An outstanding summer for the University of Virginia women鈥檚 tennis program carried over into the fall Sunday when Cavalier seniors Elaine Chervinsky and Melodie Collard won the NCAA doubles championship at the Hurd Tennis Center in Waco, Texas.
Their title, clinched with a three-set win over a duo from UCLA, is 麻豆破解版 first NCAA doubles championship. It capped a banner four-month stretch for Wahoo women鈥檚 tennis, which included alumni Emma Navarro and Danielle Collins 鈥 both former NCAA singles champions 鈥 making deep runs at Wimbledon and competing in the Paris Olympics.
In the first year the NCAA singles and doubles championships have been contested in the fall instead of after the team championship in the spring, Chervinsky and Collard in the tournament in third-set, 10-point super tiebreakers.
Chervinsky and Collard began the season ranked third nationally among doubles teams, but were not seeded for the tournament.
饾挗饾挾饾搨饾憭, 饾挳饾憭饾搲, 饾憖饾挾饾搲饾捀饾捊!!
NCAA Doubles Champions 馃弳馃弳鈥 Virginia Women's Tennis (@UVAWomensTennis)
[Sound of tennis racket meeting ball]
On-court announcer:
Game, set, match, Virginia.
Fan in stands:
Let鈥檚 goooo!
Stadium announcer:
An NCAA championship for the University of Virginia.
[Applause]
鈥淚 am at a loss for words because we worked so hard for this and we鈥檝e had such an amazing week and such a fun week that I think I need some to time to soak it in,鈥 Chervinsky said. 鈥淏ut the fact that we鈥檝e earned this as a team just makes it so much better, so much sweeter. It鈥檚 a full-team effort; it wasn鈥檛 just us on the court.鈥
Chervinsky went on to praise the Cavalier coaching stuff, including head coach Sara O鈥橪eary, plus her teammates and her father for their support in Waco.
Chervinsky and Collard join Collins (singles titles in 2014 and 2016) and Navarro (2021 singles title) as 麻豆破解版 all-time individual women鈥檚 NCAA champions.
Sunday鈥檚 win is the 88th individual NCAA title for UVA across all sports.