RI CHIE MCKE E, 1972-1974

B I T S Y G R A N T, 1931
When asked near the end of his tenure in
1955 to rate the best at Carolina all-time,
the veteran tennis coach John Kenfield
chose Bitsy Grant to head up the list.
Bryan “Bitsy” Grant came to Carolina as
a freshman in 1929 and was named an
All-America in 1931. Ranked as high as
#3 nationally in men’s singles during his post-Carolina
c a r e e r, Grant played on four U.S. Davis Cup teams and
won three U.S. Tennis Association national clay court
championships. Grant’s leadership helped the 1931 team
finish undefeated and capture the Southern Conference
title.
W I L M E R H I N E S , 1933
C a r o l i n a ’s top player in 1933, Wi l m e r
Hines won the Southern Conference singles title and combined with Lenoir
Wright to win the doubles crown. He
also was named an All-America that year.
The Tar Heels, in fact, won the Southern
Conference crown every year of Hines’
career at Carolina, never losing a match and tying only one
for a combined overall record of 52-0-1. After leaving
Carolina, Hines went on to win the Italian Open championship. A great all-around athlete, Hines also lettered in
basketball three times and captained the 1933 UNC basketball squad that finished with a 12-5 record.
V I C S E I X A S, 1948
Regarded by most as the greatest player in Carolina’s tennis history, Vic Seixas was also one of the great players in
American tennis history. Seixas was named an A l l - A m e r i c a
in 1948, and went on to an impressive professional career.
Seixas won the Wimbledon singles championship in 1953
and also won the U.S. Open championship in 1954. W h i l e
at Carolina, Seixas, who played under the legendary John
Kenfield from 1947-49, won the Southern Conference singles title in 1948 and finished as the runner-up in both
1947 and 1949. He teamed with Clark Taylor to capture the
league doubles crown in 1949. In 1948, he entered the
N C A A Tournament as the top seed, and won five matches
in the tournament before
dropping the championship match to the
then-No. 1 ranked playe r. That same year in the
NCAA championships,
Seixas, who came to
Carolina after four years
of Army Air Force duty,
was the seventh-ranked
m e n ’s singles player in
the U.S. amateur ranks.
By 1952, he had
attained the #1 singles
ranking among
Americans. The 55
Davis Cup singles matches that he played in are the most
of any American player in history, and his 75 U.S. Open
m e n ’s singles victories were a record that stood until broken by Jimmy Connors in 1985.
G E O R G E SO K O L , 1963
Named an All-America in singles as a junior in 1963,
G e o rge Sokol had a distinguished tennis career at Carolina.
He was the Tar Heels’ first dominant presence in the
Atlantic Coast Conference, which
began selecting a singles champion in 1954. From 1954 to 1964,
the ACC chose a sole singles
champion before going to individual flight titles thereafter. Sokol
won three of those titles, in 1962,
1963 and 1964. Sokol also won
an outright ACC doubles title in
1963, with partner Keith
Stoneman.
F R E D D I E M CN A I R , 1970-73
The only Carolina player to win
All-America honors throughout
his four years in Chapel Hill,
Freddie McNair probably ranks as Carolina’s finest player
behind Vic Seixas. While at Carolina,
McNair combined with Richie McKee to
reach the NCAA doubles finals in 1973.
In the Atlantic Coast Conference, he won
three individual singles titles in 1970,
1971 and 1972 and three doubles titles,
one with Joe Dorn in 1970 and two with
McKee in 1971 and 1972. He went on to
have a distinguished professional career,
attaining the world’s #1 doubles ranking with teammate
Sherwood Stewart in the late 1970s.
R I C H I E M CK E E , 1972-1974
Charlotte, N.C., native Richie McKee won much fame
playing collegiate tennis, earning All-America honors in
singles as a sophomore, junior and senior. The son of
teaching pro Dick McKee, who reached the finals at
Wimbledon after a career at the University of Miami,
M c K e e ’s playing improved with each
year he spent at Carolina. He became
known as much for his quiet on-the-court
manner as for his tennis talent. A t e a m
captain, McKee and doubles partner
Freddie McNair reached the NCAA d o ubles finals in 1973, and the two won the
1971 and 1972 Atlantic Coast
Conference doubles titles. In singles,
McKee won two ACC titles, at #4 in 1971 and #3 in 1972.
B I L LY B R O C K , 1976
A Coach Don Skakle protege, Billy Brock was a member
of four Atlantic Coast Conference championship teams at
Carolina and was an All-America in singles in 1976.
Brock, known for his baby-faced appearance and slight
build, was a powerhouse on the court and a member of
North Carolina teams that lost only eight
dual matches in his four-year career,
including four undefeated seasons in the
ACC. The Tar Heels finished as high at
seventh in 1974 in the national polls, as
Brock won two ACC individual flight
singles titles, at #3 in 1974 and #1 in
1975, and also took home a doubles title
in 1975 with partner Tommy Dixon. One
of the Norfolk, Va., native’s greatest wins was a secondround 1974 NCAA Tournament upset of 12th-seeded Steve
Mott of UCLA. Down a set, then-freshman Brock went on
to win nine straight games from the favored Bruin, and
won the final sets, 6-0 and 6-1. Brock reached the third
round of the tournament.
J E F F C H A M B E R S, 1985
The only Carolina player in history to receive an NCAA
singles invitation each of his four years as a Tar Heel,
Chambers attended the NCAA Tournament in 1984, 1985,
1986 and 1987. He was named an All-America in singles
in 1985 after capturing the ACC individual flight championship at #2 singles and going 26-8 overall. Chambers also
attended the NCAA Tournament in doubles three times, missing only in 1986.
The St. Petersburg, Fla., native was a
three-time All-Atlantic Coast Conference
selection. He enjoyed his highest national ranking in doubles with partner Wa y n e
Hearn in 1985, as the pair reached the
No. 24 slot in the ITA p o l l .
B RYA N J O N E S , 1992
One of two Carolina players in history to be named the
Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament Most Va l u a b l e
P l a y e r, Bryan Jones received that honor and many more in
1992 as the senior tri-captain led the Tar Heels to one of
the school’s most successful seasons, setting a school
record for team wins (25-5). Jones also was named the
ACC Player of the Year in 1992 and helped lead the team
to the 1992 ACC Tournament Championship. It was the
second such championship for UNC during Jones’ tenure, as Carolina also won
the coveted trophy in 1990 when Jones
was a sophomore. The Tar Heels finished
the 1992 conference regular season undefeated at 8-0 and placed four players on
the All-ACC team, including Jones, who
also earned the honor in 1990. The Kings
Mountain, N.C., native was named an
All-America selection in singles after finishing with a 35-7
overall record, was named the ITA Region II Vo l v o
Tennis/Senior Player of the Year and reached the second
round of the NCAA Tournament. Jones, who also won the
flight #2 ACC singles title in 1992, was a member of a
senior class that saw its team reach the quarterfinals of the
N C A A Tournament and finish eighth nationally in the ITA
poll — the best finish for Carolina since 1974. Over four
years as a Tar Heel, Jones helped the team reach the championship match of the ACC Tournament each year.
C H R I S MU M F O R D , 1992
A member of the 1992 Atlantic Coast Conference
Tournament championship team, Chris Mumford was one
of three Tar Heels to be named All-Americas on that squad
— the most of any Carolina team in history. Mumford had
a spectacular year in 1992, capturing All-America honors
in doubles with teammate Roland Thornqvist after completing a 15-7 season at the #1 position. The pair were
quarterfinalists at the NCAA Championships and finished
the season ranked 14th in the ITA poll. Mumford merited
All-ACC honors in 1992, the second
such honor in his career, as the
Richmond, Va., native captured the flight
#5 ACC singles title with a 7-1 conference record. Over his four-year career,
Mumford was a member of a senior class
which helped lead the Tar Heels to an
81-29 overall record and a 24-4 record in
the ACC. After being unranked as freshmen, those seniors led Carolina to national rankings of
24th in their sophomore year, 17th in their junior year and
eighth in their senior year, and led Carolina in 1990 to its
first ACC crown since 1978. The 1992 team’s NCAA
Tournament bid was also the first since 1978 for the Ta r
Heels, as that squad went on to become quarterfinalists
nationally and set a school record with 25 wins.
R O L A N D T H O R N Q V I S T, 1992-1993
A rguably the most accomplished tennis player ever to wear
Carolina Blue and White, 1993 UNC graduate Roland
Thornqvist was the #1 singles and #1 doubles player at
Carolina for three straight years. The Farsta, Sweden,
native was named an All-America in both singles and doubles by the ITA in both 1992 and 1993. His greatest
accomplishment, however, was winning the Rafael Osuna
Sportsmanship Award in both 1992 and 1993. He is the
first player in the history of college tennis to win the prestigious honor twice. As a junior, he also won the Region II
Arthur Ashe Jr./Head Sportsmanship Award. In 1993, he
captured the singles title in the
R o l e x / I TA National Indoor
Championships, one of the collegiate
grand slams; was named to the Rolex
Collegiate All-Star Team; was the ITA
Region II Senior Player of the Year and
the Atlantic Coast Conference Player of
the Ye a r. Thornqvist was the ACC champion at #1 singles in both his sophomore
and senior years and he won the #1 doubles crown as a
senior with Daryl Wyatt. A three-time All-ACC selection,
Thornqvist co-captained the Tar Heel team as a senior and
qualified for the NCAA Tournament in singles three years
and in doubles twice. He was a quarterfinalist in singles in
both 1992 and 1993 as well as in doubles in 1992. Prior to
coming to Carolina, he won the 1990 NAIA national cham-
pionship in both singles and doubles as a freshman at Elon
and was named a first-team Volvo All-America and the
N A I A National Tennis Player of the Ye a r, compiling a singles record of 37-0. Thornqvist also was named by USA
Today as its collegiate athlete of the year for the state of
North Carolina in 1990. After spending a year on the AT P
Tour following graduation from Carolina in 1993,
Thornqvist was an assistant coach for the Tar Heels in
1995 and 1996. He left the program to become the head
w o m e n ’s tennis coach at the University of Kansas, but
returned to the North Carolina tennis program in 1998 as
the head coach of the women’s team.
ual ACC flight titles at #1 singles. He won the 1995 Rafael
Osuna Sportsmanship Award nationally and was the Region
II Head/Arthur Ashe, Jr. Sportsmanship Award recipient.
The 1996 Region II Men’s Tennis Player of the Ye a r,
Caldwell received NCAA singles invitations in 1994, 1995
and 1996 and was an NCAA quarterfinalist in 1995. A
three-time All-ACC selection, he compiled a 116-41 (.737)
record over his four years as a Tar Heel and finished his
ACC career with a 32-5 (.865) record in singles and a 2710 (.730) record in doubles. Caldwell was both the 1993
Region II ITA Rookie Player of the Year and the 1994
P e n n / I TA National Player to Wa t c h .
D A RY L W YAT T, 1993
BR I N T M O R R O W, 1995
Although he spent only one year as a member of the Ta r
Heel tennis team, Washington, D.C., native Daryl Wy a t t
made his time in a Carolina uniform
count. The first African American men’s
tennis player at UNC since Junie
Chatman graduated in 1978, Wyatt was
superb in doubles with partner Roland
Thornqvist in 1993. The pair went undefeated in Atlantic Coast Conference play
that season, going 8-0 on a team that
never lost during ACC regular season
p l a y, and finished at 24-6 overall, winning A l l - A m e r i c a
honors from the ITA. Wyatt and Thornqvist also captured
the ACC individual doubles title at the #1 position, and
qualified for NCAA doubles competition, advancing to the
second round. Wyatt was 32-11 overall in singles play and
finished ACC singles competition at 6-2.
A consistently strong performer for the Tar Heels over his
four years in Chapel Hill, Brint Morrow was named A l l America in doubles in 1995 with partner David Caldwell,
the tandem having gone 26-10 over the season and receiving an NCAA doubles invitation that season. A 1996 Carolina graduate whose
father played tennis at Carolina in 1961,
Morrow was a three-time A l l - A t l a n t i c
Coast Conference selection. He won
three individual ACC singles flight
championships and one doubles championship. Morrow captured the flight #3
doubles title with Caldwell and the flight
#5 singles crown in 1993 as a freshman, the flight #2 singles title as a sophomore, and he went undefeated in conference play in 1996 to win the flight #3 singles title as a
s e n i o r. He also was the recipient of the 1995 Blue/Gray
Classic Sportsmanship Award after competing in that prestigious tournament in Montgomery, A l a .
D AV I D C A L D W E L L , 1994-1995
Two-time All-America David Caldwell left a legacy at
Carolina that will be difficult to match by any future Ta r
Heel. The Richmond, Va., native came to UNC as one of
the most decorated junior tennis stars in the country, having been ranked in the top five nationally. At North
Carolina, he continued
his winning ways,
becoming the only
Atlantic Coast
Conference men’s tennis player to earn A C C
Player of the Year honors three times, in
1994, 1995 and 1996.
Caldwell was named an
I TA All-America in singles as both a sophomore and a junior, and
was a doubles A l l America with partner
Brint Morrow as a juni o r. Caldwell was 16-0
in ACC singles as a
junior and a senior, and
is the only player to
ever win three individ-
T R I P P P H I L L I P S , 2000
An intense competitor and
valued team leader, Tr i p p
Phillips, of Charlotte, N.C.,
earned All-America status
his senior season. A f t e r
returning from a medical
red-shirt, Phillips had an
outstanding senior campaign, posting a stellar 25-6
singles record at the #1 singles position. Phillips collected impressive victories
over nationally #1 ranked Daniel Anderson and #3 Shuon
Madden. Phillips’ intense leadership carried the Tar Heels
to a second place ACC finish and as high as a #16 national
ranking. Phillips’ dominating 12-2 record against A C C
competetion earned him runnerup honors at #1 singles.
Phillips saved his best performance of the year for last as
he advanced to the quarterfinals of the NCAA
Championships in singles. Phillips’ performance elevated
him in the ITA rankings as he finished 2000 ranked #12
nationally in singles. Phillips’ career and character were
honored as he received the prestigious Patterson Medal and
the John Van Nostrand Aw a r d .
TAR
HEEL
AWARD
Roland Thornqvist
1993 ITA Indoor
Singles Champion
All-Atlantic Coast Conference Selections
1984 — Wayne Hearn; 1985 — Jeff Chambers, Wayne
Hearn, Eddie Stewart; 1986 — Jeff Chambers; 1987 —
Jeff Chambers, Don Johnson, Eddie Stewart; 1989 —
Don Johnson, David Pollack; 1990 — Don Johnson,
Bryan Jones; 1991 — Chris Mumford, Roland
Thornqvist; 1992 — Joe Frierson, Bryan Jones, Chris
Mumford, Roland Thornqvist; 1993 — David Caldwell,
Cooper Pulliam, Roland Thornqvist; 1994 — David
Caldwell, Brint Morrow; 1995 — David Caldwell, Brint
Morrow; 1996 — David Caldwell, Brint Morrow, Rob
Tedesco; 1997 — Tripp Phillips, Paul Harsanyi, Rob
Tedesco; 1998 — Rob Tedesco, Tripp Phillips, Adam
Seri; 1999 — Assaf Drori; 2000 — Tripp Phillips,
Marcio Petrone.
ACC Playerof the Year
1985 — Wayne Hearn; 1992 — Bryan Jones; 1993 —
Roland Thornqvist; 1994 — David Caldwell; 1995 —
David Caldwell; 1996 — David Caldwell.
MVP of ACC Championship
1990 — Don Johnson; 1992 — Bryan Jones.
ACC Rookie of the Year
1994 — Paul Harsanyi; 1999 - Bjorn Rencken.
ACC Coach of the Year
1983, 1990, 1992 — Allen Morris; 1996, 2000 — Sam
Allen Morris
1983, 1990, 1992 ACC Paul.
Coach of the Year
Alphonso C. Smith Sportsmanship Award
1974 — Richie McKee; 1977 — Earl Hassler; 1980 —
Gary Taxman.
ITARegion II Seniorof the Year
1992 — Bryan Jones; 1993 — Roland Thornqvist;
1996 — David Caldwell.
ITARegion II Rookie-of-the-Year
1989 — Bryan Jones; 1993 — David Caldwell.
Don Johnson
2000 WImbledon
Mixed Doubles
Region II Arthur Ashe Jr. Sportsmanship Award
Champion, 2000
1990 — Don Johnson; 1992 — Roland Thornqvist; 1995
World Doubles Titlist — David Caldwell.
ITARegion II Playerto Watch
1994 — David Caldwell.
ITARegion II Coach of the Year
1992 — Allen Morris; 1996, 2000 — Sam Paul.
ITARegion II John Van Nostrand Award
2000 — Tripp Phillips.
Sam Paul
1996, 2000
ACC, ITA Region II
Coach of the Year,
National Coach of
Year Finalist
ITANational Playerto Watch
1994 — David Caldwell.
ITANationally Ranked Singles Players
1984 — Wayne Hearn, 53rd; Jeff Chambers, 63rd; 1985
— Wayne Hearn, 31st; Jeff Chambers, 43rd; Eddie
Stewart, 95th; 1986 — Jeff Chambers, 80th; David
Pollack, 105th; 1987 — Jeff Chambers, 74th; 1989 —
David Pollack, 64th; Don Johnson, 90th; 1990 — Bryan
Jones, 59th; Don Johnson, 60th; 1991 — Woody Webb,
58th; Roland Thornqvist, 66th; Andre Janasik, 95th;
1992 — Roland Thornqvist, 7th; Bryan Jones, 20th;
Woody Webb, 79th; 1993 — Roland Thornqvist, 4th;
David Caldwell, 74th; 1994 — David Caldwell, 14th;
Brint Morrow, 67th; Paul Harsanyi, 91st; 1995 — David
Caldwell, 12th; Brint Morrow, 37th; 1996 — David
Caldwell, 21st; Brint Morrow, 91st; 1997 — Tripp
Phillips, 41st; 1998—Tripp Phillips, 69th; 2000 -Tripp Phillips, 12th.
ITANationally-Ranked Doubles Teams
1984 — Jeff Chambers and Wayne Hearn, 28th; 1985 —
Jeff Chambers and Wayne Hearn, 24th; 1986 — Jeff
Chambers and Mark DeMattheis, 47th; 1987 — Jeff
Chambers and Eddie Stewart, 28th; 1989 — Don
Johnson and David Pollack, 22nd; 1991 — Andre
Janasik and Sean Steinour, 33rd; 1992 — Chris
Mumford and Roland Thornqvist, 14th; 1993 — Roland
Thornqvist and Daryl Wyatt, 10th; 1994 — David
Caldwell and Brint Morrow, 21st; 1995 — David
Caldwell and Brint Morrow, 9th; 1996 — David
Caldwell and Brint Morrow, 27th; 1998 — Rob Tedesco
and Tony Thomas, 48th
NCAA Tournament Singles Participants
1983 — Ron Erskine; 1984 — Jeff Chambers, Wayne
Hearn; 1985 — Jeff Chambers, Wayne Hearn; 1986 —
Jeff Chambers; 1987 — Jeff Chambers; 1990 — Bryan
Jones; 1991 — Roland Thornqvist; 1992 — Bryan
Jones, Roland Thornqvist; 1993 — Roland Thornqvist;
1994 — David Caldwell; 1995 — David Caldwell, Brint
Morrow; 1996 — David Caldwell; 1997 — Tripp
Phillips; 1998 — Tripp Phillips; 2000 -- Tripp Phillips.
NCAA Tournament Doubles Participants
1984 — Jeff Chambers and Wayne Hearn; 1985 — Jeff
Chambers and Wayne Hearn; 1987 — Jeff Chambers
and Eddie Stewart; 1992 — Chris Mumford and Roland
Thornqvist; 1993 — Roland Thornqvist and Daryl
Wyatt; 1994, 1995, 1996 — David Caldwell and Brint
Morrow
MVP of H.E. Butt Tennis Championships
1993 —Roland Thornqvist
Rafael Osuna National Sportsmanship Award
1992, 1993 — Roland Thornqvist; 1995 — David
Caldwell.
MVP of Blue/Gray Tennis Championships
1993 — Roland Thornqvist
ITANational IndoorSingles Champion
1993 — Roland Thornqvist
Blue/Gray Classic Sportsmanship Award
1995 — Brint Morrow
The University of North Carolina men’s tennis pro- sions — in 1977, 1978, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996,
gram began the decade of the 1990s in grand style. 1997, 1998 and 2000.
Over the course of the past decade, the Tar Heels have
Success in the Atlantic Coast Conference has also
claimed four Atlantic Coast Conference regular-season been the rule of the day during Carolina’s vaunted tenand tournament championships (1990, 1991, 1992, nis history. Since the conference’s formation during
1996); earned seven Top 25 final national rankings the summer of 1953, Tar Heel teams have won a total
from the Intercollegiate Tennis Association (1990, of 24 league championships, including 22 outright
1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1996, 2000); and merited crowns. In fact, in 47 years of Atlantic Coast
eight spots in the NCAA Team Tournament field Conference competition, the Tar Heels have finished
(1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997,
out of the upper division only four times and
1998, 2000).
have been either first or second in 35
The results of the past
of those 47 years. The Tar Heels’
decade have been cause for
cumulative
regular-season
celebration for Tar Heel
dual-match ACC record
head coach Sam Paul
stands at an amazing 261and his players. After a
60, a winning percentage
decade of competence
of .813. Carolina playin
the
1980s,
ers have also won 85
Carolina’s proud tenACC singles champinis program regained
onships and 36 doumomentum in the
bles titles.
1990s. It seems only
The Birth of Tar Heel
appropriate that the
Tennis
first decade of the 21st
The roots of tennis
century
match
the
competition
at
the
accomplishments
long
University
of
North
associated with the sport of
Carolina date back to 1884
tennis in Chapel Hill.
when the University Tennis Club
Carolina has always had an
was founded. In 1894, the club
especially rich tradition in the
began intercollegiate competisport of tennis, featuring a long During his 28-year tenure as Carolina’s head
tion in the sport. It was not until
list of great coaches, players coach, John Kenfield’s teams won 15 Southern
1908, however, that letters were
and teams. Over the past 93 Conference championships and amassed a
first awarded and the sport was
years since the program’s remarkable winning percentage of .933.
granted varsity status at the
inception in 1908, UNC teams
University. From 1908 through
have compiled a phenomenal won-loss record that 1927, the team functioned without a head coach and in
would be difficult to rival in all of college athletics.
1911, 1915 and 1919 no team was fielded at all.
The Tar Heels’overall dual-match record stands at
That changed in 1927, however, as John Kenfield
1,292-299-8, a winning percentage of .808. Since the arrived as head coach and Tar Heel tennis fortunes
first Tar Heel team was fielded in the spring of 1908, began to soar quickly. Kenfield answered an ad placed
79 of 92 North Carolina teams have posted winning by the University Athletic Association in the American
records, five have had .500 seasons and only seven Lawn Tennis Journal, seeking Carolina’s first full-time
have had losing records. During three of those years, tennis coach. Kenfield’s decision to respond to the
the University fielded no team at all. In only four of query proved to be a stroke of luck for Carolina.
the seven losing seasons did the team play more than
Kenfield, then 35 years old, was working in
two matches, finishing 3-4 in 1945, 8-9 in 1957, 14-16 Chicago as both a tennis instructor at the Lake Shore
in 1986 and 11-14 in 1999. Nineteen of the 93 teams Country Club in affluent and suburban Glencoe, Ill.,
have finished their campaigns undefeated, the latest in and as a vice president of the Curtiss Candy Company,
1970 with an 18-0 mark. During the late 1930s and an enterprise he’d helped organize. While at Curtiss,
early 1940s, Carolina teams put together a 67-match Kenfield named the Baby Ruth candy bar, one of the
winning streak, a collegiate record in its time and since biggest sellers of all time. The young candy company
broken only by William & Mary in 1949.
wanted a catchy name for its new confectionery treat
Nineteen Carolina teams have finished the season to compete with the popular O’Henry bar of its leading
ranked among the nation’s Top 25 teams, topped by a competitor. Babe Ruth was then at the height of his
tie for third place at the 1948 NCAA Championships. career with the New York Yankees and Kenfield wrote
The University of North Carolina also played host to the Bambino, asking for his permission to name the
the 71st National Collegiate Tennis Championships in candy bar after him. Ruth sent back a royalty figure
1955 on the historic Campus Courts in Chapel Hill. which the fledgling company couldn’t afford. Kenfield
Since the NCAA went to a team tournament format in then suggested “Baby Ruth” as an alternate name
1977, Carolina has made the NCAA field on 10 occa- because no royalties would have been involved. The
1990-2000
DECADE OF
MEN’S
TENNIS
EXCELLENC
E IN THE
CAROLINA
TRADITION
15
Number of
victories in a 20
match dual season that
Carolina has
averaged over
the past decade.
5
Number of
Atlantic Coast
Conference
Player of the
Year awards
Carolina has
earned in the
past nine years.
1990-2000
DECADE OF
MEN’S
TENNIS
EXCELLENC
E IN THE
CAROLINA
TRADITION
24
Number of
Atlantic Coast
Conference singles flight
championships
won by Tar
Heel players in
the past decade,
including three
won in 2000.
name was adopted, the candy bar was a smash hit,
Curtiss made millions and the rest, as they say, is history. Kenfield’s first year as head coach was 1928 and
until his retirement after the 1955 season, his teams
wrote a rather remarkable success story during his 28year coaching tenure. Ten of his 28 teams finished
their seasons unbeaten and his overall coaching record
was 434-30-2 for a remarkable winning percentage of
.933. His teams averaged a 16-1 record each year during his 28 seasons on the Hill.
Ruling the Roost in the Southern Conference
Carolina also dominated tennis in the old Southern
Conference, beginning with the league’s founding
prior to the 1921-22 school year and running through
1953 when the ACC was founded. Under Kenfield,
Carolina teams won Southern Conference team championships on 15 occasions in 1930, 1931, 1932, 1933,
1936, 1937, 1939, 1940, 1941, 1942, 1943, 1944,
1950, 1951 and 1953. Kenfield also coached 13
Southern Conference individual singles champions
and 13 doubles teams which won league titles. Prior to
Kenfield’s arrival on campus, Carolina also won
Southern Conference doubles titles in 1922 and 1923,
giving the school 15 doubles championships in all.
Kenfield tutored some of the most accomplished
players in Carolina tennis history. The first great player was Bryan “Bitsy” Grant of Atlanta, Ga., who came
to UNC as a freshman in 1929. Rumor has it that Grant
was actually enrolled at Carolina for three months
3
Number of
National
Sportsmanship
Awards won by
Carolina players in the last
nine years.
Bitsy Grant, left, and Wilmer Hines, right, led the
Tar Heels in the early 1930s. Grant eventually played on
four U.S. Davis Cup teams and Hines, who was also a
three-time letterman in basketball at UNC, went on to win
the Italian Open singles title.
before Kenfield knew he was on campus. Once discovered, Grant blossomed quickly, being named an
All-America selection in 1931. Ranked as high as #3
nationally in men’s singles during his post-collegiate
career, Grant played on four U.S. Davis Cup teams and
won a trio of U.S. Tennis Association national clay
court championships.
Grant and sophomore Wilmer Hines played together on Carolina’s 1931 team, which finished undefeated
and won the Southern Conference title. Two years
later, Hines succeeded Grant as UNC’s top player,
winning the Southern Conference singles title in 1933
and combining with Lenoir Wright to win the doubles
crown. Hines was also named an All-American that
year. After playing at Carolina, Hines went on to win
the Italian Open championship. Ironically, Hines was
more than merely a great tennis player. He also lettered
in basketball three times and captained the 1933 UNC
squad which finished with a 12-5 record.
In the late 1930s and early 1940s, Kenfield’s top
players included Ramsay Potts, Archie Henderson,
Harris Everett and Zan Carver. Potts, who graduated in
1937 and was also a two-time letterman in basketball
at Carolina, made the NCAA singles semifinals while
at UNC. That was in 1936 when the National
Intercollegiate Championships were held at
Northwestern University in Evanston, Ill. That same
year, Potts was ranked #3 in the final national collegiate singles rankings.
Carolina was so dominant during that time in the
Southern Conference warfare under Kenfield’s tutelage that in 1936, UNC had all four semifinalists in the
Southern Conference Tennis Championships.
Henderson, a native Chapel Hillian, swept the singles titles of four of the six tournaments in which he
played in 1940 and in the process beat all of the top
American players of the time with the exception of the
legendary Jack Kramer. In 1940, Everett won the
Southern Conference singles championship. A year
later, he won the league doubles crown while teaming
with M.P. Anthony. Everett, who was also a native of
Chapel Hill, improved his national ranking to 11th in
1940 after he beat both German Davis Cup star Henner
Henkle and Welby Van Horn at the Forest Hills nationals. In 1941, Carver gave up his Tar Heel football
career to concentrate solely on tennis. He beat out
Everett for the number one spot on the Carolina team
and then downed his teammate for the Southern
Conference singles title. That same season, Carver lost
a tough three-set match (7-5 in the third) to Joe Hunt,
who would go on to claim the singles title that year at
the U.S. Open in Forest Hills.
Seixas Becomes a Tennis Legend
Near the end of his coaching tenure, Kenfield was
asked to pick the all-time Carolina tennis team. The
veteran mentor chose Grant #1, Hines #3, Henderson
#4, Carver #5 and Everett #6. The man in the second
spot was the legendary Vic Seixas, an All-America
selection in 1948. Seixas had a storybook career at
Carolina, winning the Southern Conference singles
Shown here after winning the 1953 Wimbledon singles title, Vic Seixas won the Southern Conference
singles championship in 1948 and the doubles championship in 1949 while at Carolina.
tories were a record that stood until broken by Jimmy
Connors in 1985.
Skakle Leads UNC
To Unequaled Success in the ACC
Carolina continued to have great teams during the
1950s. In 1953, UNC became a member of the Atlantic
Coast Conference and from 1955-1958, four different
men piloted the program as head coach. Kenfield
retired after the 1955 season with Ham Strayhorn serving as the head coach in 1956 and Vladimir Cernik in
1957 and 1958.
With Don Skakle’s arrival as UNC’s head coach in
1958, the second great era in North Carolina tennis
began. A contemporary of Seixas who played on UNC
teams in the late 1940s, Skakle led his teams to total
domination of the Atlantic Coast Conference during
his 22 seasons as head coach. His teams won a total of
18 ACC titles, including 16 crowns outright. On nine
occasions the Tar Heels finished among the nation’s
Top 20 teams. Overall, Skakle’s teams had a 418-55
dual-match record in 22 seasons, including a 132-14
mark in the ACC.
Among Skakle’s great players were George Sokol,
who won a trio of ACC singles titles from 1962-64,
while being named an All-America in his junior year;
Freddie McNair, Carolina’s only four-time AllAmerica selection, who won three ACC #1 doubles
crowns and three ACC singles titles (two at #1 and one
at #2); Richie McKee, McNair’s doubles partner who
was an All-America selection three times and the winner of two ACC singles championships and two league
doubles crowns; and Billy Brock, a 1976 All-America
who won a pair of conference crowns in both singles
and doubles.
McNair probably ranks as Carolina’s finest player
since Seixas left campus in 1949 and before Roland
Thornqvist and David Caldwell’s arrival in the ’90s.
title in 1948, finishing as runnerup in both 1947 and
1949 and teaming with Clark Taylor to capture the
league doubles crown in 1949. Seixas, a Philadelphia,
Pa. native, came to the University after four years of
Army Air Force duty. In 1948, he entered the NCAA
Tournament as the top seed. He won five matches in
the tournament before dropping the championship
match 6-4, 1-6, 7-5, 6-1 to Harry Likas of the
University of San Francisco, who was
then #1 in the national singles rankings,
one spot ahead of Seixas. The same year
at the NCAA Championships, Seixas and
Taylor were seeded third in the doubles
tournament despite their seventh-place
standing in the national doubles rankings.
The duo won a pair of matches before losing to the brother team of Evert and Evert
from Notre Dame, 6-3, 6-8, 3-6, 6-4, 6-3
in the quarterfinals. During his senior year
in 1949, Seixas was the seventh-ranked
men’s singles player in the U.S. amateur
ranks.
Seixas went on to have a star-studded
career after graduating from Carolina. By
1952, he had attained the #1 singles ranking among Americans and he won the
Wimbledon singles championship in 1953
and the U.S. Open title in 1954. The 55
In his 22 years as head coach, Don Skakle’s teams won 18 ACCchampionships
Davis Cup singles matches he played in
and finished among the nation’s Top 20 nine times. His 1965 team, above, finare more than any American player in hisished a perfect 20-0.
tory. His 75 U.S. Open men’s singles vic-
1990-2000
DECADE
OF MEN’S
TENNIS
EXCELLEN
CE IN THE
CAROLINA
TRADITIO
N
11
Number of
Tar Heel AllAmerica
selections
over the past
decade. In
1992 Carolina
had a remarkable three AllAmerica
selections.
2
National
ranking of the
Georgia
Bulldogs
when the
1994 Tar
Heels defeated them 4-2
in Athens.
1990-2000
DECADE
OF MEN’S
TENNIS
EXCELLEN
CE IN THE
CAROLINA
TRADITIO
N
24
Total number of
Atlantic Coast
Conference
Championships
won by Carolina,
including two in
the past decade.
The Heels have
as many ACC
titles as all the
other eight league
schools combined.
10
Number of seasons since 1990
the Tar Heels
have been ranked
#27 or higher in
the ITArankings,
including a #8
ranking in 1992.
While at Carolina, McNair combined with McKee to
reach the NCAA doubles finals in 1973 at Princeton,
N.J., even though the duo had been upset in the finals
of the ACC Tournament the same year. McNair went
on to have a distinguished professional career, attaining the world’s #1 doubles ranking with teammate
Sherwood Stewart in the late 1970s. In fact, McNair
won the 1976 French Open doubles title while teaming with Stewart.
Allen Morris and the Rebirth of Carolina Tennis
When Skakle passed away from natural causes on
the eve of the ACC Tournament in 1980, Carolina tennis suffered its first leadership void in over two
decades. The University hired Allen Morris, a great
tennis player in his own right, to become only the fifth
head coach in school history. Morris was named ACC
Coach of the Year three times during his tenure — in
1983, 1990 and 1992. During the 1984 campaign,
UNC reached a major milestone when the school won
its 1,000th dual match in history. The victory came in
San Antonio, Texas, as the Tar Heels upset sixthranked Trinity University, a program with a famed tradition, 5-4.
Morris’ top players included Jeff Chambers,
Wayne Hearn, current UNC assistant coach Don
Johnson, Bryan Jones and Roland Thornqvist. An AllAmerica in 1985, Chambers earned four NCAA
Tournament singles invitations and three NCAA doubles bids, missing only in doubles in 1986. Hearn was
the ACC Player of the Year in 1985 and he made the
NCAA Tournament in both singles and doubles twice.
Although he never made the NCAA Tournament,
Johnson was a consistent player who was named the
1990 ACC Tournament Most Valuable Player after
leading the Tar Heels to their first conference crown in
12 years. Johnson has gone on to have a distinguished
doubles career in the professional ranks, winning several major tournaments and consistently being ranked
in the Top 10 in the world in doubles. Just this past
year Johnson won the 2000 Wimbledon mixed doubles championship and the title at the 2000 World
Doubles Championship Tournament in India.
A Stellar 1992 for the Heels
Jones and Thornqvist helped lead the 1992 squad
to remarkable success on the court. Thornqvist was
named a first-team All-America in both singles and
doubles, and Jones, a senior from Kings Mountain,
N.C., took All-America honors in singles as the 1992
Tar Heels set a school record for victories in a season
during their 25-5 campaign. Carolina finished eighth
in the final ITA poll and made the NCAA Tournament
field for the first time since 1978, losing to third-seeded UCLA in the quarterfinals, 5-2, after upsetting
higher seeded Texas Christian 5-3 in the round of 16.
Carolina also claimed the ACC regular-season and
tournament championships in 1992.
Jones was named ACC Player of the Year, MVPof
the ACC Tournament and Region II Senior Player of
the Year in 1992, and he advanced to the second round
of the NCAA Tournament. Thornqvist finished the
season ranked seventh nationally in singles and
reached the quarterfinals of the NCAA Tournament in
both singles and doubles, playing the latter with Chris
Mumford, an All-America selection in his own right
and one of four All-ACC selection in ‘92. Thornqvist
also was honored with the Rafael Osuna Award given
nationally for sportsmanship by the ITA.
That seemed only a prelude to Thornqvist’s senior
season. Finishing 36-6 in singles and 24-6 in doubles,
the Swedish native was ranked fourth nationally in
singles and 10th in doubles at the season’s end.
Thornqvist captained the 1993 UNC team to a 17th-
Roland Thornqvist won the prestigious Rafael Osuna
Sportsmanship Award in both 1992 and 1993 and
was a two-time All-America selection in both singles
and doubles.
place ITA poll ranking and the Final 16 of the NCAA
Tournament, beating Harvard in the first round of the
tournament before falling to top-ranked Southern
California in the round of 16.
Individually, Thornqvist won the Rafael Osuna
Sportsmanship Award from the ITA for the second
straight year, the first player in the history of college
tennis to win the award more than once. He captured
ACC titles at #1 singles and #1 doubles, was named to
the All-ACC Team for the third straight year and was
the ACC Player of the Year and the ITA Region II
Senior Player of the Year.
As a senior, Thornqvist won the ITA national
indoor singles championship, beating Georgia’s Mike
Sell in the finals at Minneapolis. He was also an
NCAA Tournament singles quarterfinalist for the second straight season and he was named the MVP of
both the H.E. Butt Championships and the Blue/Gray
Championships.
Thornqvist has gone on to become an outstanding
collegiate head women’s coach at the University of
Kansas (1996-98) and at the University of North
Carolina (1998-present).
Carolina and the Hall of Fame
Five Tar Heel tennis greats are enshrined in the
Collegiate Tennis Hall of Fame in Athens, Ga. Seixas
was inducted in 1984, Grant in 1985, Kenfield in 1986,
Skakle in 1991 and Morris in 1993. Carolina has had
several inductees into the North Carolina Tennis Hall
of Fame, the most recent being Skakle in 1986. Morris
has been inducted into the North Carolina Tennis Hall
of Fame, the North Carolina Sports Hall of Fame, the
Southern Tennis Hall of Fame and the Collegiate
Tennis Hall of Fame. Morris recently retired at the
director of athletics at Presbyterian College in Clinton,
S.C. where he served for seven years after leaving his
coaching career at Carolina.
Don Johnson’s Famed Doubles Career
Don Johnson has distinguished himself as one of
the world’s best doubles players. Johnson surpassed
the $1 million dollar mark in earnings this year and
had his most successful season winning five ATP Tour
Master’s Series titles. Johnson’s biggest victories
were the Wimbledon Mixed Doubles title, his first
grand slam title, and the World Doubles
Championships, considered professional tennis’ fifth
major for doubles play.
In the World Doubles Championship, Johnson
teamed with South Africa’s Piet Norval. The duo
faced a difficult task. In round robin play, Johnson and
Norval beat the world’s #8 and #4 ranked teams Alex
O’Brien and Jared Palmer and Paul Haarhuis and
Sandon Stolle. In the semifinals Johnson and Norval
survived a three set marathon to advance to the finals
against the Indian duo of Mahesh Bhupathi and
Leander Paes. Johnson and Norval had lost to the
Indian team two days earlier in the round robin portion
of the tournament in front of a raucous, partisan crowd.
However, after surviving a thrilling first set tiebreak
(10-8), Johnson and Norval won the final two sets
decisively 6-3, 6-4. Johnson and Norval’s victory
earned each player $92,000 and assured them a place
among the top 5 doubles teams in the world.
Johnson’s other victories in 2000 were Mexico
City (with Byron Black), Estoril (Portugal),
Nottingham (England) and Basel (Switzerland).
In June, Johnson teamed with Kimberly Po to win
the Wimbledon Mixed Doubles Championships 6-2, 76 over Australia’s Lleyton Hewitt and Kim Clijisters.
It was the first grand slam title of any kind for Po and
Johnson who lost the U.S. Open final the year before.
Johnson has won 14 ATP Tour Master’s Series
titles and has made the finals seven other times in the
last four years. The majority of Johnson’s early success was achieved with fellow American Francisco
Montana. Johnson and Montana advanced to the
Quarterfinals of the French Open in 1996 and 1998
and the semifinals of the 1998 World Doubles
Championships. In 1998, Johnson’s doubles ranking
rose to #6 in the world.
1990-2000
DECADE
OF MEN’S
TENNIS
EXCELLEN
CE IN THE
CAROLINA
TRADITIO
N
71.4%
Coach Sam
Paul’s career
ACC winning
percentage
over his seven
years as head
coach.
6
Number of
times Coach
Paul has led
the Heels to the
NCAA
Championships in his
seven year
UNC career.
UNC assistant
coach Don
Johnson and
Kimberly Po display the 2000
Wimbledon mixed
doubles trophy
which they
received from the
Duke and Duchess
of Kent.
AAAA
Abels, Byron 1935
Abels, Lucas 1931-32
Adamek, Remi 1997-99
Ager, John 1951
Alderman, Neil 1981-83
Alexander, Heath 1947-48,
1950-51
Anderson, Don 1945
Anderson, Kevin 1984 (M),
1985-86
Anthony, M.P. 1940-42
Applegate, William 1962-64
Archer, Greg 2000
Athar, Ahad 1999-2000
BBBB
Bach, Robbie 1982-84
Baggs, H. 1930
Baity, Ed 1945
Balch, Jon 1994-97
Bank, Stephen 1956-58
Barnett, R.W. 1932 (M)
Black, Geoffrey 1957-59
Boesch, B.W. 1944
Bolen, Zack 1992-93
Booker, John 1951-52
Bortner, Robert 1956, 1958
Bowman, Hugh 1950
Boyd, Alexander 1986
Brabham, Wells 1991-94
Bradford, Thomas 1953-56
Breziner, Aron 1998-2000
Bristol, L.F. 1938 (M)
Bristow, John 1988-89
Britt, David 1995-97
Brock, Billy 1973-76
Brooks, Guy 1975-76, 1978
(M)
Brown, Peter 1978
Browne, H.T. 1930
Browne, Herbert 1952-55
Brownlow, Tyne 2000
Buchanan, Francis 1951
Buford, Tiger 1979-81
Burchfield, Brian 1986-87
CCCC
Cahall, W.L. 1943
Caldwell, David 1993-96
Carl, Neal 1977-79
Carlton, John 1961-62
Carroll, Darcy 1982
Carver, A.H. 1940-41
Causey, Phillip 1959
Chambers, Jeff 1984-87
Chatman, Junie 1975-78
Cheatwood, David 1998-2000
Chewning, Tom 1965-67
Clark, Lloyd 1958
Clark, R.E. 1939
Cocke, Stanley 1961-63
Cordon, J.T. 1935
Corn, William 1969-72
Correll, William 1972-74
Coss, Jonathan 1985-86
Covington, Dick 1928
Craig, Beverly 1983-85 (M)
Crawford, Douglas 1969
DDDD
Dalrymple, T.E. 1928
Dameron, Edgar 1946
Dameron, Lasley 1949-50
Daniels, Sam 1946
Davis, Mac 1945
Davis, Robert 1966-68
DeGray, Edward 1935-36
Dell, Julian 1956
DeMattheis, Mark 1984-87
Dickson, David 1979
Dillard, J.R. 1932-33
Disco, Ray 1979-82
Dixon, Thomas 1973-76
Dorn, Joseph 1968-70
Drori, Assaf 1999-2000
Dukes, John 1971
Durrill, Cole 1991-92
Duval, Charles 1951
Dwight, Edward 1979
EEEE
Early, D.E. 1939
Elix, Ben 1999-2000
Erskine, Ron 1981-84
Evans, Carl 1964
Everett, H.W. 1940-42
F FFF
Farrell, Frank 1936-38
Fenichell, Chris 1978-81
Finnegan, Thomas 1987
Fitzsimons, Mike 1986-87 (M),
1988-89
Flanagan, Jewett Flagg 1974
Fleming, Shawn 1994
(M),1995-96
Floren, Lennart 1965
Foreman, John 1936-38
Foster, John 1956
Freeman, S.R. 1941
Frierson, Joe 1989-92
Fuller, Edward 1936-37, 1939
Fuller, Lawrence 1991
GGGG
Garcia, Joseph 1971, 1973-75
Goddard, Davis 1965-66
Goldberg, Jon 1992
Gordon, Eric 1995-1997
Gragg, W.H. 1938-39
Graham, E.K. 1930-31
Grant, Bitsy 1931-32
Grass, Michael 1998-99
Green, Robert 1953-56
Griffin, Carter 1987-89
Grigg, John 1980-83
Gruner, Stanley 1946-49
Gustafson, Bruce 1953-56
HHHH
Hackney, C.W. 1944
Hamilton, Gene 1966-68
Hammerstein, James 1950
Handel, Samuel 1952-53, 1955
Hansel, William 1960
Happer, Mills 1958-60
Hardaway, Richard 1971-74
Harden, Charles 1941
Harper, Ryan 1994
Harris, Harvey 1933-35
Harrison, John 1962-63
Harrison, John 1967
Harsanyi, Paul 1994-97
Hassler, Earl 1975-78
Hearn, Wayne 1984-85
Heier, Jeffrey 1979
Henderson, Archibald 1935-37
Henderson, Richard 1962,
1964
Hendlin, H.H. 1930-31
Hendrix, M.P. 1942-43
Henry, Tal 1978
Herring, Horace T. 1974 (M)
Hewitt, Robert 1952 (M)
Hilkey, Max 2000
Hill, Chris 1993-96
Hill, Gregg 1998
Hines, Robert 1978-80
Hines, Wilmer 1931-33
Hobbs, S.H. 1942
Hoehn, Edward 1962-64
Holderness, Richard 1966-67
Holley, C.E. 1934 (M)
Holmes, Mark 1986-87 (M)
Holmes, William 1963 (M)
Holtermann, Jan 1988
Huckabee, Jimbo 1992
Hudgins, Daniel 1956
Hutton, Brett 1993-94
IIII
Ingram, James 1948
Izlar, Bill 1951-53
JJJJ
Jacobus, Robert 1957
Jagoe, W.H. 1944
Janasik, Andre 1988-91
Jeffress, E.B. 1937 (M)
Jensen, John 1968-69 (M)
Johnson, Don 1987-90
Johnson, R.U. 1944
Johnson, Thomas 1979-81 (M)
Jones, Bryan 1989-92
Jones, J.L. 1934
Jones, Kirby 1961-63
Jordan, Melville 1946
KKKK
Kang, Jason 1998
Karson, Jamieson 1977-79
Keel, Koley 1985-86
Kenfield, John 1947
Kerdasha, Ronald 1952-55
Kernodle, Michael 1969, 1971
Kessler, David 1986-89
Keys, Bennette 1958-60
Kraut, Jon 1975-78
Krege, James 1987-90
LLLL
Lambeth, Charles 1951
Langstroth, Lee 1968-70
Lanier, Andrew 1990-92 (M)
Lassiter, Allen 1968-70
Lawch, R.C. 1944
Leitch, Robert 1973
Legum, Louis 1961-62 (M)
Levitan, Walter 1933-35
Lidskog, Fred 1996-97
Lipson, Nate 1996
Liskin, Philip 1930-31
Livingston, Frank 1957
Lockett, Frank 1959-60
Long, Donald 1965
Ludwig, Ken 1980-83
Luxenberg, Robert 1950-51
MMMM
Maass, Harold 1942-43, 1946
MacArthur, Charles 1970 (M),
’71-72
Makepeace, Richard 1958
Markham, J.E. 1942-43
Markham, John 1965-66 (M)
Marks, D.W. 1943
Matisso, A.P. 1944
McDermott, Sean 1995-98
McGeachy, Neil 1988
McGlinn, J.A. 1934
McIver, Frank 1957
McKee, Richard 1971-74
McLean, Jim 1982-83 (M)
McNab, Adam 1993, 1996
McNair, Bruce 1976
McNair, Freddie 1970-73
McNair, John 1972-73
Mears, William 1968-69, 1971
Meir, Victor 1990-91
Meniane, Trystan 2000
Merritt, W.E. 1928-30
Meserole, W.B. 1939-40
Milton, Cecil 1952
Minor, W.T. 1934-35
Miscall, Lawrence 1955 (M)
Morgan, David 1932-34
Morgan, David 1961-62
Morris, Ray 1943-44, 1947-48
Morrow, Brint 1993-96
Morrow, Peter 1961
Mumford, Chris 1989-92
Murphy, T.L. 1940 (M)
Myers, Peter 1963-64
NNNN
Neill, D.H. 1941
Newsome, Albert 1957
Nichols, Dave 1945 (M)
Nicholson, James 1946-47
Norwood, John 1928-29
OOOO
Oberstein, David 1974-77
Oettinger, Kenneth 1964-66
Ord, J.W. 1942 (M)
PPPP
Paley, Donald 1943, 1946
Palmore, J.I. 1930
Parrish, Oscar 1963-65
Payne, Bobby 1952-55
Peck, D.D. 1943-44
Peck, Stanley 1957
Petrone, Marcio 2000
Phillips, Tripp 1996-2000
Pollack, David 1985-88
Potts, Ramsay 1936-37
Potts, Dek 1977, 1979-81
Prosper, Darren 1990 (M)
Pulliam, Cooper 1990, 1992-94
Pulliam, Jay 1983-85
RRRR
Rawlings, Frederick 1968-70
Rawlings, W.H. 1938-40
Rencken, Bjorn 1999
Rice, Charles 1947-50
Rice, E.B. 1940
Ricks, Thomas 1959-61
Rider, C.F. 1938-40
Riley, Chad 1999-2000
Robinson, Gordon 1936-37
Robinson, P.F. 1941
Rood, Carlton 1937-39
Rood, R.W. 1938-39
Rosenkampff, Brad 1985
Rowe, Roy 1945
Ruotolo, Thomas 1978
SSSS
Sanders, Richard 1961
Sapp, Richard 1952
Sarner, Josh 1981-84
Saunders, Eric 1996-98
Scott, Bill 1928-29
Scott, Randall 1988-89
Seixas, Vic 1947-48
Seri, Adam 1998
Shaffer, Charles 1962-64
Shapiro, M.M. 1929
Sheridan, James 1980-82
Shettle, William 1960
Shivar, William 1967-69
Shoaf, David 1959 (M)
Shoneman, John 1969
Shore, Frank 1935-36
Shuford, H.S. 1932-33
Simmons, Mitchell 1970-73
Skakle, Cliff 1975-78
Skakle, Don 1946-48
Smith, Canie 1957
Smith, Stanley 1953 (M)
Sokol, George 1962-64
Stackhouse, Glenn 1960 (M)
Stanley, Robert 1986
Steinour, Sean 1990-93
Steward, Pawling 1957
Stewart, Eddie 1983-85, 1987
Stoneman, Hubert 1961-63
Stubbs, William 1947 (M)
Sussman, David 1990-91
Swann, Edward 1958
Swenson, Bruce 1966-68
Swigart, Donald 1946
Sylvia, Bruce 1959-61
Sylvia, Delmer 1951-53
TTTT
Tanner, Thomas 1988-91
Tate, Robert 1969
Taxman, Gary 1977-80
Taylor, Clark 1947-50
Tedesco, Robert 1995-98
Tendler, Paul 1978
Thomas, Tony 1995-98
Thompson, Donald 1953-56
Thornqvist, Roland 1991-93
Trott, William 1966-68
Troutman, Mark 1979-80
Tuttle, Clifford 1945
VV VV
Van Winkle, Frederick 1957
Van Wyck, Frederic 1965-67
W WWW
Waddell, C.E. 1928-29
Wadden, T.A. 1942
Wadsworth, James 1965-67
Walker, John 1957
Weathers, Bill 1945
Webb, Woody 1991-93
Weilbaecher, Derek 1987-88
Weilbaecher, James 1986-88
Wellford, H.W. 1944
Weesner, Richard 1933
West, Douglas 1965-67
Whitaker, Ken 1981-83
Wilder, Cleo 1945-46, 1948-49
Willis, Richard 1933-35
Wilson, S.L. 1928
Winstead, James 1949-50
Wright, L.C. 1931-33
Wyatt, Daryl 1993
X YZ
Yeomans, E.D. 1929, 1931
Zimmerman, George 1961-62