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Stanford's Dick Gould headlines 2006 ITA Men's Collegiate
Hall of Fame induction ceremonies
The Intercollegiate Tennis Association will induct nine new members into its ITA Men's Collegiate Tennis Hall of Fame during this month's NCAA Championships at Stanford University.
The Class of 2006 consists of coaches Dick Gould (Stanford) and
Bill Wright (California and Arizona), and players Jeff Borowiak
(UCLA), Tom Edlefsen (Southern California), Dan Goldie
(Stanford), Matt Mitchell (Stanford), Jared Palmer (Stanford),
Richey Reneberg (SMU) and Ferdie Taygan (UCLA).
This year's ceremony will take place on the evening of May 24 at Stanford's Arrillaga Family Sports Center. A reception will begin at 6 pm and the dinner and ceremony begins at 7 pm. (General public tickets are $50. To hold a space, a check payable for $50 per person to "Stanford University" should be mailed no later than May 15 to: Dick Gould, Director of Tennis, Department of Athletics, Stanford University, Arrillaga Family Sports Center, Stanford, CA 94305-6150.)
The nine inductees this year are the most in a single class
since 1985. Stanford's four inductees equals the most to be
inducted from the same school since Southern California had four
in the inaugural class in 1983.
Stanford's Gould highlights this year's ceremonies. Gould is
widely regarded as not only the top collegiate tennis coach of
all time, but among the best in any college sport. He guided the
Cardinal to a record 17 NCAA team championships while coaching
10 NCAA singles champions and seven doubles champs during his 38
years at the helm. He was twice named Wilson/ITA National Coach
of the Decade for the eighties and nineties. He retired from
coaching in 2004 with a career record of 776-148 and was an
amazing 88-11 (.888) in NCAA tournament matches.
Wright retired from Arizona last year after 27 years of
coaching. He also coached at Denver, Colorado State, Illinois
and California. He enjoyed some of his greatest success at Cal.
He was named Wilson/ITA National Coach of the Year in 1979 and
in '80 he led the Golden Bears to the USTA-ITA National Team
Indoor title and NCAA final.
Borowiak was a three-time ITA All-America for UCLA from 1969-71.
He won the NCAA singles title in '70 and claimed the doubles
crown (with Harold Rahim) in '71. Borowiak helped the Bruins to
back-to-back titles in '70-71.
Edlefsen is the fifth player from USC's legendary '63 squad to
be inducted into the ITA Hall of Fame. He was a three-time ITA
All-America from 1963-65 and also was ranked in the top 10 in
the U.S. in singles three different times in the sixties.
Stanford's Goldie, Mitchell and Palmer are the 13th, 14th and
15th Cardinal players to be inducted into the ITA Hall of Fame.
Goldie played on two NCAA championship teams in '83 and '86 and
earned ITA All-America honors three times from '84-86. He also
captured the '85 ITA National Indoor and '86 NCAA singles
crowns. Mitchell won the '77 NCAA singles title and helped the
Cardinal to NCAA back-to-back team titles in '77-78. He was also
a three-time ITA All-American. Palmer captured the '91 NCAA
singles title. He went on to win two Grand Slam doubles titles
(and two mixed), reach No. 1 in the ATP doubles rankings and
play for the U.S. Davis Cup team several times over an
eight-year span.
SMU's Reneberg was the ITA National Player of the Year in '86
when he reached the NCAA singles final. He also captured the
singles title at the '86 ITA All-American Championships and
earned All-America honors three times from '85-87. Reneberg went
on to win two Grand Slam doubles titles and was ranked in the
U.S. top ten eight times. He was ranked as high as No. 20 in the
ATP singles rankings and No. 1 in doubles during his career.
UCLA's Taygan was the only the fifth player to earn ITA
All-America honors four times during his career (1974-77). He
helped the Bruins to NCAA titles in '75 and '76 and won the NCAA
doubles crown with Peter Fleming in '76. As a pro he won the '82
French Open doubles title.
Players are eligible for election to the ITA Hall of Fame 15
years after their last collegiate match and coaches are eligible
following retirement. The main criteria for election are college
accomplishments as well as honors earned after college. College
tennis legend Dan Magill serves as curator for the ITA Hall of
Fame, which is housed at the University of Georgia.
The ITA Men's Tennis Hall of Fame, which includes over 1,800
rare photos, inducted its first class in 1983 and has inducted
more than 160 players, coaches and contributors since then.
Members include the late Arthur Ashe (UCLA), Jimmy Connors
(UCLA), John McEnroe (Stanford) and Stan Smith (Southern
California). The ITA Women's Collegiate Tennis Hall of Fame is
located at the College of William & Mary in Williamsburg, Va.
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