TRINITY'S BETHEA AND RUSH HEADLINE SOUTHERN COLLEGIATE ATHLETIC
CONFERENCE'S 15TH ANNIVERSARY MEN'S TENNIS
TEAM
SUWANEE, Ga. - Trinity University's Brian
Bethea and Sloan Rush, the only two-time
Players-of-the-Year in Southern Collegiate Athletic Conference
men's tennis history, highlight an impressive list of 12 past
standouts named to the SCAC's 15th anniversary men's tennis
team.
Bethea, the league's Player-of-the-Year in 1993
and 1994, was an All-SCAC selection for three consecutive years at
No. 1 singles for the Tigers. Bethea was an All-American in 1995
when he and partner Jamie Saben advanced to the NCAA Division III
Men's Tennis Doubles finals before losing to Todd Born and John
Weston of Redlands.
Rush earned SCAC Player-of-the-Year honors in 2000
and 2001. Those same two years, behind Rush's strong play at No. 1
singles, Trinity advanced to the national championship match,
winning it all in 2000 and finishing as national runner-up in 2001.
Rush, a two-time All-American, finished second at the 2000 NCAA
Division III Men's Tennis Singles Championships, losing to Carnegie
Mellon's Kayvon Fatahalian, 6-3, 6-4, in the title match. As a
senior, he and partner Ed Rahn advanced all the way to the 2001
NCAA Division III Men's Tennis Doubles finals before falling to
Derek Fitzpatrick and Nick Cunningham of UC-Santa Cruz.
With 13 team championships in 14 years of competition, Trinity was
awarded the lion's share of spots on the 15th anniversary men's
tennis team. Joining Bethea and
Rush on the squad are former Tigers: Jamie
Broach, Jeff Mueller, Ryan
Scott, Jordan Taillon and Chris
Zolas.
Broach was a three-time All-SCAC selection,
culminating with the league's Player-of-the-Year award his senior
season (1998). He was also an All-American selection that same
season. Broach had a 10-1 career record in SCAC tournament singles
play. Mueller earned SCAC Player-of-the-Year
honors as a junior in 1999 and was an All-American that same
season. He played No. 5 singles for the 2000 Trinity team that
defeated Gustavus Adolphus to win the Division III Men's Tennis
Championship. Scott, a three-time All-SCAC
selection, finished second in the Player-of-the-Year vote as a
junior in 2002. He was a freshman on the 2000 title team and a
three-time All-American as a doubles player (2000, 2002, 2003).
Taillon, the 2004 SCAC Player-of-the-Year and a
three-time All-American (2002, 2003, 2005), compiled an 11-1 SCAC
tournament singles record. Zolas was named the
league's Player-of-the-Year as a senior in 1996. His final three
seasons at Trinity, Zolas went undefeated in both singles and
doubles play at the SCAC tournament (1994-1996).
Sewanee: The University of the South placed two former players on
the all-anniversary team - Jason Abraham and
K.C. Horne.
Abraham was a four-time All-SCAC selection and
capped his career with a runner-up finish in the SCAC
Player-of-the-Year voting his senior season (2003). In earning
All-American honors in 2003, he advanced to the second round of the
NCAA's (the furthest of any SCAC individual that year) before
falling to the eventual national runner-up. His 22-1 singles record
in 2001 is the best single-season individual mark in SCAC history.
Horne, Sewanee's most decorated men's tennis
player, was an All-American all four years on the Mountain. He was
selected as the ITA Division III Rookie-of-the-Year in 1993 - the
same year Sewanee won its only outright men's conference tennis
title in the SCAC era. Horne earned SCAC Player-of-the-Year honors
as a junior in 1995.
Marshall Kuresman, a three-time All-American for
DePauw University, was the SCAC Player-of-the-Year as a sophomore
in 2003. In 2005, he made it to the round of 16 in the NCAA Men's
Individual competition and also received the Arthur Ashe Award for
Leadership & Sportsmanship, which goes to a player who has
exhibited outstanding sportsmanship and leadership as well as
scholastic, extracurricular and tennis achievements.
J.D. Prichard of Hendrix College was an All-SCAC player at
No. 1 singles for three consecutive years (2002-04) finishing third
in the Player-of-the-Year voting as a senior. In addition, his last
three seasons at Hendrix, he went 9-0 in SCAC tournament play -
earning all-tournament honors all three years.
Andy Campbell of Rhodes College was the SCAC
Player-of-the-Year as a junior in 2002 - the same year he led the
Lynx to a second-place finish at the conference tournament - the
program's best finish in the SCAC era. Campbell qualified for the
NCAA's as both a singles and doubles player (with partner Duncan
Howell) in 2002 and 2003.
The Southern Collegiate Athletic Conference will be announcing 15th
Anniversary teams in all 18 sports during the 2005-06 academic
year. The SCAC was formed in 1991 after a reorganization of its
predecessor, the College Athletic Conference (CAC). The CAC dates
to 1962 with four charter members: Centre College, Southwestern @
Memphis (now Rhodes College), Sewanee-The University of the South,
and Washington & Lee (Va.) University. Washington (Mo.)
University joined the CAC later that same year.
The SCAC was formed to provide an association through which the
member institutions may encourage organized competition in
intercollegiate sports among teams representative of their
respective student bodies. Members of this conference share a
commitment to priority of the overall quality of academic standards
and quality educational experiences.
The SCAC's 15th Anniversary teams were selected in each sport
through balloting by present coaches and administrators. Athletes
who participated in conference competition between the fall of 1991
through the spring of 2004 and had been named to at least two
All-SCAC teams were eligible for selection.
|
15th Anniversary Team |
All-SCAC Selections | |||||||||||||
| Name, School | 92 | 93 | 94 | 95 | 96 | 97 | 98 | 99 | 00 | 01 | 02 | 03 | 04 | 05 |
| Jason Abraham, Sewanee | x | x | x | x | ||||||||||
| Brian Bethea, Trinity | x# | x# | x | |||||||||||
| Jamie Broach, Trinity | x | x | x# | |||||||||||
| Andy Campbell, Rhodes | x# | x | ||||||||||||
| K.C. Horne, Sewanee | x | x | x# | x | ||||||||||
| Marshall Kuresman, DePauw | x# | x | ||||||||||||
| Jeff Mueller, Trinity | x# | x | ||||||||||||
| J.D. Prichard, Hendrix | x | x | x | x | ||||||||||
| Sloan Rush, Trinity | x | x# | x# | |||||||||||
| Ryan Scott, Trinity | x | x | x | x | ||||||||||
| Jordan Taillon, Trinity | x | x# | x | |||||||||||
| Chris Zolas, Trinity | x | x | x# | |||||||||||
x First Team All-SCAC
# Player-of-the-Year
Due to inclement weather, championships were not contested in
1997