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Carolina Men’s General Information University Quick Facts Table of Contents Location: Chapel Hill, N.C. Returning Starters from 2006 ...... Front Cover Chartered: 1789 Tribute to 2006 NCAA Sweet 16 Team ...... Inside Front Enrollment: 26,878 General Information, 2007 Media Guide ...... 1 Chancellor: James Moeser 2007 Roster & Schedule ...... 2 Director of Athletics: Dick Baddour 2007 Season Preview ...... 3 Senior Woman Administrator: Beth Miller 2007 Player Biographies ...... 4 National Affiliation: NCAA Division I 2007 Photo Roster ...... 11 Conference: Atlantic Coast Head Coach Sam Paul ...... 12 Nickname: Tar Heels Assistant Coach ...... 14 Mascot: Rameses The Ram 2006 Statistics ...... 15 2006 Season Review ...... 17 School Colors: Carolina Blue and White Carolina Tennis Tradition Under Coach Sam Paul ...... 18 Athletic Dept. Web Site: www.TarHeelBlue.com Year-by-Year Records ...... 19 Carolina Men’s Tennis Information All-Time Match Scores ...... 20 Head Coach: Sam Paul (Presbyterian ‘83) Records Against Oppponents ...... 26 Career Record at UNC: 213-111, 13 years Conference Champions ...... 27 Office Phone: (919) 962-6060 All-Americas ...... 28 Assistant Coach: Tripp Phillips ( ‘00) Miscellaneous Honors & Awards ...... 31 2006 Record: 25-5 overall, 8-3 in the ACC, ACC Tournament Carolina Tennis History ...... 32 Quarterfinalist All-Time Letter Winners ...... 36 2006 National Finish: NCAA Tournament Sweet 16, 12th in final ITA ACC Top 50 Honorees ...... 37 Poll Players In The Pros ...... 38 Home Facility: Cone-Kenfield Tennis Center Cone-Kenfield Tennis Center ...... 39 Courts: Hard Courts, 6 indoor and 12 outdoor Athletic Tradition ...... 40 Outdoor Seating Capacity: 2,000 Department of Athletics ...... 42 Tennis Center Phone: (919) 962-6363 The University of North Carolina ...... 43 Tennis Center Fax: (919) 962-2604 Student-Athlete Services ...... 46 Tennis Center Administrative Assistant: Andrew Parker Educational Foundation Information ...... 48, Inside Back Cover Head Athletic Trainer: Sally Mays 2007 Team Picture, 2007 Schedule ...... Back Cover Assistant Athletic Trainers: Matt Odom, Jeff Hudson Team Physician: Tom Brickner Team Orthopaedic Surgeon: Alex Creighton TarHeelBlue.com UNC Athletic Communications Media and fans can follow the Carolina men’s tennis team Men’s Tennis Media Contact: Dave Lohse, Associate Athletic and the rest of the UNC athletic program from anywhere in the Communications Director world on the official web site of North Carolina athletics. Student Assistant Contact for Men’s Tennis: Elizabeth Ryan TarHeelBlue.com offers schedules, rosters, results, features Lohse’s Email Address: [email protected] and even more on all 28 of Carolina’s varsity sports. Lohse’s Office Phone: (919) 962-7257 Lohse’s Home Phone: (919) 419-3488 Lohse’s Cell Phone: (919) 641-4128 Ryan Email Address: [email protected] Ryan’s Office Phone: (919) 962-2123 Athletic Communications Office Fax: (919) 962-0612 Office Mailing Address: P.O. Box 2126, Chapel Hill, NC 27515 Shipping Address: Sports Information, 300 Skipper Bowles Drive, Chapel Hill, NC 27514

Wilson Library, Polk Supporting UNC Men’s Tennis Place, Dey Hall The University of North Carolina and Nike extended their agreement for eight more years beginning in July 2002. The agreement provides each varsity team with shoes, apparel, equipment bags and other prod- ucts. It also provides $100,000 annually to the Chancellor's Academic Enhancement Fund for undergraduate teaching and $100,000 annually to the athletic department to reward Olympic sport programs and coach- es for academic and athletic excellence.

2007 Men’s Tennis Brochure Player headshots, team pictures and cur- rent player action photos by Jeffrey Camarati, Grant Halverson and Andrew Parker. Covers designed by Dana Gelin. The 2007 media guide was edited by Dave Lohse, Associate Director of Athletic Communications, Elizabeth Ryan, Athletic Communications staff assistant, and Andrew Parker, the admin- istrative assistant for the men’s and women’s tennis programs at the Cone- Kenfield Tennis Center.

2006-07 UNC Men’s Tennis Media Guide page 1 2007 Roster & Schedule Carolina Men’s Tennis Name Yr. Ht. Hometown (High School) Kyle Baker Fr. 6-0 Acworth, Ga. (Harrison) Benjamin Carlotti Jr. 5-11 Paris, France (Lycee Lafontaine) Andrew Crone Fr. 6-1 Hickory, N.C. (Hickory) Sandeep Daiya Jr. 5-11 Acworth, Ga. (Harrison) Taylor Fogleman So. 5-11 New Orleans, La. (Jesuit) Sebastian Guejman Sr. 6-1 Buenos Aires, Argentina (Allison Academy) Lenny Gullan Jr. 6-7 Cape Town, South Africa (Saddlebrook Academy) Stefan Hardy Fr. 6-0 Santa Maria, Calif. (Righetti) Tristan Heinrich Jr. 6-3 Boise, Idaho (Boise) Chris Kearney Fr. 6-1 Irvine, Calif. (Mater Dei) Will Plyler Jr. 5-10 Raleigh, N.C. (Broughton) Junior Karl Wishart Jeff Schroeder Jr. 6-2 Raleigh, N.C. (Leesville Road) David Stone Jr. 6-4 Greensboro, N.C. (Page) Maclane Wilkison Fr. 5-9 Charlotte, N.C. (Charlotte Latin) Karl Wishart Jr. 6-3 Baden-Baden, Germany (Klosterschulevom Helligen Grab) Head Coach: Sam Paul Assistant Coach: Tripp Phillips Administrative Assistant: Andrew Parker Head Trainer: Sally Mays Pronuncation Guide Benjamin Carlotti car-LOTT-ee Sandeep Daiya DIE-yuh Sebastian Guejman GOOZH-mon Lenny Gullan GULL-en Stefan Hardy STEFF-on Junior Tristan Heinrich Chris Kearney KERR-nee Karl Wishart WIH-shart

2007 University of North Carolina Men’s Tennis Schedule Day Date Opponent Site Time Saturday February 3 Charlotte Chapel Hill 10 a.m. Saturday February 3 Gardner-Webb Chapel Hill 4 p.m. Tuesday February 6 Howard Chapel Hill 2 p.m. Tuesday February 6 Campbell Chapel Hill 7 p.m. Friday February 9 Rice Houston, Texas 1 p.m. Saturday February 10 Vanderbilt Houston, Texas 1 p.m. Saturday February 17 South Carolina Chapel Hill 1 p.m. Sunday February 25 VCU Richmond, Va. 1 p.m. Sunday March 4 Navy Chapel Hill 1 p.m. Sunday March 4 James Madison Chapel Hill 6 p.m. Monday March 12 San Diego San Diego, Calif. 4:30 p.m. Saturday March 17 San Diego State San Diego, Calif. 3 p.m. Friday March 23 Georgia Tech Atlanta, Ga. 2:30 p.m. Sunday March 25 Clemson Clemson, S.C. 1 p.m. Wednesday March 28 Wake Forest Winston-Salem, N.C. 3 p.m. Friday March 30 Miami Chapel Hill 3 p.m. Sunday April 1 State Chapel Hill 1 p.m. Wednesday April 4 NC State Raleigh, N.C. 2 p.m. Saturday April 7 Boston College Chapel Hill 2:30 p.m. Sunday April 8 Maryland Chapel Hill 1 p.m. Wednesday April 11 Duke Chapel Hill 4 p.m. Friday April 13 Tech Blacksburg, Va. 2 p.m. Sunday April 15 Virginia Charlottesville, Va. 1 p.m. Thursday- Sunday April 19-22 ACC Tournament Cary, N.C. TBA Friday- Sunday May 11-13 NCAA Tournament Regionals Campus Sites TBA Thursday- Monday May 17-28 NCAA Championships Athens, Ga. TBA

page 2 2006-07 Men’s Tennis Media Guide Carolina Men’s Tennis 2007 Season Outlook Coming off one of the most successful and cussion. Junior Benjamin Carlotti competed well in record-breaking seasons in University of North the fall and advanced to the Round of 32 of the ITA Carolina men’s tennis program history, the Tar All-America Championships. He stands out as a Heels have plenty to look forward to in 2007. probable singles competitor. Carlotti split his time With the loss of four starting seniors from the almost equally at the No. 3, No. 4 and No. 5 spots UNC Class of 2006, two of which were senior All- last season. Sebastian Guejman, the lone senior America selections and one the Intercollegiate on the team, returns as the captain. Troubled with Tennis Association/Ted Farnsworth National Senior an injury in the fall, he comes back with the experi- Player of the Year, the 2007 UNC men’s tennis ence the young Tar Heel team needs in the lineup. squad finds itself with practically a new lineup. Guejman was 10-4 at No. 4 and 7-3 at No. 5 as he Instead of facing anxiety over the approaching sea- split time at those two spots in 2005-06. son, head coach Sam Paul went out and signed The four freshmen competed in fall tournaments four recruits labeled the second-best recruiting for the first time as collegiate athletes. All four will class in the nation by TennisRecruiting.net. likely factor into the discussion as to who earns Freshmen Kyle Baker, an Acworth, Ga. local, starting nods in the spring, but they will receive stiff Andrew Crone, a native of Hickory, N.C., Stefan competition from a cadre of juniors and a sopho- Hardy, who hails from Santa Maria, Calif. and Chris more trying to break into the lineup after playing Kearney of Irvine, Calif. all earn high ratings as an behind an experienced group of the seniors the incoming class. Paul has high hopes for his incom- past two years. The four freshmen all faced good ing class. “They’ve had a good fall,” Paul said. competition in the fall, gaining valuable experience. “They’ve worked hard, are learning our system and According to coach Paul, Chris Kearney in particu- they have good attitudes. So I’m pleased with that.” lar had an outstanding fall season. With the loss of seniors Raian Luchici, Aly The Tar Heels face a similar situation in doubles Mandour, Brad Pomeroy and Derek Porter, the Tar play. Luchici and Pomeroy teamed up last season Heels find starting positions up for grabs as they to form one of the top tandems in the nation, fin- enter this season. Luchici and Pomeroy teamed up ishing the year ranked No. 5 nationally in doubles to comprise a formidable pair at the top two spots after opening the spring season ranked first. Two-year returning starter Sebastian Guejman in singles. Luchici starred at number one singles, Facing a brutal schedule of opponents in dual is the lone senior on the 2007 Tar Heel team. posting an ACC dual match record of 8-2 and over- match play and national tournaments, Luchici and all dual match ledger of 20-6. Pomeroy found his Pomeroy ended the season with a 26-12 overall 1 spot. groove at the No. 2 seed, compiling a 7-4 dual mark. Replacing a team of that calibre at the No. 1 The Tar Heels also have another addition to the match record against league foes and an overall spot will be a difficult task. team as new assistant coach Tripp Phillips returns mark of 19-6. Porter and Mandour played No. 3 Porter paired with Guejman at the No. 3 seed to Carolina in a coaching position. A former and No. 6 for much of the season, respectively. and they had a sterling 23-7 overall ledger. Juniors Carolina player from 1996-2000, a Patterson Mandour earned a 4-0 ACC dual match record with Lenny Gullan and David Stone took on competition Medal winner as the school’s top senior athlete, a a 9-1 dual match mark overall, while Porter held a at the two seed, posting a 26-10 overall record. 2006 U.S. Open semifinalist in doubles and a vet- 17-10 dual record for the year. Carolina’s doubles play was top notch last season eran of all four Grand Slam events, Phillips will Overall, including tournament and dual match as the team lost the doubles point in only six of 30 bring experience and knowledge to his job. Coach play, Carolina boasted six players who achieved matches. In addition, the top three teams won 26, Paul looks forward to the teaching experience the 20-win plateau in 2005-06. Luchici was 25-10 26 and 23 matches, respectively. Phillips can contribute. He replaces Don Johnson overall, while Benjamin Carlotti was 24-9, Brad Gullan and Stone competed in the ITA All- who spent the last three years of his tenure at Pomeroy was 22-10, Sebastian Guejman was 21- America tournament in the fall as a team which Carolina in the full-time assistant coaching post. 11 and Will Plyler and Derek Porter were both 20- entered the tournament in the qualifying phase. “Tripp is the smartest player I’ve ever coached in 12. Mandour was the seventh player in double digit Amazingly, they advanced to the quarterfinals, college and I’m really happy to have him on board,” overall wins with a 14-5 mark. upsetting two nationally-ranked tandems on the said Paul. “After the success he had this summer To fill the seeds, coach Paul is looking to his road to quarters; including the No. 10 Tennessee at the U.S. Open, it shows his commitment to the returnees and his high-ranked incoming class to team of James Cluskey and Ken Skupski to put program that he still wants to come in and work for mature quickly. Although the lineup is still up for them in the quarterfinals. They look to move up in the team. He is already making an immediate final decision, fall tournament play opened up dis- the lineup this year and likely will take over the No. impact. And from the experience he’s had -- he’s played all the slams and all the ATP tournaments - - that’s a great teaching tool to help all our guys.” The 2007 squad will face a tough ACC schedule this year according to coach Paul. Known as one of the toughest conferences in the nation with as many as 11 teams ranked in the Top 75 last year, the Tar Heels will face some very talented teams as they hope to equal their 8-3 league mark of 2006. Outside of conference play, the team will continue to play a solid mixture of opponents, traveling to Texas and California for road trips, a formula that hopefully prepares it for the ACC docket later in the season. With a young and inexperienced squad, Paul and his team still look for high accolades this sea- son. “Losing our top three seeds, two All-Americas, a National Senior Player of the Year, all those things are hard to absorb in a single year,” says Paul. “The guys have worked hard this fall and I’ve been really pleased with their attitudes and effort. We’re just trying to get better every single day. Our expectations are high. I think we know that we are talented, but a little inexperienced, but we’re not going to let that be an excuse for us. We are really going to go after it and work hard like we always have and work to be the best team we could be.”

The 2006 Carolina tennis team poses with many of the program’s recent alumni after clinching a spot in the NCAA Sweet 16.

2006-07 UNC Men’s Tennis Media Guide page 3 The 2007 Tar Heels Carolina Men’s Tennis

As a Freshman: Opened the fall with 10 consec- AR EEL Off Court with Kyle utive wins and two tournament titles, showing the T H Kyle McAllister Baker Full Name: promise he has exhibited as a Tar Heel mainstay Academic Major: Business TENNIS • defeated Virginia Tech’s Stephane Rod 6-2, 6-2 Biggest Sports Thrill: Becoming a Tar Heel People With Greatest Influence On Athletic and teammates Geoff Boyd and Raian Luchici to KYLE Career: My parents win the USC Fall Invitational • Did not lose a set in four matches to capture the Groot Memorial BAKER Favorite Book: Bible Favorite Magazine: ESPN Invitational B Flight • Overcame a match point and Freshman Friends a 5-3 third set deficit to tie the Miami match at 3- Acworth, Ga. Favorite TV Show: Favorite Vacation Spot: Palm Springs, 3 and set up Brad Pomeroy’s match-clinching vic- California tory • Rallied from a set down to beat Clemson’s General: Stands 6-0 tall • One of the freshmen Goo Goo Dolls comprising UNC’s top-flight recruiting class, sec- Favorite Musical Performer: Brett Twente to tie the Clemson match 3-3 • Was ond best in the nation • A five-star blue chip Non-Tennis Skill I Wish I Could Do Better: a brilliant 24-7 in singles as a frosh • Was nation- Golf recruit according to tennisrecruiting.net • ally ranked 109th in the nation at the conclusion Most Prized Possession: My silver necklace of his freshman campaign. Ranked as high as No. 1 in Georgia in every age with a cross on it Prep: Graduated in June 2003 from Lycee group as he advanced through junior tennis • To Prepare For A Match, I: Listen to music Born August 10, 1987 in Atlanta. Ga. • Son of Lafontaine in Paris • Has played tennis since Mac and Janet Baker • Sister Christie, 21, plays eighth grade • Won the French University’s Tennis tennis at Samford University • Younger brother Championship in 2003 • Was team captain for six Chase, 13, is also a tennis player. TAR HEEL straight years • Member of a club team that won Fall 2006: Hoping to bounce back from fall the French Championship five times in a row • injury problems • Competed in one fall tourna- TENNIS Was undefeated in team matches for six straight ment • Won his first match as a Tar Heel against years • Also played dodge ball, table tennis and water polo. Brandon Davis of Illinois in straight sets, 6-4, 6- BENJAMIN 1 • Fell to the Illini’s Billy Heiser, 7-5, 7-5. CARLOTTI Prep: Graduated from Harrison High School in Kennesaw, Ga. in May 2006 • Remained unde- Junior Paris, France feated on his high school tennis team posting a record of 55-0 • Finished his junior career ranked General: Stands 5-11 tall • Advanced to the No. 1 in the South and in the Top 20 in the nation Semifinals of the Wilson/ITA Mideast Regional • Team captain of his high school tennis team this past fall • Posted a huge upset win over both his junior and senior years • 2005 Copper No. 15 Arnaud Lecloerec of VCU to place him Bowl Finalist • Won Peach State National in the semifinals • Competed in the Polo Ralph Tournament in May 2005 • Ranked as high as Lauren All-American Tennis Tournament in top five in the South in every age group • Played October 2006 • Went to the Round of 32 with up since the 12s, never playing out a full second three upset wins after earning his way into the year of eligibility in any age group • Ranked as championship bracket through the qualifying high as top 40 in the nation in the 12s, 14s and phase • His upset win over the No. 64 nation- 16s • Played at Kalamazoo Nationals three ally-ranked player, Roy Sichel of Charlotte, times • Represented Georgia three times in win- advanced him to the Main Draw • Defeated ning Davis Cup Titles • Won three qualifying automatic qualifier and 87th nationally-ranked rounds at the Eddie Herr Tournament and won player, Bojan Szumanski of Texas Tech, in the main draw round in the 16s • In 2004, won the first round of the Main Draw • Transferred from state qualifier doubles championship in 16s and Ole Miss as a redshirt freshman in 2004 • Born finished second in the 18s singles draw • Coached by Torrey Hawkins, Jason Parker and May 10, 1985 in Paris, France • Son of Pierre Brian Devilliers • An all-star baseball and bas- and Michele Carlotti • Sister, Chloe, 29, was a ketball player before focusing on tennis full time nationally-ranked tennis player at Ole Miss. • Strengths of his game lie in his forehand, quick- As a Sophomore: Posted an overall singles ness, hands, attitude and strong desire to win. record of 24-9 • Won the deciding match over No. 11 Virginia at No. 5 singles • Rallied from a set down against Marko Miklo, to clinch the Kyle Baker’s Career Record match, 7-4, in a third set tiebreaker • Clinched Season Singles Doubles Fall 2006 1-1 2-0 the deciding point against Charlotte to give Off Court with “Frenchie”: head coach Sam Paul his 200th career win at Full Name: Benjamin Jean-Francois Carlotti Career Totals 1-1 2-0 Carolina • Won UNC’s first point against Duke Academic Major: Business over Kiril Dimitrov, ranked No. 111, in two sets Post School Ambition: Businessman or Pro • Helped lead the Tar Heels to the NCAA Tennis Player Sweet 16 for the first time since 1993 with a Hobbies: Soccer, video games, reading, music, two-set win over Ryan Young at No. four sin- lifting Muhammad Ali gles • Posted a 4-1 record against ranked Athlete Most Admired: Biggest Sports Thrill: Clinching the Virginia opponents • Had a wining record in three-set match last year and being lifted on my teammates matches with 6-2 • Was 6-0 in singles at No. shoulders 3 and 7-1 at No. 5 • Was nationally-ranked in Person With Greatest Influence On Athletic singles for most of the school year. Career: My father Favorite Movie: The Alchemist Benjamin Carlotti’s Career Record Favorite Website: Facebook Season Singles Doubles Nobody Can Believe I Watch: The Simpsons Fall 2006 9-3 3-1 Favorite Vacation Spot: Corsica 2005-06 24-9 1-2 Favorite Musical Performer: Phil Collins 2004-05 24-7 5-3 Talent I Have Outside Tennis: Dancing Career Totals 57-19 9-6 My Most Prized Possession Is: My head page 4 2006-07 Men’s Tennis Media Guide Carolina Men’s Tennis The 2007 Tar Heels

AR EEL Off Court with “Cronefish”: Sandeep Daiya’s Career Record T H Full Name: Andrew Parker Crone Season Singles Doubles TENNIS Academic Major: Undecided Fall 2006 3-3 0-2 Post School Ambition: Be a pro-tennis player 2005-06 5-2 2-2 Hobbies: Fishing, sports, hanging out with 2004-05 6-3 1-4 friends, ping pong ANDREW Career Totals 14-8 3-8 CRONE Athlete Most Admired: Pete Sampras Person With Greatest Influence On Athletic Freshman Career: Bret Garnett, coach Hickory, N.C. Favorite Movie: Old School Favorite TV Show: Family Guy General: Stands 6-1 tall • A five-star blue chip ATPtennis.com selection in the nation’s No. 2 ranked recruiting Favorite Website: Nobody Can Believe I Watch: Monk class according to tennisrecruiting.net • Chose Favorite Musical Performer: Brad Paisley UNC over a pair of other ACC institutions • Born To Prepare For A Match, I: Listen to music October 5, 1987 in Hickory, N.C. • Son of John Best Advice I Ever Received: “Treat others and Beth Crone • Has two brothers, Will, 21, how you would like to be treated.” and Chase, 15. The Best Thing About Being A Carolina Fall 2006: Competed in four fall tournaments Student-Athlete: Having the bond with the for Carolina • Opened up play as a Tar Heel at team the Napa Valley Classic • Won his first match as a Tar Heel in the UNC Fall Invitational over Richmond’s Sami Belakhlef in straight sets, 6-1, TAR HEEL 6-3 • Won four out of five matches at the Bolleteri/Treibly Tournament • Fell in the second TENNIS round of the ITA Mideast Regional to Charleston’s Or Dekel. SANDEEP Prep: Graduated from Hickory High School in DAIYA 2006 • Compiled a 54-15 singles record Junior between October 2005 and July 2006 • Acworth, Ga. Undefeated his senior year in high school • Conference player of the year as a prepster • Stands 5-11 tall • Defeated Brad Won his 3A North Carolina High School Athletic General: Clinard of Charlotte before falling to Gustav Association state singles title his senior year TAR HEEL Asplund in the Qualifying Round of singles at and 3A state doubles title his freshman year • the ITA Mideast Regional • Product of the talent- TENNIS Led Hickory High School to state champi- rich Atlanta tennis region • All-State selection in onships in 2004 and 2006 • Ranked as high as tennis • Born March 3, 1986 in Los Angeles, No.1 in North Carolina and No. 4 in the TAYLOR Calif • Son of Pankaj and Chanda Daiya • Has Southeast in the junior ranks • Nationally FOGLEMAN one sister. ranked as high as No. 21. Sophomore As a Sophomore: Posted an overall 5-2 sin- New Orleans, La. gles record • Competed in one dual-match Andrew Crone’s Career Record against Gardner-Webb • Defeated Kim Ellis at Stands 5-11 tall • Defeated ECU’s Season Singles Doubles No. 6 singles • Posted a 2-2 doubles record. General: Aleksey Kochetov to capture first tournament Fall 2006 6-5 6-7 As a Freshman: Won a consolation flight title of his career at UNC Wilmington • Won Career Totals 6-5 6-7 championship of the USC Fall Invitational with a Flight A doubles with partner David Stone at the 6-0, 7-6 win over Furman’s Ryan Friend. UNCW/Landfall Invitational • Defeated USC’s Prep: Graduated from Harrison High School in David Wolf to win the One-A-Day UNC Fall Acworth, Ga., in May 2004 • Was an All-County Invitiational Flight B title • Top recruit from class tennis player for three years • Tennis team cap- of 2005 • Ranked among the top 20 players in tain during his senior year• Won the Carl the South • Born in New Orleans, La. • Son of Harrison High School Leadership award his Amos and Jana Fogleman • Has one sister. senior year • Made the academic honor roll for Went 6-2 overall in singles and four years. As a Freshman: 4-3 in doubles • Competed in two dual matches against Campbell and Elon • Defeated both Off Court with “Deep”: opponents at No. 6 singles • Won two singles Full Name: Sandeep Pankaj Daiya matches at the Napa Valley Invitational, defeat- Academic Major: Economics ing nationally-ranked Pramod Dabir and Post School Ambition: Become a lawyer Georgia’s Josh Varella • qualified for the ITA Golf and listening to music Hobbies: Mideast Regional in singles. Biggest Sports Thrill: Beating Duke at the Ranked No. 37 nationally in his first year ACC Tournament in 2005 Prep: of Boys’ 18s • Won the 2004 Copper Bowl in Person With Greatest Influence On Athletic Career: My sister Tuscon, defeating Blake Boswell in the singles Favorite Book: Catcher in the Rye final • Defeated nationally-ranked Maciek Sykut Favorite Magazine: ESPN The Magazine and Michael Venus to capture the National Open Favorite Movie: Wedding Crashers in Tallahassee • Back-to-back Louisiana 5A Favorite TV Show: Friends State Singles Champion • Led the Jesuit Blue Favorite Musical Performer: DMB Jays to four consecutive team state champi- Talent I Have Outside Tennis: Playing the onships (2002-05) • Named 5A Metro Player of piano the Year in 2003 and 2004 • Mother, Jana, played tennis at Tulane University • Sister, Sara, is an all-state volleyball player at Sacred Heart High School in New Orleans.

2006-07 UNC Men’s Tennis Media Guide page 5 The 2007 Tar Heels Carolina Men’s Tennis sister, Georgina. Taylor Fogleman’s Career Record As a Junior: Posted an overall singles record Season Singles Doubles of 21-11 and overall 24-8 doubles record • Fall 2006 10-3 6-5 Recorded a 4-2 record in tiebreakers • Key win 2005-06 6-2 4-3 over Clemson’s Clint Boling helped lead the Career Totals 16-5 10-8 Tar Heels to their first Sweet 16 appearance since 1993 • Bounced back after dropping the first set to Dmitry Babenko of South Carolina Off Court with “Foggie”: to clinch the match against the Gamecocks at Taylor McNeilly Fogleman Full Name: No. 5 singles • Was 18-7 in dual matches with Academic Major: Communications a 10-4 mark at No. 4 and a 7-3 ledger at No. 5 Post School Ambition: Make money • Was 6-4 in ACC dual match action • Won the Hobbies: Fishing, hunting, golf, water skiing Athlete Most Admired: Andre Agassi deciding match in the regular season against Biggest Sports Thrill: Playing a doubles exhi- Florida State at No. 5 singles over Chris bition with Andre Agassi and Andy Roddick Westerhof • Posted an outstanding doubles Favorite Book: The Rainmaker record with partner Derek Porter at No. 3 spot Favorite Movie: Gladiator • The duo went 23-7 • Combined with Porter Favorite TV Show: The Fresh Prince of Bel to rally from a 6-3 deficit to beat Clemson at Air No. 3 doubles in the NCAA second round Favorite Website: CarolinaHurricanes.com match, winning 9-8 (5) to clinch the doubles Favorite Pastime: Golf point for UNC. Nobody Can Believe I Watch: Golf for eight As a Sophomore: Worked his way into the hours every weekend singles lineup and notched a 14-6 mark over- Favorite Vacation Spot: Bermuda all • Posted a 4-2 record in three-set matches, Golf Talent I Have Outside Tennis: including key wins over Clemson’s Michael Most Prized Possession: My car Gee and Georgia Tech’s George Gvelesiani • To Prepare For A Match, I: Sleep Defeated Virginia’s 50th ranked Darrin Cohen 3-6, 6-2, 6-2 • Was 12-6 at the No. 6 singles spot., 5-3 in ACC matches. As a Freshman: Attended Florida AR EEL International University. T H Prep: Attended Allison Academy in North TENNIS Miami Beach, Fla. • Graduated on May 31, 2002 • Had a 4.0 grade point average there as LENNY a junior and a senior. GULLAN Junior Cape Town, Sebastian Guejman’s Career Record South Africa Season Singles Doubles Fall 2006 4-3 5-2 General: Stands 6-7 tall • Advanced to the main 2005-06 21-11 24-8 draw singles at the ITA Mideast Regional after 2004-05 14-6 9-10 topping Ryan Johnson of Charlotte and Michael Career Totals 39-20 38-20 O’Shea of FSU in qualifying draws • Teamed up with David Stone in the Polo Ralph Lauren All- American Championships • Duo advanced to the Off Court with “C-bass”: Main Draw with three wins and then reached the Full Name: Sebastian Martin Guejman Academic Major: Business Administration round of eight as qualifiers with upset wins over Post School Ambition: Pro tennis and law the the No. 24 team of Galic and Kokta of Baylor Hobbies: Soccer, music, skiing, reading, and the No. 10 nationally-ranked tandem, scuba diving, marathons Tennessee’s Hubble and Rogers • Combined Athletes Most Admired: Diego Maradona and with Stone to go 10-3 in doubles in the fall • Was Nick Monroe ranked third in South Africa at the end of 2002 • AR EEL Person With Greatest Influence On Athletic Born October 25, 1985, in Sandton, South Africa T H Career: My father • Son of Len and Lyn Gullan • His family now TENNIS Favorite TV Shows: Entourage, Curb Your resides in London • Has one brother, Philip, 16, Enthusiasm and one sister, Tanya, 30. SEBASTIAN Favorite Vacation Spot: Barcelona, Spain As a Sophomore: Saw singles action in three GUEJMAN Favorite Musical Performers: John Lennon fall tournaments • Won Flight C singles at UNC and Andres Calamaro Fall Invitational • Won doubles Flight A with part- Senior Talent I Have Outside Tennis: Soccer Buenos Aires, ner David Stone in UNC Fall Invitational • Posted Argentina Non-Tennis Skill I Wish I Could Do Better: Dance an overall 6-2 singles record and a 26-13 overall My Most Prized Possession Is: My brain doubles record • Combined with Stone to be one General: Stands 6-1 tall • Carolina’s lone sen- Best Advice I Ever Received: “You may fail of the nation’s most improved doubles teams in ior • In fall 2006 he advanced to the champi- many times, but you are not a failure until you their sophomore years • The duo reached a sea- onship round of Flight A singles at the UNC begin to blame somebody else.” son high of No. 79 in the ITA rankings on March Fall Invitational before falling to Pedro Best Thing About Being A Carolina 21, 2006 • They were 26-10 overall including a Rodrigues of USC • Born May 21, 1984 in Student-Athlete Is: To learn to work hard to mark of 20-8 in dual matches, primarily at No. 2 Buenos Aires, Argentina • Son of Mario and achieve your goals where they were 15-8 • Started the season 20-3, Graciela Guejman • Transferred to Carolina including 12 straight wins from January 29 after attending Florida International University through March 15. from May 2002 to December 2003 • Started As a Redshirt Freshman: Earned a medical play for the Tar Heels in the fall of 2004 with redshirt after being limited by injuries the pervi- three years of eligibility remaining• Has one ous year • Saw singles action in two fall tourna-

page 6 2006-07 Men’s Tennis Media Guide Carolina Men’s Tennis The 2007 Tar Heels ments • Won three matches at the Groot Stefan Hardy’s Career Record Memorial Inviational. Season Singles Doubles Saw brief action in the fall of As a Freshman: Fall 2006 1-1 3-2 2003 • Finished with a 3-1 overall singles record Career Totals 1-1 3-2 for the season • Performed well for the Tar Heels in the Carolina Classic Tournament, defeating opponents from Richmond and N.C. State • Off Court with Stefan: Went 1-1 overall in doubles with teammate Full Name: Stefan Cameron Hardy Jonathan Janda • Was 2-1 in tiebreaker match- Hobbies: Drawing, basketball es. Athlete Most Admired: Pete Sampras Prep: Graduated from Saddlebrook Prep in Biggest Sports Thrill: France vs. Italy 2006 Wesley Chapel, Fla. on June 6, 2003 • Played World Cup title match golf and tennis in high school • Finished as the Person With Greatest Influence On Athletic valedictorian of his class there • Reached the Career: Hugh Bream finals of the under-16 South African champi- Favorite Magazine: Sports Illustrated onships in doubles in 2001 and the semifinals of Favorite Movie: Old School singles the same year • Captained Saddlebrook Favorite TV Show: Entourage team to 2002 state title while again losing only Favorite Website: facebook.com Switzerland one match • Was state runnerup in both singles Favorite Vacation Spot: and doubles that year • Runnerup in Florida 16s doubles in 1998 • National Honor Society mem- ber • Named to Who’s Who In American High Schools • Junior class president • Valedictorian of Saddlebrook Prep’s Class of 2003.

Lenny Gullan’s Career Record Season Singles Doubles Fall 2006 2-3 10-3 2005-06 6-2 26-13 2004-05 4-3 1-3 TAR HEEL Career Totals 12-8 37-19 TENNIS

Off Court with Lenny: STEFAN Full Name: Leonard Lawrence Gullan Academic Major: Business Administration HARDY Post School Ambition: Run a fortune 500 Freshman company Santa Maria, Calif. Biggest Sports Thrill: Going to the Sweet Sixteen last year General: Stands 6-0 tall • Endured injury prob- TAR HEEL People With Biggest Sports Influence On My lems which limited his playing time in the fall • Athletic Career: My family Hopes a return to good health will allow him to TENNIS The World is Flat Favorite Book: compete for a starting spot in the spring • A five- Favorite Website: Facebook star blue chip recruit according to tennisrecruit- TRISTAN Favorite Vacation Spot: Greek Isles ing.net • Signed letter of intent with Carolina Favorite Musical Performer: Dave Matthews HEINRICH Band over three West Coast schools • Member of the Junior Non-Tennis Skill I Wish I Could Do Better: nation’s second-ranked recruiting class • Born Boise, Idaho Golf, dancing August 10, 1987 in Santa Monica, Calif. • Son of My Most Prized Possession Is: My sense of Michael and Debra Hardy • Has one brother, General: Stands 6-3 tall • Had an outstanding character Kyle, 24, and one sister, Danica, 26. fall 2006 season • Captured Flight B singles title To Prepare For A Match, I: Listen to my iPod Fall 2006: Saw singles action in the Napa Valley at NC State Fall Invitational • Advanced to main and imagine the match unfolding Classic, splitting two matches • Teamed up in draw singles in ITA Mideast Regional after If I Could Spend Three Hours Doing doubles with Lenny Gullan, going 2-1 in the tour- defeating Mauricio Correa of UNC Asheville and Anything, It Would Be: Lying on a beach nament • Went 1-1 in doubles with Chris Elliott Quibell of Coastal Carolina in qualifying Kearney at the ITA Mideast Regional • The Tar rounds • With teammate Will Plyler, the duo Heel duo fell to the 53rd-ranked Cojanu and The Tar Heels in 2005-06 faced teammates Chris Kearney and Karl O’Brien of William & Mary, 8-4. ° Won its first 15 matches of the season, the Wishart in the Flight B doubles finals of the most at the beginning of a season since the Prep: Graduated from Righetti High School in UNC Fall Tournament • Outstanding scholar- 1970 team ran the table at 18-0. Santa Maria, Calif. on June 9, 2006 • Member of athlete • Son of Shirley Heinrich • Has one ° Finished 25-5 overall. The 25 wins equalled his high school tennis team • Team captain and brother. the most in school history, matching the 1992 Most Valuable Player • Doubles finalist in boys As a Sophomore: Posted an overall 6-3 sin- team which also finished 25-5. 16s at Kalamazoo Nationals • Easter Bowl gles record and 3-2 doubles record • Saw action ° Went 8-3 in the ACC. Only two other Tar Singles Quarterfinalist in boys 18s • Member of in three fall tournaments, including ITA Mideast Heels teams have ever won eight ACC match- Southern California Junior Davis Cup Team Qualifying Regional • Played one dual doubles es in a season – 1992 at 8-0 and 1996 at 8-0. Champion • Ranked in the Top 10 in Southern match with Taylor Fogleman against ° Advanced to the Final 16 of the NCAA California in each age group as he advanced Championship for the first time since 1993. Georgetown • Duo won 8-3 • Named an ITA through the junior tennis ranks • Top 25 recruit Academic All-America for the school year. The Tar Heels captured a regional champi- according to tennisrecruiting.net. onship for the first time since that structure was As a Freshman: Posted a 7-1 overall singles introduced by the NCAA in 1994. record • Won his singles flight at the Groot ° Had six singles players win 20 or more Memorial Invitational, defeating South matches in a season, a school high. Raian Carolina’s Thomas Stoddard in the final 4-6, 7- Luchici led UNC with 25 wins. 5, 6-4 • Won the consolation finals of the USC Fall Invitational • Defeated ECU’s Nick Rose

2006-07 UNC Men’s Tennis Media Guide page 7 The 2007 Tar Heels Carolina Men’s Tennis

and Campbell’s Gabriel Delarue 6-0, 6-0. Stacy Kearney • Has one sister, Jordyn, 11. Prep: Graduated in May 2004 from Boise High Fall 2006: Competed in three fall tournaments • TAR HEEL School • Was number one in tennis singles at Won his four straight matches as a Tar Heel • Boise High all four years • Won three State Advanced to the Round of 16 at the ITA Mideast TENNIS Singles Championships (2002-2004) • Member Regional after defeating Elon’s Damon Gooch of two team State Championships (2003-2004) • and East Tennessee State’s Enrique Olivares • WILL Is a Morehead Scholar at UNC • Recipient of The upset win over Gooch who was nationally- PLYLER Coca-Cola Scholar award • Served as Key Club ranked No. 119 was a key victory for Kearney • Junior President in high school and was a member of Fell in the Round of 16 to ODU’s Henrique Raleigh, N.C. the National Honor Society. Cancado, one of the nation’s top players • Won Flight B doubles title at the UNC Fall Invitational General: Stands 5-10 tall • Competed in three Tristan Heinrich’s Career Record with partner Karl Wishart over teammates fall 2006 tournaments • Advanced to the doubles Season Singles Doubles Tristan Heinrich and Will Plyler. finals of Flight B in the UNC Fall Invitational with Fall 2006 9-3 4-5 Prep: Graduated from Mater Dei High School in partner Tristan Heinrich • Duo fell to teammates 2005-06 6-3 3-2 Santa Ana, Calif. in May 2006 • Member of high Chris Kearney and Karl Wishart in the champi- 2004-05 7-1 1-2 school tennis team • All-America selection • onship match • Had a 5-2 fall singles record, Career Totals 22-7 8-9 Ranked among the Top 25 recruits in the coun- improving his career singles mark to an out- try according to tennisrecruiting.net • Won six standing 33-15 • Former state singles champion singles matches at Kalamazoo Nationals in Off Court with Tristan: • Born July 7, 1985 in Raleigh, N.C. • Son of Full Name: Tristan Thomas Heinrich 2005 • Advanced to the Round of 16 at the 2005 Sally and William Plyler • Has one sister, Settle, Academic Majors: Economics and Political National Clay Courts. 24, and one brother, B.B., 15. Science As a Sophomore: • Had an overall singles mark Hobbies: Basketball, piano of 20-12, including a brilliant 16-6 in dual match- Biggest Sports Thrill: Winning the Chris Kearney’s Career Record es • Started most of the season at No.5 and No. Intermountain Sectional Championship Season Singles Doubles 6 singles spots • Went undefeated at No. 5 sin- Fall 2006 7-2 6-3 Person With Greatest Influence On Athletic gles with a record of 7-0 • Won 13 of 15 singles Career: Jim Moortgat, former tennis coach Career Totals 7-2 6-3 matches in a stretch from January 21 through Favorite Magazine: The Economist Favorite Website: espn.com March 21 • Won three matches at the UNC Fall Invitational, advancing to the finals of his flight Favorite Pastime: Hanging out with friends Off Court with “Shermanator”: where he fell to Radford’s Arthur Vasarevic • Favorite Vacation Spot: California Full Name: Christopher Harrison Kearney Talent I Have Outside Tennis: Piano Academic Major: Business Teamed with former prep school rival, Jeffrey The Best Thing About Being A Carolina Post School Ambition: Pro tennis player Schroeder, during two fall tournaments in dou- Student-Athlete Is: Going to basketball games Hobbies: Hanging out with friends, music, bles • Won three matches in doubles with Karl golf Wishart at the UNC Fall Invitational • The tan- Athlete Most Admired: Roger Federer dem lost only seven games over the course of Person With Greatest Influence On Athletic three matches • Clinched the matches against Career: My dad Yale, Charlotte and San Diego State with a trio of Favorite Magazine: ESPN The Magazine wins, all at the No. 6 singles seed • Posted an 5- Favorite Movie: Wedding Crashers 4 overall doubles record. Favorite TV Show: Entourage As a Freshman: Participated in two fall tourna- Favorite Website: espn.com ments and two dual matches • Qualified for the Favorite Musical Performer: Linkin Park Main Draw of the ITA Mideast Region Non-Tennis Skill I Wish I Could Do Better: Championships and won his first-round match Golf over Davidson’s Russ Burns • Won his first dual Best Advice I Ever Received: “Have fun” match over North Carolina A&T’s Jerome Kirkland • Posted wins over the Aggies and James Madison at No. 5 singles. Prep: Played the No. 1 singles spot all four years for Coach Steve Spivey’s Broughton Caps • Member of three consecutive high school boys’ tennis team State Championship squads • Defeated Bobby Lake of Watauga High to win the state 4A singles championship held at UNC’s Cone-Kenfield Tennis Center in his senior year. TAR HEEL Will Plyler’s Career Record TENNIS Season Singles Doubles Fall 2006 5-2 5-3 CHRIS 2005-06 20-12 5-4 KEARNEY 2004-05 8-1 4-3 Career Totals 33-15 14-10 Freshman Irvine, Calif.

General: Stands 6-1 tall • Has good chance to earn a spot in the starting lineup for the Tar Heels in 2007 • Merited Five-star gold chip sta- tus according to tennisrecruting.net • Member of the nation’s second-ranked recruiting class • Attended same high school as Heisman Trophy winner Matt Leinart • Born November 18, 1987 in Newport Beach, California • Son of Kevin and page 8 2006-07 Men’s Tennis Media Guide Carolina Men’s Tennis The 2007 Tar Heels fathers of Carolina tennis • Captured high Championship with atrio of wins in the qualifying Off Court with “Bone”: school regional doubles championship in 2002 phase • The tandem reached the quarterfinals in Will Johnson Plyler Full Name: and in 2003 • Named to All-Conference Team in the main draw with upset wins over the No. 10 Economics Academic Major: all four seasons at Leesville Road • Elected to nationally-ranked tandem, Tennessee’s Hubble Marcos Baghdatis Athlete Most Admired: membership in National Honor Society. and Rogers and the 24th-ranked tandem in the Making the round of Biggest Sports Thrill: country, Baylor’s Galic and Kokta • 48-21 in his 16 at the NCAA team championships last career in doubles • Born April 15, 1986 in year Jeff Schroeder’s Career Record Season Singles Doubles Greensboro, N.C. • Son of Dwight and Diane Favorite Book: Nate the Great Fall 2006 1-5 1-3 Stone • Has two sisters, Meredith, 25, and Favorite Pastime: Basketball 2005-06 2-4 4-3 Jennifer, 16. Favorite Vacation Spot: Riverton, North 2004-05 DNP DNP As a Sophomore: Posted an overall 5-4 singles Carolina record and an overall 26-11 doubles record • Jon Gilliam, Career Totals 3-9 5-6 Favorite Musical Performer: Competed mainly at No. 2 doubles spot with part- guitarist Off Court with Jeff: ner Lenny Gullan • The duo went 5-4 in ACC dou- Full Name: Jeffrey Michael Schroeder bles action • Overall the duo was 26-10 in doubles Academic Major: Business play, going 20-8 in dual match play including 4-0 Hobbies: Fishing, playing football, hanging out at No. 1 and 15-8 at No. 2 • Reached a national Athlete Most Admired: Rod Brind’Amour ranking of No. 79 in the March 21, 2006 poll • The Person With Greatest Influence On Athletic duo posted a 25-3 record in matches from Career: My father September 23, 2005 through April 9, 2006 • Only Favorite Magazine: Road and Track three losses in that time came to doubles teams TarHeelBlue.com Favorite Website: from Wake Forest, Northwestern and Clemson • Favorite Vacation Spot: The beach Won one dual singles match against N.C. A&T’s Favorite Musical Performer: Phish The Best Thing About Being A Carolina Vitas Hawley in two straight 6-0 sets at the No. 5 Student-Athlete: Getting a great education position • Lost in three sets to Matt Rubenstein in the ITA Mideast Region Qualifying singles draw • Won the A Flight of the UNC Fall Invitational with Lenny Gullan, losing only five games in four matches • Defeated Wake Forest’s Hamar/Ross 9-8 to reach the Round of 16 at the ITA Mideast Region Indoor Championships. As a Freshman: Qualified for the Main Draw of the ITA Mideast Indoor Championships • Posted a 3-1 singles record in dual matches • Teamed with Sebastian Guejman to post a 7-5 dual match dou- bles record • Defeated Babenko and Rodrigues to clinch the doubles point against South Carolina. Prep: Ranked No. 1 in the state Boys’ 18s and among the top 10 in the South coming out of high school • A four-time member of the Junior Davis TAR HEEL Cup, which recognizes players for their outstand- ing character, sportsmanship and ability • No. 1 TENNIS player in singles and doubles at Page High School all four years • All-America selection • JEFF MVP and team captain of Page squad • All-State, All-Region and All-Conference choice • Named SCHROEDER conference player of the year • Was a member of Junior the National Honor Society. Raleigh, N.C. TAR HEEL David Stone’s Career Record General: Stands 6-2 tall • Saw action in four of Season Singles Doubles the six fall tournaments • Teamed with Tristan TENNIS Fall 2006 5-2 11-2 Heinrich in doubles competition for two fall tour- 2005-06 5-4 26-11 naments • An in-state walk-on player who was DAVID 2004-05 7-5 11-8 added to the team roster in November 2004 • STONE Career Totals 17-11 48-21 Did not play in any tournament or dual action as a freshman in 2004-05 • Born May 15, 1985 in Junior Greensboro, N.C. Red Bank, N.J. • Son of Paul and Diane Schroeder • Has one brother, Jimmy, a UNC General: Stands 6-4 tall • Advanced to the sec- graduate. ond round of Main Draw singles at the ITA As a Sophomore: Posted an overall 2-4 sin- Mideast Regional after defeating Lisandro gles record and a 4-3 doubles record • Saw Picardo of East Tennessee State in the first action in two fall tournaments, the UNC Fall round • Defeated Winthrop’s Tobias Handschin Invitational and the Wolfpack Invitational. and Elon’s Austin Fenn in the Qualifying rounds Prep: Was an outstanding high school tennis as a singles competitor • Main Draw entry in player at Leesville Road High School in doubles with long-time partner Lenny Gullan • Raleigh, N.C • Graduated on May 31, 2004 • Duo posted three wins in the regional before Played on the varsity tennis team for four years falling to Virginia’s Huey and Singer • Won • Defeated UNC teammate Will Plyler when Flight A doubles title with partner Taylor Leesville faced Broughton • Played No. 1 sin- Fogleman at the UNCW/Landfall Invitational • gles his junior and senior year and No. 1 dou- Teamed up with Lenny Gullan in the Polo Ralph bles all four years • Trained with Cliff Skakle, Lauren All-American Championships • Duo son of the late Don Skakle, one of the founding advanced to the Main Draw of the

2006-07 UNC Men’s Tennis Media Guide page 9 The 2007 Tar Heels Carolina Men’s Tennis

Off Court with “Stone”: Karl Wishart’s Career Record Full Name: David Benjamin Stone Season Singles Doubles Academic Major: Sociology Fall 2006 8-5 4-2 Post School Ambition: To be successful in 2005-06 9-3 3-3 everything I do 2004-05 8-2 2-4 Golf, fishing, football Hobbies: Career Totals 25-10 9-9 Biggest Sports Thrill: Beating Duke on April 22, 2005 People With Greatest Influence On Athletic Career: My family Off Court with “Karlovic”: Karl Simon Wishart Favorite Magazine: Sports Illustrated Full Name: Biochemistry Favorite Food: Chicken Parmesan Academic Major: Soccer, music Favorite Movie: The Departed Hobbies: Hitting with Bjorn Borg Favorite Website: ebaumsworld.com Biggest Sports Thrill: and Guillermo Villas Favorite Pastime: Going to the beach with my family Favorite Book: Bible Friends Nobody Can Believe I Watch: Two-A-Days Favorite TV Show: www.skysports.com Favorite Vacation Spot: Lake house Favorite Website: Browsing the web Favorite Musical Performer: Red Hot Chili Favorite Pastime: Peppers Favorite Vacation Spot: Corfu, Greece Chris Martin Talent I Have Outside Tennis: Cooking Favorite Musical Performer: (Coldplay) Most Prized Possession: My car “Winners If I Could Spend Three Hours Doing The Best Advice I Ever Received: train, losers complain.” Anything, It Would Be: Playing golf AR EEL The Best Advice I Ever Received: “Always T H be the hardest worker” TENNIS

KARL TAR HEEL WISHART TENNIS Junior Baden-Baden, MACLANE Germany WILKISON General: Stands 6-3 tall • Has 25-10 career sin- Freshman gles record • Claimed the Flight B doubles title Charlotte, N.C. with partner Chris Kearney over teammates Tristan Heinrich and Will Plyler in the UNC Fall Invitational • Fell in the finals of Flight A singles General: Stands 5-9 tall • Father won six to Maryland’s Borid Fetbroyt in the UNC Fall career ATP singles titles and 10 career dou- Invitational • Earned three wins in the bles titles • Born May 14, 1988 in Charlotte, Bolleteri/Treibly Tournament • Born in Great N.C. • Son of Tim and Vicky Wilkison • Has Britain and currently living in Germany • Born one brother, Cole, 15, and one sister, Tory, 7. July 18, 1985 • Son of Jim and Margaret Wishart Fall 2006: Did not play. • Has one brother, Andrew, 22. Prep: Graduated from Charlotte Latin School Posted an overall 9-3 singles in May 2006 • Played tennis there from 2002 As a Sophomore: record and an overall 3-3 doubles record • to 2006 • All-State four years • All-Conference Competed mainly in fall tournaments • Won two four years • Team captain his senior year • dual single matches against Quincy Hawley of Ranked as high as 70th in the nation and N.C. A&T and Kevin Killeavy of Georgetown, third in the South in 16s • Suffered an elbow both at No. 6 spot • Recorded a 2-2 singles injury limiting his playing time • Southern The Tar Heels in 2005-06 record at the season-opening Napa Valley Had two players named NCAA singles and Closed Doubles Champion in 16s. ° Challenge • Won the UNC Fall Invitational B doubles All-Americas. Raian Luchici was an Flight singles, defeating Radford’s Brandon All-America in singles and Luchici joined Brad Off Court with Maclane: Johnson in the final • Defeated William & Mary’s Pomeroy as an All-America selection in dou- Full Name: Maclane Scott Wilkison Kavi Sud in the first round of the ITA Mideast bles. Academic Major: Business Region Championships before falling to 99th- ° Had two individuals win 2006 Intercollegiate Post School Ambition: Professional tennis rated Henrique Cancado of ODU in the round of Tennis Association National Awards, the most Hobbies: Internet, Panthers football, Tar Heel 64 • Teamed with Will Plyler to win three doubles selections of any ACC school. Don Johnson won the ITA Assistant Coach of the Year football and basketball matches at the UNC Fall Invitational. Award. Raian Luchici was the recipient of the Athletes Most Admired: Muhammad Ali, As a Freshman: Advanced to the finals of the Michael Jordan and Lawrence Taylor ITA/Ted Farnsworth Senior Player of the Year Groot Memorial Invitational with a 6-2, 6-0 win Award. Person With Greatest Influence On Athletic over NC State’s Mason Schermerhorn • My dad ° Had a doubles team, Raian Luchici and Brad Career: Captured the A-B Flight Championship of the Favorite Book: The Lord of the Rings Pomeroy finish the year ranked No. 6 national- USC Fall Invitational with a 7-5, 2-6, 6-3 victory Favorite Magazine: Sports Illustrated ly in the ITA ratings. over Virginia. Tech’s Adel Abbas. Favorite Pastime: Football ° Had a singles player, Raian Luchici, finish the Favorite Vacation Spot: Miami Prep: Graduated in June 2004 from K.L. Grab in year ranked No. 15 nationally by the ITA.. If I Could Spend Three Hours Doing Baden-Baden • Won 2004 Regional Tennis That was highest individual ranking by a UNC Anything, It Would Be: Sleeping Championship • Played as No.1 local player at player since Tripp Phillips finished 2000 ranked Non-Tennis Skill I Wish I Could Do Better: TCRW in Baden-Baden • At 18, he ranked in the No. 12. Rap top 300 on the German national men’s tennis • ° Had Raian Luchici named the ACC Men’s Captain of high school soccer team • Also Tennis Player of the Week three times — played golf • Achieved a high overall average January 23, 2006, February 6, 2006, and April (1.8) in German Abiter, finishing with distinction 17, 2006. and a merit prize. page 10 2006-07 Men’s Tennis Media Guide Carolina Men’s Tennis The 2007 Tar Heels Photo Roster

Kyle Baker Benjamin Carlotti Andrew Crone Sandeep Daiya • Freshman • Junior • Freshman • Junior • Acworth, Ga. • Paris, France • Hickory, N.C. • Acworth, Ga.

Taylor Fogleman Sebastian Guejman Lenny Gullan Stefan Hardy • Sophomore • Senior • Junior • Freshman • New Orleans, La. • Buenos Aires, Argentina • Cape Town, South Africa • Santa Maria, Calif.

Tristan Heinrich Chris Kearney Will Plyler Jeff Schroder • Junior • Freshman • Junior • Junior • Boise, Idaho • Irvine, Calif. • Raleigh, N.C. • Raleigh, N.C.

David Stone Maclane Wilkison Karl Wishart Sam Paul • Junior • Freshman • Junior • Head Coach • Greensboro, N.C. • Charlotte, N.C. • Baden-Baden, Germany

2006-07 UNC Men’s Tennis Media Guide page 11 Head Coach Sam Paul Carolina Men’s Tennis campus this year as an assistant coach for Coach Paul’s Highlights at North Carolina * Paul enters his 18th season at North Carolina. He came to Chapel the Tar Heels. Sam Paul Hill as an assistant coach in 1989 and became head coach in 1993. Paul has also men- Head Tennis Coach *Paul earned his 100th career victory by defeating No. 23 Notre Dame tored six All-Americas on March 25, 2000. He won his 200th victory on March 4, 2006, a 7-0 213-111 at UNC in his tenure as head victory over Charlotte. 75-35 in ACC Matches coach, including one *Paul ranks fourth in career ACC dual match victories behind only Don two-time All America. 14th Season as Head Coach Skakle, Chuck Kriese and Jay Lapidus. David Caldwell (two- *North Carolina has finished in the top three in the ACC regular-season at North Carolina time All-America), standings in 13 of the 17 years Paul has coached here. Brint Morrow, Tripp *In 15 of the last 17 years, Carolina’s No. 1 singles player has earned 18th Season Overall Phillips, Nick Monroe, All-America honors and/or participated in the NCAA singles champi- at North Carolina Raian Luchici and onship. Brad Pomeroy have A new member of the been awarded the directed his Tar Heels to a 19-6 dual match 200-victory club, head prestigious honor of All-America status. Paul record and the Atlantic Coast Conference tour- coach Sam Paul begins his coached Bryan Jones, Chris Mumford, Ronald nament championship, the 25th in school his- 14th year as head coach at Thornqvist and Daryl Wyatt to All-America hon- tory. Carolina has been invited to the NCAA North Carolina in 2006-07 ors during his assistant coaching years at Tournament 14 of the past 15 seasons while and his 18th season at Carolina from 2000-03. Paul has been an assistant and head coach in Carolina overall. A four- In 2006, Paul mentored Raian Luchici who Chapel Hill; only once in Paul’s tenure have the time Atlantic Coast became the first ITA National Senior Player of Tar Heels failed to make the NCAATournament Conference Coach of the the Year in UNC history while playing on one of field. Year selection, three-time the best squads UNC fans have witnessed. Paul has repeatedly been rewarded for his intercollegiate Tennis The 2006 squad finished the season ranked coaching ability as he was selected the Atlantic Association Mideast Region Coach of the Year No. 12 nationally. In the course of the season, Coast Conference Coach of the Year in 1996, and three-time ITA National Coach of the Year the Tar Heels tied the highest team ranking in 2000, 2002 and 2004. The 1996 Tar Heels finalist, Paul also begins his 16th overall year ITA ratings history with a No. 8 rank, which was amassed a 21-5 overall record, went undefeat- as a collegiate head coach with an outstanding also reached by the 1992 squad. The team 213-111 dual-match record at Carolina and a went 25-5 in dual matches and tied for the 75-35 ACC regular-season dual match record. most wins in school history, also achieved by North Carolina’s tradition of excellence in the 1992 team. Joining Luchici as an All- men’s tennis has continued under Paul, who America honoree was fellow senior Brad ranks as the fourth winningest coach in ACC Pomeroy. Six Tar Heels won 20 or more sin- history in dual match wins in his career and is gles matches during the course of the season. second in UNC history in that category behind Besides their success on the court, Tar Heel only Don Skakle. tennis teams under Coach Paul also excel in The 46-year-old native of Lancaster, S.C., the classroom. The UNC men’s tennis team has been uniting the winning reputation of had the highest composite grade point average UNC men’s tennis with his adroit skills for of any men’s athletic team at Carolina during coaching and recruiting since he was named the 2003-04 school year and again during the 2004-05 school year. Eight Tar Heel players of the 14 on Head Coach Sam Paul the squad in 2005-06 were Education: named to the ACC Academic Presbyterian College (1983, B.S. in Applied Psychology) Honor Roll. College Coaching: Paul has tutored four play- • University of South Carolina, Assistant Coach, 1983-86 ers at North Carolina who • Trinity University, Assistant Coach, 1986-87 have been ranked in the Top • University of Richmond, Director of Tennis, Head Men’s and 500 in the world in men’s sin- Women’s Tennis Coaches, 1987-89 gles — Don Johnson (UNC • University of North Carolina, Assistant Coach, 1989-93; class of ’90), David Caldwell Head Coach, 1993-present (UNC Class of ’96), Tripp Recognition: Phillips (UNC Class of ’00) • 1996 ACC Coach of the Year and Nick Monroe (UNC Class • 1996 ITA Mideast Region Coach of the Year of ’04). • 1996 ITA National Coach of the Year Finalist Paul became the only ACC Coach Sam Paul is seen pictured with Carolina • 2000 ACC Coach of the Year coach to coach a player tennis legend and All-America Vic Seixas, both a Wimbledon and U.S. Open singles champion. • 2000 ITA Mideast Region Coach of the Year ranked No. 1 in the world in • 2000 ITA National Coach of the Year Finalist the ATP men’s doubles rank- ed in the ACC regular season at 8-0 and saw • 2002 ACC Coach of the Year ings when he acted as per- • 2004 ACC Coach of the Year five players complete individual 20-win sea- sonal coach for UNC alum- sons. Senior David Caldwell received ACC • 2004 ITA Mideast Coach of the Year nus Don Johnson during his • 2004 ITA National Coach of the Year Finalist Player of the Year honors for the third consec- magnificent runs in doubles utive season and won the No. 1 singles title for at Wimbledon and the U.S. the third straight season — both league firsts. the head coach in April 1993, making North Open during the late 1990s and early years of The 2000 Tar Heels compiled an 18-6 mark, Carolina one of the most respected programs this decade. Paul accompanied Johnson to a reached the NCAA Tournament regional final in the nation. Twice since 2000 Paul has men- pair of Grand Slam titles and an appearance and had three players earn ACC flight champi- tored student-athletes who have won the on the U.S. Davis Cup Team. onship honors. Senior Tripp Phillips earned All- Patterson Medal as Carolina’s outstanding Paul took over the reigns as head coach in America distinction as he advanced to the senior student-athlete — Tripp Phillips in 2000 May 1993 after assisting coach Allen Morris for NCAA quarterfinals and won the Patterson and Nick Monroe in 2004. Phillips returns to four years from 1989-1993. In 2002, Paul Medal as UNC’s outstanding senior athlete. page 12 2006-07 Men’s Tennis Media Guide Carolina Men’s Tennis Head Coach Sam Paul NCAA Tournament. The Tar Heels Under Paul’s guidance, the Tar Heels hosted finished 23-5 overall and hosted NCAA regionals in 2004 and 2006. an NCAA regional for the first time During his tenure, the Tar Heels have also since the tournament field had remarkable success in ITA Grand Slam expanded to 64. Nick Monroe events. A Carolina player has competed in the became the fourth NCAA singles national singles indoor competition nine of the quarterfinalist coach by Paul. past 15 years, most recently Raian Luchici in After serving as the Director of 2005. In 1993, former UNC men’s assistant Tennis and the head men’s and coach and two-time All-America selection women’s tennis coaches at the Ronald Thornqvist won the ITA Indoors title in University of Richmond for two Minneapolis, Minn. years from 1987-89, Paul came to In 2004, Geoff Boyd and Brad Pomeroy won Chapel Hill as Coach Allen Morris’ the Mideast Region doubles championship assistant coach in September and advanced to the quarterfinals of the Sam Paul earned his 200th victory as the Tar Heels’ head coach 1989. At Richmond, he won hon- national indoors. Brad Pomeroy and Raian when Carolina defeated Charlotte 7-0 on March 4, 2006 at the ors as the Colonial Athletic Luchici reached the finals of the 2005 All- Cone-Kenfield Tennis Center. Association’s Women’s Tennis American Championships and the semifinals Coach of the Year in both 1988 of the 2005 ITA National Indoors and earned In 2002, the Tar Heels had one of their best and 1989. His women went 11-11 in his first the No. 1 collegiate ranking in doubles in the seasons in recent memory as UNC went 19-6 year at the helm, finishing third in the CAA. 2006 preseason in the process. The duo overall against a brutal schedule and won the The Spiders improved to 14-7 in 1989, which ended the season as All-America selections, ACC tournament title for the first time since was good for second place in the CAA. The ranked No. 6 in the country. 1989 team was In addition to his collegiate coaching experi- also ranked in ence, Sam Paul has worked with numerous Sam Paul’s Tenure at North Carolina Year Overall ACC ACC Final ITA NCAA Tournament the region’s Top ATP Tour players including Nick Monroe, Don Record Record Finish Rank Finish 10. On the Johnson and Tripp Phillips, all of whom have 1994 16-9 6-2 2nd (t) 19th (t) NCAA 3rd Round men’s side, chosen to train in Chapel Hill on a fulltime 1995 14-11 6-2 3rd (t) 33rd (t) NCAA 1st Round Paul led the basis. 1996 21-5 8-0 1st 16th NCAA 2nd Round Spiders to a 12- A 1983 graduate of Presbyterian College in 1997 13-8 5-3 3rd (t) 36th NCAA 1st Round 9 mark and Clinton, S.C. wih a Bachelor of Science degree 1998 15-10 6-2 2nd 49th NCAA 2nd Round 1999 11-14 3-5 5th (t) 63rd third-place in applied psychology, Paul also played tennis 2000 18-6 6-2 2nd 21st NCAA 2nd Round league finish in for the Blue Hose for two years. He has a 2001 11-9 6-3 2nd (t) 36th NCAA 1st Round his second year 1981 Associate of Arts degree with a concen- 2002 19-6 7-1 2nd* 26th NCAA 1st Round while working tration in business from Anderson (S.C.) 2003 11-12 3-5 6th (t) 50th NCAA 1st Round with a non- College, where he played tennis as a freshman 2004 23-5 7-1 1st (t) 17th NCAA 2nd Round 2005 16-11 4-6 6th (t) 34th NCAA 1st Round scholarship and sophomore. 2006 25-5 8-3 4th (t) 12th NCAA Final 16 men’s program In addition to coaching at Richmond, Paul Totals 213-111 73-35 at Richmond. also served as an assistant coach for the ten- *ACC Tournament Champion During Paul’s nis teams at Trinity University in San Antonio, four years as Texas for one year and at the University of the Carolina South Carolina for three years. He took the job 1992 with a stirring 4-3 championship match assistant, UNC was 82-29 overall in dual at USC directly out of college in 1983 and then victory over Georgia Tech. matches, 26-3 in Atlantic Coast Conference moved to Trinity for one year. Paul moved to In 2004, UNC surprised much of the college regular-season dual matches and 10-2 in ACC Richmond in 1987 and UNC in 1989 and has tennis world by rising from a No. 50 preseason Tournament dual matches. Paul was an assis- remained in Chapel Hill ever since. ranking to share the ACC regular-season tant for teams which won ACC Tournament Paul is also beginning his 18th year as championship and earn the No. 11 seed in the titles in 1990 and 1992, were the ACC camp director of the annual Carolina Tar Heel Tournament runnersup in 1991 and 1993 and Tennis Camps. won the conference’s regular-season cham- pionships in 1991 and 1992. All four teams Paul worked with at Carolina as an assis- tant to Morris were ranked in the Top 25 in the nation by the ITA. The 1992 Carolina team reached the quarterfinals of the NCAA Tournament and the 1993 squad was in the NCAA Tournament Final 16. Since Paul took over as UNC’s head coach the Tar Heels have made the NCAA Tournament field Former UNC assistant coach Don Johnson was inducted into the North every year from 1994 Carolina Tennis Hall of Fame on January 28, 2006. Pictured here are former UNC men’s tennis coach Allen Morris, Johnson, former UNC women’s ten- through 2006 with the nis coach Kitty Harrison and current UNC men’s tennis coach Sam Paul. exception of 1999. 2006-07 UNC Men’s Tennis Media Guide page 13 Assistant Coach Tripp Phillips Carolina Men’s Tennis Tripp Phillips Assistant Coach First season at North Carolina (North Carolina, 2000)

The North Carolina men’s tennis staff wel- comes an outstanding new additionin in 2006- 07 with the hiring of 2000 Patterson Medal winner Tripp Phillips as the new full-time assis- Tripp Phillips signs autographs for eager fans at the 2006 U.S. Open.champions tant coach for the coach Sam Paul’s program. the semifinals of the U.S. Open in September, runnerup honors at No. 1 singles in league Phillips replaces long- marking an amazing accomplishment for the competition. time assistant coach Don Johnson, who relo- unseeded team. In other ATP events, he and Phillips saved his best performance of his cated to Boston, Mass., with his family follow- Fisher won the 2006 championship in Tokyo career for last as he advanced to the quarterfi- ing the 2005-06 record-setting Tar Heel sea- and they reached the semifinals at the event in nals of the NCAA Championships in singles. son. Thailand. Teaming with ’s Stephen Phillips’ performance elevated him in the ITA Since his graduation from Carolina in 2000, Hess, Phillips advanced to the semifinals at rankings as he finished 2000 ranked No. 12 Phillips has been a highly successful profes- Casablanca. nationally in singles. Phillips’ career and char- sional player, launching his career in 2001. On On the 2006 Challenger series, Phillips won acter were honored as he received the presti- October, 6, 2006, the talented right-hander the title at with Rogier Wassen of gious Patterson Medal from Carolina and the achieved his careeer high Stanford ATP The Netherlands; reached the finals at John Van Nostrand Award from the ITA. He Doubles Ranking at No. 29. In December of Tallahassee with of the U.S.; and UNC soccer player Lorrie Fair won the 2006, he had a current ranking of No. 32. and was a semifinalist at Sunrise with Fisher. 2000 Patterson Medals. He was the first ten- Phillips has been coached in the profession- Phillips also played in the semifinals of the nis player so honored since Vic Seixas in al ranks by both UNC head mentor Sam Paul U.S.A. F3 event as part of the Future series 1950. and by Calvin Davis. His career high INDESIT with the U.S.’s Rob Haywood. Phillips was born August 26, 1977 in ATP singles ranking came on May 19, 2003 Phillips’ success on the professional tour Newport News, Va. He grew up in Charlotte, when he achieved the No. 343 rating in the should come to no surprise to anyone who saw N.C. and now maintains his permanent resi- world. him play at North Carolina from 1996-2000. dence in Chapel Hill, N.C. Phillips was mar- Phillips had a magnificent year in doubles in At 6-1, 170 pounds, Phillips was a tireless ried to Laura Zuger on November 4, 2006. 2006, going 22-17 overall and earning over and intense competitor and valued team $120,000 in prize money. He had his greatest leader. Phillips, who came to UNC from success this past year while playing with Charlotte, N.C., earned All-America status his In 2000, Tripp Phillips won the Patterson Medal Australia’s . The duo reached senior season when he played as a fifth-year as UNC’s outstanding men’s senior student-ath- lete, the first Tar Heel tennis player in a half cen- senior. After returning from a medical redshirt tury to win the award. campaign, Phillips had an outstanding senior Tripp Phillips is seen in action at the 2006 U.S. Open where he advanced to the semifinals in season, posting a stellar 25-6 singles record doubles with Ashley Fisher of Australia. (Photo at the No.1 singles position. by Alan Billing) Phillips collected impressive victories over nationally No.1-ranked Daniel Anderson and No. 3-rated Shuon Madden that season. Phillips’ vigorous leadership carried the Tar Heels to a second-place ACC finish and a No. 16 national ranking. Phillips’ dominating 12-2 record against ACC competetion earned him

Tripp Phillips’ 2006 Professional Doubles Highlights ATP & Grand Slam Events Champion — Tokyo with Australia’s Ashley Fisher Semifinalist — U.S. Open with Australia’s Ashley Fisher; Bangkok with Australia’s Ashley Fisher; Casablanca with Australia’s Challenger Series Champion — Mexico City with The Netherlands’ Rogier Wassen Finalist — Tallahassee with U.S.’s Bobby Reynolds Semifinalist — Sunrise with Australia’s Ashley Fisher Futures Series Semifinalist — U.S.A. F3 with U.S.’s Rob Haywood page 14 2006-07 Men’s Tennis Media Guide Carolina Men’s Tennis 2006 Statistics

Overall Record: 25-5 • ACC Regular Season: 8-3; ACC Tournament: 0-1 • ITA Rank: #12 Derek Porter Home: 19-1 • Away: 6-2 • Neutral: 0-2; Indoor: 15-1 • Outdoor: 10-4 posted a 20- Head Coach: Sam Paul • Assistant Coach: Don Johnson win cam- paign as a Date Opponent W/L Score Indoor/Outdoor Dbls. Pt. Record senior 1/21/06 Campbell W 7-0 Indoor Yes 1-0 1/21/06 Elon W 7-0 Indoor Yes 2-0 1/27/06 #51 Northwestern W 5-2 Indoor Yes 3-0 1/29/06 Gardner-Webb W 7-0 Indoor Yes 4-0 1/29/06 North Carolina A&T W 7-0 Indoor Yes 5-0 2/4/06 #26 Notre Dame W 4-3 Indoor Yes 6-0 2/5/06 Yale W 7-0 Indoor Yes 7-0 2/11/06 Georgetown W 7-0 Indoor Yes 8-0 2/11/06 UNC Wilmington W 7-0 Indoor Yes 9-0 2/13/06 at #12 South Carolina W 4-2 Indoor Yes 10-0 2/18/06 #20 VCU W 4-2 Indoor Yes 11-0 3/4/06 Charlotte W 7-0 Indoor Yes 12-0 3/4/06 Navy W 7-0 Indoor Yes 13-0 3/13/06 at #23 San Diego W 5-2 Outdoor Yes 14-0 3/15/06 at San Diego State W 6-1 Outdoor Yes 15-0 3/21/06 #31 Wake Forest L 3-4 Indoor No 15-1, 0-1 ACC 3/25/06 #10 Clemson W 4-3 Indoor No 16-1, 1-1 ACC 3/26/06 #27 Georgia Tech W 5-2 Outdoor Yes 17-1, 2-1 ACC 3/31/06 at #27 Florida State W 5-2 Outdoor Yes 18-1, 3-1 ACC 4/2/06 at #13 Miami L 1-4 Outdoor Yes 18-2, 3-2 ACC 4/5/06 #36 NC State W 5-2 Outdoor Yes 19-2, 4-2 ACC 4/7/06 at Maryland W 7-0 Indoor Yes 20-2, 5-2 ACC 4/9/06 at Boston College W 6-1 Outdoor Yes 21-2, 6-2 ACC 4/12/06 at #6 Duke L 3-4 Outdoor No 21-3, 6-3 ACC Aly 4/14/06 #11 Virginia W 4-3 Outdoor No 22-3, 7-3 ACC Mandour 4/16/06 #57 Virginia Tech W 4-3 Outdoor Yes 23-3, 8-3 ACC went 9-1 in dual match- 4/21/06 vs. #19 Florida State@ L 2-4 Outdoor No 23-4 es for the 5/13/06 South Carolina State$ W 4-0 Outdoor Yes 24-4 Tar Heels 5/14/06 #24 Clemson$ W 4-1 Outdoor Yes 25-4 5/20/06 vs. #6 Ohio State* L 0-4 Outdoor No 25-5 @ACC Tournament (Cary, N.C.); $NCAA Tournament Regional (Chapel Hill, N.C.); *NCAA Championships (Stanford, Calif.)

Match-By-Match Matrix Date Opponent W/L Score 1 2 3 4 5 6 1 2 3 Record (ACC) 1/21 Campbell (In) W 7-0 W W W W W W W W W 1-0 1/21 Elon (In) W 7-0 W W W W W W W W W 2-0 1/27 #51 Northwestern (In) W 5-2 L L W W W W W L W 3-0 1/29 Gardener-Webb (In) W 7-0 W W W W W W W W W 4-0 1/29 North Carolina A&T (In) W 7-0 W W W W W W W W W 5-0 2/4 #26 Notre Dame (In) W 4-3 W L W W L L L W W 6-0 2/5 Yale (In) W 7-0 W W W W W W W W W 7-0 2/11 Georgetown (In) W 7-0 W W W W W W W W W 8-0 2/11 UNC Wilmington (In) W 7-0 W W W W W W W W W 9-0 2/13 at #12 South Carolina (In) W 4-2 W W L L W DNF W W DNF 10-0 2/18 #20 VCU (In) W 4-2 L W W DNF W L W W W 11-0 3/4 Charlotte (In) W 7-0 W W W W W W W W W 12-0 3/4 Navy (In) W 7-0 W W W W W W W W W 13-0 3/13 at #23 San Diego (Out) W 5-2 W W L W L W L W W 14-0 3/15 at San Diego State (Out) W 6-1 W L W W W W W W W 15-0 3/21 #31 Wake Forest (In) L 3-4 L L W L W W L L L 15-1 (0-1) 3/25 #10 Clemson (In) W 4-3 W W L W W L L L W 16-1 (1-1) 3/26 #27 Georgia Tech (Out) W 5-2 W L W L W W W W L 17-1 (2-1) 3/31 at #27 Florida State (Out) W 5-2 W W W L W L W L W 18-1 (3-1) 4/2 at #13 Miami (Out) L 1-4 L L L L DNF DNF L W W 18-2 (3-2) 4/5 #36 NC State (Out) W 5-2 W W W L W L W W L 19-2 (4-2) 4/7 at Maryland (In) W 7-0 W W W W W W W W W 20-2 (5-2) 4/9 at Boston College (Out) W 6-1 L W W W W W W W W 21-2 (6-2) 4/12 at #6 Duke(Out) L 3-4 W W L L W L L L W 21-3 (6-3) 4/14 #11 Virginia (Out) W 4-3 W L W L W W L L L 22-3 (7-3) 4/16 #57 Virginia Tech (Out) W 4-3 W W L L L W W L W 23-3 (8-3) 4/21 vs. #19 Florida State (Out) L 2-4 W DNF L L L W DNF L L 23-4 5/13 South Carolina State (Out) W 4-0 DNF W W DNF DNF W DNF W W 24-4 5/14 #22 Clemson (Out) W 4-1 L DNF W W W DNF W L W 25-4 5/20 #6 Ohio State (Out) L 0-4 L DNF L DNF DNF L L L DNF 25-5

2006-07 UNC Men’s Tennis Media Guide page 15 2006 Statistics Carolina Men’s Tennis Individual Singles Results ACC Dual Match Singles Matrix Player #1 #2 #3 #4 #5 #6 Tour. ACC Overall Player #1 #2 #3 #4 #5 #6 Benjamin Carlotti 1-0 6-0 5-6 7-1 5-2 6-5 24-9 Raian Luchici 8-2 Sandeep Daiya 1-0 4-2 5-2 Derek Porter 1-2 4-3 Taylor Fogleman 2-0 4-2 6-2 Brad Pomeroy 0-1 6-2 1-1 Sebastian Guejman 1-0 10-4 7-3 3-4 6-4 21-11 Benjamin Carlotti 2-0 1-4 3-1 Sebastian Guejman 2-4 4-0 Lenny Gullan 6-2 6-2 Will Plyler 2-0 2-4 Tristan Heinrich 6-3 6-3 Aly Mandour 4-0 Raian Luchici 20-6 5-4 8-2 25-10 Totals 8-3 7-4 7-4 3-8 9-1 6-4 Aly Mandour 1-0 8-1 5-4 4-0 14-5 Will Plyler 2-0 7-0 7-6 4-6 4-4 20-12 ACC Dual Match Doubles Matrix Brad Pomeroy 1-1 14-4 4-1 3-4 7-4 22-10 Team #1 #2 #3 Derek Porter 1-0 5-3 11-7 3-2 5-5 20-12 Luchici/Pomeroy 6-5 Jeff Schroeder 2-4 2-4 Guejman/Porter 1-2 6-2 David Stone 1-0 4-4 5-4 Gullan/Mandour 0-2 Karl Wishart 2-0 7-3 9-3 Gullan/Stone 4-4 1-0 Totals 22-7 20-7 22-8 17-10 23-4 20-7 Totals 6-5 5-6 7-4

Doubles Matrix Career Records Singles Doubles Team #1 #2 #3 Tourn. Breaks ACC Overall Benjamin Carlotti 48-16 6-5 Carlotti/Daiya 1-1 1-0 1-1 Sandeep Daiya 11-5 3-6 Carlotti/Stone 0-1 0-1 Taylor Fogleman 6-2 4-2 Daiya/Heinrich 1-1 1-1 Sebastian Guejman 35-17 33-18 Fogleman/Guejman 0-1 0-1 Lenny Gullan 10-5 27-16 Fogleman/Gullan 0-1 0-1 Tristan Heinrich 13-4 4-3 Fogleman/Heinrich 1-0 1-1 2-1 Raian Luchici 86-46 79-50 Fogleman/Luchici 2-0 0-0 2-0 Aly Mandour 14-6 10-14 Guejman/Luchici 1-0 0-0 1-0 Will Plyler 28-13 9-7 Brad Pomeroy 73-34 81-41 Guejman/Porter 3-2 18-2 2-2 3-2 7-4 23-7 Derek Porter 70-47 24-16 Gullan/Stone 4-0 15-8 1-0 6-2 1-1 5-4 26-10 Jeff Schroeder 2-4 4-3 Gullan/Mandour 0-2 0-0 0-1 0-2 0-2 David Stone 12-9 37-19 Luchici/Pomeroy 16-8 10-4 3-1 6-5 26-12 Karl Wishart 17-5 5-7 Mandour/Pomeroy 1-0 1-0 0-0 2-0 Mandour/Porter 0-2 0-2 2006 Rankings History Mandour/Schroeder 2-1 0-1 2-1 Team Rankings Mandour/Wishart 0-1 0-1 1/10/2006 #31 Plyler/Schroeder 2-2 2-2 1/31/2006 #30 Plyler/Wishart 3-2 3-2 2/7/2006 #27 Totals 20-8 20-10 23-5 2/14/2006 #30 2/21/2006 #17 2/28/2006 #14 Miscellaneous Singles Statistics 3/7/2006 #13 vs. Ranked 3/14/2006 #13 Player Tiebreakers 3-Set Matches All Doubles Opponents 3/21/2006 #12 Benjamin Carlotti 4-1 6-2 1-2 4-1 3/28/2006 #8 Sandeep Daiya 0-1 2-2 4/4/2006 #9 Taylor Fogleman 1-1 4-2 4/11/2006 #12 Sebastian Guejman 4-2 2-5 24-8 0-2 4/18/2006 #11 4/25/2006 #11 Lenny Gullan 1-0 2-0 26-13 5/1/2006 #11 Tristan Heinrich 2-1 1-2 3-2 5/26/2006 #12 Raian Luchici 6-2 7-1 29-12 16-9 Raian Luchici Aly Mandour 0-2 0-1 4-6 Preseason (9/6/05) #27 Will Plyler 2-1 2-2 5-4 1/10/2006 #5 Brad Pomeroy 5-1 4-4 28-12 2-3 2/21/2006 #9 Derek Porter 3-2 3-6 23-9 1-6 3/7/2006 #7 Jeff Schroeder 1-0 0-1 4-3 3/21/2006 #10 David Stone 1-1 0-2 26-11 0-1 4/4/2006 #18 4/18/2006 #7 Karl Wishart 2-1 3-3 4/25/2006 #7 5/1/2006 #10 Benjamin Carlotti Preseason (9/6/05) #66 1/10/2006 #93 3/7/2006 #114 Raian Luchici & Brad Pomeroy Preseason (9/6/05) #51 1/10/2006 #1 2/21/2006 #3 3/7/2006 #4 3/21/2006 #6 4/4/2006 #6 4/18/2006 #7 4/25/2006 #5 The doubles play of Lenny Gullan and David Stone was one of 5/1/2006 #5 the pleasant surprises of the 2006 campaign as the first-year Lenny Gullan & David Stone starters went 26-10 overall. 3/21/2006 #79 page 16 2006-07 Men’s Tennis Media Guide Carolina Men’s Tennis 2006 Season Review Chalk up another victory for the even-num- UNC blanked S.C. State 4-0 while Clemson bered year. made quick work of South Carolina 4-1 even 2006 proved no exception to the pattern the after the Gamecocks had won the doubles Tar Heel men’s tennis program has established point. The following day the Tar Heels survived under head coach Sam Paul since his coaching a tense doubles point to go up 1-0 by rallying debut in the sky blue in 1994. Odd-numbered from 6-3 down at No. 3 to win the match in a years have tended to produce good UNC tiebreaker 7-5. In singles, Derek Porter, teams, squads of NCAA quality in all years save Benjamin Carlotti and Sebastian Guejman won 1999. Even-numbered years feature the teams at No. 3, No. 4 and No. 5 to give the Tar Heels that really shine, the record-breaking, champi- the 4-1 win over the No. 24 Tigers and earn a onship-calibre units led by players who go on to spot in the Sweet 16 of the NCAA Tournament win national awards. for the first time since 1993. So while UNC entered the 2005-06 season The 2006 campaign was a season filled with with a No. 31 ranking from the Intercollegiate heroes and characterized by a balanced lineup Tennis Association, it almost came as no sur- that produced victory and victory and a tremen- prise that the Tar Heels would rally and end up dous ability to gut out close victories. UNC had as the nation’s 12th-ranked squad at season’s a 13-5 record in matches where the winning end. It was almost the mirror image of the sea- team had four or five points. son the North Carolina senior class had The Tar Heels did not lose a match to a non- encountered as sophomores in 2004 when a Tar conference team until the Sweet 16 match of the Heel team ranked No. 50 in the preseason NCAA Tournament. Carolina opened the sea- surged to a 23-5 record and a 17th place ITA son by winning its first 15 matches, all outside of ranking. the league, between January 21 and March 15. Led by a quartet of four outstanding seniors, The 15 wins at the beginning of the season including two players who had transferred to marked Carolina’s best start since the 1970 Carolina, the Tar Heels finished 25-5 overall and team finished its docket undefeated at 18-0. Benjamin Carlotti celebrates the clinching 8-3 in the Atlantic Coast Conference. The 25 Included in the winning streak were victories point in UNC’s 4-3 win over No. 11 Virginia on wins tied the school record for dual match victo- over Northwestern and Notre Dame, two of the April 14. Carlotti’s four-hour match was decid- ries in a season, equaling the 1992 team’s 25-5 best teams from the Midwest, as well as No. 12 ed in a third-set tiebreaker, 1-6, 6-3, 7-6 (4). mark. The record was all the more outstanding South Carolina and No. 20 VCU. given the strength of the ACC in 2006, with the Carolina also scored West Coast top five teams in the league separated by only wins over No. 23 San Diego and one match in the standings. Duke, Virginia and SanDiego State. Miami all finished 9-2 while North Carolina and After the trip to California over Florida State were 8-3. Even Clemson at 5-6 in spring break, the Heels returned the ACC was ranked 24th heading into the home to meet Wake Forest at the NCAA Tournament. Cone-Kenfield Tennis Center Nine league teams earned ACC invitations where they lost to the Demon and four teams hosted regionals. No. 5 Duke, Deacons 4-3, Wake’s first win in No. 7 Virginia, No. 9 Miami and No. 11 North Chapel Hill since 1988. Carolina Carolina all made the NCAA Round of 16 and did not dwell on the loss to Wake Virginia defeated Miami in that round to reach as the Tar Heels bounced back to the final eight. Florida State at No. 19, Clemson beat No. 10 Clemson 4-3 four days at No. 24m Wake Forest at No. 28, Georgia later and followed that up with 5-2 Tecg at No. 30 and NC State at No. 42 also wins over Georgia Tech and The Tar Heels celebrate their trip to the NCAA Sweet 16 made the NCAA field. Florida State. Carolina lost on the moments after clinching the regional title with a 4-1 win over Carolina led the ACC in total wins with 25 and road for the first time April 2 with a ACC rival Clemson. in winning percentage at .833. For the second 4-1 loss at No. 13 Miami. time in three years the Tar Heels were selected Three straight wins followed before a week of to host a regional tournament at Cone-Kenfield three 4-3 thrillers — a loss at No. 6 Duke April Tennis Center. But while the 2004 regional saw 12, a win over No. 11 Virginia April 14 and a win the Tar Heels drop a heartbreaking 4-3 decision over Virginia Tech April 16. In rallying to beat to Ohio State in the regional final, UNC fared the Cavaliers, the Tar Heels handed the 2004 better in 2006. and 2005 ACC champion Wahoos only their The Tar Heels hosted a field which included second ACC loss in their last 27 matches. South Carolina State, Clemson and South A week later, UNC would be upset 4-2 in the Carolina. On the opening day of the tournament quarterfinals of the ACC Tournament by Florida State, an NCAA Final 8 team from 2005. The Tar Heels had beaten the Seminoles 5-2 in the regular season in Tallahassee. Carolina recovered from its ACC Tournament loss to win the regional title, beating Clemson for the second time in the season and earning the right to go to Stanford for the final 16. Although the Heels were bounced from the tournament rather unceremo- niously by Ohio State 4-0, there was still much to celebrate on the season. Carolina’s senior class of Raian Luchici, Brad UNC’s balance was one of its great- Pomeroy, Derek Porter and Aly Mandour led David Benjamin of the Intercollegiate Tennis Association est strengths as six players posted 20 the Tar Heels to a school record 25 wins and a presents Raian Luchici with the Farnsworth Senior Player of or more singles win on the campaign. spot in the NCAA Sweet 16. the Year Award at last year’s NCAA Championships. 2006-07 UNC Men’s Tennis Media Guide page 17 Carolina Men’s Tennis Tar Heel TennisTradition Under Sam Paul All-ACC Selections Chris Mumford Tar Heel Tennis Highlights During The Sam Paul Coaching Era During The Sam Paul Coaching Era (includes players named to All-ACC team (includes tenure as assistant coach and head coach) since Sam Paul’s first full season as an UNC vs. ACC Opponents Since The 1990 Season assistant coach in 1990) Opponent Wins Losses Year All-ACC Selections Boston College 1 0 1990 Don Johnson Clemson 17 9 Bryan Jones Duke 7 17 1991 Chris Mumford Florida State 16 5 Roland Thornqvist Georgia Tech 18 6 1992 Joe Frierson Maryland 18 1 Bryan Jones Miami 1 1 Chris Mumford NC State 23 0 Roland Thornqvist Virginia 14 6 1993 David Caldwell Virginia Tech` 2 0 Cooper Pulliam Wake Forest 13 5 Roland Thornqvist Total 130 51 1994 David Caldwell All-Time ACC Championships (Since 1954) Brint Morrow Total 1995 David Caldwell Cooper Pulliam 1. North Carolina 25 Brint Morrow 2. Duke 12 1996 David Caldwell 3. Clemson 11 Brint Morrow 4. Maryland 2 Rob Tedesco 5. NC State 2 1997 Tripp Phillips 6. Virginia 2 Paul Harsanyi NCAA Tournament Appearance Rob Tedesco 1977 (Final 16), 1978 (Final 16), 1992 (Quarterfinals), 1993 (Final 16), 1998 Rob Tedesco 1994 (Regional Finalist), 1995, 1996 (Regional Finalist), 1997, 1998 Tripp Phillips Rob Tedesco (Regional Finalist), 2000 (Regional Finalist), 2001, 2002, 2003 2004 Adam Seri (Regional Finalist), 2005, 2006 (Final 16) 1999 Assaf Drori National Fila ITA Team Rankings 2000 Tripp Phillips (Highest Ranking Achieved During the Season) Marcio Petrone Year Ranking 2001 Marcio Petrone 1990 #24 2002 Marcio Petrone 1991 #17 Nick Monroe 1992 #8 Andy Metzler 1993 #17 2003 Nick Monroe 1994 #19 Derek Porter 1995 #18 Tyrstan Meniane Brint Morrow 1996 #16 2004 Nick Monroe 1997 #20 Jonathan Janda 1998 #27 Geoff Boyd 1999 Unranked Raian Luchici 2000 #16 2005 Raian Luchici 2001 #26 2006 Raian Luchici 2002 #23 2003 #13 2004 #13 2005 #17 Geoff Boyd 2006 #8

Tripp Phillips is flanked by UNC alumni Jon Balch and Brint Morrow along with head coach Sam Paul at the 2006 U.S. Open where Phillips reached the In 2002, the Tar Heel men’s and women’s tennis team swept the Atlantic semifinals in doubles. Coast Conference championships. page 18 2006-07 Men’s Tennis Media Guide Carolina Men’s Tennis Year-by-Year Records Year-by-Year Team Results, 1908-present 1967 19-1 1st Don Skakle Carolina has had 83 winning seasons, eight losing 1968 17-2 2nd Don Skakle 1969 19-1 2nd Don Skakle seasons and five with a .500 record. 1970 18-0 1st 20th (t) Don Skakle Overall Southern National Carolina 1971 22-2 2nd 10th (t) Don Skakle Year Record Conf. Finish Finish Head Coach 1908 2-0 None 1972 17-3 1st 5th (t) Don Skakle 1909 2-1 None 1973 24-1 1st 11th (t) Don Skakle 1910 6-0 None 1974 19-3 1st 7th Don Skakle 1911 No Team 1975 23-2 1st 25th (t) Don Skakle 1912 2-1 None 1976 21-2 1st 13th (t) Don Skakle 1913 0-0 None 1977 22-2 1st 14th Don Skakle 1914 0-1 None 1978 23-5 2nd (t) 18th Don Skakle 1915 No Team 1979 15-10 6th Don Skakle 1916 1-1 None 1980 23-5 4th Don Skakle 1917 2-0 None 1981 18-10 5th (t) Allen Morris 1918 1-1 None 1982 15-11 3rd (t) Allen Morris 1919 No Team 1983 22-6 2nd Allen Morris 1920 0-2 None 1984 22-11 4th Allen Morris 1921 0-2 None 1985 19-13 2nd (t) Allen Morris 1922 8-0-2 None 1986 14-16 3rd (t) Allen Morris 1923 7-0 None 1987 21-5 2nd (t) Allen Morris 1924 3-1-1 None 1988 14-14 8th Allen Morris 1925 6-3 None 1989 17-9 3rd Allen Morris 1926 6-0-1 None 1990 19-8 3rd 24th Allen Morris 1927 6-2-1 None 1991 20-7 1st 17th Allen Morris 1928 10-1 John Kenfield 1992 25-5 1st 8th Allen Morris 1929 7-1 John Kenfield 1993 18-9 2nd 17th Allen Morris 1930 10-0-1 Champion John Kenfield 1994 16-9 2nd (t) 19th (t) Sam Paul 1931 14-0 Champion John Kenfield 1995 14-11 3rd (t) 33rd (t) Sam Paul 1932 14-0 Champion John Kenfield 1996 21-5 1st 16th Sam Paul 1933 14-0 Champion John Kenfield 1997 13-8 3rd (t) 36th Sam Paul 1934 15-1 John Kenfield 1998 15-10 2nd 49th Sam Paul 1935 18-1 John Kenfield 1999 11-14 5th (t) 63rd Sam Paul 1936 16-0 Champion John Kenfield 2000 18-6 2nd 21st Sam Paul 1937 18-0 Champion John Kenfield 2001 11-9 2nd (t) 36th Sam Paul 1938 14-2-1 John Kenfield 2002 19-6 2nd 26th Sam Paul 1939 19-0 Champion John Kenfield 2003 11-12 6th (t) 50th Sam Paul 1940 16-0 Champion John Kenfield 2004 23-5 1st (t) 17th Sam Paul 1941 18-0 Champion John Kenfield 2005 16-11 6th (t) 34th Sam Paul 1942 14-1 Champion John Kenfield 2006 25-5 4th (t) 12th Sam Paul 1943 7-1 Champion John Kenfield Totals 1398-347-8, 25 Atlantic Coast Conference 1944 2-2 Champion John Kenfield Championships 1945 3-4 John Kenfield Carolina’s ACC Tournament Championship Years 1946 10-1 John Kenfield 1954, 1995, 1956, 1958. 1959, 1960, 1961, 1962, 1963, 1965, 1947 21-1 3rd (t) John Kenfield 1966, 1967, 1968 (Co-Champion), 1970, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1974, 1948 19-1 3rd (t) John Kenfield 1975, 1976, 1977, 1978 (Co-Champion), 1990, 1992, 2002 1949 23-1 8th John Kenfield Overall Records By Coach 1950 22-2 Champion John Kenfield Coach Years Record Pct. ACC 1951 20-5 Champion John Kenfield No Coach 1908-27 52-15-5 .757 1952 24-2 John Kenfield John Kenfield 1928-55 434-30-2 .933 10-0 1953 23-0 Champion John Kenfield Ham Strayhorn 1956 18-1-1 .925 6-0 Vladimir Cernik 1957-58 19-11 .633 11-1 Southern Conference Totals 15 Championships Don Skakle 1959-80 418-55 .884 132-14 *Carolina fielded no team in 1911, 1915 and 1919. Allen Morris 1981-93 244-124 .663 62-29 Year Record ACC Finish Natl. Finish Head Coach 1954 22-2 1st John Kenfield Sam Paul 1994-present 213-111 .639 75-34 1955 21-1 1st John Kenfield Totals 1,398-347-8 .800 296-78 1956 18-1-1 1st Ham Strayhorn 1957 8-9 2nd Vladimir Cernik Carolina’s Coaching Tree 1958 11-2 1st Vladimir Cernik John Don Allen Sam 1959 12-3 1st Don Skakle Kenfield Skakle Morris Paul 1960 14-2 1st Don Skakle 1961 15-6 1st Don Skakle 1962 22-1 1st Don Skakle 1963 18-1 1st 10th (t) Don Skakle 1964 16-2 2nd Don Skakle 1965 20-0 1st Don Skakle 1966 19-1 1st Don Skakle 2006-07 UNC Men’s Tennis Media Guide page 19 All-Time Match Scores Carolina Men’s Tennis 2006 (25-5, ACC 8-3) *Blue/Gray Classic in Montgomery, Ala. Feb.19 Brown W 6-1 March 30 Florida State W 5-2 Head Coach: Sam Paul #2004 Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament March 2 Davidson W 5-2 April 2 Wake Forest W 7-0 Jan. 21 Campbell W 7-0 in Raleigh, N.C. March 8 Charlotte W 6-1 April 6 Virginia W 6-1 Jan. 21 Elon W 7-0 @NCAA Regional at Chapel Hill, N.C. March 14 at South Carolina W 4-3 April 9 Duke L 3-4 Jan. 27 #51 Northwestern W 5-2 March 18 at Florida State W 6-1 April 12 Georgia Tech L 3-4 Jan. 29 Gardner-Webb W 7-0 2003 (11-12, ACC 3-5) March 23 Wake Forest W 7-0 April 13 Clemson L 3-4 Jan. 29 North Carolina A&T W 7-0 Head Coach: Sam Paul March 25 Notre Dame W 4-3 April 18 Florida State~ L 2-4 Feb. 4 #26 Notre Dame W 4-3 Jan. 31 Princeton W 4-3 March 28 NC State W 4-3 May 9 Clemson+ L 0-4 Feb. 5 Yale W 7-0 Feb. 1 Georgia W 5-2 April 1 Va. Commonwealth W 4-3 $ Blue-Gray Championship (Montgomery, Ala.) Feb. 11 Georgetown W 7-0 Feb. 7 UT-Chattanooga W 6-1 April 8 Georgia Tech W 6-1 ~ Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament Feb. 11 UNC Wilmington W 7-0 Feb. 9 Washington L 1-6 April 9 Clemson W 6-1 (Greenwood, S.C.) Feb. 13 at #12 South Carolina W 4-2 Feb. 19 at VCU L 0-5 April 12 at Duke L 3-4 + NCAA Regional Tournament (Austin, Texas) Feb. 18 #20 VCU W 4-2 Feb. 23 Auburn W 5-1 April 15 at Virginia L 1-6 Mar. 4 Charlotte W 7-0 Feb. 28 Gardner-Webb W 7-0 April 16 at Maryland W 6-0 1996 (21-5, ACC 8-0) Mar. 4 Navy W 7-0 March 9 Charlotte W 6-1 April 21 Wake Forest~ W 4-1 Head Coach: Sam Paul Mar. 13 at #23 San Diego W 5-2 March 14 *vs. UAB W 4-1 April 22 Clemson~ W 4-3 Jan.23 UNC Greensboro W 7-0 Mar. 15 at San Diego State W 6-1 March 14 *vs. Tulsa L 1-4 April 23 Duke~ L 1-4 Feb.6 Davidson W 7-0 Mar. 21 #31 Wake Forest L 3-4 March 15 *vs. William & Mary L 1-4 May 13 Ball State+ W 4-1 Feb.17 William & Mary W 7-0 Mar. 25 #10 Clemson W 4-3 March 20 South Carolina L 2-4 May 14 at Tennessee+ L 2-4 Feb.18 Va. Commonwealth W 5-2 Mar. 26 #27 Georgia Tech W 5-2 March 23 at Georgia Tech L 3-4 ~ Atlantic Conference Tournament, Norcross, Feb.22 Charlotte W 7-0 Mar. 31 at #27 Florida State W 5-2 March 29 at Clemson L 2-5 Ga. Feb.25 Furman W 7-0 April 2 at #13 Miami L 1-4 April 2 at Wake Forest L 2-4 + NCAA Regional Tournament, Knoxville, March 3 at Florida L 2-5 April 5 #36 NC State W 5-2 April 4 Florida State L 3-4 Tenn. March 5 at Florida State W 6-1 April 7 at Maryland W 7-0 April 6 Virginia W 4-3 March 14 Auburn$ W 5-1 April 9 at Boston College W 6-1 April 9 Duke L 3-4 1999 (11-14, ACC 3-5) March 15 Fresno State$ L 0-4 April 12 at #6 Duke L 3-4 April 11 at Maryland W 6-0 Head Coach: Sam Paul March 16 Notre Dame$ W 4-1 April 14 #11 Virginia W 4-3 April 13 at NC State W 7-0 Jan.30 Campbell W 6-1 March 23 Georgia Tech W 7-0 April 16 #57 Virginia Tech W 4-3 April 17 #vs. NC State W 4-0 Jan.30 Davidson W 6-1 March 24 Notre Dame W 4-2 April 21 `vs. #19 Florida State L 2-4 April 18 #vs. Clemson L 1-4 Feb.6 Charlotte W 5-2 March 27 NC State W 7-0 May 13 @S.C. State W 4-0 May 10 @vs. Oklahoma State L 0-4 Feb.6 UNC-Asheville W 7-0 March 30 at Maryland W 7-0 May 14 @#22 Clemson W 4-1 *at the Blue/Gray Classic in Montgomery, Ala. Feb.13 South Carolina L 1-6 March 31 at Virginia W 6-1 May 20 *#6 Ohio State L 0-4 #2003 Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament Feb.20 Furman W 6-1 April 3 Wake Forest W 6-1 `Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament, Cary, in Raleigh, N.C. Feb.23 at VCU L 0-6 April 6 Clemson W 7-0 N.C. @NCAA Regional at Minneapolis, Minn. Feb.27 William & Mary L 2-5 April 8 at South Carolina W 4-3 @NCAA Regional at Chapel Hill, N.C. Feb.27 UNC-Wilmington W 7-0 April 11 at Duke W 4-3 *NCAA Sweet 16 at Stanford, Calif. 2002 (19-6, ACC 7-1) March 9 at Texas L 0-7 April 14 at Georgia L 1-4 Head Coach: Sam Paul March 11 at Texas A&M L 0-4 April 19 NC State~ W 4-0 2005 (16-11, ACC 4-6) Jan.31 Davidson W 7-0 March 13 at Texas Christian L 3-4 April 20 Virginia~ W 4-0 Head Coach: Sam Paul Feb. 1 Texas L 3-4 March 18 Norte Dame$ L 0-4 April 21 Duke~ L 1-4 Jan. 22 Davidson W 7-0 Feb. 6 Furman W 5-2 March 19 Middle Tenn. State$ W 4-2 May 11 Southwestern La.+ W 4-2 Jan. 22 North Carolina A&T W 7-0 Feb. 9 West Virginia W 7-0 March 20 Auburn$ L 1-4 May 12 Texas L 2-4 Jan. 29 at #34 Notre Dame L 2-5 Feb. 11 Campbell W 7-0 March 26 Maryland W 7-0 $ Blue-Gray Championship (Mongomery, Ala) Jan. 30 at #40 Northwestern L 2-5 Feb. 23 at South Carolina L 3-4 March 28 Florida State W 4-3 ~ Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament Feb. 5 Campbell W 6-1 March 2 Charlotte W 6-1 April 2 Virginia L 2-5 (Greenwood, S.C.) Feb. 5 James Madison W 7-0 March 3 Rice W 5-2 April 3 Miami W 5-2 + NCAA Regional Tournament (Austin, Texas) Feb. 10 #41 South Carolina W 5-2 March 7 NC State W 7-0 April 7 at Wake Forest L 2-5 Feb. 13 #68 Purdue W 7-0 March 14 *vs. Harvard L 2-4 April 10 at Clemson L 2-5 1995 (14-11, ACC 6-2) Feb. 19 Charlotte W 7-0 March 15 *vs. William & Mary W 4-0 April 11 at Georgia Tech L 3-4 Head Coach: Sam Paul Feb. 27 Gardner-Webb W 7-0 March 16 *vs. Tulsa L 1-4 April 14 at NC State W 4-3 Feb.12 at Notre Dame L 3-4 Feb. 27 Elon W 6-1 March 24 Georgia Tech W 4-3 April 16 Duke L 1-6 March 4 William & Mary W 6-0 Mar. 5 Maryland W 7-0 March 25 Brown W 4-3 April 23 Clemson~ L 3-4 March 4 Charlotte W 6-0 Mar. 6 #30 Florida State L 3-4 March 29 Clemson W 5-2 $ Blue-Gray Championship March 8 Ball State * W 6-1 Mar. 13 at #36 Clemson L 3-4 March 31 Va. Commonwealth W 5-2 ~ Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament March 9 at Texas L 2-5 Mar. 18 at #60 Alabama L 1-6 April 3 Wake Forest W 4-3 March 14 Kentucky L 1-6 Mar. 23 at #37 NC State W 4-3 April 6 at Florida State W 6-1 1998 (15-10, ACC 6-2) March 16 Florida $ L 2-4 Mar. 27 at Miami W 4-3 April 10 at Duke L 3-4 Head Coach: Sam Paul March 17 Michigan $ W 5-2 Mar. 31 at #35 VCU W 4-3 April 13 at Maryland W 7-0 Jan. 20 UNC-Greensboro W 7-0 March 18 Mississippi $ L 1-4 Apr. 2 #41 Virginia Tech W 5-2 April 14 at Virginia W 6-1 Feb.3 Charlotte W 7-0 March 22 Maryland W 7-0 Apr. 8 at #28 Wake Forest L 1-6 April 19 #vs. Virginia W 4-0 Feb.9 UNC-Asheville W 7-0 March 24 Florida State L 3-4 Apr. 10 #3 Virginia L 2-5 April 20 #vs. Wake Forest W 4-2 Feb.10 Furman W 6-1 March 25 Florida L 3-4 Apr. 13 #5 Duke L 0-7 April 21 #vs. Georgia Tech W 4-3 Feb.18 Va. Commonwealth L 3-4 March 28 Furman W 5-0 Apr. 17 at #35 Georgia Tech L 3-4 May 11 @vs. Virginia Tech L 2-4 Feb.25 William & Mary W 5-2 March 29 at NC State W 7-0 Apr. 21 vs. #50 NC State# W 4-0 *at the Blue/Gray Classic in Montgomery, Ala. March 2 West Virginia W 7-0 March 31 at Va Commonwealth L 2-4 Apr. 22 vs. #8 Duke# W 4-2 #2002 Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament March 5 Vanderbilt W 6-1 April 2 Virginia W 6-1 Apr. 23 vs. #25 Florida State# L 2-4 in Raleigh, N.C. March 10 at Florida State W 5-2 April 5 at Wake Forest W 7-0 May 13 vs. #31 Boise State@ L 1-4 @NCAA Regional at Knoxville, Tenn. March 12 at Florida L 3-4 April 7 Miami (Fla.) W 5-2 #2005 Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament March 26 Georgia Tech W 6-1 April 9 South Carolina W 5-1 in Cary, N.C. 2001 (11-9, ACC 6-3) March 28 Texas Christian L 2-5 April 12 Duke W 4-3 @NCAA Regional at Boise, Idaho. Head Coach: Sam Paul April 4 Texas A&M L 3-4 April 15 at Clemson L 3-4 Feb. 1 Davidson W 7-0 April 5 Texas L 3-4 April 16 at Georgia Tech W 4-3 2004 (23-5, ACC 7-1) Feb. 5 Campbell W 6-1 April 9 NC State W 6-1 April 21 Georgia Tech ~ W 4-0 Head Coach: Sam Paul Feb. 13 Furman L 3-4 April 11 Clemson W 6-1 April 22 Duke ~ L 3-4 Jan. 31 Davidson W 7-0 Feb. 17 South Carolina W 6-1 April 13 Wake Forest W 6-1 May 5 Clemson + L 3-4 Jan. 31 James Madison W 7-0 Feb. 23 South Florida L 1-6 April 15 at Duke L 1-6 * at Austin, Texas Feb. 7 Campbell W 7-0 Feb. 24 Tulsa L 2-5 April 18 at Virginia L 1-6 $ Blue-Gray Championship (Montgomery, Ala.) Feb. 7 Villanova W 7-0 March 5 Charlotte W 6-1 April 19 at Maryland W 6-0 ~ Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament Feb. 10 Charlotte W 6-1 March 10 at Texas L 2-5 April 24 Clemson~ W 4-1 (Greenwood, S.C.) Feb. 14 at #14 Georgia W 5-2 March 12 at Rice L 3-4 April 25 Virginia~ L 2-4 + NCAA Regional Tournament (Norfolk, Va.) Feb. 20 #57 Virginia Tech W 6-1 March 23 Maryland W 7-0 May 11 at Georgia L 1-6 Feb. 22 #12 VCU L 2-5 March 25 Virginia W 5-2 May 15 Georgia Tech+ W 4-0 1994 (16-9, ACC 6-2) Feb. 29 Georgetown W 6-1 March 28 at NC State W 4-3 May 16 South Carolina+ L 1-4 Head Coach: Sam Paul Feb. 29 No. Carolina A&T W 7-0 March 31 Florida State W 6-1 ~ Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament Feb.12 Furman W 5-2 Mar. 2 at #19 So. Carolina W 6-1 April 4 at Wake Forest L 2-5 (Atlanta, Ga.) Feb.20 Davidson W 7-0 Mar. 6 #38 Clemson W 4-3 April 7 at VCU W 4-3 + NCAA Regional Tournament (Richmond, Va.) Feb.21 Elon W 6-1 Mar. 11 #55 Louisville* W 4-1 April 9 Duke L 2-5 March 6 at Florida State W 4-3 Mar. 12 #34 Alabama* W 4-0 April 13 at Georgia Tech W 5-2 1997 (13-9, ACC 5-3) March 9 Purdue * W 7-0 Mar. 13 #14 Harvard* L 3-4 April 15 at Clemson W 5-2 Head Coach: Sam Paul March 12 at Florida L 3-4 Mar. 20 UNC Greensboro W 6-0 April 20 *vs. Clemson L 3-4 Jan.21 UNC-Greensboro W 7-0 March 17 TCU $ L 2-5 Mar. 20 UNC Wilmington W 6-0 May 12 #vs. Arkansas L 0-4 Jan.29 Davidson W 7-0 March 18 New Mexico $ L 2-5 Mar. 23 Maryland W 7-0 *2001 Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament Feb.11 Furman W 7-0 March 19 San Diego $ W 5-2 Mar. 24 NC State W 5-2 in Orlando, Fla. Feb.23 Notre Dame W 4-3 March 25 Georgia Tech L 3-4 Mar. 28 #35 Georgia Tech W 4-3 #NCAA Regional at Dallas, Texas Feb.26 UNC-Asheville W 7-0 March 27 Notre Dame L 3-4 Mar. 31 #42 Wake Forest W 6-1 March 1 William & Mary W 7-0 March 29 Va. Commonwealth W 5-2 Apr. 3 at #12 Virginia W 5-2 2000 (18-6, ACC 6-2) March 13 Auburn$ L 0-4 March 30 NC State W 6-1 Apr. 6 at #6 Duke L 2-5 Head Coach: Sam Paul March 14 Alabama$ L 3-4 April 2 at Georgia W 4-2 Apr. 10 at #33 Florida State W 5-2 Feb. 5 Campbell W 7-0 March 19 Charlotte W 6-0 April 5 at South Carolina L 1-5 Apr. 16 NC State# W 4-0 Feb. 8 Furman W 7-0 March 22 Maryland W 7-0 April 8 Wake Forest W 5-2 Apr. 17 #45 Clemson# L 2-4 Feb.12 Texas L 1-6 March 23 VCU L 1-6 April 9 Clemson W 4-3 Mar. 15 South Carolina St.@ W 4-0 Feb.13 Purdue W 4-3 March 26 NC State W 6-1 April 14 at Duke L 1-6 Mar. 16 #17 Ohio State@ L 3-4 Feb.18 Texas A&M L 2-5 March 28 Florida L 2-5 April 16 at Virginia W 5-2 page 20 2006-07 Men’s Tennis Media Guide Carolina Men’s Tennis All-Time Match Scores April 17 at Maryland W 7-0 March 8 Wisconsin # W 5-1 1988 (14-14, ACC 0-7) $ Blue-Gray Championship (Montgomery, Ala.) April 22 Virginia ~ L 2-5 March 9 Pepperdine # L 3-5 Head Coach: Allen Morris ~ Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament May 13 Clemson + W 4-2 March 10 Ball State # W 5-1 Feb.21 Florida State * W 5-4 (Raleigh, N.C.) May 14 at South Carolina + W 4-2 March 14 Oklahoma State @ W 6-3 Feb.24 Guilford W 8-1 May 15 Georgia Tech + L 3-4 March 21 Arizona $ L 3-5 Feb.27 UNC-Asheville W 8-1 1985 (19-13, ACC 5-2) * at Gainesville, Fla. March 22 Auburn $ W 5-1 Feb.29 Penn State W 8-1 Head Coach: Allen Morris $ Blue-Gray Championship (Mongomery, Ala.) March 23 Fresno State $ W 5-1 March 2 McNeese State # L 4-5 Feb.17 at Tennessee L 2-6 ~ Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament March 27 at NC State W 8-1 March 3 Nebraska # L 1-8 Feb.21 at Guilford W 9-0 (Charlotte, N.C.) March 30 at Clemson W 6-3 March 4 Maryland # L 1-7 Feb.23 UNC-Asheville W 9-0 + NCAA Regional Tournament (Columbia, March 31 at Georgia Tech W 6-3 March 5 Tulsa # W 7-2 Feb.24 Atlantic Christian W 9-0 S.C.) April 2 West Virginia W 6-3 March 13 Richmond W 8-1 Feb.25 Charlotte W 6-0 April 6 South Carolina L 3-5 March 14 Oklahoma L 2-7 March 1 at SMU L 0-9 1993 (18-9, ACC 7-1) April 8 Furman W 6-0 March 16 NC State L 3-6 March 2 at TCU W 5-4 Head Coach: Allen Morris April 11 Duke W 7-2 March 18 at Furman W 5-4 March 3 at Texas A&M L 2-7 Jan.30 at Notre Dame W 4-3 April 14 Maryland W 8-0 March 19 at Presbyterian W 7-2 March 4 at Texas L 3-6 Feb.13 Florida L 3-4 April 19 Maryland ~ W 6-0 March 20 at South Carolina W 5-4 March 6 Houston # W 7-2 Feb.18 at Kentucky * W 4-3 April 20 at Georgia Tech ~ W 5-2 March 22 Old Dominion W 8-1 March 7 Miami (Fla) # L 3-5 Feb.19 Louisiana State * W 4-3 April 21 Duke ~ L 2-5 March 25 Virginia Tech W 5-4 March 7 Southeastern La.# L 4-5 Feb.20 Tennessee * L 1-6 ^ at Notre Dame March 26 Georgia Tech L 1-5 March 8 TCU # W 5-4 March 6 Nebraska # W 5-2 * USTA/ITCA Men's National Indoor Team March 27 Davidson W 6-3 March 9 Ark.-Little Rock# W 5-4 March 7 Minnesota # L 0-6 Championship April 2 Clemson L 0-9 March 15 at Davidson W 8-1 March 7 Mississippi # L 3-4 # H.E.B. Championship (Corpus Christi, April 5 West Virginia L 4-5 March 17 at Georgia L 1-8 March 13 Furman W 6-1 Texas) April 9 at Maryland L 4-5 March 20 at NC State W 9-0 March 18 Drake $ W 5-2 @ Texas Spring Break Invitational (Austin, April 10 at Virginia L 4-5 March 22 Furman W 5-0 March 19 Alabama $ L 2-5 Texas) April 14 Wake Forest L 2-7 March 23 Virginia W 6-3 March 20 Miami (Fla) $ W 6-1 $ Blue-Gray Championship (Montgomery, Ala.) April 15 at Duke L 1-7 March 24 South Carolina L 3-6 March 26 Florida State W 6-1 ~ Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament April 17 William & Mary W 5-4 March 26 Virginia Tech W 9-0 March 28 Virginia W 4-3 (Atlanta, Ga.) April 21 Georgia Tech ~ L 2-7 March 28 California-Irvine $ W 7-2 April 3 Maryland W 7-0 April 22 Maryland ~ W 8-1 March 29 Ark.-Little Rock$ W 5-1 April 4 South Carolina W 4-3 1990 (19-8, ACC 5-2) April 23 Virginia ~ L 2-5 March 30 Georgia $ L 1-5 April 7 Duke L 1-6 Head Coach: Allen Morris * at Gainesville, Fla. March 31 Miami (Fla) $ L 0-6 April 10 at VCU L 3-4 Feb.17 Purdue % W 8-1 # H.E.B. Championship (Corpus Christi, April 2 Old Dominion W 8-1 April 14 at Wake Forest W 6-1 Feb.18 at West Virginia % L 4-5 Texas) April 3 at Wake Forest W 5-4 April 15 at NC State W 6-1 Feb.23 at Elon W 6-3 ~ Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament April 6 Harvard L 2-7 April 17 at Georgia Tech W 7-0 Feb.24 East Carolina W 9-0 (Winston-Salem, N.C.) April 7 Maryland L 2-7 April 18 at Clemson W 7-0 March 1 Nebraska # W 5-1 April 9 Duke W 8-1 April 23 NC State ~ W 7-0 March 2 Mississippi # W 8-1 1987 (21-5, ACC 5-1) April 12 at Clemson L 2-7 April 24 Florida State ~ W 5-0 March 3 Arkansas # W 5-2 Head Coach: Allen Morris April 14 at Georgia Tech W 6-3 April 25 Duke ~ L 1-5 March 4 South Carolina # L 4-5 Feb. 26 at Guilford W 9-0 Apr. 18-20 ACC Tournament 3rd Place May 14 Harvard + W 5-3 March 11 at San Diego L 2-7 March 2 Penn State W 8-1 96 points May 15 Southern California + L 2-5 March 12 New Mexico @ W 5-4 March 4 Utah * W 5-4 # H.E.B. Championship (Corpus Christi, * USTA/ITA National Indoor Intercollegiate March 13 Yale @ W 9-0 March 5 TCU * L 3-6 Texas) Team Championship (Louisville, Ky.) March 14 at California-Irvine L 4-5 March 6 Wichita State * W 5-4 $ Blue-Gray Championship (Montgomery, Ala.) # H.E.B Championship (Corpus Christi, Texas) March 16 at Pepperdine L 2-7 March 7 Auburn * L 3-6 $ Blue-Gray Championship (Montgomery, Ala.) March 24 at Furman W 6-3 March 8 Trinity * W 5-3 1984 (22-11, ACC 4-3) ~ Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament March 25 at South Carolina L 2-5 March 9 at Texas L 1-8 Head Coach: Allen Morris (Charlotte, N.C.) March 28 NC State W 8-1 March 10 at Texas A&M W 5-2 Feb .24 Charlotte W 8-1 + NCAA Division I Championship (Athens, March 31 at Maryland L 4-5 March 12 at Trinity W 5-4 Feb. 25 Tennessee L 2-7 Ga.) April 1 at Virginia W 9-0 March 13 at Rice L 4-5 Feb. 26 UNC-Asheville W 6-0 April 5 Davidson W 8-1 March 14 at Houston W 7-2 Feb. 29 Michigan # W 6-3 1992 (25-5, ACC 8-0) April 7 Georgia Tech W 8-1 March 17 Florida State W 7-2 March 1 Auburn # L 3-5 Head Coach: Allen Morris April 8 Clemson W 5-4 March 18 at NC State W 7-2 March 2 Arizona # L 1-5 Feb.20 Kansas * W 5-1 April 10 Wake Forest W 8-1 March 23 Old Dominion W 7-2 March 2 Minnesota # L 1-5 Feb.20 Southern California * L 2-4 April 12 at Duke L 4-5 March 26 Virginia Tech W 8-1 March 3 Ark.-Little Rock# L 4-5 Feb.21 Pepperdine * L 1-5 April 14 Virginia Tech W 6-0 March 27 Furman W 7-2 March 5 at Trinity W 5-4 Feb.22 Miami (Fla) * W 4-2 April 20 Georgia Tech ~ W 5-4 March 28 Presbyterian W 7-2 March 6 at Texas L 1-8 March 2 at Florida State W 6-3 April 21 at Duke ~ W 5-3 March 29 Virginia W 7-2 March 7 at Texas A&M L 4-5 March 6 Wisconsin # W 6-0 April 22 Clemson ~ W 5-3 March 31 at Davidson W 8-1 March 8 at Baylor W 9-0 March 7 Texas # W 5-3 % Mountaineer Classic (Charleston, W.Va.) April 2 Duke W 6-3 March 9 at TCU W 5-4 March 8 Mississippi # W 5-3 # H.E.B. Championship (Corpus Christi, April 5 Clemson L 2-7 March 10 at North Texas State W 9-0 March 9 Notre Dame # L 3-5 Texas) April 7 UNC-Asheville W 8-1 March 14 Guilford W 9-0 March 14 Notre Dame W 5-4 @ at Park Newport, Calif. April 8 at Wake Forest W 8-1 March 15 George Washington W 9-0 March 15 Furman W 6-3 ~ Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament April 9 West Virginia W 9-0 March 16 Atlantic Christian W 8-1 March 17 West Virginia W 8-0 (Durham, N.C.) April 12 Maryland W 6-1 March 18 West Virginia W 9-0 March 21 at South Carolina W 5-2 *H.E.B Championship (Corpus Christi, Texas) March 19 Virginia Tech W 8-1 March 25 NC State W 5-2 1989 (17-9, ACC 5-2) March 20 Georgia Tech W 8-1 March 27 Indiana $ W 4-2 Head Coach: Allen Morris 1986 (14-16, ACC 4-3) March 25 at Georgia L 2-7 March 28 Harvard $ W 6-0 Feb.11 at Davidson W 8-1 Head Coach: Allen Morris March 28 Appalachin State W 8-1 March 29 Texas Christian $ W 4-2 Feb.17 at West Virginia % L 3-5 March 1 Temple W 8-1 March 30 Wake Forest W 9-0 March 30 Mississippi State $ L 3-5 Feb.18 Murray State % W 5-3 March 2 William & Mary W 9-0 March 31 Clemson L 4-5 April 5 Georgia Tech W 7-2 Feb.19 Notre Dame % L 4-5 March 5 Southwestern La.# L 3-6 April 4 NC State W 9-0 April 6 Clemson W 7-2 Feb.26 Elon W 8-1 March 6 Ark.-Little Rock # L 3-6 April 6 at Furman W 8-1 April 7 at Duke W 5-3 Feb.27 Penn State W 8-1 March 7 Baylor # W 5-4 April 7 at South Carolina W 7-2 April 9 Wake Forest W 6-0 March 7 William & Mary W 9-0 March 8 Illinois # W 5-2 April 8 Davidson W 9-0 April 11 at Virginia W 5-1 March 11 at San Diego L 4-5 March 10 at Trinity L 2-7 April 11 at Duke W 5-4 April 12 at Maryland W 5-0 March 12 at UC-Irvine L 4-5 March 11 at Texas L 1-8 April 13 at William & Mary W 9-0 April 17 NC State ~ W 5-1 March 13 at Pepperdine L 3-6 March 12 at Texas L 3-6 April 14 at Old Dominion W 7-2 April 18 Clemson ~ W 5-1 March 15 Iowa State # W 8-1 March 13 at TCU L 1-8 April 15 at Virginia L 4-5 April 19 Duke ~ W 5-4 March 16 New Mexico # W 7-2 March 15 at SMU L 0-9 April 18 at Maryland L 4-5 May 15 Texas Christian + W 5-3 March 17 Utah # W 6-3 March 17 Guilford W 8-1 Apr. 20-22 ACC Tournament ~ 3rd Place May 17 UCLA + L 2-5 March 24 Maryland W 8-1 March 18 Davidson W 7-2 94 points * USTA/ITCA National Indoor Team March 26 Virginia W 6-3 March 21 Wake Forest W 5-4 # H.E.B. Championship (Corpus Christi, Championships (Louisville, Ky.) April 1 Furman W 9-0 March 23 at Virginia W 5-4 Texas) # H.E.B. Championship (Corpus Christi, April 2 Richmond W 9-0 March 25 Georgia Tech L 2-7 ~ at College Park, Md. Texas) April 3 at NC State W 8-1 March 27 Southern California $ L 0-5 $ Blue-Gray Championship (Montgomery, Ala.) April 8 at Georgia Tech L 1-5 March 28 Texas A&M$ L 4-5 1983 (22-6, ACC 6-1) ~ Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament April 9 at Clemson L 3-6 March 29 Long Beach State$ L 1-5 Head Coach: Allen Morris (Charlotte, N.C.) April 11 at Wake Forest W 8-1 March 30 California-Irvine $ W 5-3 Feb.20 UNC Asheville W 8-1 + NCAA Tournament (Athens, Ga.) April 13 Duke W 7-2 April 1 at Duke W 6-3 Feb.21 Charlotte W 9-0 April 16 South Carolina L 4-5 April 3 NC State W 8-1 March 1 Penn State W 9-0 1991 (20-7, ACC 6-0) April 21 Wake Forest ~ W 6-3 April 4 Maryland L 4-5 March 2 at Guilford W 9-0 Head Coach: Allen Morris April 22 Virginia ~ W 6-3 April 6 Clemson L 0-9 March 4 Rice % W 6-3 Feb.10 at Davidson W 9-0 April 23 at Clemson ~ L 1-8 April 9 West Virginia W 6-3 March 5 South Florida % W 5-4 Feb.16 Southern Illinois ^ W 8-1 % Mountaineer Classic (Charleston, W.Va.) April 11 at South Carolina L 4-5 March 6 at Florida State L 3-6 Feb.17 at Notre Dame L 3-6 # at Irvine, Calif. April 12 at Furman W 6-3 March 8 Vanderbilt * W 5-4 Feb.20 Utah * W 6-0 ~ Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament April 17 Duke ~ L 3-6 March 10 at Miami L 2-5 Feb.21 UCLA * L 1-5 (Clemson, S.C.) April 18 Virginia ~ L 4-5 March 12 at Georgia L 4-5 Feb.22 Arizona State * L 1-5 April 19 NC State ~ W 7-2 March 13 at Davidson W 9-0 Feb.23 Harvard * W 5-4 # H.E.B. Championship (Corpus Christi, March 18 at Tennessee L 0-9 March 4 Elon W 9-0 Texas) March 19 at UT-Chattanooga W 6-3 2006-07 UNC Men’s Tennis Media Guide page 21 All-Time Match Scores Carolina Men’s Tennis March 21 Old Dominion W 6-3 March 15 Davidson W 8-1 April 4 Virginia W 9-0 Apr. 26-28 ACC Tournament~ 1st Place March 22 Auburn L 4-5 March 16 Presbyterian W 7-2 April 5 Hampton W 6-3 63 points March 24 Virginia Tech W 6-0 March 18 at William & Mary W 8-1 April 6 Maryland W 9-0 NCAA Tournament 7th place March 25 Wisconsin W 7-2 March 20 at South Carolina L 4-5 April 8 Wisconsin W 9-0 finish March 26 South Carolina W 9-0 March 22 at NC State L 4-5 April 11 South Carolina W 7-2 ~ at Clemson, S.C. March 27 Princeton W 6-3 March 27 Iowa W 5-4 April 12 Duke W 6-3 March 29 West Virginia W 9-0 March 28 MIT W 9-0 Apr. 15-17 ACC Tournament~ 1st Place 1973 (24-1, ACC 6-0) March 31 at Clemson L 4-5 March 29 Minnesota W 5-4 61 points Head Coach: Don Skakle April 1 at Georgia Tech W 9-0 March 31 at Maryland L 5-4 * at Greenville, S.C. March 9 West Virginia W 9-0 April 3 Virginia W 8-1 April 1 Washington & Lee W 9-0 ~ Raleigh, N.C. March 10 Eastern Kentucky W 9-0 April 4 at Wake Forest W 7-2 April 3 Hampton W Forfeit March 12 Furman W 9-0 April 7 NC State W 8-1 April 5 Clemson L 0-9 1976 (21-2, ACC 6-0) March 14 Swarthmore W 9-0 April 9 Maryland W 7-2 April 7 at Virginia W 6-3 Head Coach: Don Skakle March 15 Florida State W 7-2 April 10 William & Mary W 8-1 April 10 Wake Forest L 4-5 Feb.29 Penn State W 9-0 March 17 at Georgia W 5-4 April 12 Duke W 5-4 April 12 East Carolina * W 6-0 March 2 at South Carolina W 9-0 March 19 Davidson W 9-0 Apr. 15-17 ACC Tournament ~ 3rd Place April 16 at Duke W 5-4 March 5 West Virginia W 9-0 March 22 Florida W 6-3 104 points April 17 Georgia Tech W 8-1 March 10 at Florida State W 5-4 March 24 Michigan State W 9-0 % at Tallahasse, Fla.; * at Gainesville, Fla. Apr. 18-20 ACC Tournament~ 4th Place March 11 at Florida L 3-6 March 26 MIT W 9-0 ~ at Atlanta, Ga 45 points March 13 Swarthmore W 9-0 March 27 Princeton W 9-0 + at Valdosta, Ga. March 17 Dartmouth W 9-0 March 28 Bucknell W 9-0 1982 (15-11, ACC 4-3) ~ Winston-Salem, N.C. March 18 at Davidson W 9-0 March 29 Penn State W 8-1 Head Coach: Allen Morris March 19 at Tennessee W 6-3 March 31 Miami L 3-6 March 3 Charlotte W 9-0 1979 (15-10, ACC 1-5) March 23 at NC State W 8-1 April 3 Duke W 9-0 March 4 Penn State W 8-1 Head Coach: Don Skakle March 24 Amherst W 9-0 April 5 Williams W 9-0 March 5 Florida L 2-7 Feb.26 Penn State W 8-1 March 25 Pennsylvania W 8-1 April 6 Harvard W 8-1 March 6 Tennessee L 2-7 March 2 West Virginia W 9--0 March 27 Presbyterian W 9-0 April 10 Wake Forest W 7-2 March 13 Miami (Fla) L 2-7 March 7 Florida State L 3-6 March 29 at Virginia W 9-0 April 11 Clemson W 8-1 March 14 Davidson W 8-1 March 8 Florida W 5-4 March 30 at VPI W 9-0 April 12 NC State W 9-0 March 16 Texas A&M L 4-5 March 10 at Furman W 6-3 April 1 Clemson W 9-0 April 13 South Carolina W 9-0 March 17 Rhode Island W 8-1 March 11 Swarthmore W 8-1 April 3 at Princeton L 4-5 April 14 Maryland W 9-0 March 18 Guilford W 9-0 March 13 South Carolina L 3-6 April 5 at Maryland W 9-0 April 16 Virginia W 8-1 March 20 at Alabama L 4-5 March 15 Richmond W 7-2 April 7 Wake Forest W 9-0 April 23 Presbyterian W 9-0 March 22 at Georgia L 2-7 March 17 at Davidson W 7-2 April 9 Furman W 8-1 April 25 Tennessee W 8-1 March 23 Virginia Tech W 5-4 March 18 Hampton L 3-6 April 10 Miami W 8-1 Apr. 19-21 ACC Tournament 1st Place March 24 Georgia Tech W 9-0 March 19 Virginia Tech W 7-2 April 11 Hampton W 6-0 64 points March 27 Yale % L 3-6 March 20 East Carolina W 9-0 April 13 Duke W 7-2 NCAA Tournament 11th place March 28 Princeton W 5-4 March 21 Washington & Lee W 9-0 Apr. 16-18 ACC Tournament~ 1st Place finish March 30 Furman W 5-4 March 24 Miami (Fla.) L 3-6 66 points ~ at Winston-Salem, N.C. March 31 South Carolina L 1-8 March 26 MIT W 9-0 NCAA Tournament 13th place April 2 Clemson L 2-7 March 28 NC State L 3-6 finish 1972 (17-3, ACC 6-0) April 4 at Maryland W 5-4 March 30 Iowa W 7-2 ~ at College Park, Md. Head Coach: Don Skakle April 5 at William & Mary W 9-0 April 1 Princeton L 1-8 March 11 Eastern Kentucky W 9-0 April 6 at Virginia L 3-6 April 5 at Clemson L 3-6 1975 (23-2, ACC) March 13 at Houston W 5-4 April 7 West Virginia W 6-3 April 6 at Guilford W 7-2 Head Coach: Don Skakle March 14 at Rice W 5-2 April 9 Wake Forest W 5-4 April 8 at Wake Forest L 3-6 March 4 West Virginia W 9-0 March 16 at Trinity (Texas) L 0-9 April 10 at NC State W 6-3 April 9 Maryland W 7-2 March 7 at Presbyterian W 9-0 March 17 at SMU L 3-5 April 12 Old Dominion W 6-3 April 10 Duke L 5-4 March 8 at Furman W 9-0 March 24 Swarthmore W 9-0 April 14 Duke L 0-9 April 12 Virginia L 5-4 March 9 Penn State* W 8-1 March 27 MIT W 9-0 Apr. 16-18 ACC Tournament ~ 3rd Place Apr. 13-15 ACC Tournament~ 5th Place March 11 at Florida State W 7-2 March 28 Michigan State W 9-0 48 points 43 points March 12 at Florida L 4-5 March 30 Williams W 9-0 % at Princeton, N.J. ~ Charlottesville, Va. March 15 Appalachian State W 9-0 April 1 Penn State W 9-0 ~ at Durham, N.C. March 20 Tennessee W 5-4 April 4 at Duke W 9-0 1978 (23-4, ACC 4-2) March 22 at Miami L 2-7 April 7 Harvard W 9-0 1981 (18-10, ACC 3-4) Head Coach: Don Skakle March 26 High Point W 7-2 April 8 Clemson W 7-2 Head Coach: Allen Morris Feb.27 Penn State W 9-0 March 27 Northwestern W 9-0 April 10 at Princeton W 7-1 Feb. 23 East Carolina W 9-0 March 4 West Virginia W 9-0 March 28 Virginia W 9-0 April 12 Wake Forest W 7-2 Feb. 28 at Tennessee L 1-8 March 6 at Texas W 6-3 March 31 Princeton W 7-2 April 13 NC State W 8-1 March 3 at Guilford W 7-2 March 8 at Texas Christian L 4-5 April 1 Johnson C. Smith W 9-0 April 15 at Maryland W 5-1 March 5 Penn State W 5-4 March 9 at Rice W 8-1 April 2 Edinboro State W 9-0 April 17 at Virginia W 7-2 March 6 William & Mary W 7-2 March 10 at Houston L 1-6 April 3 Davidson W 6-0 Apr. 20-22 ACC Tournament~ 1st Place March 7 South Carolina L 3-6 March 13 High Point W 9-0 April 4 Harvard W 8-1 65 points March 8 at Georgia Southern W 5-3 March 15 at South Carolina W 6-3 April 5 Richmond W 9-0 April 26 at Presbyterian W 9-0 March 9 at Florida State W 7-2 March 16 Guilford W 6-0 April 8 at Clemson W 9-0 April 29 Miami (Fla.) L 3-6 March 10 at Miami (Fla.) L 0-9 March 18 Davidson W 8-1 April 9 Hampton W 7-2 June 12-18 NCAA Tournament+ 5th Place March 12 at South Florida W 5-4 March 20 Virginia Tech W 8-1 April 11 at Wake Forest W 8-1 ~ at Charlottesville, Va. March 13 at Florida L 3-6 March 21 Iowa W 9-0 April 12 Duke W 9-0 + Athens, Ga. March 15 at Georgia L 2-7 March 22 Washington & Lee W 9-0 April 13 South Carolina W 8-1 March 17 at Davidson W 7-2 March 23 Michigan State W 9-0 April 14 NC State W 9-0 1971 (22-2, ACC 5-1) March 19 Charlottee W 9-0 March 24 Furman W 9-0 April 17 Maryland W 6-3 Head Coach: Don Skakle March 21 at Old Dominion W 5-4 March 26 at Virginia W 6-3 Apr. 18-20 ACC Tournament 1st Place March 5 Michigan W 9-0 March 22 Virginia Tech W 8-1 March 27 MIT W 9-0 66 points March 6 Michigan W 8-1 March 23 MIT W 9-0 March 29 Western Michigan W 8-1 NCAA Tournament 25th place March 18 Cincinnati W 9-0 March 24 Iowa W 7-2 March 30 NC State L 5-4 finish March 22 Toledo W 9-0 March 27 Furman W 7-2 April 1 at Princeton W 5-4 * at Clinton, S.C. March 23 Tennessee Tech W 9-0 March 28 Yale L 4-5 April 3 Clemson W 6-3 ~ at Durham, N.C. March 27 Miami (Ohio) W Forfeit March 30 Brown W 5-4 April 5 Wake Forest W 6-3 March 29 Penn State W 9-0 March 31 Virginia L 6-3 April 6 Hampton W 5-4 1974 (19-3, ACC 6-0) March 30 Williams W 9-0 April 4 at Clemson L 1-8 April 8 Miami W 6-2 Head Coach: Don Skakle March 31 Williams W 9-0 April 5 at Georgia Tech W 8-1 April 9 Presbyterian W 7-2 March 5 West Virginia W 9-0 April 3 Princeton W 8-1 April 8 at Wake Forest L 3-6 April 11 Duke L 4-5 March 9 Swarthmore W 9-0 April 6 Indiana W 9-0 April 10 NC State L 3-6 April 12 Maryland W 5-4 March 10 Eastern Kentucky W 9-0 April 9 at South Carolina W 9-0 April 12 Maryland W 9-0 Apr. 14-16 ACC Tournament~ 1st Place March 12 Penn State W 9-0 April 10 at Clemson L 4-5 April 14 Duke W 6-3 58 points March 14 at Furman W 9-0 April 12 NC State W 9-0 Apr. 17-19 ACC Tournament~ 4th Place ~ at Chapel Hill, N.C. March 16 at Florida L 3-6 April 17 at Miami (Fla.) L 3-6 47 points March 17 Kentucky W 9-0 April 19 at Wake Forest W 8-1 ~ at Clemson, S.C. 1977 (18-1, ACC 6-0) March 20 at Davidson W 9-0 April 21 Virginia W 9-0 Head Coach: Don Skakle March 25 MIT W 9-0 April 24 Maryland W 9-0 1980 (23-5, ACC 4-3) Feb.28 Penn State W 9-0 March 27 Toledo W 9-0 April 30 Southern Illinois* W 6-3 Head Coach: Don Skakle March 4 West Virginia W 9-0 March 28 Amherst W 9-0 April 30 Tennessee* W 8-1 Feb.25 Penn State W 8-1 March 10 at Furman W 9-0 April 4 at Princeton L 4-5 May 1 Georgia* W 7-2 Feb.27 Virginia W 6-3 March 11 UT-Chattanooga* W 6-6 April 5 at Maryland W 6-2 May 3 George Washington W 9-0 Feb.29 West Virginia W 10-0 March 15 at Guilford W 9-0 April 7 Clemson W 9-0 May 5 Presbyterian W 5-4 March 3 at Georgia W 5-4 March 16 Notre Dame W 9-0 April 8 Miami L 1-5 May 7 Duke W 9-0 March 4 Furman + W 6-3 March 17 Dartmouth W 9-0 April 10 at NC State W 8-1 ACC Tournament 1st Place March 5 at Florida L 4-5 March 18 Miami (Ohio) W 8-1 April 11 at Duke W 7-2 71 points March 6 at Florida State W 7-2 March 23 Iowa W 9-0 April 15 at Virginia W 6-3 June 14-19 NCAA Tournament+ 10th place March 10 High Point W 9-0 March 24 High Point W 9-0 April 17 Wake Forest W 8-1 * Tennessee Tennis Classic (Knoxville, Tenn.) March 11 Alabama W 5-4 March 28 MIT W 9-0 April 19 at South Carolina W 7-2 + at Notre Dame, Ind. March 12 Guilford W 8-1 March 31 NC State W 7-2 April 20 at Presbyterian W 9-0 March 14 Richmond W 8-1 April 2 at Miami (Fla.) L 4-5 April 22 at Tennessee W 5-4 page 22 2006-07 Men’s Tennis Media Guide Carolina Men’s Tennis All-Time Match Scores 1970 (18-0, ACC 7-0) 1965 (20-0, ACC 7-0) 1961 (15-6, ACC 7-0) April 30 at Harvard L 1-8 Head Coach: Don Skakle Head Coach: Don Skakle Head Coach: Don Skakle May 2 at Penn W 5-4 March 18 Cincinnati W 9-0 March 22 Kalamazoo W 7-2 March 24 Dartmouth L 2-7 May 3 at Princeton L 0-9 March 21 Dartmouth W 9-0 March 26 Michigan State W 8-1 March 25 Dartmouth L 1-8 May 4 at Virginia W 5-4 March 23 Clemson W 6-3 March 27 Michigan State W 6-3 March 27 Michigan State W 5-3 May 7 NC State W 9-0 March 27 at Florida State W 5-3 March 29 MIT W 6-0 March 28 Michigan State L 4-5 May 9-11 ACC Tournament 2nd Place March 30 MIT W 9-0 March 30 Ohio W 9-0 March 29 Williams L 4-5 March 31 Williams W 9-0 March 31 Williams W 6-3 March 30 Williams W 6-3 1956 (18-1-1, ACC 5-0) April 2 Harvard W 8-0 April 1 Williams W 6-3 April 1 The Citadel W 6-3 Head Coach: Ham Strayhorn April 3 Wayne State W 9-0 April 2 Randolph-Macon W 9-0 April 3 Harvard L 4-5 March 21 Springfield W 9-0 April 6 at Tennessee W 5-3 April 9 Virginia W 6-3 April 4 Harvard L 3-6 March 28 Williams W 8-1 April 9 Eastern Kentucky W 9-0 April 12 State College, Pa. W 9-0 April 5 M.I.T. W 9-0 April 3 Harvard W 7-6 April 10 at NC State W 9-0 April 16 Maryland W 7-2 April 6 Kalamazoo W 9-0 April 5 Notre Dame W 9-0 April 13 at Presbyterian W 7-2 April 19 Toledo W 8-1 April 11 Davidson W 8-1 April 7 Kalamazoo T 4-4 April 15 South Carolina W 8-1 April 21 Duke W 9-0 April 14 Virginia W 5-4 April 14 Davidson W 9-0 April 18 at Princeton W 6-2 April 22 Western Michigan W 6-3 April 15 Maryland W 5-1 April 17 South Carolina W 9-0 April 20 at Virginia W 9-0 April 23 Toledo W 9-0 April 17 at Davidson W 8-1 April 20 Virginia W 9-0 April 25 at Maryland W 6-3 April 24 at Wake Forest W 9-0 April 19 Cincinnati W 9-0 April 21 Clemson W 9-0 April 30 at Duke W 8-1 April 27 NC State W 8-1 April 24 Duke W 5-4 April 22 Harvard W 9-6 May 1 Wake Forest W 9-0 April 30 at South Carolina W 9-0 April 28 at South Carolina W 9-0 April 24 Duke W 6-3 May 7-9 ACC Tournament 1st Place May 1 at Clemson W 7-2 April 29 at Clemson W 9-0 April 26 Rollins W 6-3 May 4 Presbyterian W 7-2 May 2 NC State W 7-2 April 27 Miami L 0-9 1969 (19-1, ACC 6-1) May 6-8 ACC Tournament* 1st Place May 3 at Wake Forest W 9-0 April 30 at Williams W 8-1 Head Coach: Don Skakle 68 points May 11-13 ACC Tournament* 1st Place May 1 at Harvard W 8-1 March 19 Tennessee W 5-4 *in Raleigh, N.C. 24 points May 2 at Brown W 9-0 March 22 Kent State W 9-0 *in Durham, N.C. May 3 at Pennsylvania W 8-0 March 26 Williams W 8-1 1964 (16-2, ACC 6-1) May 4 at Springfield W 9-0 March 27 Williams W 6-3 Head Coach: Don Skakle 1960 (14-2, ACC 6-0) May 5 at Maryland W 8-1 March 28 Michigan State W 9-0 March 24 Indiana L 4-5 Head Coach: Don Skakle May 8 at NC State W 9-0 March 29 Toledo W 6-3 March 25 George Washington W 8-1 March 23 Williams L 4-5 May 10 ACC Tournament* 1st Place March 31 MIT W 9-0 March 26 Michigan State W 8-1 March 24 Williams W 5-4 *in Raleigh, N.C. April 1 East Carolina W 9-0 March 27 Michigan State W 7-1 April 1 South Carolina W 9-0 April 2 The Citadel W 9-0 March 28 Toledo W 9-0 April 4 Harvard L 4-5 1955 (21-1, ACC 5-0) April 3 Harvard W 6-3 March 30 MIT W 9-0 April 6 Davidson W 9-0 Head Coach: John Kenfield April 4 Princeton W 5-4 April 1 Williams W 9-0 April 14 Indiana W 8-1 March 29 Michigan State W 9-0 April 5 Presbyterian W 7-1 April 2 Williams W 8-1 April 18 Georgetown* W 6-3 March 31 Dartmouth W 9-0 April 8 Virginia Tech W 9-0 April 3 Ohio W 9-0 April 19 Wisconsin* W 7-2 April 1 Dartmouth W 9-0 April 12 at Clemson L April 10 at Geo. Washington W 5-4 April 20 Geo. Washington* W 8-1 April 2 Swarthmore W 8-1 April 21 Maryland W 9-0 April 14 Wake Forest W 9-0 April 22 at Davidson W 9-0 April 4 Harvard W 14-1 April 26 at Wake Forest W 5-4 April 18 at Maryland L 4-5 April 26 at NC State W 8-1 April 5 Harvard W 14-1 April 29 NC State W 9-0 April 20 at Virginia W 9-0 April 29 at Duke W 5-4 April 6 Williams W 15-0 May 1 Duke W 9-0 April 22 at Duke W 9-0 April 30 Clemson W 9-0 April 11 Notre Dame W 9-0 May 3 at South Carolina W 8-1 April 27 at NC State W 9-0 May 2 Wake Forest W 7-2 April 14 Kalamazoo W 8-0 May 7 Virginia W 7-2 May 1 South Carolina W 9-0 May 6 at Virginia W 7-2 April 15 Maryland W 9-0 May 8-10 ACC Tournament* 2nd Place May 2 Clemson W 8-1 May 7 at Maryland W 6-3 April 16 Presbyterian W 7-2 *in Raleigh, N.C. May 5 Davidson W 9-0 May 12-14 ACC Tournament~ 1st Place April 20 Duke W 5-4 May 7-9 ACC Tournament* 1st place *Cherry Blossom Tournament (Washington, April 23 at Wake Forest W 8-1 1968 (17-2, ACC 6-1) *in Durham, N.C. D.C.) April 26 Davidson W 8-1 Head Coach: Don Skakle ~in Raleigh, N.C. April 29 Miami L 3-6 March 16 Tennessee W 6-3 1963 (18-1, ACC 7-0) May 2 at Williams W 8-1 March 19 Bucknell W 9-0 Head Coach: Don Skakle 1959 (12-3, ACC 6-0) May 3 at Amherst W 9-0 March 20 Ohio W 9-0 March 23 Dartmouth W 9-0 Head Coach: Don Skakle May 4 at Harvard W 9-0 March 21 Ohio W 9-0 March 25 Dartmouth W 8-1 March 24 Illinois L 4-5 May 6 at Princeton W 5-4 March 23 Northwestern W 6-3 March 27 Michigan State W 9-0 March 25 Illinois W 6-3 May 7 at Virginia W 9-0 March 25 MIT W 9-0 April 3 Williams W 9-0 March 27 at Rollins L 4-5 May 9 William and Mary W 9-0 March 30 at Presbyterian W 9-0 April 4 Williams W 9-0 March 28 at Rollins L 3-6 May 10 NC State W 9-0 April 2 Williams W 9-0 April 5 Harvard W 7-2 April 3 Maryland W 8-1 May 12-14 ACC Tournament* 1st Place April 4 Williams W 9-0 April 11 at Rollins W 8-1 April 4 Virginia W 8-1 *in Chapel Hill, N.C. April 8 Clemson W 5-4 April 12 Michigan* W 5-4 April 6 at South Carolina W 8-1 April 13 at Jacksonville W 9-0 April 13 at Miami L 0-9 April 10 Davidson W 9-0 1954 (22-2. ACC 5-0) April 16 at Florida L 1-8 April 17 Indiana W 7-2 April 13 Clemson W 7-2 Head Coach: John Kenfield April 19 Toledo W 7-2 April 18 at Davidson W 9-0 April 16 NC State W 9-0 March 31 Michigan State W 6-0 April 20 at Virginia W 8-1 April 19 Virginia W 8-1 April 23 at Davidson W 7-2 April 1 Dartmouth W 13-2 April 22 at Maryland W 6-3 April 20 Maryland W 8-1 April 29 Duke W 6-3 April 2 Darmouth W 13-2 April 26 Wake Forest W 9-0 April 24 Duke W 9-0 May 1 at Georgetown W 5-4 April 5 Harvard W 12-5 April 29 at Duke W 6-0 April 26 at South Carolina W 9-0 May 2 at Geo. Washington W 7-2 April 6 Harvard W 11-3 April 30 at NC State W 9-0 April 27 at Clemson W 8-1 May 4 at Wake Forest W 9-0 April 7 Williams W 15-0 May 2 South Carolina L 4-5 May 1 NC State W 9-0 May 6-8 ACC Tournament* 1st Place April 9 Princeton W 6-3 May 9-11 ACC Tournament* 1st Place May 2 at Wake Forest W 9-0 *in Raleigh, N.C. April 10 Princeton L 4-5 *at College Park, Md. May 6 Presbyterian W 8-1 April 12 at Davidson W 9-0 May 9-11 ACC Tournament~ 1st Place 1958 (11-2, ACC 5-0) April 13 Presbyterian L 4-5 1967 (19-1, ACC 7-0) *in Coral Gables, Fla.; ~in Chapel Hill, N.C. Head Coach: Vladimir Cernik April 20 at NC State W 9-0 Head Coach: Don Skakle March 26 Williams W 13-0 April 21 Kalamazoo W 9-0 No match-by-match results available 1962 (22-1, ACC 7-0) April 1 Harvard W 8-6 April 22 Notre Dame W 7-2 Head Coach: Don Skakle April 2 Illinois W 5-4 April 23 Notre Dame W 7-2 1966 (19-1, ACC 7-1) March 20 Dartmouth W 9-0 April 9 Wake Forest W 9-0 April 24 at Wake Forest W 9-0 Head Coach: Don Skakle March 21 Dartmouth W 6-3 April 15 at NC State W 9-0 April 26 at Duke W 6-3 March 21 Kalamazoo W 6-3 March 26 Michigan State W 7-2 April 18 at South Carolina W 9-0 April 28 Rollins W 6-3 March 22 Williams W 9-0 March 27 MIT W 8-1 April 19 at Clemson W 8-1 May 1 at William and Mary W 9-0 March 23 Dartmouth W 8-1 April 2 Harvard W 6-3 April 24 at Duke W 8-0 May 4 at Amherst W 9-0 March 24 Williams W 5-4 April 3 Harvard W 8-1 April 26 at Maryland W 9-0 May 5 at Harvard W 9-0 March 26 Clemson W 6-3 April 4 Williams W 8-1 April 30 at Harvard L 1-8 May 6 at Wesleyan W 10-0 March 28 MIT W 9-0 April 5 Williams W 9-0 May 1 at Yale L 3-6 May 7 at Princeton W 5-4 March 31 Ohio W 9-0 April 11 at Furman W 9-0 May 7 Rollins W 5-3 May 8 at Maryland W 9-0 April 5 at Florida State L 4-5 April 13 at Maryland W 7-2 ACC Tournament 1st Place May 12 Virginia W 7-2 April 6 Florida W 7-1 April 14 at Virginia W 7-2 May 13-15 ACC Tournament* 1st Place April 7 Florida State W 5-4 April 16 Davidson W 9-0 1957 (8-9, ACC 4-1) *in Chapel Hill, N.C. April 11 Illinois W 8-1 April 17 at Duke W 6-3 Head Coach: Vladimir Cernik April 12 Toledo W 9-0 April 18 at The Citadel W 7-2 March 21 George Washington W 6-3 1953 (23-0) April 14 Toledo W 9-0 April 20 at Rollins W 8-1 March 26 Kalamazoo L 0-9 Head Coach: John Kenfield April 16 at Virginia W 9-0 April 21 at Rollins W 9-0 March 27 Williams L 3-5 March 26 Springfield W 9-0 April 18 at Maryland W 9-0 April 23 at Georgia W 7-2 March 28 Williams W 5-4 March 30 Harvard W 12-1 April 21 Presbyterian W 9-0 April 25 Toledo W 9-0 March 29 Maryland L 4-5 March 31 Harvard W 12-3 April 22 at Duke W 8-0 April 27 South Carolina W 7-0 April 1 Harvard L 1-14 April 1 Williams W 14-1 April 23 Wake Forest W 9-0 April 28 Clemson W 8-1 April 2 Harvard L 0-15 April 2 Williams W 14-1 April 26 at NC State W 9-0 May 1 at NC State W 8-1 April 12 Clemson W 8-1 April 3 Amherst W 9-0 April 30 South Carolina W 9-0 May 2 Wake Forest W 8-1 April 13 South Carolina W 8-1 April 4 Michigan State W 6-3 May 12-14 ACC Tournament* 1st place May 4 Miami L 3-6 April 18 Illinois L 0-9 April 6 Sewanee W 7-2 67 points May 10-12 ACC Tournament* 1st Place April 25 Duke W 5-4 April 7 Georgetown W 9-0 *at Clemson, S.C. *in Raleigh, N.C. April 29 at Williams L 4-5 April 8 Dartmouth W 15-0 2006-07 UNC Men’s Tennis Media Guide page 23 All-Time Match Scores Carolina Men’s Tennis April 9 Dartmouth W 15-0 May 1 at Dartmouth W 8-1 1946 (15-1) Apr. 21-27 North-South Tennis Tournament*: April 10 Kalamazoo W 9-0 May 2 at Williams W 9-0 Head Coach: John Kenfield won singles and doubles April 16 Wake Forest W 9-0 May 3 at Massachusetts W 9-0 March 30 Greensboro May 3 at Georgetown W 9-0 April 21 NC State W 9-0 May 4 at Harvard W 8-1 Tennis Club W 8-1 May 5 at Yale W 6-3 April 23 Duke W 7-2 May 6 at Wesleyan W 9-0 April 3 Kalamazoo W 7-2 May 6 at Princeton W 6-3 April 25 Davidson W 7-2 May 9 at NC State W 8-1 April 9 East Carolina W 7-0 May 7 at Navy W 8-1 April 27 William and Mary W 9-0 May 11-13 Southern Conference April 13 Greensboro ORD W 9-0 May 8 Southern Conf. Tournament 1st May 2 at Virginia W 9-0 Tennis Tournament* 1st Place April 19 Virginia W 8-1 Place; won singles and doubles May 4 at Williams W 7-2 *in Davidson, N.C. April 20 Navy W 5-4 * at Pinehurst, NC May 5 at Amherst W 9-0 April 22 William and Mary L 2-7 # in West Virginia May 6 at Harvard W 7-2 1949 (23-1) April 24 Wake Forest W 9-0 May 8 at Yale W 7-2 Head Coach: John Kenfield April 29 Greensboro 1940 (16-0) May 9 at Princeton W 7-2 March 26 Michigan State W 9-0 Tennis Club W 8-1 Head Coach: John Kenfield May 14-16 Southern Conf. Tourn. 1st Place March 29 Michigan State W 8-1 April 30 Duke W 9-0 Oct. 9-12 #Middle Atlantic Intercollegiate March 31 Haverford W 8-1 May 1 NC State W 9-0 Tennis Tournament: won singles and runner-up 1952 (24-2) April 1 Haverford W 8-0 May 2 Cherry Point W 9-0 in doubles Head Coach: John Kenfield April 4 Harvard W 7-2 May 4 Virginia W 9-0 Nov. 29 Virginia W 9-0 March 19 Brown W 9-0 April 6 Yale W 8-1 May 7 Greensboro ORD W 9-0 March 26 Haverford W 9-0 March 21 Springfield W 8-1 April 7 Williams W 12-2 May 11 Duke W 7-2 March 29 Colby W 5-0 March 26 Michigan State W 5-4 April 8 Williams W 8-7 May 15 NC State W 9-0 April 2 Dartmouth W 9-0 March 27 Michigan State W 5-4 April 15 Cincinnati W 8-1 April 3 Williams W 9-0 March 31 Harvard W 8-5 April 18 Wake Forest W 10-0 1945 (3-6-1) April 4 Williams W 9-0 April 1 Harvard W 8-1 April 19 Presbyterian W 8-1 Head Coach: John Kenfield April 5 Cornell W 8-1 April 2 Williams W 13-2 April 20 Duke W 7-2 April 24 William and Mary L 2-7 April 6 Cornell W 6-3 April 3 Williams W 10-5 April 22 Kalamazoo W 6-3 April 24 at Navy L 0-9 April 16 Duke W 6-3 April 4 Dartmouth W 11-4 April 25 NC State W 12-2 May 5 at Georgia Tech L 3-6 Apr. 9-14 North-South Amateur April 5 Dartmouth W 9-6 April 30 at Princeton W 7-2 May 11 Camp Lejeune T 3-3 Tournament*: won singles and doubles April 7 at NC State W 8-1 May 2 at Williams W 7-2 May 12 Duke W 7-2 April 19 NC State W 9-0 April 8 Dayton W 9-0 May 3 at Harvard W 9-0 May 19 at Virginia W 6-3 April 22 Washington and Lee W 9-0 April 12 Lehigh W 8-1 May 4 at Brown W 9-0 May 23 N.C. Pre-Flight L 4-5 May 2 Presbyterian W 5-4 April 15 Presbyterian W 8-1 May 5 at Wesleyan W 9-0 May 27 Cherry Point May 4 at Virginia W 8-1 April 18 Kalamazoo W 6-3 May 6 at Yale W 5-4 Marines L 4-5 May 6 at Yale W 5-4 April 19 Duke L 4-5 May 7 at West Side Tennis W 5-4 May 28 The Citadel W 7-0 May 7 at Princeton W 7-2 April 22 Rollins L 0-9 May 11 Davidson W 5-4 June 6 at Duke L 4-5 May 8 at Navy W 8-1 May 1 Washington & Lee W 9-0 May 16 William and Mary L 1-8 May 9-11 Southern Conf. Tournament May 3 at William & Mary W 6-3 May 23 at Virginia W 6-3 1944 (3-2, ACC 2-1) 1st Place; won singles, winner May 5 at Amherst W 5-4 Head Coach: John Kenfield and runners-up in doubles May 6 at Williams W 5-4 1948 (21-1) April 15 Georgia Tech L 0-9 # in West Virginia May 7 at Massachusetts W 8-1 Head Coach: John Kenfield April 22 at Navy L 2-7 * at Pinehurst, NC May 8 at Harvard W 5-4 March 29 Michigan State W 9-0 April 29 Duke W 8-1 May 9 at Brown W 9-0 March 30 Harvard W 9-0 May 13 at Cherry Point W 5-4 1939 (19-0) May 10 at Springfield W 9-0 April 2 Cornell W 5-4 May 20 Virginia W 9-0 Head Coach: John Kenfield May 13 Virginia W 5-4 April 3 Yale W 8-1 Southern Conf. Tournament 1st Place March 25 Wake Forest W 9-0 May 17 *Southern Conference April 5 Yale W 6-3 March 27 Richmond W 9-0 UNC won singles and doubles April 6 Yale W 9-0 1943 (7-1, ACC 3-0) March 28 Williams W 8-1 * played at Davidson, NC April 7 Williams W 14-1 Head Coach: John Kenfield March 29 Williams W 8-1 April 8 Williams W 15-0 April 3 Davidson W 4-3 April 3 Yale W 9-1 1951 (20-5) April 9 Michigan W 9-2 April 10 at Navy L 4-5 April 4 Yale W 9-1 Head Coach: John Kenfield April 13 at NC State W 9-0 April 13 at St. John’s W 7-2 April 4 Yale W 10-0 March 22 Springfield W 9-0 April 14 Virginia W 5-1 April 14 at Army W 6-3 April 8 Cornell W 8-1 March 26 Rutgers W 9-0 April 16 Cincinnati W 9-0 April 22 Duke W 8-1 Apr. 10-14 North-South Tournament: won March 29 Michigan State W 5-4 April 21 at Duke W 7-2 April 28 Davidson W 7-0 singles and doubles March 30 Michigan State L 4-5 April 22 Wake Forest W 9-0 April 29 Georgia Tech W 6-3 April 17 Washington and Lee W 4-0 March 31 Kalamazoo W 5-4 April 24 at Davidson W 5-4 May 1 at Duke W 7-2 April 19 at Duke W 9-0 April 2 Harvard W 5-0 April 29 Presbyterian W 7-2 Southern Conf. Tournament 1st Place April 22 Virginia W 6-3 April 3 Harvard L 7-8 May 1 at William & Mary L 4-5 April 24 Davidson W 8-1 April 4 Williams W 8-5 May 3 at Army W 5-4 1942 (14-1, ACC 5-0) April 25 at Duke W 6-0 April 5 Williams W 9-6 May 5 at Navy W 8-1 Head Coach: John Kenfield April 26 Maryland W 7-2 April 6 Williams W 5-4 May 6 at Penn W 6-3 April 2 Cornell W 8-1 Apr. 27-30 NC State Tournament:won singles April 8 Yale W 6-3 May 8 at CC of Virginia W 9-0 April 3 Cornell W 8-1 and doubles April 9 Dartmouth W 5-4 May 13-17 Southern Conference April 4 Kalamazoo W 8-1 May 1 Presbyterian W 9-0 April 10 Dartmouth W 5-4 Tournament* April 6 St. Johns W 7-2 May 3 NC State W 9-0 April 13 East Carolina W 8-1 UNC won singles April 8 NC State W 9-0 May 8 at Harvard W 5-4 April 16 NC State W 8-0 *in Chapel Hill April 9 Elon W 6-1 May 9 at Yale W 6-3 April 18 Duke W 5-4 April 11 at Virginia W 9-0 May 10 at Princeton W 5-4 April 21 Davidson W 9-0 1947 (21-1) April 13 Catawba W 8-1 May 11-16 Southern Conf. Tournament April 23 Presbyterian W 7-2 Head Coach: John Kenfield April 15 at NC State W 9-0 1st Place; won singles, runner-up April 28 at Virginia L 2-7 March 28 Yale W 8-4 April 27 at Duke W 8-1 in doubles April 30 at Springfield W 9-0 March 31 Yale W 10-3 April 28 Davidson W 7-0 May 1 at Williams L 2-7 April 2 Kalamazoo W 6-0 May 2 at Maryland W 9-0 1938 (14-2-1) May 2 at Massachusetts W 9-0 April 3 Haverford W 9-0 May 4 at Yale W 5-4 Head Coach: John Kenfield May 3 at Harvard W 6-3 April 4-6 *Sedgefield Tournament May 5 at Princeton L 5-4 Tulane W 2-0 May 4 at Yale L 2-7 Won both singles and doubles May 6 at Geo. Washington W 9-0 Presbyterian W 6-0 May 5 at Wesleyan W 7-2 April 7 Michigan W 10-2 Southern Conf. Tournament 1st Place Virginia W 8-1 May 10-12 Southern Conference April 8 Colgate W 7-2 SouthernConference Tournament: won singles Williams W 9-0 Tournament* 1st Place April 9 South Carolina W 9-0 and doubles Williams W 9-0 UNC won singles and doubles April 10 Cornell W 9-0 North-South Tournament: won singles and Yale W 8-3 * at Davidson, N.C. April11 Cornell W 7-2 doubles Yale T 5-5 April 15 Duke W 8-1 Cornell W 5-0 1950 (23-2) April19 at Navy W 6-3 1941 (18-0, ACC 4-0) Duke W 9-0 Head Coach: John Kenfield April 21 Wake Forest W 9-0 Head coach: John Kenfield Duke W 8-1 March 24 Ohio State W 10-0 April 24 NC State W 9-0 Oct 10-13 #Middle Atlantic Tennis Davidson W 9-0 March 27 Michigan State W 10-0 April 26 at Virginia W 8-1 Tournament: won singles and doubles Williams W 7-2 March 28 Michigan State W 9-1 April 28 at Army W 7-2 Nov 22 at Virginia W 8-1 Harvard W 5-4 March 30 Haverford W 12-0 April 29 at Williams W 8-1 Feb 5 Budge-Marble Match Yale L 2-7 March 31 Haverford W 12-0 April 30 at Amherst W 7-0 March 26 Yale W 7-0 Princeton L 4-5 April 4 Harvard W 13-0 May 1 at Wesleyan W 8-1 March 27 Yale W 8-1 N.Y.U. W 9-0 April 5 Harvard W 12-1 May 6 Davidson W 8-1 March 28 Yale W 6-1 Lehigh W 8-1 April 6 Williams W 14-1 May 7 William & Mary L 1-8 March 31 Haverford W 12-0 Participated in Pinehurst Tournament. April 7 Williams W 14-1 May 8-10 Southern Conference April 2 Williams W 14-1 Participated in State Tournament, winning sin- April 11 Presbyterian W 9-0 Tournament# April 3 Williams W 15-0 gles and doubles. April 13 at Wake Forest W 9-0 May 14 at NC State W 9-0 April 4 Cornell W 7-0 Participated in Southern Conference April 15 Kalamazoo W 8-1 May 17 Virginia W 6-2 April 5 Cornell W 7-2 Tournament, winning singles and doubles. April 17 Cincinnati W 9-0 *in Greensboro, N.C. April 7 Virginia W 9-0 April 20 Virginia W 7-2 # in Chapel Hill, N.C. April 9 NC State W 9-0 1937 (18-0) April 22 at Davidson L 4-5 April 10 at Duke W 6-0 Head Coach: John Kenfield April 24 Miami L 0-9 April 11 Wake Forest W 9-0 Tulane W 2-1 April 25 at Duke W 5-4 April 16 Michigan W 8-1 Virginia W 9-0 April 26 Wake Forest W 9-0 Apr. 24-26 UNC Interscholastic Tennis Yale W 9-1 April 29 William & Mary W 8-1 Tournament Yale W 10-0 page 24 2006-07 Men’s Tennis Media Guide Carolina Men’s Tennis All-Time Match Scores Yale W 10-0 Wake Forest W 9-0 1928 (11-1) Georgetown T 3-3 Lehigh W 10-0 NC State W 7-0 Head Coach: None Trinity W 5-1 NC State W 9-0 Appalachian W 6-0 Georgia Tech L 2-7 Davidson W 4-2 Harvard W 8-1 Navy W 7-2 Virginia W 9-0 Southern Intercollegiate Tournament: Williams W 8-1 Maryland W 9-0 Va Med College W 9-0 Singles--UNC, second place Duke W 9-0 N.Y.U. W 9-0 Delaware W 8-1 Doubles--UNC, winner Duke W 10-0 Army W 6-3 Gettysburg W 5-1 Davidson W 9-0 Yale W 7-2 Wake Forest W 4-0 1921 (0-2) Lehigh W 9-0 Harvard W 7-2 Wake Forest W 8-1 Head Coach: None Yale W 8-1 Brown W 9-0 Alabama W 5-1 State Championship Tournament: Army W 9-0 Southern Conf. Tournament 1st Place Southwestern W 6-0 Singles: UNC, semi-finalists N.Y.U. W 9-0 State Tournament: LSU W 2-1 Doubles: UNC, winner Princeton W 7-2 Singles--UNC first place Duke W 5-4 U.S. Naval Academy W 9-0 Doubles--UNC first place Duke W 9-0 1920 (0-2) Southern Conf. Tournament 1st Place Conference Tournament State Tournament: second place in singles, Head Coach: None Middle Atlantic Intercollegiate Championships: Singles--UNC first and second places winner in doubles VMI L 2-3 Singles: UNC first place Doubles--UNC first place Trinity L 2-3 Doubles: UNC first place 1927 (6-2-1) North South Tournament 1932 (14-0) Head Coach: None 1919 Singles: UNC semi-finals Head Coach: John Kenfield Duke L 5-4 No Team Fielded Doubles: UNC semi-finals South Carolina W 9-0 Furman T 3-3 NC State Intercollegiate Tournament Wake Forest W 9-0 Georgetown W 4-2 1918 (1-1) UNC won singles and doubles Davidson W 9-0 Johns Hopkins W 5-4 Head Coach: None Southern Conference Tournament Duke W 9-0 Maryland W 8-0 No records available. UNC won singles and doubles Navy W 8-1 Virginia W 5-4 Georgetown W 9-0 Duke L 5-4 1917 (3-0) 1936 (17-0) Pennsylvania W 9-0 Wake Forest W 9-0 Head Coach: None Head Coach: John Kenfield N.Y.U. W 8-1 Virginia W 9-0 Trinity W 2-1 Virginia W 9-0 Army W 9-0 Trinity W 2-1 Yale W 10-2 Yale W 8-1 1926 (7-1-1) Raleigh C.C. W 4-0 Yale W 11-1 Harvard W 6-3 Head Coach: None Amherst W 9-0 Brown W 9-0 Virginia W 5-2 1916 (2-1) Davidson W 9-0 Duke W 8-1 Wake Forest W 6-1 Head Coach: None NC State W 9-0 Wake Forest W 9-0 Duke W 5-2 Trinity L 1-2 South Carolina W 9-0 Southern Conf. Tournament 1st Place Duke W 6-1 Elon W 3-0 Wake Forest W 7-0 State Tournament: Wofford W 4-2 Raleigh C.C. W 2-1 NC State W 9-0 Singles--UNC first and second places South Carolina T 3-3 Duke W 9-0 Doubles--UNC first and second places Wake Forest W 5-2 1915 Newark W 9-0 Greensboro No Team Fielded Amherst W 8-1 1931 (14-0) County Club W 6-1 Yale W 7-2 Head Coach: John Kenfield Greensboro 1914 (0-1) Army W 9-0 Clemson W 6-0 Country Club L 5-4 Head Coach: None N.Y.U. W 9-0 Wake Forest W 9-0 Mid-South Tournament (Pinehurst): Singles: Trinity L 1-2 Princeton W 7-2 Duke W 9-0 UNC, runner-up; Doubles: UNC, winner Southern Intercollegiate Tournament Navy W 9-0 Wake Forest W 9-0 Singles—UNC semi-finals Southern Conf. Tournament 1st Place; Davidson W 9-0 1925 (6-3) Doubles—UNC second won singles and doubles Sewanee W 6-0 Head Coach: None Georgetown W 7-2 St. Johns W 7-0 1913 (0-0) 1935 (18-1) Princeton W 8-1 Naval Academy L 3-4 Head Coach: None Head Coach: John Kenfield N.Y.U. W 8-1 Swarthmore L 1-6 Trinity No result Wake Forest W 9-0 West Point W 9-0 Georgetown W 6-2 Southern Intercollegiate Tournament: Dartmouth W 7-1 Yale W 5-4 Wake Forest W 6-0 Doubles—UNC second place NC State W 9-0 Brown W 5-0 Duke W 5-0 Wake Forest W 9-0 Harvard W 7-2 Virginia L 1-6 1912 (2-1) Duke W 5-1 Duke W 9-0 Wake Forest W 6-0 Head Coach: None Appalachian State W 7-0 Southern Conf. Tournament 1st Place Duke W 7-0 Trinity W 3-0 NC State W 8-0 State Tournament: winner and runner-up in State Championship Tournament: South Carolina L 1-2 South Carolina W 8-1 singles, winner and runner-up in doubles Singles: UNC, second South Carolina W 3-0 Boston W 6-0 Southern Conference Tournament: Doubles: UNC, winner Davidson W 9-0 runner-up and semi-finalist in singles, winner Southern Intercollegiate Tournament: 1911 Duke W 8-1 in doubles Singles--UNC, third No Team Fielded Virginia W 8-1 Doubles--UNC, second Virginia W 3-1 1930 (10-0-1, ACC 4-0) Mid-South Tournament (Pinehurst): 1910 (6-0) Princeton L 2-7 Head Coach: John Kenfield Singles--UNC, winner Head Coach: None Yale W 8-1 Alabama W 5-2 Doubles--UNC, winner Wake Forest W 3-0 West Point W 6-3 Davidson W 7-2 Davidson W 3-0 Amherst W 8-1 Johns Hopkins W 9-0 1924 (3-1-1) Randolph-Macon W 3-0 Williams W 7-2 Duke W 7-2 Head Coach: None Richmond W 3-0 Dana College W 9-0 Wake Forest W 7-2 Virginia L 0-7 Virginia W 3-0 Southern Conference Tournament winner (sin- Wake Forest W 9-0 Virginia Tech W 5-2 Washington & Lee W 2-1 gles and doubles) Tennessee W 5-0 Davidson T 3-3 Sewanee W 4-2 NC State W 4-2 1909 (2-1) 1934 (17-1) Georgia Tech W 7-0 Kentucky W 5-1 Head Coach: None Head Coach: John Kenfield Alabama W 4-3 Cincinnati No record Guilford W 3-0 Boston W 6-0 Tulane T 3-3 State Championship Tournament: Wake Forest L 1-2 Wake Forest W 9-0 Southern Conf. Tournament 1st Place Singles: UNC, runner-up Davidson W 3-0 Lynchburg W 9-0 State Tournament: winner in singles and dou- Doubles: UNC, winner and runner-up NC State W 9-0 bles 1908 (2-0) Davidson W 6-3 Southern Tournament: semifinalist in doubles 1923 (7-0) Head Coach: None Appalachian State W 7-0 Head Coach: None Wake Forest W NC State W 9-0 1929 (11-1) Virginia W 4-1 Guilford W Davidson W 6-3 Head Coach: John Kenfield Wake Forest W 5-0 Note: UNC won both matches but no record Roanoke W 9-0 Chapel Hill T.C. W 7-2 Richmond W 6-0 can be found of the scores. This is the first Maryville W 5-1 Raleigh T.C. W 8-1 Davidson W 5-1 year that monograms were awarded to players Navy W 6-3 Biltmore C.C. W 6-3 Wake Forest W 6-0 on the tennis team. John-Hopkins W 5-4 Greenville C.C. W 6-3 George Washington W 5-2 Princeton L 0-9 Hampden-Sydney W 8-1 Catholic W 4-2 Army W 6-3 Georgetown W 5-4 Southern Intercollegiate Tournament: Yale W 5-4 Catholic W 9-0 Doubles--UNC, winner and runner-up Amherst W 7-2 Maryland W 8-1 Hartford Golf Club W 7-2 Princeton L 6-3 Duke W 5-4 Georgia Tech W 5-1 1922 (8-0-2) State Tournament: UNC first place in singles Duke W 6-3 Head Coach: None Duke W 7-2 Georgia Tech W 5-1 1933 (14-0) State Tournament: winner in singles, winner Oglethorpe W 5-0 Head Coach: John Kenfield and runner-up in doubles Wofford W 7-0 Wake Forest W 9-0 Davidson T 3-3 Duke W 8-1 Loyola W 7-0 Davidson W 6-0 Lehigh W 6-1 Duke W 7-2 Lafayette W 6-1 2006-07 UNC Men’s Tennis Media Guide page 25 Records Against Opponents Carolina Men’s Tennis Carolina has the advantage Fresno State 1-1 Oklahoma 0-1 Tennessee 9-6 in 134 of the 165 all-time Furman 29-1-1 Oklahoma State 1-1 Tennessee-Chattanooga3-0 series.The Tar Heels trail in Gardner-Webb 3-0 Old Dominion 7-0 Tennessee Tech 1-0 23 series and are tied in Georgetown 11-0-1 Pennsylvania 5-0 Texas 2-11 eight. George Washington 9-0 Penn State 17-0 Texas A&M 1-8 Georgia 7-8 Pepperdine 0-4 Texas Christian 5-6 Carolina holds the winning Georgia Southern 1-0 Presbyterian 26-1 Toledo 11-0 edge over 10 of 11 ACC Georgia Tech 27-13 Princeton 22-10 Trinity (Texas) 3-2 opponents. Gettysburg 1-0 Purdue 4-0 Tulane 2-0-1 Guilford 14-0 Randolph-Macon 2-0 Tulsa 1-3 The Tar Heels lead the ACC Hampden-Sydney 1-0 Rhode Island 1-0 UCLA 0-3 with a conference dual- Hampton 5-1 Rhodes 1-0 Utah 3-0 match winning percentage Harvard 44-11 Rice 4-2 Vanderbilt 2-0 of 79.1%. Haverford 7-0 Richmond 9-0 Villanova 1-0 High Point 5-0 Roanoke 1-0 Virginia 72-16 Carolina’s 25 ACC Houston 3-1 Rollins 6-3 Virginia Commonwealth 7-7 Championships are the Illinois 4-2 Rutgers 1-0 VMI 0-2 most of any ACC team. Indiana 4-1 Rutgers-Newark 1-0 Virginia Tech 17-1 The school with the sec- Iowa 5-0 San Diego 2-2 Wake Forest 79-11 ond most championships Iowa State 1-0 San Diego State 1-0 Washington 0-1 has won 12. Jacksonville 1-0 South Carolina 39-17-1 Washington & Lee 7-1 James Madison 2-0 South Carolina State 2-0 Wayne State 1-0 Alabama 6-4 Johns Hopkins 3-0 South Florida 2-1 Wesleyan 2-0 UAB 1-0 Johnson C. Smith 1-0 The University West Virginia 17-3 Amherst 11-0 Kalamazoo 13-1-1 of the South (Sewanee) 4-0 Western Michigan 2-0 Appalachian State 6-0 Kansas 1-0 Southern California 0-4 Wichita State 1-0 Arizona 0-2 Kent 1-0 Southern Illinois 2-0 William & Mary 18-7 Arizona State 0-1 Kentucky 3-1 Southern Methodist 0-3 Williams 58-5 Arkansas 1-1 Lafayette 1-0 Southwestern La. 1-2 Wisconsin 5-0 Arkansas-Little Rock 2-2 Lehigh 5-0 Springfield 7-0 Wofford 2-0 Army 10-0 Long Beach State 0-1 St. John’s (Md.) 1-0 Yale 34-5-1 Auburn 3-4 Louisiana State 2-0 St. John’s (N.Y.) 2-0 Ball State 2-0 Louisville 1-0 Swarthmore 6-1 Barton 2-0 Loyola (Md.) 1-0 Temple 1-0 Baylor 2-0 Maryland 53-8 Boise State 0-1 Maryville (Tenn.) 1-0 Regular Season 1980 4-3 Boston College 3-0 Massachusetts 3-0 ACC Records 1981 3-4 Brown 10-0 MIT 17-0 1954 5-0 1982 4-3 Bucknell 2-0 McNeese State 0-1 1955 5-0 1983 6-1 California-Irvine 2-2 Miami (Fla.) 7-19 1956 6-0 1984 4-3 Campbell 7-0 Miami (Ohio) 2-0 1957 5-1 1985 5-2 Catawba 1-0 Michigan 8-0 1958 6-0 1986 4-3 Catholic 2-0 Michigan State 24-2 1959 7-0 1987 5-1 Charlotte 16-0 Middle Tennessee State 1-0 1960 7-0 1988 0-7 Cincinnati 6-0 Minnesota 1-2 1961 7-0 1989 5-2 Citadel 4-0 Mississippi 2-2 1962 7-0 1990 5-2 Clemson 40-23 Mississippi State 0-1 1963 7-0 1991 6-0 Colby 1-0 Murray State 1-0 1964 6-1 1992 8-0 Colgate 1-0 Navy 11-4 1965 7-0 1993 7-1 Cornell 11-0 Nebraska 2-1 1966 7-0 1994 6-2 Dana 1-0 New Mexico 2-1 1967 7-0 1995 6-2 Dartmouth 23-2 New York University 6-0 1968 6-1 1996 8-0 Davidson 62-1-2 UNC Asheville 8-0 1969 6-1 1997 5-3 Dayton 1-0 UNC Greensboro 4-0 1970 7-0 1998 6-2 1971 6-1 1999 3-5 Delaware 1-0 UNC Wilmington 3-0 1972 6-0 2000 6-2 Drake 1-0 North Carolina A&T 3-0 1973 6-0 2001 6-2 Duke 84-29 NC State 80-5 1974 6-0 2002 7-1 East Carolina 7-0 North Texas 1-0 1975 6-0 2003 3-5 Eastern Kentucky 4-0 Northwestern 4-1 1976 6-0 2004 7-1 Edinboro 1-0 Notre Dame 12-7 1977 6-0 2005 4-6 Elon 8-0 Oglethorpe 1-0 1978 4-2 2006 8-3 Florida 4-14 Ohio State 2-2 1979 1-5 Total 296-78 Florida State 24-8 Ohio University 5-0 page 26 2006-07 Men’s Tennis Media Guide Carolina Men’s Tennis ACC & Southern Conference Singles & Doubles Champions Southern 1990 — #6, Thomas Tanner David Cheatwood won ACC singles 1991 — #1, Roland Thornqvist; #6, Chris flight titles in 2000 and 2001. Conference Mumford Singles 1992 — #2, Bryan Jones; #5, Chris Champions Mumford; #6, Joe Frierson — #1, Roland Thornqvist; #2, David Through 1953. 1993 Caldwell; #5, Brint Morrow; #6, Cooper 1933 — Wilmer Hines Pulliam 1935 — Walt Levitan — #1, David Caldwell; #2, Brint 1936, 1937 — Ramsay 1994 Potts Morrow — #1, David Caldwell; #6, David Britt 1938 — John Foreman 1995 — #1, David Caldwell; #2, Rob 1939 — Carl Rood 1996 Tedesco; #3, Brint Morrow; #6, Tony 1940 — Harris Everett Thomas 1941 — Zan Carver — #3, Paul Harsanyi; #4, Tony 1942 — Harris Everett 1997 Thomas 1948 — Vic Seixas — #3, Adam Seri 1951 — Buddy Ager 1998 — #3, David Cheatwood; #4, Marcio 1952, 1953 — Del Wilmer Hines 2000 Petrone; #6 Chad Riley Sylvia 1968 — #2, Gene Hamilton and Bill Trott 2001 – #3. David 1970 — #1, Joe Dorn and Freddie McNair; Atlantic Coast Conference Cheatwood #2, Lee Langstroth and Forrest Simmons; Singles Champions Southern #3, Jimmy Corn and Fred Rawlings Discontinued following 2001 season. 1971 — #1, Richie McKee and Freddie — Tommy Bradford Conference 1955 McNair; #2, Jimmy Corn and Rich — Bob Bortner 1958 Doubles Hardaway; #3, Joe Garcia and Forrest — Bruce Sylvia 1960 Champions Simmons 1962, 1963, 1964 — George Sokol Through 1953. 1972 — #1, Richie McKee and Freddie — #1, O.H. Parrish; #2, Bronson Van 1965 1931 — Wilmer Hines McNair Wyck; #3, Nat West; #5, Tom Chewning and Bitsy Grant 1973 — #2, Tommy Dixon and Rich — #2, Bronson Van Wyck; #3, Bob Bobby Payne 1966 1933 — Wilmer Hines Hardaway; #3, Billy Brock and Forrest Davis; #4, Tom Chewning; #5, Nat West; and Lenoir Wright Simmons #6, Ken Oettinger 1935 — Walter Levitan and Harvey Harris 1974 — #2, Tommy Dixon and Rich — #1, Gene Hamilton; #3, Bronson 1967 1936, 1937 — Ramsay Potts and Eddie Hardaway Van Wyck; #4, Tom Chewning; #5, Fuller 1975 — #1, Billy Brock and Tommy Dixon Smokey Swenson 1938 — Bill Rawlings and Carl Rood 1976 — #3, Junie Chatman and Cliff — #2, Joe Dorn; #3, Jimmy Corn; #4, 1969 1940 — Bill Rawlings and Charlie Rider Skakle Fred Rawlings; 1941, 1942 — Ham Anthony and Harris 1978 — #2, Cliff Skakle and Gary Taxman #5, Allen Lassiter; #6, Mike Kernodle Everett 1986 — #2, David Pollack and Jimmy — #1, Lee Langstroth; #2, Freddie 1970 1949 — Vic Seixas and Clark Taylor Weilbaecher McNair; #3, Eddie Shelton; #4, Jimmy 1951 — Buddy Ager and Bob Luxenberg 1990 — #3, Joe Frierson and Bryan Jones Corn; #5, Fred Rawlings 1952 — Herbie Browne and Bobby Payne 1991 — #2, Andre Janasik and Sean — #1, Freddie McNair; #2, Jimmy 1971 1953 — Tommy Bradford and Don Steinour; #3, Joe Frierson and Thomas Corn; #3, Forrest Simmons; #4, Richie Thompson Tanner McKee; #6, Mike Kernodle 1993 — #1, Roland Thornqvist and Daryl — #1, Freddie McNair; #2, Jimmy Atlantic Coast Conference 1972 Wyatt; #3, David Caldwell and Brint Corn; #3, Richie McKee; #4, John McNair Doubles Champions Morrow 1973 — #4, Rich Hardaway; #6, Tommy Discontinued following 2001 season. 1996 — #2, Tony Thomas and Tripp Dixon — Tommy Bradford and Herb 1955 Phillips; #3, Rob Tedesco and Paul — #3, Billy Brock; #4, Tommy Dixon; Browne 1974 Harsanyi #5, Joe Garcia; 1956 — Tommy Bradford and John Foster 2001 — #3, Trystan Meniane and Chad #6, Dave Oberstein — Steve Bank and Bob Bortner 1958 Riley 1975 — #1, Billy Brock; #2, Joe Garcia; 1959 — Geoffrey Black and Ben Keys The Southern Conference decided a sole sin- #3, Tommy Dixon; 1960 — Ben Keys and Bruce Sylvia gles champion throughout Carolina’s member- #5, Dave Oberstein 1961 — Bruce Sylvia and Keith Stoneman ship in the league. The Southern Conference 1976 — #3, Earl Hassler; #4, Dave 1962 — Bitsy Harrison and Ted Hoehn decided a sole doubles championship team Oberstein; #5, Junie Chatman; #6, Cliff 1963 — George Sokol and Keith throughout Carolina’s membership in the Skakle Stoneman league. In addition to those listed, Carolina also 1977 — #3, Junie Chatman; #4, Cliff 1964 — Ted Hoehn and O.H. Parrish won doubles championships in 1922 and 1923 but research has been unable to attach the Skakle; #5, Jon Kraut; — #1, O.H. Parrish and Bronson Van 1965 names of the champions to those years. The #6, Gary Taxman Wyck; #2, Andy Goddard and Ken Atlantic Coast Conference decided sole singles 1978 — #2, Junie Chatman Oettinger; #3, Tom Chewning and Nat and doubles champions from 1954 to 1964. 1983 — #2, Ron Erskine; #5, Ken West Beginning in 1965, ACC champions were deter- Whitaker 1967 — #2, Gene Hamilton and Bill Trott; mined by flight. The ACC discontinued the 1984 — #2, Wayne Hearn #3, Smokey Swenson and Bronson Van practice of naming flight champions following 1985 — #2, Jeff Chambers Wyck the 2001 season. It now merely names an All- ACC Team. 2006-07 UNC Men’s Tennis Media Guide page 27 All-America Selections Carolina Men’s Tennis

Bitsy Grant, 1931 Vic Seixas When asked near the end of his tenure in 1955 to rate the best players at Carolina all-time, the vet- eran Tar Heel tennis coach John Kenfield chose Bitsy Grant to head up the list. Bryan “Bitsy” Grant came to Carolina as a freshman in 1929 and was named an All-America in 1931. Ranked as high as No. 3 nationally in men’s singles dur- ing his post-Carolina career, Grant played on four U.S. Davis Cup teams and won three U.S. Tennis Association national clay court championships. Grant’s leadership helped the 1931 team finish undefeated and capture the Southern Conference title.

es in the tournament before dropping the cham- pionship match to the No. 1 ranked player. That same year Seixas, who came to Carolina after four years of Army Air Force duty during World War II, was the seventh-ranked men’s singles Freddie McNair player in the U.S. amateur ranks. By 1952, he had attained the No. 1 singles ranking among Freddie McNair, 1970-73 American players. The 55 Davis Cup singles The only Carolina player to win All-America hon- matches that he played in were the most of any ors in every one of his four years in Chapel Hill, American player in history and his 75 U.S. Open Freddie McNair ranks as one of Carolina’s finest men’s singles victories were a record that stood players ever. While at Carolina, McNair com- until broken by in 1985. bined with Rich McKee to reach the NCAA dou- bles finals in 1973. In the Atlantic Coast Conference, he won three individual singles titles George Sokol in 1970, 1971 and 1972 and three doubles titles, one with Joe Dorn in 1970 and two with McKee in 1971 and 1972. He went on to have a distin- guished professional career, attaining the world’s No. 1 doubles ranking with teammate Sherwood Stewart in the late 1970s. Rich McKee, 1972-1974 A native of Charlotte, N.C., Rich McKee won much fame Bitsy Grant and Wilmer Hines, All-Americas playing collegiate tennis, earning All-America honors Wilmer Hines, 1933 as a sophomore, junior and Carolina’s top player in 1933, Wilmer Hines won senior. The son of teaching the Southern Conference singles title and com- pro Dick McKee, who bined with Lenoir Wright to win the doubles reached the finals at crown. He also was named an All-America that Wimbledon after a career at year. The Tar Heels, in fact, won the Southern the University of Miami, Conference crown every year of Hines’ career at McKee’s play improved with each year he spent Carolina, never losing a match and tying only one at Carolina. He became known as much for his for a combined overall record of 52-0-1. After quiet on-the-court manner as for his tennis talent. leaving Carolina, Hines went on to win the Italian A team captain, McKee and doubles partner Open championship. A great all-around athlete, Freddie McNair reached the NCAA doubles finals Hines also lettered in basketball three times and in 1973, and the two won the 1971 and 1972 captained the 1933 UNC basketball squad. Atlantic Coast Conference doubles titles. In sin- Vic Seixas, 1948 gles, McKee won two ACC titles, at No. 4 in 1971 Regarded by most as the greatest player in and No. 3 in 1972. Carolina’s tennis history, Vic Seixas was also one Billy Brock, 1976 of the outstanding players in American tennis his- A Don Skakle protege, Billy tory. Seixas was named an All-America in 1948 Brock was a member of four and went on to an impressive professional George Sokol, 1963 Atlantic Coast Conference career. Seixas won the Wimbledon singles cham- Named an All-America in singles as a junior in championship teams at pionship in 1953 and also won the U.S. Open 1963, George Sokol had a distinguished tennis Carolina and was an All- championship in 1954. While at Carolina, Seixas, career at Carolina. He was the Tar Heels’ first America in singles in 1976. who played under the legendary coach John dominant presence in the Atlantic Coast Brock, known for his baby- Kenfield from 1947-49, won the Southern Conference. From 1954 to 1964, the ACC chose faced appearance and slight Conference singles title in 1948 and finished as a sole singles champion before going to individ- build, was a powerhouse on the runnerup in both 1947 and 1949. He teamed ual flight titles. Sokol won three of those titles, the court and a member of with Clark Taylor to capture the league doubles capturing the crowns in 1962, 1963 and 1964. North Carolina teams that lost only eight dual crown in 1949. In 1948, he entered the NCAA Sokol also won an outright ACC doubles title in matches in his four-year career. He played on Tournament as the top seed and won five match- 1963, with partner Keith Stoneman. teams which compiled four undefeated seasons in the ACC. The Tar Heels finished as high at sev- page 28 2006-07 Men’s Tennis Media Guide Carolina Men’s Tennis All-America Selections enth in 1974 in the national polls. Brock won two tenure as Carolina also won the coveted trophy Roland ACC individual flight singles titles, taking the in 1990 when Jones was a sophomore. The Tar Thornqvist championship at No. 3 in 1974 and at No. 1 in Heels finished the 1992 conference regular sea- 1975. He also took home a doubles title in 1975 son undefeated at 8-0 and placed four players on with partner Tommy Dixon. One of the Norfolk, the All-ACC team, including Jones, who also Va., native’s greatest wins was a second-round earned the honor in 1990. The Kings Mountain, 1974 NCAA Tournament upset of 12th-seeded N.C., native was named an All-America selection Steve Mott of UCLA. Down a set, Brock, who was in singles after finishing with a 35-7 overall only a freshman, went on to win nine straight record. He was named the ITA Region II Volvo games against the favored Bruin, and won the Tennis/Senior Player of the Year and reached the final two sets 6-0 and 6-1. second round of the NCAA Tournament. Jones, Jeff Chambers, 1985 who also won the flight No. 2 ACC singles title in The only Carolina player in 1992, was a member of a senior class that history to receive an NCAA helped the Tar Heels reach the quarterfinals of singles invitation each of his the NCAA Tournament and finish eighth national- four years as a Tar Heel, ly in the ITA poll, the best finish for Carolina since Chambers competed in the 1974. Over four years as a Tar Heel, Jones NCAA Tournament in 1984, helped the team reach the championship match 1985, 1986 and 1987. He of the ACC Tournament each year. was named an All-America Chris Mumford, 1992 in singles in 1985 after cap- A member of the 1992 turing the ACC individual Atlantic Coast Conference flight championship at No. 2 singles and going Tournament championship 26-8 overall. Chambers also played in the NCAA team, Chris Mumford was Tournament in doubles three times, missing only one of three Tar Heels to be during the 1986 season. The St. Petersburg, Fla. named All-America on that native was a three-time All-Atlantic Coast squad — the most of any Conference selection. He enjoyed his highest Carolina team in history. national ranking in doubles with partner Wayne Mumford had a spectacular Hearn in 1985, as the pair reached the No. 24 season in 1992, capturing spot in the ITA poll. All-America honors in doubles with teammate Roland Thornqvist after completing a 15-7 sea- son at the No. 1 doubles position. The pair were quarterfinalists at the NCAA Championships and finished the season ranked 14th in the ITA poll. Mumford garnered All-ACC honors in 1992, the Tar Heel team as a senior and qualified for the second such honor in his career, as the NCAA Tournament in singles three years and in Richmond, Va. native captured the flight No. 5 doubles twice. He was a quarterfinalist in singles ACC singles title with a 7-1 conference record. in both 1992 and 1993, and in doubles in 1992. Over his four-year career, Mumford was a mem- After spending a year on the ATP Tour following ber of a senior class which helped lead the Tar graduation from Carolina in 1993, Thornqvist was Heels to an 81-29 overall record and a 24-4 an assistant coach for the Tar Heels in 1995 and record in the ACC. After being unranked as fresh- 1996. He left the program to become the head men, that senior class led Carolina to national women’s tennis coach at the University of rankings of 24th in their sophomore year, 17th in Kansas, but returned to the North Carolina tennis their junior year and eighth in their senior year. program in 1998 as the head coach of the Those seniors also led Carolina in 1990 to its first women’s team for three seasons. He is current- ACC crown since 1978. The 1992 team’s NCAA ly the women’s coach at Florida where he has led Tournament bid was also the first since 1978 for the Gators to an NCAA championship. the Tar Heels as that squad went on to become Daryl Wyatt, 1993 quarterfinalists nationally and set a school record Although he spent only one with 25 wins. year as a member of the Tar Roland Thornqvist, 1992-1993 Heel tennis team, One of the most accomplished tennis players Washington, D.C. native ever to wear Carolina Blue, Roland Thornqvist Daryl Wyatt made his time in was the No. 1 singles and No. 1 doubles player a Carolina uniform count. at Carolina for three straight years. The Farsta, Wyatt was superb in dou- Sweden native was named an All-America in bles with partner Roland both singles and doubles by the ITA in 1992 and Thornqvist when Wyatt was 1993. His greatest accomplishment, however, a freshman in 1993. The Bryan Jones was winning the Sportsmanship pair went undefeated in Award in both 1992 and 1993. He was the first Atlantic Coast Conference play that season, player in the history of college tennis to win the going 8-0 against conference foes on a team that Bryan Jones, 1992 prestigious honor twice. As a junior, he also won finished 24-6 overall. In the process Wyatt One of three Carolina players in history to be the Region II Arthur Ashe Jr./Head earned All-America honors from the ITA. Wyatt named the Atlantic Coast Conference Sportsmanship Award. In 1993, he captured the and Thornqvist also captured the ACC individual Tournament’s Most Valuable Player, Bryan Jones singles title in the Rolex/ITA National Indoor doubles title at the No. 1 position, and qualified received that honor and many more in 1992 as Championships, one of the collegiate grand slam for NCAA doubles competition, advancing to the the senior tri-captain led the Tar Heels to one of events; was named to the Rolex Collegiate All- second round. Wyatt was 32-11 overall in singles the school’s most successful seasons, a season Star Team; was the ITA Region II Senior Player of play and finished ACC singles competition at 6-2. in which Carolina set a school record for team the Year and the Atlantic Coast Conference David Caldwell, 1994-1995 wins as UNC finished 25-5. Jones also was Player of the Year. Thornqvist was the ACC Two-time All-America David Caldwell left a lega- named the ACC Player of the Year in 1992 and champion at No. 1 singles in both his sophomore cy at Carolina that will be difficult to match by helped lead the team to the 1992 ACC and senior years and he won the No. 1 doubles future Tar Heels. The Richmond, Va. native came Tournament Championship. It was the second crown as a senior with Daryl Wyatt. A three-time to UNC as one of the most decorated junior ten- ACC team championship for UNC during Jones’ All-ACC selection, Thornqvist co-captained the 2006-07 UNC Men’s Tennis Media Guide page 29 All-America Selections Carolina Men’s Tennis

David Caldwell onship. Morrow captured the flight No. 3 doubles As a senior Monroe won the Jon Van Nostrand title with Caldwell and the flight No. 5 singles Award from the ITA, receiving a grant to pursue crown in 1993 as a freshman, the flight No. 2 sin- his professional tennis career. He had his best gles title as a sophomore, and he went undefeat- season as a senior when he finished No. 21 in ed in conference play in 1995 to win the flight No. the ITA singles and No. 17 in the ITA doubles 3 singles title as a senior. He also was the recip- rankings. Monroe was the captain of the 2004 ient of the 1995 Blue/Gray Classic Tar Heel team. He played on four Tar Heel teams Sportsmanship Award after competing in that which played in the NCAA Tournament and he prestigious tournament in Montgomery, Ala. was a standout on UNC’s 2002 ACC champi- onship squad. Tripp Phillips and Raian Luchici, fellow 2000 2006 Patterson Medal A transfer student winner Lorrie Fair. from the University of Georgia, Raian Luchici, a native of Timisoara, Raian Romania, joined Luchici the Tar Heel squad in 2004 as a soph- omore. Luchici earned first-team All-America hon- nis stars in the country, having been ranked in the ors his senior sea- top five nationally. At North Carolina, he contin- son as a both a singles and doubles competitor ued his winning ways, becoming the first Atlantic with fellow senior Brad Pomeroy. He posted a Coast Conference men’s tennis player in history stellar 25-10 overall singles campaign and a 20- to earn ACC Player of the Year honors three 6 record at the No. 1 spot in the lineup. The Tar times, taking the award in 1994, 1995 and 1996. Heel tandem of Luchici and Pomeroy opened the Caldwell was named an ITA All-America in sin- Tripp Phillips, 2000 spring season ranked first in the country. They gles as both a sophomore and a junior and was An intense competitor and valued team leader, posted a domineering 26-12 doubles record, 16- a doubles All-America with partner Brint Morrow Tripp Phillips of Charlotte, N.C. earned All- 8 in dual match play. Luchici finished the season as a junior. Caldwell was 16-0 in ACC singles America status his senior season. After returning nationally ranked 15th in singles and sixth in the play as a junior and senior and is the only player from a medical redshirt campaign, Phillips had an country as a doubles tandem with Pomeroy. to ever win three individual ACC flight titles at No. outstanding senior season, posting a stellar 25-6 Luchici is the first player since 1995 to be hon- 1 singles. He won the 1995 Rafael Osuna singles record at the No.1 singles position. ored as a first-team All-America in both singles Sportsmanship Award and was the Region II Phillips collected impressive victories over and doubles in the same season since David Head/Arthur Ashe Jr. Sportsmanship Award nationally No.1-ranked Daniel Anderson and No. Caldwell. He was named the Farnsworth/ recipient. The 1996 Region II Men’s Tennis 3-rated Shuon Madden that season. Phillips’ Intercollegiate Tennis Association National Player of the Year, Caldwell received NCAA sin- capable leadership carried the Tar Heels to a Senior Player of the Year at the conclusion of his gles invitations in 1994, 1995 and 1996 and was second place ACC finish and a No. 16 national senior campaign in 2006; the first recipient in an NCAA quarterfinalist in 1995. A three-time All- ranking. Phillips’ dominating 12-2 record against Carolina history. With Pomeroy, the duo was the ACC selection, he compiled a 116-41 (.737) ACC competetion earned him runnerup honors at first in Carolina history since 1973 to compete in record over his four years as a Tar Heel and fin- No. 1 singles. However, Phillips saved his best the championship match of a collegiate grand ished his ACC career with a 32-5 (.865) record in performance of the year for last as he advanced slam event when they advanced to the finals of singles and a 27-10 (.730) record in doubles. to the quarterfinals of the NCAA Championships the Polo Ralph Lauren All-American Caldwell, a 1996 Carolina graduate, was both the in singles. Phillips’ performance elevated him in Championships. 1993 Region II ITA Rookie Player of the Year and the ITA rankings as he finished 2000 ranked No. Brad Pomeroy, 12 nationally in singles. Phillips’ career and char- 2006 Brad the 1994 Penn/ITA National Player to Watch. Pomeroy Brint Morrow, acter were honored as he received the presti- A native of gious Patterson Medal and the John Van Asheville, N.C., 1995 Brint Morrow A consistently Nostrand Award. He and UNC soccer player Brad Pomeroy strong per- Lorrie Fair won the 2000 Patterson Medals. He was honored as a former for the was the first tennis player so honored since Vic first-team All- Tar Heels over Seixas in 1950. America in dou- his four years Nick Monroe, bles following the in Chapel Hill, 2004 conclusion of his Brint Morrow A native of senior campaign in was named Olathe, Kan., 2006. Pomeroy All-America in Nick Monroe teamed with fellow doubles in received All- standout senior Raian Luchici to post a dominat- 1995 with America honors ing 26-12 doubles record, a 16-8 dual meet partner David from the record and an outstanding 10-4 doubles record in Caldwell, the Intercollegiate tournament play. In ACC dual match, the duo tandem hav- T ennis combined to earn a 6-5 record. The Tar Heel pair ing gone 26- Association in Nick advanced to the second round of the NCAA 10 over the 2004, the first Monroe Championships at Taube Tennis Stadium in season while UNC All-America Stanford, Calif. They were the first Carolina duo receiving an in four years. to advance to the final round of an ITA grand NCAA doubles Monroe won the Patterson Medal in 2004 as salm event since 1973 when they reached the invitation. A 1996 Carolina graduate whose father UNC’s outstanding senior men’s student-athlete finals in the Polo Ralph Lauren All-American played tennis at Carolina in the 1960s, Morrow and he reached the quarterfinals of the NCAA Championships. Pomeroy and Luchici opened was a three-time All-Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament in singles as a senior. A three-time the 2006 spring season ranked first in the nation selection. He won three individual ACC singles All-ACC selection, Monroe finished his UNC sin- and ended the season fifth in the nation. flight championships and one doubles champi- gles career with 100 wins, the second most in Tar Heel history behind David Caldwell’s 116 wins. page 30 2006-07 Men’s Tennis Media Guide Carolina Men’s Tennis Miscellaneous Honors & Awards All-Atlantic Coast Conference Selections 2002--Marcio Petrone, 38th; Trystan Meniane, 1984 — Wayne Hearn; 1985 — Jeff Chambers, 118th; 2003--Trystan Meniane, 39th; Nick Wayne Hearn, Eddie Stewart; 1986 — Jeff Monroe, 72nd; 2004 — Nick Monroe, 21st; 2005 Chambers; 1987 — Jeff Chambers, Don Johnson, — Raian Luchici, 56th; Benjamin Carlotti, 109th; Eddie Stewart; 1989 — Don Johnson, David 2006 — Raian Luchici, 15th. Pollack; 1990 — Don Johnson, Bryan Jones; 1991 — Chris Mumford, Roland Thornqvist; 1992 — Joe ITA Nationally-Ranked Doubles Teams Frierson, Bryan Jones, Chris Mumford, Roland 1984 — Jeff Chambers and Wayne Hearn, 28th; Thornqvist; 1993 — David Caldwell, Cooper 1985 — Jeff Chambers and Wayne Hearn, 24th; Pulliam, Roland Thornqvist; 1994 — David 1986 — Jeff Chambers and Mark DeMattheis, Caldwell, Brint Morrow; 1995 — David Caldwell, 47th; 1987 — Jeff Chambers and Eddie Stewart, Brint Morrow; 1996 — David Caldwell, Brint 28th; 1989 — Don Johnson and David Pollack, Morrow, Rob Tedesco; 1997 — Tripp Phillips, Paul 22nd; 1991 — Andre Janasik and Sean Steinour, Harsanyi, Rob Tedesco; 33rd; 1992 — Chris Mumford and Roland 1998 — Rob Tedesco, Tripp Thornqvist, 14th; 1993 — Roland Thornqvist and Phillips, Adam Seri; 1999 – Daryl Wyatt, 10th; 1994 — David Caldwell and Assaf Drori; 2000 – Tripp Brint Morrow, 21st; 1995 — David Caldwell and Phillips, Marcio Petrone; Brint Morrow, 9th; 1996 — David Caldwell and 2001 – Marcio Petrone; Brint Morrow, 27th; 1998 — Rob Tedesco and 2002 —Andy Metzler, Nick Tony Thomas, 48th; 2003 — Trystan Meniane and Monroe, Marcio Petrone; Nick Monroe, 18th; 2004 — Nick Monroe and 2003 — Nick Monroe, Geoff Boyd, 17th; 2006 — .Raian Luchici and Brad Trystan Meniane, Derek Paul Harsanyi was Pomeroy, 6th. Porter; 2004 — Nick ACC Freshman of the Year in 1994. Monroe, Raian Luchici, Andy Metzler NCAA Tournament Singles Participants Jonathan Janda, Geoff Boyd; ITA Region II Player to 1983 — Ron Erskine; 1984 — Jeff Chambers, 2005 — Raian Luchici; 2006 — Raian Luchici. Watch Wayne Hearn; 1985 — Jeff Chambers, Wayne 1994 — David Caldwell. Hearn; 1986 — Jeff Chambers; 1987 — Jeff ACC Player of the Year Chambers; 1990 — Bryan Jones; 1991 — Roland 1985 — Wayne Hearn; 1992 — Bryan Jones; ITA Mideast Region Jon Van Nostrand Thornqvist; 1992 — Bryan Jones, Roland 1993 — Roland Thornqvist; 1994 — David Memorial Award Winner Thornqvist; 1993 — Roland Thornqvist; 1994 — Tripp Phillips; — Nick Monroe Caldwell; 1995 — David Caldwell; 1996 — David 2000 — 2004 David Caldwell; 1995 — David Caldwell, Brint Caldwell Morrow; 1996 — David Caldwell; 1997 — Tripp ITA National Jon Van Nostrand Memorial Phillips; 1998 — Tripp Phillips; 2000 — Tripp ACC Player of the The Week Award Winner Phillips; 2002 — Marcio Petrone; 2003 — Trystan Tripp Phillips; — Nick Monroe March 12, 2001--Chad Riley; April 3, 2001-- 2000 — 2004 Meniane, Nick Monroe; 2004 — Nick Monroe; David Cheatwood; April 16, 2001--Chad Riley; 2005 — Raian Luchici; 2006 — Raian Luchici. March 11, 2002--Daniel Pinchbeck; April 1, ITA Mideast Coach of the Year — Allen Morris; — Sam Paul 2002--Marcio Petrone; April 15, 2002--Nick 1992 1996 NCAA Tournament Doubles Participants - Sam Paul; — Sam Paul. Monroe; April 21, 2002--Marcio Petrone; 2000 2004 1984 — Jeff Chambers and Wayne Hearn; 1985 February 3, 2003--Daniel Pinchbeck; February — Jeff Chambers and Wayne Hearn; 1987 — Jeff 16, 2004 — Nick Monroe; March 8, 2004 — Brad ITA Assistant Coach of the Year Chambers and Eddie Stewart; 1992 — Chris — Don Johnson. Pomeroy; March 29, 2004 — Raian Luchici; 2006 Mumford and Roland Thornqvist; 1993 — Roland April 5, 2004 — Nick Monroe; March 28, 2005 — Thornqvist and Daryl Wyatt; 1994 — David Benjamin Carlotti; January 23, 2007 — Raian Rafael Osuna Sportsmanship Award Caldwell and Brint Morrow; 1995 — David — Roland Thornqvist; — David Luchici; February 6, 2006 — Raian Luchici; April 1992, 1993 1995 Caldwell and Brint Morrow; 1996 — David Caldwell 17, 2006 — Raian Luchici. Caldwell and Brint Morrow; 2003 — Trystan Meniane and Nick Monroe; 2004 — Nick Monroe MVP of ACC Championship ITA National Indoor Singles Champion and Geoff Boyd; 2006 — Raian Luchici and Brad — Roland Thornqvist 1990 — Don Johnson; 1992 — Bryan Jones; 1993 Pomeroy. 2002 -- Marcio Petrone. ITA National Player to MVP of H.E. Butt Tennis Championships ACC Freshman of the Year Watch 1993 — Roland Thornqvist — David Caldwell 1994 — Paul Harsanyi; 1999 - Bjorn Rencken. 1994 MVP of Blue/Gray Tennis Championships ACC Coach of the Year ITA/Farnsworth National 1993 — Roland Thornqvist 1983, 1990, 1992 — Allen Morris; 1996, 2000, Senior Player of the Year — Raian Luchici 2002, 2004 — Sam Paul 2006 Blue/Gray Classic Sportsmanship Award 1995 — Brint Morrow Alphonso C. Smith Sportsmanship Award ITA Nationally Ranked Singles Players 1974 — Richie McKee; 1977 — Earl Hassler; 1980 Marcio Petrone was named the — Wayne Hearn, 53rd; — Gary Taxman 1984 David Pollack Most Valuable Player of the 2002 Jeff Chambers, 63rd; 1985 — ACC Tournament. Wayne Hearn, 31st; Jeff ITA/Ted Farnsworth Region II Senior of the Chambers, 43rd; Eddie Stewart, 95th; — Jeff Year 1986 Chambers, 80th; David Pollack, 105th; — 1992 — Bryan Jones; 1993 — Roland Thornqvist; 1987 Jeff Chambers, 74th; — David Pollack, 64th; 1996 — David Caldwell; 2006 — Raian Luchici. 1989 Don Johnson, 90th; 1990 — Bryan Jones, 59th; Don Johnson, 60th; — Woody Webb, 58th; ITA Region II Rookie-of-the-Year 1991 Roland Thornqvist, 66th; Andre Janasik, 95th; 1989 — Bryan Jones; 1993 — David Caldwell 1992 — Roland Thornqvist, 7th; Bryan Jones, 20th; Woody Webb, 79th; — Roland Region II Arthur Ashe Jr. Sportsmanship 1993 Thornqvist, 4th; David Caldwell, 74th; — Award 1994 David Caldwell, 14th; Brint Morrow, 67th; Paul 1990 — Don Johnson; 1992 — Roland Thornqvist; Harsanyi, 91st; — David Caldwell, 12th; Brint 1995 — David Caldwell; 2003--Nick Monroe. 1995 Morrow, 37th; 1996 — David Caldwell, 21st; Brint Morrow, 91st; 1997 — Tripp Phillips, 41st; 1998 — Tripp Phillips, 69th; 2000— Tripp Phillips, 12th; 2006-07 UNC Men’s Tennis Media Guide page 31 Carolina Tennis History Carolina Men’s Tennis

The University of North Carolina men’s ten- John Kenfield 2006. nis program began the decade of the 1990s in Success in the Atlantic Coast Conference grand style and the success has carried over has also been the rule of the day during into the New Millennium as well. Carolina’s vaunted tennis history. Since the Over the course of the past 17 seasons, the conference’s formation during the summer of Tar Heels have claimed six Atlantic Coast 1953, Tar Heel teams have won a total of 25 Conference regular-season or tournament league championships, including 23 outright championships (1990, 1991, 1992, 1996, crowns. In fact, in 53 years of Atlantic Coast 2002, 2004); earned nine final Top 25 nation- Conference competition, the Tar Heels have al rankings from the Intercollegiate Tennis finished outside of the upper division of the Association (1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, league standings only five times and have 1996, 2000, 2004, 2006); and merited 14 been either first or second in the standings in spots in the NCAA Tournament field (1992, 38 of those 53 years. The Tar Heels’ cumula- 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 2000, tive regular-season dual-match ACC record 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006). The stands at an amazing 296-78, a winning per- 2004 squad received the school’s highest centage of .791. Carolina players have also seed ever in the NCAA Tournament at No. 11; won 86 ACC singles championships and 37 the 2006 team matched the highest seed with doubles titles. No. 11 this past season. The Tar Heels host- The Birth of Tar Heel Tennis ed an NCAA regional in 2004 for the first time The roots of tennis competition at the since the tournament went to its current 64- University of North Carolina date back to 1884 team format in 1999. The 2006 team also when the University Tennis Club was founded. hosted an NCAA regional and beat Clemson In 1894, the club began intercollegiate com- in the regional final to advance to the NCAA petition in the sport. It was not until 1908, how- Sweet 16 for the first time since 1993. ever, that letters were first awarded to the The results of the past 17 years have been players and the sport was granted varsity sta- cause for celebration for Tar Heel head coach tus at the University. From 1908 through 1927, Sam Paul and his players. Carolina’s proud of .800. It was during the 2002 season that the team functioned without a head coach and tennis program regained momentum in the North Carolina reached the point in its history in 1911, 1915 and 1919 no team was fielded 1990s similar to that from its early years in the where it had 1,000 more wins than it had loss- at all. Beginning in 1920, Tar Heel teams have nascent decades of the 20th century. It seems es, any amazing feat of long-term excellence. faced outside competition for 87 successive only appropriate that the first decade of the The milestone will came on February 9, 2002 years. 21st century match the accomplishments long when UNC defeated West Virginia 7-0 at the Program continuity kicked in as of the 1927 associated with the sport of tennis in Chapel Cone-Kenfield Tennis Center. The win gave season when John Kenfield arrived as head Hill. the Tar Heels 1,000 more wins in history than coach and Tar Heel tennis fortunes began to Carolina has always had an especially rich losses for the first time as UNC’s record stood soar quickly. Kenfield answered an advertise- tradition in the sport of tennis, featuring a long 1,307-307-8 at the end of that day. Going into ment placed by the University Athletic list of great coaches, players and teams. Over the 2007 season, UNC teams have won 1,051 Association in the American Lawn Tennis the past 99 years, since the first team was matches more than they have lost. Journal. The ad sought Carolina’s first full- fielded in 1908, UNC teams have compiled a Since the first Tar Heel team was fielded in time tennis coach. Kenfield’s decision to phenomenal won-loss record that would be the spring of 1908, 83 of 99 North Carolina respond to the query proved to be a stroke of difficult to rival in all of college athletics. teams have posted winning records, five have luck for Carolina and not a half-bad decision The Tar Heels’ overall dual-match record had break even seasons and only eight have for himself. stands at 1,398-347-8, a winning percentage had losing records and even one of those was Kenfield, then 35 years old, was working in good enough to qualify for the NCAA Chicago as both a tennis instructor at the Lake Tournament. During three of 99 seasons, the Shore Country Club in suburban Glencoe, Ill., University fielded no team at all and in only and as a vice president of the Curtiss Candy five of the eight losing seasons did the team Company, an enterprise he’d helped organize actually play more than two matches on its in the Windy City. While at Curtiss Candy entire schedule, finishing 3-4 in 1945, 8-9 in Company, Kenfield named the Baby Ruth 1957, 14-16 in 1986, 11-14 in 1999 and 11-12 candy bar, one of the biggest sellers of all in 2003. Nineteen of the 99 teams have fin- time, as well as the Butterfinger bar. The ished their campaigns undefeated, the latest young candy company wanted a catchy name in 1970 with an 18-0 mark. During the late for its new confectionery treat featuring choco- 1930s and early 1940s, Carolina teams put late and peanuts to compete with the popular together a 67-match winning streak, a colle- O’Henry bar of its leading business competi- giate record in its time which was broken by tor. Babe Ruth was then at the height of his William & Mary in 1949. baseball career with the New York Yankees Twenty-two Carolina teams have finished and Kenfield wrote the famous Bambino, ask- the season ranked among the nation’s Top 25 ing for his permission to name the candy bar teams, topped by a tie for third place at both after him. Ruth sent back a royalty figure the 1947 and 1948 NCAA Championships. which the fledgling company couldn’t afford. The University of North Carolina also played Kenfield then suggested “Baby Ruth” as an host to the 71st National Collegiate Tennis alternate name because no royalties would Championships in 1955 on the Campus have been involved. The name was adopted, Courts in Chapel Hill. Since the NCAA aban- the candy bar was a smash hit with the doned flight play and went to a team tourna- American populace, Curtiss made millions ment format in 1977, Carolina has made the and the rest, as they say, is history. Baby NCAA field on 16 occasions — in 1977, 1978, Ruth and Butterfinger candy bars are still 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, enormously popular fare 80 years later. Bitsy Grant 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005 and Kenfield’s first year as head coach was page 32 2006-07 Men’s Tennis Media Guide Carolina Men’s Tennis Carolina Tennis History Atlantic Coast Conference was Vic Seixas formed. The University of North Carolina was one of the seven founding members of the ACC. Under Kenfield, Carolina teams won Southern Conference team championships on 15 occasions — 1930, 1931, 1932, 1933, 1936, 1937, 1939, 1940, 1941, 1942, 1943, 1944, 1950, 1951 and 1953. Kenfield also coached 13 Nick Monroe and Southern Don Johnson Conference indi- vidual singles 1928 and until his retirement after the 1955 champions and 13 season, his teams wrote a rather remarkable doubles teams which won league titles. Prior success story during his 28-year coaching to Kenfield’s arrival on campus, Carolina also tenure. Ten of his 28 teams finished their dual won Southern Conference doubles titles in and won a trio of U.S. Tennis Association match seasons unbeaten and his overall 1922 and 1923, giving the school 15 doubles national clay court championships. coaching record was 434-30-2 for a remark- championships in all. Grant and sophomore Wilmer Hines played able winning percentage of .933. His teams Kenfield tutored some of the most accom- together on Carolina’s 1931 team, which fin- averaged a 16-1 record each year during his plished players in Carolina tennis history. The ished undefeated and won the Southern 28 seasons on the Hill. It was only appropri- first great player who came under Kenfield’s Conference title. Two years later, it was Hines ate that when the University built a new tennis tutelage was Bryan “Bitsy” Grant of Atlanta, who succeeded Grant as UNC’s top player, facility in 1992 the naming honors on the com- Ga., who came to UNC as a freshman in winning the Southern Conference singles title plex should honor the founder of the program, 1929. Rumor has it that Grant was actually in 1933 and combining with Lenoir Wright to win the doubles crown the same year. Hines The 1965 Tar Heels, undefeated at 20-0 and ACC champions was also named an All-America that year. After playing at Carolina, Hines went on to win the championship. Ironically, Hines was more than merely a great tennis player. He also lettered in basketball three times at Carolina and captained the 1933 UNC basketball squad. In the late 1930s and early 1940s, Kenfield’s top players included players like Ramsay Potts, Archie Henderson, Harris Everett and Zan Carver. Potts, who graduated in 1937 and was also a two-time letterman in basketball at Carolina, made the NCAA sin- gles semifinals while at UNC. That was in 1936 when the National Intercollegiate Championships were held at Northwestern University in Evanston, Ill. That same year, Potts was ranked No. 3 in the final national collegiate singles rankings. Carolina was so dominant during that time in Southern Conference tennis battles under Kenfield’s tutelage that in 1936, UNC had all four semifinalists in the Southern Conference Tennis Championships’ singles competition. Henderson, a native Chapel Hillian, swept the singles titles of four of the six tournaments in which he played during the 1940 season Kenfield. enrolled at Carolina for three months before and in the process beat all of the top American Ruling the Roost in the Southern Kenfield knew he was on campus. Once dis- players of the time with the exception of the Conference covered, Grant blossomed quickly, being legendary . In 1940, Everett won Carolina also dominated tennis in the named an All-America selection in 1931. the Southern Conference singles champi- Southern Conference, beginning with the Ranked as high as No. 3 nationally in men’s onship. A year later, he won the league dou- league’s founding prior to the 1921-22 school singles during his post-collegiate career, bles crown while teaming with M.P. Anthony. year and running through 1953 when the Grant played on four U.S. Davis Cup teams Everett, who was also a native of Chapel 2006-07 UNC Men’s Tennis Media Guide page 33 Carolina Tennis History Carolina Men’s Tennis Hill, improved his national ranking to 11th in in the U.S. amateur ranks. the ACC Tournament in 1980, Carolina tennis 1940 after he beat both German Davis Cup Seixas went on to have a star-studded suffered its first leadership void in over two star Henner Henkle and Welby Van Horn at career after graduating from Carolina. By decades. The University hired Allen Morris, a the Forest Hills United States National 1952, he had attained the No. 1 singles rank- great tennis player in his own right, to become Championships. In 1941, Carver gave up his ing among Americans and he won the only the fifth head coach in school history. Tar Heel football career to concentrate solely Wimbledon singles championship in 1953 and Morris was named ACC Coach of the Year on tennis. He beat out Everett for the number the U.S. Open title in 1954. The 55 Davis Cup three times during his tenure — in 1983, 1990 one spot on the Carolina team and then singles matches he played in were more than and 1992. During the 1984 campaign, UNC downed his teammate Everett for the any American player in history and that record reached a major milestone when the school Southern Conference singles title. That same stood for decades. His 75 U.S. Open men’s won its 1,000th dual match in history. The vic- season, Carver lost a tough three-set match singles victories were a record that stood until tory came in San Antonio, Texas, as the Tar (7-5 in the third) to Joe Hunt, who would go on broken by Jimmy Connors in 1985, almost 30 Heels upset sixth-ranked Trinity 5-4. to claim the singles title that year at the U.S. years after Seixas’ heyday in the sport. Morris’ top players included Jeff Open in Forest Hills. Skakle Leads UNC To Unequaled Success Chambers, Wayne Hearn, Don Johnson, Seixas Becomes a Tennis Legend in the ACC Bryan Jones and Roland Thornqvist. An All- Near the end of his coaching tenure, Carolina continued to have great teams America in 1985, Chambers earned four Kenfield was asked to pick the all-time during the 1950s. In the summer of 1953, NCAA Tournament singles invitations and Carolina tennis team up to that point. The vet- UNC became a member of the Atlantic Coast three NCAA doubles bids. Hearn was the ACC eran mentor chose Grant No. 1, Hines No. 3, Conference, joining six other schools as Player of the Year in 1985 and he made the Henderson No. 4, Carver No. 5 and Everett founding members in a league that grew from NCAA Tournament in both singles and dou- No. 6. The man in the second spot was the the original seven teams in 1953 to 12 teams bles twice. Although he never made the NCAA legendary Vic Seixas, an All-America selec- in 2005. Tournament, Johnson was a consistent player tion in 1948. Seixas had a storybook career at From 1955-1959, four different men pilot- who was named the 1990 ACC Tournament Carolina, winning the Southern Conference ed the Tar Heel program as head coach. Most Valuable Player after leading the Tar singles title in 1948, finishing as the runnerup Kenfield retired after the 1955 season with Heels to their first conference crown in 12 in both 1947 and 1949 and teaming with Clark Ham Strayhorn serving as the head coach in years. Johnson went on to have a distin- Taylor to capture the league doubles crown in 1956 and Vladimir Cernik tapped as the head guished doubles career in the professional 1949. Seixas, a Philadelphia, Pa. native, man in 1957 and 1958. ranks, winning several major tournaments and came to the University after four years of Army With Don Skakle’s arrival as UNC’s head consistently being ranked in the Top 10 in the Air Force duty during World War II. In 1948, coach in 1959, the second great era in North world in doubles. Johnson earned two Seixas entered the NCAA Tournament as the Carolina tennis began. A collegiate contempo- Wimbledon doubles titles and a U.S. Davis top seed. He won five matches in the tourna- rary of Seixas who also played on UNC teams Cup appearance before his retirement in 2003 ment before dropping the championship in the late 1940s, Skakle led his teams to total from the professional ranks to become match 6-4, 1-6, 7-5, 6-1 to Harry Likas of the domination of the Atlantic Coast Conference Carolina’s assistant tennis coach. University of San Francisco, who was then during his 22 seasons as head coach. His A Stellar 1992 Season for the Tar Heels No. 1 in the national singles rankings, one teams won a total of 18 ACC titles, including Jones and Thornqvist helped lead the spot ahead of Seixas. Seixas advanced far- 16 crowns outright. On nine occasions the Tar 1992 squad to remarkable success on the ther in NCAA singles action than any other Tar Heels finished among the nation’s Top 25 court. Thornqvist was named a first-team All- Heel in history. The same year at the NCAA teams. Overall, Skakle’s teams had a 418-55 America in both singles and doubles, and Championships, Seixas and Clark Taylor were dual-match record in 22 seasons, including a seeded third in the doubles tournament 132-14 mark in the ACC. Bryan Jones despite their less impressive seventh-place Among Skakle’s great players were standing in the national doubles rankings. The George Sokol, who won a trio of ACC singles duo won a pair of matches before losing to the titles from 1962-64, while being named an All- brother team of Evert and Evert from Notre America in his junior year; Freddie McNair, Dame, 6-3, 6-8, 3-6, 6-4, 6-3 in the quarterfi- Carolina’s only four-time first-team All- nals. During his senior year in 1949, Seixas America selection, who won three ACC No. 1 was the seventh-ranked men’s singles player doubles crowns and three ACC singles titles (two at No. 1 and one at No. 2); Rich McKee, Don Skakle McNair’s doubles partner who was an All- America selection three times and the winner of two ACC singles championships and two league doubles crowns; and Billy Brock, a 1976 All-America who won a pair of confer- ence crowns in both singles and doubles. McNair probably ranks as Carolina’s finest player since Seixas left campus in 1949 and before Roland Thornqvist and David Caldwell’s arrival in the ’90s. While at Carolina, McNair combined with McKee to reach the NCAA doubles finals in 1973 at Princeton, N.J., even though the duo had been upset in the finals of the ACC Tournament the same year. McNair went on to have a distinguished professional career, attaining the world’s No. 1 doubles ranking with teammate Sherwood Stewart in the late 1970s. In fact, McNair won the 1976 doubles title while teaming with Stewart. Allen Morris Arrives In Chapel Hill When Skakle passed away on the eve of page 34 2006-07 Men’s Tennis Media Guide Carolina Men’s Tennis Carolina Tennis History NCAA Tournament in both singles and dou- time in school history in 2004 and received a bles, playing the latter with Chris Mumford, an program high No. 11 NCAA Tournament seed. All-America selection in his own right. In 2006, UNC hosted an NCAA regional and Thornqvist also was honored with the Rafael earned a No.11 seed. The Tar Heels won the Osuna Award given nationally for sportsman- regional and earned a berth in the Sweet 16 ship by the ITA. That seemed only a prelude to Thornqvist’s brilliant senior season. Finishing 36-6 in singles and 24-6 in doubles, the Swedish native was ranked fourth nationally in singles and 10th in doubles at the season’s end. Thornqvist captained the 1993 UNC team to a 17th-place ITA poll ranking and to the Final 16 of the NCAA Tournament, beating Harvard in the first round of the tournament before falling to eventual NCAA champion Southern California in the round of 16. Individually, Thornqvist won the Rafael Osuna Sportsmanship Award from the ITA for the second straight year, the first player in the history of college tennis to win the award more than once. He captured ACC titles at No. 1 Allen Morris singles and No. 1 doubles, was named to the All-ACC Team for the third straight year and Jones, a senior from Kings Mountain, N.C., was the ACC Player of the Year and the ITA took home All-America honors in singles as Region II Senior Player of the Year. David Caldwell and Brint Morrow the 1992 Tar Heels set a school record for vic- As a senior, Thornqvist won the ITA tories in a season during their 25-5 campaign. national indoor singles championship, beating for the first time since 1993. Carolina finished eighth in the final Georgia’s Mike Sell in the finals at Paul has tutored several All-America play- Intercollegiate Tennis Association poll and Minneapolis. He was also an NCAA ers at Carolina, including David Caldwell, Brint made the NCAA Tournament field for the first Tournament singles quarterfinalist for the sec- Morrow, Tripp Phillips, Nick Monroe, Raian time since 1978, beating No. 8 TCU in the ond straight season and he was named the Luchici and Brad Pomeroy. Caldwell and round of 16 before losing to third-seeded MVP of both the H.E. Butt Championships and Phillips were both outstanding singles players UCLA in the quarterfinals. Carolina also the Blue/Gray Championships. and both advanced far into the NCAA claimed both the ACC regular-season and Carolina’s success has continued since Tournament several times. Phillips reached tournament championships in 1992. Sam Paul took over for Allen Morris after the the quarterfinals of the NCAA Tournament in Jones was named ACC Player of the Year, latter retired from coaching in 1993 to become 2000 and later that year he was named the Most Valuable Player of the ACC Tournament athletic director at his alma mater, winner of the Patterson Medal as Carolina’s and Region II Senior Player of the Year in outstanding senior student-athlete. He was 1992, and he advanced to the second round Roland Thornqvist the first tennis player so named since Vic of the NCAA Tournament. Thornqvist finished Seixas. Monroe, who Sam Paul acknowl- the season ranked seventh nationally in sin- edges as one of the hardest-working players gles and he reached the quarterfinals of the he ever coached, was an All-America in 2004, captured the Patterson Medal and reached the NCAA quarterfinals in singles. Carolina has finished either first, second or third in the ACC standings in every year under Paul’s tutelage with the exceptions of 1999, 2003, 2005 and 2006. The 2002 team, led by senior Marcio Petrone as tournament Most Valuable Player, won Carolina’s 25th ACC championship in school history. Duke has won the second most ACC champi- onships in history with 12. Carolina and the College Tennis Hall of Fame Six Tar Heel tennis greats are enshrined in the Collegiate Tennis Hall of Fame in Athens, Ga. Vic Seixas was inducted in 1984, Bitsy Grant in 1985, John Kenfield in 1986, Don Skakle in 1991, Allen Morris in 1993 and Presbyterian College. Freddie McNair in 2001. Paul, who had been an assistant for four Carolina has had several inductees into seasons under Morris, has led the Tar Heels the North Carolina Tennis Hall of Fame, the to NCAA Tournament bids in 1994, 1995, most recent being former All-ACC player and 1996, 1997, 1998, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, former assistant coach Don Johnson in 2006. 2004, 2005 and 2006. Carolina reached A great player and coach, Allen Morris North Carolina’s Archie Henderson has an audi- NCAA regional finals in 1994, 1996, 2000 and was inducted into the North Carolina Tennis ence with the Queen of England, Elizabeth, wife 2004 and was one win short in each case from Hall of Fame, the North Carolina Sports Hall of of King George the VI and mother of Queen Elizabeth II, while he competed in the 1945 reaching the tournament’s Final 16. The Fame, the Southern Tennis Hall of Fame and Wimbledon Championships. school hosted an NCAA regional for the first the Collegiate Tennis Hall of Fame. 2006-07 UNC Men’s Tennis Media Guide page 35 All-Time Letter Winners Carolina Men’s Tennis AAAA DeMattheis, Mark 1984-87 Hill, Chris 1993-96 McLean, Jim 1982-83 Scott, Randall 1988-89 Abels, Byron 1935 Dickson, David 1979 Hill, Gregg 1998 McNab, Adam 1993, 1996 Seixas, Vic 1947-48 Abels, Lucas 1931-32 Dillard, J.R. 1932-33 Hines, Robert 1978-80 McNair, Bruce 1976 Seri, Adam 1998 Adamek, Remi 1997-99 Disco, Ray 1979-82 Hines, Wilmer 1931-33 McNair, Freddie 1970-73 Shaffer, Charles 1962-64 Ager, John 1951 Dixon, Thomas 1973-76 Hobbs, S.H. 1942 McNair, John 1972-73 Shapiro, M.M. 1929 Aiken, Ben 2001-04 Dorn, Joseph 1968-70 Hoehn, Edward 1962-64 Mears, William 1968-69, 1971 Sheridan, James 1980-82 Alderman, Neil 1981-83 Drori, Assaf 1999-2000 Holderness, Richard 1966-67 Meir, Victor 1990-91 Shettle, William 1960 Alexander, Heath 1947-48, Dukes, John 1971 Holley, C.E. 1934 Meniane, Trystan 2000-03 Shivar, William 1967-69 1950-51 Durrill, Cole 1991-92 Holmes, Mark 1986-87 Merritt, W.E. 1928-30 Shoaf, David 1959 Anderson, Don 1945 Duval, Charles 1951 Holmes, William 1963 Meserole, W.B. 1939-40 Shoneman, John 1969 Anderson, Kevin 1984-86 Dwight, Edward 1979 Holtermann, Jan 1988 Metzler, Andrew 2002-04 Shore, Frank 1935-36 Anthony, M.P. 1940-42 Huckabee, Jimbo 1992 Milton, Cecil 1952 Shuford, H.S. 1932-33 Applegate, William 1962-64 E E E E Hudgins, Daniel 1956 Minor, W.T. 1934-35 Simmons, Mitchell 1970-73 Archer, Greg 2000-03 Early, D.E. 1939 Hutton, Brett 1993-94 Miscall, Lawrence 1955 Skakle, Cliff 1975-78 Athar, Ahad 1999-2000 Elix, Ben 1999-2000 Monroe, Nicholas 2001-04 Skakle, Don 1946-48 Erskine, Ron 1981-84 I I I I Morgan, David 1932-34 Smith, Canie 1957 B B B B Evans, Carl 1964 Ingram, James 1948 Morgan, David 1961-62 Smith, Stanley 1953 Bach, Robbie 1982-84 Everett, H.W. 1940-42 Izlar, Bill 1951-53 Morris, Ray 1943-44, 1947-48 Sokol, George 1962-64 Baggs, H. 1930 Morrow, Brint 1993-96 Stackhouse, Glenn 1960 Baity, Ed 1945 F F F F J J J J Morrow, Peter 1961 Stanley, Robert 1986 Balch, Jon 1994-97 Farrell, Frank 1936-38 Jacobus, Robert 1957 Mumford, Chris 1989-92 Steinour, Sean 1990-93 Bank, Stephen 1956-58 Fenichell, Chris 1978-81 Jagoe, W.H. 1944 Murphy, T.L. 1940 Steward, Pawling 1957 Barnett, R.W. 1932 Finnegan, Thomas 1987 Janasik, Andre 1988-91 Myers, Peter 1963-64 Stewart, Eddie 1983-85, 1987 Black, Geoffrey 1957-59 Fitzsimons, Mike 1986-89 Janda, Jonathan 2002-05 Stone, David 2005-06 Boesch, B.W. 1944 Flanagan, Jewett Flagg 1974 Jeffress, E.B. 1937 N N N N Stoneman, Hubert 1961-63 Bolen, Zack 1992-93 Fleming, Shawn 1994-96 Jensen, John 1968-69 Neill, D.H. 1941 Stubbs, William 1947 Booker, John 1951-52 Floren, Lennart 1965 Johnson, Don 1987-90 Newsome, Albert 1957 Sussman, David 1990-91 Bortner, Robert 1956, 1958 Fogleman, Taylor 2006 Johnson, R.U. 1944 Nichols, Dave 1945 Swann, Edward 1958 Bowman, Hugh 1950 Foreman, John 1936-38 Johnson, Thomas 1979-81 Nicholson, James 1946-47 Swenson, Bruce 1966-68 Boyd, Alexander 1986 Foster, John 1956 Jones, Bryan 1989-92 Norwood, John 1928-29 Swigart, Donald 1946 Boyd, Geoff 2002-05 Freeman, S.R. 1941 Jones, J.L. 1934 Sylvia, Bruce 1959-61 Brabham, Wells 1991-94 Frierson, Joe 1989-92 Jones, Kirby 1961-63 O O O O Sylvia, Delmer 1951-53 Bradford, Thomas 1953-56 Fuller, Edward 1936-37, 1939 Jordan, Melville 1946 Oberstein, David 1974-77 Breziner, Aron 1998-2001 Fuller, Lawrence 1991 Oettinger, Kenneth 1964-66 T T T T Bristol, L.F. 1938 K K K K Ord, J.W. 1942 Tanner, Thomas 1988-91 Bristow, John 1988-89 G G G G Kang, Jason 1998 Tate, Robert 1969 Britt, David 1995-98 Garcia, Joseph 1971, 1973- Karson, Jamieson 1977-79 P P PP Taxman, Gary 1977-80 Brock, Billy 1973-76 75 Keel, Koley 1985-86 Paley, Donald 1943, 1946 Taylor, Clark 1947-50 Brooks, Guy 1975-76, 1978 Goddard, Davis 1965-66 Kenfield, John 1947 Palmore, J.I. 1930 Tedesco, Robert 1995-98 Brown, Peter 1978 Goldberg, Jon 1992 Kerdasha, Ronald 1952-55 Parrish, Oscar 1963-65 Tendler, Paul 1978 Browne, H.T. 1930 Gordon, Eric 1995-1997 Kernodle, Michael 1969, 1971 Payne, Bobby 1952-55 Thomas, Tony 1995-98 Browne, Herbert 1952-55 Gragg, W.H. 1938-39 Kessler, David 1986-89 Peck, D.D. 1943-44 Thompson, Donald 1953-56 Brownlow, Tyne 2000-01 Graham, E.K. 1930-31 Keys, Bennette 1958-60 Peck, Stanley 1957 Thornqvist, Roland 1991-93 Buchanan, Francis 1951 Grant, Bitsy 1931-32 Kraut, Jon 1975-78 Petrides, P.J. 2003-05 Trott, William 1966-68 Buford, Tiger 1979-81 Grass, Michael 1998-99 Krege, James 1987-90 Petrone, Marcio 2000-02 Troutman, Mark 1979-80 Burchfield, Brian 1986-87 Green, Robert 1953-56 Phillips, Tripp 1996-2000 Tuttle, Clifford 1945 Griffin, Carter 1987-89 L L L L Pinchbeck, Daniel 2002-03 C C C C Grigg, John 1980-83 Lambeth, Charles 1951 Plyler, Will, 2005-06 V V V V Cahall, W.L. 1943 Gruner, Stanley 1946-49 Langstroth, Lee 1968-70 Pollack, David 1985-88 Van Winkle, Frederick 1957 Caldwell, David 1993-96 Guejman, Sebastian, 2005-06 Lanier, Andrew 1990-92 Pomeroy, Brad 2003-06 Van Wyck, Frederic 1965-67 Carl, Neal 1977-79 Gullan, Lenny, 2005-06 Lassiter, Allen 1968-70 Porter, Derek 2003-06 Carlotti, Benjamin, 2005-06 Gustafson, Bruce 1953-56 Lawch, R.C. 1944 Potts, Ramsay 1936-37 W W W W Carlton, John 1961-62 Ledford, Jeremy 2003-04 Potts, Dek 1977, 1979-81 Waddell, C.E. 1928-29 Carroll, Darcy 1982 H H H H Leitch, Robert 1973 Prosper, Darren 1990 Wadden, T.A. 1942 Carver, A.H. 1940-41 Hackney, C.W. 1944 Legum, Louis 1961-62 Pulliam, Cooper 1990, 92-94 Wadsworth, James 1965-67 Causey, Phillip 1959 Hamilton, Gene 1966-68 Levitan, Walter 1933-35 Pulliam, Jay 1983-85 Walker, John 1957 Chambers, Jeff 1984-87 Hammerstein, James 1950 Lidskog, Fred 1996-97 Watkins, Andrew 2004 Chatman, Junie 1975-78 Handel, Samuel 1952-53, Lieberman, Jeremy, 2005 R R R R Weathers, Bill 1945 Cheatwood, David 1998-2001 1955 Lipson, Nate 1996 Rawlings, Frederick 1968-70 Webb, Woody 1991-93 Chewning, Tom 1965-67 Hansel, William 1960 Liskin, Philip 1930-31 Rawlings, W.H. 1938-40 Weilbaecher, Derek 1987-88 Clark, Lloyd 1958 Happer, Mills 1958-60 Livingston, Frank 1957 Rencken, Bjorn 1999 Weilbaecher, James 1986-88 Clark, R.E. 1939 Hardaway, Richard 1971-74 Lockett, Frank 1959-60 Rice, Charles 1947-50 Wellford, H.W. 1944 Cocke, Stanley 1961-63 Harden, Charles 1941 Long, Donald 1965 Rice, E.B. 1940 Weesner, Richard 1933 Cordon, J.T. 1935 Harper, Ryan 1994 Luchici, Raian 2004-06 Ricks, Thomas 1959-61 West, Douglas 1965-67 Corn, William 1969-72 Harris, Harvey 1933-35 Ludwig, Ken 1980-83 Rider, C.F. 1938-40 Whitaker, Ken 1981-83 Correll, William 1972-74 Harrison, John 1962-63 Luxenberg, Robert 1950-51 Riley, Chad 1999-2001 Wilder, Cleo 1945-46, 1948- Coss, Jonathan 1985-86 Harrison, John 1967 Robinson, Gordon 1936-37 49 Covington, Dick 1928 Harsanyi, Paul 1994-97 M M M M Robinson, P.F. 1941 Willis, Richard 1933-35 Craig, Beverly 1983-85 Hassler, Earl 1975-78 Maass, Harold 1942-43, 1946 Rood, Carlton 1937-39 Wilson, S.L. 1928 Crawford, Douglas 1969 Hearn, Wayne 1984-85 MacArthur, Charles 1970-72 Rood, R.W. 1938-39 Winstead, James 1949-50 Heier, Jeffrey 1979 Makepeace, Richard 1958 Rosenkampff, Brad 1985 Wishart, Karl 2005-06 D D D D Heinrich, Tristan, 2005-06 Mandour, Aly 2005-06 Rowe, Roy 1945 Wright, L.C. 1931-33 Daiya, Sandeep, 2005-06 Henderson, Archibald 1935- Markham, J.E. 1942-43 Ruotolo, Thomas 1978 Wyatt, Daryl 1993 Dalrymple, T.E. 1928 37 Markham, John 1965-66 Dameron, Edgar 1946 Henderson, Richard 1962-64 Marks, D.W. 1943 S S S S X Y Z Dameron, Lasley 1949-50 Hendlin, H.H. 1930-31 Matisso, A.P. 1944 Sanders, Richard 1961 Yeomans, E.D. 1929, 1931 Daniels, Sam 1946 Hendrix, M.P. 1942-43 McDermott, Sean 1995-98 Sapp, Richard 1952 Zimmerman, George 1961-62 Davis, Mac 1945 Henry, Tal 1978 McGeachy, Neil 1988 Sarner, Josh 1981-84 Davis, Robert 1966-68 Herring, Horace T. 1974 McGlinn, J.A. 1934 Saunders, Eric 1996-98 DeGray, Edward 1935-36 Hewitt, Robert 1952 McIver, Frank 1957 Schroeder, Jeff 2005-06 Dell, Julian 1956 Hilkey, Max 2000-01 McKee, Richard 1971-74 Scott, Bill 1928-29 page 36 2006-07 Men’s Tennis Media Guide Carolina Men’s Tennis ACC Top 50 Honorees Eleven University of North Carolina players NCAA quarterfinalist in 1995. Caldwell was Seixas. While at Carolina, McNair combined were included on the list of the 50 greatest also a three-time All-ACC selection. with Richie McKee to reach the NCAA doubles Atlantic Coast Conference men’s tennis play- Jeff Chambers, 1984-87, St. Petersburg, final in 1973. In the Atlantic Coast Conference, ers of all time, announced in September 2002 Fla., is the only Carolina player in history to he won three individual singles titles (1970, by the ACC Office. UNC's representatives receive an NCAA singles invitation each of his 1971, 1972) and three doubles titles, one with were diverse in nature and included nine All- four years as a Tar Heel, Chambers played in Joe Dorn in 1970 and two with McKee in 1971 America selections as well as six players who the NCAA Tournament in 1984, 1985, 1986 and 1972. He went on to have a distinguished played professional tennis. Among the Tar and 1987. He was named an All-America in professional career, attaining the world’s No. 1 Heel selections were professional doubles singles in 1985 after capturing the ACC indi- doubles ranking with teammate Sherwood stars Freddie McNair and Don Johnson, the vidual flight championship at No. 2 singles and Stewart in the late 1970s. latter a two-time Wimbledon doubles titlist. All going 26-8 in singles overall. Chambers also O.H. Parrish, 1963-65, Richmond, Va., 11 players on the list won ACC championships qualified for the NCAA Tournament in doubles played on three ACC championship teams for either individually or as a team. three times, missing only in 1986. Chambers Carolina in the mid 1960s. In 1965, he won the "I'm very proud of the large number of UNC was a three-time All-Atlantic Coast Conference Atlantic Coast Conference championship at student-athletes named to the team," said Sam selection. No. 1 singles. He was the Atlantic Coast Paul, whose tenure at UNC as assistant and Don Johnson, 1987-90, Pittsburgh, Pa., Conference champion in doubles in 1964 while head tennis coach dates to 1989. "This is an distinguished himself as one of the world’s playing with Ted Hoehn. In 1965, he captured amazingly representative list and includes best doubles players while a professional. In the ACC championship at No. 1 doubles play- players who have been dominant forces both 2001, he teamed with to win the ing with Bronson Van Wyck. in the ACC and on the national scene." doubles title at Wimbledon, reach the finals at Tripp Phillips, 1996-2000, Charlotte, N.C., Billy Brock, 1973-76, Norfolk, Va., was a the U.S. Open and represent the U.S. on the was an intense competitor and valued team Coach Don Skakle protege, a member of four Davis Cup Team. Palmer and Johnson com- leader. Phillips earned All-America status his Atlantic Coast Conference championship peted for the U.S. in Davis Cup play against senior season. After returning from a medical teams at Carolina and an All-America in sin- India in Winston-Salem, N.C. Johnson is a redshirt, Phillips had an outstanding senior gles in 1976. Brock was a powerhouse on the 1990 graduate of the University of North campaign, posting a stellar 25-6 singles record court and a member of North Carolina teams Carolina. He played tennis at UNC for four at the No. 1 singles position. However, Phillips that lost only eight dual matches in his four- years. As a senior he was named first team saved his best performance of the year for the year career. Brock played on four squads All-Atlantic Coast Conference and he played last as he advanced to the quarterfinals of the which posted undefeated seasons in the ACC. No. 2 singles on a team which won the Tar NCAA Championships. Phillips’ performance Brock won two ACC individual flight singles Heels’ first Atlantic Coast Conference champi- elevated him in the ITA rankings at season’s titles (No. 3 in 1974 and No. 1 in 1975) and he onship in 12 years. end as he finished 2000 ranked No. 12 nation- also took home an ACC doubles title in 1975. Bryan Jones, 1989-92, Kings Mountain, ally in singles. Phillips’ career and character David Caldwell, 1993-96, Richmond, Va., N.C., is one of three Carolina players in histo- as he received the prestigious John Van was a two-time All-America. David Caldwell ry to be named the Atlantic Coast Conference Nostrand Award from the ITA. He was the first left a legacy at Carolina that will be difficult to Tournament Most Valuable Player since that UNC tennis player to win the Patterson Medal match by any future Tar Heel. At North award came into existence. Jones received as the team’s outstanding senior student-ath- Carolina, he became the only Atlantic Coast that honor and many more in 1992 as the sen- lete since Vic Seixas in 1950. Conference men’s tennis player to earn ACC ior tri-captain led the Tar Heels to one of the George Sokol, 1962-64, Bryn Mawr, Pa., Player of the Year honors three times, winning school’s most successful seasons, setting a was named an All-America in singles as a jun- the award in 1994, 1995 and 1996. Caldwell school record for team wins (25-5). Jones also ior in 1963. He was one of the Tar Heels’ first was named an ITA All-America in singles as was named the ACC Player of the Year in 1992 dominant presences in the Atlantic Coast both a sophomore and a junior, and was a dou- and helped lead the team to the 1992 ACC Conference. Sokol won three of ACC individ- bles All-America with partner Brint Morrow as a Tournament Championship. It was the second ual singles titles (1962, 1963, 1964). Sokol junior. Caldwell was 16-0 in ACC singles in his such championship for UNC during Jones’ also won an ACC doubles title in 1963 with junior and senior years combined. He is the tenure, as Carolina also won the coveted tro- partner Keith Stoneman. only player to ever win three individual ACC phy in 1990 when Jones was a sophomore. Roland Thornqvist, 1991-93, Farsta, flight titles at No. 1 singles. He also won the The Kings Mountain, N.C., native was named Sweden, was named an All-America in both 1995 Rafael Osuna Sportsmanship Award. an All-America selection in singles after finish- singles and doubles by the ITA in 1992 and The 1996 Region II Men’s Tennis Player of the ing with a 35-7 overall record. He was also 1993. His greatest accomplishment, however, Year, Caldwell received NCAA singles invita- named the ITA Region II Volvo Tennis/Senior was winning the ITA’s Rafael Osuna tions in 1994, 1995 and 1996 and was an Player of the Year in 1992. Sportsmanship Award in both 1992 and 1993. Rich McKee, 1971-74, Charlotte, N.C., He was the first player in the history of college won a great deal of fame playing collegiate tennis to win the prestigious honor twice. In tennis, earning All-America honors as a soph- 1993, he captured the singles title in the omore, junior and senior. The son of teaching Rolex/ITA National Indoor Championships, one pro Dick McKee, who reached the finals at of the collegiate grand slams. That sam year Wimbledon after a career at the University of he was named to the Rolex Collegiate All-Star Miami, McKee’s play improved with each year Team, was the ITA Region II Senior Player of he spent at Carolina. He became known as the Year and the Atlantic Coast Conference much for his quiet on-the-court manner as for Player of the Year. Thornqvist was the ACC his tennis talent. A team captain, McKee and champion at No. 1 singles in both his sopho- doubles partner Freddie McNair reached the more and senior years and he won the No. 1 NCAA doubles finals in 1973 and the tandem doubles crown as a senior.. A three-time All- won the 1971 and 1972 Atlantic Coast ACC selection, Thornqvist qualified for the Conference No. 1 doubles titles. In singles, NCAA Tournament in singles three years and McKee won two ACC titles — No. 4 in 1971 in doubles twice. He was a quarterfinalist in and No. 3 in 1972. singles in both 1992 and 1993 and in doubles Freddie McNair, 1970-73, Chevy Chase, in 1992. Md., is the only Carolina player to win All- America honors each of his four years in ACC Top 50 honoree O.H. Parrish and former Chapel Hill. McNair probably ranks as UNC coach Don Skakle Carolina’s finest player in history behind Vic page 37 2006-07 Men’s Tennis Media Guide 2006-07 UNC Men’s Tennis Media Guide page 37 Carolina Players In The Pros Carolina Men’s Tennis

During Sam Paul’s Coaching Tenure The Following Players Have Gone On To Play Professional Tennis °David Caldwell °Don Johnson °Tripp Phillips °Trystan Meniane °Brad Pomeroy °Nick Monroe °Raian Luchici °Tony Thomas °Paul Harsanyi °Daryl Wyatt °Roland Thornqvist °Bryan Jones °Marcio Petrone °Adam Seri °Greg Hill °Assaf Drori Former teammates Brad Pomeroy and Nick Monroe accept trophies at the $10K Future event in Laguna Nigel, Calif. Pomeroy and Stephen Ward, a former player at William & Mary, defeated Monroe and Izak ven der Merwe (Old Dominion) on October 9, 2006 by a 6-4, 6-2 score.

Don Johnson accepts his Wimbledon doubles trophy in 2001.

David Caldwell, Class of ‘96 Roland Thornqvist, Class of ‘93

Trystan Meniane Assaf Drori, Class of ‘99 Tony Thomas, Class of ‘98 page 38 2006-07 Men’s Tennis Media Guide Carolina Men’s Tennis Cone-Kenfield Tennis Center In keeping with the University of North Carolina’s tradition of offering quality facilities for its student-athletes, the University dedicated an indoor/outdoor tennis facility adjacent to the Friday Center on N.C. Highway 54 in Chapel Hill in September 1992. The Cone-Kenfield Tennis Center, which took four years to come to fruition, was the crowning jewel in a decade-long campaign to improve the athletic facilities at the University. The tennis center, located on Don Skakle Drive, was dedicated September 12, 1992, with a crowd of more than 1,000 Carolina tennis and ath- letic enthusiasts in attendance. Paul Hardin, chancellor of the University, and athletic director John Swofford officially dedicated the structure and named the facility that now serves as the home of the Tar Heels’ men’s and women’s tennis programs.

Bill Moore of Raleigh, N.C., chaired the fund- raising committee that helped bring the facility to fruition. Other members of the Tennis Fundraising Committee were Cliff Alphin, Billy Armfield, Kelly Bowles, Herb Browne, Tom Chewning, Jim Corn, Lyons Gray, Kitty Harrison, Katherine Hogan, Paul Hoolahan, Allen Morris, M.W. Peebles, Jr., Moyer Smith, Sue Walsh, Keith Stoneman, John The facility is named for Ceasar Cone II, a Swofford, and Ernie Williamson. 1928 alumnus of the University who played tennis The $2 million complex includes: at Carolina and was a great benefactor of the • Six indoor and 12 outdoor, lighted, hard sur- school throughout his life. Cone went on to found face tennis courts Cone Mills in Greensboro, N.C., one of the most • Indoor spectator viewing on the upper level of the sites of courts No. 1, 2 and 3. successful textile manufacturing entities in the the indoor center The first exhibition matches were played at the South. The center also bears the name of John • Outdoor seating for 2,000 in the Rauch Tennis dedication ceremonies, prior to the UNC-Furman Kenfield, the legendary Tar Heel tennis coach who Stadium football game. Since then, Carolina’s men’s ten- compiled a sterling record of 434-30-2 in dual- • Men’s and women’s varsity dressing facilities nis squad has hosted at least one tournament match play from 1928-55. Kenfield’s teams won • Public and visitor dressing facilities each fall in addition to the spring dual match 15 Southern Conference championships and two • Fully-equipped weight-training rooms for both schedule. Atlantic Coast Conference team championships varsity teams Beginning in November 1992, the Tar Heels during his tenure. He coached the likes of Bitsy • An alley for coaches behind each set of indoor were named the host institution for the ITA Grant, Wilmer Hines and Vic Seixas at UNC and courts Mideast Region Indoor Singles and Doubles his 1948 team finished third in the nation. Kenfield • Offices and public restrooms on the upper Championships, which features the top men’s sin- was Carolina’s first-ever full-time tennis coach, level of the center core gles and doubles players from the Mideast and he took over the reins of the UNC team in • Indoor area of approximately 47,500 square Region. Winners of the Mideast Region time to coach Ceasar Cone II in his senior season feet Championships advance to the ITA national in 1928. • Air conditioning for the indoor area indoor tournaments each year. Fund-raising on the Cone-Kenfield Tennis • Halide lighting on all courts The Tar Heels have hosted NCAA regional Center was completed in early 1991 and con- • Indirect lighting on the indoor courts tournaments at the Cone-Kenfield Tennis Center struction on the facility began in the spring of that UNC added a new outdoor scoreboard to the in two of the past three years — 2004 and 2006. year. facility prior to the 2004 campaign. It is located at

2006-07 UNC Men’s Tennis Media Guide page 39 Tar Heel Athletic Tradition Carolina Men’s Tennis

North Carolina fields 28 varsity athletic teams, 15 for women and 13 for men. During the 2005-06 school year, 24 of 28 Carolina squads qualified for NCAA postseason play and Carolina finished fourth in the National Association of Collegiate Athletic Directors’ Cup, sym- bolic of overall athletic excellence. Going into the 2006-07 school year, Carolina had won 242 Atlantic Coast Conference championships in its histo- ry and has been the dominant school in league play in that respect. Maryland In the fall of 2003, Sports Illustrated ranks second with 177 alltime ACC on Campus (above) declared UNC’s titles and none of the other schools in women’s soccer program the greatest college sports dynasty ever. the conference have won more than The Tar Heel program, under the 113 league championships, less than leadership of legendary head coach Anson Dorrance, has won 19 of the 26 half of Carolina’s total. UNC won 12 national championships ever decided titles in 1994-95, the most ever won in in the sport of women’s soccer on the a single school year by one university. collegiate level. The Tar Heels have also won all but two of the Atlantic Coast Conference championships ever decided. Carolina’s program passed the 600 win mark in 2005 and the overall Dean Smith is the second winningest coach in Division I record now stands at 629-28-18, a win- college basketball history with 879 wins in 36 seasons at ning percentage of .945. UNC from 1961 through 1997.

Carolina athletic alumni include two of the world’s most famous sports figures — Michael Jordan (above) and Mia Hamm (below).

North Carolina’s Dean E. Smith Center, named after the legendary Tar Heel basketball coach, is home to one of the nation’s best men’s college basketball program. Crowds of nearly 22,000 fans pack the Smith Center for every Tar Heel home game.

UNC football fans stormed the field at Kenan Stadium to celebrate UNC’s 31-28 win over No. 4 Miami on October 30, 2004 as Connor Barth kicked a game-winning 42-yard field goal as time expired. page 40 2006-07 Men’s Tennis Media Guide Carolina Men’s Tennis Tar Heel Athletic Tradition

Carolina’s National Men’s Basketball Championship 1924 • 1957 • 1982 • 1993 • 2005 Teams

Women’s Basketball • 1994

Women’s Soccer 1981 • 1982 • 1983 • 1984 • 1986 • 1987 • 1988 • 1989 • 1990 • 1991 • 1992 • 1993 • 1994 • 1996 • 1997 • Men’s Lacrosse 1999 • 2000 • 2003 • 1981 • 1982 Men’s Soccer 2006 1986 • 1991 2001

Field Hockey • 1989 • 1995 • 1996 • 1997

2006-07 UNC Men’s Tennis Media Guide page 41 Department of Athletics Carolina Men’s Tennis Dick Baddour • Director of Athletics Dick Baddour, a 1966 graduate of the University of North Carolina, was named Director of Athletics on June 25, 1997. In his nine years as director, the UNC Department of Athletics has undergone a number of changes, yet remains one of the premiere programs in the Atlantic Coast Conference and in the nation. The Goldsboro, N.C., native heads a program that with 28 varsity sports is the largest in the ACC. Carolina prides itself on a strong overall athletic program and finished fourth in the 2005-06 U.S. Department of Athletics Mission Statement The Department of Athletics has offered high quality athletic programs for many years. Through a Sports Academy Cup, a measure of NCAA post- dedicated commitment to educational interests, competitive athletic programs, and integrity in all season success. The Tar Heels, inaugural winners of the Cup in 1994, have finished among the top 10 areas, the student-athletes, coaches and staff strive to bring credit and recognition to the University. teams 11 times in the competition's 13 years. The mission of the Department is to sponsor a broad-based athletic program that provides educa- Baddour is in his 40th year of continuous service tional and athletic opportunities for young men and women to grow and develop, and to serve the to the university. He graduated from UNC in 1966 interests of the University by complementing and enhancing its diversity and quality of life. Coaches, and was appointed Assistant Dean of Men in 1967. as educators, are foundational to this process. In keeping with the University’s efforts to offer pro- He served as Assistant Dean of Admissions and grams of regional and national acclaim, the Department’s athletic programs strive for competitive Assistant Dean of the UNC School of Law and also excellence within the Atlantic Coast Conference or other similar institutions. Through its athletic pro- earned a Master of Arts degree in education prior to grams, the University seeks to unite students, faculty, staff and alumni in a common and shared expe- joining the athletic department in 1986. rience. The Department seeks to contribute to the diversity of the University by offering opportunities In 2001, he received the Distinguished Service for enhanced racial/ethnic, cultural and geographic representation. Medal from the UNC General Alumni Association. To fulfill this mission, the Department, with the approval of the Board of Trust, has developed prin- Active in Chapel Hill community affairs, he is a ciples of operation to provide guidance and direction to its personnel. This Mission Statement and past president of the Public School Foundation and accompanying principles require strong dedication and commitment from all who participate in, coach has served on the Parks and Recreation in and support the Department of Athletics. Commission. He and his wife, Lynda, have two sons, Allen and David, and a daughter, Jennifer. Department of Athletics Statement on Gambling The mission of the Department of Athletics is to sponsor a broad-based athletic program that pro- Dr. Beth Miller vides educational and athletic opportunities for young men and women to grow and develop. In keep- • Sr. Assoc. Director of Athletics ing with the Department's mission and the University's commitment to educational interests, compet- Beth Miller is in her 22nd year supervising North itive athletic programs, and integrity in all areas, the Department of Athletics strongly condemns the Carolina's highly-successful 26-team Olympic influence of gambling on intercollegiate athletics. Sports program and serves Student gambling is a significant issue on college campuses. Student-athlete involvement in gam- as UNC's Senior Woman bling has produced many tragic situations, both for student-athletes and the universities they repre- Administrator. She is a 1968 sent. Student-athletes often compete in contests that generate interest from those involved in gam- alumna of Appalachian State bling and, possibly, organized crime. If given the opportunity, those interests will not hesitate to exploit University with a B.S. degree the position student-athletes in health and physical edu- hold on college campuses. As University of North Carolina Athletics Administration, 2006-07 cation. She has a master's such, the University of North Chancellor ...... Dr. James Moeser from ASU and earned a Carolina is firmly opposed to all Faculty Athletics Representative ...... Dr. Jack Evans Doctor of Arts degree in forms of gambling and bribery Director of Athletics...... Dick Baddour physical education at Middle related to intercollegiate athlet- Senior Associate Athletic Director ...... Larry Gallo Jr. Tennessee State in 1974. ics. Senior Associate A.D. (Olympic Sports/SWA) ...... Dr. Beth Miller From 1969-72, Miller served as the head volley- Senior Associate A.D. (Facilities & Operations) ...... Willie Scroggs To fulfill its educational obli- Senior Associate A.D. (Business and Finance)...... Martina Ballen ball and basketball coach at Appalachian State. gation, the Department provides Senior Associate A.D. (Student-Athlete Services)...... John Blanchard She became head volleyball coach at UNC in 1975 a gambling education program Associate A.D. (Communications)...... Steve Kirschner and led the Tar Heels to four consecutive ACC titles to all its student-athletes and Associate A.D. (Ticket Operations & Smith Center) ...... Clint Gwaltney from 1980-83 and five postseason tournament departmental staff members. Associate A.D. (Football Administration)...... Corey Holliday appearances. She also coached softball at This statement and the educa- Associate A.D. (Marketing and Promotions) ...... Rick Steinbacher Carolina from 1978-79. tional program are reflections of Assistant A.D. (Strength & Conditioning) ...... Jeff Connors In 1979, Miller was named Athletic Business Assistant A.D (Football & Olympic Sports Operations) ...... Ellen Culler the Department's commitment to Assistant A.D. (Certification & Eligibility) ...... Susan Maloy Manager. She retired from coaching volleyball after keeping intercollegiate athletics 1983, but continued to handle all financial affairs for Assistant A.D. (Facility Planning & Management) ...... Mike Bunting free from the influences of gam- Assistant A.D. (Marketing & Promotions)...... Michael Beale the department through 1987. She has overseen bling and its related activities. Assistant A.D. (Compliance) ...... Amy Herman UNC's Olympic Sports program since 1985. The Department requires its Executive Director Rams Club...... John Montgomery Miller currently serves on a number of Atlantic staff members and student-ath- Director of the Academic Support Program...... Robert Mercer Coast Conference committees, including those for letes to adhere to NCAA, state Director of Sports Medicine ...... Dr. Tim Taft women's basketball, women's golf and volleyball. Associate Director of Sports Medicine ...... Dr. Dan Hooker and federal laws regarding gam- She chairs the Awards Committee and the Senior Athletic Department Switchboards bling. In the interest of fair com- Woman Administrators Committee. She also Smith Center ...... (919) 962-6000 serves on UNC's Housing Advisory Board. petition and the growth and Carmichael Auditorium ...... (919) 962-5411 Miller is a native of Landis, N.C. serves on UNC's development of student-ath- Mailing Address:...... Overnight Address: letes, the Department strongly P.O. Box 2126 ...... Dean Smith Center Housing Advisory Board. Miller is a native of Chapel Hill, NC 27515 ...... Skipper Bowles Drive Landis, N.C. urges its friends and supporters to refrain from gambling/betting ...... Chapel Hill, NC 27514 Internet Address: ...... TarHeelBlue.com on contests involving collegiate competition and to abide by state and federal laws. page 42 2006-07 Men’s Tennis Media Guide Carolina Men’s Tennis The University of North Carolina Through its teaching, research and public •Recent Rankings than 850 wireless access points, UNC provides service, the University of North Carolina at Several national publications regularly pub- wireless connectivity in classrooms, labs, Chapel Hill is an educational and economic lish rankings that listed Carolina prominently in libraries, residence halls and quadrangles. beacon for the people of North Carolina and categories ranging from academic quality to 1st among public research universities, for beyond. affordability to diversity to public service to inter- the second consecutive year, recording the •History national presence. Recent highlights include: highest rate of undergraduates studying abroad The University of North Carolina at Chapel 5th best public university in U.S. News & in 2002-2003; 7th among all research universi- Hill was the nation’s first state university to open World Report’s annual “Best Colleges” guide- ties for the total number of undergraduates its doors and the only public university to award book. Affirmation as a national leader in student going abroad, according to an annual report degrees in the 18th century. accessibility; 2nd among public campuses and published by the Institute of International Authorized by the N.C. Constitution in 1776, 19th overall in “Great Schools, Great Prices,” Education. the university was chartered by the N.C. based on academic quality, net cost of atten- 1st among U.S. academic institutions recog- General Assembly Dec. 11, 1789, the same nized as “best places to work for postdocs,” year George Washington first was inaugurated according to The Scientist magazine. Based on as president. conditions for postdoctoral fellows working in The cornerstone was laid for Old East, the the life sciences as part of the magazine’s third nation’s first state university building, Oct. 12, annual survey. Carolina was 6th among all U.S. 1793. Hinton James, the first student, arrived institutions, including government institutions from Wilmington, N.C., Feb. 12, 1795. and private research centers. •Location “Hottest” for health careers, according to the The 729-acre central campus includes the Kaplan/Newsweek 2005 “How to Get into two oldest state university buildings, Old East College” guide, based on admissions trends and Person Hall. Old East and Playmakers and interviews with a broad array of educators, Theatre, an 1852 Greek-revival building are admissions officers, students and other long- National Historic Landmarks. time observers of the admissions process. An The American Society of Landscape article in the guide says UNC’s diverse offerings Architects selected the Carolina campus as one in the health disciplines – all in the same place of the most beautifully landscaped spots in the – are helping attract prospective students. country. That listing is among the praise affirm- 14th among top U.S. colleges and universi- ing the charm of mighty oaks, majestic quad- ties for the number of alumni volunteering to rangles, brick sidewalks and other landscaping serve in the Peace Corps in 2004. Currently, 60 synonymous with UNC. Chapel Hill graduates are representing the Today, the campus is undergoing an United States abroad by serving people who unprecedented physical transformation made live in the developing world as Peace Corps vol- possible in part by North Carolinians’ over- unteers. whelming approval of the $3.1 billion bond ref- 14th – the highest ranking for any major pub- erendum for higher education. The referendum, lic research university – in the 2004 “Black approved in November 2000, was the nation’s Enterprise-DayStar Top 50 Colleges and largest higher education bond package. Universities for African Americans” list. This The bonds mean $510 million for renova- ranking was based on responses to questions tions, repairs and new buildings so 21st century about which schools were both a good academ- students at Carolina can learn in a 21st century dance and average student debt. Also 6th ic and social fit for African-Americans. environment. Also guided by a visionary master among publics for “least debt.” One of the nation’s top universities in foster- plan for growth now rapidly coming to life, the Kenan-Flagler Business School: tied for 6th ing social responsibility and public service, university is investing another $800-plus million among undergraduate programs. according to The Princeton Review and from non-state sources, including private gifts 4th among public universities in “The Top Campus Compact. Carolina appears in a book, and overhead receipts from faculty research American Research Universities,” produced in “Colleges With a Conscience: 81 Great grants, for other buildings essential to excel- December 2004 by the Lombardi Program on Schools With Outstanding Community lence. The resulting $1.3 billion capital con- Measuring University Performance at the Involvement.” Based on admissions practices, struction program is among the largest under- University of Florida. Based on categories such scholarships rewarding community service and way at any major American university. as research, endowment assets, private giving, support for service-learning programs. Recently completed projects include the ren- faculty, and advanced training. Among the 20 very “best buy” public univer- ovation of Memorial Hall, which anchors the uni- 1st among the 100 best public colleges com- sities in the U.S. and Canada as judged by the versity’s planned arts common and is now a bining great academics and affordable tuitions 2005 Fiske Guide to Colleges based on the comfortable, elegant venue for the performing as ranked by Kiplinger’s Personal Finance. quality of the academic programs in relation to arts; the Rams Head Center, a linchpin in the Carolina has been first four consecutive times. the cost of attendance. campus master plan that combines a 700-space A “best value” among 81 schools chosen for Degree programs or specialty areas from the parking deck, dining and student recreation “America’s Best Value Colleges, 2006 Edition” schools of business, education, law, medicine, facilities, and innovative sustainability practices; by The Princeton Review/Random House for pharmacy, public health as well as the College and the renovated Health Sciences Library, outstanding academics, relatively low costs, of Arts and Sciences appeared prominently in which features 140 computer workstations and and generous financial aid packages. Carolina the Spring 2005 edition of U.S. News & World technology that will encourage collaboration has appeared in this publication two years in a Report’s “American’s Best Graduate Schools” among scientists and educations in Chapel Hill row. issue. Highlights included medicine, overall pri- and beyond. 1st for the top entrepreneurial campus and mary care, 2nd, overall research, tied for 23rd; This fall, groundbreakings will include the 5th “most connected.” according to The pharmacy, 3rd for Pharm.D. doctoral program; North Carolina Cancer Hospital, a $180 million Princeton Review and Forbes.com. UNC has an Kenan-Flagler Business School’s MBA pro- facility being built by the UNC Health Care undergraduate business degree offering with a gram, tied for 21st, law, tied for 27th; education, System that was approved by the North concentration in entrepreneurship in the Kenan- tied for 27th; sociology, tied for 4th; history, tied Carolina General Assembly and Gov. Mike Flagler Business School, a new minor in entre- for 13th; political science, tied for 13th; English, Easley in 2004. preneurship in the College of Arts and Sciences, tied for 19th; and psychology, tied for 22nd. UNC anchors one corner of the famed and a new campuswide Carolina Kenan-Flagler appeared in several other best Research Triangle Park, which has played a Entrepreneurial Initiative. In 2000, UNC became MBA program lists. They included Business vital role in nurturing the economic development the nation’s largest university requiring under- Week, 16th, Forbes, 8th for return on invest- of North Carolina. graduates to own laptop computers. With more ment to graduates; The Wall Street Journal, 2006-07 UNC Men’s Tennis Media Guide page 43 The University of North Carolina Carolina Men’s Tennis 11th based on a survey of corporate of Missouri system; U.S. President James Polk; recruiters; The Financial Times, 7th; and geneticist Francis Collins; actors Jack Palance, Hispanic Business, 5th, among top business George Grizzard and Andy Griffith, as well as schools for Hispanics. The school’s internation- actresses Louise Fletcher and Sharon al executive education program was ranked Lawrence; editorial cartoonist Jeff MacNelly; 17th overall by The Financial Times. The school Hugh McColl, retired chairman and chief execu- was included in a new Princeton Review tive officer of Bank of America Corp.; and fash- book,“Best 143 Business Schools,” and the ion designer Alexander Julian. MBA program was ranked 6th for best campus •The Carolina Covenant environment, 10th for best professors and 10th Carolina has expanded its nationally recog- for most family friendly. nized Carolina Covenant initiative to make a •Key Statistics debt-free college education possible for more Now in its third century, Carolina offers bach- low-income students. The changes, announced elor's, master's, doctoral and professional by Chancellor James Moeser during his 2004 degrees in academic areas critical to North State of the University address, send an even Carolina's future: business, dentistry, educa- stronger message about accessibility and the tion, law, medicine, nursing, public health and traditional commitment to opportunity in Chapel social work, among others. Offerings include 71 Hill for qualified students – regardless of their bachelor’s, 110 master’s and 77 doctorate ability to pay. degree programs. The health sciences are well Launched in fall 2004, the Carolina Covenant integrated with the liberal arts, basic sciences initially covered 225 freshmen who can gradu- and high-tech programs. Patient outreach pro- ate without debt. Instead, they agree to work on grams affiliated with Carolina and the UNC campus 10 to 12 hours weekly in a federal work- Health Care System serve citizens in all 100 study job, and Carolina meets the rest of their North Carolina counties. needs through a combination of federal, state, Carolina belongs to the select group of 62 university, and other privately funded grants and American and two Canadian campuses forming scholarships. the Association of American Universities. Now the university is increasing the financial $1.47 billion in gifts and pledges from alumni In fall 2004, Carolina enrolled more than eligibility requirements for the program to cover and friends toward its $1.8 billion goal. 26,800 students from all 100 North Carolina an estimated 120 new students. Starting in fall Carolina First has created 144 new endowed counties, the other 49 states and more than 100 2005, students and their families must be at or professorships toward a total goal of 200 and other countries. Eighty-two percent of Carolina's below 200 percent of the federal poverty level – 473 new scholarships and fellowships for stu- undergraduates come from North Carolina. up from 150 percent. That raises the threshold dents toward a target of 1,000. Faculty support Those students learn from a 3,100-member to cover a family of four with an annual income and the quality of students and facilities are faculty. Many of those faculty members hold or of about $37,000 or a single parent with a child among key priorities for the campaign, sched- have held major posts in virtually every national who makes about $24,000. This year, those uled to close in July 2007. scholarly or professional organization and have income levels were at about $28,000 and Other campaign priorities include providing earned election to the most prestigious aca- $18,000, respectively. the means to pursue strategic initiatives to demic academies and organizations. Carolina became the first major public U.S. enrich the academic experience; conduct The Carolina academic community benefits university to announce plans for such a program research that improves the health and the eco- from a library with more than 5.6 million vol- in fall 2004. Since then, several universities, nomic, social, and cultural well being of citizens; umes and perennially ranks among the best including Virginia, Maryland, Nebraska, Illinois, and redouble the commitment to public service research libraries in North America as judged by Harvard and Brown, have created or and engagement. the Association of Research Libraries. The most announced plans for similar programs. UNC Total giving in fiscal 2004 was $190 million in recent association listings place Carolina 15th also has begun a mentorship program for gifts and private grants – the largest single among 114 research libraries in North America. Covenant scholars being supported by faculty amount received in a single year in the universi- UNC's North Carolina Collection is the largest of volunteers. ty’s history. The campaign counts gifts, pledges its kind among state-oriented collections on The university consistently ranks among the and deferred gifts, bringing the campaign total campuses nationwide. And the Southern and national leaders in making education financially to $237 million for fiscal 2004. The $190 million rare book collections also are among the coun- accessible to students. Carolina also meets the figure counts only gifts received outright. try's finest. full need of middle-income students, with finan- In fall 2000, Chancellor James Moeser Carolina's more than 243,000 alumni live in cial aid packages comprised of two-thirds pledged to the people of North Carolina that if all 50 states and in 146 countries. Notable alum- grants and scholarships and one-third loans they passed the higher education bond referen- ni include writers Thomas Wolfe, Shelby Foote, and work-study. (Most aid packages are closer dum the university would triple their investment Russell Banks and Jill McCorkle; athletes to two-thirds loans and one-third grants.) with private funds. The people responded over- Michael Jordan, Vince Carter, Antawn Jamison, Carolina Covenant scholars were admitted whelmingly, and successful completion of the Mia Hamm, Marion Jones and Davis Love III; under the university’s rigorous admissions stan- Carolina First campaign will fulfill that pledge. and journalists Alan Murray, Roger Mudd, dards. More than half of the first year’s class in The ultimate beneficiaries will be the people of Charles Kuralt, Stuart Scott and Tom Wicker. 2004 were first-generation college students. North Carolina. Others include former White House Chief of Covenant students posted an average 4.21 •Students Staff Erskine Bowles; former White House grade-point average and 1,209 Scholastic Recent freshman classes at Carolina have Communications Director Don Baer; former Aptitude Test (SAT) score. set new standards of excellence as measured U.S. Sen. John Edwards (now director of UNC’s •The Carolina First Campaign by the rigorous coursework students have taken new Center on Poverty, Work and Opportunity); The Carolina First Campaign is a compre- in high school, as well as their grades and SAT Bill Harrison, chairman and chief executive offi- hensive, multi-year private fund-raising cam- scores. In 2004, the university’s incoming fresh- cer of JPMorgan Chase & Co.; Sallie L. paign – the largest in the university’s history – to men continued that trend. And the most aca- Krawcheck, chief financial officer and head of support the vision of Carolina becoming the demically qualified incoming class ever is head- strategy for Citigroup Inc.; Ken Thompson, nation’s leading public university. The ultimate ed to Carolina in fall 2005 with an average SAT chairman and chief executive officer of beneficiaries of reaching that goal will be the score of 1301, up 14 points over last year's Wachovia Corp.; Dr. Mary Sue Coleman, a bio- people of North Carolina, whom Carolina is ded- class. Admitted freshmen hail from every North chemist and former Carolina vice chancellor icated to serve. Carolina county, each of the nation’s 50 states and now the University of Michigan president; The university exceeded the $1 billion mark and 44 other countries. Dr. Elson Floyd, former Carolina executive vice for the campaign during fiscal 2002-2003. As of Incoming freshmen will include 43 new chancellor and now president of the University June 2005, the campaign has raised more than page 44 2006-07 Men’s Tennis Media Guide Carolina Men’s Tennis The University of North Carolina Morehead Scholars: 24 of North Carolina's most scholarships. This award goes to students who of Arts and Sciences in recognition of major dynamic young leaders and the rest from 14 show a strong commitment to careers in mathe- contributions to their fields. They are Drs. Jack other states and England. Among the largest matics, the natural sciences or engineering. D. Griffith, Kenan Distinguished Professor of and most competitive scholarships at U.S. col- Carolina has had 27 Goldwater Scholars since Microbiology and Immunology and member of leges and universities, the Morehead Awards the first awards were made in 1989. This year, the UNC Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer cover all expenses for four years of undergrad- UNC was among 12 campuses with four win- Center; and Joseph M. DeSimone, W.R. Kenan, uate study, including summer enrichment expe- ners each, including Harvard, Princeton and Jr. Distinguished Professor of Chemistry and riences. The program, now more than a half- Stanford universities. Chemical Engineering at UNC and N.C. State century old, is modeled after the Rhodes Richard Waters of Morehead City won the University. The academy is considered the Scholarships to Oxford University in England. George J. Mitchell Scholarship for graduate nation’s oldest and most illustrious learned soci- The newest Tar Heels who will enter Carolina study in Ireland. Richard, who graduated in May ety. Griffin’s melding of electron microscopy this fall will include 22 Robertson Scholars. with a double major in chemistry and mathe- methods with biochemical tools revealed impor- Along with 20 others who will matriculate at matics, is Carolina’s second Mitchell tant insights into genetic diseases. His 1999 co- Duke University, they are part of the fifth class of Scholarship winner since the program began in discovery that the ends of chromosomes are this unique scholarship program, created by a 1998. He plans to earn a graduate degree in tied in firmly knotted loops provided insights into $24 million gift from Julian and Josie Robertson. applied science at the University College Cork cancer and aging. DeSimone holds more than The full-tuition scholarship allows each student in Cork, Ireland, and will eventually pursue a 100 U.S. patents and is renowned for discover- to spend a semester in residence at the other medical degree to help people in underserved ing revolutionary ways to use carbon dioxide in campus. The scholarships bring together two of regions of the world. place of conventional organic solvents for envi- the nation's finest universities and help foster Nicholas Love, a biology major who graduat- ronmentally responsible manufacturing, clean- enhanced collaboration between both campus- ed in May, won a Churchill Scholarship for out- ing and processing. Earlier this year, he was es. standing academic As the first public university in the nation, and extracurricular Carolina has a long and proud history of linking accomplishments. its expertise and energy to the needs of the Nicholas, who people. Among those graduating last May were hails from champions of the people — 15 scholars who Brighton, Mich., contributed hundreds of hours of service to the will seek a gradu- community and received special training in how ate degree in zool- to make that service more effective. These stu- ogy at Cambridge dents comprised the first graduating class of the University in Public Service Scholars Program, which was England. launched in 2003 by the Carolina Center for John W. Steen Public Service. More than 450 students are IV of Winston- enrolled in this innovative program, working in Salem received an nursing homes, hospitals, public schools, the Andrew W. Mellon Special Olympics, the Animal Protection Fellowship. John, Society, the Family Violence Prevention Center, who graduated Habitat for Humanity and the Big Buddy men- with highest hon- toring program. They reported more than ors in English in 26,000 hours of service during the 2004-05s May, will use the academic year. award to study for The number of Carolina students winning a doctorate in comparative literature at Emory elected to membership in the National Academy distinguished scholarships is rivaled by only a University. of Engineering. Griffith and DeSimone bring to handful of other universities. For example, Pablo Durana, a junior from Montreal, was 27 the total number of Carolina faculty members Carolina has the second largest number of chosen as a member of USA Today’s 2005 All- elected to the American Academy of Arts and Rhodes Scholars among public universities (38 USA College Academic Team. Durana was one Sciences. since 1902). The 38th winner, Class of 2002 of 20 undergraduates chosen for the “first Assistant Professor Lisa Pearce of the alumna Rachel Mazyck of Laurel, Md., won the team.” The communication studies major found- Department of Sociology was named a William award last November to study at Oxford ed and coordinates the Carolina Language T. Grant Scholar. The award provides $300,000 University in England. She earned an under- Partnership, which offers one-on-one English over five years to support research in youth graduate degree in English with highest distinc- lessons to Hispanic employees at UNC. development. Pearce, a fellow of the Carolina tion from UNC and graduated from Harvard •Faculty Population Center, will use the funds to study University’s master’s program in education poli- Dr. Oliver Smithies, Excellence Professor of the role of religion in the shaping of self-image, cy and management. She will use the scholar- pathology and laboratory medicine, was one of aspirations, and achievement in youth. ship to earn a doctorate of philosophy specializ- two recipients of the 2005 March of Dimes Prize Two distinguished professors at Carolina ing in educational studies. in Developmental Biology for his role in devel- have been selected for prestigious Guggenheim Last spring, nine other undergraduates oping gene targeting. Smithies helped develop Fellowship awards. Drs. Donald J. Raleigh, Jay joined Mazyck as among the university’s distin- a technique that gives scientists around the Richard Judson distinguished professor of his- guished scholarship winners by being selected world the ability to alter particular genes in cul- tory, and Gerald J. Postema, Cary C. Boshamer for Truman, Goldwater, Mitchell and Churchill tured cells and transfer those targeted genes to professor of philosophy and law are 2005 recip- scholarships, as well as a Mellon fellowship and laboratory mice. Gene targeting allows them to ients. Fellows are selected by the John Simon a slot on USA Today’s 2005 All-USA College design and produce “knockout” mice to study Guggenheim Memorial Foundation and recog- Academic Team: how the disabled gene works and to create ani- nized for distinguished individual achievement Lauren McAlee, a junior from Crofton, Md., mal models of human diseases. Smithies also and exceptional promise for future accomplish- with a double major in public policy and philos- won the 2001 Albert Lasker Award for Basic ment. Raleigh has written, translated or edited ophy, won the Truman Scholarship, which will Medical Research, the nation's most distin- more than a dozen books on a wide variety of fund her senior year and graduate studies. She guished honor for outstanding contributions to issues related to Russia. He will use his fellow- hopes to open a charter school in a low-income basic medical research. The Lasker Awards ship to research an oral history project, “Soviet community. have often been called “America's Nobels,” and Baby Boomers: An Oral History of the Class of Four students — juniors Carrie Gibbons of more than 60 researchers who won a Lasker ’67.” Postema has written close to 60 publica- Cary, Kimberly Kallianos of Atlanta and James went on to receive the Nobel Prize. tions, articles and chapters, and has written Mahaffey of Raleigh, and sophomore Gregory Two faculty members last spring were elect- several books, including “Bentham and the Charville of Raleigh, won Barry M. Goldwater ed fellows of the prestigious American Academy Common Law Tradition.” 2006-07 UNC Men’s Tennis Media Guide page 45 Student-Athlete Services Carolina Men’s Tennis

Student-Athlete Services Athletic Director’s discuss course selection, major and career Advancing toward graduation, Building Scholar-Athlete Award Winners exploration, academic progress and aca- Character and Developing leadership Year Recipient demic eligibility. Student-Athlete Services at the University 1986 Kevin Anderson Kym Orr is the full-time member of the of North Carolina encompasses three areas 1987 Jeff Chambers UNC Athletic Academic Support Staff who 1988 David Kessler that play an integral part in the collegiate works specifically with the men’s tennis pro- 1989 David Pollack experience of every UNC student-athlete. gram at Carolina. 1990 James Krege Those three areas are Academic 1991 Bryan Jones The Academic Support Program helps Development, Student-Athlete Development 1992 Bryan Jones freshmen transition from high school to col- and Leadership Development. 1993 Roland Thornqvist lege through a variety of academic programs 1994 Cooper Pulliam such as academic counseling, individual • ACADEMIC DEVELOPMENT 1995 Brint Morrow tutoring, group review sessions and supple- The Academic Support Program is the 1996 Brint Morrow mental instruction. main service utilized in advancing UNC stu- 1997 Jon Balch A member of each team serves as the dent-athletes to graduation. The program 1998 Sean McDermott Academic Team Captain, providing a strong assists student-athletes in exploring their 1999 Tripp Phillips link between the Academic Support Program interests and abilities, enjoying a broad edu- 2000 Tripp Phillips and the other student-athletes on the squad. cational experience, and reaching or exceed- 2001 David Cheatwood The Academic Team Captain for men’s tennis ing their academic goals. "Our young people 2002 Marcio Petrone for 2006-07 is Tristan Heinrich. are students first and athletes second and 2003 Ben Aiken 2004 Ben Aiken that will always be the case at the University," • STUDENT-ATHLETE DEVELOPMENT 2005 Geoff Boyd says UNC Director of Athletics Dick Baddour. Building character in UNC student-athletes 2006 Brad Pomeroy "That is a credit to our coaches, administra- is the main charge of Student-Athlete tors and support staff, but most of all, our stu- Development. primarily in the Pope dent-athletes. Their accomplishments in the Through Carolina Outreach, Tar Heels are Academic Support Center, classroom are very impressive." involved in a variety of projects and organi- which is equipped with During the 2006-07 academic year, 265 zations on campus and in the community. study facilities, tutorial Carolina student-athletes made the ACC The UNC Department of Athletics has part- rooms, a computer lab, a Academic Honor Roll, which requires a nered with Gatorade and the UNC School of 128-seat auditorium, coun- cumulative GPA of at least 3.0 for the year. In Public Health for a national pilot program selors' offices, and state-of- the fall of 2005, 144 student-athletes made called Get Kids in Action, in which Tar Heel the-art video and computer the Dean's List, and 153 did so in the spring student-athletes visit local elementary equipment. At the center, of 2006. Kym Orr schools to encourage children to exercise. students meet with staff to The Academic Support Program is housed The Carolina Dreams program allows young patients at UNC Spring 2006 Dean’s List Honorees Children’s Hospitals to Tristan Heinrich, Aly Mandour attend Tar Heel sport- Fall 2005 Dean’s List Honorees ing events with UNC Tristan Heinrich student-athletes. Other recent activities have 2005-06 Atlantic Coast Conference Academic included building a Honor Roll Selections house with Habitat for ° Benjamin Carlotti, Sophomore, Business Humanity, cooking Administration meals at Ronald ° Sebastian Guejman, Junior, Business McDonald House and Administration cleaning up the road- ° Lenny Gullan, Sophomore, Business ways through the Administration ° Tristan Heinrich, Sophomore, Economics and Adopt-a-Highway pro- Political Science gram. ° Raian Luchici, Senior, Business Administration Student-Athlete ° Aly Mandour, Senior, Business Administration As a Morehead Scholar at UNC, Tristan Heinrich (left) traveled with fel- Development also ° Jeff Schroeder, Sophomore, Business low Morehead Scholar and UNC lacrosse player Fletcher Gregory (right) seeks to develop stu- Administration to Ecuador in the summer of 2005. The two Tar Heel athletes taught ° Karl Wishart, Sophomore, Biochemistry rural children geography and English as part of their responsibilities. dent-athletes on a per- sonal level through a variety of speakers who address issues like nutrition, gambling, rela- tionship communication and substance use. Career Development helps UNC student-ath- letes look beyond college with resources such as career counseling and workshops on resume writing and interviewing skills.

• LEADERSHIP DEVELOPMENT The primary outlet for Leadership Development is the Carolina Leadership Academy, started at UNC in 2004. As the nation's premier leadership development program in collegiate athletics, the Carolina Leadership Academy develops, challenges page 46 2006-07 Men’s Tennis Media Guide Carolina Men’s Tennis Student-Athlete Services

• STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING Under the direction of the UNC Olympic sports strength and conditioning staff, Tar Heel student-athletes get out- standing coaching intended to help maximize their physical potential. The staff evaluates Carolina student-athletes in a variety of ways, including the use of specialized software for lifting and running and video analysis to encourage steady progress toward reaching optimum preparation for competi- tion. The men’s tennis team trains at the Olympic sports weight room in Kenan Field House. In addition to top-of-the-line Greg Gatz strength equipment, the Kenan-based center boasts a five- lane, 25-yard rubberized surface for teaching and performing warm-up activities, acceleration drills and agility movements. Year-round train- ing produces athletes who are prepared to compete successfully and safely. Greg Gatz is the Director of Strength and Conditioning for Olympic Sports and oversees the program. He is assisted by Steve Gisselman. The 2003-04 Tar Heel men’s tennis team participated in a community service project in which UNC student-athletes assisted in the building of Special focus is on a Habitat For Humanity house in the greater Chapel Hill community. responsibility, accounta- • SPORTS MEDICINE The Tar Heels receive excellent care and supports student-athletes, coaches and bility, making good choic- staff in their continual quest to become world es, ethics and character building. from one of the country’s best sports class leaders in athletics, academics and life. medicine staffs. Rising Stars Program Dr. Tim Taft, Director of Sports Medicine, oversees a comprehensive program designed to keep student-athletes healthy and to rehabili- tate any injuries quickly and successfully. Dr. Tom Brickner is the physician who works directly with the men’s tennis team while Alex Tim Taft Creighton is the orthopaedic surgeon for the men’s tennis squad. A member of the ath- letic training staff is pres- ent at all matches and practices to ensure that any injuries receive Designed for a select group of "high poten- The Academy consists of three programs: prompt and proper care. Tom Brickner tial" sophomores and juniors, the program Head certified athletic provides future leaders with insights, strate- CREED Program trainer Sally Mays over- Leadership training begins in the freshman gies and skills necessary to become effective sees care for the men’s year. All leadership begins with personal leaders. The program includes monthly tennis team and is meetings, interactive exercises and action leadership, therefore freshmen are taught assisted by certified learning experiences. skills to effectively lead themselves. athletic training gradu- Training consists of monthly meetings fea- ate students Matt Odom Veteran Leaders Program turing keynote speakers and small group dis- and Jeff Hudson. cussion. Upperclass student-athletes serve This program is designed for team cap- as peer mentors and discussion leaders. tains and veteran student-athletes. It pro- vides advanced Sally Mays leadership training • Carolina CREED and support, teaches As a University of North Carolina student-athlete, I pledge to make the critical skills and every effort to abide by the Carolina CREED as a show of my commit- insights necessary to ment to the University, the Department of Athletics, my team and be effective vocal myself. leaders and provides C - I will know and embrace the tradition and culture of this great a strong peer net- University and its athletics department R - I will respect myself and others work. Student-ath- E - I will pursue excellence in my academic work by striving to letes meet regularly reach my academic potential while preparing for a career of signifi- to learn and rein- cance force leadership E - I will excel athletically by committing myself to performance principles and share excellence, team success and continual improvement successes, frustra- D - I will develop the capacity to effectively lead myself and others tions and lessons.

2006-07 UNC Men’s Tennis Media Guide page 47