Whitehorse Daily Star

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Photo by Marissa Tiel

STEP IN – Ewan Halliday returns the ball to Matthias Hoenisch during the men’s singles final at the Yukon Tennis Championships on Aug. 25 at Mount McIntyre. Halliday, the defending champion, won 4-6, 6-1, 6-4.

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Photo by Marissa Tiel

HEAD TO TOE STRETCH –Matthias Hoenisch serves to Ewan Halliday during men’s singles final Yukon tennis championship action.

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Photo by Marissa Tiel

FRIENDS AT THE END – Matthias Hoenisch, right, congratulates Ewan Halliday after Halliday won the final 4-6, 6-1, 6-4.

Ewan Halliday defends men’s singles title at Yukon Tennis Championships

After coaching tennis camps for most of the summer, the trash talk was at an all-time high Friday morning.

By Marissa Tiel on August 28, 2017

After coaching tennis camps for most of the summer, the trash talk was at an all-time high Friday morning.

Ewan Halliday and Matthias Hoenisch, both coaches for Tennis Yukon’s summer programming and students at Victoria’s St. Michaels University School, faced each other in the men’s singles final of the Yukon Tennis Championships Friday night.

Halliday secured the win in three sets 4-6, 6-1, 6-4.

“We’ve been spending a lot of time together and we’ve been hitting a lot of tennis balls together,” said Hoenisch. “I think we’re both pretty happy with how things went and I think the fans liked it, so that’s what really matters.”

Hoenisch got off to an early lead, securing the first set.

He knew he couldn’t play the way he did the last time he faced Halliday on the court and planned to be more offensive.

“I know that if I hit defensively, he’ll just eat me up on those ground strokes and he’ll hit lots of winners because that’s the kind of player he is,” said Hoenisch. “I had to hit offensively and I think in the first set it paid off.”

On the other side of the net, Halliday was feeling his nerves. He struggled with butterflies in his stomach for the first 10 games, but when Hoenisch took the first set, he said it was a wake-up call.

“I said, ‘Ewan, you gotta start playing. This game is going to be too short if you keep playing like this,’” he said. “At the end of the first set is when I really woke up and I started thinking, ‘OK, how can I beat this guy?’”

Instead of biding his time on the baseline, Halliday moved his way up the court for a few points and hit two solid drop shots.

The momentum shifted.

“Hitting a drop shot is kind of a good booster for the player who does it,” said Hoenisch. “I think he got more confident and it took me down a bit for that set.”

Halliday became the first junior in the Tennis Yukon era to win the men’s singles title at the Yukon Tennis Championships last year when he beat Shahid Sayed.

Halliday had advanced to this year’s final with a 6-0, 6-3 victory over Sayed in Thursday night’s semifinals.

Hoenisch beat Kieran Halliday 6-2, 6-1 to advance from the other semifinal.

Halliday won the match point on a Hoenisch serve.

“I knew it was coming. He has a big serve. I was sitting at the back and I was just waiting for it,” said Halliday. “Luckily I got a good piece of racket on it and went back and just waited.”

When the rally ended, both teens embraced over the net sporting big smiles.

“I’m disappointed, but not heartbroken,” said Hoenisch. “I’m pretty happy with how I played even though I lost.”

The duo is now shifting their focus to school, which begins in September. They’ll hit a few balls but start in earnest in the new year when the school tennis season begins.

Tonight, the doubles final takes place at Mount McIntyre at 5 p.m.

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