University of Arkansas, Fayetteville ScholarWorks@UARK

Arkansas Women's Athletics

2011

Arkansas Women's Tennis, 2011

University of Arkansas, Fayetteville. Athletics Media Relations

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TABLE OF CONTENTS RAZORBACK WOMEN’S TENNIS...... 1-6 Tennis Facilities...... 1-2 Media Information...... 3 2011 Roster...... 4 2011 Preview...... 5 Opponent Directory...... 6

COACHES AND STAFF...... 7-10 Michael Hegarty...... 8-9 Audrey Bordeleau/Support Staff....10

MEET THE RAZORBACKS...... 11-28 Anouk Tigu...... 12 Emily Carbone...... 14 Kate Lukomskaya...... 16 Stephanie Roy...... 18 Claudine Paulson...... 20 Valentina Starkova...... 22 Kelsey Sundaram...... 24 Jade Frampton...... 26

REVIEW AND RECORDS...... 29-42 2010 Season Review...... 30 2009-10 Statistics...... 31 NCAA Tournament...... 32 All-Americans...... 33 Honors and Awards...... 34 Coaching Records...... 35 Year-by-Year Results...... 36-40 Series Records...... 41 All-Time Roster...... 42

RAZORBACK ATHLETICS...... 43-68 The University of Arkansas...... 44-48 Chancellor Dr. G. David Gearhart.49 Student-Athlete Academic Support & Achievement...50-52 Razorbacks in the Community...... 53 Athletic Director Jeff Long...... 54-55 Senior Athletic Staff...... 56-57 Razorback Foundation...... 58 Home of Champions...... 59 Million Fans...... 60 Campus Life...... 61 Traditions...... 62-63 Fayetteville...... 64-65 Facilities...... 66-68

University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis 1 GEORGE M. BILLINGSLEY TENNIS CENTER MEDIA INFORMATION MEDIA RELATIONS GENERAL INFORMATION AND DILLS INDOOR STADIUM The media relations offices at the University of Ar- Location...... Fayetteville, Ark. The inside cover features the George M. Billing- kansas are under the direction of Zack Higbee, Phil Pierce Founded...... March 27, 1871 and Jeri Thorpe, Associate Directors for Media Relations Enrollment...... 21,406 sley Tennis Center, the home of 10 plexi-paved out- and Communications. Our offices are located on the Nickname...... Razorbacks door courts and the site of the 2008 Men’s Tennis Colors...... Cardinal and White north side of Barnhill Arena. Affiliation...... NCAA Division I SEC Championship. Conference...... Southeastern (West) The former Varsity Courts were renovated into ON THE WEB Chancellor...... Dr. G. David Gearhart ArkansasRazorbacks.com is a one-stop source for fans Athletics Director...... Jeff Long the Billingsley Tennis Center in 2008. The renova- Facility...... George M. Billingsley Tennis Center (1,500) tions include a player lounge, a plaza entry, a score- and media members. All press releases and statistics are Dills Indoor Stadium (1,000) posted on the web site as well as highlight video packages Year Opened...... Billingsley Tennis Center, 2008 board for the main courts, skyboxes overlooking the with post-match quotes. Dills Indoor Stadium, 2002 indoor and outdoor courts and elevated stadium seating for the outdoor courts. TENNIS STAFF CREDENTIALS Head Coach...... Michael Hegarty Unlike many other programs around the coun- Media credentials for men’s tennis events may be ob- Alma Mater (Year)...... Auburn (1994) try, Arkansas’ tennis team takes advantage of facili- tained by contacting John Thomas. Credentials may be Years at Arkansas...... 7 ties which give the Razorbacks an opportunity to picked up at the Athletic Media Relations offices up to Office Phone...... 479-575-3446 the day of the event. Assistant Coach...... Audrey Bordeleau play and practice 365 days a year, regardless of the Alma Mater (Year)...... Arkansas (2008) weather. EMAIL UPDATES TEAM INFORMATION The University of Arkansas’ Dills Indoor Stadium Members of the media may request that they be 2010 Dual Record...... 18-10 was originally constructed in 1982, but it was exten- added to the Arkansas Media Relations email list. List 2010 SEC Finish...... 3rd in West members receive match stories, stats, updates and other 2010 NCAA Finish...... 22nd sively renovated in 2001, giving the Razorbacks one Letterwinners Returning/Lost...... 7/0 of the finest indoor facilities in the nation. information via email. Please contact John Thomas to be All-Americans Returning/Lost...... 0/0 added to the list. Newcomers...... 1 (Jade Frampton) The stadium was renamed and dedicated on April 30, 2002, in honor of Jane Dills Morgan and INTERVIEW POLICY ATHLETIC MEDIA RELATIONS Nancy Dills Lee, along with Ewell Lee, who made a All interviews with athletes and coaches must be ar- Women’s Tennis Contact...... John Thomas Office Phone...... 479-575-3114 sizeable donation in the name of Robert “Bob” and ranged through Athletic Media Relations. Phone inter- Cell Phone...... 479-799-5646 Lucile Dills. They were early and long-time support- views with out-of-town media are encouraged and can Fax...... 479-575-7410 ers of the Razorback program. also be arranged. The coaching staff is generally available Email...... [email protected] in its offices weekdays between 9 a.m. and noon. All re- Assoc. AD - New Media...... Bill Smith The stadium originally included just four courts, Assoc. MRD...... Robby Edwards quests for information should be made to John Thomas Assoc. MRD...... Zack Higbee but the renovations increased that number to six. in the Athletic Media Relations office. The Arkansas lock- Assoc. MRD...... Phil Pierce Other improvements included a new ceiling and in- er room is closed to media at all times. Assoc. MRD...... Jeri Thorpe sulation system, 96 new lamps, resurfacing of all the Asst. MRD...... Chad Crunk Asst. MRD...... Zach Lawson courts and six electronic scoreboards. OLYMPIC SPORT PRESS CONFERENCE Asst. MRD...... Derek Satterfield The Dills Indoor Stadium also houses new and The Razorbacks host a weekly press conference on Intern...... Patrick Crawford Tuesday afternoons at 1 p.m. in the Barnhill Arena inter- Intern...... LaToya Gulley renovated coaches offices, player locker rooms and view room. Head coach Michael Hegarty attends these Intern...... Stephanie Taylor Website...... ArkansasRazorbacks.com training rooms. conferences to talk about Arkansas’ upcoming schedule and previous results.

POST-MATCH INTERVIEWS COVER Head coach Michael Hegarty is available at the con- The cover of the 2011 Arkansas women’s tennis media clusion of each match for interviews. Interviews are ar- guide features senior Anouk Tigu. Current team photog- ranged through an AMR staff member and are conducted raphy by Wesley Hitt and design by Andrew Reynolds. court side. CREDITS PARKING The 2011 Arkansas women’s tennis media guide was writ- Parking is open for all women’s tennis events after 5 ten, edited and designed by John Thomas. Editorial assis- p.m. and on weekends. For events on weekdays, earlier tance provided by Associate Director for Media Relations than 5 p.m. fans may obtain a visitor’s pass from the Uni- Robby Edwards, Associate Director for Media Relations versity of Arkansas Transit and Parking office. Jeri Thorpe and Assistant Athletic Director for New Me- dia Bill Smith. Current team photography by Wesley Hitt.

2 University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis 3 HOGS RETURN AND ADD FIREPOWER TO LINEUP THE RAZORBACKS ENTER 2011 LOOKING FOR FOURTH STRAIGHT NCAA BID. Arkansas enters the 2011 season looking for its fourth straight bid to the NCAA Tournament and its fifth appear- ance in six years. Head coach Michael Hegarty has his top seven student- athletes back from last year, so there’s good reason for high expectations. With a lineup of freshmen and sophomores, the 2010 club went 18-10 overall, 6-5 in the Southeastern Conference and beat host Oklahoma to advance to the second round of Jade Frampton the NCAA Tournament. The Razorbacks ended the year ranked (above) and No. 22 in the country, and had wins over No. 22 Ole Miss, No. 23 Claudine Washington, No. 27 TCU, No. 32 Tulsa and No. 35 Oklahoma. Paulson (right) Hegarty and the Razorbacks achieved those heights with just three players back from the 2009 lineup, which won the SEC’s Western Divi- sion, won the NCAA Fayetteville Regional and advanced to the Round of 16 in the NCAA Tournament. Those three student-athletes all moved up in last year’s order, Anouk Tigu went from No. 2 to No. 1, Kate Lukom- skaya from No. 6 to No. 2 and Emily Carbone from No. 4 to No. 3. Tigu, is a senior this year and ranks No. 18 in the nation. She went 14-8 in the No. 1 spot and was 23-10 overall a year ago. In the fall, she was 10-3, won the USTA/ITA Central Regional Championship and earned a spot in the USTA/ ITA Indoor National Championship. The 2010-11 University of Arkansas Razorback women’s tennis team: Back row, from left, assistant coach Audrey Bor- Lukomskaya, a junior this season, was 20-16 two years ago, including 10-9 at No. 6. Jumping up to No. 2, she was deleau, trainer Katie Roling, Claudine Paulson, Jade Frampton, Anouk Tigu, Kelsey Sundaram, head coach Michael 9-9 at that position and 23-13 overall. Hegarty. Front row, from left, Emily Carbone, Stephanie Roy, Kate Lukomskaya, Valentina Starkova. Carbone, a junior this year, was 9-7 at No. 3 last year and 18-19 overall after going 8-9 at No. 4 in 2009 with a 23-14 overall mark. 2010-11 UNIVERSITY OF ARKANSAS WOMEN’S TENNIS In the fall, Lukomskaya was 5-2 and Carbone was 6-5. If Hegarty goes with the same lineup for 2011, he will have Tigu at No. 1, Lukomskaya at No. 2 and Carbone at NAME HT YR HOMETOWN (PREVIOUS SCHOOL) No. 3. Emily Carbone 5-4 JR Lexington, Ky. (Henry Clay) The bottom half of the order included Stephanie Roy at No. 4, Kelsey Sundaram at No. 5 and Claudine Paulson Jade Frampton 5-6 FR St. George, Utah (Oak Meadow) at No. 6. Kate Lukomskaya 5-9 JR Minsk, Belarus (School Number 51) As a sophomore last year, Roy was 11-4 at No. 4 and 17-9 overall. Sundaram, as a freshman, was 13-3 at No. 5 and Claudine Paulson 5-9 SO Guayaquil, Ecuador (Nuevo Mundo) 26-11 overall; and Paulson, also as a freshman in 2010, was 10-3 at No. 6 and 18-13 for the year. Stephanie Roy 5-6 JR Montreal, Quebec (Regina Assumpta) In the fall, Roy was 4-3 in singles, Sundaram 8-5 and Paulson 4-2. In doubles, Tigu and Paulson were 16-8 at No. 1, Lukomskaya and Sundaram 22-17 at No. 2, and Roy and Valen- Valentina Starkova 5-9 SO Almaty, Kazakhstan (CSKA Military College of Sport) tina Starkova 9-8 at No. 3. Kelsey Sundaram 5-5 SO New Braunfels, Texas (Canyon) Starkova, who joins Paulson and Sundaram as sophomores, also worked her way into the singles lineup. Playing Anouk Tigu 5-7 SR Moordrecht, Holland (St. Antonius College in Gouda) anywhere from No. 2 through No. 6, she was 17-9, including 5-3 at No. 6. Another candidate for a spot in the lineup is the only new- HEAD COACH: Michael Hegarty (Eighth year at Arkansas) Anouk Tigu comer to this year’s team, freshman Jade Frampton. She went 7-5 ASSISTANT COACH: Audrey Bordeleau (First year at Arkansas) in the fall, including winning the Singles C Flight in the Sooner Classic at Oklahoma. HOW DO YOU SAY . . . In addition to Tigu winning the ITA Central Regional singles Emily CAR-bon-ee title, she also won the top flight title at the SEC Coaches’ Classic. e-KAT-a-reena LOO-come-SKY-a Other fall highlights include Roy’s 6-2, 6-2 victory over No. 82 Stephanie WAH Jennifer Rabat of Purdue at the UCF Invitational, and Paulson and ANN-ook TEE-goo Starkova advancing to the finals of their respective flights at the Audrey BOARD-low SEC Coaches’ Classic. Arkansas’ schedule includes 12 matches at either the Dills In- door Stadium or Billingsley Outdoor Center, including non-con- ference matches against Texas A&M, Colorado, Texas Tech and

4 University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis 5 2011 OPPONENT DIRECTORY COACHING STAFF P. 7-10 University of Kentucky Lexington, Kentucky Vanderbilt University Nashville, Tennessee University of Arkansas Fayetteville, Arkansas University of Tennessee Knoxville, Tennessee University of Georgia Athens, Georgia University of Mississippi Oxford, Mississippi

Mississippi State University of Starkville, Mississippi South Carolina Columbia, South Carolina

Auburn University Auburn, Alabama

University of Alabama Tuscaloosa, Alabama Louisiana State University of Florida ton Rouge, Louisiana Gainesville, Florida

LEAGUE HEADQUARTERS Birmingham, Alabama

OPPONENT DATE/TIME HEAD COACH MEDIA CONTACT EMAIL SID PHONE North Texas Jan. 22 Noon Sujay Lama Ryan Kasmiersky [email protected] (940) 565-3671 Texas A&M Jan. 23 Noon Bobby Kleinecke Debbie Darrah [email protected] (979) 862-5449 Utah Jan. 29. 2 p.m. Mat Iandolo Kyle Harris [email protected] (801) 581-3771 @Notre Dame Jan. 30 TBA Jay Louderback Brent Henningfeld [email protected] (574) 631-1762 Yale Jan. 30 TBA Danielle Lund McNamara Timothy Bennett, Jr. [email protected] (203) 432-1457 @Oklahoma St. Feb. 4 5 p.m. Chris Young Sean Maguire [email protected] (405) 744-7714 @Oklahoma Feb. 6 1 p.m. David Mullins Leslie Koch [email protected] (405) 325-8231 Tulsa Feb. 11 11 a.m. Dean Orford Cedrique Flemming [email protected] (918) 631-3720 Texas Tech Feb. 13 2 p.m. Todd Petty Randy Farley [email protected] (806) 742-7600/ext. 260 Colorado Feb. 25 Noon Nicole Kenneally Andrew Green [email protected] (303) 492-5626 Rice Feb. 27 11 a.m. Elizabeth Schmidt Chuck Pool [email protected] (713) 348-5775 South Carolina Mar. 4 Noon Arlo Elkins Matt Freed [email protected] (803) 777-5204 Florida March 6 Noon Roland Thornqvist Kathy Cafazzo [email protected] (353) 375-4683/6133 @Miss. State Mar. 11 2:30 p.m. Daryl Greenan John R. Cade [email protected] (662) 325-2703 @Ole Miss March 13 1 p.m. Mark Beyers Kim Ling [email protected] (662) 915-7522 Tennessee March 25 Noon Mike Patrick & Sonia Hahn-Patrick Donnie Conley [email protected] (865) 974-1212 @Georgia March 27 Noon Jeff Wallace Christopher Lakos [email protected] (706) 542-1621 @Alabama April 1 2 p.m. Jenny Mainz Jessica Pare’ [email protected] (205) 348-3673 @Auburn April 3 1 p.m. Tim Gray Kendra Lee [email protected] (334) 844-9900 Kentucky April 8 Noon Carlos Drada Metz Camfield [email protected] (859) 257-3838 Vanderbilt April 10 Noon Geoff Macdonald Laina Balafas [email protected] (615) 322-4121 LSU April 16 Noon Tony Minnis Jesse Delerno [email protected] (225) 578-1866 6 University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis 7 Another honoree is Ela Kaluder, who was named the 2007 ITA Player to MICHAEL HEGARTY Watch, an honor that proved prophetic in 2009 when Kaluder was named the HEAD WOMEN’S TENNIS COACH, UNIVERSITY OF ARKANSAS ITA Central Region Senior Player of the Year. She also earned first-team All-SEC 2008 SEC COACH OF THE YEAR honors in 2007 and 2008. EIGHTH SEASON AT ARKANSAS Not content for his players to succeed only on the court, Hegarty has in- stilled a strong academic work ethic into his players, believing tennis should go hand-in-hand with a college education. Leading the way in the classroom was Miseviciute, who was named the SEC Scholar-Athlete of the Year and an ESPN The Magazine Academic All-American in both 2008 and 2009. Since 2004, Hegarty’s Razorbacks have been named to the SEC Honor Roll a total of 30 times. After a successful college and professional career, Hegarty began his coach- ing career as an assistant coach at his alma mater, Auburn University, in 1994. After two seasons with the Tigers, Hegarty took his first job at Arkansas, assis- tant coach of the men’s tennis team under current men’s head coach Robert Cox for a year before taking an assistant coaching position with the Kentucky Wildcats men’s and women’s programs. Hegarty took his first head coaching job at Fresno State in 1997 where he took the west coast by storm. The Bulldogs spent three seasons in the Top 25 with Hegarty and were crowned Western Athletic Conference champions in 1999. For this, Hegarty was named WAC and Region VII Coach of the Year. Arkansas’ most decorated wom- Before returning to Arkansas, Hegarty served as an assistant coach for the University of Florida men’s tennis team en’s tennis player, Miseviciute, with from 2001-2003, helping transform Florida men’s tennis into a national powerhouse. For his work with the Gators, the help of Hegarty, won an astound- Hegarty was named the ITA Southeast Regional Assistant Coach of the Year. ing 126 singles matches in her career, While playing at Auburn, Hegarty broke the Top 20 in singles in both 1992 and 1993. He was named a two-time earned two All-America and three academic All-SEC honoree and graduated with a degree in journalism. After graduating and entering the pro circuit, All-SEC honors, and was a finalist for Hegarty was ranked as high at 284th in the world and competed in several world-renowned tournaments including the Honda Award in 2008 and 2009. the 1994 US Open, the and the NASDAQ Open. In seven seasons as Arkansas’ head coach, Michael Hegarty has returned Most recently, Anouk Tigu was vot- Hegarty and his wife, Mary McDonald, currently reside in Fayetteville with their two children. the Razorbacks to national prominence with two Southeastern Conference ed the ITA Central Region Player to Western Division championships and four trips to the NCAA Tournament, Watch in spring 2010, and she vali- including each of the last three years. dated the attention by winning the THE HEGARTY FILE Under Hegarty, Arkansas improved from an 8-13 finish his first year ITA Central Region championship in Name: Michael Patrick Hegarty in 2004 to 11-11 in 2005 to a spot in the NCAA Tournament in 2006. The fall 2010. Also in 2010, Kelsey Sunda- Degree: Auburn University, 1994 school’s first ever SEC Western Division titles followed in 2008 and 2009. The ram was named the ITA Rookie Play- Playing Career: 1994 US Open, 1994 Australian Open, collegiate top 20 sin- ‘08 club advanced to the Elite Eight of the NCAA Tournament while the ‘09 gles ranking at Auburn in 1992 and 1993 er of the Year. Tigu, who was ranked team reached the Round of 16. No. 29 in the nation, was first-team Last year’s team, despite replacing three players in his singles lineup from PRIOR TO THE RAZORBACKS All-SEC while Sundaram made the the 2009 team, finished 18-10, ranked No. 22 in the nation and advanced to Auburn University all-freshman team. the second round of the NCAA Tournament. The Razorbacks had wins over Assistant Coach, 1994-95 No. 22 Ole Miss, No. 23 Washington, No. 27 TCU, No. 32 Tulsa and No. 35 Accomplishments: Worked with both men’s and women’s teams as assistant Oklahoma. Hegarty was named the ITA Central Region Coach of the Year for coach at his alma mater University of Arkansas the second time in three seasons. Assistant Coach, 1995-96 In 2009, the Razorbacks were 15-8 and won the SEC West at 8-4. Arkansas Accomplishments: Assistant with current men’s coach Robert Cox beat Oral Roberts and No. 28 TCU in the NCAA Tournament before falling to University of Kentucky No. 3 Duke, 4-2. During the regular season, Hegarty’s team posted wins over Assistant Coach, 1996-97 No. 13 Kentucky, No. 13 Tennessee, No. 16 Florida and No. 22 LSU. Accomplishments: Again working with both men’s and women’s programs, Hegarty was named the SEC Coach of the Year in 2008 after going 18-10, helped UK reach the highest ranking in school history -- No. 5 -- and 20-8 winning the SEC West at 9-2 and guiding the Razorbacks to the Elite Eight in 1997. in the NCAA Tournament. Also the ITA Central Region Coach of the Year, Fresno State University Arkansas beat No. 46 Wake Forest, No. 14 North Carolina and No. 2 Georgia Head Coach, 1997-2001 Accomplishments: Three straight years in ITA men’s top 25, capped by a in the post-season before losing to No. 7 UCLA. During the regular season, high of 13th as a team. Western Athletic Conference champions in 1999. Arkansas posted wins over No. 6 Georgia, No. 15 Kentucky and No. 20 Ten- WAC and Region VII Coach of the Year. nessee. University of Florida Under Hegarty’s tutelage, the Razorbacks have accumulated individual Assistant Coach, 2001-03 honors. Aurelija Miseviciute won the Intercollegiate Tennis Association Na- Accomplishments: Assisted as Gators moved from 42nd to No. 2 in ITA tional Indoor Championship title in 2007. Consistently ranked in the top rankings; 2003 ITA Southeast Regional Assistant Coach of the Year and final- three in the country, Miseviciute repeated as ITA National Indoor Champion ist for national ITA Assistant Coach of the Year in 2008. 8 University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis 9 AUDREY BORDELEAU ASSISTANT TENNIS COACH, FIRST SEASON MEET THE RAZORBACKS P. 11-28 Former Razorback Audrey Bordeleau returned to the Arkansas Razorbacks as an assistant coach on Sept. 22, 2010. Bordeleau, who is from Quebec City, Quebec, lettered at Arkansas from 2005-08 and was one of the first signees for head coach Michael Hegarty when he took over the program just prior to the 2004 season. Bordeleau played in the middle of the lineup and helped Arkansas improve from 8-13 the year before she arrived to 11-11 in 2005, 10-11 in 2006, 11-11 in 2007 and 18-10 in 2008. The 2008 club won the Southeastern Conference’s Western Division title and advanced to the round of eight in the NCAA Tournament, matching the best performance in school history. As a senior, Bordeleau was 17-8 in singles and a team-leading 22-3 in doubles, helping Arkansas record wins over six teams ranked in the top 20. In the NCAA Tournament, the Razorbacks knocked off No. 46 Wake Forest, 4-0, No. 14 North Carolina in Chapel Hill, 4-3, and No. 2 Georgia, 4-2, before los- ing to No. 7 UCLA, 4-0. Bordeleau was 15-14 as a freshman, 15-7 as a sophomore and 10-11 as a ju- nior for a career record of 57-40. She also helped the 2006 team earn a spot in the NCAA Tournament, which was Arkansas’ first appearance since 2001. A team captain on the court and off the court, she was a member of the SEC Academic Honor Roll, was named to the 2008 SEC Community Service Team and participated in several com- munity service projects, including the Sweat Hogs, Lift Up America and with Arkansas Athletes Outreach.

KATIE ROLING ATHLETIC TRAINER, SECOND SEASON A six-time participant in the Canadian National Ju- Katie Roling is in her second nior Championship, she finished ninth in 2003. season as the athletic trainer for She earned her bachelor’s in business administra- the Razorbacks women’s tennis tion in 2008. Since graduating, she has worked with the team. She also works with the Razorbacks as a volunteer assistant coach, as a student- cheerleading and dance teams athlete academic counselor and as a club pro at Fayette- at Arkansas. Roling graduated ville Athletic Club. from Missouri State in 2009 with a degree in athletic train- ing. She is currently pursuing her masters degree in sport management from Arkansas.

10 University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis 11 2010 RESULTS ANOUK TIGU FULL CAREER (Fall & Spring) SINGLES TEAM/SCHOOL OPPONENT (RANK) SINGLES SCORE ANOUK TIGU YEAR SINGLES DOUBLES Jan. 23 Oklahoma State Nataliya Shatkovskaya Won 6-4, 6-0 2007-08 11-13 19-4 Jan. 30 #23 Washington Venise Chan (#11) Won 6-4, 5-7, 7-5 2008-09 25-6 26-13 5-7 / SENIOR Jan. 31 #19 Michigan Denise Muresan Lost 6-1, 6-0 2009-10 23-10 21-12 Feb. 6 Louisiana-Lafayette Audrey Wooland Won 6-2, 6-1 2010-11* 10-3 7-3 Feb. 7 #61 Utah Erin Monson Won 6-4, 6-1 Total 69-32 73-3 MOORDRECHT, HOLLAND Feb. 13 at #32 Tulsa Alexandra Kichoutkin Lost 6-4, 6-1 Feb. 20 at #60 Rice Rebekka Hanle (#63) Won 6-2, 6-3 * -- Fall 2010 (ST. ANTONIUS COLLEGE) Feb. 21 at #27 TCU Nina Munch-Soegaard Won 6-7, 6-2, 7-6 Feb. 28 #35 Oklahoma Ana-Maria Constantinescu (#76) Won 7-6(1), 7-6(6) March 6 at #6 Florida* Lauren Embree (#15) Lost 6-4, 6-0 the Southeastern Conference’s Fresh- *March 7 at #58 South Carolina Ana Marija Zubori (#72) Lost 7-6(5), 7-5 man of the Week. Although Tigu’s *March 12 #22 Ole Miss Kristi Boxx (#36) Won 6-2, 6-2 Razorback career began with a bang, *March 14 #50 Mississippi State Olesya Tsigvintseva Won 6-1, 6-0 one of her most valuable contribu- *March 17 at Texas A&M Elze Potgieter (#63) Lost 6-3, 2-6, 6-4 tions to the team came during the AS A JUNIOR (2009-10) *March 26 #14 Georgia Chelsey Gullickson (#13) Lost 6-2, 6-4 NCAA Championships. Against No. *March 28 at #15 Tennessee Caitlin Whoriskey (#12) Lost 6-4, 6-2 One of three returning letterwinners from 2009 and the lone upperclassmen, Tigu entered the fall with a No. 59 2 ranked Georgia, Tigu clinched the singles ranking by ITA. By virtue of her ranking, Tigu earned a spot in the qualifying singles flight at the 2009 Riviera/ *April 2 #50 Auburn Fani Chifchieva (#54) Won 6-4, 6-4 *April 4 Alabama (#47) Won 7-5, 6-3 Razorbacks’ first ever berth into the ITA Women’s All-American Championship in California, where she defeated Alabama’s Courtney McLane 6-2, 4-6, *April 9 at #31 Vanderbilt Catherine Newman (#23) Lost 6-1, 6-3 Elite Eight of the NCAA Tournament. 6-4 in the first round. Tigu won her flight at the Razorback Classic with a 6-1, 6-0 victory over Tulsa’s Alexandra -Ki *April 11 at Kentucky Megan Broderick (#98) Won 6-4, 6-0 Not only did she get it done in sin- choutkin. She also entered the Wilson/ITA Central Region Championships as the No. 1 seed in singles and advanced *April 17 at #71 LSU Whitney Wolf Won 6-2, 4-6, 6-1 gles play during the 2008 season, but to the quarterfinals. Tigu finished the fall with a 9-2 singles ^April 22 #55 Auburn Fani Chifchieva (#45) Won 7-6(4), 6-1 she combined for an incredible 20-4 record. In doubles, Tigu was 8-1 with partner Claudine Paul- %May 26 Duke Reka Zsilinska (#34) Won 7-5, 6-2 record in doubles action. son. The duo was the No. 1 seed at the Wilson/ITA Central Re- %May 27 Baylor Leenka Broosova (#5) Lost 6-3, 6-0 gion Championship and advanced to the finals, which they BEFORE ARKANSAS DOUBLES SCORE/ lost to the Oklahoma duo of Ana-Maria Constantienscu and Tigu caught the Arkansas coaching Teona Tsertsvadze. In the spring, Tigu picked up right where DOUBLES TEAM/SCHOOL OPPONENT (RANK) PARTNER Jan. 23 Oklahoma State Buslaieva/Khatsko Won 8-5/Claudine Paulson staff’s attention by establishing her- she left off at the No. 1 singles position for the Razorbacks. At Jan. 30 #23 Washington Ardies/Dy (#11) Lost 8-6/Claudine Paulson self as one of the top junior players that spot, she accumulated a 23-10 record with wins over nine Jan. 31 #19 Michigan Muresan/Mahtani Won 8-6/Claudine Paulson in The Netherlands. At the ages of 12, ranked opponents. Tigu, herself, climbed the singles rankings Feb. 6 Louisiana-Lafayette Mazinova/Marcovich Won 8-6/Claudine Paulson 14 and 16, Tigu was the No. 1-ranked throughout the season finishing 29th in the nation. Tigu was Feb. 7 #61 Utah Monson/Maughen Won 8-3/Claudine Paulson player in her country, including a na- also selected to play in the NCAA Singles Tournament at the Feb. 13 at #32 Tulsa Karaitaina/Kichoutkin Won 8-6/Claudine Paulson tional championship at the age of 16. end of the year and advanced to the second round with a Feb. 20 at #60 Rice Chao/Guzman (#31) Lost 8-4/Claudine Paulson At the age of 18, she took her game to win over Duke’s Reka Zsilinska, 7-5, 6-2. Her best tennis was Feb. 21 at #27 TCU Munch-Soegaard/Duncan (#22) Won 8-6/Claudine Paulson the international level as Tigu earned Feb. 28 #35 Oklahoma Constantinescu/Tsertsvadze (#29) Won 9-7/Claudine Paulson played at the end of the season where she won her last six of an ITF top 45 ranking and was accept- eight matches. *March 6 at #6 Florida Boonstra/Will (#6) Lost 8-1/Claudine Paulson *March 7 at #58 South Carolina Stojic/Zubori Lost 8-4/Claudine Paulson ed to Roland Garros and Wimbledon *March 12 #22 Ole Miss Boxx/Nijessen (#12) Lost 8-3/Claudine Paulson in the junior division. AS A SOPHOMORE (2008-09) *March 14 #50 Mississippi State Tsigvtseva/Mayuk Won 8-1/Claudine Paulson Carrying her freshman success into her sophomore campaign, March 17 at Texas A&M Potgieter/Urbina Lost 9-7/Claudine Paulson PERSONAL Anouk Tigu posted another 20+ win season in 2008-09, fin- *March 26 #14 Georgia Gullickson/Gilchrist (#9) Lost 8-5/Stephanie Roy Anouk Tigu’s tennis experience goes ishing the season 22-7 overall and 10-5 in dual play, all in *March 28 at #15 Tennessee Whoriskey/Sorbello (#57) Lost 8-5/Stephanie Roy back to when she was five years old. the No. 2 spot in the singles lineup. Ranked as high as No. *April 2 #50 Auburn Chifchieva/Hastenrath Won 8-7(7)/Stephanie Roy Born on Oct. 26, 1989, to Luc and 66 during the season, Tigu’s standout singles victories came *April 4 Alabama McLane/Guarachi (#20) Lost 8-2/Stephanie Roy Joke Tigu, Tigu began learning tennis *April 9 at #31 Vanderbilt Preeg/Wu (#25) Lost 8-3/Stephanie Roy against then-ranked No. 35 Alex Haney of Auburn and her from her father, a tennis coach, and match-clinching win over Vanderbilt’s Keilly Ulery, giving the *April 11 at Kentucky Lilley/Pienaar Lost 8-2/Stephanie Roy *April 17 at #71 LSU Burns/Robinson Won 8-4/Valentina Starkova her older brother Sabin. Razorbacks the upset win. In doubles, Tigu and partner Nanar ^April 22 #55 Auburn Chifchieva/Hastenrath Won 8-2/Valentina Starkova Airapetian won the ITA Central Region Doubles Champion- ^April 23 #17 Ole Miss Vogel/Rangel Won 8-3/Valentina Starkova ship and finished the season with an overall record of 22-12. %May 14 #42 Oklahoma Eckel/Kalashnikova Won 9-8(3)/V. Starkova The duo started the spring season ranked No. 8 in the nation %May 15 #16 Texas Craddock/Damico Lost 8-5/Valentina Starkova and their list of victories included then-ranked No. 3 Amanda Granson and Melissa Mang of Duke, and teammates Aurelija ^SEC Tournament / % --NCAA Tournament / * -- Southeastern Conference Miseviciute and Ella Kaluder who were ranked No. 10 at the time.

AS A FRESHMAN To begin the 2008 spring season, Tigu established herself as an up and coming star in the Razorback women’s tennis pro- gram. She was honored twice in her first three weeks of play as 12 University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis 13 EMILY CARBONE 2010 RESULTS FULL CAREER (Fall & Spring) EMILY CARBONE SINGLES TEAM/SCHOOL OPPONENT (RANK) SINGLES SCORE YEAR SINGLES DOUBLES Jan. 23 Oklahoma State Sara Meghoufel Won 6-3, 6-4 2008-09 23-14 17-14 Jan. 23 Saint Louis Hailee Elmore Lost 6-4, 4-6, 1-0(4) 2009-10 18-19 7-7 5-4 / JUNIOR Jan. 30 #23 Washington Joyce Ardies Lost 4-6, 6-3, 6-0 2010-11* 6-5 8-5 Jan. 31 #19 Michigan Tania Mahtani Won 7-6(3), 3-6, 1-0(4) Total 47-38 32-26 Feb. 6 Louisiana-Lafayette Briggitt Marcovich Won 6-0, 6-4 LEXINGTON, KY. Feb. 7 #61 Utah Evgenia Krychkova Won 6-4, 7-5 *-Fall 2010 Feb. 13 at #32 Tulsa JoAnne Karatiana Won 6-2, 6-3 (HENRY CLAY) Feb. 20 at #60 Rice Julie Chao Lost 7-5, 6-7(5), 6-3 PERSONAL Feb. 21 at #27 TCU Katariina Tuohimaa (#56) Lost 6-2, 4-6, 6-0 Born and raised in Lexington, Ky., Feb. 28 #35 Oklahoma Maria Kalashnikova Won 6-4, 6-2 Carbone is the daughter of Donald *March 6 at #6 Florida Allie Will (#11) Lost 6-0, 7-6(4) and Linda Carbone and has a young- *March 7 at #58 South Carolina Anya Morgina (#111) Lost 6-3, 7-5 er sister, Michelle. Both of her parents *March 12 #22 Ole Miss Connor Vogel Won 6-3, 4-6, 6-2 *March 14 #50 Mississippi State Natalia Mayuk Won 6-2, 6-1 played tennis at Austin Peay State March 17 at Texas A&M Nazari Urbina (#67) Lost 6-2, 6-2 University. Raised in bluegrass coun- AS A SOPHOMORE (2009-10) *March 26 #14 Georgia Nadja Gilchrist (#25) Lost 6-3, 6-1 try, Carbone is living out her dream Carbone entered the fall looking to build on the 20-plus singles victories she earned as a freshman. She picked up *March 28 at #15 Tennessee Rosalia Alda Won 7-5, 4-6, 6-3 to play tennis in the SEC at Arkansas. seven victories in the fall and advanced to the Round of 16 at the Wilson/ITA Central Region Championship, losing *April 2 #50 Auburn Myrthe Molenveld Lost 6-3, 4-6, 1-0(5) to eventual champion Ana-Maria Constantinescu of Oklahoma. Carbone also played her way to the semifinal round *April 4 Alabama Meritt Emery Won 6-3, 6-2 at the Razorback Classic. Partnered with freshman Valentina Starkova in doubles, the pair earned five victories. Over *April 9 at #31 Vanderbilt Chelsea Preeg (#82) Lost 6-3, 6-2 the spring, Carbone went 11-12 in dual matches and 5-6 in conference play. The majority of her spring was played *April 11 at Kentucky Christine Johnson Lost 5-7, 6-3, 1-0(7) at the No. 3 singles spot for the Hogs. There, she went a strong 9-7. Early in the non-conference season, Carbone *April 17 at #71 LSU Nicole Kantor Won 6-4, 6-2 went on a four-match winning streak that included a win over Tulsa’s JoAnne Karatiana, 6-2, 6-3. She also notched a ^April 23 #17 Ole Miss Connor Vogel Lost 5-7, 6-2, 6-3 %May 14 #42 Oklahoma Maria Kalashnikova Won 1-6, 6-3, 6-2 win for her team in the first round of the NCAA Tournament against Oklahoma’s Maria Kalashnikova, and it was the %May 15 #16 Texas Vanja Corovic (#75) Lost 6-0, 6-3 second time in the season that she came out on top. DOUBLES SCORE/ AS A FRESHMAN (2008-09) DOUBLES TEAM/SCHOOL OPPONENT (RANK) PARTNER Emily Carbone posted an astounding 23 singles victories as a freshman. She spent most of the dual season in the *April 11 Kentucky Elle Coldiron/Nicole Scates Won 8-1/C. Paulson No. 4 spot in the Arkansas lineup, clinching the Razorbacks’ win over Southeastern Conference foe and then-ranked No. 13 Kentucky. In doubles, Carbone and partner Kate Lukomskaya finished the season 15-12 and 11-6 in dual ^SEC Tournament / % --NCAA Tournament / * -- Southeastern Conference play. Carbone and Lukomska- ya clinched Arkansas’ doubles points against Tulsa, Mississip- pi State, Mississippi and LSU.

PRIOR TO ARKANSAS Carbone not only established herself as an elite junior player in Kentucky but also on the na- tional level as well. Carbone, the top ranked tennis player in Kentucky for 2008, saw her national ranking among high school seniors jump into the top 20. She claimed two team state championships in Kentucky, while also winning two individual championships and being runner-up her other two seasons. Among her fin- est accomplishments as a high school student-athlete came when she was honored as the Kentucky State Farm Female Athlete of Year.

14 University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis 15 KATE LUKOMSKAYA 2010 RESULTS FULL CAREER (Fall & Spring) KATE LUKOMSKAYA SINGLES TEAM/SCHOOL OPPONENT (RANK) SINGLES SCORE YEAR SINGLES DOUBLES Jan. 23 Oklahoma State Alisa Buslaieva Won 6-1, 7-6(4) 2008-09 20-17 18-17 Jan. 30 #23 Washington Lina Xu Won 6-0, 6-7(5), 6-4 2009-10 23-13 22-16 5-9 / JUNIOR Jan. 31 #19 Michigan Rika Tatsuno Won 6-0, 6-4 2010-11* 5-2 4-4 Feb. 6 Louisiana-Lafayette Julie Mazinova Won 6-4, 6-1 Total 48-32 44-37 Feb. 13 at #32 Tulsa Ewa Szatkowska Won 6-3, 6-4 MINSK, BELARUS Feb. 20 at #61 Rice Jessica Jackson (#100) Lost 6-2, 6-0 *-Fall 2010 Feb. 21 at #27 TCU Kayla Duncan (#79) Lost 6-4, 6-4 (SCHOOL NUMBER 51) Feb. 26 Memphis Marjorie Ondeck Won 6-1, 6-3 Feb. 26 Oral Roberts Lina Semenova 5-7, 0-1 (DNF) Ekaterina Lukomskaya was born on Feb. 28 #35 Oklahoma Marie-Pier Huet Won 6-1, 6-2 June 1, 1990, to Yury Lukomski and *March 7 at #58 South Carolina Dijana Stojic Lost 6-3, 6-2 Sviatlana Lukomskaya. She has an *March 12 #22 Ole Miss Karen Nijessen Lost 6-3, 6-1 older sister, Evgenia, and is majoring *March 14 #50 Mississippi State Radka Ferancova Won 7-5, 6-4 in apparel studies at Arkansas. March 17 at Texas A&M Morgan Frank (#111) Lost 7-6(3), 7-6(3) *March 28 at #15 Tennessee Maria Sorbello (#58) Won 1-6, 6-4, 7-5 AS A SOPHOMORE (2009-10) *April 2 #50 Auburn Daniela Vukadinovic Won 6-2, 6-4 Lukomskaya entered the 2009 fall season as one of three returning Razorbacks and was impressive with an 11-4 re- *April 4 Alabama Courtney McLane Lost 7-6(3), 6-3 cord in singles. The highlight of the fall was advancing to the finals at the Wilson/ITA Central Region Championship. *April 9 at #31 Vanderbilt Jackie Wu (#27) Lost 7-5, 6-3 Unseeded entering the tournament, Lukomskaya advanced through the semifinals and quarterfinals before facing *April 11 at Kentucky Caroline Lilley Lost 6-2, 7-6(3) Oklahoma’s Ana-Maria Constantinescu in the finals. Lukomskaya battled but lost 5-7, 6-3, 6-2 in the finals. She also *April 17 at #71 LSU Kaitlin Burns Lost 7-6, 6-0 won her flight at the Razorback Classic. In doubles, Lukomskaya paired with freshman Kelsey Sundaram and ad- ^April 22 #55 Auburn Daniela Vukadinovic Won 7-5, 6-1 vanced to the doubles semifinal at the Wilson/ITA Central Region Championship. As the spring began, Lukomskaya ^April 23 #17 Ole Miss Karen Nijssen (#110) Lost 6-1, 6-4 was clearly one of the top players on the team, as she %May 14 #42 Oklahoma Marie-Pier Huet Lost 6-3, 6-1 %May 15 #16 Texas Krista Damico (#63) Lost 6-2, 6-3 played the majority of her time at the No. 2 spot in singles with a 12-10 overall record and 9-9 at the No. DOUBLES SCORE/ 2 position. Lukomskaya’s great play was recognized DOUBLES TEAM/SCHOOL OPPONENT (RANK) PARTNER toward the end of the season as she became ranked Jan. 23 Oklahoma State Rose/Meghoufel Won 8-0/Kelsey Sundaram for the first time in her Razorback career in singles af- Jan. 23 Saint Louis Miller/Septien Won 8-0/Kelsey Sundaram ter defeating No. 58 Maria Sorbello of Tennessee, 1-6, Jan. 30 #23 Washington Smith/Chan Won 8-2/Kelsey Sundaram 6-4, 7-5. Her highest ranking of the season came at Jan. 31 #19 Michigan Taney/Tatsuno Lost 9-7/Kelsey Sundaram No. 115. In doubles, Lukomskaya was part of a great Feb. 6 Louisiana-Lafayette Gordon/Wooland Won 8-2/Kelsey Sundaram team again with Sundaram, going a combined 16-9 Feb. 7 #61 Utah Miles/Harris Won 8-0/Kelsey Sundaram Feb. 13 at #32 Tulsa Erofeeva/Szatkowska Lost 8-6/Kelsey Sundaram in dual matches and 6-4 in the SEC, good for tops Feb. 20 at #60 Rice Rasch/Jackson Won 8-5/Kelsey Sundaram on the team. Together, the duo won five of their last Feb. 21 at #27 TCU Babanova/Tuohimaa Won 8-6/Kelsey Sundaram eight matches of the season, including one in the Feb. 26 Memphis Murdock/Ondeck Won 8-1/Kelsey Sundaram NCAA Tournament against Oklahoma. Feb. 26 Oral Roberts Semenova/Pippen Won 8-1/Kelsey Sundaram Feb. 28 #35 Oklahoma Kalashnikova/Eckel Won 8-0/KelseySundaram AS A FRESHMAN (2008-09) *March 7 at #58 South Carolina Jocic/Saari-Bystrom Won 8-5/Kelsey Sundaram In her first season with the Razorbacks, Lukomskaya *March 12 #22 Ole Miss Rangel/Vogel Lost 8-5/Kelsey Sundaram proved her worth, posting a 20-6 record and winning *March 14 #50 Mississippi State Ryzhova/Ferencova Won 8-0/Kelsey Sundaram 10 dual matches, all at the No. 6 singles position. March 17 at Texas A&M Davidson/Frank Lost 8-3/Kelsey Sundaram *March 26 #14 Georgia Hyndman/Ellis Lost 9-8/Kelsey Sundaram In doubles, Lukomskaya spent most of the season in *March 28 at #15 Tennessee Alda/Zubor (#18) Lost 8-4/Kelsey Sundaram the No. 3 slot with fellow freshman Emily Carbone. *April 2 #50 Auburn Molenveld/Schippers Won 8-4/Kelsey Sundaram The two won 15 matches during the season, 11 in *April 4 Alabama Foehse/Tunaru Won 8-0/Kelsey Sundaram dual play, clinching doubles points against Tulsa, *April 9 at #31 Vanderbilt Newman/Roberts Won 8-0/Kelsey Sundaram Mississippi State, Mississippi and LSU. *April 11 at Kentucky Broderick/Johnston Won 8-5/Kelsey Sundaram *April 17 at #71 LSU Wolf/Frankenberger (#89) Lost 8-4/Kelsey Sundaram BEFORE ARKANSAS ^April 22 #55 Auburn Molenveld/Schippers (#88) Lost 8-6/Kelsey Sundaram Lukomskaya established herself as one of the top ^April 23 #17 Ole Miss Nijssen/Boxx (#12) Lost 8-4/Kelsey Sundaram players in Belarus at a young age. At %May 14 #42 Oklahoma Constantinescu/Tsertsvadze (#41) Won 9-7/Kelsey Sundaram %May 15 #16 Texas Corovic/Ellis (#49) Lost 9-7/Kelsey Sundaram the age of 16, Lukomskaya was ranked in the Top 30 among players at her age in all of Europe. She ^SEC Tournament / % --NCAA Tournament / * -- Southeastern Conference won the Minsk Cup (Belarus) as well as the Head Cup (Ukraine) in 2007 on her way to achieving an ITF world rank of 329. She was also the runner up at the ITA Minsk Open in 2006.

PERSONAL 16 University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis 17 STEPHANIE ROY 2010 RESULTS FULL CAREER (Fall & Spring) STEPHANIE ROY SINGLES TEAM/SCHOOL OPPONENT (RANK) SINGLES SCORE YEAR SINGLES DOUBLES Jan. 16 Florida Gulf Coast Jessica Sweeting Won 6-3, 6-1 2009-10 17-9 15-14 Jan. 17 Purdue Bhavani Tirumurti Won 3-6, 6-1, 1-0(7) 2010-11* 4-3 6-3 5-6 / JUNIOR Jan. 18 Akron Angelika Jogasuria Lost 6-4, 2-6, 6-1 TOTAL 21-12 21-17 Jan. 23 Oklahoma State Iryna Khatsko Won 6-4, 2-6, 6-1 Jan. 23 Saint Louis Casey Miller Won 6-7(4), 6-1, 1-0(7) * -Fall 2010 MONTREAL, QUEBEC Jan. 30 #23 Washington Denise Dy (#3) Lost 6-1, 6-1 Feb. 6 Louisiana-Lafayette Milou Isreal Won 6-0, 6-4 (REGINA ASSUMPTA) Feb. 7 #61 Utah Paige Miles Won 6-2, 6-1 Feb. 17 at #32 Tulsa Anastasia Erofeeva Won 4-6, 6-4, 6-4 PERSONAL Feb. 20 at #60 Rice Rebecca Lin Won 5-7, 7-6(7), 6-4 Roy was born in Montreal, Que- Feb. 21 at #27 TCU Idunn Hertzberg Won 6-1, 6-0 Feb. 26 Memphis Ashley Murdock Lost 7-6(5), 6-2 bec to Sylvian Roy and Viviane Feb. 26 Oral Roberts Kristen Gray Won 6-0, 6-1 Lussier on Aug. 2, 1990. She has Feb. 28 #35 Oklahoma Teona Tsertsvadze Won 6-0, 6-2 an older brother, Nicolas, and *March 6 at #6 Florida Merrit Boonstra (#62) Lost 6-2, 6-2 AS A SOPHOMORE (SPRING 2010) chose Arkansas because of the *March 7 at #58 South Carolina Madeleine Saari-Bystrom Won 6-1, 6-4 great chemistry she felt with the Although she did not play in the fall, Roy was a major contributor during the team’s spring season. Play- *March 12 #22 Ole Miss Abby Guthrie Won 7-5, 5-7, 6-0 ing the majority of the season at the No. 4 spot, Roy posted a 17-9 record throughout the spring and a *March 14 #50 Mississippi State Marilia Ryzhova Won 6-3, 6-1 players and coaching staff. 6-4 conference record. One of Roy’s standout victories came only in the seventh match of her Razorback March 17 at Texas A&M Christi Liles Won 5-7, 6-2, 6-1 career, when she helped her team clinch a 4-3 victory over Tulsa with a win over Anastasia Erofeeva in *March 26 #14 Georgia Yvette Hyndman Lost 6-4, 6-3 *March 28 at #15 Tennessee Zsofia Zubor Won 6-3, 6-1 three sets, 4-6, 6-4, 6-4. At the beginning of conference play, Roy won four of her first five matches against *April 2 #50 Auburn Jil Hastenrath Won 6-4, 6-1 players from South Carolina, Ole Miss, Mississippi State, and Texas A&M. In doubles, Roy was just as much *April 9 at #31 Vanderbilt Keilly Ulery Won 6-1, 3-6, 7-5 of a mainstay as she and teammate Valentina Starkova racked up a 9-8 record overall throughout the dual *April 11 at Kentucky Minnette Pienaar Lost 6-1, 6-3 season. *April 17 at #71 LSU Keri Frankenberger Lost 6-3, 6-3 ^April 23 #17 Ole Miss Abby Guthrie Lost 2-6, 6-2, 7-5 %May 14 #42 Oklahoma Kristina Radan Lost 6-4, 6-3 AS A FRESHMAN (2008-09) A mid-term enrollee at Arkansas, Roy sat out the 2009 spring season, but practiced and trained with the DOUBLES SCORE/ Razorbacks. DOUBLES TEAM/SCHOOL OPPONENT (RANK) PARTNER Jan. 16 Akron A. Jogasuria/P. Jogasuria Lost 8-2/Valentina Starkova Jan. 17 Missouri Weber/Mera w/o(inj) BEFORE ARKANSAS Jan. 18 Northwestern Curukovic/Bazhanova Won 8-6/Valentina Starkova Roy joined the Razorback women’s tennis team after an impressive junior career in Canada. Since begin- Jan. 23 Oklahoma State Shatkovskaya/Cristello Won 8-6/Valentina Starkova Jan. 23 Saint Louis McKenna/Tomalak Won 8-4/Valentina Starkova ning international competition, Roy was never ranked lower than seventh among Canada’s elite. Roy was Jan. 30 #23 Washington Malovic/Xu Won 8-2/Valentina Starkova a finalist at the 2008 Jan. 31 #19 Michigan Nguyen/Sulahian Lost 8-3/Valentina Starkova Canadian Univer- Feb. 6 Louisiana-Lafayette Isreal/Dufrene Won 8-2/Valentina Starkova Feb. 7 #61 Utah Kryuchkova/Johnson Won 8-5/Valentina Starkova sity and College Feb. 13 at #32 Tulsa Farley/Row Lost 9-8(4)/Valentina Starkova National Champi- Feb. 20 at #60 Rice Hanle/Lin Lost 8-6/Valentina Starkova onships. An out- Feb. 21 at #27 TCU Hertzberg/Mastromarino Won 9-7/Valentina Starkova Feb. 26 Memphis Brown/Arques-Garcia Won 8-1/Valentina Starkova standing doubles Feb. 26 Oral Roberts Gray/Costa Won 8-2/Valentina Starkova player as well, as a Feb. 28 #35 Oklahoma Connelly/Huet Lost 9-7/Valentina Starkova *March 6 at #6 Florida* Embree/Revzina (#34) Lost 8-1/Valetina Starkova 16-year-old, part- *March 7 at #58 South Carolina* Morgina/Pereira Lost 9-8(5)/Valentina Starkova nered with Ameri- *March 12 #22 Ole Miss* Guthrie/Van de Stroet Lost 8-5/Valentina Starkova can Alexandra Mc- *March 14 #50 Mississippi State* Terpko/Makarycheva Won 8-2/Valentina Starkova March 17 at Texas A&M Liles/Olivier Lost 8-5/Valentina Starkova Goodwin to go all *March 26 #14 Georgia* Gullickson/Gilchrist (#9) Lost 8-5/Anouk Tigu the way from the *March 28 at #15 Tennessee* Whoriskey/Sorbello (#57) Lost 8-5/Anouk Tigu qualifying to the *April 2 #50 Auburn* Chifchieva/Hastenrath Won 8-7(7)/Anouk Tigu *April 4 Alabama* McLane/Guarachi (#20) Lost 8-2/Anouk Tigu finals of the 2006 *April 9 at #31 Vanderbilt* Preeg/Wu (#25) Lost 8-3/Anouk Tigu Evansville (IN) *April 11 at Kentucky* Lilley/Pienaar Lost 8-2/Anouk Tigu *April 17 at #71 LSU* Burns/Robinson Won 8-4/Claudine Paulson Open on her way to ^April 22 #55 Auburn* Chifchieva/Hastenrath Won 8-2/Claudine Paulson a 853 WTA doubles ^April 23 #17 Ole Miss* Vogel/Rangel Won 8-3/Claudine Paulson ranking. A native of %May 14 #42 Oklahoma Eckel/Kalashnikova Won 9-8(3)/Claudine Paulson %May 15 #16 Texas Craddock/Damico Lost 8-5/Claudine Paulson Quebec, she attend- ed Regina Assumpta ^ -- SEC Tounament / % -- NCAA Tournament / * -- Southeastern Conference prior to enrolling at Arkansas. 18 University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis 19 CLAUDINE PAULSON 2010 RESULTS FULL CAREER (Fall & Spring) CLAUDINE PAULSON SINGLES TEAM/SCHOOL OPPONENT (RANK) SINGLES SCORE YEAR SINGLES DOUBLES Jan. 23 Oklahoma State Alexandra Cristello Won 6-4, 6-0 2009-10 18-13 27-10 Jan. 23 Saint Louis Caitlin McKenna Won 6-4, 6-1 2010-11* 4-2 7-3 5-9 / SOPHOMORE Jan. 30 #23 Washington Aleksandra Malovic Won 6-2, 7-6(6) TOTAL 22-15 34-13 Jan. 31 #19 Michigan Mimi Nguyen Lost 6-3, 6-2 Feb. 7 #61 Utah Andrea Maughen Won 6-1, 6-4 *-Fall 2010 GUAYAQUIL, ECUADOR Feb. 13 at #32 Tulsa Michelle Farley Won 6-4, 7-5 Feb. 20 at #60 Rice Daniella Trigo Won 6-3, 5-7, 6-1 Feb. 21 at #27 TCU Mari Babanova Won 6-2, 6-0 (NUEVO MUNDO) Feb. 28 #35 Oklahoma Tara Eckel Lost 6-4, 6-1 *March 6 at #6 Florida Anastasia Revzina (#105) Lost 6-4, 7-5 *March 12 #22 Ole Miss Gabby Rangel Won 7-6(7), 6-0 *March 14 #50 Mississippi State Danielle Terpko Won 6-1, 6-1 March 17 at Texas A&M Sheri Olivier Won 6-4, 7-5 *March 26 #14 Georgia Cameron Ellis Lost 6-3, 6-2 *March 28 at #15 Tennessee Katie Lee Lost 6-2, 6-4 *April 2 #50 Auburn Paulina Schippers Won 6-3, 6-2 AS A FRESHMAN (2009-10) *April 4 Alabama Paulina Bigos Won 6-1, 4-6, 7-5 Paulson entered the fall season as an experienced junior tennis player. Despite earning five singles wins, Paulson *April 9 at #31 Vanderbilt Hannah Blatt Lost 7-5, 6-4 *April 11 at Kentucky* Nicole Scates Won 6-0, 6-0 made her biggest immediate impact in doubles. Paulson paired with junior Anouk Tigu and the two posted a stellar 8-2 record. The duo was the No. 1 seed at the Wilson/ITA Central Region Championship and advanced to the finals, DOUBLES SCORE/ which they lost to the Oklahoma top duo of Ana-Maria Constantienscu and Teona Tsertsvadze. In the spring, Paulson DOUBLES TEAM/SCHOOL OPPONENT (RANK) PARTNER continued her strong freshman campaign, generating a 13-6 record overall and 5-4 in SEC play. The majority of her Jan. 23 Oklahoma State Buslaieva/Khatsko Won 8-5/Anouk Tigu play came at the No. 6 spot as she compiled a 10-3 record at that spot alone. Midway through the spring, Paulson was Jan. 23 Saint Louis Elmore/Elmore Won 8-2/Annemijn Koenen Jan. 30 #23 Washington Ardies/Dy (#11) Lost 8-6/Anouk Tigu awarded the SEC Freshman of the Week award after winning in straight sets over Gabby Rangel of Ole Miss, 7-6(6), Jan. 31 #19 Michigan Muresan/Mahtani Won 8-6/Anouk Tigu 6-0, and Danielle Terpko of Mississippi State, 6-1, 6-1, catapulting her team to wins over both teams. In doubles, Paul- Feb. 6 Louisiana-Lafayette Mazinova/Marcovich Won 8-6/Anouk Tigu son was a part of the frequently ranked team of her and Tigu. Together, they racked up an 8-6 record in the spring Feb. 7 #61 Utah Monson/Maughen Won 8-3/Anouk Tigu alone, all coming at the No. 1 doubles spot. The duo ended the season ranked 64th in ITA doubles rankings. Feb. 13 at #32 Tulsa Karaitaina/Kichoutkin Won 8-6/Anouk Tigu Feb. 20 at #60 Rice Chao/Guzman (#31) Lost 8-4/Anouk Tigu Feb. 21 at #27 TCU Munch-Soegaard/Duncan (#22) Won 8-6/Anouk Tigu PRIOR TO ARKANSAS Feb. 28 #35 Oklahoma Constantinescu/Tsertsvadze (#29) Won 9-7/Anouk Tigu Paulson was a constant figure on the junior International Tennis Federation circuit, including working her way to a No. *March 6 at #6 Florida Boonstra/Will (#6) Lost 8-1/Anouk Tigu 85 ranking in July 2007. Paulson represented her country four times in Federation Cup play, going undefeated (4-0) *March 7 at #58 South Carolina Stojic/Zubori Lost 8-4/Anouk Tigu *March 12 #22 Ole Miss Boxx/Nijessen (#12) Lost 8-3/Anouk Tigu in doubles and clinching the team victory over Bermuda with a convincing 6-2, 6-3 win over Ashley Brooks. She lost a *March 14 #50 Mississippi State Tsigvtseva/Mayuk Won 8-1/Anouk Tigu 12-10 tiebreaker against future 2009 NCAA individual champion Mallory Cecil (Duke) at the 2007 Nicholas Machivello March 17 at Texas A&M Potgieter/Urbina Lost 9-7/Anouk Tigu Cup. Paulson was both the singles and doubles champion at the 2006 Copa de las Naciones Amigas and she won the *March 26 #14 Georgia Ueshima/Fakhoury Won 8-2/Valentina Starkova 2006 doubles titles at *March 28 at #15 Tennessee Meredith/Szekely Won 8-3/Valentina Starkova the Peru Junior Open *April 2 #50 Auburn Thornton/Kurteva Won 8-1/Valentina Starkova and the Guayaquil Ec- *April 4 Alabama Bigos/Emery Won 8-5/Valentina Starkova uador ITF Champion- *April 9 at #31 Vanderbilt Blatt/Dillon Won 8-2/Valentina Starkova *April 17 at #71 LSU* Kantor/Wilson Won 8-4/Stephanie Roy ship. ^April 22 #55 Auburn* Thornton/Kurteva Won 9-7/Stephanie Roy ^April 23 #17 Ole Miss* van de Stroet/Guthrie Lost 8-1/Stephanie Roy PERSONAL %May 14 #42 Oklahoma Pier-Huet/Radan Lost 8-3/Stephanie Roy Born on March 10, %May 15 #16 Texas Lancaster/Larsson Won 8-6/Stephanie Roy 1990, to Guillermo ^ --SEC Tournament / % --NCAA Tournament / * --Southeastern Conference Paulson and Chilo Crespo, Paulson be- gan playing tennis at the age of six. A na- tive of Guayaquil, Ec- uador, she has a pas- sion for cooking and would love to open a restaurant one day. She chose Arkansas because she loved ev- ery minute of being here on her visit.

20 University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis 21 VALENTINA STARKOVA 2010 RESULTS FULL CAREER (Fall & Spring) VALENTINA STARKOVA SINGLES TEAM/SCHOOL OPPONENT (RANK) SINGLES SCORE YEAR SINGLES DOUBLES Jan. 23 Saint Louis Sarah Septien Won 6-2, 6-0 2009-10 17-9 22-15 Jan. 31 Michigan Michelle Sulahian Lost 7-6, 6-3 2010-11* 7-6 7-5 5-9 / SOPHOMORE Feb. 6 Louisiana-Lafayette Shelby Dufrene Won 6-1, 6-2 TOTAL 24-15 29-20 Feb. 7 Utah Lisa Johnson Lost 3-6, 6-3, 1-0(8) Feb. 26 Memphis Andrea Arques-Garcia Won 6-7(5), 7-5, 1-0(4) *- Fall 2010 ALMATY, KAZAKHSTAN Feb. 26 Oral Roberts Ana Costa Won 6-2, 6-3 *March 6 at #6 Florida Claire Bartlett Lost 6-0, 6-2 PERSONAL (CSKA MILITARY COLLEGE OF SPORT) *March 7 at #58 South Carolina Adriana Pereira Lost 6-3, 7-6(5) The only child of Alex and Tatyana *March 26 #14 Georgia Lara Fakhoury Won 6-2, 6-1 Starkova, Valentina Alexandrov- *April 4 Alabama Alice Tunaru Won 6-3, 6-4 na Starkova was born in Almaty, *April 17 at #71 LSU Hannah Robinson Won 6-2, 6-2 ^April 22 #55 Auburn Jil Hastenrath Won 6-3, 6-1 Kazakhstan on Nov. 18, 1991. Her ^April 23 #17 Ole Miss Gabby Rangel Won 6-4, 7-6(3) father has a Master of Sport from the Soviet Union. Majoring in DOUBLES SCORE/ sports management at Arkansas, AS A FRESHMAN (2009-10) DOUBLES TEAM/SCHOOL OPPONENT (RANK) PARTNER In the spring, Starkova compiled a 9-4 record in dual matches and a 3-2 conference record. She really Jan. 16 Akron A. Jogasuria/P. Jogasuria Lost 8-2/Stephanie Roy Starkova aims to rise into the top picked up the pace in the latter half of the season as she ended the year on a five-match winning streak, Jan. 17 Missouri Weber/Mera w/o (inj.) 50 on the WTA circuit. including two wins in the SEC Tournament. All were straight set and conference victories. In doubles, Jan. 18 Northwestern Curukovic/Bazhanova Won 8-6/Stephanie Roy Jan. 23 Oklahoma State Shatkovskaya/Cristello Won 8-6/Stephanie Roy Starkova split time with three different teammates. After spending most of the season with Stephanie Roy Jan. 23 Saint Louis McKenna/Tomalak Won 8-4/Stephanie Roy and generating a 9-8 dual match record, Starkova played with Claudine Paulson and Anouk Tigu to go a Jan. 30 #23 Washington Malovic/Xu Won 8-2/Stephanie Roy combined 9-1 in doubles. With Paulson, the team was a perfect 5-0. Jan. 31 #19 Michigan Nguyen/Sulahian Lost 8-3/Stephanie Roy Feb. 6 Louisiana-Lafayette Isreal/Dufrene Won 8-2/Stephanie Roy PRIOR TO ARKANSAS Feb. 7 #61 Utah Kryuchkova/Johnson Won 8-5/Stephanie Roy Feb. 13 at #32 Tulsa Farley/Row Lost 9-8(4)/Stephanie Roy Starkova joined the Razorbacks as one of the top players on the International Tennis Federation circuit. Star- Feb. 20 at #60 Rice Hanle/Lin Lost 8-6/Stephanie Roy kova owns four ITF tournament singles titles and six doubles titles. The No. 2 junior player in Kazakhstan Feb. 21 at #27 TCU Hertzberg/Mastromarino Won 9-7/Stephanie Roy and the No. 106 player in the world, Starkova attended CSKA Military College of Sport before coming to Ar- Feb. 26 Memphis Brown/Arques-Garcia Won 8-1/Stephanie Roy kansas and, as a senior, won the Kazakhstan championship, earning Master of Sport recognition. Starkova Feb. 26 Oral Roberts Gray/Costa Won 8-2/Stephanie Roy Feb. 28 #35 Oklahoma Connelly/Huet Lost 9-7/Stephanie Roy also was a part of the Group II championship team in the 2009 Fed Cup. She represented her country three *March 6 at #6 Florida Embree/Revzina (#34) Lost 8-1/Stephanie Roy times in Federation Cup play, going undefeated (3-0) and set the record for the most games in a set and the *March 7 at #58 South Carolina Morgina/Pereira Lost 9-8(5)/Stephanie Roy longest final set in Turkmenistan’s Fed Cup history when she defeated Jenneta Halliyeva in a three-set thrill- *March 12 #22 Ole Miss Guntrie/Van de Stroet Lost 8-5/Stephanie Roy *March 14 #50 Mississippi State Terpko/Makarycheva Won 8-2/Stephanie Roy er to clinch the vic- March 17 at Texas A&M Liles/Olivier Lost 8-5/Stephanie Roy tory for her coun- *March 26 #14 Georgia Ueshima/Fakhoury Won 8-2/Claudine Paulson try. Starkova won *March 28 at #15 Tennessee Meredith/Szekely Won 8-3/Claudine Paulson *April 2 #50 Auburn Thornton/Kurteva Won 8-1/Claudine Paulson the singles title at *April 4 Alabama Bigos/Emery Won 8-5/Claudine Paulson the Chandigarh *April 9 at #31 Vanderbilt Blatt/Dillon Won 8-2/Claudine Paulson *April 17 at #71 LSU Burns/Robinson Won 8-4/Anouk Tigu ITF Juniors and the ^April 22 #55 Auburn Chifchieva/Hastenrath Won 8-2/Anouk Tigu ITF Junior Open ^April 23 #17 Ole Miss Vogel/Rangel Won 8-3/Anouk Tigu Championships in %May 14 #42 Oklahoma Eckel/Kalashnikova Won 9-8(3)/Anouk Tigu India in January of %May 15 #16 Texas Craddock/Damico Lost 8-5/Anouk Tigu 2009. She won four ^ --SEC Tournament / % --NCAA Tournament / * --Southeastern Conference ITF junior tourna- ments in 2007 and 2008, compiling an incredible 50- 13 singles record in international play during that time pe- riod.

22 University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis 23 KELSEY SUNDARAM 2010 RESULTS FULL CAREER (Fall & Spring) KELSEY SUNDARAM SINGLES TEAM/SCHOOL OPPONENT (RANK) SINGLES SCORE YEAR SINGLES DOUBLES Jan. 23 Oklahoma State Malika Rose Won 6-0, 7-5 2009-10 26-11 22-16 Jan. 23 Saint Louis Mia Elmore Won 6-1, 6-2 2010-11* 8-5 6-5 5-5 / SOPHOMORE Jan. 30 #23 Washington Samantha Smith Won 0-6, 6-4, 6-1 TOTAL 34-16 28-21 Jan. 31 #19 Michigan Whitney Taney Lost 6-4, 5-7, 1-0(10) Feb. 6 Louisiana-Lafayette Mia Gordon Won 6-2, 6-0 * - Fall 2010 NEW BRAUNFELS, TEXAS Feb. 7 #61 Utah Missy Harris Won 6-3, 6-0 Feb. 13 at #32 Tulsa Rebecca Row Lost 6-2, 6-1 Feb. 20 at #60 Rice Ana Guzman Lost 6-4, 6-3 PERSONAL (CANYON) Feb. 21 at #27 TCU Gaby Mastromarino Won 6-3, 6-4 Sundaram was born on April 8, Feb. 26 Memphis Amanda Brown Won 6-0, 6-1 1991, to Meenakshi and Kelly Feb. 26 Oral Roberts Tayler Pippen Won 6-0, 6-0 Feb. 28 #35 Oklahoma Kristina Radan Won 6-0, 6-4 Sundaram in Temple, Texas. Her *March 7 at #58 South Carolina Miljana Jocic Lost 7-6(5), 6-7(0), 1-0(6) father is the director/owner/ *March 12 #22 Ole Miss Laura van de Stroet Won 7-5, 6-2 coach at the Competitive Edge *March 14 #50 Mississippi State Valeriya Makarycheva Won 6-1, 6-0 March 17 at Texas A&M Lauren Santacroce Won 6-3, 6-1 Tennis Academy in Chennai, *March 26 #14 Georgia Naoko Ueshima Won 6-1, 6-3 India. She is majoring in veteri- AS A FRESHMAN (2009-10) *March 28 at #15 Tennessee Jennifer Meredith Lost 6-2, 1-6, 6-3 Kelsey Sundaram captured 13 total wins in singles and doubles during the fall. In doubles, Sundaram nary medicine and would like to *April 2 #50 Auburn Carolina Thornton Won 6-1, 6-1 pursue vet school when she com- paired with sophomore Kate Lukomskaya and ended the fall with six wins. The duo advanced to the *April 4 Alabama Antonia Foehse Won 6-1, 6-0 doubles semifinal at the Wilson/ITA Central Region Championship. In the spring, Sundaram wasted no *April 9 at #31 Vanderbilt Rachel Dillon Won 6-3, 3-6, 6-1 pletes college. *April 11 at Kentucky Elle Coldiron Won 6-0, 6-0 time showing why she belonged in the SEC, compiling a 19-5 singles record to lead the team in victo- *April 17 at #71 LSU Ebie Wilson Won 6-2, 3-6, 6-0 ries. She also ended the season on a seven-match win streak. Out of those five losses in the spring, only ^April 22 #17 Ole Miss Laura van de Stroet Won 6-1, 6-2 two went in straight sets. In doubles, Sundaram teamed with Lukomskaya, and they racked up a 16-9 %May 14 #42 Oklahoma Teona Tsertsvadze Won 6-4, 6-3 dual record, also good for tops on the team, with the majority coming at the No. 2 spot. At the end of DOUBLES SCORE/ the season, Sundaram’s great play earned her All-SEC honors on the freshman team. DOUBLES TEAM/SCHOOL OPPONENT (RANK) PARTNER Jan. 23 Oklahoma State Roses/Meghoufel Won 8-0/Kate Lukomskaya PRIOR TO ARKANSAS Jan. 23 Saint Louis Miller/Septien Won 8-0/Kate Lukomskaya Sundaram was a top player on the junior international tour, winning the junior national championships Jan. 30 #23 Washington Smith/Chan Won 8-2/Kate Lukomskaya Jan. 31 #19 Michigan Taney/Tatsuno Lost 9-7/Kate Lukomskaya in India at the age of 17. Her strong play vaulted her to a top-200 ranking by the International Tennis Feb. 6 Louisiana-Lafayette Gordon/Wooland Won 8-2/Kate Lukomskaya Federation and a No. 956 ranking by the Women’s Tennis Association. In ITF tournament play, Sundaram Feb. 7 #61 Utah Miles/Harris Won 8-0/Kate Lukomskaya had a solid career international junior singles record of 41-25. After moving back to the United States for Feb. 13 at #32 Tulsa Erofeeva/Szatkowska Lost 8-6/Kate Lukomskaya Feb. 20 at #60 Rice Rasch/Jackson Won 8-5/Kate Lukomskaya her senior year, Sundaram became the 20th-ranked junior player in the U.S. and the top-ranked player Feb. 21 at #27 TCU Babanova/Tuohimaa Won 8-6/Kate Lukomskaya in Texas in the high school class of 2009. Prior to the move, she was also the National Junior Champion Feb. 26 Memphis Murdock/Ondeck Won 8-1/Kate Lukomskaya and ranked No. 1 Feb. 26 Oral Roberts Semenova/Pippen Won 8-1/Kate Lukomskaya among junior play- Feb. 28 #35 Oklahoma Kalashnikova/Eckel Won 8-0/Kate Lukomskaya *March 7 at #58 South Carolina Jocic/Saari-Bystrom Won 8-5/Kate Lukomskaya ers in India. Sun- *March 12 #22 Ole Miss Rangel/Vogel Lost 8-5/Kate Lukomskaya daram was selected *March 14 #50 Mississippi State Ryzhova/Ferencova Won 8-0/Kate Lukomskaya to represent India March 17 at Texas A&M Davidson/Frank Lost 8-3/Kate Lukomskaya *March 26 #14 Georgia Hyndman/Ellis Lost 9-8(8)/Kate Lukomskaya in the 2010 Com- *March 28 at #15 Tennessee Alda/Zubor (#18) Lost 8-4/Kate Lukomskaya monwealth Games *April 2 #50 Auburn Molenveld/Schippers Won 8-3/Kate Lukomskaya and was the cham- *April 4 Alabama Foehse/Tunaru Won 8-0/Kate Lukomskaya *April 9 at #31 Vanderbilt Newman/Roberts Won 8-0/Kate Lukomskaya pion in both sin- *April 11 at Kentucky Broderick/Johnston Won 8-5/Kate Lukomskaya gles and doubles in *April 17 at #71 LSU Wolf/Frankenberger (#89) Lost 8-4/Kate Lukomskaya the 2007 Indian ITF ^April 22 #55 Auburn Molenveld/Schippers (#88) Lost 8-6/Kate Lukomskaya junior tournament ^April 23 #17 Ole Miss Nijssen/Boxx (#12) Lost 8-4/Kate Lukomskaya %May 14 #42 Oklahoma Constantinescu/Tsertsvadze (#41) Won 9-7/Kate Lukomskaya in Chennai. Sun- %May 15 #16 Texas Corovic/Ellis (#49) Lost 9-7/Kate Lukomskaya daram was also the champion of the ^ -- SEC Tournament / % -- NCAA Tournament / * -- Southeastern Conference 23rd International Junior Champion- ships of Sri Lanka in 2006.

24 University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis 25 JADE FRAMPTON 5-6 / FRESHMAN ST. GEORGE, UTAH (OAK MEADOW)

AS A FRESHMAN (FALL 2010) Frampton came out of the gates fast in her first fall season as a Razorback. Over just four tournaments, she compiled a 7-5 record in singles and actually won her flight at the Sooner Classic. After tallying three straight wins over two days, Frampton defeated Elizabeth Ullathorne of Texas Tech, 3-6, 7-5, 6-2, to claim the title. She also qualified for the ITA Central Regional Championship after dropping Earlynn Lauer of Drury in straight sets. In doubles, Frampton teamed up with Kelsey Sudaram and Valentina Starkova and totaled a record of 7-4.

BEFORE ARKANSAS Frampton competed in the International Tennis Federation junor circuit and has played there since she was 13 years old. Over just five years, she compiled a record of 35-40 in singles and 41-39 in doubles. She is currently ranked No. 535, but her highest ranking of 224 came in January of last year.

PERSONAL Frampton was born in St. George, Utah to Dix and Sun hee Frampton on Oct. 28, 1992. She has five sisters, Meg, Dia, Rena, Nikki, and Misty and plans to possibly major in journalism.

26 University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis 27 REVIEW AND RECORDS: 29-42

28 University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis 29 HOGS SECOND IN WEST, GARNER FOURTH STRAIGHT NCAA BID 2009-10 RESULTS/STATS The Razorback women’s tennis team came into 2009- OVERALL RECORD: 18-10 || SEC: 6-5 H: 10-2 || A: 5-6 || N: 1-2 || VS. RANKED: 11-9 10 with high expectations after two straight SEC West titles and three straight NCAA Tournament bids, but with SINGLES only three returning lettermen from 2009, many thought PLAYERS OVERALL TOURN. DUAL CONF. 1 2 3 4 5 6 it would be a rebuilding year for Coach Michael Hegarty Emily Carbone 18-19 7-7 11-12 5-6 0-1 2-3 9-7 0-1 ------and his bunch. Annemijin Koenen 8-8 6-8 2-0 ------2-0 With only Anouk Tigu, Emily Carbone and Kate Lu- Kate Lukomskaya 23-13 11-3 12-10 3-6 1-0 9-9 2-1 ------Claudine Paulson 18-13 5-7 13-6 5-4 ------0-1 3-2 10-3 komskaya returning, the Razorbacks would feature six Fernanda Perrotta 5-2 2-1 3-1 0-1 ------2-0 1-1 first-year players, including four freshmen. Stephanie Roy 17-9 2-1 15-8 6-4 0-1 2-1 1-2 11-4 1-0 --- Arkansas kicked off the year in the fall season where Valentina Starkova 17-9 8-5 9-4 3-2 ------1-0 2-0 1-1 5-3 Tigu proved why she should would be the No. 1 player for Kelsey Sundaram 26-11 7-6 19-5 8-2 ------2-0 4-2 13-3 --- the Hogs in the spring as she advanced to the quarterfi- Anouk Tigu 23-10 9-2 14-8 6-5 14-8 ------nals of the Wilson/ITA Central Region Championship as Totals 156-93 57-40 99-53 36-30 15-10 13-13 15-10 17-8 20-6 18-7 Percentage .627 .588 .651 .545 .600 .500 .600 .680 .769 .720 the No. 1 seed in singles. She, along with partner Clau- dine Paulson, advanced to the finals in doubles of that DOUBLES same regional. Overall, the team finished the fall season PLAYERS OVERALL TOURN DUAL CONF 1 2 3 with an 8-1 record. Emily Carbone/Valentina Starkova 5-7 5-7 ------Lukomskaya had a very similar fall season as well as Claudine Paulson/Stephanie Roy 2-1 --- 2-1 1-0 ------2-1 she advanced to the finals of the Central Region in sin- Anouk Tigu/Claudine Paulson 16-8 8-2 8-6 1-3 8-6 ------gles, losing a tough three-setter to Ana-Maria Constanti- Kate Lukomskaya/Kelsey Sundaram 22-17 6-7 16-9 6-4 3-3 13-6 --- Anouk Tigu/Valentina Starkova 3-0 --- 3-0 1-0 --- 3-0 --- nescu. In the same tournament, she and Kelsey Sundaram Stephanie Roy/Valentina Starkova 9-8 --- 9-8 1-3 --- 2-1 7-7 advanced to the doubles semifinal. Lukomskaya finished Anouk Tigu/Stephanie Roy 2-4 --- 2-4 2-4 2-4 ------the fall season with an 11-4 record in singles, pitting her Anouk Tigu Claudine Paulson/Valentina Starkova 5-0 --- 5-0 5-0 ------5-0 as the solid No. 2 player going into the spring. point to advance to round two. Unfortunately, the Hogs Kate Lukomskaya/Aurelija Miseviciute 1-0 --- 1-0 ------1-0 --- The Hogs then moved into the spring schedule, couldn’t find the same magic against No. 19 Michigan Totals 69-37 32-14 37-23 21-11 12-10 13-6 13-7 which was stacked with multiple nationally ranked teams and were ousted. Percentage .650 .695 .616 .656 .545 .684 .650 that featured nationally ranked players, and that was just With one win against a highly-ranked team in the MATCH-BY-MATCH the non-conference schedule. The SEC schedule featured Kick-Off, Arkansas seemed to be ahead of schedule in its SINGLES DOUBLES UA its usual top-notch teams and players, but the Razorbacks so-called “rebuilding” year. The team went through the DATE OPPONENT W/L SCORE 1 2 3 4 5 6 1 2 3 RANK had a bevy of home matches on their side, including four rest of the non-conference schedule to rack up 10 wins Jan. 23 ST. LOUIS W 7-0 W W W W W W W W W #19 that would be conference matches. and take a lot of momentum into the conference season. Jan. 23 OKLAHOMA ST. W 6-1 L W W W W W W W W #19 The team’s first true test came at the ITA Kick-Off Jan. 29 #23 WASHINGTON W 5-2 W L W L W W L W W #18 In Southeastern Conference play, the Razorbacks saw Jan. 30 #19 MICHIGAN L 2-5 L W W L L L W L L #18 Weekend, which are esentially the first two rounds of the a very up and down season, going 6-5, but finished sec- Feb. 5 #61 UTAH W 6-1 W W W W W L W W W #17 ITA National Indoors tournament. Arkansas’ first match- ond in the Western Division behind Ole Miss. Feb. 6 UL-LAFAYETTE W 7-0 W W W W W W W W W #17 up came against No. 23 Washington where the team won At the SEC Tournament, the Razorbacks went 1-1 Feb. 13 at #32 Tulsa W 4-3 L W W W L W W L L #17 four of six singles matches and also won the doubles with a win over No. 55 Auburn, their second of the sea- Feb. 20 at #60 Rice L 3-4 W L L L W W L W L #18 Feb. 21 at#27 TCU W 5-2 W L L W W W W W W #18 2010 Arkansas Razorbacks son. In their second match of the tournament against Feb. 26 MEMPHIS W 6-1 L W W W W W W W W #20 No. 17 Ole Miss, the team found itself playing from be- Feb. 26 ORAL ROBERTS W 6-1 L W W W W W W W W #20 hind after losing the doubles point. Even with strong Feb. 28 #35 OKLAHOMA W 6-1 W W W W W L W W L #20 singles play, the Hogs couldn’t capitalize and fell in *Mar. 5 at #6 Florida L 0-7 L L L L L L L L down #15 *Mar. 7 at #58 South Carolina L 1-6 L L L W L L L W L #15 the match, 4-2. *Mar. 12 #22 OLE MISS W 5-2 W L W W W W L L L #17 The Razorbacks went into their fourth straight *Mar. 14 #50 MISS. STATE W 7-0 W W W W W W W W W #17 NCAA Tournament with a Top-25 ranking and trav- Mar. 17 at Texas A&M L 3-4 L L L W W W L L L #14 eled to Norman, Okla., for the first two rounds. Their *Mar. 26 #14 GEORGIA L 2-5 L L L W L W L L W #22 first match came against host-Oklahoma, a team they *Mar. 28 at #15 Tennessee L 3-4 L W W W L L L L W #22 *April 2 #50 AUBURN W 6-1 W W L W W W W W W #22 hadalready faced earlier in the year. *April 4 ALABAMA W 6-1 W L W W W W L W W #22 Just like before, the Hogs made quick work of the *April 9 at #31 Vanderbilt L 3-4 L L L W W L L W W #23 Sooners and moved on to round two where they faced *April 11 at Kentucky W 4-3 W L L L W W L W W #23 16th-ranked Texas. The season would end there for the *April 17 at #71 LSU W 5-2 W L W L W W L W W #23 %April 23 #55 Auburn W 4-0 W W W W W L L W W #25 Hogs, but with each player returning this year, the sky %April 23 #17 Ole Miss L 2-4 L L L L W W L W L #25 is definitely the limit for this Razorback team. ^May 14 #42 Oklahoma W 4-2 W L W W L W W W L #24 ^May 15 #16 Texas L 0-4 down L L led down L L L W #24 ^ -- SEC Tournament / % -- NCAA Tournament / * -- Southeastern Conference

30 University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis 31 2010 NCAA WOMEN'S TENNIS CHAMPIONSHIP RESULTS ARKANSAS' ALL-AMERICANS TEAM RESULTS INDIVIDUAL SINGLES In the span of two seasons, Aurelija Mise- 2010 Hosted by the University of Georgia at Athens 2010 Hosted by the University of Georgia at Athens viciute rocketed to the top of the collegiate First and Second Round, Norman, Okla. Anouk Tigu women’s tennis world to become the most Round 1 Arkansas 4, Oklahoma 2 1st rnd def. Reka Zsilinska (Duke) 7-5, 6-2 Round 2 Texas 4, Arkansas 0 2nd rnd lost to Leenka Broosova (Baylor) 6-3, 6-0 decorated and successful women’s tennis player in University of Arkansas history. The PREVIOUS CHAMPIONSHIP TOURNAMENT PARTICIPATION two-time All-American, only the third wom- en’s tennis player in school history to earn TEAM RESULTS 2009 NCAA Championships 1982 AIAW Championships Texas A&M 2007 Hosted by Georgia at Athens that status, finished her Arkansas career as Iowa City, Iowa (T9th overall) Round 1 Arkansas 4, Oral Roberts 0 Ela Kaluder (First Round) the leader in career singles wins (125), career 1st rnd Arkansas 5, SMU 4 Round 2 Arkansas 4, TCU 3 1st rnd l. to Nina Henkel (UC) 6-1, 6-3 doubles wins (86), career singles winning per- Qtr. Finals Texas 6, Arkansas 3 Round of 16 Duke 4, Arkansas 2 Consolation Ole Miss 6, Arkansas 3 2008 Hosted by Tulsa at Tulsa, Okla. centage (.886), singles wins in a season (52) INDIVIDUAL RESULTS Aurelija Miseviciute (National Semifinalist) and singles season winning percentage (.897). 1996 NCAA Southwest Regional AIAW CHAMPIONSHIP 1st rnd def. Jenni-Lee Heinser (USF) 2-6, 6-3, 6-2 Texas A&M Individual Singles 2nd rnd def. Taylor Ormond (Baylor) 6-1, 7-5 Miseviciute led Arkansas to back-to-back SEC Round 1 Arkansas 5, SMU 1 1975-Carol Crafton 3rd rnd def. Laura Vallverdu (Miami [Fla.]) 6-2, 6-3 Western Division titles and led the Razorbacks Quarters def., Riza Zalmeda (UCLA) 6-3, 6-3 Round 2 Texas A&M 5, Arkansas 3 1976-Janan Trimble to their highest team finish in school history Individual Doubles Semis l, Zuzana Zemenova (Baylor) 7-6 (2), 6-4 1997 NCAA Central Regional 1982 - Beth Wagner/Lori Zacharias in the 2008 NCAA Tournament and a return Kansas 1st rnd - def. Janie Kaplan/Suzanne Doumar 2009 Hosted by Texas A&M at College Station Aurelija Miseviciute trip in 2009. She began the 2008 season with Round 1 Arkansas 5, Utah 1 (Florida State) 7-6, 6-3 Aurelija Miseviciute (National Quarterfinalist) Semi-Finals Arkansas 5, Kansas 1 Qtr. Finals Wagner/Zacharias def. Sandy 1st rnd def. Jennifer Widjaja (Pacific) 6-1, 6-2 a preseason ranking of 117 and began her Finals Ole Miss 5, Arkansas 1 Sadler/Karen Gibbs (Wichita St.) 6-4, 7-6 (8-6) 2nd rnd def. Marina Cossou (California) 7-5, 7-5 climb when she captured the ITA Indoor Championship in 2007. Miseviciute repeated the Semi-Finals Chris Breed/Julie Grummel (Cal- 3rd rnd def. Jospa Bek (Clemson) 6-3, 6-1 feat in 2008. Also that year, she reached the national semifinals in singles -- the highest 1998 NCAA Southwest Regional Berkeley) Quarters lost to Mallory Cecil (Duke) 6-3, 6-3 LSU def. Wagner/Zacharias, 6-3, 6-2 performance by a Razorback women’s tennis player -- and the NCAA round of 16 in doubles Round 1 Arkansas 5, Rice 0 Individual Doubles with partner Ela Kaluder. She also advanced to the quarterfinals in singles at the 2009 NCAA Semi-Finals Arkansas 5, Houston 0 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIPS 1983 Hosted by New Mexico Finals Arkansas 5, LSU 2 Beth Wagner/Kellie Chase (Second Round) Tournament. All of her success was noticed as she was honored as the 2009 SEC Player of Individual Singles 1st rnd def. Patty Tiddy/Laurie Foeder (SIU-E) the Year. She also garnered first-team All-SEC recognition in 2008 and 2009. In the class- 1998 NCAA Championships 1997 Hosted by Stanford at Palo Alto 2nd rnd l. Andrea Kriva/Heather Ludloff (UCLA) 6-1, room she excelled, being named the Notre Dame Maria Pavlidou (First Round) 6-2 Round of 16 Duke 5, Arkansas 1 1st rnd l. to Katie Kocsis (UCLA) 6-3, 6-4 2008 and 2009 SEC Scholar-Athlete of 1984 Hosted by UCLA at Los Angeles the Year. She was also named to ESPN 1999 NCAA Championships Beth Wagner/Kellie Chase (First Round) 1998 Hosted by Notre Dame at South Bend The Magazine Academic All-America Tennessee Maria Pavlidou (First Round) 1st rnd l. Cathy Richmand/Ross Riach (Miami) Round 1 Wisconsin 5, Arkansas 4 1st rnd l. to Katherine Nasser (NWern) 2-6, 6-0, 6-4 second team in 2008 and was a finalist 1994 Hosted by Georgia at Athens for the Honda Award for women’s ten- 2000 NCAA Championships 1999 Hosted by Wisconsin at Madison Melinda Mones/Maria Torres (Second Round) Duke Maria Pavlidou (Fourth Round) 1st rnd def. Jody Yin/Rachel Epstein (Ind.) 4-6, 6-4, nis (2008 and 2009). Round 1 Arkansas 5, North Carolina 2 1st rnd def. Galina Seliounina (Houston) 6-4, 6-0 6-4 Arkansas netted its first two All- 2nd rnd l. /Susie Starett (UCLA) 6-3, 7-6 Round 2 Duke 5, Arkansas 0 2nd rnd def. Allison Bradshaw (Ariz. St.) 6-3, 6-4 Americans in 1999 when Chin Bee 3rd rnd def. Whitney Laiho (Fla.) 0-6, 6-4, 7-6 (4) 2001 NCAA Championships 4th rnd l. Vanessa Castellano (Georgia) 6-3, 6-1 2008 Hosted by Tulsa at Tulsa, Okla. Khoo finished the year ranked in the Florida Chin Bee Khoo (Second Round) Aurelija Miseviciute/Ela Kaluder (Round of 16) Top 20 and Maria Pavlidou played her Round 1 Arkansas 4, Miami 1 1st rnd def. Tari Ann Toro (W&M) 2-6, 6-4, 6-2 1st rnd def. Julia Koulbitskaya/Kate Kosminskya Round 2 Florida 4, Arkansas 0 2nd rnd l. Lioudmila Skavronskai (Miami) 6-1, 7-5 (Penn) 6-4, 6-2 way to the quarterfinals at the NCAA 2nd rnd l, Melanie Gloria/Tinesta Rowe (Fresno St.) Championship in Gainesville, Fla. In 2006 NCAA Championships 2000 Hosted by Pepperdine at Malibu 6-3, 7-6 (2) 2000, Khoo became the first-ever two- Texas Christian Chin Bee Khoo (3rd Round) Round 1 Texas 4, Arkansas 0 1st rnd def. Katarina Markovski (S. Caro.) 7-5, 6-1 time All-American for the Razorbacks 2nd rnd def. Julie DeRoo (Ole Miss) 7-6(3), 6-2 when she advanced to the round of 16 2008 NCAA Championships 3rd rnd l. Melissa Irvin (Stanford) 7-5, 6-3 of the NCAA Singles Championship in Tulsa Maria Pavlidou Chin Bee Khoo Round 1 Arkansas 4, Wake Forest 0 2001 Hosted by Georgia State at Stone Mountain Malibu, Calif. Khoo was not finished Round 2 Arkansas 4, North Carolina 3 Chin Bee Khoo (2nd Round) though. In 2001 she became the program’s only three-time All-American when she was seeded in the top 16 of the Round of 16 Arkansas 4, Georgia 2 1st rnd def. Carolina Mayorga (Kentucky) 6-0, 6-1 Quarterfinals UCLA 4, Arkansas 0 2nd rnd l. Martina Ondrejkova (S. Ala.) 7-5, 6-7, 6-4 NCAA Singles Championships in Stone Mountain, Ga.

32 University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis 33 OTHER HONORS AND AWARDS ALL-TIME RECORDS ITA INDOOR CHAMPIONSHIPS ALL-SOUTHWEST CONFERENCE PHI BETA KAPPA CAREER MATCH WINS SEASON MATCH WINS SEASON PERCENTAGE 2008 Aurelija Miseviciute (Champion) 1991 Rose Barakat 1999 Louise Ostling SINGLES SINGLES SINGLES 2007 Aurelija Miseviciute (Champion) 1990 Joanne Varnum NAME YEARS WINS NAME YEAR WINS NAME YEARS REC. PCT. 1985 Kellie Chase ITA ACADEMIC ALL-AMERICA TEAM 1. Aurelija Miseviciute 05-09 125 1. Aurelija Miseviciute 2008 52 1. Aurelija Misevicute 2008 52-6 .897 Aurelija Mise- 1984 Beth Wagner/Kellie Chase 1999 Louise Ostling, Maria Pavlidou, Adriana Garcia, 2. Maria Pavlidou 95-99 107 2. Lori Zacharias 1981 44 2. Aurelija Misevicute 2009 40-5 .888 viciute be- 1983 Beth Wagner/Kellie Chase Tara Reid, Chin Bee Khoo and Andrea Ho came the first Team selected as a whole. Brandy Brown 94-98 107 3. Aurelija Miseviciute 2009 40 2. Joanne Varnum 1990 23-3 .885 Razorback HONDA AWARD Beth Wagner 80-84 107 3. Trisha Shaw 1981 42 3. Aurelija Miseviciute 2006 29-4 .879 tennis player 2009 Aurelija Misevicute (Finalist) SEC ACADEMIC HONOR ROLL 5. Louise Ostling 95-99 103 4. Chin Bee Khoo 2000 37 4. Nathalie DeBondt 1989 20-3 .869 to capture a 2008 Aurelija Misevicute (Finalist) 2010 Emily Carbone, Kate Lukomskaya, 6. Andrea Ho 96-00 99 5. Debbie Smith 1981 36 5. Brandy Brown 1996 29-6 .829 national-level Fernanda Perrotta, Stephanie Roy, Anouk Tigu 7. Kellie Chase 81-85 98 6. Brandy Brown 1998 35 6. Sandy Schwann 1987 19-5 .792 singles title ITA REGIONAL AWARDS 2009 Nanar Airapetian, Ela Kaluder, with the 2007 2010 Player to Watch Anouk Tigu Aurelija Misevicute, Anouk Tigu 8. Chin Bee Khoo 98-01 89 7. Andrea Ho 1998 34 Joanne Varnum 1989 19-5 .792 ITA Indoor Na- Rookie of the Year Kelsey Sundaram 2008 Audrey Bordeleau, Nanar Airapetian, Kendra Howard 94-98 89 Kendra Howard 1998 34 Kelsey Sundaram 2010 19-5 .792 tionals Coach of the Year Michael Hegarty Ela Kaluder,Aurelija Misevicute 10. Adriana Garcia 95-99 88 9. Audrey Bordeleau 2008 32 9. Brandy Brown 1998 35-10 .778 2009 Cent. Region Senior Player of the Year Ela 2007 Audrey Bordeleau, Nanar Airapetian, Chin Bee Khoo 2001 32 10. Loretta Sheales 1987 22-6 .774 Kaluder Ela Kaluder,Aureilja Miseviciute 2008 Central Region Coach of the Year 2006 Audrey Bordeleau, Melissa Cornett, DOUBLES Beth Wagner 1981 32 Michael Hegarty Vlatka Jovanovic,Allison Linden NAME YEARS WINS DOUBLES (MINIMUM 10 MATCHES) 2007 Player to Watch Ela Kaluder 2005 Audrey Bordeleau, Melissa Cornett, 1. Kaluder/Miseviciute 05-09 86 DOUBLES NAME YEARS REC. PCT. 2001 Senior of the Year Chin Bee Khoo Allison Linden 2. Chase/Wagner 82-84 60 NAME YEARS WINS 1. Chase/Rupp 1985 9-1 .900 1999 Cissy Leary Sportsmanship Award Louise 2004 Simona Arghire, Melissa Cornett, Anna Dybicz, Ostling Christian Kincannon, Whitney Morton, 3. Wagner/Shaw 80-81 38 1. Shaw/Wagner 1981 38 2. Pavlidou/Garcia 1999 8-1 .889 ALL-SOUTHEASTERN CONFERENCE 1999 Player to Watch Chin Bee Khoo Iliana Pacheco 4. Wagner/Zacharias 80-82 35 2. Zacharias/Wagner 1982 31 3. Rankin/Sheales 1987 13-3 .842 2010 Anouk Tigu (1st Team) Regional Asst. Coach of the Year Alan 2003 Kristin Kincannon, Adriana Lopez, 5. Garcia/Ostling 95-99 32 3. Kaluder/Miseviciute 2008 30 4. Chase/Smith 1982 29-6 .829 Kelsey Sundaram (Freshman Team) Ferguson Simona Arghire, Anna Dybicz, Monica Dybicz 6. Chase/Smith 81-82 29 Chase/Wagner 1983 30 5. Bordeleau/Tigu 2008 19-4 .826 2009 Aurelija Miseviciute (1st Team) 1998 Cissy Leary Sportsmanship Award Kendra 2002 Chin Bee Khoo, Adriana Lopez, Tara Reid 7. Pavlidou/Brown 95-98 27 Chase/Wagner 1984 30 6. Kaluder/Miseviciute 2006 25-6 .806 Ela Kaluder (2nd Team) Howard 2001 Youlia Boyadjieva, Chin Bee Khoo, Anouk Tigu (2nd Team) SW Region Coach of the Year Kevin Adriana Lopez, Tara Reid 8. Zacharias/Smith 80-81 26 6. Franco/Airapetian 2008 28 6. Blackburn/Schreurs 1991 12-3 .800 Aurelija Miseviciute (SEC Player of the Year/ Platt 2000 Andrea Ho, Chin Bee Khoo, Adriana Lopez 9. Franco/Ledaja 05-06 25 7. Chase/Smith 1982 29 7. Zacharias/Wagner 1982 31-8 .795 Scholar-Athlete of the Year) 1996 Dist. 6 Co-Coach of the Year Kevin Platt 1999 Adriana Garcia, Andrea Ho, Chin Bee 10. Brown/Ostling 95-98 24 8. Smith/Zacharias 1981 26 8. Chase/Wagner 1984 30-9 .769 2008 Aurelija Miseviciute (1st Team) Khoo, Louise Ostling, Maria Pavlidou 9. Loomis/Shaw 1983 25 Shaw/Incardone 1982 10-3 .769 Ela Kaluder (1st Team) ESPN THE MAGAZINE 1998 Adriana Garcia, Andrea Ho, Louise Ostling Michael Hegarty (Coach of the Year) 1997 Adriana Garcia, Louise Ostling CAREER PERCENTAGE Franco/Ledaja 2006 25 10. Pavlidou/Brown 1997 15-5 .750 ACADEMIC ALL-AMERICA 1996 Claire Santiago Aurelija Miseviciute (Scholar-Athlete of the Year) 2009 Aurelija Misevictute, Second Team All-District SINGLES (MINIMUM TWO SEASONS) Kaluder/Miseviciute 2006 25 1995 Robin Juels, Penny Taylor, Maria Torres 2007 Ela Kaluder (1st Team) 2008 Aurelija Misevictute, Second Team At-Large NAME YEARS REC. PCT. 2001 Chin Bee Khoo (2nd Team) 1994 Maria Torres 1 Aurelija Miseviciute 05-09 125-16 .889 1998 Brandy Brown (At Large) 1993 Jolanda Schreurs 1998 Kendra Howard (Sportsmanship Award) ITA SCHOLAR-ATHLETE 2. Nathalie DeBondt 88-90 39-10 .795 1998 Kevin Platt (Coach of the Year) ALL-AMERICAN 3. Lori Zacharias 80-82 70-21 .769 COACHING RECORDS 1994 Melinda Mones/Maria Torres (Doubles) 1999 Louise Ostling, Maria Pavlidou, Adriana Garcia, 4. Helena Norrby 85-87 38-14 .745 NAME SEASONS W-L-T PCT. Tara Reid, Chin Bee Khoo, Andrea Ho 1998 Louise Ostling 5. Brandy Brown 95-98 107-36 .743 Alice Reen 1990-91 14-7 .667 6. Chin Bee Khoo 98-01 89-32 .735 Martin Novak 1985-90 80-49 .620 7. Joanne Varnum 87-91 68-28 .708 8. Betsy Meacham 83-97 79-38 .684 Kathy Mack 1979-85 108-70 .607 A TRADITION OF EXCELLENCE 9. Loretta Sheales 86-90 67-34 .663 Michael Hegarty 2004-present 91-75 .584 Not only was Chin Bee Khoo one of the all-time 10. Louise Ostling 95-99 101-53 .652 Kevin Platt 1992-2003 124-155 .444 winningest Razorback tennis players and the first Deb Thompson 1972-79 Not Available multiple All-American, she was named the first DOUBLES Hegarty women’s tennis recipient of the Salute to Excel- NAME YEARS REC. PCT. lence Award presented each year by the Athletics 1. Chase/Smith 81-82 29-6 .829 Department at the annual Red 2. Rankin/Sheales 86-87 13-3 .813 Tie Dinner. Khoo was joined in 3. Schreurs/Blackburn 90-91 12-3 .800 2009 by Aurelija Miseviciute as 4. Wagner/Zacharias 80-82 31-8 .795 Salute to Excellence honorees. 5. Chase/Wagner 82-83 62-23 .750 At right, Phi Beta Kappa Lou- 6. Mones/Torres 93-94 17-6 .739 ise Ostling receives her degree. 7. Shaw/Wagner 80-81 38-13 .729 A key player in Arkansas’ late 8. Kaluder/Miseviciute 05-09 84-32 .724 1990s NCAA teams, she also 9. Pavlidou/Brown 96-98 18-7 .720 combined excellence on the 10. Franco/Airapetian 06-08 50-23 .684 court and in the classroom. Reen Platt Novak Mack

34 University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis 35 YEAR-BY-YEAR YEAR-BY-YEAR Deb (Thompson) Billingsley,1972-79 Oct. 31 Oklahoma State L 7-1 March 11 Houston L 6-3 SMU Invitational, Dallas, Texas Oct. 27 Memphis W 7-2 S. Break Tourn.-Delray Beach, Fla. Mar. 20 @ Louisiana State L 7-2 April 9 Houston* L 6-3 She was the first coach from 1972- SWC Tournament - 5th overall March 12 Lamar W 6-3 Mar. 24 Auburn W 5-4 Feb. 1 Kansas W 5-4 Mar. 17 Michigan State W 5-4 Mar. 22 @ New Orleans W 9-0 April 12 Houston L 7-2 79, but records are incomplete from Nov. 21 Texas Christian L 9-0 March 12 Northeast La. W 5-4 Mar. 24 South Carolina L 5-1 Feb. 2 Kansas W 5-4 Mar. 18 Western Illinois W 7-2 Mar. 23 @ Tulane W 7-2 April 14 Texas A&M* L 6-3 that era. Nov. 21 Houston W 5-0 March 13 Memphis State W 5-4 Mar. 25 Oklahoma L 5-4 Feb. 8 Oklahoma City W 7-2 Mar. 19 Miami-Ohio L 5-4 Mar. 26 Houston* L 7-2 April 15 Rice* L 5-4 Nov. 22 Rice W 5-4 March 15 Tulane W 5-4 Mar. 26 Mississippi L 7-2 Feb. 8 Memphis W 9-0 April 3 Texas* L 9-0 April 2 S. Methodist* L 8-1 @ Texas Christian* W 5-4 KATHY MACK Arkansas Invitational March 16 Louisiana State L 5-4 Mar. 28 Rice* L 6-3 Feb. 16 Texas Tech* W 5-4 April 7 Baylor* W 6-3 April 9 Baylor* W 9-0 @ Texas A&M* W 5-1 (1979-85) Feb. 6 Louisiana Tech W 7-2 March 17 Lamar W 8-1 April 2 Texas Christian* W 8-1 Mar. 2 Oklahoma W 5-4 April 13 Houston* L 8-1 April 15 @ Texas A&M* L 8-1 SWC Tournament-Houston, Texas 108-70 Feb. 6 Northeast La. L 8-1 March 18 Rice W 6-3 April 3 Trinity L 8-1 March North Carolina L 6-3 April 16 @ Rice* W 5-2 April 20 Texas Christian W 5-1 .607 Feb. 7 Memphis State W 6-3 March 19 Trinity L 7-2 April 8 So. Methodist* L 5-4 March Houston* L 5-4 1986-87 SWC Tournament-Austin, Texas April 21 Texas L 7-0 Feb. 8 Rice L 7-2 March 20 Texas A&M W 5-4 April 9 Baylor* W 9-0 March Houston Baptist L 5-4 22-6, 4-4 SWC April 23 Texas L 5-0 @ NLU Team Invitational April 3 Southern Methodist L 5-4 April 10 Texas* L 8-1 Mar. 15 Texas A&M* L 9-0 Sept. 13 Mississippi W 5-4 1988-89 1979-80 Feb. 12 Murray State W 7-2 April 4 Texas Christian L 5-4 April 16 Texas Tech* W 8-1 Laver’s Coll. TN Tourn.-Delray Beach, Fla. Sept. 28 Oklahoma W 6-3 ALICE Oct. 24 Memphis W 8-0 17-8, 4-4 SWC, 5TH RECORD Feb. 13 Oklahoma St. L 7-2 April 13 SW Missouri St. W 8-1 Mar. 18 Tennessee W 5-4 REEN 1983-84 Lady Razorback Invitational Jan. 28 Creighton W 9-0 11-14 Feb. 14 Rice L 5-3 April 15 Tulsa W 9-0 Mar. 19 Miami-Ohio W 6-3 (1990-91) March 16 Alabama W 8-1 SWAIAW Regionals - Austin, Texas 17-13, 2-6 IN SWC Mar. 20 Michigan State W 5-4 Jan. 31 Tulsa W 9-0 Jan. 28 @ SW Missouri St. W 8-1 14-7 Texas Tech W 8-1 Lady Cardinal Inv., Beaumont, Tx. Feb. 6 Kansas W 7-2 Feb. 3 La Tech (forfeit) W 5-0 March 18 Florida State W 7-2 April 2 Texas A&M L 5-4 Mar. 29 Texas* L 9-0 .667 Evangel W 8-1 Sept. 16 Oklahoma L 5-4 Feb. 7 Oklahoma W 5-3 Feb. 3 Mississippi W 5-4 March 19 Stetson W 9-0 April 3 S. Methodist L 7-2 Martin Novak was named the head Oral Roberts L 9-0 Sept. 22 Louisiana State L 5-4 Feb. 8 SW Missouri St. W 9-0 Feb. 17 Oklahoma L 5-4 E. Texas State Team Tournament April 4 Texas-P. Basin L 5-4 coach in the final three matches of SW Missouri St. W 7-2 Sept. 23 UT-San Antonio W 7-2 Wichita State Invitational Feb. 17 Wichita State W 9-0 East Central State W 9-0 March 27 Oral Roberts W 7-2 AIAW Championship - Austin, Texas the 1984-85 season. Kathy Mack 1990-91 Sept. 24 New Mexico L 5-4 announced her resignation at mid- Feb. 20 Oklahoma State L 8-1 Feb. 18 Oklahoma City W 6-0 Central State W 9-0 March 27 Iowa State W 8-1 April 28 S. Methodist W 5-4 14-7, 5-3 SWC, 3RD Sept. 24 Southwestern La. W 6-3 season, effective at the end of the Feb. 21 Wichita State W 9-0 Feb. 24 @ Kansas L 6-3 Tulsa W 6-3 March 28 North Texas L 7-2 April 29 Texas L 6-3 @ Manhattan, Kansas March 28 Oklahoma W 5-4 April 30 Mississippi L 6-3 Oct. 7 Memphis W 8-1 year due to the birth of a child. Mack Feb. 22 Minnesota W 7-2 Feb. 25 @ Kansas State L 5-4 Feb. 1 Kansas W 5-4 Arkansas State W 7-2 coached most of the spring season, March 28 Kansas W 8-1 Oct. 8 Northeast La. W 5-4 SW Louisiana Invitational Lady Razorback Invitational Feb. 2 Kansas State W 9-0 Texas Women’s W 9-0 but Novak was named head coach April 3 Ark.-Little Rock W 9-0 1982-83 @ Memphis, Tenn. Mar. 6 Southwestern La. W 6-3 Mar. 4 #Texas Christian* L 5-4 Feb. 3 Illinois W 5-4 East Texas State L 8-1 Oct. 28 Auburn W 6-3 prior to the John Brown match. Mar. 7 Lamar W 5-1 Mar. 10 #North Texas W 9-0 Oklahoma State L 9-0 April 4 Wichita State W 8-1 @ Tuscaloosa, Alabama April 9 Tulsa W 9-0 Oct. 29 Middle Tenn. W 9-0 Mar. 8 South Alabama (Susp) 2-0 Mar. 11 #Nebraska W 5-4 Feb. 8 Wake Forest L 5-4 Oklahoma L 8-1 23-18, 4-4 IN SWC Oct. 29 Mississippi L 5-4 MARTIN Mar. 14 Western Illinois W 6-0 Mar. 12 Tulsa W 9-0 April 10 Oral Roberts W 5-4 Sept. 15 SW Missouri St. W 9-0 Feb. 9 Alabama W 5-4 Texas Tech L 9-0 Feb. 3 Trinity L 9-0 NOVAK Mar. 16 Southern Illinois W 8-1 Mar. 19 @ Pacific W 5-4 April 11 Oklahoma City W 9-0 Sept. 23 Tulsa W 9-0 Feb. 10 Samford W 5-1 New Mexico L 9-0 Feb. 4 UT-San Antonio W 9-0 (1985-90) Mar. 17 Illinois W 7-2 Mar. 21 @ San Jose State W 9-0 UT - P. Basin L 9-0 April 14 SW Missouri St. W 9-0 Cowgirl Invitational, Stillwater, Okla. Feb. 16 Memphis State W 9-0 @ Missouri Valley Invitational Feb. 10 Northeast La. W 5-4 80-49 Mar. 18 Rutgers W 8-1 Mar. 23 @ Fresno State W 5-1 Houston L 9-0 Oct. 1 Oklahoma W 5-4 Feb. 24 @ Houston* W 5-4 April 24 Northeast La. L 8-1 Feb. 11 Ark.-Little Rock W 8-1 .620 Mar. 18 Notre Dame W 9-0 Mar. 25 Texas A&M* W 7-2 Midland J.C. L 6-3 Oct. 2 Rice L 6-3 Mar. 1 @ Mississippi L 6-0 April 25 North Texas L 5-4 Feb. 12 Wichita State W 6-3 Mar. 21 Texas Christian* L 6-3 April 2 @ Houston* L 5-4 Oct. 3 Oklahoma State L 5-4 Mar. 19 @ Oklahoma W 7-2 SW Missouri St. W 8-1 Feb. 25 Texas Tech* L 6-3 Mar. 27 Northeast La. W 8-1 April 6 @ Texas* L 5-1 Oct. 8 Wichita State W 8-0 Mar. 20 @ Wichita State W 8-1 Nebraska L 6-3 1981-82 Mar. 2 Ark.-Little Rock W 7-2 Mar. 28 Southwestern La. W 5-1 April 7 @ Baylor* W 9-0 LSU Invitational, Baton Rouge, La. Mar. 30 Baylor* W 7-2 Mar. 22 @ Baylor* W 9-0 Iowa State L 9-0 RECORD Mar. 3 Baylor* W 9-0 Mar. 28 Tulane L 5-4 April 8 S. Methodist* L 7-2 Oct. 14 Memphis W 9-0 Mar. 31 S. Methodist* L 8-1 Mar. 23 @ Texas* L 8-1 Oklahoma L 8-1 28-16 NLU-Adidas Classic, Monroe, La. Mar. 31 @ Houston* L 6-3 April 15 Texas Tech* W 7-2 Oct. 15 Lamar W 9-0 April 3 John Brown L 9-0 @ Dallas, Texas Tulsa W 8-1 @ Louisville, Ky. Mar. 15 Tyler J.C. W 5-4 April 3 Texas A&M* W 5-4 April 16 Rice* W 6-1 Oct. 16 Rollins College L 5-4 April 8 Rice* L 6-3 Mar. 30 Louisiana State L 7-2 Oral Roberts L 8-1 Sept. 18 Purdue L 8-1 Mar. 16 Louisiana State W 7-2 April 5 Texas Tech* W 5-4 SWC Tourn. -Fort Worth, Texas Oct. 22 Auburn L 5-4 April 13 Texas Christian* L 6-3 Mar. 31 S. Methodist* L 5-4 Evangel W 7-2 Sept. 19 Louisville W 8-1 Mar. 16 Louisiana Tech W 9-0 April 9 @ Texas* L 7-2 April 21 Texas Christian W 6-0 Oct. 23 Vanderbilt W 9-0 April 6 Texas Tech* W 7-2 Arkansas State W 8-1 Sept. 19 Eastern Kentucky W 9-0 Mar. 17 Northeast La. L 5-4 1985-86 April 11 @ Baylor* W 7-2 April 22 Texas L 6-3 Oct 14 Memphis W 8-1 April 7 Rice* W 5-4 Memphis L 6-3 @ Columbia, Mo. Mar. 28 Texas* L 9-0 13-11, 1-7 SWC April 12 @ S. Methodist* L 6-3 Lady Razorback Invitational April 13 Texas Christian* L 7-2 Sept. 25 Missouri W 8-1 Mar. 30 Rice* L 8-1 Sept. 20 Kansas State W 8-1 April 18 Rice* W 7-2 1989-90 1980-81 Feb. 17 Wichita State W 9-0 April 14 Texas A&M* W 6-3 Sept. 25 Iowa W 8-1 Mar. 31 Texas A&M* L 5-4 Sept. 21 Wichita State W 7-2 16-10, 3-5 SWC RECORD Feb. 18 Texas A&M* W 7-2 SWC Tourn.-College Station, Texas Sept. 26 Wichita State W 8-1 April 2 Trinity L 9-0 Sept. 28 Mississippi W 7-2 1987-88 @ Lady Vol Inv., Knoxville, Tenn. 28-12 Feb. 19 Memphis W 9-0 April 19 Houston W 6-3 Oct. 3 Arkansas-Little Rock W 9-0 April 4 SW Missouri St. W 5-4 Oct. 4 Memphis W 8-1 12-11, 2-6 SWC Feb. 2 Kansas W 7-2 @ Wichita State Feb. 19 Oklahoma W 5-4 April 20 Texas L 5-0 Oct. 6 SW Missouri St. W 8-1 April 7 Houston* W 5-4 Oct. 25 Tulane W 6-3 Lady Razorback Invitational Feb. 3 Miami-Ohio W 8-1 Sept. 4 Kansas State W 9-0 Feb. 25 Houston L 6-3 Oct. 21 Tulsa W 9-0 April 14 Texas Christian* L 8-1 Oct. 26 Auburn W 6-3 Jan. 23 Kansas State W 9-0 Feb. 4 Tennessee L 5-1 Sept. 4 Wichita State W 7-2 Feb. 26 Trinity L 8-1 1991-92 Oct. 30 Kansas State W 9-0 April 21 S. Methodist* L 8-1 Nov. 15 Kansas L 5-4 Jan. 23 Memphis State W 8-1 Feb. 10 @ Texas Tech* W 8-1 Sept. 5 Oklahoma St. L 7-2 Lady Seminole Inv., Tallahassee, Fla. Oct. 31 Oklahoma L 6-3 Jan. 24 Oklahoma W 8-1 Alabama Invitational Feb. 16 Oklahoma W 7-2 6-14, 0-11 SEC, 12TH @ Southern Illinois-Carbondale Mar. 3 South Florida L 5-0 Feb. 8 SW Missouri St. W 9-0 Nov. 13 North Texas W 8-1 Lady Razorback Invitational Feb. 5 $Wisconsin L 6-3 Feb. 18 Mississippi L 6-3 Sept. 12 Louisville L 6-3 Mar. 3 Auburn W 6-3 1984-85 Feb. 14 Baylor W 6-3 Nov. 14 Texas Christian W 5-4 Feb. 7 Northeast La. W 6-3 Feb. 5 $Alabama L 5-4 Feb. 23 SW Missouri St. W 9-0 Sept. 12 E. Illinois W 7-2 Mar. 4 Louisiana State W 6-3 18-13, 2-6 SWC Feb. 15 Mississippi* L 6-3 Nov. 19 Lamar W 5-4 Feb. 8 Wichita State W 6-3 @ Wichita, Kansas Feb. 25 Northeast La. W 8-1 Sept. 13 S. Illinois W 9-0 Mar. 5 Northeast La. W 5-4 Sept. 21 Oral Roberts W 9-0 Feb. 21 Alabama* L 6-3 Nov. 20 Houston L 5-4 Feb. 9 Oklahoma State L 7-2 Feb. 6 %Ohio State W 7-2 March 2 Kansas State W 8-1 Sept. 13 Sangamon St. W 8-1 Mar. 12 Kentucky W 5-4 Sept. 22 Wichita State W 5-4 Feb. 22 S. Methodist L 5-4 Nov. 21 Texas A&M L 6-3 SW Missouri St. Invitational Feb. 13 Texas* L 8-1 March 3 Baylor W 6-3 Lady Razorback Invitational Mar. 13 Vanderbilt W 8-1 Sept. 23 Kansas W 6-3 Feb. 23 Kansas L 5-4 Nov. 22 Texas Tech W 7-2 Feb. 14 Kansas L 5-4 Feb. 14 Tulsa W 9-0 March 4 Wichita State W 9-0 Sept. 19 Oral Roberts L 5-4 Mar. 13 Yale L 8-1 Sept. 27 Houston Baptist W 5-4 Feb. 29 Oklahoma W 5-1 Feb. 20 Northeast La. W 5-4 Feb. 15 SW Missouri St. W 9-0 Feb. 19 Minnesota W 7-2 March 8 Texas* L 9-0 Sept. 19 SW Missouri St. W 9-0 Mar. 14 Tennessee L 5-4 Sept. 28 Alabama W 5-4 March 3 Louisiana State* L 6-3 Feb. 25 Oklahoma W 6-3 Feb. 22 Texas Tech* L 8-1 Feb. 20 Oklahoma L 6-3 March 12 S. Methodist* L 5-4 Sept. 20 East Texas State W 8-1 Mar. 15 North Carolina St. W 9-0 Sept. 30 McNeese State W 9-0 March 6 Kansas State W 6-3 Feb. 25 Houston L 5-4 Mar. 2 S. Methodist* L 7-2 Feb. 21 Wichita State W 6-3 March 19 @ South Carolina L 6-1 Oct. 8 Tulsa W 9-0 Mar. 16 North Carolina W 6-3 Oct. 5 Brigham Young L 7-2 March 7 Mississippi State* L 5-4 Feb. 26 Memphis State W 8-1 Mar. 8 Texas Christian* L 8-1 Feb. 27 Texas Tech* L 8-1 March 21 @ N.C. State W 8-1 Cowgirl Fall Classic, Stillwater, Okla Mar. 19 Georgia L 6-3 Oct. 6 Kansas L 6-3 March 15 @ Georgia* L 9-0 Feb. 27 Oklahoma State L 5-4 Mar. 12 Texas A&M* L 9-0 Mar. 5 Texas Christian* L 7-2 Marc 22 @ North Carolina W 5-4 Oct. 31 Kansas State W 9-0 Mar. 19 Indiana L 7-2 Oct. 20 Oklahoma L 7-2 March 17 @ South Carolina* L 8-1 Feb. 27 Alabama W 5-4 Mar. 13 Rice* L 5-4 Mar. 11 SW Missouri St. W 8-1 April 4 Lamar W 6-1 Oct. 31 Nebraska W 9-0 Oct. 26 Tulane L 7-2 March 20 @ Florida* L 9-0 March 11 Murray State W 8-1 Oct. 26 Auburn W 5-4 Mar. 12 Northeast La. W 8-1 April 8 South Alabama W 5-1 36 University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis 37 YEAR-BY-YEAR YEAR-BY-YEAR March 21 @ Rollins College W 7-2 Mar. 14 #16 Kentucky* L 6-2 April 25 Louisiana State W 6-3 Mar. 21 @ Cal-Irvine W 9-0 Mar. 26 Miss State* W 5-4 Mar. 31 #5 Vanderbilt* L 6-1 Apr. 4 #61 Auburn* L 4-2 2006-07 April 3 Kentucky* L 7-2 @ San Diego Invitational April 26 Florida L 6-0 Mar. 28 #48 LSU*% W 5-1 Mar. 29 LSU* W 5-4 April 5 @ #28 Mississippi* L 6-1 Apr. 10 @ #20 LSU* L 6-1 11-11, 4-7 SEC WEST 3RD April 4 Tulsa W 8-1 Mar. 18 #43 Fresno St L 6-3 NCAA SW Reg.-College Station,Tex. April 2 @ #3 Georgia* W 5-4 Mar. 31 @ Houston W 6-3 April 7 Miss. State* L 4-3 Apr. 11 @ #13 Tulane L 6-0 Jan. 27 #32 N. Carolina St. W 5-2 April 16 @ Auburn* L 5-1 Mar. 19 Furman L 5-4 May 3 S. Methodist W 5-1 April 4 @ Auburn* W 6-0 Apr. 2 @ Rice W 5-1 April 14 @ #44 LSU* L 7-0 SEC Tournament—Nashville, Tenn. Jan. 28 Tulsa L 4-3 April 18 @ Tennessee* L 5-2 Mar. 31 @ #4 Florida* L 6-0 May 4 Texas A&M L 5-3 April 10 Alabama* W 8-1 Apr. 6 @ Auburn* W 7-2 SEC Tournament—Columbia, S.C. Apr.18 #19 LSU L 4-0 Feb. 3 @ Missouri W 6-1 April 19 @ Vanderbilt* L 6-0 April 2 @ #39 Auburn* L 5-1 April 11 Miss. State* W 9-0 Apr. 8 Brigham Young W 5-1 April 18 #13 Tennessee L 4-0 Feb. 4 Sam Houston St. W 7-0 1996-97 2004-05 SEC Tournament-Tuscaloosa, Ala. April 6 @ #30 Oklahoma L 5-3 SEC Tournament- Lexington, Ky. Apr. 9 @ Florida* L 6-0 Feb. 4 St. Louis W 7-0 2002-03 April 24 Kentucky L 6-0 April 15 @ #31 Tennessee* L 5-3 19-9, 4-7 SEC, 9TH April 16 Alabama W 6-0 Apr. 15 Baylor L 5-4 11-11, 1-10 SEC WEST 5TH Feb. 9 Kansas W 5-2 Jan. 29 SW Missouri St. W 9-0 Jan. 29 Oral Roberts W 7-0 April 17 @ #25 Vanderbilt* L 5-1 April 17 #6 Mississippi W 5-1 SEC Tournament-Oxford, Miss. 8-14, 0-11 SEC,12TH Feb. 11 Oklahoma W 5-2 Alice Reen stepped down for heath Feb. 1 #12 Georgia* L 6-1 Jan. 25 SW Missouri State W 6-1 Jan. 30 Wichita State W 7-0 SEC Tournament-Fayetteville April 18 #2 Florida L 5-1 Apr. 20 LSU L 5-1 Feb. 23 #35 Brigham Young L 4-3 reasons after the fall 1991 season, Feb. 3 #21 @ Alabama* L 5-4 Feb. 8 Rice W 6-1 Jan. 30 Saint Louis W 7-0 with Kevin Platt stepping in at mid- April 28 #27 Vanderbilt L 6-0 NCAA Regionals.- Baton Rouge, LA NCAA Regionals-Durham, N.C. Mar. 2 #12 Georgia* L 6-1 Feb. 9 North Texas W 9-0 Feb. 12 #68 SMU W 4-3 Feb. 4 @ #46 Tulsa W 4-3 season as the head coach before the May 15 #48 Rice W 5-0 May 13 North Carolina W 5-2 Mar. 4 #24 Tennessee* L 5-2 1994-95 Feb. 15 #15 Vanderbilt* W 5-4 Feb. 14 Oral Roberts W 7-0 Feb. 6 @ Oklahoma State W 4-3 start of the spring dual match sea- May 16 #52 Houston W 5-0 May 14 Duke L 5-0 Mar. 9 @ #17 Vanderbilt* L 7-0 Feb. 17 #23 Harvard W 5-4 Feb. 15 St. Louis W 7-0 Feb. 11 SW Missouri St. W 7-0 son in 1992. 5-14, 0-11 SEC, 12TH May 17 #33 Louisiana State W 5-2 Mar. 11 @ #31 Kentucky* L 4-1 Feb. 21 @ #33 LSU* L 5-1 Feb. 19 @ #50 Tulsa L 5-2 Feb. 12 Kansas State W 4-3 Feb. 1 SW Missouri St. W 6-0 NCAA Champ.- South Bend, Ind. 2000-01 Mar. 14 La-Lafayette W 4-3 Feb. 4 #25 Tennessee* L 9-0 Feb. 23 @ Baylor% W 6-3 Feb. 22 Texas-Arlington W 6-1 Feb. 13 North Texas W 6-1 May 21 #4 Duke L 5-1 10-13, 2-9 SEC,11TH Mar. 23 #2 Florida* L 6-1 KEVIN Feb. 8 #32 Oklahoma L 6-0 Feb. 27 Northeast La. W 7-2 Feb. 28 @ Auburn* L 6-1 Feb. 13 Abilene Christian W 7-0 Jan. 27 SW Missouri W 6-1 Mar. 25 #34 S. Carolina* L 7-0 PLATT Feb. 15 Louisiana Tech W 7-0 Mar. 2 #14 Tennessee* L 6-3 1998-99 Mar. 2 @ #32 Alabama* L 7-0 Feb. 15 #47 SMU W 7-0 Jan. 30 #11 Vanderbilt* L 4-2 Mar. 30 @ Miss State* W 4-3 (92-2003) Feb. 24 @ Louisiana State* L 7-2 Mar. 8 #1 Florida* L 8-1 Mar. 5 Tulane W 4-3 Mar. 4 #26 South Carolina* L 5-2 15-11, 5-6 SEC, 7TH Feb. 10 @ #23 Mississippi* W 4-3 Apr. 1 Mississippi* W 4-3 124-155 March 5 #1 Georgia* L 8-1 Mar. 10 #22 South Carolina* W 5-4 Jan. 28 Southwest Missouri W 9-0 Mar. 7 #1 Florida* L 7-0 Mar. 6 #2 Florida* L 7-0 Feb. 17 UT-Arlington W 6-1 Apr. 3 @ #56 SMU L 4-3 March 9 #6 Florida* L 9-0 Mar. 12 Abilene Christian W 7-1 Feb. 7 #26 Tennessee* W 7-2 Mar. 9 #24 S. Carolina* L 6-1 Mar. 11 # 23 Tennessee* L 6-1 .444 Feb. 24 Louisiana Tech W 7-0 Apr. 6 @ #36 Auburn* L 5-2 March 11 #17 South Carolina* L 5-1 @ Honolulu, Hawai’i Feb. 12 #75 Louisville W 9-0 Mar. 14 #5 Georgia* L 7-0 Mar. 13 #3 Georgia* L 6-1 Feb. 25 #2 Georgia* L 7-0 Apr. 8 @ #62 Alabama* W 5-2 @ San Diego Invitational Mar. 16 Chaminade W 9-0 Feb. 13 #51 Rice W 9-0 Mar. 16 #11 Tennessee* L 7-0 Mar. 22 UC-Santa Barbara Cancelled Mar. 1 #75 Texas-El Paso W 7-0 Apr. 14 #29 LSU* W 4-3 March 17 #48 Pacific L 6-3 Mar. 17 Hawai’i W 9-0 Feb. 18 #5 Stanford! L 6-1 Mar. 20 Westmont W 9-0 Mar. 25 @ #5 Vanderbilt* L 6-1 1992-93 Mar. 4 #14 Tennessee* L 6-1 SEC Tournament—Auburn, Ala. March 18 S. Methodist W 5-4 Mar. 19 Hawai’i Pacific W 9-0 Feb. 19 #13 Southern Cal L 5-4 Mar. 22 @ Cal Poly-SLO L 5-2 Mar. 28 @ #3 Kentucky* L 6-1 3-19, 0-11 SEC, 12TH Mar. 6 #4 Florida* L 6-1 Apr. 19 #30 Auburn L 4-1 March 19 !#50 Fresno State W 8-1 Mar. 20 Northern Iowa W 9-0 Feb. 20 #15 Pepperdine L 5-2 Mar. 28 @ #15 Kentucky* L 6-1 Apr. 1 @ #23 Miss. State* L 4-0 Jan. 31 Tennessee* L 9-0 Mar. 10 @ #35 Kentucky* L 4-1 March 31 @ #49 Miss. State* L 5-4 Mar. 28 @ Kentucky* L 5-2 Feb. 26 Texas-El Paso W 9-0 Mar. 30 @ #15 Vanderbilt* L 7-0 Apr. 3 #45 Mississippi* L 7-0 Feb. 10 SW Missouri St. W 8-1 Mar. 16 #19 S. Carolina* L 4-2 2007-08 April 1 @ #21 Mississippi* L 8-1 April 4 Auburn* W 5-0 Feb. 28 #3 Georgia* L 8-1 Apr. 4 #51 Mississippi* L 6-1 Apr. 8 @ #29 Alabama* L 6-1 Feb. 12 Drake L 7-2 Mar. 18 #50 S. Methodist W 4-1 18-10, 9-2 SEC WEST CHAMP April 8 #21 Vanderbilt* L 6-3 April 5 #44 Rice W 7-1 Mar. 5 @ #23 Kentucky* L 6-3 Apr. 6 @ Miss State* L 4-1 Apr. 10 @ Auburn* W 5-2 Feb. 13 Kansas L 9-0 Mar. 22 @ #72 UTSA W 7-0 Jan. 19 @ #28 BYU W 5-2 April 11 @ Kentucky* L 6-3 April 6 #37 Houston W 5-1 Mar. 7 @ #6 Mississippi* L 7-2 Apr. 12 LSU* L 6-1 Apr. 16 # 42 LSU* L 4-3 Feb. 14 Kansas State W 5-4 Mar. 25 @ #18 Baylor L 4-0 Jan. 20 @ Utah W 6-1 April 15 @ #19 Alabama* L 5-1 April 9 Tulsa W 8-1 Mar. 9 #8 Vanderbilt* L 6-3 SEC Tournament—Tuscaloosa, Ala. Feb. 21 Auburn* L 7-2 Mar. 26 @ #10 Texas L 7-0 Jan. 26 Missouri W 7-0 April 19 Tulsa W 7-0 April 11 @ Miss. State* W 5-1 Mar. 11 #1 Florida* L 9-0 April 21 #24 South Carolina L 4-1 Feb. 25 @ Louisiana State* L 6-0 Apr. 1 @ #25 LSU* L 5-2 MICHAEL Feb. 2 Kansas W 5-2 April 23 #23 Auburn* L 5-3 April 13 @ #13 Mississippi* L 7-2 Mar. 16 vs. #60 Illinois W 9-0 Feb. 27 @ Baylor L 7-2 Apr. 5 Rice W 6-1 HEGARTY Feb. 7 vs. #8 S. California L 4-3 SEC Tournament-Auburn, Ala. SEC Tournament- Athens, Ga. Mar. 21 #15 South Carolina* W 5-4 2005-06 Mar. 9 Florida* L 8-1 Apr. 9 Auburn* W 4-1 (2004-PRES) Feb. 8 vs. #2 UCLA L 4-3 April 27 #12 South Carolina L 6-0 April 17 South Carolina L 5-3 Mar. 26 #68 Houston W 8-1 10-11, 5-6 SEC WEST 2ND Feb. 9 vs. #12 Fresno State L 4-3 Mar. 11 Oklahoma State L 6-3 Apr. 13 @ #37 Miss State* L 5-2 91-75 Jan. 27 Oral Roberts W 7-0 NCAA Central Reg.-Lawrence, Kan. Mar. 28 #19 Fresno State W 6-3 Feb. 15 @ #16 Wm & Mary L 4-3 Mar. 13 South Carolina* L 6-2 1995-96 Apr. 15 @ #45 Alabama* L 4-3 .584 Jan. 27 Missouri State W 7-0 May 9 Utah W 5-0 April 2 @ Alabama* W 8-1 Feb. 17 @ #44 N.C. State W 5-1 Mar. 15 @ Sacramento State W 6-2 SEC Tournament-Starkville, Miss. Jan. 29 Wichita State W 6-1 15-9, 5-8 SEC, 8TH May 10 Kansas W 5-1 April 4 @ #39 Miss. State* W 5-2 Feb. 21 La-Lafayette W 6-1 Mar. 17 @ Pacific L 9-0 Apr. 19- #24 Kentucky L 4-1 Feb. 13 @ Nebraska L 4-3 Feb. 9 @ Houston W 6-3 May 11 Mississippi L 5-1 April 10 #39 Auburn* W 6-0 Feb. 24 @ #40 Tulsa W 5-2 Mar. 18 @ Cal-Berkley L 6-0 NCAA Regionals-Gainesville, Fla. Feb. 19 William & Mary, Cancelled Feb. 10 @ Texas Tech W 8-1 April 13 @ #41 Baylor W 6-3 SEC Tournament-Knoxville, Tenn. Feb. 29 #29 Auburn* L 4-3 Mar. 25 Georgia* L 6-0 May 12 #36 Miami W 4-1 Feb. 25 Kansas W 4-3 Feb. 11 @ Rice W 5-4 1997-98 April 15 @ #61 LSU* L 5-4 Apr. 17 Vanderbilt L 4-0 Mar. 2 Alabama* W 7-0 Mar. 26 Oklahoma L 6-3 May 13 #5 Florida L 4-0 Mar. 3 @ #7 Georgia* L 5-2 Feb. 16 @ #1 Florida* L 9-0 22-9, 10-5 SEC, 5TH April 18 #44 Virginia Tech W 8-0 Mar. 7 @ #20 Vanderbilt* W 5-2 Mar. 28 Vanderbilt* L 7-2 Feb. 18 @ #19 Auburn* L 6-3 Mar. 5 @ #19 Tennessee* L 4-3 Jan. 28 SW Missouri St. W 9-0 SEC Tournament-Baton Rouge, La. 2001-02 2003-04 Mar. 9 @ #15 Kentucky* W 4-3 April 8 @ Alabama* L 9-0 Feb. 21 SW Missouri St. W 9-0 Mar. 10 Vanderbilt* L 6-1 Jan. 31 @ #31 Houston% W 6-3 April 22 #31 LSU W 5-2 6-16, 0-11 SEC,12TH 8-13, 0-11 SEC,12TH Mar. 21 @ #20 Tennessee* W 6-1 April 9 @ Mississippi State* L 6-3 Feb. 24 #20 Mississippi* L 7-2 Mar. 12 Kentucky* L 6-1 Feb. 1 @ #52 Rice% W 7-2 April 23 #3 Georgia L 5-0 Feb. 2 @ UT-Arlington W 5-2 Jan. 23 St. Louis W 7-0 Mar. 23 #6 Georgia* W 4-3 April 10 @ Mississippi* L 7-0 Mar. 1 @ #7 Vanderbilt* L 3-6 Mar. 18 @ #15 Baylor L 5-1 Feb. 6 #65 Tulsa W 9-0 NCAA Regionals-Knoxville, Tenn. Feb. 3 @ #55 S. Methodist L 6-1 Feb. 29 SW Missouri W 6-1 Mar. 28 @ #4 Florida* L 5-2 April 24 @ Kentucky* L 5-1 Mar. 3 @ #9 Tennessee* L 5-4 Mar. 20 @ #43 SMU L 4-3 Feb. 7 #34 Kentucky* W 7-2 May 15 #49 Wisconsin L 5-4 Feb. 9 #68 SW Missouri W 4-3 Feb. 2 Abilene Christian W 7-0 Mar. 30 @ #34 S. Carolina W 5-2 SEC Tournament-Nashville, Tenn. Mar. 9 Memphis W 9-0 Mar. 24 @ #6 Florida* L 7-0 Feb. 12 @ #1Florida* L 8-1 Feb. 13 #55 Tulsa W 4-3 Feb. 4 #68 SMU W 5-2 Apr. 4 #68 Ole Miss* L 4-3 April 29 Auburn L 6-0 Mar. 11 #30 Kentucky* W 5-4 1999-2000 Mar. 26 @ #34 S. Carolina* W 4-3 Feb. 14 @ #16 Vanderbilt* L 7-2 Feb. 16 @ Rice W 5-2 Feb. 11 Louisiana Lafayette W 5-2 Apr. 6 #68 Miss. State* W 5-2 Mar. 17 @ Cal-Santa Barbara W 7-2 Mar. 31 Miss State* W 6-1 1993-94 @ Nashville, Tenn. 10-13, 4-7 SEC,T7TH Feb. 21 #9 Texas L 5-2 Feb. 14 #6 Vanderbilt L 5-2 Apr. 12 @ #30 LSU* L 5-2 Mar. 19 @ CP-SLO W 9-0 Jan. 26 SW Missouri W 9-0 Apr. 2 @ Mississippi* W 4-3 5-14, 2-10 SEC, 10TH Feb. 15 #18 Harvard W 8-1 Feb. 23 #21 Baylor L 5-2 Feb. 15 Oral Roberts W 6-0 SEC Tournament—Auburn, Ala. Mar. 29 Miss State* W 8-1 Feb. 8 Tulsa W 9-0 Apr. 7 Auburn* W 7-0 Feb. 2 SW Missouri St. W 9-0 @ USTA/ITA National Indoor Team Mar. 1 #58 Auburn* L 4-3 Feb. 21 Oklahoma Christian W 6-1 Apr. 18 #27 LSU W 4-0 Mar. 31 Louisiana State* W 5-1 Feb. 11 @ South Carolina* L 2-7 Apr. 9 Alabama* W 4-3 Feb. 7 #9 Mississippi* L 8-1 Feb. 19 #5 Stanford L 6-1 Mar. 3 #22 Alabama* L 4-3 Feb. 27 @ #48 South Carolina L 5-2 Apr. 19 #8 Georgia L 4-3 April 4 @ #17 Georgia* L 6-3 Feb. 13 @ Georgia* L 1-7 Apr. 12 @ Oklahoma W 4-3 Feb. 11 @ #5 Georgia* L 6-0 Feb. 20 #25 Wisconsin L 6-3 Mar. 8 @ #5 Florida* L 7-0 Feb. 29 @ #2 Florida* L 7-0 NCAA 1st & 2nd Rnds —Chapel Hill, N.C. April 6 @ #18 South Carolina* L Feb. 24 #8 Texas L 6-3 Apr. 15 @ LSU* L 5-2 Feb. 13 @ #19 South Carolina* L Feb. 21 #14 Brigham Young L 5-4 Mar. 10 @ #23 S. Carolina* L 6-1 Mar. 5 @ #36 Tennessee* L 7-0 May 9 #46 Wake Forest W 4-0 5-2 Feb. 26 @ Vanderbilt* L 5-4 SEC Tournament—Gainesville, Fla. 5-2 Feb. 23 Southwestern La. W 5-0 Mar. 15 @ #1 Georgia* L 7-0 Mar. 7 @ #2 Georgia* L 7-0 May 10 #14 North Carolina W 4-3 April 11 Tulsa W 9-0 Mar. 3 Mississippi* L 5-1 Apr. 20 LSU L 4-2 Feb. 18 #9 Kansas L 5-2 Feb. 27 @ #12 Tennessee* L 6-3 Mar. 17 @ #10 Tennessee* L 7-0 Mar. 10 #49 Tulsa L 5-2 NCAA Championship -- Tulsa, Okla. April 13 Baylor Cancelled Mar. 5 Alabama* W 7-2 NCAA Tournament—Fort Worth, Texas Feb. 20 #40 Alabama* L 5-2 Mar. 1 @ #19 S. Carolina* W 5-4 @ Honolulu, Hawai’i Mar. 16 @ NC- Wilmington W 4-1 May 15 #2 Georgia W 4-2 April 19 Oral Roberts W 9-0 Mar. 9 @ Tennesee* L 6-3 May 13 #18 Texas L 4-0 Feb. 26 Mississippi State* W 6-0 Mar. 6 Nicholls State% W 6-0 Mar. 20 #46 Washington St L 5-0 Mar. 21 #15 Kentucky* L 5-2 May 17 #7 UCLA L 4-0 April 20 #27 Alabama* W 6-2 Mar. 12 Kentucky* L 5-4 Feb. 28 Louisiana State* W 5-4 Mar. 7 #36 Baylor% W 7-2 Mar. 21 @ Hawai’i Pacific W 5-1 Mar. 26 Miss State* L 4-3 SEC Tournament-Gainesville, Fla. Mar. 17 @ Fresno State L 5-4 Mar. 4 #37 Kansas St. W 7-2 Mar. 14 #6 Mississippi* L 5-4 Mar. 22 @ Hawai’i W 5-2 Mar. 28 @ #58 Mississippi* L 6-1 Mar. 19 @ California L 8-1 Mar. 6 Baylor W 5-4 Mar. 20 @ #29 San Diego W 5-1 Mar. 29 #13 Kentucky* L 7-0 Apr. 2 #23 Alabama* L 5-2 38 University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis 39 OPPONENT W L SERIES BEGAN LAST MEETING YEAR-BY-YEAR SERIES RECORDS New Mexico 0 2 79-80 83-84 YEAR-BY-YEAR RESULTS New Orleans 1 0 87-88 87-88 2008-09 2009-10 OPPONENT W L SERIES BEGAN LAST MEETING SEASON COACH W-L-T PCT. CONF. Abilene Christian 3 0 96-97 04-05 Nicholls State 1 0 97-98 97-98 15-8, 8-4 SEC WEST CHAMP 18-10, 6-5 2ND IN SEC WEST Alabama 13 12 80-81 09-10 North Carolina 5 1 82-83 07-08 Jan. 23 St. Louis W 7-0 Jan. 23 Saint Louis W 7-0 1972-79 Deb (Thompson) Billingsley Results Not Available Ark.-Little Rock 3 1 80-81 83-84 North Carolina St. 3 0 89-90 07-08 Jan. 25 #34 Tulsa W 6-1 Jan. 23 Oklahoma St. W 6-1 Arkansas State 2 0 79-80 79-80 NC- Wilmington 1 0 03-04 03-04 Jan. 31 #58 Oregon W 4-0 ITA Kickoff Weekend 1980 Kathy Mack 12-14 .462 N/A Auburn 15 12 82-83 09-10 North Texas 4 2 80-81 04-05 Feb. 1 #17 Notre Dame L 1-4 Jan. 29 #23 Washington W 5-2 Baylor 14 5 82-83 05-06 Northern Iowa 1 0 96-97 96-97 Feb. 6 #44 BYU W 6-1 Jan. 30 #19 Michigan L 2-5 1981 Kathy Mack 28-12 .700 N/A Brigham Young 3 3 84-85 08-09 Notre Dame 1 1 86-87 08-09 Feb. 25 #69 SMU L 2-5 Feb. 6 UL-Lafayette W 7-0 1982 Kathy Mack 28-16 .636 N/A Cal-Berkeley 0 2 92-93 99-00 Ohio State 1 0 87-88 87-88 Feb. 28 Memphis W 7-0 Feb. 7 #61 Utah W 6-1 Cal-Irvine 1 0 97-98 97-98 Oklahoma 14 11 79-80 09-10 Ma. 6 @ #37 Alabama* L 3-4 Feb. 13 @ #32 Tulsa W 4-3 1983 Kathy Mack 23-18 .560 4-4 SWC Cal-Los Angeles 0 2 07-08 07-08 Oklahoma State 2 9 79-80 09-10 Mar. 8 @ #50 Auburn* W 6-1 Feb. 20 @ #60 Rice L 3-4 Cal Poly-SLO 1 1 95-96 02-03 Oklahoma City 3 0 80-81 88-89 Mar. 13 #13 Kentucky* W 5-2 Feb. 21 @ #27 TCU W 5-2 1984 Kathy Mack 16-14 .533 2-6 SWC Cal-Santa Barbara 1 0 95-96 95-96 Okla. Christian 1 0 03-04 03-04 Mar. 15 #27 Vanderbilt* W 4-3 Feb. 26 Memphis W 6-1 1985 Kathy Mack 18-13 .567 2-6 SWC Central State 1 0 79-80 79-80 Oral Roberts 10 3 79-80 09-10 Mar. 18 @ #8 Miami (Fla.) L 0-7 Feb. 26 Oral Roberts W 6-1 Chaminade 1 0 96-97 96-97 Oregon 1 0 08-09 08-09 Mar. 27 #13 Tennessee* W 4-3 Feb. 28 #35 Oklahoma W 6-1 1986 Martin Novak 13-11 .542 1-7 SWC Creighton 1 0 88-89 88-89 Pacific 1 2 88-89 94-95 Mar. 29 @ #2 Georgia* L 1-6 March 5 @ #6 Florida* L 0-7 Drake 0 1 92-93 92-93 Pepperdine 0 1 98-99 98-99 Apr. 3 #30 South Carolina*L 2-5 March 7 @ #58 S. Carolina* L 1-6 1987 Martin Novak 22-6 .785 4-4 SWC Apr. 5 #16 Florida* W 4-0 Duke 0 3 97-98 08-09 Purdue 0 1 81-82 81-82 March 12 #22 Ole Miss* W 5-2 Apr. 10 @ #67 Miss. St.* W 4-0 1988 Martin Novak 12-11 .522 2-6 SWC East Texas State 1 1 79-80 80-81 Rice 15 9 80-81 09-10 March 14 #50 Miss. St.* W 7-0 Apr. 12 @ #28 Ole Miss* W 5-2 Eastern Illinois 1 0 80-81 80-81 Rollins College 1 1 82-83 91-92 March 17 @ Texas A&M L 3-4 1989 Martin Novak 17-8 .680 4-4 SWC Apr. 18 #22 LSU* W 5-2 Eastern Kentucky 1 0 81-82 81-82 Rutgers 1 0 86-87 86-87 March 26 #14 Georgia* L 2-5 SEC Tournament—Fayetteville, Ark. East Central State 1 0 79-80 79-80 St. Louis 6 0 02-03 09-10 March 28 @ #15 Tennessee* L 3-4 1990 Martin Novak 16-10 .615 3-5 SWC Apr. 24 #26 Ole Miss L 3-4 Evangel 2 0 79-80 79-80 Sacramento State 1 0 92-93 92-93 April 2 #50 Auburn* W 6-1 NCAA 1st & 2nd Rnds —Fayetteville 1991 Alice Reen 14-7 .667 5-3 SWC Florida 1 21 91-92 09-10 Samford 1 0 90-91 90-91 April 4 Alabama* W 6-1 May 9 Oral Roberts W 4-0 Florida State 1 0 80-81 80-81 Sam Houston St. 1 0 06-07 06-07 April 9 @ #31 Vanderbilt* L 3-4 1992 Kevin Platt 6-14 .300 0-11 SEC, 12th May 10 #28 TCU W 4-3 Fresno State 3 3 88-89 07-08 San Diego 1 0 97-98 97-98 April 11 @ Kentucky* W 4-3 NCAA Champ. -- College Station, Texas Furman 0 1 93-94 93-94 Sangamon State 1 0 80-81 80-81 April 17 @ #71 LSU* W 5-2 1992 Kevin Platt 6-14 .300 0-11 SEC, 12th May 15 #3 Duke L 2-4 Georgia 3 20 82-83 09-10 San Jose State 1 0 88-89 88-89 SEC Tournament - Athens, Ga. 1993 Kevin Platt 3-19 .143 0-11 SEC, 12th Harvard 2 0 96-97 97-98 South Alabama 2 0 86-87 89-90 April 22 #55 Auburn W 4-0 Hawai’i 2 0 96-97 01-02 South Carolina 5 17 82-83 09-10 April 23 #17 Ole Miss L 2-4 1994 Kevin Platt 5-14 .263 2-10 SEC, 10th Hawai’i Pacific 2 0 96-97 01-02 South Florida 0 1 82-83 82-83 NCAA 1st and 2nd Rnds - Norman, Okla. Houston Baptist 1 1 84-85 84-85 So. California 0 2 98-99 07-08 May 14 #42 Oklahoma W 4-2 1995 Kevin Platt 5-14 .263 0-11 SEC, 12th Houston 11 10 79-80 99-00 SMU 8 14 81-82 08-09 May 15 #16 Texas L 0-4 1996 Kevin Platt 15-9 .625 5-8 SEC, 8th Illinois 3 0 86-87 98-99 Southern Illinois 2 0 80-81 86-87 Stanford 0 2 97-98 98-99 1997 Kevin Platt 19-9 .679 4-7 SEC, 9th Iowa 1 0 81-82 81-82 Iowa State 1 1 79-80 80-81 Stetson 1 0 80-81 80-81 1998 Kevin Platt 22-9 .710 10-5 SEC, 5th Indiana 0 1 82-83 82-83 Tennessee 4 19 82-83 09-10 John Brown 0 1 84-85 84-85 Texas 0 18 81-82 09-10 1999 Kevin Platt 15-11 .577 6-7 SEC, 7th Kansas 10 7 80-81 07-08 Texas A&M 5 10 81-82 09-10 Texas-Arlington 3 0 00-01 02-03 2000 Kevin Platt 10-13 .435 4-7 SEC, T7th Kansas State 10 1 80-81 04-05 Kentucky 6 15 82-83 09-10 Texas Christian 7 9 80-81 09-10 2001 Kevin Platt 10-13 .435 2-9 SEC, 11th Lamar 6 0 81-82 89-90 Texas-El Paso 2 0 98-99 00-01 La.-Lafayette 8 0 83-84 09-10 UT-Permian Basin 0 2 79-80 81-82 2002 Kevin Platt 6-16 .272 0-11 SEC, 12th La.-Monroe 10 3 80-81 96-97 UT-San Antonio 3 0 83-84 00-01 Texas Tech 10 5 79-80 95-96 2003 Kevin Platt 8-14 .308 0-11 SEC, 12th Louisiana State 13 18 81-82 09-10 Louisiana Tech 4 0 80-81 88-89 Texas Women’s 1 0 79-80 79-80 2004 Michael Hegarty 8-13 .381 0-11 SEC, 12th Louisville 2 1 80-81 98-99 Trinity 0 5 81-82 83-84 McNeese State 1 0 84-85 84-85 Tulane 4 3 81-82 03-04 2005 Michael Hegarty 11-11 .500 1-10 SEC, West 5th Memphis 14 2 79-80 09-10 Tulsa 21 2 79-80 09-10 Tyler JC 1 0 83-84 83-84 2006 Michael Hegarty 10-11 .476 5-6 SEC, West 2nd Miami - Fla. 1 1 00-01 08-09 Miami - Ohio 2 1 84-85 89-90 Utah 3 0 96-97 09-10 2007 Michael Hegarty 11-11 .500 4-7 SEC, West 3rd Midland JC 0 1 79-80 79-80 Vanderbilt 5 18 82-83 09-10 M. Tennessee 1 0 83-84 83-84 Virginia Tech 1 0 98-99 98-99 2008 Michael Hegarty 18-10 .643 9-2 SEC, West 1st Michigan 0 1 09-10 09-10 Washington 1 0 09-10 09-10 Washington State 0 1 01-02 01-02 2009 Michael Hegarty 15-8 .652 8-4 SEC, West 1st Michigan State 2 0 84-85 85-86 Minnesota 2 0 86-87 87-88 Wake Forest 1 1 90-91 07-08 2010 Michael Hegarty 18-10 .643 6-5 SEC, West 2nd Mississippi 9 21 81-82 09-10 Western Illinois 2 0 85-86 86-87 Mississippi St. 11 8 91-92 09-10 Westmont 1 0 02-03 02-03 Missouri 3 0 81-82 07-08 Wichita State 16 0 80-81 05-06 Missouri State 28 0 79-80 05-06 William & Mary 0 1 07-08 07-08 Murray State 2 0 80-81 81-82 Wisconsin 0 3 87-88 98-99 Aurelija Miseviciute Nebraska 2 2 79-80 05-06 Yale 0 1 82-83 82-83 40 University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis 41 ALL-TIME ROSTER -A- -F- -L- -R- Allen, Yawna...... 2004-05 Franco, Maryori...... 2004-08 Ledaja, Karina...... 2004-06 Radek, Janice...... 1975-76 Airapetian, Nanar...... 2006-09 Ferreira, Megan...... 2001-04 Linden, Allison...... 2004-06 Rankin, Christy...... 1984-88 Angotti, Laurence...... 1995-96 Fetzer, Jeanie...... 1974-78 Loghry, Amy...... 1989-91 Reid, Tara...... 1999-2001 Arghire, Simona...... 2002-04 Forney, Ann...... 1977-78 Lopez, Adriana...... 1999-2002 Rice, Celeste...... 1985-89 Armstrong, Julie...... 1974-76 Franz, Debbie...... 1982-83 Loomis, Myke...... 1982-83 Richardson, Beth...... 1989-93 Frampton, Jade...... 2010-present Lukomskaya, Kate...... 2008-present Rojas, Ana Maria...... 1997-98 Lynn, Lisa...... 1980-81 Roy, Stephanie...... 2009-present -G- Ruggles, Donna...... 1979-81 Garcia, Adriana...... 1996-99 -M- Rupp, Brigitte...... 1984-85 Garos, Janneke...... 1991-92 Mallory, Molly...... 1979-80 Garzo, Elena...... 1982-86 Mariani, Tina...... 1988-89 -S- UNIVERSITY OF Gaston, Susan...... 1975-76 Mauney, Valerie...... 1991-92 Santiago, Claire...... 1992-96 Gipson, Lisa...... 1986-87 McGarrahan, Amy...... 1988-92 Schreuers, Jolanda...... 1990-92 Gray, Lindsey...... 2009-10 Meacham, Betsy...... 1983-87 Schwan, Sandy...... 1985-88 Miseviciute, Aurelija...... 2005-09 Shaw, Trisha...... 1980-84 -H- Mones, Melinda...... 1990-94 Sheales, Loretta...... 1986-90 ARKANSAS Maria Pavlidou -B- Hale, Heather...... 1992-93 Morton, Whitney...... 2003-05 Smith, Amy...... 1983-84 Banholzer, Jeanette...... 1999-2000 Harris, Joy...... 1979-80 Munger, Marjorie...... 1979-80 Smith, Debbie...... 1980-82 Barakat, Rose...... 1989-91 Harris, Melody...... 1979-80 Soulti, Lydia...... 1992-93 Basham, Cathy...... 1975-76 Hay, Kelly...... 1993-94 Starkova, Valentina...... 2009-present Baxley, Liz...... 1979-80 Henry, Dana...... 1979-80 Stephens, Kerry...... 1990-91 Benett, Karen...... 1975-77 Ho, Andrea...... 1997-00 Stephenson, Susan...... 1977-78 Beukers, Marjolyn...... 1983-84 Hoffmeister, Melissa...... 2006-08 Storm, Cecily...... 1979-80 Bilger, Patti...... 1975-76 Horne, Catherine...... 2003 Stultz, Sara...... 1974-75 Blackburn, Julie...... 1989-92 Howard, Kendra...... 1995-98 Sundaram, Kelsey...... 2009-present Boon, Laura...... 1984-86 Hulo, Honor...... 1987-88 Bordeleau, Audrey...... 2004-08 Hunter, Teresa...... 1975-76 -T- Boustany, Stella...... 1976-77 Tigu, Anouk...... 2007-present Boyadjieva, Julia...... 1999-01 -I- Aurelija Miseviciute Torres, Maria...... 1993-95 Brackwell, Susan...... 1975-76 Incardone, Susan...... 1981-82 -N- Tribble, Bev...... 1974-76 Brennan, Mary...... 1979-80 Niemeier, Robin...... 1993-94 Trimble, Janan...... 1974-78 Brown, Brandy...... 1995-98 -J- Norrby, Helena...... 1985-89 Turk, Teresa...... 1979-80 Brown, Lindsey...... 2005-2006 Jovanovic, Vlatka...... 2004-06 Norris, Linda...... 1985-89 Juels, Robin...... 1993-96 -V- -C- -O- Varnum, Joanne...... 1987-89 Carbone, Emily...... 2008-present -K- O’Neil, Tanya...... 1993 Vlasak, Brenda...... 2000-01 Carrithers, Jane...... 1979-80 Kaer, Kathy...... 1981-83 Ostling, Louise...... 1996-99 Chase, Kellie...... 1981-85 Kaluder, Ela...... 2005-09 -W- Combs, Janet...... 1977-78 Kelly, Melissa...... 1997 -P- Wagner, Beth...... 1980-84 Coogan, Debbie...... 1973-77 Kenner, Leigh...... 1975-76 Pacheco, Iliana...... 2002-05 Wenzel, Kay...... 1979-80 Cornett, Melissa...... 2003-06 Khoo, Chin Bee...... 1999-01 Parson, Amanda...... 1992-94 Wesson, Shan...... 1983-84 Crafton, Carol...... 1972-76 Knowles, Mary...... 1974-75 Paulson, Claudine...... 2009-present Wilhelm, Rachel...... 2005-07 Crawford, Nancy...... 1977-78 Koenen, Annemijn...... 2009-10 Pavlidou, Maria...... 1996-99 Williams, Ann...... 1983-84 Perrotta, Fernanda...... 2009-10 Williams, Tracey...... 1983-85 -D- Wooden, Tami...... 1979-81 D’Arcy, Patricia...... 1999-01 DeBondt, Nathalie...... 1988-90 -Z- Dixon, Carly, 2006 Zacharias, Lori...... 1980-82 Donica, Cindy...... 1979-83 Duesner, Caroline...... 1984-85 Dybicz, Anna...... 2002-04 Dybicz, Monika...... 2002-04

Ela Kaluder

42 University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis 43 the academy began producing Inquiry, architecture to nursing, from transporta- the first undergraduate research journal COLLEGES AND SCHOOLS tion and logistics to international rela- published by an Arkansas institution of OF THE UNIVERSITY OF tions, all taught by nationally acclaimed higher learning. ARKANSAS faculty.

Honors College A program in nanoscience that com- WORLD-CLASS FACILITIES bines students and faculty in physics and Over $700 million in construction Dale Bumpers College of Agricultural, Food engineering has made the university the projects were completed on campus in and Life Sciences leader in production of nanomaterials for the past decade, are now under construc- Fay Jones School of Architecture universities across the country. tion or are in the planning stages. These No matter what students choose to include plans to upgrade or renovate sev- J. William Fulbright College of Arts study the University of Arkansas has the and Sciences eral of our historic buildings. The univer- programs, the faculty and the facilities to sity is also engaged in an ambitious pro- Sam M. Walton College of Business prepare them for the careers they want in gram to improve the energy efficiency of the future. 35 of our buildings, in an on-going effort College of Education and Health Professions UNIVERSITY OF ARKANSAS to create a sustainable campus. College of Engineering

A PORTRAIT OF THE STATE’S FLAGSHIP, LAND-GRANT UNIVERSITY WORLD-CLASS SUPPORT Global Campus The University of Arkansas, the flag- Citizens in Fayetteville and Investment in the future is critical, Graduate School ship campus of the University of Arkan- surrounding Washington Coun- DID YOU KNOW? and the unprecedented Campaign for the School of Law sas System, resides on a former hilltop ty raised $130,000 to secure the Fayetteville ranks No. 7 on the Forbes. Twenty-First Century that concluded in farm overlooking the Ozark Mountains university’s location in a state- 7 com’s list of “ Top 10 College Towns. 2006 resulted in a billion dollar infusion to the south. At the University’s founding wide competition sparked by the of gifts to the University of Arkansas. The Razorback basketball is ranked #14 on in 1871, the site was described as “second General Assembly’s Organic Act 14 the Forbes.com’s list of “College Basket effort included the largest single gift to BROAD RANGE OF DEGREES to none in the state of Arkansas.” of 1871, providing for the “loca- ball’s 20 Most Valuable Teams”. - a U.S. public university in the history of At Arkansas, students can major in Located in Fayetteville, the universi- tion, organization and mainte- American philanthropy: a $300 million Arkansas is home to Rhodes, Marshall, one of over 120 undergraduate disci- ty is both the major land-grant university nance of the Arkansas Industrial gift from the Walton Family Charitable NUMEROUS Goldwater, Udall, NSF and James Madi plines, many of which prepare them for for Arkansas and the state university. The University with a normal depart- Trust. Primary among the programs cre- son recipients. - entry into graduate studies ranging from university was created under the Morrill ment [i.e., teacher education] ated by the Walton gift was the designa- law to medicine. Land-Grant College Act of 1862, where- therein.” Senior Walk features names of more than tion of $200 million toward the estab- 120,000 120,000 graduates. by federal land sales provided funds for Today, the University of Ar- lishment of the Honors College. TEN COLLEGES AND new colleges devoted to agriculture and kansas encompasses more than Arkansas presses publish nearly 100 That kind of commitment from the the mechanic arts, scientific and classical 130 buildings on 345 acres and 100 books each year. state and the region is not uncommon. SCHOOLS: ONE UNIVERSITY studies, and military tactics, all designed provides nearly 200 academic More than $700 million in construction It was the effort of the city of Fayetteville The University has five colleges, four for the liberal and practical education of programs, more than some uni- 700 projects were completed in the past de and Washington County in submitting the industrial classes. The university’s versities twice its size. At the cade - the highest bid to the state in the 1870s schools and a global campus to provide founding satisfied the provision in the same time, it maintains a low that resulted in the University of Arkan- a wide range of majors, from agricultural Arkansas Constitution of 1868 that the student-to-faculty ratio (cur- sas opening its doors here on Jan. 22, business to biological engineering, from General Assembly establish and maintain rently 17:1) that makes personal than 65 percent of the faculty is tenured. 1872. a state university. attention possible. The university pro- The instructional mission is aided by SENIOR WALK motes undergraduate research in virtu- the Cordes Teaching and Faculty Support ally every discipline and makes higher The University of Arkansas is Center, a program run by faculty for fac- proud to be the last university in the education affordable with competitively ulty. The center involves as many as 400 priced tuition and generous financial nation maintaining what once was a faculty and nearly 200 teaching assistants common tradition of etching its gradu- aid. per year in regularly scheduled programs, ates’ names into the campus sidewalks. seminars, workshops and an annual off- The 100,000th graduate’s name went WORLD-CLASS FACULTY campus teaching retreat as well as indi- down in cement during the 1990s. The The campus culture places high val- vidual assistance to update and enhance names on Senior Walk stretch over five ue on excellent teaching. At this mainly their teaching methods. miles of campus sidewalks. residential campus, the faculty numbers This emphasis is reinforced by the The story of Senior Walk is a per- nearly 1,000, of which almost 95 per- University of Arkansas Teaching Acade- fect example of how the University of cent are full-time. Nine of every 10 fac- my, which consists of faculty recognized Arkansas brings its commitment to ulty members hold either a doctorate or by their peers, colleges and the larger uni- the past together with innovations for terminal degree in their field, and more versity for teaching excellence. In 2000, the future. When the costs involved in hand-etching names into concrete OLD MAIN forced numerous other universities to One of the original buildings of Arkansas’ campus, Old Main symbolizes the strong connection to the past and the give up, the University of Arkansas focus upon the future which come together in the present at the University of Arkansas. Completed in 1876, Old Main stood the test of time until the mid-1980s when age and modern building codes threatened to send it to the wrecking ball as it did turned to its physical plant and engi- its sister building at the University of Illinois. A major fund-raising campaign by alumni totally renovated Old Main. Reopen- neering school grads to create a one- ing in 1992, the building maintains the feel of a Victorian-era building with high ceilings and elaborate wooden trim. Just below the surface of the period hardwood floors, Old Main is hard-wired to the internet and built to last well into its second of-a-kind computerized sandblasting century. machine -- the SandHog. Each sum- Even with renovation, Old Main remained unfinished until 2006. One of the gifts during the Campaign for the Twenty-First Century specified the installation of a clock, originally planned for the blank faces of the south tower. mer, the SandHog roars across the As mentioned, Old Main was built from shared plans with its counterpart on the Illinois campus, with one important front lawn of Old Main, etching the difference. The north tower of Arkansas’ Old Main is taller than the south tower. Legend says this was symbolic of the Civil War as the lead engineer was a northern veteran. names of graduates into sidewalks.

44 University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis 45 RESEARCH POINTS OF PRIDE DISCOVERY THAT IS MAKING LIFE BETTER FOR ARKANSAS AND THE WORLD THE DISTINCTIVE CHARACTERISTICS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF ARKANSAS UNIQUE TRADITIONS assist Panama in establishing an agri- The Carnegie Foundation categorizes the University of Starting on Old Main’s front step with the year 1876, the names of the more cultural teaching, research and exten- Arkansas as a research institution with “high research activ- than 125,000 graduates have been chiseled into more than two miles of cam- sion program similar to the one that ity,” placing it among the top 10 percent of universities na- pus walkways, grouped by year of graduation. It’s not uncommon to see alumni had been so successful in modernizing tionwide. In simple terms, the university is in the top tier of strolling Senior Walk to rediscover their own names and fond memories of ac- agriculture in the United States. 150 research universities among the nation’s more than 4,000 complishment and fun. post-secondary institutions — and growing in research activ- Old Main, the university’s signature building, designed in Second Empire CHANGING THE WORLD ity and expenditures each year. Some internationally significant As a land-grant and state university, the institution con- architectural style, has come to symbolize higher education in Arkansas. Old ways that the siders research, scholarship and creative endeavor — all lead- Main is one of 11 campus buildings on the National ing to the advancement of knowledge — a significant compo- Register of Historic Places. Today, it is the home to University nent of its primary mission. The university’s faculty members the J. William Fulbright College of Arts and Science, has – and is – are active researchers and scholars who consistently attract the largest academic college within the University of changing the international attention in the arts, sciences, humanities, Arkansas. world: technology, busi- The Inn at Carnall Hall and Ella’s Restaurant ness and educa- comprise the university’s own on-campus hospitality •Barnett Sure, tion. center. The beautiful, 50-room historic inn and five- a University Research ex- star restaurant are both overseen by the hospitality of Arkansas penditures at the any other public laboratory in the and restaurant management academic program in the professor of University of Ar- country. Dale Bumpers College of Agricultural, Food agricultural kansas for fiscal and Life Sciences. Carnall Hall was built in chemistry, pio- year now exceed •The Chemical Hazards Research 1905 as the university’s first women’s resi- neered nutri- $117 million per Center has the largest ultra-low- dence hall. The building was named after tion research year, making re- speed boundary layer wind tunnel Ella Carnall, one of the campus’ first female that led to the co-discovery of vitamin search activity a in the world. The wind tunnel sim- faculty members. E, a vitamin high in antioxidants. His significant aca- ulates releases of heavier-than-air work also led to understanding of how demic element gases into the atmosphere. It has THE FULBRIGHT LEGACY vitamin E, amino acids and B vitamins at the univer- been used to simulate potential di- Since its founding, the University of affect reproduction and lactation. sity and an eco- sasters and to trace the path of di- Arkansas has compiled a remarkable record nomic engine sasters that have occurred, such as of scientific, technological, intellectual and •As world population grew during the for the state. It’s the catastrophic 1984 Union Car- creative accomplishment. This accomplishment is exemplified by the late U.S. 20th century, so did the contribution also not uncom- bide leak in Bhopal, India. Senator J. William Fulbright, a Rhodes Scholar as a student and eventual presi- of research at the University of Arkan- mon anymore dent of the university (1939-41). Fulbright went on to serve at the national level, sas. Marinus C. Kik, a professor of agri- for research awards to the university to rise at double-digit percentage rates, and such •The High Density Electronics Cen- cultural chemistry from 1927 to 1967, awards also are approaching the $100 million level. founding in 1946 the greatest international exchange program for faculty and ter has established itself as one of the developed the process for parboiling In addition to the work performed by faculty through individual and collabora- students in the world. top electronics packaging research rice, one of the most plentiful grains in tive efforts in their academic departments, special research and outreach programs — Fulbright’s injunction for academia guides the University of Arkansas to this and education facilities in the world. undeveloped parts of the world. Kik’s often interdisciplinary — are conducted in approximately 50 centers and organized day: “The highest function of higher education is the teaching of things in per- HiDEC has executed contracts from spective, toward the purposes of enriching the life of the individual, cultivating process increased retention of vitamins research units around campus. government and industry total- the free and inquiring mind and advancing the effort to bring reason, justice and and shortened cooking time. ing more than $30 million. Projects humanity into the re- AMONG THE LEADING-EDGE CENTERS AND have ranged from multichip mod- lations of men and •In 1948, Silas Hunt became the first RESEARCH ACTIVITIES: ule design to the development and •The RFID Research Center laboratory conducts research in the most efficient nations.” black person to integrate a traditional- evaluation of new technologies and ly white Southern university, enrolling use of radio frequency identification and other wireless sensor technologies electronic products. The University throughout the supply chain, with a particular emphasis on the retail supply of Arkansas has long in the University of Arkansas School of Law six years before the Brown v. chain. Positioned in northwest Arkansas at the epicenter of retail activity, •The Center for Advanced Spatial been an institution Board of Education decision. Likewise, the RFID Research Center laboratory is a multidisciplinary “supply chain in Technologies has been recognized of strong interna- a box” devoted to examining the technology as used in retail, storeroom and nationally for its data storage and tional orientation. Edith Irby Jones soon after became the warehouse environments. retrieval warehouse, GeoStor, by the In 1951, under U.S. first black graduate from a Southern Urban & Regional Information Sys- State Department university, attaining her medical de- •The Center for Sensing Technology and Research features a 9.4 Tesla Fou- tems Association. The center works auspices, the Univer- gree from the University of Arkansas rier transform mass spectrometer, which uses a high-powered magnet that with people across campus in vari- sity became the first for Medical Sciences. Both acts hap- improves the resolution of images of molecules and provides detailed infor- ous disciplines, offering researchers land-grant institu- pened without litigation or protest. mation about their structure. Coupled with other instruments in the High the latest in innovative technologies. tion in the nation Performance Mass Spectrometry Laboratory, the mass spectrometer offers This has led to interdisciplinary col- to assemble an agri- •When John Pople and Walter Kohn high-resolution laser desorption mass spectrometry, which is not available at laboration in fields as diverse as en- cultural foreign mis- received the 1998 Nobel Prize in gineering, agriculture, anthropology sion. The object of Chemistry, they cited the research of and sociology. that mission was to University of Arkansas chemist Peter 46 University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis 47 five years while researchers around the world raced to catch up.

• Professor Dwight Isely of the de- partment of entomology is considered CHANCELLOR the father of insect pest management DR. G. DAVID GEARHART in the United States. His research iden- Dr. G. David Gearhart became the chancellor tified the weak point in the life cycle of the University of Arkansas on July 1, 2008, fol- of insects that made them particu- lowing 10 years of service to the university as vice larly susceptible to control strategies. chancellor for university advancement. Previously Through his work on cotton insect he was senior vice president of Penn State Univer- pests, the codling moth, the striped cucumber beetle, the southern corn sity, during which time he was named a Fulbright rootworm and the rice water weevil, Scholar, studying at Oxford University in Oxford, American Agriculture saved millions of England. Pulay as the building block for their prize-winning work. Early in his career, Pu- dollars. His Bachelor of Arts degree is from Westmin- lay developed techniques for determining the shape and size of molecules that ster College in Missouri. Both his law degree and would permanently change the way scientists study matter. Today his approach • Engineering professors at the Uni- his doctor of education degree are is used by theoretical chemists around the world to determine the geometry of versity of Arkansas invented the next- from the University of Arkansas. He large, biologically important molecules. best thing to the zip code – the wide- is a native of Fayetteville. area bar code reader, which became the Prior to being appointed • Two professors and a university alumnus – Harold Dulan, E.J. Ball and Lewis most widely implemented automated chancellor, Dr. Gearhart oversaw Callison – created the nation’s first commercial variable annuity life insurance mail-sorting equipment in the world. the Campaign for the Twenty-First company, later bought by Aetna Insurance. Today, variable annuities are used By 2000, more than 15,000 bar code Century, the most successful capi- worldwide in estate planning for participation in economic growth and as a readers were used in every major Postal tal campaign in Arkansas history, which raised more than $1 billion for academic hedge against inflation. Service facility, increasing the efficien- programs. cy of processing 20 billion pieces of As chancellor, Dr. Gearhart instituted the first tuition freeze in 24 years and imple- • In 1950, the University of Arkansas built the first American facility to in- mail a year at a savings of $200 million. mented a $220 million campus building renova- tion and refurbishment plan, as well tegrate the study of fine arts. Edward Durell Stone, a former student who was as a campus-wide energy savings plan. He has also undertaken a renewed emphasis on by then an internationally recognized architect, designed the Fine Arts Center • Former President William Jefferson the arts on campus, including the establishment of the “All Steinway Campus.” and followed on this early effort later to design the Kennedy Center for Arts in Clinton and Secretary of State Hillary Dr. Gearhart has additionally implemented a major cost savings program that has Washington, D.C. Other universities and colleges also followed Arkansas’ exam- Rodham Clinton started their careers ple, developing cross-curricular exchanges so that artists, musicians, actors and as faculty members of the University already resulted in over $13 million in cost reduction and savings to the flagship campus. Campus enrollment has designers could learn from each other and draw inspiration from other similar of Arkansas in the mid-1970s. While also grown by more than 10 percent in the last two years to almost 21,500 students. At the same time, diversity in disciplines. a law professor, Mr. Clinton made his the student body has increased significantly. first runs for political office, getting He and his wife of 35 years, Jane, have two children and one grandchild. • Chemistry professor Paul Kuroda predicted that self-sustaining nuclear chain elected as the Arkansas attorney gen- reactions could have occurred naturally in earth’s geologic history. His prediction eral in 1976. Mrs. Clinton founded was later confirmed when scientists discovered a natural nuclear reactor in Ga- the university’s legal clinic, which still bon, Africa. In 1960, he predicted the existence of Plutonium-244 as an element provides law students a chance to work present during the solar system’s formation. Confirmation of his theory enabled with clients on legal problems. DR. SHARON HUNT scientists to more accurately date the sequence of events in the solar system’s FACULTY ATHLETIC REPRESENTATIVE early history. Chancellor G. David Gearhart has appointed Dr. Sharon Hunt to be the faculty athletics representative for the University of Arkansas in August 2010. • The Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing, a 60-hour program launched at Dr. Hunt is the first woman and non-lawyer to hold the post. Dr. Hunt has been on the University the University of Arkansas in 1966, has grown into one of the most productive of Arkansas faculty for 20 years and has served as head of the department of health science, kinesiology, and highly ranked programs of its kind in America. Founded by English profes- recreation and dance in the College of Education and Health Professions for that entire time except for the sors William Harrison and James Whitehead, later joined by Miller Williams, the 2000-01 academic year, when she served as interim dean of the college. program was an early catalyst in the transformation of the traditional study of A high school athlete, Hunt’s involvement with collegiate athletics dates back to her own college days literature into a demanding training ground for writers. at the University of Arkansas when she played extramural sports with the women’s basketball and tennis teams prior to the enactment of Title IX. • University of Arkansas plant pathologists George Templeton, Roy Smith, Da- After receiving her bachelor’s and master’s degrees in physical education from the university, she went on to earn a doctor vid TeBeest and graduate student Jim Daniels conducted research in the early of education degree from the University of Georgia, where she taught a variety of sport-activity courses as a graduate assistant. 1970s that led to the first biological herbicide for weed control in a field crop, Upon the completion of her doctoral degree, she joined the faculty of the University of Kentucky for 13 years, where she taught later called Collego. Their work to avoid chemical herbicides led to worldwide de- both undergraduate and graduate courses and served as the graduate coordinator for the department of health, physical educa- tion and recreation. In 1990, she and her family returned to Fayetteville. velopment of safer biological herbicides and establishment of the Rosen Center Dr. Hunt will work closely with the athletic department, will be involved in the student-athlete advisory council on campus for Alternative Pest Control at the University of Arkansas. and will travel to represent the University of Arkansas at various SEC and NCAA meetings. Dr. Hunt was instrumental in establishing the graduate athletic training education program in the College of Education and • Physics professors Allen Hermann and Zhengzhi Sheng mixed up a thallium- Health Professions, and she has worked closely with athletics on that program. The athletics department provides support to based material in 1988 that set the world’s highest temperature at which super- students in the athletic training education program in the form of a stipend, books and travel to the Arkansas Athletic Trainers’ conductivity could be sustained, leading to new advances in the manufacture of Association annual meeting. Two endowed scholarships for athletic training students in honor of longtime Razorback trainers high-density electronics. Their patented material held the record for more than Dean Weber and the late Bill Ferrell were established through the athletics department.

48 University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis 49 UNIVERSITY OF ARKANSAS Melissa Harwood-Rom ACADEMIC GAME PLAN Associate AD for Student- FOR GRADUATION Athlete Support Services Student-athletes are expected to meet spe- cific academic criteria in order to maintain eli- ACADEMICS gibility. This is easily achieved by following the STUDENT-ATHLETE ACADEMIC SUPPORT FOR SUCCESS AND ACHIEVEMENT Academic Game Plan created by the Student- Athlete Academic Support and Achievement STUDENT-ATHLETE ACADEMIC SUPPORT AND team. ACHIEVEMENT MISSION STATEMENT The SAASA designs programs and sets spe- The primary focus of the Razorback Student-Athlete Academic Support and Achievement Program is to provide cific goals to help student-athletes achieve aca- the student-athlete with the opportunity to develop the skills necessary to be a success in college and in life. This demic success. An example of a key goal is the is accomplished through superior academic counseling, life skills training and preparation to enter the job market successful completion of 30 hours of coursework upon graduation. during each academic year. By maintaining this course load, Razorback athletes not only stay THE BOGLE ACADEMIC CENTER on track to graduate in four years, There is no higher priority for the University of Arkansas Athletic Department than the academic progress of its but easily meet eligibility scholar-athletes. Thanks to the generous gift of Bob and Marilyn Bogle, the home of the Razorback Athletic Depart- requirements set by the ment’s Student-Athlete Academic Support and Achievement program is the Bob and Marilyn Bogle Academic Center. NCAA. The 15,000-square foot Bogle Academic Center is located in the east side of Donald W. Reynolds Razorback Stadium. Under the overall direction of Senior Associate Athletic Director Jon Fagg, the Bogle Academic Center houses the Arkansas Razorbacks Academic Support Program, the Razorback Office of Student Life and the Career Development STUDY HALL AND Program. TUTORS A quiet setting for unin- Associate Athletic Director for Student-Athlete Support Services Melissa Harwood-Rom oversees the staff of pro- terrupted study, the Bogle fessionals dedicated to directing student-athletes to reach their personal academic goals, and to do so in ways that Academic Center provides balance their academic, athletic and personal lives. three types of study hall STUDENT-ATHLETE ACADEMIC SUPPORT AND space. The computer lab (above) has over 30 stations for individual comput- ACHIEVEMENT SERVICES er-based study. An open study hall is available for group or individual study, and monitored by staff members of the SAASA. There are 17 individual study The Mission Statement for the Razorback Student-Athlete Academic Support and Achievement division -- SAASA carrels that provide space for tutors to meet with student athletes for indi- -- speaks for itself, but the improvements and achievements of the Razorbacks over the past academic year are what vidual instruction in specific subjects. is most important. At Arkansas, academic services are not just good grades and eligibility. Along with 18 of 19 teams Each Razorback team sets its own criteria for study hall attendance. exceeding the NCAA standard for APR, Razorbacks earned some of the highest conference and national academic The use of tutors is a key element for academic success, allowing for individu- honors in the 2009-10 year including a pair of Southeastern Conference Scholar-Athletes of the Year. alized assistance and for reaching academic excellence in advanced subjects. It is also not about honoring the “A” student. Arkansas Athletics is committed to every single athlete improving his or her academic performance every semester, working to achieve academic “personal bests” with each class just the same as we would expect our athletes to hit personal records in competition.

50 University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis 51 ACADEMICS IN THE COMMUNITY HONORS AND GRADUATES GIVING BACK TO NORTHWEST ARKANSAS AND THE WORLD HONORS AND AWARDS 2010 SPRING SEMESTER Community service is a vital part of the educational process for any college stu- Academic Excellence Program -- Recognition for Razorback athletes who exceed a 3.0 ACADEMIC HONOR ROLL dent, and Razorback athletes continued to make it a priority in 2009-10. PGA each fall and spring semester. Kailey Anders, soccer, communication disorders; Amanda Anderson, volley- With guidance from the Student-Athlete Development office, Razorback student- Academic Champions -- Razorbacks who scored perfect 4.0 grades for the semester ball, kinesiology; Seth Armbrust, football, kinesiology; Natalie Bohonsky, athletes, coaches and staff members participating in a number of events throughout Athletic Director’s List -- Razorbacks with grades from 3.50-3.99 gymnastics, journalism; Lane Boyer, men’s track and field, geology; Kate- the year. Here’s a brief look at some of those projects. Athletic Department Honor Roll -- Razorbacks with grades from 3.00-3.49 lyn Cherry, women’s track and field, engineering; Amy DeFilippo, gymnas- tics, kinesiology; Tara Diebold, women’s track and field, communication Lon Farrell Award -- Presented to the graduating Razorback athlete each spring disorders; Joseph Doramus, men’s golf, finance; Halmon Fess, men’s ten- w Going out to area elementary schools to support the Book Hogs reading semester with the highest cumulative GPA. nis, business; Seth Haynes, men’s track and field, biology; Megan Haskins, swimming and diving, finance; Price Holmes, football, nursing; Sarah How- program and the Sweat Hawgs physical education awareness program. Bandon Burlsworth Award -- Voted on by the university faculty as the ard, swimming and diving, journalism; Megan Jackson, women’s track and w Individual team projects ranging from volunteering at the Fayetteville outstanding former non-scholarship student-athlete. field, kinesiology; Paige Johnson, women’s track and field, English/journal- Public Library, working with Habitat for Humanity, assisting with area Hard Working Hog -- Recognizing achievements of new personal academic bests ism; Kelci Lewis, gymnastics, kinesiology; Lisa Lunkenheimer, swimming and diving, kinesiology; James McCann, baseball, communication; Hope shelters, helping the local youth programs like the Scouts, holiday shopping each semester. McLemore, softball, health science; Elizabeth McVean, soccer, kinesiology; and meal programs and visiting area nursing homes. SEC Academic Honor Roll -- A 3.0 GPA or above for two consecutive semesters. Garrett Methvin, Baseball, kinesiology; Kat Moffet, soccer, journalism; Erin Moskos, soccer, kinesiology; Sam Murphy, baseball, communication; w Teaming with Numana, Inc. for Razorback Relief: Operation Haiti, a 24-hour Erin Neumann, swimming and diving, communication disorders; Lynette marathon to package, more than 1.4 million meals for the Haitian CLASS ATTENDANCE Ng, swimming and diving, communication/ Asian studies; Rio Reina, men’s relief effort. track and field, finance; Mackenzie Rhea, volleyball, Biology; Alexandra The University of Arkansas Razorback Ath- Roman, swimming and diving, Spanish; Lindsay Scanlan, volleyball, crimi- Several Razorbacks shared some putt-putt time with letic Department has an overall student-athlete nal justice; Haley Smith, swimming and diving, kinesiology; Katie Stripling, The quiet efforts of our 19 Razorback teams have a long-lasting impact on the young fans as a part of Make a Difference Day. Razorback class attendance policy. Student-Athletes Aca- women’s track and field, kinesiology; Chelsea Tidwell, soccer, nutrition; athletes from all sports participated in various commu- Anouk Tigu, women’s tennis, business; Kelsea Vance, swimming and div- youth of our state. The incredible positive benefit of the time spent by the Razorbacks demic Support and Achievement assists with nity service activities across the city of Fayetteville. the enforcement of this policy through regular ing, biology; Victoria Vela, women’s golf, business; Kerri Wood, women’s helping the community pays tremendous dividends, not only for the University of track and field, marketing checks on class attendance. If traveling with a Arkansas, but for the entire community. team, student-athletes notify instructors early in 2009 FALL SEMESTER And while we focus here on the positive benefits for the fresh young faces who re- ceive an autograph or a kind word of encouragement from a Razorback, we each semester regarding assignments or exams. ACADEMIC HONOR ROLL Garrett Methvin, baseball, kinesiology; David Hurd, football, biology; Halm- know that there is a considerable impact upon our student-athletes, our STUDENT LIFE on Fess, men’s tennis, business; Lane Boyer, men’s track, geology; Corinna future leaders. The opportunity to give back impresses upon them that The social and personal development of Rees, women’s golf, political science; Victoria Vela, women’s golf, busi- no matter their personal circumstances when they arrived in Fayetteville, ness; Stacy Bartlett, gymnastics, nutrition; Amy DeFilippo, gymnastics, student-athletes is as important to the Univer- kinesiology; Kelci Lewis, gymnastics, kinesiology; Sarah Nagashima, gym- they have a chance to not only improve their lives, but touch the lives of sity of Arkansas as the academic and athletic nastics, apparel studies; Genny Salvatore, gymnastics, art; Kailey Anders, others. achievement. The Office of Student Life focuses soccer, communication disorders; Katherine Moffett, soccer, journalism; on the personal development and community Chelsea Tidwell, soccer, nutrition; Kim Jones, softball, recreation; Hope service components of the NCAA CHAMPS/ McLemore, softball, kinesiology; Gina Bargiachi, swimming and diving, art; Sarah Howard, swimming and diving, journalism; Lisa Lunkenheimer, LifeSkills program. Training is provided in a swimming and diving, kinesiology; Erin Neumann, swimming and diving, variety of areas in- communication disorders; Lynette Ng, swimming and diving, communica- cluding financial tion ; Leah Pierce, swimming and diving, economics; Anouk Tigu, women’s planning, drug and tennis, business; Tara Diebold, women’s track, communication disorders; Katie Stripling, women’s track, kinesiology; Keri Wood, women’s track, alcohol education, marketing; Mackenzie Rhea, volleyball, biology time management, study skills and de- WHO ELSE GRADUATES FROM THE veloping commu- nity service activi- UNIVERSITY OF ARKANSAS? Here’s a short list of some of our numerous notable graduates: ties. Steve Atwater (BSBA ‘88), Two-time Super Bowl participant with the Denver Broncos At left: the Razorback men’s basketball team served meals Regina Blakely (BA ’81, JD ’85), Former CBS News Reporter over the Thanksgiving holiday. Above: members of the Razor- George W. Haley (LLB ’52), U.S. Ambassador to Gambia, brother of back gymnastics team take part in Razorback Relief: Opera- author Alex Haley tion Haiti helping to package more than 1.4 million meals Jerry Jones (BA ‘65), Owner of the Dallas Cowboys in 24 hours. Ronald LeMay (BSBA ‘72), CEO, Sprint Robert Maurer (BS ‘48), Inventor of fiber optic technology at Corning Glass “The University of Arkansas isn’t a huge university, but it has a huge reputa- Rodney Slater (BA ‘80), First African-American U.S. Secretary Razorback student-athletes are regular tion. My professors were concerned with my personal goals; concerned about CAREER of Transportation speakers at both Book Hogs Read To how I wanted to develop as an individual. There is a great amount of one- Pat Summerall (BSE ’53), Former CBS Sports and Win and Sweat Hogs, a program that DEVELOPMENT on-one mentoring with the teachers. I think one of the greatest things about The purpose of the Career Fox Sports announcer encourages physical fitness in the el- Arkansas is that you are an individual, a real person — not just an I.D. Don J. Tyson, Jr. (’52), Founder, Tyson Foods ementary schools. Development Program is to as- number — to the faculty and staff.” Jim C. Walton (BSBA ’71), President, Walton Enterprises sist student-athletes in making S. Rob Walton (BSBA ’66), Former Chairman of the Board, Book Hogs is one of the largest depart- a smooth transition from the Tiffany Wright (BA, 1998) Wal-Mart Stores ment outreach programs Razorback University of Arkansas into the Tiffany Wright went from 1998 NCAA Women’s Final Four to graduation to sideline student-athletes are guest readers in el- reporter for ESPN’s coverage of the WNBA within weeks. Today, she is the sports anchor workplace. This process begins FAMOUS RECENT RAZORBACKS ementary classrooms and there are con- at ABC affiliate, WSOC, in Charlotte, N.C. tests for reading the most books with the during the freshman year with -Felix Jones (First Round NFL, Dallas Cowboys) -Darren McFadden (First Round NFL, Oakland Raiders) winners recognized at Razorback sport- a one-hour course on career options. Workshops are held to provide student-athletes training -Lauren Ervin (Third Round WNBA, Connecticut Sun) ing events. in resume writing, interviewing skills and etiquette. Individual assistance with locating summer -Sonny Weems (Second Round NBA, Chicago Bulls) internships and job placement gives student-athletes a head start into their chosen careers. -Stacy Lewis (LPGA member, tied for third at U.S Women’s Open) Bottom right: members of the Razorback -Logan Forsythe (First Round MLB, San Diego Padres) women’s golf team help out a local food -Wallace Spearmon (200), Veronica Campbell-Brown (200), NIcole Teter shelter. (800), Christin Wurth-Thomas (1,500), (10,000), Deena Kastor (Marathon) and April Steiner Bennett (pole vault) all at the Beijing Olympics.

52 University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis 53 “WE WILL PROVIDE OPPORTUNITIES FOR STUDENT-ATHLETES TO ACHIEVE THEIR FULLEST POTENTIAL ACADEMICALLY, ATHLETICALLY AND SOCIALLY, WHILE JEFF LONG COMPETING SUCCESSFULLY AT THE HIGHEST LEVEL.” VICE CHANCELLOR FOR INTERCOLLEGIATE ATHLETICS AND DIRECTOR OF ATHLETICS program $73 million in the next 10 years. Long recently negotiated an extensive all Entering his third full year as Vice drawing more than a million fans annually sports apparel and footwear all sports agree- Chancellor and Director of Athletics, Jeff to campus to cheer on the Razorbacks. ment with NIKE, Inc. that will outfit all 19 Long has not only guided the University In the classroom, the Razorbacks ex- Razorback sports programs through the of Arkansas’ Department of Intercollegiate ceed national APR multi-year rate stan- 2014-15 season. Athletics through a period of unprecedent- dards in 18 of 19 sports. For the first time A number of athletic facilities have ed transition, he has transformed and re- in program history, all 19 sports exceeded also seen a transformation with Bud Walton vitalized a tradition-rich athletics program the yearly APR benchmark rate in the most Arena undergoing extensive renovations, encompassing 19 sports and more than 460 recent report (2008-09). The academic suc- including replacement of the lower seating student-athletes. Long has not only accept- cess has coincided with a transformation bowl and the addition of courtside seating, ed, but embraced the challenge of leading a of the program’s academic achievement ribbon boards and a courtside club room. Razorback program that serves as a source approach from maintaining eligibility to In the spring of 2009, Bogle Park, arguably of pride for so many at the University of focusing on student-athlete advancement the nation’s best softball facility, was dedi- Arkansas, in all corners of the state and towards a college diploma. cated on the Arkansas campus and a new to thousands of Razorbacks all around the In the community, Razorback student- synthetic playing surface was installed at world. athletes are more active than ever volun- Donald W. Reynolds Razorback Stadium. Long has established a multi-faceted teering more than 2,500 hours of time in Long remains committed to maintaining combined athletics program uniformly between the rigors of school and athletic Arkansas’ reputation as the home to some committed to the development of student- practice and competition. Community out- of the nation’s best playing venues while athletes academically, athletically and so- reach initiatives including Lift Up America, targeting much needed facility improve- cially. A part of Chancellor G. David Gear- Book Hogs, Sweat Hogs, Razorback for a ments crucial to the overall development of hart’s Executive Committee, Long and other Day and Razorback Relief have Razorback health of the Razorback program. He had student-athletes. The department recently The Long Family: Christina, Fanny, Stephanie and Jeff. members of the campus leadership team student-athletes making a difference in Ar- commissioned a master facilities plan to as- begun the process of carefully blending the athletic director at Pittsburgh. During his are charged with developing policies and kansas and around the world. In 2009-10, sess facility needs for the future success of radio and television rights and SoonerVi- men’s and women’s athletic departments tenure, Long redefined Pitt athletics, most charting the course for the future of higher the Lee Spencer Cup was established to an- the Razorback program. sion productions. In addition, Long was into one unified department and establish- notably through the “Quest for Excellence” education at the University of Arkansas. nually recognize the Razorback team that Arkansas’ program flourished in Long’s the primary administrator for the Sooners’ ing a new administrative structure. Under campaign. Designed to enhance the stu- Since his arrival, Long and his staff have earns distinction in the classroom, in ath- first year, finishing 24th in the NACDA Di- highly successful football and men’s basket- Long’s leadership, Arkansas revised poli- dent-athlete experience for Panther athletes re-engaged the athletic department with letic competition, in personal development rectors Cup, its best finish in nearly a de- ball programs, along with sport supervision cies governing class attendance, drug test- through scholarship endowments and capi- the university community working to more and in the community. cade. In his first full year at the helm, Ar- of baseball, wrestling and both golf teams. ing, the NCAA Opportunity Fund as well tal gifts for facility construction and reno- fully integrate Razorback Athletics into the Administratively, landmark agree- kansas scored a program-record 730 points Long’s first appointment as a director as other compliance and business office vation, the Quest resulted in almost $34 campus environment. Razorback Athletics ments have been negotiated with ISP and on its way to a 25th-place finish. The of athletics was at Eastern Kentucky where procedures. The academic support services million in just over two and a half years. stepped forward with a $1 million gift to with Southeastern Conference televi- back-to-back top 25 Directors Cup finishes he served for two and a half years. He made division was re-organized and a formal divi- His commitment to building the Pitt support the university’s academic mission sion partners to guarantee future revenue marked only the second time in school his- several revisions to the EKU athletic infra- sion of student life was created focusing on athletics brand resulted in a new primary in 2009-10 which brought the department’s streams and secure the financial base of the tory the Razorbacks accomplished that feat. structure and completed several facility student-athlete development and commu- mark for the Panthers which returned the support of the greater university communi- program in uncertain economic times. A veteran administrator with a track projects. Long created the first modern cor- nity service. powerful “PITT” brand to Pittsburgh. He es- ty to nearly $4 million. The department has Even the most optimistic outlook record of the highest commitment to the porate partner and sponsorship structure at Long was busy on external issues as tablished a partnership with adidas for uni- pledged another $1 million gift for 2010-11. would have been hard pressed to foresee concept of “student-athlete,” Long has EKU. Prior to Eastern, Long had a brief stay well. In 2008, Arkansas returned to the forms and apparel for all 19 Pitt teams and The success of Long’s approach can be the level of success that the Razorback pro- had more than two decades experience in with Virginia Tech as an associate athletics classic Razorback logo. The new branding an agreement with ISP Sports. measured in part by the remarkable accom- gram would attain in such a short time after athletic administration at the Division I director. was featured in the launch of a new website Long’s four-year tenure added up to plishments of the Razorback program in Long was selected to replace legendary ath- level including at the University of Pitts- He began his career in college athletic ArkansasRazorbacks.com. In 2009-10, Ar- Pittsburgh becoming one of the nation’s his tenure. Arkansas has captured six con- letic director and former Razorback football burgh, University of Oklahoma, University administration at Michigan, hired by leg- kansas hosted a year-long celebration com- top programs, notably the Panthers’ selec- ference championships and advanced to coach Frank Broyles in September of 2007. of Michigan, Virginia Tech University and endary coach and athletics director, the memorating “100 Years of the Razorbacks” tion as the No. 17 overall program in the 40 NCAA post-season competitions while Before Long officially took the reins, Arkan- Eastern Kentucky University prior to arriv- late Bo Schembechler. During his seasons and launched a new official newspaper of nation in the December 2006 Sports Illus- sas announced that it would ing at Arkansas. While known as an inno- with the Wolverines, Long was promoted the department, Inside Razorback Athletics. trated on Campus’ All-Sport Rankings. combine its previously inde- vator in athletic department management, through a series of posts to the position of Long worked tirelessly to maintain As an athletic leader, Long was a key pendent men’s and women’s Long also understands the coach’s perspec- associate athletics director. long-time relationships and to forge new re- advocate for the Big East during the league’s athletic programs into one tive from time spent in coaching and ad- A former two-sport athlete at Ohio lationships for the benefit of the Razorback time of membership transition. Due in part combined athletic program. ministrative staff positions at Duke Uni- Wesleyan, Long earned seven varsity let- program including extending Arkansas’ to his leadership, the Big East maintained Shortly after that an- versity, Rice University and North Carolina ters for the Bishops in football and baseball relationship with War Memorial Stadium its position as a key member of the Bowl nouncement, Long was busy State University. before completing his degree in economics in Little Rock. Long was also instrumen- Championship System, and the Pitt Pan- engineering the first coach- On the forefront of NCAA governance, in 1982. He started his post-graduate career tal in helping re-establish the Razorbacks’ thers earned the Big East’s automatic berth ing search of his tenure. Long Long served on the NCAA Management in athletics as a graduate assistant football presence in Texas, partnering with former in 2004 at the Tostitos Fiesta Bowl. Along not only found the next head Council as one of the athletic administra- coach at the cradle of coaches, Miami Uni- Razorback Jerry Jones to develop the South- with his tenure on the Executive Council, football coach, he convinced tors who oversaw the operations and regu- versity of Ohio. Long earned his master’s west Classic, a 10-year football series with Long also served on the NCAA’s Sports Wa- Bobby Petrino, one of the lation for Division I. His experience as an in education at Miami in 1983, moving on Texas A&M played at the new Dallas Cow- gering Task Force in 2004, and as a member most successful collegiate athletic director and administrator in Amer- to football staff positions at Rice, Duke and boys Stadium. of the Executive Committee of the Division coaches in recent history, to ica’s most prestigious conferences – the Big N.C .State prior to joining Michigan. Perhaps his most impressive accom- I-A Athletic Directors’ Association. return to the college game at 12, Big Ten, Big East, Atlantic Coast and An Ohio native from Kettering, Long plishment came when he brokered a new Before arriving at Pitt, Long was senior Arkansas. now SEC gives Long a uniquely informed is married to the former Fanny Gellrich partnership with ISP to form Razorback associate athletic director at Oklahoma for By the time, Long offi- perspective on intercollegiate athletics. of Ann Arbor, Mich. The Longs have two Sports Properties. As economic indicators two and a half years. Responsible for the cially started his new position During his career, Long has served in five of daughters, Stephanie and Christina. were beginning to point toward challeng- external affairs of the Sooners, he oversaw on Jan. 1, 2008, he had already the six Bowl Championship Series leagues. ing economic times, Long signed Arkansas key brand areas of marketing and promo- accomplished a list of tasks vi- Prior to assuming his current roles at to a deal that will guarantee the Razorback tions, licensing, media relations, ticketing, tal to the short and long-term Arkansas, Long served for four years as the 54 University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis 55 ARKANSAS SENIOR STAFF ARKANSAS SENIOR STAFF CLAYTON HAMILTON TRACEY STEHLIK BEV LEWIS Associate Athletic Director. Associate Athletic Director for Compliance ASSOCIATE VICE CHANCELLOR AND EXECUTIVE ASSOCIATE AD Chief Financial Officer Starting her 27th year with the University Clayton Hamilton joined the university in of Arkansas, Tracey Stehlik serves as associate For almost three decades, Bev Lewis is synonymous with the University of Arkansas and Razorback women’s January 2010, assuming oversight of the finan- athletic director for compliance. She began her sports teams. While the 2007-08 season was her 27th season at the University, it also proved one of the most im- cial affairs, business operations, and human re- career as an assistant women’s basketball coach, portant in her time at Arkansas. Lewis was a key player in the decision to bring together the University’s men’s and sources. He has over 13 years of financial man- and was a part of the staff that won the only women’s departments. Starting on Jan. 1, 2008, she became an associate vice chancellor for the University and the agement experience, with stops at Colorado, women’s hoops conference championships at executive associate athletic director of the unified Razorback Athletic Department. Florida State, the Dallas Cowboys, and Cleve- Arkansas. Stehlik worked in a variety of admin- Lewis, the former women’s athletic director, now serves as associate vice chancellor and executive associate land Cavaliers. He is a member of CABMA, and istrative roles since leaving the court including athletic director for administration and sport programs. Lewis is also the coordinator of a five-member sport admin- served as president in 2008-09. Hamilton gradu- compliance and game management. She and istrator group that provides day-to-day administrative support for each of Arkansas’ 19 sports. Lewis is the sport ad- ated from Arkansas in 1994 with a bachelor’s degree in accounting, husband Wayne have two daughters, Mollie and Maggie. ministrator for women’s basketball, men’s and women’s cross country, men’s and women’s track and field, men’s and and from the U.S. Sports Academy in 1997 with a master’s degree in women’s golf, gymnastics, softball and volleyball. In addition, Lewis is the primary administrator working with the sports management. Hamilton received his CPA certification from KEVIN TRAINOR Razorbacks’ strength and conditioning units and athletic training and sports medicine program as well as overseeing the State of Arkansas in 1998. Hamilton and wife Stephanie have two Associate Athletic Director for the media relations and new media divisions. She also serves as a liaison to the faculty senate and the faculty athletic daughters, Lauren and Caylee. Public Relations committee, and coordinates the department’s NCAA certification, Title IX compliance and strategic planning. Starting his 16th season at Arkansas, Kevin The largest portion of her service to the university was her 19-year tenure as the Director of Women’s Athletics. As a result of her strong em- MELISSA HARWOOD-ROM Trainor is in his third year as associate athletic phasis on the classroom, Razorback female student-athletes received numerous academic honors including national academic All-American of the Associate Athletic Director for director and his first as the department’s Public year, team academic national titles and the University’s first two SEC/H. Boyd McWhorter Scholar-Athletes of the Year. Student-Athlete Academic Support and Relations Director. Trainor was a nearly 20 year Her leadership was also a part of the success of the University’s Campaign for the Twenty-First Century. Lewis directed Women’s Athletics Achievement veteran in the media relations office before as- to over $11.5 million in direct support for women’s teams. During the campaign, Lewis received one of her greatest personal honors as Bob and Serving as the lead coordinator for academ- suming his current role. A university graduate in Marilyn Bogle requested that Arkansas’ $6 million facility be named the Bev Lewis Center for Women’s Athletics. ic support for all 19 Razorback sports, Melissa journalism in 1994, he earned his masters at Ar- In 1998, she was voted into the University of Arkansas Hall of Honor by the University’s letterwinners in recognition of her contributions Harwood-Rom brings over 20 years of experi- kansas in 2005. Trainor and his wife, the former Ruth Whitehead, are both as a coach and an administrator. ence at Arkansas. Joining the university in 1989 the parents of two daughters, Emma and Ellie. Lewis served collegiate athletics at the highest level as an administrator, first with the NCAA Championship Cabinet and most recently on after working with football and men’s basketball the NCAA Management Council. at Washington State, she developed the former JUSTIN MALAND Prior to assuming the duties of AD, Lewis was women’s cross country and track coach. Her Arkansas coaching milestones included the first women’s athletics department academic system before being named to Asst. Athletic Director for Facilities women’s squad to achieve a national ranking and the first conference championship team with the 1988 Southwest Conference Cross Country oversee all teams in the summer of 2008. She and university professor Justin Maland begins his fourth year as an Championships. Curt Rom have two children, Zoe and Clio. assistant athletic director for facilities and his Lewis earned her bachelor’s degree from Central Michigan in 1979 and followed it with her master’s from Purdue prior to her arrival at Ar- ninth with the Razorback athletic department. kansas in 1981. The Harrison, Ark., native was a catcher at Hen- Her husband, Harley, is the former athletic director at the University of Montana, former assistant director of championships with the NCAA, CHRIS POHL Associate Athletic Director for Events drix College, and joined Arkansas through the and former development officer at Arkansas. A former championships director for the baseball staff in 1999. He earned his master’s in NCAA, Chris Pohl begins her seventh season at sports management from Arkansas in 2001. He JON FAGG MATT TRANTHAM the University of Arkansas. She joined Arkansas is married to the former Sarah Parnell, and the SENIOR ASSOCIATE AD FOR SENIOR ASSOCIATE AD FOR in 2004 to manage marketing and promotion for Malands are the parents of two children, Macy and Jack. COMPLIANCE AND INTERNAL OPERATIONS the women’s sports after 11 years at the NCAA. Pohl oversees the event management depart- DR. BILL SMITH STUDENT-ATHLETE SERVICES Overseeing Razorback facilities, event ment which coordinates all home and postsea- Asst. Athletic Director for New Media Overseeing all aspects of compliance and aca- management and equipment operations, son events for the Razorbacks. Her primary sport Beginning his 22nd year with the univer- demics, Jon Fagg joined the University of Arkansas responsibilities include football, men’s and wom- as a senior associate athletic director for compliance Matt Trantham begins his third year at the sity, Dr. Bill Smith manages internet operations and student-athlete services in the summer of 2008. University of Arkansas as the senior associate en’s basketball and swimming and diving. A 1981 graduate of Central for the athletic department, ArkansasRazor- He serves as member of the senior management athletic director for internal operations. Michigan and basketball letterwinner, she earned her master’s in 1984 backs.com, and oversees brand compliance and group for the Department of Intercollegiate Athlet- from Penn State. printed projects. Smith earned his doctorate at ics. Supervising several major projects in Fagg’s department supervision of NCAA and Southeastern Conference rules his first year with the Razorbacks, Trantham guided the $2.5 million the university in 1999, and has been an adjunct compliance and education is a new position for Arkansas. In addition to report- renovation of Bud Walton Arena and the $1.3 million restoration of BRIAN PRACHT instructor at both Arkansas in journalism and ing directly to the vice chancellor and director of athletics, Fagg will have an synthetic playing surface at Donald W. Reynolds Razorback stadium in Associate Athletic Director for Marketing NorthWest Arkansas Community College in his- informational reporting relationship on compliance issues with the University’s tory. He and his wife Libby have two children, Office of the General Counsel. 2008-09. This year, he is overseeing the Master Plan currently under- Brian Pracht joined the Razorbacks in July In addition to compliance, Fagg also supervises the student-athlete services way for all athletic facilities. 2010, with more than 15 years of collegiate mar- Will and Ashley. depart ment which advises and offers support to more than 450 Razorback stu- Prior to joining Arkansas, Trantham began his career with the keting and promotions experience working at dent-athletes. Sooners in July 1999 as the promotions director for the athletic depart- Wichita State, Long Beach State and the South- ERIC WOOD Fagg joined the Razorback staff after spending the past seven years at North land Conference. His responsibilities at Arkan- Carolina State University. Hired at North Carolina State in March 2001, he served ment where he worked with all 20 of OU’s teams. He was named assis- Asst. AD for Student-Athlete Development four and half years as an assistant athletics director for compliance before being tant athletic director for event management in 2004 and was promoted sas include overseeing marketing, promotions, Eric Wood begins his second year with Ar- promoted to associate athletics director for compliance in the fall of 2005. to associate athletic director in 2006. ticket sales, licensing in addition to serving as kansas working to develop programs that con- While with the Wolfpack, Fagg’s responsibilities included coordinating all In his role as associate AD for event management, Trantham over- the staff liaison with International Sports Prop- tribute to the personal growth and character de- aspects of the NCAA compliance program, including rules education for inter- erties (IMG College) and Razorback Sports Proper- collegiate staff and related university personnel, and advisement, education and saw more than 500 events a year, coordinated the efforts of more than velopment of Razorback student-athletes. Wood interpretations regarding NCAA rules and regulations. 1,500 event staff members and was responsible for activities within ties (RSP). worked in a similar role at the ACC and is the Prior to his tenure at North Carolina State, Fagg spent three years as the as- 13 athletic facilities. He also served as OU’s liaison with all postseason Pracht graduated in 1994 with a bachelor’s degree in business ad- current chair of the NCAA Student-Athlete Af- sistant athletics director for compliance at Fresno State University. He also served events including both Big 12 and NCAA championship competitions. ministration from Emporia State in Kansas. He and his wife Amy have fairs Advisory Committee. He also spent a year one year as director of compliance for the Big South Conference. two daughters, Caroline and Lily. His first athletics administrative experience came at Mars Hill College where Prior to joining the Sooners, Trantham spent five seasons in pro- at Wake Forest and at the University of New Ha- he handled compliance duties as well as serving as an assistant coach for the foot- fessional sports in Washington, D.C. Trantham earned his bachelor’s ven. Wood is a 1998 graduate of Sacred Heart ball team for three seasons. of science degree in business management from Centenary College University and was a three-year letterman in football. He earned his His coaching experience also includes a stint as an assistant coach at David- in 1990 and a master’s degree in sports management from the United Master’s Degree from Clemson in 2000. Wood and his wife Celia are son from February 1992 to June 1993 and as a GA coach at his alma mater, the University of Arizona, from January 1991 to February 1992. States Sports Academy in 1998. originally from the Bronx, N.Y. The couple welcomed their first child, Fagg and his wife Amanda have three children: Jon Madison and twins, Trantham and wife Kristen are parents of two sons, Will and Davis; Eliana Jewel, this year. Reed and Ellie. and one daughter, Morgan.

56 University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis 57 RAZORBACK FOUNDATION, INC. Performing the vital role of sup- porting the student- athletes at the Uni- versity of Arkansas with financial sup- port, the Razorback Foundation, Inc., is in its fourth decade Harold Horton Chris Wyrick of working along- Executive Director Executive Dir. RSVP side the athletic de- partment to advance Razorback Athletics. The goal of the foundation is ensur- ing that the more than 460 student- athletes at Arkansas have the equipment, facilities and overall support to achieve the goals of graduation and athletic achievement. Norm DeBriyn Sean Rochelle Associate Director Associate Director For the first time in school history, all 19 Razorback head coaches and members of the athletic department’s executive and senior administrative staffs are members of the Razorback Foundation. The pledge of personal support by those inside the department led the way for a growth in membership that saw the membership total increase from 10,390 HOME OF CHAMPIONS in November 2008 to 10,530 in June 2009. RAZORBACK ATHLETICS From January to June 2009, Razorback Foundation staff visited with more than 11,000 people at 50 Razorback Club functions, ranging from chapter meetings to scholarship fun- draising golf events hosted by local Razorback Clubs. Another key factor in raising the profile of the Razorback Foundation and fostering membership growth was a renewed commitment to increasing A Club membership (for- Marvin Caston Jessica Dorrell (1 in football in 1964, one in men’s National Championships Assistant Director Assistant Director mer Razorback letter winners) and enhancing communication and coordination with Ra- 42 basketball in 1994, 40 in men’s cross country, track and field.) zorback Clubs throughout the region. To help facilitate communication with all founda- (102 in men’s and 12 women’s cross NCAA Individual Titles - tion members, a new web site RazorbackFoundation.com was launched. country and track and field, two individuals in women’s swim The Foundation, officially incorporated and relocated off campus in 1988, has helped 118 ming and diving, one women’s golf and one doubles team in provide financial aid for the construction for the Broyles Athletic Center (football and men’s tennis.) - - This number includes team and divi administrative offices), Charlie Baum Stadium at George Cole Field (baseball), John Mc- Conference Team Titles - sional titles won in the SWC and SEC (7 baseball, 27 men’s basket Donnell Field (outdoor track and field), Randal Tyson Track Center (indoor track and field), 179 ball, two women’s basketball, 34 men’s cross country, 13 women’s- Dills Indoor Tennis Center, the George M. Billingsley Tennis Center (outdoor tennis) and cross country, 18 football, one men’s golf, one soccer, 28 men’s in Donald W. Reynolds Razorback Stadium (football). Jackie Rollins door track and field, five men’s tennis, two women’s tennis, three Chief Financial Officer women’s indoor track, 24 men’s outdoor track and field, three women’s outdoor track and field, 11 volleyball.) - This number includes titles from MISSION STATEMENT Conference Individual Titles - The stated mission of the Razorback FRANK BROYLES the SWC and SEC (21 men’s cross country, 11 women’s cross coun- Foundation, Inc., is to support the athletic Athletic Director Emeritus 590 try, one men’s golf, two women’s golf, two gymnastics, two swim endeavors of the University of Arkansas Ra- The start of 2008 saw the Razorback Founda- ming and diving, 28 men’s tennis, 162 men’s indoor track and tion, Inc., welcome a familiar face, a man with a field, 98 women’s indoor track and field, 199 men’s outdoor track zorbacks. and field, 64 women’s outdoor track and field.) The Foundation assists our student-ath- high profile and a long track record in athletics -- letes by providing for scholarships, facilities legendary Arkansas athletic director Frank Broyles. The former national champion football coach and various programs that enable them to and leader of Razorback men’s realize their dreams of achieving a quality athletics for almost 40 years, college education while participating in ath- he closed out a 50-year career letics on a nationally competitive level. of service to the University and is now raising support MEMBERSHIP LEVELS for the University and the Top: 2006 NCAA Men’s Track and Field Champi- The opportunity to participate in the Razorback program. ons. Upper right: Amy Yoder wins an individual Na- annual fund giving to the Razorback Foun- A member of every sig- tional Title. Right: Stacy Lewis won the 2007 NCAA Women’s Golf National Championship. Above: The dation, Inc., has several levels, beginning at nificant college athletics hall 1994 men’s basketball team returns to celebrate the the $50 Razorback level and continuing up to of fame, Broyles was recently National Championship. Left: The men’s track and field team won the 2010 SEC Championship. Broyles-Matthews Scholarship Platinum. For named to the NACDA Hall of Donita Ritchie more information about levels of giving and Fame in 2008. His 19-season Admin. Asst. to career as the Razorback head football coach included the 1964 Frank Broyles benefits, please visit the foundation’s website National Championship, seven Southwest Conference titles and a record of 144-58-5. at RazorbackFoundation.com. 58 University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis 59 CAMPUS LIFE OPPORTUNITIES FOR THE MIND, BODY AND SOUL The university offers a vibrant of state, Pulitzer Prize- campus life for its mainly full-time, winning writers, political residential undergraduate student pop- pundits and humorists, ulation. More than a dozen university and other noteworthy na- residence halls can accommodate in tional and international excess of 4,000 students, and the rest figures and scholars such live in and around the city of Fayette- as James Carville, Mary ville. Matalin, Ehud Olmert, There are over 300 registered stu- Geraldine Ferraro, James dent organizations including special Earl Jones, George H.W. interest, religious, international and Bush, and Dave Barry. cultural organizations, as well as hon- orary and professional service groups. Students also may choose to partici- RESIDENTIAL pate in the university’s Greek system, LIFE which is made up of 11 sororities and Close to all the univer- 17 fraternities. sity In addition, more than 6,000 stu- has to offer dents, faculty and staff annually partic- ipate in the intramural sports program, University Hous- which offers activities like bowling ing offers a variety MILLION FANS and table tennis tournaments, and of housing options LET’S CALL THOSE HOGS sponsors clubs ranging from aikido to within more than a waterskiing. Many of these activities dozen residence halls are conducted at the Health, Physical on campus. First-year Education, and Recreation building, a students are required $14 million, 225,000-square foot facil- to live on campus and ity that contains 10 racquetball courts, will find many options four basketball gyms, an indoor track, in living arrangements staff conduct programs in Hol- an Olympic size pool, a climbing wall, and price that entice them to stay on combe through the year, but the true a computer lab, a human performance campus beyond their freshman year – strength of the community comes lab and numerous classrooms. from the suite-style facilities of Maple from the interactions, relationships Culturally and intellectually, the Hill to the international living learn- and plans the residents themselves academic semesters bustle with fac- ing community of Holcombe Hall to build. ulty and student musical performanc- the new apartments on Duncan Av- The newest and most unique cam- es, theatre productions, art exhibits, enue. pus residence is Duncan Avenue Apart- concerts, poetry readings and visiting Maple Hill is a multi-use suite-style Fans love the Razorbacks and that is easily evidenced by the more than 1 million ments. The four-bedroom apartments speakers — both on campus and at facility. Students live in double rooms are just minutes walking distance from people who were in attendance at last year’s athletic contests. Here’s a look at the adjacent Walton Arts Center. Re- in one- and two-bedroom suites, with most classrooms and laboratories on some of the numbers and keep in mind that our attendance totals don’t include cent university programming includes cable television and individual Eth- campus. While this complex offers men’s and women’s cross country, track and field, men’s and women’s tennis, outdoor movies at the Greek Theatre, ernet connections in each room. The apartment-style living, each student and swimming. comedians, karaoke nights and even a residence halls also feature staff apart- has a separate contract – so if an apart- hypnotist. ments, classrooms, conference rooms, Total number of fans attending Razorback home ment-mate leaves, other roommates 1,149,641 The university’s Distinguished Lec- quiet study rooms and a large fireplace events in 2009-10 are not responsible for the departing ture Series has featured former heads lounge. roommate’s charges. The fully fur- Holcombe Hall opened in 1949, The average home football attendance nished apartments include high speed 65,112 and is named for Miss Jobelle Hol- Internet, cable television and all utili- combe, who graduated in 1898 and ties except telephone, and also features 13,182 The average home men’s basketball attendance served as the first dean of women from a washer and dryer and full kitchen 1907 to 1913. In 2006, Holcombe Hall with appliances. It is the first “Green 7,749 The average home baseball attendance began the transition to an interna- Globes” construction project on the tional living-learning community. The University of Arkansas campus. 4,477 Fans who attended the 2010 SEC Softball Tourney at Bogle Park goal of these communities is to create a unique and exciting place for inter- Visit http://housing.uark.edu to learn The average home gymnastics attendance national exchange and learning at the 2,505 more about our campus housing options. University of Arkansas. Students and 60 University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis 61 WHY RAZORBACKS? Arkansas’ athletic teams have not always been called the Razor- backs. During the early years of its athletic history, the Cardinal served as the University nickname. A lot of things changed in 1909, however, when Arkansas foot- ball coach Hugo Bezdek called his players “a wild band of Razorback hogs,” after guiding his team to a 16-0 victory over Louisiana State on October 30, 1909. Alluding to the Razorback, characterized by a ridge back and te- nacious, wild fighting ability, Bezdek never forgot this idea and often called his team “a fighting band of Razorbacks.” This new nickname became increasingly popular and the student body voted to change the official University mascot from the Cardinal to the Razorbacks in 1910. In the 1920s, “Wooo, Pig, Sooie” was added as the school yell, referred to more commonly as the “Hog Call.” There are dozens of Lions, Tigers and Bears, but in all of college a t h l e t i c s there is only one Razorback. The distinctive logo of the Arkansas teams is officially known as the Profile Hog, but is known to many fans as the Helmet Hog -- a fixture of the football team’s helmet for almost half a century. A PROPER HOG CALL A chant of “Woo Pig Sooie” is known worldwide as a Hog Call. Just like any good tradition, there are lots of versions of the Hog Call (even spellings). A properly executed Hog Call is composed of three “calls,” slowly raising one’s arms from the knees to above the head during the “Woo.” Traditionalists prescribe an eight second “Woo.” The fingers should be wiggled and the “Woo” should build in volume and pitch as the arms rise. Upon completion of the “Woo,” both arms are brought straight down with fists clinched as if executing a chin-up while yelling, “Pig”. The right arm is extended up and out with the “Sooie.” TRADITION A full Hog Call -- the kind one will always hear victorious Razorback teams execute THERE IS NOTHING LIKE A RAZORBACK after contests -- requires two more Hog Calls, followed immediately by a “Razor-Backs” yell, coordinated with a pumping motion of the right arm after the third “Sooie.” So, in A MASCOT LIKE NO OTHER order, the full Hog Call is: The wild hogs known as razorbacks native to the Arkansas wilderness bear no resemblance to the typical barnyard pig of today. The untamed razorback hog was a lean, feral animal that was ill-tempered. It fought and defeated anything that crossed WOOOOOOOO. PIG. SOOIE! its path, man or beast. Turn of the 20th century outdoor magazines lauded the razorback as “the most intelligent of all the WOOOOOOOO. PIG. SOOIE! hogs and is likewise the most courageous. . . . He has a clear, farseeing eye.” WOOOOOOOO. PIG. SOOIE! Except for the rare sighting in the Australian Outback, the Razorback only exists today in the form of Arkansas’ players RAZORBACKS! and fans. A Russian boar, which closely resembles the wild hog of Hugo Bezdek’s day, currently serves as the official live mas- cot. Tusk III is cared for by the Stokes family of Dardanelle, Ark., and travels to home games and special events for the Razor- ARKANSAS FIGHT RAZORBACK SPIRIT SQUADS THE UA ALMA MATER backs. Tusk III is supported by the legacy program known as the Tusk Fund, and fans can participate by sending their support One of the first tasks of a new Razor- Along with being a Razorback, serv- Brodie Payne and Henry Tovey wrote care of the Razorback Foundation, Inc. Tusk III made his debut in 2010 after the unexpected passing of his brother, Tusk II, back is learning to sing the University of ing as a Razorback cheerleader has a long the University of Arkansas Alma Mater in following Arkansas’ AutoZone Liberty Bowl win over ECU in January. Arkansas fight song. Arkansas Fight was tradition at the University of Arkan- the early 1900s. They were inspired by While yearbook references as early as 1914 of a hog on the sideline at football games, a formal live mascot prior to the written in the late 1920s. It is a unique sas. Currently, the Razorbacks have two the Ozark Mountain sunrise as it illumi- Tusk line dates back to the 1960s with a series of hogs that represented Arkansas. In addition to appearances at games, they tune, fitting of the only college in Ameri- squads, a Red and White, that inspire the nated Old Main. have gained a reputation for fierce behavior. ca with a Razorback mascot. Several other crowds at all home sporting events. Big Red III escaped from an exhibit near Eureka Springs in the summer of 1977 and ravaged the countryside before being colleges have adapted the tune, but the Arkansas also has a dance team, the Pure as the dawn on the brow of thy beauty, gunned down by an irate farmer. Another live mascot, Ragnar, was lyrics remain unique to Arkansas. Razorback Pom Squad, which performs Watches thy Soul a wild hog captured in south Arkansas by Leola farmer Bill Robin- at halftime of many events. Members from the mountains of God. son. Before Ragnar’s spree was done, the mighty animal had killed Hit that line! Hit that line! of the Pom Squad also serve at baseball Over the fates of thy children departed, a coyote, a 450-pound domestic pig and seven rattlesnakes. Ragnar Keep on going! games as RBI Girls. Arkansas has a team Far from the land died in 1978 of unknown causes. Take that ball right of uniformed mascots, led by the origi- where their footsteps have trod. down the field! nal Big Red, the Fighting Razorback. Sue Beacon of hope in the ways dreary lighted, Give a cheer. Rah! Rah! E. joined the family along with kid-sized Pride of our hearts that are loyal and true. THE HOG HAT Never fear. Rah! Rah! Pork Chop in the late 1990s. Boss Hog is a From those who adore unto one who It is true; no Razorback fan’s closet is complete without an of- Arkansas will never yield! 9-foot-tall inflatable mascot that rounds adores us, ficial Hog Hat. The original style was a hard plastic hat with a long On your toes, Razorbacks, out the team. Mother of Mothers, we sing unto you. snout, rough razorback ridges across the top and wickedly sharp, to the finish, Jean Nail serves as the coordinator pointed curly-cue tail. The modern versions are often sculpted Carry on with all your might! for cheerleaders and mascots. For more from softer material. Regardless, the Hog Hat is undoubtedly the For it’s A-A-A-R-K-A-N-S-A-S information on the cheer squads and most recognized piece of fan apparel in college athletics. Just ask for Arkansas! tryouts, go to the Spirit Squad section of ESPN GameDay’s Kirk Herbstreit as he dons the traditional Hog Fight! Fight! Fi-i-i-ight! ArkansasRazorbacks.com. Hat. 62 University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis 63 FAYETTEVILLE NORTHWEST ARKANSAS SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE COME AND EXPLORE While Fayetteville is home to the NORTHWEST ARKANSAS University of Arkansas, its location BIKES, BLUES AND BBQ INFORMATION Fayetteville and the Northwest in the Northwest corner of the state -The population of Northwest Arkansas Arkansas area celebrated the 10th broadens the borders of this college is around 420,000. Annual Bikes, Blues and BBQ event territory. With Springdale, Rogers -It is recognized as one of the fastest in 2009 and are eagerly anticipating and Bentonville to the North, Siloam growing areas in the United States. the 2010 fall event as well. Springs to the West and Fort Smith -The regional airport (XNA) offers sev- The Bikes, Blues and BBQ rally to the South of Fayetteville, it’s easy eral daily departures, with direct jet is the third-largest bike rally in the to see how Northwest Arkansas is in service to Atlanta, Charlotte, Chicago, country behind Sturgis and Daytona the center of all the action. Cincinnati, Dallas/Ft. Worth, Denver, Detroit, Houston, Las Vegas, Los An- Beach and the 2009 attendance num- geles, Memphis, Minneapolis/St. Paul, bers were around 350,000 people. SPRINGDALE Newark, New York and Orlando. This year’s event begins Sept. 29, With a population around and the family-friendly rally helps 65,000, Springdale is anchored by area charities. The event was estab- the world headquarters of Tyson Bentonville also hosts many of the lished in 2000 and more than one Foods. It is home to museums, 100 area’s exciting outdoor opportunities half million dollars has been raised. houses of worship, theaters and great with lake access, camping, golf and Blues concerts and great food are dining. It is also home to the North- other recreational outlets. all part of the fun on this rumbling west Arkansas Naturals, Kansas City’s weekend. Double A affiliate. THE AMP Every summer, Northwest ROGERS Arkansas comes alive with the Rogers boasts a population sound of music at the Arkan- around 50,000 and is home to Mercy sas Music Pavilion. The AMP Medical Center. Just minutes from plays host to headliners, new- Fayetteville, Rogers has some of the comers and local artists in an outdoor concert setting. The Fayetteville’s famous Dickson Street is much more than a college hangout, adding upscale condominiums and specialty retail to its long-standing reputation as the center of enter- area’s best shopping and dining op- tainment and dining. From hosting major national events like Bikes, Blues and BBQ or serving as the final resting place for the goal posts after Razorback football upsets, one thing tions. 2010 schedule included Levon remains constant -- Dickson is the heart of what’s happening. Helm, Blue Oyster Cult, Geor- gia Satellites, Indigo Girls, Goo BENTONVILLE Goo Dolls, Ted Nugent, Gary Characterized Bentonville’s population has by unmatched out- FAYETTEVILLE ARKANSAS Allan, Eil Young Band and Co- door activities, a INFORMATION blossomed to more than 29,000. rey Smith, Colby Caillat, STS9, vibrate night life North Cross Canadian Ragweed, Pat #4 Best Places for Business and Career west Arkansas Community College is and cultural and Forbes Magazine Travers and Rick Derringer educational op- located here, and it is the home to and the Black Crowes. portunities, Fay- #7 Top College Sports Towns Walmart, the world’s largest retailer. etteville has some- Forbes.com In addition, several of Walmart’s larg- WALTON ARTS CENTER thing for everyone. est vendors make their homes in the THE NORTHWEST Just off campus in the heart of #7 Best Places to Live, Work and Play From Robert area as well making this an exciting Fayetteville is home to the Walton Redford to James Kiplingers’ ARKANSAS NATURALS zir Bhutto. Sports figures such as Magic place for new graduates to explore. Arts Center. The WAC hosts numer- Earl Jones, the University of Arkansas The Northwest Arkansas #9 Healthiest Housing Market Johnson and Apolo Ohno have been on ous concerts, theater productions, hosted numerous famous speakers in re- campus. We’ve also had one of our more Naturals enjoyed their sec- National Builders classes and events with headliners cent years through its Distinguished Lec- famous former law professors speak sev- ond summer in Springdale in ture Series. Rang- eral times, President Bill Clinton. 2010. The Naturals are mem- such as Beauty and the Beast, Mom- ing from political H. W. Bush to Is- The Fayetteville campus hosts sever- bers of the Texas League and ma Mia! and the Blue Man Group satirist, now sena- raeli prime min- al concerts each year and recent perform- have a schedule that runs from just to name a few. Shows and events tor, Al Frankin, ister Ehud Barak, ers include sold-out performances by TI, April-September. Numerous run year round. political consul- vice presidential Foo Fighters and John Mayer in Barnhill promotional events including tant Mary Matlin candidate Geral- Arena. Special events bring artists rang- to CNN’s Ander- dine Ferraro and ing from B.B. King to Keith Urban and concerts, fireworks and special son Cooper, and the former Prime Carrie Underwood to Reynolds Razor- events surround nearly every to former world Minister of Paki- back Stadium. home game at ARVEST Ball- leaders like George stan the late Bena- park.

64 University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis 65 FACILITIES FACILITIES HOME OF THE RAZORBACKS HOME OF THE RAZORBACKS

1. Donald W. Reynolds Razorback Stadium (72,000) 8. Fred and Mary Smith Golf Facility 1 Recently renovated in 2001...Home of football museum...one of the largest sports venue video boards Opened 2004...Blessings Golf Course...Indoor practice bays and video analysis...dedicated putting and 11 2. Bud Walton Arena (19,200) chipping areas on all surfaces Fifth-largest on-campus hoops facility in nation. 9. Barnhill Arena - Gymnastics (8,500) 3. Baum Stadium (10,731) Inaugural season for gymnastics in 2003...Host of 2006 and 2009 NCAA Regional Inaugural season in 1994-95...Several expansions...Host of several NCAA events including 10. Barnhill Arena - Volleyball (8,500) 2010 regional Converted to volleyball facility in 1994...Host of several NCAA first and second round matches 4. Bogle Park (1,346) 11. Arkansas Natatorium (1,500) Inaugural season in 2009...Host of 2010 SEC Championship...Chairback seating...Skyboxes Inaugural season in 1985...renovations in 1996, 2003, 2007...diving area with 5 meter and 10 meter 5. Randal Tyson Track Center (5,000) platforms as well as 1 meters and 3 meters boards...Long and short course events. Named for Randal Tyson in recognition of the lead gift from the Tyson Family...Host of nine 12. Razorback Field (1,000) NCAA Men’s and Women’s Indoor Track and Field Championships Inaugural season in 1992...Renovated in 2001 and 2010 6. John McDonnell Field (7,000) 13. Billingsley Tennis Center (1,500) Named for legendary track coach John McDonnell in 1998...Host of 2009 NCAA Outdoor Renovated in 2008...Elevated stadium seating for 10 outdoor courts Track and Field Championships 14. Dills Indoor Courts (1,500) 7. Agri Cross Country Park Only six-court indoor facility in the SEC...Chairback seating added in 2004...Lead gift from the Year-round dedicated cross country training and competition facility Dills family

2 5 8 12

3 6 9 13

10 14 4 7

66 University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis 67 FACILITIES HOME OF THE RAZORBACKS

WALKER FAMILY TRAINING CENTER -Opened Jan. 18, 2005 -Headquarters to the Razorback strength and conditioning program -38,000 square foot facility...110 yards long overlooking the Razorback indoor and outdoor football practice fields -19,000 square foot weight room -19,000 square foot conditioning area -Nutritional area with juice bar and protein machines -13 42-inch flat-screen televisions -On-site athletic training room

WILLARD AND PAT WALKER PAVILION SUTTON STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING CENTER -Opened in 1998 and resurfaced in 2002 -Opened in April 2004 -Made possible by a gift from Willard and Pat Walker -7,000 square foot strength and conditioning area -76,000 square feet of usable space -Located within the Lewis Center -Full-size football field including end zones and sidelines -Dedicated to the physical training needs for female -Height of 52 feet student-athletes -Home to the primary Razorback weight room -Camden and Sue Greene Speed Development Center features sprint and sand lanes

68 University of Arkansas Women’s Tennis