Mudge And Gould Retain St. Louis Open Crown by Rob Dinerman
Dateline October 29th
--- Forced to a fifth game in their semifinal round against a pair of
first-time partners who had rampaged through the fourth 15-7,
top-seeded two-time St. Louis Open defending champions Damien Mudge and
Ben Gould rose to that severe Saturday-afternoon challenge by subduing
Manek Mathur and Viktor Berg 15-9, then pressed on with a 15-8, 10 and
14 victory several hours later in the final against Paul Price and
Clive Leach. Mudge and Gould, who had opened with a straight-set win
against Chris Walker and Mark Chaloner, thereby consolidated their
triumph in the 2012-13 season-opening Maryland Club Open and recorded
their 21st tournament title in 22 attempts over the past two-plus
seasons.
Repeating what had occurred two weeks earlier in
Baltimore, three of the seven main-draw matches went to a fifth game,
namely the aforementioned top-half semi (a strikingly streaky affair in
which every game other than the 15-10 first went to the winning team in
single digits, with Mudge/Gould racing out to 5-1 in the fifth and
never looking back) and both matches played by James Stout and Greg
McArthur, who had first had to weather a four-game qualifying-round
match with 2011 Tompkins Cup Challenger semifinalists Greg Bassett and
Dan Roberts. Stout and McArthur, unfazed by a daunting early deficit
(8-15, 3-9) and later on by the loss of a fourth-game match-ball
opportunity, persevered to a 8-15 15-13 15-7 14-15 15-9 quarterfinal
upset win over second seeds Matt Jenson (who rifled a rail down the
left wall on that fourth-game 14-all point) and Preston Quick, with the
key being the Stout/McArthur comeback in that second game. They then
rallied from two games to love down (the first of them being by a
single point) to push Leach and Price (first-round 3-0 winners over
qualifiers Jacques Swanepoel and Shaun Johnstone) to a fifth game
before the latter third-seeded duo barely prevailed 15-14 15-7 9-15
10-15 15-12.
Perhaps somewhat drained by that route-goer, which ended
barely three hours before they were due back on court for the final,
Leach and Price dropped the opening pair of games but clung close in
the third, which seesawed to 14-all. But on the ensuing exchange,
Price’s attempt to nail a mid-court forehand drive down the middle
between his two opponents instead rang loudly off the tin, ending the
match and allowing Mudge and Gould to exit the host Racquet Club Of St.
Louis with yet another tournament win.