Philadelphia's female tandem of Lisa Raymond and Rennae Stubbs proved to be too much. Neither player dropped a set as the Freedoms (10-6) dominated the Breakers (8-9).
"Today their girls were too strong for us," Breakers Coach Dick Leach said. "It'd be like if we had [Roger] Federer and [Rafael] Nadal."
Comparing the No. 1- and No. 2-ranked men's singles players in the world to Raymond and Stubbs might seem a little outlandish. But the Freedoms duo was that potent Sunday.
Raymond is ranked No. 1 in the world in doubles and No. 73 in singles.
Stubbs is the No. 6-ranked doubles player in the world.
Together, they steamrolled the Breakers' Anastassia Rodionova (No. 41 in doubles and No. 92 in singles) and Tina Krizan, 5-1.
Philadelphia's women were just as effective when they split up. Raymond took down Rodionova in women's singles, 5-3.
Stubbs teamed with WTT men's MVP Daniel Nestor to bounce the Breakers in mixed doubles, 5-0, to close out the match with aplomb.
The Breakers trailed just 16-14 going into the last set, but the 6-foot-3 Nestor and Stubbs were on their game. The Freedoms broke Rick Leach and Krizan to take a 2-0 lead, which gave the Freedoms an 18-14 advantage.
Then Dick Leach substituted in Delgado and Rodionova in a last-ditch effort to save the match.
"Rick came over and said give them a shot," Dick Leach said.
Delgado and Rodionova didn't have any more luck than Leach and Krizan. The Breakers' duo needed to win five straight games to win the match in regulation, but couldn't so much as capture one.
A Stubbs volley helped the Freedoms break the Breakers again, then a Nestor volley in the fifth game won it.
On the ATP Tour, Nestor and Sacramento's Mark Knowles are the No. 3-ranked doubles team in the world.
"Rennae and Daniel have played a lot together," Freedoms Coach Craig Kardon said. "Daniel is so dominant with his kick serve and Rennae is dominant at the net."
Delgado got the Breakers started on the right track by defeating Jaymon Crabb, 5-3, in men's singles to open the match.