GEORGIA WOMEN’S TENNIS
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MEDIA GUIDE
Returning 2018 All-American
Katarina Jokic
Morgan Coppoc Elena ChristoďŹ
Marta Gonzalez
Returning 2018 All-SEC
2019 Georgia Women’s Tennis University Facts
Location: Athens, Ga. Founded: 1785 Enrollment: 38,652 Nickname: Bulldogs Conference: SEC Colors: Red & Black Tennis Facilities: Dan Magill Tennis Complex Henry Feild Stadium (4,500); Lindsey Hopkins Indoor Courts (1,200); McWhorter Courts (300) President: Jere W. Morehead J. Reid Parker Director of Athletics: Greg McGarity Faculty Chairman: David Shipley Deputy AD/SWA: Stephanie Ransom Sport Administrator: Matt Borman
Tennis Staff
Head Coach: Jeff Wallace (UGA ‘85) Overall Record: 714-180 (33 years) Assoc. Head Coach: Drake Bernstein (Georgia ‘11) Volunteer Coach: Mariana Gould (Georgia ‘17) Program Specialist: Will Reynolds (Georgia ‘12) Athletic Trainer: Abby Sponseller (Penn State ‘17) Strength & Conditioning: Katrin Koch (Indiana ‘97) Tennis Office/Fax: (706) 542-7995/7997
Table Of Contents
UGA Quick Facts/Media Information.............................................................. 1 Roster/Opponent InformationSeason Preview............................................... 2 Season Preview/Fall Recap............................................................................ 3-5
Tennis Staff
Head Coach Jeff Wallace............................................................................... 8-9 Assoc. Head Coach Drake Bernstein.............................................................. 10-11 Tennis/UGAAA Administrative Support Staff................................................. 12
Meet The Bulldogs
Final Record (SEC): 18-7 (10-3/4th) Final Ranking: No. 7 NCAA Finish: Quarterfinals Home/Away/Neutral Record: 9-1/4-3/5-3 Letterwinners Ret./Lost: 6/3 Newcomers: 3
Lourdes Carle.................................................................................................. 14-15 Elena Christofi................................................................................................. 16-17 Alee Clayton.................................................................................................... 17-18 Morgan Coppoc............................................................................................... 19-20 Marta Gonzalez............................................................................................... 21-22 Annette Goulak............................................................................................... 23-24 Katarina Jokic................................................................................................. 25-26 Meg Kowalski................................................................................................. 27-28 Vivian Wolff.................................................................................................... 29-30
Program History
2018 Review
2018 Season Review
Overall Record: 894-283 (45 years) Team Grand Slam Titles: 5 (2 NCAA, 3 National Indoor) Individual Grand Slams: 10 (6 singles, 4 doubles) All-Americans: 36 with 108 honors Honda Award/Tennis Winners: 3 (1984, ’94, ’98) SEC Titles: 9 (1983, ’89, ’90, ’94, ’00, ’02, ’07, ’09, ‘13) SEC Tournament Titles: 7 (1983, ’94, ’01, ’07, ’08, ’09, ‘14) NCAA Appearances: 32 straight since 1987; NCAA Record: 79-30; Team Titles: 2 (1994, ’00) NCAA Singles Titles: 3, Lisa Spain (‘84), Angela Lettiere (’94), Chelsey Gullickson (‘10)
UGA Sports Communications
Loran Smith Sr. Assoc. AD/Sports Communications: Claude Felton Tennis SID Contacts: Christopher Lakos, Austin Hannon SCD Mailing Address: P.O. Box 1472, Athens, Ga. 30603; SCD Phone (706) 542-1621
Social Media
@ugawomenstennis Georgia Women’s Tennis ugawomenstennis
2019 Georgia Women’s Tennis
Season Review/Final Statistics...................................................................... 30-31
Tennis History
Look Back at 2018........................................................................................... 32-36 Records........................................................................................................... 38 National Championships/Tournaments.......................................................... 39 NCAA Tournament Results............................................................................. 40-44 SEC Championships/SEC Tournaments.......................................................... 45-46 National, SEC and UGA Honors...................................................................... 47-48 All-Americans................................................................................................. 49-51 Letterwinners.................................................................................................. 52 Series Records/Annual Results...................................................................... 53-59 Facilities.......................................................................................................... 60 Bulldogs in the Community............................................................................. 61 Endowments................................................................................................... 62
CREDITS The 2019 University of Georgia women’s tennis media guide is produced by the UGA Sports Communications Office. Editors: Austin Hannon, Christopher Lakos. Cover Design: Austin Hannon. Photography: Kristin Bradshaw, Caityln Tam, Connor Richter, Steffenie Burns, Cory A. Cole, John Paul Van Wert, John Kelley, Sean Taylor, Evan Stichler, Wes Blankenship, Bill Kallenberg, Rick Limpert, Parker Moore, Wesley Hitt, Ashley Connell, Lesley Onstott, Julianne Upchurch, Kelly Wegel, Dennis Echols, Phillip Faulkner, Steven Colquitt, Tony Fox, Perry McIntyre, Cheri Wranosky, Mike Holliday, Julie Wrege, Radi Nabulsi, Bob Rives, Donovan Eason, Don Alschuler, Blane Marable, Stacey Ward. Printing: Walker360
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2019 Georgia and Opponent Information Alphabetical Roster Name Lourdes Carle Elena Christofi Alee Clayton Morgan Coppoc Marta Gonzalez Annette Goulak Katarina Jokic Meg Kowalski Vivian Wolff
Ht 5-7 5-10 5-8 5-7 5-5 5-6 5-7 5-4 5-8
2019 Bulldog Schedule Cl. Fr. Jr. Fr. Soph. Jr. Soph. Soph. Fr. Soph.
Hometown (Academy / High School) Daireaux, Argentina (San Ignacio) Athens, Greece (Costeas-Geitonas School) Huntsville, Ala. (Laurel Springs) Tulsa, Okla. (Tucker Tennis Academy) Madrid, Spain (IES Europa) Oak Park, Calif. (Oak Park HS) Novi Grad, Bosnia (TK Mladost) Chicago, Ill. (Laurel Springs) Frankfurt, Germany (Kurpfalz Gymnasium)
Coaches/Support Staff Head Coach: Jeff Wallace (34th year at UGA) Assoc. Head Coach: Drake Bernstein (7th year at UGA) Volunteer Coach: Mariana Gould (1st year coaching at UGA) Program Specialist: Will Reynolds (1st year at UGA) Athletic Trainer: Abby Sponseller (1st year at UGA) Strength & Conditioning: Katrin Koch (15th year at UGA)
Pronunciation Guide
Lourdes Carle............................................. Lord-es Car-Lay Elena Christofi............................................ ELL-uh-nuh CHRIS-toe-fee Alee Clayton............................................... Al-E Morgan Coppoc.......................................... COP-ick Katarina Jokic............................................ YOLK-itch Annette Goulak.......................................... GOO-Lack
2019 Opponent Information
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South Florida http://www.gousfbulls.com Tennis SID:Erin Beck Email: ebeck@usf.edu Phone: (813)974-4029
LSU http://www.lsusports.net Tennis SID: Morgan Galvin Email: mgalvi1@lsu.edu Phone: (225) 578-8226
Kansas State http://www.kstatesports.com Tennis SID: Chris Brown Email: cbrown@kstatesports.com Phone: (785)532-7976
Texas A&M http://www.12thman.com Tennis SID: Debbie Darrah Email: ddarrah@athletics.tamu.edu Phone: (979) 862-5449
William & Mary http://www.tribeathletics.com Tennis SID: Kris Sears Email: kasear@wm.edu Phone: (757)221-3368
Florida http://www.floridagators.com Tennis SID: Sam Stolte Email: SamS@gators.ufl.edu Phone: (352) 375-4683 ext. 6133
Clemson http://www.clemsontigers.com Tennis SID: Libby Kehn Email: elizabk@clemson.edu Phone: (864) 656-4218
South Carolina http://www.gamecocksonline.com Tennis SID: Ellen Balentine Email: ebalentine@mailbox.sc.edu Phone: (803) 777-5204
Georgia Tech http://www.ramblinwreck.com Tennis SID: Liz Ryan Email: lryan@athletics.gatech.edu Phone: (404) 894-5445
Ole Miss http://www.olemisssports.com Tennis SID: Catie Smith Email: caitie@olemiss.edu Phone: (662) 915-5255
Tennessee http://www.utsports.com Tennis SID: Wyeth Wilson Email:wwilso48@vols.utk.edu Phone: (865) 974-2849
Mississippi State http://www.hailstate.com Tennis SID: Emily Pschigoda Email: emily@athletics.msstate.edu Phone:(630) 917-1252
JANUARY 25
^South Florida
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^William & Mary or Kansas State
2 p.m. TBA
@Clemson @ %ITA National Team Indoors Georgia Tech
4 p.m. All Day 1 p.m.
@*Tennessee *LSU *Texas A&M @Florida @South Carolina *Ole Miss *Mississippi State @*Alabama @*Auburn
12 p.m. 3 p.m. 1 p.m. 5 p.m. 1 p.m. 5 p.m. 1 p.m. 5 p.m. 12 p.m.
@ *Arkansas @ *Missouri *Kentucky *Vanderbilt @ &SEC Tournament
2 p.m. 12 p.m. 4 p.m. 1 p.m. All Day
NCAA 1st/2nd Rounds (Sites TBA) NCAA Super Regional (Sites TBA) $NCAA Team Championships $NCAA Singles & Doubles
TBA TBA All Day All Day
FEBRUARY 2 8-11 23 MARCH 2 8 10 15 17 22 24 29 31 APRIL 5 7 12 14 17-21 MAY 3-5 11 16-21 22-25
Note: ^ITA Kickoff Weekend; Pending its result against South Florida, Georgia will play in either the winner/loser of the Kansas State/William & Mary match; %Seattle,Washington; &College Station, Texas; $Lake Nona, Florida.; *denotes SEC match; all times ET and subject to change.
Alabama http://www.rolltide.com Tennis SID: Zachary Rhodes Email: zrhodes@ia.ua.edu Phone: (205) 348-6084
Missouri http://mutigers.com/ Tennis SID: Kate Lakin Email: lakinke@missouri.edu Phone: (573) 884-8519
Auburn http://www.auburntigers.com Tennis SID: Wes Todd Email: wlt0006@auburn.edu Phone: (334) 750-5682
Kentucky http://www.ukathletics.com Tennis SID: Cami Moore Email: cami.moore@uky.edu Phone: (859) 257-3838
Arkansas http://www.arkansasrazorbacks.com Tennis SID: Jordan Manning Email: jlm106@uark.edu Phone: (479) 575-3696
Vanderbilt http://www.vucommodores.com Tennis SID: Laken Walker Email:laken.walker@vanderbilt.edu Phone: (615) 322-4121
2019 Season Preview
YOUTHFUL GEORGIA SQUAD AIMS TO PEAK AT THE RIGHT TIME The college tennis season consists of three segments starting with fall individual tournaments, then the indoor portion for the team followed by the outdoor team season. During the fall, the Bulldogs refine their game in preparation for the team season. With the latest fall compeition complete, head coach Jeff Wallace reflected on how his latest team is taking form as he enters his 34th season directing the Bulldogs. Under his steady leadership, the Georgia program has advanced to 32 consecutive NCAA Tournaments and finished nationally ranked in the top 25 throughout his tenure including in the top 10 in 29 seasons. During the 2018 fall season, Georgia’s cumulative singles record was 60-25 and doubles was 14-14. Do you look at those numbers or rather how each Bulldog performed? “A little of both. I think we as a group realized we are going to get better in doubles and we are excited that we are going to get better in doubles, so I’m not neccessarily worried about it as 14-14 is somewhat a normal situation for us in doubles. When you are looking at records from the fall it is like 3-0 and 2-0, which just isn’t enough matches. I anticipate we’ll have a better idea after Team Indoors and maybe into the SEC season of what we are going to do. But we have some exciting things that we are going to throw out there in doubles and we will see where it all falls. Also I think you just have to focus on each player and see what they bring to the table.” What are your thoughts on the schedule for the upcoming season? “For us, we just need to focus on our practices, getting through the ITA Kick-Off Weekend and getting out to Seattle for the ITA Team Indoors. We know that all 16 teams in that tournament are capable of beating any other team out there on a given day, so if we get through the Kick-Off Weekend then we need to be ready for an amazing around of 16 match. It could be against a team that could finish in the top-5 of the country.” What can you tell us about the three new Bulldogs? “Meg (Kowalski), had a great first tournament and really looked good, but unfortunately had an injury and the surgery and basically missed most of the rest of the fall. I think her upside is phenomenal. I’m excited about what she can bring to this team being healthy again. You never want anybody to have an injury, but she worked extremely hard in her rehab work and we saw that on the court when she was playing, so we are excited about her future.”
2019 GEORGIA Bulldogs FRONT ROW (L-R): Meg Kowalski, Lourdes Carle, Marta Gonzalez, Annette Goulak BACK ROW: Vivian Wolff, Morgan Coppoc, Katarina Jokic, Alee Clayton, Elena Christofi
play some other events like the US Open and the Youth Olympics, but sometimes you don’t get enough matches in when you do that. I’m looking forward to her playing weekin and week-out getting a lot of matches in. That is when we will see a lot more with her development. Certainly, she has a lot of upside, but there are things we need to work on with her and we are really looking forward to seeing what she can contribute.” “Alee (Clayton), also came in with a great sense of urgency and played great tennis for us early. I think she settled in and she needs to keep that energy up and that sense of urgency up. I think she is a better athlete when she is feeling like she has to bring it every moment. That is what we are trying to teach and train her to do. Once she brings that every day, she has a lot of upside.”
FALL RESULTS
Singles Player Record Vs. Ranked Opp. Lourdes Carle 5-2 1-2 Elena Christofi 4-3 1-2 Alee Clayton 7-4 0-1 Morgan Coppoc 3-5 0-1 Marta Gonzalez 14-3 9-3 Annette Goulak 5-5 0-0 Katarina Jokic 10-1 9-1 Meg Kowalski 4-0 1-0 Vivian Wolff 8-2 3-0 Totals 60-25 24-10 Percentage .706 .706
Doubles This year’s team features no seniors. Where will the Player Record Vs. Ranked Opp. leadership come from? Lourdes Carle 3-2 1-1 Elena Christofi 2-6 0-2 “Hopefully from all of them. When you look at it, Alee Clayton 5-3 0-1 leadership is important and you have to have it. Some Morgan Coppoc 3-5 0-2 teams have 60-70 people and maybe eight or 10 are the Marta Gonzalez 3-5 0-1 leaders, but we have nine people, so for us leadership Annette Goulak 4-0 0-0 has to come in a different way from each and every one Katarina Jokic 3-2 0-0 of them. They need to lead the best way they can each Meg Kowalski 0-4 0-1 and every day. Obviously, you look towards your upper Vivian Wolff 5-1 1-0 classmen who have had more experience like Marta Totals 14-14 1-4 (Gonzalez) and Elena (Christofi) because they’ve been on Percentage .500 .200 the team the longest and have the most experience, but that doesn’t mean that others can’t step up and lead in the right way at the right time.”
“Lourdes (Carle), had the opportunity to
2019 Georgia Women’s Tennis
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2019 Season Preview/2018 Fall Recap Marta Gonzalez had an impressive fall showing, what did you see? “Marta healthy is very dangerous and that is what she showed us. She can be as good as anybody in the country. I’m very impressed with what she has gone through. She has transitioned into this incredible tennis player. She has always had an amazing upside and has had great experiences and done well, but now you have somebody that is playing the best tennis that she has ever played and enjoying it as much as you can enjoy it.”
Rankings to Start the Year Six Bulldogs landed on the ITA’s Singles Rankings, released on Nov. 14. No other school had six with the closest team being Vanderbilt with five ranked singles players. The first ITA Team Rankings were released on Jan. 9th with Georgia at No. 5.
And what about Katarina Jokic’s successful fall that saw Georgia’s seventh grand slam singles title in program history? “It was an awesome event that she had to win that big tournament in the fall and put herself as the No. 1 ranked player in the country is a huge honor. At the same time, whenever anybody does something that is outstanding and special and great like that, you just want to be really careful that they don’t feel like ‘Ok, that was my moment.’ They have to immediately get out of that moment and realize that was something that was really great, but why did that happen and what do I need to keep doing to keep growing and that is where our focus is with her - growth. I think some athletes when they do something special, they spend too much time in that moment and months go by and they are still in that moment and they aren’t growing as a student-athlete. For her, that is where our focus is. We think she will transition through that and use it in the right way. It was a great experience and hopefully that will catapult her to do even bigger things in the future.” What can you say about the importance of the staff around you with Drake Bernstein picking up another Assistant Coach of the Year Award, a former Dawg in Will Reynolds becoming the Program Specialist, and the second-straight year a senior transitions into the volunteer coach role in Mariana Gould? “It certainly makes me more comfortable as a head coach. I can come in every day and have these amazing assistants and the people I’m around are so capable and care so much about Georgia. That for me is the number one thing - their desire to be successful for the right reasons and that is the University of Georgia, the Athletic Department and our program. You get that everyday with Drake and Will that is for sure. And to get another senior All-American to stick around after graduation to help coach, while pursuing a graduate degree is awesome.” Do you take anything out of entering the season ranked No. 5 in the nation? “I think we were the only team ranked top-10 in the country that moved up two spots from last year’s final rankings. Some stayed the same and some moved down. The bottom line is it is the first ranking. If I’ve said it one time, I’ve said it a thousand times, it is the last ranking that counts not the first ranking. It is what it is. I think the moving up a little bit is the reflection of a lot of the great fall singles matches we played and the rankings we were able to acheive individually. At the same time it means nothing and does nothing for us. We are still 0-0 and we have every opportunity in front of us.”
INAUGURAL ‘FIRST SERVE’ A SUCCESS ATHENS, Ga. -- Over 400 spectators helped the Georgia men’s and women’s tennis teams kick off the 2019 spring season at the inaugural ‘First Serve’ event on Saturday, Jan. 12th. Those in attendance were treated to an exhibition that featured both programs. The Red team beat the Black squad, 7-4, to earn bragging rights for a year. The courts were then flooded with Georgia tennis fans old and young during an hour-long clinic. “It was just a great event to build excitement for both our tennis programs,” women’s tennis associate head coach Drake Bernstein said. “A lot of fans turned out, which just shows how much tennis means to this community. All of us had a fun time, and it was a perfect way to kick off the upcoming season.” Longtime UGA and Athens radio personality Jeff Dantzler served as the emcee of the event. He, along with the Georgia coaches, introduced both squads to the fans. “It was just a really great idea by our associate head coaches Drake Bernstein and Jamie Hunt,” men’s tennis head coach Manuel Diaz said. “It was a wonderful opportunity to interact with our community with so many kids here interested in the sport of tennis. We saw a couple hundred kids out here and all of them were so good and enthusiastic about our sport. It is great to make that connection and hopefully they will come out and support our team.”
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2018 Fall Recap
2018 ORACLE/ITA NATIONAL FALL SINGLES CHAMPION
Katarina Jokic
SURPRISE, Ariz. -- Georgia sophomore Katarina Jokic captured the Oracle ITA National Fall Championships singles title on Nov. 11 with a straight set win over senior Kate Fahey of Michigan. The eighth-ranked Jokic went 6-0 in the tournament, winning all of her matches in straight sets to improve to 10-1 to end the fall. As the singles champion, Jokic will receive a main draw wildcard into a 2019 Oracle Challenger Series tournament.
In the final, the participants traded service breaks to open the match before each held to knot it at 2-all. Jokic then held serve for a 3-2 advantage and then converted another break point opportunity for a 4-2 lead. In the seventh game, she fell behind 15-40 and got it back to deuce to force a deciding point with the no-ad format. Jokic won a lengthy rally to take a commanding 5-2 lead. After Fahey held, Jokic closed out the set 6-3. In the second set Fahey raced out to a 3-0 lead before Jokic stormed back to tie it up and then at 4-all, she broke Fahey again for a 5-4 advantage. The Wolverine broke back to make it 5-all and Jokic responded with a service break for a 6-5 lead. The set looked to be headed to a tiebreaker when Fahey took a 40-15 advantage but Jokic responded once again to get it back to deuce. She came through on championship point for a 6-3,7-5 victory. Jokic’s title marked the 11th individual national championship in Georgia women’s tennis history and the first for a Bulldog since Chelsey Gullickson won the 2010 NCAA singles title in Athens. The title goes down as the seventh singles grand slam in Georgia history and the fifth Bulldog to do so as Jokic joins Lisa Span, Angela Lettiere, Agata Cioroch, and Gullickson.
Road to the Championship
Round of 64 | No. 8 Jokic def. Madeline Bosniak (Georgia Gwinett Co.), 6-1, 6-1 Round of 32 | No. 8 Jokic def. No. 99 Livia Kraus (Baylor), 6-2, 6-4 Round of 16 | No. 8 Jokic def. No. 4 Ashley Lahey (Pepperdine), 6-1, 7-6 (1) Round of 8 | No. 8 Jokic def. No. 7 Fernanda Contreras (Vanderbilt), 6-0, 2-1 ret. Semifinals | No. 8 Jokic def. No. 30 Christina Rosca (Vanderbilt), 6-1, 6-0 Finals | No. 8 Jokic def. No. 18 Kate Fahey (Michigan), 6-3, 7-5
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This was an amazing experience overall. I won the tournament and had some tough matches, and I learned that I don’t have to play the same game all the time. Also, I learned that I’m tougher than I actually thought I was. I was down 3-0 in the second set and that’s not a good thing after winning the first set. I focused on the next point, I knew she was a tough player, and I had to keep fighting the whole match. No matter what happened each game, I just kept my focus on the next point.
-Katarina Jokic
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Three days after Jokic won the championship, she was tabbed as the No. 1 collegiate women’s tennis player in the nation by ITA. And 10 days after that, she was recognized on field with a video tribute at Sanford Stadium during the Georgia-Georgia Tech football game in front of a capacity crowd of 92,746. 2019 Georgia Women’s Tennis
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Meet The Coaches
Georgia Head Coach Jeff Wallace
Georgia Associate Head Coach Drake Bernstein
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Coaching Milestones
On February 9, 2018
Georgia head coach Jeff Wallace reached the 700-win plateau while at the 2018 ITA National Team Indoor Championships. In the No. 4 Bulldogs’ first round matchup, Georgia dispatched No. 11 Texas, 4-2. Associate Athletic Director Matt Brachowski presented Jeff Wallace with a commemorative 700-ball signed by the team at the next home match.
On March 23, 2018 2019 Georgia Women’s Tennis
Georgia head coach Jeff Wallace picked up career win No. 706 at Kentucky, tying his mentor and former coach, legendary Georgia men’s tennis coach Dan Magill, in all-time wins. Wallace capped his playing career in 1984 under Magill after winning the SEC singles title at the No. 6 spot. Wallace past Magill in wins six days later with a victory over Alabama on the friendly confines of the Dan Magill Tennis Complex. He was dosed with an icy water cooler. 9
Head Coach Jeff Wallace
Jeff WaLlace Head Coach | 34th Year Georgia ‘85 Career: 714-180 (.799)
As the nation’s winningest active women’s tennis coach, Jeff Wallace has built the Georgia Bulldogs into one of the elite college programs. The 2019 season will mark his 34th year with the Bulldogs. The 2018 season marked another successful year for the Bulldogs highlighted by an elite eight apperance 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, Dan Magill, in career wins (706) and enters 2019 wiht 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 Final. 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
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Wallace's Quick Hits Personal Birthplace: Portland, Oregon Education: University of Georgia, 1985 Family: Wife, Sabina; Daughter, Brittany Sabina (29) Son, Jarryd Jeffrey (28)
The Wallace Era • 2 NCAA Team Titles: 1994, 2000 • 3 National Indoor Team Titles: 1994, 1995, 2002 • 11 NCAA Final Fours • 32-consecutive NCAA Tournament appearances • 8 SEC Titles: 1989, 1990, 1994, 2000, 2002, 2007, 2009, 2013 • 6 SEC Tournament Titles: 1994, 2001, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2014 • 4-Time ITA National Coach-Of-The-Year: 1991, 1994, 2000, 2009 • 4-Time Regional Coach-Of-The-Year: 1990, 1994, 2000, 2014 • 5-Time SEC Coach-Of-The-Year: 1989, 1990, 1992, 1994, 2007 •.799 winning percentage is the best among active Division I coaches with a minimum of 600 victories. • Nine Grand Slams (5 singles, 4 doubles) • Two HONDA Award Winners • One College Tennis Player of the Year • Three Senior of the Year selections • 47 Bulldogs selected to the SEC Honor Roll 99 times • 45 Bulldogs selected to All-SEC teams 102 times • One NCAA and SEC Sportsmanship Award Winner once during his time as coach of the Bulldogs has the team missed the NCAA Tournament, and that was his first year in 1986.
Playing/Coaching Career A 1985 graduate of the University of Georgia, Wallace capped his playing career under legendary Bulldog head coach Dan Magill in 1984 after winning the SEC singles title at the No. 6 spot. The very next season, his first as coach of the Bulldogs,
Wallace led a struggling team up the path of respectability by posting a 20-9 mark and landing a spot in the final Volvo Tennis/ITCA Top 25 poll. In 1987, just two years removed from a losing record, Georgia advanced to the national championship match. Although they didn’t win it that year, the Bulldogs would have their day.
NCAA Champions The 1994 season ranks as one of the most dominant ever in women’s tennis history. It found Georgia on the champion’s pedestal in every major team tournament possible: NCAA Champions, USTA/ITA National Team Indoor Champions, and SEC regular season and tournament champions. Top that all off with a 27-2 overall record including a perfect 14-0 SEC mark and a season sweep of arch-rival Florida, and it’s easy to see why Wallace was named coach of the year. The 2000 Bulldogs went 27-2, winning the Southeastern Conference title and the NCAA National Championship. In the title match on the campus of Pepperdine, Georgia dethroned the defending champion Stanford Cardinal 5-4, snapping a 48-match winning streak. Wallace was 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
Head Coach Jeff Wallace finest programs. The Bulldogs have won the title three times (1994, 1995, 2002) and have reached at least the semifinals 17 times including three straight years from 2015-17.
Developing Talent
His record for developing players and having them maximize their potential has been evident throughout his tenure. For example in 2015, he guided the team to a 24-7 record and the program’s 11th trip to the Final Four, the team’s first trip to the NCAA Semifinal since 2009. The Bulldogs finished the season ranked No. 5 in the country. In 2013, the Bulldogs won their ninth regular season SEC championship after going 24-4 and clinching its third consecutive 20-plus win season. The Bulldogs went undefeated at home (14-0) for the first time since 2009 and 12th time in program history. In 2001, Agata Cioroch arrived from Poland and played No. 5 for the Bulldogs as a freshman. Two years later, she became Georgia’s top talent and in 2004 was the No. 1-ranked player in college tennis for much of the season. Cioroch concluded her career as a five-time All-American with two grand slam singles titles. Strong doubles teams are a key component for a successful college tennis team. There have been six Bulldog tandems under Wallace to finish the season ranked No. 1. In 2009, two of Georgia’s top players were freshmen, Chelsey Gullickson and Nadja Gilchrist, and by the end of the year they had earned All-America honors. Gullickson was named the ITA National Rookie of the Year, advanced to the NCAA Singles semifinals and tied a school record with 69 combined wins. Gullickson and Gilchrist became the first freshmen in school history to play No. 1 doubles in the lineup. In 2010, the pair earned All-America honors again and Gullickson became the second Bulldog to win an NCAA singles title in Athens under Wallace and the third overall in the history of the program. She would finish her career in 2012 as the school’s first ever eight-time All-American and own the record for victories. Meanwhile, Lauren Herring became the fourth Bulldog under Wallace to be named SEC Freshman of the Year, and the sophomore All-SEC tandem of Maho Kowase and Lilly Kimbell posted a school record of their own by going 22-0 at No. 3. While the depth of talent can vary each season, the results remain consistent. This was no more evident than in 2002. Despite having only one player earn All-America honors, Georgia went undefeated during the regular season, won the USTA/ITA National Team Indoor title, the SEC championship and advanced to the NCAA “Final Four.” The 2002 squad finished with a 26-2 record and final national ranking of No. 3. Georgia went 13-0 at home and extended its home winning streak to 50 straight.
Success in the Wallace Era In 29 of the past 33 seasons, Georgia has finished with a top-10 national ranking, including No. 1 in 1994 and 2000. In the Wallace era, nine Bulldogs have won grand slam titles, two have won the HondaBroderick Award/tennis, 35 Bulldogs have earned All-America honors 104 times, and 47 different Bulldogs have been listed on the SEC Academic Honor Roll.
Family A native of Portland, Oregon, Wallace is married to the former Sabina Marie Horne. They have two children, Brittany Sabina (29) and Jarryd Jeffrey (28). Brittany, who is married to Chris Sjogren, is a graduate of Valdosta State and is working in Atlanta. Jarryd, a 2015 UGA graduate who is married to the former Lea Babcock, is training full-time as a sprinter for the U.S. Paralympic Team. He is a two-time Paralympian (2012, 2016) who competed in London, England and in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Jarryd has set several world records, including the 100-meter sprint (10.71 seconds) at the 2015 ParaPan American Games and the 200-meter sprint (22.08 seconds) and the 4x100-meter (40.73 seconds) at the 2013 IPC Athletics Worlds. He has medaled seven times. Sabina, a former All-SEC distance runner at Georgia, was inducted into the North Bay (Ontario, Canada) Sports Hall of Fame in 1996. She has continued to run competitively and has helped Wallace train for road races and marathons. Sabina is the track representative for Georgia’s “G” club, an alumni association for University of Georgia letter-winners. Also, Wallace received the 2002 Distinguished Alumni Award from the Recreation and Leisure Studies department of the University of Georgia’s College of Education.
2019 Georgia Women’s Tennis
The Wallace Family Jarryd and his wife Lea, Sabina, Jeff, Brittany and her husband Chris Sjogren
Year 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 Total
THE WALLACE RECORD
W 20 26 22 24 23 25 22 20 27 23 13 18 21 24 27 23 26 19 20 18 13 24 22 27 13 19 24 24 24 24 22 19 18 714
L 9 5 7 4 4 5 6 6 2 4 14 5 5 4 2 5 2 5 5 8 10 2 5 3 9 5 5 4 5 7 5 6 7 180
Pct. .690 .840 .759 .857 .852 .833 .786 .769 .931 .852 .481 .783 .791 .857 .931 .821 .929 .792 .800 .692 .565 .923 .815 .900 .591 .792 .852 .857 .852 .774 .815 .760 .600 .799
Ranking No. 22 No. 6 No. 7 No. 4 No. 6 No. 4 No. 5 No. 6 No. 1 No. 3 No. 14 No. 6 No. 4 No. 5 No. 1 No. 5 No. 3 No. 7 No. 7 No. 9 No. 25 No. 4 No. 8 No. 3 No.18 No. 8 No. 6 No. 5 No. 4 No. 5 No. 7 No. 6 No. 7
NCAA Finish ----Finalist Quarterfinalist Semifinalist Quarterfinalist Semifinalist Quarterfinalist Quarterfinalist National Champions Semifinalist Round of 32 Round of 16 Semifinalist Quarterfinalist National Champions Semifinalist Semifinalist Quarterfinalist Quarterfinalist Quarterfinalist Round of 32 Quarterfinals Round of 16 Semifinalist Round of 32 Quarterfinalist Quarterfinalist Quarterfinalist Quarterfinalist Semifinalist Round of 16 Round of 16 Quarterfinalist
700 WIN CLUB
No. 1: Oct. 5, 1985: Beat Wisconsin 6-3 in Columbia, S.C. No. 100: Feb. 3, 1990: Beat Okla. State 5-1 in Miami, Fla. No. 200: April 19, 1994: Beat Auburn 6-0 in Athens, Ga. No. 300: April 2, 1999: Beat Tennessee 5-1 in Knoxville, Tenn. No. 400: April 19, 2003: Beat #10 Kentucky 4-1 in Knoxville, Tenn. No. 500: May 10, 2008 : Beat #33 S. Carolina 4-0 in Athens, Ga. No. 600: April 7, 2013 : Beat Arkansas 7-0 in Athens, Ga. No. 700: Feb. 9, 2018 : Beat Texas 4-2 in Madison, Wisconsin
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Assoc. Head Coach Drake Bernstein
Drake bernstein
Associate Head Coach 7th Season (Georgia ‘11)
Drake Bernstein, a three-time ITA Regional Assistant Coach of the Year selection, enters his seventh season with the highly successful Georgia women’s tennis program. In this span, the Bulldogs have registered 131 wins, been ranked as high as No. 1 during two of those seasons and No. 2 in the others, and continued their 32-year streak of advancing to the NCAA Championships and developing All-Americans. A member of the 2008 national champion Georgia men’s tennis team, Bernstein was named to the Bulldog staff in July of 2012. In June of 2015, Bernstein was promoted to associate head coach. In the past three seasons, he assisted the Bulldogs to No. 6 (2017) and two No. 7 (2016, 2018) final rankings. In the span, Georgia advanced to the quarterfinals of the NCAA Tournament once, reached the semifinals of the ITA National Team Indoors twice and the finals of the 2016 SEC Tournament. Six Bulldogs earned a total of 10 All-America honors. This past season, he earned his third ITA Regional Assistant Coach of the Year Award. In 2015, Bernstein helped guide the Bulldogs to a 24-7 record and No. 5 final ranking. Georgia reached the Final Four of the NCAA Championships and the finals of the ITA National Team Indoors and the SEC Tournament. For the second straight season, he was selected as the ITA Southeast Region Assistant Coach of the Year. In 2014, the Bulldogs enjoyed a 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 Final. For his efforts, Bernstein was recognized as the ITA Southeast Region Assistant Coach of the Year for the first time. In 2013, Bernstein helped Georgia to a 24-4 record, an NCAA Quarterfinals and a final ranking of No. 5. He also helped the program win its first SEC Championship since 2009. When not on the court, Bernstein takes to the recruiting trails with no boundaries. He has traveled across America to scout top talent and even abroad to Madrid, Paris, Dublin, and Frankfurt for individual recruits. Attending marque tournaments is also high on his priority list and he has checked off a few including Roehampton, the warm-up for Wimbledon, also Wimbledon itself, and the US Open. A native of nearby 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.
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Bernstein's Quick Hits Personal Birthdate: Aug. 28, 1989 Birthplace: Charleston, S.C. Education: B.S. in Sport Management, University of Georgia, 2011
Coaching Experience • 2011-2012 Asst. Coach, University of Alabama • 2012-2015 Asst. Coach, University of Georgia • 2016-curent Assoc. Head Coach, University of Georgia Year 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018
School Alabama Georgia Georgia Georgia Georgia Georgia Georgia
Rec, 18-5 24-4 24-5 24-7 22-5 19-6 18-7
Rank No. 11 No. 5 No. 4 No. 5 No. 7 No. 6 No. 7
NCAA Finish NCAA 2nd Round NCAA Quarterfinalists* NCAA Quarterfinalists** NCAA Semifinalists NCAA Round of 16 NCAA Round of 16 NCAA Quarterfinalists
*SEC Champions; **SEC Tournament Champions
Playing Expereince
• 2008-2011 University of Georgia • Member 2008 NCAA & SEC Champions that went 27-3 • Member 2011 SEC Co-Champions that went 24-6 • 2011 All-SEC Second Team • Career Record: 112-44 in singles, 84-56 in doubles
Assoc. Head Coach Drake Bernstein 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 Banner-Herald 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. The couple is expecting their first child, a baby girl, this upcoming May...just in time for NCAA Championships!
COACHING ACCOLADES
2014 *Southeast Regional Assistant Coach of the Year 2015 *Southeast Regional Assistant Coach of the Year 2018 *Southeast Regional Assistant Coach of the Year
“ In November, Bernstein was by Katarina Jokic’s side every step of the way in the 2018 Oracle/ITA National Fall Singles Championships.
2019 Georgia Women’s Tennis
I’m so proud of Kat and the way she competed all week. Today was the pinnacle of it all. She was tested down 3-0 in the second set and fought back to 3-3. She was broken serving for the championship and bounced right back to get a break to make it 5-all. She was down 15-40 in the last game but she maintained a worker’s mentality through the last point. This is a great step forward for her. We ended the fall with a lot of momentum. We look to continue to work to get ready for the dual match season.
-Drake Bernstein
“
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Georgia Support Staff
Mariana Gould
Will Reynolds
Volunteer Coach, 1st Season (Georgia ‘18)
Program Specialist, 1st Season (Georgia ‘12)
For the second straight year, the Bulldogs’ volunteer coach will come from within. After All-American Caroline Brinson served in the position last season, All-American Mariana Gould follows suit, moving from the playing court to the coaches bench for the 2019 campaign. Gould finished her Bulldog career with a 82-29 singles record and a 85-35 doubles record. She graduated with a degree in Health Promotions in May of 2018, and is currently pursuing a Master’s program in Public Health. The Boise, Idaho native enrolled into Georgia in the fall of 2014 upon training at the Smith Sterns Academy in Hilton Head Island, S.C. As a freshman, she helped the Bulldogs advance to the NCAA Final Four, the ITA National Team Indoor Finals and the SEC Tournament Championship Final. Sophomore year brought an ITA Doubles All-America accolade while playing with Ellen Perez and named to the SEC All-Tournament Team. The highlight in her junior campaign was clinching the win at Florida that snapped the Gators’ home match win streak at 163 games - the then-longest streak across all NCAA sports. Concluding her career on a high note, she went 25-5 in singles and 31-9 in doubles, earning All-SEC Second Team honors and aiding the Bulldogs to their 32-consecutive NCAA appearance.
Will Reynolds is entering his first season with the Georgia Bulldog women’s tennis program as a program specialist, however he is not new to Georgia Tennis. Not only did Reynolds play for the Bulldogs from 2009-2012, but he has been called upon on a few occasions to help out the Bulldogs’ coaching corner. Reynolds graduated from Georgia with a B.S. in Communications in May of 2012 and immediately started a graduate school, serving as the graduate manager for women’s tennis. He graduated with a Master’s in Sports Management in May 2014. Upon graduation, Reynolds moved to Huntsville, Alabama to become the Director of Junior Tennis at Athletic Club Alabama under the direction of Rusty Walker and Eddie Jacques, a former Georgia men’s tennis player (1994-97). Additionally, he worked for a Biotech company prior to returning to the Classic City in February of 2017. Back where he calls home, Reynolds trained at Beck Tennis Academy at Jennings Mill until being named Program Specialist in September of 2018. He and his wife Ashley Hines have two children; a daughter, Piper (3), and a son, Jacob (1).
UGA Administration And Support Staff
Jere W. Morehead University President
Vince Thomas Facility Liaison
David Shipley Faculty Athletics Representative
Abby Sponseller Athletic Trainer Women’s Tennis
Greg McGarity J. Reid Parker Director of Athletics
Kenneth Towns Academic Counselor
Katrin Koch Strength and Conditioning
Stephanie Ransom Deputy AD Finance /SWA
Christopher Lakos Sports Communications
Matt Borman Deputy AD/Exec.Director of Bulldog Club/ Tennis Administrator
Jana Heitmeyer Sports Nutritionist
Brenton Shiver Marketing & Promotions
Georgia Coaches’ Pledge
Charles Mack Event Management
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Austin Hannon Sports Communications
Not Pictured: Corbin Bryant, Promotions; Connor Richter, IMG
“These student-athletes are entrusted to my care. I will train them to the best of my ability. I will develop them into smartly disciplined, physically fit, highly trained athletes thoroughly indoctrinated in love for the Georgia Bulldogs who represent the University of Georgia and the athletic program in the highest possible manner. “I will encourage our athletes and insist that they perform to the best of their ability in the classroom as well as in the arena of competitive athletics. I will require of them, and demonstrate by my own example, the highest standards of integrity, personal conduct, morality, sportsmanship and professional skill.”
Meet The Bulldogs
Freshmen
Juniors
Meg Kowalski
Lourdes Carle
Alee Clayton
Elena Christofi
Marta Gonzalez
Sophomores Vivian Wolff
Katarina Jokic
2019 Georgia Women’s Tennis
Morgan Coppoc
Annette Goulak 15
Meet The Bulldogs
Lourdes Carle Freshman | 5-7 | Daireaux, Argentina San Ignacio FRESHMAN SEASON (Fall 2018) *Received an ITA Preseason Newcomer/Freshman Ranking of No. 4 and a Doubles Ranking of No. 34 with Katarina Jokic *Enters the spring semester with an ITA singles ranking of No. 78 *Finished the fall competition schedule with a 5-2 singles mark and a 3-2 doubles mark *Made collegiate debut at the Big 5 Challenge going 3-1 in singles including 1-1 vs. ranked opponents *Went 2-1 in the Bulldog Classic to close out the fall with the loss coming against the highest ranked opponent in the tournament No. 7 Fernanda Contreras (Vanderbilt) who Carle took to a first set tiebreaker, but ultimately lost *Highest ranked singles win: def. Arizona State #46 Lauryn John Baptiste, 6-3, 6-4 in Big 5 Challenge *Highest ranked doubles win: Partnered with Vivian Wolff to def. Illinois #30 Daniela Pedraza Novak/Sasha Belaya, 6-1 in Bulldog Classic *Finished fall with a 3-2 doubles record, going 2-0 with Vivian Wolff *Competed in the Youth Olympics in Buenos Aires in October, reaching the bronze medal match of the doubles draw, while also competing in singles and mixed doubles
Fed Cup in Madrid, Spain *Competed as part of an ITF 18 & under Argentinean team that toured Europe in the summer of 2016 *Won three professional events; singles titles at 2018 $15,000 Sao Jose Dos Campos (CL) and 2017 $15,000 Buenos Aires (CL), and doubles title at 2017 $15,000 Buenos Aires (CL) PERSONAL *Born Feb. 10, 2000 *Daughter of Jorge and Claudia Carle *Brother, Pedro, serves as the team manager and played collegiately at College of the Desert before finishing at Florida Gulf Coast University *Has met men’s professional tennis player Juan Martin del Potro, also from Argentina *Major: Intended Sports Management *Writes left-handed, plays right-handed, making a strong backhand
JUNIORS/HIGH SCHOOL *Ranked as high as No. 9 in ITF junior rankings *Has competed in each of the four junior Grand Slam events; twice at the US Open (2017 & 2018), Wimbledon Championships (2018), Roland Garros French Championships (2018), and Australian Open (2018) *Compiled strong wins against No. 3, 8 and 9 ranked juniors at the 2017 US Open Juniors *Advanced to the semifinals of the 2017 ITF Junior Masters *Achieved a World Tennis Association (WTA) ranking of 633 after playing in only seven tournaments *Represented Argentina at the 2015 Junior 16
*The 2018 Youth Olympics were located about five hours away from Carle’s hometown of Daireaux
CAREER RECORD Singles Year Overall Dual #1 #2 #3 #4 #5 #6 18Fall 5-2 - - - - - - Total 5-2 - - - - - - Doubles Year Overall Dual #1 #2 #3 18Fall 3-2 - - - Total 3-2 - - - -
Lourdes Carle
In women’s doubles, Carle played with Columbia’s Maria Camila Osorio Serrano.
“
It was one of the biggest tournaments I’ve ever played in my whole career. I enjoyed it, it was a really good experience, and I enjoyed playing close to my family over there which is not common for me because I always play [events] far from my house and my family and friends. The village was amazing, having the chance to interact with other people, which I think it the biggest thing for the Olympics. You play your sport and you get to know different people from different sports.
-Lourdes Carle
“
In mixed doubles, Carle played with fellow Argentinean Sebastian Baez.
2019 Georgia Women’s Tennis
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Meet The Bulldogs
Elena Christofi Junior | 5-10 | Athens, Greece Costeas-Geitonas School JUNIOR SEASON (FALL 2018) *Recipient of the Ramsey Scholarship for Academic & Athletic Excellence *Received an ITA Preseason Doubles Ranking of No. 6 with Morgan Coppoc *Finished the fall portion of the schedule with a 4-3 singles record and a 2-6 doubles record *Highest-ranked singles win: def. No. 117 Emilee Duong (Illinois), 7-5, 5-7, 6-3 *Went 3-0 in the Bulldog Classic, two of which were third-setters *Picked up two doubles wins with Katarina Jokic at the ITA Southeast Regionals in their first time playing with each other *Earned J. Reid Parker Director of Athletics Honor Roll for the summer semester *On the 2018-19 Student Athlete Advisory Committee SOPHOMORE SEASON (2017-18) *Recipient of the Leighton Ballew Women’s Tennis Scholarship Endowment *Contributed in the singles and doubles lineup to the 18-7 Georgia team that advanced to the program’s 32nd consecutive NCAA Championships, eighth straight Sweet Sixteen, and finished a NCAA Quarterfinalist *Named to the All-SEC Second Team *Finished 12-12 in singles, and 23-9 in doubles overall *Earned a berth into the NCAA Doubles Championship with freshman Morgan Coppoc *Concluded the season ranked No. 13 with Coppoc, going 21-9 overall with a 12-3 dual record (11-3 on court one) including a 6-1 SEC mark *Christofi/Coppoc tallied 11 ranked wins including six within the top-25 and the highest coming against No. 5 Arianne Hartono/Alexas Bortles of Ole Miss in the SEC Tournament *Began season with an ITA preseason doubles ranking of No. 34 with freshman Morgan Coppoc, while also ranked 10th in singles *Compiled a 9-5 doubles record with Coppoc 18
to conclude the fall season ranked sixth in ITA doubles *Went 10-5 in doubles and 6-6 in singles during fall play *Finished the spring season with a 4.0 GPA, earning a spot on the J. Reid Parker Director of Athletics Honor Roll *Earned Spring SEC Academic Honor Roll recognition FRESHMAN SEASON (2016-17) *Helped team go 19-6 with a final ITA Ranking of No. 6, advanced to the NCAA Sweet 16, the ITA National Team Indoor semifinals and second in the SEC *Received Doubles All-America honors with Kennedy Shaffer as duo advanced to the Elite Eight of NCAA Doubles Championships *Named All-SEC First Team & Co-Freshmen of the Year plus ITA Southeast Regional Rookie of the Year *Posted a team-best 29-7 singles record including 17-3 in dual matches and 14-3 at No. 2 in the lineup, also went 23-12 in doubles *Fifth-highest ranked freshman in singles, ending the year at No. 24 plus No. 26 in doubles with Kennedy Shaffer *Led SEC in wins on No. 2 singles with nine *In doubles, Shaffer/Christofi’s seven SEC wins tied for the most wins on court No. 2 *SEC Freshman of the Week twice in March (6-12th & 20-26th) due to four doubles clinchers and two singles clinchers *2016 ITA Southeast Regional Singles Title *Reached the 2016 ITA Southeast Regional Doubles Championship match with partner Kennedy Shaffer but fell in third-set tiebreaker *Earned a berth into the NCAA Singles Championships *Excellent student, named ITA ScholarAthlete and posted a 4.0 GPA in the spring semester to make the J. Reid Parker Director of Athletic Honor Roll
*Also named to the Dean’s List of the J. Reid Parker Director of Athletic Honor Roll in the fall for having a 3.5+ GPA with 14+ hours *The UGA Scholar Athlete for women’s tennis JUNIORS/HIGH SCHOOL *Earned ITA Junior life-best ranking of 61 and career-best WTA Doubles Ranking of 826 in the world *Competed in all four junior grand slams (the US Open, Wimbledon, French Open and Australian Open) including reaching the 2016 Wimbledon and 2016 French Open junior doubles quarterfinals *Went 3-0 while representing Greece on its Fed Cup Team in 2016, posting wins over Madagascar, Malta and Tunisia as the squad finished second in pool play of the Europe/Africa Zone Group III and fifth overall *Trained at Filothei (Greece) Tennis Club and completed studies at Costeas-Geitonas School in Pallini, Greece PERSONAL *Born Aug. 9, 1998 *Daughter of Antreas & Efi Christofi *Family: Has one sister, Iro, who coaches at a club in Greece and one brother, Giannis *Major: Pre-Business
Elena Christofi ACCOLADES
2016 *Southeast Regional Singles Champion 2017 *Doubles All-American w/ Kennedy Shaffer *Southeast Regional Rookie of the Year *Scholar-Athlete Award
All2017 First Team Co-Freshman of the Year 2018 Second Team Academic Honor Roll
CAREER RECORD Singles Year Overall Dual #1 #2 #3 #4 #5 #6 2017 29-7 17-3 1-0 14-3 2-0 - - 2018 12-12 6-6 - - 2-3 3-3 1-0 18Fall 4-3 - - - - - - Total 45-22 23-9 1-0 14-3 4-3 3-3 1-0 Doubles Year Overall Dual #1 #2 #3 2017 23-12 12-8 2-4 10-4 2018 23-9 12-3 11-3 1-0 18Fall 2-6 - - - Total 48-27 24-11 2-4 10-4 -
*Win % in completed matches: .719 *Win % in all matches: .479
*Win % in completed matches: .686 *Win % in all matches: .500
2019 Georgia Women’s Tennis
19
Meet The Bulldogs
Alee Clayton Freshman | 5-8 | Huntsville, Ala. Laurel Springs FRESHMAN YEAR (2018-19) *Finished the fall portion of the season with a 7-4 singles mark and a 5-3 doubles mark *Made collegiate debut at the Big 5 Challenge going 4-0 in singles to win her flight and 1-1 in doubles *Won two matches with Vivian Wolff in the ITA Southeast Regional doubles back draw *Won two matches with Annette Goulak in the Bulldog Classic to cap the fall
CAREER RECORD Singles Year Overall Dual #1 #2 #3 #4 #5 #6 18Fall 7-4 - - - - - - Total 7-4 - - - - - - Doubles Year Overall Dual #1 #2 #3 18Fall 5-3 - - - Total 5-3 - - - -
JUNIORS/HIGH SCHOOL *Attended Laurel Springs School, an accredited online private school *Trained at Athletic Club Alabama in Huntsville under the direction of Rusty Walker and Eddie Jacques, a former Georgia men’s tennis player (1994-97) *Ranked as high as No. 60 among juniors on Tennis Recruiting Network *Rated the No. 1 junior women’s tennis player in Alabama and No. 21 in the southeast region via Babolat recruiting *Four-star recruit according to Tennis Recruiting Network *Won the 2018 USTA Southern L1A Singles Championships *Reached the finals of the Women’s A Singles in the 2018 Oracle ITA Summer Circuit, hosted by Middle Tennessee from July 14-16
2018 Georgia Bulldog Recruiting Class
7
# in the Nation
PERSONAL *Born June 14, 1999 *Daughter of Wes and Frances Clayton *Family: Has two sisters, Hannah Page and Sanders *Major: Undecided *Left-handed
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Tennis Recruiting Network
Alee Clayton
Get To Know Alee Clayton: Q: What is your favorite non-tennis sport to watch? A: Football Q: What is your go-to sing-in-the-car song? A: “Best Love Song” -T-Pain ft. Chris Brown Q: What is your most binge worthy TV show? A: Gossip Girl Q: What movie have you seen a thousand times and will watch another thousand? A: The Proposal Q: What is your dream destination? A: Huntsville, my home! Q: What is your most frequented Athens restaurant? A: Your Pie Q: What meal can you not live without? A: Wings Q: What is your favorite non-tennis sport to play? A: Basketball Q: What is your guilty pleasure snack? A: Ice Cream Q: Where do you go shopping the most? A: Walmart 2019 Georgia Women’s Tennis
21
Meet The Bulldogs
Morgan Coppoc Sophomore | 5-7 | Tulsa, Okla. Tucker Tennis Academy SOPHOMORE SEASON (2018-19) *Recipient of the Women’s Tennis Scholarship Endowment *Received an ITA Preseason Doubles Ranking of No. 6 with Elena Christofi and an ITA Preseason Singles Ranking of No. 77 *Finished the fall with a 3-5 mark in singles and doubles *Tallied two singles wins in the Bulldog Classic *Reached the doubles semifinals in the ITA Southeast Regional Championships playing with Marta Gonzalez after recording just one match with her last season FRESHMAN SEASON (2017-18) *Played No. 1 doubles and No. 6 singles, primarily, for the Bulldogs team that went 18-7, and advanced to the program’s 32nd-consecutive NCAA Championships, eighth-straight Sweet Sixteen, and finished a NCAA Quarterfinalist *Named to the All-SEC Second Team *Concluded the season with an 11-match win streak in completed matches *Went 24-7 in singles overall including a 13-3 dual mark and a perfect SEC record at 8-0 *Ended the season ranked No. 110 in ITA Singles, reached as high as No. 55 *Was first off the court with a win six times in dual play *Finished ranked No. 13 in ITA Doubles with Elena Christofi after opening fall play with an ITA Preseason Doubles Ranking of No. 34 *Coppoc/Christofi defeated 11 ranked squads including six top-25 doubles teams *Earned a NCAA Doubles Championship berth *Concluded fall ranked 6th in doubles with Christofi after the duo went a team-best 9-5 record *Compiled a 11-4 singles record and concluded the fall with a No. 55 ITA singles ranking *Best singles win win came over All-Pac 12 First Teamer Gabby Smith of Southern Califor22
nia (then-No.14). During the fall, Coppoc defeated the senior Trojan 6-3,6-2 in the SoCal Challenge in Los Angeles, Calif. JUNIORS/HIGH SCHOOL *Trained at Tucker Tennis Academy in Tulsa with coach Trent Tucker *Ranked among the top 10 juniors nationally as well as high as No. 37 in the International Tennis Federation Juniors *Competed in the 2016 juniors at the French Open, Wimbledon and U.S. Open *Finished third at the 2016 National Hard Court Championships in doubles with fellow Bulldog freshman Annette Goulak *Doubles Finalist with Victoria Emma in the 18s at the Prince George’s County International Hard Courts plus reached the round of 16 in the singles *Captured the Girls 16s at the USTA Winter Nationals in Scottsdale, Ariz. *Ranked as high as No. 3 in the USTA 16s *Named a Blue Chip recruit and part of the nation’s top-ranked recruiting class according to the Tennis Recruiting Network
CAREER RECORD Singles Year Overall Dual #1 #2 #3 #4 #5 #6 2018 24-7 13-3 - - - 0-2 4-1 9-0 18Fall 3-5 - - - - - - Total 27-12 13-3 - - - 0-2 4-1 9-0 Doubles Year Overall Dual #1 #2 #3 2018 22-11 12-3 11-3 1-0 18Fall 3-5 - - - Total 25-16 12-3 11-3 1-0 -
PERSONAL *Born: April 16, 1999 *Daughter of Trent and Teri Coppoc *Majoring in Risk Management and Insurance with a minor in Sports Management. *Learned how to play the piano when she was four and learned how to play the ukulele from Drake Bernstein
*Win % in completed matches: .813 *Win % in all matches: .591 *Win % in completed matches: .800 *Win % in all matches: .480
Morgan Coppoc ACCOLADES
All2018 Second Team
Morgan on the Keys:
Q: When do you first start playing the piano? A: Probably when I was 3 or 4 years old, my mom put me in a program that you had to start at that earlier of an an age to get in and from there it just took off from there. I’m very thankful that my parents wanted me to learn and have that talent. It is pretty cool that I can walk by a piano whereever I am and can play. Q: Did you have many recitals? A: Yeah, there were those typical winter recitals, spring recitals and that kind of thing. All the kids in the program would put on a show whether it was solo or groups of the same aged kids. Also there was a thing called Gild, which was sort of like passing on to the next level of the program.
Q: Do you have a favorite song that you play? A: I really like “Bella’s Lullaby” from the movie Twilight. It is that piano song that I really enjoy playing. It is smooth and soothing that is really relaxing. I also like to play “Lost Boy”, by Ruth B. Q: How often do you still play? A: I try to whenever I can. Last year, I lived in ECV and there is a piano in Rooker Hall. Also when I go home, we have one so I play it a lot then. I’ll turn it up and by the time I’m finished, my mom will be watching from the stairs. Q: Do you like any specific artists? A: I love Alicia Keys. I can’t play any of her music, but it is cool to hear the piano in the songs since you don’t hear that much piano in songs nowadays. 2019 Georgia Women’s Tennis
23
Meet The Bulldogs
Marta Gonzalez Junior | 5-5 | Madrid, Spain IES Europa JUNIOR SEASON (2018-19) *Contained a team-best 14-3 fall record in singles and a 3-5 mark in doubles *Earned an At-Large Bid for the ITA National Fall Championships in Surprise, Arizona, occurring Nov. 7-11 *Advanced to the singles semifinals of the ITA Southeast Regional Championships after notching her highest ranked win in her career in the quarterfinals against Florida State’s No. 11 Carla Touly, 6-3, 7-6(4) *Has already surpassed her singles ranked win total of 2017-18 of six with seven thus far *At the Bulldog Classic, she went 2-0 in singles including her seventh ranked win *On the doubles side at the ITA Southeast Regionals, she along with Morgan Coppoc went 3-1 with a semifinals showing after playing just one match together prior *Started 2018 fall strong at the Big 5 Challenge by winning her singles flight going undefeated 4-0 - all against ranked opponents *Received a ITA Preseason Singles Ranking of No. 76 *Recipient of the Doyle E. Mote Women’s Tennis Scholarship Endowment SOPHOMORE SEASON (2017-18) *Recipient of the Doyle E. Mote Women’s Tennis Scholarship Endowment *A member of the dual single lineup to the Georgia team that went 18-7, and advanced to the program’s 32nd-consecutive NCAA Championships, eighth straight Sweet Sixteen, and finished a NCAA Quarterfinalist *Named to the All-SEC Second Team *Went 21-10 in singles with six ranked wins *Eight of her 10 singles losses were against ranked foes *Defeated two top-50 ranked opponents; #44 Emma Higuchi (Stanford) and #41 Maria Kononova (North Texas) - with the latter marking her highest career ranked win *Ranked as high as No. 49 in ITA Singles, fin24
ished at No. 108 *Missed seven matches due to illness/injury in the middle of dual season *Passed her singles win total from last season (19) with a win at Ole Miss *Started the season No. 105 in ITA Preseason Singles Rankings and concluded the fall at No. 51 *Tallied the second-best singles record of the fall with a 16-5 showing *Named to the J. Reid Parker Director of Athletics Honor Roll for the spring semester *Earned Spring SEC Academic Honor Roll recognition
in Madrid and completed studies at IES Europa
FRESHMAN SEASON (2016-17)
PERSONAL
*Helped team go 19-6 with a final ITA Ranking of No. 6, advanced to the NCAA Sweet 16, the ITA National Team Indoor semifinals and second in the SEC *Posted a 19-5 singles record including 8-3 at No. 5 in the lineup and 21-10 in doubles including 14-6 at No. 3 with Mariana Gould *Highest ranked win in doubles was over No. 38 Axon/Turner of Auburn *Went 1-1 against ranked opponents to advance to the Round of 16 in the ITA Southeast Regionals *Qualified for the main draw at the One Love Tennis Open in Atlanta in 2016 *Named to the J. Reid Parker Director of Athletic Honor Roll in the fall and spring
*Born Sept. 16, 1998 *Daughter of Begoña Encinas *Family: Has one brother, Enrique González *Major: Mechanical Engineering *Can solve a rubik’s cube *Knows how to play the ukulele and guitar
JUNIORS/HIGH SCHOOL *Ranked as high as No. 20 in Spain and owns career-best WTA ranking of 681 in singles and 915 in doubles *Won a $10K event at Palmas del Gran Canaria in 2015 with wins over WTA players ranked 347, 450 and 483 *Competed for Spain’s National Team during junior career *Trained at Universidad Europea TeniSpain
Marta Gonzalez ACCOLADES
All2018 Second Team Academic Honor Roll
CAREER RECORD Singles Year Overall Dual #1 #2 #3 #4 2017 19-5 9-3 - - - - 2018 21-10 5-5 - - 5-5 - 18Fall 14-3 - - - - - Total 54-18 14-8 - - 5-5 -
#5 #6 8-3 1-0 - - 8-3 1-0
Doubles Year Overall Dual #1 #2 #3 2017 21-10 14-6 0-0 0-0 14-6 2018 1-5 - - - 18Fall 3-5 - - - Total 25-20 14-6 0-0 0-0 14-6
*Win % in completed matches: .636 *Win % in all matches: .341
*Win % in completed matches: .700 *Win % in all matches: .560
2019 Georgia Women’s Tennis
25
Meet The Bulldogs
Annette Goulak Sophomore | 5-6 | Oak Park, Calif. Oak Park SOPHOMORE SEASON (Fall 2018) *Finished the fall season with a 5-5 singles record and a 4-0 doubles record *Three of four doubles wins are with Alee Clayton including two in the Bulldog Classic *Opened the season 2-0 in doubles playing with Alee Clayton and Vivian Wolff, while also going 1-3 in singles at the Big 5 Challenge *Notched two singles wins in the consolation bracket of the ITA Southeast Regionals *On the 2018-19 Student-Athlete Advisory Committee *Recipient of the Barbara Hartman Howell Scholarship Endowment FRESHMAN SEASON (2017-18) *Played primarily doubles for the Georgia team that went 18-7 and advanced the the program’s 32nd-consecutive NCAA Championships, eighth-straight Sweet Sixteen appearance, and finished a NCAA Quarterfinalist *Played with senior Kennedy Shaffer at No. 3 doubles, going 11-8 overall (10-8 in dual season) *The duo notched two match clinchers *Appeared in the doubles lineup in all but one dual match, Senior Day vs. Missouri, which she volunteered to vacate her spot to senior Laura Patterson *Won four out of her six dual singles matches played *Collected nine singles wins in the fall highlighted by defeating Florida’s Peggy Porter to advance to the Round of 16 of the ITA Southeast Regional *Went 5-5 in fall doubles playing with six different teammates *Named an ITA Scholar-Athlete *Made Dean’s List in the fall and the spring, earning a 3.5 GPA or higher while taking 14+ hours
26
JUNIORS/HIGH SCHOOL *Trained at Total Tennis with coach Mike Gennette *Ranked as high as in the top 20 in the USTA Juniors including No. 3 in California *Went undefeated in league play for Oak Park High School and a three-time recipient of the Most Valuable Player Award *Top showings on the USTA Junior Circuit include winning the 2015 Winter National Championship doubles title and a third-place finish at the 2016 National Hard Courts *Finished third at the 2016 National Hard Court Championships in doubles with fellow Bulldog signee Morgan Coppoc *Named a Blue Chip recruit and part of the nation’s top-ranked recruiting class according to the Tennis Recruiting Network *Completed studies at Oak Park High School PERSONAL *Born: June 11, 1999 *Daughter of Alexander and Tatyana Goulak *Family: Has one older brother David who attends the University of California Davis and is a member of the tennis team. He earned BIG West Conference Freshman of the Year honors in 2017 with Second Team Doubles honors. As a sophomore, he was named Big West Second Team Singles and Doubles.
CAREER RECORD
Singles Year Overall Dual #1 #2 #3 #4 2018 16-6 4-2 - - - - 18Fall 5-5 - - - - - Total 21-9 4-2 - - - -
#5 - - -
Doubles Year Overall Dual #1 #2 #3 2018 16-13 10-8 - 1-0 9-8 18Fall 4-0 - - - Total 20-13 10-8 - 1-0 9-8
*Win % in completed matches: .636
*Win % in completed matches: .700
*Win % in all matches: .341
*Win % in all matches: .560
#6 4-2 4-2
Annette Goulak ACCOLADES
2018 *Scholar-Athlete Award
Did You Know?
In the program’s 44 years, Georgia has only had two letterwinners that reign from The Golden State with Annette Goulak being the second. The first was Lisa Salvatierra who played for the Bulldogs from 1993-95, earning All-SEC doubles honors en route to Georgia’s fourth National Championship in 1994. Salvatierra played sparingly in singles, going just 2-0 on the No. 6 court, but was a fixture in the doubles lineup on the No. 3 court with Anne Chauzu. The duo went 10-2 overall including a perfect 6-0 in SEC play. Salvatierra also picked up Academic All-SEC honors in 1994. The San Francisco native did not start her collegiate career in Athens, but rather Salt Lake City at the University of Utah. Annette Goulak aims to become the Bulldogs’ first All-American from the state of California. 2019 Georgia Women’s Tennis
27
Meet The Bulldogs
Katarina Jokic
Sophomore | 5-8 | Novi Grad, Bosnia TK Mladost SOPHOMORE SEASON (Fall 2018) *Capped the fall by winning a singles grand slam, the 2018 Oracle/ITA National Fall Singles Championship *Became the fifth women’s tennis player in history to win a grand slam and the seventh singles title in program history *Tabbed as the No. 1 singles player in the country in the latest ITA Rankings put out on November 14th *Advanced to the singles quarterfinals with two ranked wins in the ITA All-American Championships which secured her passage to the ITA National Fall Championships *Contains a 10-1 singles record - all but one against ranked opponents - and a 3-2 doubles record *Went 2-0 in singles in the Bulldog Classic and 1-1 in doubles with Lourdes Carle *Tallied two doubles victories with Elena Christofi in the ITA Southeast Regional Championships after not recording a match together last season *Received an ITA Preseason Singles Ranking of No. 8 and Doubles ranking of No. 34 with Lourdes Carle *Recipient of the Leighton Ballew Women’s Tennis Scholarship Endowment *Earned J. Reid Parker Director of Athletics Honor Roll for the summer semester FRESHMAN SEASON (2017-18) *Helped lead the 18-7 Georgia team to a No. 7 final rankings, and a NCAA Quarterfinalist finish in the program’s 32nd-consecutive NCAA Championships *Named Southeastern Conference Freshman of the Year, SEC First Team, SEC All-Freshman Team *Received ITA Southeast Regional Rookie of the Year *Garnered ITA All-America Singles honors with a No. 17 final ITA Singles Rankings - the highest ranked freshman in the nation 28
*Led the Bulldogs on the No. 1 singles court, concluding with a team-best 31-8 overall record and 12-4 mark in duals *Notched five match clinchers, none more important than the one that beat No. 10 South Carolina, 4-3, in the NCAA Sweet Sixteen to secure the Bulldogs’ trip to the Elite Eight *Compiled 13 ranked wins including seven within the top-25 *Paired with Mariana Gould on the No. 2 doubles court, finishing with a No. 21 final ITA Doubles Rankings, and a team-best 29-9 record *Received an at-large bid into the NCAA Singles and Doubles Championships *Two time SEC Freshman of the Week (Jan. 31 & Feb. 14) *In doubles, Gould and Jokic went 8-5 against ranked tandems, including a 5-2 mark versus top-25 teams *Named to the ITA National Indoor AllTournament Team - No. 2 doubles with Gould after going undefeated with a season-best win over No. 2 Ellyse Hamlin and Kaitylin McCarthy of Duke *Compiled a team-best 19-3 singles record during fall action *Defeated Estela Perez-Somarriba (No. 11) of Miami and Anna Danilina (No. 15) of Florida en route to becoming the ITA SE Regional Singles Champion *The duo reached the doubles quarterfinals at the ITA National Fall Championships and the semifinals of the ITA Southeast Championships *Made J. Reid Parker Director of Athletics Honor Roll Dean’s List in the fall, earning a 3.5 GPA or higher while taking 14+ hours *Named to the J. Reid Parker Director of Athletics Honor Roll for the spring semester *Recipient of the McMullan Women’s Tennis Scholarship Endowment
JUNIORS/HIGH SCHOOL *Trained at TK Mladost in Banja Luka in the Republic of Srpska *A career high ITF Junior ranking of No. 36 along with No. 604 on the WTA singles rankings *Tallied a 30-13 career singles record in ITF Pro Circuit main draw matches *Posted a 15-3 record in ITF pro circuit events in 2016 including winning a pair of $10K tournaments in Prokuplje, Serbia and Sibenik, Croatia *Part of the nation’s top-ranked recruiting class according to the Tennis Recruiting Network PERSONAL *Born: April 19, 1998 *Daughter of Nikola and Gordono Jokic *Majoring in Management
Katarina Jokic ACCOLADES
2017 *Southeast Regional Singles Champion 2018 *Doubles All-American w/ Kennedy Shaffer *Southeast Regional Rookie of the Year *Scholar-Athlete Award *Oracle/ITA National Fall Singles Champion
All2018 First Team Freshman of the Year All-Freshman Team
CAREER RECORD
Singles Year Overall Dual #1 #2 #3 #4 2018 31-8 12-4 12-4 - - - 18Fall 10-1 - - - - - Total 41-9 12-4 12-4 - - -
#5 - - -
#6 4-2
Doubles Year Overall Dual #1 #2 #3 2018 30-12 16-5 - 13-5 3-0 18Fall 3-2 - - - Total 32-15 16-5 - 13-5 3-0
*Win % in completed matches: .750 *Win % in all matches: .480
*Win % in completed matches: .762 *Win % in all matches: .640
2019 Georgia Women’s Tennis
29
Meet The Bulldogs
Meg Kowalski Freshman | 5-4 | Chicago, Ill. Laurel Springs FRESHMAN SEASON (Fall 2018) *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 *Recipient of the McMullan Women’s Tennis Scholarship Endowment JUNIORS/HIGH SCHOOL *Attended Lyons Township High School in 2014 as a freshman prior to concluding scholastics with Laurel Springs School, an accredited online private school *At Lyons Township, she led the Lions to a 29-2 overall record, a sectional title and a third-place 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 *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 30
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. James played rugby at University of Utah for two years. *Major: Intended Sports Management *Right-handed
CAREER RECORD Singles Year Overall Dual #1 #2 #3 #4 #5 #6 18Fall 4-0 - - - - - - Total 4-0 - - - - - - Doubles Year Overall Dual #1 #2 #3 18Fall 0-4 - - - Total 0-4 - - - -
Meg Kowalski
Get To Know Meg Kowalski: Q: What is your favorite professional sports team? A: Chicago Cubs Q: What is your go-to sing-in-the-car song? A: “The Show Goes On” -Lupe Fiasco Q: What is your most binge worthy TV show? A: One Tree Hill Q: What movie have you seen a thousand times and will watch another thousand? A: Safe Haven Q: What is your most frequented Athens restaurant? A: Taqueria Tsunami Q: What meal can you not live without? A: Sushi Q: What is your favorite non-tennis sport to watch? A: Gymnastics Q: What is your favorite non-tennis sport to play? A: Soccer Q: Where do you go shopping the most? A: Trader Joe’s Q: What is your role in the apartment with Lourdes and Alee? A: I’m the kitchen police. 2019 Georgia Women’s Tennis
31
Meet The Bulldogs
Vivian Wolff Sophomore | 5-9 | Frankfurt, Germany Kurpfalz Gymnasium SOPHOMORE SEASON (Fall 2018) *Tied with Alee Clayton for team-most doubles wins with five *Contains the third-most singles wins with eight including a 3-0 record vs. ranked foes *Capped fall with a 3-0 singles showing and 1-0 doubles showing in Bulldog Classic *Won her first-round match in the singles bracket of the ITA Southeast Regional Championships before falling in the round of 32 but rebounding for a consolation win *Notched two wins in the doubles consolation bracket at the ITA Southeast Regional Championships with Alee Clayton *Opened the fall season going 3-1 in singles and 2-0 in doubles at the Big 5 Challenge *Notched her first career ranked singles win at Big 5 Challenge, defeated No. 111 Margot Decker of Kansas State, 6-4,6-4 *Earned J. Reid Parker Director of Athletics Honor Roll for the summer semester FRESHMAN SEASON (2017-18) *A part of the Georgia team that went 18-7, and advanced to the program’s 32nd-consecutive NCAA Championships, eighth straight Sweet Sixteen, and finished a NCAA Quarterfinalist *Four of her six dual singles matches played reached third sets *Made collegiate debut in dual singles at LSU, going unfinished, and then won her first dual singles match the next day at Texas A&M in three sets *First career match clincher vs. Florida *Overall, she finished 9-9 in singles and 6-4 in doubles *Went 5-7 in singles and 6-4 in doubles during the fall *Best showing was at the TCU Big 5 Challenge where she went 4-0 in singles and 3-0 in doubles *Played with five different partners in fall doubles, going 2-0 with Laura Patterson and 2-2 32
with Annette Goulak *Made J. Reid Parker Director of Athletics Honor Roll Dean’s List in the fall, earning a 3.5 GPA or higher while taking 14+ hours *Named to the J. Reid Parker Director of Athletics Honor Roll in the spring semester JUNIORS/HIGH SCHOOL *Trained in Frankfurt, Germany and Atlanta, Georgia *Career High combined ITF Junior ranking of No. 326 along with No. 789 on the WTA singles rankings *Posted a 35-17 record in ITF junior events and 22-22 in ITF pro circuit main draw singles events in her career *Reached singles semifinals and doubles finals of 2016 ITF event in Graz, Austria including win over top-seed Melanie Stokke *Competed in tournaments in Germany, Austrian, Spain, Serbia, Belarus and Thailand *Part of the nation’s top-ranked recruiting class according to the Tennis Recruiting Network *Completed studies at Kurpfalz Gymnasium in Mannheim, Germany
CAREER RECORD
Singles Year Overall Dual #1 #2 #3 #4 2018 9-9 3-1 - - - - 18Fall 8-2 - - - - - Total 17-11 3-1 - - - -
#5 #6 2-0 1-1 - 2-0 1-1
Doubles Year Overall Dual #1 #2 #3 2018 6-4 - - - 18Fall 5-1 - - - Total 11-5 - - - -
PERSONAL *Born: Oct. 8, 1998 *Daughter of Patrick and Connie Wolff *Major: International Business
*Win % in completed matches: .750 *Win % in all matches: .500
Vivian Wolff
Get To Know Vivian Wolff: Q: What is your favorite professional sports team? A: Bayern Munich & Eintracht Frankfurt Q: What is your go-to sing-in-the-car song? A: “Say My Name” -Florence & the Machine ft. Calvin Harris Q: What is your most binge worthy TV show? A: Narcos Q: What movie have you seen a thousand times and will watch another thousand? A: Interstellar and Avatar Q: What is your most frequented Athens restaurant? A: Cali N Tito’s and Last Resort Grill Q: What is one thing that you have to have in the pantry? A: Cereal Q: Do you have any notable collections? A: Video Games Q: Do you have a guilty pleasure treat? A: Chocolate Q: What is your favorite non-tennis sport to play? A: Hockey 2019 Georgia Women’s Tennis
33
A Look Back At 2017-18...
34
2017-18 Season Review Overview of the Season In head coach Jeff Wallace’s 33rd year at the helm,
the 2018 Georgia Bulldogs advanced to the NCAA Quarterfinals in the program’s 32nd-consecutive NCAA Tournament appearance. For the eighth-straight season, the Bulldogs swept their first and second round opponents to advance to the Round of 16. The Sweet Sixteen matchup against South Carolina served as redemption for the Bulldogs, after dropping the regular season meeting. Elena Christofi and Katarina Jokic grinded out third-set wins to seal the 4-3 victory, sending Georgia to its 15th all-time Elite Eight, and first since 2015. The Bulldogs’ run ended against a streaking Stanford squad that went on to capture the National Championship on its 20th win in a row. Individually, Georgia extended its streak of having at least one Bulldog in the NCAA Singles Championship to 33-straight years, while also having at least one pair in the NCAA Doubles Championship for the 10th-consecutive year. Jokic, one of 13 freshmen in the 64-player singles field, lost in the first round to an eventual semifinalist. In the doubles competition, senior Mariana Gould and Jokic won their first match, before also losing to eventual semifinalists. Christofi and Morgan Coppoc fell in the first round in a third-set match tiebreaker. In the regular season, Georgia notched double-digit wins in the Southeastern Conference for the sixthstraight season, going 10-3. The stern schedule endured by the Bulldogs could be attested to all of their losses stemming from final top-15 ranked teams, including six within the top-10. The lone outside top-10 team Georgia lost to was No. 12 South Carolina, which the Bulldogs reconciled. Georgia associate head coach Drake Bernstein garnered ITA Assistant Coach of the Year honors for the Southeast Region. Wallace picked up win No. 707 in March, passing his mentor and former coach, legendary Georgia men’s tennis coach Dan Magill, in alltime wins. Final Rankings Georgia’s No. 7 final ITA ranking marked the 29th time
the Bulldogs capped the year ranked in the top 10 under Wallace. In the final individual rankings, the Bulldogs had four singles players and two doubles pairs representing the red and black. Katarina Jokic led the group in singles rankings at No. 17 - the highest spot among freshman in the nation. Following in the rankings were senior Kennedy Shaffer (No. 87), sophomore Marta Gonzalez (No. 108), and freshman Morgan Coppoc (No. 110). In doubles, Elena Christofi/ Coppoc finished at No. 13, while the Mariana Gould/Jokic duo was No. 21. Year of Katarina Jokic Jokic, of Novi Grad, Bosnia, put together a remarkable freshman campaign that included earning ITA Singles All-America honors, ITA Southeast Region 2019 Georgia Women’s Tennis
Rookie of the Year, SEC Freshman of the Year, SEC First-Team, and All-SEC Freshman Team. She also won the ITA SE Regional Singles Championship in the fall, and was named to the ITA National Team Indoor All-Tournament Team with Mariana Gould in February. Playing exclusively at No. 1 singles, Jokic went 12-4 in the dual season, contributing to her team-best 31-8 overall record. Lineup of All-SEC honors A conference-best six players were named to All-SEC teams. Along with Katarina Jokic’s first team nod, Kennedy Shaffer, Elena Christofi, Mariana Gould, Marta Gonzalez, and Morgan Coppoc received second team honors. Senior Laura Patterson was named to the Community Service Team. Off the Court Excelling away from the court, the team earned a 3.38 cummulative grade point average. Individually, Laura Patterson earned ITA Scholar Athlete distinction. Patterson and Mariana Gould graduated on May 4.
FINAL RESULTS: 18-7 (10-3 SEC) Final ITA Ranking: No. 7 NCAA Quarterfinals ITA National Team Indoor Quarterfinals SEC Regular Season Finish: 4th
Date Opponent Location Time/Results Jan. 26 Michigan State # Athens, Ga. W 4-0 Jan. 27 Penn # Athens, Ga. W 4-0 Feb. 3 Clemson Athens, Ga. W 7-0 Feb. 9 No. 11 Texas $ Madison, Wis. W 4-2 Feb. 10 No. 9 Duke $ Madison, Wis. L 3-4 Feb. 11 No. 8 Texas Tech $ Madison, Wis. W 4-1 Feb. 23 No. 12 Georgia Tech Atlanta, Ga. L 2-4 Mar. 2 No. 43 LSU* Baton Rouge, La. W 4-0 Mar. 3 Texas A&M* College Station, Tx W 4-2 Mar. 10 No. 28 Tennessee* Athens, Ga. W 7-0 Mar. 16 No. 18 Florida* Athens, Ga. W 4-1 Mar. 18 No. 10 South Carolina* Athens, Ga. L 1-4 Mar. 23 No. 20 Kentucky* Lexington, Ky. W 4-0 Mar. 25 No. 3 Vanderbilt* Nashville, Tenn. L 1-4 Mar. 29 Alabama* Athens, Ga. W 4-0 Mar. 31 No. 15 Auburn* Athens, Ga. W 4-1 Apr. 5 No. 9 Ole Miss* Oxford, Miss. L 3-4 Apr. 9 No. 32 Miss. State* Starkville, Miss. W 4-0 Apr. 12 No. 49 Arkansas* Athens, Ga. W 4-0 Apr. 14 Missouri* Athens, Ga. W 4-0 Apr. 20 No. 6 Ole Miss^ Knoxville, Tenn. L 1-4 May 11 Georgia St.% Athens, Ga. W 4-0 May 12 No. 29 Wake Forest% Athens, Ga. W 4-0 May 17 No. 10 South Carolina% Chapel Hill, N.C. W 4-3 May 19 No. 15 Stanford % Winston-Salem, N.C. L 0-4 May 24-28 Singles & Doubles% Winston-Salem, N.C. 35
2017-18 Season Review For the third-consecutive year, a Bulldog won the ITA SE Singles Crown
Wake Forest Campus Winston-Salem, N.C.
NCAA Round of 16 UGA def. S.C. 4-3 Moved to Chapel Hill, N.C. Due to Rain 2018 NCAA Championships Winston-Salem, N.C.
32nd-Straight NCAA Appearance 36
2017-18 Season Review
INSIDE THE NUMBERS Overall Record: 18-7 • SEC: 10-3 • Home: 11-2 • Away: 4-3 • Neutral: 3-2 • Ranked: 11-7 • Final ITA Ranking: No. 7
2018 Statistics Singles
Overall Pct. Dual
Totals
156-68 .696 70-32 86-36 37-14 12-4 8-9 8-8 9-7 16-1 17-3
Doubles
Overall Pct. Dual Tour SEC
Elena Christofi 12-12 Morgan Coppoc 24-7 Marta Gonzalez 21-10 Annette Goulak 16-6 Mariana Gould 25-5 Katarina Jokic 31-8 Laura Patterson 6-1 Kennedy Shaffer 10-10 Vivian Wolff 9-9
Gould/Jokic 29-9 Christofi/Coppoc 21-9 Goulak/Shaffer 11-8 Patterson/Shaffer 1-0 Goulak/Wolff 2-2 Patterson/Wolff 2-0 Christofi/Goulak 1-0 Gonzalez/Wolff 1-0 Goulak/Gould 1-0 Goulak/Patterson 1-0 Coppoc/Wolff 1-1 Seven other Combos. 2-8 Totals 74-37
.500 6-6 .774 13-3 .677 5-5 .727 4-2 .833 17-2 .795 12-4 .857 -- .500 8-9 .500 3-1
Tour SEC 1
2
3
4
5
6
6-6 3-3 -- -- 2-3 3-3 1-0 -- 11-4 8-0 -- -- -- 0-2 4-1 9-0 16-5 1-0 -- -- 5-5 -- -- -- 12-4 2-1 -- -- -- -- -- 4-2 8-3 11-1 -- -- 1-0 6-2 8-0 2-0 19-4 6-3 12-4 -- -- -- -- -- 6-1 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- 2-1 3-5 -- 8-9 -- -- -- -- 6-8 3-1 -- -- -- -- 2-0 1-1
.763 16-5 13-4 .700 12-3 9-6 .579 10-8 1-0 1.000 1-0 -- .500 -- 2-2 1.000 -- 2-0 1.000 -- 1-0 1.000 -- 1-0 1.000 -- 1-0 1.000 -- 1-0 .500 -- 1-1 .200 -- 2-8 .667 40-16 34-21
Composite Stats
8-2 6-1 7-3 1-0 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- 22-6
1
-- 11-3 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- 11-3
2
13-5 1-0 1-0 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- 15-5
3
3-0 -- 9-8 1-0 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- 14-8
Singles Dual Doubles Dual Elena Christofi 12-12 6-6 23-9 12-3 Morgan Coppoc 24-7 13-3 22-11 12-3 Marta Gonzalez 21-10 5-5 1-5 -- Annette Goulak 16-6 4-2 16-13 10-8 Mariana Gould 25-5 17-2 31-9 16-5 Katarina Jokic 31-8 12-4 30-12 16-5 Laura Patterson 6-1 -- 5-3 1-0 Kennedy Shaffer 10-10 8-9 12-8 11-8 Vivian Wolff 9-9 3-1 6-4 -- TEAM 156-68 70-32 74-37 40-16
Katarina Jokic 2018 Final Standings
SEC All Home
Away
Nuetral
Vanderbilt^* 12-1 27-4 13-0 6-2 8-2 Florida* 11-2 19-9 8-2 9-2 2-5 South Carolina* 11-2 21-7 13-2 7-1 1-4 Georgia* 10-3 18-7 11-1 4-3 3-3 Ole Miss* 9-4 22-7 8-3 10-1 4-3 Auburn* 8-5 20-11 13-2 4-4 3-5 Mississippi St.* 6-7 16-11 10-4 4-4 2-3 Kentucky* 6-7 14-11 10-3 4-6 0-2 Texas A&M* 5-8 17-11 13-2 2-8 2-1 LSU 5-8 15-11 12-2 1-6 2-3 Arkansas 3-10 16-6 4-7 3-6 9-3 Tennessee* 3-10 18-12 10-4 7-7 1-1 Alabama 2-11 15-15 10-5 2-7 3-3 Missouri 0-13 13-17 7-9 1-7 5-1 ^SEC Champion/SEC Tournament Champion; *NCAA Tournament Appearance
The Last Time Georgia... Won at Home 5/12/18 v. #29 Wake Forest, 4-0! on the Road 4/9/18 at #32 Miss. State, 4-0 Neutral Site 5/17/18 v. #10 S. Carolina, 4-3& Lost at Home 3/18/18 v. #10 South Carolina, 4-1 On the Road 4/5/18, at #9 Ole Miss, 4-3 Neutral Site 5/19/18 v. #15 Stanford, 4-0& Earned a 7-0 Shutout 3/10/18 v. #28 Tennessee Earned a 4-0 Shutout Was shut out
5/12/18 v. #29 Wake Forest! 2/12/17 vs. #1 Florida$
Won the Doubles Pt. 5/12/18 v. #29 Wake Forest! Won Dbls, Lost Match 3/18/18 v. #10 S. Carolina Swept Doubles 2/2/15 at Virginia Lost Doubles 5/19/18 v. #15 Stanford, 4-0&
2019 Georgia Women’s Tennis
Lost Dbls, Won Match 5/17/18 v. #10 S.C, 4-3& Was Swept in Doubles 2/12/17 vs. #1 Florida$ Beat a Top-10 Team 5/17/18 v. #10 S.C, 4-3& Swept a Top-10 Team 4/23/16 vs. #5 Vanderbilt, 4-0 Beat a Top-5 Team 3/17/17 at #1 Florida, 4-1 Beat the No. 1 Team 3/17/17 at #1 Florida, 4-1 Won 4-3 in 3rd set tiebreak 4/6/08 at Vanderbilt Lost 4-3 in 3rd set tiebreak 1/30/11 at N. Carolina Won 6-0, 6-0 in Singles 5/13/17, Brinson & Gonzalez vs. South Carolina St.* Held 10-match W Streak 3/10/17-4/14/17 (10) 15-match W Streak 3/15/09-5/18/09 (16) 20-match W Streak 1/23/02-4/19/02 (22)^
Key $ at 2017 ITA National Team Indoors, New Haven, Conn.; !2018 NCAA Championship Second Round, Athens, Ga.; &2018 NCAA Championships, Chapel Hill, N.C./Winston-Salem, N.C.
37
2017-18 Season Review
2018 Senior Day - Thank You Seniors!
Mariana Gould
Laura Patterson
Kennedy Shaffer
Singles Year Overall Dual #1 #2 #3 #4 #5 #6 2015 17-6 5-1 -- -- -- 4-1 -- 1-0 2016 21-7 14-2 -- -- -- -- 14-2 -2017 19-11 13-6 -- -- -- -- 0-1 13-5 2018 25-5 17-2 -- -- 1-0 6-2 8-0 2-0 Total 82-29 49-11 -- -- 1-0 10-3 22-3 16-5 Doubles Year Overall Dual #1 #2 #3 2015 11-7 0-3 -- -- 0-3 2016 21-11 14-6 14-6 -- -2017 22-8 14-6 -- -- 14-6 2018 31-9 16-5 -- 13-5 3-0 Total 85-35 44-20 14-6 13-5 17-9
Singles Year Overall Dual #1 #2 #3 #4 #5 #6 2015 10-4 -- -- -- -- -- -- -2016 16-7 10-3 -- -- -- -- 1-0 9-3 2017 4-3 -- -- -- -- -- -- -2018 6-1 -- -- -- -- -- -- -Total 36-15 10-3 -- -- -- -- 1-0 9-3 Doubles Year Overall Dual #1 #2 #3 2015 12-5 3-3 -- -- 3-3 2016 21-10 17-8 -- -- 17-8 2017 6-2 -- -- -- -2018 5-3 1-0 -- -- 1-0 Total 44-20 21-11 -- -- 21-11
Singles Year Overall Dual #1 #2 #3 #4 #5 #6 2015 18-6 18-6 -- 2-0 8-4 8-2 -- -2016 32-8 20-4 -- 11-4 5-0 4-0 -- -2017 24-7 15-2 -- 2-1 13-1 -- -- -2018 10-10 8-9 -- 8-9 -- -- -- -Total 84-31 61-21 -- 23-14 26-5 12-2 -- -Doubles Year Overall Dual #1 #2 #3 2015 17-7 17-7 -- 17-7 -2016 19-10 12-6 -- 3-2 9-4 2017 28-11 14-7 -- 14-7 -2018 12-8 11-8 -- 1-0 10-8 Total 76-36 54-28 -- 35-16 19-12
*2017 ITA Scholar-Athlete Award *2018 SEC Community Service Award
*2015 All-SEC Second Team *2015 All-SEC Freshman Team *2016 All-SEC Second Team *2016 SEC All-Tournament Team *2016 ITA Singles All-American *2017 All-SEC Second Team *2017 ITA Doubles All-American with Elena Christofi, reaching Elite Eight of NCAA Doubles Championships *2018 All-SEC Second Team
Daughter of Jay and Lucy CAREER RECORD
*2016 ITA Doubles All-American with Ellen Perez, going 19-9 together *2016 SEC All-Tournament Team; 2-0 in singles and 2-1 in doubles in Baton Rouge, La. *2017 SEC Academic Honor Roll *2018 ITA National Team Indoor All-Tournament Team - No. 2 Doubles with Katarina Jokic *2018 All-SEC Second Team *2018 SEC Academic Honor Roll *2018 ITA Scholar-Athlete Award 38
Daughter of Gil and Joy CAREER RECORD
Daughter of Doug and Lorri CAREER RECORD
History
Angela Lettiere was inducted into the Circle of Honor in 2005 Lisa Spain 1984 NCAA Singles Champion
All-American Kate Fuller Holds the school record with 125 doubles wins.
All-American Chelsey Gullickson played in the main draw of the 2010 US Open.
2019 Georgia Women’s Tennis
39
All-Time Records
THE RECORD HOLDERS SEASON (Top 10) Singles Victories......................................... Record T1. Angela Lettiere (1994, Sr.)................................. 46-14 T1. Shannan McCarthy (1989, Fr.)............................ 46-15 T3. Chelsey Gullickson (2009, Fr.)............................ 43-10 T3. Agata Cioroch (2002, So.).................................. 43-6 T3. Laura Kimel (1991, Jr.)....................................... 43-8 T3. Jill Waldman (1989, Jr.)..................................... 43-7 7. Tonya Bogdonas (1991, Jr.)................................ 42-11 T8. Maho Kowase (2014, Sr.)................................... 39-7 T8. Vanessa Castellano (1999, Sr.).......................... 39-10 T8. Esther Knox (1999, Jr.)....................................... 39-13 T8. Stacy Sheppard (1995, Sr.)................................. 39-13 T8. Shannan McCarthy (1991, Jr.)............................ 39-8 T8. Caryn Moss (1989, Fr.)........................................ 39-7 T8. Lisa Spain (1984, Sr.).......................................... 39-3
Doubles Victories........................................ Record 1. Kate Fuller (2013, Jr.)........................................... 40-9 2. Maho Kowase (2014, Sr.)..................................... 38-7 3. Lauren Herring (2014, Jr.)..................................... 36-7 4. Chelsey Gullickson (2012, Sr.)............................. 35-13 T5. Naoko Ueshima (2008, So.)............................... 33-11 T5. Shadisha Robinson (2004, Fr.)............................ 33-9 T7. Lilly Kimbell (2012, So.)..................................... 32-5 T7. Kate Fuller (2012, So.)........................................ 32-14 T7. Shadisha Robinson (2005, So.).......................... 32-5 T8. Mariana Gould (2018, Sr.).................................. 31-9 T8. Nadja Gilchrist (2012, Sr.).................................. 31-10 T8. Cameron Ellis (2009, Jr.).................................... 31-16
Best Singles Win % (Min. 25 wins)
1.000, Agata Cioroch (26-0, 2001; 1-0 at No. 3, 13-0 at No. 4 and 12-0 at No. 5 spot)
Best Singles Win % (Min. 35 wins) .946, *Shannan McCarthy (35-2, 1992) *28-0 at No. 1 spot while ranked No. 1
CAREER (Top 10) Singles Victories.........................................Record 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........................................Record 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
Consecutive Win Streak (Doubles) 22, Kimbell/Kowase in 2012 (24-2) 19, Catlin/Castellano in 1999 (26-2)
Most Combined Singles/Doubles Wins (Season) 1. 77, Maho Kowase (2014: 39-S, 38-D) 2. 71, Kate Fuller (2013: 31S, 40D) T3. 69, Chelsey Gullickson (2012: 34S, 35D) T3. 69, Chelsey Gullickson (2009: 43S, 26D) T3. 69, Naoko Ueshima (2008: 36S, 33D) T3. 69, Agata Cioroch (2002: 43S, 26D) 7. 68, Lauren Herring (2013: 38S, 30D) T8. 67, Lauren Herring (2014: 31S, 36D) T8. 67, Shadisha Robinson (2004: 34S, 33D) 10. 66, Michelle Anderson (1994: 35-S, 21-D)
Most Combined Singles/Doubles Wins
64, Chelsey Gullickson & Nadja Gilchrist (64-21, 2009-12)
Best Doubles Win % (Team, Min. 45 Wins)
Final No. 1 Rankings
Best Singles Win % (Min. 120 wins) .854, Lisa Spain, 123-21 from 1981-84
Best Doubles Win % (Min. 90 wins) .853, Marissa Catlin, 93-16 from 1997-00
Most Doubles Wins (Team)
.893, Marissa Catlin & Vanessa Castellano (50-6, 1998-99)
.929, Marissa Catlin (26-2, 1999)
Most Doubles Wins (Team)
36, Lauren Herring & Maho Kowase (36-7, 2014)
Best Doubles Win % (Team)
40
33, Agata Cioroch in 2001-02 (26-0/+7) 32, Shannan McCarthy in 1992 (35-2)
(Career, Min. 200 wins) 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 Doubles Win % (Min. 25 wins)
.929, Marissa Catlin & Vanessa Castellano (26-2, 1999, 11-0 at No. 1 spot) .923, Lilly Kimbell & Maho Kowase (24-2, 2012, 22-0 at No. 3 spot)
MISCELLANEOUS Consecutive Win Streak (Singles)
All-American Kate Fuller holds the school record with 125 doubles wins.
1994: Team 1994: Angela Lettiere/Michelle Anderson (D) 1995: Stacy Sheppard/Tina Samara (D) 1998: Marissa Catlin (Singles) 1999: Marissa Catlin/Vanessa Castellano (D) 2000: Team 2000: Marissa Catlin/Lori Grey (D) 2003: Agata Cioroch/Lori Grey (D) 2005: Shadisha Robinson/Caroline Basu (D)
National Championships, NCAA Tournament History
BULLDOG CHAMPIONSHIPS 1994, 1994, 1995, 2000, 2002 NCAA Championships
Georgia has captured five national team titles in the history of the program including two NCAA titles (1994, 2000) and three USTA/ITA National Indoor crowns (1994, 1995, 2002). Georgia has made 32 straight appearances in the NCAA Tournament with 11 trips to the Final Four. Georgia’s last trip to the Final Four came in 2015, going 24-7. Overall, the Bulldogs are 79-30 in the NCAA Tournament. The Bullogs have served as the host of the NCAA Women’s Tennis Championships eight times (1994, 2004, ’05, ’07, ’10, ’12, ‘14 and ‘17). The NCAAs have been held at one site since 2006.
1994
NCAA Champions (Athens, Ga.)
Round-by-Round: 1st Round: def. No. 21 So. Cal, 5-2; Quarterfinals: def. No. 6 Duke, 5-0; Semifinals: def. No. 3 Cal, 5-3; Finals: def. No. 4 Stanford, 5-4 Noteworthy: Georgia won its first national championship in the first year that it played host to the women’s NCAA tournament Team Members Michelle Anderson, Anne Chauzu, Brooke Galardi, Marianna Land, Angela Lettiere, Lisa Salvatierra, Tina Samara, Stacy Sheppard; Head Coach Jeff Wallace, Asst. Coach Mark Guilbeau, Trainer Jennifer Smith, Student Asst. Sally Curtis
2000
NCAA Champions (Malibu, Calif.)
Round-by-Round: 1st Round: def. Furman, 5-0; 2nd Round: def. No. 26 Ohio State, 5-0; Round of 16: def. No. 17 S. Alabama, 5-1; Quarterfinals: def. No. 12 So. Cal, 5-1; Semifinals: def. No. 4 Florida, 5-2; Finals: def. No. 1 Stanford, 5-4 Noteworthy: Georgia ended Stanford’s 48 match winning streak with 5-4 win in the National Championship match. Team Members Kelly Baskin, Marissa Catlin, Christa Grey, Lori Grey, Esther Knox, Zoe Mellis, Anne Nguyen, Aarthi Venkatesan; Head Coach Jeff Wallace, Asst. Coach Debbie Beck, Trainer Ron Shinault, Student Asst. Vanessa Castellano
First and Second Rounds
Starting in 1999, the NCAA field expanded from 16 to 64 teams with the first and second rounds to be at campus sites and then round of 16 and beyond at a designated final site. Since this change, Athens has hosted 17 of the 20 years and the Bulldogs have been a perfect 34-0 in the first and second rounds during that time. In total, Georgia is 38-2 with the two losses coming in the second round in 2006 and 2010. The Bulldogs defeated Georgia State and Wake Forest last season. Full NCAA Team & Individual Results on pages 42-45.
ITA Kick-Off Weekend Results; National Finish
2009 (Athens): Beat Ole Miss 4-0, Marshall 4-0; Semifinalist 2010 (Athens): Beat Va. Tech 5-2, William & Mary 4-2; Went 1-2 2011 (Chapel Hill, N.C.): Beat VCU 5-2, Lost to UNC 4-3; n/a 2012 (Athens): Beat Missouri 6-1, FIU 7-0; Went 2-1 2013 (Athens): Beat Columbia 4-1, Ga. State 7-0; Semifinalist 2014 (Athens): Beat Elon 4-0, Arkansas 5-0; Went 1-2 2015 (Athens): Beat Samford 4-1, Auburn 4-1; Finalist 2016 (Athens): Beat Wyoming 4-0, Old Dominion 4-0; Semifinalist 2017 (Athens): Beat New Mexico 4-0, Illinois 4-0; Semifinalist 2018 (Athens): Beat Michigan State 4-0, Penn 4-0; Went 2-1
2019 Georgia Women’s Tennis
ITA National Team Indoor Championships
Georgia has made 29 appearances at the ITA National Indoors since its inception in 1988. The Bulldogs have won three titles (1994-95, 2002), finished second four times (2001, ’04, ’09, ’15) and tied for third nine times (1989-’93, ’98-00, ‘16). The Bulldogs have been to seven consecutive National Team Indoors. Georgia owns a 59-25 overall mark at the tournament, and that’s the second most wins of any program. The Bulldogs did not attend in 1997 due to multiple injuries. It has been held in Madison, Wisconsin (1988-2010, ’16, ‘18), in Charlottesville, Virginia (2011-15), and in New Haven, Connecticut (2017). This year, the tournament heads to Seattle, Washington, the campus of the Huskies.
1994
ITA National Indoor Champions (Madison, Wis.)
Round-by-Round: 1st Round: def. No. 14 USC 6-0; Quarterfinals: def. No. 13 Indiana 5-1; Semifinals: def. No. 9 Kansas 5-1; Finals: def. No. 5 Florida 5-1 Noteworthy: Georgia won 21 of the 24 matches it played and never had to go to doubles, which was a first for the national indoor team champion Team Members Michelle Anderson, Anne Chauzu, Brooke Galardi, Marianna Land, Angela Lettiere, Lisa Salvatierra, Tina Samara, Stacy Sheppard; Head Coach Jeff Wallace, Asst. Coach Mark Guilbeau, Trainer Jennifer Smith, Student Asst. Sally Curtis
1995
ITA National Indoor Champions (Madison, Wis.)
Round-by-Round: 1st Round: def. No. 14 Wake Forest 5-3; Quarterfinals: def. No. 15 Notre Dame 6-0; Semifinals: def. No. 11 Indiana 6-0; Finals: def. No. 7 UCLA 5-4 Noteworthy: Georgia’s doubles play was a key as the Wake Forest and UCLA matches were split 3-3 after singles. Team Members Michelle Anderson, Anne Chauzu, Kappy Kellett, Marianna Land, Jane Reid, Lisa Salvatierra, Stacy Sheppard, Tina Samara, Nadine van de Walle, Head Coach Jeff Wallace, Asst. Coaches Mark Guilbeau, Debbie Beck, Trainer Lisa Kanter
2002
ITA National Indoor Champions ( Madison, Wis.)
Round-by-Round: 1st Round: def. No. 21 Baylor 6-1; Quarterfinals: def. No. 6 Tennessee 4-3; Semifinals: def. No. 1 Stanford 4-3; Finals: def. No. 4 Vanderbilt 4-1 Noteworthy: Georgia trailed Tennessee 3-1 in the quarterfinals but roared back for a 4-3 win...In the semifinals, Georgia snapped Stanford’s 35-match winning streak. Team Members Agata Cioroch, Lori Grey, Tina Hojnik, Jeanette Mattsson, Anne Nguyen, Mariel Verban Head Coach Jeff Wallace, Vol. Asst. Coach Marc Gallant, Trainer Angela Laham, Asst. Coach Debbie Beck In 2009, the ITA National Team Indoor Championships field expanded to 60-teams with first and second round action scattered across the country as part of the ITA Kick-Off Weekend, four-team brackets on campus sites. Georgia is 18-0 during ITA Kick-Off Weekend in Athens and 1-1 on the road (at UNC in 2011). Also since 2009, the ITA has named an All-Tournament Team at the national event along with a Most Outstanding Player (MOP) award. Georgia’s Chelsey Gullickson received the inaugural MOP award (2009). Bulldogs who have been selected to the All-Tournament Team include Gullickson at No. 1 singles and Naoko Ueshima at No. 5 (2009), Lilly Kimbell/Maho Kowase at No. 3 doubles (2012), Silvia Garcia at No. 4 (2013), Hannah King at No. 5 and Caroline Brinson at No. 6 (2015), Garcia/Brinson at No. 2 doubles (2016), and Katarina Jokic/Mariana Gould (2018).
41
All-Time NCAA Tournament Results Georgia’s Record in the NCAA Championships (79-30; NCAA Champions: 1994, 2000)
Alabama..................... 2-0 Arizona State............. 1-0 Arkansas.................... 0-1 Auburn........................ 1-0 Baylor......................... 2-0 Boise State................. 1-0 California.................... 5-2 Central Florida............ 1-0 Clemson..................... 2-2
Coastal Carolina......... 1-0 College of Charleston.1-0 Charleston Southern.. 1-0 Duke........................... 3-3 Elon............................ 1-0 Florida........................ 2-3 Florida State............... 1-0 Fresno State............... 1-0 Furman....................... 1-0
Georgia Tech.............. 1-0 Georgia State............. 1-0 Harvard....................... 1-0 Indiana....................... 4-0 Kansas........................ 1-0 Kentucky..................... 1-0 Marist......................... 1-0 Maryland-Balt. County...... 1-0 Miami......................... 2-0
Michigan.................... 1-0 Mississippi State....... 2-0 Ohio State.................. 1-0 Oklahoma State......... 1-1 North Carolina State.. 1-0 North Florida.............. 1-0 Pepperdine................. 1-1 Quinnipiac.................. 1-0 Samford...................... 1-0
South Alabama.......... 2-0 South Carolina........... 5-0 South Carolina State.. 3-0 Southern California.... 4-0 SMU........................... 1-0 Stanford..................... 3-11 Tennessee.................. 2-0 Texas.......................... 2-0 Trinity.......................... 1-0
UCLA.......................... 1-1 Vanderbilt................... 0-3 Wake Forest............... 1-0 William & Mary......... 2-1 Winthrop.................... 2-0 Yale............................ 1-0
NCAA Team Competition
FIRST ROUND QUARTERFINALS SEMIFINALS FINALS 1987 - Los Angeles, Calif. (Host: UCLA) - Final Ranking: No. 6 (First Year of Tournament) Miami (W, 5-4) Trinity (W, 5-4) SMU (W, 5-3) Stanford (L, 5-1) 1988 - Los Angeles, Calif. (Host: UCLA) - Final Ranking: No. 7 Indiana (W, 6-0) Stanford (L, 5-3) 1989 - Gainesville, Fla. (Host: Florida) - Final Ranking: No. 4 Texas (W, 5-1) Cal (W, 5-4) Stanford (L, 6-0) 1990 - Gainesville, Fla. (Host: Florida) - Final Ranking: No. 6 Oklahoma State (5-1) Stanford (L, 6-0) 1991 - Stanford, Calif. (Host: Stanford) - Final Ranking: No. 4 Indiana (W, 6-0) Pepperdine (W, 5-1) Stanford (L, 5-1) 1992 - Stanford, Calif. (Host: Stanford) - Final Ranking: No. 5 Duke (L, 5-4) 1993 - Gainesville, Fla. (Host: Florida) - Final Ranking: No. 7 Indiana (W, 5-3) Stanford (L, 5-1) 1994 - Athens, Ga. (Host: Georgia) - NATIONAL CHAMPIONS - Final Ranking: No. 1 Southern Cal (W, 5-2) Duke (W, 5-0) Cal (W, 5-3) Stanford (W, 5-4) 1995 - Malibu, Calif. (Host: Pepperdine) - Final Ranking: No. 3 South Carolina (W, 5-4) Duke (W, 5-4) Florida (L, 5-0) 1996 - Columbia, S.C. (Regional Host Site) 1st Rnd: Miami (Fla.) (W, 5-2) Reg. Semi: Tennessee (W, 5-3) Reg. Final: Clemson (L, 5-4) 1997 - Stanford, Calif. (Host: Stanford) - Final Ranking: No. 6 William & Mary (L, 5-0) 1998 - Notre Dame, Ind. (Host: Notre Dame) - Final Ranking: No. 4 Kansas (W, 5-3) William & Mary (W, 5-2) Florida (L, 5-1) Starting in 1999, NCAA Field Expanded From 16 To 64 Teams With 1st/2nd Rounds at Campus Sites and then designated Finals Site Features Round of 16-Championship FIRST ROUND SECOND ROUND ROUND OF 16 QUARTERFINALS SEMIFINALS FINALS 1999 - 1st/2nd Round Host: Georgia - Championship Site: Gainesville, Fla. (Host: Florida) - Final Ranking: No. 5 Central Florida (W, 5-0) Miss. State (W, 5-0) South Carolina (W, 5-0) Cal (L, 5-4) 2000 - 1st/2nd Round Host: Georgia - Championship Site: Malibu, Calif. (Host: Pepperdine) - NATIONAL CHAMPIONS - Final Ranking: No. 1 Furman (W, 5-0) Ohio State (W, 5-0) South Alabama (W, 5-1) Southern Cal (W, 5-1) Florida (W, 5-2) Stanford (W, 5-4) 2001 - 1st/2nd Round Host: Georgia - Championship Site: Stone Mountain, Ga. (Host: Georgia State) - Final Ranking: No. 3 Coastal Carolina (W, 4-0) Miss. State (W, 4-0) Baylor (W, 5-0) Southern Cal (W, 4-0) Vanderbilt (L, 4-2) 2002 - 1st/2nd Round Host: Georgia - Championship Site: Stanford, Calif. (Host: Stanford) - Final Ranking: No. 3 Winthrop (W, 4-0) South Alabama (W, 4-3) Cal (W, 4-1) UCLA (W, 4-2) Stanford (L, 4-0) 2003 - 1st/2nd Round Host: Oklahoma - Championship Site: Gainesville, Fla. (Host: Florida) - Final Ranking: No. 7 UMBC (W, 4-0) Alabama (W, 4-1) Kentucky (W, 4-0) Stanford (W, 4-0) 2004 - 1st/2nd Round Host: Georgia - Championship Site: Athens, Ga. (Host: Georgia) - Final Ranking: No. 7 Samford (W, 4-0) Georgia Tech (W, 4-0) Fresno State (W, 4-2) Vanderbilt (L, 4-2) 2005 - 1st/2nd Round Host: Georgia - Championship Site: Athens, Ga. (Host: Georgia) - Final Ranking: No. 9 Quinnipiac (W, 4-0) South Carolina (W, 4-0) Cal (W, 4-2) Stanford (L, 4-1) 2006 - 1st/2nd Round Host: Vanderbilt - Championship Site: Stanford, Ca. (Host: Stanford) - Final Ranking: No. 25 Indiana (W, 4-1) Vanderbilt (L, 4-2) 2007 - 1st/2nd Round Host: Georgia - Championship Site: Athens, Ga. (Host: Georgia) - Final Ranking: No. 4 South Carolina State (W, 4-0) Auburn (W, 4-0) William & Mary (W, 4-2) Cal (W, 4-1) 2008 - 1st/2nd Round Host: Georgia - Championship Site: Tulsa, Okla. (Host: Tulsa) - Final Ranking: No. 8 Yale (W, 4-0) South Carolina (W, 4-0) Arkansas (L, 4-2) 2009 - 1st/2nd Round Host: Georgia - Championship Site: College Station, Texas (Host: Texas A&M) - Final Ranking: No. 3 South Carolina State (W, 4-0) Boise State (W, 4-0) Florida (W, 4-2) South Carolina (W, 4-3) Duke (L, 5-2) 2010 - 1st/2nd Round Host: Clemson, S.C. - Championship Site: Athens, Ga. (Host: Georgia) - Final Ranking: No. 18 Harvard (W, 4-0) Clemson (L, 4-2) 2011 - 1st/2nd Round Host: Georgia - Championship Site: Stanford, Ca., (Host: Stanford) - Final Ranking: No. 8 Marist (W, 4-0) Alabama (W, 4-0) Cal (W, 4-3) Stanford (L, 4-0) 2012 - 1st/2nd Round Host: Georgia - Championship Site: Athens, Ga. (Host: Georgia) - Final Ranking: No. 7 College of Charleston (W, 4-0) Clemson (W, 4-3) Texas (W, 4-0) Duke (L, 4-2) 2013 - 1st/2nd Round Host: Georgia - Championship Site: Champaign, Ill. (Host: Illinois) - Final Ranking: No. 5 Winthrop (W, 4-0) Arizona State (W, 4-0) Clemson (W, 4-2) Stanford (L, 4-1) 2014 - 1st/2nd Round Host: Georgia - Championship Site: Athens, Ga. (Host: Georgia) - Final Ranking: No. 4 Elon (W, 4-0) Florida State (W, 4-0) Southern California (W, 4-3) Florida (L, 4-1) 2015 - 1st/2nd Round Host: Georgia - Championship Site: Waco, Texas (Host: Baylor) - Final Ranking: No. 5 Charleston Southern (W, 4-0) Duke (W, 4-0) Michigan (W, 4-2) Stanford (W, 4-1) UCLA (L, 4-1) 2016 - 1st/2nd Round Host: Georgia - Championship Site: Tulsa, Okla. (Host: Tulsa) - Final Ranking: No. 7 North Florida (W, 4-0) Baylor (W, 4-0) Okla. State (L, 4-0) 2017 - 1st/2nd Round Host: Georgia - Championship Site: Athens, Ga. (Host: Georgia) - Final Ranking: No. 6 South Carolina State (W, 4-0) North Carolina State (W, 4-0) Pepperdine (L, 4-3)
42
All-Time NCAA Tournament Results NCAA Team Competition (continued from page 40)
FIRST ROUND SECOND ROUND ROUND OF 16 QUARTERFINALS SEMIFINALS FINALS 2018 - 1st/2nd Round Host: Georgia - Championship Site: Winston-Salem, N.C. (Host: Wake Forest) - Final Ranking: No. 7 Georgia State (W, 4-0) Wake Forest (W, 4-0) South Carolina (W, 4-3) Stanford (L, 4-0)
NCAA Doubles Competition
FIRST ROUND SECOND ROUND QUARTERFINALS SEMIFINALS FINALS 1983 - Nancy Cohen/Lisa Spain L, 6-2, 6-4 (Burgin/Gates, Stanford) 1984 - Alice Reen/Lisa Spain W, 6-3, 4-6, 6-2 (Wood/Rudd, Rice) L, 6-4, 6-3 (MacGregor/Howell, San Diego State) 1986 - Jane Cohodes/Alice Reen L, 6-4, 7-5 (Fletcher/Finerman, Cal) 1988 - Lisa Apanay/Stacey Schefflin W, 7-5, 6-7 (6), 7-6 (4) (Chambers/Neil, Illinois) L, 6-4, 7-5 (Campbell/Marshall, Oklahoma) 1989 - Shannon McCarthy/Stacey Schefflin W, 7-6 (9), 6-1 (Amend/Jonkowsky, Arizona State) L, 6-3, 6-3 (Finerman/Albano, Cal) 1990 - Shannon McCarthy/Stacey Schefflin W, 6-1, 6-2 (Lane/Iiorkowski, Boston College) W, 6-3, 6-4 (Amend/Glitz, Arizona State) W, 6-1, 6-3 (Gilchrist/Plautz, Texas) L, 6-3, 6-3 (Birch/Graham, Stanford) 1990 - Caryn Moss/Jill Waldman L, 3-6, 6-4, 6-4 (Booth/Waniek, Oklahoma State) 1991 - Angela Lettiere/Shannon McCarthy L, 6-1, 5-7, 6-4 (Bergan/Rojohn, Arizona State) 1992 - Shawn McCarthy/Stacy Sheppard W, 6-4, 4-6, 6-1 (Salvatierra/Stevens, Utah) W, 6-3, 6-4 (Barone/Collantes, Ole Miss) L, 6-2, 7-5 (McKeon/Richards, San Diego) 1993 - Anne Chauzu/Angela Lettiere W, 3-6, 6-2, 6-3 (Cioffi/Geiger, Arizona State) L, 1-6, 6-3, 6-4 (Guenther/van der Merwe, William & Mary) 1994 - Tina Samara/Stacy Sheppard W, 6-1, 4-6, 6-4 (Poruri/Schlukebir, Stanford) L, 6-2, 6-3 (Bougnol/Piquemal, Ole Miss) 1995 - Tina Samara/Stacy Sheppard W, 6-2, 6-3 (Gevers/Villarroel, S. Alabama) W, 6-4, 6-3 (Italiano/Schmitt, USC) W, 1-6, 7-6 (5), 6-4 (Bleszynski/Schlukebir, Stanford) L, 6-3, 1-6, 6-2 (Phebus/Starrett, UCLA) 1996 - Michelle Anderson/Anne Chauzu L, 6-4, 3-6, 6-1 (Scott/Shasby, Stanford) 1997 - Michelle Anderson/Marissa Catlin W, 6-2, 6-4 (Maes/Pietrucha, Arizona) W, 6-3, 6-3 (Basica/Green, Florida) W, 6-4, 6-3 (Csapo/Svedenhov, Pepperdine) W, 7-6 (5), 2-6, 6-1 (Bleszynski/Scott, Stanford) L, 6-2, 3-6, 6-2 (Buth/Nickitas, Florida) 1999 - Vanessa Castellano/Marissa Catlin W, 6-0, 6-2 (Fernandez/Penalvo, Marquette) W, 6-0, 6-1 (Ondrejkova/Puflerova, S. Alabama) W, 6-3, 6-4 (Dasso/Hall, Notre Dame) W, 6-1, 6-2 (Lesenarova/Valkyova, USC) L, 4-6, 7-5, 6-1 (Augustus/Jensen, Cal) 2000 - Marissa Catlin/Lori Grey W, 6-2, 7-5 (Nedelkova/Ondrisova, VCU) W, 7-5, 6-2 (Colosio/Mores) W, 7-5, 6-7 (4), 6-0 (Bergman/Bielik, Wake Forest) W, 7-5, 6-3 (Ondrekjova/Puflerova, S. Alabama) L, 4-6, 6-1, 7-5 (Curren/Jensen, Cal) 2000 - Esther Knox/Aarthi Venkatesan W, 7-5, 6-3 (Castellvi/Ojeda, Tennessee) L, 5-7, 6-3, 6-2 (Ashley/Irvin, Stanford) 2001 - Aarthi Venkatesan/Lori Grey L, 6-3, 6-1 (Gough/Regnier, Arizona) 2002 - Agata Cioroch/Lori Grey L, 7-5, 6-3 (Boyanovich/Radman, South Carolina) 2003 - Agata Cioroch/Lori Grey W, 6-1, 4-6, 6-1 (Dawaf/Rotondi, Florida) W, 6-4, 6-1 (Smekodub/Kuhn, Tulane) L, 6-4, 6-2 (Fusano/Kops-Jones, Cal) 2004 - Agata Cioroch/Shadisha Robinson L, 6-3, 7-5 (Grier/Rush, Northwestern) 2005 - Caroline Basu/Shadisha Robinson W, 6-4, 6-3 (Cema/Covello, Baylor) L, 6-3, 5-7, 6-4 (Barnes/Burdette, Stanford) 2007 - Darya Ivanov/Yvette Hyndman L, 6-4, 6-4 (Dulgheru/Kosakowski, Pepperdine) 2009 - Chelsey Gullickson/Nadja Gilchrist L, 7-6 (5), 6-3 (Bek/Hadziselimovic, Clemson) 2010 - Chelsey Gullickson/Nadja Gilchrist W, 6-2, 6-2 (Beelen/Molnar, Iowa) W, 1-6, 6-3, 6-4 (Boxx/Nijssen, Ole Miss) W, 6-2, 6-1 (Frilling/Krisik, Notre Dame) L, 2-6, 7-5, 7-6 (6) (Pluskota/Whoriskey, Tennessee) 2011 - Chelsey Gullickson/Kate Fuller W, 6-3, 6-2 (Bolender/Muresan, Michigan) W, 6-4, 6-4 (Fraser/Tomljanovic, Virginia) L, 6-3, 7-6(4) (Barte/Burdette, Stanford) 2012 - Chelsey Gullickson/Nadja Gilchrist W, 6-2, 7-5 (Capra/Kahan, Duke) W, 4-6, 7-6(0), 6-1 (Bektas/Bolender, Michigan) W, 6-1, 6-2 (Juricova/Susyani, Cal) W, 7-6 (5), 6-4 (Dolehide/Montez, UCLA) L, 6-2, 6-4 (Burdette/Gibbs, Stanford) 2013 - Kate Fuller/Silvia Garcia W, 3-6, 6-4, 6-0 (Beazant/Harmath, Rice) W, 6-4, 7-5 (Adams/Kilgo, Texas Tech) L, 7-6 (4), 7-5 (Guarachi/Macfarlane, Alabama) 2014 - Kate Fuller/Silvia Garcia L, 6-2, 6-2 (Albuquerque/Riobueno, Miami) 2014 - Lauren Herring/Maho Kowase W, 6-2, 6-4 (Goldfeld/Smith, Duke) W, 5-7, 6-2, 6-3 (Barnett/Corning, Northwestern) W, 6-3, 6-1 (Kisialeva/Shankle, Baylor) W, 6-4, 7-5 (Burgmans/Flickinger, Auburn) L, 6-1, 6-0 (Jansen/Routliffe, Alabama) 2015 - Lauren Herring/Ellen Perez W, 6-2, 6-2 (Austin/Preston, Arizona) L, 5-7, 6-3, 3-6 (Austin/Keegen, Florida) 2016 - Mariana Gould/Ellen Perez L, 6-4, 6-4 (Generette/Shankle, Baylor) 2017 - Ellen Perez/Caroline Brinson L, 5-7, 6-1, 10-6 (Di Lorenzo/Kowase, Ohio State) 2017 - Elena Christofi/Kennedy Shaffer W, 6-3, 6-4 (Aney/Carter, North Carolina) W, 6-4, 6-3 (Chatt/Lipp, Northwestern) L, 1-6, 6-2, 11-9 (Foster/Valle Costa, LSU) 2018 - Morgan Coppoc/Elena Christofi L, 0-6, 6-2, 1-0 (10-7) (Proctor/Kauffman, Winthrop) 2018 - Mariana Gould/Katarina Jokic W, 6-2,6-3 (Kobayashi/Wong, Washington) L, 6-2, 6-2 (Sanford/Daavettila, UNC)
2019 Georgia Women’s Tennis
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All-Time NCAA Tournament Results NCAA Singles Competition
FIRST ROUND SECOND ROUND ROUND OF 16 QUARTERFINALS SEMIFINALS FINALS 1983 - Lisa Spain W, 6-4, 3-6, 6-4 (Foreman, Clemson) W, 6-0, 7-5 (Blumentritt, Rice) L, 6-0, 6-2 (Allen, Trinity) 1984 - Lisa Spain - NATIONAL CHAMPION W, 2-6, 6-4, 6-2 (Linstrom, N.E. Louisiana) W, 6-2, 6-3 (Elliott, Trinity) W, 6-4, 7-5 (Jung, Pepperdine) W, 7-5, 7-5 (Minter, UCLA) W, 3-6, 7-6 (10), 6-3 (Rush, Trinity) W, 7-5, 3-6, 6-3 (Gates, Stanford) 1986 - Jane Cohodes L, 6-1, 6-4 (Prah, Cal) 1987 - Laurie Friedland W, 7-6 (5), 6-2 (Hahn, Kentucky) L, 4-6, 7-5, 6-1 (Savides, Stanford) 1988 - Liz Alexander W, 6-2, 6-0 (Wood, Oklahoma State) L, 6-0, 6-0 (Stafford, Florida) 1988 - Stacy Schefflin L, 6-3, 6-0 (Norwood, USC) 1989 - Shannan McCarthy W, 6-2, 2-6, 6-2 (Larking, San Diego) W, 4-6, 7-5, 6-0 (Foltz, Indiana) W, 7-6 (5), 6-2 (Albano, Cal) L, 7-6 (4), 6-1 (Porter, Pepperdine) 1989 - Stacy Schefflin W, 6-0, 6-2 (Sampras, UCLA) W, 6-1, 6-1 (Reece, Indiana) L, 6-4, 4-6, 6-2 (Santrock, SMU) 1989 - Liz Alexander W, 1-6, 7-5, 6-2 (Jockosky, Arizona State) L, 6-1, 6-1 (Helgeson, Pepperdine) 1989 - Caryn Moss W, 6-2, 6-4 (Sloan, Brown) L, 6-2, 7-5 (5) (Emmons, UCLA) 1989 - Jill Waldman L, 6-2, 6-3 (Yates, Kentucky) 1990 - Shannan McCarthy W, 6-3, 6-1 (Booth, Oklahoma State) L, 6-3, 3-6, 6-1 (Hamers, Kansas) 1990 - Caryn Moss W, 6-2, 6-4 (Carotenuto, U.S. Inter.) L, 6-4, 6-1 (Green, Stanford) 1990 - Stacy Schefflin W, 6-3, 6-3 (Durak, William & Mary) W, 6-1, 6-3 (Denforth, Florida) L, 6-4, 6-0 (Graham, Stanford) 1990 - Jill Waldman W, 6-2, 6-4 (Jonkowsky, Arizona State) L, 6-2, 6-1 (Lozzano, Cal) 1991 - Angela Lettiere L, 6-4, 6-3 (Kuttler, Florida) 1991 - Shannan McCarthy - NATIONAL SEMIFINALIST W, 6-1, 6-3 (Sampras, UCLA) W 6-1, 6-1 (Verbruggen, Miami) W, 7-6 (3), 7-6 (5) (Vigueira, Cal) W, 6-2, 5-7, 7-5 (Farley, Florida) L, 4-6, 6-2, 6-3 (Birch, Stanford) 1991 - Tonya Bogdonas L, 6-0, 6-2 (Mazzotta, Miami) 1991 - Laura Kimel W, 6-3, 6-0 (Yates, Arizona) L, 3-6, 6-1, 6-4 (Exum, Duke) 1992 - Shannan McCarthy - NATIONAL RUNNER-UP W, 6-2, 6-0 (Sirianni, Oklahoma State) W, 6-2, 6-4 (Schmitt, USC) W, 6-2, 6-4 (Reece, Indiana) W, 6-0, 6-3 (Lloyd, Florida) W, 6-2, 6-3 (Poruri, Stanford) L, 6-3, 6-3 (Raymond, Florida) 1992 - Shawn McCarthy W, 6-2, 6-0 (Abe, Cal) W, 3-6, 6-4, 6-1 (Gurney, North Carolina) L, 6-4, 6-2 (de Lone, Harvard) 1993 - Anne Chauzu W, 6-2, 6-3 (Poulos, Cal) L, 6-1, 6-2 (Farley, Florida) 1993 - Stacy Sheppard L, 7-5, 7-5 (Mazzotta, Miami) 1994 - Stacy Sheppard W, 6-4, 3-6, 7-5 (Olejar, Pepperdine) L, 6-1, 2-6, 6-3 (Tzvetkova, Clemson) 1994 - Angela Lettiere - NATIONAL CHAMPION W, 6-4, 6-0 (Callen, Virginia) W, 6-2, 6-2 (Hunt, N.C. State) W, 7-5, 6-1 (Poulos, Cal) W, 6-1, 6-0 (Chi, UCLA) W, 7-6 (6), 6-1 (Collantes, Ole Miss) W, 7-6 (4), 6-2 (Phebus, UCLA) 1995 - Michelle Anderson L, 6-3, 6-2 (Davidson, Cal) 1995 - Anne Chauzu L, 6-2, 6-4 (Simkova, USC) 1995 - Tina Samara L, 6-4, 3-6, 7-6 (6) (Bash, Kentucky) 1995 - Stacy Sheppard - NATIONAL SEMIFINALIST W, 2-6, 6-2, 6-2 (Lyons, Duke) W, 4-6, 6-2, 7-6 (5) (Okada, UCSB) W, 6-2, 6-4 (Chi, UCLA) W, 7-5, 6-4 (Viollet, Miami) L, 6-1, 6-1 (Pace, Texas) 1996 - Michelle Anderson W, 6-3, 4-6, 6-4 (Petrov, Pepperdine) L, 6-4, 6-4 (Hall, Notre Dame) 1996 - Anne Chauzu W, 6-3, 6-4 (Sanderson, Duke) L, 6-4, 6-2 (Hunt, Kansas) 1997 - Michelle Anderson L, 6-2, 0-1, ret. (Harris, Wake Forest) 1997 - Marissa Catlin W, 6-7 (5), 6-3, 6-4 (Lepsi, Tennessee) W, 7-6 (4), 6-4 (Merchant, Florida) L, 6-3, 7-5 (Lesenarova, San Diego) 1998 - Vanessa Castellano W, 7-5, 1-6, 6-3 (Knox, Cal) L, 7-6(4), 6-2 (Nickitas, Florida) 1998 - Aarthi Venkatesan L, 3-6, 7-6(3), 7-5 (Boyd, USC) 1999 - Vanessa Castellano - NATIONAL SEMIFINALIST W, 7-5, 6-2 (Warkentin, USC) W, 6-3, 6-2 (Emami, Kentucky) W, 7-5, 6-2 (Webb, Duke) W, 6-3, 6-1 (Pavlidou, Arkansas) L, 6-2, 6-4 (Irvin, Stanford) 1999 - Aarthi Venkatesan W, 6-3, 6-0 (Dascoli, Ohio State) W, 6-4, 6-1 (Cooper, UCLA) L, 6-2, 4-6, 7-6 (4) (Huber, USC) 1999 - Marissa Catlin W, 7-5, 7-6(5) (Giraldo, Clemson) W, 7-5, 6-1 (Friganovic, New Mexico) L, 6-4, 6-3 (Valkyova, San Diego)
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All-Time NCAA Tournament Results FIRST ROUND SECOND ROUND ROUND OF 16 QUARTERFINALS SEMIFINALS FINALS 1999 - Esther Knox W, 6-2, 6-3 (Griffin, Maryland) W, 6-4, 6-3 (Ditty, Vanderbilt) L, 6-2, 4-6, 6-2 (Irvin, Stanford) 2000 - Marissa Catlin W, 6-2, 6-0, (Piski, Auburn) L, 6-2, 6-0 (Granville, Stanford) 2000 - Lori Grey W, 6-2, 6-2 (Nasser, Northwesterm) W, 6-4, 7-6(1) (Hazlett, Florida) L, 6-4, 6-3 (Colosio, LSU) 2000 - Esther Knox W, 6-3, 6-4 (Chiew, BYU) L, 6-4, 6-3 (Irvin, Stanford) 2000 - Aarthi Venkatesan - NATIONAL SEMIFINALIST W, 6-2, 6-0 (Blau, Arizona) W, 7-6(3), 3-6, 6-3 (Frey, Ole Miss) W, 6-1, 7-6(3) (Bielik, Wake Forest) W, 7-6(7), 3-6, 6-0 (Lehnhoff, Florida) L, 6-1, 6-0 (Granville, Stanford) 2001 - Aarthi Venkatesan W, 6-3, 6-3 (Tokuda, Stanford) L, 2-6, 6-3, 6-3 (Ditty, Vanderbilt) 2001 - Anne Nguyen W, 5-7, 7-6, 6-4 (Miller, Duke) L, 4-6, 7-5, 6-2 (Engel, Arizona State) 2001 - Mariel Verban W, 4-6, 6-3, 6-3 (Parekh, Baylor) L, 6-4, 6-1 (Kalvaria, Stanford) 2002 - Agata Cioroch W, 6-2, 6-2 (Dumitrescu, Florida State) W, 6-0, 6-1 (Pillay, Tulsa) L, 6-0, 6-4 (Lastra, Stanford) 2003 - Agata Cioroch - NATIONAL SEMIFINALIST W, 6-4, 6-2 (Perianu, Oklahoma) W, 6-3, 6-4 (Pinchbeck, North Carolina) W, 6-2, 6-4 (Sumantri, Washington) W, 6-7(2), 6-2, 6-2 (Kops-Jones, Cal) L, 7-5, 6-2 (Castellvi, Tennessee) 2003 - Anne Nguyen L, 6-1, 6-2 (Encina, Tennessee) 2004 - Agata Cioroch L, 4-6, 6-3, 6-4 (Karnaukhova, Sacramento State) 2004 - Shadisha Robinson W, 6-3, 3-6, 6-2 (Aburto, TCU) L, 5-7, 7-5, 6-4 (Kalsarieva, Kentucky) 2005 - Shadisha Robinson L, 6-3, 6-4 (Yelsey, Stanford) 2005 - Natalie Frazier L, 6-3, 6-2 (Walter, Baylor) 2006 - Natalie Frazier L, score unknown (Carleton, Duke) 2007 - Natalie Frazier W, 6-1, 6-2 (Cerna, Baylor) W, 7-5, 6-3 (Zheltova, Sacramento State) W, 6-0, 5-7, 7-6(6) (Logar, Stanford) L, 6-4, 6-4 (Falcon, LSU) 2007 - Monika Dancevic W, 6-0, 4-6, 6-2 (Cohen, Miami) 2008 - Kelley Hyndman W, 6-3, 2-6, 7-6(3) (Voelker, Denver) L, 2-6, 6-2, 6-2 (Zemenova, Baylor) 2008 - Yvette Hyndman L, 5-7, 6-3, 6-3 (Uvarova, VCU) 2009 - Chelsey Gullickson - NATIONAL SEMIFINALIST W, 6-2, 6-4 (Kissell, Miami) W, 6-3, 6-1 (Abdala, Arizona State) W, 6-3, 7-6(5) (Juricova, Cal) W, 6-1, 6-4 (Mosolova, Northwestern) L, 6-4, 5-7, 6-4 (Vallverdu, Miami) 2009 - Nadja Gilchrist L, 6-2, 6-4 (Andersson, Cal) 2009 - Yvette Hyndman L, 6-3, 6-3 (Schnack, UCLA) 2010 - Chelsey Gullickson - NATIONAL CHAMPION W, 6-1, 6-1 (Rubesova, N.W. State) W, 7-6(3), 6-4 (Marand, North Carolina) W, 6-1, 6-4 (Will, Florida) W, 6-2, 6-4 (Falconi, Ga. Tech) W, 7-6(6), 6-3 (Barte, Stanford) W, 6-3, 7-6(7) (Juricova, Cal) 2011 - Chelsey Gullickson W, 4-6, 6-3, 6-2 (Wong, Clemson) W, 3-6, 6-3, 6-3 (Muresan, Michigan) W, 6-1, 2-6, 6-2 (De Bruycker, North Carolina) L, 6-3, 6-0 (Juricova, Cal) 2012 - Chelsey Gullickson L, 6-3, 6-2 (Santamaria, USC) 2012 - Maho Kowase L, 2-6, 7-6 (5), 6-1 (Ellis, Texas) 2013 - Lauren Herring W, 6-1, 3-6, 6-3 (Turvy, Northwestern) W, 6-4, 6-2 (Scandalis, USC) W, 6-0, 6-2 (Hardebeck, Stanford) L, 6-2, 6-2 (Weatherholt, Nebraska) 2013 - Maho Kowase W, 4-6, 7-6 (7-5), 6-3 (Smih, UC-Irvine) L, 6-2, 6-1 (Sanchez, Texas A&M) 2014 - Silvia Garcia W, 6-2, 6-2 (Niu, Northwestern) W, 6-0, 6-7(6), 7-5 (Davidson, Stanford) L, 7-6(4), 6-2 (Capra, Duke) 2014 - Lauren Herring W, 6-1, 6-2 (Vyskocilova, Tulane) L, 7-6(4), 7-5 (Zhao, Stanford) 2014 - Maho Kowase L, 6-4, 6-3 (Carter, North Carolina) 2015 - Lauren Herring L, 6-1, 6-4 (Lohan, Miami) 2016 - Caroline Brinson L, 6-3, 6-2 (Manasse, California) 2016 - Ellen Perez W, 6-0,6-4 (Vaidya, Columbia) L, 6-3, 7-5 (Adamovic, Okla. State) 2016 - Kennedy Shaffer W, 6-1, 6-4 (Kay, UNC) W, 6-3, 3-6, 7-6(4) (Yurovsky, Michigan) W, 6-4,3-6,6-2 (Ip, Rice) L, 6-1,6-4 (Stefani, Pepperdine) 2017 - Elena Christofi L, 7-5, 7-6 (10-8) (Marker, Arizona) 2017 - Ellen Perez W, 6-3, 6-3 (Guerin, Wake Forest) W, 7-5, 6-3 (Fung, Washington) L, 6-4, 7-6 (7-3) (Danilina, Florida) 2017 - Kennedy Shaffer L,7-5, 6-3 (Daavettila, North Carolina)
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All-Time NCAA Tournament Results NCAA Singles Competition (continued from page 45)
FIRST ROUND SECOND ROUND ROUND OF 16 QUARTERFINALS SEMIFINALS FINALS 2018 - Katarina Jokic L, 7-5,4-6,6-4 (Sherif Ahmed, Pepperdine)
Super Regional Format Added to DI Tennis Modification to begin for 2019 championships January 19, 2017 | By Greg Johnson
A super regional format is coming to the Division I Men’s and Women’s Tennis Championships in 2019.
That year, the 16 teams advancing from first and second rounds of the tournament will participate in two-team super regionals on the campuses of the higher-seeded teams. The eight super regional winners for each gender will then advance to the finals site. The Division I Competition Oversight Committee supported the change Tuesday during its meeting at the NCAA Convention in Nashville, Tennessee.
Currently, teams advancing out of the second round move directly to the finals site. Part of the rationale for the change is to provide teams with another opportunity to generate local support and highlight their programs in a championship-caliber competition.
The Division I Men’s and Women’s Tennis Committee also believes the super regional round will address existing scheduling challenges presented by the current Division I Men’s and Women’s Tennis Championships format.
The number of teams advancing to the finals site will be reduced from 16 to eight per gender. That will in turn reduce the days of competition from six to four and eliminate the strain of completing eight matches on each of the first two days of competition. The format will also provide scheduling flexibility in the event of inclement weather.
In another change slated for the 2018 championships, the Division I Competition Oversight Committee will allow the tennis committee to place the unseeded teams (Nos. 17-64) geographically in the bracket rather than assign them in pods as is currently done.
The change followed a request from the Competition Oversight Committee last October that asked the tennis committee to either justify or consider modifying its bracketing policies and procedures that vary from the general principles established for all Division I team championships, excluding men’s and women’s basketball.
Through its research, the tennis committee determined that the tennis bracketing principles should be consistent with the general principles. The change will be beneficial for student-athletes, who will miss less class time and spend less time on the road.
Future Dates, Sites and Hosts
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May 16-25, 2019 DI M&W Tennis Championships
University of Central Florida on USTA National Campus in Lake Nona, Fla.
May 14-23, 2020 DI M&W Tennis Championships
Oklahoma State at the Greenwood Tennis Center in Stillwater, Okla.
May 20-29, 2021 DI M&W Tennis Championships
University of Central Florida on USTA National Campus in Lake Nona, Fla.
May 19-28, 2022 DI M&W Tennis Championships
Illinois at Atkins Tennis Center in Champaign, Ill.
SEC Regular Season Titles 2013 SEC CHAMPIONS 24-4, 11-1 (Left-Right): Former Graduate Manager Will Reynolds, Assistant Coach Drake Bernstein, Lauren Herring, Kate Fuller, Lilly Kimbell, Kelli Jordan, Maho Kowase, Ayaka Okuno, Silvia Garcia, Mia King, Head Coach Jeff Wallace, former Athletic Trainer Tara Martin
NINE
1983 1989 1990 1994 2000 2002 2007 2009 2013
(18-5, 11-1 SEC)
(24-4, 8-1 SEC)
(23-4, 11-1 SEC)
(27-2, 14-0 SEC)
(18-5, 11-0 SEC)
REGULAR SEASON CHAMPIONSHIPS
Georgia claimed its first SEC title, going 8-1 in the regular season and then sweeping through the league tournament in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. At the SEC Tournament, Georgia avenged its only league loss of the year, defeating Florida 5-4 in the final. For the secondstraight 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. 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. 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 Lady 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. 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. 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.
(26-2, 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.
(24-2, 10-1 SEC)
The Bulldogs returned to the top of the league in 2007 behind a 10-1 performance in the SEC. One of those 10 wins came against No. 1 Florida, the reigning SEC Champs. That victory catapulted the Bulldogs to the top ranking in the country for the first time since their last SEC Championship in 2002. Georgia went on the win the SEC Tournament as well, upending the five-time defending Gators once more. Senior Natalie Frazier was the tournament’s Most Valuable Player for her undefeated performance at the No. 1 slot. She was named to the All-SEC team as well along with Monika Dancevic, Yvette Hyndman and Darya Ivanov. Frazier, Hyndman and Ivanov became All-Americans as well.
(27-3, 10-1 SEC)
(24-4, 12-1 SEC) 2019 Georgia Women’s Tennis
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 All-SEC team along with freshmen Nadja Gilchrist and Chelsey Gullickson. The freshmen duo earned All-America honors too. 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.
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SEC Tournament History
1983 1994 2001 2007 2008 2009 2014
(18-5, 11-1 SEC)
Site: Tuscaloosa, Ala. *Used experimental dual match format before permanently moving to it in 2000.
Road to the Championship def. LSU, 6-3 def. Tennessee, 5-4 def. Florida, 5-4
Site: Fayetteville, Ark.
Road to the Championship def. Auburn, 5-0 def. Ole Miss, 5-1 def. Florida, 5-3
Site: Starkville, Miss.
Road to the Championship def. South Carolina, 4-3 def. Florida, 4-2 def. Tennessee, 4-1
(27-2, 14-0 SEC)
(23-5, 8-3 SEC) Site: Lexington, Ky.
Road to the Championship def. Auburn, 4-1 def. Tennessee, 4-1 def. Florida, 4-1
Site: Auburn, Ala.
Road to the Championship def. Kentucky, 4-1 def. Arkansas, 4-3 def. Florida, 4-3
(24-2, 10-1 SEC)
(22-5, 9-2 SEC) Site: Fayetteville, Ark.
Road to the Championship def. Alabama, 4-1 def. Florida, 4-2 def. Tennessee, 4-0
Site: Columbia, Mo.
Road to the Championship def. LSU, 4-0 def. Vanderbilt, 4-1 def. Alabama, 4-0
(27-3, 10-1 SEC)
(24-5, 11-2 SEC)
TOURNAMENT TITLES
SEVEN
In 2014, Lauren Herring and Maho Kowase helped lead Georgia to its first SEC Tournament title since 2009.
2014 SEC Tournament Champions
Georgia in the SEC Tournament Georgia’s SEC Tournament MVPs (The SEC began naming an MVP in 1997)
1997: Michelle Anderson 1998: Marissa Catlin 2001: Mariel Verban 2007: Natalie Frazier 2008: Kelley Hyndman 2009: Monika Dancevic 2014: Silvia Garcia 48
56-24 Record In SEC Tournament
The SEC Women’s Tennis Tournament has been held 28 times since 1982. The location rotates around the league. Georgia has played host to the event three times (1983, 1997, 2010). SEC Tournament Meetings Alabama..........................5-0 Arkansas.........................3-0 Auburn.............................4-1 Florida.............................6-12 Kentucky..........................4-2 LSU..................................6-0
Miss. State......................2-0 Ole Miss..........................7-3 South Carolina................4-2 Tennessee.......................12-2 Texas A&M......................1-0 Vanderbilt........................2-2
By the numbers... (Beginning in 1990)
First Round: 2-0 Quarterfinals: 24-5 Semifinals: 19-5 Finals: 6-13 Eastern Division Host Sites: 21-13 Western Division Host Sites: 29-9 In Athens: 2-2
National Honors
EXCELLING ON THE COURT Georgia in Grand Slams
11 Titles | 21 Finalists Singles (Seven Titles) 1983 Riviera/ITA All-American Championships: Lisa Spain (def. Heliane Steden (Southern California) 6-4, 6-3) 1984 NCAA Championships: Lisa Spain (def. Linda Gates (Stanford) 7-5, 3-6, 6-3) 1994 NCAA Championships: Angela Lettiere (def. Keri Phebus (UCLA) 7-6(4), 6-2) 2002 ITA National Indoor Championships: Agata Cioroch (def. Jewel Peterson (USC) 6-4, 6-3) 2003 ITA National Indoor Championships: Agata Cioroch (def. Anda Perianu (Oklahoma) 6-3, 6-1) 2010 NCAA Championships: Chelsey Gullickson (def. Jana Juricova (California) 6-3, 7-6(7)) 2018 ITA National Fall Championships: Katarina Jokic (def. Kate Fahey (Michigan) 6-3, 7-5) Grand Slam Singles Finalists National Clay Courts: Caryn Moss-1989, Shannan McCarthy-1990; Riviera All-American: Angela Lettiere-1993, Marissa Catlin-1997, Chelsey Gullickson-2009 Aarthi Venkatesan-2000; National Indoors: Shannan McCarthy-1991, Angela Lettiere-1994, Marissa Catlin-1999; NCAA Championships: Shannan McCarthy-1992. Doubles (Four Titles) 1994 National Clay Courts: Tina Samara and Stacy Sheppard (def. Erica O’Neill/Jana Strnadova (Syracuse) 6-3, 6-7(2), 6-3) 1994 National Indoors: Michelle Anderson and Angela Lettiere (def. Rebecca Jensen/Nora Koves (Kansas) 7-5, 6-1) 1998 National Clay Courts: Vanessa Castellano and Marissa Catlin (def. Celeste Frey/Marianna Eberle (Ole Miss) 6-0, 6-2) 1999 Rolex National Indoors: Vanessa Castellano and Marissa Catlin (def. Karen Goldstein/Vanessa Webb (Duke) 7-5, 6-3) Grand Slam Doubles Finalists National Clay Courts: Samara/Sheppard-1993; Riviera All-American: McCarthy/Schefflin-1989, Samara/Sheppard-1994, Castellano/Catlin-1997 National Indoors: Anderson/Chauzu-1996; NCAA Championships: Anderson/Catlin-1997, Castellano/Catlin-1999, Catlin/Grey-2000; Gilchrist/Gullickson-2012; Herring/Kowase-2014
Awards and Honors
Honda Award (3) 1984: Lisa Spain 1994: Angela Lettiere 1998: Marissa Catlin National Player of the Year (1) 1994: Angela Lettiere National Senior of the Year (3) 1990: Stacey Schefflin 1992: Shannan McCarthy 1994: Angela Lettiere Collegiate All-Star Team (23) 1992: Shannan McCarthy (S) 1994: Angela Lettiere (S/D), Michelle Anderson (D) 1995: Tina Samara (D), Stacy Sheppard (D) 1997: Michelle Anderson (D), Marissa Catlin (D) 1998: Marissa Catlin (S) 1999: Vanessa Castellano (D), Marissa Catlin (D) 2000: Marissa Catlin (D), Lori Grey (D), Aarthi Venkatesan (S) 2003: Lori Grey (D), Agata Cioroch (S/D) 2004: Agata Cioroch (S) 2005: Caroline Basu (D), Shadisha Robinson (D) 2010: Chelsey Gullickson (S) 2013: Kate Fuller (D), Silvia Garcia (D) 2014: Lauren Herring (D), Maho Kowase (D) USTA Collegiate Team (4) 1998: Marissa Catlin 1999:Marissa Catlin 2005: Shadisha Robinson 2007: Natalie Frazier National Player to Watch (4) 1989: Shannan McCarthy 1994: Angela Lettiere 1998: Marissa Catlin 2002: Agata Cioroch National Rookie of the Year (2) 1989: Shannan McCarthy 2009: Chelsey Gullickson NCAA Sportsmanship Award (1) 2013: Maho Kowase
2008: Kelley Hyndman, Kelley Moore, Naoko Ueshima 2009: Lara Fakhoury 2011: Kelli Jordan, Maho Kowase 2012: Kate Fuller, Lauren Herring, Alina Jerjomina, Kelli Jordan, Maho Kowase 2013: Kate Fuller, Lauren Herring, Maho Kowase, Makenzie Craft 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 Regional Senior of the Year (11) 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 Regional Rookie of the Year (7) 1989: Shannan McCarthy 1991: Angela Lettiere 2000: Lori Grey 2009: Chelsey Gullickson 2012: Lauren Herring 2017: Elena Christofi 2018: Katarina Jokic Regional Most Improved Senior (1) 2014: Lilly Kimbell Penn/ITA Player to Watch (5) 1993: Anne Chauzu; 1994: Michelle Anderson 2000: Aarthi Venkatesan; 2002: Agata Cioroch 2017: Ellen Perez ITA/Cissie Leary Award for Sportsmanship (2) 2010: Cameron Ellis 2014: Maho Kowase ITA/Arthur Ashe Award for Sportsmanship & Leadership (3) 2011: Cameron Ellis 2013: Kate Fuller 2017: Caroline Brinson
CoSIDA/GTE/Capital One Academic All-Americans (3) 1988: Lianna Bebeau 1990: Jill Waldman 2013-15: Lauren Herring (3x)
NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship (2) 1988: Lianna Bebeau 2015: Lauren Herring Volvo Tennis All-America Scholars (1988-92) (4) 1988: Lianna Bebeau 1989: Amila Fetahagic 1990: Jill Waldman 1991: Caryn Moss
ITA Awards
Katarina Jokic earned Georgia’s seventh grand slam singles title
2019 Georgia Women’s Tennis
ITA All-Academic Team and Scholar-Athletes (28) 2003: Douglas Wink 2005: Jitka Schonfelodva 2006: Kelly Sandefer
Angela Lettiere led Georgia to its first NCAA title in 1994 and became the second Bulldog in school history to win the NCAA singles crown.
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SEC And UGA Honors
ON THE COURT AND IN CLASS SEC Honors
SEC Player of the Year (6) 1994: Angela Lettiere 1997: Michelle Anderson 1998: Marissa Catlin 1999: Vanessa Castellano 2000: Aarthi Venkatesan 2014: Lauren Herring SEC Sportmanship Award (4) 1991: Shannan McCarthy 1992: Tonya Bogdonas 1997: Michelle Anderson 2013: Maho Kowase SEC Freshman of the Year (5) 2000: Lori Grey 2007: Yvette Hyndman 2009: Chelsey Gullickson 2012: Lauren Herring 2017: Elena Christofi 2018: Katarina Jokic SEC Academic Honor Roll (47 Bulldogs ->102 Awards) 1984: Jenny Thornton 1985: Susan Green, Jenny Thornton 1986: Lianna Bebeau, Susan Green, Jenny Thornton 1987: Lianna Bebeau, Lisa Apanay 1988: Elizabeth Alexander, Lisa Apanay, Lianna Bebeau, Jill Waldman 1989: Elizabeth Alexander, Lisa Apanay, Amila Fetahagic, Stacey Schefflin, Jill Waldman 1990: Shannan McCarthy, Shawn McCarthy, Caryn Moss, Stacey Schefflin, Jill Waldman 1991: Shannan McCarthy, Maria Salsgard 1992: Shannan McCarthy, Shawn McCarthy, Laura Kimel 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, Zoë Mellis 1999: Zoë Mellis 2000: Marissa Catlin, Esther Knox, Zoë Mellis 2001: Christa Grey 2002: Christa Grey 2003: Tina Hojnik, Alexandra Smith 2004: Agata Cioroch, Natalie Frazier, Jennifer Hodge, 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, Maho Kowase 2013: Kate Fuller, Lauren Herring, Kelli Jordan, Maho Kowase 2014: Kate Fuller, Lauren Herring, Maho Kowase 2015: Lauren Herring, Mia King, Caroline Brinson 2016: Caroline Brinson, Silvia Garcia, Laura Patterson, Ellen
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Perez, Kennedy Shaffer 2017: Caroline Brinson, Mariana Gould, Stephanie Grodecki, Laura Patterson, Ellen Perez 2018: Elena Christofi, Marta Gonzalez, Mariana Gould, Laura Patterson SEC FIRST-YEAR ACADEMIC HONOR ROLL (Began in ‘03) (12)
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 SEC COMMUNITY SERVICE TEAM (Began in ‘04) (6) 2004: Alexandra Smith 2005-07: Natalie Frazier 2008: Kelley Moore 2009-10: Cameron Ellis 2011-14: Kate Fuller 2016-17: Caroline Brinson 2018: Laura Patterson All-SEC Honors (47 Bulldogs -> 104 Awards) (Position/At-Large distinction occurred from 1991-2005) 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, Jill Waldman 1990: Caryn Moss, Shannan McCarthy, Stacey Schefflin 1991: Angela Lettiere (S), Shannan McCarthy 1992: Shannan McCarthy, Shawn McCarthy, Stacy Sheppard 1993: Anne Chauzu (D), Angela Lettiere (D), Stacy Sheppard 1994: Michelle Anderson (S/D), Anne Chauzu (D), Brooke Galardi (S), Angela Lettiere (S/D), Lisa Salvatierra (D), Tina Samara (D), Stacy Sheppard (S/D) 1995: Michelle Anderson (S/D), Anne Chauzu (S/D), Tina Samara (D), Stacy Sheppard (S/D) 1998: Vanessa Castellano (D), Marissa Catlin (S/D), Aarthi Venkatesan (S/D), Jane Reid (D) 1999: Vanessa Castellano (S&D), Marissa Catlin (D) 2000: Marissa Catlin (S&D), Lori Grey (D), Esther Knox (S), Anne Nguyen (S), Aarthi Venkatesan (S) 2001: Agata Cioroch (S) 2002: Agata Cioroch (D), Lori Grey (D), Tina Hojnik (D), Mariel Verban (D) 2003: Agata Cioroch (D), Lori Grey (D), Tina Hojnik (D), Douglas Wink (D) 2004: Jitka Schonfeldova (S), Alexandra Smith (S), Douglas Wink (D), Natalie Frazier (D) 2005: Caroline Basu (D), Shadisha Robinson (D) 2006: Caroline Basu, Natalie Frazier
2007: Natalie Frazier, Monika Dancevic, Yvette Hyndman 2008: Monika Dancevic, Yvette Hyndman 2009: Moika 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: Silvia Garcia, Lauren Herring, Maho Kowase 2015: Lauren Herring 2016: Ellen Perez; Caroline Brinson, Kennedy Shaffer 2017: Elena Christofi, Ellen Perez, Kennedy Shaffer 2018: Katarina Jokic, Mariana Gould, Morgan Coppoc, Elena Christofi, Kennedy Shaffer, Marta Gonzalez
UGA Academic Honors
UGA Scholar Athlete Award (22) (Highest GPA on team for a full academic year) 1976-78: Tina Price; 1978-81: Susan Boyett 1982-83: Anne M. Sussman 1984: Lynn Morgan 1985-88: Lianna Bebeau; 1989: Amila Fetahagic 1990: Jill Waldman 1991-92: Laura Kimel 1993-94: Brooke Galardi 1995-96: Anne Chauzu 1997: Michelle Anderson 1998-2000: Zoë Mellis 2001-02: Alexandra Smith 2003-04: Douglas Wink 2005: Jitka Schonfeldova 2006-07: Natalie Frazier 2008: Naoko Ueshima 2009: Lara Fakhoury 2010: Naoko Ueshima 2011-12: Kelli Jordan 2013-15: Lauren Herring 2016: Stephanie Grodecki 2017: Elena Christofi 2018: Elena Christofi UGA Lewis Leadership Award (5) (UGA student-athlete who embodies education, motivation, discipline, positive attitude and who seeks the good of the group above personal gain) 1989: Lisa Apanay 1992: Tony Bogdonas 1994: Angela Lettiere 1999: Jane Reid 2001: Christa Grey UGA Outstanding Achievement Award (6) (UGA student-athletes who excelled in the classroom or in their sport) 1978: Tina Price (Athletics) 1981: Susan Boyett (Academics) 1982: Susan Dadriu (Academics) 1983: Lisa Spain (Athletics) 1988: Lianna Bebeau (Academics) 1994: Angela Lettiere (Athletics)
All-Americans
36 ALL-AMERICANS | 108 HONORS 25 Multiple All-Americans 8 Chelsey Gullickson: 2009-12 (S&D) 7 Marissa Catlin: 1997-’99 (S&D), 2000 (D) 7 Shannan McCarthy: 1989-91 (S&D), ’92 (S) 5 Michelle Anderson: 1994-96 (D), ’97 (S&D) 5 Agata Cioroch: 2002 (S), 2003 (S&D), 2004 (S&D) 5 Stacey Schefflin: 1988 (D); ’89-’90 (S&D) 5 Aarthi Venkatesan: 1999 (S), 2000-2001(S&D) 5 Ellen Perez: 2015 (D), 2016 & 2017 (S&D) 4 Vanessa Castellano: 1998-99 (S&D) 4 Lori Grey: 2000 (S&D), 2001 (D), 2003 (D) 4 Lauren Herring: 2013 (S), 2014-15 (S&D) 4 Angela Lettiere: 1991, ’93 (D), ’94 (S&D) 4 Stacy Sheppard: 1992, ’94 (D), ’95 (S&D) 4 Lisa Spain: 1981-84 (S) 3 Anne Chauzu: 1993, ’95-’96 (D) 3 Nadja Gilchrist: 2009-10, ’12 (D) 3 Esther Knox: 1999 (S), 2000 (S&D) 3 Shadisha Robinson: 2004 (D), ’05 (S&D) 2 Kate Fuller: 2011 (D) 2 Silvia Garcia: 2013 (D), 2014 (S) 2 Shawn McCarthy: 1992 (S&D) 2 Caryn Moss: 1989, ’90 (S) 2 Tina Samara: 1994, ’95 (D) 2 Mariel Verban: 2001 (S) {1999-Singles at Wake Forest} 2 Kennedy Shaffer 2016 (S), 2017 (D) 11 One-time All-Americans 1 Lisa Apanay: 1988 (D) 1 Caroline Basu: 2005 (D) 1 Natalie Frazier: 2007 (S) 1 Mariana Gould 2016 (D) 1 Yvette Hyndman: 2007 (D) 1 Maho Kowase: 2014 (D) 1 Darya Ivanov: 2007 (D) 1 Anne Nguyen: 2001 (S) 1 Caroline Brinson: 2017 (D) 1 Elena Christofi: 2017 (D) 1 Katarina Jokic: 2018 (S) Most All-Americans In One Year: 4 (1994, ’99, 2000, ’01, ‘17); 3 (1989, ’90, ’92, ’95, ’05, ‘07, ‘13, ‘14, ’16); 2 (1988, ’91, ’93, ’96, ’97, ’98, ’09); 1 (1981, ’82, ’83, ’84, 2002)
Michelle Anderson
Pretoria, South Africa All-American: 1994-97 • Member of the 1994 NCAA Championship team, USTA National Team Indoor champions in 1994 and 1995 • Georgia’s first-ever four-time AllAmerican in doubles • No. 1 final doubles ranking with Angela
Lettiere in 1994 • In 1997 became first player in league history to earn SEC Player of the Year, MVP of the SEC Tournament and SEC Sportsmanship Award • Career Record: 127-51 (S); 82-17 (D)
Lisa Apany
Morrow, Ga. All-American: 1988 • All-America honors in doubles with Stacey Schefflin • In 1989, became first women’s tennis player in Georgia history to win the prestigious UGA Lewis Leadership Award • Career Record: 83-39 (S); 77-26 (D)
Caroline Basu
Wolfsburg, Germany All-American: 2005 • All-America honors in doubles with Shadisha Robinson • Duo set school record with a 28-4 record and final national ranking of No. 1 • Career Record: 23-9 (S); 29-4 (D)
Caroline Brinson
New Orleans, La. All-American: 2017 • Sole senior on the 2017 team that made the program’s 31st-consecutive NCAA Tournament • Earned Doubles All-America honors with Ellen Perez, top-8 seed in the Doubles Championship and finished
with a No. 10 ranking • 2017 ITA/Arthur Ashe Leadership and Sportsmanship Award • 2015 ITA Southeast Regional Singles Champion • Career Record: 92-28 (S); 83-38 (D)
Vanessa Castellano Barcelona, Spain
All-American: 1998-99 • Four-time All-American and part of the greatest doubles duo in school history with Marissa Catlin; Duo went 26-2 in 1999, won two collegiate Grand Slam events, and reached the finals in two others and had final doubles ranking of No. 1 • 1999 SEC Player of the Year • Career Record: 130-31 (S); 70-14 (D)
2019 Georgia Women’s Tennis
Marissa Catlin Clearwater, Fla.
All-American: 1997-2000 • Seven-time All-American who was a member of the 2000 NCAA Champions • Inducted to UGA Circle of Honor in 2013 • With Vanessa Castellano, went 26-2 in 1999, won two collegiate Grand Slams, and reached the finals in two others • No. 1 final doubles ranking in 1999 and 2000 with Lori Grey and Vanessa Castellano, respectively, No. 1 singles in 1998 • Career Record: 123-29 (S); 93-16 (D)
Anne Chauzu
Linas, France All-American: 1993, ’95-’96 • Member of the 1994 NCAA Champions, USTA National Team Indoor Champions in 1994 and 1995 •Paired with Michelle Anderson and finished the 1995 and 1996 season ranked in the top ten • Career Record: 106-59 (S); 61-22 (D)
Elena Christofi
Athens, Greece All-American: 2017 •Member of the 2017 squad that advanced to the Sweet Sixteen and a No. 6 final ranking •Led the 2017 team as a freshman with singles wins (29-7) and the second-most doubles wins (23-12) • Advanced to the Round of Eight of the NCAA Doubles Championship with junior Kennedy Shaffer. The duo’s final ranking: No. 26 •Finished with a No. 24 singles rankings, 5th highest freshman •2016 ITA Southeast Regional Singles Champion •2017 SEC Co-Freshman of the Year, First Team All-SEC, AllFreshmen Team • Career Record: 45-22 (S); 48-27 (D)
Agata Cioroch
Warsaw, Poland All-American: 2002-04 • Member of the 2002 USTA/ITA National Team Indoor Championship, 2002 SEC Champions, 2001 SEC Tournament Champions • Won 2002 ITA National Indoor Singles title and 2003 ITA National Indoor Singles title • No. 1 ITA Final Doubles Ranking with Lori Grey (2003); No. 2 in Singles (2003); Preseason No. 1 in Singles (2003) • Set a school record by winning her first 33 singles matches (26-0 as a freshman); Ranked No. 1 in singles and doubles during junior year • Career Record: 126-22 (S); 95-42 (D)
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All-Americans Natalie Frazier Riverdale, Ga.
All-American: 2007 • Member of the 2007 SEC Championship and SEC Tournament Championship teams • 2007 ITA South Region Senior Player of the Year and SEC Tournament MVP • Member of 2007 USTA Summer Collegiate and Pan-Am Games Teams, SEC Honor Roll and SEC Good Works Team • Career Record: 115-45 (S); 93-29 (D)
Kate Fuller
Suwanee, Ga. All-American: 2011, 2013 • Member of the 2011-14 teams that advanced to the NCAA Quarterfinals. won the SEC in 2013 and SEC Tournament in 2014. • In 2011, earned All-America honors in doubles with Chelsey Gullickson, reached the NCAA quarterfinals and finished with a 17-6 mark and #8 ranking • In 2013, earned All-America honors in doubles with Silvia Garcia; reached the NCAA quarterfinals and finished 26-4 and #2 ranking. • Career Record: 97-39 (S); Current School Record 125-42 (D)
Silvia Garcia Madrid, Spain
All-American: 2013-14 • Advanced to the quarterfinals in singles at the 2014 NCAA Championships • Went 37-8 in singles and 27-6 in doubles while helping Georgia to the NCAA quarterfinals and a final ranking of No. 4 in 2014 • 2014 SEC Tournament MVP, SEC All-Tournament Team member, and First Team All-SEC • Career Record: 99-40 (S); 99-30 (D)
Nadja Gilchrist Webster, N.Y.
All-American: 2009-10, ’12 • Member of the 2009 SEC Championship and SEC Tournament Championship team that advanced to the NCAA Final Four and ended the year ranked No. 3 • Earned All-America status in doubles three times with Chelsey Gullickson, including reaching the NCAA Doubles finals in 2012 • First freshmen duo in UGA history to play #1 doubles in the lineup • Holds the school record for career wins as a duo with Chelsey Gullickson (64) • Career Record: 93-46 (S); 101-36 (D)
Lori Grey
Seminole, Fla. All-American: 2000-01, 2003 • Member of the 2000 NCAA Championship Team and 2002 USTA/ITA National Team Indoor Championship Team, as well as the 2001 and 2002 SEC Championship Teams • Third player in school history to be named All-American in singles and doubles as a freshman • No. 1 final doubles ranking in 2000 (Catlin) and 2003 (Cioroch) • Career Record: 105-52 (S); 89-38 (D)
Chelsey Gullickson
Palm Beach Gardens, Fla. All-American: 2009-12 • First eight-time All-American in Georgia tennis history (women or men), At the end of her career had school record 230 Wins • 2010 NCAA Singles Champion, won the title in Athens, ended year 30-8 and final singles ranking of #6, ranked as high as #2 during the season • 2010 US Open Main Draw participant in singles and doubles; reached 2nd round in doubles • Member of the 2009 SEC Championship and SEC Tournament Championship team that reached the NCAA Final Four and had a No. 3 ranking • 2009 ITA National Rookie of the Year, tying a school record with 69 combined wins in singles and doubles, Final ITA singles ranking of #6 and NCAA semifinalist with a 43-10 record; Also tied mark with 69 combined wins as a senior in 2012 • Earned All-America status in singles and in doubles with freshman Nadja Gilchrist; the pair finished 2009 ranked 7th nationally; First freshmen duo in UGA history to play #1 doubles in the lineup • 2009-12 NCAA singles and doubles participant; ’10 Singles Champion, ’12 Doubles finalist with Gilchrist; Set Georgia Career Record for Duo with 64 wins • Career Record: 124-34 (S); 106-42 (D)
Darya Ivanov
Adelaide, Australia All-American: 2007 • Member of the 2007 SEC Championship Team • Earned All-America status in doubles with partner Yvette Hyndman; the pair finished 2007 ranked 10th nationally • Georgia Record: 54-23 (S); 59-19 (D) • Career Record: 99-38 (S); 91-41 (D), played first two years at Tulane
Katarina Jokic
Novi Grad, Bosina All-American: 2018 •Earned singles All-America honors with a No. 17 final ITA singles rankings - the highest ranked freshman in the nation •Led the Bulldogs on the No. 1 singles court, concluding with a team-best 31-8 overall record and 12-4 mark in duals •Named ITA Southeast Regional Rookie of the Year and Southeastern Conference Freshman of the Year in addition to landing on the All-SEC First Team and SEC All-Freshman Team •Helped lead the 18-7 Georgia team to a No. 7 final rankings and a NCAA Quarterfinalist finish in the program’s 32nd-consecutive NCAA Championship appearance • Named to the ITA National Indoor All-Tournament Team - No. 2 doubles with Mariana Gould •To start her sophomore campaign (2018-19), she capped the fall by winning the 2018 Oracle/ITA National Fall Singles Championship to become the fifth Georgia women’s tennis player to win a singles grand slam •She begins the spring 2019 season with the No. 1 ITA singles ranking in the country • Career Record: 41-9 (S); 33-14 (D)
Lauren Herring Greenville, N.C.
All-American: 2013-15 • 2015 CoSIDA Academic All-American, 2014 SEC Player of the Year • Posted a singles record of 21-7 and a doubles record of 24-10 as she helped lead the team to the ITA Indoor Finals and the NCAA semifinals and No. 5 ranking in 2015 • Four-time member of the SEC Academic Honor Roll and fourtime recipient of the ITA Scholar Athlete Award and First Team All-SEC 2013-15 • Has the second-most doubles victories in school history (118) as well as the second most total victories for a career at UGA with 238 • Career Record: 120-28 (S); 118-39 (D)
Mariana Gould Boise, Idaho
All-American: 2016 • Member of 2016 squad that went 22-5 and finished ranked #7 • Earned All-America honors in doubles with Ellen Perez after going 19-9 and final ranking of #10 • 2016 SEC All-Tournament Team • Clinched Georgia’s win over No. 1 Florida in 2017 which snapped the Gator’s and the nation’s longest home match win-streak at 163 • 2017-18 SEC Academic Honor Roll • 2018 ITA National Team Indoor All-Tournament Team - No. 2 Doubles with Katarina Jokic • 2018 All-SEC Second Team • 2018 ITA Scholar-Athlete Award • Career Record: 82-29 (S); 85-35 (D)
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Yvette Hyndman Bradenton, Fla.
All-American: 2007 • Member of the 2007 SEC Championship and SEC Tournament Championship teams, 2008 SEC Tournament Champions, 2009 SEC Championship and SEC Tournament Champions • Earned All-America in doubles with partner Darya Ivanov; the pair finished 2007 ranked 10th nationally • Career Record: 87-64 (S); 96-54 (D)
All-American Katarina Jokic heads into the spring with the No. 1 ITA singles ranking after winning the 2018 Oracle/ITA National Fall Championships in Surprise, Ariz.
All-Americans Esther Knox
Sydney, Australia All-American: 1999-2000 • Member of the 2000 NCAA Championship Team • Reached a career-high No. 2 ranking, finished up No. 11 in 2000 • Georgia Record: 69-21 (S); 38-12 (D) • Career Record: 105-45 (S); 71-26 (D), played first two years at Cal
Maho Kowase
Kashiwa, Chiba, Japan All-American: 2014 • Holds school record with 245 combined singles and doubles victories • Advanced to the doubles finals at the 2014 NCAA Championships • Posted a 38-7 record in doubles, including a 15-3 record alongside Lauren Herring on the No. 1 court • Teamed with Herring to secure at the time the most single season doubles wins by a doubles team in school history (36) • Career Record: 133-36 (S); 112-27 (D)
Angela Lettiere Vero Beach, Fla.
All-American: 1991, ’93-’94 • Member of the 1994 NCAA and USTA National Team Indoor Champions • 1994 NCAA Singles Champion, Honda Award winner, and Player of the Year by Tennis Magazine; Also the National Senior of the Year and SEC Player of the Year. • One of only two players in history to play in three consecutive Grand Slam Finals in one season • Captured school’s first-ever Grand Slam doubles title with Michelle Anderson and No. 1 final Doubles Ranking in 1994 • Career Record: 110-46 (S); 49-7 (D)
Shannan McCarthy Alpharetta, Ga.
All-American: 1989-92 • Seven-time All-American who at time of graduation was winningest player in Georgia tennis history with 150 victories • 1992 ITA National Senior-of-the-Year • 1992 NCAA singles finalist • 1989 ITA National Rookie-of-the-Year and Player-to-Watch • Three-time Academic All-SEC selection • Career Record: 150-34 (S); 67-16 (D)
Shawn McCarthy Alpharetta, Ga.
All-American: 1992 • Improved each year including AllAmerica honors as a senior • Final 1992 ranking of #29 in singles and #15 in doubles • Academic All-SEC and All-SEC • Career Record: 106-37 (S); 49-17 (D)
Caryn Moss
Pembroke Pines, Fla. All-American: 1989-90 • Two-time All-SEC, Academic All-SEC, Dean’s List • Finalist at the 1990 DuPont National Clay Courts • Claimed the 1989 SEC No. 3 singles and doubles championship • Career Record: 88-27 (S); 38-5 (D)
2019 Georgia Women’s Tennis
Anne Nguyen Lancaster, Penn.
All-American: 2001 • Member of the 2000 NCAA Championship Team, the 2002 USTA/ITA National Team Indoor Championship, 2002 SEC Champions and 2001 SEC Tournament Champions • 2000 ITA South Regional singles champion • 2001 SEC Coaches Classic singles champion • Career Record: 116-37 (S); 42-36 (D)
Ellen Perez
Shellharbour, Australia All-American: 2015-17 • Five-time All-American that was one of two players to earn both the doubles and singles accolade in back-to-back years in 2016-17 • Earned first doubles accolade (2015) partnering with Lauren Herring, going 18-9 and a No. 6 national ranking • Earned second doubles accolade (2016) with Mariana Gould, going 19-9 and No. 10 ranking. •As a junior (2017), she grabbed her third doubles accolade with Caroline Brinson with a top-8 seed in the NCAA Championship and a No. 10 final ranking •Earned All-America honors in singles in 2016 after going 28-7 with a No. 5 ranking and 2017 with a No. 16 ranking • Career Record: 63-27 (S), 56-32 (D)
Shadisha Robinson South Ozone Park, N.Y.
All-American: 2004-05 • Doubles All-American with Agata Cioroch in 2004 • Semifinalist at ITA All-American and National Indoors • Earned All-America honors in doubles with Caroline Basu as duo set school record with a 28-4 record and final national ranking of No. 1 in 2005 • Career Record: 66-28 (S); 65-14 (D)
Tina Samara
Laurel Hollow, N.Y. All-American: 1994-95 • Member of the 1994 NCAA Championship Team, USTA National Team Indoor champions in 1994 and 1995 • No. 1 final doubles ranking with Stacy Sheppard in 1995 • Rolex All-Star Team after a 26-6 season, winning the SkyTel Clay Court Championships and NCAA semifinalists • Won ITA Summer Circuit’s “triple crown” by winning the singles, doubles, and mixed doubles titles • Career Record: 118-43 (S); 67-18 (D)
Stacey Schefflin Charlotte, N.C.
All-American: 1988-90 • At time of graduation ranked second in school history with 133 singles wins and second with 86 doubles victories • In 1989, joined Shannan McCarthy as the first players in UGA history as AllAmerican in singles and doubles •1990 Regional and National Senior-of-the-Year • Career Record: 133-41 (S); 86-26 (D)
Kennedy Shaffer
Rossford, Ohio All-American: 2016-17 • Member of 2016 and 2017 teams that finished No. 7 and No. 6, respectively • In 2016, earned first All-America honors in singles by going 32-8, reaching the NCAA quarterfinals and finished No. 22 •Grabbed doubles honors in 2017 with Elena Christofi after reaching the quarterfinals of the NCAA Doubles Championships • Four-time All-SEC Second Team recipient • 2016 SEC All-Tournament Team • 2015 All-SEC Freshman Team • Career Record: 84-31 (S); 76-36 (D)
Stacy Sheppard Loganville, Ga.
All-American: 1992,’94-’95 • Member of the 1994 NCAA Championship Team, USTA National Team Indoor champions in 1994 and 1995 • No. 1 final doubles ranking with Tina
Samara in 1995 • Rolex All-Star Team after a 26-6 season, winning the SkyTel Clay Court Championships and NCAA semifinalists • 1995 NCAA semifinalist in singles and doubles • Career Record: 123-55 (S); 69-21 (D)
Lisa Spain
Moultrie, Ga. All-American: 1981-84 • 1984 NCAA Singles Champion • Honda Broderick Award for Tennis • First All-American in the history of women’s tennis at UGA • SEC Champion in 1983 and 1984 • Member of National Amateur Team, Federation Team • Career Record: 123-21 (S); 73-31 (D)
Aarthi Venkatesan Brisbane, Australia
All-American: 1999-2001 • Member of the 2000 NCAA Championship Team, with key win over Stanford’s Marissa Irvin, ranked No. 1 in college and No. 78 on the WTA tour, in the finals • No. 3 final singles ranking in 2000 • Named 2000 SEC Player of the
Year, All-SEC • 2000 NCAA singles semifinalist • Member of the 2001 SEC Tournament Championship Team • Limited action as a senior due to injury but posted impressive victory over Stanford’s Laura Granville at USTA/ITA National Team Indoors and snapping her record 65-match winning streak • Career Record: 111-40 (S); 64-19 (D)
Mariel Verban
Bloomington, Ill. All-American: 1999 (Wake Forest), 2001 (Georgia) • Member of the 2001 SEC Tournament Championship Team • 2001 SEC Tournament MVP • Transferred to Georgia and began playing in February of 2001, finished year ranked No. 13 • 1998 All-ACC and ACC Rookie of the Year (Wake Forest) • UGA Record: 30-17 (S); 32-12 (D) Career Record: 103-46 (S); 66-31 (D)
53
Letterwinners
BULLDOG COMPETITORS Bold indicates current Georgia letterwinner
-AElizabeth Alexander (1988-89) Laurie Allen (1980) Ellen Alsobrook (1981) Michelle Anderson (1994-97) Alexandra Anghelescu (2011) Jessica Annest (1997-98) Lisa Apanay (1986-89) -BKelly Baskin (1996-97, ’99-00) Caroline Basu (2005-06) Lianna Bebeau (1985-88) Chris Belasco (1981) Tonya Bogdonas (1989-92) Susan Boyett (1979-80) Caroline Brinson (2014-17) Sherri Byrd (1979-81) -CVanessa Castellano (1998-99) Marissa Catlin (1997-00) Anne Chauzu (1993-96) Elena Christofi (2017-) Agata Cioroch (2001-04) Nancy Cohen (1980-82) Jane Cohodes (1985-88) Kelly Coleman (1986) Morgan Coppoc (2018-) Makenzie Craft (2013) Pam Crews (1975-76) -DMonika Dancevic (2007-09)
Columbus, Ohio Dunwoody, Ga. Decatur, Ga. Pretoria, S. Africa Johns Creek, Ga. Atlanta, Ga. Morrow, Ga. Marietta, Ga. Wolfsburg, Germany Decatur, Ga. Atlanta, Ga. Rockford, Ill. Coral Gables, Fla. New Orleans, La. Belton, S.C. Barcelona, Spain Clearwater, Fla. Linas, France Athens, Greece Warsaw, Poland Miami, Fla. Bexley, Ohio Toledo, Ohio Tulsa, Okla. Frisco, Texas unknown Thorold, Ontario, Canada
Roswell, Ga. Athens, Ga. -F-
Lara Fakhoury (2007, ’09-10) Lu Fendig (1976-77) Amila Fetahagic (1988-89) Jennifer Fisher (1982-83) Wright Floyd (1988) Natalie Frazier (2004-07) Laurie Friedland (1985-88) Kate Fuller (2011-14)
Tampa, Fla. St. Simons, Ga. Zenica, Yugoslavia Framingham, Mass. Atlanta, Ga. Riverdale, Ga. Miami, Fla. Suwanee, Ga. -G-
Brooke Galardi (1993-95) Silvia Garcia (2013-16) Nancy Gates (1979) Kathy George (1977) Nadja Gilchrist (2009-12) Mariana Gould (2015-18) Marta Gonzalez (2017-) Annette Goulak (2018-)
54
Marshall Graham (1984) Sue Green (1984-86) Christa Grey (1998-01) Lori Grey (2000-03) Dana Grubbs (1979-80) Chelsey Gullickson (2009-12)
Reidsville, N.C. Kalamazoo, Mich. Seminole, Fla. Seminole, Fla. Jacksonville, Fla. Palm Beach Gardens, Fla. -H-
Rachael Hart (2011) Lauren Herring (2012-15) Dot Higgins (1981-83) Jennifer Hodge (2003-04) Tina Hojnik (2001-03) LuAnn Howard (1975) Kelley Hyndman (2005-08) Yvette Hyndman (2007-10)
Alpharetta, Ga. Greenville, N.C. Rome, Ga. Athens, Ga. Maribor, Slovenia Atlanta, Ga. Bradenton, Fla. Bradenton, Fla. -I-
Darya Ivanov (2006-07)
Adelaide, Australia -J-
-ECameron Ellis (2008-11) Adrienne Elsberry (2007-08)
Over the years, Bulldog letterwinners have returned for reunions including (r-l): Kelly Baskin, Agata Cioroch, Lori Grey, Christa Grey, Kelley Hyndman, Marianna Land, Anne Nguyen, Evgenia Subbotina and Mariel Verban
LaJolla, Calif. Madrid, Spain Rome, Ga. Anniston, Ala. Webster, N.Y. Boise, Idaho Madrid, Spain Oak Park, Calif.
Susan Jackson (1975-77) Alina Jerjomina (2011-12) Katarina Jokic (2018-) Kelli Jordan (2010-12)
Charlotte, N.C. Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. Novi Grad, Bosnia Tifton, Ga. -K-
Jennifer Kalnitsky (1992) Jaime Kaplan (1980-81) Wendi Kaplan (1988) Maxxine Kaufman (1982-84) Kappy Kellett (1995-97) Lilly Kimbell (2011-14) Laura Kimel (1991-92) Hannah King (2015-16) Mia King (2013-15) Esther Knox (1999-00) Maho Kowase (2011-14)
Kanata, Ontario Macon, Ga. Atlanta, Ga. Miami Beach, Fla. Atlanta, Ga. New Braunfels, Texas Winter Park, Fla. Dunwoody, Ga. Charlotte, N.C. Sydney, Australia Kashiwa, Chiba, Japan -L-
Marianna Land (1993-95) Sara Lett (2008) Angela Lettiere (1991-94) Donna Little (1981) Julie Lumpkin (1979-80)
Atlanta, Ga. Indianapolis, Ind. Vero Beach, Fla. Charlotte, N.C. Columbus, Ga. -M-
Anne Marcinkowski (2016) Chris Marshburn (1975-77) Margaret Martin (1978-79) Jeanette Mattsson (2002) Shannan McCarthy (1989-92) Shawn McCarthy (1989-92) Janet McClelland (1977-80) Barbara McKinley (1977) Zoë Mellis (1997-2000) Melanie Mercer (1985-87) Holly Mills (1981) Kelley Moore (2008) Lynn Morgan (1983-85)
Johns Creek, Ga. unknown Gainesville, Ga. Osthammar, Sweden Alpharetta, Ga. Alpharetta, Ga. Waycross, Ga. Atlanta, Ga. Essex, England Lookout Mtn, Tenn. Sarasota, Fla. Duluth, Ga. Midlothian, Va.
Caryn Moss (1989-91)
Pem. Pines, Fla. -N-
Anne Nguyen (2000-03)
Lancaster, Penn. -O-
Ayaka Okuno (2013)
Osaka, Japan -P-
Laura Patterson (2015-18) Ellen Perez (2015-17) Tina Price (1975-77) -RAlice Reen (1984-87) Adele Reid (1981) Jane Reid (1995-96, ’98-99) Shadisha Robinson (2004-06) Lauren Rose (1997-98) -SMaria Salsgard (1990-92) Tina Samara (1993-96) Dolores Sanchez (1978-79) Susan Sadri (1981-82) Lisa Salvatierra (1993-95) Stacey Schefflin (1987-90) Jitka Schonfeldova (2004-05) Lorri Seals (1983) Kennedy Shaffer (2015-18) Leigh Shepherd (1980-82) Stacy Sheppard (1992-95) Anastasiya Shevchenko (2005) Mary Lynne Smisson (1979-80) Alexandra Smith (2001-04) Debi Snelling (1975-77) Laura Snelling (1983) Lisa Spain (1981-84) Evgenia Subbotina (2003-06) Anne Sussman (1980-81) -TJenny Thornton (1983-86) Frances Turner (1983-86) -UNaoko Ueshima (2007-10) -VAarthi Venkatesan (1998-01) Mariel Verban (2001-02) -WJill Waldman (1987-90) Abby Walter (2017) Nadine van de Walle (1995-98) Paula Westmoreland (1979-80) Douglas Wink (2003-04) Vivian Wolff (2018-) -YHollye Yermovsky (1977) Cathy Young (1977) Terri Ysseldyke (1977)
Roswell, Ga. Shellharbour, Australia Dublin, Ga. Orlando, Fla. Charlotte, N.C. Marietta, Ga. S. Ozone Park, N.Y. Toledo, Ohio Halmstad, Sweden Laurel Hollow, N.Y. Augusta, Ga. Charlotte, N.C. San Francisco, Ca. Matthews, N.C. Prague, Czech Rep. Tyrone, Ga. Rossford, Ohio Newton, N.C. Loganville, Ga. Barcelona, Spain Columbus, Ga. Marietta, Ga. Atlanta, Ga. Atlanta, Ga. Moultrie, Ga. Minsk, Belarus Augusta, Ga. Dublin, Ireland Pensecola, Fla. Nishinomiya, Japan Brisbane, Australia Bloomington, Ill. Charleston, S.C. Thomasville, Ga. Huissen, Holland Griffin, Ga. Greensboro, N.C. Atlanta, Ga. Waycross, Ga. Kennesaw, Ga. Marietta, Ga.
Series Records
SERIES HISTORY Last Last Series First UGA Opp. School Record Mtg. Win Win Agnes Scott 2-0 1975 1984 ------Alabama 43-4 1975 2018 2015 UAB 1-0 1987 1987 ------Arizona 1-0 1993 1993 ------Arizona State 3-1 1987 2013 1997 Arkansas 30-3 1983 2018 2008 Auburn 55-7 1974 2018 2017 Baylor 9-3 1986 2016 2015 Boise State 1-0 2009 2009 ------Boston College 1-0 1991 1991 ------Brenau 4-0 1977 1979 ------Butler 1-0 2011 2011 -----BYU 7-1 1987 2002 1996 California 11-7 1982 2015 2014 Central Florida 1-0 1999 1999 ------Charleston Southern 1-0 2015 2015 -- -- -Chattanooga 1-1 1984 1990 1988 Clemson 31-19 1976 2018 2010 Coast. Carolina 1-0 2001 2001 ------College of Charleston 8-5 1976 2012 1979 Columbia 1-0 2013 2013 ------Dartmouth 1-0 2002 2002 ------Duke 14-13 1977 2017 2018 Eastern Kentucky 1-0 1985 1985 ------East Tenn. State 2-0 2007 2008 ------Elon 2-0 2014 2014 ------Emmanuel 1-0 2002 2002 ------Emory 8-0 1977 1987 ------Flagler 1-0 1976 1976 ------Florida 17-49 1977 2018 2017 Fla. International 2-0 2012 2012 ------Florida State 9-10 1976 2014 1985 Fresno State 1-0 2004 2004 ------Furman 17-1 1974 2014 1974 Ga. College 3-0 1974 1976 ------Ga. Southern 16-1 1974 2007 1974 Ga. State 17-0 1977 2018 ------Ga. Tech 24-6 1984 2016 2018 Harvard 3-1 1988 2010 2006 Hawaii 1-0 1996 1996 ------Houston 1-2 1986 1987 1986 Illinois 2-0 1985 2017 ------Illinois State 2-0 1982 2003 ------Indiana 8-1 1983 2006 1985 Iowa 1-0 1980 1980 ------James Madison 1-0 1984 1984 ------Kansas 5-0 1989 1997 ------Kansas State 1-0 2012 2012 ------Kentucky 36-10 1980 2018 2006 Long Beach 1-0 1987 1987 ------LSU 43-4 1975 2018 1985 Marist 1-0 2011 2011 -----Marshall 2-0 2006 2009 -------
2019 Georgia Women’s Tennis
Series First School Record Mtg. UMBC 1-0 2003 Memphis 4-0 1981 Mercer 7-0 1976 Miami 7-5 1979 Michigan 5-0 1982 Michigan State 3-0 1980 Mid. Tenn. St. 4-0 1998 Minnesota 2-0 1987 Mississippi 39-10 1982 Miss. State 41-0 1981 Miss. Univ. of Women 2-0 1977 Missouri 7-0 2012 New Mexico 2-0 1989 North Carolina 3-10 1978 North Carolina St. 1-0 2017 North Florida 1-0 2016 Northeast La. 3-0 1984 Northwestern 3-4 1985 Notre Dame 7-0 1993 Ohio State 2-0 1983 Oklahoma 2-0 1983 Oklahoma State 7-6 1982 Old Dominion 1-0 2016 Peace College 1-0 1982 Pennsylvania 1-0 2018 Pepperdine 4-1 1987 Presbyterian 2-0 1979 Princeton 0-1 1977 Purdue 1-0 1984 Quinnipiac 1-0 2005 Rice 1-0 1986 Rollins 2-3 1978 Samford 2-0 2004 San Diego 1-0 1987 San Diego State 0-2 1987 Univ. of South 2-0 1974 Shorter 2-0 1977 South Alabama 7-1 1979 South Carolina 47-16 1974 South Carolina St. 3-0 2007 USC-Buford 1-0 1978 USC-Charleston 1-0 1985 South Florida 6-5 1980 Southern California 9-1 1989 SMU 2-2 1984 Stanford 4-21 1987 Tennessee 46-9 1976 Texas 14-3 1988 Texas A&M 13-1 1986 Texas Tech 2-0 2016 TCU 3-3 1984 Tift 3-0 1975 Trinity 3-2 1985
Last Last UGA Opp. Win Win 2003 ------2012 ------2017 ------2014 2010 2016 ------2018 ------2002 ------1993 ------2017 2018 2018 ------1981 ------2018 ------2017 ------1985 2016 2017 ------2016 ------1992 ------2005 2009 2013 ------2000 ------1984 ------1992 2016 2016 ------1982 ------2018 ------2017 2017 1980 ------------- 1977 1984 ------2005 ------1986 -----1985 1983 2015 ------1987 ------1987 ------1974 ------1978 ------2002 1986 2018 2018 2017 ------1978 ------1985 ------2010 1985 2014 2003 1990 1988 2015 2018 2018 2011 2018 1994 2018 2017 2018 ------2004 1986 1976 ----1989 1986
Annette Goulak
Series First School Record Mtg. Troy 1-0 2012 UCLA 8-5 1988 UNC-Charlotte 1-0 2004 UNLV 4-0 1994 USIA 1-0 1989 Utah 4-0 1988 Valdosta State 5-0 1979 Vanderbilt 32-13 1983 Virginia 4-0 1980 VCU 1-0 2011 Virginia Tech 2-0 1990 Wake Forest 7-3 1978 West Georgia 1-0 1984 Wichita State 2-0 2005 William & Mary 9-2 1986 Winthrop 4-0 2002 Wisconsin 2-0 1986 Wyoming 1-0 2016 Yale 2-0 2008
Last Last UGA Opp. Win Win 2012 ------2015 2015 2004 ------1999 ------1989 ------1990 ------1982 ------2016 2018 2016 ------2011 -----2010 ------2018 1996 1984 ------2008 ------2010 1997 2013 ------2001 ------2016 ------2011 -------
55
Annual Results
GEORGIA ANNUAL HISTORY Women’s Tennis Cumulative Record: 894-283 (.760), 45 seasons Year Record (*) SEC Head Coach 1974.................................8-4 ........................................................--...........................................Jane Kuykendoll 1975.................................14-0.......................................................--...........................................Jane Kuykendoll 1976.................................16-2.......................................................--...........................................Jane Kuykendoll 1977.................................17-10.....................................................--...........................................Jane Kuykendoll 1978.................................10-19.....................................................--...........................................Greg McGarity 1979.................................15-10.....................................................--...........................................Greg McGarity 1980.................................15-6 ......................................................3-1 (4th)................................Greg McGarity 1981.................................11-9 ......................................................2-2 (3rd)................................Greg McGarity 1982.................................22-9 ......................................................5-2 (3rd)................................Lee Myers 1983.................................18-5 (18th).............................................11-1 (1st)..............................Lee Myers 1984.................................18-9 ......................................................7-2 (3rd)................................Cissie Donigan 1985.................................16-20 ....................................................7-4 (3rd)................................Cissie Donigan 1986.................................20-9 (22nd)............................................7-2 (3rd)................................Jeff Wallace 1987.................................26-5 (6th)...............................................7-2 (3rd)................................Jeff Wallace 1988.................................22-7 (7th)...............................................7-3 (2nd)...............................Jeff Wallace 1989.................................24-4 (4th)...............................................8-1 (1st)................................Jeff Wallace 1990.................................23-4 (6th)...............................................11-1 (T1st)............................Jeff Wallace 1991.................................25-5 (4th)...............................................10-2 (2nd).............................Jeff Wallace 1992.................................22-6 (5th)...............................................12-2 (2nd).............................Jeff Wallace 1993.................................20-6 (7th)...............................................11-3 (2nd).............................Jeff Wallace 1994.................................27-2 (1st)...............................................14-0 (1st)..............................Jeff Wallace 1995.................................23-4 (3rd)...............................................12-2 (2nd).............................Jeff Wallace 1996.................................13-14 (14th)...........................................6-8 (7th)................................Jeff Wallace 1997.................................18-5 (6th)...............................................11-3 (2nd).............................Jeff Wallace 1998.................................21-5 (4th)...............................................11-3 (2nd).............................Jeff Wallace 1999.................................24-4 (5th)...............................................11-2 (3rd)..............................Jeff Wallace 2000.................................27-2 (1st)...............................................11-0 (1st)..............................Jeff Wallace 2001.................................23-5 (5th)...............................................8-3 (4th)................................Jeff Wallace 2002.................................26-2 (3rd)...............................................11-0 (1st)..............................Jeff Wallace 2003.................................19-5 (7th)...............................................9-2 (T2nd).............................Jeff Wallace 2004.................................20-5 (7th)...............................................9-2 (3rd)................................Jeff Wallace 2005.................................18-8 (9th)...............................................7-4 (4th)................................Jeff Wallace 2006.................................13-10 (25th)...........................................8-3 (T3rd)..............................Jeff Wallace 2007.................................24-2 (4th)...............................................10-1 (1st)..............................Jeff Wallace 2008.................................22-5 (8th)...............................................9-2 (2nd)...............................Jeff Wallace 2009.................................27-3 (3rd)...............................................10-1 (1st)..............................Jeff Wallace 2010.................................13-10 (18th)...........................................8-3 (T2nd).............................Jeff Wallace 2011.................................19-5 (8th)...............................................9-2 (T2nd).............................Jeff Wallace 2012.................................24-5 (6th)...............................................9-2 (2nd)...............................Jeff Wallace 2013.................................24-4 (5th)...............................................12-1 (T1st)............................Jeff Wallace 2014.................................24-5 (4th)...............................................11-2 (T2nd)...........................Jeff Wallace 2015.................................24-7 (5th)...............................................11-2 (2nd).............................Jeff Wallace 2016.................................22-5 (7th)...............................................11-2 (T2nd)...........................Jeff Wallace 2017.................................19-6 (6th)...............................................11-2 (T2nd)...........................Jeff Wallace 2018.................................18-7 (7th)...............................................10-3 (4th)..............................Jeff Wallace *(Final ITCA/ITA Ranking)
1974 (8-4) (sites not available) Univ. South S. Carolina Ga. Southern Furman Ga. College Emory Univ. South Ga. Southern Furman S.Carolina—forfeit Emory Auburn
W, 6-3 L, 5-4 W, 8-1 L, 6-3 W, 8-1 W, 5-4 W, 9-0 L, 6-3 L, 6-3 W, 9-0 W, 8-1 W, 6-3
1975 (14-0) (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
1976 (16-2) (sites not available) Clemson College of Charleston Auburn Flagler Clemson College of Charleston Mercer Florida State Auburn Ga. College Furman Tift
W, 8-1 W, 7-2 W, 8-1 W, 8-1 W, 8-1 W, 8-1 W, 9-0 L, 7-2 L, 6-3 W, 9-0 W, 8-1 W, 9-0
Georgia Coaches Career Records Cissie Donigan
Lee Myers
Greg McGarity
Jeff Wallace
34-29 (1984-85)
40-14 (1982-83)
51-44 (1978-81)
714-180 (1986-present)
Not Pictured: Jane Kuykendoll 55-16 (1974-77)
56
Ga. College Emory Tennessee Emory Furman Auburn
W, 9-0 W, 9-0 W, 7-2 W, 8-1 W, 8-1 W, 7-2
1977 (17-10) (sites not available) #North Carolina L, 8-1 #Duke L, 8-1 #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 ^Clemson L, 5-4 ^Mercer W, 8-1 ^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 Furman W, 7-2 Emory W, 9-0 Ga. State W, 8-1 Shorter W, 8-1 Brenau W, 9-0 Auburn W, 5-4 ^Mercer Invitational; #Furman Invitational
1978 (10-19) Wake Forest Clemson LSU at Fla. State at Auburn at Furman N. Carolina Duke USC-Buford UT-Chattanooga Coll. Chrlston Wake Forest Auburn Florida State Ga. State Ga. Southern at Clemson Shorter at S. Carolina
L, 6-3 L, 8-1 L, 9-0 L, 7-2 L, 7-2 W, 9-0 L, 8-1 L, 8-1 W, 9-0 L, 8-1 L, 7-2 L, 9-0 L, 6-3 L, 6-3 W, 7-2 W, 9-0 L, 6-3 W, 7-2 W, 5-4
Annual Results at College of Charleston L, 7-2 Mercer W, 9-0 College of Charleston L, 6-3 S. Carolina L, 6-3 Clemson L, 5-2 Auburn L, 5-2 at Ga. State W, 9-0 ^Ga. State W, 9-0 ^Ga. Southern W, 9-0 %Rollins L, 6-0 ^GAIAW State Tournament; %AIAW Region III Tournament
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 %S. Alabama W, 7-2 %S. Florida L, 6-3 %AIAW Region III Tournament *SEC match
1979 (15-10)
at Tennessee* L, 6-3 Fla. State L, 6-3 at S. Carolina L, 6-3 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 %Ms.Univ.-Women W, 9-0 %Rollins L, 6-3 %AIAW Region III Tournament *SEC match
South Carolina L, 8-1 North Carolina L, 6-1 Duke L, 5-4 Furman W, 7-2 Miami L, 6-1 LSU L, 7-2 Auburn W, 5-4 Valdosta St. W, 9-0 at 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 %S. Alabama W, 8-1 %Florida L, 8-1 %AIAW Region III Tournament
1980 (15-6, 3-1 SEC) Clemson S. Carolina at College of Charleston Florida* at Valdosta St. Fla. State (Val., Ga.) Virginia Iowa Clemson Presbyterian Mercer at Kentucky*
L, 5-4 L, 9-0 W, 6-3 L, 7-2 W, 9-0 L, 5-4 W, 6-3 W, 6-3 L, 7-2 W, 8-1 W, 9-0 W, 7-2
1981 (11-9, 2-2 SEC)
1982 (22-9, 5-2 SEC) 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 $LSU* W, 9-0 $Ole Miss* L, 5-4 $Tennessee* W, 6-3 Michigan W, 7-2 ^Alabama W, 7-2 ^Ole Miss L, 5-4 %S. Florida W, 7-2 %S. Florida W, 5-4 %Cal-Berkeley L, 7-2 %Florida State L, 5-4 $SECs, Oxford, Ms.; ^AIAW Region III Tournament; %AIAW Nationals
1983 (18-5, 11-1 SEC) SEC Champions SEC Tournament Champions
1983 SEC Champions
2019 Georgia Women’s Tennis
Ole Miss* at Alabama* Duke
W, 7-2 W, 7-2 W, 5-4
1987 NCAA Finalists 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 $LSU* W, 6-3 $Tennessee* W, 5-4 $Florida* W, 5-4 $SECs, Tuscaloosa, Ala.; *SEC match
1984 (18-9, 7-2 SEC) 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 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 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
vs. California (Provo) L, 8-1 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 #LSU* L, 6-3 #N. Carolina L, 5-4 #Rollins W, 5-4 #Trinity L, 9-0 %Okla. State L, 6-3 %S. Carolina L, 5-4 %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 !USC Invite, Columbia, S.C.; ^Miami Invite, Miami, Fla.; #FSU Invite, Tallahassee, Fla.; %Clemson Invite; *SEC match
1986 (20-9, 7-2 SEC) Clemson Wisconsin Duke Michigan St. Texas A&M at Ga. Tech at LSU* at Kentucky* ^Duke ^S. Florida ^Houston Vanderbilt*
L, 6-3 W, 6-3 W, 7-2 W, 8-1 W, 5-4 W, 9-0 W, 6-3 L, 5-4 W, 9-0 W, 7-2 L, 6-3 W, 9-0
William & Mary W, 9-0 Furman W, 8-1 Baylor W, 7-0 %S. Alabama L, 5-4 %S. Carolina W, 8-1 %Okla. State L, 5-4 Alabama* W, 8-1 at TCU L, 5-4 at Trinity L, 7-2 & Rice W, 6-3 & S. Alabama W, 5-4 & 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 ^FSU Invite, Tallahassee, Fla.; %Clemson Invite, Clemson; &Houston Classic, Houston, Texas; *SEC match
1987 (26-5, 7-2 SEC) 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 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 #Ole Miss W, 9-0 #Vanderbilt W, 8-1 #Tennessee W, 9-0 $Miami W, 5-4 $Trinity W, 5-4 $SMU W, 5-4 $Stanford L, 5-1 #SECs, Athens, Ga; $NCAAs, Los Angeles, Calif.; *SEC match
1985 (16-20, 6-4 SEC) ! S. Carolina ! Indiana ! N. Carolina at N. Carolina at Duke ^Clemson ^Rollins ^S. Florida ^Clemson vs. S. Diego St. (Provo)
W, 7-2 L, 5-4 W, 5-4 L, 7-2 W, 6-3 L, 6-3 W, 6-3 L, 5-1 L, 5-4 L, 7-2
1990 SEC Champions
57
Annual Results 1988 (22-7, 7-3 SEC) NCAA Quarterfinalists Duke L, 5-4 at Utah W, 9-0 ^UCLA L, 5-4 ^BYU W, 5-4 ^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 ~SMU L, 6-3 ~Harvard W, 5-1 ~Okla. State W, 5-0 ~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 #Ole Miss* W, 8-1 #Miss. State* W, 7-2 #Auburn* W, 8-1 Northwestern W, 9-0 $Indiana W, 5-4 $Stanford L, 5-3 ^Provo, Utah; ~USTA/ITA National Team Indoors, Madison, Wis.; #SECs, Baton Rouge, La.; $NCAAs, Los Angeles, Calif.; *SEC match
1989 (24-4, 8-1 SEC) 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 ~Cal-Berkeley W, 5-4 ~Miami W, 6-0 ~Florida L, 5-4 ~UCLA L, 5-4 Texas W, 7-2 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 $Texas W, 5-1 $Cal-Berkeley W, 5-4 $Stanford L, 6-0 ~USTA/ITA National Team Indoors, Madison, Wis.; SECs, Oxford, Miss.; $NCAAs, Gainesville, Fla.; *SEC match
$Tennessee W, 5-0 $Duke L, 5-4 ~USTA/ITA National Team Indoors, Madison, Wis.; #SECs, Tuscaloosa, Ala.; $NCAAs, Stanford, Calif.; *SEC match
1989 SEC Champions Florida* W, 5-4 at Duke L, 6-3 Alabama* W, 9-0 Vanderbilt* W, 9-0 ~Ariz. State W, 5-1 ~Okla. State W, 5-1 ~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 #Auburn* W, 5-0 #Tennessee* W, 5-1 #Florida* L, 5-2 $Oklahoma State W, 5-1 $Stanford L, 6-0 ~USTA/ITA National Team Indoors, Madison, Wis.; #SECs, Starkville, Miss. ; $NCAAs, Gainesville, Fla.; *SEC match
1991 (25-5, 10-2 SEC) NCAA Semifinalists LSU* at Alabama* Utah N.E. Louisiana Boston College Texas ~Pepperdine ~Indiana ~Stanford Miami Ole Miss* Duke at S. Carolina* at Cal-Berkeley at Stanford Clemson
W, 7-2 W, 9-0 W, 5-1 W, 9-0 W, 9-0 W, 9-0 W, 8-1 W, 5-1 L, 5-4 W, 6-1 W, 7-2 W, 5-3 W, 6-0 W, 5-3 L, 5-1 W, 9-0
at Tennessee* W, 6-0 at Vanderbilt* W, 6-0 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 #Tennessee* W, 5-2 #LSU* W, 6-0 #Florida* L, 5-1 $Indiana W, 6-0 $Pepperdine W, 5-0 $Stanford L, 5-1 ~USTA/ITA National Team Indoors, Madison, Wis.; #SECs, Knoxville, Tenn.; $NCAAs, Stanford, Calif. *SEC match
1992 (22-6, 12-2 SEC) NCAA Quarterfinalists at Alabama* at Georgia Tech Florida* vs. BYU (in Lex, Ky.) at Kentucky* ~Arizona State ~Tennessee ~Stanford S. Carolina* at Clemson at Duke William & Mary Auburn* Arkansas* Oklahoma State California at LSU* at Texas Tennessee* Vanderbilt* Florida State at Ole Miss* at Miss. State* #Alabama* #Tennessee* #Florida*
1990 (23-4, 11-1 SEC) NCAA Quarterfinalists SEC Champions Oklahoma State at Miami Virginia Tech
58
W, 5-1 W, 7-2 W, 9-0
1994 National Champions
W, 5-4 W, 9-0 L, 5-3 W, 5-2 W, 6-0 W, 5-2 W, 5-2 L, 5-1 W, 6-0 W, 8-1 L, 5-1 W, 6-1 W, 7-2 W, 9-0 W, 9-0 W, 5-4 W, 5-3 L, 6-3 W, 5-3 W, 6-0 W, 6-3 W, 6-3 W, 7-1 W, 5-0 W, 5-1 L, 5-4
~USTA/ITA National Team Indoors, Madison, Wis.; &SECs, Fayetteville, Ark.; $NCAAs, Athens, Ga.; * SEC match
1993 (20-6, 11-3 SEC) NCAA Quarterfinalists
1995 (23-4, 12-2 SEC) NCAA Semifinalists USTA/ITA National Team Indoor Champions
^Minnesota W, 9-0 ^Notre Dame W, 8-1 ^UCLA W, 5-4 Georgia Tech W, 9-0 Clemson W, 5-2 Texas L, 5-2 ~Kansas W, 5-4 ~Arizona W, 5-4 ~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 #Tennessee* W, 5-4 #Ole Miss* W, 5-2 #Florida* L, 5-2 $Indiana W, 5-3 $Stanford L, 5-1 ^Minnesota Invite, Minneapolis, Minn.; ~USTA/ITA National Team Indoors, Madison, Wis.; #SECs, Nashville, Tenn.; $NCAAs, Gainesville, Fla.; *SEC match
at #6 Duke W, 5-4 #24 Clemson W, 7-1 #2 Texas W, 6-1 ~ #14 Wake Forest W, 5-4 ~ #15 Notre Dame W, 6-0 ~ #11 Indiana W, 6-0 ~ #7 UCLA W, 5-4 at Arkansas* W, 8-1 #18 Kentucky* 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 &#22Ole Miss* W, 5-0 &#15LSU* W, 5-0 &#2Florida* L, 5-4 $ #12 S. Carolina W, 5-0 $ #8 Duke W, 5-4 $ #1 Florida L, 5-0 ~USTA/ITA National Team Indoors, Madison, Wis.; &SECs, Auburn, Ala.; $NCAAs, Malibu, Calif.; * SEC match
---Start of Opponent Team Rankings--1994 (27-2, 14-0 SEC) NCAA Champions USTA/ITA National Team Indoor Champions SEC Champions SEC Tournament Champions Arkansas* Vanderbilt* at #14 Clemson at Kentucky* ~ #14 Southern Cal ~ #13 Indiana ~ #9 Kansas ~ #5 Florida #6 Duke FSU at LSU* at #4 Texas at UNLV at #5 California at #12 Ole Miss* at Miss. State* #18 Notre Dame at Alabama* #4 Florida* Auburn* #19 S. Carolina* Tennessee* &Auburn* &#10 Ole Miss* &#5Florida* $Southern Cal (21) $Duke (6) $California (3) $Stanford (4)
W, 6-0 W, 8-0 W, 7-2 W, 8-1 W, 6-0 W, 5-1 W, 5-1 W, 5-1 W, 6-1 W, 6-1 W, 9-0 L, 5-1 W, 6-3 L, 5-4 W, 7-2 W, 6-0 W, 6-1 W, 8-1 W, 5-3 W, 6-0 W, 7-2 W, 6-0 W, 5-0 W, 5-1 W, 5-3 W, 5-2 W, 5-0 W, 5-3 W, 5-4
1996 (13-14, 6-8 SEC) NCAA Regional Finalists ^ #18 BYU ^ Hawaii at #37 Kentucky* #5 Duke ~ #13 William & Mary ~ #5 Duke ~ #7 UCLA #32 Florida State #14 Vanderbilt* at #25 Clemson #7 Wake Forest at #47 LSU* #6 Notre Dame #24 Tennessee* #27 Auburn* #28 Arkansas* at #12 Ole Miss* at Miss. State* at #24 Alabama* #14 S. Carolina* #1 Florida* & #33 Kentucky* & #14 S. Carolina* & #10 Vanderbilt* $Miami (26) $Tennessee (15) $Clemson (20)
L, 5-4 W, 9-0 L, 5-4 L, 5-4 W, 5-1 L, 5-3 L, 5-1 W, 6-1 L, 5-4 W, 5-4 L, 5-4 W, 5-4 W, 5-4 L, 5-2 L, 5-1 W, 6-3 L, 6-3 W, 6-1 W, 6-3 L, 6-3 L, 6-0 W, 5-1 W, 5-4 L, 5-3 W, 5-2 W, 5-3 L, 5-4
^Hawaii Invitational, Honolulu; ~USTA/ ITA National Team Indoors, Madison, Wis; #SEC Tournament, Gainesville, Fla; $NCAA Southeast Regional, Columbia, S.C.
1997 (18-5, 11-3 SEC) NCAA Final Round of 16 Ga. Southern College of Charleston
W, 9-0 W, 9-0
Annual Results
2000 National Champions at #30 Arkansas* #4 Texas #21 Alabama* at #1 Florida* #35 Clemson #8 Ole Miss* Miss. State* #47 Kentucky* #9 Wake Forest ^ #6 Arizona State ^ #14 UNLV ^ #32 Kansas at #10 Vanderbilt* at #21 Tennessee* #18 LSU* at Auburn* at #27 S. Carolina* & #29 Kentucky* & #12 Ole Miss* & #1 Florida* $Wm. & Mary (10)
W, 6-1 W, 5-4 W, 7-1 L, 9-0 W, 6-3 W, 5-4 W, 6-3 W, 8-1 W, 5-3 L, 5-4 W, 6-3 W, 7-2 W, 6-0 W, 7-2 W, 5-4 W, 6-0 L, 5-4 W, 5-1 W, 5-3 L, 5-1 L, 5-0
^UNLV Invitational, Las, Vegas, Nev; &SECs, Athens, Ga.; $NCAAs, Stanford, Calif.; * SEC match
1998 (21-5, 11-3 SEC) NCAA Semifinalists Middle Tenn. State Ga. Southern at Clemson ~ #14 BYU ~ #13 Wake Forest ~ #1 Stanford at #34 Kentucky* #68 Auburn* #19 South Carolina* #11 Wake Forest #15 Vanderbilt* at #38 LSU* & #8 California & #9 Texas at Alabama* #20 Arkansas* at #63 Miss. State* at #7 Ole Miss* #3 Florida* #12 Tennessee* & #37 South Carolina* & #12 Tennessee* & #3 Florida* $ #15 Kansas $ William & Mary $ #2 Florida
W, 9-0 W, 9-0 W, 9-0 W, 6-3 W, 6-1 L, 5-2 W, 5-4 W, 9-0 W, 7-1 W, 5-4 W, 6-1 W, 8-1 W, 6-3 W, 7-2 W, 9-0 L, 5-4 W, 9-0 W, 6-3 L, 6-3 W, 5-2 W, 5-1 W, 5-2 L, 5-1 W, 5-3 W, 5-2 L, 5-1
#55 Georgia Tech #T6 Texas ~ #8 UCLA ~ #T6 Ole Miss (T6) ~ #2 Duke at #14 Arkansas* Clemson #9 Ole Miss* #18 Kentucky* #49 LSU* #39 Miss. State* #17 Wake Forest UNLV at #12 Tennessee* at #8 Vanderbilt* Alabama* at #1 Florida* at #39 Auburn* at #16 South Carolina* & #18 Arkansas* & #8 Ole Miss* % #73 Central Florida % #56 Miss. State $ #15 South Carolina $ #6 California
W, 9-0 W, 8-1 W, 6-2 W, 5-2 L, 5-1 W, 8-1 W, 9-0 W, 5-4 W, 8-1 W, 8-1 W, 7-1 W, 5-4 W, 9-0 W, 5-1 W, 5-1 W, 7-2 L, 6-3 W, 6-0 W, 5-1 W, 5-0 L, 5-4 W, 5-0 W, 5-0 W, 5-0 L, 5-4
~ USTA/ITA National Team IndoorsMadison, Wis.; &SECs - Baton Rouge, La; % NCAA Regionals-Athens, Ga; $ NCAAsGainesville, Fla.
2000 (27-2, 11-0 SEC) NCAA Champions SEC Champions #15 William & Mary at #62 Clemson #26 Arkansas* ~ #16 Vanderbilt ~ #13 Southern Cal ~ #1 Stanford #18 Tennessee* at #24 LSU* at #14 UCLA at #9 Texas
W, 9-0 W, 7-1 W, 7-1 W, 6-1 W, 6-2 L, 4-3 W, 8-1 W, 6-3 W, 5-4 W, 7-1
at #38 Texas A&M #75 Auburn* at #28 Ga. Tech #18 S. Carolina* at #23 Miss. State* at #17 Ole Miss* at #36 Kentucky* #6 Florida* at Alabama* #10 Vanderbilt* & #34 Miss. State & #18 Tennessee & #5 Florida % Furman % #26 Ohio State $ #17 South Alabama $ #12 Southern Cal $ #4 Florida $ #1 Stanford
~ USTA/ITA National Team Indoors, doubles played first; & SEC Tournament, Oxford, Miss.; %NCAA Regionals in Athens, Ga.; $NCAAs in Malibu, Calif.; *SEC match
2001 (23-5, 8-3 SEC) NCAA Semifinalists SEC Tournament Champions #62 Middle Tenn. St. #18 Baylor ~Wisconsin ~ #11 Notre Dame ~ #3 Duke ~ #1 Stanford at #23 Arkansas* #54 Clemson at #18 S. Carolina* #29 Ole Miss* #25 LSU* #41 Miss. State* #44 Alabama* #39 Ga. Tech #25 Kentucky* at Auburn* #8 Texas at #3 Florida* at #4 Tennessee* at #6 Vanderbilt* & #22 S. Carolina & #5 Florida & #4 Tennessee %Coastal Carolina %Miss. State $ #18 Baylor $ #10 Southern Cal $ #6 Vanderbilt
2019 Georgia Women’s Tennis
2002 (26-2, 11-0 SEC) NCAA Semifinalists USTA/ITA National Team Indoor Champions SEC Champions Emmanuel #35 BYU Middle Tenn. State ~ #21 Baylor ~#6 Tennessee ~#1 Stanford ~ #4 Vanderbilt Clemson at #26 Ga. Tech at #2 Vanderbilt* at #11 Kentucky* #51 Auburn* at #21 Alabama* #55 Arkansas* #33 LSU* Dartmouth #25 Ole Miss* Miss. State* at #20 S. Carolina* at #1 Florida* #13 Tennessee* & #34 Ole Miss & #17 S. Carolina %Winthrop % #28 South Alabama $ #12 California $ #5 UCLA $ #2 Stanford
W, 7-0 W, 7-0 W, 6-1 W, 6-1 W, 4-3 W, 4-3 W, 4-1 W, 6-1 W, 5-2 W, 4-3 W, 5-2 W, 6-1 W, 5-2 W, 7-0 W, 7-0 W, 5-2 W, 4-3 W, 7-0 W, 4-3 W, 4-3 W, 7-0 W, 4-0 L, 4-2 W, 4-0 W, 4-3 W, 4-1 W, 4-2 L, 4-0
~USTA/ITA National Team IndoorsMadison, Wis.; &SECs.- Columbia, S.C..; %1st/2nd Rnds.-Athens, Ga; $NCAA Champs- Palo Alto, Calif.; *SEC match
2003 (19-5, 9-2 SEC) NCAA Quarterfinalists at #58 Furman W, 7-0 vs. Illinois St. (Greenville,SC) W, 7-0 ~ #28 Wake Forest W, 5-2 ~ #7 Southern Cal L, 5-2 ~ #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 & #37 South Carolina W, 4-0 & #10 Kentucky W, 4-1 & #2 Florida L, 4-0 % MD-Baltimore Co. W, 4-0 % #32 Alabama W, 4-1 $ #12 Kentucky W, 4-0 $ #1 Stanford L, 4-0
~USTA/ITA Natl. Team Indoors Madison, Wis.; &SECs., Knoxville, Tenn.; %NCAA 1st/2nd Rnds., Norman, Okla.; $NCAA Rnd. of 16, Gainesville, Fla.; *SEC match
2004 (20-5, 9-2 SEC) NCAA Quarterfinalists
1999 (24-4, 11-2 SEC) NCAA Quarterfinalists W, 9-0 W, 8-1 W, 9-0
W, 7-0 W, 6-1 W, 7-0 W, 5-1 W, 4-1 L, 4-3 W, 7-0 W, 6-1 W, 4-3 W, 6-1 W, 5-1 W, 5-2 W, 6-1 W, 6-1 W, 5-2 W, 5-2 W, 6-1 L, 4-3 L, 4-3 L, 4-3 W, 4-1 W, 4-2 W, 4-1 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 W, 5-0 W, 4-0 L, 4-2
~USTA/ITA National Team Indoors- Madison, Wis.; &SEC Tournament- Starkville, Miss.; % NCAA 1st/2nd Rds-Athens Ga.;, $NCAA Rnd. of 16- Stone Mountain, Ga.; *SEC match
~ USTA/ITA National Team IndoorsMadison, Wis.; & Austin, Texas; &SEC’sLexington, Ky; $NCAAs- Notre Dame, Ind.; * SEC match
Middle Tenn. State Georgia Southern Georgia State
W, 9-0 W, 6-0 W, 9-0 W, 7-2 W, 5-1 W, 6-3 W, 8-0 W, 5-2 W, 6-0 W, 5-3 W, 5-2 W, 5-0 L, 5-1 W, 5-0 W, 5-0 W, 5-1 W, 5-1 W, 5-2 W, 5-4
2001 SEC Tournament Champions
#32 Baylor ~ #12 Harvard ~ #8 Northwestern ~#3 California ~ #2 Stanford UNC-Charlotte #59 TCU (#59) at #52 Alabama* Auburn*
W, 6-1 W, 6-1 W, 4-3 W, 4-1 L, 5-0 W, 7-0 W, 6-1 W, 5-2 W, 7-0
#12 Clemson #56 LSU* #68 Arkansas* at #38 Ga. Tech Miss. State* #33 Ole Miss* at #2 Florida* at #31 S. Carolina* at #18 Kentucky* at #5 Vanderbilt* #24 Tennessee* & #21 Kentucky %Samford % #40 Ga. Tech $ #16 Fresno State $ #3 Vanderbilt
W, 6-1 W, 7-0 W, 7-0 W, 4-3 W, 7-0 W, 7-0 L, 6-1 W, 5-2 W, 6-1 L, 4-3 W, 4-3 L, 4-1 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 W, 4-2 L, 4-1
~USTA/ITA National Team Indoors, Madison, Wis.; &SECs, Nashville, Tenn.; %NCAA 1st and 2nd Round, Athens, $NCAA Round of 16, Athens, Ga.; *SEC match
2005 (18-8, 7-4 SEC) NCAA Quarterfinalists Georgia Southern #41 Baylor ~ #5 Northwestern ~ #6 Vanderbilt ~ #1 Stanford Wichita State at #16 Clemson #36 Alabama* at #74 Auburn* at #38 LSU* at #52 Arkansas* #16 Georgia Tech at #34 Miss. State* at #46 Ole Miss* #9 Florida* #24 South Carolina* #5 Kentucky* #6 Vanderbilt* at #20 Tennessee* &Auburn & #18 Tennessee & #3 Kentucky % Quinnipiac % #22 S. Carolina $ #24 California $ #1 Stanford
W, 7-0 W, 5-2 W, 5-2 W, 4-1 L, 4-0 W, 7-0 W, 5-2 W, 5-2 W, 7-0 W, 5-2 W, 6-1 L, 4-3 W, 4-3 W, 4-2 L, 4-3 W, 4-0 L, 4-3 L, 7-0 L, 4-3 W, 4-0 W, 4-1 L, 4-2 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 W, 4-2 L, 4-1
~USTA/ITA National Team Indoors, Madison, Wis.; %SECs, Tuscaloosa, Ala.; +NCAA 1st/2nd Rnds, Athens, $NCAA Round of 16, Athens, Ga.; *SEC match
2006 (13-10, 8-3 SEC) NCAA 2nd Round #20 William & Mary Georgia Southern ~ #19 Harvard ~ #8 Baylor ~ #5 Northwestern Winthrop #26 Clemson at #5 Georgia Tech #59 Arkansas* #46 LSU* at #19 S. Carolina* at #6 Florida* #66 Marshall Auburn* at #26 Alabama* at #28 Kentucky* at #11 Vanderbilt* Miss. State* #60 Ole Miss* #29 Tennessee* & #31Tennessee % #42 Indiana % #13 Vanderbilt
W, 4-3 W, 7-0 L, 4-3 L, 4-3 L, 6-0 W, 5-2 L, 4-3 L, 6-1 W, 5-2 W, 7-0 W, 6-1 L, 5-2 W, 6-1 W, 6-1 W, 6-1 L, 4-3 L, 5-2 W, 6-1 W, 5-2 W, 6-1 L, 4-3 W, 4-1 L, 4-2
~USTA/ITA National Team Indoors,
59
Annual Results Madison, Wis.; &SECs, Gainesville, Fla.; %NCAA 1st/2nd Rounds, Nashville, Tenn.; *SEC match
2007 (24-2, 10-1 SEC) NCAA Quarterfinalist SEC Tournament Champions #28 Texas A&M #6 Baylor Winthrop #61 Florida State Ga. Southern at #12 Clemson #6 Ga. Tech at #45 Arkansas* at #51 LSU* #53 South Carolina* #1 Florida* East Tenn. State at #41 Auburn* #61 Alabama* #22 Kentucky* #21 Vanderbilt* at #75 Miss. State* at Ole Miss* at #24 Tennessee* & #30 Auburn & #21 Tennessee & #3 Florida % S.C. State % #31 Auburn $ #14 William & Mary $ #10 California
W, 6-1 W, 7-0 W, 7-0 W, 6-1 W, 7-0 W, 6-1 W, 5-2 W, 6-1 W, 5-2 W, 5-2 W, 4-3 W, 7-0 L, 4-3 W, 6-1 W, 6-1 W, 4-3 W, 6-1 W, 6-1 W, 6-1 W, 4-1 W, 4-1 W, 4-2 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 W, 4-1 L, 4-1
&SECs, Lexington, Ky.; %NCAA 1st/2nd Rounds, Athens, Ga.; $NCAA Rnd. of 16, Athens, Ga.; *SEC match
2008 (22-5, 9-2 SEC) NCAA Round of 16 SEC Tournament Champions East Tenn. State #29 South Florida #32 Wichita State ~ #19 Notre Dame ~ #2 Georgia Tech ~ #8 Southern Cal #18 Clemson at #1 Georgia Tech at Miss. State* at Ole Miss* #29 S. Carolina* #5 Florida* at #5 Baylor at #26 Texas A&M #26 LSU* at #22 Arkansas* Alabama* #33 Auburn* at #25 Kentucky* at #13 Vanderbilt* #25 Tennessee* & #22 Kentucky & #16 Arkansas & #5 Florida % Yale % #33 S. Carolina $ #17 Arkansas
W, 7-0 W, 6-1 W, 7-0 W, 4-2 L, 7-0 W, 4-3 W, 4-3 W, 4-3 W, 4-0 W, 6-1 W, 7-0 L, 5-2 L, 4-3 W, 6-1 W, 6-1 L, 4-3 W, 6-1 W, 5-2 W, 5-2 W, 4-3 W, 5-2 W, 4-1 W, 4-3 W, 4-3 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 L, 4-2
~USTA/ITA National Team Indoors, Madison, Wis.; &SEC Tournament, Auburn, Ala.; +NCAA 1st/2nd Rounds, Athens, Ga.; $NCAA Rnd. of 16, Tulsa, Okla.; *SEC match
2009 (27-3, 10-1 SEC) NCAA Semifinalist SEC Champions SEC Tournament Champions Memphis Furman ^ #53 Ole Miss ^ #45 Marshall at #11 Clemson
60
W, 7-0 W, 7-0 W, 4-1 W, 5-0 W, 4-3
2008 SEC Champions ~ #9 Southern Cal ~ #3 UCLA ~ #2 California ~ #1 Northwestern #7 Baylor #70 Ole Miss* #57 Miss. State* at #23 Florida* at #22 S. Carolina* #6 Georgia Tech at #21 LSU* #23 Arkansas* at #29 Auburn* at #25 Alabama* #17 Vanderbilt* #23 Kentucky* at #13 Tennessee* & #24 Alabama & #15 Florida & #10 Tennessee % S.C. State % #35 Boise State $ #15 Florida $ #22 S. Carolina $ #3 Duke
W, 4-3 W, 6-1 W, 4-2 L, 4-1 W, 4-3 W, 6-1 W, 6-1 L, 4-3 W, 6-1 W, 6-1 W, 4-2 W, 6-1 W, 5-2 W, 6-1 W, 4-0 W, 5-2 W, 5-2 W, 4-1 W, 4-2 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 W, 4-2 W, 4-3 L, 5-2
^ITA Kickoff Weekend, Athens, Ga.; ~USTA/ITA National Team Indoors, Madison, Wic.; &SECs, Fayetteville, Ark.; %NCAA 1st/2nd Rounds, Athens, Ga.; $NCAA Round of 16, College Station, Texas.; *SEC match
2010 (13-10, 8-3 SEC) NCAA Round of 32 #75 South Florida ^ #55 Virginia Tech ^ #48 William & Mary #15 Clemson ~ #11 N. Carolina ~ #20 Fla. State ~ #6 Miami (Fla.) #50 Alabama* #36 Auburn* at Kentucky* at #25 Vanderbilt* at #26 Ga. Tech at #22 Arkansas* LSU* at #72 Miss. State* at #35 Ole Miss* #15 South Carolina* #4 Florida* #14 Tennessee* & #16 S. Carolina % #39 Harvard % #9 Clemson
W, 5-2 W, 5-2 W, 4-2 L, 4-3 L, 5-2 W, 6-1 L, 5-2 W, 4-3 W, 4-3 W, 7-0 W, 5-2 L, 5-2 W, 5-2 W, 6-1 W, 4-3 L, 5-2 W, 4-3 L, 6-1 L, 4-2 L, 4-1 W, 4-0 L, 4-2
^ITA Kickoff Weekend, Athens, Ga.; ~USTA/ITA National Team Indoors, Madison, Wis.; &SECs, Athens, Ga.; $NCAA 1st/2nd Rounds, Clemson, S.C.; *SEC match
2011 (19-5, 9-2 SEC) NCAA Quarterfinalist Memphis at ^ #31 VCU at ^ #6 UNC #13 Ga. Tech at #9 Clemson at Auburn* at #34 Alabama* #8 Vanderbilt* Kentucky*
W, 7-0 W, 5-2 L, 4-3 W, 5-2 W, 5-2 W, 7-0 W, 4-3 W, 6-1 W, 6-1
Butler #24 Yale at #56 LSU* #12 Arkansas* #27 Ole Miss* Miss. State* at #2 Florida* at #38 S. Carolina* at #16 Tennessee* & #21 Arkansas & #14 Tennessee %Marist % #26 Alabama $ #9 California $ #2 Stanford
W, 7-0 W, 6-1 W, 7-0 W, 7-0 W, 6-1 W, 6-1 L, 6-1 W, 4-3 L, 5-2 W, 4-0 L, 4-1 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 W, 4-3 L, 4-0
%ITA Weekend, Chapel Hill, N.C.; &SECs., Knoxville, Tenn.; %NCAA 1st/2nd Rounds, Athens, Ga.; $ NCAA Round of 16-Finals, Stanford, Calif.; *SEC match
2012 (24-5, 9-2 SEC) NCAA Quarterfinalist Kansas State Troy at #13 Ga. Tech ^Missouri ^Fla. International #74 Fla. International ~ #14 Texas ~ #7 California ~ #10 Michigan #53 Memphis #17 Clemson #22 South Carolina* #15 Florida* at Miss. State* at #25 Ole Miss* at #37 Arkansas* #49 LSU* at Kentucky* at #25 Vanderbilt* #11 Alabama* #63 Auburn* #21 Tennessee* & #28 S. Carolina & #11 Alabama & #2 Florida $ #64 Coll. of Charleston $ #24 Clemson $$ #11 Texas $$ #3 Duke
W, 6-1 W, 7-0 W, 4-3 W, 6-1 W, 7-0 W, 7-0 W, 4-2 L, 4-0 W, 5-2 W, 4-3 W, 7-0 W, 6-1 L, 4-3 W, 7-0 W, 5-2 W, 7-0 W, 6-1 W, 7-0 W, 4-3 L, 4-3 W, 6-1 W, 7-0 W, 4-0 W, 4-2 L, 4-1 W, 4-0 W, 4-3 W, 4-0 L, 4-2
^ITA Weekend, Athens, Ga..; ~ITA National Team Indoors, Charlottesville, Va.; *SEC match; &SECs., Oxford, Miss.; $NCAA 1st/2nd Rounds, Athens, Ga.; $$ NCAA Round of 16, Athens, Ga.
2013 (24-4, 12-1 SEC) SEC Champions NCAA Quarterfinalist ^#73 Columbia W, 4-1 ^#71 Georgia State W, 7-0 at #19 Clemson W, 5-2 ~ #11 Texas W, 4-2 ~ #7 Cal W, 4-1 ~ #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, 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 & #39 Ole Miss W, 4-0
& #8 Alabama & #2 Florida %Winthrop % #26 Arizona State $ #13 Clemson $ #12 Stanford
W, 4-2 L, 4-0 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 W. 4-2 L, 4-1
~ITA National Team Indoors; &SECs, Starkville, Miss.; %NCAA 1st/2nd Rounds - Athens, Ga.; ^^NCAA Round of 16 Champaign, Ill.; *SEC match
2014 (24-5, 11-2 SEC) SEC Tournament Champions NCAA Quarterfinalist ^ #75 Elon ^ #51 Arkansas #13 Clemson ~ #9 Miami ~ #8 California ~ #3 North Carolina Furman at #25 Georgia Tech at #40 Tennessee* at Miss. St.* at #49 Ole Miss* #5 Virginia #54 S. Carolina* #3 Florida* at #28 Kentucky* at #11 Vanderbilt* #7 Texas A&M* Missouri* at #47 Arkansas* at #54 LSU* #9 Alabama* #24 Auburn* & #53 LSU & #11 Vanderbilt & #3 Alabama % #75 Elon % #37 Florida State $ #15 USC $ #8 Florida
W, 4-0 W, 5-0 W, 7-0 W, 4-0 L, 4-3 L, 4-3 W, 7-0 W, 7-0 W, 7-0 W, 7-0 W, 5-2 W, 4-3 W, 4-0 W, 4-2 W, 4-0 L, 4-2 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 L, 4-3 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 W, 4-1 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 W. 4-3 L, 4-1
^ ITA Kickoff Weekend; ~ ITA National Team Indoors; & SEC Tourn., Columbia, Mo.; %NCAA 1st/2nd Rd, Athens, Ga.; $NCAA Round of 16., Athens, Ga.; SEC match
2015 (24-7, 11-2 SEC) NCAA Semifinalist at #15 Baylor ^#71 Samford ^#28 Auburn at #13 Clemson at #10 Virginia ~ #15 Michigan ~ #1 UCLA ~ #5 California ~ #3 North Carolina #23 Georgia Tech Texas A&M* at #9 Alabama* at #39 Auburn* #22 Kentucky* #11 Vanderbilt* at Tennessee* at Missouri* #26 Ole Miss* #44 Miss. State* at #6 Florida* at #26 S. Carolina* & Miss. State & #24 LSU & #9 Vanderbilt % Charleston Southern % Duke $ #11 Michigan $ #14 Stanford $ #7 UCLA
L, 4-3 W, 4-1 W, 4-0 W, 4-3 L, 4-2 W, 4-1 W, 4-2 W, 4-2 L, 4-1 W, 4-1 W, 5-2 L, 5-2 W, 4-1 W, 4-0 W, 5-2 W, 4-1 W, 6-0 W, 4-0 W, 7-0 L, 4-3 W, 4-2 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 L, 4-3 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 W, 4-2 W, 4-1 L, 4-1
^ITA Kickoff Weekend; ~ ITA National
Team Indoors; *SEC match, & SECs, Columbia, S.C.; % NCAA Championships 1st/2nd Rounds, Athens, Ga.; $NCAA Championships Round of 16, Waco, Texas
2016 (22-5, 11-2 SEC) NCAA Round of 16 ^ #74 Wyoming ^ #57 Old Dominion #20 Clemson ~ #17 Texas Tech ~ #12 Michigan ~ #5 North Carolina at #24 Ga. Tech at #26 Ole Miss* at #25 Miss. State* #46 Alabama* #11 Auburn* #10 Virginia #54 Tennessee* at #23 Kentucky* at #5 Vanderbilt* #24 Arkansas* #71 Missouri* at #16 LSU* at #18 Texas A&M* #4 Florida* #11 South Carolina* & #18 Texas A&M & #5 Vanderbilt & #3 Florida % North Florida % #40 Baylor $ #12 Okla. State
W, 4-0 W, 4-0 W, 7-0 W, 4-0 W, 4-1 L, 4-2 W, 4-1 W, 4-0 W, 5-2 W, 6-1 W, 4-1 W, 4-2 W, 4-0 W, 4-2 L, 4-3 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 W, 5-2 W, 5-2 L, 4-0 W, 41 W, 4-1 W, 4-0 L, 4-2 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 L, 4-0
^ITA Kickoff Weekend; ~ ITA National Team Indoors; *SEC match, &SECs, Baton Rouge, La.; %NCAA Championships 1st/2nd Rounds (Athens, Ga.); $NCAA Championships Round of 16 (Tulsa, Okla.)
2017 (19-6, 11-2 SEC) NCAA Round of 16 ^ New Mexico ^ Illinois at Clemson ~ #10 Duke ~ #3 Pepperdine ~ #1 Florida Mercer #11 Georgia Tech #30 Kentucky* #14 Vanderbilt* at #46 Alabama* at #4 Auburn* at #1 Florida* at #21 S. Carolina* #28 Ole Miss* #25 Miss. St.* at #23 Tennessee* at #19 Arkansas* at #46 Missouri* #19 LSU* #21 Texas A&M* & #12 Auburn % South Carolina St. % #30 North Carolina St. $ #12 Pepperdine
W, 4-0 W, 4-0 W, 7-0 W, 4-1 W, 4-1 L, 4-0 W, 7-0 L, 4-3 W, 4-1 L, 4-2 W, 6-1 W, 4-1 W, 4-1 W, 4-0 W, 4-2 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 W, 5-2 L, 4-2 L, 1-4 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 L, 4-3
^ITA Kickoff Weekend; $ ITA National Team Indoors; *SEC match, &SECs, Nashville, Tenn.; % NCAA Championships 1st/2nd Rounds, Athens, Ga.; $NCAA Championships Round of 16 (Athens, Ga.)
Annual Results 2018 (18-7, 10-3 SEC) NCAA Quarterfinalist ^Michigan State ^Penn Clemson ~ #11 Texas ~ #9 Duke ~ #8 Texas Tech at #12 Ga. Tech at #43 LSU* at Texas A&M* #28 Tennessee* #18 Florida* #10 South Carolina* at #20 Kentucky* at #3 Vanderbilt* Alabama* #15 Auburn* at #9 Ole Miss* at Ole Miss* at #32 Mississippi St.* #49 Arkansas Missouri & #6 Ole Miss % Georgia State % #29 Wake Forest $ #10 South Carolina $ #15 Stanford
W, 4-0 W, 4-0 W, 7-0 W, 4-2 L, 4-3 W, 4-1 L, 4-2 W, 4-0 W, 4-2 W, 7-0 W, 4-1 L, 4-1 W, 4-0 L, 4-1 W, 4-0 W, 4-1 L, 4-3 W, 6-1 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 L, 4-1 W, 4-0 W, 4-0 W, 4-3 L, 4-0
^ITA Kickoff Weekend; ~ ITA National Team Indoors, Madison, Wis.; &SECs, Knoxville, Tenn.; %NCAA 1st/2nd Rounds, Athens, Ga.; $NCAA Rnd. of 16, Winston-Salem, N.C.; *SEC match
2019 Georgia Women’s Tennis
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Tennis Facilities
DAN MAGILL TENNIS COMPLEX
DAN MAGILL (1921-2014)
The University of Georgia
tennis programs owe much to the hard work and dedication of legendary Bulldog Dan Magill.
The Dan Magill Tennis Complex has long stood as a beacon of excel- • Capacity: 5,000 lence in collegiate tennis. With a total of 16 courts (12 outdoor and four indoor) • Built: 1977 and a total seating capacity of more than 5,000 fans, it is one of the largest • Courts: 12 outdoor/4 indoor on-campus tennis facilities in the country. • Hosted: 34 NCAA 1st/2nd In 2006, the NCAA opted to have one combined site for the men’s and Rounds and/or Championships 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).
Women’s Tennis Clubhouse
Dan Magill Grandstand and Pressbox
He developed the Georgia
tennis complex into the finest on-campus tennis facility in the country which includes 12 outdoor courts, four indoor, and grandstand and private box seating for 5,000.
He also spearheaded the
move to locate the Collegiate Tennis Hall of Fame facility on the Georgia campus. For his efforts, the entire facility was officially named the “Dan Magill Tennis Complex” in 1993.
Magill passed away in Au-
gust 2014 at the age of 93, but not before leaving behind a legacy that will stand the test of time.
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Henry Feild Stadium Court
Lindsey Hopkins Indoor Courts
Community Service
BULLDOG SERVICE “It’s always great for our team to get out in the community and give something back to it.” Head Coach Jeff Wallace
The UGA women’s tennis team has a long-standing history of service to the Athens and northeast Georgia communities. Over the years, the team has embarked on two community service projects in the area with Habitat for Humanity in September and the Salvation Army Angel Tree initiative in December. Head coach Jeff Wallace’s dedication to building character and wellrounded student-athletes extends far beyond the most recent season, though. Since the Southeastern Conference (SEC) began handing out the honor in 2004, a UGA women’s tennis player consistently has appeared on the SEC Community Service Team. In addition, the Bulldogs are one of the most decorated programs in the nation when it comes to academic awards. A total of 47 student-athletes have amassed 102 awards on the SEC Academic Honor Roll since 1984 plus an additional 12 have made the SEC First-Year Academic Honor Roll that the league office began in 2003. All of this speaks volumes to the team’s ability to pursue excellence both on and off the court.
“We always enjoy getting out in the local community and giving back a little. It’s important to us that we continue to make a differences in peoples’ lives both on and off the court.” Assoc. Head Coach Drake Bernstein
Over the years, the Bulldogs have assisted the local Habitat for Humanity chapter with the construction of a house and helped out the Salvation Army Angel Tree initiative by packagaing and organizing toys for the less fortunate youth in the Athens Area. Caroline Brinson (top, left) was named to the SEC Community Service Team for women’s tennis in 2016 and 2017. Laura Patterson (middle) received the recognition last season.
2019 Georgia Women’s Tennis
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Endowment Program
TENNIS ENDOWMENTS
Ensuring the Future of UGA Athletics
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 Katarina Jokic is the 2019 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 2016-17: Ellen Perez 2007: Darya Ivanov 2018: Elena Christofi 2008-10: Naoko Ueshima 2019: Katarina Jokic 2010-12: Lilly Kimbell 2013-14: Maho Kowase 2015: Silvia Garcia
Barbara Hartman Howell Scholarship Endowment Annette Goulak is the 2019 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 2019: Annette Goulak
2015: Caroline Brinson 2016: Hannah King
2017: Laura Patterson 2018: Mariana Gould
Doyle E. Mote Scholarship Endowment Marta Gonzalez is the 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
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2010: Yvette Hyndman 2011: Cameron Ellis 2012: Chelsey Gullickson 2013-14: Kate Fuller 2015: Lauren Herring
2016-17: Caroline Brinson 2018-19: Marta Gonzalez
UGAA Women’s Tennis Scholarship Endowment Morgan Coppoc is the 2019 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 2010: Yvette Hyndman 2017-18: Kennedy Shaffer 2004: Douglas Wink 2011-12: Kate Fuller 2019: Morgan Coppoc 2005-06: Natalie Frazier 2013: Lilly Kimbell 2007: Monika Dancevic 2014: Mia King 2008: Yvette Hyndman 2015: Hannah King 2009: Cameron Ellis 2016: Silvia Garcia John and Marilyn McMullan Family Women’s Tennis Scholarship Endowment Meg Kowalski is the 2019 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 2019: Meg Kowalski
2018: Katarina Jokic
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 studentathletes 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 postgraduate 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 this year with Elena Christofi.
University of Georgia Nike Tennis Camp
SCHEDULE
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^ITA Kickoff Weekend; %Seattle,Washington; &College Station, Texas; $Lake Nona, Florida.; *denotes SEC match; all times ET and subject to change.
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GEORGIA
WOMEN’S TENNIS