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Hart, Andrews & Broomfield of UCLA head to ITA Fall Championships

uclabruins.com/news

UCLA Bruins News

SURPRISE, Ariz. – The UCLA women’s tennis team will officially mark the end of the 2018 portion of its schedule at the Oracle ITA National Fall Championships this week, when it sends five players to the Surprise Tennis & Racquet Complex. The five-day event will conclude Sunday, Nov. 11, with ESPN3 and the ESPN App providing live coverage of the singles finals.

Seven Top-10 singles players from the Oracle/ITA preseason list and five Top-10 doubles tandems are in the star-studded field. UCLA will be represented by two singles players and two doubles teams. It was recently announced that the Fall Championships singles winners will be granted main-draw wildcard spots in the 2019 Oracle Challenger Series tournament. More information is available HERE.

Heading up the Bruin contingency is the red-hot doubles duo of Gabby Andrews and Ayan Broomfield, which has now claimed back-to-back titles after topping the Jack Kramer Collegiate Tournament field. Previously, the pair won the ITA Southwest Regional Championships doubles title to earn an automatic bid in this week’s draw. For the year, Andrews-Broomfield holds an unblemished mark at 8-0. Seeded sixth, the pair will face off with Air Force’s TJ Fumagalli-Kristin Kerrigan Wednesday.

Earning an at-large doubles bid, meanwhile, was the 29th-ranked combination of Elysia Bolton and Jada Hart. The pair, which turned in strong performances at the Riviera/ITA All-American Championships and ITA Regionals, currently sits at 7-2 on the year. Bolton-Hart is staring down top-seeded and third-ranked Michaela Gordon and Emily Arbuthnott of Stanford in the first round.

Bolton, who is No. 3 among freshmen according to Oracle/ITA, also picked up an at-large berth in the singles draw. Seeded 13th, Bolton will face Princeton’s Stephanie Schrage in opening-round play. If victorious, Bolton could take on 2017 NCAA singles champion Brienne Minor of Michigan in the second round and past Oracle ITA Masters foe No. 3 Estela Perez-Somarriba of Miami in the Round of 16. Bolton is 7-3 across three highly-regarded tournaments this fall.

Joining Bolton in the singles draw is sophomore teammate Abi Altick, who also picked up an at-large nod. No. 52 Altick will take on No. 20 Marianna Petrei of Idaho in search of her sixth win of the fall. Two of Altick’s five triumphs thus far have come over ranked opponents (No. 53 Sabina Machalova of Ole Miss, No. 51 Petra Melounova of Hawai’i).

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Broomfield, Andrews win NCAA Doubles Championship

uclabruins.com

Press Release:

Orlando, Fla. – May 25, 2019. Broomfield and Andrews registered the program’s first NCAA doubles title since 2008, outlasting Kate Fahey-Brienne Minor of Michigan 5-7, 7-6(6), 1-0(9) in the final round. The three-set win marked the pair’s third of the week, posting a pair of 10-7 decisions before Saturday’s 11-9 thriller.

The duo posted tiebreaking wins in three other sets, as well. In order to reach the final, the Bruins dealt No. 1-seeded Angela Kulikov-Rianna Valdes of crosstown rival USC a 6-4, 6-4 loss in Friday’s semifinal round. The third-seeded tandem handed losses to the first-, 10th-, 12th-, 25th- and 37th-ranked teams in the nation en route to the program’s seventh doubles championship.

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Jubb delivers first tennis national championship

GamecocksOnline.com

Press Release:

ORLANDO, Fla. – South Carolina junior Paul Jubb capped off his brilliant run through the NCAA Singles Championship with a 6-3, 7-6 (2) win over the top player in the country to deliver the Gamecocks’ first national championship in men’s tennis. The Hull, England, native dropped just one set in his six victories en route to the title.

Facing a familiar foe on Mississippi State’s Nuno Borges, the No. 1 ranked player in the nation, Jubb knew he would have a battle on his hands in the championship match. He also knew he had pushed Borges to the limit twice before this season.

“I was so relentless with my feet,” Jubb said. “That was the main thing we were saying with my coach, just going into every single ball. I’m one of the toughest players from the back and my tempo is so high, so I was just trying to keep that up the whole match.”

Both players shook off early nerves as each dropped his first service game. Jubb turned the momentum after a tough hold at 3-3. After clipping the net twice to see a 40-Love lead erased, Jubb worked a long rally until Borges sailed his final shot long to decide the game.

Jubb immediately pounced in Borges’ service game, bursting to a 40-15 lead. The Bulldogs’ senior again forced the game to deuce with a big serve, but again saw Jubb take the deciding point when his great return led to a Borges error and a 4-3 Jubb lead.

The two SEC heavy-weights went toe-to-toe as the next game also went to deuce. Again Jubb delivered, this time with a clean forehand winner up the line to surge ahead 5-3. He went on to take a 40-15 lead in the next game and closed out the set with a great return for a 6-3 victory.

Jubb kept the pressure on in the second set, winning the first two games before Borges got back on serve with a break in the third. After both players held at Love in the eighth and ninth games of the set, both were pressed but held in their next service games, including Borges holding off Jubb’s first championship point with a huge second serve to even the set at 5-5.

Two games later, Jubb served first to open the tiebreak, winning that point and two more on Borges’ serve as the Gamecock senior’s forehand continued to paint lines. The two split the next four points for a 4-2 Jubb advantage.

After switching sides, Jubb’s great return immediately put Borges behind the point. As he tried to work his way back in, Jubb came to net and knocked off a high backhand volley into the open court to go up 5-2. A Borges mishit set up another championship point.

Jubb hit a strong serve up the T that had Borges reaching, and the Gamecock junior buried a forehand up the line for the clean winner and the national title.

“Unbelievable,” Jubb said after the match. “I had to overcome so much mental toughness after losing to him twice this season. Overcoming that fear and regaining believe that I could win was so big for me today, and I did it.”

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Stanford three-peats as Pac-12 Women’s Tennis Champions with win over UCLA

Pac-12 Conference

By Holly Roberts of Pac-12 Conference

OJAI, Calif. – Top-seeded and No. 5 nationally ranked Stanford (22-1) captured its third consecutive Pac-12 Women’s Tennis Championship tournament title and its fourth straight NCAA Tournament automatic bid with a 4-2 comeback victory over No. 2 seed and No. 9 ranked UCLA (18-7) at Libbey Park on Saturday.

The title match beared striking resemblance to last year’s tourney finale in which the Bruins took the doubles point and evened the match 2-2, but the Cardinal surged late with key victories once again highlighted by the clincher from junior Emily Arbuthnott at No. 4 singles.

“It’s obviously amazing to clinch a final like this,” said Arbuthnott, who not only clinched the 2018 Pac-12 team title for the Cardinal but has also secured the winning point in five consecutive meetings against the Bruins.

“We have this joke on our team that I end up clinching all the time. I think it might be the way I play – I don’t play too fast or too slowly, but it means a lot,” added Arbuthnnott. “Obviously I would have preferred to have won the match point that I had in the second set and get done faster, but I think getting through those three-set matches, especially in situations where you know if you win you’ve won the match, that it’s great character building. I’ve been in that situation so many times now that I feel quite comfortable.”

“She’s really solid and her matches go a little longer which is one of the reasons that she clinches a lot,” said Stanford head coach Lele Forood. “We have people like [Caroline] Lampl who bangs the ball through the court and gets off the court sooner – it takes a little bit of both.”

The Bruins have secured the doubles point in their last seven meetings against the Cardinal, but Stanford has rebounded to win the last five of those contests.

“We’ve got great singles players,” said Forood of her team’s resiliency. “That doesn’t faze us exactly. We’d like to win it and they [UCLA] were very good in the doubles, so we just know that we’ve gotta win a bunch of singles matches.”

Now with a Pac-12 tourney three-peat in the record book, Stanford will turn its attention to defending its 2018 NCAA National Championship, which it claimed as the No. 15 seed and four top-10 upsets.

“Probably better doubles from us,” joked Farood on what it will take to repeat as NCAA champions. “Just a lot of belief like we came through in singles today.”

“We’re really excited, especially with the new setup this year with teams hosting third rounds as well,” said Arbuthnott of the Cardinal’s upcoming NCAA Tournament play. “We’re really looking forward to getting back and trying to defend that title. It was really close last year, but we have the same team and we know we’re capable of it.”

The NCAA Women’s Tennis Championship Selection Show will stream live on NCAA.com on Monday, April 29 at 3:30 p.m. PT.

2019 PAC-12 WOMEN’S TENNIS CHAMPIONSHIP

No. 1 Stanford 4, No. 2 UCLA 2


DOUBLES:
1. Gabby Andrews/Ayan Broomfield, UCLA def. Caroline Lampl/Kimi Yee, STAN – 6-4
2. Elysia Bolton/Jada Hart, UCLA v. Emily Arbuthnott/Michaela Gordon, STAN – 6-5 unf.
3. Abi Altick/Taylor Johnson, UCLA def. Melissa Lord/Niluka Madurawe, STAN – 6-3
Order of finish: 3, 1

SINGLES:
1. Michaela Gordon, STAN def. Jada Hart, UCLA – 6-4, 6-4
2. Melissa Lord, STAN def. Elysia Bolton, UCLA – 7-5, 6-3
3. Caroline Lampl, STAN def. Ayan Broomfield, UCLA – 6-2, 6-1
4. Emily Arbuthnott, STAN def. Alaina Miller, UCLA – 6-1, 6-7 (3), 6-0
5. Janice Shin, STAN v. Abi Altick, UCLA – 2-6, 6-4, 2-1 unf.
6. Gabby Andrews, UCLA def. Emma Higuchi, STAN – 6-3, 6-2
Order of finish: 3, 6, 2, 1, 4

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