HAWK TALK

May 2015

Issue link: https://catalog.e-digitaleditions.com/i/504636

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 136 of 162

137 "Freshman year I got lice and I gave it Katie and Morven, so I'll never forget that," Silver said. "ey were pretty scared, but we went through some treatments together and had some team bonding there. It was funny." Talcott's hair was spared the head bug, but she wasn't spared the hair pick. "I've dealt with enough lice to last me a lifetime," she said, quite seriously. "But I think we've become really close and stuff like that shows it." e good has without a doubt outweighed the bad. McCulloch wasn't sure she was going to visit the United States before committing to a state she knew nothing about. She has since played tennis in 15-20 states, by her count. "I would never have had the chance to do if I hadn't come here, so it's been an awesome opportunity," she said. Zordani has found a new family, and potentially a new future. She wants to stay on campus and dabble in coaching next season. "I want to stay and help out and see where that takes me. I just can't get enough of this place." Silver's career and playing time were dogged by injuries, but she says she'll leave those "tough mo- ments" behind and take with her "teammates that I'll be friends with forever." Talcott has played at the top of the Hawkeye lineup since Day 1, and she intends to continue her career professionally. A New York kid in 2011, she gradu- ates in 2015 with this bit of cultural information for those behind her: "You don't go cow-tipping for fun, which is what all my friends back East thought I would be do- ing. Iowa City is just a place, like anywhere else. It has its differences, but at the end of the day, it's the people that make an experience." F our years ago Katie Dougherty assembled a group of four strangers who, besides being tremendous tennis players, did not share a lot of similarities. ey came from Scotland, the Great Lakes, Long Island and the Midwest. ey settled in Iowa City and for four years called it home, eventually discovering that they all agree on at least one thing: ey are going to miss this place. "e Hawkeye community is so much fun to play for," said Morven McCulloch, who site unseen came to Iowa from Scotland. "I'm going to miss putting on the Hawkeye shirt and going out and playing for the Hawkeye community." McCulloch, Ellen Silver, Shelby Talcott, and Katie Zordani were teenagers with very different pasts when they arrived in 2011. Together they com- posed the 18th-ranked recruiting class in the na- tion, but in the years since, they've developed into much more. "We're like sisters now, we do everything together," said Silver. "We have classes together, we study together and we're together every day." e foursome has navigated the college life as classmates, teammates, roommates, doubles part- ners, travel partners and everything in between. ey have broken bread together countless times, and have shared both the good moments, and at least one time, the bad. As McCulloch puts it, "spring break is always ex- citing," but hearing it from Silver, it can get a little dirty.

Articles in this issue

view archives of HAWK TALK - May 2015