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.
Stanford's Delaney was a four-time ITA
All-American for the Cardinal from 1972-75. He captured NCAA doubles titles
in '73 and '74 (with Alex Mayer and John Whitlinger, respectively) and was a
member of Coach Dick Gould's first (of 17) NCAA championship teams those
same years. Delaney was the fourth player to ever earn ITA All-American
honors four times and is one of 23 to ever do it. He resides in Arlington,
Va.
William & Mary's Larned was the NCAA singles
champ in 1947 and a finalist in singles and doubles in '46. He beat North
Carolina's Vic Seixas in the '47 NCAA final. A World War II hero, Larned
also led the Tribe to back-to-back NCAA team titles in 1947-48.
Arizona's Lenoir was a three-time ITA
All-American from 1962-64, reaching at least the NCAA singles quarterfinals
each of those years. He was also the USTA Boys' 18s singles champion in '63
and two-time U.S. interscholastic champ. Lenoir resides in Tampa, Fla.
UCLA's Nagler swept the NCAA singles and doubles
titles in 1960. A three-time ITA All-American, he is the only player to ever
win three Pac-10 men's singles titles. He also helped the Bruins to NCAA
team titles in '60 and '61. While at UCLA, he played on the basketball team
for John Wooden in '58 and '59. Nagler lives in Los Angeles.
Nagler is the 16th UCLA player or coach to be
inducted in the ITA Hall of Fame. Delaney is the 12th Cardinal to be
inducted. Lenoir is the first Arizona player to be inducted (former coach
Dave Snyder entered in 2001). Larned is the second Tribe inductee,
joining teammate Bernard "Tut" Bartzen.
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.
Three others - Paul Haarhuis of Armstrong
Atlantic State and Florida State, Jim Osborne of Utah and BYU (coach) and
John Sadri of North Carolina State - were eligible for induction this
year, but will go into the ITA Hall of Fame in 2005 due to scheduling
conflicts.