The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Pascual claims PAC Singles title

Spring-Ford sophomore holds off Andrew Light for the crown

- By Jeff Stover jstover@21st-centurymed­ia.com @MercuryXSt­over on Twitter

GRATERFORD » It was the toughest opponent — and most challengin­g match — he faced all weekend.

But Malchu Pascual was up to the task at hand.

After breezing through three rounds of play in the Pioneer Athletic Conference’s Singles Tournament, Pascual found himself squaring off against Phoenixvil­le’s Graham Light in Saturday’s championsh­ip match at Perkiomen Valley. It was a rematch of their regular-season duel little more than two weeks earlier, where Light posted a straight-set victory in helping the Phantoms edge Spring-Ford 4-3.

This time, however, Pascual prevailed. The Ram sophomore topped Light 7-6 (7-4), 6-2 to return his program and family to prominence in the PAC’s boys tennis hierarchy.

“Today, I knew what to expect,” Pascual said. “It was going to be a challenge. I had to be ready for this, and it worked out.”

Pascual was coming off a 6-1,

“He came out Friday with a different look in his eyes. You could tell he meant business. It was a great grind in the first set, Graham coming back to force the tiebreaker. Malchu had been playing behind the whole time.”

– Spring-Ford head coach John Brennan on Malchu Pascual.

6-0 dispatch of Upper Merion’s Jaden Mayer in the semifinal round — a tougher pairing than his first two of the tourney, where he went 6-0, 6-0 against Owen J. Roberts’ Sam Savage and Upper Perkiomen’s Adam Dockery. Light, in turn, was extended to three sets in his semifinal with Meth- acton’s Harsha Santhanam, rebounding from a 6-4 first- set loss with a pair of 6-2 wins.

That represente­d a significan­t period of “down time” for Pascual, who had at least a two-hour break prior to finding out his opponent for the title match.

“He had gone through a long, tough match,” Pacual said of Light, who faced a three-set pairing with Methacton’s Adam Zhang in Friday’s quarterfin­al, “and he possibly might have been tired. But I knew I had to be 100 percent.”

It was a back-and-forth opening set, Light going up 6-5 after Pascual held 3-2 and 5-4 leads. The Phoenixvil­le senior and tournament’s top seed rallied to force the tiebreaker, which Pascual won by a handy margin.

“It doesn’t give me an advantage or disadvanta­ge,” Pascual said of long breaks between matches. “I don’t need a long rest. I can start right away or three hours later ... it doesn’t matter.”

“He came out Friday with a different look in his eyes. You could tell he meant business,” SF head coach John Brennan added. “It was a great grind in the first set, Graham coming back to force the tiebreaker. Malchu had been playing behind the whole time.”

Pascual got the early lead in the second set, only to see Light reverse it 2-1. But he went back in front 3-2, off a tight game with Light, then ran the table the rest of the way.

“That was a crucial game in the set,” Pascual said. “That could have decided the match either way. I knew I had to win the game.”

Pascual is following in the footsteps of older brother Patrick, a singles champion from 2014 to 2016. Patrick and the Pascual parents were at the courts watching Malchu, the tourney’s second seed, become the Rams’ sixth singles titlist in Brennan’s 14 seasons at the helm.

“They’re not the same person,” Brennan said in comparing the brothers. “They both want to win, and they have similar drives.

“Pat also grew as a player. Malchu is more stubborn — he’ll admit that, too — but he listens more. He’s grown as a player and person.”

The third-place match went to Mayer by default, Santhanam unable to compete due to cramping in his legs. Mayer will join Pascual and Light in representi­ng the PAC in the Class AAA portion of the District 1 Singles Tournament April 27-28 at Legacy. NOTES » Adam Zhang (Methacton) won the fifthplace match with teammate Krishna Suraesh, 8-2. Zhang took the first quarterfin­al set with Light 6-3, at which time Light came back with 6-2 and 6-4 victories . ... Adam Dockery (Upper Perkiomen) will be the PAC’s representa­tive in the district’s Class AA bracket. He lost to Suraesh in their fifth-place playback, 8-5.

 ?? BARRY TAGLIEBER — FOR DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA ?? Spring-Ford’s Malchu Pascual hits a return during the second day of the PAC Singles Tournament on Saturday morning.
BARRY TAGLIEBER — FOR DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA Spring-Ford’s Malchu Pascual hits a return during the second day of the PAC Singles Tournament on Saturday morning.
 ?? BARRY TAGLIEBER — FOR DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA ?? Phoenixvil­le’s Graham Light squares up a return during the second day of the PAC Singles Tournament Saturday.
BARRY TAGLIEBER — FOR DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA Phoenixvil­le’s Graham Light squares up a return during the second day of the PAC Singles Tournament Saturday.
 ?? BARRY TAGLIEBER — FOR DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA ?? Upper Merion’s Jaden Mayer follows through on a return during the PAC Singles Tournament Saturday.
BARRY TAGLIEBER — FOR DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA Upper Merion’s Jaden Mayer follows through on a return during the PAC Singles Tournament Saturday.

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