Upstart Ohio State Faces Defending Champion Georgia in Tuesday's ITA Women's Division I Team Indoor Final; Four More ITF Junior Circuit Titles Last Week for Americans
There will be a new face and a familiar face in Tuesday night's final of the ITA Division I Women's Team Indoor Championships after defending champion Georgia came from behind to beat Auburn and Ohio State earned the program's a first trip to a national final with a win over Texas A&M.
Georgia looked down and out against Auburn this afternoon in Evanston, but roared backed from a 3-1 deficit to beat top seed Auburn 4-3 to return to the final.
Georgia, the No. 2 seed, lost the doubles point and dropped five first sets in singles. But freshman Deniz Dilek, the only Bulldog to win a first set, closed out Angella Okutoyi at line 3 7-5, 6-1 to put her team on the board. Auburn built the lead to 3-1 with straight-sets wins by Ava Esposito at line 5 and Ashton Bowers at line 4, and the Tigers' Ekaterina Khayrutdinova served for her match with Aysegul Mert at 6-3, 5-4 at line 2. But Mert broke back, and with Georgia's Anastasiia Lopata at line 1 and Emma Dong at line 6 already having forced third sets, everything rode on Mert getting through her second set. Mert, who had lost to Khayrutdinova in two previous meetings, trailed 3-0 in the tiebreaker, but won seven of the next nine points to force a third.
The third sets of the remaining three matches were all close, 4-4 at 1, 3-3 at 2 and 4-3 at 6. But Dong got the break for a 5-3 lead at 6, after Eva Ionescu had been up 40-0 in the game and served it out to make it 3-2.
Lopata was up 5-4 on serve at 1 and Mert was up 4-3 serving at 2, after seven straight breaks to start the third set. She got the crucial hold and had four match points in Khayrutdinova's 3-5 service game, when Khayrutdinova's call was overturned by the ELC after a Mert challenge, making it 0-40. But Khayrutdinova wasn't rattled, winning the next four points with some aggressive play, forcing Mert to serve it out.
Mert took a 40-0 lead, made an error on her first match point, but forced an error with a big forehand to send Georgia back to the championship match against Ohio State.
The Buckeyes, seeded No. 5, had to find four singles points after dropping the doubles point to the third-seeded Aggies, but they had proven capable of that in their 4-2 quarterfinal win over No. 1 seed North Carolina on Saturday.
Texas A&M made it 2-0 with Lucciana Perez continuing her steamrolling of opponents, beating Luciana Perry 6-2, 6-1. Perry had played number 1 in the Buckeyes' first two matches, but coach Melissa Schaub moved Teah Chavez to 1, as well as switching the lineup at line 3 and 4 and lines 5 and 6. Those switches paid off handsomely, with Chavez putting Ohio State ahead with her straight-sets win over Mia Kupres, and Audrey Spencer at 6, Hephzibah Oluwadare at 5 and Nao Nishino at 4 following with straight-sets victories one right after the other to earn the 4-2 win.
Ohio State had reached the ITA Team Indoor semifinals in 2016 and 2017, but this will be their first final. Georgia will be playing for its sixth Team Indoor Championship Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. Central.
Cracked Racquets will have coverage of the final at their YouTube channel.
Women's ITA Division I Team Indoor Semifinals February 9, 2026
Georgia[2] d. Auburn[1] 4-3Doubles:
1. Deniz Dilek and Aysegul Mert(UGA) d. DJ Bennett and Stefani Webb(AUB) 6-2
2. Angella Okutoyi and Ava Esposito(AUB) d. Anastasiia Lopata and Patricija Paukstyte(UGA) 6-1
3. Ekaterina Khayrutdinva and Ashton Bowers(AUB) d. Emma Dong and Anastasiia Gureva(UGA) 7-5
Order of finish: 2, 1, 3
In addition to the titles by Michael Antonius and Janae Preston at the ITF J300 in Ecuador, which I covered in Saturday's post, six other Americans won titles on the ITF Pro Circuit.
At the J60 in Mexico, Chase Bowden won his first title on the ITF Junior Circuit, and is the first player I can recall claiming a title when they received entry based on their WTN ranking. Bowden, a 16-year-old from Florida, has competed in the Battle of Boca series of events there, which has doubtless assisted in building up his World Tennis Number ranking. Bowden, obviously not seeded, defeated No. 2 seed Justin Riley Anson 7-5, 6-4 in an all-USA final.
In the girls doubles final, No. 7 seeds Enya Hamilton and Autumn Xu won their second ITF junior doubles title, beating No. 2 seeds Sofia Mills and Mexico's Maria Jose Gil Castillo 6-0, 6-3 in the final.
At the J30 in Sri Lanka, Swanika Roy won her second straight title, this week as the top seed, after winning the week before as the No. 4 seed. The 16-year-old defeated No. 2 seed Yeon Joo Cha of Korea 6-3, 6-1 in the final.
At the J30 in Kenya, sisters Bi-Neh Awantang 15, and Mbongta Awantang 16, won their first ITF Pro Circuit title in doubles; after defeating the top seeds in the second round, the unseeded pair took the title when No. 3 seed Kudzai and Kuzivaishe Chapepa of Zimbabwe retired at 4-6, 5-3.
There is another J300 in South America this week in Lima Peru, with Janae Preston the No. 3 seed. Other seeded US girls are Lani Chang[5] and Yael Saffar[6].
Michael Antonius is not making the switch from hard courts to clay, with the only seeded boy No. 5 Agassi Rusher, who qualified. Navneet Raghuram, who reached the semifinals last week in Ecudador, is also in the draw.
The top boys seed is Emilio Camacho of Ecuador, with Candela Vazquez of Argentina the top girls seed.







