Andy Jackson Named New Razorbacks Tennis Coach

 

FAYETTEVILLE – Andy Jackson, whose teams have made 22 straight NCAA Tournament appearances, has been hired as the new men’s tennis coach at the University of Arkansas, Vice Chancellor and Director of Athletics Jeff Long announced Tuesday.

“Coach Jackson has demonstrated the ability to lead nationally competitive tennis programs within the Southeastern Conference,” Vice Chancellor and Director of Athletics Jeff Long says. “His record of sustained success, first at Mississippi State and then at Florida, is confirmation that he knows what it takes to compete and win in the nation’s most challenging men’s tennis conference. Andy also has a tremendous record of developing student-athletes on and off the court. I am confident that under his leadership, our men’s tennis program will return to national prominence while competing for both individual and team championships. We are excited to welcome Andy to Razorback Athletics.”

Jackson has 29 years of head coaching experience at Florida and Mississippi State, compiling a 496-234 record, and is the only coach to win an SEC title at two different schools. He has won three conference regular-season titles, three conference tournament crowns and three times earned SEC Coach of the Year honors. For his last 24 years, he has coached men’s teams in Gainesville and Starkville, and all 24 teams finished the season ranked in the top 25, with 13 of those in the top 10, including a No. 2 ranking in the final poll of 2003. In his career, he has produced seven 20-plus win seasons and advanced to the NCAA finals site 20 times with seven quarterfinal appearances and three trips to the semifinal round.

Individually, he has coached nine collegiate grand slam event champions, three SEC Players of the Year, four SEC Rookies of the Year and two ITA National Rookies of the Year. He also has coached 43 NCAA singles qualifiers and 26 doubles’ teams to qualify for the NCAA tournament with 34 All-America honors. His players have earned 70 Academic All-SEC citations, and he has coached five two-time Academic All-Americans.

“I am honored to be the new head coach at the University of Arkansas and appreciate the opportunity Jeff Long has given me to help lead this program back to a place as a consistent national contender in men’s tennis,” Jackson says. “As a coach in the SEC for nearly 30 years, I know the challenges of competing in this league. At the University of Arkansas, I am confident we can build a program that will compete successfully not only in the SEC, but nationally.

“We will focus our efforts on the development of our student-athletes not just on the court, but in the classroom and in all aspects of their lives. I have tremendous respect for this program’s history and for the commitment the University of Arkansas has made to men’s tennis. I am excited to begin working with our student-athletes and investing in the future success of Razorback Tennis.”

Jackson most recently served as the men’s head coach at Florida from 2001-12, winning 209 matches, the third-highest total in school history, after inheriting a team that was 9-17 the year before he arrived. He led the Gators to conference titles in 2003 and 2005 and SEC Tournament crowns in 2003 and 2011 and was named SEC Coach of the Year in 2002 and 2005. During his time at Florida, he won 72 percent of his matches and was even better in conference play with a 90-32 record for a winning percentage of 74 percent. The Gators were dominant at home under Jackson, earning a 128-16 mark for a winning percentage of 89 percent, including a 17-1 record in NCAA Tournament games on their home courts.

In 2012, the Gators finished 16-9, including a 7-4 mark in the SEC, and advanced to the Round of 16 in the NCAA Tournament. In 2011, Jackson produced two individual All-Americans as Alexandre Lacroix earned recognition in singles and doubles with Sekou Bangoura joining him in doubles. The Gators also won their second SEC Tournament title under Jackson in 2011.

On Jan. 31, 2006, Florida took over the No. 1 spot in the ITA Poll for the first time in program history. The year before, Jackson led the Gators to match their deepest NCAA Tournament run by shutting out rival Florida State in the quarterfinals to advance to the semifinal round for just the second time in school history. The 2005 squad also brought Jackson’s second SEC title to Gainesville in his fifth season, the quickest a coach had delivered two conference championships in school history, and won the SEC Tournament.

The 2003 team claimed Jackson’s first SEC crown at Florida. Earlier that season, the Gators played in the final of the 2003 National Team Indoors to mark the first national title match in school history. In 2002, Jackson won his second overall SEC Coach of the Year honor and first at Florida.

Mississippi State made 11 straight NCAA Tournament appearances from 1991-2001, one of just seven teams in the country to do so, reaching the quarterfinal round five times and the semifinal round in 1994 and 1998. The Bulldogs finished each of his 13 seasons ranked in the final top 25 and were ranked in the top 10 for seven straight seasons from 1992-98.

Under Jackson, four different singles players and three doubles teams held the No. 1 spot in the ITA national rankings, including Marco Baron, who ended the 2001 season as the top-ranked singles player in collegiate tennis, and Thomas Dupré, who finished the 1997 season ranked No. 1 by the ITA. Baron and Dupré also were named SEC Players of the Year in those seasons, and Dupré added National Player of the Year in 1997.

Jackson coached Miquelard and Joc Simmons to the 1994 NCAA Doubles championship, becoming the only coach in the history of collegiate tennis to coach men’s and women’s doubles national champions at the same school. In 1989, he led Jackie Holden and Claire Pollard to the national title.

Jackson began his coaching career as the women’s head coach at Mississippi State, a post he held from 1984-89. In addition to coaching, he also maintained an ATP Tour World Ranking from 1986-88.

Jackson lettered twice for the University of Kentucky, playing at No. 2 in singles and doubles. He was a team captain on the Wildcats’ 1984 NIT championship squad and also earned the school’s Outstanding Christian Athlete of the Year Award. He was inducted into the UK Tennis Hall of Fame on July 26, 2008. As a prep player at Franklin County (Ky.) High School, he lettered in basketball and tennis, helping the tennis team to a 79-1 record.

Born Aug. 14, 1961 in Oneida, Ky., Jackson graduated from the University of Kentucky. He is a descendent of former U.S. President and War of 1812 hero Andrew Jackson as well as Confederate General Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson.

Andy Jackson Coaching History
June 2013 – Arkansas (Men’s Head Coach)
2001-12 – Florida (Men’s Head Coach)
1989-2001 – Mississippi State (Men’s Head Coach)
1984-89 – Mississippi State (Women’s Head Coach)

Andy Jackson Year-By-Year
1985 – Mississippi State (Women) 7-15 (1-8 SEC, 7th)
1986 – Mississippi State (Women) 19-8 (5-4 SEC, 5th)
1987 – Mississippi State (Women) 15-7 (5-4 SEC, 4th)
1988 – Mississippi State (Women) 14-8 (5-4 SEC, 4th)
1989 – Mississippi State (Women) 12-7 (5-4 SEC, 5th) No. 20 Final Rank
1989 – Mississippi State (Men) 16-8 (4-5 SEC, t5th) No. 20 Final Rank
1990 – Mississippi State (Men) 12-11 (5-6 SEC, 6th) No. 25(t) Final Rank
1991 – Mississippi State (Men) 17-12 (5-7 SEC, 6th) No. 20 Final Rank (NCAA Tournament Round of 16)
1992 – Mississippi State (Men) 19-6 (9-3 SEC, 3rd) No. 9 Final Rank (NCAA Tournament Round of 16)
1993 – Mississippi State (Men) 19-7 (12-2, SEC t1st) No. 7 Final Rank (NCAA Tournament Round of 16)
1994 – Mississippi State (Men) 21-7 (10-4 SEC, t2nd) No. 3 Final Rank (NCAA Tournament Semifinal Round)
1995 – Mississippi State (Men) 19-7 (10-3 SEC, 3rd) No. 6 Final Rank (NCAA Tournament Quarterfinal Round)
1996 – Mississippi State (Men) 20-6 (11-4 SEC, 3rd) No. 8 Final Rank (NCAA Tournament Quarterfinal Round)
1997 – Mississippi State (Men) 17-6 (8-4 SEC, t4th) No. 6 Final Rank (NCAA Tournament Quarterfinal Round)
1998 – Mississippi State (Men) 21-5 (10-3 SEC, 3rd) No. 4 Final Rank (NCAA Tournament Semifinal Round)
1999 – Mississippi State (Men) 13-12 (5-7 SEC, 9th) No. 15 Final Rank (NCAA Tournament Round of 16)
2000 – Mississippi State (Men) 12-8 (6-5 SEC, 6th) No. 22 Final Rank (NCAA Tournament Second Round)
2001 – Mississippi State (Men) 14-11 (5-6 SEC, t5th) No. 14 Final Rank (NCAA Tournament Round of 16)
2002 – Florida (Men) 18-7 (7-4 SEC, t3rd) No. 11 Final Rank (NCAA Tournament Round of 16)
2003 – Florida (Men) 25-5 (11-0 SEC, 1st) No. 2 Final Rank (NCAA Tournament Quarterfinal Round)
2004 – Florida (Men) 18-8 (8-3 SEC, 2nd) No. 8 Final Rank (NCAA Tournament Round of 16)
2005 – Florida (Men) 24-6 (10-1 SEC, t1st) No. 4 Final Rank (NCAA Tournament Semifinal Round)
2006 – Florida (Men) 17-8 (8-3 SEC, t2nd) No. 15 Final Rank (NCAA Tournament Round of 16)
2007 – Florida (Men) 15-8 (7-4 SEC, t3rd) No. 16 Final Rank (NCAA Tournament Round of 16)
2008 – Florida (Men) 17-8 (8-3 SEC, 4th) No. 10 Final Rank (NCAA Tournament Round of 16)
2009 – Florida (Men) 18-9 (8-5 SEC, 4th) No. 11 Final Rank (NCAA Tournament Second Round)
2010 – Florida (Men) 21-5 (9-1 SEC, 2nd) No. 8 Final Rank (NCAA Tournament Round of 16)
2011 – Florida (Men) 20-9 (7-4 SEC, 5th) No. 9 Final Rank (NCAA Tournament Round of 16)
2012 – Florida (Men) 16-10 (7-4 SEC, t4th) No. 12 Final Rank (NCAA Tournament Round of 16)
Total 496-234 (211-115 SEC)

Courtesy University of Arkansas Department of Athletics

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