Brian Dudley Wins Southern League Tennis MVP

Brian Dudley

Submitted by Denair Unified School District

Denair’s Brian Dudley won the boys singles championship and was named the Southern League’s Most Valuable Player at the recent tennis tournament. Andrew Knapp and Abi Wilson brought the Coyotes a second title with their victory in mixed doubles.

Dudley, a senior, defeated Jake Van Vuren of Ripon Christian 6-2, 6-1 at the Merced College courts to extend his unbeaten record to 18-0 this season. He will be the Southern League’s top seed when the Sac-Joaquin Section individual tournament begins Thursday at Oak Park in Stockton.

Knapp, a senior, and Wilson, a sophomore, knocked off a team from Delhi to win their championship. The tournament was the first time this season the Denair duo had played mixed doubles this year. That came about after both suffered their first losses of the season in the semifinals of the singles tournament.

Like Dudley, Knapp and Wilson advanced to the Section tournament later this week in Stockton.

For the rest of the Coyotes, the season ended Monday with a 6-3 loss to Summerville in the first round of the Section team tournament. Dudley, Knapp and Wilson won their singles matches, but the Bears prevailed in all the other matches.

Denair (12-3) finished second behind Ripon Christian in the SL this spring.

DHS Tennis Focused on ‘Takin’ Care of Business’

Saul Mendoza, Abi DIrkse, Andrew Knapp, Kaelee Martinez, Brian Dudley, Jasmine Yonan and Joel Thornton

Submitted by Denair Unified School District

Bill Weber’s goal was to teach Denair High School tennis players enough about the game so they could compete for a Southern League championship this season. A little education about classic rock bands from the ’70s was a bonus.

Mission accomplished on both ends.

The Coyotes (12-3) battled for the top spot in the SL all spring before finishing second behind Ripon Christian High School (13-2) – a squad whose only two defeats came to Denair. The only things separating Denair from at least a piece of the league championship were two losses to Delhi, which finished third.

Weber is a longtime coach with a lengthy record of success at many levels. This is his first season at Denair and he said he especially enjoyed watching his players – some with limited competitive experience in tennis – blossom along the way.

His goal is to make the sport fun. To that end, he often incorporates music from his own high school days – the 1970s – into practices. This spring, the Coyotes were exposed to rock anthems from power bands like Boston, Kansas, REO Speedwagon and Queen.

As the year progressed, it was another classic song – “Takin’ Care of Business” by Bachman-Turner Overdrive – that seemed to best capture the spirit of the team. At the Southern League singles and doubles tournaments Thursday and Friday at Merced Junior College, the Coyotes will be sporting T-shirts with the song’s title on the back.

“It just kind of evolved. It fits us and the kids seem to enjoy that song,” Weber said. Continue reading “DHS Tennis Focused on ‘Takin’ Care of Business’” »

Denair High Tennis Coach Brings Award-Winning Approach

Bill Weber

Submitted by Denair Unified School District

Bill Weber teaches tennis. To children as young as 3 and seniors as old as 88. To players who have never gripped a racquet all the way to tournament competitors. His office can be a city park, a private club or, this spring, the purple courts at Denair High School.

He is a tennis lifer. He’s been teaching the sport for 30 years and, at age 57, can’t imagine doing anything else.

Recently, he was named the 2014 Independent Teaching Professional of the Year by the U.S. Professional Teaching Association, an international organization with more than 13,000 members. He was singled out as the best in Northern California, a region that stretches from Fresno to the Oregon border.

Weber consistently has earned praise for his innovative teaching techniques, especially with children. He uses a method developed in Europe that uses smaller racquets, a shorter court, lower nets and modified balls to introduce kids to the game. As young players gradually get bigger and stronger, they move to the regular court.

He has worked with the U.S. Tennis Association on a program that integrates life skills and nutrition with instruction. He is one of the organizers of a NorCal team tennis league. He is a volunteer for junior programs. He currently is the director of tennis for Brenda Athletic Club in Turlock and teaches for city rec programs in Turlock, Oakdale, Atwater, Newman and Patterson.

What is Weber’s key message to his students?

“Have fun. If it’s not fun, you’re not going to want to do it, whether you’re a high-level player or a beginning player,” he said.

In Denair, Weber has worked previously with just two of the eight girls and seven boys on his team.

“We’re pretty green, but that doesn’t mean they can’t be competitive,” he said. “My hope for the season is to be undefeated in Southern League. We will have to overcome Ripon Christian, but I think we can.” Continue reading “Denair High Tennis Coach Brings Award-Winning Approach” »