Worth Richardson
| Title: | Head Tennis Coach |
| Phone: | 252-985-5201 |
| Email: | wrichardson@ncwc.edu |
Following an extensive national search, Worth Richardson was announced as head coach of the Battling Bishops’ men’s and women’s tennis programs in June of 2012. Richardson’s successful track record as both a coach and recruiter, as well as his familiarity with North Carolina Wesleyan and the USA South Athletic Conference, were instrumental in his selection.
“We are
very excited to have Worth Richardson join our staff as head coach
of our men’s and women’s tennis programs,” said
John Thompson, N.C. Wesleyan Vice President for Athletics.
“Worth is a bright, energetic coach and we look forward to
working with him to further the great success of our
programs.”
Richardson comes
to North Carolina Wesleyan from Division I Bucknell University,
where he served as associate head coach of the Bison men’s
and women’s tennis teams. In just one season, Richardson led
BU’s top men’s doubles duo to the program’s and
conference’s first-ever NCAA Tournament bid. That same
doubles tandem achieved Bucknell’s first national ranking, as
well as the highest national ranking ever for a Patriot League
affiliate. Richardson’s hard work also resulted in the top
men’s recruit in the League’s class of 2012.
No stranger to
the USA South Athletic Conference, Richardson’s pre-Bucknell
resume saw the Virginia native enjoy a successful five-year stint
as the assistant men's coach at his alma mater, Christopher Newport
University. During his CNU tenure, the Captains earned four
All-America honors, three USA South Player of the Year awards, 18
All-Conference picks and 12 All-Conference Academic
selections.
It was at CNU
that Richardson established himself as an elite recruiter, having
secured two players who had achieved top-200 national junior
rankings, in addition to several Division I transfers and a wealth
of international talent. He proceeded to coach five of his CNU
recruits to top-25 national rankings in singles and doubles play,
leading his Captains to ITA Regional Championships in both. CNU, in
fact, achieved team national rankings in four of Richardson’s
five years on staff.
A four-year
starter for the Captains, Richardson also boasts the rare
distinction of winning a USA South Conference Championship as both
a player and a coach. His first title came as a senior in 2006, the
same year he was named to the All-Conference and All-Tournament
teams. After moving to the sidelines, he led the Captains to a
share of the 2007 league title before helping CNU secure an
outright championship the following year.
Ironically, it
was North Carolina Wesleyan that ended the Captains’ run in
2009 with the first of four consecutive USA South regular season
and tournament crowns for the Battling Bishops… a streak
that Richardson will now attempt to carry on as head coach of his
former league rival.
“I am
excited to bring my talents to Rocky Mount,” he said, adding,
“I am honored to have this opportunity to build on the
immense foundation Coach Modise, the administration and benefactors
have set in place. I look forward to helping our men capture their
first national title.”
On the
women’s side, the bar has also been raised as the 2012 season
saw Wesleyan's women turn the corner with a third straight winning
season, which included a share of the program's first USA South
regular season championship. Richardson again embraces the
challenge and is confident he can continue Wesleyan’s recent
success.
He continued,
“Roughly a year from now I hope to see us take home both the
men's and women's USA South Championships in front of packed
bleachers as we host the conference tournament at our
beautiful Slick Family Foundation Tennis
Complex.”
A nominee for
Assistant Coach of the Year in 2011, Richardson has worked with
players from the Philippines, Australia, Switzerland, Mexico,
Belarus and Moldova over the course of his career. His coaching
experience also includes a turn with the James River Tennis
Academy, as well as a stint as head coach of the 2010 USTA
Mid-Atlantic Boys and Girls 14u Zonals team. Most recently, he was
selected as the Mid-Atlantic 16U Intersectional team coach. Later
this summer, he will take the top four boys and girls from his
section to Shreveport, Louisiana for the highest level team
tournament in the country.
Richardson’s experience, however, doesn’t end there.
From 2009 to 2010, he served as tournament director of the USTA
Mid-Atlantic Boys 18U L2 Challenger at CNU, and he remains
assistant director of the Adidas Tennis Camps at the University of
Mary Washington, a position in which he has served since 2009.
He has also enjoyed runs as the head tennis pro at both the
Culpeper Sport and Racket Club and the James River Country Club,
where he accepted the USTA Virginia Tennis Club of the Year award
in 2007.
Also of note,
Richardson served as the inaugural tennis coach at Eastern View
High School in his hometown of Culpeper. Despite having no students
with high school playing experience, Richardson’s squad made
the regional semifinals in his and the program’s second and
third seasons, boasting a District singles champion in the
latter.
A 2006 graduate
of Christopher Newport with a degree in economics, Richardson will
now reside in the Rocky Mount area.

