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Tennis portal; The NCAA Men's Tennis Championships are annual tournaments held in the spring to crown team, singles, and doubles champions in American college tennis.The first intercollegiate championship was held in 1883, 23 years before the founding of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA), with Harvard's Joseph Clark taking the singles title.
A tournament for Division III was also added in 1973. However, after 1995, the NCAA no longer holds a Division II tournament. The national championship rounds are contested annually in May. In recent years, the NCAA Division I Women's Tennis Championship has been held at the same location as the men's tournament.
The 1999 NCAA Division I Men's Tennis Championships were the 53rd annual championships to determine the national champions of NCAA Division I men's singles, doubles, and team collegiate tennis in the United States. Hosts Georgia defeated UCLA in the championship final, 4–2, to claim the Bulldogs' third team national title.
The 1977 NCAA Division I Tennis Championships were the 32nd annual tournament to determine the national champion of NCAA men's college tennis. Matches were played during May 1977 at the Dan Magill Tennis Complex in Athens, Georgia on the campus of the University of Georgia. A total of three championships were contested: men's team, singles, and ...
The 1989 NCAA Division I Men's Tennis Championships were the 43rd annual championships to determine the national champions of NCAA Division I men's singles, doubles, and team collegiate tennis in the United States. Stanford defeated Georgia, 5–3, in the final of the team championship to win their second consecutive and tenth overall title.
The 1974 NCAA Division I Tennis Championships were the 29th annual tournaments to determine the national champions of NCAA Division I men's singles, doubles, and team collegiate tennis in the United States. [1] This was the first year after the NCAA changed the name of the University Division to its present-day moniker, Division I.
The men's sports with the biggest net gains during the 1988–89 to 2010–11 period were indoor track and field, lacrosse, and cross country (each with more than 100 net gains). The men's sports with the biggest losses were wrestling (−104 teams), tennis, and rifle; the men's team sport with the most net losses was water polo. [88]
Three-time defending champions Stanford again defeated Georgia in the championship final, 4–0, to claim the Cardinal's sixteenth team national title. With the team win, Stanford swept all three men's tennis titles (team, singles, and doubles).