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Teams: Men's Tennis: Team
Overview
►Coach
Eng earns Master Pro distinction
Tufts University Men's Tennis has
a long history as a top national program in the NCAA's Division III. The team plays a very
competitive schedule as a member of the New England Small College
Athletic Conference (NESCAC), the premier conference in the country.
Over the past three decades, the Jumbos have regularly been
ranked among the top 25 teams in the nation and have made NCAA
playoff appearances six times since the conference allowed
post-season play in 1994. In recent years, several players have
garnered All-American status and represented Tufts at the NCAA
Championships.
Coach Doug Eng's 2008-09 team enjoyed its most successful season
in seven years. With nine victories, Tufts had its best total since
since the 2001-02 season. The Jumbos were ranked 30th in the
Intercollegiate Tennis Association (ITA) poll for most of 2008-09.
In the very competitive ITA Northeast Region, Tufts is ninth in the
rankings. For 2007-08, Tufts was ranked 21st nationally in Division III for
much of the season. The team finished 8-7 with most matches in the
very tough NESCAC conference. Six NESCAC teams placed among the top
30 in the final ITA poll for 2009.
As members of the NESCAC, Tufts plays in the nation's most
competitive small college conference academically and athletically. The
NESCAC is a group of highly selective liberal arts colleges and
universities that share an academics-first philosophy for
intercollegiate athletics. The Tufts program has matched its
competitive successes with academic achievement. The Jumbos were one
of 36 teams in the country to be named an ITA All-Academic Team, the
ninth straight year that they have earned that honor. An
extraordinary seven players were recognized as ITA Scholar Athletes
for 2008-09. The team often produces among the most ITA
Scholar-Athletes in the nation.
The Tufts tennis team has split seasons in the fall and spring.
In the fall, the team will compete in a few dual matches, the ITA
Regional Championships and the Wallach Invitational at Bates. Most
head-to-head dual matches, the NESCAC Championships and NCAA
competition take place in the spring. For spring break,
the team travels south for practice and plays a few out-of-region
matches. During the season, practice is five or six
days per week in the afternoons. Off-court training is twice per
week during the season and three times per week between seasons. The
team uses state-of-the-art training including Dartfish
video-analysis and high-speed photography.
Located right outside of Boston, Tufts offers a well-rounded
collegiate experience to student-athletes. Within its picturesque
small-college campus, Tufts is a major university with "an
unprecedented diversity of programs, exceptional faculty and bright
and talented students," according to President Lawrence S. Bacow.
The Athletics Department sponsors a varsity program of 28 sports
that is among the most competitive in the NCAA's Division III. Tufts
finished 10th in the 2009 Learfield Sports Directors' Cup, which
awards points based on NCAA performances. The University's proximity to a world-class city renowned
for its academic institutions is also a major draw.
Recent Tufts Tennis graduates have moved on to successful
careers. About two-thirds go on to graduate school, medical school,
law school or business school. The rest often establish successful
careers in high tech or financial business.
Doug Eng, EdD PhD, has coached at Tufts for 14 years. In 2004-05,
he was head coach of the women's team which produced Tufts' first
two All-Americans and a record seven All-Conference players. Two
years ago, Eng took over the men's team. In all of his seasons
coaching at Tufts, the teams have achieved a national ranking. Eng's
areas of expertise are in biomechanics, coaching theory and sports
psychology. He has spoken at every major tennis conference in the
United States and has won several national awards including Pro of
the Year by the Professional Tennis Registry (PTR) and the US
Professional Tennis Association (USPTA).
Eng is a PTR national clinician who has worked with over a
thousand coaches. He writes regularly for TennisOne.com and was
chair of several sport science committees. Eng competed USTA High
Performance Training and has worked with dozens of ranked juniors,
including a dozen who played Division I tennis, several who achieved
ITF rankings and a couple who played on the Future Circuit. He has
worked with a couple national champions and two Davis Cup players.
In the past nine summers, he has directed programs at the Tennis
Academy at Harvard University.
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