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To write Amy Bryant:
Amy Bryant
Women's Tennis Coach
Emory University
Woodruff PE Center
600 Asbury Circle
Atlanta, GA 30322
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Amy Bryant, Head Coach
Amy Bryant is the fifth person and
first female in NCAA history, in any division, to win the
national team championship as a coach and player. She did
the former in 2003, 2004, 2005, and 2006 and the latter as the
No. 1 singles player on Emory's 1996 national championship
team.
Bryant, a former All-American, assumed
the head coaching duties in 2000. In her seven seasons, the
Eagles have compiled a 138-27 record (.84 win percentage)
with seven appearances in the NCAA national quarterfinals and
five appearances in the NCAA team championship finals.
Bryant was selected the national Division
III Coach of the Year by the Intercollegiate Tennis Association
in 2003, and the ITA regional Division III Coach of the Year
in 2002, 2003, and 2004. She and her assistants have been
honored five times as the conference Coaching Staff of the
Year by the University Athletic Association.
Her 2006 squad became the first Division
III team ever to win a fourth consecutive national championship.
To claim the championship they had to avenge three losses suffered to teams in regular season play.
Her 2005 squad became the first Division
III team ever to win a third consecutive national championship.
They did it despite replacing three players in the singles
lineup with freshmen.
Her 2004 squad became the first to
repeat as unofficial "triple crown" winners by capturing
the NCAA team, singles and doubles championships. It was an
all-Emory final in both the NCAA singles and doubles championships.
The squad compiled a 24-1 dual-match record, losing only to
the eventual NAIA national champion.
Her 2003 squad became the second
in Division III women's tennis history to achieve the unofficial
"triple crown" by winning the NCAA team, singles
and doubles championships. The squad compiled a 24-1 dual-match
record, losing only to an NCAA Division II school.
Her 2002 team advanced to the NCAA
national finals and the 2001 squad finished third at the national
championships.
Bryant coached a doubles pairing to
four consecutive NCAA national titles (2001-04) and a singles
player to back-to-back NCAA national championships (2003-04).
Bryant, a 1996 Emory graduate, was
the first women's tennis player in school history to earn
All-America honors in both singles and doubles. She was the
runner-up in the NCAA national singles championship her junior
season and teamed up to reach the semifinals of the NCAA doubles
championship her senior year.
At the time of her graduation, Bryant
ranked fifth on the school's all-time list with 76 career
singles victories and fifth in career double victories with
66. She compiled a 24-4 singles record her junior season and
was selected the conference's Most Valuable Player her senior
year. All four years, Bryant made the all-conference first
team in singles and doubles.
She also was a standout in soccer
where she twice made the all-region team. Though Bryant only
played three seasons of soccer, she graduated with the school
record for career goals and points. She was a two-time female
winner of the school's Bridges Award as its outstanding all-around
athlete and won the McCord Award her junior year for outstanding
individual athletic achievement.
Bryant was inducted into the Emory
Sports Hall of Fame in 2001. |