Introduction
The pathway to US college tennis and the potential to receive an athletic scholarship is an incredible opportunity. Not only is US college tennis a great athletic and academic opportunity for a young aspiring tennis player and has a tremendous financial value, but there are many intangible benefits from pursuing this worthy pathway.
The US College Tennis Pathway
The US college tennis pathway starts with U10 and U12 players testing their skills at summer community clubs, then joining year-round competitive tennis programs and competing at local, provincial, national and potentially international events from U10 to U18 age groups.
After graduating from U18 junior tennis and high school, these youngsters are ready to pursue a US tennis scholarship. This pathway is a way to continue to play the game that many young athletes love and allows them to be a part of a team working together towards common goals all while enjoy the camaraderie with teammates and develop life-long friendships and relationships.
Note: Although many athletes start playing and competing early in their junior careers, it is important to know that it is possible to pick up a racquet at a later age and obtain an athletic scholarship to a US college.
Why College Tennis?
College tennis in the United States is an exciting and rewarding experience. College tennis gives you, the student athlete, the ability to improve your tennis while furthering your education and earning an accredited bachelors degree.
There is a tremendous financial value for aiming for an athletic scholarship.
Financial Considerations: The monetary value of a US College Tennis Scholarship
If you do not receive athletic scholarship aid, some student-athletes are offered a position on their school’s tennis team and receive an academic scholarship (depending on their SAT grades and high school transcripts). Other student athletes may be offered a part academic scholarship and part athletic scholarship.
Even if you do not receive any type of scholarship, college athletes may collect other significant benefits, such as:
- Priority in scheduling classes
- Help with note taking when a class is missed
- Streamlined registration for courses
- Tutoring help
Resources
Players seeking scholarships
- National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA)
- National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA)
- Tennis Recruiting Network
- Universal Tennis Ratings
- How to Contact College Coaches
- Can You Handle the Life of a College Athlete?
INTERCOLLEGIATE ATHLETICS
The NCAA, NAIA, NJCAA are the governing organizations of collegiate athletics within the United States.
Tennis is one of many amateur sports sponsored by these organizations and have produced some of its great athletes like James Blake (Harvard), Laura Granville (Stanford), Wesley Moodie (Boise State), Bob and Mike Bryan (Stanford), Peter Luczak (Fresno State) and Amer Delic (Illinois).
A number of Canadian players have also taken the NCAA route, including Carol Zhao (Stanford), Brayden Schnur (UNC) and Benjamin Sigouin (UNC).
Intercollegiate Divisions
2025 Canadian NCAA Rankings
Mar. 4, 2025
MEN
Singles (Top 125)
- #53 – Jaden Weekes (Kentucky)
- #111 – Chris Xu (UNC Chapel Hill)
Doubles (Top 90)
- #22 – Keegan Rice (Virginia)
- #33 – Christophe Clément (Georgia Tech)
- #70 – Aram Noroozian (New Mexico)
- #87 – Duncan Chan (TCU)
Teams (Top 75)
- #2 – TCU (Duncan Chan)
- #5 – Virginia (Keegan Rice)
- #8 – Arizona (Matthias Uwe Kask, Sasha Rozin)
- #10 – Colombia (Junghee You)
- #17 – Princeton (Aleksandar Mitric)
- #23 – Clemson (Stewart Aronson, Katean Mehta)
- #27 – Kentucky (Eric Crivei, Jaden Weekes)
- #30 – University of Pennsylvania (Tal Goodman)
- #33 – Southern California (Connor Church)
- #42 – Georgia Tech (Christophe Clement)
- #44 – Purdue (Stefan Simeaunovic)
- #46 – Middle Tennessee (Kristian Thomas)
- #49 – Washington (Stephane Kamendje)
- #54 – Oregon (Lachlan Robertson)
- #55 – Utah (Emmett Potter)
- #57 – Virginia Tech (Maxime St-Hilaire)
- #60 – Penn State (Stefan Simeaunovic)
- #63 – Dartmouth (Denny Bao, Henry Ren)
- #68 – Chris Xu (UNC Chapel Hill)
WOMEN
Singles (Top 125)
- #24 – Annabelle Xu (Virginia)
- #37 – Josie Usereau (Arizona)
- #43 – Teah Chavez (Ohio State)
- #51 – Mia Kupres (Texas A&M)
- #54 – Cadence Brace (LSU)
- #63 – Kayla Cross (LSU)
- #89 – Orly Ogilvy (Yale)
- #94 – Scarlett Nicholson (Georgia Tech)
- #116 – Martyna Ostrzygalo (Arizone)
- #121 – Mélodie Collard (Virginia)
Doubles (Top 90)
- #1 – Mélodie Collard (Virginia)
- #11 – Cadence Brace, Kayla Cross (LSU)
- #29 – Martyna Ostrzygalo (Arizona)
- #32 – Teah Chavez (Ohio State)
- #35 – Annabelle Xu (Virginia)
- #47 – Jessica Alsola (California, Berkeley)
- #67 – Eva Goncharov (DePaul)
- #68 – Mia Kupres (Texas A&M)
- #35 – Reece Carter, Alexia Jacobs (Washington)
Teams (Top 75)
- #2 – Virginia (Mélodie Collard, Annabelle Xu)
- #4 – Texas A&M (Mia Kupres)
- #7 – Ohio State (Alessia Cau, Teah Chavez)
- #8 – LSU (Cadence Brace, Kayla Cross)
- #11 – Auburn (Ariana Arseneault)
- #13 – Texas Tech (Hailey Murphy)
- #21 – Washington (Reece Carter, Catherine Gagnon, Alexia Jacobs)
- #22 – Georgia Tech (Scarlett Nicholson)
- #28 – UCLA (Bianca Fernandez)
- #29 – Yale (Orly Ogilvy)
- #31 – Arizona (Zoya Chulak, Martyna Ostrzygalo, Danielle Tuhten, Josie Usereau)
- #34 – Penn State (Jelena Vico)
- #51 – UC Santa Barbara (Emma Tutoveanu, Raphaelle Leroux)
- #54 – Ole Miss (Rachel Krzyzak)
- #60 – University of Minnesota (Anlie Xie)
- #63 – Princeton (Leena Bennetto)
- #69 – University of Missouri (Gian Octa)
- #72 – California, Berkeley (Jessica Alsola, Naomi Xu)