Women's Tennis Upends Tennessee 4-3 to
Reach NCAA Round of 16
Gamecocks Win 5-Hour Plus Thriller Over
Tourney's No. 10 Seed in Knoxville,
Tenn.
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (May 10, 2009) - It
took over five hours to decide and in
the end, the No. 22 South Carolina
women's tennis
team (16-10) triumphed over No.
10-ranked and seeded Tennessee (18-7)
4-3 in Knoxville, Tenn., to reach the
NCAA round of 16.
South Carolina now faces Washington in
College Station, Texas, on Friday, May
15, at 1 p.m. ET. Washington is the only
other
team besides the Gamecocks not among the
tournament's top 16 seeds to reach the
round of 16 after the Huskies stunned
No. 7-
seeded Southern California 4-3.
"That was without a doubt one of the
best college tennis matches I've ever
seen or been a part of," South Carolina
head coach Arlo
Elkins said. "Both teams played so well
on every court and competed so hard. I
just can't say how proud I am of this
team for what
they've accomplished. We're very eager
to get to College Station."
Gamecock senior Gira Schofield provided
the clinching point for South Carolina
at the No. 1 singles position against
Caitlin
Whoriskey of Tennessee. Schofield
entered the match having lost her prior
two match-ups with Whoriskey during the
regular season
and SEC Tournament but held on for a
thrilling 7-5, 6-7(8), 6-4 triumph.
"It's the best feeling in the world,
especially when you win and your
teammates are hugging you and you put in
so much work,"
Schofield said. "At the end, to have a
victory and make the Sweet 16, it's just
awesome."
After falling behind 5-1 in the first
set, Schofield stormed back and took six
straight games to win the set. In the
second, she got
down 5-2 but came back once again to
force a tiebreaker. In the breaker,
Schofield had one match point at 6-5,
but Whoriskey
played three excellent points in a row
to send the match to a third set with
the team score tied 3-all.
Schofield took an early break to lead
2-0, but Whoriskey rebounded with a
break to put the match back on serve.
The match stayed
that way until Schofield recorded
another break to push ahead 4-2. She
nearly made it 5-2 after snagging a 40-0
lead on her serve,
but Whoriskey dug deep, fought back to
deuce and eventually broke Schofield to
make the score 4-3.
With the UT crowd cheering loudly for
Whoriskey, Schofield kept her composure
and once again broke Whoriskey to take a
5-3
lead. Schofield then got up 40-15 on her
serve, but Whoriskey managed to fight
off the two match points and extended
the match to
a 10th game. It was in the 10th game
that a final break of serve ended the
Lady Vols' season. It looked as if the
match would go to
an 11th game after Whoriskey stormed
ahead 40-0, but Schofield won five
straight points, finishing the match off
with a blistering
crosscourt forehand winner on a short
ball at the net.
"I was trying to play one point at a
time, that was my main focus," Schofield
said. "When I was serving, my focus was
on my first
serve, getting it in. On the returns, I
wanted to put the first return deep
because then I could set up the point
and create different
options where I could move her."
"It's always disappointing to lose, but
this one is pretty tough," Whoriskey
said. "She is a very talented player,
though, and really
played about as well as I've ever seen
her play today. She came out and just
had a couple more winners than I did and
I think that is
what decided the match."
South Carolina got off to a strong start
by winning the doubles point. Dijana
Stojic and Suzanna Mansour recorded the
first victory at
No. 3 doubles with an 8-2 triumph
against Zsofia Zubor and Samantha Orlin.
Schofield and Miljana Jocic secured the
point by
upending Jennifer Meredith and Maria
Sorbello on court two by an 8-4 count.
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In singles, Stojic took care of Orlin
6-2, 6-2 at No. 3 singles to put South
Carolina up 2-0. Zubor scored
Tennessee's first point when
she defeated Mansour 7-5, 6-2 at six
singles and Meredith tied the match
thanks to a 7-6, 6-4 victory against
Natasa Vuckovic on
court four.
Ana Marija Zubori recorded a critical
win for South Carolina at No. 2 singles
when she outlasted Natalie Pluskota in
three sets 6-2,
5-7, 6-4 to make it 3-2 for the
Gamecocks. Shortly afterward, Sorbello
pulled a come-from-behind 2-6, 6-3, 6-3
triumph over Jocic at
No. 5 singles to set the stage for the
exciting finish.
South Carolina is in the NCAA round of
16 for the first time since 1999, for
the fourth time under Elkins and for the
sixth overall in
the program's history since the NCAA
first held a championship in 1982. The
Gamecocks' other showings came in 1982,
1983,
1990, 1995. Carolina's best finish was a
quarterfinal appearance in 1982.
#22 South Carolina (16-10) def. #10
Tennessee (18-7), 4-3
Singles
1. #43 Gira Schofield, USC, def. #34
Caitlin Whoriskey, UT, 7-5, 6-7(8), 6-4
2. #48 Ana Marija Zubori, USC, def.
Natalie Pluskota, UT, 6-2, 5-7, 6-4
3. Dijana Stojic, USC, def. Samantha
Orlin, UT, 6-2, 6-2
4. Jennifer Meredith, UT, def. Natasa
Vuckovic, USC, 7-6, 6-4
5. Maria Sorbello, UT, def. Miljana
Jocic, USC, 2-6, 6-3, 6-3
6. Zsofia Zubor, UT, def. Suzanna
Mansour, USC, 7-5, 6-2
Order of Finish: 3, 6, 4, 2, 5, 1
Doubles
1. #27 Vuckovic/Zubori, USC, vs. #10
Whoriskey/Pluskota, UT, 4-7
2. Jocic/Schofield, USC, def.
Meredith/Sorbello, UT, 8-4
3. Mansour/Stojic, USC, def.
Zubor/Orlin, UT, 8-2
Order of Finish: 3, 2