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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.
The NCAA Division I Men's Tennis Championship is an annual men's college tennis national collegiate championship sponsored by the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) for teams in Division I. The tournament crowns a team, individual, and doubles champion .
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 2022 NCAA Division I Men's Tennis Championships were the men's tennis tournaments played from May 6 to May 28, 2022 at campus sites and Champaign, Illinois at the Khan Outdoor Tennis Complex. [1] [2] It was the 76th edition of the NCAA Division I Men's Tennis Championship. [3]
It was the 67th edition of the NCAA Division I Men's Tennis Championship* [1] and the 32nd edition of the NCAA Division I Women's Tennis Championship.* [2] It was the eighth time the men's and women's tournaments were held at the same venue. It consisted of a men's and women's team, singles, and doubles championships.
The 2003 NCAA Division I men's tennis championships were the 57th annual championships hosted by the NCAA to determine the individual, doubles, and team national champions of men's collegiate tennis among its Division I member programs in the United States, held at the end of the 2002 NCAA Division I tennis season.
It was the 70th edition of the NCAA Division I Men's Tennis Championship* [1] and the 34th edition of the NCAA Division I Women's Tennis Championship*, [2] and the tenth time that the men's and women's tournaments were held at the same venue. It consisted of a men's and women's team, singles, and doubles championships. [3]
The 2004 NCAA Division I men's tennis championships were the 58th annual championships hosted by the NCAA to determine the individual, doubles, and team national champions of men's collegiate tennis among its Division I member programs in the United States, culminating the 2004 NCAA Division I tennis season. [1]