Profile of Harvard’s head women’s tennis coach, Traci Green

Meet Harvard’s head women’s tennis coach.

Traci Green

In 1978, tennis sensation Tracy Austinhad made her first name a hot property--thus, Frank and Tina Sloan Green named their new daughter Traci. But even though Frank played high-school football and ran track in college, and Tina, who’s in the National Lacrosse Hall of Fame, coached three Temple squads to NCAA titles, they hardly expected her to play tennis, let alone make the U.S. junior team or become Harvard’s head women’s tennis coach. Traci attended the Friends Select School in Philadelphia (“I was one of the fastest kids in my class through seventh grade”); two years after learning tennis, she was top-ranked in her region. Arthur Ashe invited her to his camps and clinics in Florida; in the evenings, he “talked life skills with us,” Green recalls. “He had us solving ancient Mayan puzzles; he really thought outside the box.” Green won a full tennis scholarship to the University of Florida, which she likens to being “thrown onto a conveyor belt--our sole job was to win the NCAA title.” They did, in her sophomore year. An unconventional, all-court player, she ranked as high as fifth nationally in doubles, and won sportsmanship awards. “I’m a calm person,” she says. “You couldn’t tell whether I was winning or losing by looking at me.” Green coached at Temple herself for three years while earning a master’s in sports administration before coming to Harvard in 2007, where her team shared the 2009 Ivy title. The Ivy emphasis on academics was “very appealing,” she says. “I’ve never been a win-at-all-costs type person.” She loves Philadelphia’s pro teams and has been to the last two World Series. And she has just taken up squash. “It’s fun,” she says. “I’m terrible!”

Related topics

You might also like

Harvard Students, Alumni to Compete at the 2026 Olympics

Six Crimson athletes are headed to the XXV Winter Games in Milano Cortina. 

England’s First Sports Megastar

A collection of illustrations capture a boxer’s triumphant moment. 

Harvard Football: Villanova 52, Harvard 7

The Crimson’s inaugural playoff appearance is nasty, brutish, and short.

Most popular

The True Cost of Grade Inflation at Harvard

How an abundance of A’s created “the most stressed-out world of all.”

Harvard’s Epstein Probe Widened

The University investigates ties to donors, following revelations in newly released files.

“The Grand Wake for Harvard Indifference”

At noon on November 16, 1938, some 500 Harvard and Radcliffe students jammed Emerson Hall to express their outrage at Kristallnacht, as the...

Explore More From Current Issue

Anne Neal Petri in a navy suit leans on a wooden chair against an exterior wall of Mount Vernon..

Mount Vernon, Historic Preservation, and American Politics

Anne Neal Petri promotes George Washington and historic literacy.

Black and white photo of a large mushroom cloud rising above the horizon.

Open Book: A New Nuclear Age

Harvard historian Serhii Plokhy’s latest book looks at the rising danger of a new arms race.

Four young people sitting around a table playing a card game, with a chalkboard in the background.

On Weekends, These Harvard Math Professors Teach the Smaller Set

At Cambridge Math Circle, faculty and alumni share puzzles, riddles, and joy.