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SEASON RECAP: Year Culminates with Tourney Bid

Tennis program continues ascent as it earns second place in the Ivy League

Cao Tracks
Meredith H. Keffer

Sophomore Holly Cao led the Crimson this year, going 15-4 at No. 1 on her way to winning first-team All-Ivy in both singles and doubles.

The 2010 season was a test for the Harvard women’s tennis team.

In 2008, under first-year head coach Traci Green, the squad went 2-17 and finished consecutive seasons with a losing record for the first time since 1980.

In 2009, forgetting its previous struggles, Green’s squad fought its way to a 13-8 record and tied with Princeton for the Ivy title with a 6-1 league performance. But Harvard lost the tiebreaker to the Tigers and therefore did not automatically qualify for the NCAA tournament, and its No. 66 ITA ranking did not land it an at-large bid.

The 2010 season presented itself as a test of whether last season’s success was a fluke. With the year completed, the team now knows the answer is a resounding, “No.”

The Crimson (14-8, 6-1 Ivy) began the season with a mediocre 6-6 record, due to a difficult schedule that included seven top-50 opponents, but turned its season around on its spring-break trip to the West Coast, winning eight of its last 10 matches to secure an at-large NCAA tournament berth, a second-place Ivy League finish, and a No. 39 ITA ranking.

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“Since my freshman year we’ve improved increasingly,” junior captain Samantha Rosekrans said. “We’ve come together a lot more and become much more cohesive.”

After sweeping Boston University to open the season, Harvard lost to current No. 1 Baylor in the opening round of the ITA Kickoff Weekend.

In the ECAC tournament, the Crimson earned third place in the eight-team field with wins over Cornell and No. 33 Princeton and a loss to No. 44 Yale. The next few weeks also included losses to No. 22 Illinois, No. 26 South Florida, and a disappointing 7-0 sweep against No. 12 California.

But the loss to the Golden Bears served as the wakeup call Harvard needed to play up to its potential. In the next match against No. 38 St. Mary’s, the Crimson was trailing, 3-0, when it turned its season around.

Freshman Kristin Norton and sophomore Holly Cao each won their matches in two sets, while Rosekrans and freshman Alex Lehman both pushed their matches into a third set after dropping the first.

Lehman won her final set, 6-4, while the captain battled to finally win a contest-determining tiebreak, 11-9.

“We came out with a new mindset,” Rosekrans said after the match. “A new day meant a clean slate. We knew it would be a huge deal if we won...[The win] came at a crucial point in the season. It really boosted our morale.”

After its trip to the Golden State, the squad began Ivy League play and defeated No. 61 Brown, No. 44 Yale, and No. 60 Dartmouth en route to a 6-1 conference record. The only mishap occurred in Princeton, N.J., where the Tigers won, 5-2.

“We were hoping to win Ivies, but Princeton got the better of us,” Rosekrans said.

Despite its second-place finish in the Ivy League, Harvard’s ranking was good enough to earn it a berth in the NCAA tournament, in which it lost to No. 19 Georgia in the first round.

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