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Coming to America was a 'culture shock' to a few Cats

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  • Coming to America was a 'culture shock' to a few Cats

    CollegeSports.com, NY
    April 29 2005

    Coming to America was a 'culture shock' to a few Cats

    By Jennifer Jones Kentucky Kernel
    Lexington, KY (U-WIRE) -- Word definitely travels far.

    Over the years, UK tennis players have carried the school's
    reputation across the world. And it is paying off now.

    Diversity has become a major contribution to the men's and women's
    tennis teams' recent success, as there are now five international
    players on the tennis team from all over the world.

    UK men's tennis head coach Dennis Emery said past tennis players
    recommended the international players to him.

    "I heard about them through word of mouth, followed them up, and
    pursued them," he said.

    And he managed to persuade many to come to Lexington.

    "They have filled some holes and made the team deeper," he said.

    Tigran Martirosyan is a senior from Yereven, Armenia, who transferred
    from Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles. He came to UK
    because of the competitiveness of the Southeastern Conference and
    because UK provides a good level of athletics.

    "I wanted a successful career and to better my tennis skills," he
    said.

    Martirosyan almost went to USC, but his coach from Loyola suggested
    UK because of our facilities, academics and coaches.

    "Moving to Kentucky was a culture shock for me. There was an Armenian
    culture in Los Angeles, so I felt comfortable there," he said.

    Martirosyan also said that the move was nothing too big to overcome,
    and he is glad he came for the experience.

    This season, Martirosyan has teamed with doubles partner Jesse
    Witten, and the two have been ranked as high as No. 6 in the nation
    by the Intercollegiate Tennis Association. He and Witten knocked off
    three top-10 opponents in the same week earlier this season.

    Marcus Sundh, a freshman from Stockholm, Sweden, came to UK because
    it is a good school for athletics and academics. He was offered other
    scholarships to Utah and to Southern Methodist University in Dallas,
    but Emery talked him into coming to Lexington."The transition was not
    too difficult because I left my family when I was sixteen to go to
    tennis school, and I do get to go home for the summer," Sundh said.





    Aibika Kalsarieva, a senior from Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan, led the UK
    women's tennis team to its first SEC Championship this season. She
    has also been named the school's first SEC Player of the Year.

    She said it was UK head coach Mark Guilbeau that drew her to campus.
    He stayed interested in her while others turned away, and it got her
    attention.

    When she finally cleared all the academic hurdles to enroll in a
    Division I school, he still wanted her, and she listened.

    Kalsarieva said Guilbeau has been a positive influence, as he has
    pushed her more than any other she has had in the past.

    She has not been back to Kyrgyzstan since she came to America in
    2000, and she said she still misses it.

    Two other international players on the women's team are Liis Sober, a
    sophomore from Tallinn, Estonia, and Kim Coventry, a sophomore from
    Melbourne, Australia.

    Coventry came to UK because of the coaching staff, and because she
    wanted to play on a team that had the potential to be in the top 10
    in the nation.

    "It was a difficult transition moving here, but I have great support
    from my teammates and coaches, and I'm really enjoying it now,"
    Coventry said.
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