GALLOWAY, NJ (May 6, 2021) – When the Rutgers University-Camden women's tennis team played Stockton University back on April 22, the match in Camden was basically to settle which team earned the second seed for the New Jersey Athletic Conference Tournament.

Stockton swept that match and things weren't any different here Thursday when the teams met in post-season play. Needing only five wins for an official NCAA post-season victory, the Ospreys swept all three doubles matches and clinched the victory with the first two completed singles matches as they eliminated the Scarlet Raptors, 5-0, in the NJAC Tournament semifinals.
Tournament bracket
Rutgers-Camden closes its season at 5-3. Stockton, 6-1, advances to the NJAC final, where it will play at top-seeded The College of New Jersey at 12 p.m. on Saturday. The Lions beat Stockton, 9-0, earlier in the season.
Stockton won the first doubles match, 8-2, over the Rutgers-Camden duo of freshman
Samantha Hoban and junior
Tiffany Trivers. The Raptors' junior duo of
LeAnne Hall and
Hannah Cohan was defeated at second doubles, 8-2, while the third doubles team of sophomore
Alyna Cabrera and junior
Erica Steer lost by an 8-3 score.
The first two completed singles matches were at the top flight and the third singles spot. At first singles, Hoban was defeated, 6-2, 6-0. At third singles, Hall lost, 6-0, 6-0.
Steer finished the season with a 3-2 singles record (1-0 at fourth singles and 2-2 in the sixth spot), while both Hall and Hoban were 4-4. Hoban was 3-4 at first singles and 1-0 at second singles. Hall was 1-0 at second singles and 3-4 in the third spot.
Trivers finished the season at 3-3 in singles competition, including 0-1 at first singles and 3-2 at second singles. Cohan was 2-3 in singles (1-0 at third singles and 1-3 at the fifth position), while Cabrera went 2-4 overall (1-4 at fourth singles and 1-0 at fifth singles).
The top doubles team of Hall and Hoban went 4-2 in the No. 1 spot, while Hoban and Trivers combined for a 1-1 mark at first doubles. Cohan and Trivers went 3-2 at second doubles, while Cohan and Hall were 1-1 and Cohan and Steer were 1-0 at second doubles.
Trivers and Hall continued climbing the program's all-time career ladder for victories. Both three-year letterwinners, Trivers now owns 21 singles wins and Hall has 20, placing them tied for fourth and sixth, respectively, on the career charts. Hall, meanwhile, has 20 doubles victories to stand at third on the career chart, while Trivers owns 19 to tie for fourth on the career list. Combined, they both own 40 overall wins to tie for third all-time.
Cohan, meanwhile, owns seven singles wins and 11 doubles victories in her career, giving her 18 overall wins to tie for 14th on the career chart.