Kronemann, 38, was named men's tennis coach at his alma mater, UC Irvine, last July. Then, he was named coach of the Newport Beach Breakers of World Team Tennis in March.
For Kronemann, it's about more than returning to his roots. It's about making a difference in tennis where those roots were planted some 20 years ago, when he was a four-time All-American tennis player for the Anteaters.
And to be coach of the Breakers, a team which he has coached against for the past seven years as Springfield Lasers coach, couldn't be better.
"It's the final piece," said Kronemann, who lives in Mission Viejo with his wife, Melanie, and three children ranging from eight-months to 7 years old. "It's a true homecoming. It made my whole life come full-circle, because I played tennis in Orange County and I have connections in Orange County. It's the icing on the cake."
He grew up in Florida, but he began making his tennis mark when he came out west to UC Irvine in 1986 on a tennis scholarship. Four years later, Kronemann, who helped UCI become Big West champion all four years, was named conference Player of the Year in 1990.
The 'Eaters also made it to the No. 4 national ranking that year.
"We had some great teams," Kronemann said. "Pepperdine, USC, UCLA, UC Irvine, Long Beach State and Stanford. Those were the 'schools of tennis' then, if you will. It was a really special time of my life."
It was Kronemann, with partner Mike Briggs, who made it to the final of the NCAA Division I doubles tournament in 1989. The UCI Hall of Fame member also made a connection with former UCI Coach Greg Patton, who also coached Kronemann when he was on Newport Beach's old WTT team, the Dukes.
In 1993, Kronemann was named the Co-MVP of the league. And the '94 Dukes squad is one of the few teams in WTT history to finish 14-0 in the regular season.
Kronemann has never lost that winning spirit. It's something Newport Beach Breakers Executive Director Jeff Purser said he noticed when the Breakers were interviewing coaching candidates following the departure of Dick Leach.