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I looked at the men’s bracket last night now I’ll take a look at the women’s bracket. Florida, which has been No. 1 all season, was named as the No. 1 seed with North Carolina grabbing the No. 2 despite finishing No. 4 in the final rankings which will be published on Thursday. If the committee would have gone solely off ranking then Ohio State would have been No. 2, Vanderbilt No. 3, and North Carolina No. 4. The other change came at No. 6 with Texas Tech jumping Stanford despite Stanford having almost a 3 point lead in the ITA rankings. It’s also interesting to note that all five of these changes revolved around Power 5 Conference Champions.

Usually teams are moved if there are head-to-head results between them but we don’t see teams moved too often when there isn’t a direct line H2H. I reached out to Marie Scovron, NCAA’s Assistant Director of Championships and Alliances, and she told me that while ITA ranking is used they also looked at other criteria such as strength of schedule, record against common opponents, and wins over NCAA teams. 

After reviewing that criteria I found that when looking at North Carolina and Vanderbilt the Tar Heels had one more win over teams that qualified for the NCAA Tournament (17 to 16). When looking at common opponents with different outcomes I saw that North Carolina beat Texas Tech, Ohio State, and Michigan while Vanderbilt lost to all three. Vanderbilt did defeat Florida twice while North Carolina lost to Florida. The strength of schedule component is determined by ITA ranking so Vanderbilt should have won that category. When looking at these three categories it looks like North Carolina wins 2 to 1. So after North Carolina jumped Vanderbilt they then jumped Ohio State due to the 4-3 win at the National Team Indoors.

When looking at Stanford and Texas Tech I notice that Texas Tech has four more wins over NCAA tournament teams (15 to 11) and when looking at common opponents Texas Tech defeated Pepperdine while Stanford lost to Pepperdine. Stanford wins the strength of schedule due to the higher ITA ranking but Texas Tech wins 2 categories to 1.

The final spot in the field went to Tulsa at No. 40 with the Golden Hurricane having to sweat it out after getting upset by South Florida in the final of the AAC Tournament. Alabama would have been the first team out however it wasn’t eligible for selection due to its sub .500 record of 8-16 so that meant that Florida International was the first out. The Panthers went 21-2 on the season however that second loss came to Rice in the finals of the Conference USA Tournament and it just didn’t have enough other quality wins to move up in the rankings. 

When the committee placed the No. 2, No. 3, and No. 4 seeds in each regional they tried to slot them within 400 miles of home (if possible) while also avoiding a host with the same conference affiliation.  

If each regional winner were to advance to Athens the the final 16 pairings would be:

#1 Florida vs. #16 Baylor
#8 Georgia Tech vs. #9 Oklahoma State
#5 Georgia vs. #12 Pepperdine
#4 Vanderbilt vs. #13 California
 
#3 Ohio State vs. #14 South Carolina
#6 Texas Tech vs. #11 Auburn
#7 Stanford vs. #10 Michigan
#2 North Carolina vs. #15 Duke
 
Florida lost three matches this year and both of the teams that beat them are in the their half of the draw although at best it would only have to face one since Vanderbilt and Georgia are in the same quarter. 
How about that potential North Carolina/Stanford match in the Elite 8!
 
Teams with the most consecutive NCAA Tournament appearances dating back to the start of the women’s tournament in 1982 (36 is the max): California (36), Stanford (36), UCLA (36), Florida (35), Georgia (31), Arizona State (30), Pepperdine (30), Duke (28), USC (26), South Carolina (23), Vanderbilt (23), Miami FL (22), Northwestern (22), Notre Dame (22), North Carolina (19), Georgia Tech (18), Texas A&M (18), Clemson (16), Michigan (16), Baylor (13), Tulsa (11). 
 

Regional with three conference champions: Florida, Baylor, Oklahoma State, Pepperdine, Texas Tech, Stanford, Michigan, Duke, and North Carolina.

There will be three first round rematches (Arkansas/Wichita State, UCLA/UCSB, South Carolina/North Florida) with Arkansas, UCLA, and South Carolina winning those regular season meetings 4-0. 

There are two first round matches that will take place on both the men’s and women’s side with Stanford and Idaho playing in Palo Alto and Oklahoma State and UMKC playing in Stillwater. 

 

 

Singles Lineup Notes

  • #1 Florida has Anna Danilina at No. 4 and Brooke Austin at No. 5 – was reversed in the conference tournament though Danilina played higher throughout the season
  • #6 Texas Tech has Sabrina Federici at No. 4 and Sarah Dvorak at No. 5 which is what they had in the conference tournament after Dvorak played 4 for most of the year and Federici played 5.
  • #9 Oklahoma State has Katie Stresnakova at No. 5 and Lena Ruppert at No. 6 – was reversed in the conference tournament. 
  • #10 Michigan has Alex Najarian at No. 3 and Chiara Lommer at No. 4 – was reversed in the conference tournament 
  • #14 South Carolina has a completely different lineup from what they put out during the SEC Tournament. In the SECs it was Horvit, Martins, Dailey, Chinallato, Berg, and Folland. For the NCAAs it’ll be Martins, Horvit, Cline Dailey, Chinellato, Berg, with Folland at 7.  
  • #16 Baylor has Theresa Van Zyl at No. 4 and Angelina Shakhraichuk at No. 5 – was reversed in the conference tournament though Van Zyl played higher throughout the season

 

Don’t forget to fill out a bracket in the Slam.Tennis May Madness Bracket Challenge. Among the prizes that can be won are some free subscriptions to College Tennis Today.