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Women's Tennis Coach Directory

NCAA Division I · click any email to write to a coach directly

Contacts
664
Programs
304
Last updated
June 2026
Source
Official athletics directories
Cost
Free on-page · CSV export $20
Bulk export
664
NameTitleEmailSchool
Kirstin BurgessHead Coachburgessk@ecu.eduEast Carolina University
Taylor RodgersAssistant Coachrodgersta24@ecu.eduEast Carolina University
Maria AlvarezAssistant Coachmariafernandaalv@fau.eduFlorida Atlantic University
Elizabeth SchmidtHead Coacheschmidt@rice.eduRice University
Blair ShankleAssociate Head Coachblair.shankle@rice.eduRice University
Jeanette MirelesAssistant CoachRice University
A.J. CulverAssistant Women's Coacharsenio.culver@temple.eduTemple University
Noah GamzaGraduate Assistant CoachTemple University
Alexa GamborinoGraduate Assistant Coachtuu83380@temple.eduTemple University
Anthony DavisonHead CoachAnthony.Davison@charlotte.eduThe University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Jan GrigaAssociate Head Coachjan.griga@charlotte.eduThe University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Dean OrfordWomen's Head Coachdean-orford@utulsa.eduThe University of Tulsa
Mark WattWomen's Assistant Coachmaw0834@utulsa.eduThe University of Tulsa
Maru BritoHead Coachmbritopena@tulane.eduTulane University
Keri WongAssistant Coachkwong6@tulane.eduTulane University
Mark TjiaHead Coachmarktjia@uab.eduUniversity of Alabama at Birmingham
Paula BairdAssistant CoachPaulaBaird@uab.eduUniversity of Alabama at Birmingham
Pardis KianoushVolunteer Assistant Coachpnoush@uab.eduUniversity of Alabama at Birmingham
Hayden PerezHead Coachhperez@memphis.eduUniversity of Memphis
Ryan HaymondAssociate Head Coachrchymond@memphis.eduUniversity of Memphis
Amanda StoneHead Coachamanda.stone2@unt.eduUniversity of North Texas
Cristina MorosHead Coachmoros1@usf.eduUniversity of South Florida
Logan Burgess HayesAssociate Head Coachlburgesshayes@usf.eduUniversity of South Florida
Ki KrollHead Coachki.kroll@utsa.eduUniversity of Texas at San Antonio
Bruno CamposAssistant CoachUniversity of Texas at San Antonio
Jacob EddinsHead Coachjeddins@goshockers.comWichita State University
Chad KissellAssistant Coachckissell@goshockers.comWichita State University
Michaela Kissell-EddinsAssistant CoachWichita State University
Susanne DepkaHead Coachsudepka@davidson.eduDavidson College
Kelly LarkinAssociate Head Coachkelarkin@davidson.eduDavidson College
George DieffenbachAssistant Coachdieffenbachg@duq.eduDuquesne University
George StephensAssistant Coach (Women's)stephensg@duq.eduDuquesne University
Michael SowterDirector of Tennis/Head Women's Tennis Coachmsowter@fordham.eduFordham University
Demi JhaveriAssistant Coachdjhaveri@fordham.eduFordham University
Eden RichardsonAssistant Coacherichardson27@fordham.eduFordham University
Stephen CurtisHead Coachscurtis2@gmu.eduGeorge Mason University
Jackie CallaHead Coachj.calla1@gwu.eduGeorge Washington University
Stella WiesemannAssistant Coachswiesemann02@gwu.eduGeorge Washington University
Jeff PuhanHead Coachjpuhan@sju.eduSaint Joseph's University
Donovan McKnightAssistant Coachdmcknight@sju.eduSaint Joseph's University
Jason HarkenAssistant Coachjharken@sju.eduSaint Joseph's University
James TobinHead Coachjames.tobin.1@slu.eduSaint Louis University
Lizzie BarlowAssistant Coachelizabeth.barlow@health.slu.eduSaint Louis University
Michael BatesHead Men's and Women's Tennis Coachmbates@sbu.eduSt. Bonaventure University
Erica EchkoHead Coacheechko1@udayton.eduUniversity of Dayton
Natasha AlekhovaAssistant CoachUniversity of Dayton
Jonas BrobeckHead Coachjonas.brobeck@uri.eduUniversity of Rhode Island
Max SchmidhauserAssistant Coachmax.schmidhauser@uri.eduUniversity of Rhode Island
Jacob DunbarAssociate Head Coachjacob.dunbar@richmond.eduUniversity of Richmond
Emily DunbarAssociate Head Coachemily.dunbar@richmond.eduUniversity of Richmond
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Sourced from official athletics staff directories · 664 coaches · 304 programs · data may change — verify on the school's site before sending.

How to email coaches · Sample email · FAQ
  1. 1

    Build your shortlist

    Search the directory for the programs that fit your academic and athletic profile before you reach out.

  2. 2

    Find the right coach

    Each program lists its full staff with titles, so you can write to the recruiting coordinator or position coach directly rather than a generic inbox.

  3. 3

    Email coaches directly

    Use each coach's name, title, and email to send a short, personalized note — under 150 words, with your grad year, position, and a highlight-reel link.

Sample outreach email

Subject: Women's Tennis Recruit — [Your Name], Class of [Year]

Coach [Last Name],

My name is [Your Name] — I'm a [Year] [Position] from [City, State], graduating in [Year].

My key stats: [one or two numbers that matter for your sport]. I've been watching [University]'s program closely — [one specific thing you genuinely like about their team or coaching style].

I'd love to be considered. I've attached my athletic résumé and highlight reel below.

Happy to chat whenever suits you.

[Your Name]
[Phone] · [Email] · [Highlight reel link]

Tip from Harry: personalise line 3 for every program. A coach can tell in two seconds if you've done your homework.

How to contact college women's tennis coaches

Reaching out directly is normal and expected — college women's tennis coaches build their recruiting classes from the athletes who email them. The process is simple: identify the right person on each staff, send a short note they can evaluate in thirty seconds, and follow up once if you don't hear back.

Email the right coach, not just the head coach

At most NCAA Division I programs, an assistant coach or recruiting coordinator owns the first read of every prospect — the head coach sees recruits the staff has already filtered. The directory above lists every staff member with their title, so you can address the person whose job is to find players like you, and copy the head coach if you want both names on the thread.

Lead with the numbers a women's tennis coach screens for

Your first email should open with your UTR or national ranking, recent tournament results, and a link to match footage. Coaches decide in one read whether you're in range for their program, so put the evaluable facts first and the personality second — our copy-ready email templates show the exact structure.

Work a list, not a wish — and follow up

Recruiting is a numbers game played politely: pick 20–40 programs across divisions that fit your level and academics, email them all, track who opens and replies, and follow up once after two weeks. The full method is in our complete guide to contacting college coaches.

Women's Tennis recruiting questions, answered

How do I contact a college women's tennis coach?
Email is the standard first touch. Find the right staff member — for women's tennis, that's usually the recruiting coordinator or an assistant coach rather than the head coach — and send a short, personalised note with your UTR or national ranking, recent tournament results, and a link to match footage. Every NCAA Division I women's tennis staff email is in the free directory on this page.
When can college women's tennis coaches respond to recruits?
NCAA contact rules vary by sport and division — for most sports, D1 coaches can communicate directly with recruits from June 15 after sophomore year or September 1 of junior year. You can email a coach at any age, and many programs will reply through your club or school coach before direct contact opens. Check the current NCAA recruiting calendar for women's tennis to be sure.
What should I include in my first email to a women's tennis coach?
Lead with your UTR or national ranking, recent tournament results, and a link to match footage. Add your graduation year, your academic profile (GPA and test scores help at selective schools), and one specific reason you're interested in that program. Keep the whole email under 150 words.
Do college women's tennis coaches actually read recruiting emails?
Yes — but they skim. Coaches receive hundreds of emails a week, so a specific subject line ("Women's Tennis recruit, Class of 2027 — [your key number]"), a short body, and an easy link to your film or results determine whether you get a reply. If you don't hear back, one polite follow-up after about two weeks is expected, not pushy.
About this list

What's included

This NCAA Division I Women's Tennis coach contact list contains verified names, job titles, email addresses, and phone numbers for head coaches, assistant coaches, and support staff across every D1 program in the country. Each record includes the coach's full name, role (e.g. Head Coach, Associate Head Coach, Assistant Coach, Director of Operations, Recruiting Coordinator), institutional email address, direct phone number where available, school name, athletic conference, and state. Data was last verified and updated June 2026.

Who uses this list

The NCAA Division I Women's Tennis contact database is used by recruiting technology vendors, sports media companies, apparel and equipment suppliers, camp and clinic operators, college planning consultants, and families of prospective student-athletes who need to reach women's tennis coaching staffs directly. Having accurate, up-to-date coach contact information removes the need to manually search individual athletic department websites — a process that typically takes hours per school.

Why coach contact data goes stale quickly

NCAA women's tennis coaching staffs turn over frequently — head coach hires, assistant promotions, and mid-season departures mean that publicly available rosters and staff directories can be out of date within weeks of publication. This list is refreshed regularly to reflect current staff across all D1 programs, so you're not emailing coaches who have moved on.

How access works

The directory is open — every coach's name, title, email and phone number is right here on the page, free to read and use, with no account or payment. Click any email to write to a coach directly. A free account is optional: it lets you save a shortlist and get new-list alerts. Data was last verified and updated June 2026.

Frequently asked questions

Are the emails verified? Yes. Addresses are cross-referenced against institutional athletic department directories and filtered to remove known bounces.

Does this include all D1 conferences? Yes — the list covers all NCAA Division I Women's Tennis programs across every conference, from the ACC and SEC to mid-major and independent programs.

Can I use this for outreach campaigns? Yes. Email coaches straight from this page, or copy the addresses into your own email platform. Always comply with applicable email and data regulations. For copy-ready first contact and follow-up emails, see our college coach email templates.

Is it really free? Yes — the entire NCAA Division I Women's Tennis directory is free to browse and use, with no account, login, or paywall on any contact detail.