GREENSBORO - Delaware State was able to beat North Carolina
A&T 7-0 Saturday afternoon in women's tennis action. Before the two teams
played, Delaware State junior Kristen Lopez walked into the Piedmont Indoor
Tennis Center and with a deep island accent yelled the name "Cayla."
"Who is calling my name?" asked Cayla Cross, the North
Carolina A&T junior tennis player out of Bermuda.
"I'm calling your name," Lopez returned as the two shared a reunion
moment once Cross figured out who was calling her name. The two hadn't seen
each other since they were 14 years old. But their friendship picked up where
it left off.
These types of reunions happen to Cross frequently. The
21-square foot island of Bermuda is so tiny; Cross didn't get an opportunity to
play for her high school. Instead, she played for youth travel teams in
Bermuda, which allowed her to travel all over the Caribbean.
Before coming to A&T, she has played in Guatemala, Saint
Vincent, Barbados and the Bahamas. She has even played outside of the Islands,
in places such as Greece, New York and Miami. Therefore, playing against
international competition is nothing new for Cross.
"You get to meet a lot of people," said Cross about her
travels. "You get to experience a lot of different cultures, and you make
lifelong friends. It really prepared me."
Cross' international opponent on Saturday in No. 2 singles
was Serbian Kristina Aleksic. Cross and Aleksic played a thrilling match in
which Alkesic won 7-5, 7-6 (7-5) in the tiebreak.
"It doesn't bother her at all. She knows them all," said
A&T coach James Dunwoody about Cross playing against international
competition. "She is much more adept in playing the international style of play
than my American players. She can handle
the pressure a lot better. When it is close, it doesn't bother her. It bothers
my other players. It doesn't bother her. She is used to it."
Cross' biggest issue on the court is where she plays,
according to Dunwoody. Dunwoody said it is his responsibility to put more
talent around her because ideally she should be slotted as a No.4, 5 or 6
singles player in the lineup and not where she has played most of the season,
as a No. 1 or 2. Cross has lost tough matches against Shaw, East Carolina and
Norfolk State recently.
"Cayla is an overachiever," said Dunwoody. "That's what puts
her in position to play close matches even though she is playing against people
she really shouldn't be playing against at No. 1. She understands when it is a
critical time in the match. When it gets close, she knows how to deal with it."
Cross, who is an accounting major and an A&T scholar
athlete, took an early 2-0 lead on Alkesic in the first set on Saturday.
Alkesic rallied to take a 4-3 advantage before Cross came back to reach set
point at 5-4, and she led 40-30 in the game that would have clinched the set
for her. But Alkesic evened the score at 40 all and then powered two
consecutive service aces to win the point. Cross lost the next two games to
give Alkesic the set.
"I was extremely frustrated after the first set," said
Cross. "She had a powerful serve. I didn't attack it the way I needed to. I
thought I hit the ball down the middle too much. When you do that, power
players like her are able to hit the ball at an angle. I thought for the most
part, I fought back. I didn't let my first set affect my second."
In the second set, Cross again was up 6-5, leaving her one
point away from victory. Alkesic was able to break her serve to tie the set,
and went on to take a 5-2 lead in the tiebreaker. Cross fought back to make it
6-5. But when Alkesic called her serve out of bounds, a call Cross questioned
before conceding. Cross dropped to 2-8 on the season and 0-2 at No. 2 singles.
"I just have to make sure I don't back up off my pace," said
Cross, who chose A&T after going on a tour of HBCU schools when she was in
high school. "It was a really tight match. It seems as if I have a lot of
those."
Cross and Azeib Nigatu lost their doubles match against
Alkesic and Vanja Adononva 8-3. Cross wonders which old friend she will see Monday. The Aggies have a huge match against Florida
A&M at the Piedmont Indoor Tennis Center Monday at 1 p.m. The Aggies need just one
MEAC victory against Southern Division opponent to qualify for the MEAC Tournament
on April 11 in Raleigh, N.C. The Aggies are 2-8 overall and 1-1 in the MEAC.
Delaware State 7, North Carolina A&T 0
Mar 03, 2012 at
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Singles competition
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1.
KOZLOVA,Ksenia (DSU) def. COLBERT, Kenya (NCATW) 6-1, 6-3
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2.
ALEKSIC,Kristina (DSU) def. CROSS, Cayla (NCATW) 7-5, 7-6, 7-5
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3.
ADONONVA,Vanja (DSU) def. STALLING, Kimberly (NCATW) 10-6, 6-2
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4.
SICIC,Marina (DSU) def. NIGUTA, Azeib (NCATW) 6-3, 6-2
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5.
ANDRADE,Cristina (DSU) def. BURRAGE, April (NCATW) 6-0, 6-0
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6.
BANAS,Maya (DSU) def. AUSTIN, Victorea (NCATW) 7-5, 6-3
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Doubles competition
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1.
ANDRADE,Cristina/SICIC,Marina (DSU) def. STALLING, Kimberly/HENRY, Nianna
(NCATW) 8-5
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2.
ADONONVA,Vanja/ALEKSIC,Kristina (DSU) def. CROSS, Cayla/NIGUTA, Azeib (NCATW)
8-3
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3.
BANAS,Maya/KOZLOVA,Ksenia (DSU) def. BURRAGE, April/COLBERT, Kenya (NCATW)
8-4
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