The 21st-year leader of the Miami program, however, has not been to a Sweet 16 in the current Super Regional format. The NCAA switched from a 16-team finals site to an eight-team site—with the Sweet 16 played at the home higher-seeded teams—in 2019. The Hurricanes fell in the second round that season, the 2020 tournament was canceled and it dropped a second-round matchup last year.
Now, Miami will travel to eighth-ranked and eighth-seeded Pepperdine for its first Super Regional matchup. The Hurricanes and Waves will face off Friday at 4 p.m. ET at Ralphs-Straus Tennis Center in Malibu, Calif.
“I’ve been thinking about that. I think it definitely puts a little bit more of a spotlight on the Sweet 16 match, being one match at one facility,” Yaroshuk-Tews said of her opening foray into this new format. “But listen, I’m not one to question things too much; I do what I’m told. I’m told to go play a Super Regional. We could be going to worse places, right? Malibu seems like a pretty cool place to continue the NCAA tournament.”
Aside from the event structure being new to the Hurricanes, the team also has to deal with, by far, the longest Sweet 16 trip of any school left in the field.
With a flight of five-plus hours and a three-hour time difference, there are some additional factors involved for Miami. Yaroshuk-Tews, though, quickly came up with a plan to work through that and not let it impact her team.
“Typically, we only leave a day before and had we gone someplace closer, we still would’ve only left a day before. But we left Wednesday, left early,” the two-time ITA Southeast Region Coach of the Year said. “The time change is going to be a bit of an issue. The weather will not be an issue. I think the weather, for us, will actually be beautiful. It will probably feel like fall. So, [there are] positives and negatives. [That is] all part of the tournament; you’ve just got to kind of make do with what you’ve got.”
The Waves into the Sweet 16 at 22-6 (7-0 WCC) on the season. It has won five matches in a row, conceding just two points during that stretch. The reining NCAA runner-up, Pepperdine has seven ranked singles players and four ranked doubles pairs.
In singles, Shirori Fukuda leads the way at No. 15, followed by Lisa Zaar at No. 27, Taisiya Pachkaleva at No. 40, Victoria Flores at No. 59, Savannah Broadus at No. 85, Janice Tjen at No. 91 and Nikki Redelijk at No. 121. In doubles, Broadus and Tjen place No. 42, with Flores and Zaar at No. 45, Flores and Tjen at No. 60 and the duo of Broadus and Fukuda at No. 70.
“From what I’ve seen and heard, of course, they are a very solid team,” Yaroshuk-Tews shared. “Although they’ve played a tough schedule, I don’t think that they’ve played the level that we’ve played. But I have a lot of respect for them. I know quite a few players in their lineup. I know that they’re really solid, really good. Playing them on their home court, they’re going to be even a little bit better. So, we’re going to have to be ready to play.”