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No. 35 San Diego State Travels to Los Angeles for NCAA Regional Against 24th-ranked California Saturday SDSU will appear in its sixth NCAA tournament Saturday
May 10, 2005 SAN DIEGO - SDSU Men's Tennis NCAA Tournament Release
No. 35 San Diego State Travels to Los Angeles for NCAA Regional Against 24th-ranked California Saturday The Aztecs will be making their sixth appearance in the annual postseason tournament after a one-year hiatus. The last time SDSU participated in the NCAA tournament was back in 2003 where it advanced to the second round before falling to Washington, 4-3.
The Matchup Meanwhile, California is riding a four-match winning streak with wins over #49 Arizona State (6-1), #6 UCLA (4-3), #21 USC (5-2) and #22 Stanford (5-2). Since the Pac-10 Championships are only a singles and doubles event, the Golden Bear's last team match came on April 16, when they defeated rival Stanford at home.
Tourney Time Info In four of the previous five NCAA tournaments, San Diego State has made it out of the first round. The only year where the Aztecs did not was in 1998 when they fell to New Mexico, 4-3. SDSU has faced a Pac-10 Conference member four times in the NCAAs going a combined 1-3. The Aztecs' only win came in 2000 during first round play against Washington (4-3). The three losses came at the hands of UCLA (1999 and 2002) and Washington (2003). The Aztecs have made it past the second round only once in school history. The 2000 squad defeated the Huskies in round one, downed Pepperdine, 4-2, in the second round and lost a heartbreaker to Virginia Commonwealth, 4-3, in the round of 16. San Diego State has played at Los Angeles Tennis Center twice in the NCAA tournament compiling a record of 2-2. In 1999, SDSU beat Tulsa, 4-1, before falling to UCLA, 4-0. In 2002, the Aztecs blanked Hampton, 5-0, and drew the Bruins again and suffered the same fate, losing 4-1.
Two Teams, Two Tournaments
Aztecs Against the Field
Familiar Face
Regular Season Champs SDSU has finished with a 5-0 record only once before, in 2001, but fell short of the postseason crown, losing to Brigham Young, 4-1, and New Mexico, 4-2.
Postseason Champs, Too
Streaking Aztecs The Aztecs' longest previous streak came in 2000 when they won nine in a row before losing to New Mexico in the conference tournament. Despite the setback, SDSU earned a berth to the NCAA Tournament and advanced to the round of 16 before being downed by Virigina Commonwealth, 4-3.
All-MWC Honorees
MWC Coach of the Year Carswell, in his second year at the helm, guided San Diego State to a 17-5 overall record, including a 5-0 mark in conference action. The unblemished conference record was just the second time in league history that the Aztecs have gone through the MWC slate without a loss. In addition to winning the regular season title, Carswell led his team to the program's third conference tournament crown in the last four seasons. After receiving a first-round bye, SDSU defeated fourth-seeded UNLV, 4-3, on Friday and beat the tournament's No. 2 seed, Brigham Young, 4-2, Saturday afternoon. Carswell is 28-14 overall in his two seasons on Montezuma Mesa, with both of his teams reaching the MWC tournament final. This is the third coaching award Carswell has collected while at SDSU. In 2001 and 2003, he was named ITA Regional Assistant Coach of the Year.
Players of the Week
Aztecs in the Rankings Stronk jumped from No. 90 to No. 43 as a result of his victories over then-No. 13 Arnaud Lecloerec of Virginia Commonwealth and No. 59 Jeff Kader of William and Mary in the Aztecs' last match of the Blue-Gray National Tennis Classic earlier this season. He is currently ranked 77th. Dickhardt, who had been ranked as high as No. 79, broke back into the rankings three weeks ago entering the charts at No. 125. Since then, he has made his way up the rankings to No. 94. Carrascosa has been ranked anywhere from the 50s to the 100s all season long. His best ranking came earlier in the season when he was ranked No. 51, but dropped out of the latest poll. Dontia Haynes is the fourth Aztec to have earned a spot in the poll, being ranked as high as No. 84 early in the season. He has since fallen out despite his solid play of late.
There's No Place Like Home The results were outstanding as the Aztecs went 5-0 at their new home, beating four ranked teams. The only blemish was the unfinished match against No. 36 Virginia Commonwealth. The contest was called due to rain with the Rams up 3-2 and the last singles match going to a third set.
Piling Up the Victories Right behind him is Markus Dickhardt who has won seven straight and is 18-5 this spring. At No. 2, the sophomore is 11-3 and at No. 3, he owns a record of 6-2. His other win came at the top position versus Utah. Chris Groh, who just had his eight-match winning streak snapped, is also playing very well. After suffering an early season injury at UCLA, the sophomore has come back to post an 12-2 record with marks of 4-0, 5-2 and 3-0 at Nos. 4, 5 and 6, respectively.
2005 MWC Championship Match Recap The Aztecs took a 1-0 lead when they posted victories at Nos. 1 and 2 to clinch the point. The SDSU top doubles team of Benedikt Stronk and Armando Carrascosa used an 8-5 performance to defeat Nima Roshan and Jose Lechuga. Following the win a the top spot, Daniel Jung and Dontia Haynes battled from behind to post an 8-5 win over Dominik Kaufhold and James Ludlow to secure the point. Similar to Friday's UNLV match, singles play was close on all six courts. First off the court was BYU's Christian Hand, who made quick work of Haynes at No. 5, defeating him in straight sets, 6-1, 6-4. The Aztecs reclaimed the lead when Jung posted his 11th straight victory, a 6-3, 6-3, win over Jonathan Sanchez at No. 6. The SDSU lead was short lived as Brigham Young's Shane LaPorte snapped Chris Groh's nine-match winning streak with his 6-4, 6-4, effort to tie the match a 2-2. Then with three matches still in progress, Markus Dickhardt broke the tie with his 7-6(5), 7-5, victory at No. 2 over BYU's Ludlow. With the Aztecs needing only one point to take the conference title, Stronk was in the middle of the three-set battle with Roshan at No. 1 and Carrascosa was fighting out of a 5-2, second set deficit to Jeff Das at No. 3. At stadium court, Stronk had lost the first set, 6-7(1), but came back to win the second, 6-3. On court nine, as Carrascosa was in the process of tying the second set at 6-6, Stronk finished off Roshan, cruising to a 6-0, third set win, giving the Aztecs the conference's automatic bid to the postseason.
Scouting California San Diego State is 0-8 all-time versus California. The last time these two schools played, the Golden Bears posted a 6-3 victory in 1992.
Scouting UCLA Dating back to 1998, the Aztecs are 0-9 against the Bruins. The last two meetings UCLA has won convincingly, winning 7-0 on both occasions.
Scouting Manhattan
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