National Championships for Men's Tennis (18)
| 2000 National Champions |
 All-American Alex Kim won Stanford's 13th NCAA singles title, and was named the Pac-10 co-Player of the Year with teammate Geoff Abrams.
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 Geoff Abrams posted a 22-2 record on the season and was rewarded with All-America honors.
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Head Coach: Dick Gould
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Stanford routed Virginia Commonwealth 4-0 in Athens, Ga., to win its 15th NCAA championship and 17th overall team title. The Cardinal went 28-1 and claimed NCAA, Pac-10 and National Indoor championships. Stanford's 28 victories matched a program-best total, tying the 1998 Cardinal. Three players earned All-America honors: Geoff Abrams, K.J. Hippensteel and Alex Kim, who became the 13th player in school history to win an NCAA singles title. Kim cruised past Kentucky's Carlos Drada, 6-1, 6-1, in the championship match.
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| 1990 National Champions |
 Jared Palmer fought through injury to All-America honors.
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 All-American Jonathan Stark posted a 20-2 record and was named Pac-10 Player of the Year.
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Head Coach: Dick Gould
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Jared Palmer and Alexis Hombrecher entered the season recovering from knee surgeries, but the Cardinal persevered to win its third consecutive NCAA title. Both would return during the regular season, before Palmer was sidelined again with another knee surgery and Jonathan Stark suffered a stress fracture in his toe. Stanford literally limped into the NCAAs in Indian Wells, Calif., where the Cardinal beat Texas, 5-1, in the quarterfinals, USC, 5-3, in the semifinals, and Tennessee, 5-2, in the championship. Stark finished the year with a 20-2 record, and Alex O'Brien went 23-4, mostly at the No. 2 position.
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| 1983 National Champions |
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 Dan Goldie was among the talented young players on the team, posting a 24-1 record.
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 Scott Davis was Stanford's only All-American in 1983 and led the team with a 24-1 record at No. 1 singles. |
Head Coach: Dick Gould
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Ranked as low as No. 13 during the season, Stanford proved itself by beating SMU, 5-2, in the championship final in Athens, Ga. A young Stanford team that included five freshmen and four sophomores, was led by No. 1 player Scott Davis and finished 24-1. Davis won all four singles matches in straight sets during the team tournament, and Dan Goldie went 21-4 overall at No. 3 singles.
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| 1981 National Champions |
 Two-time All-Ameican Tim Mayotte would go on to be ranked as high as No. 7 in the world after leaving the Farm.
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 Scott Bondurant, one of four All-Americans on the team, clinched the championship for the Cardinal.
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Head Coach: Dick Gould
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The Cardinal won its sixth NCAA championship in nine years by defeating UCLA, 5-1, in Athens, Ga., to finish the season at 20-2. Scott Bondurant, playing at No. 5, secured the winning point in a 6-3, 4-6, 7-5 victory over Bruce Brescia. No. 1 player Tim Mayotte had rallied to Marcel Freeman 6-7, 7-6 (5-1), 6-3 to put the Cardinal up 3-1.
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| 1974 National Champions |
 Doubles champion Jim Delaney was named an All-American for a third time, and would again be given the award in 1975.
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 Triple crown winner and future Stanford coach John Whitlinger was one of four All-America selections from the Cardinal.
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Head Coach: Dick Gould
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The Cardinal won its second consecutive NCAA title behind John Whitlinger's "triple crown" of singles, doubles (with Jim Delaney) and team titles. Whitlinger would eventually succeed Dick Gould as the team's head coach. The team experienced some adversity when defending NCAA singles and doubles champion Alex Mayer left the team and Amateur Clay Court winner, Pat DuPre, was sidelined for the year by a wrist injury. But Stanford got a boost from Chico Hagey, who fought his way into the lineup, suffered a midseason slump and then dominated in the NCAAs, losing serve just once over the seven rounds. Hagey reached the singles final against Whitlinger, who rallied to win 1-6, 6-3, 6-3, 6-1. Stanford beat host USC, 30-25, to win the team title.
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| 1973 National Champions |
 Alex Mayer became the first Stanford player to win the NCAA singles, doubles, and team titles in a single season.
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 Doubles champion Jim Delaney won his second of four All-America awards.
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Head Coach: Dick Gould
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The beginning of seven NCAA titles in 10 years, Stanford beat USC, 33-28, in Princeton, N.J., to secure coach Dick Gould's first NCAA title. Alex Mayer, a three-time All-American, became Stanford's fourth NCAA singles winner and also won the doubles title, teaming with Jim Delaney. It was beginning of a dynasty for Gould, as his teams would win 15 of the next 25 NCAA titles from 1973 to 1997.
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1942 National Champions (unofficial)
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Larry Dee won his second NCAA doubles title, this time alongside Ted Schroeder.
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 Ted Schroeder won the NCAA singles and doubles crowns in 1942, and also the singles title at the U.S. National Championships (now the U.S. Open). |
Head Coach: John Lamb
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Ted Schroeder had perhaps the finest season ever by a Stanford tennis player. Not only did he win the NCAA singles and doubles crowns in 1942 -- the latter with Larry Dee - but he captured the singles title at the U.S. National Championships, the precursor to the U.S. Open. Stanford won the unofficial national team title in 1942, because the NCAA did not hold a team championship until after World War II. Stanford highlights were its twin shutouts (8-0 and 9-0) over perennial power UCLA. Of Schroeder, the future Wimbledon singles champion, longtime Stanford publicist Don Liebendorfer wrote: "His game had no weaknesses and he had a wonderful competitive temperament."
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