MOBILE, Ala. — For the third time in four years,
 Xavier University of Louisiana men's tennis is the NAIA national runner-up
  after a 5-0 loss Saturday morning to Georgia Gwinnett in the tournament final.
	
     Men's tennis is the only XULA sport to reach the 
 final of an NAIA national championship team event. The Gold Rush also finished
  second in 2016 and 2017 . . . and all the runner-up finishes were to Georgia Gwinnett.
	
	     The Grizzlies (27-0) won their sixth consecutive national title, 
	 finished unbeaten for the fourth consecutive season and won a dual
	  match for the 109th consecutive time. They've never lost to an NAIA opponent 
		 — their three losses in seven seasons are to NCAA Division II teams; 
		  the most recent was April 3, 2015.
			
			     "Georgia Gwinnett is just too good for everybody — not just us,"
			 XULA coach 
Alan Green said.
			 
			      Still it was a remarkable finish for the Gold Rush (17-9),
			  the lowest seeded team (seventh) ever to reach an NAIA men's final. XULA
				 got there with three victories against top-10 seeds: No. 10 Union (Ky.)
				  in the round of 16, No. 2 Reinhardt in the quarterfinals and No. 3 Cardinal
					 Stritch in the semifinals.
					 
					 		      "It was a fun ride with our guys," Green said.
							 "We weren't supposed to be in the final. It's a little more rewarding
							  because of where we came from. Our guys did more than what I asked of them."
								
			     Federico Bonacia won in doubles and singles for Georgia Gwinnett.
			Bonacia and Ayed Zatar won five of the last six games in an 8-4 victory against 
			 
Santiago Perez and 
Shaikh Abdullah on the first doubles court — that gave
			  the Grizzlies a 3-0 lead — and he clinched with a 6-0, 6-3 victory against 
Ghassan Alansi on court two.
				
				     Georgia Gwinnett scored first at No. 2 doubles when
				Rafael Coutinho and Valentino Caratini defeated 
Pierre Andrieu and Alansi 8-2.
				XULA's 
Chris Anders and 
Gabriel Niculescu led 2-0 on court three before
				  Federico Herrere Duran and Daniel Czepielewski rallied for an 8-5 victory.
 
					
					     "It took us some time to separate from a very good Xavier team," Georgia Gwinnett coach Chase Hodges
 said. "They played extremely well and hard early in the doubles."
     Mika Kosonen won 6-1, 6-0 against 
Samir Chikhaoui at No. 6 singles.
 Four singles matches were unfinished, including Herrera Duran with a 6-3, 5-2 lead against
  Perez, who saved a national championship point. Herrera Duran and Perez are 1-2 in the
	 most recent Oracle ITA/NAIA singles rankings.
	
	     XULA's 
Gabriel Niculescu led Jose Dugo 6-4, 1-3 when the Grizzlies clinched.
It was the final collegiate competition for Niculescu, Anders and Andrieu, all seniors.
 
     "Our team showed great fight and left everything on the court," Green said.
     Georgia Gwinnett tied the NAIA men's record for consecutive
 championships won. Lamar (1955-60) and Redlands (1966-71) also won six in a row.
 
			 						
								
								
Lowest seeds to reach NAIA men's tennis championship round
No. 7 — 
XULA, 2019 . . . lost 5-0 to No. 1 Georgia Gwinnett
No. 3 — 
XULA, 2016 . . . lost 5-2 to No. 1 Georgia Gwinnett
No. 3 — Georgia Gwinnett, 2014 . . . won 5-1 vs. No. 1 Embry-Riddle (Fla.)
No. 3 — Oklahoma Christian, 2012 . . . won 5-4 vs. No. 1 Fresno Pacific
No. 3 — Fresno Pacific, 2009 . . . won 5-3 vs. No. 1 Auburn Montgomery
No. 3 — Fresno Pacific, 2008 . . . lost 5-3 to No. 1 Auburn Montgomery
No. 3 — Oklahoma City, 2002 . . . lost 5-0 to No. 1 Auburn Montgomery