Quantcast The Daily Northwestern
College Media Network
  • Home

Cats Shocked By UCLA, Fall Short Of NCAA Goals (Women's Tennis)

Brian Regan

Issue date: 5/21/07 Section: Sports
  • Print
  • Email
  • Page 1 of 1
By Brian Regan
The Daily Northwestern

It wasn't supposed to happen this way.

After losing a solid core of experienced seniors, including star Cristelle Grier, this was supposed to be a rebuilding year of sorts for Northwestern.

But because the Wildcats overachieved and won the Big Ten title for the ninth straight year, leading to a No. 5 seed in the NCAA Tournament, any early exit would be looked upon as a disappointment.

NU became the NCAA Tournament's first major casualty Friday, losing 4-0 to No. 12 UCLA and becoming the highest-seeded team not to make the quarterfinals.

"I knew UCLA was a great team," NU coach Claire Pollard said. "The rankings didn't really matter this year because anyone in the top 16 could beat anyone."

The Cats couldn't get anything going against the Bruins, falling behind early in both doubles and singles.

"They just outplayed us," Pollard said. "We fought hard and played well, but the truth of the matter is that they simply outplayed us."

At the No. 2 doubles spot, Lauren Lui and Keri Robison lost two breaks to fall behind 5-1 to Ashley Joelsen and Alex McGoodwin. After the Cats won a break, the teams held serve for the rest of the match with NU losing 8-5.

UCLA took the clincher at No. 3 by defeating Samantha Murray and Alexis Conill 8-4, ending the pair's nine-match winning streak.

The Bruins didn't wait long to dismantle NU in singles. Robison and Murray lost in straight sets within minutes of each other, giving UCLA a 3-0 lead and leaving the Cats with a lead in only one match still on court: At No. 6, Nazlie Ghazal was up a set on Elizabeth Lumpkin.

The match came down to Yasmin Schnack and Prousis at the No. 3 slot, where Schnack had taken the first set 6-4 and closed in for the win against NU's clutch senior. But sadly for the Cats, Prousis could deliver no magic, ending the team's season and her team career at NU, but giving the rest of the team motivation for next season.

"I'm going to look at it this way: We are starting four freshmen, three sophomores and a senior, won the Big Ten and lost to a really hot team that may win this thing," Pollard said. "That's a hell of a year for such a young team. Yes, the young players were bitterly disappointed, but they learned a lot and that will bear well for the future."

Reach Brian Regan at b-regan@northwestern.edu.
Page 1 of 1

Article Tools

The DAILY encourages you to share your thoughts on this story. Please help us keep the discussion lively, but civil. Comments that are abusive to others, off-topic or vulgar, or comments that misrepresent someone's identity, will not be tolerated. We reserve the right to delete any comments in violation or to close comment threads on articles.

Please e-mail online@dailynorthwestern.com to flag a comment or for more information.

Be the first to comment on this story

  • NOTE: Email address will not be published

Type your comment below (html not allowed)

  I understand posting spam or other comments that are unrelated to this article will cause my comment to be flagged for deletion and possibly cause my IP address to be permanently banned from this server.

Advertisement

NU Football Insider



Cats Corner

Photobucket

Advertisement