Columbus North sweeps Owls in tennis regional semifinals

COLUMBUS — Columbus North hosted the Seymour Owls on Tuesday in regional tennis.

The second-ranked Bull Dogs swept all five positions for a 5-0 victory over Seymour in the boys tennis regional semifinal Tuesday at Columbus North.

“I thought we came out and played really well,” North coach Kendal Hammel said. “We’re starting to get the intensity overall as a team. A little more geared up from match to match knowing that (today’s) match is the last match regionalwise before we go up against the big-time Center Grove (semistate) type match on Saturday.”

The Bull Dogs (19-1) now move on to face Austin, which defeated Batesville 3-2 in the other regional semifinal, in the regional final at 5:30 p.m. today. With the loss, the Owls’ season officially comes to an end.

“Playing high-skilled teams is always great because it brings out the best in us,” Seymour coach Jacob Hunt said. “I was really proud of the boys going in and knowing how stiff the competition was going to be. With a couple of sicknesses today, we had to make due with what we had and piece things together. The boys had a really good attitude through the whole thing.”

One of those illnesses was at No. 1 singles, where the match between North’s Hank Lin and Seymour’s Joe Schmidt was forfeited. With the Owls’ forfeit, Lin is still eligible in the state singles competition.

In the other matches, North’s Parth Shah downed Parker Thompson 6-1, 6-1 at No. 2 singles, and Austin Clark topped Carter Stein 6-1, 6-3 at No. 3 singles.

The Bull Dogs’ Amrit Kar and Anvay Atram blanked Shun Takeuchi and Joel Stevens 6-0, 6-0 at No. 1 doubles. Teddy Littrell and Yoki Murabayashi defeated Drew Handloser and Xavier DuBois 6-1, 6-3 at No. 2 doubles.

“We definitely have a resilient team with how much we dealt with this year,” Hunt said. “The boys fought throughout the whole thing, and we ended on a really strong note. I think despite what the numbers say on the score, I think the boys really came out to give it their all for one last hurrah this season.”

North will need the same intensity it showed Tuesday against Seymour.

“We know this will be the last match before a couple of practices and then getting into the meat of the tournament (in Saturday’s semistate), which is really going to make the difference,” Hammel said. “I think they’ll come out and do the exact same thing. They’re ready for it. They’re fired up for it.”