Aug. 23, 2001 Brian Boland, entering his first season as men's tennis coach at Virginia, has announced the hiring of Constantine Ananiadis as assistant coach. Ananiadis comes to Virginia from Agnes Scott College in Decatur, Ga., where he was head coach for the last two seasons. In addition to tennis, he also served as cross-country coach and physical education instructor. Prior to his appointment at Agnes Scott College, Ananiadis served as an assistant tennis professional at the Anniston Country Club in Anniston, Ala for one year. A 1996 graduate of Stetson University in DeLand, Fla., he received his master's degree in exercise physiology from Auburn University this summer. Ananiadis got his start as a tennis camp insructor, working at Auburn, Stetson and Notre Dame over the course of five summers before spending a year at Auburn as a graduate teaching assistant. Reference: http://virginiasports.cstv.com/sports/m-tennis/spec-rel/082301aaa.html --- ca. 2006 at Washington College web site : Constantine Ananiadis was introduced as the head men's and women's tennis coach at Washington College in June 2003. He came to Chestertown from the University of Virginia, where he served as an assistant women's tennis coach for two seasons. The 2002-03 Cavaliers advanced to the second round of the NCAA Division I Team Championship after finishing with a 16-10 record and were ranked 35th nationally. Ananiadis also briefly served as an assistant men's tennis coach at Virginia when he first arrived at the school. Prior to his stay at Virginia, Ananiadis was the head tennis and cross country coach at Agnes Scott College. As tennis coach, he had an immediate impact, guiding the team to a 17-4 record in his first season after a 4-10 finish the previous year. That mark broke the school record for wins in a season and landed Agnes Scott in the Division III Top 10 for the first time ever. During his tenure, he coached the first Agnes Scott athlete of any sport to achieve All-America status or be selected for an NCAA Championship. Ananiadis's work in tennis also includes a one-year stint as an assistant tennis professional at the Anniston Country Club in Anniston, AL and several summers as a tennis camp instructor or director at Stetson University, Auburn University, the University of Notre Dame, and Virginia. Ananiadis received a Bachelor of Science in Sports & Exercise Science from Stetson in 1996 and went on to do graduate work in Exercise Physiology at Auburn. While at Stetson, he was a standout tennis player, helping the Hatters to their first national ranking and breaking the school record for winning percentage in a season by posting a 21-3 record his senior year. A nationally-ranked junior player while growing up in his native Greece, Ananiadis and his wife, Marti, have two sons, Stavros and Vagelis. He currently serves as the Men's Awards Chair for the ITA's Atlantic South region. Reference: http://www.washingtoncollegesports.com/mtennis/coaches.html