Fall season ends with strong finish
By Peter Henle | November 7, 2005Duke senior Jackie Carleton posted a career-best finish at the ITA National Intercollegiate Indoor Championships in Columbus, Ohio, this past weekend by reaching the round of 16.
Duke senior Jackie Carleton posted a career-best finish at the ITA National Intercollegiate Indoor Championships in Columbus, Ohio, this past weekend by reaching the round of 16.
Senior Jackie Carleton, Duke's only representative at the ITA National Intercollegiate Indoor Championships, won her opening match of the tournament Thursday.
A year after the women's tennis team qualified no one for the ITA National Collegiate Indoor Championships, the Blue Devils will send three of its players there this season after they earned bids...
Day four of the ITA Southeast Regional Championships concluded Sunday in Chapel Hill with Duke in prime position for the final day of matches Monday.
The women's tennis team, looking to build on its strong performance at last weekend's All-American Tournament, began play yesterday at the Intercollegiate Tennis Association Southeast Women's...
Members of the women's tennis team travelled to California this weekend to compete in the Cal Invitational in Berkeley and pre-qualifying rounds of the Riviera ITA/All-American Tournament in...
Duke women's tennis made its presence known at the Maryland Invitational this weekend, with Blue Devil's competing in the A flight finals in both singles and doubles.
Mission unaccomplished.
Last year's season did not end the way the women's tennis team had imagined. Duke struggled through a spring filled with injuries and inconsistency.
For the second time in as many years, the Duke women’s tennis program benefited from UCLA’s inability to retain its hard-court stars.
After playing through a season plagued by injury, the 15th-ranked Duke women’s tennis team hoped to rebound by making a deep run in the NCAA Tournament.
CARY, N.C. — The 15th-ranked Blue Devils entered the ACC Championship seeking their 16th title in 18 years.
The seventh-seeded Blue Devils made quick work of 10th-seeded N.C. State Thursday, defeating the Wolfpack 4-0 in the first round of the ACC Championships at the Cary Tennis Center.
When the ACC women’s tennis tournament starts today, 15th-ranked Duke will be in a strangely unfamiliar position—seeded seventh.
After giving Duke its first lead at North Carolina Wednesday, seldom-used Parker Goyer knew she would be called upon to earn more crucial points for the Blue Devils with two of their top singles...
CHAPEL HILL — Leading 3-0 in the deciding set of the final match, Saras Arasu broke her tiring opponent’s serve for the second consecutive time and appeared to put Duke ahead for good.
Over the 16th-ranked Blue Devils’ last seven matches, a stretch in which they have gone 3-4, there has been a definite lack of intensity.
Upon dropping the second set tiebreaker to Maryland’s Marianne Baker, Duke junior Jackie Carleton tossed her racquet down the width of two courts.
Nevermind that Wednesday’s loss to Wake Forest was Duke’s first conference road loss since 1989.
For the first time since George H.W. Bush was in office, No. 12 Duke lost a conference road match Wednesday, falling to No. 36 Wake Forest, 6-1.