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2002
NCAA Division I Women's Tennis Championships Selections
Team
Brackets:
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Participants: Seeds | Singles
| Doubles
The
NCAA Division I Women's Tennis Committee has selected the 64 teams
and 16 regional sites for the 2002 NCAA Division I Women's Tennis
Championships.
Sixteen
regional competitions will be conducted May 10-12 with the winner
of each site advancing to the NCAA Division I Women's Tennis Championships
at the Taube Family Tennis Stadium in Stanford, California, hosted
by Stanford University. The team championship will be held May 16-19.
The
teams will play a single-elimination tournament at 16 first- and
second-round sites (four teams at each site) and the finals site
(16-team bracket) to determine the national champion. The matches
shall be regulation dual matches (three [3] eight-game,
pro-set doubles played for one team point, followed by six [6]
singles matches, each valued at one team point, played best of three
sets). Regular scoring will be used and a 12-point tiebreaker will
be played at eight games all in doubles and at six games all in
singles.
The
selection of teams and individuals for the NCAA Division I Women's
Tennis Championships is based on the prescribed criteria listed
in the championships handbook and approved by the Division I Championships/Competition
Cabinet.
Thirty-one
conferences receive automatic qualification into the 2002 NCAA Division
I Women's Tennis Championships. Each conference and their automatic
qualifiers are listed below.
Teams
Advancing to NCAA Championships - Round of 16
1.
Florida
2.
Georgia
3.
Stanford
4.
Vanderbilt
5.
Duke
6.
North Carolina
7.
UCLA
8.
Wake Forest
9.
Texas
10.
USC
11.
Arizona State
--.
Virginia CW
13.
Tennessee
14.
Kentucky
15.
California
16.
Northwestern
SINGLES:
Jessyca Arthur William and Mary
Lauren Barnikow Stanford
Courtney Bergman Harvard
Janet Bergman Wake Forest
Bea Bielik Wake Forest
Megan Bradley UCLA
Sarah Borwell Houston
Erin Burdette Stanford
Nataly Cahana Old Dominion
Chloe Carlotti Fresno State
Vilmarie Castellvi Tennessee
Delila Causevic Maryland
Agata Cioroch Georgia
Bruna Colosio LSU
Lindsay Dawaf Florida
Julie DeRoo Duke
Anca Dumitrescu Florida State
Megan Dunigan Furman
Adria Engel Arizona State
Linda Faltynkova Oklahoma State
Alesya Ignatieva Mississippi
Alena Jecminkova Kansas State
Lauren Kalvaria Stanford
Darija Klaic Washington
Raquel Kops-Jones California
Katja Kovac Baylor
Kavitha Krishnamurthy Princeton
Dora Krstulovic Arizona State
Manon Kruse Middle Tennessee
Debbie Laroque Arizona
Gabriela Lastra Stanford
Alix Lacelarie Clemson
Jessica Lehnhoff Florida
Catherine Lynch California
Luana Magnani Southern California
Katarina Markovski South Carolina
Carolina Mayorga Kentucky
Kelly McCain Duke
Jennifer McGaffigan Illinois
Marlene Mejia North Carolina
Jenny Miller Vanderbilt
Maja Mlakar Arizona
Martina Nedelkova Virginia Commonwealth
Toni Neykova Iowa
Kim Niggemeyer Fresno State
Alison Ojeda Tennessee
Andrea Ondrisova Virginia Commonwealth
Anda Perianu Oklahoma
Erica Perkins Washington State
Jewel Peterson Southern California
Alicia Pillay Tulsa
Kate Pinchbeck North Carolina
Marine Piriou Northwestern
Alice Pirsu Pennsylvania
Jennifer Radman South Carolina
Mira Radu Mississippi
Monica Rincon Ohio State
Sarah Riske Vanderbilt
Julie Rotondi North Carolina
Viktoria Stoklasova South Alabama
Vladka Uhlirova Texas
Mariel Verban Georgia
Sara Walker UCLA
Sarah Witten Kentucky
Jaime Wong Georgia Tech
Alternates
(listed in order):
Susanna Lingman Harvard
Christina Fusano California
DOUBLES:
Hillary Adams Kelly McCain Duke
Jessyca Arthur Candice Fuchs William and Mary
Lauren Barnikow Erin Burdette Stanford
Millie Begovic Weyli Chang Alabama
Janet Bergman Bea Bielik Wake Forest
Kathy Boyanovich Jennifer Radman South Carolina
Megan Bradley Lauren Fisher UCLA
Tiffany Brymer Jewel Peterson Southern California
Claire Carter Darjia Klaic Washington
Vilmarie Castellvi Agnes Wiski Tennessee
Agata Cioroch Lori Grey Georgia
Bruna Colosio Rocio Fantilli LSU
Katie Cunha Lindsey Green Notre Dame
Lindsay Dawaf Jessica Lehnhoff Florida
Adria Engel Dora Krstulovic Arizona State
Linda Faltynkova Katarzyna Kolodynska Oklahoma State
Ziva Grasic Vladka Uhlirova Texas
Ashley Hedberg Jessica Roland Texas A&M
Lauren Kalvaria Gabriela Lastra Stanford
Raquel Kops-Jones Jody Scheldt California
Manon Kruse Stacy Varnell Middle Tennessee
Debbie Larocque Maja Mlakar Arizona
Anita Loyola Luana Magnani Southern California
Petya Marinova Sara Walker UCLA
Carolina Mayorga Sarah Witten Kentucky
Stacy McKenna Erica Perkins Washington State
Alesia Mikalayeva Liina Suurvarik Illinois State
Martina Nedelkova Andrea Ondrisova Virginia Commonwealth
Kim Niggemeyer Simone Jardim Fresno State
Sarah Riske Aleke Tsoubanos Vanderbilt
Karie Schlukebir Linda Tran Indiana
Carolina Maurer Katia Illarinova Auburn
Alternates
(listed in order):
Marine Piriou Jessica Rush Northwestern
In the
2001 championships, the Stanford Cardinals topped the Vanderbilt University
Commodores 4-0 in Stone Mountain, Georgia, to capture their 11th national
crown. The squad finished the season with an unblemished record for
the seventh time in program history.
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