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Late Tuesday afternoon news started to circulate that University of Virginia men’s head coach Brian Boland was departing to take over as the new USTA Player Development Head of Men’s Tennis and on Wednesday morning it was officially confirmed. Boland will finish out the current season at Virginia and will then relocate to Orlando where he’ll serve under USTA Player Development General Manager Martin Blackman. Boland took over as head coach at Virginia in 2001 and since then his teams have won over 400 matches while winning three of the last four NCAA Championships and completely rewriting the record books at both Virginia and in the ACC. The USTA’s release also includes a Q&A while Virginia’s release has several great quotes with a few of them below. I also embedded Boland’s press conference from earlier today where he talked in more detail about his decision to head south. 

 

“For the past sixteen years, my family and I have considered it a privilege and a blessing to call Charlottesville our home and the University of Virginia men’s tennis program our life,” Boland said. “From day one, we believed in the University and the University believed in us. I will forever be indebted to our athletics director, Craig Littlepage, for taking a chance and granting me the opportunity to lead this program in 2001 at the age of 29. I am also appreciative of every administrator, assistant coach, student-athlete, staff member, donor and fan whose unwavering support and commitment allowed our program to be successful. For this, my family and I will always be truly grateful.

“After much consideration and many conversations over a long period of time with my wife Becky, I have decided to resign at the end of this season and accept the role of head of men’s tennis for USTA Player Development at the newly constructed USTA National Campus in Orlando, Florida. I consider this next step in my career to be the absolute highest honor and the ultimate responsibility that can be bestowed upon any tennis coach in the United States. I plan on doing everything in my power, together with the entire USTA and the private sector, to make sure American men’s tennis regains its position as the global leader on the ATP Tour, in the Davis Cup and in the Olympics. Lastly, with the recent move of my parents to Florida, where several other of our family members currently reside, this decision gradually developed into the right one for not only my career, but most importantly for my family as well.

 

 

The USTA also had its usual Wednesday release of the new Top 25 with both Virginia and Florida remaining in the top spots. There was no change in men’s top 11 and really just minimal movement throughout the top 25. TCU made the biggest jump coming up four spots from No. 20 to No. 16 while South Carolina moved up three spots from No. 25 to No. 22. Mississippi State and Kentucky each dropped three spots to No. 19 and No. 20 respectively.

The women’s top three stayed the same however Stanford jumped Georgia for No. 4 which was kind of surprising since Stanford only played and beat Hawaii while Georgia beat a pair of top 25 teams in Mississippi State and Ole Miss – not sure what my fellow voters were thinking with that one. The only other change in the top 10 was Texas Tech jumping Cal for No. 7 with the Red Raiders coming off wins over Baylor and Texas. South Carolina made the biggest jump coming up three spots from No. 21 to No. 18 after defeating both Arkansas and Missouri on the road. Texas A&M fell the most with the Aggies dropping down five spots from No. 19 to a tie for No. 24 after losing to Baylor and LSU. 

No teams dropped out of either poll though Tulane did enter on the men’s side in a tie for No. 25 with Illinois. I’m surprised the Oregon men didn’t crack the top 25 especially since they just beat Tulane two weeks ago. I had Oregon at No. 23 and Tulane at No. 25 in my ballot with Illinois dropping out. 

Voter ballots available to the public: Bobby, Dallas Oliver (TRN), Bruce Waschuk (UTR Men/Women)

USTA Poll Information: there are eight college tennis “experts” on the voting panel, including yours truly, and each of us ranked 25 teams from numbers 1 to 25, with the first-place team receiving 25 points and the last-place team receiving one. When voting we were to consider strength of schedule, Top 25 wins/losses, road wins/losses and personnel adjustments for each program while also basing our vote on performance, not reputation or preseason speculation. For control, the highest and lowest outlying ranking for each team on the ballot was removed. Therefore, the maximum number of points a team can receive is 150. First-place votes were not tallied. 

Voting Panel: Casey Angle (former ITA championships director), Virgil Christian (USTA College Tennis), Granger Huntress (Texas College Tennis), Bobby Knight (College Tennis Today), Dallas Oliver (Tennis Recruiting Network), Mike Patrick (former University of Tennessee women’s coach), Lisa Stone (Parenting Aces) and Bruce Waschuk (Universal Tennis Rating).

 

USTA MEN’S TOP 25   USTA WOMEN’S TOP 25
Rank School Votes Prv Chg Rank School Votes Prv Chg
1 Virginia 150 1 0 1 Florida 149 1 0
2 Wake Forest 142 2 0 2 North Carolina 145 2 0
3 Ohio State 140 3 0 3 Ohio State 138 3 0
4 North Carolina 130 4 0 4 Stanford 130 5 1
5 Texas 123 5 0 5 Georgia 127 4 -1
6 USC 117 6 0 6 Oklahoma State 121 6 0
7 Oklahoma State 112 7 0 7 Texas Tech 113 8 1
8 Baylor 107 8 0 8 California 110 7 -1
9 UCLA 103 9 0 9 Georgia Tech 98 9 0
10 Texas A&M 97 10 0 10 Michigan 95 10 0
11 California 95 11 0 T11 Pepperdine 90 11 0
12 Georgia 82 13 1 T11 Vanderbilt 90 12 1
T13 Florida 75 14 1 13 UCLA 70 13 0
T13 Oklahoma 75 12 -2 14 Baylor 66 T14 0
15 Michigan 69 15 0 T15 Auburn 64 16 1
16 TCU 49 20 4 T15 Kentucky 64 T14 -1
17 Georgia Tech 48 19 2 17 Duke 56 17 0
18 Stanford 40 18 0 18 South Carolina 43 21 3
19 Mississippi State 38 16 -3 19 Arizona State 42 18 -1
20 Kentucky 37 17 -3 20 Texas 34 22 2
21 Columbia 35 21 0 21 LSU 30 23 2
22 South Carolina 14 25 3 22 Mississippi State 27 T19 -3
23 Northwestern 13 24 1 23 Arkansas 14 24 1
24 Cornell 10 23 -1 T24 Texas A&M 12 T19 -5
T25 Illinois/Tulane 7 22/NR T24 USC 12 25 1
Receiving Votes: Oregon (6), South Florida (5) Dropped Out: None
Receiving Votes: Tennessee (3), NC State (1) Dropped Out: No