Jordan Wylie
Jordan Wylie
Title: Asst. Coach
Email: jcwylie@emory.edu

Jordan Wylie joined the Emory women's tennis coaching staff as an assistant on July 1, 2014. 

In just her second season after joining the coaching staff, Wylie helped the Eagles capture the National Championship in 2016 with a 5-4 victory over Williams College in the championship match. After helping the Eagles to a 28-5 record, which ties the program mark for most wins in a single season, Wylie was honored with the ITA Atlantic South Regional Assistant Coach of the Year Award and earlier in the year, she was honored by the University Athletic Association by being named part of the Coaching Staff of the Year as the team won its fourth consecutive UAA title and 27th in the last 29 seasons.

No stranger to Emory women’s tennis, Wylie enjoyed a fine four-year career (2009-10 through 2012-13) with the Eagles program.  During her tenure as a collegiate player, Wylie was a two-time All-America singles player (2011 & 2012) after advancing to the Round 16 at the NCAA Championships.  She garnered three All-University Athletic Association honors in singles, including first-team berths in 2012 & 2013, and was a three-time all-league performer in doubles, garnering first-team acclaim in 2011 and 2013.  She was the No. 12-ranked Division III singles player at the end of her junior season and was slotted in the No. 25 spot after her senior campaign.  In addition, Wylie was tabbed by the ITA as the Atlantic South Region Senior Player of the Year.   During the Eagles' national championship season of 2013-14, Wylie served as a volunteer coach.

She posted 20 or more singles victories in two seasons and finished with a career won-lost mark of 70-40, with her win total ranking 14th all-time in the history of the program.  She compiled a 62-37 ledger in doubles, the 18th-most victories on the Eagles’ all-time chart.  Emory registered an 82-22 record during Wylie’s career and was a national runner-up on two occasions.

"I feel so fortunate to have Jordan join our full- time coaching staff,” Bryant said. “She knows the program better than anyone and shares a special bond with me and the players as an alumna.  This will be a seamless transition for our program and, with Jordan's continued involvement, I am confident that our program will continue to vie for national championships in the future.”

A native of nearby Roswell, Wylie attended Centennial High School.  She earned undergraduate degrees from Emory in May of 2013 as a double major in Psychology and Anthropology.  Wylie was a volunteer coach for Emory during the 2013-14 school year that saw the Eagles claim the program’s sixth D-III national championship and establishing a school record for wins with an overall record of 28-2.