It was a stressful day for virtually every USA team at the Tepic Elite 16, save for one: Kelly Cheng and Sara Hughes.
All told, there were eight American matches played on Friday in Mexico (one, for clarity’s sake, was double-counted, as it was an all-American matchup between Terese Cannon and Sarah Sponcil and Betsi Flint and Julia Scoles). Half would go the full three sets. By day’s end, just one of the six Americans in the field remained standing, which was, fittingly, the team who made life easiest on itself.
Cheng and Hughes have been perfect thus far in Tepic, winning three straight pool matches in six straight sets, closing out a flawless performance with an expected sweep over Mexico’s Abril Flores and Atenas Gutierrez (21-11, 21-16) on Friday afternoon. That win earned Cheng and Hughes a bye into Saturday afternoon’s quarterfinals, where they awaited the winner of Brazil’s Carol Salgado and Barbara Seixas and France’s Lezana Placette and Alexia Richard.
The latter two names may ring a bell as the duo that nearly ended Kristen Nuss and Taryn Kloth’s run in the La Paz quarterfinals, only to be stumped in three sets. Again, France was stumped in three, having a match point attempt blocked by Salgado at 14-13. Brazil finished from there, winning 21-9, 18-21, 16-14, setting up the second meeting between Salgado and Seixas and Cheng and Hughes. The first came in the opening round of pool play in the Beach Pro Tour Finals; Brazil won, 21-18, 20-22, 16-14, although Cheng and Hughes left Doha the real winners, a gold medal and $150,000 in hand by tournament’s end.
That match will be the first on the day in Tepic, held on court two while Canadians Melissa Humana-Paredes and Brandie Wilkerson match up with Italians Marta Menegatti and Valentina Gottardi on center.
All of North America, then, will be competing at 1 p.m. Pacific. The rest of the North American teams have likely already packed their bags and are either headed to California or straight to Brazil for the upcoming month-long stretch in Itapema, Saquarema, and Uberlandia.
Flint and Scoles were done in by the all-American match against Sponcil and Canon to close out pool play, which Sponcil and Cannon won, 15-12 in the third. It’s the first tournament Flint and Scoles have played together and not made a final. In the three previous events they’ve played, they have won a silver…
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