2022-23 Georgia Women's Tennis Media Guide

Page 1

GEORGIA WOMEN'S TENNIS

TABLE OF CONTENTS 1

Lisa Spain Hall of Fame

Stacey Schefflin Hall of Fame

Dawgs in the Pros

Georgia Tennis

Dan Magill Tennis Complex

University of Georgia

Media Information

2022 Roster and Pronunciation

2022 Schedule Breakdown

COACHING STAFF 12

Jeff Wallace, Head Coach

Drake Bernstein, Assoc. Head Coach

Grant Esposito, Volunteer Assistant Coach

Sarah Hebberd, Program Specialist

MEET THE DAWGS 16

Meg Kowalski, Graduate

Ania Hertel, Senior

Lea Ma, Senior

Guillermina Grant, Sophomore

Mai Nirundorn, Sophomore

Mell Reasco, Sophomore

Dasha Vidmanova, Sophomore

Haley Gaudette, Freshman

Anastasiia Lopata, Freshman

Alexandra Vecic, Freshman

PREVIOUS SEASON STATS 34

FALL SEASON STATS 35

HONORS AND AWARDS 36

All-SEC

Honors & Awards

All-Americans

HISTORY & RECORDS 41 Records

Six National Championships

11 Singles/Doubles Champions

19 SEC Championships

NCAA Tournament Results

NCAA Singles Results

NCAA Doubles Results Series Records

Year-by-Year Results

Letterwinners

QUICK FACTS

Location Athens, Ga.

Founded 1785

University President Jere W. Morehead Faculty Athletic Rep. Prof. David Shipley

J. Reid Parker Director of Athletics Josh Brooks

Enrollment 40,118

Nickname Bulldogs

Mascot UGA X "Que"

Colors Red and Black Website georgiadogs.com

Tennis Facility Dan Magill Tennis Complex

............................Henry Feild Stadium (4,500 cap.)

...........Lindsey Hopkins Indoor Facility (1,000 cap.)

Conference Southeastern Conference Program History.........................................49 years

All-time W/L Record 972-269

All-time SEC W/L Record 369-80

2022 ROSTER INFO

Starters returning/lost (5/1)

Letterwinner returning/lost (7/2) Newcomers (3)

SPORTS COMMUNICATIONS CONTACTS

Claude Felton, Senior Associate AD

Christopher Lakos, Assistant AD Jake Golob, Graduate Assistant

SPORTS COMMUNICATIONS ADDRESS

Butts-Mehre Heritage Hall

1 Selig Circle Athens, Ga. 30602

CREDITS

Written and Edited by: Jake Golob, Julia Maenius Lilly Parmer.

Graphic Design by: Jake Golob and Griffin Dejoy.

Photography: Julian Alexander, David Barnes, David Bohrer, Kristie M. Bradshaw, Jack Casey, Ashley Connell, John Curry, Brett Davis, Rob Davis, Donavan Eason, Dan Evans, Phillip Faulkner, Joel Gibson, Steve Guyer, Rebecca Hay, Bill Kallenberg, Dave Marck, Perry McIntyre, Mackenzie Miles,Parker Moore, Radi Nabulsi, Lesley Onstott, Chamberlain Smith, Evan Stichler, Ashley Strickland, Brian Tirpak, Scott Trubey, Julianne Upchurch, Tony Walsh, Kevin Works, Kelly Wegel, Dylan Wilson, Cody Schmelter, Evan Stichler, John Kelley and the Georgia Center for Continuing Education.

UNIVERSITY ENDOWMENTS
ADMINISTRATION & STAFF
INFORMATION
59
60 OPPONENT
62

The Georgia tennis program began from humble origins in 966 as a club sport under Jo Ann Kemp. It was established under the auspices of the AIAW in the 1973-74 season and later the NCAA in 1982-83. Through the 2022 season, the Bulldogs have amassed an all-time record of 969-294 for a .767 winning percentage.

The first head coach for the program was Jane Kuykendoll, and she directed the team for four seasons (55-16). Greg McGarity took over in 1978, and the team won the GAIAW State Tournament earning the program's first post-season berth, qualifying for the AIAW Regionals.

McGarity led the program until 1981, posting a 51-44 career mark. (Note. On Aug. 13, 2010, McGarity was named Georgia's athletic director). Lee Meyers served as the third coach (1982-83). In 1982, Georgia made the AIAW Nationals. After Meyers, Cissie Donigan was Georgia's fourth coach, going 34-29 in two seasons. It was during this time that Georgia had its first All-American, Lisa Spain. She won the 1984 NCAA singles title and also was the HONDA/Broderick Award winner for tennis.

Current coach Jeff Wallace became the fifth coach in school history in 1986. Now heading towards his 37th season as head coach, Wallace is the winningest active women's tennis coach and has amassed a 788-192 record for an .804 winning percentage. In 2020, he became one of just two women's tennis coaches to reach 750 wins. The program has become one of the nation's best with two NCAA team titles, four ITA Indoor Team Championship and 19 SEC Championships.

THE MECCA OF COLLEGE TENNIS

The newly rennovated Dan Magill Tennis Complex was unveiled in February 2020. The $8.5 million renovationproject marked the largest makeover for the complex since 2002. It features a new grandstand to Henry Feild Stadium with chair-back seating in the lower levels, permanent concession stands, restrooms and a new 1,750-square foot handicap accessible press box. New umpire headquarters, as well as additional seating along the grass, can also be seen at the complex.

The Dan Magill Tennis Complex has long stood as a beacon of excellence in collegiate tennis. With a total of 16 courts (12 outdoor and four indoor) and a total seating capacity of more than 5,000 fans, it is one of the largest on-campus tennis facilities in the country. In 2006, the NCAA opted to have one combined site for the men’s and women’s tennis championships. Georgia has served as a host for the combined NCAA Tennis Championships in 2007, 2010, 2012, 2014, and 2015, and 2017.

Regarded as one of the best collegiate tennis facilites in America, the complex hosted the men’s NCAA Championships a total of 24 times, the women’s Championships three times and both genders five times, most recently in 2017. It played host to 13 NCAA Championship in a row from 1977-89. The complex underwent a $7.5 million development and renovation project in 2002 that included the construction of brand-new clubhouses for the men’s and women’s programs. In 1991, the complex received lights thanks to the generous support of Oscar-winning actress and Athens native, Kim Basinger.

Five of Georgia’s six National Championships in men’s tennis and one of the two women’s NCAA titles were won on their home courts at the Dan Magill Tennis Complex. Aside from Georgia’s best players, the Magill Tennis Complex has hosted classic matchups featuring such stars as John McEnroe and the Bryan brothers. Former Bulldog All-American John Isner is having a successful professional career ranked in the top 20 in the world. Former Bulldog Chelsey Gullickson captured the 2010 NCAA singles title at the Magill Tennis Complex and went on to play in the US Open in singles and doubles. Recent Bulldog Ellen Perez has competed at the 2016 US Open as well as the last three Australian Opens (2017-19).

THE CITY OF ATHENS

Universally known as one of the nation’s premier college towns, Athens is the perfect marriage of campus and community. Broad Street is all that separates the University of Georgia’s historic North Campus and a vibrant and shopping. Athens has carved its own identity with the individualistic pursuits of a music scene that has turned local artists into worldwide superstars. Athens’ ever-thriving music scene fostered world-wide megabands such as R.E.M. and the B-52s. Historic venues such as the Georgia Theatre and the 40-Watt Club make Athens a must-stop for a wide variety of emerging and established stars from Taylor Swift to Snoop Dogg.

THE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA

“Something for everyone.” That’s one way to describe the academic, athletic, and social is a leader among public universities nationally with a breadth and diversity of degree programs that rival any institution of higher learning. Various degree programs such as education, business, international affairs, journalism, math and public administration rank among the best in the nation. With its top-notch facilities campus-wide, the University of Georgia is an ideal setting for anyone to pursue a world-class education. The University of Georgia is the birthplace of public higher education in the USA. On January 27, 1785--just two years after the Revolutionary War and still four years before George Washington’s inauguration lature adopted the charter that created the University of Georgia, making UGA the oldest chartered state university in the nation. More than 225 years later, Georgia still offers something for everyone.

ALPHABETICAL ROSTER

Name Ht. Yr. Hometown (Academy / Last School)

Haley Gaudette 5-8 Fr. Milton, Ga. (Johns Creek HS)

Guillermina Grant 5-7 So Montevideo, Uruguay (Carrasco Lawn Tennis Club)

Ania Hertel 5-10 Sr. Warsaw, Poland (Legia Warsaw Club)

Meg Kowalski 5-4 Gr. Chicago, Ill. (Laurel Springs)

Anastasiia Lopata 5-7 Fr. Kiev, Ukraine (Kiev Gymnasium of Oriental Languages Number 1)

Lea Ma 5-9 Sr. Dix Hills, N.Y. (IMG Academy)

Mai Nirundorn 5-7 So. Bangkok, Thailand (Hilton Head Island)

Mell Reasco 5-6 So. Quito, Ecuador (New Ecuador)

Alexandra Vecic 5-9 Fr. Singen, Germany

Dasha Vidmanova 6-3 So. Prague, Czech Republic (1st CLTK Prague)

Head Coach Jeff Wallace, 38th season (Georgia ‘85)

Associate Head Coach Drake Bernstein, 11th season (Geoorgia ‘11)

Volunteer Coach Grant Esposito, 1st season (Indiana Wesleyan '20)

Program Specialist Sarah Hebberd, 2nd season (Pfeiffer ‘11)

Coach Wallace, the assistant coaches and the student-athletes appreciate your interest in the Georgia women’s tennis program and look forward to providing assistance to the media in all ways possible. Media in need of assistance beyond this guide should contact:

Jake Golob

Office: (706) 542-1621

Mailing Address: P.O. Box 1472

Cell: (706) 621-0047 Athens, GA 30603-1472

Email: jake.golob@uga.edu

Coach and Player Interviews

Throughout the season, all practices are closed to the media unless otherwise specified. Interviews will generally be conducted in-person before practice. However, other arrangements can be made by contacting UGA Sports Communications.

Media desiring to conduct interviews over the phone should make arrangements through the Sports Communications office, as well. These will be coordinated according to Coach Wallace’s and the players’ availability, usually prior to, or immediately after practice sessions.

Post-Match Interviews

Media in the press box area will be surveyed at the conclusion of the match to determine which players are needed for interviews.

All interviews will be conducted on the courts and will be arranged by UGA Sports Communications.

HOW TO SAY IT

Haley Goudette Hey-lee GAH-det

Guillermina Grant Gee-sher-mee-nuh

Ania Hertel On-yuh

Anastasiia Lopata Anna-stah-see-uh Low-pot-uh

Lea Ma LEE-uh

Mai Nirundorn My NUUR-un-dorn

Alexandra Vecic Alex-on-druh Vetch-itch

Dasha Vidmanova DAH-sha Vid-MAN-ova

Drake Bernstein Burn-Steen

Grant Esposito ES-po-see-toe

BY COUNTRY

United States of America

Haley Gaudette, Meg Kowalski and Lea Ma

Czech Republic

Dasha Vidmanova

Ecuador

Mell Reasco

Germany

Alexandra Vecic

Poland

Ania Hertel

Thailand

Mai Nirundorn

Ukraine

Anastasiia Lopata

Uruguay

Guillermina Grant

GEORGIA 8 WOMEN'S TENNIS MEDIA GUIDE
INFO
MEDIA
ROSTER BREAKDOWN Total Squad Members 10 By Class Graduate 1 Seniors 2 Juniors 0 Sophomores 4 Freshmen 3 By Dexterity Right-Handed 9 Left-Handed 1 BULLDOGS
2022-23 GEORGIA WOMEN'S TENNIS

SEC PRESEASON COACHES

FALL SCHEDULE

SPRING SCHEDULE

9 BULLDOGS GEORGIADOGS.COM
Date Event Location Time Sept. 22-25 Battle in the Bay Classic San Francisco, Calif. All Day Sept. 26 - Oct. 2 ITF Hilton Head 15K Hilton Head Island, S.C. All Day Sept. 30 - Oct. 2 Sea Pines College Tournament Hilton Head Island, S.C. All Day Oct. 10-17 ITF Florence 25K Florence, S.C. All Day Oct. 13-18 ITA Southeast Regional Atlanta, Ga. All Day Oct. 17-24 ITF Macon 80K Macon, Ga. All Day Oct. 17-24 ITF Ft. Worth 25K Fort Worth, Texas All Day Oct. 28-30 Jacksonville Classic Jacksonville, Fla. All Day Nov. 2-6 ITA National Fall Championship San Diego, Calif. All Day Nov. 4-6 NC State Invitational Raleigh, N.C. All Day Date Event Location Time Jan. 13-15 Duel in the Desert Palm Springs, Calif. All Day Jan. 27 1 Stetson Athens, Ga. 2:30 p.m. Jan. 28 1 Notre Dame or USC Athens, Ga. 11 a.m. or 2:30 p.m. Feb. 1 North Carolina Chapel Hill, N.C. 5 p.m. Feb. 4 Ohio State Columbus, Ohio TBD Feb. 10-13 2 ITA Indoors Seattle, Wash. TBD Feb. 19 Georgia Tech Athens, Ga. 1 p.m. Mar. 3 Arkansas * Athens, Ga. 5 p.m. Mar. 5 Missouri * Athens, Ga. 11 a.m. Mar. 5 Mercer Athens, Ga. 4 p.m. Mar. 10 Kentucky * Lexington, Ky, 12 p.m. Mar. 12 Vanderbilt * Nashville, Tenn. 1 p.m. Mar. 17 Alabama * Athens, Ga. 5 p.m. Mar. 19 Auburn * Athens, Ga, 1 p.m. Mar. 24 Tennessee * Athens, Ga. 5 p.m. Mar. 31 LSU * Baton Rouge, La. 12 p.m. Apr. 2 Texas A&M * Bryan-College Station, Texas 12 p.m. Apr. 7 South Carolina * Athens, Ga. 5 p.m. Apr. 9 Florida * Athens, Ga. 1 p.m. Apr. 14 Mississippi State * Starkville, Miss. 4 p.m. Apr. 16 Ole Miss * Oxford, Miss. 12 p.m. Apr. 19-23 3 SEC Tournament Fayetteville, Ark. May 5-7 4 NCAA First & Second Round Campus Site TBD May 12-14 5 NCAA Round of 16 Campus Site TBD May 17-27 6 NCAA Championships Lake Nona, Fla.
3-
4-
5-
6-
1- ITA Kick-off Weekend in Athens, Ga. (Played Outdoors)
2-
ITA National Team Indoors in Seattle, Wash. SEC Tournament in Fayetteville, Ark.
NCAA First & Second Round at Campus Site TBD
NCAA Round of 16 at Campus Site TBD
NCAA
Championships in Lake Nona, Fla.
1. Texas A&M 2. Georgia 3. Vanderbilt 4. Auburn 5. Florida 6. Tennessee 7. South Carolina 8. LSU 9. Arkansas 10. Ole Miss 11. Alabama 12. Mississippi State 13. Kentucky 14. Missouri

2021-22 SEASON RECAP

ATHENS, Ga. – For the 34th time in 37 seasons, the University of Georgia women’s tennis team concluded the season in the round of 16 or better at the NCAA Tournament.

In 2022, Georgia finished 19-7 with a 10-3 Southeastern Conference record and reached the NCAA Tournament for the 35th consecutive year. The Bulldogs captured 15 ranked wins, including a 7-0 sweep over No. 4 Ohio State. The final 2021-22 ITA team, singles and doubles rankings sponsored by Tennis-Point will be released Wednesday, June 1.

Georgia had five players earn All-SEC honors, two named to the SEC All-Tournament team and one All-American. Freshman Mell Reasco finished the season with a team-best 27-9 record and a team-high eleven wins versus ranked opponents. Reasco, a native of Quito, Ecuador, was tabbed a top-16 seed in the NCAA Singles Tournament, earning All-America honors. She was named to All-SEC First Team and All-Freshman Team, as well as the SEC All-Tournament team. Junior Lea Ma joined Reasco as the other Bulldog to earn All-SEC First Team honors.

Graduates Morgan Coppoc and Meg Kowalski and freshman Dasha Vidmanova earned AllSEC Second Team honors, while Vidmanova was also named to the All-Freshman team. Since arriving on campus in January, Vidmanova amassed a 16-7 record, including eight wins versus ranked opponents.

Junior Ania Hertel recorded a team second-best 23-5 mark, with a 16-3 dual season record. Hertel, a native of Warsaw, Poland, finished the 2022 campaign on a five-match win streak and was named to the SEC All-Tournament team.

SERIES RECORD vs 2023 OPPONENTS

In doubles play, Coppoc and Hertel asserted themself as the Bulldogs' top tandem in doubles play. The duo had a 13-10 record, including five wins against ranked opponents, and earned a berth in the NCAA Doubles Tournament. Despite playing their way into the singles and doubles championships, both Reasco and the team of Coppoc and Hertel have withdrew due to personal reasons.

Wallace, who recently completed his 37th season, has amassed a 792-194 record for a .803 winning percentage. As the nation’s winningest active women’s tennis coach, Wallace has built the Georgia Bulldogs into one of the most elite programs in women’s collegiate tennis.

GEORGIA 10 WOMEN'S TENNIS MEDIA GUIDE Alabama UGA, 45-4 Arkansas..................................................UGA, 33-3 Auburn UGA, 57-8 Florida........................................................UF, 49-20 Georgia Tech UGA, 28-6 Kentucky UGA, 40-10 LSU UGA, 47-4 Mercer UGA, 7-0 Mississippi State UGA, 46-0 Missouri UGA, 10-0 North Carolina UNC, 9-4 Notre Dame UGA, 8-0 Ohio State UGA, 3-0 Ole Miss UGA, 43-10 South Carolina.......................................UGA, 51-17 Stetson N/A Tennessee UGA, 52-9 Texas A&M UGA, 16-3 USC............................................................UGA, 9-1 Vanderbilt UGA, 37-13

MEET THE DAWGS

WALLACE JEFF

HEAD COACH | 38TH SEASON

EDUCATION

Georgia, 1985

FAMILY

Wife: Sabina

Children: Brittany and Jarryd

PLAYING CAREER

• 2x WAC Singles Champion at No. 3 & No. 5 (1980, 1981)

• WAC Doubles Champion at No. 3 (1981)

• SEC Singles Champions at No. 6 (1984)

• Two-time letterman at Utah (1980-81)

• Two-time letterman at Georgia (1983-84)

• Amassed a 46-22 record at UGA

COACHING ACCOLADES

• Winningest active coach in collegiate women’s tennis.

• Six National Championships

• 12 NCAA Final Fours

• 35-Consecutive NCAA Tournament Appearances

• 19 SEC Conference Championships

• 14-Time Coach of the Year

• Two Honda Award Winners

• Two College Tennis Players of the Year

• 41 All-Americans with 117 honors

• 33 ITA-Scholar Athletes

• 55 Bulldogs selected to SEC Honor Roll 121 times

As the nation’s winningest active women’s tennis coach, Jeff Wallace has built the Georgia Bulldogs into one of the most elite programs in all of women’s collegiate tennis. Following a success playing career that saw him earning a SEC singles title in 1985 under Coach Dan Magill, the Portland native jumped right into coaching the following season. His first season saw immediate success as he took a team with a losing record to a 20-9 record and earning a spot in the final Volvo Tennis/ITCA Top 25 poll. It would only be another year before Wallace found himself in his first National Championship match where ultimately, the team fell just short, but it would not be long before the Bulldogs began to see the consistent success it has shown during the Wallace Era. Through 2022, Wallace has tallied 792 career victories, which ranks second in women’s tennis history for Division I women’s tennis coaches.

In 2022, Georgia finished 19-7 with a 10-3 Southeastern Conference record and reached the NCAA Tournament for the 35th consecutive year. The Bulldogs captured 15 ranked wins, including a 7-0 sweep over No. 4 Ohio State.

The 2021 season marked his 36th year with the Bulldogs, and he guided the team to their 31st overall top 10 finish including the 17th time they concluded the year with a top five national ranking. The 2021 team posted a 23-2 record, going a perfect 13-0 to win the Southeastern Conference regular season title and then claimed the SEC Tournament crown by registering three shutouts. The Bulldogs advanced to the quarterfinals of the NCAA Championships. A trio of players earned a total of four All-America honors including senior Katarina Jokic who was a finalist for the Honda Award. Additionally, the team finished with the highest Grade Point Average of any Georgia women’s sport for the spring semester of 2021 with a 3.57 mark.

In 2020, before the cancelation of the spring season due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Georgia was on their way to another successful season being ranked in the top-10, reaching as high as No. 2 in the ITA Rankings. Georgia qualified for the ITA National Indoor Tournament once again in Chicago, Ill. and began conference play undefeated. Most notably, Wallace reached a new milestone with the last match played before the cancelation being his 750th win.

The 2019 season saw a Bulldog team that enjoyed tremendous success. Georgia captured its sixth indoors National Championship defeating defending champions North Carolina and earned a SEC Regular Season Championship, but fell just

short of the NCAA Championship in May, falling to Stanford and finished the season with a No. 2 overall ranking. 2019 also saw another Bulldog be crowned as National Player of the Year.

The 2018 season marked another successful year for the Bulldogs highlighted by an elite eight appearance in the program’s 32nd-consective NCAA appearance and a No. 7 ITA final ranking with an 18-7 record. The year came with its fair share of milestones. On February 9, Wallace reached the 700-win plateau with a 4-2 win over Texas in the ITA National Team Indoor Championships. Later in the season, Wallace tied his mentor and former coach, Magill, in career wins (706) and entered 2019 with 714 victories. Additionally, another Bulldog became a first-time All-American capping a SEC Freshman of the Year campaign.

In 2016 and 2017, Georgia finished with a No. 7 and No. 6 ITA final ranking, respectively, while six Bulldogs earned All-America honors.

Wallace led a youthful Georgia squad in 2015 to a 24-7 record and the program’s 11th trip to the NCAA Final Four. The Bulldogs sported a roster with five freshmen and only three upperclassmen, but Georgia put up an impressive record, reaching the SEC Tournament Championship and making its deepest run in the NCAA Tournament since 2009.

In 2014, Wallace garnered ITA Regional Coach of the Year honors after the Bulldogs enjoyed another banner season, going 24-5 with a final ranking of No. 4. Georgia captured the SEC Tournament title, the NCAA Tournament’s No. 1 overall seed for the first time in school history, advanced to the NCAA Quarterfinals plus saw the top duo of Lauren Herring and Maho Kowase reach the NCAA Doubles Finals

Wallace became one of three coaches in women’s tennis history to reach the 600-win plateau in 2013. He is one of five active collegiate tennis coaches with at least 600 wins, and is one of five UGA coaches to reach the mark. In 2009 following another memorable campaign when Georgia advanced to its 10th NCAA Final Four, Wallace became the first person to ever be named the Intercollegiate Tennis Association National Coach of the Year four times. The 2010 season featured Chelsey Gullickson winning the NCAA singles title at the Dan Magill Tennis Complex. Wallace’s teams are the picture of consistency. Only once during his time as coach of the Bulldogs has the team missed the NCAA Tournament, and that was his first year in 1986.

NCAA CHAMPIONS

The 1994 season ranks as one of the most dominant ever in women’s tennis history. The 1994 season

GEORGIA 12 WOMEN'S TENNIS MEDIA GUIDE

saw one of the best records in Bulldog history with a 27-2 overall record including a perfect 14-0 SEC mark. Wallace was named coach of the year and Georgia was crowned champion in every major team tournament possible. They were USTA/ITA National Team Indoor Champions, SEC regular season and tournament champions and capped it off with their first NCAA National Championship in front their home crowd in Athens, Ga.

The 2000 Bulldogs saw equal success going 272, and winning the Southeastern Conference title. The NCAA National Championship was played on the campus of Pepperdine where Georgia defeated the defending National Champion Stanford Cardinal 5-4, snapping a 48-match winning streak of theirs and earning Wallace his fourth National Championship, second NCAA Title. Wallace was later named the Wilson/ITA National Coach of the Year.

USTA/ITA NATIONAL TEAM INDOORS

Under Wallace, the Bulldogs have been among the most successful teams at the USTA/ITA National Team Indoor Championships. The annual event attracts the nation’s finest programs where the Bulldogs have found consistent play. Georgia has won the Indoor National Title four times with the latest coming in 2019. There, Georgia would go on to capture its sixth National Championship and its fourth indoor defeating defending National Champions North Carolina 4-3.

DEVELOPING TALENT

In his 37 seasons at the helm of the program, Wallace has had a proven track record of taking even the most talented recruits to new heights. On the courts, his players have earned nine National Individual Championships, five in singles and four doubles. He has also coached two Honda Award

Winners, two National Players of the Year, three National Seniors of the Year. Bringing in talent and getting them to reach their potential is something Wallace has been known for as well as shown by the eight Regional Rookies of the Year and in 2020 he saw his fifth straight earn that distinction.

Success off the courts is something Wallace takes great pride in as well. He has seen 55 Bulldogs selected to the SEC Honor Roll 121 times, 15 SEC First Year Academic Honor Roll recipients and 33 ITA-Scholar Athletes. Many of Wallace’s teams have been named ITA All-Academic Teams as well.

PLAYING DAYS

As a freshman, Wallace won the Western Athletic Conference No. 5 singles, was a runner-up at No. 3 doubles and helped lead the Utes to the 1980 NCAA Tournament. The following year, he won the WAC No. 3 singles and No. 3 doubles helping lead Utah to back-to-back NCAA Tournament appearances.

The standout sophomore transferred to Georgia and was held out of the 1981-82 season. As a Junior, Wallace recorded a 17-9 mark at the No. 6 spot. His senior season, Wallace went 29-13, winning the SEC Championship at the No. 6 spot and helped lead the Bulldogs to the semifinals of the NCAA Tournament.

A two-time letterman for the Georgia Bulldogs, Wallace was described as a real fighter on the court, amassing a 46-22 career record at UGA.

PERSONAL

A native of Portland, Oregon, Wallace graduated in 1985 with a Bachelors in Recreation. He is married to the former Sabina Marie Horne. They have two children, Brittany and Jarryd.

JEFF WALLACE COACHING RECORD

13 BULLDOGS GEORGIADOGS.COM
YEAR W L PCT RANKING NCAA FINISH 1986 20 9 .690 No. 22 –1987 26 5 .840 No. 6 National Finalist 1988 22 7 .759 No. 7 Quarterfinalist 1989 24 4 .857 No. 4 Semifinalist 1990 23 4 .852 No. 6 Quarterfinalist 1991 25 5 .833 No. 4 Semifinalist 1992 22 6 .786 No. 5 Quarterfinalist 1993 20 6 .769 No. 6 Quarterfinalist 1994 27 2 .931 NO. 1 CHAMPIONS 1995 23 4 .852 No. 3 Semifinalist 1996 13 14 .481 No. 14 Round of 32 1997 18 5 .783 No. 6 Round of 16 1998 21 5 .791 No. 4 Semifinalist 1999 24 4 .857 No. 5 Quarterfinalist 2000 27 2 .931 NO. 1 CHAMPIONS 2001 23 5 .821 No. 5 Semifinalist 2002 26 2 .929 No. 3 Semifinalist 2003 19 5 .792 No. 7 Quarterfinalist 2004 20 5 .800 No. 7 Quarterfinalist 2005 18 8 .692 No. 9 Quarterfinalist 2006 13 10 .565 No. 25 Round of 32 2007 24 2 .923 No. 4 Quarterfinals 2008 22 5 .815 No. 8 Round of 16 2009 27 3 .900 No. 3 Semifinalist 2010 13 9 .591 No.18 Round of 32 2011 19 5 .792 No. 8 Quarterfinalist 2012 24 5 .852 No. 6 Quarterfinalist 2013 24 4 .857 No. 5 Quarterfinalist 2014 24 5 .852 No. 4 Quarterfinalist 2015 24 7 .774 No. 5 Semifinalist 2016 22 5 .815 No. 7 Round of 16 2017 19 6 .760 No. 6 Round of 16 2018 18 7 .600 No. 7 Quarterfinalist 2019 28 2 .933 No. 2 National Finalists 2020* 8 2 .800 N/A Canceled 2021 23 3 .920 No. 3 Quartefinalist 2022 19 7 .730 No. 12 Round of 16 TOTAL 792 194 .803
Wallace celebrating after winning the 2021 SEC Tournament Championship in Tuscaloosa, Ala.
^ ^
Left to right: Brittany, her husband Chris and daughters Collins and Hazel, Jeff and his wife Sabina, Jarryd and his wife Lea and son Levi.

BERNSTEIN DRAKE

ASSOCIATE HEAD COACH | 11TH SEASON

EDUCATION

Georgia, 2011

FAMILY

Wife: Cassidy

Children: Brody and Cashton

PLAYING CAREER

• Ranks 16th all-time in Georgia tennis history with 196 combined career wins (112 Singles & 84 Doubles)

• Dick Copas Leadership Award Winner

• All-SEC Second Team

• Team Captain

COACHING ACCOLADES

• ITA Regional Coach of the Year (2014, 2015, 2018, 2021)

• ITA National Team Indoor Champions (2019)

• SEC Regualar Season Champions (2013, 2019, 2021)

• SEC Tournament Titles (2014, 2021)

The 2022-23 campaign marks the 12th season as a coach for Drake Bernstein including his 11th with the highly successful Georgia women’s tennis program. In this span, the Bulldogs have seen continued success, ranking in the top 10 nationally each year including in the top five at season’s end a total of five times. Also, the Bulldogs have captured a USTA/ITA National Team Indoor Championship (2019), three SEC Championships (2013, 2019, 2021) and two SEC Tournament titles (2014, 2021) . Bernstein has been integral in the development of numerous All-Americans, a National Player of the Year, and countless All-SEC Honorees.

Bernstein joined the Bulldog staff in 2012 and was promoted to Associate Head Coach in 2015. He has been named an ITA Regional Assistant Coach of the Year four times (2014, 2015, 2018, 2021).

In 2022, Georgia finished 19-7 with a 10-3 Southeastern Conference record and reached the NCAA Tournament for the 35th consecutive year. The Bulldogs captured 15 ranked wins, including a 7-0 sweep over No. 4 Ohio State.

In 2021, Georgia tallied a 23-2 final record and No. 4 final ITA ranking. The Bulldogs advanced to the quarterfinals of the NCAA Championships after dominating Southeastern Conference competition. Georgia went 13-0 in league play to claim the regular season crown and then swept three more matches, all shutouts, to win the SEC Tournament title. A trio of players earned a total of four All-America honors including senior Katarina Jokic who was a finalist for the Honda Award. Additionally, the team finished with the highest Grade Point Average of any Georgia women’s sport for the spring semester of 2021 with a 3.57 mark.

In 2020, before the cancelation of the spring season due to the COVID-19 Pandemic, Georgia was on their way to another successful season being ranked in the top-10, reaching as high as No. 2 in the ITA Rankings. Georgia qualified for the ITA National Indoor Tournament once again in Chicago, Ill. and began conference play undefeated.

The 2019 season saw a Bulldog team that enjoyed tremendous success. Georgia captured its sixth indoor National Championship defeating defending champions North Carolina and later earned a SEC Regular Season Championship. The team fell just short of the NCAA Championship in May as Stanford edged Georgia in the national title match as the Bulldogs finished the season with a No. 2 overall ranking.

When not on the court, Bernstein takes point on recruiting for the Bulldogs. He has traveled across across globe for individual recruits and attended various Grand Slam tournaments.

A native of Winder, Ga., Bernstein returned to Georgia prior to the 2012-13 campaign after spending one season as an assistant coach for the University of Alabama women’s tennis team. The Crimson Tide finished the season No. 11 -- their

highest final ranking in program history. Alabama posted an 18-5 record, claimed the SEC Western Division with a 10-1 league mark and played host to an NCAA Regional for the first time in school history.

Bernstein graduated from the University of Georgia in May 2011 with a degree in sport management. He compiled a career record of 112-44 in singles and 84-56 in doubles and is one of only 14 players in Bulldog history to win over 100 career singles matches. As a senior, he earned All-SEC Second Team honors and was the recipient of the Dick Copas Leadership Award while serving as a team captain. Following graduation, Bernstein spent time playing professional tennis. He reached the doubles quarterfinals of the BB&T Atlanta Open ATP 250 event including a win over the top seed and No. 12 ranked duo in the world in Rajeev Ram and Scott Lipsky.

The Georgia men’s tennis team reached the NCAA semifinals in three of Bernstein’s four seasons in Athens including the national championship run in 2008, his freshman year. Bernstein enjoyed a stellar prep career at Winder-Barrow High School, registering an 82-1 record that included 79 consecutive victories. He was named the 2007 Athens Banner-Herald Boys Tennis Player of the Year and was a three-time Athens BannerHerald All-Northeast Georgia selection. He helped Winder-Barrow to its first state tournament appearance in 2006 and again in 2007.

Bernstein is married to the former Cassidy McComb of Henderson, Nev. She was a four-time All-American and member of Georgia’s 2008 and 2009 national championship gymnastics teams. A 2011 UGA graduate, McComb was named the 2008 SEC Freshman of the Year and the 2011 SEC All-Around champion. They have two children, Brody and Cashton.

GEORGIA 14 WOMEN'S TENNIS MEDIA GUIDE
@DRAKEAB1 @DRAKEAB1

ESPOSITO GRANT

Grant Esposito joined the Bulldog staff as a volunteer assistant coach for the 2022-23 season.

Esposito joins the Bulldogs after a one year stint as a volunteer assistant coach for the Mississippi State Bulldogs. During his one season as an assistant, Esposito helped coach the Bulldogs to a 14-13 overall record, including a NCAA Tournament appearance.

Prior to Mississippi State, Esposito served as an assistant coach at his alma mater, Indiana Wesleyan. During his lone season as an assistant, Esposito helped coach the Wildcats to a 31-4 overall record and an undefeated record in the Crossroads League action. In addition to claiming the 2021 Crossroads League regular season and tournament championships, Esposito helped guide Indiana Wesleyan to a quarterfinal appearance in the NAIA National Championships and a No. 8 national ranking.

Along with his collegiate coaching credentials, the Fountain, City, Indiana native also has extensive experience as a tennis instructor for all ages. While working as an assistant coach at Indiana Wesleyan, Esposito also served as the tennis program manager at the YMCA of Muncie where he designed and implemented the facilities’ tennis curriculum. He taught lessons and clinics to both juniors and adults as well as organizing and overseeing tournaments at the YMCA.

Esposito was also the co-owner of his own tennis academy in Central Indiana for three years alongside his father, Mike, who was also his high school head coach. Esposito gained experience as a teaching pro at the West Indy Raquet Club

Sarah Hebberd is in her second season with the Bulldogs’ women’s tennis staff as the Program Specialist. Her day-to-day duties consist of scheduling travel arrangements, meals, and equipment, as well as helping the team from a developmental and mentoring perspective.

She returns to the Classic City after a threeyear stint with the NCAA, where she served as Assistant Director of Academic and Membership Affairs. Most recently, she worked both nationally and on-campus as a Division I Student-Athlete Advisory Committee liaison. Prior to her time with the NCAA, Hebberd functioned as the Director of Compliance for three years for the University of Georgia Athletic Association.

Hebberd graduated from Pfeiffer University with a B.S. in Sports Management and Business Administration in May of 2011. At Pfeiffer, Hebberd was a two-time Academic All-American and captain of the women’s lacrosse team. Her senior year, she was named the Conference Carolinas Scholar-Athlete of the Year. Upon graduation, she remained in Charlotte, North Carolina, where she

in Indianapolis and served three summers as a camp instructor at his high school alma mater and worked as an instructor at the 2019 Arthur Ashe Kid’s Day in Flushing Meadows, New York.

During his collegiate playing career, Esposito was a three-time Crossroads League All-Conference selection while at Indiana Wesleyan. He was half of a doubles tandem that was ranked ninth nationally by the International Tennis Association (ITA) and was an honorable mention to be an NAIA All-American in 2019. Esposito was twice chosen as the Crossroads League Athlete of the Week in Sept. 2018 and won the NAIA ITA Midwest Regional Championship as a doubles competitor that same year. He was also selected as the 2019 recipient of the ITA Regional and National Arthur Ashe Leadership and Sportsmanship Award.

Esposito also played collegiately at Wright State (2015-16), Olivet Nazarene (2016-17) and IUPUI (2017-18). He excelled in the classroom as well, graduating magna cum laude with a degree in sports management and earned a spot on the Dean’s List each semester of his college career. He was recognized by the ITA as a scholar athlete in the 2017-18 and 2019-2020 academic years.

During his career at Northeastern High School, Esposito amassed a 40-0 record in individual conference matches and was a four-time TriEastern Conference individual champion. He went 96-14 during his prep career and set the school record for victories and was a three-time All-State selection. Esposito was also a standout basketball player at the high school level and won sectional titles as both a junior and senior. He also spent the 2018-19 season as the head boys basketball coach at RJ Baskett Middle School in Gas City, Indiana.

completed a Compliance Internship before being promoted to Assistant Director of Compliance at UNC Charlotte. She served Charlotte Athletics for four years.

15 BULLDOGS GEORGIADOGS.COM
VOLUNTEER
| 1ST SEASON
@GRANTESPOSITO @GJESPOSITO1 PROGRAM SPECIALIST | 2nd SEASON HEBBERD SARAH
ASSISTANT COACH

KOWALSKI MEG

CLASS Graduate

HEIGHT 5-4

HOMETOWN Chicago, Illinois

MAJOR M.S. Sport Management

CAREER BESTS

ITA Singles Ranking No. 12 (2021)

(Morgan Coppoc, 2020)

SENIOR (2021-22)

Concluded the season with a 21-9 overall record and went 19-13 in doubles overall… Provided depth to the team, playing No. 3 to No. 6 throughout the season… Named Second Team All-SEC… Named to SEC Community Service Team for fourth straight season... Named to the SEC Academic Honor Roll... Recorded two wins against ranked opponents… Concluded the fall season with a 14-5 singles mark and a 12-9 doubles mark… Advanced to the quarterfinals of the ITA Southeast Regional… Member of ITA All-Academic Team... A member of the StudentAthlete Advisory Committee (SAAC) and L.E.A.D.

JUNIOR (2020-21)

Helped Bulldogs win the SEC Regular Season and Tournament titles and advance to the quarterfinals of the NCAA Championships, posting a final record of 23-2 and final ITA national ranking of No. 4... Earned All-America honors in singles and finished ranked No. 25 nationally with a 25-4 record including 13-3 at No. 3 in the lineup... Advanced to the round of 16 at the NCAA Singles Championships... Final doubles record of 26-7 including 19-4 with Lea Ma... Named First Team All-SEC... Named to SEC Community Service Team for third straight season and SEC Academic Honor Roll... Reached career high in singles rankings at No. 12... Upset No. 6 Cameron Morra of North Carolina 6-3, 7-6(3)... Became first Bulldog to blank a singles opponent in a dual match 6-0, 6-0 since the 2017 season, defeating Angel Carney of Ga. State... Ended the fall season with a record of 152… Was one of two Bulldogs to go undefeated in singles, 9-0, over three events… StudentAthlete Advisory Committee (SAAC) President... Named to the SEC Council on Racial Equity and Social Justice... Inducted into L.E.A.D. Academy... Named an ITA Scholar-Athlete and part of ITA AllAcademic Team.

SOPHOMORE (2019-20)

and ITA Southeast Regional Rookie of the Year; Georgia’s third-straight winner of each… Named to All-Freshman SEC Team and SEC Community Service Team… Named NCAA All-Tournament Team… Named to the ITA National Indoor AllTournament Team…Recorded a team-high 10 clinches in singles… Two-time SEC Freshman of the Week… Concluded the fall season with a 4-0 singles mark and a 0-4 doubles mark… Started her collegiate career with a singles flight championship in the Big 5 Challenge, going 4-0 in the weekend… Earned her first ranked win at Big 5 Challenge against No. 118 Savannah Slaysman of Arizona State, 6-2, 6-3… Earned Dean’s List on J. Reid Parker Director of Athletics Honor Roll for the fall and spring semester (at least 3.50 GPA with 14 or more hours)… Recipient of the McMullan Women’s Tennis Scholarship.

BEFORE GEORGIA

@MEGKOWALSKIII

@MEGKOWALSKIII

Had a singles record of 6-0 and a doubles record of 5-2 before the cancellation of the 2020 season… Reached career highs in both doubles and singles rankings at No. 52 for both… Named to the SEC Spring Academic Honor Roll… Was named to the SEC Community Service Team Member for the second straight year… Finished the fall season with a ranking of No. 56 in singles… ITA Southeast Regional Championships Consolation Runner-Up, defeated by teammate Morgan Coppoc… Recipient of the McMullan Women’s Tennis Scholarship donated by the McMullan Family… Student-Athlete Advisory Committee (SAAC) Representative.

FRESHMAN (2018-19)

Concluded the season ranked No. 108 in ITA singles with a 25-1 overall record and went 16-12 in doubles overall… Went undefeated in singles during the regular season, going 15-0 for an overall record of 19-0…Named SEC Freshman of the Year

Attended Lyons Township High School in 2014 where as a freshman she led the Lions to a 29-2 overall record, a sectional title and a thirdplace finish in state playoffs – Lyons Township’s first state trophy in 11 years… Only freshman in the state semifinals, losing to eventual state champion Brienne Minor who later went on to win the 2017 NCAA Singles Championship in Athens, Ga. for Michigan…Concluded scholastics with Laurel Springs School, an accredited online private school… Trained at Smith Stearns Tennis Academy in Hilton Head Island, S.C. under the direction of BJ Stearns… Member of National Honors Society… Earned a Junior life-best ranking of No. 5 on Tennis Recruiting Network… Blue chip recruit according to Tennis Recruiting Network… A doubles finalist at the 2017 Hilton Head $15k ITF Circuit – her first professional event… 2017 National Selection singles champion… Won the 2016 & 2017 doubles titles at the Delray Beach (Florida) and Copa Sultana-Mayagues (Puerto Rico) ITF events, including being as a singles semifinalist 3 times… Reached the Round of 16 in singles of the 2017 Orange Bowl International Tennis Championships… Reached the Round of 16 in the singles and doubles main draws of the 2017 Pan American Championships ITF in Tulsa, Oklahoma… Finished singles finalist and doubles semifinalist at the 2015 Eddie Herr International Championships… 2015 National Selection Doubles Champion.

PERSONAL

Born Nov. 19, 1999… Daughter of Chris and Mattie Kowalski… Family: Has two brothers, Harry and James… Major: Sports Management... Right-Handed.

GEORGIA 16 WOMEN'S TENNIS MEDIA GUIDE
Single-Season Dual Doubles Wins
Career Singles Record........................................86-18 Career Dual Singles Record 50-8 Career Doubles Record 75-29 Career Doubles Dual Record 49-23 CAREER ACCOLADES
SEC Community Service Team
ITA Scholar Athlete 3x SEC Academic Honor Roll 2x All-SEC Singles All-American 2019 ITA Southeast
the Year 2019 SEC Freshman of the Year
ITA Doubles Ranking No. 52
Single-Season Singles Wins...............25 (2019;2021) Single-Season Dual Singles Wins 21 (2019) Single-Season Doubles Wins 26 (2021)
16 (2019)
4x
3x
Region Rookie of
17 BULLDOGS GEORGIADOGS.COM Singles Overall Dual Tour SEC 123456 Ranked Streak Last 10 2022-23 7-10-07-10-0––––––1-1W15-1 2021-22 17-810-47-46-4––1-05-36-22-02-3W25-3 2020-21 25-413-312-15-1––13-3–––13-1L14-1 2019-20 12-46-06-42-0–––––6-02-2W68-1 2018-19 25-121-14-08-0––––1-020-14-0W56-1 Totals 86-1850-836-1021-5––14-35-37-228-122-7 DoublesOverallDualTour SEC 1 2 3Ranked 2022-23 5-30-05-30-0– – –0-0 2021-22 19-312-97-48-3–4-38-60-3 2020-21 26-716-410-310-1– –16-40-1 2019-20 9-45-24-23-0– –5-20-1 2018-19 16-1216-80-49-3–1-015-81-1 Totals 75-2949-2326-1630-7–5-344-201-7 Meg
Kowalski Career Stats Georgia Women's Tennis

HERTEL ANIA

JUNIOR (2021-22)

Had a singles record of 23-5 and a doubles record of 16-13 at the conclusion of the season… Ranked No. 17 in doubles with partner Morgan Coppoc… Named to the SEC All-Tournament Team… Named to the SEC Academic Honor Roll... Finished the fall season with a 7-2 record… Advanced to the semifinals of the ITA Southeast Regional, before falling to fellow teammate Mell Reasco… Competed in three ITF Professional events… Reached the semifinals of the ITF Hilton Head 25K... Member of ITA All-Academic Team.

SOPHOMORE (2020-21)

Helped Bulldogs win the SEC Regular Season and Tournament titles and advance to the quarterfinals of the NCAA Championships, posting a final record of 23-2 and final ITA national ranking of No. 4... Final singles record of 10-4 and went 11-3 in doubles...Named to the SEC Academic Honor Roll...Reached career high doubles ranking of No. 10 with partner Katarina Jokic and finished year at No. 56...Defeated No. 3 ranked duo of Alexa Graham and Sara Daavettila of North Carolina, 6-2 with partner Jokic...Concluded her second fall season going 9-3 in singles and 9-3 in doubles… Went undefeated at the SEC Challenge with a record of 3-0

FRESHMAN (2019-2020)

Had a singles record of 6-3 and a doubles record of 5-1 before the cancellation of the 2020 season… Had a doubles ranking high of 30 with partner Katarina Jokic…Two-time SEC Freshman of the Week for the week of Feb. 5 & March 11… Clinched two matches with wins against No. 22 Georgia Tech and Clemson…Joined the team in January of 2020

BEFORE GEORGIA

Had a career best juniors ranking of No. 46… Played in all four junior grand slam tournaments… Ranked as high as 694 in singles and 336 in doubles by the Women’s Tennis Association (WTA)…Won a pair of ITF Grade 2 singles titles…Reached finals in two Grade 2 events…Claimed the Eddie Herr International title…Won the Banana Bowl ITF Grade 1 title

PERSONAL

Born Oct. 27, 2000…Daughter of Malgorzata Lawniczak Hertel and Jerzy Hertel…Major: Journalism... Right-handed.

GEORGIA 18 WOMEN'S TENNIS MEDIA GUIDE
Senior HEIGHT 5-10 HOMETOWN Warsaw, Poland MAJOR Journalism CAREER BESTS ITA Singles Ranking No. 18 (2020) ITA Doubles Ranking No. 10 (Katarina Jokic, 2021) Single-Season Singles Wins........................23 (2022) Single-Season Dual Singles Wins 16 (2022) Single-Season Doubles Wins 16 (2022) Single-Season Dual Doubles Wins 12 (2022) Career Singles Record........................................44-13 Career Dual Singles Record 23-7 Career Doubles Record 38-18 Career Doubles Dual Record 21-10 CAREER ACCOLADES 2x SEC Academic Honor Roll 2022 SEC All-Tournament Team
CLASS
@ANIA_HERTEL
19 BULLDOGS GEORGIADOGS.COM Singles Overall Dual Tour SEC 123456 Ranked Streak Last 10 2022-23 5-10-05-10-0––––––1-1W15-1 2021-22 23-516-37-27-2–––2-26-08-10-0W56-1 2020-21 10-41-19-30-0––––1-00-10-0L16-4 2019-20 6-36-30-02-0––1-05-3––1-1W26-3 Totals 44-1323-721-69-2––1-07-57-08-22-2 DoublesOverallDualTour SEC 1 2 3Ranked 2022-23 4-10-04-10-0– – –0-0 2021-22 16-1312-94-46-512-9– –5-5 2020-21 11-32-09-30-01-0–1-01-0 2019-20 7-17-10-02-07-1– –4-1 Totals 38-1821-1017-88-520-9–1-010-6 Ania Hertel Career Stats Georgia Women's Tennis (November 9,

JUNIOR (2021-22)

Concluded the season ranked No. 38 in ITA singles with a 16-8 overall record and went 6-2 in doubles overall… Went 10-4 at the No. 1 spot, including wins over No. 4 Irina Cantos Siemers and No. 12 Jaeda Daniel… Named First Team All-SEC… Named to the SEC Academic Honor Roll... Recorded a team second-best eight wins versus ranked opponents… Won SEC Player of the Week… Concluded the fall season with a 10-4 singles mark... Named an ITA Scholar-Athlete and part of ITA All-Academic Team.

SOPHOMORE (2020-21)

Helped Bulldogs win the SEC Regular Season and Tournament titles and advance to the quarterfinals of the NCAA Championships, posting a final record of 23-2 and final ITA national ranking of No. 4... Final singles record of 17-5 including 15-3 at No. 2 in the lineup and final national ranking of No. 30... Went 20-4 in doubles including 16-4 at No. 3 with Meg Kowalski... Named to the SEC First-Year Academic Honor Roll...Received a 5-8 seed for the NCAA Doubles Tournament with Jokic and fell in the first round... Clinched four matches for the Bulldogs including NCAA Round of 16 dual with Virginia, beating ninth-ranked Natasha Subhash in a third-set tiebreaker {2-6,6-3,7-6(4)}... Earned at-large bid to the NCAA Singles Tournament and reached the Round of 32... Named the 2021 SEC Newcomer of the Year...Named First Team AllSEC... Named to the SEC All-Tournament Team... Named SEC Newcomer of the Week for the week of Feb. 24... Opted out of the 2020 fall season due to the COVID-19 Pandemic... Named an ITA Scholar-Athlete and part of ITA All-Academic Team.

FRESHMAN (2019-2020)

Had a singles record of 4-1 and a doubles record of 3-1 before the cancellation of the 2020 season… Had a singles ranking high of 18… Named to the SEC First Year Spring Academic Honor Roll… Named ITA Southeast Region Rookie of the Year… SEC Freshman of the Week for the week of Jan. 29… Finished fall season with a No. 19 ranking in singles… Finished fall season 14-5… Earned a spot at the Oracle ITA Fall Nationals.

BEFORE GEORGIA

Attended IMG Academy in Bradenton, Fla. and spent time training at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in Flushing, N.Y. and the Junior Tennis Champions Center (JTCC) in College Park, Md.,… Rated the No. 3 junior nationally by Tennis Recruiting Network in 2018 and 2019 along with being a “Blue Chip” recruit… Ranked as high as No. 19 combined in the 2018 International Tennis Federation Juniors and finished the year at No. 23… Competed at the 2019 Roland Garros Juniors including reaching the quarterfinals in the doubles… Two-time competitor in the U.S. Open Juniors and has played in the Wimbledon and Australian Open Juniors… Reached the Round of 16 at the 2019 U.S. Open Juniors and the 2018 Wimbledon Juniors including a win over then No. 1 ranked junior Clara Tauson of Denmark… A singles semifinalist and doubles finalist at the 2019 Adidas Easter Bowl event in Indian Wells (Calif.) and advanced to the singles quarterfinals at the 2019 USTA National Championships in San Diego… Represented the United States at the 2018 Youth Olympic Games in Buenos Aires, Argentina… A singles finalist at the 2018 COPA Barranquilla Capital de Vida tournament in Colombia and singles quarterfinalist at the 2018 Orange Bowl Tournament… One of five American ladies chosen by the USTA to compete in three ITF events in Paraguay and Brazil in 2016 .

PERSONAL

Born Feb. 1, 2001… Daughter of Karen and Peter Ma… Major: Intended Sports Management… Right-handed.

GEORGIA 20 WOMEN'S TENNIS MEDIA GUIDE
CLASS Senior HEIGHT 5-8 HOMETOWN Dix Hills, New York MAJOR Sport Management CAREER BESTS ITA Singles Ranking No. 18 (2020) ITA Doubles Ranking N/A Single-Season Singles Wins........................18 (2020) Single-Season Dual Singles Wins 15 (2021) Single-Season Doubles Wins 20 (2021) Single-Season Dual Doubles Wins 16 (2021) Career Singles Record........................................65-21 Career Dual Singles Record 29-8 Career Doubles Record 36-11 Career Doubles Dual Record 19-5 CAREER ACCOLADES 3x ITA Scholar Athlete 2x All-SEC 2x SEC Academic Honor Roll 2022 ITA Southeast Regional Singles Champion 2021 SEC All-Tournament Team 2021 SEC Newcomer of the Year 2020 ITA Southeast Regional Rookie of the Year 2020 SEC First-Year Academic Honor Roll
@THELEAMA_
MA LEA
21 BULLDOGS GEORGIADOGS.COM Singles Overall Dual Tour SEC 123456 Ranked Streak Last 10 2022-23 14-20-014-20-0––––––4-2L19-1 2021-22 16-810-46-46-310-4–––––8-7L15-2 2020-21 17-515-32-28-1–15-3––––11-4L16-1 2019-20 18-64-114-50-0–4-1––––5-6W14-2 Totals 65-2129-836-1314-410-419-4––––28-19 DoublesOverallDualTour SEC 1 2 3Ranked 2022-23 1-10-01-10-0– – –0-0 2021-22 6-20-06-20-0– – –0-0 2020-21 20-416-44-010-1– –16-40-1 2019-20 9-43-16-31-0–1-02-11-0 Totals 36-1119-517-611-1–1-018-51-1
Georgia
Lea Ma Career Stats Women's Tennis (November 9,

GRANT GIGI

FRESHMAN (2021-22)

Provided depth during the season… Had a singles record of 12-3 and a doubles record of 15-10 at the conclusion of the season… Clinched the match in her collegiate outdoors singles debut against Kentucky… Went 2-0 in SEC play… Won the ITA Southeast Regional consolation draw, where she defeated fellow teammate Mai Nirundorn… Named to the SEC First-Year Academic Honor Roll... Member of ITA All-Academic Team... Recipient of the Leighton Ballew Women’s Tennis Scholarship Endowment.

BEFORE GEORGIA

Trained in her home country of Uruguay at the Carrasco Lawn Tennis Club in Montevideo and among the top ranked South American juniors… Has trained with Enrique Pérez-Cassarino, Daniel Senaldi and Diego Gatti… Reached a career-high ranking of No. 31 in the International Tennis Federation (ITF) World Junior Rankings… Competed in a pair of Grand Slam Junior events at the Australian Open and French Open… Advanced to the doubles semifinals at the 2020 French Open Juniors including a straight set win over the top seed in the first round… Reached the quarterfinals of the 2020 Eddie Herr ITF event in Bradenton, Fla… Claimed doubles titles in Grade A events in Criciuma, Brazil and Mérida, Mexico… Represented Uruguay in Fed Cup competition in 2017 and 2019, going 2-4 all-time in singles and 2-3 in doubles… Started playing tennis at the age of three and also played hockey, handball and participated in track & field

PERSONAL

Born June 22, 2002… Daughter of Tati Ruiz… Intended Major: Business… Right-handed.

GEORGIA 22 WOMEN'S TENNIS MEDIA GUIDE
CLASS Sophomore HEIGHT 5-7 HOMETOWN Montevideo, Uruguay MAJOR Business CAREER BESTS ITA Singles Ranking N/A ITA Doubles Ranking No. 46 (Ania Hertel, 2022) Single-Season Singles Wins........................12 (2022) Single-Season Dual Singles Wins 2 (2022) Single-Season Doubles Wins 15 (2022) Single-Season Dual Doubles Wins 8 (2022) Career Singles Record..........................................23-7 Career Dual Singles Record 2-0 Career Doubles Record 25-13 Career Doubles Dual Record 8-7 CAREER ACCOLADES 2022 SEC First-Year Academic Honor Roll
@GUILLE_GRANT @GUILLEGRANT22
23 BULLDOGS GEORGIADOGS.COM Singles Overall Dual Tour SEC 123456 Ranked Streak Last 10 2022-23 11-40-011-40-0––––––0-1L17-3 2021-22 12-32-010-32-0––––1-01-00-1W79-1 Totals 23-72-021-72-0––––1-01-00-2 DoublesOverallDualTour SEC 1 2 3Ranked 2022-23 10-30-010-30-0– – –0-1 2021-22 15-108-77-34-4– –8-70-1 Totals 25-138-717-64-4– –8-70-2 Guillermina Grant Career Stats Georgia Women's Tennis (November 9,

NIRUNDORN MAI

FRESHMAN (2021-22)

Provided depth during the season… Had a singles record of 12-9 and a doubles record of 8-8 at the conclusion of the season… Made her collegiate outdoors singles debut against Missouri… Went 3-0 in SEC play… Advanced to the finals of the ITA Southeast Regional consolation draw, where she fell to fellow teammate Guillermina Grant… Advanced to the round of 16 off the ITA Southeast Regional in doubles with partner Meg Kowalski... Named to the SEC First-Year Academic Honor Roll... Member of ITA All-Academic Team... Recipient of the Doyle E. Mote Women’s Tennis Scholarship Endowment.

BEFORE GEORGIA

Trained in her home country of Thailand as well as in Hilton Head Island, S.C. with coach Travis Curran… Ranked as high as No. 20 in the International Tennis Federation (ITF) junior rankings… Played in numerous Grand Slam junior events… Reached the round of 16 of the Girls singles at Wimbledon and the US Open along with the second round at the Australian Open… Competed in ITF junior events in Thailand, Japan, Malaysia and China.

PERSONAL

Born Aug. 12, 2002… Daughter of Jean Kansuthi… Intended Major: Undecided… Right-handed.

GEORGIA 24 WOMEN'S TENNIS MEDIA GUIDE
CLASS Sophomore HEIGHT 5-7 HOMETOWN Bangkok, Thailand MAJOR Undecided CAREER BESTS ITA Singles Ranking N/A ITA Doubles Ranking N/A Single-Season Singles Wins....................... 12 (2022) Single-Season Dual Singles Wins 4 (2022) Single-Season Doubles Wins 8 (2022) Single-Season Dual Doubles Wins 1 (2022) Career Singles Record........................................20-13 Career Dual Singles Record 4-1 Career Doubles Record 13-9 Career Doubles Dual Record 1-4
ACCOLADES 2022 SEC First-Year Academic Honor Roll
CAREER
@MAI_NIRUNDORN
25 BULLDOGS GEORGIADOGS.COM Singles Overall Dual Tour SEC 123456 Ranked Streak Last 10 2022-23 8-40-08-40-0––––––1-3W17-3 2021-22 12-94-18-83-0–––––4-10-0L14-2 Totals 20-134-116-123-0–––––4-11-3 DoublesOverallDualTour SEC 1 2 3Ranked 2022-23 5-10-05-10-0– – –0-0 2021-22 8-81-47-41-2– –1-40-0 Totals 13-91-412-51-2– –1-40-0 Mai Nirundorn Career Stats Georgia Women's Tennis (November 9,

REASCO MELL

FRESHMAN (2021-22)

Concluded the season ranked No. 21 in ITA singles with a 27-9 overall record and went 23-12 in doubles overall… Went 5-1 at the No. 1 spot in the post-season… Earned All-America honors for being a Top-16 seed in the NCAA Tournament… Named to All-Freshman SEC Team and First Team All-SEC… Named to the SEC All-Tournament Team… Named to the SEC First-Year Academic Honor Roll... Recorded a team-high 11 wins versus ranked opponents… Two-time SEC Freshman of the Week… Concluded the fall season with a 12-3 singles mark and a 8-2 doubles mark… Won the ITA Southeast Regional Championship… Advanced to the quarterfinals of the ITA National Fall Championship… Represented Ecuador in the 2022 Billie Jean King Cup... Member of ITA AllAcademic Team.

BEFORE GEORGIA

Trained in her home country of Ecuador and at New Ecuador HS… Ranked among the top South American juniors in the world… Has trained with former French Open champion Andrés Gómez and Paula Racedo… Reached a career-high ranking of No. 20 in the International Tennis Federation (ITF) World Junior Rankings and No. 617 in the Women’s Tennis Association (WTA) Rankings… Competed in various Grand Slam Junior events including the US Open, French Open and Wimbledon… Notable career wins include over a pair of top-12 junior players in the world… Claimed titles in a Grade 2 event in Prato, Italy, a Grade 1 tournament in Cuenca, Ecuador, a Grade B1 tournament in Sao Paulo, Ecuador and an ITF event in Monastir, Tunisia… Represented Ecuador in Fed Cup competition in 2019 and also helped 2021 national team move up to Fed Cup’s America’s Group 1 by winning four singles matches.

PERSONAL

Born July 23, 2002… Daughter of Néicer Reasco and Germania Gonzalez… Intended Major: Economics… Left-handed.

GEORGIA 26 WOMEN'S TENNIS MEDIA GUIDE
CLASS Sophomore HEIGHT 5-6 HOMETOWN Quito, Ecuador MAJOR Economics CAREER BESTS ITA Singles Ranking No. 10 (2022) ITA Doubles Ranking No. 20 (Dasha Vidmanova, 2023) Single-Season Singles Wins....................... 27 (2022) Single-Season Dual Singles Wins 15 (2022) Single-Season Doubles Wins 23 (2022) Single-Season Dual Doubles Wins 15 (2022) Career Singles Record..........................................30-9 Career Dual Singles Record 15-6 Career Doubles Record 26-13 Career Doubles Dual Record 15-10 CAREER ACCOLADES 2x SEC Freshman of the Week 2022 Singles All-American 2022 All-SEC 2022 Freshman All-SEC 2022 SEC All-Tournament Team 2022 SEC First-Year Academic Honor Roll 2021 ITA Southeast Regional Rookie of the Year 2021 ITA Southeast Region Singles Champion
@MELLREASCOG @MELL_REASCO
27 BULLDOGS GEORGIADOGS.COM Singles Overall Dual Tour SEC 123456 Ranked Streak Last 10 2022-23 3-00-03-00-0––––––0-0W33-0 2021-22 27-915-612-37-45-19-41-1–––11-7L17-2 Totals 30-915-615-37-45-19-41-1–––11-7 DoublesOverallDualTour SEC 1 2 3Ranked 2022-23 3-10-03-10-0– – –0-0 2021-22 23-1215-108-29-3–15-10–4-6 Totals 26-1315-1011-39-3–15-10–5-6 Mell Reasco Career Stats Georgia Women's Tennis (November 9,

VIDMANOVA DASHA

FRESHMAN (2021-22)

Concluded the season ranked No. 106 in ITA singles with a 16-7 overall record and went 1310 in doubles overall… Joined the Bulldogs in January after signing in November of 2021… Named to All-Freshman SEC Team and Second Team All-SEC… Clinched three matches, including her collegiate debut against North Florida and a 4-3 win over Tennessee to send the Bulldogs to the SEC Tournament Finals… Two-time SEC Freshman of the Week… Recorded a team second-best eight wins against ranked opponents... Named an ITA Scholar-Athlete and part of ITA All-Academic Team.

BEFORE GEORGIA

Trained in her home country of Czech Republic and at 1st CLKT Prague... Ranked among the top European juniors in the world... Reached a careerhigh ranking of No. 21 in the International Tennis Federation (ITF) World Junior Rankings and No. 732 in the Women’s Tennis Association (WTA) Rankings... Competed in various Grand Slam Junior events including the Australian Open, French Open and Wimbledon... Multiple career wins over of top-10 junior players in the world... Claimed titles in a Grade 2 event in Tribuswinkle, Austria, and a Grade 1 event in Offenbach, Germany.

PERSONAL

Born Jan. 9, 2003... Daughter of Oleg Vidmanova and Marija Vimanova... Intended Major: Finance... Right-handed.

GEORGIA 28 WOMEN'S TENNIS MEDIA GUIDE
CLASS Sophomore HEIGHT 6-3 HOMETOWN Prague, Czech Republic MAJOR Finance CAREER BESTS ITA Singles Ranking No. 31 (2023) ITA Doubles Ranking No. 20 (Mell Reasco, 2023) Single-Season Singles Wins....................... 16 (2022) Single-Season Dual Singles Wins 16 (2022) Single-Season Doubles Wins 13 (2022) Single-Season Dual Doubles Wins 13 (2022) Career Singles Record..........................................27-9 Career Dual Singles Record 16-7 Career Doubles Record 20-12 Career Doubles Dual Record 13-10 CAREER ACCOLADES 2x SEC Freshman of the Week 2022 Freshman All-SEC 2022 All-SEC 2022 ITA Scholar Athlete
@DASHAVIDMANOVA
29 BULLDOGS GEORGIADOGS.COM Singles Overall Dual Tour SEC 123456 Ranked Streak Last 10 2022-23 11-20-011-20-0––––––2-2L18-2 2021-22 16-716-70-09-3–3-513-2–––8-7L23-5 Totals 27-916-711-29-3–3-513-2–––10-9 DoublesOverallDualTour SEC 1 2 3Ranked 2022-23 7-20-07-20-0– – –0-1 2021-22 13-1013-100-08-40-112-61-34-3 Totals 20-1213-107-28-40-112-61-34-4
Dasha Vidmanova Career Stats Georgia Women's Tennis

LOPATA ANASTASIIA

BEFORE GEORGIA

Trained in her home country of Ukraine… Reached a career-high ranking of No. 32 in the International Tennis Federation (ITF) World Junior Rankings… Competed in a pair of Grand Slam Junior events at the Australian Open and Wimbledon… Won the Grade 1 Beaulieu-sur-Mer in France without dropping a set and made it to the finals of the Grade 2 Cap d’Ail in France — both on clay courts... Captured three doubles titles, winning the Grade 1 Bamberg in Germany, the Grade 2 Istres in France and the Grade 2 Cap d’Ail in France... has posted a career-high 10.89 Universal Tennis Rating and has posted 13 top-75 wins, including four top-30... In 2021, She won the Grade 3 Lviv in Ukraine, and advanced to the semifinals of the W15 Chornomorsk in Ukraine, defeating the No. 1 seed Anastasia Zolotareva (No. 335 WTA) along the way.

PERSONAL

Born December 20, 2004… Daughter of Mykola and Lesia Lopata… Intended Major: Finance… Right-handed

GEORGIA 30 WOMEN'S TENNIS MEDIA GUIDE
CLASS Freshman HEIGHT 5-7 HOMETOWN Kiev, Ukraine MAJOR Finance CAREER BESTS ITA Singles Ranking No. 64 (2023) ITA Doubles Ranking N/A Single-Season Singles Wins.......................7-6 (2023) Single-Season Dual Singles Wins N/A Single-Season Doubles Wins 5-3 (2023) Single-Season Dual Doubles Wins N/A Career Singles Record............................................7-6 Career Dual Singles Record N/A Career Doubles Record 5-3 Career Doubles Dual Record N/A CAREER ACCOLADES 10th rated Freshman/Newcomer by the ITA
@ANASTEWWA
31 BULLDOGS GEORGIADOGS.COM Singles Overall Dual Tour SEC 123456 Ranked Streak Last 10 2022-23 7-60-07-60-0––––––2-2L15-5 Totals 7-60-07-60-0––––––2-2 DoublesOverallDualTour SEC 1 2 3Ranked 2022-23 5-30-05-30-0– – –0-0 Totals 5-30-05-30-0– – –0-0
Women's Tennis
Anastasiia Lopata Career Stats
Georgia

BEFORE GEORGIA

Attended Milton HS… Trained at Tennis Academy of the South in Atlanta, Ga. under the direction of Gery Groslimond… Ranked as high as No. 169 among juniors on Tennis Recruiting Network… Three-star recruit according to Tennis Recruiting Network… Three-year letter-winner at Milton HS… Named a team captain as a senior… Part of a squad that reached the finals of the GHSA 7-AAAAAAA state championship as a freshman… Has posted a career-high 8.94 Universal Tennis Rating.

PERSONAL

Born June 12, 2003… Daughter of Mike and Shannon Gaudette… Formerly Shannon McCarthy, a seven-time All-American, four-time All-SEC team, two-time SEC Champion, 1992 National Senior of the Year and 1989 National Rookie of the Year at Georgia under head coach Jeff Wallace… McCarthy posted a school-best 150-34 career singles record and 67-16 career doubles record and owns the school record for most singles wins in a season with 46… Haley is a triplet with brothers Brendan (who attends Georgia) and Caden (who plays collegiate baseball for Georgia Tech)... Also has an older sister named Karson... Intended Major: Public Heath…Right-handed.

GAUDETTE HALEY

GEORGIA 32 WOMEN'S TENNIS MEDIA GUIDE
CLASS Freshman HEIGHT 5-8 HOMETOWN Marietta, Georgia MAJOR Public Health CAREER BESTS ITA Singles Ranking N/A ITA Doubles Ranking N/A Singles Wins N/A Dual Singles Wins.........................................N/A Doubles Wins N/A Dual Doubles Wins N/A Career Singles Record...................................N/A Career Dual Singles Record N/A Career Doubles Record N/A Career Doubles Dual Record N/A
@HALEY_GAUDETTE @HALEYGAUDETTE No Stats Available Haley
Career
Georgia
Gaudette
Stats
Women's Tennis

VECIC ALEXANDRA

BEFORE GEORGIA

Trained in her home country of Germany… Reached a career-high ranking of No. 8 in the International Tennis Federation (ITF) world junior rankings… Reached a career-high ranking of No. 478 in the Women’s Tennis Association (WTA) world rankings… Competed in all four Junior Grand Slam Junior events, including a semifinals appearance at the Australian Open and a quarterfinals appearance at the French Open… In 2019, she won Grade 1 Villena in Spain and the Grade 2 Villach in Austria – both on clay courts… Has posted a career-high 11.11 Universal Tennis Rating and has posted nine WTA Top-300 wins.

PERSONAL

Born January 7, 2002… Daughter of Srdjan and Biljana Vecic… Intended Major: Marketing and International Business… Right-handed.

33 BULLDOGS GEORGIADOGS.COM
CLASS Freshman HEIGHT 5-9 HOMETOWN Singen, Germany MAJOR Marketing CAREER BESTS ITA Singles Ranking N/A ITA Doubles Ranking N/A Singles Wins N/A Dual Singles Wins.........................................N/A Doubles Wins N/A Dual Doubles Wins N/A Career Singles Record...................................N/A Career Dual Singles Record N/A Career Doubles Record N/A Career Doubles Dual Record N/A
@ALEX_VECIC_707 No Stats Available Alexandra Vecic Career Stats Georgia Women's Tennis

2021-22 Tennis Season Stats Georgia Season Statistics (May 16, 2022)

Overall: 19-7 – SEC: 10-3 – Home: 10-1 – Away: 6-3 – Neutral: 3-3

Singles Overall Dual Tour SEC 123456 Ranked Streak Last 10

Alee Harris2-70-02-70-0––––––0-0L52-7

Morgan Coppoc20-1210-810-47-3–0-11-48-11-2–2-7L32-5

Guillermina Grant12-32-010-32-0––––1-01-00-1W79-1

Ania Hertel23-516-37-27-2–––2-26-08-10-0W56-1

Meg Kowalski21-914-57-46-4––1-05-36-22-02-3W25-3

Lea Ma 16-810-46-46-310-4–––––8-7L15-2

Mai Nirundorn12-94-18-83-0–––––4-10-0L14-2

Mell Reasco27-915-612-37-45-19-41-1–––11-7L17-2

Dasha Vidmanova16-716-70-09-3–3-51-1–––8-7L23-5 Totals 149-6987-3462-3547-1915-512-1016-715-614-415-231-32

DoublesOverallDualTour

Guillermina Grant15-108-77-34-4– –8-70-1

Ania Hertel16-1312-94-46-512-9– –5-5

Meg Kowalski19-1312-97-48-3–4-38-60-3

Lea Ma 6-2–6-2–

Mell Reasco23-1215-108-29-3–15-10–4-6

Dasha Vidmanova13-1013-10–8-40-112-61-34-3

GEORGIA 34 WOMEN'S TENNIS MEDIA GUIDE
Percentages.683.719.639.712.750.545.696.714.778.882.492
SEC 1 2 3Ranked
– – – –
Alee Harrus7-2–7-2–
– – – –
Mai Nirundorn8-81-47-41-2– –1-4–
Totals 64-4237-2927-1321-1312-916-109-109-12 Percentages.604.561.675.618.571.615.474.429

2022-23 Fall Tennis Season Stats Georgia Season Statistics (November 9, 2022)

Overall: 0-0 – SEC: 0-0 – Home: 0-0 – Away: 0-0 – Neutral: 0-0

Singles Overall Dual Tour SEC 123456 Ranked Streak Last 10

Haley Gaudette0-00-00-00-0––––––0-0––

Guillermina Grant11-40-011-40-0––––––0-1L17-3

Ania Hertel5-10-05-10-0––––––1-1W15-1

Meg Kowalski7-10-07-10-0––––––1-1W57-1

Anastasiia Lopata7-60-07-60-0––––––2-2L15-5

Lea Ma 14-20-014-20-0––––––4-2L19-1

Mai Nirundorn8-40-08-40-0––––––1-3W17-3

Mell Reasco3-00-03-00-0––––––0-0W33-0

Alex Vecic0-00-00-00-0––––––0-0––

Dasha Vidmanova11-20-011-20-0––––––2-2L18-2

Totals 66-200-066-200-0––––––11-12

Percentages.767.000.767.000––––––.478

35 BULLDOGS GEORGIADOGS.COM
SEC 1 2 3Ranked Haley Gaudette0-00-00-00-0– – –0-0 Guillermina Grant10-20-010-20-0– – –0-1 Ania Hertel 4-00-04-00-0– – –0-0 Meg Kowalski5-20-05-20-0– – –0-0 Anastasiia Lopata5-10-05-10-0– – –0-0 Lea Ma 1-10-01-10-0– – –0-0 Mai Nirundorn5-10-05-10-0– – –0-0 Mell Reasco3-10-03-10-0– – –0-0 Alex Vecic 0-00-00-00-0– – –0-0 Dasha Vidmanova7-20-07-20-0– – –0-1 Totals 20-50-020-50-0– – –0-1 Percentages.800.000.800.000– – –.000
DoublesOverallDualTour

ALL–SEC HONORS

1981

Lisa Spain

1982

Leigh Shepard

Lisa Spain

1983

Lisa Spain

1984

Lisa Spain

1986

Jane Cohodes

1987

Alice Reen

1989

Shannan McCarthy

Caryn Moss

Stacey Schefflin

Jil Waldman

1990

Shannan McCarthy

Caryn Moss

Stacey Schefflin

1991

Angela Lettiere

Shannan McCarthy

1992

Shannan McCarthy

Shawn McCarthy

Stacy Sheppard

1993

Anne Chauzu

Angela Lettiere

Stacy Sheppard

1994

Michelle Anderson

Anne Chauzu

Brooke Galardi

Angela Lettiere

1995

Michelle Anderson

Anne Chauzu

Tina Samara

Stacy Sheppard

1998

Vanessa Castellano

Marissa Catlin

Jane Reid

Aarthi Venkatesan

1999

Vanessa Castellano

Marissa Catlin

2000

Marissa Catlin

Lori Grey

Esther Knox

Aarthi Venkatesan

2001

Agata Cioroch

2002

Agata Cioroch

Lori Grey

Tina Hojnik

Douglas Wink

2003

Agata Cioroch

Lori Grey

Tina Hojnik

Douglas Wink

2004

Natalie Frazier

Jitka Schonfeldova

Alexandra Smith

Douglas Wink

2005

Caroline Basu

Shadisha Robinson

2006

Caroline Basu

Natalie Frazier

2007

Monika Dancevic

Natalie Frazier

Yvette Hyndman

2008

Monika Dancevic

Yvette Hyndman

2009

Monika Dancevic

Chelsey Gullickson

Nadja Gilchrist

2010

Nadja Gilchrist

Chelsey Gullickson

2011

Chelsey Gullickson

Maho Kowase

2012

Lauren Herring

Chelsey Gullickson

Maho Kowase

2013

Lauren Herring

Maho Kowase

2014

Silivia Garcia

Lauren Herring

2015

Lauren Herring

2016

Caroline Brinson

Ellen Perez

Kennedy Shaffer

2017

Elena Christofi

Ellen Perez

Kennedy Shaffer

2018

Elena Christofi

Morgan Coppoc

Marta Gonzalez

Mariana Gould

Katarina Jokic

Kennedy Shaffer

2019

Lourdes Carle

Elena Christofi

Marta Gonzalez

Katarina Jokic

Vivian Wolff

2021

Morgan Coppoc

Katarina Jokic

Meg Kowalski

Lea Ma

2022

Morgan Coppoc

Meg Kowalski

Lea Ma

Mell Reasco

Dasha Vidmanova

36 WOMEN'S TENNIS MEDIA GUIDE
GEORGIA
37 BULLDOGS GEORGIADOGS.COM SEC PLAYER OF THE YEAR 1994 Angela Lettiere 1997 Michelle Anderson 1998 Marissa Catlin 1999 Vanessa Castellano 2000 Aarthi Venkatesa 2014 Lauren Herring 2021 Katarina Jokic
NEWCOMER OF THE YEAR 2021 Lea Ma SEC FRESHMAN OF THE YEAR 2000 Lori Grey 2007 Yvette Hyndman 2009 Chelsey Gullickson 2012 Lauren Herring 2017...........................................Elena Christofi 2018 Katarina Jokic 2019 Meg Kowalski SEC SPORTSMANSHIP AWARD 1991 Shannan McCarthy 1992 Tonya Bogdonas 1997 Michelle Anderson 2013 Maho Kowase SEC COMMUNITY SERVICE TEAM 2004 Alexandra Smith 2005 Natalie Frazier 2006 Natalie Frazier 2007 Natalie Frazier 2008 Kelley Moore 2009 Cameron Ellis 2010 Cameron Ellis 2011 Kate Fuller 2012 Kate Fuller 2013 Kate Fuller 2014 Kate Fuller 2016 Caroline Brinson 2017........................................Caroline Brinson 2018 Laura Patterson 2019 Meg Kowalski 2020 Meg Kowalski 2021 Meg Kowalski 2022 Meg Kowalski SEC FIRST YEAR ACADEMIC HONOR ROLL 2003 Jennifer Hodge ......................................................Douglas Wink 2004 Natalie Frazier 2006 Sara Lett 2007 Naoko Ueshima 2008 Cameron Ellis 2011 Kate Fuller Rachael Hart ...................................................Alina Jerjomina .....................................................Maho Kowase 2012 Lauren Herring 2013 Makenzie Craft 2019 Lourdes Carle Meg Kowalski 2021 Ariana Arseneault SEC ACADEMIC HONOR ROLL 1984 Jenny Thorton 1985 Susan Green Jenny Thorton 1986 Lianna Bebeau Susan Green .....................................................Jenny Thorton 1987...............................................Lisa Apanay .....................................................Lianna Bebeau 1988 Elizabeth Alexander Lisa Apanay .....................................................Lianna Bebeau ........................................................Jil Waldman 1989 Elizabeth Alexander Lisa Apanay ..................................................Amila Fetahagic ..................................................Stacey Schefflin ........................................................Jil Waldman 1990 Shannan McCarthy Shawn McCarthy .........................................................Caryn Moss ..................................................Stacey Schefflin ........................................................Jil Waldman 1991 Shannan McCarthy Maria Salsgard 1992 Laura Kimel Shannan McCarthy .................................................Shawn McCarthy 1994 Brooke Galardi Marianna Land ....................................................Angela Lettiere ...................................................Lisa Salvatierra 1995 Anne Chauzu Lisa Salvatierra 1996 Anne Chauzu Kappy Kellett 1997 Michelle Anderson Kappy Kellett 1998 Jessica Annest Zoe Mellis 1999 Zoe Mellis 2000 Marissa Catlin Esther Knox ...........................................................Zoe Mellis 2001 Christa Grey 2002 Christa Grey 2003 Tina Hojnik ..................................................Alexandra Smith 2004 Agata Cioroch Natalie Frazier ......................................................Jennifer Hoge ..............................................Jitka Schonfeldova ..................................................Alexandra Smith ......................................................Douglas Wink 2005 Caroline Basu Natalie Frazier ..............................................Jitka Schonfeldova ..............................................Evgenia Subbotina 2006 Caroline Basu Natalie Frazier .....................................................Kelly Sandefer 2007 Natalie Frazier Kelley Hyndman 2008 Kelley Hyndman Sara Lett .......................................................Kelley Moore ...................................................Naoko Ueshima 2009 Lara Fakhoury Naoko Ueshima 2010 Cameron Ellis Lara Fakhoury ..................................................Yvette Hyndman ...................................................Naoko Ueshima 2011 Cameron Ellis Kelli Jordan 2012 Kate Fuller Alina Jerjomina .........................................................Kelli Jordan 2013 Kate Fuller Lauren Herring .........................................................Kelli Jordan .....................................................Maho Kowase 2014 Kate Fuller Lauren Herring .....................................................Maho Kowase 2015 Caroline Brinson Lauren Herring ..............................................................Mia King 2016 Caroline Brinson Silvia Garcia ...................................................Laura Patterson ...........................................................Ellen Perez ..................................................Kennedy Shaffer 2017........................................Caroline Brinson ....................................................Mariana Gould .............................................Stephanie Grodecki ...................................................Laura Patterson ...........................................................Ellen Perez 2018 Elena Christofi Marta Gonzalez ....................................................Mariana Gould ...................................................Laura Patterson 2019 Elena Christofi Marta Gonzalez ...................................................Annette Goulak .....................................................Katarina Jokic ........................................................Vivian Wolff 2020 Elena Christofi Alee Clayton ...................................................Morgan Coppoc ...................................................Marta Ganzalez .....................................................Katarina Jokic .....................................................Meg Kowalski 2021 Elena Christofi
SEC
GEORGIA 38 WOMEN'S TENNIS MEDIA GUIDE ........................................................Alee Clayton ...................................................Morgan Coppoc ...................................................Marta Gonzalez ..........................................................Ania Hertel .....................................................Katarina Jokic .....................................................Meg Kowalski ................................................................Lea Ma 2022.............................................Alee Clayton ..........................................................Ania Hertel .....................................................Meg Kowalski ................................................................Lea Ma HONDA AWARD 1984 Lisa Spain 1994 Angela Lettiere 1998 Marissa Catlin NATIONAL PLAYER OF THE YEAR 1994 Angela Lettiere 2019 Katarina Jokic NATIONAL SENIOR OF THE YEAR 1990 Stacey Schefflin 1992 Shannan McCarthy 1994 Angela Lettiere USTA COLLEGIATE TEAM 1989 Shannan McCarthy 1994 Angela Lettiere 1998 Marissa Catlin 2002 Agata Cioroch NATIONAL ROOKIE OF THE YEAR 1989 Shannan McCarthy 2009 Chelsey Gullickson NCAA SPORTSMANSHIP AWARD 2013 Maho Kowase
SENIOR OF THE YEAR 1989 Elizabeth Alexander 1990 Stacey Schefflin 1992 Shannan McCarthy 1994 Angela Lettiere 1995 Stacy Sheppard 2000 Marissa Catlin 2001 Aarthi Venkatesan 2007 Natalie Frazier 2012 Chelsey Gullickson 2014 Maho Kowase 2015 Lauren Herring 2021 Katarina Jokic REGIONAL ROOKIE OF THE YEAR 1989 Shannon McCarthy 1991 Angela Lettiere 2000 Lori Grey 2009 Chelsey Gullickson 2012 Lauren Herring 2017...........................................Elena Christofi 2018 Katarina Jokic 2019 Meg Kowalski 2020 Lea Ma 2022 Mell Reasco ITA ALL-ACADEMIC SCHOLAR ATHLETES 2003 Douglas Wink 2005 Jitka Schonfeldova 2006 Kelly Sandefer 2008 Kelley Hyndman Kelly Moore ...................................................Naoko Ueshima 2009 Lara Falkhoury 2011 Kelli Jordan Maho Kowase 2012 Kate Fuller Lauren Herring ...................................................Alina Jerjomina .........................................................Kelli Jordan .....................................................Maho Kowase 2013 Makenzie Craft Kate Fuller .....................................................Lauren Herring .....................................................Maho Kowase 2014 Kate Fuller Lauren Herring .....................................................Maho Kowase 2015 Lauren Herring 2017...........................................Elena Christofi .............................................Stephanie Grodecki ...................................................Laura Patterson ...........................................................Ellen Perez 2018 Elena Christofi Annette Goulak ....................................................Mariana Gould 2019 Elena Christofi Anette Goulak .....................................................Meg Kowalski 2020 Elena Chrisotfi Morgan Coppoc .....................................................Katarina Jokic .....................................................Meg Kowalski ................................................................Lea Ma 2021 Elena Chrisotfi Morgan Coppoc ...................................................Marta Gonzalez .....................................................Meg Kowalski ................................................................Lea Ma 2022........................................Morgan Coppoc ................................................................Lea Ma ...............................................Dasha Vidmanova ITA CISSIE LEARY AWARD 2010 Cameron Ellis 2014 Maho Kowase 2020 Marta Gonzalez ITA ARTHUR ASHE AWARD 2011 Cameron Ellis 2013 Kate Fuller 2014 Kate Fuller 2017........................................Caroline Brinson COSIDA ACADEMIC ALL-AMERICAN 1988 Lianna Bebeau 1990 Sheila Taormina .......................................................Jill Waldman 2013 Lauren Herring 2014 Lauren Herring 2015 Lauren Herring
REGIONAL

ALL-AMERICAN CAREER TOTALS

41 ALL-AMERICANS 118 HONORS

SINGLES ALL-AMERICANS

1981

Lisa Spain

1982

EIGHT

Chelsey Gullickson (2009-12)

SEVEN

Marissa Catlin (1997-99)

Shannan McCarthy (1989-91)

SIX

Katarina Jokic (2018-21)

FIVE

Michelle Anderson (1994-96)

Agata Cioroch (2002-04)

Ellen Perez (2015-17)

Stacey Schefflin (1988-90)

Aarthi Vankatesan (1999-01)

FOUR

Vanessa Castellano (1998-99)

Lori Grey (2000-01, 2003)

Lauren Herring (2013-15)

Angela Lettiere (1991, 1993-94)

Stacy Sheppard (1992, 1994-95)

Lisa Spain (1981-84)

THREE

Anne Chauzu (1993, 1995-96)

Esther Cox (1999-2000)

Nadja Gilchrist (2009-10, 2012)

Shadisha Robinson (2004-05)

TWO

Elena Christofi (2017, 2020)

Kate Fuller (2011, 2013)

Silvia Garcia (2013-14)

Shawn McCarthy (1992)

Caryn Moss (1989-90)

Tina Samara (1994-95)

Mariel Verban (1999*, 2001)

Kennedy Shaffer (2016-17)

ONE

Lisa Apanay (1988)

Ariana Arseneault (2021)

Caroline Basu (2005)

Caroline Brinson (2017)

Lourdes Carle (2019)

Natalie Frazier (2007)

Marta Gonzalez (2019)

Mariana Gould (2016)

Yvette Hyndman (2007)

Meg Kowalski (2021)

Maho Kowase (2014)

Darya Ivanov (2007)

Anne Nguyen (2001)

Mell Reasco (2022)

Lisa Spain

1983

Lisa Spain

1984

Lisa Spain

1989

Shannan McCarthy

Caryn Moss

Stacey Shefflin

1990

Shannan McCarthy

Caryn Moss

Stacey Shefflin

1991

Shannan McCarthy

1992

Shannan McCarthy

Shawn McCarthy

1994

Angela Lettiere

1995

Stacy Sheppard

1997

Michelle Anderson

Marissa Catlin

1998

Vanessa Castellano

Marissa Catlin

1999

Vanessa Castellano

Marissa Catlin

Esther Fnox

Aarthi Venkatesan

Mariel Verban*

2000

Lori Grey

Esther Knox

Aarthi Venkatesan

2001

Anne Nguyen

Aarthi Venkatesan

Mariel Verban

2002

Agata Cioroch

2003

Agata Cioroch

2004

Agata Cioroch

2005

Shadisa Robinson

2007

Natalie Frazier

2009

Chelsey Gullickson

2010

Chelsey Gullickson

2011

Chelsey Gullickson

2012

Chelsey Gullickson

2013

Lauren Herring

2014

Silvia Garcia

Lauren Herring

2015

Lauren Herring

2016

Ellen Perez

Kennedy Shaffer

2017

Ellen Perez

2018

Katarina Jokic

2019

Marta Gonzalez

Katarina Jokic

2020

Katarina Jokic

2021

Katarina Jokic

Meg Kowalski

2022

Mell Reasco

39 BULLDOGS GEORGIADOGS.COM

DOUBLES ALL-AMERICANS

1988

Stacey Shecfflin

Lisa Apanay

1989

Shannan McCarthy

Stacey Shefflin

1990

Shannan McCarthy

Stacey Shefflin

1991

Angela Lettiere

Shannan McCarthy

1992

Shawn McCarthy

Stacy Shepperd

1993

Anne Chauzu

Angela Lettiere

1994

Michelle Anderson

Angela Lettiere

Tina Samara

Stacy Sheppard

1995

Michelle Anderson

Anne Chauzu

Tina Samara

Stacy Sheppard

1996

Michelle Anderson

Anne Chauzu

1997

Michelle Anderson

Marissa Catlin

1998

Vanessa Castellano

Marissa Catlin

1999

Vanessa Castellano

Marissa Catlin

2000

Marissa Catlin

Lori Grey

Esther Knox

Aarthi Venkatesan

2001

Lori Grey

Aarthi Venkatesan

2003

Agata Cioroch

Lori Grey

2004

Agata Cioroch

Shadisha Robinson

2005

Caroline Basu

Shadisha Robinson

2007

Darya Ivanov

Yvette Hyndman

2009

Nadja Gilchrist

Chelsey Gullickson

2010

Nadja Gilchrist

Chelsey Gullickson

2011

Kate Fuller

Chelsey Gullickson

2012

Nadja Gilchrist

Chelsey Gullickson

2013

Kate Fuller

Silvia Garcia

2014

Lauren Herring

Maho Kowase

2015

Lauren Herring

Ellen Perez

2016

Mariana Gould

Ellen Perez

2017

Caroline Brinson

Elena Christofi Ellen Perez

Kennedy Shaffer

2018

Katarina Jokic

2019

Lourdes Carle

Katarina Jokic

2020

Elena Christofi

2021

Katarina Jokic

Ariana Arseneault

40 WOMEN'S TENNIS MEDIA GUIDE
GEORGIA

SEASON RECORDS SINGLES VICTORIES

T1.

T1.

T3.

T3.

T8.

DOUBLES VICTORIES

1.

T5.

T5.

T7. Lilly Kimbell (2012, So.)

T7. Kate Fuller (2012, So.)

T7. Shadisha Robinson (2005, So.)

T8. Mariana Gould (2018, Sr.)

T8. Nadja Gilchrist (2012, Sr.)

T8. Cameron Ellis (2009, Jr.)

MOST COMBINES VICTORIES

1. 77, Maho Kowase 2014: 39-S, 38-D

2. 71, Kate Fuller 2013: 31S, 40D

T3. 69, Chelsey Gullickson

T3. 69, Chelsey Gullickson

T3. 69, Naoko Ueshima

T3. 69, Agata Cioroch

7. 68, Lauren Herring

T8. 67, Lauren Herring

T8. 67, Shadisha Robinson

2012: 34S, 35D

2009: 43S, 26D

2008: 36S, 33D

2002: 43S, 26D

2013: 38S, 30D

2014: 31S, 36D

2004: 34S, 33D

10. 66, Michelle Anderson 1994: 35-S, 21-D

BEST SINGLES WIN PERCENATGE

1.000, Agata Cioroch 26-0, 2001 (Min. 25 wins)

BEST SINGLES WIN PERCENATGE

946, Shannan McCarthy 35-2, 1992 (Min. 35 wins)

BEST DOUBLES WIN PERCENATGE

.929, Marissa Catlin 26-2, 1999 (Min. 25 wins)

BEST DOUBLES WIN PERCENATGE (TEAM)

.929, Marissa Catlin & Vanessa Castellano 26-2, 1999 (11-0 at No. 1)

.923, Lilly Kimbell & Maho Kowase 24-2, 2012 (22-0 at No. 3)

MOST DOUBLES WINS (TEAM)

36, Lauren Herring & Maho Kowase 36-7, 2014

CAREER RECORDS SINGLES VICTORIES

1. Shannan McCarthy (1989-92) 150-34

T2. Maho Kowase (2011-2014) 133-36

T2. Stacey Schefflin (1987-90) 133-41

4. Jill Waldman (1987-90)................ 130-25

5. Michelle Anderson (1994-97)....... 127-51

6. Agata Cioroch (2001-04)....... 126-22

7. Chelsey Gullickson (2009-12) 124-34

T8. Lisa Spain (1981-84)............... 123-21

T8. Marissa Catlin (1997-00)........ 123-29

T8. Stacy Sheppard (1992-95)........ 123-55

DOUBLES VICTORIES

1. Kate Fuller (2011-14) 125-42

2. Lauren Herring (2012-15) 118-39

3. Maho Kowase (2011-14) 112-27

T4 Lilly Kimbell (2011-14) 109-31

T4 Naoko Ueshima (2007-10) 109-50

6. Chelsey Gullickson (2009-12) 106-42

7. Cameron Ellis (2008-11) 103-54

8. Nadja Gilchrist (2009-12) 101-36

9. Silvia Garcia (2013-16) 99-30

10 Yvette Hyndman (2007-10) 96-54

MOST COMBINES VICTORIES

1. 245, Maho Kowase 133-S, 112-D

2. 238, Lauren Herring 120-S, 118-D

3. 230, Chelsey Gullickson 124-S, 106-D

4. 223, Cameron Ellis 120-S, 103-D

T5. 222, Kate Fuller................................97-S, 125-D

T5. 222, Naoko Ueshima 113-S, 109-D

7. 221, Agata Cioroch 126-S, 95-D

8. 219, Stacey Schefflin 133-S, 86-D

9. 217, Shannan McCarthy 150-S, 67-D

10. 216, Marissa Catlin 123-S, 93-D

BEST SINGLES WIN PERCENATGE

.852, Lisa Spain 123-21, 1981-84 (Min. 120 wins)

BEST DOUBLES WIN PERCENATGE

.853, Marissa Catlin 93-16, 1997-00 (Min. 90 wins)

BEST DOUBLES WIN PERCENATGE (TEAM)

.893, Marissa Catlin & Vanessa Castellano 50-6, 1998-99

MOST DOUBLES WINS (TEAM) 64, Chelsey Gullickson & Nadja Gilchrist 64-21, 2009-12

MISCELLANEOUS RECORDS

SINGLES WIN STREAK

33. Agata Cioroch 2001-02

32. Shannan McCarthy 1992

DOUBLES WIN STREAK

22. Lilly Kimbell & Maho Kowase 2012

19. Marissa Catlin & Vanessa Castellano 1999

ITA SOUTHEAST REGIONAL CHAMPIONS

SINGLES CHAMPIONS

2011 Chelsey Gullickson

2012 Lauren Herring

2013 Silvia Garcia

2015 Caroline Brinson

2016 Elena Christofi

2017............................................Katarina Jokic

2021 Mell Reasco

2022 Lea Ma

DOUBLES CHAMPIONS

2011 Chelsey Gullickson/Lilly Kimbell

2012 Lauren Herring/Kate Fuller

DOUBLES RUNNER-UP

2013 Lauren Herring/Maho Kowase

2016 Elena Christofi/Kennedy Shaffer

41 BULLDOGS GEORGIADOGS.COM
Angela Lettiere (1994, Sr.) 46-14
Shannan McCarthy (1989, Fr.) 46-15
Chelsey Gullickson (2009, Fr.) 43-10
Agata Cioroch (2002, So.) 43-6
Laura Kimel (1991, Jr.) 43-8
Jill Waldman (1989, Jr.) 43-7 7. Tonya Bogdonas (1991, Jr.) 42-11
Maho Kowase (2014, Sr.) 39-7
Vanessa Castellano (1999, Sr.) 39-10
Esther Knox (1999, Jr.) 39-13
T3.
T3.
T8.
T8.
T8.
Stacy Sheppard (1995, Sr.) 39-13
Shannan McCarthy (1991, Jr.) 39-8
Caryn Moss (1989, Fr.) 39-7
Lisa Spain (1984, Sr.) 39-3
T8.
T8.
T8.
Kate Fuller (2013, Jr.) 40-9 2. Maho Kowase (2014, Sr.) 38-7 3. Lauren Herring (2014, Jr.) 36-7
Chelsey Gullickson (2012, Sr.) 35-13
4.
Naoko Ueshima (2008, So.) 33-11
Shadisha Robinson (2004,
Fr.) 33-9
32-5
32-14
32-5
31-9
31-10
31-16

SEC CHAMPIONS

1983 REGULAR SEASON CHAMPS

18-5 Overall Record, 11-1 SEC

Georgia claimed its first SEC title, going 8-1 in the regular season and then sweeping through the league tournament in Tuscaloosa, Ala. At the SEC Tournament, Georgia avenged its only league loss of the year, defeating Florida 5-4 in the final. For the second-straight year, Lisa Spain earned All-America honors, compiling a 32-4 mark and advancing to the NCAA quarterfinals. Also, Maxxine Kaufman and Dot Higgins played key roles during the season and in the SEC Tournament.

1989 REGULAR SEASON CHAMPS

24-4 Overall Record, 8-1 SEC

Georgia captured its second SEC title with a four-point margin over rival Florida (29-25) after a stellar showing in the league tournament. Stacey Schefflin (No. 2 singles), Caryn Moss (No. 3 singles, No. 3 Doubles) and Jill Waldman (No. 5 singles, No. 3 doubles) earned first place finishes in their SEC flights. Schefflin, Moss and Shannan McCarthy earned All-America honors and McCarthy was named the National-Player-to-Watch. Waldman and Amila Fetahagic were named Academic All-Americans.

1990 REGULAR SEASON CHAMPS

23-4 Overall Record, 11-1 SEC

Georgia recorded its first-ever perfect regular season mark against SEC opponents including six shutouts and halted Florida’s six-year SEC winning streak. The fourth-ranked Bulldogs began league play with a 5-4 win over third-ranked Florida. The Gators shared the league title after a 5-2 win over Georgia in the SEC Tournament final. For the second year in a row, Shannan McCarthy, Stacey Schefflin and Caryn Moss earned All-America honors and Schefflin was named the National Senior of the Year.

1994 REGULAR SEASON CHAMPS

27-2 Overall Record, 14-0 SEC

Georgia’s magical season began with a USTA/ITA National Indoor team title in March and continued through conference play as they went undefeated in the SEC. The NCAA champions posted three wins over Florida during the year. At one point, Georgia’s entire lineup was ranked among the top 100. Four Bulldogs earned All-America honors, seven made All-SEC including Angela Lettiere who went on to win the NCAA singles title and was named College Player of the Year, National Senior of the Year and SEC Player of the Year. Lettiere and Michelle Anderson won the USTA/ITA national indoor doubles title too and ended the year ranked No. 1.

2000 REGULAR SEASON CHAMPS

18-5 Overall Record, 11-0 SEC

Georgia grabbed its fifth SEC title, going a perfect 11-0 in the regular season as junior Aarthi Venkatesan headlined a championship squad that would go on to win the program’s second NCAA title, beating Stanford in the finals to finish the season ranked No. 1 with a 27-2 overall record. Venkatesan, the 2000 SEC Player of the Year, was one of five Bulldogs to be named All-SEC while Lori Grey earned SEC Freshman of the Year honors. Venkatesan, Grey, Marissa Catlin and Esther Knox earned All-America honors too.

2002 REGULAR SEASON CHAMPS

26-2 Overall Record, 11-0 SEC

Georgia extended its home match winning streak to 50 and posted several impressive road victories to help garner its sixth SEC title. The Bulldogs began their winning ways with another USTA/ITA National Team Indoor title and then went undefeated in conference play. Agata Cioroch headlined the squad as she was named the ITA National Player to Watch, was the lone All-American and was one of five players to be named All-SEC. Alexandra Smith earned MVP honors as she came up big with clinching wins over second-ranked Vanderbilt in Nashville, at top-ranked Florida and South Alabama in the NCAA Championships with the match on the line.

2007 REGULAR SEASON CHAMPS

24-2 Overall Record, 10-1 SEC

Georgia extended its home match winning streak to 50 and posted several impressive road victories to help garner its sixth SEC title. The Bulldogs began their winning ways with another USTA/ITA National Team Indoor title and then went undefeated in conference play. Agata Cioroch headlined the squad as she was named the ITA National Player to Watch, was the lone All-American and was one of five players to be named All-SEC. Alexandra Smith earned MVP honors as she came up big with clinching wins over second-ranked Vanderbilt in Nashville, at top-ranked Florida and South Alabama in the NCAA Championships with the match on the line.

2009 REGULAR SEASON CHAMPS

27-3 Overall Record, 10-1 SEC

The Bulldogs claimed another SEC title in 2009 behind a 10-1 performance in the SEC and then followed that up with their third straight SEC Tournament crown and an NCAA Final Four showing. Senior Monika Dancevic was the SEC Tournament’s Most Valuable Player for her steady performance at the No. 4 slot in singles and No.

2 doubles. She was named to the first team AllSEC team along with freshmen Nadja Gilchrist and Chelsey Gullickson. The freshmen duo earned All-America honors as well.

2013 REGULAR SEASON CHAMPS

24-4 Overall Record, 12-1 SEC

Georgia won its ninth SEC championship after going 12-1 in SEC play, including wins on the road over No.3 Texas A&M and No. 8 Alabama. Along with the men, it was the fourth time in history that both the men’s and womens team’s have won the SEC regular season title in the same year. The Bulldogs went on the road to clinch the title, first beating No. 22 Auburn 4-0 and then topping No. 8 Alabama 4-0. Georgia had four represenatives on the All-SEC Teams; Lauren Herring and Maho Kowase were named to the first team, while Kate Fuller and Silvia Garcia were named to the second team. Garcia was also named to the conference’s All-Freshman Team.

2019 REGULAR SEASON CHAMPS

28-2 Overall Record, 13-0 SEC

Georgia captured its tenth SEC championship after going a perfect 13-0, joining the 2002 team as the only other Bulldog team to go undefeated in the regular season. It also marked the first SEC team to end the conference slate without a loss since Florida did so in 2016. Georgia clinched the regular season title after defeating Vanderbilt 4-1. The team would go on the finish as the National Runner-Up falling to Stanford in the National Championship match. Meg Kowalski was named SEC Freshman on the Year with Katarina Jokic, Marta Gonzalez, Vivian Wolff, Lourdes Carle and Elena Christofi were all named to All-SEC teams.

2021 REGULAR SEASON CHAMPS

23-2 Overall Record, 13-0 SEC

Georgia captured its eleventh SEC title, going 13-0 in conference play, sweeping 10 of those 13 foes. It was the fourth season the Bulldogs won both regular season and tournament title since the 2009 season. The championship was clinched after sweeping Alabama 4-0. Georgia would go on to finsih the season 23-2. Jeff Wallace was named SEC Coach of the Year, Katarina Jokic was named SEC Player of the Year and Lea Ma Newcomer of the Year. Jokic, Ma, Meg Kowalski and Morgan Coppoc were all named First Team All-SEC.

1983 – TUSCALOOSA, ALA. (HOST: ALABAMA)

First Round: Georgia 6, LSU 3

Semifinals: Georgia 5, Tennessee 4

Finals: Georgia 5, Florida 4

1990 – KNOXVILLE, TENN. (HOST: TENNESSEE)

Quarterfinals: #1 Georgia 5, Auburn 0

Semifinals: #1 Georgia 5, #4 Tennessee 1

Final: #2 Florida 5, Georgia 2

1991 – KNOXVILLE, TENN. (HOST: TENNESSEE)

Quarterfinals: #2 Georgia 5, Tennessee 2

Semifinals: #2 Georgia 6, #3 LSU 0

Final: #1 Florida 5, #2 Georgia 1

1992 – TUSCALOOSA, ALA. (HOST: ALABAMA)

Quarterfinals: #2 Georgia 5, #7 Alabama 0

Semifinals: #2 Georgia 5, #3 Tennessee 1

Final: #1 Florida 5, #2 Georgia 4

1993 – NASHVILLE, TENN. (HOST: VANDERBILT)

Quarterfinals: #3 Georgia 5, #6 Tennessee 4

Semifinals: #3 Georgia 5, #2 Ole Miss 2

Final: #1 Florida 5, #3 Georgia 2

1994 – FAYETTEVILLE, ARK. (HOST: ARKANSAS)

Quarterfinals: #1 Georgia 5, #8 Auburn 0

Semifinals: #1 Georgia 5, #4 Ole Miss 1

Final: #1 Georgia 5, #2 Florida 3

1995 – AUBURN, ALA. (HOST: AUBURN)

Quarterfinals: #2 Georgia 6, #7 Ole Miss 0

Semifinals: #2 Georgia 5, #6 LSU 0

Final: #1 Florida 5, #2 Georgia 4

1996 – GAINESVILLE, FLA. (HOST: FLORIDA)

First Round: #7 Georgia 5, #10 Kentucky 1

Quarterfinals: #7 Georgia 5, #2 South Carolina 4

Semifinals: #3 Vanderbilt 5, #7 Georgia 2

1997 –ATHENS, GA. (HOST: GEORGIA)

Quarterfinals: #2 Georgia 5, #10 Kentucky 1

Semifinals: #2 Georgia 5, #3 Ole Miss 3

Final: #1 Florida 5, #2 Georgia 1

1998 – LEXINGTON, KY. (HOST: KENTUCKY)

Quarterfinals: #2 Georgia 5, #7 South Carolina 1

Semifinals: #2 Georgia 5, #6 Tennessee 2

Final: #1 Florida 5, #2 Georgia 2

1999 – BATON ROUGER, LA. (HOST: LSU)

Quarterfinals: #2 Georgia 5, #7 Arkansas 0

Semifinals: #3 Ole Miss 5, #2 Georgia 4

2000 – OXFORD, MISS. (HOST: OLE MISS)

Quarterfinals: #1 Georgia 5, #9 Mississippi State 2

Semifinals: #1 Georgia 5, #5 Tennessee 0

Final: #2 Florida 5, #1 Georgia 1

2001 – STARKVILLE, MISS. (HOST: MISSISSIPPI STATE)

Quarterfinals: #4 Georgia 4, #5 South Carolina 3

Semifinals: #4 Georgia 4, #1 Florida 2

Final: #4 Georgia 4, #2 Tennessee 1

2002 – COLUMBIA, S.C. (HOST: SOUTH CAROLINA)

Quarterfinals: #1 Georgia 4, #8 Ole Miss 0

Semifinals: #4 South Carolina 4, #1 Georgia 2

2003 – KNOXVILLE, TENN. (HOST: TENNESSEE)

Quarterfinals: #2 Georgia 4, #7 South Carolina 0

Semifinals: #2 Georgia 4, #3 Kentucky 1

Final: #1 Florida 4, #2 Georgia 0

2004 – NASHVILLE, TENN. (HOST: VANDERBILT)

Quarterfinals: #6 Kentucky 4, #3 Georgia 1

2005 – TUSCALOOSA, ALA. (HOST: ALABAMA)

First Round: #5 Georgia 4, #12 Auburn 0

Quarterfinals: #5 Georgia 4, #4 Tennessee 1

Semifinals: #1 Kentucky 4, #5 Georgia 2

2006 – GAINESVILLE, FLA. (HOST: FLORIDA)

Quarterfinals: #5 Tennessee 4, #4 Georgia 3

2007 – LEXINGTON, KY. (HOST: KENTUCKY)

Quarterfinals: #1 Georgia 4, #8 Auburn 1

Semifinals: #1 Georgia 4, #5 Tennessee 1

Final: #1 Georgia 4, #2 Florida 2

2008 – AUBURN, ALA. (HOST: AUBURN)

Quarterfinals: #2 Georgia 4, #7 Kentucky 1

Semifinals: #2 Georgia 4, #3 Arkansas 3

Final: #2 Georgia 4, #1 Florida 3

2009 – FAYETTEVILLE, ARK. (HOST: ARKANSAS)

Quarterfinals: #1 Georgia 4 , #8 Alabama 1

Semifinals: #1 Georgia 4, #4 Florida 2

Final: #1 Georgia 4, #3 Tennessee 0

2010 – ATHENS, GA. (HOST: GEORGIA)

Quarterfinals: #5 South Carolina 4, #4 Georgia1

2011 – KNOXVILLE, TENN. (HOST: TENNESSEE)

Quarterfinals: #3 Georgia 4, #6 Arkansas 0

Semifinals: #2 Tennessee 4, #3 Georgia 1

2012 – OXFORD, MISS. (HOST: OLE MISS)

Quarterfinals: #3 Georgia 4, #6 South Carolina 0

Semifinals: #3 Georgia 4, #2 Alabama 2

Final: #1 Florida 4, #3 Georgia 1

2013 – STARKVILLE, MISS. (HOST: MISSISSIPPI STATE)

Third Round: #1 Georgia 4, #9 Ole Miss 0

Semifinals: #1 Georgia 4, #4 Alabama 0

Final: #3 Florida 4, #1 Georgia 0

2014 – COLUMBIA, MO. (HOST: MISSOURI)

Third Round: #3 Georgia 4, #11 LSU 0

Semifinals: #3 Georgia 4, #2 Vanderbilt 1

Final: #3 Georgia 4, #1 Alabama 0

2015 – COLUMBIA, S.C. (HOST: SOUTH CAROLINA)

Third Round: #2 Georgia 4, #10 Mississippi State 0

Semifinals: #2 Georgia 4, #6 LSU 0

Final: #4 Vanderbilt 4, #3 Georgia 3

2016 – BATON ROUGE, LA. (HOST: LSU)

Third Round: #3 Georgia 4, #6 Texas A&M 1

Semifinals: #3 Georgia 4, #2 Vanderbilt 0

Final: #1 Florida 4, #3 Georgia 2

2017 – NASHVILLE, TENN. (HOST: VANDERBILT)

Third Round: #10 Auburn 4, #2 Georgia 1

2018 – KNOXVILLE, TENN. (HOST: TENNESSEE)

Third Round: #5 Ole Miss 4, #4 Georgia 1

2019 – COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS. (HOST: TEXAS A&M)

Third Round: #1 Georgia 4, #9 LSU 0

Semifinals: #1 Georgia 4, #5 Texas A&m 0

Final: #2 South Carolina 4, #1 Georgia 3

2020 – CANCELLED DUE TO COVID-19

2021 – TUSCALOOSA, ALA. (HOST: ALABAMA)

Third Round: #1 Georgia 4, #9 Kentucky 0

Semifinals: #1 Georgia 4, #4 Tennessee 0

Final: #1 Georgia 4, #3 Texas A&M 0

2022 – GAINESVILLE, FLA. (HOST: FLORIDA)

Third Round: #3 Georgia 4, #6 South Carolina 2

Semifinals: #3 Georgia 4, #7 Tennessee 3

Final: #1 Texas A&M 4, #3 Georgia 0

Note: The SEC began it’s current team format tournament in 1990. Before that date, the tournament was individual flights excluding the 1982 and 1983 season.

SEC TOURNAMENT OVERVIEW

19x

11x SEC CHAMPIONS

REGULAR SEASON CHAMPS

8x SEC TOURNAMENT CHAMPS

43 BULLDOGS GEORGIADOGS.COM
SEC
Year Site Round Reached (Opponent) 1990 Knoxville, Tenn. Finals (Florida) 1991 Knoxville, Tenn. Finals (Florida) 1992 Tuscaloosa, Ala. Finals (Florida) 1993 Nashville, Tenn. Finals (Florida) 1994 Fayetteville, Ark. Champion (Florida) 1995 Auburn, Ala. Finals (Florida) 1996 Gainesville, Fla. Semifinals (Vanderbilt) 1997 Athens, Ga. Finals (Florida) 1998 Lexington, Ky. Finals (Florida) 1999 Baton Rouge, La. Semifinals (Ole Miss) 2000 Oxford, Miss. Finals Florida) 2001 Starkville, Miss. Champion (Tennessee) 2002 Columbia, S.C. Semifinals (South Carolina) 2003 Knoxville, Tenn. Finals (Florida) 2004 Nashville, Tenn. Quarterfinals (Kentucky) 2005 Tuscaloosa, Ala. Semifinals (Kentucky) 2006 Gainesville, Fla. Quarterfinals (Tennessee) 2007 Lexington, Ky. Champion (Florida) 2008 Auburn, Ala Champion (Florida) 2009 Fayetteville, Ark. Champion (Tennessee) 2010 Athens, Ga, Quarterfinals (South Carolina) 2011 Knoxville, Tenn. Semifinals (Tennessee) 2012 Oxford, Miss. Finals (Florida) 2013 Starkville, Miss. Finals (Florida) 2014 Columbia, Mo. Champion (Alabama) 2015 Columbia, S.C. Finals (Vanderbilt) 2016 Baton Rouge, La. Finals (Florida) 2017 Nashville, Tenn. Third Round (Auburn) 2018 Knoxville, Tenn. Third Round (Ole Miss) 2019 College Station, Texas Finals (South Carolina) 2020 *** Canceled*** 2021 Tuscaloosa, Ala. Champion (Texas A&M) 2022 Gainesville, Fla. Finals (Texas A&M)

NO.2

Note: Since the 1982 & 1983 championships did not follow a flighted format, there were no individual championships awarded those years. The individual championships were discontinued after the 1989 tournament since the team dual match format was instituted for the conference tournament in 1990.

GEORGIA 44 WOMEN'S TENNIS MEDIA GUIDE
SINGLES CHAMPIONS NO.1 SINGLES 1980 Mary Lynner Smisson 1984 Lisa Spain 1986 Jane Cohodes NO.2 SINGLES 1989 Stacey Schefflin NO.3 SINGLES 1980 Ilene Friedland 1986 Alice Reen 1989 Caryn Moss NO.4 SINGLES n/a NO.5 SINGLES 1985 Alice Reen 1986 Laurie Friedland 1988 Jill Waldman 1989 Jill Waldman NO.6 SINGLES 1985 Laurie Friedland
DOUBLES CHAMPIONS
DOUBLES
Stacey Schefflin
Apanay
SEC
SEC
NO.1
1988
& Lisa
DOUBLES
Holly Mills & Jamie Kaplan
DOUBLES
Jill Waldman & Caryn Moss
1981
NO.3
1987.................................Jill Waldman & Laurie Friedland 1989
SEC TOURNAMENT MVP 1997.......................................................Michelle Anderson 1998 Marrissa Catlin 2001 Mariel Verban 2007 Natalie Frazier 2008 Kelley Hyndman 2009 Monika Dancevik 2014 Silvia Garcia 2021 Morgan Coppoc * SEC began naming an MVP in 1997 SEC ALL-TOURNAMENT TEAM 2011 Cameron Ellis 2012 Maho Kowase Lilly Kimbell 2013 Kate Fuller Lauren Herring 2014 Silvia Garcia Lilly Kimbell 2015 Lauren Herring Hannah King 2016 Kennedy Shaffer Mariana Gould 2019 Elena Christofi Vivian Wolff 2021 Morgan Coppoc Lea Ma 2022.................................................................Mell Reasco .............................................................................Ania Hertel SEC TOURNAMENT ALL-TIME RECORD ALABAMA 5-0 ARKANSAS 3-0 AUBURN 4-1 FLORIDA 6-12 KENTUCKY 5-2 LSU 6-0 MISSISSIPPI STATE 2-0 OLE MISS 7-3 SOUTH CAROLINA 5-2 TENNESSEE 14-2 TEXAS A&M 2-1 VANDERBILT 2-2
NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP | ATHENS, 1994 1994 2000 2019 1995 2002 USTA INDOORS | MADISON, WIS. USTA INDOORS | MADISON, WIS. USTA INDOORS | MADISON, WIS. NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP | MALIBU, ITA INDOORS | SEATTLE, WASH.

DOUBLES CHAMPIONS

1994 MICHELLE ANDERSON AND ANGELA LETTIERE

Defeated Rebecca Jensen and Nora Koves of Kansas 7-5, 6-1 at the ITA National Indoor Tournament

1994 TINA SAMARA AND STACY SHEPPARD

Defeated Erica O’Neill and Jana Strnadova of Syracuse 6-3, 6-7 (2), 6-3 at the National Clay Courts

1998 VANESSA CASTELLANO AND MARISSA CATLIN

Defeated Celeste Frey and Marianna Eberle of Ole Miss 6-0, 6-2 at the National Clay Courts

1999 VANESSA CASTELLANO AND MARISSA CATLIN

Defeated Karen Goldstein and Vanessa Webb of Duke 7-5, 6-3 at the Rolex National Indoors

SINGLES CHAMPIONS

1983 LISA SPAIN

Defeated Heliane Steden of USC 6-4, 6-3 at the Riviera/ITA All-American Championships

1984 LISA SPAIN

Defeated Linda Gates of Stanford 7-5, 3-6, 6-3 at the NCAA Championships

1994 ANGELA LETTIERE

Defeated Keri Phebus of UCLA 7-6(4), 6-2 at the NCAA Championships

2002 AGATA CIOROCH

Defeated Jewel Peterson of USC 6-4, 6-3 at the ITA National Indoor Championships

2003 AGATA CIOROCH

Defeated Anda Perianu of Oklahoma 6-3, 6-1 at the ITA National Indoor Championships

2010 CHELSEY GULLICKSON

Defeated Jana Juricova of California 6-3, 7-6(7) at the NCAA Championships

2018 KATARINA JOKIC

Defeated Kate Fahey of Michigan 6-3, 7-5 at the ITA National Fall Championships

LISA SPAIN ANGELA LETTIERE AGATA CIOROCH CHELSEY GULLICKSON KATARINA JOKIC

1987 - LOS ANGELES, CALIF. (HOST: UCLA)

1st Round: Georgia 5, Miami 4

Quarterfinals: Georgia 5, Trinity 4

Semifinals: Georgia 5, SMU 3

Final: Stanford 5, Georgia 1

1988 - LOS ANGELES, CALIF. (HOST: UCLA)

1st Round: Georgia 6, Indiana 0

Quarterfinals: Stanford 5, Georgia 3

1989 - GAINESVILLE, FLA. (HOST: FLORIDA)

1st Round: Georgia 5, Texas 1

Quarterfinals: Georgia 5, Cal 1

Semifinals: Stanford 6, Georgia 0

1990 - GAINESVILLE, FLA. (HOST: FLORIDA)

1st Round: Georgia 5, Oklahoma State 1

Quarterfinals: Stanford 6, Georgia 0

1991 - STANFORD, CALIF. (HOST: STANFORD)

1st Round: Georgia 6, Indiana 0

Quarterfinals: Georgia 5, Pepperdine 1

Semifinals: Stanford 5, Georgia 1

1992 - STANFORD, CALIF. (HOST: STANFORD)

1st Round: Duke 5, Georgia 4

1993 - GAINESVILLE, FLA. (HOST: FLORIDA)

1st Round: Georgia 5, Indiana 3

Quarterfinals: Stanford 5, Georgia 1

1994 - ATHENS, GA. (HOST: GEORGIA)

1st Round: Georgia 5, Southern Cal 2

Quarterfinals: Georgia 5, Duke 0

Semifinals: Georgia 5, Cal 3

Final: Georgia 5, Stanford 4

1995 - MALIBU, CALIF. (HOST: PEPPERDINE)

1st Round: Georgia 5, South Carolina 4

Quarterfinals: Georgia 5, Duke 0

Semifinals: Florida 5, Georgia 0

1996 - COLUMBIA, S.C. (HOST: USC)

1st Round: Georgia 5, Miami 2

Regional Semifinal: Georgia 5, Tennessee 2

Regional Final:Clemson 5, Georgia 4

1997 - STANFORD, CALIF. (HOST: STANFORD)

1st Round: William & Mary 0, Georgia 5

1998 - NOTRE DAME, IND. (HOST: NOTRE DAME)

1st Round: Georgia 5, Kansas 3

Quarterfinals: Georgia 5, William & Mary 2

Semifinals: Florida 5, Georgia 1

1999 - GAINESVILLE, FLA. (HOST: FLORIDA)

1st Round: Georgia 5, Central Florida 0

Quarterfinals: Georgia 5, Miss. State 0

Semifinals: Georgia 5, South Carolina 0

Final: Cal 5, Georgia 4

2000 - MALIBU, CALIF. (HOST: PEPPERDINE)

1st Round: Georgia 5, Furman 0

2nd Round: Georgia 5, Ohio State 0

Round of 16: Georgia 5, South Alabama 1

Quarterfinals: Georgia 5, Southern Cal 1

Semifinals: Georgia 5, Florida 2

Final: Georgia 5, Stanford 4

2001 - ATLANTA, GA. (HOST: GEORGIA TECH)

1st Round: Georgia 4, Coastal Carolina 0

2nd Round: Georgia 4, Miss. State 0

Round of 16: Georgia 5, Baylor 0

Quarterfinals: Georgia 4, Southern Cal 0

Semifinals: Vanderbilt 4, Georgia 2

2002 - STANFORD, CALIF. (HOST: STANFORD)

1st Round: Georgia 4, Winthrop 0

2nd Round: Georgia 4, South Alabama 3

Round of 16: Georgia 4, Cal 1

Quarterfinals: Georgia 4, UCLA 2

Semifinals: Stanford 4, Georgia 0

2003 - STANFORD, CALIF. (HOST: STANFORD)

1st Round: Georgia 4, UMBC 0

2nd Round: Georgia 4, Alabama 1

Round of 16: Georgia 4, Kentucky 0

Quarterfinals: Stanford 4, Georgia 0

2004 - ATHENS, GA. (HOST: GEORGIA)

1st Round: Georgia 4, Samford 0

2nd Round: Georgia 4, Georgia Tech 0

Round of 16: Georgia 4, Fresno State 2

Quarterfinals: Vanderbilt 4, Georgia 2

2005 - ATHENS, GA. (HOST: GEORGIA)

1st Round: Georgia 4, Quinniapac 0

2nd Round: Georgia 4, South Carolina 0

Round of 16: Georiga 4, Cal 2

Quarterfinals: Georgia 4, Stanford 1

2006 - STANFORD, CALIF. (HOST: STANFORD)

1st Round: Georgia 4, Indiana 1

2nd Round: Vanderbilt 4, Georgia 2

2007 - ATHENS, GA. (HOST: GEORGIA)

1st Round: Georgia 4, South Carolina State 0

2nd Round: Georgia 4, Auburn 0

Round of 16: Georgia 4, William & Mary 2 Quarterfinals: Georgia 4, Cal 1

2008 - TULSA, OKLA. (HOST: TULSA)

1st Round: Georgia 4, Yale 0

2nd Round: Georgia 4, South Carolina 0

Round of 16: Arkansas 4, Georgia 2

2009 - COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS (HOST: TEXAS)

1st Round: Georgia 4, South Carolina State 0

2nd Round: Georgia 4, Boise State 0

Round of 16: Georgia 4, Florida 2

Quarterfinals: Georgia 4, South Carolina 3

Semifinals: Duke 5, Georgia 2

2010 - ATHENS, GA. (HOST: GEORGIA)

1st Round: Georgia 4, Harvard 0

2nd Round: Clemson 4, Georgia 2

2011 - STANFORD, CALIF. (HOST: STANFORD)

1st Round: Georgia 4, Marist 0

2nd Round: Georgia 4, Alabama 0

Round of 16: Georgia 4, Cal 3

Quarterfinals: Stanford 4, Georgia 0

2012 - ATHENS, GA. (HOST: GEORGIA)

1st Round: Georgia 4, College of Charleston 0

2nd Round: Georgia 4, Clemson 3

Round of 16: Georgia 4, Texas 0

Quarterfinals: Duke 4, Georgia 2

2013 - CHAMPAIGN, ILL. (HOST: ILLINOIS)

1st Round: Georgia 4, Winthrop 0

2nd Round: Georgia 4, Arizona State 0

Round of 16: Georgia 4, Clemson 2

Quarterfinals: Stanford 4, Georgia 1

2014 - ATHENS, GA. (HOST: GEORGIA)

1st Round: Georgia 4, Elon 0

2nd Round: Georgia 4, Florida State 0

Round of 16: Georgia 4, Southern Cal 3

Quarterfinals: Florida 4, Georgia 1

2015 - WACO, TEXAS (HOST: BAYLOR)

1st Round: Georgia 4, Charelston Southern 0

2nd Round: Georgia 4, Duke 0

Round of 16: Georgia 4, Michigan 2

Quarterfinals: Georgia 4, Stanford 1

Semifinals: UCLA 4, Georgia 1

2016 - TULSA, OKLA. (HOST: TULSA)

1st Round: Georgia 4, North Florida 0

2nd Round: Georgia 4, Baylor 0

Round of 16: Oklahoma State 4, Georgia 0

2017 - ATHENS, GA. (HOST: GEORGIA)

1st Round: Georgia 4, South Carolina State 0

2nd Round: Georgia 4, North Carolina State 0

Round of 16: Pepperdine 4, Georgia 3

2018 - WINSTON SALEM, N.C. (HOST: WF)

1st Round: Georgia 4, Georgia State 0

2nd Round: Georgia 4, Wake Forest 0

Round of 16: Georgia 4, South Carolina 3

Quarterfinals: Stanford 4, Georgia 0

2019 - ORLANDO, FLA. (HOST: UCF)

1st Round: Georgia 4, Alabama State 0

2nd Round: Georgia 4, Wake Forest 0

Round of 16: Georgia 4, Michigan 2

Quarterfinals: Georgia 4, Vanderbilt 3

Semifinals: Georgia 4, Duke 2

Final: Stanford 4, Georgia 0

2020 - ORLANDO, FLA. (HOST: UCF)

Cancelled due to Covid-19 pandemic

2021 - ORLANDO, FLA. (HOST: UCF)

1st Round: Georgia 4, Austin Peay St. 0

2nd Round: Georgia 4, Wake Forest 1

Round of 16: Georgia 4, Virginia 1

Quarterfinals: NC State 4, Georgia 2

2022 - CHAMPAIGN, ILL. (HOST: ILLINOIS)

1st Round: Georgia 4, Charleston Southern 0

2nd Round: Georgia 4, Wake Forest 0

Round of 16: Duke 4, Georgia 1

NCAA TOURNAMENT OVERVIEW

Year Final Site Round Reached (Opponent)

Los Angeles, Calif. Finals (Stanford)

1988 Los Angeles, Calif. Quarterfinals (Stanford)

1989 Gainesville, Fla. First Round (Pepperdine)

1990 Gainesville, Fla. Quarterfinals (Stanford)

1991 Stanford, Calif. Semifinals (Stanford)

1992 Stanford, Calif. First Round (Duke)

1993 Gainesville, Fla. Quarterfinals (Duke)

1994 Athens, Ga. Champion (Stanford)

1995 Malibu, Calif. Semifinals (Stanford)

1996 Columbia, S.C. Regional Final (Clemson)

1997 Stanford, Calif. First Round (William & Mary)

1998 Notre Dame, Ind. Semifinals (Florida)

1999 Gainesville, Fla. Finals (California)

2000 Malibu, Calif. Champion (Pepperdine)

2001 Stone Mountain, Ga. Semifinals (Vanderbilt)

2002 Stanford, Calif. Semifinals (Stanford)

2003 Stanford, Calif. Quarterfinals (Stanford)

2004 Athens, Ga. Quarterfinals (Vanderbilt)

2005 Athens, Ga. Quarterfinals (Stanford)

2006 Stanford, Calif. Second Round (Vanderbilt)

2007 Athens, Ga. Quarterfinals (California)

2008 Tulsa, Okla. Round of 16 (Arkansas)

2009 College Station, Texas Semifinals (Duke)

2010 Athens, Ga. Second Round (Clemson)

2011 Stanford, Calif. Quarterfinals (Stanford)

2012 Athens, Ga. Quarterfinals (Duke)

2013 Champaign, Ill. Quarterfinals (Stanford)

2014 Athens, Ga. Quarterfinals (Florida)

2015 Waco, Texas Semifinals (UCLA)

2016 Tulsa, Okla. Round of 16 (Oklahoma State)

2017 Athens, Ga. Round of 16 (Pepperdine)

2018 Winston Salem, N.C. Quarterfinals (Stanford)

2019 Orlando, Fla. Finals (Stanford)

2020 Orlando, Fla. *** Canceled***

2021 Orlando, Fla. Quarterfinals (NC State)

2022 Champaign, Ill. Round of 16 (Duke)

47 BULLDOGS GEORGIADOGS.COM
1987

NCAA TOURNAMENT SINGLES RESULTS

1983

LISA SPAIN

1st Rd.: def. Foreman (Clemson) 6-4, 3-6, 6-4

2nd Rd.: def. Blumentritt (Rice) 6-0, 7-5

Rd. of 16: lost Allen (Trinity) 6-0, 6-2

1984

LISA SPAIN

1st Rd.: def. Linstrom (N.E. Louisiana) 2-6, 6-4, 6-2

2nd Rd.: def. Elliott (Trinity) 6-2, 6-3

Rd. of 16: def. Jung (Pepperdine) 6-4, 7-5

QF: def. Minter (UCLA) 7-5, 7-5

SF: def. Rush (Trinity) 3-6, 7-6 (10), 6-3

F: def. Gates (Stanford) 7-5, 3-6, 6-3

1986

JANE COHODES

1st Rd.: lost Prah (Cal) 6-1, 6-4

1987

LAURIE FRIEDLAND

1st Rd.: def. Hahn (Kentucky) 7-6 (5), 6-2

2nd Rd.: lost Savides (Stanford) 4-6, 7-5, 6-1

1988

LIZ ALEXANDER

1st Rd.: def. Wood (Oklahoma State) 6-2, 6-0

2nd Rd.: lost Stafford (Florida) 6-0, 6-0

STACY SCHEFFLIN

1st Rd: lost Norwood (Southern Cal) 6-3, 6-0

1989

SHANNAN MCCARTHY

1st Rd.: def. Larking (San Diego) 6-2, 2-6, 6-2

2nd Rd.: def. Foltz (Indiana) 4-6, 7-5, 6-0

Rd. of 16: def. Albano (Cal) 7-6(5), 6-2

QF: lost Porter (Pepperdine) 7-6, (4), 6-1

STACY SCHEFFLIN

1st Rd.: def. Sampras (UCLA) 6-0, 6-2

2nd Rd.: def. Reece (Indiana) 6-1, 6-1

Rd. of 16: lost Santrock (SMU) 6-4, 4-6, 6-2

LIZ ALEXANDER

1st Rd.: def. Jockosky (Arizona State) 1-6, 7-5, 6-2

2nd Rd.: lost Helgeson (Pepperdine) 6-1, 6-1

CARYN MOSS

1st Rd.: def. Sloan (Brown) 6-2, 6-4

2nd Rd.: lost Emmons (UCLA) 6-2, 7-5 (5)

JILL WALDMAN

1st Rd.: lost Yates (Kentucky) 6-2, 6-3

2nd Rd.: def. Hazlett (Florida) 6-4, 7-6(1)

Rd of 16: lost Colosio (LSU) 6-4, 6-3

1990

SHANNAN MCCARTHY

1st Rd.: def. Booth (Oklahoma State) 6-3, 6-1

2nd Rd.: lost Hamers (Kansas) 6-3, 3-6, 6-1

CARYN MOSS

1st Rd.: def. Carotenuto (U.S. Inter.) 6-2, 6-4

2nd Rd.: lost Green (Stanford) 6-4, 6-1

STACY SCHEFFLIN

1st Rd.: def. Durak (William & Mary) 6-3, 6-3

2nd Rd.: def. Denforth (Florida) 6-1, 6-3

Rd. of 16: lost Graham (Stanford) 6-4, 6-0

JILL WALDMAN

1st Rd.: def. Jonkowsky (Arizona State) 6-2, 6-4

2nd Rd.: lost Lozzano (Cal) 6-2, 6-1

1991

Angela Lettiere

1st Rd.: lost Kuttler (Florida) 6-4, 6-3

SHANNAN MCCARTHY

1st Rd.: def. Sampras (UCLA) 6-1, 6-3

2nd Rd.: def. Verbruggen (Miami)

Rd. of 16: def. Vigueira (Cal) 7-6 (3), 7-6 (5)

QF: def. Farley (Florida)6-2, 5-7, 7-5

SF: lost Birch(Stanford) 4-6, 6-2, 6-3

TONYA BOGDONAS

1st Rd.: lost Mazzotta (Miami) 6-0, 6-2

LAURA KIMEL

1st Rd.: def. Yates (Arizona) 6-3, 6-0

2nd Rd.: lost Exum (Duke) 3-6, 6-1, 6-4

1992

SHANNAN MCCARTHY

1st Rd.: def. Sirianni (Oklahoma State) 6-2, 6-0

2nd Rd.: def. Schmitt (Southern Cal) 6-2, 6-4 Rd. of 16: def. Reece (Indiana) 6-2, 6-4

QF: def. Lloyd (Florida) 6-0, 6-3

SF: def. Poruri (Stanford) 6-2, 6-3

F: lost Raymond (Florida) 6-3, 6-3

SHAWN MCCARTHY

1st Rd.: def. Abe (Cal) 6-2, 6-0

2nd Rd.: Gurney (North Carolina) 3-6, 6-4, 6-1

1993

ANNE CHAUZU

1st Rd.: def. Poulos (Cal) 6-2, 6-3

2nd Rd.: lost Farley (Florida) 6-1, 6-2

STACY SHEPPARD

1st Rd.: lost Mazzotta (Miami) 7-5, 7-5

1994

STACY SHEPPARD

1st Rd.: def. Olejar (Pepperdine) 6-4, 3-6, 7-5

2nd Rd.: lost Tzvetkova (Clemson) 6-1, 2-6, 6-3

ANGELA LETTIERE

1st Rd.: def. Callen (Virginia) 6-4, 6-0

2nd Rd.: def. Hint (N.C. State) 6-2, 6-2

Rd. of 16: def. Poulos (Cal) 7-5, 6-1

QF: def. Chi (UCLA) 6-1, 6-0

SF: def. Collantes (Ole Miss) 7-6(6), 6-1

F: def. Phebus (UCLA) 7-6(4), 6-2

1995

MICHELLE ANDERSON

1st Rd.: lost Davidson (Cal) 6-3, 6-2

ANNA CHAUZU

1st Rd.: lost Simkova (Southern Cal) 6-2, 6-4

TINA SAMARA

1st Rd.: lost Bash (Kentucky) 6-4, 3-6, 7-5(6)

STACY SHEPPARD

1st Rd.: def. Lyons (Duke) 2-6, 6-2, 6-2

2nd Rd.: def. Okada (UCSB) 4-6, 6-2, 7-6(5)

Rd. of 16: def. Chi (UCLA) 6-2, 6-4

QF: def. Viollet (Miami) 7-5, 6-4

SF: lost Pace (Texas) 6-1, 6-1

1996

Michelle Anderson

1st Rd.: def. Petrov (Pepperdine) 6-3, 4-6, 6-4

2nd Rd.: lost Hall (Notre Dame) 6-4, 6-4

ANNE CHAUZU

1st Rd.: def. Sanderson (Duke) 6-3, 6-4

2nd Rd.: lost Hunt (Kansas) 6-4, 6-2

1997

MICHELLE ANDERSON

1st Rd.: ret. Harris (Wake Forest) 6-2, 0-1

MARISSA CATLIN

1st Rd.: def. Lepsi (Tennessee) 6-7(5), 6-3, 6-4

2nd Rd.: def. Merchant (Florida) 7-6(4), 6-4

Rd. of 16: lost Lesenarova (San Diego) 6-3, 7-5

1998

VANESSA CASTELLANO

1st Rd.: def. Knox (Cal) 7-5, 1-6, 6-3

2nd Rd.: lost Nickitas (Florida) 7-6(4), 6-2

AARTHI VENKATESAN

1st Rd.: lost Boyd (Southern Cal) 3-6, 7-6(3), 7-5

1999

VANESSA CASTELLANO

1st Rd.: def. Warkentin (Southern Cal) 7-5, 6-2

2nd Rd.: def. Emami (Kentucky) 6-3, 6-2

Rd. of 16: def. Webb (Duke) 7-5, 6-2

QF: def. Pavlidou (Arkansas) 6-3, 6-1

SF: lost Irvin (Stanford) 6-2, 6-4

AARTHI VENKATESAN

1st Rd.: def. Dascoli (Ohio State) 6-3, 6-0

2nd Rd.: def. Cooper (UCLA) 6-4, 6-1

Rd. of 16: lost Huber (Southern Cal) 6-2, 4-6, 7-6(4)

MARISSA CATLIN

1st Rd.: def. Giraldo (Clemson) 7-5, 7-6(5)

2nd Rd.: def. Friganovic (New Mexico)

Rd. of 16: lost Valkyova (San Diego) 6-4, 6-3

ESTHER KNOX

1st Rd.: def. Griffin (Maryland) 6-2, 6-3

2nd Rd.: def. Ditty (Vanderbilt) 6-4, 6-3

Rd. of 16: lost Irvin (Stanford) 6-2, 4-6, 6-2

2000

MARISSA CATLIN

1st Rd.: def. Piski (Auburn) 6-2, 6-0

2nd Rd.: lost Granville (Stanford) 6-2, 6-0

LORI GREY

1st Rd.: def. Nasser (Northwestern) 6-2, 6-2

2nd Rd.: def. Hazlett (Florida) 6-4, 7-6(1)

Rd of 16: lost Colosio (LSU) 6-4, 6-3

ESTHER KNOX

1st Rd.: def. Chiew (BYU) 6-3, 6-4

2nd Rd.: lost Irvin (Stanford) 6-4, 6-3

AARTHI VENKATESAN

1st Rd.: def. Blau (Arizona) 6-2, 6-0

2nd Rd.: def. Frey (Ole Miss) 7-6(3), 3-6, 6-3

Rd. of 16: def. Bielik (Wake Forest) 6-1, 7-6(3)

QF: def. Lehnhoff (Florida) 7-6(7), 3-6, 6-0

SF: lost Granville (Stanford) 6-1, 6-0

GEORGIA 48 WOMEN'S TENNIS MEDIA GUIDE

2001

AARTHI VENKATESAN

1st Rd.: def. Tokuda (Stanford) 6-3, 6-3

2nd Rd.: lost Ditty (Vanderbilt) 2-6, 6-3, 6-3

ANNE NGUYEN

1st Rd.: def. Miller (Duke) 5-7, 7-6, 6-4

2nd Rd.: lost Engel (Arizona State) 4-6, 7-5, 6-2

MARIEL VERBAN

1st Rd.: def. Parekh (Baylor) 4-6, 6-3, 6-3

2nd Rd.: lost Kalvaria (Stanford) 6-4, 6-1

2002

AGATA CIOROCH

1st Rd.: def. Dumitrescu (Florida State) 6-2, 6-2

2nd Rd.: def. Pillay (Tulsa) 6-0, 6-1

Rd. of 16: lost Lastra (Stanford) 6-0, 6-4

2003

AGATA CIOROCH

1st Rd.: def. Perianu (Oklahoma) 6-4, 6-2

2nd Rd.: def. Pinchbeck (North Carolina)

Rd. of 16: def. Sumatri (Washington) 6-2, 6-4

QF: def. Kops-Jones (Cal) 6-7(2), 6-2, 6-2

SF: lost Castellvi (Tennessee) 7-5, 6-2

ANNE NGUYEN

1st Rd: lost Encina (Tennessee) 6-1, 6-2

2004

AGATA CIOROCH

1st Rd.: lost Karnaukhova (Sacramento State) 4-6, 6-3, 6-4

SHADISHA ROBINSON

1st Rd.: def. Aburto (TCU) 6-3, 3-6, 6-2

2nd Rd.: lost Kalsarieva (Kentucky) 5-7, 7-5, 6-4

2005

SHADISA ROBINSON

1st Rd.: lost Yesley (Stanford) 6-3, 6-4

NATALIE FRAZIER

1st Rd.: lost Walter (Baylor) 6-3, 6-2

2006

NATALIE FRAZIER

1st Rd.: lost Carleton (Duke) 7-5, 6-3

2007

NATALIE FRAZIER

1st Rd.: def. Cerna (Baylor) 6-1, 6-2

2nd Rd.: def. Zheltova (Sacramento State) 7-5, 6-3 Rd. of 16: def. Logar (Stanford) 6-0, 5-7, 7-6(6)

QF: lost Falcon (LSU) 6-4, 6-4

MONIKA DANCEVIC

1st Rd.: lost Cohen (Miami) 6-0, 4-6, 6-2

2008

KELLY HYNDMAN

1st Rd.: def. Voelker (Denver) 6-3, 2-6, 7-6(3)

2nd Rd.: lost Zemenova (Baylor) 2-6, 6-2, 6-2

YVETTE HYNDMAN

1st Rd.: lost Uvarova (VCU) 5-7, 6-3, 6-3

2009

CHELSEY GULLICKSON

1st Rd.: def. Kissell (Miami) 6-2, 6-4

2nd Rd.: def. Abdala (Arizona State) 6-3, 6-1

Rd. of 16: def. Juricova (Cal) 6-3, 7-6(5)

QF: def. def. Mosolova (Northwestern) 6-1, 6-4

SF: lost Vallverdu (Miami) 6-4, 5-7, 6-4

NADJA GILCHRIST

1st Rd.: lost Andersson (Cal) 6-2, 6-4

YVETTE HYNDMAN

1st Rd.: lost Schnack (UCLA) 6-3, 6-3

2010

CHELSEY GULLICKSON

1st Rd.: def. Rubesova (N.W. State) 6-1, 6-1

2nd Rd.: def. Marand (North Carolina) 7-6(3), 6-4

Rd. of 16: def. Will (Florida) 6-1, 6-4

QF: def. Falconi (Georgia Tech) 6-2, 6-4

SF: def. Barte (Stanford) 7-6(6), 6-3

F: def. Juricova (Cal) 6-3, 7-6(7)

2011

CHELSEY GULLICKSON

1st Rd.: def. Wong (Clemson) 4-6, 6-3, 6-2

2nd Rd.: def. Muresan (Michigan) 3-6, 6-3, 6-3

Rd. of 16: def. De Bruycker (UNC) 6-1, 2-6, 6-2

QF: lost Juricova (Cal) 6-3, 6-0

2012

CHELSEY GULLICKSON

1st Rd.: lost Santamaria (Southern Cal) 6-3, 6-2

MAHO KOWASE

1st Rd.: lost Ellis (Texas) 2-6, 7-6(5), 6-1

2013

LAUREN HERRING

1st Rd.: def. Turvy (Northwestern) 6-1, 3-6, 6-3

2nd Rd.: def. Scandalis (Southern Cal) 6-4, 6-2

Rd. of 16: def. Hardebeck (Stanford) 6-0, 6-2

QF: lost Weatherholt (Nebraska) 6-2, 6-2

MAHO KOWASE

1st Rd.: def. Smith (UC-Irvine) 4-6, 7-6(7-5), 6-3

2nd Rd.: lost Sanchez (Texas A&M) 6-2, 6-1

2014

SILIVIA GARCIA

1st Rd.: def. Niu (Northwestern) 6-2, 6-2

2nd Rd.: def. Davidson (Stanford) 6-0, 6-7(6), 7-5 Rd. of 16: lost Capra (Duke) 7-6(4), 6-2

LAUREN HERRING

1st Rd.: def. Vyskocilova (Tulane) 6-1, 6-2

2nd Rd.: lost Zhao (Stanford) 7-6(4), 7-5

MAHO KOWASE

1st Rd.: lost Cater (North Carolina) 6-4, 6-3

2015

LAUREN HERRING

1st Rd.: lost Lohan (Miami) 6-1, 6-4

2016

CAROLINE BRINSON

1st Rd.: def. Manasse (Cal) 6-3, 6-2

ELLEN PEREZ

1st Rd.: def. Vaidya (Columbia) 6-0, 6-4

2nd Rd.: lost Adamovic (Oklahoma State) 6-3, 7-5

KENNEDY SHAFFER

1st Rd.: def. Kay (UNC) 6-1, 6-4

2nd Rd.: def. Yurovsky (Michigan) 6-3, 3-6, 7-6(4)

Rd. of 16: def. Ip (Rice) 6-4, 3-6, 6-2

SF: lost Stefani (Pepperdine) 6-1, 6-4

2017

ELENA CHRISTOFI

1st Rd.: lost Marker (Arizona) 7-5, 7-6(10-8)

ELLEN PEREZ

1st Rd.: def. Guerin (Wake Forest) 6-3,6-3

2nd Rd.: def. Fung (Washington) 7-5, 6-3

Rd. of 16: lost Danilina (Florida) 6-4, 7-6(7-3)

KENNEDY SHAFFER

1st Rd.: lost Daavettila (North Carolina) 7-5, 6-3

2018

KATARINA JOKIC

1st Rd.: lost Sherif Ahmed (Pepperdine) 7-5, 4-6, 6-4

2019

MARTA GONZALEZ

1st Rd.: def. Ewing (Southern Cal)

2nd Rd.: lost Morra (North Carolina) 7-6(7-5), 6-2

KATARINA JOKIC

1st Rd.: def. Kozarov (Furman)7-5, 7-5

2nd Rd.: def. Turati (Texas) 7-6(7-3), 6-2 Rd. of 16: def. Rychagovea (Kansas) 6-1, 6-7(6-8), 6-3

QF: def. Hart (UCLA) 3-6, 6-4, 6-3

SF: def. Chen (Duke) 7-5, 6-2

F: lost Perez-Somarriba (Miami) 6-7(1-7), 6-2, 6-3

2020

Cancelled due to Covid-19 pandemic

2021

KATARINA JOKIC

1st Rd.: def. Khatamova (UCSB) 6-1, 7-6(5)

2nd Rd.: lost Tjen (Oregon) 6-1, 6-4

MEG KOWALSKI

1st Rd.: def. Jones (UNC) 6-2, 6-2

2nd Rd.: def. Kozarov (Furman) 7-5, 6-4 Rd. of 16: lost Navarro (Virginia) 6-1, 6-1

LEA MA

1st Rd.: def. Stolmar (UCF) 6-1, 6-4

2nd Rd.: lost Daavettila (UNC) 6-4, 6-4

49 BULLDOGS GEORGIADOGS.COM

NCAA TOURNAMENT DOUBLES RESULTS

1983

NANCY COHEN/LISA SPAIN

1st Rd.: lost Burgin/Gates (Stanford) 6-2, 6-4

1984

ALICE REEN/LISA SPAIN

1st Rd.: def. Wood/Rudd (Rice) 6-3, 4-6 /, 6-2

2nd Rd.: lost MacGregor/Howell (San Diego State) 6-4, 6-3

1986

JEN COHODES/ALICE REEN

1st Rd.: lost Fletcher/Finerman (Cal) 6-4,7-5

1988

LISA APANAY/STACEY SCHEFFLIN

1st Rd.: def. Chambers/Neil (Illinois) 7-5, 6-7 (6), 7-6 (4)

2nd Rd.: lost Campbell/Marshall (Oklahoma) 6-4, 7-5

1989

SHANNON MCCARTHY/STACEY SCHEFFLIN

1st Rd.: def. Amend/Jonkowsky (Arizona State) 7-6 (9), 6-1

2nd Rd.: lost Finerman/Albano (Cal) 6-3, 6-3

1990

SHANNON MCCARTHY/STACEY SCHEFFLIN

1st Rd.: def. Lane/Iiorkowski (Boston College) 6-1,6-2

2nd Rd.: def. Amend/Glitz (Arizona State) 6-3, 6-4

QF: def. Gilchrist/Plautz (Texas) 6-1, 6-3

SF: lost Birch/Graham (Stanford) 6-3, 6-3

CARYN MOSS/JILL WALDMAN

1st Rd.: lost Booth/Waniek (Oklahoma State) 3-6, 6-4, 6-4

1991

ANGELA LET TIERE/SHANNON MCCARTHY

1st Rd.: lost Bergan/Rojohn (Arizona State) 6-1, 5-7, 6-4

1992

SHAWN MCCARTHY/STACY SHEPPARD

1st Rd.: def. Salvatierra/Stevens (Utah) 6-4, 4-6, 6-1

Rd. of 16: def. Barone/Collantes (Ole Miss) 6-3, 6-4

QF: lost McKeon/Richards (San Diego) 6-2, 7-5

1993

ANNE CHAUZU/ANGELA LETTIERE

1st Rd.: def. Cioffi/Geiger (Arizona State) 3-6, 6-2, 6-3

2nd Rd.: lost Guenther/van der Merwe (William & Mary) 1-6, 6-3, 6-4

1994

TINA SAMARA/STACY SHEPPARD

1st Rd.: def. Poruri/Schlukebir (Stanford) 6-1, 4-6, 6-4

2nd Rd.: lost Bougnol/Piquemal (Ole Miss) 6-2, 6-3

1995

TINA SAMARA/STACY SHEPPARD

1st Rd.: def. Gevers/Villarroel (South Alabama) 6-2, 6-3

2nd Rd.: def. Italiano/Schmitt (Southern Cal) 6-4, 6-3

QF: def. Bleszynski/Schlukebir (Stanford) 1-6, 7-6 (5), 6-4

SF: lost Phebus/Starrett (UCLA) 6-3, 1-6, 6-2

1996

MICHELLE ANDERSON/ANNE CHAUZU

1st Rd.: lost Scott/Shasby (Stanford) 6-4, 3-6, 6-1

1997

MICHELLE ANDERSON/MARISSA CATLIN

1st Rd.: def. Maes/Pietrucha (Arizona) 6-2, 6-4

2nd Rd.: def. Basica/Green (Florida) 6-3, 6-3

QF: def. Csapo/Svedenhov (Pepperdine) 6-4, 6-3

SF: def. Bleszynski/Scott (Stanford) 7-6 (5), 2-6, 6-1

F: lost Buth/Nickitas (Florida) 6-2, 3-6, 6-2

1999

VANESSA CASTELLANO/MARISSA CATLIN

1st Rd.: def. Fernandez/Penalvo (Marquette) 6-0, 6-2

2nd Rd.: def. Ondrejkova/Puflerova (South Alabama) 6-0, 6-1

QF: def. Dasso/Hall (Notre Dame) 6-3, 6-4

SF: def. Lesenarova/Valkyova (Southern Cal) 6-1, 6-2

F: lost Augustus/Jensen (Cal) 4-6, 7-5, 6-1

2000

MARISSA CATLIN/LORI GREY

1st Rd.: def. Nedelkova/Ondrisova (Virginia Commonwealth) 6-2, 7-5

2nd Rd.: Colosio/Mores (LSU) 7-5, 6-2

QF: def. Bergman/Bielik (Wake Forest) 7-5, 6-7 (4), 6-0

SF: def. Ondrekjova/Puflerova (South Alabama) 7-5, 6-3

F: lost Curren/Jensen (Cal) 4-6, 6-1, 7-5

ESTHER KNOX/AARTHI VENKATESAN

1st Rd.: def. Castellvi/Ojeda (Tennessee) 7-5, 6-3

2nd Rd.: lost Ashley/Irvin (Stanford) 5-7, 6-3, 6-2

2001

AARTHI VENKATESAN/LORI GREY

1st Rd.: lost Gough/Regnier (Arizona) 6-3, 6-1

2002

AGATA CIOROCH/LORI GREY

1st Rd.: lost Boyanovich/Radman (South Carolina) 7-5, 6-3

2003

AGATA CIOROCH/LORI GREY

1st Rd.: def. Dawaf/Rotondi (Florida) 6-1, 4-6, 6-1

2nd Rd.: def. Smekodub/Kuhn (Tulane) 6-4, 6-1

QF: lost Fusano/Kops-Jones (Cal) 6-4, 6-2

2004

AGATA CIOROCH/SHADISHA ROBINSON

1st Rd.: lost Grier/Rush (Northwestern) 6-3, 7-5

2005

CAROLINE BASU/SHADISHA ROBINSON

1st Rd.: def. Cema/Covello (Baylor) 6-4, 6-3

2nd Rd.: lost Barnes/Burdette (Stanford) 6-3, 5-7, 6-4

2007

DARYA IVANOV/YVETTE HYNDMAN

1st Rd.: lost Dulgheru/Kosakowski (Pepperdine) 6-4, 6-4

2009

CHELSEY GULLICKSON/NADJA GILCHRIST

1st Rd.: lost Bek/Hadziselimovic (Clemson) 7-6 (5), 6-3

2010

CHELSEY GULLICKSON/NADJA GILCHRIST

1st Rd.: def. Beelen/Molnar (Iowa) 6-2, 6-2

2nd Rd.: def. Boxx/Nijssen (Ole Miss) 1-6, 6-3, 6-4

QF: def. Frilling/Krisik (Notre Dame) 6-2, 6-1

SF: lost Pluskota/Whoriskey (Tennessee) 2-6, 7-5, 7-6 (6)

2011

CHELSEY GULLICKSON/KATE FULLER

1st Rd.: def. Bolender/Muresan (Michigan) 6-3, 6-2

2nd Rd.: def. Fraser/Tomljanovic (Virginia) 6-4, 6-4

QF: lost Barte/Burdette (Stanford) 6-3, 7-6(4)

GEORGIA 50 WOMEN'S TENNIS MEDIA GUIDE

2012

CHELSEY GULLICKSON/NADJA GILCHRIST

1st Rd.: def. Capra/Kahan (Duke) 6-2, 7-5

2nd Rd.: def. Bektas/Bolender (Michigan) 4-6, 7-6(0), 6-1

QF: def. Juricova/Susyani (Cal) 6-1, 6-2

SF: def. Dolehide/Montez (UCLA) 7-6 (5), 6-4

F: lost Burdette/Gibbs (Stanford) 6-2, 6-4

2013

KATE FULLER/SILVIA GARCIA

1st Rd.: def. Beazant/Harmath (Rice) 3-6, 6-4, 6-0

2nd Rd.: def. Adams/Kilgo (Texas Tech) 6-4, 7-5

QF: Guarachi/Macfarlane (Alabama) 7-6 (4), 7-5

2014

KATE FULLER/SILVIA GARCIA

1st Rd.: Albuquerque/Riobueno (Miami) 6-2, 6-2

LAUREN HERRING/MAHO KOWASE

1st Rd.: def. Goldfeld/Smith (Duke) 6-2, 6-4

2nd Rd.: def. Barnett/Corning (Northwestern) 5-7, 6-2, 6-3

QF: def. Kisialeva/Shankle (Baylor) 6-3, 6-1

SF: def. Burgmans/Flickinger (Auburn) 6-4, 7-5

F: lost Jansen/Routliffe (Alabama) 6-1, 6-0

2015

LAUREN HERRING/ELLEN PEREZ

1st Rd.: def. Austin/Preston (Arizona) 6-2, 6-2

2nd Rd.: lost Austin/Keegen (Florida) 5-7, 6-3, 3-6

2016

MARIANA GOULD/ELLEN PEREZ

1st Rd.: lost Generette/Shankle (Baylor) 6-4, 6-4

2017

ELLEN PEREZ/CAROLINE BRINSON

1st Rd.: lost Di Lorenzo/Kowase (Ohio State) 5-7, 6-1, 10-6

ELENA CHRISTOFI/KENNEDY SHAFFER

1st Rd.: def. Aney/Carter (North Carolina) 6-3, 6-4

2nd Rd.: def. Chatt/Lipp (Northwestern) 6-4, 6-3

QF: lost Foster/Valle Costa (LSU) 1-6, 6-2, 11-9

2018

MORGAN COPPOC/ELENA CHRISTOFI

1st Rd.: def. Proctor/Kauffman (Winthrop) 0-6, 6-2, 1-0 (10-7)

MARIANA GOULD/KATARINA JOKIC

1st Rd.: def. Kobayashi/Wong (Washington)

2nd Rd.: lost Sanford/Daavettila (UNC) 6-2, 6-2

2019

LOURDES CARLE/KATARINA JOKIC

1st Rd.: def. Zupancic/Fung (Washington) 6-4, 6-1

2nd. Rd.: def. Aney/Graham (UNC) 6-1, 6-3

QF: lost Minor/Fahey (Michigan) 6-2, 3-6, 1-0 (10-8)

2020

Cancelled due to Covid-19 pandemic

2021

ARIANA ARSENEAULT/KATARINA JOKIC

1st Rd.: lost Garcia/Das (FSU) 6-4, 6-4

51 BULLDOGS GEORGIADOGS.COM

OPPONENT RECORD FIRST/LAST RESULT

OPPONENT RECORD FIRST/LAST RESULT

52 WOMEN'S TENNIS MEDIA GUIDE
GEORGIA
Agnes Scott UGA Leads 2-0 1975/1984 UGA W, 6-0 ALABAMA UGA Leads 45-5 1975/2022 ALA W, 4-3 Alabama State UGA Leads, 1-0 2019/2019 UGA W, 4-0 UAB UGA Leads, 1-0 1987/1987 UGA W, 8-0 Arizona UGA Leads, 1-0 1993/1993 UGA W, 5-4 Arizona State UGA Leads, 3-1 1987/2013 UGA W, 4-0 ARKANSAS ........ UGA Leads, 33-3 .............. 1983/2022 ............UGA W, 6-1 AUBURN UGA Leads, 57-8 1974/2022 AU W, 4-3 Austin Peay St. UGA Leads, 1-0 2021/2021 UGA W, 4-0 Baylor UGA Leads, 9-3 1986/2016 UGA W, 4-0 Boise State UGA Leads, 1-0 2009/2009 UGA W, 4-0 Boston College...............UGA Leads, 1-0 1991/1991 UGA W, 9-0 Brenau............................UGA Leads, 4-0 1977/1979 UGA W, 7-2 Butler UGA Leads, 1-0 2011/2011 UGA W, 7-0 BYU UGA Leads, 7-1 1987/2002 UGA W, 7-0 California UGA Leads, 11-7 1982/2015 UGA W, 4-2 Central Florida UGA Leads, 1-0 1999/1999 UGA W, 5-0 Charleston Southern UGA Leads, 2-0 2015/2022 UGA W, 4-0 Chattanooga Tied, 1-1 1975/1978 UTC W, 8-1 Clemson UGA Leads, 33-19 1976/2020 UGA W, 7-0 Coast. Carolina UGA Leads, 1-0 2001/2001 UGA W, 4-0 College of Charleston UGA Leads 8-5 1976/2012 UGA W, 4-0 Columbia UGA Leads, 1-0 2013/2013 UGA W, 4-1 Dartmouth UGA Leads, 1-0 2002/2002 UGA W, 5-2 Duke Tied, 15-15 1977/2022 Duke W, 4-1 Eastern Kentucky UGA Leads, 1-0 1985/1985 UGA W, 9-0 East. Tenn. St. UGA Leads, 2-0 2007/2008 UGA W, 7-0 Elon UGA Leads, 1-0 2014/2014 UGA W, 4-0 Emmanuel UGA Leads, 1-0 2002/2002 UGA W, 7-0 Emory UGA Leads, 8-0 1974/1977 UGA W, 9-0 Flagler UGA Leads, 1-0 1976/1976 UGA W, 8-1 FLORIDA ............. UF Leads, 49-20 .............. 1977/2022 ........... UGA W, 4-1 Fla. International............UGA Leads, 2-0 2012/2012 UGA W, 7-0F Florida State Tied, 10-10 1976/2021 UGA W, 4-3 Fresno State...................UGA Leads, 1-0 2004/2004 UGA W, 4-2 Furman UGA Leads, 17-1 1974/2014 UGA W, 7-0 Ga. College UGA Leads, 3-0 1974/1976 UGA W, 9-0 Ga. Southern UGA Leads, 17-1 1974/2021 UGA W, 6-1 Ga. State UGA Leads, 18-0 1977/2021 UGA W, 7-0 Ga. Tech UGA Leads, 28-6 1977/2022 UGA W, 4-0 Harvard UGA Leads, 3-1 1988/2010 UGA W, 4-0 Hawaii............................UGA Leads, 1-0 1996/1996 UGA W, 9-0 Houston...........................UH Leads, 2-1..........................1986/1987 UGA W, 7-2 Illinois UGA Leads, 2-0 1985/2017 UGA W, 4-0 Illinois State...................UGA Leads, 2-0 1982/2003 UGA W, 7-0 Indiana UGA Leads, 8-1 1983/2006 UGA W, 4-1 Iowa UGA Leads, 1-0 1980/1980 UGA W, 6-3 James Madison UGA Leads, 1-0 1984/1984 UGA W, 8-1 Kansas UGA Leads, 5-0 1989/1997 UGA W, 7-2 Kansas State..................UGA Leads 2-0 2012/2019 UGA W, 7-0 KENTUCKY ........ UGA Leads, 40-10 .............1980/2022.......... UGA W, 4-0 Long Beach UGA Leads, 1-0 1987/1987 UGA W, 9-0 LSU UGA Leads, 47-4 1975/2022 UGA W, 4-1 Marist UGA Leads, 1-0 2011/2011 UGA W, 4-0 Marshall.........................UGA Leads, 2-0 2006/2009 UGA W, 5-0 UMBC.............................UGA Leads, 1-0 2003/2003 UGA W, 4-0 Memphis UGA Leads, 4-0 1981/2012 UGA W, 4-3 Memphis State UGA Leads, 1-0 1981/1981 UGA W, 7-2 Mercer UGA Leads, 7-0 1976/2017 UGA W, 7-0 Miami.............................UGA Leads, 7-5 1979/2014 UGA W, 4-0 Michigan UGA Leads, 6-0 1982/2019 UGA W, 4-2 Michigan State UGA Leads, 4-0 1980/2020 UGA W, 7-0 Mid. Tenn. St. UGA leads, 4-0 1998/2002 UGA W, 6-1 Minnesota......................UGA Leads, 2-0 1987/1993 UGA W, 9-0 MISSISSIPPI UGA Leads, 43-10 1982/2022 UGA W, 7-0 MISSISSIPPI STATE...UGA Leads, 46-0 .....................1981/2022 .................. UGA W, 6-1 Miss. Univ. of Women UGA Leads, 2-0 1977/1981 UGA W, 9-0 MISSOURI UGA Leads, 10-0 2012/2022 UGA W, 6-1 New Mexico UGA Leads, 2-0 1989/2017 UGA W, 4-0 North Carolina UNC Leads, 9-4 1978/2021 UNC W, 4-3 N.C. State NC St. Leads, 3-2 2017/2022 N.C. State W, 4-2 North Florida UGA Leads, 2-0 2016/2022 UGA W, 5-0 Northeast La. UGA Leads, 3-0 1984/1991 UGA W, 9-0 Northwestern..................NU Leads, 4-3 1985/2009 NU W, 4-1 Notre Dame UGA Leads, 8-0 1993/2020 UGA W, 5-2 Ohio State UGA Leads, 3-0 1983/2022 UGA W, 7-0 Oklahoma UGA Leads, 2-0 1983/1984 UGA W, 5-1 Oklahoma St. UGA Leads, 7-6 1982/2016 OSU W, 4-0
Old Dominion UGA Leads, 1-0 2016/2016 UGA W, 4-0 Peace College UGA Leads, 1-0 1982/1982 UGA W, 9-0 Pennsylvania UGA Leads, 1-0 2018/2018 UGA W, 4-0 Pepperdine UGA Leads, 4-1 1987/2017 PU W, 4-3 Presbyterian UGA Leads, 2-0 1979/1980 UGA W, 8-1 Princeton PU Leads, 1-0 1977/1977 PU W, 9-0 Purdue UGA Leads, 1-0 1984/1984 UGA W, 8-1 Quinnipiac UGA Leads, 1-0 2005/2005 UGA W, 4-0 Rice UGA Leads, 1-0 1986/1986 UGA W, 6-3 Rollins RC Leads, 3-2 1978/1985 UGA W, 6-3 Samford UGA Leads, 2-0 2004/2015 UGA W, 4-1 San Diego UGA Leads, 1-0 1987/1987 UGA W, 8-1 San Diego St. SDSU leads, 2-0* 1984/1985 SDSU W, 7-2 Univ. of South UGA leads, 2-0 1974/1974 UGA W, 9-0 Shorter UGA leads, 2-0 1977/1978 UGA W, 7-2 South Alabama UGA leads, 7-1 1979/2002 UGA W, 4-3 SOUTH CAROLINA .....UGA leads, 51-17...................... 1974/2022 ................... UGA W, 4-1 S.C. State UGA leads, 3-0 2007/2017 UGA W, 4-0 USC-Buford UGA leads, 1-0 1978/1978 UGA W, 9-0 USC-Charleston UGA leads, 1-0 1985/1985 UGA W, 8-1 South Florida..................UGA leads, 7-5 1980/2019 UGA W, 5-2 So. California UGA leads, 9-1 1989/2014 UGA W, 4-3 SMU Tied, 2-2 1984/1990 UGA W, 9-0 Stanford SU leads, 22-5 1987/2019 SU W, 4-0 TENNESSEE UGA leads, 52-9 1976/2022 UGA W, 4-3 Texas UGA leads, 14-3 1988/2018 UGA W, 4-2 TEXAS A&M UGA leads, 16-3 1986/2022 TAMU W, 4-0 Texas Tech UGA leads, 2-0 2016/2018 UGA W, 4-1 TCU Tied, 3-3 1984/2004 UGA W, 6-1 Tift UGA leads, 3-0* 1975/1976 UGA W, 9-0 Trinity UGA leads, 3-2 1985/1989 UGA W, 7-0 Troy UGA leads, 1-0 2012/2012 UGA W, 7-0 UCLA UGA leads, 8-5 1988/2015 UCLA W, 4-1 UNC-Charlotte UGA leads, 1-0 2004/2004 UGA W, 7-0 UNLV UGA leads, 4-0 1994/1999 UGA W, 9-0 USIA UGA leads, 1-0 1989/1989 UGA W, 7-2 Utah UGA leads, 4-0 1988/1991 UGA W, 5-1 Valdosta State UGA leads, 5-0 1979/1982 UGA W, 9-0 VANDERBILT..... UGA leads, 37-13 ............. 1983/2022 ...........UGA W, 4-3 Virginia...........................UGA leads, 6-1 1980/2022 UVA W, 4-3 VCU UGA leads, 1-0 2011/2011 UGA W, 5-2 Virginia Tech UGA leads, 2-0 1990/2010 UGA W, 5-2 Wake Forest UGA leads, 10-3 1978/2022 UGA W, 4-0 Washington UGA leads, 1-0 2022/2022 UGA W, 4-0 West Georgia UGA leads, 1-0 1984/1984 UGA W, 6-0 Wichita State.................UGA leads, 2-0 2005/2008 UGA W, 7-0 William & Mary UGA leads 9-2 1986/2010 UGA W, 4-2 Winthrop UGA leads, 4-0 2002/2013 UGA W, 4-0 Wisconsin UGA leads, 2-0 1986/2001 UGA W, 7-0 Wyoming........................UGA leads, 1-0 2016/2016 UGA W, 4-0 Yale UGA leads, 2-0 2008/2011 UGA W, 6-1
*Conference opponents listed in BOLD – Updated as of May 24, 2022 –

1974 (8-4)

Coach: Jane Kuykendoll

Furman W, 7-2

Emory W, 9-0

Shorter W, 8-1

Brenau

* sites not available

1-Furman Invitational

2-Mercer Invitational

1978 (10-19)

Coach: Greg McGarity

1975 (14-0)

Coach: Jane Kuykendoll

USC-Buford W, 9-0

UT-Chattanooga L, 8-1

Coll. Chrlston L, 7-2

Wake Forest L, 9-0

Auburn L, 6-3 Florida State L, 6-3

Ga. State W, 7-2

Ga. Southern W, 9-0 at Clemson L, 6-3

Shorter W, 7-2 at S. Carolina W, 5-4 at College of Charleston L, 7-2

1976 (16-2)

Coach: Jane Kuykendoll

Mercer W, 9-0 College of Charleston L, 6-3 S. Carolina L, 6-3

Clemson L, 5-2

Auburn L, 5-2

1-Ga. State W, 9-0

1-Ga. Southern W, 9-0

2-Rollins L, 6-0

1-GAIAW State Tournament

2-AIAW Region III Tournament

1979 (15-10)

Coach: Greg McGarity

at Valdosta St. W, 9-0

Fla. State (Val., Ga.) L, 5-4

Virginia W, 6-3

Iowa W, 6-3

Clemson L, 7-2

Presbyterian W, 8-1

Mercer W, 9-0 at Kentucky* W, 7-2

Michigan State (KY) W, 8-1

Furman (forfeit) W, 9-0 at Ga. State W, 9-0

Auburn* (forfeit) W, 9-0

Alabama* W, 5-4

Ga. Southern W, 8-1 Ga. State W, 8-1

1-S. Alabama W, 7-2

1-S. Florida L, 6-3

* SEC match

1-AIAW Region III Tournament

1981 (11-9, 2-2 SEC)

Coach: Greg McGarity at Tennessee* L, 6-3

Fla. State L, 6-3 at S. Carolina L, 6-3

1-SECs, Oxford, Miss.

2-AIAW Region III Tournament

3-AIAW Nationals

1983 (18-5, 11-1 SEC)

Coach: Lee Myers

SEC Champions SEC Tournament Champions

Ole Miss* W, 7-2 at Alabama* W, 7-2

Duke W, 5-4

Oklahoma W, 6-3

Indiana W, 5-4

Arkansas W, 6-3

Kentucky* W, 7-2 at Florida State L, 6-3 at South Florida L, 5-4 at Rollins L, 5-4 at Florida* L, 6-3

Ohio State W, 9-0

Miss. State* W, 8-1 at Auburn* W, 6-2 at S. Carolina L, 6-3

Ga. State W, 9-0

LSU* W, 7-2

Columbus Coll. W, 9-0 at Tennessee* W, 5-4 at Vanderbilt* W, 5-4

1-LSU* W, 6-3

1-Tennessee* W, 5-4

1-Florida* W, 5-4

* SEC match

1-SECs, Tuscaloosa, Ala.

1984 (18-9, 7-2 SEC)

Coach: Cissie Donigan

North Carolina W, 5-4 Fla. State L, 7-2 James Madison W, 8-1 at Kentucky* W, 7-2

Tennessee* W, 8-1

Okla. State L, 5-4

1982

Purdue W, 8-1 vs. Fla. State (at Clemson) L, 6-3 vs. Miami (at Clemson) L, 8-1 vs. S. Florida (at Clemson) L, 6-3

vs. Okla. State (Provo) L, 6-3 at Tennessee* W, 5-4

Vanderbilt* W, 5-4 at USC-Charleston W, 8-1 LSU* W, 5-4

3-LSU* L, 6-3

3-N. Carolina L, 5-4

3-Rollins W, 5-4 3-Trinity L, 9-0 4-Okla. State L, 6-3 4-S. Carolina L, 5-4

4-Illinois W, 9-0 Miami L, 9-0 TCU L, 5-4 Florida* L, 7-2 vs. Fla. State (at UF) L, 5-4 vs. Northwestern (at UF) W, 8-1 at Alabama* W, 5-4 at Auburn* W, 6-1 Kentucky* L, 6-3 at S. Carolina W, 7-2 Northeast La. W, 5-4 Ole Miss* L, 5-4

Eastern Kentucky W, 9-0 Miss. State* W, 7-2 * SEC match

1-USC Invite, Columbia, S.C.

2-Miami Invite, Miami, Fla.

3-FSU Invite, Tallahassee, Fla.

4-Clemson Invite, Clemson, S.C.

1986 (20-9, 7-2 SEC)

Coach: Jeff Wallace

Clemson L, 6-3 Wisconsin W, 6-3

Duke W, 7-2 Michigan St. W, 8-1 Texas A&M W, 5-4 at Ga. Tech W, 9-0 at LSU* W, 6-3 at Kentucky* L, 5-4

1-Duke W, 9-0

1-S. Florida W, 7-2

1977 (17-10)

Coach: Jane Kuykendoll

1-North Carolina L, 8-1

1-Duke L, 8-1

1-Furman W, 6-3

Ms.Univ.-Women W, 7-2

Florida L, 9-0

LSU L, 8-1

Alabama L, 7-2

Auburn W, 8-1

Clemson L, 6-3 College of Charleston L, 5-4

Princeton L, 9-0

Ga. Southern W, 9-0

Ga. State W, 9-0

2-Clemson L, 5-4

2-Mercer W, 8-1

2-Auburn W, 5-4

Furman W, 7-1

College Charleston W, 7-2

S. Carolina L, 6-3

Emory W, 9-0

Brenau W, 9-0

St. W, 9-0

S. Carolina L, 8-1 at Presbyterian W, 6-0 Clemson L, 5-4

Furman W, 6-3

Brenau W, 9-0 at Mercer W, 9-0 Georgia State W, 8-1 at Clemson L, 6-3

Auburn W, 5-2 at College of Charleston L, 6-3 at Ga. Southern W, 9-0 at Brenau W, 7-2 at Ga. State W, 8-1 at Ga. Southern W, 9-0 at Auburn W, 7-2

1-S. Alabama W, 8-1

1-Florida L, 8-1

1-AIAW Region III Tournament

1980 (15-6, 3-1 SEC)

Coach: Greg McGarity Clemson L, 5-4

S. Carolina L, 9-0 at College of Charleston W, 6-3

Florida* L, 7-2

Vanderbilt* W, 8-1 vs. Oklahoma (@VU) W, 5-1 at SMU L, 8-1 vs. Northeast La. (SMU) W, 6-0 vs. San Diego St (SMU) L, 6-3 at TCU W, 5-4 vs. W. Georgia (Atlanta) W, 6-0 vs. Agnes Scott (ATL) W, 6-0 vs. Columbus Col. (ATL) W, 5-1 at Ga. Tech W, 9-0

Alabama* W, 5-4

Florida* L, 6-3

S. Carolina W, 8-1 at Ole Miss* L, 5-3

Auburn* W, 8-1 at Miss. State* W, 8-1 at LSU* W, 8-1

* SEC match

1985 (16-20, 6-4 SEC)

Coach: Cissie Donigan

1-S. Carolina W, 7-2

1-Indiana L, 5-4

1-N. Carolina W, 5-4 at N. Carolina L, 7-2 at Duke W, 6-3

2-Clemson L, 6-3

2-Rollins W, 6-3

2-S. Florida L, 5-1

2-Clemson L, 5-4 vs. S. Diego St. (Provo) L, 7-2 vs. California (Provo) L, 8-1

1-Houston L, 6-3 Vanderbilt* W, 9-0 William & Mary W, 9-0 Furman W, 8-1 Baylor W, 7-0

2-S. Alabama L, 5-4

2-S. Carolina W, 8-1

2-Okla. State L, 5-4

Alabama* W, 8-1 at TCU L, 5-4 at Trinity L, 7-2

3-Rice W, 6-3

3-S. Alabama W, 5-4

3-Houston L, 5-4 Florida* L, 6-3

Auburn* W, 8-1

Tennessee* W, 9-0 at Miss. State* W, 5-1 at Ole Miss* W, 9-0 * SEC match

1-FSU Invite, Tallahassee, Fla.

2-Clemson Invite, Clemson, S.C.

3-Houston Classic, Houston, Texas

1987 (26-5, 4-2 SEC)

Coach: Jeff Wallace

NCAA Finalists

Clemson W, 5-4

Miami L, 7-2

S. Alabama W, 9-0

Duke W, 8-1 at Alabama* W, 8-1 at S. Carolina W, 6-2

UAB W, 8-0 Northwestern L, 5-4

Texas A&M W, 7-2

53 BULLDOGS GEORGIADOGS.COM
Univ. South W, 6-3 S. Carolina L, 5-4 Ga. Southern W, 8-1 Furman L, 6-3 Ga. College W, 8-1 Emory W, 5-4 Univ. South W, 9-0 Ga. Southern L, 6-3 Furman L, 6-3 S.Carolina—forfeit W, 9-0 Emory W, 8-1 Auburn W, 6-3 * sites not available
Valdosta St. W, 9-0 UT-Chatt. W, 5-3 Tift W, 9-0 Auburn W, 9-0 Alabama W,12-0 LSU W,10-2 Furman W, 7-2 Tift W, 8-1 Ga. College W, 9-0 Emory W, 8-1 Agnes Scot W, 9-0 Ga. Southern W, 9-0 Emory W, 7-2 Furman W, 7-2 * sites not available
Clemson W, 8-1 College of Charleston W, 7-2 Auburn W, 8-1 Flagler W, 8-1 Clemson W, 8-1 College of Charleston W, 8-1 Mercer W, 9-0 Florida State L, 7-2 Auburn L, 6-3 Ga. College W, 9-0 Furman W, 8-1 Tift W, 9-0 Ga. College W, 9-0 Emory W, 9-0 Tennessee W, 7-2 Emory W, 8-1 Furman W, 8-1 Auburn W, 7-2
sites
*
not available
Ga. State W, 8-1
W, 9-0 Auburn W, 5-4
L, 6-3
L, 8-1 LSU L, 9-0 at Fla. State L, 7-2 at Auburn L, 7-2 at Furman W, 9-0 N. Carolina L, 8-1 Duke L, 8-1
Wake Forest
Clemson
at
Ga. State W, 9-0
South
North
L, 6-1 Duke L, 5-4 Furman
Miami L,
LSU
Auburn
Valdosta
at
Carolina L, 8-1
Carolina
W, 7-2
6-1
L, 7-2
W, 5-4
Clemson L, 6-3 Miss. State* W, 9-0 Memphis State W, 7-2 South Florida L, 5-4 Valdosta State W, 7-2 at Mercer W, 9-0 College of Charleston W, 8-1 S. Carolina L, 7-2 at Clemson L, 6-3 Ga. State W, 9-0 Furman W, 8-1 Auburn* W, 5-4 Ga. State W, 9-0 Ga. Southern W, 9-0 Florida* L, 8-1
W, 9-0 1-Rollins L, 6-3 * SEC match
Region III Tournament
1-Ms.Univ.-Women
1-AIAW
(22-9, 5-2 SEC)
Lee Myers College of Charleston W, 8-1 Duke W, 6-3 Ga. State W, 8-1 Illinois State W, 9-0 Okla. State L, 5-4 TCU L, 6-3 at Peace College W, 9-0 at N. Carolina W, 6-3 at Duke W, 6-3 at Wake Forest W, 8-1 Alabama* W, 7-2 Florida* L, 6-3 S. Carolina L, 6-3 at Furman W, 8-1 at Florida State W, 6-3 at Valdosta St. W, 9-0 Ga. Southern W, 8-1 Clemson L, 5-4 Auburn* W, 8-1 Kentucky* W, 8-1 at Ga. State W, 7-2 1-LSU* W, 9-0 1-Ole Miss* L, 5-4 1-Tennessee* W, 6-3 2-Michigan W, 7-2
W, 7-2 2-Ole Miss L, 5-4 3-S. Florida W, 7-2 3-S. Florida W, 5-4 3-Cal-Berkeley L, 7-2 3-Florida State L, 5-4 * SEC match
Coach:
2-Alabama

Coach: Jeff Wallace

Texas A&M W, 7-2

Kansas W, 9-0

BYU W, 6-3 at Alabama* W, 7-2 at Southern Cal W, 5-2 at New Mexico W, 9-0 at Okla. State W, 5-1

Trinity W, 7-0

Ga. Tech W, 9-0 at Vanderbilt* W, 9-0 at Tennessee* W, 6-0 Miss. State* W, 9-0 at Auburn* W, 7-2

Kentucky* W, 9-0

3-Texas W, 5-1

3-Cal-Berkeley W, 5-4

3-Stanford L, 6-0 * SEC match

1-USTA/ITA National Team Indoors, Madison, Wis.

2-SECs, Oxford, Miss.

3-NCAAs, Gainesville, Fla.

1990 (23-4, 9-0 SEC)

Coach: Jeff Wallace NCAA Quarterfinalists SEC Champions

Oklahoma State W, 5-1 at Miami W, 7-2

Virginia Tech W, 9-0

Florida* W, 5-4 at Duke L, 6-3

Alabama* W, 9-0

Vanderbilt* W, 9-0

1-Ariz. State W, 5-1

1-Okla. State W, 5-1

1-Stanford L, 6-0 Kansas W, 9-0 S. Carolina W, 6-0 at LSU* W, 8-1 at Utah W, 9-0 vs. SMU (Provo, Utah.) W, 9-0 vs. BYU (Provo, Utah) W, 8-1 at Miss. State* W, 6-0 at Ole Miss* W, 9-0 at Ga. Tech W, 6-0 at Kentucky* W, 9-0

Auburn* W, 6-0

Tennessee* W, 6-0

2-Auburn W, 5-0

2-Tennessee W, 5-1

2-Florida L, 5-2

3-Oklahoma State W, 5-1

3-Stanford L, 6-0

* SEC match

1-USTA/ITA National Team Indoors, Madison, Wis.

2-SECs, Starkville, Miss.

3-NCAAs, Gainesville, Fla.

Georgia Tech W, 6-0 Kentucky* W, 6-0

BYU W, 7-1 Miss. State* W, 7-0 Auburn* W, 6-0 at Florida* L, 5-2

2-Tennessee W, 5-2

2-LSU W, 6-0

2-Florida L, 5-1

3-Indiana W, 6-0

3-Pepperdine W, 5-0

3-Stanford L, 5-1

* SEC match

1-USTA/ITA National Team Indoors, Madison, Wis. 2-SECs, Knoxville, Tenn.

3-NCAAs, Stanford, Calif.

1992 (22-6, 10-1 SEC)

Coach: Jeff Wallace

NCAA Quarterfinalists at Alabama* W, 5-4 at Georgia Tech W, 9-0 Florida* L, 5-3 vs. BYU (in Lex, Ky.)

4-Indiana W, 5-3

4-Stanford L, 5-1

* SEC match

1-Minnesota Invite, Minneapolis, Minn.

2-USTA/ITA National Team Indoors, Madison, Wis.

3-SECs, Nashville, Tenn.

4-NCAAs, Gainesville, Fla.

Start of Opponent Team Rankings

1994 (27-2, 11-0 SEC)

Coach: Jeff Wallace

NCAA Champions

USTA/ITA National Team

Indoor Champions

SEC Champions

SEC Tournament Champions

Arkansas* W, 6-0

Vanderbilt* W, 8-0 at #14 Clemson W, 7-2 at Kentucky* W, 8-1

1-#14 Southern Cal W, 6-0

1-#13 Indiana W, 5-1

1-#9 Kansas W, 5-1

1-#5 Florida W, 5-1

#6 Duke W, 6-1

FSU W, 6-1 at LSU* W, 9-0 at No.4 Texas L, 5-1 at UNLV W, 6-3 at No.5 California L, 5-4 at No.12 Ole Miss* W, 7-2 at Miss. State* W, 6-0

No.18 Notre Dame W, 6-1 at Alabama* W, 8-1

#20 Ole Miss* W, 5-4

#41 UNLV W, 9-0 at #6 Florida* L, 5-0 at FSU W, 6-3 #30 LSU* W, 7-2 #14 Alabama* W, 9-0 #50 Miss. State* W, 6-0 #17 William and Mary L, 5-4 at #16 Tennessee W, 7-0 at #21 Vanderbilt W, 5-0 at #23 Auburn* W, 5-0 at #12 S. Carolina* W, 5-1

2-#22 Ole Miss W, 5-0

2-#15 LSU W, 5-0

2-#2 Florida L, 5-4

3-#12 S. Carolina W, 5-0

3-#8 Duke W, 5-4

3-#1 Florida L, 5-0 * SEC match

1-USTA/ITA National Team Indoors, Madison, Wis. 2-SECs, Auburn, Ala.

3-NCAAs, Malibu, Calif.

1996 (13-14, 4-7 SEC)

Coach: Jeff Wallace

NCAA Regional Finalists

1-#18 BYU L, 5-4

1-Hawaii W, 9-0 at #37 Kentucky* L, 5-4 #5 Duke L, 5-4

2-#13 William & Mary

2-Alabama

No.4 Florida* W, 5-3

Auburn* W, 6-0

No.19 S. Carolina* W, 7-2

Tennessee* W, 6-0

2-Auburn W, 5-0

2-#10 Ole Miss W, 5-1

6-1 at #24 Alabama* W, 6-3 #14 S. Carolina* L, 6-3 #1 Florida* L, 6-0

3-#33 Kentucky W, 5-1

3-#14 S. Carolina W, 5-4

* SEC match

1-Provo, Utah

2-USTA/ITA National Team Indoors, Madison, Wis.

3-SECs, Baton Rouge, La.

4-NCAAs, Los Angeles, Calif.

1989 (24-4, 8-1 SEC)

Coach: Jeff Wallace

NCAA Semifinalists

SEC Champions at S. Carolina W, 5-1 Ole Miss* W, 9-0

LSU* W, 9-0

Utah W, 9-0

USIU (Gainesville) W, 7-2 at Florida* L, 5-4

1-Cal-Berkeley

1991 (25-5, 8-1 SEC)

Coach: Jeff Wallace NCAA Semifinalists

LSU* W, 7-2 at Alabama* W, 9-0 Utah W, 5-1

N.E. Louisiana W, 9-0

Boston College W, 9-0

Texas W, 9-0

1-Pepperdine W, 8-1

1-Indiana W, 5-1

1-Stanford L, 5-4

Miami W, 6-1

Ole Miss* W, 7-2

Duke W, 5-3 at S. Carolina W, 6-0 at Cal-Berkeley W, 5-3 at Stanford L, 5-1

Clemson W, 9-0 at Tennessee* W, 6-0 at Vanderbilt* W, 6-0

1-USTA/ITA National Team Indoors, Madison, Wis.

2-SECs, Tuscaloosa, Ala.

3-NCAAs, Stanford, Calif.

1993 (20-6, 9-2 SEC)

Coach: Jeff Wallace

NCAA Quarterfinalists

1-Minnesota W, 9-0

2-Notre Dame W, 8-1

3-UCLA W, 5-4 Georgia Tech W, 9-0 Clemson W, 5-2 Texas L, 5-2

2-Kansas W, 5-4

2-Arizona W, 5-4

2-Stanford L, 5-1 Ole Miss* L, 6-3 Miss. State* W, 7-2 at Arkansas* W, 6-0 LSU* W, 6-0 at S. Carolina* W, 5-1 Kentucky* W, 5-1 at Tennessee* W, 5-1 at Vanderbilt* W, 5-2 at Florida State W, 5-2 at Florida* L, 5-1 at Auburn* W, 5-1 Alabama* W, 5-1

3-Tennessee W, 5-4

3-Ole Miss W, 5-2

3-Florida L, 5-2

2-#5 Florida W, 5-3

3-#21 Southern Cal W, 5-2

3-#6 Duke W, 5-0

3-#3 California W, 5-3

3-#4 Stanford W, 5-4

* SEC match

1-USTA/ITA National Team Indoors, Madison, Wis.

2-SECs, Fayetteville, Ark.

3-NCAAs, Athens, Ga.

3-#10 Vanderbilt L, 5-3

4-#26 Miami W, 5-2

4-#15 Tennessee W, 5-3

4-#20 Clemson L, 5-4 * SEC match

1-Hawaii Invitational, Honolulu

2-USTA/ITA National Team Indoors, Madison, Wis. 3-SEC Tournament, Gainesville, Fla

4-NCAA Southeast Regional, Columbia, S.C.

1997 (18-5, 9-2 SEC)

1995 (23-4, 10-1 SEC)

Coach: Jeff Wallace

NCAA Semifinalists

USTA/ITA National Team Indoor Champions

at #6 Duke W, 5-4

#24 Clemson W, 7-1

#2 Texas W, 6-1

1-#14 Wake Forest W, 5-4

1-#15 Notre Dame W, 6-0

1-#11 Indiana W, 6-0

1-#7 UCLA W, 5-4 at Arkansas* W, 8-1

#18 Kentucky* W, 8-1

Coach: Jeff Wallace NCAA Round of 16 Ga. Southern W, 9-0 College of Charleston W, 9-0 at #30 Arkansas* W, 6-1 #4 Texas W, 5-4 #21 Alabama* W, 7-1 at #1 Florida* L, 9-0 #35 Clemson W, 6-3 #8 Ole Miss* W, 5-4 Miss. State* W, 6-3 #47 Kentucky* W, 8-1 #9 Wake Forest W, 5-3

1-#6 Arizona State L, 5-4

1-#14 UNLV W, 6-3

1-#32 Kansas W, 7-2 at #10 Vanderbilt* W, 6-0 at #21 Tennessee* W, 7-2 #18 LSU* W, 5-4

54 WOMEN'S TENNIS MEDIA GUIDE at BYU W, 5-4 South Florida W, 5-1 Houston W, 7-2 S. Alabama W, 9-0 William & Mary W, 7-2 Kentucky* L, 6-3 at San Diego W, 8-1 Minnesota W, 9-0 at Long Beach St. W, 9-0 at Pepperdine W, 7-2 at Auburn* W, 7-2 Miss. State* W, 9-0 LSU* W, 7-2 Ga. Tech W, 9-0 at Florida* L, 7-2 1-Ole Miss W, 9-0 1-Vanderbilt W, 8-1 1-Tennessee W, 9-0 2-Miami W, 5-4 2-Trinity W, 5-4 2-SMU W, 5-4 2-Stanford L, 5-1 * SEC match 1-SECs, Athens, Ga 2-NCAAs, Los Angeles, Calif. 1988 (22-7, 4-3 SEC)
GEORGIA
NCAA Quarterfinalists Duke L, 5-4 at Utah W, 9-0 1-UCLA L, 5-4 1-BYU W, 5-4 1-TCU W, 7-2 at Ga. Tech W, 9-0 at Kentucky* L, 6-1 S. Carolina W, 8-1 Vanderbilt* W, 8-1 Florida* L, 8-1 2-SMU L, 6-3 2-Harvard W, 5-1 2-Okla. State W, 5-0 2-Indiana W, 5-1 at LSU* W, 7-2 at Texas W, 6-3 at Texas A&M W, 9-0 at Trinity W, 7-2 Okla. State W, 5-1 Kentucky* L, 5-4 Miami W, 6-3 Tennessee* W, 8-1 Alabama* W, 9-0 3-Ole Miss W, 8-1 3-Miss. State W, 7-2 3-Auburn
W, 8-1 Northwestern W, 9-0
4-Indiana W, 5-4
4-Stanford L, 5-3
W, 5-4
1-Miami W, 6-0 1-Florida L, 5-4 1-UCLA L, 5-4 Texas W, 7-2
W, 5-2 at Kentucky* W, 6-0 1-Arizona State W, 5-2 1-Tennessee W, 5-2 1-Stanford L, 5-1 S. Carolina* W, 6-0 at Clemson W, 8-1 at Duke L, 5-1 William & Mary W, 6-1 Auburn* W, 7-2 Arkansas* W, 9-0 Oklahoma State W, 9-0 California W, 5-4 at LSU* W, 5-3 at Texas L, 6-3 Tennessee* W, 5-3 Vanderbilt* W, 6-0
W,
W,
Florida State
6-3 at Ole Miss*
6-3 at Miss. State* W, 7-1
W, 5-0
W, 5-1
L, 5-4 3-Tennessee W, 5-0 3-Duke L, 5-4 * SEC match
2-Tennessee
2-Florida
W, 5-1 2-#5 Duke L, 5-3 2-#7 UCLA L, 5-1 #32 Florida
W, 6-1 #14 Vanderbilt* L, 5-4 at #25 Clemson W, 5-4 #7 Wake
L, 5-4 at #47 LSU* W, 5-4 #6 Notre
W, 5-4 #24 Tennessee* L, 5-2 #27 Auburn* L, 5-1 #28 Arkansas* W, 6-3
#12
L, 6-3
W,
State
Forest
Dame
at
Ole Miss*
at Miss. State*

1998 (21-5, 9-2 SEC)

Coach:

2-SECs, Baton Rouge, La.

3-NCAA Regionals, Athens, Ga.

4-NCAAs, Gainesville, Fla.

4-#18 Baylor W, 5-0

4-#10 Southern Cal W, 4-0

4-#6 Vanderbilt L, 4-2

* SEC match

1-USTA/ITA National Team Indoors, Madison, Wis.

2-SEC Tournament, Starkville, Miss.

3-NCAA 1st/2nd Rds-Athens Ga.

4-NCAA Rnd. of 16, Stone Mountain, Ga.

2000

(27-2, 11-0 SEC)

Coach: Jeff Wallace

NCAA Champions

SEC Champions

#15 William & Mary W, 9-0

at #62 Clemson W, 7-1

#26 Arkansas* W, 7-1

1-#16 Vanderbilt W, 6-1

1-#13 Southern Cal W, 6-2

1-#1 Stanford L, 4-3

#18 Tennessee* W, 8-1

at #24 LSU* W, 6-3

at #14 UCLA W, 5-4

at #9 Texas W, 7-1

at #38 Texas A&M W, 9-0

#75 Auburn* W, 6-0

at #28 Ga. Tech W, 9-0

#18 S. Carolina* W, 7-2

at #23 Miss. State* W, 5-1

at #17 Ole Miss* W, 6-3

at #36 Kentucky* W, 8-0

#6 Florida* W, 5-2

at Alabama* W, 6-0

#10 Vanderbilt* W, 5-3

2-#34 Miss. State W, 5-2

2-#18 Tennessee W, 5-0

2-#5 Florida L, 5-1

3-Furman W, 5-0

3-#26 Ohio State W, 5-0

4-#17 South Alabama W, 5-1

4-#12 Southern Cal W, 5-1

4-#4 Florida W, 5-2

4-#1 Stanford W, 5-4

* SEC match

1-USTA/ITA National Team Indoors

1999 (24-4, 10-1 SEC)

Coach: Jeff Wallace

NCAA Quarterfinalists

Middle Tenn. State W, 9-0

Georgia Southern W, 8-1

Georgia State W, 9-0

#55 Georgia Tech W, 9-0

#T6 Texas W, 8-1

1-#8 UCLA W, 6-2

1-#T6 Ole Miss W, 5-2

1-#2 Duke L, 5-1 at #14 Arkansas* W, 8-1

Clemson W, 9-0

#9 Ole Miss* W, 5-4 #18 Kentucky* W, 8-1

#49 LSU* W, 8-1 #39 Miss. State* W, 7-1

#17 Wake Forest W, 5-4

UNLV W, 9-0 at #12 Tennessee* W, 5-1 at #8 Vanderbilt* W, 5-1 Alabama* W, 7-2 at #1 Florida* L, 6-3 at #39 Auburn* W, 6-0 at #16 South Carolina* W, 5-1

2-#18 Arkansas W, 5-0

2-#8 Ole Miss L, 5-4

3-#73 Central Florida W, 5-0

3-#56 Miss. State W, 5-0

4-#15 South Carolina W, 5-0

4-#6 California L, 5-4

* SEC match

1-USTA/ITA National Team Indoors, Madison, Wis.

2-SEC Tournament, Oxford, Miss.

3-NCAA Regionals in Athens, Ga.

4-NCAAs in Malibu, Calif.

2001 (23-5, 8-3 SEC)

Coach: Jeff Wallace NCAA Semifinalists

SEC Tournament Champions

#62 Middle Tenn. St. W, 7-0

#18 Baylor W, 6-1

1-Wisconsin W, 7-0

1-#11 Notre Dame W, 5-1

1-#3 Duke W, 4-1

1-#1 Stanford L, 4-3 at #23 Arkansas* W, 7-0

#54 Clemson W, 6-1 at #18 S. Carolina* W, 4-3 #29 Ole Miss* W, 6-1

#25 LSU* W, 5-1

#41 Miss. State* W, 5-2

#44 Alabama* W, 6-1

#39 Ga. Tech W, 6-1

#25 Kentucky* W, 5-2 at Auburn* W, 5-2

#8 Texas W, 6-1

at #3 Florida* L, 4-3

at #4 Tennessee* L, 4-3

at #6 Vanderbilt* L, 4-3

2-#22 S. Carolina W, 4-1

2-#5 Florida W, 4-2

2-#4 Tennessee W, 4-1

3-Coastal Carolina W, 4-0

3-Miss. State W, 4-0

2002 (26-2, 11-0 SEC)

Coach: Jeff Wallace

NCAA Semifinalists

USTA/ITA National Team

Indoor Champions

SEC Champions Emmanuel W, 7-0 #35 BYU W, 7-0 Middle Tenn. State W, 6-1

1-#21 Baylor W, 6-1

1-#6 Tennessee W, 4-3

1-#1 Stanford W, 4-3

1-#4 Vanderbilt W, 4-1 Clemson W, 6-1 at #26 Ga. Tech W, 5-2 at #2 Vanderbilt* W, 4-3 at #11 Kentucky* W, 5-2 #51 Auburn* W, 6-1 at #21 Alabama* W, 5-2 #55 Arkansas* W, 7-0 #33 LSU* W, 7-0 Dartmouth W, 5-2 #25 Ole Miss* W, 4-3 Miss. State* W, 7-0 at #20 S. Carolina* W, 4-3 at #1 Florida* W, 4-3 #13 Tennessee* W, 7-0

2-#34 Ole Miss W, 4-0

2-#17 S. Carolina L, 4-2

3-Winthrop W, 4-0

3-#28 South Alabama W, 4-3

4-#12 California W, 4-1

4-#5 UCLA W, 4-2

4-#2 Stanford L, 4-0 * SEC match

1-USTA/ITA National Team Indoors, Madison, Wis.

2-SECs, Columbia, S.C.

3-1st/2nd Rnds, Athens, Ga.

4-NCAA Championship, Palo Alto, Calif.

2003 (19-5, 9-2 SEC)

Coach: Jeff Wallace

NCAA Quarterfinalists at #58 Furman W, 7-0 vs. Illinois St. (Greenville,SC) W, 7-0

1-#28 Wake Forest W, 5-2

1-#7 Southern Cal L, 5-2

1-#9 UCLA W, 4-3 at #21 Clemson W, 6-1 #9 Vanderbilt* W, 4-3 #18 Kentucky* W, 6-1 at #40 Auburn* W, 7-0 #31 Alabama* W, 6-1 at #54 Arkansas* W, 7-0 at #50 LSU* W, 6-0 #28 Ga. Tech rainout at #42 Ole Miss* W, 5-2 at Miss. State* W, 7-0 #37 South Carolina* W, 7-0 #5 Florida* L, 5-2 at #9 Tennessee* L, 7-0

2-No.37 South Carolina W, 4-0

2-#10 Kentucky W, 4-1

2-#2 Florida L, 4-0

3-MD-Baltimore Co. W, 4-0

3-#32 Alabama W, 4-1

4-#12 Kentucky W, 4-0

4-#1 Stanford L, 4-0

* SEC match

1-USTA/ITA National Team Indoors Madison, Wis.

2-SECs., Knoxville, Tenn.

3-NCAA 1st/2nd Rnds, Norman, Okla.

4-NCAA Rnd. of 16, Gainesville, Fla.

2004 (20-5, 9-2 SEC)

Coach: Jeff Wallace

NCAA Quarterfinalists

#32 Baylor W, 6-1

1-#12 Harvard W, 6-1

1-#8 Northwestern W, 4-3

1-#3 California W, 4-1

1-#2 Stanford L, 5-0

UNC-Charlotte W, 7-0

59 TCU W, 6-1

at #52 Alabama* W, 5-2

Auburn* W, 7-0

#12 Clemson W, 6-1

#56 LSU* W, 7-0

#68 Arkansas* W, 7-0

at #38 Ga. Tech W, 4-3

Miss. State* W, 7-0

#33 Ole Miss* W, 7-0

at #2 Florida* L, 6-1

at #31 S. Carolina* W, 5-2 at #18 Kentucky* W, 6-1

at #5 Vanderbilt* L, 4-3

#24 Tennessee* W, 4-3

2-#21 Kentucky L, 4-1

3-Samford W, 4-0

3-#40 Ga. Tech W, 4-0

4-#16 Fresno State W, 4-2

4-#3 Vanderbilt L, 4-1

*SEC match

1-USTA/ITA National Team Indoors, Madison, Wis.

2-SECs, Nashville, Tenn.

3-NCAA 1st and 2nd Round, Athens, Ga.

4-NCAA Round of 16, Athens, Ga.

2005 (18-8, 7-4 SEC)

Coach: Jeff Wallace NCAA Quarterfinalists

Georgia Southern W, 7-0

#41 Baylor W, 5-2

1-#5 Northwestern W, 5-2

1-#6 Vanderbilt W, 4-1

1-#1 Stanford L, 4-0

Wichita State W, 7-0

at #16 Clemson W, 5-2

#36 Alabama* W, 5-2

at #74 Auburn* W, 7-0 at #38 LSU* W, 5-2 at #52 Arkansas* W, 6-1

#16 Georgia Tech L, 4-3 at #34 Miss. State* W, 4-3 at #46 Ole Miss* W, 4-2

#9 Florida* L, 4-3

#24 South Carolina* W, 4-0

#5 Kentucky* L, 4-3

#6 Vanderbilt* L, 7-0

at #20 Tennessee* L, 4-3

2-Auburn W, 4-0

2-#18 Tennessee W, 4-1

2-#3 Kentucky L, 4-2

3-Quinnipiac W, 4-0

3-#22 S. Carolina W, 4-0

4-#24 California W, 4-2

4-#1 Stanford L, 4-1

* SEC match

1-USTA/ITA National Team Indoors, Madison, Wis.

2-SECs, Tuscaloosa, Ala.

3-NCAA 1st/2nd Rnds, Athens, Ga.

4-NCAA Round of 16, Athens, Ga. 2006 (13-10, 8-3 SEC)

NCAA second Round

#20 William & Mary W, 4-3 Georgia Southern W, 7-0

1-#19 Harvard L, 4-3

1-#8 Baylor L, 4-3

1-#5 Northwestern L, 6-0 Winthrop W, 5-2 #26 Clemson L, 4-3 at #5 Georgia Tech L, 6-1 #59 Arkansas* W, 5-2 #46 LSU* W, 7-0 at #19 S. Carolina* W, 6-1 at #6 Florida* L, 5-2 #66 Marshall W, 6-1 Auburn* W, 6-1 at #26 Alabama* W, 6-1 at #28 Kentucky* L, 4-3 at #11 Vanderbilt* L, 5-2 Miss. State* W, 6-1 #60 Ole Miss* W, 5-2 #29 Tennessee* W, 6-1

2-#31Tennessee L, 4-3

3-#42 Indiana W, 4-1

3-#13 Vanderbilt L, 4-2 * SEC match

1-USTA/ITA National Team Indoors, Madison, Wis. 2-SECs, Gainesville, Fla.

3-NCAA 1st/2nd Rounds, Nashville, Tenn.

2007 (24-2, 10-1 SEC)

Coach: Jeff Wallace

NCAA Quarterfinalist SEC Tournament Champions #28 Texas A&M W, 6-1 #6 Baylor W, 7-0 Winthrop W, 7-0 #61 Florida State W, 6-1 Ga. Southern W, 7-0 at #12 Clemson W, 6-1 #6 Ga. Tech W, 5-2 at #45 Arkansas* W, 6-1 at #51 LSU* W, 5-2 #53 South Carolina* W, 5-2 #1 Florida* W, 4-3 East Tenn. State W, 7-0 at #41 Auburn* L, 4-3 #61 Alabama* W, 6-1 #22 Kentucky* W, 6-1 #21 Vanderbilt* W, 4-3 at #75 Miss. State* W, 6-1 at Ole Miss* W, 6-1 at #24 Tennessee* W, 6-1

1-#30 Auburn W, 4-1

1-#21 Tennessee W, 4-1

1-#3 Florida W, 4-2

2-S.C. State W, 4-0

2-#31 Auburn W, 4-0

3-#14 William & Mary W, 4-1

3-#10 California L, 4-1 * SEC match

1-SECs, Lexington, Ky.

2-NCAA 1st/2nd Rounds, Athens, Ga.

3-NCAA Rnd. of 16, Athens, Ga.

2008 (22-5, 9-2 SEC)

Coach: Jeff Wallace

NCAA Round of 16

SEC Tournament Champions

East Tenn. State W, 7-0 #29 South Florida W, 6-1 #32 Wichita State W, 7-0

1-#19 Notre Dame W, 4-2

1-#2 Georgia Tech L, 7-0

1-#8 Southern Cal W, 4-3 #18 Clemson W, 4-3 at #1 Georgia Tech W, 4-3 at Miss. State* W, 4-0 at Ole Miss* W, 6-1

55 BULLDOGS GEORGIADOGS.COM at Auburn* W, 6-0 at #27 S. Carolina* L, 5-4
Kentucky W, 5-1
Ole Miss W, 5-3
Florida L, 5-1
Wm. & Mary L, 5-0 * SEC match
Invitational, Las, Vegas, Nev
Athens, Ga.
Stanford, Calif.
2-#29
2-#12
2-#1
3-#10
1-UNLV
2-SECs,
3-NCAAs,
Semifinalists Middle Tenn. State W, 9-0 Ga. Southern W, 9-0 at Clemson W, 9-0 1-#14 BYU W, 6-3 1-#13 Wake Forest W, 6-1 1-#1 Stanford L, 5-2 at #34 Kentucky* W, 5-4 #68 Auburn* W, 9-0 #19 South Carolina* W, 7-1 #11 Wake Forest W, 5-4 #15 Vanderbilt* W, 6-1 at #38 LSU* W, 8-1 2-#8 California W, 6-3 2-#9 Texas W, 7-2 at Alabama* W, 9-0 #20 Arkansas* L, 5-4 at #63 Miss. State* W, 9-0 at #7 Ole Miss* W, 6-3 #3 Florida* L, 6-3 #12 Tennessee* W, 5-2 3-#37 South Carolina W, 5-1 3-#12 Tennessee W, 5-2 3-#3 Florida L, 5-1 4-#15 Kansas W, 5-3 4-William & Mary W, 5-2 4-#2 Florida L, 5-1 * SEC match 1-USTA/ITA National Team Indoors, Madison, Wis. 2-Austin, Texas 3-SEC’s, Lexington, Ky. 4-NCAAs, Notre Dame, Ind.
Jeff Wallace NCAA
Coach: Jeff Wallace

2009

at #26 Ga. Tech L, 5-2

at #22 Arkansas* W, 5-2

LSU* W, 6-1

at #72 Miss. State* W, 4-3

at #35 Ole Miss* L, 5-2

#15 South Carolina* W, 4-3

#4 Florida* L, 6-1

#14 Tennessee* L, 4-2

3-#16 S. Carolina L, 4-1

4-#39 Harvard W, 4-0

4-#9 Clemson L, 4-2

* SEC match

1-ITA Kickoff Weekend, Athens, Ga.

2-USTA/ITA National Team Indoors, Madison, Wis.

3-SECs, Athens, Ga.

4-NCAA 1st/2nd Rounds, Clemson, S.C.

2011 (19-5, 9-2 SEC)

Coach: Jeff Wallace

NCAA Quarterfinalist

Memphis W, 7-0

1-#31 VCU W, 5-2

1-#6 UNC L, 4-3

#13 Ga. Tech W, 5-2

at #9 Clemson W, 5-2 at Auburn* W, 7-0

at #34 Alabama* W, 4-3

#8 Vanderbilt* W, 6-1

Kentucky* W, 6-1 Butler W, 7-0

#24 Yale W, 6-1

at #56 LSU* W, 7-0

#12 Arkansas* W, 7-0

327 Ole Miss* W, 6-1 Miss. State* W, 6-1

at #2 Florida* L, 6-1

at #38 S. Carolina* W, 4-3

at #16 Tennessee* L, 5-2

2-#21 Arkansas W, 4-0

2-#14 Tennessee L, 4-1

3-Marist W, 4-0

3-#26 Alabama W, 4-0

4-#9 California W, 4-3

4-#2 Stanford L, 4-0

* SEC match

1-ITA Weekend, Chapel Hill, N.C.

2-SECs., Knoxville, Tenn.

3-NCAA 1st/2nd Rounds, Athens, Ga.

4-NCAA Rd. of 16-Finals, Stanford, Calif.

2012 (24-5, 9-2 SEC)

Coach: Jeff Wallace

NCAA Quarterfinalist Kansas State W, 6-1 Troy W, 7-0

at #13 Ga. Tech W, 4-3

1-Missouri W, 6-1

1-Fla. International W, 7-0

#74 Fla. International W, 7-0

2-#14 Texas W, 4-2

5-#11 Texas W, 4-0

5-#3 Duke L, 4-2

* SEC match

1-ITA Weekend, Athens, Ga.

2-ITA National Team Indoors, Charlottesville, Va.

3-SECs, Oxford, Miss.

4-NCAA 1st/2nd Rounds, Athens, Ga.

5-NCAA Round of 16, Athens, Ga.

2013 (24-4, 12-1

SEC)

Coach: Jeff Wallace

NCAA Quarterfinalist

SEC Champions

1-#73 Columbia W, 4-1

1-#71 Georgia State W, 7-0 at #19 Clemson W, 5-2

2-#11 Texas W, 4-2

2-#7 Cal W, 4-1

2-#1 UCLA L, 4-1 #24 Ga. Tech W, 4-3 at #57 Tennessee* W, 6-1 #50 Ole Miss* W, 6-1. Miss. State* W,

5-#15 USC W. 4-3

6-#8 Florida L, 4-1

* SEC match

1-ITA Kickoff Weekend

2-ITA National Team Indoors

3-SEC Tourn., Columbia, Mo.

4-NCAA 1st/2nd Rd, Athens, Ga.

5-NCAA Round of 16, Athens, Ga.

2015 (24-7, 11-2 SEC)

Coach: Jeff Wallace

NCAA Semifinalist at #15 Baylor L, 4-3

1-#71 Samford W, 4-1

1-#28 Auburn W, 4-0 at #13 Clemson W, 4-3 at #10 Virginia L, 4-2

2-#15 Michigan W, 4-1

2-#1 UCLA W, 4-2

2-#5 California W, 4-2

2-#3 North Carolina L, 4-1

#23 Georgia Tech W, 4-1 Texas A&M* W, 5-2

at #9 Alabama* L, 5-2

at #39 Auburn* W, 4-1

#22 Kentucky* W, 4-0

#11 Vanderbilt* W, 5-2

at Tennessee* W, 4-1

at Missouri* W, 6-0

#26 Ole Miss* W, 4-0

#44 Miss. State* W, 7-0

at #6 Florida* L, 4-3

at #26 S. Carolina* W, 4-2

3-Miss. State W, 4-0

4-0

3-#8 Alabama W, 4-2

3-#2 Florida L, 4-0

4-Winthrop W, 4-0

4-#26 Arizona State W, 4-0

5-#13 Clemson W. 4-2

5-#12 Stanford L, 4-1

* SEC match

1-ITA Kickoff Weekend

2-ITA National Team Indoors

3-SECs, Starkville, Miss.

4-NCAA 1st/2nd Rounds - Athens, Ga.

5-NCAA Round of 16 Champaign, Ill.

2014 (24-5, 11-2 SEC)

Coach: Jeff Wallace

NCAA Quarterfinalist

SEC Tournament Champions

1-#75 Elon W, 4-0

1-#51 Arkansas W, 5-0 #13 Clemson W, 7-0

2-#9 Miami W, 4-0

2-#8 California L, 4-3

3-#24 LSU W, 4-0

3-#9 Vanderbilt L, 4-3

4-Charleston Southern W, 4-0

4-Duke W, 4-0

5-#11 Michigan W, 4-2

5-#14 Stanford W, 4-1

5-#7 UCLA L, 4-1

* SEC match

1-ITA Kickoff Weekend

2-ITA National Team Indoors

3-SECs, Columbia, S.C.

4-NCAA 1st/2nd Rounds, Athens, Ga.

5-NCAA Championships Rd. of 16, Waco, Texas

2016 (22-5, 11-2 SEC)

Coach: Jeff Wallace NCAA Round of 16

1-#74 Wyoming W, 4-0

1-#57 Old Dominion W, 4-0

#20 Clemson W, 7-0

2-#17 Texas Tech W, 4-0

2-#12 Michigan W, 4-1

2-#5 North Carolina L, 4-2

1-ITA Kickoff Weekend

2-ITA National Team Indoors

3-SECs, Baton Rouge, La.

4-NCAA 1st/2nd Rounds, Athens, Ga.

5-NCAA Rd. of 16, Tulsa, Okla.

2017 (19-6, 11-2 SEC)

Coach: Jeff Wallace NCAA Round of 16

1-New Mexico W, 4-0

1-Illinois W, 4-0 at Clemson W, 7-0

2-#10 Duke W, 4-1

2-#3 Pepperdine W, 4-1

2-#1 Florida L, 4-0 Mercer W, 7-0 #11 Georgia Tech L, 4-3 #30 Kentucky* W, 4-1 #14 Vanderbilt* L, 4-2 at #46 Alabama* W, 6-1 at #4 Auburn* W, 4-1 at #1 Florida* W, 4-1 at #21 S. Carolina* W, 4-0 #28 Ole Miss* W, 4-2 #25 Miss. St.* W, 4-0 at #23 Tennessee* W, 4-0 at #19 Arkansas* W, 4-0 at #46 Missouri* W, 4-0 #19 LSU* W, 5-2 #21 Texas A&M* L, 4-2

3-#12 Auburn L, 1-4

4-South Carolina St. W, 4-0 4-#30 N.C. State. W, 4-0 5-#12 Pepperdine L, 4-3 * SEC match

1-ITA Kickoff Weekend

2-ITA National Team Indoors

3-SECs, Nashville, Tenn.

4-NCAA 1st/2nd Rounds, Athens, Ga. 5-NCAA Rd.of 16, Athens, Ga.

2018 (18-7, 10-3 SEC)

Coach: Jeff Wallace

NCAA Quarterfinalist

1-Michigan State W, 4-0

1-Penn W, 4-0 Clemson W, 7-0

2-#11 Texas W, 4-2

2-#9 Duke L, 4-3

1-ITA Kickoff Weekend, Athens, Ga.

2-USTA/ITA National Team Indoors, Madison, Wis.

3-SECs, Fayetteville, Ark.

4-NCAA 1st/2nd Rounds, Athens, Ga.

5-NCAA Round of 16, College Station, Texas

2010 (13-10, 8-3 SEC)

Coach: Jeff Wallace

NCAA Round of 32

#75 South Florida W, 5-2

1-#55 Virginia Tech W, 5-2

1-#48 William & Mary W, 4-2

#15 Clemson L, 4-3

2-#11 N. Carolina L, 5-2

2-#20 Fla. State W, 6-1

2-#6 Miami (Fla.) L, 5-2

#50 Alabama* W, 4-3

#36 Auburn* W, 4-3

at Kentucky* W, 7-0

at #25 Vanderbilt* W, 5-2

2-#7 California L, 4-0

2-#10 Michigan W, 5-2

#53 Memphis W, 4-3 #17 Clemson W, 7-0

#22 South Carolina* W, 6-1

#15 Florida* L, 4-3

at Miss. State* W, 7-0

at #25 Ole Miss* W, 5-2 at #37 Arkansas* W, 7-0

#49 LSU* W, 6-1 at Kentucky* W, 7-0

at #25 Vanderbilt* W, 4-3

#11 Alabama* L, 4-3

#63 Auburn* W, 6-1

No.21 Tennessee* W, 7-0

3-#28 S. Carolina W, 4-0

3-#11 Alabama W, 4-2

3-#2 Florida L, 4-1

4-#64 Coll. of Charleston W, 4-0

4-#24 Clemson W, 4-3

2-#3 North Carolina L, 4-3 Furman W, 7-0 at #25 Georgia Tech W, 7-0 at #40 Tennessee* W, 7-0 at Miss. St.* W, 7-0 at #49 Ole Miss* W, 5-2 #5 Virginia W, 4-3 #54 S. Carolina* W, 4-0 #3 Florida* W, 4-2 at 328 Kentucky* W, 4-0 at #11 Vanderbilt* L, 4-2 #7 Texas A&M* W, 4-0 Missouri* W, 4-0 at #47 Arkansas* W, 4-0 at #54 LSU* W, 4-0 #.9 Alabama* L, 4-3 #24 Auburn* W, 4-0

3-#53 LSU W, 4-0

3-#11 Vanderbilt W, 4-1

3-#3 Alabama W, 4-0

4-#75 Elon W, 4-0

4-#37 Florida State W, 4-0

at #24 Ga. Tech W, 4-1

at #26 Ole Miss* W, 4-0

at #25 Miss. State* W, 5-2

#46 Alabama* W, 6-1

#11 Auburn* W, 4-1

#10 Virginia W, 4-2

#54 Tennessee* W, 4-0

at #23 Kentucky* W, 4-2

at #5 Vanderbilt* L, 4-3 #24 Arkansas* W, 4-0 #71 Missouri* W, 4-0 at #16 LSU* W, 5-2 at #18 Texas A&M* W, 5-2 #4 Florida* L, 4-0 #11 South Carolina* W, 41

3-#18 Texas A&M W, 4-1

3-#5 Vanderbilt W, 4-0

3-#3 Florida L, 4-2

4-North Florida W, 4-0

4-#40 Baylor W, 4-0

5-#12 Okla. State L, 4-0 * SEC match

2-#8 Texas Tech W, 4-1 at #12 Ga. Tech L, 4-2 at #43 LSU* W, 4-0 at Texas A&M* W, 4-2 #28 Tennessee* W, 7-0 #18 Florida* W, 4-1 #10 South Carolina* L, 4-1 at #20 Kentucky* W, 4-0 at #3 Vanderbilt* L, 4-1 Alabama* W, 4-0 #15 Auburn* W, 4-1 at #9 Ole Miss* L, 4-3 at #32 Mississippi St.* W, 4-0 #49 Arkansas* W, 4-0 Missouri* W, 4-0

3-#6 Ole Miss L, 4-1

4-Georgia State W, 4-0

4-#29 Wake Forest W, 4-0

5-#10 South Carolina W, 4-3

5-#15 Stanford L, 4-0

* SEC match

1-ITA Kickoff Weekend

2-ITA National Team Indoors, Madison, Wis.

3-SECs, Knoxville, Tenn.

4-NCAA 1st/2nd Rounds, Athens, Ga.

5-NCAA Rnd. of 16, Winston-Salem, N.C.

GEORGIA 56 WOMEN'S TENNIS MEDIA GUIDE #29 S. Carolina* W, 7-0 #5 Florida* L, 5-2 at #5 Baylor L, 4-3 at #26 Texas A&M W, 6-1 #26 LSU* W, 6-1 at #22 Arkansas* L, 4-3 Alabama* W, 6-1 #33 Auburn* W, 5-2 at #25 Kentucky* W, 5-2 at #13 Vanderbilt* W, 4-3 #25 Tennessee* W, 5-2 2-#22 Kentucky W, 4-1 2-#16 Arkansas W, 4-3 2-#5 Florida W, 4-3 3-Yale W, 4-0 3-#33 S. Carolina W, 4-0 4-#17 Arkansas L, 4-2 * SEC match
National Team Indoors, Madison, Wis. 2-SEC Tournament, Auburn, Ala. 3-NCAA 1st/2nd Rounds, Athens, Ga. 4-NCAA Rnd. of 16, Tulsa, Okla.
1-USTA/ITA
(27-3, 10-1 SEC)
NCAA Semifinalist SEC Champions SEC Tournament Champions Memphis W, 7-0 Furman W, 7-0 1-#53 Ole Miss W, 4-1 1-#45 Marshall W, 5-0 at #11 Clemson W, 4-3 2-#9 Southern Cal W, 4-3 2-#3 UCLA W, 6-1 2-#2 California W, 4-2 2-#1 Northwestern L, 4-1 #7 Baylor W, 4-3 #70 Ole Miss* W, 6-1 #57 Miss. State* W, 6-1 at #23 Florida* L, 4-3 at #22 S. Carolina* W, 6-1 #6 Georgia Tech W, 6-1 at #21 LSU* W, 4-2 #23 Arkansas* W, 6-1 at #29 Auburn* W, 5-2 at #25 Alabama* W, 6-1 #17 Vanderbilt* W, 4-0 #23 Kentucky* W, 5-2 at #13 Tennessee* W, 5-2 3-#24 Alabama W, 4-1 3-#15 Florida W, 4-2 3-#10 Tennessee W, 4-0 4-S.C. State W, 4-0 4-#35 Boise State W, 4-0 5-#15 Florida W, 4-2 5-#22 S. Carolina W, 4-3 5-#3 Duke L, 5-2
Coach: Jeff Wallace
* SEC match
7-0 #15 Notre Dame W, 6-1 at #4 Florida* L, 4-1 at #32 South Carolina* W, 7-0 #16 Vanderbilt* W, 5-2 #46 Kentucky* W, 7-0 vs #58 Missouri* (St. Louis) W, 4-0 at #3 Texas A&M* W, 4-2 #59 LSU* W, 7-0 #50 Arkansas* W, 7-0 at #22 Auburn* W, 4-0 at #8 Alabama* W, 4-0 3-#39 Ole Miss W,

2019 (28-2, 13-0 SEC)

Coach: Jeff Wallace

ITA National Indoor Champions

NCAA National Runner-Ups

2-ITA National Team Indoors, Madison, Wis.

2021 (23-2, 13-0 SEC)

Coach: Jeff Wallace

NCAA Quarterfinalist

SEC Champions SEC Tournament Champions

Georgia State W, 7-0

#1 North Carolina L, 4-3

#8 Florida State W, 4-3

#9 Georgia Tech W, 4-1 Georgia Southern W, 6-1

#19 Tennessee* W, 4-0 at Ole Miss* W, 4-0 at Mississippi State* W, 4-0 #27 Florida* W, 4-1 #35 South Carolina* W, 4-0

at #19 LSU* W, 4-0

at #23 Kentucky* W, 4-0

at #16 Vanderbilt* W, 4-2 Missouri* W, 4-0 #24 Arkansas* W, 4-0 #40 Alabama* W, 4-0 #17 Auburn* W, 4-2 vs #17 Texas A&M* W, 4-0

1-#25 Kentucky W, 4-0

1-#17 Tennessee W, 4-0

1-#12 Texas A&M W, 4-0

2-Austin Peay W, 4-0

2-#32 Wake Forest W, 4-1

3-#14 Virgina W, 4-1

3-#6 NC State L, 4-2

* SEC match

1-SECs, Tuscaloosa, Ala.

2-NCAA 1st/2nd Rounds, Athens, Ga.

3-NCAA Rd. of 16, Orlando, Fla.

2022 (19-7, 10-3 SEC)

Coach: Jeff Wallace

NCAA Round of 16

at #3 North Carolina PPD

1-North Florida W, 5-0

1-Mississippi State W, 4-1

2-#16 Washington W, 4-0

2-#6 NC State L, 4-2

2-#7 Virginia L, 4-3 #46 Ole Miss* W, 7-0

#56 Mississippi State* W, 6-1

at #15 Florida* W, 4-1

at #59 South Carolina* W, 4-1 #4 Ohio State W, 7-0

at #27 Tennessee* W, 4-0

Coach: Jeff Wallace

*Cancelled Due to Covid-19*

Dame W, 5-2 at #22 Ga. Tech W, 4-1 Clemson W, 7-0

2-#11 Virginia W, 4-1

2-#5 Duke L, 4-2

2-#8 N.C. State L, 4-1 #23 Tennessee* W, 4-0 at #26 Ole Miss* W, 4-0 at Mississippi State* W, 4-0 #46 Florida* Cancelled #19 South Carolina* Cancelled at LSU* Cancelled at Texas A&M* Cancelled at Kentucky* Cancelled at Vanderbilt* Cancelled Missouri* Cancelled Arkansas* Cancelled Alabama* Cancelled Auburn* Cancelled

Tournament Cancelled

Regionals Cancelled

Tournament Cancelled

#61 LSU* W, 4-1 #12 Texas A&M* L, 7-0

at #27 Georgia Tech W, 4-0 at Missouri W, 6-1 at #32 Arkansas* W, 6-1 #66 Kentucky* W, 4-0 #39 Vanderbilt* W, 4-3 at #45 Alabama* L, 4-3 at #13 Auburn* L, 4-3

3-#28 South Carolina W, 4-2

3-#26 Tennessee W, 4-3

3-#6 Texas A&M L, 4-0

4-Charleston Southern W, 4-0

4-#23 Wake Forest W, 4-0

5-#4 Duke L, 4-1

* SEC match

1-ITA Kickoff Weekend

2- ITA National Team Indoors, Madison, Wis.

3-SEC Tournament, Gainesville, Fla.

4-NCAA First & Second Round, Athens, Ga.

5-Round of 16, Durham, N.C.

HEAD COACH HISTORY

57 BULLDOGS GEORGIADOGS.COM
1-South Florida W, 5-2 1-Kansas State W, 7-0 at Clemson W, 7-0 2-#14 N.C. State W, 4-2 2-#2 Vanderbilt W, 4-3 2-#1 Stanford W, 4-3 2-#3 North Carolina W, 4-3 #31 Georgia Tech W, 4-0 at #30 Tennessee* W, 4-0 #15 LSU* W, 4-2 #21 Texas A&M* W, 4-0 at #34 Florida* W, 4-1 at #7 South Carolina* W, 4-2 No. 48 Ole Miss* W, 4-0 No. 50 Mississippi State* W, 4-0 at #39 Alabama* W, 4-0 at #49 Auburn* W, 4-0 at #40 Arkansas* W, 4-0 at Missouri* W, 4-0 at #24 Kentucky* W, 4-0 #7 Vanderbilt* W, 4-1 3-#28 LSU W, 4-0 3-#19 Texas A&M W, 4-0 3-#5 South Carolina L, 4-0 4-Alabama State W, 4-0 4-#22 Wake Forest W, 4-0 4-#16 Michigan W, 4-2 5-#8 Vanderbilt W, 4-3 5-#5 Duke W, 4-2 5-#3 Stanford L, 4-0 * SEC match 1-ITA Kickoff Weekend 2-ITA National Team Indoors, Seattle, Wash. 3-SECs, College Station, Texas 4-NCAA 1st/2nd Rounds, Athens, Ga. 5-NCAA Tournament, Lake Nona, Fla.
SEC)
SEC Tournament Champions
2020 (8-2, 3-0
1-Michigan State W, 7-0 1-Notre
3-SEC
4-NCAA
5-NCAA
* SEC match 1-ITA Kickoff Weekend
Year Coach Record 1974-77 Jane Kuykendoll 55-16 1978-81 Greg McGarity 51-44 1982-83 Cissie Donigan 40-14 1984-85 Lee Myers 34-29 1986-Present Jeff Wallace 792-194

Elizabeth Alexander (1988-89) Columbus, Ohio

Laurie Allen (1980) Dunwoody, Ga.

Ellen Alsobrook (1981) Decatur, Ga.

Michelle Anderson (1994-97) Pretoria, S. Africa

Alexandra Anghelescu (2011) Johns Creek, Ga.

Jessica Annest (1997-98) Atlanta, Ga.

Lisa Apanay (1986-89) Morrow, Ga.

Kelly Baskin (1996-97, ’99-00) Marietta, Ga.

Caroline Basu (2005-06)..........Wolfsburg, Germany

Lianna Bebeau (1985-88) Decatur, Ga.

Chris Belasco (1981) Atlanta, Ga.

Tonya Bogdonas (1989-92) Rockford, Ill.

Susan Boyett (1979-80)................Coral Gables, Fla.

Caroline Brinson (2014-17) New Orleans, La.

Sherri Byrd (1979-81) Belton, S.C.

Lourdes Carle (2019) Daireaux, Argentina

Vanessa Castellano (1998-99) Barcelona, Spain

Marissa Catlin (1997-00) Clearwater, Fla.

Anne Chauzu (1993-96) Linas, France

Elena Christofi (2017-2021).............Athens, Greece

Agata Cioroch (2001-04) Warsaw, Poland

Nancy Cohen (1980-82)..........................Miami, Fla.

Jane Cohodes (1985-88) Bexley, Ohio

Kelly Coleman (1986) Toledo, Ohio

Morgan Coppoc (2018-2022) Tulsa, Okla.

Makenzie Craft (2013).........................Frisco, Texas

Kim Crews (1975-76).........................Edmond, Okla.

Pam Crews (1975-76) Edmond, Okla.

Monika Dancevic (2007-09) Thorold, Ontario, Canada

Cameron Ellis (2008-11) Roswell, Ga.

Adrienne Elsberry (2007-08) Athens, Ga.

Lara Fakhoury (2007, ’09-10)..................Tampa, Fla.

Lu Fendig (1976-77).........................St. Simons, Ga.

Amila Fetahagic (1988-89) Zenica, Yugoslavia

Jennifer Fisher (1982-83) Framingham, Mass.

Wright Floyd (1988)...............................Atlanta, Ga.

Natalie Frazier (2004-07) Riverdale, Ga.

Laurie Friedland (1985-88) Miami, Fla.

Kate Fuller (2011-14).........................Suwanee, Ga.

Brooke Galardi (1993-95) LaJolla, Calif.

Silvia Garcia (2013-16)......................Madrid, Spain

Nancy Gates (1979).................................Rome, Ga.

Kathy George (1977) Anniston, Ala.

Nadja Gilchrist (2009-12) Webster, N.Y.

Mariana Gould (2015-18) Boise, Idaho

Marta Gonzalez (2017-2021).............Madrid, Spain

Annette Goulak (2018) Oak Park, Calif.

Marshall Graham (1984) Reidsville, N.C.

Guillermina Grant (2021-) Montevideo, Uruguay

Sue Green (1984-86) Kalamazoo, Mich.

Christa Grey (1998-01) Seminole, Fla.

Lori Grey (2000-03)............................Seminole, Fla.

Dana Grubbs (1979-80) Jacksonville, Fla.

Chelsey Gullickson (2009-12) Palm Beach Gardens, Fla.

H

Alee Harris (2019-2022) Huntsville, Ala.

Rachael Hart (2011) Alpharetta, Ga.

Lauren Herring (2012-15) Greenville, N.C.

Anna Hertel (2020-)........................Warsaw, Poland

Dot Higgins (1981-83) Rome, Ga.

Jennifer Hodge (2003-04) Athens, Ga.

Tina Hojnik (2001-03) Maribor, Slovenia

LuAnn Howard (1975) Atlanta, Ga.

Kelley Hyndman (2005-08) Bradenton, Fla.

Yvette Hyndman (2007-10) Bradenton, Fla.

I

Darya Ivanov (2006-07) Adelaide, Australia

J

Susan Jackson (1975-77) Charlotte, N.C.

Alina Jerjomina (2011-12) Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.

Katarina Jokic (2018-2021) Novi Grad, Bosnia

Kelli Jordan (2010-12).............................Tifton, Ga.

K

Jennifer Kalnitsky (1992) Kanata, Ontario

Jaime Kaplan (1980-81) Macon, Ga.

Wendi Kaplan (1988) Atlanta, Ga.

Maxxine Kaufman (1982-84).......Miami Beach, Fla.

Kappy Kellett (1995-97) Atlanta, Ga.

Lilly Kimbell (2011-14) New Braunfels, Texas

Laura Kimel (1991-92) Winter Park, Fla.

Hannah King (2015-16) Dunwoody, Ga.

Mia King (2013-15) Charlotte, N.C.

Esther Knox (1999-00) Sydney, Australia

Meg Kowalski (2019-) Chicago, Ill. Maho Kowase (2011-14) Kashiwa, Chiba, Japan

Marianna Land (1993-95)......................Atlanta, Ga.

Sara Lett (2008)............................Indianapolis, Ind.

Angela Lettiere (1991-94) Vero Beach, Fla. Donna Little (1981)...........................Charlotte, N.C.

Julie Lumpkin (1979-80)....................Columbus, Ga. M

Lea Ma (2020-) Dix Hills, N.Y.

Anne Marcinkowski (2016) Johns Creek, Ga.

Chris Marshburn (1975-77) unknown

Margaret Martin (1978-79) Gainesville, Ga.

Jeanette Mattsson (2002) Osthammar, Sweden

Shannan McCarthy (1989-92) Alpharetta, Ga.

Shawn McCarthy (1989-92) Alpharetta, Ga.

Janet McClelland (1977-80) Waycross, Ga.

Barbara McKinley (1977) Atlanta, Ga.

Zoë Mellis (1997-2000) Essex, England

Melanie Mercer (1985-87) Lookout Mtn, Tenn.

Holly Mills (1981) Sarasota, Fla.

Kelley Moore (2008)...............................Duluth, Ga.

Lynn Morgan (1983-85) Midlothian, Va.

Caryn Moss (1989-91) Pem. Pines, Fla.

Anne Nguyen (2000-03) Lancaster, Penn.

Mai Nirundorn (2022-) Bangkok, Thailand

Laura Patterson (2015-18)....................Roswell, Ga.

Ellen Perez (2015-17) Shellharbour, Australia

Tina Price (1975-77) Dublin, Ga.

Mell Reasco (2022-) Quito, Ecuador

Alice Reen (1984-87)............................Orlando, Fla.

Adele Reid (1981).............................Charlotte, N.C.

Jane Reid (1995-96, ’98-99)...............Marietta, Ga.

Shadisha Robinson (2004-06) S. Ozone Park, N.Y.

Lauren Rose (1997-98) Toledo, Ohio

Maria Salsgard (1990-92) Halmstad, Sweden

Tina Samara (1993-96) Laurel Hollow, N.Y.

Dolores Sanchez (1978-79) Augusta, Ga.

Susan Sadri (1981-82)......................Charlotte, N.C.

Lisa Salvatierra (1993-95) San Francisco, Ca.

Stacey Schefflin (1987-90) Matthews, N.C.

Jitka Schonfeldova (2004-05) Prague, Czech Rep.

Lorri Seals (1983) Tyrone, Ga.

Kennedy Shaffer (2015-18) Rossford, Ohio

Leigh Shepherd (1980-82) Newton, N.C.

Stacy Sheppard (1992-95)................Loganville, Ga.

Anastasiya Shevchenko (2005) Barcelona, Spain

Mary Lynne Smisson (1979-80) Columbus, Ga.

Alexandra Smith (2001-04) Marietta, Ga.

Debi Snelling (1975-77) Atlanta, Ga.

Laura Snelling (1983) Atlanta, Ga.

Lisa Spain (1981-84) Moultrie, Ga.

Evgenia Subbotina (2003-06) Minsk, Belarus

Anne Sussman (1980-81) Augusta, Ga.

Jenny Thornton (1983-86) Dublin, Ireland

Frances Turner (1983-86) Pensecola, Fla.

Naoko Ueshima (2007-10) Nishinomiya, Japan

Aarthi Venkatesan (1998-01) Brisbane, Australia

Mariel Verban (2001-02) Bloomington, Ill.

Dasha Vidmanova (2022-) Prague, Czech Republic

Jill Waldman (1987-90) Charleston, S.C.

Abby Walter (2017) Thomasville, Ga.

Nadine van de Walle (1995-98) Huissen, Holland

Paula Westmoreland (1979-80) Griffin, Ga.

Douglas Wink (2003-04) Greensboro, N.C.

Vivian Wolff (2018-) Atlanta, Ga.

Hollye Yermovsky (1977) Waycross, Ga.

Cathy Young (1977) Kennesaw, Ga.

Terri Ysseldyke (1977) Marietta, Ga.

GEORGIA 58WOMEN'S TENNIS MEDIA GUIDE A
B
C
D
E
F
G
L
N
O
P
Ayaka Okuno (2013) Osaka, Japan
R
S
T
U
V
W
Y

UNIVERSITY ENDOWMENTS

The Athletic Scholarship Endowment Program was instituted to allow supporters of the University of Georgia Athletic Association to invest in the educational opportunities of UGA student-athletes. The program is vital to the future of Georgia Athletics by providing the long-term solution of keeping pace with escalating expenses. A gift to establish a scholarship provides income towards funding a scholarship each year and permanently memorializes the donor or any individual whose honor the scholarship is named. A full scholarship is endowed through a gift of $150,000.

There are four women’s tennis scholarship endowments including one established by the UGAAA in honor of the 2000 team which won both the NCAA and SEC titles. For more information about the Athletic Scholarship Endowment Program or other giving opportunities, please contact the UGAAA Development office at (877) 423-2947.

LEIGHTON BALLEW SCHOLARSHIP ENDOWMENT

Guillermina Grant is the 2023 recipient of the Leighton Ballew tennis scholarship. It is awarded annually to an international student-athlete who has demonstrated commitment to the University in an outstanding manner, both in the classroom and on the court. If no international student-athlete exists, selection of a student-athlete recipient is based on the aforementioned criteria. The late Mr. Ballew was a UGA faculty member for 40 years and founded the drama department.

1999: Vanessa Castellano

2000: Zoë Mellis

2001: Aarthi Venkatesan

2002: Tina Hojnik

2003-04: Agata Cioroch

2005: Jitka Schonfeldova

2006: Kelley Hyndman

2007: Darya Ivanov

2008-10: Naoko Ueshima

2011-12: Lilly Kimbell

2013-14: Maho Kowase

2015: Silvia Garcia

2016-17: Ellen Perez

2018: Elena Christofi

2019-21: Katarina Jokic

2022-23: Guillermina Grant

BARBARA HARTMAN HOWELL SCHOLARSHIP ENDOWMENT

Alex Vecic is the 2023 recipient of the Barbara Hartman Howell tennis scholarship. It is awarded annually to a scholar-athlete on the women’s tennis team who has a stated purpose of graduating. The scholarship was established by Barbara Hartman Howell’s lifelong friends Vickie Pruitt Farmer and Leon Farmer, Jr. for her many years of dedication to and love of the Georgia Athletic Association and in memory of her daughter, Amanda, who passed away suddenly on July 22, 2007 at the tender age of 26. Vickie and Barbara graduated from Athens High School Class of 1969 and were Phi Mu sorority sisters at UGA.

2009-12: Nadja Gilchrist

2012-14: Lauren Herring

2015: Caroline Brinson

2016: Hannah King

2017: Laura Patterson

2018: Mariana Gould

2019: Annette Goulak

2020: Vivian Wolff

2021-22: Ania Hertel

2023: Alex Vecic

DOYLE E. MOTE SCHOLARSHIP ENDOWMENT

Mai Nirundorn is the 2023 recipient of the Doyle E. Mote women’s tennis scholarship. It is awarded annually to an all-around student-athlete who is a good student and loves the game of tennis. This scholarship endowment was established by Lillian Jensen Mote in loving memory of her husband, Doyle E. Mote. Originally from Calhoun, Doyle graduated from the University’s School of Pharmacy in 1950 and was a pharmacist in Lynchburg, Va., for 36 years.

2002: Mariel Verban

2003: Anne Nguyen

2004: Agata Cioroch

2005-06: Caroline Basu

2007-09: Kelley Hyndman

2010: Yvette Hyndman

2011: Cameron Ellis

2012: Chelsey Gullickson

2013-14: Kate Fuller

2015: Lauren Herring

2016-17: Caroline Brinson

2018-21: Marta Gonzalez

2021-23: Mai Nirundorn

UGA WOMEN’S TENNIS SCHOLARSHIP ENDOWMENT

Ania Hertel is the 2023 recipient of the UGAAA women’s tennis scholarship. It is awarded annually to a student-athlete who best demonstrates outstanding character, leadership and dedication to the University, the women’s tennis team and the community. This scholarship endowment was established by the UGAAA in 2000 in honor of the 2000 women’s tennis team that captured its second national championship crown. The 2002-03 season marked the first year the UGAA Women’s Tennis Scholarship Endowment was awarded.

2003: Lori Grey

2004: Douglas Wink

2005-06: Natalie Frazier

2007: Monika Dancevic

2008: Yvette Hyndman

2009: Cameron Ellis

2010: Yvette Hyndman

2011-12: Kate Fuller

2013: Lilly Kimbell

2014: Mia King

2015: Hannah King

2016: Silvia Garcia

2017-18: Kennedy Shaffer

2019-22: Morgan Coppoc

2023: Ania Hertel

JOHN AND MARILYN MCMULLAN FAMILY WOMEN’S TENNIS SCHOLARSHIP ENDOWMENT

Anastasiia Lopata is the 2023 recipient of the McMullan Family women’s tennis scholarship. The award is presented to a participant on the team who displays a love for the sport of tennis. The McMullan family has had several tennis players in their family, including Marilyn and her son, Ted, as well as John and Marilyn’s daughter-in-law, Catherine.

2016-17: Marianna Gould

2018: Katarina Jokic

2019-22: Meg Kowalski

2023: Anastasiia Lopata

VICKIE FARMER SCHOLARSHIP ENDOWMENT

As natives of Athens, Ga., Vickie and Leon Farmer have been enthusiastic supporters of the Bulldog sports program for many years. Graduates of the University of Georgia, Vickie (AB ’73) and Leon (BBA ’64 and JD ’67) have fully funded multiple scholarships for student-athletes in 12 different Bulldog sports. A women’s tennis student-athlete received one of these endowments in 2006 (Shadisha Robinson) and 2007 (Natalie Frazier).

DORIS MARIE RAMSEY SCHOLARSHIP ENDOWMENT

Established by the late Bernard B. Ramsey in honor of his beloved wife, Doris Marie Ramsey, this endowment creates 10 athletic scholarships, continuing the legacy of the Ramsey name. These scholarships benefit two scholar-athletes in football, two in other men’s sports, two in women’s sports, and four pursuing post-graduate educations at UGA. A women’s tennis student-athlete received one of these endowments from 2002-04 (Alexandra Smith), in 2013-14 (Lauren Herring), and Elena Christofi.

59 BULLDOGS

MOREHEAD JERE

President Jere W. Morehead began his tenure as the 22nd University of Georgia President on July 1, 2013. Under his leadership, the University has risen in the rankings of the best public colleges and universities and completed a series of initiatives to enhance student learning and success, including a requirement for experiential learning for all undergraduates.

Additionally, the University completed the most successful capital campaign in its history, raising more than $1.4 billion, and launched an Innovation District initiative to create UGA’s campus of the future, where students and faculty partner with industry to generate ideas and solutions to continue the University’s role as a powerful driver of economic development in Georgia. Since 2013, UGA has increased its research expenditures by 41% and has been ranked among the top five universities in the U.S. each year for research-based products reaching the marketplace. UGA now stands first nationally in this important ranking.

In keeping with his focus on student success, President Morehead launched the ALL Georgia Program to support students from rural areas and created the Double Dawgs program, which enables students to save time and money by earning an undergraduate and graduate degree in five years or less. UGA graduates are in demand: 91% of graduates in 2020 were employed or in graduate school within six months of graduation.

President Morehead has served the University of Georgia since 1986 in both faculty and administrative roles. Before becoming President, he was Senior Vice President for Academic Affairs and Provost from 2010 to 2013. Prior to 2010, he held several key administrative posts, including Vice President for Instruction, Vice Provost for Academic Affairs, Associate Provost and Director of the Honors Program, and acting Executive Director of Legal Affairs.

Josh Brooks was named J. Reid Parker Director of Athletics Jan. 6, 2021, after serving 11 years at UGA, most recently as Interim Director of Athletics and Senior Deputy Director of Athletics.

Brooks returned to UGA in 2016 as Executive Associate Director of Athletics after serving as Deputy Athletics Director at the University of Louisiana Monroe from 2015-16 and Director of Athletics at Millsaps College from 2014-15.

Prior to his tenures at Millsaps and ULM, he served in capacities at UGA as Director of Football Operations (200811) and Assistant and Associate Athletic Director for Internal Operations (2012-14).

On January 20, 2021, Brooks pledged $100,000 to create a need-based scholarship that will support UGA students from Athens-Clarke County. His gift will create a Georgia Commitment Scholarship (GCS), adding to the more than 550 endowed, need-based scholarships created under the GCS program since its launch in January 2017.

During his time at UGA, Brooks worked closely with former Director of Athletics Greg McGarity overseeing internal and external for all athletic operations. He has served as the liaison with the Office of University Architects office on all athletic construction projects and with several campus departments as well as the president’s office. His responsibilities at UGA have included overseeing the departments of facility support, graphics and design, and turf management.

He has been involved in the scheduling of future football games, as well as overseeing bowl game operations. In addition, his responsibilities included assisting with the development and management of facilities, new construction projects for the Athletic Association, and planning the 2013 Jason Aldean Concert in Sanford Stadium. Brooks has also served as the sport facilitator for football and men’s and women’s track and field and cross country.

He is the Meigs Professor of Legal Studies in the Terry College of Business, where he has held a faculty appointment since 1986. He is a co-author of several books and book chapters, including The Legal and Regulatory Environment of Business, and he has published scholarly articles on legal topics ranging from export control to jury selection. He has served as Editorin-Chief of the American Business Law Journal.

His external service currently includes serving as President of the Southeastern Conference (SEC) and Chair of the SEC Executive Committee. He also serves as Chair of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I Board of Directors, a member of the NCAA Division I Administrative Committee, and a member of the NCAA Board of Governors. He is Co-Chair of the University Leadership Forum, a national initiative led by the Council on Competitiveness to expand the role of American higher education in the global innovation economy. Additional service includes membership on the boards of the Georgia Chamber of Commerce, Metro Atlanta Chamber of Commerce, Georgia Research Alliance, University System of Georgia Foundation, Atlanta Regional Council for Higher Education, and Emory University Candler School of Theology.

President Morehead has received several University-wide teaching awards, including the Josiah Meigs Award – UGA’s highest honor for teaching excellence – the Richard B. Russell Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching, the Teacher of the Year Award in the Terry College of Business, and the Lothar Tresp Outstanding Honors Professor Award. In 2021, he received the Chief Executive Leadership Award from the Council for the Advancement and Support of Education District III for outstanding leadership and service in support of education.

He holds a bachelor’s degree from Georgia State University and a law degree from the University of Georgia.

During his time at Millsaps, Brooks revamped the Major game-day experience. He created the kid’s zone, specialized concessions, and partnerships with youth sports leagues. Partnerships with the Jackson Public Schools, the Jackson Zoo, the National Guard and the Boy and Girl Scouts of America added to game days. This enhanced experience helped Brooks solicit over $100K in sponsorship opportunities.

Brooks also established a department-wide fundraising campaign that led to a 150 percent increase in Major-Club donations. Capping off this fundraising campaign was the creation of a standalone Hall of Fame event at the Capital Club and the Mary Ann Edge Golf Tournament held at Patrick Farms golf course.

The Majors saw great athletic success in Brooks’ first year. The Majors enjoyed two SAA regular season championships, captured by the men’s soccer team and the women’s basketball team. The Millsaps’ baseball team also earned a trip to the West Regional tournament. The student-athletes also shined in the classroom in Brooks’ first year. Millsaps’ studentathletes had an overall grade-point-average of 3.0 in the 2014-15 academic year. Over 130 Majors’ earned Academic All-Conference honors.

While serving as director of football operations at the University of Louisiana-Monroe beginning in 2004, and in 2007 ULM became bowl eligible for the first time in school history after beating Alabama. Brooks gained experience as a student at Louisiana State University, working as an equipment manager and a student assistant coach. During his four years at LSU, the Tigers participated in the 2000 Peach Bowl, 2002 Sugar Bowl, and won the 2001 Southeastern Conference championship.

A native of Hammond, Louisiana, he graduated from LSU (’02) with a degree in Kinesiology and completed his Master’s degree in Sport Management from The University of Georgia (‘14). He and his wife Lillie have twin sons Jackson and James born July 2009 and a third son Davis born March 2012.

GEORGIA 60 WOMEN'S TENNIS MEDIA GUIDE
BROOKS JOSH @BROOKS_UGA @BROOKS_UGA
J. REID PARKER DIRECTOR OF ATHLETICS
UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA PRESIDENT
61 BULLDOGS GEORGIADOGS.COM
Josh Brooks J. Reid Parker Director of Athletics David Shipley Faculty Athletics Representative Darrice Griffin Senior Deputy Director of Athletics Will Lawler Deputy Athletic Director – Legal & Regulatory Affairs Stephanie Ransom Deputy Athletic Director – Finance SWA Magdi El Shahawy Deputy Athletic Director – Academics & Student Development Ron Courson Executive Associate Athletic Director –Sports Medicine Ford Williams Executive Associate Athletic Director Geoff Bentzel Senior Associate Athletic Director –Compliance Matt Brachowski Senior Associate Athletic Director –Internal Operations Claude Felton Loran Smith Senior Associate AD –Sports Communications Glada Horvat Senior Associate Athletic Director –Academics & Eligibility Kevin Miller Senior Associate Athletic Director –Development Beth Dziedzic Associate Athletic Director –Academics Anna Randa Associate Athletic Director –Sports Medicine Tanner Stines Associate Athletic Director – Facilities & Capital Projects Alan Thomas Associate Athletic Director –External Operations John Bateman Assistant Athletic Director –Marketing Mike Bilbow Assistant Athletic Director –Digital Production Emily Deitz Assistant AD – Fan Engagement & Licensing Rhonda Kilpatrick Assistant Athletic Director – Academics and Eligibility Derek Hammock Assistant Athletic Director- Finance & Strategic Planning Scott Hallberg Associate Athletic Director –Business Operations Courtney Gay Assistant Athletic Director – Diversity, Equity & Inclusion Jen Galas Assistant Athletic Director – Social Media & Digital Strategy Leigh Futch Assistant Athletic Director –The Georgia Way Steve Flippen Assistant Athletic Director –Compliance Wendy Whittington Assistant Athletic Director –Ticket Operations Amy Thomas Associate Athletic Director –Human Resources Christie Purks Associate Athletic Director –Event Management Mike Mobley Assistant Athletic Director –Sports Communications Christopher Lakos Assistant Athletic Director –Sports Communications
Not Pictured JJ Beasley Nutritionist Mary Ashley Jacoppo Student Manager Paul Buzzard Equipment Kaylee Shaver Athletic Trainer Tim Sullivan Athletic Training Intern
Cory Kopaniasz Assistant Athletic Director –Academics Jake Golob Graduate Assistant –Sports Communications Christopher Lakos Assistant Athletic Director –Sports Communications Harrison welch Assistant Director of Fan Engagement Whitney Burton Director of Academic Services Maria Williams Sports Nutritionist Katrin Koch Director of Athletic Performance for Olympic Sports RYann Powell Assistant Director of Event & Facility Operations WOMEN’S TENNIS STAFF

ALABAMA

Location Tuscaloosa, Ala.

Colors Crimson & White

Head Coach Jenny Mainz

2022 Record 15-12

Conference Record 5-8 (SEC)

Final National Ranking No. 40

Tennis SID Gabby Spencer

Email..........................................gspencer@ia.ua.edu

Website rolltide.com

Florida

Location Gainseville, Fla.

Colors Blue & Orange

Head Coach Roland Thornqvist

2022 Record 21-7

Conference Record 10-3 (SEC)

Final National Ranking No. 16

Tennis SID Andrew Hile

Email...................................andrewh@gators.ufl.edu

Website floridagators.com

LSU

Location Baton Rouge, La.

Colors Purple & Gold

Head Coach Taylor Fogleman

2022 Record 5-14

Conference Record 4-9 (SEC)

Final National Ranking No. 74

Tennis SID Robert Quiroga

Email................................................rquiro1@lsu.edu

Website lsusports.net

Missouri

Location Columbia, Mo.

Colors Black & Gold

Head Coach ootton

2022 Record 7-20

Conference Record 2-11 (SEC)

Final National Ranking NR

Tennis SID Ryan Koslen

Email..............................................koz@missouri.edu

Website mutigers.com

Ohio State

Location Columbus, Ohio

Colors Scarlet & Gray Head Coach Melissa Schuab 2022 Record 21-6

Conference Record 11-0 (Big 10)

Final National Ranking No. 15

Tennis SID Leann Parker

Email..........................................Parker.387@osu.edu

Website ohiostatebuckeyes.com

Stetson

Location DeLand, Fla.

Colors Hunter Green & White

Head Coach Travis Sandlant

2022 Record 22-3

Conference Record 8-1 (MAAC)

Final National Ranking No. 60

Tennis SID Joseph Ashley

Email......................................jmashley@stetson.edu

Website gohatters.com

Arkansas Location Fayetteville, Ark.

Colors Red & White

Head Coach Cristina Sanchez-Quintanar 2022 Record

Final National Ranking No. 34

Tennis SID Victoria Guerra

Email...........................................vgguerra@uark.edu

Website arkansasrazorbacks.com

Georgia tech

Navy & Gold

Record 8-5 (ACC) Final National Ranking No. 32 Tennis SID Liz Ryan

Email...............................lryan@athletics.gatech.edu

Website ramblinwreck.com

Mercer

Location Macon, Ga.

Colors Orange & Black

Head Coach Eric Hayes

2022 Record 6-16

Conference Record 0-7 (SoCon)

Final National Ranking NR

Tennis SID Amanda Cover Email........................................cover_al@mercer.edu

Website mercerbears.com

North Carolina

Location Chapel Hill, N.C.

Colors White & Carolina Blue

Head Coach Brian Kalbas

2022 Record 28-3

Conference Record 12-1 (ACC)

Final National Ranking No. 3

Tennis SID Gary Paczesny

Email..........................................gpaczesny@unc.edu

Website goheels.com

Ole Miss Location Oxford, Miss.

Colors Navy/Powder Blue & Red

Head Coach Mark Beyers 2022 Record 13-11

Conference Record 5-8 (SEC)

Final National Ranking No. 51

Tennis SID Alex Kirsch

Email..................................adkirsc1@go.olemiss.edu

Website olemisssports.com

Tennessee

Location Knoxville, Tenn.

Colors Orange & White

Head Coach Alison Ojeda

2022 Record 16-10

Conference Record 7-6 (SEC)

Final National Ranking No. 24

Tennis SID Max Potter

Email...............................maxpotter@tennessee.edu

Website utsports.com

USC Location Los Angeles, Calif.

Colors Black & Gold

Head Coach Alison Swain

2022 Record 18-12

Conference Record 7-3 (SEC)

Final National Ranking No. 20

Tennis SID Gia Larez

Email.................................................glarez@usc.edu

Website usctrojans.com

Auburn

Location Auburn, Ala.

Colors Navy & Burnt Orange

Head Coach Caroline Lilley

2022 Record 22-6

Conference Record 11-2 (SEC)

Final National Ranking No. 14

Tennis SID Riley Hubbard

Email.......................................rhubbard@auburn.edu

Website auburntigers.com

Kentucky

Location Lexington, Ky.

Colors Blue & White

Head Coach Carlos Drada

2022 Record 13-15

Conference Record 0-13 (SEC)

Final National Ranking No. 72

Tennis SID Allyson Warren

Email...................................allyson.warren@uky.edu

Website ukathletics.com

Mississippi State

Location Starkville, Miss.

Colors Maroon & White

Head Coach Daryl Greenan

2022 Record 12-15

Conference Record 2-11 (SEC)

Final National Ranking No. 68

Tennis SID Olivia Hooten

Email.......................ohooten@athletics.msstate.edu

Website hailstate.com

Notre Dame

Location Notre Dame, Ind.

Colors Blue & Gold

Head Coach Alison Silverio

2022 Record 13-12

Conference Record 5-8 (ACC)

Final National Ranking No. 48

Tennis SID Dan Wacker

Email...............................................dwacker@nd.edu

Website und.com

South Carolina

Location Columbia, S.C.

Colors Garnet, Black & White

Head Coach Kevin Epley 2022 Record 15-11

Conference Record 8-5 (SEC)

Final National Ranking No. 28

Tennis SID Chase Berley

Email......................................mberley@email.sc.edu

Website gamecocksonline.com

Texas A&M

Location Bryan-College Station, Texas

Colors Maroon & White

Head Coach Mark Weaver

2022 Record 33-2

Conference Record 13-0 (SEC)

Final National Ranking No. 7

Tennis SID Sam Thornton

Email...........................shornton@athletics.tamu.edu

Website 12thman.com

Vanderbilt Location Nashville, Tenn.

Colors Black & Gold

Head Coach Aleke Tsoubanos

2022 Record 18-10

Conference Record 6-7 (SEC)

Final National Ranking No. 26

Tennis SID Gavin Nevill

Email..............................gavin.nevill@vanderbilt.edu

Website vucommodores.com

GEORGIA 62 WOMEN'S TENNIS MEDIA GUIDE
Conference
16-10
Record 8-5 (SEC)
Colors
2022
Conference
Location Atlanta, Ga.
Head Coach Rodney Harmon
Record 15-11

2023 PHOTO ROSTER

Haley Gaudette Freshman 5-8 Johns Creek, Ga. Guillermina grant Sophomore 5-7 Montevideo, Uruguay Ania hertel Senior 5-10 Warsaw, Poland Meg kowalski Graduate 5-4 Chicago, Ill. Anastasiia lopata Freshman 5-7 Kiev, Ukraine lea ma Senior 5-9 Dix Hills, N.Y. Mai Nirundorn Sophomore 5-7 Bangkok, Thailand Mell Reasco Sophomore 5-6 Quito, Ecuador Alexandra vecic Freshman 5-9 Singen, Germany Dasha Vidmanova Sophomore 6-3 Prague, Czech Republic
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.