March 25, 2025

Medical students participate in largest Match in history

Among those who matched during the National Resident Matching Program on Friday, March 21, were 80 members of the Vanderbilt University School of Medicine graduating class.

Chinonso Ani celebrates at Match Day after learning he is going to Emory University for his residency in interventional radiology. (photo by Donn Jones)
Savanah Hardcastle is headed to University of Utah Health for her anesthesiology residency. (photo by Donn Jones)
Brian Hou celebrates with Amy Fleming, MD, after learning he matched at VUMC for his residency in orthopaedic surgery. (photo by Donn Jones)
Katherine Hajdu will go to Barnes-Jewish Hospital for her orthopaedic surgery residency. (photo by Donn Jones)
Gosife “Donald” Okoye will do his obstetrics and gynecology residency at the Mayo Clinic School of Graduate Medical Education. (photo by Donn Jones)
Starina D’Souza is off to Children’s Hospital-Los Angeles for her residency in pediatrics. (photo by Donn Jones)
Jessica McDonald and Alex Bruno hold the fishbowl of dollar bills they received for having their names called last. The couple will stay at VUMC for their residencies in pathology and pediatrics, respectively. (photo by Donn Jones)

Langford Auditorium at Vanderbilt University Medical Center was brimming with excitement and anticipation Friday, March 21, as 80 graduates of Vanderbilt University School of Medicine took turns opening their envelopes on the big stage and announcing the next stop on their medical careers: residency training.

The National Resident Matching Program reports that this year’s Match — the process of matching the preferences of applicants for U.S. residency positions with the preferences of residency program directors — had an all-time record for applicant participation.

Across the nation a total of 52,498 applicants registered for the Match, an increase of 2,085 (4.1%) over last year.

Twenty-six VUSM medical students will stay at VUMC for residency. Four couples entered the Match together.

This year, eight students will graduate with both MD and PhD degrees as part of the Medical Scientist Training Program.

The breakdown of Match specialties for residency is: internal medicine: 14; diagnostic radiology: 8; pediatrics: 8; orthopaedic surgery: 6; obstetrics-gynecology: 6; emergency medicine: 5; anesthesiology: 5; general surgery: 4; psychiatry: 3; neurological surgery: 3; physical medicine and rehabilitation: 2; pathology: 2; otolaryngology: 2; preliminary surgery: 2; urology: 1; plastic surgery: 1; oral and maxillofacial surgery: 1; ophthalmology:1; neurology: 1; interventional radiology: 1; family medicine: 1; dermatology: 1; urology research fellowship: 1; and preliminary medicine: 1.

Yanelis Diaz-Greenberg and Michael Greenberg participated in the Couples Match and are excited to be staying at Vanderbilt for her psychiatry residency and his physical medicine and rehabilitation residency. (photo by Donn Jones)
Yanelis Diaz-Greenberg and Michael Greenberg participated in the Couples Match and are excited to be staying at Vanderbilt for her psychiatry residency and his physical medicine and rehabilitation residency. (photo by Donn Jones)

Yanelis Diaz-Greenberg, the 2025 class president, welcomed her classmates, their families and friends, as the countdown to 11 a.m., the first moment envelopes could be opened. 

Diaz-Greenberg was doubly excited for the day as she and her husband, Michael Greenberg, were participating in the Couples Match. In this process, a couple’s rank order lists of residency programs are linked, and the couple is matched with the highest ranked pair for which they’ve both been offered positions.

“To all the friends and family here, I have to say that this class has been the most supportive, hardworking class — coming in every single day with heart and determination,” Diaz-Greenberg told her classmates. “I am so proud of you all, and it’s such an honor to be all of your friends and colleagues.”

Diaz-Greenberg and her husband met six years ago when they were University of Central Florida undergraduates. They came to Vanderbilt University together for medical school and were married in September 2024. Their envelopes were popped open to reveal they are remaining in Nashville at VUMC. Her residency is in psychiatry and his is in physical medicine and rehabilitation.

“I could not have imagined going through medical school without Michael,” Diaz-Greenberg said. “We encouraged each other through difficult times and celebrated the wins, small or big. I am so grateful we got to share our dream of becoming physicians together.”

Jullian Valdez announces he will be going to Baylor College of Medicine-Cullen Eye Institute for an ophthalmology residency. (photo by Donn Jones)
Jullian Valadez announces he will be going to Baylor College of Medicine-Cullen Eye Institute for an ophthalmology residency. (photo by Donn Jones)

Fourth-year medical student Jullian Valadez knew where he was heading for residency before he was handed his Match Day envelope. His specialty, ophthalmology, is an early match specialty, but he wanted to surprise his family, and especially his mother, by opening the envelope with them on stage. The news that he’d be heading back home to them in Houston for a residency at Baylor College of Medicine-Cullen Eye Institute brought tears to his mother’s eyes.

“Baylor was my top choice, but somehow she was much more eager than me throughout the process,” Valadez said. “I want to note that these past four years have been fun. Yes, coursework is hard, but when everything is nested within a larger mission of bringing health to populations (and in my case, preserving vision as a process to experience and interact with the world around us), then it makes things really easy.

“Of course, I also owe a lot to the effort my mom put in raising me and centering education as a focal point for me. To come from where I came from and achieve all that I have thus far is truly a credit to the hoops she jumped through and barriers she overcame for me.”

Carter Lovvorn will stay at VUMC for his residency in pediatrics. (photo by Donn Jones)
Carter Lovvorn will stay at VUMC for his residency in pediatrics. (photo by Donn Jones)

Fourth-year medical student Carter Lovvorn said it had been an interesting experience attending medical school at Vanderbilt because his father, Harold “Bo” Lovvorn, MD, a professor of Pediatric Surgery at Monroe Carell Jr. Children’s Hospital at Vanderbilt, is a well-known presence on the Main Campus.

“It’s pretty crazy going to school at a place where your dad is a legend,” he said. “He’s worked here for virtually my whole life, and EVERYBODY knows him. It feels like everywhere I go (especially at Monroe Carell), there are folks coming up to me telling stories about their interactions with him. Hearing these stories from everyone from nurses to pharmacists to environmental service workers to doctors has only increased my admiration for and drive to be like him, especially in the way he treats others.

“In terms of his career influencing my choice to pursue medicine and particularly pediatrics, it honestly didn’t play a huge role. Our relationship is a dad-son relationship, not a mentor-mentee relationship. At home, we mostly talk about our shared interests in sports and grilling — although we will occasionally nerd out about a cool medical case.”

His brother, Davis, chose a career as an immigration lawyer, while medicine has been his path, and Lovvorn gives his parents great credit for “intentionally trying not to sway our paths and dreams in life.”

Lovvorn’s envelope revealed that he would remain at Vanderbilt for a pediatrics residency, so there will be countless opportunities for family grill-outs.

Residency assignments

Neha Aggarwal – Northwestern McGaw, Neurology

Amad Amedy – UCLA Medical Center, Emergency Medicine

Chinonso Ani – Emory, Interventional Radiology

Anagha Ashokan – Boston U. Medical Center, Internal Medicine

Alexandra, Belfi – UPMC Medical Education, Internal Medicine

Natalie Bennett – VUMC, Internal Medicine/ABIM Research Path

Shreya Bhatia – VUMC, OBGYN

Michael Bolos – VUMC, OBGYN

Alexander Bruno – VUMC, Pediatrics

Tina Chai – Johns Hopkins, Pediatrics

Anoop Chandrashekar – Emory, Orthopaedic Surgery

Hannah Chew – Kaiser Permanente-Fontana, Psychiatry

Anne Clinton – UPMC Medical Education, Internal Medicine

Wyatt Cole – U. of Rochester Medical Center, Urology

Margaret Comer – VUMC, Internal Medicine

Dhweeja Dasarathy – Stanford Health Care, Internal Medicine

Yanelis Diaz-Greenberg – VUMC, Psychiatry

Starina D’Souza – Children’s Hospital-Los Angeles, Pediatrics

Shady Faltaous – UC San Diego Medical Center, Radiology-Diagnostic

Kyle Fletcher – VUMC, Internal Medicine-Preliminary

Chase Frasee – VUMC, Oral & Maxillofacial Surgery

Lakshmi Suryateja Gangavarapu – VUMC, Neurological Surgery

Michael Greenberg – VUMC, Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation

Katherine Hajdu – Barnes-Jewish Hospital, Orthopaedic Surgery

Savanah Hardcastle – U. of Utah Health, Anesthesiology

Simone Herzberg – Boston U. Medical Center, Orthopaedic Surgery

Brian Hou – VUMC, Orthopaedic Surgery

Natasha Hughes – Massachusetts General Hospital, Neurological Surgery

Seohyun Im – St. Louis Children’s Hospital, Pediatrics

Naadir Jamal – VUMC, Orthopaedic Surgery

Jihoon Jang – Johns Hopkins Hospital, Internal Medicine

Maryam Jawid – Baylor College of Medicine, Orthopaedic Surgery

Natalie Jones – VUMC, Anesthesiology

Nathaniel Kelm – VUMC, Radiology-Diagnostic

Marissa Khalil – Loma Linda U., OBGYN

Lena Khanolkar – Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Radiology-Diagnostic

Sunaya Krishnapura – Stanford Health Care, Pediatrics

Shimran Kumar – UCLA Medical Center, Emergency Medicine

Alexander Landry – U. of Cincinnati Medical Center, Emergency Medicine

Michael Libre – Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Internal Medicine

Carter Lovvorn – VUMC, Pediatrics

Sean Luong – Naval Hospital Camp Pendleton, Family Medicine

Margaret McBride – Nationwide Children’s Hospital, Pediatrics/Research

Jessica McDonald – VUMC, Pathology

Grant Mercer – UC San Francisco, General Surgery-Preliminary

Jean Mok – VUMC, General Surgery

Monica Nable – U. of Washington, Radiology-Diagnostics

Sydney Nelson – VUMC, Pediatrics

Kirsten Nguyen – U. of Southern California, Internal Medicine

Yeong Ha Oh – VUMC, Anesthesiology

Gosife Okoye – Mayo Clinic School of Graduate Medical Education, OBGYN

Seungweon Park – Stanford Health Care, Radiology-Diagnostic

Ankush Patel – Northwestern McGaw, Radiology Diagnostic

Olivia Prosak – Hospital of the U. of Pennsylvania, Otolaryngology

Jessica Quintos – Kaiser Permanente-Santa Clara, OBGYN

Sweeya Raj – U. of Texas Southwestern Medical School, Otolaryngology

Chirag Ram – Barnes-Jewish Hospital, General Surgery

Derek Riffert – VUMC, General Surgery

Amelia Sawyers – Johns Hopkins Hospital, Internal Medicine

Sophie Schelhammer – VUMC, Internal Medicine

Alexander Silver – U. of Michigan Hospitals-Ann Arbor, Pathology/PSTP

X-Zavyer Smith – Barnes Jewish Hospital, Anesthesiology

Hayden Smith – U. of Arizona-Tucson, Dermatology

Lauren Sullivan – U. of Kansas-Kansas City, Plastic Surgery

Alison Swartz – VUMC, Emergency Medicine

Thomas Ueland – Boston U. Medical Center, General Surgery

Jullian Valadez – Baylor College of Medicine-Cullen Eye Institute, Ophthalmology

Niketna Vivek – VUMC, General Surgery-Preliminary

Claire White-Dzuro – Oregon Health and Science U., Radiology-Diagnostic

Zachary Williams – UCLA Semel Institute for Neuroscience, Psychiatry-Research

Mae Wimbiscus – Massachusetts General Hospital, Anesthesiology

Gunther Wong – Barrow Neurological Institute, Neurological Surgery

Emily Wooder – Umass Chan Medical School, OBGYN

David Wu – VUMC, Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation

Connie Xiao – U. of Michigan Hospitals-Ann Arbor, Emergency Medicine

Grace Xu – Medical U. of South Carolina, Internal Medicine

Yuanchu Yang – VUMC, Internal Medicine

Michael Zargari – VUMC, Internal Medicine

Olizer Zhao – Northwestern McGaw, Radiology-Diagnostic; Surgery Preliminary