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The Jimmy Lunsford Tennis Complex is a tennis facility located on the campus of Troy University in Troy, Alabama. The complex opened in the spring of 2001 as the Trojan Oaks Tennis Complex. The complex opened in the spring of 2001 as the Trojan Oaks Tennis Complex.
Troy tennis plays their home matches at the Jimmy Lunsford Tennis Complex. Opened in 2001, the facility contains 12 outdoor hard courts with a small clubhouse/pro shop. The facility hosts various USTA junior and adult tournaments, as well as a $25,000 professional women's tennis tournament, the USTA Tennis Classic of Troy.
Rawia Elsisi, a former Troy women's tennis player, was hired in 2014 as the next head coach for the team. In her first season at the helm, she led the Trojans to a 15–8 record that included a win over then #72-ranked Nicholls State and received the #4-seed in the Sun Belt Tournament.
The Trojans ended the 2011 season with a 42-17 record. Troy's highest rank of the season was #18 in the Baseball America poll. Troy had also reached a ranking of #25 in the USA Today coaches poll and #22 in the College Baseball News poll. Troy once again won a regular season title in 2013, this time in a thrilling fashion.
InnerCity Tennis is best known as the owner of the tennis center at Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Park. It has been around since 1952, operating as a nonprofit that charges those who can afford to ...
Six more current or former tennis players linked to a match-fixing syndicate in Belgium were given suspensions of varying lengths — one was barred for 15 years — and fined, the International ...
Below is a list of Troy's top single-game attendance figures. Trojan Arena's largest attendance of 5,120 took place on November 9, 2012 against the Mississippi State Bulldogs . Troy defeated the Bulldogs 56–53 in a thriller, with Troy guard Emil Jones draining a basket with only 1.6 seconds to win the game.
Under RPI's president at the time, Richard J. Grosh, the 15th Street Armory was renovated into a modern sports and recreation center. [5] Rensselaer's alumni association pledged the funds to install the building's synthetic rubber flooring in its gymnasium, and in 1973 the building was named the Alumni Sports and Recreation Center. [3]