CdMâs Matthews keeps eyes on prize
Watch Corona del Mar High senior Fabian Matthews for long enough, and it becomes clear that his forehand is his most potent weapon.
Matthews, who is headed to UC Irvine to play tennis collegiately, has the ability to whip a forehand winner from nearly anywhere on the court.
âThatâs my signature shot,â he said with a grin. âIâve got that so much in my high school matches. Every single kid Iâve played, theyâll say, âDonât hit it to his forehand.â And after the match, theyâll be like, âI wish I had your forehand.â Itâs pretty cool to be known as the kid with the big forehand.â
Still, the signs attached to the tennis courts at CdM wonât say that about Matthews.
The signs, which represent CIF titles, will show that Matthews is a winner.
He has won two consecutive CIF Southern Section Individuals championships in doubles with program graduate Dustin Hladek. Today, Matthews aims to make it three in a row, this time in singles. His quest resumes today at 11:30 a.m. at Seal Beach Tennis Center, in Round of 16 competition.
CIF titles donât exactly grow on trees. Since the CIF Individuals began in 1922, only two boysâ players have won as many as three titles. They are Allen Cleveland and Jackie Douglas, both of Santa Monica, who combined for six straight tiles from 1949 to 1954.
So what Matthews is chasing may be historic, but itâs best not to count out the player who went 36-1 for the Sea Kings in dual match play.
CdM Coach Tim Mang wonât. Mang, who is retiring after this season ends, has watched Matthewsâ development since he was playing No. 2 singles his freshman year behind Wesley Miller. Matthews went on to play No. 1 singles each of the last three years.
âHeâs a lot stronger,â Mang said. âHis serve is bigger. His volleys are better. Those are exactly the things he knew he needed to work on as a sophomore. And the doubles, under pressure, has helped his singles. He hits a nice slice backhand. Heâs a much more well-rounded player.â
Even his one loss deserves mention. It came against Thousand Oaksâ Denis Lin in a CIF Southern Section Division I quarterfinal match that CdM lost on games. But the loss to Lin only came immediately after Matthews defeated Thousand Oaks junior Kyle McMorrow, who won the CIF singles division title at the prestigious Ojai Valley Tournament.
Matthews, the Sea Kingsâ only singles player this year to consistently get wins, has taken on that burden.
âWeâve relied on him,â Mang said. âWhen we play a really good team, they get a lot of rest while Fabian is grinding out there. And he has to adjust to three different types of players.â
But if Matthews is on, there are few who can beat him. Heâs ranked No. 8 in the United States Tennis Assn. Southern California boysâ 18s. And, even if his opponent is on, Matthews rarely gets blown off the court.
âHeâs always been deceptively quick,â Mang said. âHe has very good intuition on where the ballâs going. You watch a full set against even the best players and they donât hit many winners against him.â
Yet, tennis doesnât totally define Matthews. He plays at least two hours a day, training with Rick Leach at the Newport Beach Tennis Club, but he tries not to practice on weekends. He is just as eager to talk about the new âGrand Theft Auto IVâ video game, or the new âIndiana Jonesâ movie. The video game is one he said his little brother, Andreas, an eighth grader who plays golf, has already mastered.
âItâs so much fun,â Matthews said. âMy brother already beat it. Heâs a psycho. It was like 27 hours [he played] or something. I think heâs better at that than at golf.â
Matthewsâ sister Tisha, a sophomore at CdM, also plays tennis. And he and his father, Oscar, have had success in father-son tennis tournaments. Oscar, a cardiologist who works out of Anaheim and Temecula, also used to be quite a soccer player in his native Argentina.
âWe have a house down there [in Argentina],â Fabian Matthews said. âI just went there for spring break. I ate a lot of meat. Theyâre the No. 1 exporter of meat or something. We had steaks every day.â
Heâs also been apt to feast on his tennis competition, even when theyâre ranked higher than Matthews. He said thatâs part of the reason he wanted to go to UCI, so he could compete right away.
Mang said he also likes that aspect of Matthewsâ demeanor.
âThatâs why I think heâll do well in college,â Mang said. âHe loves the challenge of playing older players. As a freshman at UCI, heâll be ready to play all the top players. Thatâs his attitude and thatâs what I like.â
Another part of the reason he wanted to play collegiately, Matthews said, is so he can have a training program to add some muscle to his 155-pound frame, slender for a guy who stands 6-foot-2.
But Matthews is a fighter. He said his favorite victory also occurred against a higher-ranked player. It was when he defeated Reid Carleton of Florida, then ranked No. 11 in the nation, at the USTA National Championships last August. Carleton now plays for Duke.
âI was definitely not supposed to win,â Matthews said. âI went in there unseeded and took him out. There was a bunch of people watching, which was cool. [UC Irvine Coach] Trevor [Kronemann] was watching that match, too. Plus, I got âPlayer of the Dayâ for the tournament, and had my picture up on the wall over there.â
There is no such honor at the Seal Beach Tennis Center for winning CIF Individuals. Still, making history should be good enough.
âThat,â Matthews said, âwould be really gnarly.â
MATT SZABO may be reached at (714) 966-4614 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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