The reasons cited by the Tennis Oversight Committee are majority support of the D-I coaches for the change and student-athlete well-being, which appears to mean too much tennis for them when both the team and the individual championships are back-to-back.
I personally don’t care for the change, but agree with some of the arguments in its favor, which boils down to me as the likelihood of fresher athletes, who have earned their opportunities to play for a national championship during fall competition.
The pilot did provide evidence for that positive, but it also highlighted some serious issues that result from making that one tournament the be-all and end-all of the fall season. Once players qualified for the NCAAs by reaching the quarterfinals of the All-American Championships, or through the regionals, they quit playing fall collegiate tennis, and the large number of walkovers in the consolations of the sectionals and conference masters suggests a lack of appropriate incentives for competing in the fall individual season, which was not addressed after the problems obvious in the first year. And when those withdrawals extend to the main draw of the All-American Championships, it is an affront to the long history of that prestigious Division I event.
The past two tournaments in the fall didn’t raise the profile of the NCAAs, even though there is little happening in tennis in the mid-November time frame. And although in-person attendance has seldom been good leading up to the singles and doubles finals in the spring, that didn’t improve in the fall either, despite good weather in Waco and Orlando the past two years.
Many players, especially on the men’s side, take the fall off to play pro events, so the strength of the fields will probably continue to decline, and January freshman, like Virginia’s Rafael Jodar, don’t have the opportunity to play the NCAAs unless they return for their sophomore year and commit to the fall tournaments.
The seeding has been a terrible problem for the fall, and while there were some issues with that in the spring individuals, a dual match season of results offered many more data points than four or five matches in the fall do. This will continue to be a problem unless the NCAA allows results from outside college to be used in seeding. Otherwise we’ll inevitably get a draw that we could have had last November, with Michael Zheng and Trevor Svajda, the unseeded 2025 finalists, meeting in the first round.
That wasn’t the only news in college tennis this week, with three of the Power 4 conferences announcing their award winners. Interesting to note that there were no sweeps of the three major awards by any school this year. The Big 12 has not yet released their awards, nor has the Ivy League, which still has regular season conference matches this weekend. Click on the headings to see the all-conference teams and other conference awards, including the Big Ten women’s new doubles team(s) of the year award.
2026 Conference Awards:
Player of the Year: Lucciana Perez, Texas A&M
Freshman of the Year: Evialina Laskevich, Oklahoma
Newcomer of the Year: Ekaterina Khairutdinova, Auburn
Coach of the Year: Jordan Szabo, Auburn
Player of the Year: Teah Chavez, Ohio State
Freshman of the Year: Mayu Crossley, UCLA
Coach of the Year: Melissa Schaub
Player of the Year: Reese Brantmeier, North Carolina
Freshman of the Year: Amelie Van Impe, SMU
Coach of the Year: Simon Earnshaw, NC State
Player of the Year: Benito Sanchez Martinez, Mississippi State
Coach of the Year: Bruce Berque, Texas
Freshman of the Year: Olaf Pieczkowski, LSU
Newcomer of the Year: Will Jansen, Georgia
Player of the Year: Max Dahlin, Michigan
Freshman of the Year: Max Dahlin, Michigan
Coach of the Year: Harry Jadun, Michigan State
Player of the Year: Dylan Dietrich, Virginia
Freshman of the Year: Mees Rottgering, Wake Forest
Coach of the Year: Tony Bresky, Wake Forest
Four US girls and four US boys have been accepted to the main draw: Maggie Sohns, Yael Saffar, Ireland O’Brien, Isabelle DeLuccia, Vihaan Reddy, Carel Ngounoue, Michael Savano and Navneet Raghuram.
The boys cutoff was 140, with their field much better than the girls which had a cutoff of 284. It’s rare to see a gender disparity like that in a J300 or J500 tournament.
Currently two ITF Top 10 boys are in the field: Jamie Mackenzie[8] of Germany and Zangar Nurlanuly[10] of Kazakhstan. The only Top 10 girl is No. 9 Victoria Barros of Brazil.
The tournament’s main draw begins May 4th.
