Randy Loden
Randy Loden
Year: Jr.
Hometown: Richmond, Va.

Personal
The son of Carl and Cheryl Loden of Richmond, Va... A singles and doubles AllAmerican... Winner of the Fall 2007 ITA regional singles title and two matches at the ITA Small College National Championships in Mobile, Ala... His brother, Kevin, was a doubles All-American at UMW... Richmond Metro Player of the Year in high school... Business major.

2007: Ranked #23 in ITA Atlantic South Rankings - Singles... 23 singles wins was fourth all-time for UMW singles wins in a season... First Team All-CAC Singles... First Team All-CAC Doubles. Randy had a very successful sophomore campaign. Over the course of the year, he posted significant singles wins over Sebastian Pena of Liberty, Matt Farina of Richmond, Kevin Walsh of Georgetown, DJ Petros of Trinity, Jon Lo of Swarthmore, Morgan Surfas of Chapman, Will Ellison of Claremont, Aron Ouye of Redlands, Erin Noble of Pomona, John Snead of James Madison, Nat Estes of Washington & Lee, and Roger Mosteller of College of New Jersey. In doubles, Randy had significant wins over Swarthmore, Johns Hopkins, George Mason, Redlands, Salisbury, and Johns Hopkins.

2006: NCAA Doubles Tournament... Ranked #16 in ITA National Rankings - Doubles... Won ITA Southeast Regional Doubles Championship... 23 doubles wins is sixth all-time on UMW single season wins list... First Team All-CAC Singles and Doubles. Randy had a solid rookie campaign playing #4 singles and #1 doubles. He posted significant singles wins over Alex Laporte of Kenyon, Charlie Howard of Washington U., Sean Dolan of Redlands, Jordan Koslosky of Carnegie Mellon, Jon Lo of Swarthmore, Bob Allensworth of James Madison U., and Larry Wei of Johns Hopkins. In doubles, Randy stepped into the #1 spot with senior Paul Bristow and advanced to the NCAA Tournament. They started the year winning the ITA Southeast Regional Doubles Championship and advanced to ITA Small College Nationals in Florida, where they finished 6th. They had significant wins over Washington & Lee, Haverford, Carnegie Mellon, New York University, Kenyon, Washington University, Longwood, Chapman, Georgetown, Salisbury, Carnegie Mellon, Rhodes, Swarthmore, Christopher Newport, and Johns Hopkins.