Updated: April 14, 2025, at 2:56 p.m.
Tennis (6-10, 2-4 Atlantic 10) dropped their final home match against Davidson 0-7 Friday.
The Revolutionaries have extended their five-game losing streak, which puts them at a 6-10 record for the season. Davidson shut out the Revs for the entire match, with the only GW win coming from senior Alejandra Ramirez and sophomore Solange Skeene, playing as doubles partners, with a score of 6-4.

Ramirez and Skeene have been partners for the majority of both this year’s and last year’s season, teaming up a total of 26 times in the last two seasons, including for every doubles game this season.
Ramirez said she’s “grateful” for her time as a student athlete and will carry everything she’s learned into her next chapter in medical school. She said her leadership as team captain made her senior season “even more meaningful.”
“Every year, I grew both as a person and a player,” Ramirez said in an email. “My teammates over the years have become some of my closest friends, and being a student-athlete opened doors in the professional realm.”
Ramirez is the only senior on the women’s 2025 roster and is wrapping up a four-year GW career with a current total of 19 doubles wins and 15 singles wins. Prior to joining the Revs, she reached a career-high ranking of No. 1383 in the International Tennis Federation and was among the top high school tennis players in her home state of Texas.
She said in September that she serves as a captain and mentor for the younger players on the team.
“It was really exciting having to take the role as the leader and captain and using everything that I’ve learned from my freshman year,” Ramirez said.
The last few matches have seen close competition, with the Revs falling to Longwood University 3-4 on April 5, despite the Revs dominating the doubles game. The preceding game against Saint Francis University was a 2-5 defeat for the Revs as well, managing to win a third of the matches they played. The close losses are a major shift from the beginning of the season, when the Revs started off with a 7-0 win against George Mason, quickly followed by three wins out of the next four games.
Head Coach George Rodriguez said the team’s up-and-down season, which included battles with injury, has helped the team’s resilience.
“This gave us an insight on where our team is with how strong we are mentally and physically,” Rodriguez said. “How much fight we have and how much we still want to win. No matter the circumstances.
Rodriguez said that entering the A-10 championship, which will be held in Orlando starting April 24, the team is prepared for any situation after the hard work they put in.
“I feel this team with all we have gone through this year has a little magic still left in them. No matter who we end up playing, they will show up and show out,” he said.
This post has been updated to reflect the following:
This post has been updated to include comments from Head Coach George Rodriguez and Alejandra Ramirez.