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As schools ponder cutting sports, tennis proves vulnerable

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TNow he’s pondering his future thousands of miles away from his family as financial reality crashes down on his sport.

Winthrop announced last month that both its men’s and women’s tennis programs will be dropped because of budget woes resulting from the coronaviru­s pandemic. Tennis has been hit hardest among college programs as athletic department­s nationwide ponder cutting sports to save money.

“I was definitely caught by surprise,” Vannemredd­y said. “No prior warning or rumor about the program shutting down. It was just a random call one day and just found out it’s done.”

Dozens of college tennis players across the country are in similar situations. Men’s and women’s tennis are the only sports dropped by more than four Division I schools since the start of the pandemic, according to AP research.

East Carolina, Green Bay, Northern Colorado, Southern Utah and Wright State have dropped men’s and women’s tennis over the last three months. In Arkansas, UAPB suspended men’s and women’s tennis for the year. Appalachia­n State cut men’s tennis, while Akron eliminated women’s tennis. Connecticu­t won’t have a men’s tennis team after 2020-21.

“My assessment is some of these cuts had probably been in the works,” said Timothy Russell, the CEO of the Internatio­nal Tennis Associatio­n, the governing body for college tennis. “Usually when there’s a cut, there’s a big hue and cry. There’s so much going on with the noise in this environmen­t, it’s easier to make these cuts with nobody paying as much attention.”

Nearly 89% of Division I schools had women’s tennis programs and 71.5% had men’s teams as of 2019, but these recent cuts have raised concern and pushed officials to seek solutions.

Tim Cass, a former New Mexico and Texas A&M coach, now is general manager for the U.S. Tennis Associatio­n’s national campus in Florida. He believes colleges can help their programs by opening on-campus tennis facilities to their communitie­s, by hosting junior or adult tournament­s and offering after-school progr ams.

If you’re doing that, more than likely your program has a very good chance of being safe,” Cass said.

A lack of quality facilities has contribute­d to some cuts.

Winthrop deputy athletic director Hank Harrawood said his school’s tennis facility required at least $1.3 million in repairs. Southern Utah and Northern Colorado didn’t have indoor facilities on campus, and Southern Utah’s teams often had to travel 4550 minutes for practice.

Northern Colorado and Southern Utah belong to the Big Sky Conference, which previously required its members to field tennis teams.

When the Big Sky relaxed that requiremen­t last month, both schools dropped their programs.

Scholarshi­p concerns also play a role.

The NCAA allows schools to offer up to 4 ½ scholarshi­ps in men’s tennis and eight in women’s tennis.

Harrawood said that meant Winthrop’s tennis programs were generating a smaller percentage of tuition revenue than the school’s other Olympic-style sports.

Once Winthrop realized it needed to save over $600,000, Harrawood said eliminatin­g tennis made the most financial sense despite its history of su ccess.

Winthrop’s women had made 17 NCAA Tournament appearance­s - including three straight from 2017-19. The men had won nine Big South Conference regular-season titles since 1997.

“From a dollars and cents standpoint, strictly a business decision on campus, it became evident tennis is pretty clearly the one where you can impact the least amount of students while also saving the most amount of money,” Harrawood sai d.

An NCAA study found 63% of Division I men’s tennis players and 62% of Division I women’s tennis players in 2018 came from outside the United States. No other sport had the majority of its players come from outside the U.S., though men’s soccer had a slightly greater number of internatio­nal athletes than men’s tennis.

Retired Stanford coach Dick Gould, who led the Cardinal to 17 NCAA team titles, believes tennis programs comprised primarily of internatio­nal players are vulnerable when schools need to cut.

“If you’re a state school that gets state and public funding, and your team is 70% (internatio­nal players), I think that makes your sport an obvious target,” said Gould, who retired from coaching in 2004 but remained Stanford’s tennis director for 12 more years.

he promise of college tennis lured Abhimanyu Vannemredd­y from his home in India to the United States, where he settled in at Winthrop University in South Carolina.

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