The first day of the Division I NCAA Team Championships produced several minor upsets, with No. 3 seeds beating No. 2 seeds and a few 4-3 battles, but the host, the No. 1 seeds in their regionals cruised through their first round matches. The only exception was the San Diego men, who are hosting the consensus choice for the toughest field in the regionals. The No. 15 seeds defeated No. 4 seed UC-Santa Barbara, No. 35 in the country, 4-2 this afternoon.
Texas A&M, without indoor backup, had to postpone their first round men's matches until Saturday, with the women's first round matches also scheduled for Saturday.
See the ITA's men's regional viewing page and a women's regional viewing page for times for Saturday's matches.
Cracked Racquets will have multiple feeds of action from most of the regionals at their YouTube Channel.
The men's draw is here; the women's draw is here.
D-I Men's first round regional results
(1)Wake Forest Regional:
Old Dominion[2] d. Gardner-Webb[3] 4-0
Wake Forest[1] d. Navy[4] 4-0
(2)Texas Regional
SMU[2] d. Princeton[3] 4-2
Texas[1] d. Texas A&M-Corpus[4] Christi 4-0
(3)Ohio State Regional
Cal[3] d. Kentucky[2] 4-3
Ohio State[1] d. Buffalo[4] 4-0
(4)Virginia Regional
Columbia[2] d. St. John's[3] 4-0
Virginia[1] d. Rider 4-0
(5)Mississippi State Regional
Wisconsin[2] d. Samford[3] 4-1
Mississippi State[1] d. Tennessee Tech[4] 4-0
(6)TCU Regional
Cornell[2] d. Arkansas[3] 4-3
TCU[1] d. Denver[4] 4-0
(7)LSU Regional
Pepperdine[2] d. Michigan[3] 4-2
LSU[1] d. Alabama State[4] 4-0
(8)Arizona Regional
Clemson[3] d. Ole Miss[2] 4-3
Arizona[1] d. Northern Arizona[4] 4-0
(9)Oklahoma Regional
Southern California[2] d. Duke[3] 4-2
Oklahoma[1] d. Utah State[4] 4-0
(10)Baylor Regional
Auburn[2] d. Santa Clara[3] 4-3
Baylor[1] d. Tulsa[4] 4-0
(11)Texas A&M Regional
Postponed until Saturday
Stanford[2] v Penn[3]
Texas A&M[1] v Wagner[4]
(12)Georgia Regional
NC State[2] d. Middle Tennessee[3] 4-2
Georgia[1] d. Elon[4] 4-0
(13)South Carolina Regional
Michigan State[2] d. North Carolina[3] 4-1
South Carolina[1] d. Richmond[4] 4-0
(14)Illinois Regional
Vanderbilt[3] d. Notre Dame[2] 4-1
Illinois[1] d. Yale[4] 4-0
(15)San Diego Regional
UCLA[2] d. Arizona State[3] 4-0
San Diego[1] d. UC-Santa Barbara 4-2
(16)UCF Regional
Florida[2] d. Stetson[3] 5-0
UCF[1] d. South Carolina State[4] 4-0
D-I Women's first round regional results
(1)Auburn Regional
Miami[2] d. North Florida[3] 4-0
Auburn[1] d. Bryant[4] 4-0
(5)North Carolina Regional
South Carolina[2] d. Maryland[3] 4-0
North Carolina[1] d. Charleston Southern[4] 4-0
(8)NC State Regional
UCF[2] d. Navy[3] 4-1
NC State[1] d. Morgan State[4] 5-0
(11)Pepperdine Regional
Stanford[2] d. BYU[3] 4-2
Pepperdine[1] d. UC-Santa Barbara 4-0
(13)Southern California Regional
Cal[2] d. Utah[3] 4-1
Southern California[1] d. Sacramento State[4] 4-0
(14)Vanderbilt Regional
Clemson[2] d. E Tennessee St[3] 4-1
Vanderbilt[1] d. Xavier[4] 4-0
(15)Duke Regional
Tennessee[2] d. Old Dominion[3] 4-2
Duke[1] d. VCU[4] 4-0
(16)Arizona State Regional
UCLA[2] d. San Diego State[3] 4-3
Arizona State[1] v Denver[4] 4-0

Play/Replay, the Electronic Line Calling System that has been in use for collegiate matches for the past year, has signed a five-year agreement with the USTA to provide ELC for all hard court events on the USTA Pro Circuit, beginning immediately.
Although the USTA Pro Circuit tournaments scheduled for most of this month are on clay and therefore not effected, there is a women's W35 in Wichita in the last week of this month that will be using this ELC system, and the men's and women's USTA SoCal Pro Series(see the dates on the banner to the left) are also hard court events that will have the system. From yesterday's release:
USTA to Feature PlayReplay Electronic Line-Calling at all USTA Pro Circuit Men’s
and Women’s ITF World Tennis Tour Hard-Court Events over the Next Five Years
ORLANDO, Fla., April 30, 2026
The USTA today announced that all men’s and women’s hard-
court ITF World Tennis Tour tournaments on the USTA Pro Circuit will feature electronic line-
calling (ELC) for the first time ever. The USTA will utilize the ELC system developed by tennis
technology company PlayReplay – the first company invested in by USTA Ventures -- on every
match court of a USTA Pro Circuit hard-court ITF World Tennis Tour event for the next five years.
The USTA Pro Circuit currently stages 67 men’s and women’s ITF World Tennis Tour hard-court
events amid its 133 total tournaments in 2026. The USTA plans to grow the USTA Pro Circuit
calendar to 165 total events in 2028 as part of its multi-year investment strategy geared toward
fortifying and maximizing the American competitive pathway.
“This investment marks a commitment to elevating the competition experience and providing an
enhanced level of service at the Pro Circuit level for all players,” said Tracy Davies, General
Manager, USA Tennis. “PlayReplay has proven to be a tremendous solution to ELC at high-level
competition at the junior and collegiate levels, and now we’re excited to see the positive benefit
to the Pro Circuit come to fruition.”
Hans Lundstam, CEO and Co-Founder of PlayReplay, remarks, "We are exceptionally proud to
help thousands of players on their journey to becoming professionals across the North American
continent. It’s magic to work with USTA. We share the same vision, and the combination of their
reach and our technology is truly transformative for the sport."
Keaton Hance continues to pile up wins at the M15 level, with the 2026 Australian Open boys finalist reaching the semifinals of this week's tournament in
Orange Park Florida. The 18-year-old from Southern California, who won the M15 last week in Orlando, defeated qualifier Matthew Segura 6-4, 6-0 in today's quarterfinals. Hance will face No. 3 seed Nick Hardt of the Dominican Republic, who beat qualifier James Connel(Florida State) of Great Britain 6-4, 7-5.
Michael Antonius lost to No. 7 seed Andreja Petrovic(North Dakota, Florida State, Duke) of Norway 6-3, 6-2. Petrovic will face top seed Raphael Perot(Texas A&M) of France, who beat Jonathan Mridha of Sweden 6-2, 6-0.
Amelia Honer(UC-Santa Barbara) and Hibah Shaikh(Virginia) are through to face each other the semifinals of the
W35 in Boca Raton. The unseeded Honer, who won last week's W35 in Charlotte NC, beat No. 6 seed Antonia Vergara Rivera of Chile 7-6(5), 6-4, while Shaikh beat Oklahoma State freshman Luca Udvardy of Hungary 2-6, 6-3, 6-3. The winner of that match will face the winner of the all-Argentina semifinal between top seed Julia Riera and unseeded Justina Maria Gonzalez Daniele.
The wild card team of Welles Newman and Jordyn Hazelitt have advanced to Saturday morning's doubles final against unseeded Kailey Evans(Texas Tech, San Diego) and Jessica Hinojosa Gomez of Mexico.
The USTA Roland Garros wild card race is still undecided going into the final two days for both the men and women. Darwin Blanch can still pass Nishesh Basavareddy(Stanford) if he wins the title at the Challenger 100 in Austria, where he has reached the semifinals.
Akasha Urhobo and Mary Stoiana are still alive in the women's race. Stoiana, the No. 6 seed at
the W100 in Bonita Springs, beat Maria Carle(Georgia) of Argentina 6-4, 1-6, 6-4 and will play unseeded Angela Fita Boluda of Spain, who eliminated Kayla Day, the No. 5 seed, 7-6(4), 6-4. The unseeded Urhobo beat No. 7 seed Leyre Romero Gormaz of Spain 6-3, 1-6, 7-6(4) and will face qualifier Madison Brengle, who defeated No. 8 seed Jazmin Ortenzi of Argentina 7-6(2), 6-2.
If my math is correct(and it may not be), Urhobo will clinch the wild card if she beats Brengle, even if Stoiana goes on to beat Urhobo in the final.
At the
ITF J200 in Sumter South Carolina, No. 8 seed Jordan Lee beat fellow 15-year-old Teodor Davidov 6-3, 6-1 to win his first tournament since the J300 in Bradenton last December. It's good to see Lee healthy and playing well again after not competing in the West Coast ITF junior swing in March and this result should put him back in the ITF Junior Top 100.
Fifteen-year-old Hannah Ayrault won her first ITF Junior Circuit title, with the No. 2 seed beating No. 5 seed Emery Combs 6-4, 0-6, 6-3 in the girls final. Ayrault should break into the ITF Junior Top 100 for the first time with this title.