UCF Edged by Duke in NCAA Round of 16

The Knights' comeback attempt after losing doubles fell just short as UCF was edged 4-3 by #18 Duke in the third round of the NCAA Tournament

05.17.21

By: UCF Athletics

ORLANDO, Fla. – The No. 9 ranked and nationally seeded UCF women's tennis team saw its season come to an end in the round of 16 of the NCAA Tournament as the Knights were edged by No. 18 Duke 4-3 on Sunday night.

The match was tight from the first serve in doubles. The Knights jumped out to a 3-1 lead on all three courts and saw Ksenia Kuznetsova and Valeriya Zeleva ride that momentum to a 6-3 victory on court two over No. 9 Chloe Beck and Karolina Berankova. Kuznetsova and Zeleva finish the season 14-4 after tallying their first win over a ranked opponent together this season. The remaining two courts went the way of the Blue Devils. Court one finished next as No. 10 Meible Chi and Margaryta Bilokin beat Rebeka Stolmar and Marie Mattel 6-3 before court three gave Duke the doubles point as No. 41 Kelly Chen and Georgia Drummy beat Evgeniya Levashova and Nadja Bay Christians 6-4.

The Knights put themselves in a good position coming out of doubles, winning four of six first sets. Duke rode their first frames to straight set victories as No. 40 Chi Beat Kuznetsova 6-2, 6-3 on court four and No. 19 Drummy beat Stolmar 6-4, 6-4 on court two.

UCF was in a good spot despite being down 3-0 on the scoreboard and had control of each remaining court.

The Black and Gold earned their first point of the match on court one where No. 22 Zeleva earned a 6-4, 6-2 win over No. 49 Chen at the top spot in singles. The victory was Zeleva's 13th in a row as she improves to 13-2 on the season and 8-2 against ranked opponents.

Nandini Sharma was next to put a point on the scoreboard as she bested Berankova 6-1, 7-5 on court six. Sharma wraps up the campaign with an impressive 11-2 mark having won six of her last seven decisions.

Jaleesa Leslie worked her way through a three-set battle to knot the match up at 3-3 with her 6-2, 1-6, 6-1 triumph over Bilokin. The standout freshman finishes the season as the team's leader in wins, collecting a 16-4 record and winning her final four matches.

The fate of the match rested in the hands of court three where Levashova was going toe-to-toe with No. 39 Beck. Levashova took the opening set by a count of 6-4 before Beck retaliated with a 6-2 victory in the second stanza.

The final frame's first five games were all holds and saw Beck take a 3-2 lead after serving first. Out of the following changeover, Beck earned a break but saw Levashova break back. Another round of breaks had Beck up 5-4 as she eventually went on to win 4-6, 6-2, 6-4 and eliminate the Knights from postseason contention.

The Black and Gold's season was one to remember and was arguably one of, if not the best campaigns in program history. The Knights finish with a record of 20-5, achieving a 20-win season for just third time in the Koniecko era, bringing the program total to seven overall. Eight of UCF's 20 victories were over ranked opponents, one of them including an upset of No. 4 FSU in Tallahassee, which propelled the team into the top 10 of the Oracle/ITA rankings for the first time in program history. UCF climbed to No. 8 after that win and earned their first national seed, checking into the NCAA Tournament at No. 9. The Knights were champions of The American for the second straight season, winning back-to-back conference titles for the first time since 1999-2000. The Knights can make the claim that they're state champs after going 10-0 against seven different in state opponents, including a pair of wins against Florida and Miami.