Home » Tennis » Couldabeens set high benchmark

Couldabeens set high benchmark

By Sam Campbell

The Couldabeens have delivered a convincing win on Wednesday night before a social exhibition on Thursday night capped off an interesting week of Broken Hill tennis.

Division 1 was a mixed bag of results by the end of the Wednesday night.

In the first round 8 fixture between Couldabeens and Feauties, it was a clean sweep.

The line-up for Couldabeens consisting of Wayne Lee, Glen Andrich, Jamie Passlow and Leonie Channing roared into action – winning the night in a convincing matter.

At the night’s conclusion, Couldabeens were six sets 42 games to Feauties scarce 17 games.

It got close between Macblack and Spin Doctors with many matches either 7-4 or 7-5.

For context, Broken Hill tennis matches are played to seven with a tiebreaker at six-all, rather than the commonly played to six.

Jack Woods and Ashley Mason opened Macblack’s account with a hard-fought win over Shaun and Tom Kennedy.

Macblack strengthened their early ascendancy with a 7-1 by Hamish Curtis and Ryan Lewis over Jenny Powell and Julie Sandy.

Sandy and Shaun Kennedy managed to rally and jag a set for Spin Doctors, beating Mason and Lewis 7-4.

Sandy kept the good times rolling when she partnered with Tom Kennedy to down Mason and Woods 7-5.

Unfortunately, they would be the only two sets Spin Doctors would get as Macblack finished ahead 4-37 to 2-25.

In the last match of the night between Net Ninjas and Keen-On Balls, games decided the victor.

Keen-On Balls came out of the gates strong, winning both opening doubles. However, Net Ninjas did not go quietly into the night with Ken Caldwell and Praise Oklong claiming a 7-3 win over Stephen Cicak and Kelli Keenan.

But that comeback looked all but foiled as Boyd Keenan and the mysteriously single-named “Tony” winning 7-0 over Oliver Brown and Matt Molloy.

Heading into the final two sets of the night and down 3-1 on sets, Net Ninjas needed to pull something from the hat.

It came in the form of two wins, tying the match on sets and forcing a count on games scored across the night.

The magic was over though, as Keen-On Balls snuck past 3-33 to 3-33.

On Thursday night with the Open A, a number of absences meant that there was an amalgamation of available players into two teams for night of social, yet high-quality tennis.

With the round put off, all attendees took to court and played three doubles matches each with the scoreline not even at the forefront of minds.

There was a slight delay as the fire brigade was called either for a burning briefcase in a nearby drainway or for Evan Boylan’s rocketing serves he was smoking down, confirmation is still needed.

The social hit serving as a reminder to the community to come down to the O’Neill Park Complex tennis courts off Wolfram Street on Wednesday and Thursday nights at 7pm to join up in the local tennis scene.

Digital Editions


  • Farmers encouraged to register for help

    Farmers encouraged to register for help

    WITH extreme weather events occurring more regularly recently across Australia, farmers are being encouraged to register with Rural Aid, a charity assists in times of…

More News

  • Smokies fast on residential fire

    Smokies fast on residential fire

    FIREFIGHTERS were called to a fire on Cummins Street last week. The blaze appeared to break out at the back of the Cummins Street house on Thursday. Crews were quick…

  • Commitment to community honoured

    Commitment to community honoured

    TWELVE people were honoured at the Broken Hill City Council’s Australia Day Event with Australia Day Awards for their service to the community. Professor Ian Plimer, a geologist and author,…

  • Lease granted for new preschool

    Lease granted for new preschool

    A NEW preschool looks set to open in the coming weeks after a lease was approved for the space formerly occupied by Playtime Preschool. At Broken Hill City Council’s Ordinary…

  • Councillors forced to find their feet

    Councillors forced to find their feet

    NEW rules introduced by the New South Wales State Government will see councillors stand to speak in council meetings. At this month’s ordinary council meeting on Wednesday, the first for…

  • Heat kills 100s of fish

    Heat kills 100s of fish

    HUNDREDS of fish have died near Weir 32 at Menindee this week as temperatures soared to about 50 degrees Celsius along the river and water temperatures climbed to about 28…

  • Power and produce gone

    Power and produce gone

    AS a prolonged heatwave continued to put stress on the electricity network this week, related power outages caused Coles to dumb a large amount of products. The supermarket was impacted…

  • What’s on in Broken Hill?

    What’s on in Broken Hill?

    FRIDAY The Workshop 343 Blende Street, 9.30am The Royal Flying Doctor Service Broken Hill Wellbeing Place hosts a free variety of craft and woodworking activities. Unblinding: Reversing type 2 diabetes…

  • Red and amber alerts for blue-green algae

    Red and amber alerts for blue-green algae

    LAKE Menindee’s Site 19 and Outlet Regulator have been issued with blue-green algae red alert warnings this week, after recent testing was carried out at the sites. A precautionary red…

  • Central Darling Shire’s shining stars

    Central Darling Shire’s shining stars

    A NUMBER of citizens and groups were recognised Central Darling Shire on Australia Day. The awards were an opportunity to acknowledge the contributions to the community by publicly thanking individual…

  • Extreme heat and pool closure

    Extreme heat and pool closure

    BROKEN Hill and the surrounding region sweltered through a severe heatwave this week, with records broken throughout the north west NSW region, down to the Mallee, Murraylands and Riverland. Tuesday…