Tennessee Volunteers men's tennis explained

Tennessee Volunteers tennis
University:University of Tennessee
Conference:Southeastern Conference
Conference Short:SEC
Founded:1932
Athletic Director:Danny White
City:Knoxville
Stateabb:TN
State:Tennessee
Coach:Chris Woodruff
Tenure:7th
Stadium:Barksdale Stadium
Capacity:2,000
Nickname:Volunteers
Ncaarunnerup:1990, 2001, 2010
Ncaasemifinals:1987, 1990, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2010, 2021, 2022
Ncaaquarterfinals:1987, 1990, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2010, 2011, 2013, 2021, 2022, 2024
Ncaaroundof16:1979, 1980, 1987, 1988, 1990, 1991, 1993, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2005, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2013, 2014, 2019, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024
Ncaaroundof32:1989, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2004, 2005, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2018, 2019, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024
Ncaatourneys:1979, 1980, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2004, 2005, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2018, 2019, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024
Conference Tournament:1990, 2002, 2010, 2021
Conference Season:1951, 1966, 1970, 1980, 1986, 1990, 2000, 2010, 2011

The Tennessee Volunteer men's tennis team represents the University of Tennessee, in Knoxville, TN. The program has appeared in 31 NCAA Tournaments. Additionally, the Vols have won 9 SEC Championships, 4 SEC Tournaments, and finished as national runner-up three times. Prominent ATP players who came to Tennessee include Tennys Sandgren, John-Patrick Smith, Chris Woodruff, Paul Annacone, Michael Fancutt, and Mike De Palmer.

History

Sam Winterbotham era

Sam Winterbotham was formerly the head coach of the Colorado Buffaloes men's tennis team from 2002–2006. After the 2006 season Colorado cut the men's tennis team due to budget constrains, and Winterbotham was subsequently named the 10th coach in Tennessee tennis history on October 24, 2006.

He and his assistant Chris Woodruff joined forces when Tennessee was ranked No. 48 nationally, but the Vols quickly vaulted up the charts. From 2007-2015 Winterbotham led Tennessee to nine consecutive NCAA tournament appearances, including six appearances in the NCAA Round of 16, three appearances in the NCAA Quarterfinals, and one national championship appearance where they lost in a close match to USC 4-2.[1]

Winterbotham became the first head coach at Tennessee to win consecutive SEC regular season championships in 2010 and 2011. In 2010, the Vols finished 11–0 in Southeastern Conference and went on to become the first team to capture the SEC Tournament Title courtesy of three 4–0 shutouts. Three players—John-Patrick Smith, Rhyne Williams and Davey Sandgren—earned All-America honors. For the first time in Tennessee history, five Vols were named All-SEC. Five players also finished the year in the national ITA rankings.

In terms of sheer number of victories, from 2008 to 2011 the team wrapped up their most successful three-year period in program history with a 101–18 (.849) record, and year-end Top 19 rankings each season. The Vols went 31-2 in 2010, won 23 matches in 2008 and 2009, and claimed 24 wins in 2011.

In 2014 Winterbotham coached doubles pair Mikelis Libietis and Hunter Reese all the way to the 2014 NCAA doubles title. After 11 years of coaching UT, as well as a 217-104 match record, Sam Winterbotham was fired on May 4, 2017 at the conclusion of the 2017 season. The Vols had struggled and missed the NCAA Tournament for two consecutive years in 2016 and 2017. In Winterbothams last two years at Tennessee he had a combined 25-31 record and the Vols were 3-21 in SEC play.[2]

Chris Woodruff era

Winterbotham was replaced by long term assistant and former NCAA Singles Champion at Tennessee Chris Woodruff. In Woodruff's first season as head coach he led the Vols to a 21-9 record and 4th place in the SEC regular season standings with an 8-4 conference record. Tennessee made the semifinals of the SEC tournament losing to Texas A&M 4-0. The Vols returned to the NCAA tournament for the first time since 2015 beating UNC Wilmington 4-0 in the first round before losing to North Carolina 4-0 in the NCAA round of 32.

In the 2019 season, Woodruff led Tennessee to the SEC title game, where they fell to #6 ranked Mississippi State. As the NCAA Tournament’s #14 seed, Tennessee fell in NCAA round of 16 to #3 seed Florida. They ended the season with a 22-8 overall record, and an 8-4 record in-conference.

Tennessee was ranked #19, with a 14-2 record, when the 2020 season was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

In the 2021 season, Tennessee defeated #13 Ole Miss, #12 South Carolina, and #1 ranked Florida in consecutive days to win their first SEC Tournament since 2010, and entered the NCAA tournament as the #3 overall seed with a 24-3 record, and a 10-2 conference record. In the NCAA Tournament, the Vols beat Alabama A&M 5-0 and Memphis 4-0 in the round of 64 and 32. At the USTA National Campus in Orlando, Tennessee went on to defeat Arizona 4-3 in the NCAA round of 16, and #11 Georgia in the Elite 8. The team season ended with a 4-2 loss to #2 Baylor in the final four, concluding the year with a 28-4 record. One week later, Tennessee players Patrick Harper and Adam Walton won the NCAA individual doubles championship for the program's first individual title since 2014.[3]

The Volunteers continued their run as a national power in the 2022 season, where they defeated #12 Texas A&M, #13 South Carolina, and #3 Baylor to advance to the ITA Indoor Championship. Despite losing to #4 TCU in the finals, Tennessee returned to the #1 overall ranking which they maintained for several weeks. Despite struggling down the stretch and finishing 5th in the SEC with a conference record of 8-4, Tennessee made the semifinals of the SEC tournament and entered the NCAA tournament as the #6 overall seed. Hosting the first three rounds, the Vols defeated Tennessee Tech, Duke, and Florida State to advance to the NCAA final site destination hosted by Illinois. In the Elite 8, Tennessee got revenge from the previous season against #3 Baylor by winning 4-3, sending the Vols to the Final Four for the second consecutive season. There, eventual national champion and #7 seed Virginia ended the teams hope for their first national title. Tennessee finished with a final record of 26-8.[4]

2023 saw the Vols return to the ITA Indoor Championships for the 3rd consecutive year, where they lost 4-3 in a re-match of the 2022 NCAA semifinals with #5 Virginia before defeating #17 Stanford and Illinois in consolation rounds. In other notable non-conference matches, Tennessee lost to #5 Michigan Wolverines(4-1), and #14 Wake Forest (4-3), but defeated #9 Columbia (4-1). The Vols recorded ranked SEC wins over #12 Mississippi State (5-2), #4 Kentucky (4-0), #20 Florida (4-3), #5 South Carolina (6-1), and #25 Ole Miss (6-1). A pair of narrow 4-3 loses to #14 Auburn and #10 Georgia, put Tennessee at 2nd in the SEC with a 10-2 conference record. In the SEC Tournament, the second seeded Volunteers beat No. 7 seed Ole Miss, before falling in the semifinals to the No. 3 seed and eventual tournament champion, #5 Kentucky 4-3. The Vols were selected as a regional host site for the 4th year in a row, defeating Belmont and Wake Forest to advance to the Super Regionals. At the Knoxville Super Regional, the season came to an end with a close 4-2 loss to the No. 9 seed South Carolina.[5]

Head coaches

Source[6]

CoachYearsSeasonsOverallConferenceSEC TitlesNCAA Appearances
WonLost%WonLost%
1Hugh D. Faust1932-1942116838.640423.148
2Jack Rogers1947152.71402.000
3W.D. Buchanan1948-1960129572.5684349.4671
4James Kalshoven1961186.57114.200
5Duane Bruley1962177.50005.000
6Tommy Barlett1963-196645411.831195.7911
7Earl Baumgardner19671134.76552.714
8Louis Royal1968-1976912168.6393724.6061
9John Newman1977-198045131.6221910.65512
10Mike DePalmer Sr.1981-199414299119.7159755.63836
11John Kreis1995-199733537.4861226.3162
12Michael Fancutt1998-2004712357.6834631.59726
13Chris Mahony2005-200622520.556913.4091
14Sam Winterbotham2007-201711217104.676217104.57139
15Chris Woodruff2018-pres.513439.7754617.73015
Total861255615.671555370.5981331

Yearly record

Source[6]

SeasonCoachRecordConference
standing
Conference
tournament
ITA
rank
Postseason
OverallConference
Southeastern Conference
1932Hugh D. Faust5-1
1933Hugh D. Faust6-20-1
1934Hugh D. Faust4-50-4
1935Hugh D. Faust6-3
1936Hugh D. Faust5-70-4
1937Hugh D. Faust6-51-3
1938Hugh D. Faust4-6-11-3
1939Hugh D. Faust6-40-3
1940Hugh D. Faust7-40-3
1941Hugh D. Faust8-60-2
1942Hugh D. Faust10-02-0
1943-1946 No Team
1947Jack Rogers5-20-2
1948W.D. Buchanan5-52-3
1949W.D. Buchanan1-90-5
1950W.D. Buchanan10-46-3T-2nd
1951W.D. Buchanan10-0-16-0Champions
1952W.D. Buchanan11-08-02nd
1953W.D. Buchanan11-36-3T-4th
1954W.D. Buchanan4-6-11-5-16th
1955W.D. Buchanan8-63-56th
1956W.D. Buchanan4-92-68th
1957W.D. Buchanan5-71-67th
1958W.D. Buchanan9-92-58th
1959W.D. Buchanan9-62-58th
1960W.D. Buchanan8-84-46th
1961James Kalshoven8-61-4
1962Duane Bruley7-70-510th
1963Tommy Bartlett10-52-410th
1964Tommy Bartlett13-13-08th
1965Tommy Bartlett15-37-14th
1966Tommy Bartlett16-27-0Champions
1967Earl Baumgardner13-45-22nd
1968Louis Royal12-7-13-3-14th
1969Louis Royal6-83-25th
1970Louis Royal14-74-1Champions
1971Louis Royal14-7-15-42nd
1972Louis Royal27-25-1T-2nd
1973Louis Royal10-93-25th
1974Louis Royal17-66-22nd
1975Louis Royal14-125-43rd
1976Louis Royal6-103-57th
1977John Newman9-123-66th
1978John Newman18-76-32nd
1979John Newman13-64-12ndNCAA Round of 16
1980John Newman14-66-0ChampionsNCAA Round of 16
1981 Mike DePalmer Sr.14-66-24th
1982Mike DePalmer Sr.21-910-12nd
1983Mike DePalmer Sr.20-412-73rd
1984Mike DePalmer Sr.23-86-24th
1985Mike DePalmer Sr.27-117-23rd
1986Mike DePalmer Sr.24-103-6Champions14th
1987Mike DePalmer Sr.24-67-22nd3rdNCAA Semifinal
1988Mike DePalmer Sr.14-116-34th13thNCAA Round of 16
1989Mike DePalmer Sr.20-86-310th14thNCAA First Round
1990Mike DePalmer Sr.34-19-0ChampionsChampions2ndNCAA Runner-up
1991Mike DePalmer Sr.21-117-4T-3rdFirst Round10thNCAA Round of 16
1992Mike DePalmer Sr.15-134-9T-8thQuarterfinal18th
1993Mike DePalmer Sr.27-117-76thSemifinal11thNCAA Round of 16
1994Mike DePalmer Sr.15-106-76thQuarterfinal13thNCAA Regional Second Round
1995John Kreis17-97-66thQuarterfinal16thNCAA Regional Second Round
1996 John Kreis11-115-88thQuarterfinal26thNCAA First Round
1997John Kreis5-170-1212thFirst Round59thNCAA First Round
1998Michael Fancutt14-76-55thQuarterfinal19thNCAA Second Round
1999Michael Fancutt18-106-55thQuarterfinal13thNCAA Second Round
2000Michael Fancutt23-610-1ChampionsSemifinal3rdNCAA Semifinal
2001Michael Fancutt23-69-22ndFinal2ndNCAA Runner-up
2002Michael Fancutt22-77-4T-2nd (East)Champions6thNCAA Semifinal
2003Michael Fancutt9-122-96th (East)First Round55th
2004Michael Fancutt14-96-54th (East)First Round21stNCAA Second Round
2005Chris Mahony16-96-5T-3rd (East)Final11thNCAA Round of 16
2006Chris Mahony9-113-85th (East)First Round50th
2007Sam Winterbotham17-87-4T-2nd (East)Second Round25th
2008Sam Winterbotham23-49-2T-2nd (East)Semifinal9thNCAA Round of 16
2009Sam Winterbotham23-78-32nd (East)Final8thNCAA Round of 16
2010Sam Winterbotham31-211-0ChampionsChampions2ndNCAA Runner-up
2011Sam Winterbotham24-510-1ChampionsSemifinal4thNCAA Quarterfinal
2012Sam Winterbotham15-145-64th (East)Quarterfinal20thNCAA Second Round
2013Sam Winterbotham26-98-42nd (East)Final6thNCAA Quarterfinal
2014Sam Winterbotham19-116-66thSecond Round18thNCAA Round of 16
2015Sam Winterbotham14-135-78thQuarterfinal43rdNCAA First Round
2016Sam Winterbotham12-170-1213thSecond Round
2017Sam Winterbotham13-143-98thQuarterfinal43rd
2018Chris Woodruff21-98-44thSemifinal20thNCAA Second Round
2019Chris Woodruff22-88-44thFinal13thNCAA Round of 16
2020Chris Woodruff14-22-112thPostseason not held (COVID-19)
2021Chris Woodruff28-410-22ndChampions4thNCAA Semifinal
2022Chris Woodruff26-88-45thSemifinal6thNCAA Semifinal
2023Chris Woodruff23-810-22ndSemifinal9thNCAA Round of 16
Total1255-615-5555-370-29431 NCAA Appearances

NCAA Tournament Results

In the NCAA Tournament, Tennessee holds a 56-31 record overall, including a 27-1 record when hosting the first two rounds in Knoxville. Overall they boast a 34-9 record in first and second round matches. From the Round of 16, on they hold a 21-22 record.[7]

Round of 16 California L 8-1
Round of 16 Trinity (TX) L 5-4
  1. 5
Round of 16
Quarterfinal
Semifinal
  1. 12 South Carolina
    #4 Long Beach St.
    #1 UCLA
W 5-3
W 5-3
L 5-2
  1. 13
First Round
Round of 16
TCU
#4 Pepperdine
W 5-2
L 5-1
  1. 13
First Round Oklahoma State L 5-4
  1. 1
Round of 16
Quarterfinal
Semifinal
Championship
  1. 16 UC-Irvine
    #9 Miami (FL)
    #4 UCLA
    #2 Stanford
W 5-2
W 5-2
W 5-4
L 5-2
  1. 11
Round of 16
  1. 6 Florida
L 5-2
  1. 11
Round of 16
  1. 6 Texas
L 5-1
Regional QF
Regional SF
Kentucky
Miami (FL)
W 4-1
L 4-2
Regional QF
Regional SF
Auburn
Kentucky
W 4-2
L 4-2
First Round UAB L 4-0
First Round
  1. 11 Florida
L 5-0
First Round
Second Round
South Florida
#12 Auburn
W 4-1
L 4-3
  1. 11
First Round
Second Round
Tennessee Tech
Mississippi State
W 4-0
L 4-3
  1. 10
First Round
Second Round
Round of 16
Quarterfinal
Semifinal
Chattanooga
North Carolina
#7 Texas A&M
#2 UCLA
VCU
W 4-0
W 4-2
W 4-3
W 4-1
L 4-3
  1. 8
First Round
Second Round
Round of 16
Quarterfinal
Semifinal
Championship
UMBC
Ohio State
South Alabama
#1 Stanford
#5 TCU
#3 Georgia
W 4-0
W 4-1
W 4-0
W 4-2
W 4-0
L 4-1
  1. 2
First Round
Second Round
Round of 16
Quarterfinal
Semifinal
Wake Forest
Virginia Tech
#15 Texas
#7 Kentucky
#11 USC
W 4-0
W 4-0
W 4-0
W 4-1
L 4-3
  1. 15
First Round
Second Round
Wichita State
Arkansas
W 4-1
L 4-1
  1. 10
First Round
Second Round
Round of 16
ETSU
Ohio State
#7 UCLA
W 4-0
W 4-2
L 4-1
First Round
Second Round
Miami (FL)
#2 Ohio State
W 4-3
L 4-1
  1. 8
First Round
Second Round
Round of 16
Furman
Virginia Tech
#9 Baylor
W 4-0
W 4-0
L 4-1
  1. 5
First Round
Second Round
Round of 16
ETSU
Duke
#12 Texas
W 4-0
W 4-1
L 4-3
  1. 2
First Round
Second Round
Round of 16
Quarterfinal
Semifinal
Championship
Winthrop
ETSU
#15 Louisville
#7 Baylor
#11 Georgia
#5 USC
W 4-0
W 4-1
W 4-0
W 4-0
W 4-1
L 4-2
  1. 3
First Round
Second Round
Round of 16
Quarterfinal
Radford
Virginia Tech
#14 California
#6 Georgia
W 4-0
W 4-0
W 4-2
L 4-3
First Round
Second Round
UNC Wilmington
#15 North Carolina
W 4-1
L 4-0
  1. 7
First Round
Second Round
Round of 16
Quarterfinal
South Carolina State
Clemson
#10 Mississippi State
#2 Virginia
W 4-0
W 4-3
W 4-2
L 4-0
First Round
Second Round
Round of 16
Elon
#11 Duke
#6 UCLA
W 4-1
W 4-2
L 4-0
First Round Stanford L 4-2
2018 First Round
Second Round
UNC Wilmington
#7 North Carolina
W 4-0
L 4-0
  1. 14
First Round
Second Round
Round of 16
Radford
NC State
#3 Florida
W 4-0
W 4-2
L 4-2
  1. 3
First Round
Second Round
Round of 16
Quarterfinal
Semifinal
Alabama A&M
Memphis
Arizona
#11 Georgia
#2 Baylor
W 5-0
W 4-0
W 4-3
W 4-1
L 4-2
  1. 6
First Round
Second Round
Round of 16
Quarterfinal
Semifinal
Tennessee Tech
Duke
Florida State
#3 Baylor
#7 Virginia
W 4-0
W 4-1
W 4-0
W 4-3
L 5-0
2023
  1. 8
First Round
Second Round
Round of 16
Belmont
Wake Forest
#9 South Carolina
W 4-1
W 4-0
L 4-2
2024
  1. 7
First Round
Second Round
Round of 16
Quarterfinal
ETSU
Memphis
#10 Florida State
#2 Texas
W 4-0
W 4-0
W 4-3
L 4-2

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Vols Fall to USC, 4-2, in NCAA Championships. University of Tennessee Athletics. 6 July 2022.
  2. Web site: Tennessee fires men's tennis coach Sam Winterbotham. Knoxnews.com.
  3. Web site: Chris Woodruff promoted to head men's tennis coach at Tennessee. Timesfreepress.com.
  4. Web site: 2021-22 Men's Tennis Schedule. Utsports.com .
  5. Web site: 2022-23 Men's Tennis Schedule . 2023-05-14 . University of Tennessee Athletics . en.
  6. Web site: All Time Record Book 2021-22. PDF. S3.amazonaws.com. 7 July 2022.
  7. Web site: Men's Tennis Record Book . utsports.com . 28 April 2023 . https://web.archive.org/web/20230417122003/https://s3.us-east-2.amazonaws.com/sidearm.nextgen.sites/utsports.com/documents/2023/1/2/2022-23_Men_s_Tennis_Record_Book.pdf . April 17, 2023 . en-us . 202223 . live.