Players, comedians serve up humor in exhibition match

  COURTNEY STEWART/Daily Bruin Just Shoot Me’s
David Spade smiles while giving teammate Pete
Sampras some words of advice.

By Jeff Agase
Daily Bruin Reporter

Andre Agassi steps to the baseline and serves to … David
Spade?

A joke, right? Well yes, sort of. Last night at the Los Angeles
Tennis Center, tennis stars Andre Agassi and Pete Sampras joined
four comedians for the Mercedes-Benz Cup’s tenth annual
“Night at the Net.”

Proceeds from the celebrity-pro 21-point match went to the
MusiCares Foundation, which works to insure support for musicians
who often receive no health or human services after their careers
end.

Spade was joined from the celebrity world by Matthew Perry, Greg
Kinnear and Kelsey Grammer. Former tennis great Pam Shriver played
the part of witty, abrasive master of ceremonies, while comedian
Fred Willard rounded out the celebrity cast as the mentally vacant
chair umpire.

The first tennis ball was not hit until over an hour past the
scheduled 7:30 p.m. starting time, but the comedy was already in
high gear. The six participants entered to The Alan Parsons
Project’s classic adrenaline gusher “Eye in the
Sky,” but any seriousness quickly disappeared when Spade ran
through the tunnel with a backwards hat and soccer shoes, while
twirling his racket with unapologetic cockiness.

The silliness further escalated when Shriver announced that team
captains Agassi and Sampras had the liberty of free substitutions
throughout the exercise in comic relief. During warmup,
Kinnear’s preppy attire proved a meaningless facade when his
lefty groundstrokes were revealed to have all the lethality of the
Swiss Air Force.

But some of the best comedy came from Agassi and Sampras, two
long-time rivals with a mutual respect but sharply contrasting
comic styles. Agassi was vocal throughout the match, lamenting
about Sampras, “I see him all the time. After 27 times, he
gets very ugly.”

Sampras’ humor was more subtle but equally crowd-pleasing.
In a rare comic performance just before serving, he asked Agassi,
“How about 128 up the middle?” after which Agassi
responded, “I’ll give you three serves. It
doesn’t matter. You still stink.”

Wisecracker Spade was the most vocal of the participants.
Clocking in at, to borrow a line from the movie “Rudy,”
“5-foot-nothing and 100-and-nothing,”

From Kinnear came a startlingly accurate Monica Seles
impersonation. After hitting a shot into the net, he bellowed a
grunt and then pleaded to the boisterous crowd, “Don’t
sound so disappointed.”

Kinnear looked to be in the best shape of the four celebrities,
with Perry and Grammer a few months in the weight room short of
playing shape. Perry was clearly all serve, rocketing a 98
mile-per-hour first then following it with a benign forehand into
the net.

Near the middle of the match, Agassi provoked Sampras when he
accused him of “serving like a girl,” to which Sampras
responded with one of his monstrous triple-digit serves.

At 15-all, the two tennis pros sat down and let the celebrities
duke it out alone. Grammer welcomed their gesture with a heads-up
reference to current pop culture by remarking, “the weakest
link is out.” Shriver dismissed Grammer’s unrealistic
claim with the line, “Now is the time to go to the
bathroom.”

At 17-15, Agassi and Sampras booted all four celebrities and
faced off for the rest of the match themselves, to the delight of
the nearly packed Straus Stadium. With the match on the line,
Agassi stepped to the baseline and broke into a dead-on Sampras
impersonation, to which Sampras responded with an equally accurate
Agassi.

A backhand winner from Sampras during sudden death ended the
match at 21-20 in favor of Team Sampras. Agassi joked in a
post-match interview, “After these kind words, I hate to say
this, but I blame my teammates.”

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