Brian Kuklik engineered<BR>a second half comeback<BR>against North Carolina<BR>that came up short.

Women's Tennis Season Wrap-Up

6/10/2002 12:00:00 AM | Women's Tennis

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June 10, 2002

2001-02 Wake Forest Women's Tennis
Season in Review

2001-02 Demon Deacons at a Glance
Overall Record: 24-6 * ACC Record: 6-2
ACC Regular Season Finish: 3rd
Final National Ranking: 8th
NCAA Team Tournament: Quarterfinalists
NCAA Singles: Bea Bielik, Champion * Janet Bergman, 2nd Rd.
NCAA Doubles: Bergman/Bielik, 2nd Rd.

Women's Tennis Closes Out 2002 Season at NCAA Championships...
The Wake Forest women's tennis team enjoyed one of the most successful seasons in school history - both as a team and individually - in 2002. The season culminated at the 2002 NCAA Championships in Stanford, Calif., where the Demon Deacons advanced to the quarterfinals as a team for the third time in school history. Deacon junior Bea Bielik captured the NCAA singles title in record-setting fashion, winning all six matches in straight sets and breaking the NCAA record for fewest games lost (21). Bielik and senior Janet Bergman advanced to the second round of the NCAA Doubles Championship in their third appearance at the tournament. The following pages provide all the highlights and details of an outstanding season...

2002 Team Accomplishments...
* The Demon Deacons tallied 24 dual match victories during the season, tying the school record set in 2000. It also marked the sixth 20-win season in school history.
* After beginning the 2002 season 15th in the rankings, Wake Forest quickly vaulted into the top 10, reaching as high as No. 2 (tying a school record) and finishing eighth.
* Wake Forest, seeded eighth in the 64-team NCAA bracket, was selected to host an NCAA Regional for the second time in school history. Wake won both regional matches to advance to the Championships in Stanford, Calif. The Deacs are undefeated (4-0) in NCAA Regional play at home.
* The Demon Deacons' post-season berth marked its ninth-straight appearance, as well as ninth overall, in the NCAA Tournament. It is the second-longest current NCAA streak for any team at Wake Forest, behind 10 straight appearances by the women's golf team.

Junior Bea Bielik won the NCAA Singles Championship.


Bea Bielik Wins NCAA Singles Championship...
Wake Forest junior Bea Bielik captured the 2002 NCAA Singles Championship with a dominating performance in the title match, winning in just 51 minutes over third-seeded Jessica Lehnhoff of Florida, 6-2, 6-0. The final match was a fitting end to an impressive, record-setting tournament run for Bielik, who posted six consecutive straight set victories and lost just 21 total games during her championship trek. The previous record for an NCAA singles champion was 22 games lost, set by Stanford's Laura Granville in 2000.
Bielik is the first national tennis champion and first female NCAA champion in Wake Forest history, and is also just the second women's tennis player from the ACC to capture the title. (Duke's Vanessa Webb won in 1998.) Bielik joins an elite group of WFU athletes to have captured an NCAA individual title, including Arnold Palmer, Jay Haas, Gary Hallberg and Curtis Strange from mens' golf and Andy Bloom, an NCAA champion in both shot put and discus.
In three seasons of NCAA singles tournament play, Bielik owns a 12-2 mark after advancing to the round of 16 in 2000, the semifinals in 2001 and winning the championship this season.
As the NCAA singles champion, Bielik earns a spot in the main draw of the U.S Open, which takes place in New York in August.

Bea Bielik's Road to the NCAA Singles Championship
First Round: (1) Bea Bielik def. Susanna Lingman (Harvard), 6-4, 6-2
Second Round: (1) Bea Bielik def. Kim Niggemeyer (Fresno State), 6-3, 6-2
Third Round: (1) Bea Bielik def. (9-16) Megan Bradley (UCLA), 6-1, 6-0
Quarterfinals: (1) Bea Bielik def. Kate Pinchbeck (UNC), 6-2, 6-4
Semifinals: (1) Bea Bielik def. (9-16) Erin Burdette (Stanford), 6-1, 6-0
Finals: (1) Bea Bielik def. (3) Jessica Lehnhoff (Florida), 6-2, 6-0

Head Coach Brian Fleishman Named National Coach of the Year...
Wake Forest women's tennis coach Brian Fleishman was named the 2002 Wilson/ITA National Coach of the Year, as announced by the Intercollegiate Tennis Association. The ITA honored Fleishman at its annual awards banquet at the NCAA Championships in Stanford, Calif.
Fleishman guided Wake Forest to this year's NCAA quarterfinals for the second time in three seasons. The 2002 Demon Deacons tied the school record for wins in a season and finished with a 24-6 record. WFU was a mainstay in the top 10 of the national rankings this season and reached as high as No. 2 in March. Fleishman also coached Bea Bielik to the National Intercollegiate Indoor singles and NCAA singles titles and to No. 1 national rankings in singles and doubles (with Janet Bergman) this season.
Fleishman, in his fourth season at the helm of the Demon Deacon program, has compiled a 76-23 record (.768) as a head coach, all at WFU. The 2000 ACC Coach of the Year, Fleishman has led the Deacs to four straight NCAA appearances. He has coached nine All-Americas during his tenure at Wake, which included two seasons (1997-98) as an assistant coach. Under Fleishman's guidance, the Deacons have recorded a 28-4 ACC record the last four seasons and are 9-4 in NCAA Tournament play.
The National Coach of the Year Award is a first for the WFU women's tennis program. Fleishman becomes the second Deacon coach to earn national recognition in the 2001-02 season, as women's golf coach Dianne Dailey was named Coach of the Year by the LPGA this past fall.
A 1991 graduate of Christopher Newport University, Fleishman served as an assistant coach at William and Mary before coming to Winston-Salem.

Bielik Wins Prestigious Honda Award...
Wake Forest's Bea Bielik was named the winner of the 2001-02 Honda Sports Award for tennis, another first for the Demon Deacon athletics program. The annual award is presented to the top collegiate athlete in 12 different sports.
In honor of Bielik's selection, the Honda Awards Program will donate $5,000 towards the women's athletic fund at Wake Forest University.
Bielik is now a nominee for the Honda-Broderick Cup, which is awarded annually to the nation's outstanding collegiate woman athlete. The twelve winners representing the sports of basketball, cross country, field hockey, golf, gymnastics, lacrosse, soccer, softball, swimming and diving, tennis, track and field and volleyball are voted upon through a nationwide ballot distributed to NCAA senior woman administrators.
Bielik and the rest of Sports Award winners will be honored at a banquet in Dallas, Texas on June 17. At that time, the winner of the Honda-Broderick Cup will be announced.

Bielik Named ITA National Player of the Year...
Yet another award was bestowed upon Bea Bielik on June 7, as she was named the 2002 National Player of the Year, as announced by the Intercollegiate Tennis Association (ITA).
Bielik and Georgia's Matias Boeker, the men's award winner, will be honored at the Tennis Week/ITA All-Star Award Ceremonies on August 23 in New York.
Bielik, a junior from Valley Stream, N.Y., won two of the three national events during the season, capturing both the National Indoors and NCAA singles titles.
The ITA National Player of the Year award goes annually to the individuals who have had the most outstanding years in both individual and team competition, as determined by the ITA.

Bergman, Bielik Named All-Americans...
Wake Forest senior Janet Bergman and junior Bea Bielik were both named to the 2002 All-American team by the Intercollegiate Tennis Association (ITA). Bielik earned All-America honors in both singles and doubles, while Bergman was named to the All-American squad in doubles.
Both Demon Deacons are making their third straight appearance on the All-American teams. Bergman was a 2000 selection in doubles and was named to the singles and doubles All-American squads last season. Bielik has been on the All-American teams in both singles and doubles in 2000, 2001 and 2002.
Criteria for selection to the All-American singles team include: top 16 seed in NCAA Singles Championships, or reach round of 16 in NCAA Singles Championships, or finish in the Top 20 of the final Omni Hotels Collegiate Tennis Rankings. Doubles team criteria include: top eight seed in NCAA Doubles Championships, or reach quarterfinals of NCAA Doubles Championship, or finish in Top 10 of final Omni Hotels Collegiate Tennis Rankings.
Bielik, the No.1 seed in the bracket, captured the 2002 NCAA Singles Championship and also finished the season ranked No. 1. As a doubles team, Bergman and Bielik finished the season ranked third nationally after advancing to the second round of the NCAA Championships.

Championship Recap...
After winning its own regional, the WFU women's tennis team advanced to the NCAA team championships in Stanford, Calif., to face Texas in the round of 16.
In the second meeting between the Deacs and the Longhorns this season, Wake posted another victory, topping Texas 4-2 to advance to the quarterfinals for the third time in school history.
Wake Forest put the first point on the board by taking two of three matches for the doubles point. At No. 1 doubles, the tandem of Bea Bielik and Karin Coetzee, playing together for just the third time, defeated Texas' 30th-ranked duo of Ziva Grasic and Vladka Uhlirova by an 8-2 score. Janet Bergman and Maren Haus also topped Lindsay Blau and Kaysie Smashey, 8-3, at No. 2 doubles to clinch the point.
In a battle of two nationally-ranked players at No. 1 singles, Bielik posted a 6-2, 6-2 win over No. 25 Uhlirova to lift the Deacs to a 2-0 score. The Longhorns made it 2-1 when Smashey, ranked 83rd, upset No. 20 Bergman at No. 2 singles, 6-4, 6-2. Texas then evened the match at 2-2 as Michelle Krinke defeated Wake's Elizabeth Proctor, 6-4, 6-1, at No. 6 singles. Proctor had defeated Krinke in the clinching match when the two teams met earlier this season.
At No. 5 singles, Katie Martzolf lifted Wake to a 3-2 lead, rallying in the second set to defeat Blau, 6-2, 7-5.
The final two matches, No. 3 and 4, both went to third sets. At No. 4, Coetzee dropped the second set, 4-6, to Forney after winning the first one, 6-4. She then came back to blank Forney 6-0 in the final set to clinch the team victory, 4-2.
At No. 3 singles, Haus had rallied after losing her first set, 2-6, to win the second, 6-4. She was up 5-3 in the third when the match was clinched.
The next day Wake faced No. 1 Florida, falling 4-0 in a match that was much closer than the score indicated. The Deacs took the Gators to a tiebreaker in doubles, but Florida took the point by winning No. 2 and 3 doubles. WFU did pick up a big upset win at No. 1 doubles, where the unranked tandem of Bielik and Coetzee defeated UF's third-ranked Lindsey Dawaf-Jessica Lehnhoff, 8-5.
The Gators won at No. 3 doubles, 8-2, then the UF tandem of Alexis Gordon and Julia Scaringe needed a tiebreaker to defeat Bergman and Haus, 9-8(3) at No. 2 to clinch the doubles point.
Florida increased its lead to 2-0 when the Gators' No. 6 player, Scaringe, topped Wake's Danielle Schwartz, 6-4, 6-2. UF's Gordon needed three sets to defeat Coetzee, 6-3, 2-6, 6-2 at No. 4, then Gator Zerene Reyes clinched the team's victory with a 6-3, 6-2 win over Haus at No. 3 singles.
Both Bielik (No. 1 singles) and Martzolf (No. 4) were at or nearing match point when Florida clinched the victory.

Bergman Also Makes NCAA Singles, Doubles Appearance...
Bea Bielik was not the only WFU representative in the NCAA singles/doubles championships. Wake Forest senior Janet Bergman made her fourth consecutive appearance in the singles bracket, becoming just the second player in WFU history to earn a four berths in the NCAA singles championship. Bergman opened the 2002 tournament with a straight-set win over Princeton's Kavitha Krishnamurthy, then fell to seventh-seeded Jewel Peterson of Southern Cal, 6-3, 7-5, in the second round.
Bergman and Bielik also teamed up for their third straight appearance in the NCAA doubles tournament. After advancing to the quarterfinals in the previous two seasons, the Deacon duo, seeded second in the bracket, was upset by Duke's Hillary Adams/Kelly McCain, in the second round, 6-4, 6-3.

Regional Recap...
Wake Forest hosted a NCAA regional in 2002 for the second time in school history, with American, No. 16 William & Mary and No. 40 Clemson participating. The Tigers upset the Tribe, 4-3, in the first match, as freshman Alix Lacelarie defeated William & Mary's Jessyca Arthur in a three-set thriller at No. 1 singles to clinch the match.
Wake Forest made quick work of its opening-round opponent, handing Patriot League champion American a 4-0 shutout. The Deacs got off to a fast start and never looked back, clinching the doubles point with victories at No. 1 and No. 3 doubles. The duo of Bea Bielik and Karin Coetzee, playing together for the first time this season, defeated American's top duo of Kristina Georgieva and Lauren Martin, 8-1. Wake's freshman tandem of Katie Martzolf and Danielle Schwartz clinched the point by blanking the Eagles' Lourdes Riusech and Annemarie Schoemaker at No. 3, 8-0.
Deacon Liz Proctor put the first singles point on the board, winning 6-1, 6-0 over AU's Melissa Rausch at No. 6. Bielik defeated Olga Mikhailova, 6-1, 6-1 at No. 1. Wake's Janet Bergman, ranked 20th, then clinched the match with a 6-0, 6-1 victory at No. 2 over Georgieva. The other three WFU players had won their opening sets and were all leading the second when the match was called.
The Deacons then defeated Clemson, 4-1, the following day to advance to the round of 16 in the NCAA Championships. WFU got off to a very strong start, taking the doubles point with convincing wins at No. 2 and 3 doubles. At No. 2, the senior duo of Bergman and Maren Haus posted an 8-2 victory over Clemson's Anna Savitskaya and Ania Dolinska. Martzolf and Schwartz teamed up again at No. 3 for a 8-1 win over the Tigers' Milena Stanoytcheva and Richele LeSaldo.
The Clemson squad fought back, however, as singles started off with some tight matches. At No. 1 singles, Lacelarie and Bielik, both nationally ranked, were knotted at 3-3 in the first set. Bielik went to win the next three games, then cruised in the second set for a 6-3, 6-1 victory.
Bergman also found herself in a tight battle with Savitskaya in the early goings at No. 2, but her 6-3, 6-2 victory gave the Demon Deacons a 3-0 lead in the match. Clemson then picked up its lone win of the day at No. 6 singles, where Stanoytcheva outlasted Schwartz, 7-5, 6-2.
Another Deacon freshman, Coetzee, provided the clinching victory at No. 4 singles, defeating Tiger Laurence Jayet, 6-2, 6-2.

Deacons Rack Up Regional Awards...
Three members of the Wake Forest women's tennis program earned Southeast Region postseason awards, as announced by the ITA. WFU head coach Brian Fleishman has been named Region Coach of the Year, Janet Bergman was honored with the Senior Player of the Year award, and Bea Bielik was named the Southeast Region's "Player to Watch".
The Region Coach of the Year Award is a first for Fleishman, and the third for WFU women's tennis. Former head coach Lew Gerrard earned the honor in 1995 and '97.
Bergman and Bielik have been two of the most decorated players in the history of Wake Forest women's tennis.
Bergman, who did not miss a dual match during her entire four-year career with the Deacons, is Wake's all-time leader in both singles (129) and doubles (117) victories. One of just two players in Wake history to be named to the All-ACC team four times, Bergman is also a three-time All-American in both singles and doubles. The Senior Player of the Year award was a fitting bookend to Bergman's career, as she was the Southeast Region's Rookie of the Year in 1999.
Bielik, a junior, has now been named the Southeast Region's "Player to Watch" for the second time in her career, as she also earned the honor in 2000. Bielik was also honored with the 2002 ACC Player of the Year award. She is also rewriting the Deacon record book, as she ranks first in career singles win percentage (.893) and already ranks among tied for second in career doubles wins.

A Quick Look at the 2002 Lineup...
Wake Forest fielded a relatively young lineup in 2002, with three freshmen, two sophomores, a junior and two seniors competing on a regular basis. Bea Bielik (Valley Stream, N.Y.) topped the Deacon lineup at No. 1 singles. Bielik, the 2002 NCAA singles champion and nation's No. 1 player, finished the season with a 35-2 record, including a 28-2 mark against nationally-ranked opponents.
Janet Bergman, who finished the year ranked 25th nationally, played at No. 2 in the lineup, compiling a 28-13 record (9-11 versus ranked opponents) and advanced to the second round of the NCAA championships. She finished her career as Wake's all-time wins leader (129).
The Nos. 3, 4, and 5 singles spots were interchangeable between senior Maren Haus (Brielle, N.J.), freshman Karin Coetzee (Bloemfontein, South Africa) and freshman Katie Martzolf (Indianapolis, Ind.) throughout the season. Haus played at No. 3 in the postseason, and finished the year with a 20-18 record. Coetzee, who gave a solid performance after joining the team in January, put together a 16-6 mark, including clinching NCAA wins over Clemson and Texas. Martzolf finished the year ranked 110th nationally with a 28-9 singles record.
Wake used two different players at No. 6 singles in NCAA play, including sophomore Elizabeth Proctor (Myrtle Beach, S.C.) and freshman Danielle Schwartz (Livingston, N.J.). Both players finished the season with even .500 records, as Proctor went 11-11 and Schwartz posted a 10-10 overall mark.
Sophomore Aimee Smith (Norcross, Ga.) missed out on NCAA play due to a stress fracture in her right leg. During the season she compiled a 10-10 singles mark, playing mainly at Nos. 5 and 6.

Deacon Doubles Debuted a New Look for NCAAs...
Wake Forest changed its doubles look for the NCAA team tournament. The duo of Janet Bergman and Bea Bielik, three-time All-Americans and two-time NCAA quarterfinalists, split up for the team tournament after playing together nearly all season at No. 1. The move proved to be effective in strengthening the lineup, as all three Deacon duos showed signs of dominance during the regional. At No. 1, Bielik and Karin Coetzee, playing together for the first time, posted an 3-0 record with wins over two ranked opponents, including Florida third-ranked tandem. Bergman and Maren Haus, who teamed up earlier this season to go 2-0 while Bielik was injured, went 2-1 in the NCAA Tournament. The freshman duo of Katie Martzolf and Danielle Schwartz, who put together an impressive 18-9 record this spring, lost just one game in the regional, blanking American 8-0 and defeating Clemson 8-1.

To Be the Best, You Have to Play the Best...
Wake Forest faced a tough schedule in 2002, as 26 of its 30 opponents were ranked in the nation's top 75 (at the time of the match), including 10 top-10 teams. The Deacs faced Stanford, the 2001 and '02 national champions, and saw Florida, the NCAA runners-up, twice this season.
Wake Forest played 10 matches against teams that advanced to California for the NCAA Team Championships, compiling 4-6 record against those squads. The Deacs defeated Tennessee and Texas twice, while all six of their losses this season came against teams that finished the season ranked among the top six - No. 1 Stanford, No. 2 Florida (twice), No. 5 North Carolina (twice) and No. 6 Duke.

Bielik Named ACC Player of the Year...
Wake Forest junior Bea Bielik was named the ACC Player of the Year, selected by a vote of the league's head coaches, in April. She is the second ACC Women's Tennis Player of the Year to come out of WFU in the last three years and becomes the school's second such honoree in the 2001-02 season. Field hockey's Jemima Cameron was named ACC co-Player of the Year in the fall. Bielik's selection to the 2002 All-ACC team was also her third straight.

Bergman Named All-ACC for the Fourth Time...
Wake senior Janet Bergman was named to the 2002 All-Atlantic Coast Conference team, her fourth consecutive selection to the squad. She sets a milestone in becoming just the second WFU player to be named to the squad all four years of her career. Terry Ann Zawacki (1993-96) was the first.

Deacs in the Rankings...
After checking in the preseason rankings at No. 14 as a team, Wake Forest vaulted into the top 10 in mid-February and remained there over the course of the season. The Deacs reached as high as No. 2 nationally (tying their highest ranking in school history) and finished the season at No. 8.
Several individual Deacons finished the season among the nation's top players as well. Junior Bea Bielik was ranked No. 1 in singles for most of the season before a sprained ankle forced her to retire against Duke's Kelly McCain on April 11. Bielik dropped to No. 2 during that time, but regained her No. 1 ranking at the end of the season after winning the NCAA title.
Bielik and Janet Bergman were also ranked No. 1 in doubles for most of the season but finished third after falling in the second round of the NCAA doubles tournament. The duo has been ranked among the nation's top five for the last two seasons.
Bergman was also ranked among the top 25 in singles all season, reaching as high as No. 12 and finishing 25th. Freshman Katie Martzolf entered the rankings after the fall, reaching as high as 48th and finishing the season at No. 110.

Doubles Delight...
Perhaps the biggest difference between the 2001 and 2002 seasons was the Deacons' improvement in doubles. After winning just over 49 percent of its doubles matches last spring, the squad won nearly 71 percent (58 of 82) of its doubles matches in dual meets this year. In overall doubles, WFU won nearly 72 percent of its matches (82 of 114). The Deacs also improved from a .522 winning percentage in ACC doubles matches last season to a .792 percentage (19-5 record) this spring.
Wake won the doubles point in 21 of 29 matches (72 percent) and owned a 20-1 overall record when taking that point.

Home Sweet Home...Indoors or Out
Wake Forest continues to enjoy a homecourt advantage, as its record over the past few years indicates. Over the last three seasons, the Deacs have posted a 30-2 mark in matches played at either Leighton Stadium, the WFU Indoor Center or the Upper Eight courts. Wake went 13-1 at home this season with its only loss coming to No. 3 Florida on March 23 at Leighton.

Netting the Honors...
Wake Forest picked up three ACC Player of the Week honors during the course of the season. Bea Bielik earned the honor twice. The first came on Feb. 25, after she went 2-0 in both singles and doubles with wins over Virginia Tech and William & Mary. The second honor came on March 25 after she defeated Florida's No. 2 singles player and doubles team, as well as a ranked singles player from FSU.
Bielik also received the ITA's National Player of the Month honor for February, after posting a 7-0 singles record during the month. Bielik and Janet Bergman, with their 8-0 record in February, were named the ITA's National Doubles Team of the Month.
Maren Haus was also named ACC Player of the Week on March 4 after going 3-0 in both singles at the UNLV Invitational, including one win over a ranked opponent.

Bergman the Record-Breaker...
Wake Forest senior Janet Bergman has rewritten the Wake record books during her Deacon career. This season she became WFU's all-time leader in both singles and doubles victories, with 129 singles wins and 117 doubles. Bergman surpassed the previous singles recordholder, Terry Ann Zawacki, by 13 wins and finished her career 23 victories ahead of Monica Kowalewski, the previous doubles leader.
Bergman also ranks third in career singles winning percentage (.737) while she and Bea Bielik rank third all-time in career doubles wins for a team (74).
She is also just the second player in school history (Zawacki was the first) to be named to the All-ACC Team four times.

A Standout in the Classroom, the Court and the Studio...
Now a Wake Forest graduate, Maren Haus was not only been a success on the tennis court, she's earned accolades for her academics as well. Haus was been named to the WFU Dean's List every semester of her collegiate career. This spring she was honored with the ACC's Weaver-James-Corrigan Postgraduate Scholarship, and most recently she was named Wake's nominee for the ACC Award for Excellence in Scholarship and Athletics.
Haus, who earned a degree in Studio Art, put a collection of her paintings on display in a local coffee house in Winston-Salem during the month prior to graduation.

Other Statistical Tidbits for 2002...
* Counting individual matches from the fall and spring, the Deacons posted a 42-35 record (.545) versus ranked opponents in singles and went 16-10 (.615) against ranked doubles teams.
* Every player on the Wake Forest women's tennis team finished with a .500 or better record in singles. Of the 13 different doubles combinations used throughout the season, 10 of them posted a .500 or better record.
* The doubles team of Janet Bergman and Bea Bielik tied the school's single-season record for doubles wins with 32 in 2001-02. The Deacon duo also closed out their three-year run with 74 career victories, which ranks third on Wake's all-time list.
* Although they didn't play every match together this season, Janet Bergman and Bea Bielik also tied with each other and set a new school record with 36 doubles victories apiece during the 2001-02 campaign. The previous record was 35, set by Jackie van Wijk in 1987.
* Only five players in school history rank among the top 10 on both the singles and doubles career wins list, and three of those were members of the 2001-02 squad - Bea Bielik, Janet Bergman and Maren Haus. Bergman wrapped up her career ranked first in both categories (129 singles, 117 doubles), while Haus finished seventh in singles (103) and ninth in doubles (70). With one more year of eligibility remaining, Bielik already ranks ninth in singles (100) and is tied for second in doubles (94). The other two players who rank on both lists are Terry Ann Zawacki and Angelique Lodewyks.

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