Many things remained the same in Atlanta from 2022 to 2023. It was hot — “spicy,” in the words of Terese Cannon. It rained. A lot. To the point that, a year ago, several matches were shortened to a single set to 28. Such was not the case this year. Mother Nature held off long enough that every match went the official distance, and the final, between Miles Partain and Andy Benesh, and Chase Budinger and Miles Evans, went far longer than that. Although the reported time for that final is a brisk 41 minutes, the official running time is somewhere in the realm of six hours.
Once again, the mercurial East Coast summer weather reared its head, though in neither instance did it seem to impact Partain in the least. Last year at this time, he was a 20-year-old defender whom most everyone recognized as an enormous talent, though one who might reach his full potential several years down the road. When he and Paul Lotman stumped Chaim Schalk and Theo Brunner in the 2022 finals, it was viewed as a sizable upset.
Therein lies the chief difference between 2022 and 2023: Miles Partain is nobody’s underdog. Not anymore. Not with three medals on the Beach Pro Tour and arguably the most improved player in the world blocking for him at the net. Anything less than a victory in Atlanta, even with it featuring the first fully-loaded field of the season, would have been seen by many as something of a surprise.
There would be no surprise. Not this year. Partain and Benesh played five matches in Atlanta, winning four of those in sweeps, including the final, a bizarre, 21-13, 21-13 pounding over Budinger and Evans that was delayed and delayed and delayed again. A match that began with several thousand in attendance and televised nationally on ESPN2 became an oddly intimate affair, with maybe a few dozen left in the stands, and FaceTime, not ESPN, proving to be the streaming service of choice if you happened to know someone remaining.
It’s a shame, too, that few will get to see the film of Partain and Benesh’s final, for it was one of their more brilliant performances of the season in a match with that much at stake. They hit .590 as a team, while Partain dug 10 balls to Evans’ four, and Benesh blocked six to Budinger’s three. They served two more aces, hit five less errors and, all in all, looked virtually unbeatable, which is exactly what they were all…
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