match, they dashed off the court and up the hill into their teammates’ welcoming arms. It was the realization of a moment, one could tell, that they had been envisioning since the season began. 

The streak, at long last, was over. The Mountaineers had wrested power, at least on this afternoon, from the Chiefs. And with the victory, a 3-2 final on May 19, Housy put itself in terrific position to claim the Berkshire League title. All that’s left to do is win the final two matches of the season. 

The last one is scheduled for Wednesday, May 25. The opponent? 

Nonnewaug. 

“I have a huge amount of respect for that streak,” Tripp said afterward. “We’ve won 14 in a row this year, and I know how challenging that’s been. To win 49 straight is an amazing accomplishment that Nonnewaug should be extremely proud of. At the same time, our guys should be very proud of breaking it.”

Housy was led, per usual, by its number-one singles player, Jonathan Miller. After losing a game for the first time all season in the team’s previous match against Shepaug Valley, he bounced back with another 6-0, 6-0 victory. 

(To say Miller “bounced back” from a match he won, 6-1, 6-0, by the way, is like saying a baseball pitcher regained his form after “surrendering” a one-hitter. It’s silly. Nevertheless, Miller has cosmically altered the scale by which he is measured through his season-long dominance, and we do our best to adapt.)    

Miller’s opponent, a tall, athletic player with terrific range, provided stiff resistance in the early stages of the match. He tracked down shot after shot — much like Housy’s own Pat Considine — and forced Miller into the kind of long rallies he has rarely had to endure this season. 

But Miller refused to give in, slowly draining his adversary’s energy with clever drop shots followed by punishing winners. And the few times the momentum shifted, Miller upped the ante with lunging, twisting, sneaker-squeaking defense. 

The turning point seemed to come late in the first set when Miller, already ahead 4-0, twisted his opponent into a knot with a misdirection volley. The Nonnewaug player, trying to read Miller’s movement, turned one way and then the other, before getting tangled up in his own feet and taking an unsightly spill. 

He was forced to sit out momentarily with an apparent right knee injury, and when play resumed he seemed resigned to the outcome. Sensing the inevitable, he began hitting halfhearted returns, limping across the court in futile defense, and sometimes neglecting to track down shots altogether. 

That is not at all a knock on his fortitude, but rather a reflection of Miller’s relentlessness. The inexorability with which he plays slowly crushes his opponents’ spirit. 

“It’s so hard not to get frustrated against him,” explained Tripp, who, it should be noted, was speaking from experience. “You think you’re in a point and you think you’ve maybe got him, and then you turn around and he’s slamming a forehand past you and it’s over.” 

Still, Nonnewaug’s number-one player deserves credit for making it hard on Miller, who has breezed through most of his matches this season in 25 minutes or less. But this was a win for which Miller had to earnestly extend himself. As one fan quipped afterward, “45 minutes, Jonathan? What the hell took you so long?”   

In other action, smooth-hitting sophomore Jack Scarpa, fell to Nonnewaug’s strong number-two player, 6-1, 6-1. Scarpa was anything but timid in the way he went after the match, answering his opponent’s every vigorous shot with a bold return of his own.  Though he lost, he certainly went down swinging. 

While Scarpa was uncorking forehands with mighty intent, Considine was quietly returning every shot thrown his way. It is the senior’s trademark style to play along the baseline and keep everything in play, and never was that more evident than on Thursday afternoon. From one side of the court to the other, he tracked down balls with tireless zeal, often engaging in rallies lasting 20 shots or more. He ultimately lost, 7-5, 6-3, but not without staging quite the fight. 

“He’s going to need a candy bar after this one,” remarked one fan. “How does he keep up that energy?”

After falling behind in singles, 2-1, it was Housy’s doubles partners who swung the match in the Mountaineers’ favor. 

Senior Max Vadakin and junior Mo Elserafy, longtime partners who have grown from a vulnerable pairing into a cohesive duo, were resolute in a 6-4, 6-3 victory. Vadakin, an especially demonstrative player, let out a number of satisfied grunts upon smashing overhand volleys past his helpless opponents. Nowhere in this world are satisfied grunts more appropriate than the tennis court. 

That set the stage for Gomez and Saqir, who methodically worked their way to a 6-3, 6-0 win. It is impossible to overstate the importance of Housy’s doubles players to the overall success of the team, whose seven-man chain is void of a single weak link. 

“It’s so hard in this league to find seven quality players and to have depth all the way down the ladder,” said Tripp. “It really pays off in matches like these, because the result often comes down to that last doubles pairing. And today, we had a senior and a junior who have been in these spots before, and they handled the pressure fantastically.” 

“I’m not even sure that’s a word,” Tripp laughed. 

It is, and it was the right one, at that.  

For Housy’s players, the journey is anything but complete. The Berkshire League title is still up for grabs, all-league honors are still to be awarded (they are decided by the league tournament, which was held the weekend of May 21 — see article on this page) and the state tournament beckons on the horizon. 

But beating Nonnewaug was a serious goal of theirs, and the Mountaineers can check it off the list. 

“They’ve been looking forward to this match for a long time,” Tripp said, “and I’m so proud of the way they rose to the occasion.”

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