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Pugh Works Overtime to Win Two Doubles Finals

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TIMES STAFF WRITER

After winning the men’s doubles championship at the 37th annual Adoption Guild Charity Tennis Tournament on Sunday at the Newport Beach Tennis Club, Jim Pugh ate a cheeseburger, changed shirts, then teamed with Kathy May-Fritz to win a three-set marathon for the mixed doubles championship.

Pugh, once a member of the world’s top-ranked doubles team, teamed with Bruce Man Son Hing to beat Carlos Bustos and Bill Behrens, 6-4, 7-6 (7-4), in the finals of the 6.5 men’s doubles division.

Thirty minutes after picking up his first trophy, Pugh was back on the court with May-Fritz to beat John Austin and Amy Frazier, 3-6, 7-6 (12-10), 6-4.

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“I’m lucky I am playing doubles,” Pugh said after his first match. “I can’t remember the last time I played two matches in one day.”

Hing and Pugh traded service breaks with Bustos and Behrens in the first set, until Pugh hit a cross-court drop shot from the net, which broke the serve of Bustos and gave Pugh-Hing a 5-4 lead.

At 40-30, Hing drilled an ace down the middle of the court to give them the set.

“It was a close match,” Pugh said. “But we made the big points at the big times.”

In the second set, both teams held serve and went into a tiebreaker. Pugh and Hing dug themselves an early hole with unforced errors, enabling Bustos and Behrens to take a 4-1 lead.

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“We tried to stay focused and positive while we were down,” Hing said. “It was only one mini-break, so we knew it wasn’t over.”

The two rallied to 6-4, when Pugh served an ace to the wide side of Behrens to end the set and match.

Pugh was again on center court, playing with May-Fritz, who with partner Jolene Watanabe, won the women’s open doubles division by default when the team of Danielle Scott and an injured Brandice Braverman retired after losing the first set.

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Frazier was teamed with her year-round coach, Austin, who won the 35-and-over doubles championship with Chris Dunk, beating Mike Fedderly, a graduate of Corona del Mar High, and Donnie Visser, 7-6, 6-4.

Frazier and Austin came out sizzling. They broke the serve of May-Fritz to take a 3-1 lead and won the set, 6-3, on Austin’s serve to Pugh’s forehand, which he could not handle.

The second set went into a tie breaker, where Pugh and May-Fritz fought off four match points, before rallying to lead the tie-break, 11-10. May-Fritz blasted a serve which Frazier hit into the net to give Pugh and May-Fritz the set.

In the deciding set, Pugh and May-Fritz jumped out to a 5-2 lead, capitalizing on a pulled right calf muscle suffered by Frazier. Austin and Frazier attempted to rally, cutting the score to 5-4, but came up short.

“After the first set they picked up their intensity level,” Frazier said. “They had the momentum and they played good points.”

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