CHAPEL HILL, North Carolina – In a matchup of undefeated teams, No. 5 North Carolina posted its sixth consecutive shutout and seventh win overall with a 4-0 victory over ninth-ranked Texas A&M today at the Cone-Kenfield Tennis Center indoor courts. It was the first loss for the Aggies, who entered the match 3-0.
“North Carolina just truly played better tennis than we did,” A&M first-year head coach Mark Weaver said. “They seemed to be a little bit sharper than we were and a little bit better at almost every position.
“I knew going into the match that we are not at our peak level by any means. I think North Carolina probably played as well as they could. I would think if they could play much better, that would be a bit scary, so my guess is they are playing near the peak of their tennis, which generally they do in the early indoor portion of the spring schedule.”
The Tar Heels jumped out to the early lead as Hayley Carter and Whitney Key, the second-ranked doubles team in the nation, raced to a 6-0 victory over A&M’s Eva Paalma and Rachel Pierson at the No. 1 line.
Ashley Dai and Chloe Ouellet-Pizer then clinched the doubles point, winning the first five games en route to a 6-1 victory against Saska Gavrilovska and Domenica Gonzalez at No. 3. The match between UNC’s 16th-ranked Jessie Aney and Kate Vialle and A&M’s Rutuja Bhosale and Anna Mamalat was on serve with the Tar Heels up, 4-3, when the doubles point was clinched and play on the No. 2 court was stopped.
“They really took it to us in the doubles, which they’ve done in the past,” Weaver said. “I was hoping we would be able to rebound from that, because that have taken it to us in the doubles in years past and we were able to jump back and make it a pretty tight contest. Unfortunately we weren’t able to do that today.”
Due to an apparent oversight in the scheduling of the officials, there was only one umpire on site, and she was responsible for all three doubles matches. The start of singles was delayed approximately 40 minutes while the teams awaited the arrival of more umpires.
Once singles play finally began, the Tar Heels, who fielded ranked players on four courts, continued to carry the momentum, winning the first set on all six courts.
Ouellet-Pizer, ranked 112th in the nation, completed the first of three straight-set Tar Heel victories with a 6-1, 6-1 win over Ines Deheza at No. 6 singles. No. 88 Whitney Kay then downed 58th-ranked Pierson, 6-3, 6-1 at No. 2 to put the Tar Heels up, 3-0.
Marika Akkerman completed the Tar Heels’ shutout with a 6-3, 6-1 over freshman Domenica Gonzalez at No. 5, preventing an A&M comeback like the Aggies pulled off in their last visit to Chapel Hill two years ago when they overcame a 3-1 deficit against the then-No. 3 Tar Heels to post the highest ranked win in program history.
“The scoreboard didn’t look too good,” Weaver admitted. “I don’t think the match was quite as bad as the score indicated, but all credit to UNC. There is a reason why they won the National Indoor Championships last year and two of the last three years.”
The remaining three matches would go unfinished. Gavrilovska, ranked 53rd in singles, narrowly lost her first set, 6-4, to sixth-ranked Carter at No. 1 and was trailing 4-1 in the second set when the match was stopped.
Vialle had pulled away for a 6-3 first-set win over Bhosale at No. 3, and the second set was tied, 3-3, when the Tar Heels clinched the victory. Paalma, the reigning SEC Player of the Week, was battling 68th-ranked Jessie Aney at the No. 4 line and had just dropped a first-set tiebreaker when play was stopped.
“I thought Eva Paalma played an excellent match,” Weaver added. “She was a little bit unlucky with a set point at 5-4 — she probably wins that point nine times out of 10 – but I was very pleased with how she played. Rutuja also played an excellent match it sounded like. I wasn’t on that side, but I heard her bringing the energy, which is one of the things we talked about before the match, and she seemed fired-up and energetic.”
Next up for both teams is the ITA National Team Indoor Championship, Feb. 5-8, in Madison, Wisconsin.
“I think the main thing to learn from today’s match is that we need to raise our games a bit,” Weaver said. “Going into the national indoors, this shouldn’t affect our confidence, so I’m not worried from that standpoint. I do feel like it does give us a really good feel of playing an indoor team. We have three great opportunities, possibly four, coming up in Wisconsin, so this kind of sets the stage of what we will expect to see in Wisconsin. I don’t know if we got that same feel when we played Baylor the other day. We did gain some experience, especially playing two indoor matches in a row, and that does put us in a better position to play well on Friday.”
The draws for the 16-team ITA National Indoor Championship will be announced later this week.
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#5 North Carolina 4, #9 Texas A&M 0
Cone-Kenfield Tennis Center (Indoor)
Chapel Hill, North Carolina
January 31, 2016
Singles
1. #53 Saska Gavrilovska (A&M) vs. #6 Hayley Carter (UNC), 4-6, 1-4 unfinished
2. #88 Whitney Kay (UNC) def. #58 Rachel Pierson (A&M), 6-3, 6-1
3. #106 Rutuja Bhosale (A&M) vs. Kate Vialle (UNC), 3-6, 3-3 unfinished
4. Eva Paalma (A&M) vs. #68 Jessie Aney (UNC), 6-7 (2), 0-0 unfinished
5. Marika Akkerman (UNC) def. Domenica Gonzalez (A&M), 6-3, 6-1
6. #112 Chloe Ouellet-Pizer (UNC) def. Ines Deheza (A&M), 6-1, 6-1
Doubles (UNC wins the point)
1. #2 Carter/Kay (UNC) def. Paalma/Pierson (A&M), 6-0
2. Bhosale/Mamalat (A&M) vs. #16 Aney/Vialle (UNC), 3-4 unfinished
3. Ashley Dai/Ouellet-Pizer (UNC) def. Gavrilovska/Gonzalez (A&M), 6-1
Order of finish
Doubles: 1, 3
Singles: 6, 2, 5
Team records
Texas A&M: 3-1
UNC: 7-0
Pronunciations
Rutuja Bhosale roo-too-jah bo-slay
Ines Deheza ee-NAY de-HAY-za
Saska Gavrilovska saush-ka gav-ril-ahv-ska
Stefania Hristov steff-on-ya RIS-tov
Anna Mamalat MAM-ah-LOT
Eva Paalma A-va paul-ma
Story courtesy of Texas A&M Athletics