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Tennis Staff
 Geoff Macdonald
Geoff Macdonald, Vanderbilt's longest- tenured coach, enters his 20th season as the head coach of the women's tennis team. Macdonald heads into the 2014 dual season as VU's active leader in career wins as a head coach.
 
During the previous 19 seasons, the two-time SEC Coach of the Year has placed the Commodores among the nation's elite programs on a consistent basis.
 
Since Macdonald joined the Vanderbilt staff in 1994, the Commodore tennis program has developed a reputation for rapid player improvement, strong commitments to coaching, and unmatched excellence on the court and in the classroom.
 
Before Macdonald's arrival, the Vanderbilt women's tennis program had never been ranked higher than No. 28 in the nation. Under his leadership, the Commodores have finished no lower than No. 19 in 16 of the past 19 years, including a school record No. 2 ranking at the end of the 2004 season.
 
In 2013, the Commodores finished 16-12 overall and 7-6 in Southeastern Conference play. Macdonald's team advanced to the second-round of the NCAA Tournament before falling to No. 13 Clemson. Vanderbilt has made it to the NCAA Tournament in each of Macdonald's nineteen seasons.
 
During the 2012 season, Macdonald guided the tennis squad to the NCAA Tournament. The team advanced to the Second Round of the NCAA Championships before falling to one of the top teams in the country, Southern Cal.
 
In 2011, Macdonald lead his team back to the NCAA tournament with an appearance in the Sweet 16 round.
 
In 2008, Macdonald and his team started out hot as they won eight of their first 10 matches, including wins over No. 2 Georgia Tech and No. 9 Notre Dame. The 2008 squad won eight straight matches in March, including six straight SEC matches.
 
His 2008 squad defeated eight top-25 teams in route to its 11th straight sweet 16 appearance. During the first round of the 2008 NCAA Tournament, Vanderbilt's 4-0 win over Indiana State gave Macdonald his 300th career win, putting himself among the nation's best. The Commodores finished the year with a 20-6 (.769) record and were ranked 10th nationally by the ITA.
 
While Macdonald's leadership continues to improve the Commodore program every season, Macdonald's impact was felt immediately in his very first year at Vanderbilt in 1995. The team finished the year 16-8, including an 8-3 mark in the SEC and advanced to the NCAA Championships for the first time in school history.
 
Once Vanderbilt began its rise to the top, the achievements kept coming. In 1996, the Commodores posted a 24-7 record, finished second in the SEC, advanced to the SEC Tournament Championship match for the first time and, once again, earned a berth in the NCAA Championships, advancing to the Round of 16. The team's 24 wins marked the the third most wins by a single team in the nation that year.
 
The team continued to improve with each successful season and in 2001 the 'Dores finally found themselves in the national spotlight as they competed in the NCAA finals. The event marked the first time that any Vanderbilt sports team had played for a national championship. Despite falling to the Stanford Cardinals, Macdonald's squad ended the season with a 26-5 record and a No. 4 national ranking, while three singles players and two doubles teams earned individual bids to the NCAA championships.
 
The following season, Macdonald not only matched the success of the previous year, but led the 'Dores to a record-setting 27 wins. The team also advanced to the finals of the National Team Indoors tournament, which features sixteen of the top ranked teams in the country. Following the season, Sarah Riske and Aleke Tsoubanos were both named ITA All-Americans.
 
In 2003, Macdonald oversaw the final year of Sarah Riske's career, who became the school's only four-time All-American (two in singles, two in doubles). Riske left VU as the school's all-time winningest doubles player, but Tsoubanos surpassed that mark a year later. The `Dores finished the 2003 season with a 21-6 record en route to advancing to the Elite Eight of the NCAA Tournament.
 
In 2004, the Commodores returned to the Final Four in the NCAA Tournament where they lost to undefeated Stanford, the eventual national champions. The 2004 Commodore team included All American, All-Academic and ITA Scholar Tsoubanos, who is entering her sixth year as Macdonald's assistant. Other honors achieved by Commodores included Annie Menees' All Academic and ITA Scholar awards, while Audra Falk and Kelly Schmandt landed All-American honors.
 
In 2006, the Commodores posted a 23-5 record en route to the team's ninth consecutive NCAA Sweet 16 appearance, despite the young team's lack of senior representatives. Following the season, junior Amanda Fish became the seventh Commodore under Macdonald to receive ITA All-American honors.
 
Macdonald has earned three Coach of the Year honors, including SEC recognition for his 2001 team, which included four ITA ranked singles players. He previously earned the title at Duke and Louisiana State University, where he began his coaching career in 1988.
 
Before coming to Nashville, Macdonald was the head coach at Duke University. Macdonald was honored with ACC Coach of the Year honors in 1992. While in Durham, he guided the Blue Devils to three conference championships and three appearances in the NCAA tournament, where Duke made two appearances in the quarterfinals and one semifinal appearance.
 
During his three years with the Tigers, Macdonald took LSU from last in the SEC to the NCAA Championship as the No. 13 seed in just three years. Following the Tigers' 1991 season, Macdonald was named the SEC Coach of the Year. Macdonald amassed a 50-24 record while at the helm of the LSU women's tennis program.
 
As a player at the University of Virginia, Macdonald capped off a successful collegiate career by winning the ACC singles title in 1981. He advanced to the NCAA Championship, where he defeated David Pate in the first round.
 
Macdonald was named the ACC's Most Valuable Player and also won the league's Sportsmanship Award. He finished second to basketball great Ralph Sampson in the Athlete of the Year voting at Virginia in 1981.
 
After his collegiate career, Macdonald played professionally for three years. Macdonald scored wins over David Pate, Wally Masur, Jacob Hlasek and Juan Aguilera. He also gained Grand Slam experience, playing in the U.S. Open. Among his victories was the Florida State Closed Men's Singles Championship.
 
Following his pro playing career, Macdonald became a private instructor until being named head coach at LSU. And now, as a Commodore, Macdonald believes the climate at Vanderbilt is right to produce national championship caliber teams. And, toward that end, he adheres to a simple coaching philosophy: Hard work and hours of individual attention for each player every week.
 
Macdonald is married to Kate Daniels, a highly acclaimed English professor at Vanderbilt, who also has taught at Wake Forest, LSU, Virginia, UMass and Bennington College. They have three children - Sam, Gus and Janey.