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Shore girls' tennis player from Ukraine falls in NJSIAA final

Alina Vysochenko of Shore Regional competes in the singles tournament. NJSIAA tennis tournament takes place at Park Avenue Tennis Center in Oakhurst. 
Oakhurst, NJ
Saturday, October 14, 2023
Alina Vysochenko of Shore Regional competes in the singles tournament. NJSIAA tennis tournament takes place at Park Avenue Tennis Center in Oakhurst. Oakhurst, NJ Saturday, October 14, 2023

WEST WINDSOR TOWNSHIP - A year ago, Alina Vysochenko was a 13-year-old boarding a plane in Germany headed to the United States with her mother, Iryna, and brother Olexander, escaping their war-torn Ukrainian homeland.

On Thursday, she was a freshman playing for Shore Regional in the NJSIAA girls’ tennis singles state championship match at Mercer County Park, where she dropped a hard-fought three-set decision to Nina Abalos of Montclair Kimberley, 6-3, 2-6, 6-2.

It was the first time a Shore Regional player had reached a state final, while Abalos, a sophomore, was the top-seed and favorite heading into the final.

Alina Vysochenko's father: 'We're a tennis family'

“They came in October last year, and I joined them in November,” said Vlad Vysochenko, Alina’s father, who is a tennis instructor. “We’re a tennis family, and tennis has helped this transition.”

Shore's Alina Vyscohenko lost in the NJSIAA girls' tennis state final on Thursday.
Shore's Alina Vyscohenko lost in the NJSIAA girls' tennis state final on Thursday.

And while his daughter was overcome by emotion in the aftermath of her loss, Vysochenko tried to fill in some of the blanks, noting that their hometown is currently part of the territory occupied by the Russian Army.

“It’s good here because the family is safe and our children have opportunities to grow and develop,” he said. “We do want to go back to Ukraine once the war is over.”

For now, the family has settled in Oceanport, with Vysochenko and his wife working as instructors at the IA Tennis Academy in Little Silver, where founder Yari Vaznenko is a Ukrainian national who Vysochenko knew from tennis circles back home.

“She is a phenomenal player, and very humble,” said Shore coach Jason Vastano, who will have Vyscochenko’s brother, a junior, on his team in the spring. “She just turned 14 so she’s a young freshman, with so much potential.”

Alina Vysochenko of Shore Regional competes in the singles tournament. NJSIAA tennis tournament takes place at Park Avenue Tennis Center in Oakhurst. 
Oakhurst, NJ
Saturday, October 14, 2023
Alina Vysochenko of Shore Regional competes in the singles tournament. NJSIAA tennis tournament takes place at Park Avenue Tennis Center in Oakhurst. Oakhurst, NJ Saturday, October 14, 2023

In the state final, Vysochenko rallied after losing the first set, winning the first four games of the second set as she evened the match at a set apiece. But it was all Abalos in the final set winning the first five games en route to the championship.

“I just told myself to stay in it. we were both evenly matched skill wise and I knew it was going to be tough,” Abalos said. “But it all boiled down to who really wanted it in the end. And I guess today I just played better than her in the third set.”

And while Vysochenko fell short of gaining a state final, it appears the family will be a factor in New Jersey tennis for the next few years.

Alina Vysochenko of Shore Regional competes in the singles tournament. NJSIAA tennis tournament takes place at Park Avenue Tennis Center in Oakhurst. 
Oakhurst, NJ
Saturday, October 14, 2023
Alina Vysochenko of Shore Regional competes in the singles tournament. NJSIAA tennis tournament takes place at Park Avenue Tennis Center in Oakhurst. Oakhurst, NJ Saturday, October 14, 2023

“Alina was the leader among Ukrainian young players, and my son is the same, second or third ranked  player in Ukraine,” Vyscohenko said.

This article originally appeared on Asbury Park Press: Alina Vysochenko, Ukraine national tennis star at Shore, falls in NJSIAAs