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    The Baylor Lariat
    Home»Sports

    No. 22 Baylor women’s tennis swept by No. 26 Oklahoma State

    Aidan O'ConnorBy Aidan O'ConnorMarch 31, 2025 Sports No Comments3 Mins Read
    Senior Cristina Tiglea prepares to receive a serve in her tight singles match against OSU's Anastasiya Komar on Sunday afternoon at the Hurd Tennis Center. Camie Jobe | Photographer
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    By Aidan O’Connor | Sports Writer

    With a chance to keep rolling in conference play, No. 22 Baylor women’s tennis hit a roadbump, falling 4-0 to No. 26 Oklahoma State Sunday at the Hurd Tennis Center.

    “We didn’t have a great start in the doubles,” head coach Joey Scrivano said. “We just found a way to underperform on the big points. I think that kind of set the tone for the entire match. I think that was the overall theme. On the bigger points, we just didn’t play. We didn’t execute what we needed to do on the big points. That makes a difference, a huge difference.”

    A rocky doubles start for the Bears (16-4, 7-3) spiraled after No. 24 seniors Liubov Kostenko and Cristina Tiglea lost 6-1. Oklahoma State (14-6, 8-1) had all the momentum, up 4-2 on the remaining two doubles courts.

    Senior Cristina Tiglea serves in her doubles match against Oklahoma State University at the Hurd Tennis Center on March 30th. Camie Jobe | Photographer
    Senior Cristina Tiglea serves in her 6-1 doubles loss against Oklahoma State University Sunday afternoon at the Hurd Tennis Center. Camie Jobe | Photographer

    However, the green and gold didn’t give up as they mounted comebacks on both courts. Senior Sierra Berry and freshman Na Dong once trailed 5-2 but stormed back to make things 5-4. Berry hit a thunderous overhead winner, and the match was hanging in the balance to give them their fourth game. The comeback was short-lived, though, as they fell 6-4 moments later. Junior Kennedy Gibbs and sophomore Zuzanna Kubacha remained unfinished, trailing 5-4.

    In singles, the struggles continued as Kostenko lost 6-0, 7-5. Tiglea and Gibbs were both down one set and behind in the second set, but managed to claw their way back to 5-5 ties in the second set. Once again, the comeback push was halted. Tiglea fell 6-4, 7-5, and Gibbs dropped the final point 6-4, 7-5 moments later to seal Oklahoma State’s 4-0 sweep.

    “I’m really proud of the athletes that were resilient and found a way to persevere,” Scrivano said. “A big part of tennis is you’ve got to problem solve. You’ve got to keep fighting when things don’t look like it’s going to be your day. Just credit to those players that did that.”

    Sophomore Zuzanna Kubacha serves in her singles match against OSU on Sunday afternoon. Camie Jobe | Photographer
    Sophomore Zuzanna Kubacha serves in her singles match against OSU on Sunday afternoon at the Hurd Tennis Center. Camie Jobe | Photographer

    Freshman Nanaka Sato remained unfinished with a score of 4-6, 7-5, 0-3 after bouncing back from being down 2-5 and multiple match points. Dong and Kubacha also left their matches unfinished, with Dong’s match being left at 6-4, 2-5, and Kubacha’s being left at 7-6(1), 1-6.

    “Ultimately, this is a team sport,” Scrivano said. “We’ve got to have all of our positions compete the same way with that same intensity and resilience. We need to do that in our upcoming matches, for sure.”

    Senior Sierra Berry hailing from Frisco, Texas returns a serve in her doubles match against OSU with her doubles partner Na Dong. Camie Jobe | Photographer
    Senior Sierra Berry (pictured) leaps for the ball in her 6-4 doubles match loss against OSU with her doubles partner Na Dong at the Hurd Tennis Center. Camie Jobe | Photographer

    The Bears will be back on the court at 2 p.m. Friday against Arizona at the Hurd Tennis Center.

    Baylor women's tennis Cristina Tiglea Joey Scrivano Kennedy Gibbs Na Dong Nanaka Sato Oklahoma State Cowgirls
    Aidan O'Connor
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    Aidan O’Connor is a sophomore double major in communication and journalism. He's a big Dallas sports and DC fan. After graduating he wants to be a play by play broadcaster and hopefully one day commentate for one of his hometown teams.

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