Home Boys' Lists Girls' Lists Men's Teams Women's Teams News Photos Contributors Links Help Sign-UpOnline Store
Latest News | Categories | Authors | News Archives
 
 

News & Features

Tournament Coverage
Payne Caps Dominant Run with Girls 14s Gold Ball
Share:    

Conquering her doubts and steadying her emotions, Bella Payne completed a dominant surge to the USTA Girls' 14 National Championship singles title at Rome Tennis Center.

Payne, who grew up in Taylors, South Carolina, but now lives in Bradenton, Florida, won all 14 sets she played on the hard courts in Georgia to come out tops among 192 entrants from around the nation.

Singles Finalist Maria Aytoyan (Left) & Champion Bella Payne
© Contributed Photo

"That was the goal," she said. "I was going there prepared to win the tournament."

The 14-year-old left-hander, who was among the group of No. 17 seeds, capped the event with a 6-3, 6-3 victory over fifth-seeded Maria Aytoyan.

"I think I've been hitting the ball a lot bigger than I had been," said Payne, a former IMG Academy student who is coached by her father, 1990s Florida State player Murphy Payne. "My serve has gotten a lot better. Serve and returns I've worked on a lot. My dad has served to me a lot recently."

Though she didn't lose a set, winning six of them by 6-1 or 6-0 scores, she needed to deal with doubts. In her fifth match of the week, against co-33rd seed Catherine Rennard of Asheville, North Carolina, Payne needed to overcome a deficit for a 6-4, 6-4 victory.

"The toughest match was in the quarterfinals," she said. "I got down 4-1 in the second set. I just tried to stay consistent and make more balls. Usually I hit the ball a lot bigger."

After breezing past her doubles partner, Sara Shumate of Charlotte, North Carolina, 6-1, 6-0 in a semifinal, Payne fell behind Aytoyan early.

"I was down 0-3 in the first set and I stayed calm," Payne said.

Payne reeled off six consecutive games to capture the first set, then fell behind 2-0 in the second. "I kept sticking with my game," she said. "She was very consistent and hit a pretty huge, heavy ball. I had to take it earlier with her going high and heavy, and that made me get in her head a little bit, and that made her make more errors."

After earning what she said was her most significant title, Payne noted how the 14s championship match was similar to her 6-2, 6-2 loss to Claire An of New York in the 2019 12s Nationals final in Alpharetta, Georgia.

"Both my opponents played the same way," said Payne, who won the 12s Clay Courts that year in Boca Raton, though.

She enjoys coming to the net and said the courts "were pretty fast, which really helped me."

Next for Payne, a blue chip rising ninth-grader whose mother is former tennis pro Aurandrea Narvaez Payne, are $15,000 tournaments in Cancun, Mexico, as she studies online via Connections Academy.

Aytoyan was delighted with her first silver ball, the road to which included three-set victories over co-33rd seed Kalista Papadopoulos of Morristown, New Jersey (5-7, 6-2, 6-0) in the round of 32 and eighth-seeded Anna Frey of Farmington, Utah (6-3, 4-6, 6-2) in a semifinal.

"It was a great experience," Aytoyan said. "I practiced really hard the week before and tried to prepare myself mentally. When I came to the tournament, I kind of told myself that overall I believe I have nothing to lose, and I played freely. I think the thing that helped me get far is the mental part. ... I stayed confident.

"I believe that Bella played a really great match that day and she deserves that win."

Doubles Champions Anita Tu & Thea Frodin (Left)
© Contributed Photo

Aytoyan, from Valley Village, California, plans to keep training at Evert Tennis Academy in Boca Raton, Florida, primarily with coach Francesco Michelotti. She's studying online with Calvert Academy.

"I'm thankful for all my coaches, my parents, my friends, everyone that's supported me," she said.

Thea Frodin of Woodland Hills, California, and fellow rising eighth-grader Anita Tu of Jacksonville, Florida, took the doubles title, beating Payne and Shumate 6-1, 1-6, 6-2.

Frey took third place in singles with a 1-6, 6-3, 6-2 triumph against Shumate.

In the singles back draw, No. 13 seed Kaia Giribalan of San Rafael, California, captured fifth place with a 6-0, 6-1 victory over co-17th seed Kori Montoya of Austin, Texas.

Tournament referee Robert Sasseville said the event ran smoothly except for a couple of lightning delays and early-morning wet courts.

"They all showed up on time," he said.

Especially Payne.

Next Up - Boys 16s

Check back tomorrow morning for our wrap of the Boys 16s from Kalamazoo, Michigan - as TRN continues with our exclusive coverage of Championship Week.

 
 

Leave a Comment

 

More Tournament Features

3-Apr-2024
Manning, Wang, Goode, Payne Capture Easter Bowl Titles
The 2024 FILA Easter Bowl USTA Spring National Championships 16s and 18s finals were scheduled over two days due to the forecast of rain in the normally arid Coachella Valley. But William Manning, Tianmei Wang, Bella Payne and Gavin Goode handled every challenge thrown their way to add their names to the long and prestigious list of Easter Bowl champions.

1-Apr-2024
Easter Bowl Sweeps for Kotseva, Johnson, Davletshina
Familiar faces continued their success last week at the FILA Easter Bowl USTA Spring National Championships, with Andrew Johnson and Jiarui Zhang adding to their gold ball collections,, Raya Kotseva staying perfect in the desert and Nikol Davletshina claiming her first singles gold.

27-Mar-2024
Jovic, Kennedy Eye Summer Slams After J300 Titles
Iva Jovic and Jack Kennedy are looking forward to competing at Roland Garros and Wimbledon for the first time in their careers after capturing the singles titles at the International Tennis Federation J300 North American Closed last Saturday at Barnes Tennis Center in San Diego.

 
 Tournament Feature Index |   Subscribe

 

About Sonny Dearth

Sonny Dearth is a writer and copy editor, primarily for the sports section, at the Daily Press newspaper and dailypress.com Web site in Newport News, Va.

Dearth has more than 40 years of experience in tennis. He is a former state high school champion who has served as a volunteer assistant coach in Virginia, where he started for four years at James Madison University in the late 1980s. He has competed in a few USTA national junior and adult events.

 
RECENT COMMITMENTS
4/25 Benett Gregor chooses Cornell College
4/23 Sanjan Shanker chooses Otterbein
4/23 Montana Parkinson-Lubold chooses New Mexico State
4/23 Artiom Anzhilov chooses Piedmont
4/22 Makayla Otey chooses Gordon (MA)
4/22 Max Gofton chooses Muhlenberg
4/22 Kevin Xie chooses MIT
4/22 Ronin Kasday chooses SMU
4/22 Robert Tate Ransom chooses Occidental
4/21 Ellise Jay chooses Occidental

Full Listings: Boys' Commits & Girls' Commits

 
 
RECENT HEADLINES
ITA NEWS
 AMERICAN COLLEGE PLACEMENT
 
ACP description
 
Learn about American College Placement - the most personalized boutique service in the nation.
 
THE LATEST FROM ZOOTENNIS
4/24 Top Three Girls Seeds Out at ITF J500 Offenbach; First ATP Points for Lee, Woestendick at Vero Beach $15K; 122nd Edition of The Ojai Underway; SEC and…
4/23 Juniors Flood Vero Beach $15K; Urhobo Qualifies at Charlottesville $75K; Schwaerzler Beats Top Seed Wolf at Savannah Challenger; USTA Roland Garros…
4/22 Eight Americans Begin Play Tuesday at ITF J500 in Germany; First of Three J100s in Florida Underway; Kovackova Sweeps Another Tennis Europe U14 Super…
4/22 Four Top Seeds Win Conference Titles, but Florida State Ends ACC Run of Virginia Men; Madrid Masters 1000 Wild Cards for Grant and Blanch; Stephens…
4/21 Grant Claims Second ITF J300 ITF in France; Krueger Reaches Tallahassee Challenger Final; Two Surprise Finalists for Men's SEC and ACC Conference…
Colette Lewis has covered topflight junior events as a freelance journalist for over a decade. Read her weekly column, follow her on Twitter, and and find more of her daily commentary at ZooTennis.
 

Page updated on Monday, March 11, 2024
Contact our web team with any corrections