May 2017 Issue

Page 1

CHRONICLE the harvard-westlake

Los Angeles • Volume 26 • Issue 8 • May 31, 2017 • hwchronicle.com

All fun and games? By Layla Moghavem

and

Jean Sanders

The Monday that Assassin started, Head Prefect Cate Wolfen ’17 saw the game as a way for students to have fun together, although it could be distracting to their schoolwork at times. The next day, she saw the game in an entirely new light. After hearing news of the Manchester attack that claimed many lives, she didn’t see students pause to think about how lucky they were to be safe but rather she saw them doing what they were doing the day before - pointing finger guns at each other and yelling ‘bang’. “The whole day just felt really sad and embarrassing to me to walk around and see this community of kids who are so lucky, me included, to be safe and not have to worry about gun violence or bombing or anything that would be as serious as what happened in Manchester was,” Wolfen said. • Continued on C7

PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY NICOLE KIM

Boys’ tennis wins CIF championship By Matthew Yam In 2010, an 11 year-old Adam Sraberg ’17 approached Harvard-Westlake boys’ tennis program head Chris Simpson and Stanford tennis star Ryan Thacher ’08. “I want to be a star tennis player,” Sraberg said. “That requires a lot of hard work, Adam,” Simpson told him. “I’m up for it. I want to come play for you and I’m going to quit baseball to be a tennis star.” Fast-forward seven years: Sraberg is a captain of Simpson’s program, which has become one of the best tennis teams in southern California. The squad completes a nearperfect season, goes 28-3 overall, remains undefeated in the Mission League for the 16th year in a row and is crowned CIF champions. After losing in the CIF championship in 2014 and 2015, and being eliminated

in the second round of CIF in 2016, the senior captains were all too familiar with the sting of defeat and were determined not to feel it again. Despite injuries to key players like Stanley Morris ’18, the squad started the season firing on all cylinders, dominating its first 14 opponents by at least 13 of a maximum 18 sets in each match. The Wolverines had strength from top to bottom, with strong play from seniors Sraberg, Jed Kronenberg and Jacob Tucker, and a pair of formidable freshmen in David Arkow and Timothy Li. The first loss of the season didn’t come until March 25 against Palisades Charter in the All-American Invitational Tournament in Newport Beach. Standout freshman Li playing in an out of school tournament, and the squad missed him dearly. However, the boys did not let the loss demoralize them, and instead used it to add fuel to the fire.

“We’d gone farther than HW’s ever gone before in the tournament, and it was a sign to us that our team was capable of accomplishing the unprecedented,” Tucker said. The squad proceeded to win its next three matches, including an 18-0 shutout of Notre Dame, before going on Spring Break. In their first match after spring break, the Wolverines faced defending CIF champions Peninsula. Peninsula led 9-8 heading into the 18th and final match of the day. The Wolverines seem poised to win (Harvard-Westlake held the tiebreaker had it finished 9-9), with Sraberg leading Dariush Jalali five games to three. It was match point for Sraberg, who lead the game 40-0. He collapsed. Jalali rallied to snatch victory from the jaws of defeat, and Peninsula won 10-8. “The only thing that could have gone better this season is that we could have gone un-

defeated if not for the one loss to Peninsula,” Tucker said. “However, that loss taught us a lot, and without it, I don’t know if we would’ve been hungry enough to take home the title.” Kronenberg expressed a similar sentiment in recognizing that they had to dial back in if they were achieve their goal of a CIF championship. “The Peninsula loss was a huge wake up call for us,” Kronenberg said. “We had been destroying every team, but now we knew we had to improve again. Our next few practices were beyond intense. We were determined to play better.” The boys did just that, delivering an 18-0 shutout against crosstown rival Loyola and two more dominant wins to close out the regular season, remaining undefeated in the Mission League. The Wolverines continued • Continued on page D1

INSIDE

SENIOR SUPPLEMENT: The seniors reflect on their time at the school, Chronicle and as friends.

Scan to read more about the boys’ tennis team.


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May 2017 Issue by The Harvard-Westlake Chronicle - Issuu