Mason has made her mark
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Students were considered family to Candace Mason, according to one
Newport Beach resident who took classes from the Costa Mesa resident
and longtime tennis instructor.
Nancy Whalen swung her racket -- along with countless others --
under the watchful eyes of Mason, a tennis instructor with the City
of Newport Beach’s Parks and Recreation Department for 26 years who
died April 15 after a bout with an illness.
Mason, who was 44, spent hours teaching tennis at private clubs
such as Newport Beach and Palisades while logging many hours on the
public courts at San Joaquin Park. For the last two years she also
instructed at Park Newport.
“She gave her life to the city as far as tennis goes,” Whalen
said. “She gave so many people a start in tennis, no matter how awful
we were. She had an element about her where she made the lessons fun
and we all thought we could hit the ball.”
Mason, a former Costa Mesa resident who is survived by her mother,
Helen, and sister, Wendee, taught classes Monday through Saturday.
About 100 well-wishers attended a service for her April 26.
The city’s Parks and Recreation Department has approved two
benches to be built -- each bearing a plaque in remembrance of Mason
-- at San Joaquin Park, on the corner of San Joaquin Hills Road and
Crown Drive in Newport Beach.
Whalen, who has lived in Newport Beach since 1988, said $2,000 has
been raised so far for the benches. She is waiting to hear from the
city about how much the benches will cost total.
*
The mother-daughter doubles duo of Dorsey and Bonnie Adams earned
second place out of 12 teams in the United States Tennis
Association’s national mother/daughter indoor championships at Club
Green Meadows in Vancouver, Wash., Friday through Sunday.
Seeded third and playing in their first national tournament
together, the Adams’ won their first- and second-round matches before
coming up short in the final.
They beat Paula and Suzanne Massie, 6-3, 6-1, in the first round
before displacing the second-seeded duo of Julia Salomon and
daughter, Melissa Holzinger, 4-6, 6-4, 6-3, in the second round.
Sue Swain and daughter Alison prevailed in the final, 7-5, 6-4.
By finishing second, Dorsey and Bonnie took home a silver ball,
awarded to the second-place team at the USTA-sanctioned event. The
winning team received a gold ball and the third-place duo captured a
bronze ball.
Bonnie, finishing her junior year at Newport Harbor High, competed
on the Sailor girls tennis team last fall.
*
With the Southern California junior sectional tennis championships
scheduled to start June 21, Newport-Mesa should be represented well
by at least two budding stars: Costa Mesa’s Nelly Radeva and Newport
Beach’s Jake Fleming.
Radeva, getting ready to finish her sixth-grade year at Kaiser
Elementary, is ranked No. 1 in Southern California in girls 12s
singles and fifth in that division in the nation. She won the girls
14s singles at the Ojai Valley tennis tournament in April and placed
first in the girls 12s singles of the Quiksilver (boys) and Roxy
(girls) junior tennis tournament at the Balboa Bay Club Racquet Club
last month. Fleming, an eighth-grader at Ensign, finished second in
the boys 14s singles at Ojai, and is ranked eighth in Southern
California in the same division. He reached the second round of the
consolation bracket at last year’s junior sectionals, a month before
winning the boys 14s singles title at the Costa Mesa junior tennis
classic.
Radeva advanced to the quarterfinals of last year’s sectionals as
an 11-year-old while reaching the final at Costa Mesa.
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