Edina two-time Class 2A singles champ Nicole Copeland has upped her game

By Heather Rule

For the Minnesota Star Tribune
October 25, 2019 at 12:44AM
Senior Nicole Snezhko of Armstrong (far side) serves to senior Delaney Schurhamer of Woodbury in their match Thursday. Schurhamer, the No. 4 seed, defeated fifth-seeded Snezhko 6-1, 6-1 in the quarterfinals. Photo: Heather Rule, special to the Star Tribune.
Senior Nicole Snezhko of Armstrong (far side) serves to senior Delaney Schurhamer of Woodbury in their match Thursday. Schurhamer, the No. 4 seed, defeated fifth-seeded Snezhko 6-1, 6-1 in the quarterfinals. Photo: Heather Rule, special to the Star Tribune. (Paul Klauda/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

If Edina senior Nicole Copeland feels any added pressure as the two-time defending Class 2A girls' singles champion, she's certainly not showing it.

"I feel like I earned my spot here, so I'm happy with the pressure," Copeland said Thursday at Baseline Tennis Center on the University of Minnesota campus. "I always take pressure as a privilege."

The No. 2-seeded Copeland won both of her matches in the girls' tennis state tournament. She won her first match 6-0, 6-2 over St. Paul Harding senior Amanye Reynolds, then defeated St. Cloud Tech junior Ashley Tarrolly 6-1, 6-3 in the quarterfinal.

Copeland fell behind 2-1 in the second set against Tarrolly before grabbing leads of 3-2 and 4-3 on her way to closing out the match. Though she had to adjust to Tarrolly changing the pace of the ball early in the second set, Copeland didn't let the deficit balloon.

Besides using her powerful ground strokes, Copeland also won points with her volleys and overhead winners at the net. It's a change from the past two years when, Copeland said, she was more of a baseline player "just kind of scrapping balls back."

It's something she said she's worked on improving over the past year.

"I've been trying to become a more full-court player and come into the net and try and finish points at the net more," Copeland said. "It's been working pretty well."

Even though she's seeking her third state singles title, she's not focused on comparing this tournament to years past. The last three-time Class 2A singles champion was Edina's Whitney Taney, who won in 2004-06.

Copeland will face Maple Grove sophomore Zoe Adkins in the semifinals Friday in a rematch from last year.

Adkins, who took third last year as an unseeded player, won her quarterfinal 3-6, 6-0, 3-0 over Roseville sophomore Nicole Ridenour, who retired in the third set because of a back injury. In the first, unseeded Ridenour got off to a 4-1 lead before taking the set.

"It just wasn't my best tennis," said Adkins, the No. 3 seed. "But I think she made me play worse. So all the credit to her. It's too bad she got hurt, because I feel like it could've been a more competitive second set."

Top-seeded Karin Young, an Eastview sophomore, dropped only two games in her pair of matches to advance to the semifinals. She will face Woodbury senior and No. 4 seed Delaney Schurhamer, who defeated fifth-seeded Nicole Snezhko, a senior from Armstrong, 6-1, 6-1 in the quarterfinals.

Class 1A

The top three seeds in the Class 1A singles tournament advanced Thursday to the quarterfinals set for 8 a.m. Friday at Reed-Sweatt Family Tennis Center in Minneapolis.

Defending state champion Arlina Shen of Blake will play sophomore and fifth-seeded Megan Muller of Pequot Lakes. The other semifinal will be senior Clare Palen of Rochester Lourdes, the No. 2 seed, against Blake junior Sonia Baig, seeded third.

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