For every hard-fought point that Nipomo native Sophie Whittle won over her world-ranked opponent Laura Robson on Sept. 28, a full house at the Templeton Tennis Ranch stadium in San Luis Obispo County erupted.
āGreat serve, Soph!ā

āYou got this!ā they yelled.
With unflinching poise, Whittle chased down Robsonās ruthless backhands and forced her into mistakes. If Robson approached the net to deliver a demoralizing slam, Whittle anticipated it and sent soft lobs over her head, just out of reach.
The crowd cheered and Robson groaned in frustration.
Even though Whittle had been seeded as a ālocal wildcardā at the Central Coast Pro Tennis Openāthe first-ever U.S. Tennis Association invitational to be held on the Central Coastāwith the hometown crowd behind her, Whittle didnāt look the underdog. She came to win.
āIt was really nice to know pretty much the whole crowd was here for me,ā the former Arroyo Grande High School star said after the match with a wry smile. āThat was kind of fun.ā
Whittleās now a junior at Gonzaga University and an all-conference tennis player. In her time at Arroyo Grande High School, she tallied a 230-9 overall record, was a four-year league champ, and a four-time MVP.

She certainly wasnāt lacking any confidence against Robson, especially having knocked off a high-ranking Canadian player, the three-seeded Francoise Abanda, in a huge upset the day before. It was her first professional victory.
Now, Whittle was neck and neck with a 23-year-old Brit whoād competed in Wimbledon, the U.S. Open, and the Australian Open, and, a few years ago, was ranked 27th in the world.
Whittle played a brilliant first set and pushed Robson to the brink, but narrowly lost it, 7-6, in a tiebreaker.
Robson, a left-hander with a rocket of a serve, not to mention a menacing physical presence, came laser-focused for the second set and wore Whittle down, winning it 6-0.
While everyone in the Templeton stands walked away incredibly impressed with Whittleās fight and effort, the loss shook her, and she couldnāt help but kick herself for mistakes in a post-match interview with the Sun.
āI wish I couldāve pulled it off tonight,ā Whittle said. āI felt a little off. I felt like I couldnāt really execute tonight. But [Robsonās] a really tough player, she could pick her targets anywhere.ā
Whittle did call the experience āan amazing opportunityā to compete at a professional level. She walked home with a $911 check, too.

āI canāt thank everyone enough for giving me the opportunity,ā she said. āIt kind of shows me where Iām at and what I need to work on.ā
In addition to the competitive benefits, the tournament was also a chance for Whittleās friends and family to see her play, since sheās usually playing her matches up in the state of Washington.
āIt was really nice. A lot of the people who were here donāt get to see me play often,ā she said.
The day after the match, Whittle bolted for Los Angeles to compete in one of the four āmajor opensā for college tennis players: the Riviera Womenās All-American Tennis Championships in Pacific Palisades on Sept. 30.
āTomorrow I fly to LA, so I got a long night ahead of me,ā she laughed.
As to whether Whittle sees herself back under the bright lights of a professional tournament in the near future?
āI would love to,ā she said.
Sports contributor Peter Johnson is a staff writer at the Sunās sister paper to the north, New Times, and can be reached at pjohnson@newtimesslo.com.
This article appears in Oct 5-12, 2017.

