Big changes for Arkansas Razorbacks as tennis programs end after 70 years

Fayetteville, Arkansas, USASat Apr 25 2026
The Arkansas Razorbacks are making a major shift by dropping both men's and women's tennis programs after spring competitions. This move reduces the total sports offered by the university to 17. The decision follows a "difficult" review process that considered financial sustainability and evolving college sports priorities. Athletic director Hunter Yurachek emphasized that supporting tennis at a competitive SEC level wasn’t feasible with current resources. While scholarships for current players will be honored until graduation, athletes can transfer immediately if desired. This isn’t the first time Arkansas cut sports. In 1993, men’s swimming was dropped to comply with an old SEC rule about proportional gender representation. That program lasted until 1996 to allow recruited athletes to finish their degrees. Today’s cuts follow a different logic—balancing budgets in an era where college athletics faces rising expenses and legal changes from the House settlement. Financially, men’s and women’s tennis cost over $2. 6 million combined in 2023-24 but generated just $9, 556 in revenue. Unlike some sports where partial scholarships spread funding thinner, tennis is a "head count" sport—meaning every player gets a full ride. Scholars note this structure makes tennis vulnerable during budget cuts because every roster spot consumes more resources. Historically, top Olympic tennis players rarely develop through college programs, reducing the sport’s competitive value for universities focused on revenue.
Arkansas now sits just above the NCAA minimum for FBS status, requiring at least 16 teams (6 men’s, 8 women’s). Other SEC schools operate between 16 and 21 sports, with most offering more than Arkansas. The Razorbacks will keep only two men’s-only sports (football and baseball) and five women’s-only programs (softball, soccer, volleyball, gymnastics, and swimming). Mixed-gender sports like basketball and track will continue. The decision reflects broader trends in higher education and athletics. Smaller schools are dropping divisions or closing programs entirely due to enrollment and financial pressures. Meanwhile, Power Four conferences face increasing costs and legal uncertainties after recent settlements. Whether Arkansas’s move signals a wider shift remains to be seen, but it underscores how college sports are becoming less predictable. Tennis has roots at Arkansas dating back to 1955 (men) and 1980 (women). The men’s team won an NCAA doubles title in 1982 and has seven players in the UA Sports Hall of Honor. Current coaches Jay Udwadia (men) and Tucker Clary (women) lead teams with losing records this season, neither of which may make the NCAA Tournament. The end of tennis marks another chapter in Arkansas’s athletics history, one shaped by both tradition and tough financial choices.
https://localnews.ai/article/big-changes-for-arkansas-razorbacks-as-tennis-programs-end-after-70-years-538ff354

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