- UTA women's tennis sweeps Senior Day win over Prairie View A&M UniversityUTA women’s tennis (7-8) defeated Prairie View A&M University (4-23) 4-0 in the last home match of the regular season Sunday at the UTA Tennis Center. Prior to the match, the team celebrated Senior Day by honoring seniors Nika Novikova, Ana Paula Jimenez, Mialy Ranaivo and Ioana Dumitrescu. They were presented with flowers and portraits as keepsakes. The team started on a high note, winning all three doubles matches to earn the point. Novikova and freshman Maria Lucia Araoz-Gosn earned the first win with a decisive 6-1 match. The duo of Ranaivo and junior Valeriia Ivanovskaia were able to overcome adversity to win 6-3, clinching the doubles point for UTA. Novikova said despite the emotions, she and her team came out on fire and carried that throughout the match. Singles were delayed due to weather conditions. However, the intermission didn’t slow the Mavericks’ momentum. “It doesn’t help having to play in this type of weather, but I would say it’s the same for both teams,” head coach Diego Benitez said. Araoz-Gosn secured the first singles win for the Mavericks, sweeping her opponent 6-0 in both games. Wins by Ranaivo and Novikova sealed the deal for UTA, winning 4-0. The three other singles were unfinished. Dumitrescu, who’s spent her entire career at UTA, highlighted her journey with the program. “UTA became my home inside and outside the court. I found family here,” she said, “It helped me grow so much. We went through literally everything you can possibly imagine here, very amazing memories.” The team will wrap its regular season up at Tarleton State University at 1 p.m. Thursday. @kaleivie_ sports-editor.shorthorn@uta.edu
- Opinion: NCAA’s new era is here to stayWe’ve survived the madness. With the Final Four upon us, fans can expect to see some high-level basketball between the best teams throughout the season. This year’s NCAA men’s Final Four is merely the second time in history all No. 1 seeds have made it that far and the first since 2008. In both the men’s and women’s tournaments, the University of Connecticut is the lone non-No. 1 seed to make the Final Four — in the women’s tournament, beating No. 1 University of South California. USC lost 2025 Naismith Women’s College player of the year Juju Watkins for the season earlier in the tournament. We should all want to watch the best teams competing for a national championship, but upsets and storylines are what make March Madness special. With the state of collegiate athletics as is, the transfer portal and name, image and likeness have completely changed the landscape of college basketball. However, UTA Athletics director Jon Fagg said he believes this year’s dominance of one seeds is a fluke. “A lot of people are saying it’s because NIL has made the best teams, the best and everybody else something else,” he said. “There’s some merit to that, but I feel like it’s going to still turn out to be a fluke.” While there might not be a direct correlation, TV ratings skyrocketed for the first two rounds of the men’s tournament despite the lack of cinderellas. The opening rounds saw the highest average audience since 1993, according to Nielsen ratings. However, ratings took a 10% hit in the Elite Eight compared to last year’s. The NCAA faces bigger questions. One of them being: In the vaunted age of the transfer portal, where’s the balance between power five conference schools and mid-major to lower Division I programs? The portal has allowed players like Auburn University forward Chad Baker-Mazara to play longer than the standard four years in college. The 25-year-old is one of many athletes who started their careers at lower-level programs and eventually played at bigger schools, using all of their redshirt seasons and eligibility to showcase their ability. Many collegiate coaches have voiced their displeasure with the transfer portal, particularly when it opens for basketball. Geno Auriemma, University of Connecticut women’s basketball head coach called the portal “a big cloud” that hangs over the NCAA Tournament during a March 28 press conference. “For instance, do you think the NBA will ever have open free agency during the NBA playoffs? I doubt that,” Auriemma said. The answer is no, but Fagg added an interesting perspective. “Ideally, it seems like [the portal] would open after the entire season is over. But, the reason it doesn’t is because most people’s seasons are over when March Madness starts,” he said. Although college coaches are losing a grip of the power they once held, the NCAA is empowering student athletes to not have to potentially wait another three extra weeks to announce a decision regarding their future. In addition to the portal, NIL has played a part in the increase of student athletes electing to prolong their college career, as opposed to going pro. For example, on Monday, Olivia Miles, University of Notre Dame guard, chose to forgo the WNBA Draft and enter the transfer portal as a graduate transfer. The decision caused some confusion as to why the projected No. 2 pick in the upcoming draft chose to remain in college. Regardless of the reasoning behind decisions like this, there’s no denying the vast difference between what once was the reality for student athletes. If a player was eligible to enter the draft — and was good enough — there used to be no doubt that player would have declared for the draft. Now, especially in women’s basketball, athletes earn more money from NIL and brand deals in college than they probably would during their whole WNBA career. “Now they have enough incentive to keep going to school, make some money and maybe more will blossom into pro players,” Fagg said. The NCAA we once knew is a distant memory. If the NCAA wants to continue operating as a professional organization, player empowerment is something they will have to tolerate. As for us fans, we should just appreciate the product that is being displayed on our TVs. @babyboimatt sports-editor.shorthorn@uta.edu
- UTA women's tennis sweeps Senior Day win over Prairie View A&M UniversityUTA women’s tennis (7-8) defeated Prairie View A&M University (4-23) 4-0 in the last home match of the regular season Sunday at the UTA Tennis Center. Prior to the match, the team celebrated Senior Day by honoring seniors Nika Novikova, Ana Paula Jimenez, Mialy Ranaivo and Ioana Dumitrescu. They were presented with flowers and portraits as keepsakes. The team started on a high note, winning all three doubles matches to earn the point. Novikova and freshman Maria Lucia Araoz-Gosn earned the first win with a decisive 6-1 match. The duo of Ranaivo and junior Valeriia Ivanovskaia were able to overcome adversity to win 6-3, clinching the doubles point for UTA. Novikova said despite the emotions, she and her team came out on fire and carried that throughout the match. Singles were delayed due to weather conditions. However, the intermission didn’t slow the Mavericks’ momentum. “It doesn’t help having to play in this type of weather, but I would say it’s the same for both teams,” head coach Diego Benitez said. Araoz-Gosn secured the first singles win for the Mavericks, sweeping her opponent 6-0 in both games. Wins by Ranaivo and Novikova sealed the deal for UTA, winning 4-0. The three other singles were unfinished. Dumitrescu, who’s spent her entire career at UTA, highlighted her journey with the program. “UTA became my home inside and outside the court. I found family here,” she said, “It helped me grow so much. We went through literally everything you can possibly imagine here, very amazing memories.” The team will wrap its regular season up at Tarleton State University at 1 p.m. Thursday. @kaleivie_ sports-editor.shorthorn@uta.edu
- Opinion: NCAA’s new era is here to stayWe’ve survived the madness. With the Final Four upon us, fans can expect to see some high-level basketball between the best teams throughout the season. This year’s NCAA men’s Final Four is merely the second time in history all No. 1 seeds have made it that far and the first since 2008. In both the men’s and women’s tournaments, the University of Connecticut is the lone non-No. 1 seed to make the Final Four — in the women’s tournament, beating No. 1 University of South California. USC lost 2025 Naismith Women’s College player of the year Juju Watkins for the season earlier in the tournament. We should all want to watch the best teams competing for a national championship, but upsets and storylines are what make March Madness special. With the state of collegiate athletics as is, the transfer portal and name, image and likeness have completely changed the landscape of college basketball. However, UTA Athletics director Jon Fagg said he believes this year’s dominance of one seeds is a fluke. “A lot of people are saying it’s because NIL has made the best teams, the best and everybody else something else,” he said. “There’s some merit to that, but I feel like it’s going to still turn out to be a fluke.” While there might not be a direct correlation, TV ratings skyrocketed for the first two rounds of the men’s tournament despite the lack of cinderellas. The opening rounds saw the highest average audience since 1993, according to Nielsen ratings. However, ratings took a 10% hit in the Elite Eight compared to last year’s. The NCAA faces bigger questions. One of them being: In the vaunted age of the transfer portal, where’s the balance between power five conference schools and mid-major to lower Division I programs? The portal has allowed players like Auburn University forward Chad Baker-Mazara to play longer than the standard four years in college. The 25-year-old is one of many athletes who started their careers at lower-level programs and eventually played at bigger schools, using all of their redshirt seasons and eligibility to showcase their ability. Many collegiate coaches have voiced their displeasure with the transfer portal, particularly when it opens for basketball. Geno Auriemma, University of Connecticut women’s basketball head coach called the portal “a big cloud” that hangs over the NCAA Tournament during a March 28 press conference. “For instance, do you think the NBA will ever have open free agency during the NBA playoffs? I doubt that,” Auriemma said. The answer is no, but Fagg added an interesting perspective. “Ideally, it seems like [the portal] would open after the entire season is over. But, the reason it doesn’t is because most people’s seasons are over when March Madness starts,” he said. Although college coaches are losing a grip of the power they once held, the NCAA is empowering student athletes to not have to potentially wait another three extra weeks to announce a decision regarding their future. In addition to the portal, NIL has played a part in the increase of student athletes electing to prolong their college career, as opposed to going pro. For example, on Monday, Olivia Miles, University of Notre Dame guard, chose to forgo the WNBA Draft and enter the transfer portal as a graduate transfer. The decision caused some confusion as to why the projected No. 2 pick in the upcoming draft chose to remain in college. Regardless of the reasoning behind decisions like this, there’s no denying the vast difference between what once was the reality for student athletes. If a player was eligible to enter the draft — and was good enough — there used to be no doubt that player would have declared for the draft. Now, especially in women’s basketball, athletes earn more money from NIL and brand deals in college than they probably would during their whole WNBA career. “Now they have enough incentive to keep going to school, make some money and maybe more will blossom into pro players,” Fagg said. The NCAA we once knew is a distant memory. If the NCAA wants to continue operating as a professional organization, player empowerment is something they will have to tolerate. As for us fans, we should just appreciate the product that is being displayed on our TVs. @babyboimatt sports-editor.shorthorn@uta.edu
- UTA men’s tennis takes down Abilene Christian UniversityUTA men’s tennis (10-9) took down Abilene Christian University (11-9), 4-3 in a tightly-contested battle at the UTA Tennis Center. The team celebrated seniors Pedro Sasso and Daniel Pérez-Caraballo, embracing them with self-portraits and team pictures prior to the first serve. The Mavericks dominated in doubles, winning two matches, including a victory in straight sets, 6-0, by freshman Ian Uraga and sophomore Yazid Lahjomri. Pérez-Caraballo and freshman Federico Garbero secured the point for UTA, winning their match 6-3. “We came out hungry and we were able to put that point on the board,” head coach Diego Benitez said. “That’s huge. When you have that extra point on you, that’s huge.” Sophomores Andres Medus and Meethre Barot kicked off singles with wins in straight sets, putting the Mavericks up 3-0. Freshman Mattia Ricci clinched the victory for UTA, but the remaining matches carried on. Despite his loss, Pérez-Caraballo competed hard, taking his opponent the distance. He split the first two sets 4-6 and 6-4, before losing 6-1 in the final. Pérez-Caraballo reflected on his time at UTA and how much the program has meant to him. “Senior day means a lot, just because it’s the last chance that you have to play at home,” he said. “UTA has given me a lot. I’m thankful to be here.” Benitez said he saw what the team has been working on in practice come to fruition in their victory. With the Western Athletic Conference Tournament approaching, the Mavericks will continue to prepare by using the time to improve conditioning and footwork, he said. Sasso, who’s looking to help UTA win their third-straight WAC championship despite the heightened pressure, said he wants to enjoy his last matches with the team. “I always had this mentality that, ‘what matters in the end is the team,’” he said. The WAC Tournament will take place April 17 through 19 at the Arlington Tennis Center. @tdreevess sports-editor.shorthorn@uta.edu
Loading...