Under Reynolds' leadership, Auburn has made three NCAA Tournament appearances and a SEC Championship semifinal appearance (2021).
The Atlanta, Ga., product was the 2003 SEC player of the year and NCAA tournament Most Outstanding Player, leading Vanderbilt to the NCAA finals that season. He played 12 seasons of professional tennis, appearing in 17 grand slam main draws for singles and 20 for doubles, and was the 2012 MVP of World Team Tennis for the Washington Kastles.
Coach Reynolds and his wife Dr. Josie Reynolds, an All-America pentathlete and heptathlete at Vanderbilt, have three sons – Parker, Mason and Blake.
- Led Vanderbilt to the 2003 NCAA final as a player and was named the tournament’s Most Outstanding Player
- 2003 SEC Player of the Year
- Ranked No. 1 nationally in singles as a collegiate player
- 12-year career in professional tennis (2002-14)
- Career high professional world rankings of No. 63 (singles) and No. 46 (doubles)
- Appeared in 17 main draw grand slam events in singles and 20 main draws in doubles
- Advanced to grand slam third rounds in singles at Australian Open (2005) and Wimbledon (2008); did so four times in doubles
- 2012 MVP of World Team Tennis; 2010 WTT male rookie of the year; led the Washington Kastles to four WTT titles (2011-14)
- Named Auburn head coach in 2016 after serving as an assistant coach for NCAA runner-up Oklahoma (2015-16 season)
- Led the young 2021 Tigers to a ranking as high as No. 39 with NCAA individual qualifiers in singles (Tyler Stice) and doubles (Tad Maclean and Finn Murgett)
- Tad Maclean and Finn Murgett 2021 NCAA doubles finalists
- In 2022, Auburn finished No. 23 as a team, advancing to the SEC semifinals and the second round of the NCAA championships; All-Americans Tad Maclean and Finn Murgett and all-SEC Tyler Stice earned NCAA individual bids
- Career record at Auburn is 74-88 after six seasons in the nation’s toughest conference
- 2015 Vanderbilt graduate in human organizational development
- 2019 inductee to the Vanderbilt Sports Hall of Fame