But something happened that went beyond backhands or volleys at the net. Di Giulio just decided to fight. He wouldn’t give up.
In the end, Di Giulio, the No. 2 seed, won his third Southern California junior sectional title with a 3-6, 6-4, 7-5 dramatic victory over the Irvine resident, seeded No. 3, Monday at the Los Caballeros Racquet & Sports Club.
“I thought I was done,” said Di Giulio, who rallied with pinpoint ground strokes and opportune shots when he approached the net. “But then I just kept fighting and I pulled back in it somehow.
“It feels really good to win this one. It’s always good to win it like this and pull it off for the title.”
Di Giulio’s late rally wasn’t his only comeback in the match. He trailed, 4-2, in the third set. But he won three straight games to go up, 5-4, and appeared on his way to the win with a 40-15 lead. But Di Giulio missed his chance to break Dawson’s serve. Even after missing on that opportunity, Di Giulio somehow found a way to respond when trailing in the next game.
He won the game after a second deuce and allowed just one winner for Dawson in the next game to close it out.
“There were times where I thought I was out of it, like when he was up, 4-2, in the third set,” Di Giulio said. “I thought it was going to be real tough to come back. But I just kept on fighting.”
Mahmoud Karim, Di Giulio’s coach, acknowledged the champion’s fighting spirit, yet hinted that it made up for what wasn’t his best performance.
“It wasn’t like he had a totally bad day,” Karim said of Di Giulio. “He had an OK day and he managed to win.”
Early on, Di Giulio, ranked No. 5 in the nation in the boys’ 14 singles division by the United States Tennis Assn., appeared to be at his best, building a 3-1 lead. But Dawson, ranked No. 9 in the nation in the boys’ 14 division, won five straight games and showed that he was plenty capable of winning the championship.