INDIANAPOLIS – The NCAA Division I Men’s Tennis Subcommittee has selected 64 singles players and 32 doubles teams for the 2024 NCAA Division I Men’s Tennis Championships.
Following the conclusion of the team championships, which will run from 16 to 19 of this month, the singles and doubles tournaments will be held from 20 to 25 of this month at the Greenwood Tennis Center in Stillwater, Oklahoma. Oklahoma State University serves as host.
All matches must be best of three sets. In six games, unadvertised points and a seven-point tiebreaker (must win by seven points or two points) will be used for all matches. In doubles, a 10-point tiebreak will be played instead of a third set.
Singles players who qualify/place for the Division I Singles Championships are automatically seeded into any conference with one or more singles players ranked in the ITA Top 125. For conferences with more than one singles player ranked in the ITA Top 125 eligible/seeded singles players, a subcommittee uses NCAA eligibility criteria to determine which student-athletes are automatically eligible for selection from those conferences. All singles players must have a minimum of 13 singles matches, including six during the spring season, to be eligible for automatic selection or at-large selection.
Automatic berths to the Division I Doubles Championships are awarded to teams that have qualified/placed in one or more doubles teams ranked in the ITA Top 60. For conferences with more than one doubles team qualified/placed in the ITA Top 60, a subcommittee will follow NCAA qualifying criteria to determine which doubles teams from those conferences are automatically seeded. All doubles teams must have started at least 10 doubles matches
A minimum of four games during the spring season will be either an automatic selection or an at-large selection.
LONELY
Automatic qualifications listed alphabetically by conference (15):
- American Athletic Conference – Trevor Swayda, SMU
- Atlantic 10 Conference – Mathis Bondaz, VCU
- Atlantic Coast Conference – Antoine Cornut-Chavinc, Florida State
- Atlantic Solar Conference – Jonas Hartenstein, North Florida
- Big 12 Conference – Eliot Spizzirri, Texas
- Big Ten Conference – Ozan Baris, Michigan State
- Big West Conference – Pablo Masjuan, UC Santa Barbara
- Conference USA – Leo Raquin, Middle Tennessee
- Mid-America Conference – Pavit Sornlaksup, Toledo
- Mountain West Conference — Samuel Sippel, Boise State
- Pac-12 Conference – Nishesh Basavareddy, Stanford
- Southeastern Conference – Johannes Monday, Tennessee
- Ivy League – Cooper Williams, Harvard
- West Coast Conference — Oliver Tarvet, San Diego
- Western Athletic Conference – Joan Torres Espinosa, UT Arlington
Big selections (49), listed alphabetically by last name:
- Pablo Alemany, Memphis
- Jack Anthrop, Ohio State
- Taha Baadi, Kentucky
- Gilles-Arnaud Baillie, Texas
- Samir Banerjee, Stanford
- Justin Boulais, Ohio State
- Micah Braswell, Texas
- Jonah Braswell, Texas
- Murphy Casson, Arizona State
- Robin Cathery, State of SC
- Dylan Dietrich, Virginia
- Sebastian Dominico, Notre Dame
- Jake Fearnley, TCU
- Jay Friend, Arizona
- Hunter Heck, Illinois
- Ronnie Hohmann, Michigan State
- Paul Inchauspe, Princeton
- Jeremy Jean, Florida
- Garrett Jones, Duke
- Petar Jovanovic, Mississippi State
- Cannon Kingsley, Ohio State
- Nemanja Malesevic, Mississippi State
- Andres Martin, Georgia Tech
- Alex Martinez Oklahoma
- Shunsuke Mitsui, Tennessee
- Inaki Montes de la Torre, Virginia
- Filippo Moroni, Awake Forest
- Govind Nanda, UCLA
- Carlys Ozolins, Illinois
- Danil Panarin, Vanderbilt
- Radu Papoe, Cornell
- Thomas Paulsell, Georgia
- Raphael Perot, Texas A&M
- Jack Pinnington, TCU
- Philip Planinsek, Alabama
- JC Roddick, Texas A&M
- Pedro Rodenas, Duke
- Chris Rodesh, Virginia
- Pierce Rollins, Tulsa
- Toby Samuel, South Carolina
- Nikola Slavich, Ole Miss
- Colton Smith, Arizona
- Tyler Stice, Auburn
- JJ Tracy, Ohio State
- Olle Wallin, Texas Tech
- Edward Winter, Pepperdine
- Gavin Young, Michigan
- Michael Zheng, Columbia
- Tyler Zink, Oklahoma State
MODIFIERS*:
- Jeffrey von der Schulenburg, Virginia
- Alvin Tudorica, South Florida
- Finn Murgett, Auburn
- Bor Artnak, Arizona
- Henry von der Schulenburg, Harvard
- Quinn Vandecastile, Oregon
- Ryan Colby, Georgia State
- Hololwam Monsey, Oklahoma
- Gustaf Strom, Arizona
*If a withdrawing student-athlete is automatically selected, the next eligible individual athlete from that conference will be considered before being replaced from another list.
Seeds 1-8:
- Johannus Monday, Tennessee
- Eliot Spizzirri, Texas
- Antoine Cornut-Schauvink, Florida State
- Chris Rodesh, Virginia
- Toby Samuel, South Carolina
- Micah Braswell, Texas
- Oliver Tarvet, San Diego
- Jake Fearnley, TCU
9-16 seeds, listed alphabetically by surname:
- Ozan Barris, Michigan State
- Nishesh Basavareddy, Stanford
- Murphy Casson, Arizona State
- Andres Martin, Georgia Tech
- Alex Martinez, Oklahoma
- Radu Papoe, Cornell
- Jack Pinnington, TCU
- Cooper Williams, Harvard
DAWBAL
Automatic Qualifications (14) listed alphabetically by conference:
- American Athletic Conference – Huntley Allen & Adam Neff, SMU
- Atlantic 10 Conference – Oscar Pinto Sansano, German Samofalov, VCU
- Atlantic Coast Conference – Duke Garrett Jones and Pedro Rodenas
- Big 12 Conference – Sebastian Gorzny and Pedro Vives, TCU
- Big Ten Conference – Robert Cash, JJ Tracy, Ohio State
- Big West Conference – GIanluca Brunkow & Pablo Masjuan, UC Santa Barbara
- Conference USA – Ondrej Horak and Leo Raquin Middle, Tennessee
- Coastal Sports Conference – Reece Falck & Harold Huens, UNCW
- West Mountain – Samuel Sippel and Jeep van Assendelft, Boise County
- Pac-12 Conference – Jacob Bullard, Murphy Casson, Arizona State
- Southeastern Conference – Joshua Lapadat and JJ Mercer, Kentucky
- Sun Belt Conference – Cody Schalk Van Schalkwyk and Connor Henry Van Schalkwyk, Old Dominion
- The Ivy League – Theo Winegar and Michael Zheng, Columbia
- West Coast Conference – Stian Klaassen & Sacchitt Sharrma, San Diego
Major options (18), listed alphabetically by organization:
- Raul Dobay and Finn Murgett, Auburn
- JJ Bianchi & Jake Vassel, Boston College
- Antoine Cornut-Chavinc and Joshua Dus Karpenschiff, State of Florida
- Keshav Chopra and Marcus McDaniel, Georgia Tech
- Freddie Blaydes and Nils Ratiu, Georgia
- Daniel Milawski, Cooper Williams, Harvard
- Hunter Heck and Karlis Ozolins, Illinois
- Etienne Donnet and Nathan Rodriguez, Louisville
- Jacob Bickerstet and Gavin Young, Michigan
- Ozan Baris and Max Sheldon, Michigan State
- Petar Jovanovic, Benito Sanchez Martinez, Mississippi State
- Sebastian Dominico, Jean Marc Malkowski, Notre Dame
- Isaac Becroft, Tyler Zink, Oklahoma State
- South Carolina, Casey Hall and Toby Samuel
- Angel Diaz and Johannus Monday, Tennessee
- Julio Perego and Togan Tokac, Texas A&M
- James Hopper, Inaki Montes de la Torre, Virginia
- Holden Koons and Dakshineswar Suresh, Wake Forest
MODIFIERS*:
- Cleve Harper, Eliot Spizzirri – Texas
- Nate Bonetto, Aidan Kim – Florida
- Pablo Alemany, Charlie Barry – Memphis
- Bozo Barun, Jared Horwood – Arkansas
- Maxwell Smith, Noah Vukadin – Clemson
- Philippos Astreinidis, Paul Inchauspe – Princeton
- Philip Planinsek, Andriy Zimnoch – Alabama
- Kabir Kapasi and Yasha Zemel – Rice
- Tadeas Paroulek, Zsombor Velcz – Baylor
- Robin Cathery and Luca Stahely – NC State
*If a disbanding doubles team is automatically qualified, the next eligible doubles team from that conference will be considered before being replaced from another list.
Seeds 1-4:
- Garrett Jones, Pedro Rodenas – Count
- Holden Koons, Dakshineswar Suresh – Cool Forest
- Joshua Lapadat, JJ Mercer – Kentucky
- Robert Cash, JJ, Tracy – State of Ohio
Seeds 5-8, listed alphabetically by organization:
- Etienne Donnet, Nathan Rodriguez – Louisville
- Sebastian Dominico, Jean Marc Malkowski – Notre Dame
- Angel Diaz, Johannus Monday – Tennessee
- James Hopper, Inaki Montes de la Torre – Virginia

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