Geoff Abrams

His college team won the NCAA national championship his freshman, sophomore, and senior years.

[4] He defeated him again in the semifinals of the Easter Bowl Junior Boys 14 Singles Tennis Championship, which he went on to win.

[22] That year he also won the USTA Amateur Champions Men's Doubles, with Edward Carter.

[23] In his senior year in 2000 he was named to the USA Tennis Collegiate Team – an elite training program for the top American college players, was the Pac-10 Champion, and the eighth-ranked college player in the U.S.[5][24][25] And – along with teammate Alex Kim – he was part of the top-ranked doubles team in the nation, which also was named the ITA National Doubles Team of the Year.

[7][29] Abrams became the first player in the Pac-10 tournament's 100-year history to win the boys' 14, 16, California Interscholastic Federation, and men's Pacific 10 singles titles.

[24] Stanford's head coach Dick Gould said in April 2000: "He has the best winning percentage ever, of anyone who's been here four years.

[32] In June 2000, he won the doubles title with Alex Kim at the USTA Chandler Cup Futures.

[33] He also won the 2000 Pomona Valley Hospital Medical Center USTA Pro Classic in Claremont, California.

[34][35] In 2009, Abrams was back at Stanford as an intern at Stanford Hospital, where he completed his residency in orthopedic surgery, and thereafter he trained further in orthopedic sports medicine and shoulder surgery at Rush University Medical Center in Chicago, Illinois.

[36][37] He specializes in sports medicine and arthroscopy, upper extremity joint replacement, and ligament reconstructive surgery of the shoulder, knee, hip, and elbow.