NCAA Championship
Florida Men, Texas Women Capture NCAA Team Titles
by Rhiannon Potkey, 23 May 2021
Share: | |
| | |
|
|
Bryan Shelton considers every one of his players to be like a son once they enter his program at the University of Florida. But there is something special about coaching his own flesh and blood.
Shelton and his freshman son, Ben, shared the ultimate gift on the biggest stage in college tennis on Saturday night.
Florida Coach Bryan Shelton and Son, Ben Shelton
© Florida Athletics
The top-seeded Florida Gators captured the first NCAA title in program history with a 4-1 victory over No. 2 Baylor, and Ben Shelton clinched the historic milestone with a three-set singles win just after midnight at the USTA National Tennis Center in Lake Nona, Florida.
Bryan Shelton became the first NCAA Division I head coach to win a women’s national title (2007, Georgia Tech) and a men’s national title.
"Trying to make me cry. Yeah, it's special,'' Shelton said during his on-court interview after the match. "I've got 10 guys over there. Ten guys that came out every day and worked. I'm just really proud of you guys and what you've done."
In a year where “Super Seniors” returned to lineups because of Covid’s interruption of the 2020 season, it was two freshmen who clinched the titles for their teams.
Lulu Sun pulled out a dramatic three-set victory to lead the second-seeded Texas women to a 4-3 win over No. 5 Pepperdine in a thrilling championship match. With the match knotted 3-3, Sun outlasted Pepperdine freshman Taisiya Pachkaleva 6-4, 6-7(3), 7-5 on court three to secure the Longhorn’s third national title.
"I just had a good sense that, and again, this is not a scientific word, but the juju of this team was very good,” said Texas head coach Howard Joffe, whose team ended the season on a 24-match win streak. “And I felt like one way or the other, we'd get over the line today. But the idea that we'd actually get to the final with the obstacles and the difficulty and the inexperience, it really is a pretty remarkable dream.”
In a match that lasted four hours, the doubles point foreshadowed what was to come for Texas (31-1) and Pepperdine (25-4).
Kylie Collins and Lulu Sun evened the doubles 1-1 with a 7-6(3) win over Lisa Zaar and Ashley Lahey by saving three match points. Freshmen Peyton Stearns and Charlotte Chavatipon clinched the 1-0 lead for Texas with a 7-6(5) victory over Anastasia Iamachkine and Jessica Failla on court three.
After the teams traded singles wins, it all came down to Sun and Pachkaleva. Sun broke for a 5-3 lead in the third set, but Pachkaleva responded with a break to even the set 5-5. Sun held for a 6-5 advantage, and broke Pachkaleva when she hit a ball into the net after a lengthy rally to launch a Texas title celebration.
Texas freshman Lulu Sun After Clinching the Win
© Texas Athletics
“Honestly, at the end I was almost going to cramp," Sun said. "So I was just [trying to] survive the last few games and just throw everything I have. And I guess it worked.”
Florida (25-2) dropped the double points against Baylor (34-5), but roared back to win four straight singles matches by Andy Andrade, Sam Riffice, Josh Goodger and Ben Shelton.
Once Ben Shelton clinched the title his 3-6, 6-1, 6-2 victory over Charlie Broom on court five just after midnight, his Gator teammates exploded in celebration
“[This title] means the world to me," Florida senior Duarte Vale said."I was telling coach that I don't even know how to act, you know? To me, it couldn't feel more special because—not even because, of course, it's a national title, a huge thing—but to do it with the people that we did it with, I mean, there's no words."
Along with the team title and his dual coaching milestone, Bryan Shelton was able to celebrate Ben Shelton earning Most Outstanding Player honors after winning eight of his matches (singles and doubles) in the tournament.
"Pretty speechless tonight. Normally I have a lot of words,'' Bryan Shelton said. "To see these guys here and see what they have gone through in the last year, year and a half … and come together tonight and compete and put it out on the line, it's truly special."
Championship Results:
Women
No. 2 Texas 4, No. 5 Pepperdine 3
Doubles
1. #19 Kylie Collins/Lulu Sun (UT) def. Lisa Zaar/Ashley Lahey (Pepp), 7-6 (7-3)
2. Shiori Fukuda/Taisiya Pachkaleva (Pepp) def. Fernanda Labraña/Anna Turati (UT), 6-1
3. #47 Peyton Stearns/Charlotte Chavatipon (UT) vs. Anastasia Iamachkine/Jessica Failla (Pepp), 7-6 (7-5)
Order of finish: 2, 1, 3
Singles
1. #37 Peyton Stearns (UT) def. #77 Ashley Lahey (Pepp), 2-6, 6-0, 6-2
2. #21 Jessica Failla (Pepp) def. #35 Anna Turati (UT), 6-2, 6-3
3. #62 Lulu Sun (UT) def. #89 Taisiya Pachkaleva (Pepp), 6-4, 6-7 (3-7), 7-5
4. #76 Charlotte Chavatipon (UT) def. #118 Shiori Fukuda (Pepp), 6-3, 6-2
5. Lisa Zaar (Pepp) def. #72 Kylie Collins (UT), 6-3, 7-6 (7-3)
6. Nikki Redelijk (Pepp) def. Malaika Rapolu (UT), 6-4, 7-5
Order of finish: 4, 2, 5, 1, 6, 3
Men
No. 1 Florida 4, No. 2 Baylor 1
Doubles:
1. Sven Lah/Constantin Frantzen (BU) def. Duarte Vale/Johannes Ingildsen (UF) 6-2
2. Sam Riffice/Ben Shelton (UF) def. Matias Soto/Nick Stachowiak (BU) 6-0
3. Finn Bass/Charlie Broom (BU) def. Will Grant/Brian Berdusco (UF) 6-1
Order of finish: 2,3,1
Singles
1. Duarte Vale (UF) vs. Adrian Boitan (BU) 5-7, 3-4 unfinished
2. Sam Riffice (UF) def. Matias Soto (BU) 7-5, 6-3
3. Andy Andrade (UF) def. Sven Lah (BU) 7-6 (8-6), 6-0
4. Blaise Bicknell (UF) vs. Nick Stachowiak (BU) 3-6, 6-4, 1-1 unfinished
5. Ben Shelton (UF) def. Charlie Broom (BU) 3-6, 6-1, 6-2
6. Josh Goodger (UF) def. Spencer Furman (BU) 6-3, 7-5
Order of finish: 3,2,6,5
Men’s All-Tournament Team
No. 1 Singles: Adam Walton, Tennessee
No. 2 Singles: Sam Riffice, Florida
No. 3 Singles: Andy Andrade, Florida
No. 4 Singles: Blaise Bicknell, Florida
No. 5 Singles: Ben Shelton, Florida (Most Outstanding Player)
No. 6 Singles: Josh Goodger, Florida
No. 1 Doubles: Adam Walton/Pat Harper, Tennessee
No. 2 Doubles: Sam Riffice/Ben Shelton, Florida
No. 3 Doubles: Charlie Broom/Finn Bass, Baylor
Women's All-Tournament Team
No. 1 Singles: Peyton Stearns, Texas (Most Outstanding Player)
No. 2 Singles: Jessica Failla, Pepperdine
No. 3 Singles: Lulu Sun, Texas
No. 4 Singles: Charlotte Chavatipon, Texas
No. 5 Singles: Lisa Zaar, Pepperdine
No. 6 Singles: Fiona Crawley, North Carolina
No. 1 Doubles: Kylie Collins/Lulu Sun, Texas
No. 2 Doubles: Taisiya Pachkaleva/Shiori Fukuda, Pepperdine
No. 3 Doubles: Charlotte Chavatipon/Peyton Stearns, Texas
Leave a Comment
More College Coverage
2-Jul-2024
SMU Programs Ready for New Challenges in ACC
Southern Methodist University officially joined the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) on Monday. Men's head coach Grant Chen and women's head coach Jeff Nevolo discuss what the moves means to their programs and how it may impact recruiting.
26-Jun-2024
Mullins Named ITA CEO Amid Collegiate Landscape Shifts
Dave Mullins was recently named the new Chief Executive Officer of the Intercollegiate Tennis Association. In recent Q&A, Mullins discussed the ITA’s role in a rapidly changing collegiate landscape, how college tennis is preparing for potential disruptions and how the ITA can help in recruiting.
24-Jun-2024
Ten Questions with NCAA Champion Alexa Noel
After transferring to the University of Miami, Alexa Noel broke through and won the NCAA women's singles title this year. Colette Lewis spoke to Noel about what she gained from competing in college, earning respect for her game, her plans for the summer, and several other topics.
About Rhiannon Potkey
Rhiannon Potkey is a veteran sportswriter with more than two
decades of experience in journalism. Potkey has covered many
sports at many levels and has a passion for finding great stories.
Potkey has covered the U.S. Open, junior sectional and national
events, college conference championships and Davis Cup matches.
Potkey is currently Content Strategist for Tennis Recruiting. You
can reach Rhiannon by email at
[email protected].