HEAD TENNIS / CROSS COUNTRY COACH
Name: Dominic Modise
Office
Phone: 252.985.5201
E-mail:
dmodise@ncwc.edu
Dominic
Modise was named head coach of the North Carolina Wesleyan men’s and women’s tennis
programs in the summer of 2007. In just two years at the helm, he has
already guided the Battling Bishops to two winning seasons in men’s tennis,
including a near-perfect 15-1 record in 2009. The 2009 season, in
fact, saw Modise earn USA South Coach of the Year honors after leading
Wesleyan to a 6-0 mark in USA South play and the regular season league
title, as well as
the USAC Tournament Championship, a regional final appearance in NCAA
Tournament play, and a #16 final national ranking. His short tenure
has seen Modise produce 11 All-Conference performers (nine male, two female), the 2008
USAC Rookie of the Year, the 2009 USAC Player of the Year, and two
regionally-ranked players.
Modise assumed his role
with the Battling Bishops after serving as assistant
women’s tennis coach at the University of Colorado
during the 2006-07 season. Modise helped the Buffaloes
achieve one of the most exciting seasons in the
program’s history as they earned an NCAA Tournament
berth and a third place finish in the Big 12 Conference.
Both overall records during the regular season (16-8)
and in the conference (9-2) were school-bests since
1999.
Before joining the Buffalo
staff, Modise spent two years as head coach at Nicholls State University
(Thibodaux, La.) rebuilding the men’s tennis program after a 15-year
absence. He guided NSU to the conference tournament for the first time in
school history and coached the team to a top-five league finish with only
two scholarship student-athletes. He was responsible
for the day-to-day
operation of the tennis program, including recruiting, budget, traveling,
and fundraising.
Prior to his successful
efforts at Nicholls State, Modise was the assistant men’s and women’s tennis
coach at the University of New Orleans. There he coached a pair of women to
national recognition among the elite Intercollegiate Tennis Association (ITA)
Top-100 rankings and guided both programs to top-five finishes in the Sun
Belt Conference. Additionally, Modise helped raise $15,000 to benefit the
tennis programs and assisted with Children’s Wish and the Privateers fundraising tournament.
He has also been involved
with fundraising through Legg Mason and the ATP Tour Futures
Tournaments.
It was during his stint at New Orleans that Modise gained notoriety as
an accomplished runner. Undergoing intensive training, he
competed in two marathons: the Great Mississippi River Relay
Race (50K, 5-person teams) and the Ole Man River Half-Marathon
(13.5K). Led by Modise, his Privateer relay team took first
place among 29 teams in the River Relay, while as an individual,
he finished 14th among 276 runners in the half-marathon.
From 2000-02, Modise was the
interim head coach University of Louisiana, Lafayette. At ULL, he helped the
Lady Cajuns reach a Top-75 national ranking and led the team to its best
finish in school history. During his tenure, he coached one of his women’s
players to a national ranking of No. 111, the highest ranking of any ULL
tennis student-athlete in school history.
With solid coaching
credentials under his belt, he has worked with some of the top players in
the world as a tennis instructor at Nick Bollettieri Tennis Academy in
Florida. Modise is
honored to take the reigns of the tennis programs at
Wesleyan, as well as a young women’s cross country squad.
“A head coach must have great
organizational skills, as well as the ability to work with others and
motivate them,” he said. “It is my pleasure to perform these tasks within
the Athletics Department at North Carolina Wesleyan and be part of the
community in Rocky Mount.”
Modise earned his bachelor’s
degree in business administration with a concentration in marketing from the
University of Hawaii at Manoa in December of 1999. In 2003,
he earned his masters degree in human performance with a concentration in
sport management from the University of New Orleans.
During his collegiate playing
days at Central Alabama Community College where he earned his associates
degree in 1997, Modise excelled on the court ranking among the Top-20 in the NJCAA singles rankings and was nominated as a NJCAA Player to Watch. He was
voted the Most Inspirational and the Most Valuable Player by his
teammates. In the classroom, Modise was named an All-WAC scholar athlete.
Originally from South Africa,
Modise speaks four languages: English, Dutch, Tswana and Zulu.