Women's Tennis

Jeff Walllace gets an ice-water bath after earning career win No. 800 on Sunday, March 5, 2023.
Jeff Wallace
Jeff Wallace
6 National Championships
(2 NCAA, 4 USTA/ITA Indoor)
814-198 Record entering the 2023 NCAA Championships 
One of only two coaches in women's tennis history with at least 800 wins
4 ITA National Coach of the Year honors
20 SEC Titles
(11 Regular Season, 9 Tournament)
41 All-Americans with 118 honors
 

       As the nation’s winningest active women’s tennis coach, Jeff Wallace has built the Georgia Bulldogs into one of the most elite programs in all of women’s collegiate tennis. Following a success playing career that saw him earning a SEC singles title in 1985 under Coach Dan Magill, the Portland native jumped right into coaching the following season.

    His first season saw immediate success as he took a team with a losing record to a 20-9 record and earning a spot in the final Volvo Tennis/ITCA Top 25 poll. It would only be another year before Wallace found himself in his first National Championship match where ultimately, the team fell just short, but it would not be long before the Bulldogs began to see the consistent success it has shown during the Wallace Era. Heading into the 2023 NCAA Championships, Wallace has tallied 814 career victories, which ranks second all-time for Division I women's tennis coaches. Now in his 38th season, Wallace's record is 814-198 (.804).

    Georgia enters the 2023 NCAA Championships with a 22-4 record, ranked No. 3 nationally and the tournament's No. 4 overall seed. The Bulldogs claimed the 2023 SEC Tournament title.

    In 2022, Georgia finished 19-7 with a 10-3 Southeastern Conference record and reach the NCAA Tournament for the 35th consecutive year. The Bulldogs captured 15 ranked wins, including a 7-0 sweep over No. 4 Ohio State.

    The 2021 season marked his 36th year with the Bulldogs, and he guided the team to their 31st overall top 10 finish including the 17th time they concluded the year with a top five national ranking. The 2021 team posted a 23-2 record, going a perfect 13-0 to win the Southeastern Conference regular season title and then claimed the SEC Tournament crown by registering three shutouts. The Bulldogs advanced to the quarterfinals of the NCAA Championships. A trio of players earned a total of four All-America honors including senior Katarina Jokic who was a finalist for the Honda Award. Additionally, the team finished with the highest Grade Point Average of any Georgia women's sport for the spring semester of 2021 with a 3.57 mark.

       In 2020, before the cancelation of the spring season due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Georgia was on their way to another successful season being ranked in the top-10, reaching as high as No. 2 in the ITA Rankings. Georgia qualified for the ITA National Indoor Tournament once again in Chicago, Ill. and began conference play undefeated. Most notably, Wallace reached a new milestone with the last match played before the cancelation being his 750th win.  

       The 2019 season saw a Bulldog team that enjoyed tremendous success. Georgia captured its sixth indoors National Championship defeating defending champions North Carolina and earned a SEC Regular Season Championship, but fell just short of the NCAA Championship in May, falling to Stanford and finished the season with a No. 2 overall ranking. 2019 also saw another Bulldog be crowned as National Player of the Year.

       The 2018 season marked another successful year for the Bulldogs highlighted by an elite eight appearance in the program’s 32nd-consective NCAA appearance and a No. 7 ITA final ranking with an 18-7 record. The year came with its fair share of milestones. On February 9, Wallace reached the 700-win plateau with a 4-2 win over Texas in the ITA National Team Indoor Championships. Later in the season, Wallace tied his mentor and former coach, Magill, in career wins (706) and entered 2019 with 714 victories. Additionally, another Bulldog became a first-time All-American capping a SEC Freshman of the Year campaign.

       In 2016 and 2017, Georgia finished with a No. 7 and No. 6 ITA final ranking, respectively, while six Bulldogs earned All-America honors.      

       Wallace led a youthful Georgia squad in 2015 to a 24-7 record and the program’s 11th trip to the NCAA Final Four. The Bulldogs sported a roster with five freshmen and only three upperclassmen, but Georgia put up an impressive record, reaching the SEC Tournament Championship and making its deepest run in the NCAA Tournament since 2009.

       In 2014, Wallace garnered ITA Regional Coach of the Year honors after the Bulldogs enjoyed another banner season, going 24-5 with a final ranking of No. 4. Georgia captured the SEC Tournament title, the NCAA Tournament’s No. 1 overall seed for the first time in school history, advanced to the NCAA Quarterfinals plus saw the top duo of Lauren Herring and Maho Kowase reach the NCAA Doubles Finals 

       Wallace became one of three coaches in women’s tennis history to reach the 600-win plateau in 2013. He is one of five active collegiate tennis coaches with at least 600 wins, and is one of five UGA coaches to reach the mark. In 2009 following another memorable campaign when Georgia advanced to its 10th NCAA Final Four, Wallace became the first person to ever be named the Intercollegiate Tennis Association National Coach of the Year four times. The 2010 season featured Chelsey Gullickson winning the NCAA singles title at the Dan Magill Tennis Complex. Wallace’s teams are the picture of consistency. Only once during his time as coach of the Bulldogs has the team missed the NCAA Tournament, and that was his first year in 1986.

NCAA Champions

       The 1994 season ranks as one of the most dominant ever in women’s tennis history. The 1994 season saw one of the best records in Bulldog history with a 27-2 overall record including a perfect 14-0 SEC mark. Wallace was named coach of the year and Georgia was crowned champion in every major team tournament possible. They were USTA/ITA National Team Indoor Champions, SEC regular season and tournament champions and capped it off with their first NCAA National Championship in front their home crowd in Athens, Ga.

       The 2000 Bulldogs saw equal success going 27-2, and winning the Southeastern Conference title. The NCAA National Championship was played on the campus of Pepperdine where Georgia defeated the defending National Champion Stanford Cardinal 5-4, snapping a 48-match winning streak of theirs and earning Wallace his fourth National Championship, second NCAA Title. Wallace was later named the Wilson/ITA National Coach of the Year.

USTA/ITA National Team Indoors

       Under Wallace, the Bulldogs have been among the most successful teams at the USTA/ITA National Team Indoor Championships. The annual event attracts the nation’s finest programs where the Bulldogs have found consistent play. Georgia has won the Indoor National Title four times with the latest coming in 2019. There, Georgia would go on to capture its sixth National Championship and its fourth indoor defeating defending National Champions North Carolina 4-3.

Developing Talent

       In his 38 seasons at the helm of the program, Wallace has had a proven track record of taking even the most talented recruits and taking them to new heights. On the courts, his players have earned nine National Individual Championships, five in singles and four doubles. He has also coached two Honda Award Winners, two National Players of the Year, three National Seniors of the Year. Bringing in talent and getting them to reach their potential is something Wallace has been known for as well as shown by the eight Regional Rookies of the Year and in 2020 he saw his fifth straight earn that distinction.

       Success off the courts is something Wallace takes great pride in as well. He has seen 55 Bulldogs selected to the SEC Honor Roll 121 times, 13 SEC First Year Academic Honor Roll recipients and 33 ITA-Scholar Athletes and five CoSIDA Academic All-Americans. Many of Wallace’s teams have been named ITA All-Academic Teams as well.

Family

       A native of Portland, Oregon, Wallace is married to the former Sabina Marie Horne. They have two children, Brittany and Jarryd, and four grandchildren.