WILLIAMSBURG, Va. - William and
Mary head women's tennis coach
Tyler Thomson announced the addition of Jesse
Medvene-Collins to the Tribe program as its assistant coach. Medvene-Collins
spent the last two seasons as an assistant coach in the Big Ten at the
University of Iowa under the direction of Katie Dougherty.
"Jesse is a great fit for this
program," Thomson said. "He brings experience and passion, and an understanding
of William and Mary's history of excellence in tennis. He also believes, as I
do, that great things are possible in the future. We are very fortunate to have
him on our coaching staff."
His
responsibilities at Iowa included assisting with recruiting, budget oversight,
player development, practice management, match scheduling, fund-raising and
team travel. During the 2012 season, Iowa was ranked as high as No. 58
nationally and earned upset wins over No. 36 DePaul and No. 48 Penn State. The
Hawkeyes finished the 2012 campaign at No. 10 in the ITA Central Region. In
2011, Medvene-Collins assisted in the recruitment of the No. 18 class in the
country to Iowa. During his tenure with the Hawkeyes, he also assisted with the
development of four-time All-Big Ten selection Sonja Molnar, who was a
unanimous all-league choice in 2011 and 2012. She was ranked as high as No. 96
in 2011 and No. 66 in 2012. He also saw an Iowa doubles team reach the NCAA
Doubles Championship event for just the fourth time in 2011.
"I am thrilled
to be part of the Tribe tennis family," Medvene-Collins said. "I have always
had great respect and admiration for the history of success here and for all of
the great players, teams and coaches who have been part of William and Mary
Women's Tennis. I am very excited to work with Tyler. He is someone who I have
felt fortunate to call a colleague, mentor and friend in the past, and I am
really looking forward to working together."
This past
summer, he was named the Intersectional coach for the Missouri Valley Section
Team at the USTA National Team Boys 18 Championships. Medvene-Collins achieved
Level 1 certification in the RPT Europe Spanish Player Development Course in
2012. He is also a USPTA (United States Professional Tennis Association)
Teaching Professional.
Prior to his
time in Iowa City, Medvene-Collins was the head women's tennis coach at Mills
College in Oakland, Calif. He led the Cyclones to a victory over the No.
7-ranked team in the West Region during his lone season, marking the
highest-ranked win in program history.
A native of
Washington D.C., Medvene-Collins started his collegiate coaching career as an
assistant with stops at Dartmouth (2003-05), Wake Forest (2005-07) and his alma
mater the University of Redlands (2007-09). During his two seasons at
Dartmouth, he helped the Big Green to an overall record of 26-16 and national
rankings of No. 71 in 2004 and No. 65 in 2005. He also assisted in the
development of a top-100 nationally-ranked singles player in Jayme Ahmend, a
two-time first-team All-Ivy League selection. In 2005, Dartmouth earned an ITA
All-Academic team award, compiling a cumulative grade point average above 3.2.
While serving
as an assistant coach for the Demon Deacons, he helped guide Wake Forest to
NCAA Tournament appearances in 2006 and 2007 to go along with national top 25
rankings. After being ranked as high as No. 14 nationally in 2006, the Deacs
finished the year at No. 22, before capping off the 2007 campaign at No. 20
nationally. He assisted with the development of 2006 NCAA Singles Championship
participant Alex Hirsch, who finished the year ranked No. 43 nationally. Wake
Forest had three nationally ranked singles players and two nationally ranked
doubles teams at the conclusion of the 2007 season.
As an
assistant at Redlands, he helped lead the Bulldogs to back-to-back conference
championships in 2008 and 2009. Redlands was ranked among the top 25 nationally
in Division III during his tenure and finished the 2009 campaign with a
program-best national ranking of No. 8. During his time with the Bulldogs, he
assisted in the development of three nationally ranked players.
Medvene-Collins
earned his bachelor's degree in sociology from Redlands in 2002 before
returning to earn his master's degree in higher education in 2009. As a
four-year letterwinner for the Bulldogs, he earned all-conference honors during
each of his final three seasons. The Bulldogs participated in the NCAA Division
III Tournament during each of his four seasons and finished his sophomore campaign
at No. 4 nationally.
The Tribe women's tennis program is storied both in the CAA and nationally. W&M
has won 21 of the CAA's 28 all-time women's tennis championships and finished
the year ranked No. 1 in its ITA Region on 14 occasions. In total, the Tribe
has advanced to the NCAA Tournament on 18 occasions, including 14 of the last
18 years. W&M has finished ranked among the national top 20 in 12 seasons
since 1990. In all, 13 different athletes have captured 26 All-America honors
for the Tribe.