Craig Tiley Officially Named CEO of USTA; Georgia Women, Ohio State Men Remain No. 1 in Latest ITA Rankings; Tulane Debuts New Tennis Facility; Michael Zheng Pens First Journal Entry for Tennis.com; Eubanks Signs with Tennis Channel
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| Craig Tiley photo courtesy of USTA |
After several months of speculation, the official announcement came today: Craig Tiley will be returning to the United States as the Chief Executive Officer of the United States Tennis Association after his 20 years of serving as Australian Open tournament director and 13 years as the CEO of Tennis Australia.
Tiley, 64, coached the University of Illinois men's team when I began covering college tennis, although his teams' three national titles (two Indoor, one NCAA) came in 2003 and 2004, before my first college tournament in 2005. I had no doubt he would succeed in his new role when he left Champaign for Melbourne, after the 2005 season, but I could never have imagined the heights that he would lead that tournament to.
When Gordon Smith retired as CEO of the USTA in 2019, Tiley's name of course came up as a replacement, but I don't think he was ready to wrestle with the always problematic USTA governing structure. That hasn't changed, with the USTA board holding the ultimate power in the organization and the chairman and president cycling in and out in two-year terms. The USTA has had two CEOs since Smith's retirement, Michael Dowse, who lasted two years, and Lew Sherr, who left to join the NY Mets after three years. It's safe to say that Tiley has a much broader background in tennis than either of them and has a firm grasp on how the organization functions, or doesn't, from his many years as a slam tournament director and a federation's CEO.
What the release doesn't say is when Tiley will start, making a vague reference to "the coming months." There are rumors that he has a non-compete clause in his TA contract that may push his start date out to much closer to the US Open than the USTA would like, so I wouldn't expect to hear much from him in the coming months. The Tennis Australia announcement on his departure is here.
My interest is in his plans for Player Development and for college tennis, with his predecessor making a huge commitment just over a year ago to collegiate tennis with the 10-year NCAA Division I team contract that begins in 2028. Again, I don't think we'll know those plans for a some time, but I'm optimistic that he'll give those realms the appropriate attention when the time comes.
Ben Rothenberg has an expansive overview of the highlights and lowlights of Tiley's more than three decades in tennis in this article at Bounces.
It's only been less than a week since the last rankings release, but there are new ITA Division I team rankings out today, the second edition that were determined by the computer algorithm. The top spots didn't change, with the Georgia women and Ohio State men at No. 1, but there were three new Top 10 women's teams: Arizona State, Cal and Pepperdine. LSU's loss to unranked Ole Miss dropped them from 4 to 9, while Southern Cal, Oklahoma and Texas exited the Top 10.
The Top 10 men are the same 10 programs, but rearranged, with Mississippi State, who barely got past Vanderbilt 4-3 Saturday at home, moving from 10 to 5. Click on the heading to see the full list of the 75 teams with rankings.
Top 10 ITA Division I Men's Team Rankings, computer, February 24, 2026 (last week's ranking in parentheses):
1. Ohio State (1)2. Virginia (2)
3. Wake Forest(4)
4. Texas (3)
5. Mississippi State (10)
6. TCU (7)
7. LSU (5)
8. Baylor (6)
9. San Diego (9)
10. Central Florida (8)





