Wayzata senior Aaron Beduhn cruised through his first set at No. 1 singles, then took a 5-2 lead in the second set before dropping a couple of games. He wasn’t aware of the clinching situation for his team, so he was a little worried as he glanced at other courts and scores.
Turns out, Beduhn came up with the championship-clinching point in his next game to seal the Class 2A boys tennis team championship for Wayzata on Wednesday at Baseline Tennis Center on the University of Minnesota campus.
“I hit a nice passing-shot winner, which was great,” Beduhn said. “It’s super nice because my older brother two years ago was able to get the clinching point against [Rochester] Mayo. So, it was kind of fun that I was able to get it this year, my senior year.”
Beduhn won his match 6-0, 6-4 as part of top seed Wayzata’s 6-1 victory over No. 2 seed Edina. Rochester Mayo, the Class 2A runner-up the past two years, finished fourth after Mounds View won that match 4-3. The championship for Wayzata, its seventh overall, is the first three-peat in Class 2A boys team tennis since Edina in 1987-89.
“It’s not easy to win these,” said Wayzata coach Jeff Prondzinski. “Our kids played to their potential really all year and kept getting better and better. I thought we played our best tennis today.”
Wayzata senior Raghav Amin finished his No. 4 singles match (6-0, 6-1) just ahead of Beduhn on the backcourts. Amin, a “superstar for three years for us,” Prondzinski said, is undefeated this season. More Trojans dominance? They’re undefeated at No. 1-3 doubles slots this season.
Wayzata swept the doubles matches, including a 4-6, 6-1, 10-5 comeback victory for the No. 1 doubles pair of Rishi Ranjith and Jacob Salisbury. Sophomore Nolan Beduhn, Aaron’s younger brother, and his doubles partner, eighth-grader Thomas Prondzinski, were the first match off the court and didn’t drop a game.
“I think we really just showed what we can do as a 2 doubles team,” said Nolan Beduhn. “We had a couple close ones this season, but it’s nice to end on that was that.”