Kalbas attended the University of Notre Dame in Notre Dame, Indiana, where he played for the Fighting Irish tennis team. He compiled a singles record of 85 wins, 54 losses, playing mostly in the team's No. 1 or No. 2 spot.[1][2][3] A strong counterpuncher, he made up for his 5-foot-7-inch (1.70 m) size with good court awareness, grit, and a willingness to play through injury.[3][4][5] Teammates considered him an informal leader by his junior year.[6] As the team captain in his senior year in 1988–89, he missed half of the season due to a sore shoulder and other injuries and fell to No. 3; he had helped recruit the player, freshman David DiLucia, who replaced him in the top spot.[3][6] Before the end of his senior year, he was hired as an assistant coach for the next season.[2]
Coaching career
Kalbas remained an assistant coach at Notre Dame for three years.[1] In his last year, Notre Dame reached the final of the 1992 NCAA Championships.[1]
Kalbas became the head coach of the University of North Carolina women's team in the summer of 2003.[1] Since its breakthrough 2009–10 season, the team has consistently held a place in the top 5 of the ITA rankings, and they have won the ACC Championships six times and the ITA National Team Indoor Championships seven times.[1][8] In Kalbas's twentieth season, North Carolina won its first NCAA team title at the 2023 Championships; he had led the program to five previous appearances in the NCAA semifinals, including one final appearance in 2014.[9][10] One of his North Carolina players has won an NCAA singles title (Jamie Loeb in 2015), and three North Carolina teams have won the NCAA doubles title (Jenna Long/Sara Anundsen in 2007, Makenna Jones/Elizabeth Scotty in 2021, and Fiona Crawley/Carson Tanguilig in 2023).[1] Kalbas was named the national Coach of the Year in 2010 and 2023.[11][12] The active leader in NCAA Division I dual match wins as a coach, he has signed a contract extension with North Carolina through 2027.[1][13]
Personal life
Kalbas has two children with his wife, Suzanne.[1] His brother, Tim Kalbas, was a fellow member of the Notre Dame tennis team.[4][14]
^ abcMitchell, Bob (April 28, 1989). "Kalbas 'everything' to Irish"(PDF). The Observer (student newspaper). p. 21. Retrieved July 1, 2023 – via Archives of the University of Notre Dame.