2014 Army Rifle Postseason Guide

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ARMY RIFLE

2013-14 POSTSEASON GUIDE


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TABLE OF CONTENTS

Table of Contents/Quick Facts/Roster .............................................. 1

QUICK FACTS Location ....................................................... West Point, N.Y. 10996 Founded ............................. March 16, 1802 by an Act of Congress Enrollment ............................................................................... 4,400

About West Point ..............................................................................2-3 Why West Point.................................................................................4-7 West Point Administration .................................................................. 8 Athletic Director ................................................................................... 9 Tronsrue Marksmanship Center .......................................................10

Athletic Director ............................................................ Boo Corrigan

Army Records.....................................................................................11

Nickname.....................................................................Black Knights

Head Coach Maj. Ron Wigger ..................................................... 12-13

Colors ...............................................................Black, Gold and Gray

Assistant Coach Rick Johnson/Spotters Chart ...............................14

Conference .................................... Great America Rifle Conference Head Coach .....................Maj. Ron Wigger (Eastern Kentucky ’83) Record at Army (Years).................................................. 110-48 (14)

Profiles ......................................................................................... 15-19 NCAA Preview ....................................................................................20 2013-14 Results/Statistics ..............................................................21 GARC History/2014 Results .............................................................22

Career Record (Years) ................................................... 110-48 (14)

GARC Honors/Awards .......................................................................23

Rifle Office Phone ................................................... (845) 938-4558

Army All-Americans ...........................................................................24

Executive Senior Associate Athletic Director ................Bob Beretta

Army History................................................................................. 25-28

Rifle Contact ................................................................ Mady Salvani Salvani’s Direct Line .............................................. (845) 938-3512

Year-by-Year ................................................................................. 29-32 2013-14 Schedule ..............................................................Back Cover

Salvani’s E-Mail ..................................madeline.salvani@usma.edu Army Official Web Site .............................. www.goARMYsports.com

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Army ‘A’ Line .......................................................... (845) 938-ARMY 2013-14 Record ........................................................................... 7-5 2014 Conference Finish ................................................. 4th (GARC)

2013 ARMY CROSS COUNTRY

2013 NCAA Championships ........................................................ 6th

2013-14 Team Captain..............................................Joseph Todaro Facility ............................................ Tronsrue Marksmanship Center

CREDITS The 2013-14 Army Rifle postseason guide is an official publication of the U.S. Military Academy Office of Athletic Communications.

ARMY RIFLE ON THE INTERNET & SOCIAL MEDIA Once again the Army rifle team will have a presence on the In-

NCAA ARMY RIFLE ROSTER Name

Cl.

Ht.

Hometown/High School

Danielle Cuomo

Fr.

5-4

Valley Stream, N.Y./Valley Stream Central

Alyssa Gestl

So. 5-3

Palmyra, Pa./Palmyra Area

Michael Matthews

Sr.

Johns Creek, Ga./Norcross

Olivia Nardone

So. 5-6

Winchester, Mass./Winchester

Joseph Todaro

Sr.

Bridgewater, N.J./Immaculata

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5-7

ternet, as the Black Knights’ season will be fully chronicled on the Army Athletic Association Web site. Biographical information, stats, feature stories, match reports and much more can be found at: www.goARMYsports.com TWITTER: Updates will be on the official handle of Army rifle (@Army_Rifle)

Head Coach: Maj. Ron Wigger, 14th Season Assistant Coach: Rick Johnson, 3rd Season Team Captain: Joseph Todaro Head Officer Representative: Col. Mark Gagnon Head Manager: Trevor Christian

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NCAA QUALIFIER 11 CONSECUTIVE YEARS (2004-2014) • 2005 NATIONAL CHAMPIONS

Superintendent ....................................... Lt. Gen. Robert Caslen, Jr


NCAA QUALIFIER 11 CONSECUTIVE YEARS (2004-2014) • 2005 NATIONAL CHAMPIONS

WEST POINT

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Since its founding, the Military Academy fulfills the same mission as it always has . . . to educate, train, and inspire the Corps of Cadets. It accomplishes this mission by developing cadets in three essential areas: intellectual, physical and military. These developmental paths are balanced and fully integrated into the daily life of each young man and woman at the Academy. Intellectual growth is fostered through an academic curriculum that provides a broad liberal education in the arts and sciences. The electives program builds upon the foundation of the core, allowing cadets to develop even greater competence in selected areas. In addition, the fields-of-study and majors nurture the development of creativity, critical thinking, and selfdirected learning, essential characteristics of 21st century officers. The fouryear academic experience leads to a bachelor of science degree and a commission as a second lieutenant in the Army. Physical development is achieved through a rigorous athletic and physical education program. Each cadet participates at the intercollegiate, club or intramural level each semester. This readies the cadet for the physical demands of military life and helps teach good judgment and self-discipline, even while under mental and physical stress. Military development begins with the cadet’s first day at West Point. Most military training takes place during the summer, with new cadets undergoing Cadet Basic Training, or Beast Barracks, their first year, followed the second summer by Cadet Field Training. Cadets spend their third and fourth summers serving in active Army units around the world; attending specialty training such as airborne, air assault or northern warfare or helping to train the first- and second-year cadets. The Cadet Leader Development System seeks to give the cadets increasing responsibility until they are ready to receive their commissions and assume their duties as leaders in today’s Army. Moral and ethical values guide cadets throughout their four years at West Point. Commitment to the Academy’s “Bedrock Values,” based on integrity and respect for the dignity of others, begins on the first day. Integrity is reflected in the Cadet Honor Code which states: “A cadet will not lie, cheat, steal, or tolerate those who do.” Respect denotes that cadets treat others with the same respect and dignity they themselves would expect. At West Point, it is not enough to train leaders—they must be leaders of character. Admission is keenly competitive and is open to young men and women from all states and territories and from every socioeconomic level. Prospective cadets must receive a nomination by a member of Congress or from the Department of the Army. The Academy seeks candidates who possess records of success in academics, athletics and leadership indicative of wellrounded individuals. Although the life of a cadet is demanding, there remains an array of club activities ranging from golf, skiing, boxing, crew and orienteering to such organizations as the cadet radio station, Habitat for Humanity and Big Brothers-Big Sisters. Additionally, the U.S. Corps of Cadets hosts a Special Olympics event each spring. Today’s Military Academy is a vastly different institution from the small academy legislated into being by Congress in 1802. Originally just 1,800 acres, the Academy has grown to more than 16,000 acres. The first graduating class numbered just two men; today’s classes graduate more than 900 new officers annually, both men and women, who are prepared for leadership roles within the Army. With the expansion of knowledge and the changing needs of the United States Army and the nation, life at West Point has changed to keep pace. Ever mindful of its rich heritage, the U.S. Military Academy is developing leaders for tomorrow, and its focus remains the national needs of the 21st century.

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The mission of the U.S. Military Academy is to educate, train, and inspire the Corps of Cadets so that each graduate is a commissioned leader of character committed to the values of Duty, Honor, Country; professional growth throughout a career as an officer in the U.S. Army; and a lifetime of selfless service to the Nation. Founded on March 16, 1802, the Academy celebrated its Bicentennial in 2002. But West Point’s role in America’s history dates to the Revolutionary War, when both sides realized the strategic importance of the commanding plateau on the west bank of the Hudson River. Gen. George Washington considered West Point to be the most strategic position in America. He personally selected Thaddeus Kosciuszko, one of the heroes of Saratoga, to design the fortifications in 1778 after problems arose with French engineers originally placed in charge of the design. In 1779, General Washington transferred his headquarters to West Point. Continental soldiers built forts, batteries and defensive barriers. A 100-ton iron chain was extended across the Hudson to control river traffic. Today, several links from that chain are arranged at Trophy Point as a reminder of West Point’s original fortifications. In 1802 President Thomas Jefferson signed the legislation establishing the U.S. Military Academy to create an institution devoted to the arts and sciences of warfare. This effectively eliminated America’s wartime reliance on foreign engineers and artillerists. West Point became the nation’s first engineering school and served as the model for engineering programs which were eventually established a t other colleges. Col. Sylvanus Thayer, the “Father of the Military Academy,” served as Superintendent from 1817 through 1833. He upgraded academic standards, instilled military discipline and emphasized honorable conduct. Early graduates were largely responsible for the construction of the nation’s initial railway lines, bridges, harbors, and roads. Although the curriculum maintains its focus on engineering, in recent decades the program of instruction has markedly changed, providing cadets a selection of more than 40 majors. This tradition of academic and military excellence, guided by a demanding standard of moral and ethical conduct, remains the cornerstone of the West Point experience. It is said at West Point that “much of the history we teach was made by those people we taught.” The Academy has produced famous leaders throughout its illustrious past…Civil War Generals Grant, Sherman, Lee, and Jackson, to name but a few. In World War I, 34 of the 38 corps and division commanders were graduates. World War II would see many graduates reach brigadier general or higher, to include Eisenhower, MacArthur, Bradley and Patton. In more recent conflicts, MacArthur, Ridgway, Westmoreland, Abrams, Schwarzkopf and Abizaid were in command. Academy graduates have also excelled in air and space exploration, and countless others went on from military service to become leaders in medicine, law, business, religion and science.

WEST POINT


WHY WEST POINT

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NCAA QUALIFIER 11 CONSECUTIVE YEARS (2004-2014) • 2005 NATIONAL CHAMPIONS

“I think if my dear mother were alive, she would tell you nothing comes close to graduating from West Point, even going to the moon.” - ASTRONAUT FRANK BORMAN “The combination of an education at West Point and the experience of a career in the armed services will prepare you in a unique way for a rich diversity of further career and service in civilian life.” - HEISMAN TROPHY WINNER GLENN DAVIS

FRANK BORMAN

“I believe in the code ... ‘Duty, Honor, Country.’ I believe in service to one’s country. The institution of the armed forces has thrived on its commitment to developing excellence. It is meritocracy in action. Race, religion, wealth, background count not.” - PRESIDENT GEORGE H.W. BUSH

2013 20 013 ARMY ARM MY CROSS CROSS COUNTRY COUNTRY GLENN DAVIS

GEORGE H.W. BUSH www.goARMYsports.com• Page 4

“From the birth of our existence, America has had a faith in the future -- a belief that where we’re going is better than where we’ve been, even when the path ahead is uncertain. To fulfill that promise, generations of Americans have built upon the foundation of our forefathers -- finding opportunity, fighting injustice, forging a more perfect union. Our achievement would not be possible without the Long Gray Line that has sacrificed for duty, for honor, for country.” - PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA


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WHY WEST POINT

“I was so proud to be on the verge of entering the only institution in American society at that time that was totally integrated, in which I would have the opportunity to rise, based solely on performance and ability. The nation always looks to West Point and always looks to each and every one of you to follow always the angels of your nature.” - GENERAL COLIN POWELL

NORMAN SCHWARZKOPF

“In every corner of America, the words ‘West Point’ command immediate respect. This place where the Hudson River bends is more than a fine institution of learning. The United States Military Academy is the guardian of values that have shaped the soldiers who have shaped the world.” - PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH

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“How great it must be, gosh how great it must be to be a member of this Corps. To know that camaraderie of discipline, of manners, of courtesy, of human sensibility, of one’s dutyARMY to his fellow man.”COUNTRY 2013 CROSS - JOURNALIST WALTER CRONKITE

COLIN POWELL

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“My four years at West Point were wonderful. I loved every minute of it and particularly the last three years. I loved the history. I loved the tradition. I liked wearing the uniform. I felt like I belonged there. Everything was meaningful to me. There is no question in my mind the proudest day of my father’s life was the day I graduated from West Point. There is a picture of the two of us standing on ‘The Plain’ and he is just beaming.” - GENERAL H. NORMAN SCHWARZKOPF


NCAA QUALIFIER 11 CONSECUTIVE YEARS (2004-2014) • 2005 NATIONAL CHAMPIONS

WHY WEST POINT

2013-14 A RIFLE “Any of us who went through the process; anyone who felt the flame of that furnace, came away altered in the way we go about running our lives. Some part of it is the belief that you are not only doing it for personal glory, but you do it because it is your responsibility. It’s part of being a member of The Corps and each of us that have felt that magic feel especially privileged to have done so.” - HEISMAN TROPHY WINNER PETE DAWKINS

PETE DAWKINS

“As I look back over my career in government, in business, of course in the military, I think West Point was a very influential experience. It hardened a sense of discipline, a sense of responsibility, duty and integrity and also very happily combined an alertness of mind and body.” - FORMER SECRETARY OF STATE ALEXANDER HAIG “For here we train the men and women whose duty it is to defend the Republic, the men and women whose profession is watchfulness, whose skill is vigilance, whose calling is to guard the peace, but if need be, to fight and win.” - PRESIDENT RONALD REAGAN

“WEST POINT IS THE RING. IT’S 2013 2 013THE ARMY ARM Y CROSS CROSS COUNTRY CO OUNTRY FOUNDATION OF EVERYTHING I HAVE DONE.” ALEXANDER HAIG

BILL CLINTON www.goARMYsports.com• Page 6

- MIKE KRZYZEWSKI ‘69


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WHY WEST POINT

“As I look back on my life, I’ll always revere the opportunities that came along that brought about the choice I made to go to West Point. I just feel that it was fundamental in molding the fabric of my life. The experiences that I had at West Point, they were irreplaceable.” - ASTRONAUT EDWIN “BUZZ” ALDRIN

DOUGLAS MacARTHUR

“You have ahead of you the best of all professions. Being a leader is the best thing you can possibly be and you’re at a school that will make you the best possible leader. West Point is the ring. It’s the foundation of everything I have done.” - HEAD COACH MIKE KRZYZEWSKI

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2013 2 013 ARMY ARMY CROSS CROSS COUNTRY COUNTRY “This nation is grateful that four years ago every man and woman graduating today made a life-changing decision. You left the comforts and familiar surroundings of civilian life, and devoted yourselves to one of the noblest professions in a free country--the profession of arms.” - FORMER VICE PRESIDENT DICK CHENEY

“West Point’s graduates have served America in many, many ways. Not only by leading troops into combat, but also by exploring frontiers, founding universities, laying out the railroads, building the Panama Canal, running corporations, serving in the Congress and The White House, and walking on the moon. Through our history, whenever duty called, the men and women of West Point have never failed us, and I speak for all Americans when I say, I know you never will.” - PRESIDENT BILL CLINTON

DICK CHENEY

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“In the evening of my memory, always I come back to West Point. Always there echoes and re-echoes ... Duty -- Honor -- Country. Today marks my final roll call with you. But I want you to know, when I cross the river, my last conscious thoughts will be of The Corps ... and The Corps ... and The Corps ...” - GENERAL DOUGLAS MacARTHUR


NCAA QUALIFIER 11 CONSECUTIVE YEARS (2004-2014) • 2005 NATIONAL CHAMPIONS

ACADEMY LEADERSHIP

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LT. GENERAL ROBERT L. CASLEN, JR. SUPERINTENDENT Lieutenant General Robert L. Caslen, Jr. became the 59th Superintendent of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point on July 17, 2013. Caslen graduated from the U.S. Military Academy at West Point in 1975. He earned master’s degrees from Long Island University and Kansas State University. Previous to this assignment, he served as the Chief of the Office of Security Cooperation-Iraq. His prior deployments and assignments include serving as the commander of the Combined Arms Center at Fort Leavenworth, Kan., the command that oversees the Command and General Staff College and 17 other schools, centers, and training programs located throughout the United States; commanding general of the 25th Infantry Division (Light) and commanding general of the Multi-National Division-North during Operation Iraqi Freedom; commandant of cadets for the U.S. Military Academy; deputy director for the War on Terrorism, J-5, The Joint Staff; assistant division commander (maneuver), 3rd Infantry Division (Mechanized); chief of staff, 10th Mountain Division (Light); chief of staff, Combined Joint Task Force Mountain during Operation Enduring Freedom; commander, 2nd Brigade, 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault); chief of staff, 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault); senior brigade C2 Observer/Controller, Operations Group, Joint Readiness Training Center; commander, 1st Battalion, 14th Infantry, 25th Infantry Division (Light); executive officer to the deputy commander in Haiti during Operation Uphold Democracy; J-3 in Honduras for Joint Task Force Bravo; brigade operations officer, 3rd Brigade, 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault); executive officer, 2nd Battalion, 187th Infantry, 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault) during Operations Desert Shield/Desert Storm. Caslen’s awards and decorations include the Distinguished Service Medal, the Defense Superior Service Medal with Oak Leaf Cluster, the Legion of Merit with three Oak Leaf Clusters, the Bronze Star Medal with two Oak Leaf Clusters, the Defense Meritorious Service Medal, and the Meritorious Service Medal with five Oak Leaf Clusters. He has earned the Combat Infantryman Badge, the Joint Chiefs of Staff Identification Badge, and is Airborne, Air Assault, and Ranger qualified. Caslen is married with three children.

BRIG. GENERAL RICHARD D. CLARKE COMMANDANT OF CADETS

BRIG. GENERAL TIM TRAINOR DEAN OF THE ACADEMIC BOARD

captain of the Army squash team (1983-84), assumed command in January 2013 of the United States Corps of Cadets as the 74th Commandant of Cadets. He previously served as the Deputy Commanding General of Operations, 10th Mountain Division. Clarke, commissioned in the Infantry following his graduation from the United States Military Academy in 1984, began his career as a rifle platoon leader with 1st Battalion, 48th Infantry, 3rd Armored Division. Beginning in December 1988, He commanded two companies in the 101st Airborne; Bravo Company, 2nd Battalion, 502nd Infantry, as well as the 101st Long Range Surveillance Detachment. In June of 1992, he transitioned to the 75th Ranger Regiment, and in March of 1993 became the Commander of the Ranger Reconnaissance Detachment. Later he served as the Company Commander of Bravo Company, 3rd Battalion, 75th Ranger Regiment. Clarke subsequently held the position of Battalion S-3 and then Battalion Executive Officer of 1st Battalion, 6th Infantry, of the 1st Armored Division. This was followed in May 1999 when he assumed duty as the Brigade Executive Officer of the 173rd Airborne Brigade. In March of 2002, Clarke became the Commander of the 3rd Battalion, 504th Parachute Infantry Regiment, 82nd Airborne Division. This was directly followed in May 2004 by command of the 1st Battalion, 75th Ranger Regiment. In August of 2007, Clarke assumed command of the 75th Ranger Regiment. He then served as the Director of Operations, Joint Special Operations Command, at Fort Bragg, N.C. Clarke’s deployments while serving in the aforementioned positions include Operation Desert Storm, Operation Joint Guardian, three deployments in support of Operation Enduring Freedom, and four deployments in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom. Clarke’s decorations include; the Defense Superior Service Medal (with Oak Leaf Cluster), the Legion of Merit; Bronze Star Medal (with 4 Oak Leaf Clusters); Meritorious Service Medal (with 3 Oak Leaf Clusters); Air Medal, Army Commendation Medal (with 2 Oak Leaf Clusters); the Army Achievement Medal (with 6 Oak Leaf Clusters); the National Defense Service Medal (with Bronze Star); the Global War on Terrorism Expeditionary Medal; the Global War on Terrorism Service Medal; and the Afghanistan Service Medal.

Brigadier General Timothy E. Trainor, Ph.D., became the Dean of the Academic Board at the United States Military Academy in the summer of 2010. He previously served as professor and head of the Department of Systems Engineering at West Point where he taught courses in engineering management, systems engineering and decision analysis. Trainor graduated with a Bachelor of Science from West Point in 1983 and entered the Engineer Branch of the U.S. Army. As an engineering officer, Trainor has served in operational assignments around the world, including Germany, Honduras, Fort Bragg, N.C., Fort Riley, Kans. and Sarajevo, Bosnia. Trainor has a Master of Business Administration from the Fuqua School of Business at Duke and a doctorate degree in industrial engineering from North Carolina State University. He is a member of the Military Applications Society of the Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences the Military Operations Research Society, the American Society for Engineering Management and the American Society of Engineering Education. He is a past president of Epsilon Mu Eta, the national Engineering Management Honor Society. Trainor is also a member of the Board of Fellows for the David Crawford School of Engineering at Norwich University. As an analyst, Trainor helped develop the Installation Status Report that provides the Army a standardized means to assess infrastructure and environmental conditions on installations to support resource allocation decisions. He has applied decision analysis methods in completing an organizational analysis of the Army’s Installation Management Agency and in assessing defense security cooperation programs. Trainor deployed to Basrah, Iraq in the summer of 2007 and worked with the British-led Provincial Reconstruction Team in helping the provincial Iraqi leaders improve their infrastructure revitalization plans. Trainor is married to Col. Donna Brazil, a 1983 graduate of West Point, who is a professor in the Department of Behavioral Sciences at the Academy. They have a daughter Cory, who is currently attending West Point, and two sons; Danny, also in the Corps of Cadets, and Zach.

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2013-14 A RIFLE Boo Corrigan was named the Academy’s

In his short time as athletic director, Corrigan has strengthened and expanded Army Athletics’ relationships in several key areas. In his tenure, Army has secured a new apparel agreement with Nike, a new pouring rights contract with Coke and bringing in the Aspire Group to enhance ticket sales and better serve Army season ticket holders. Corrigan also crafted the Team Army concept, a comprehensive plan designed to add significant value to Army’s corporate sponsorships while maintaining the tradition of West Point Athletics. Corrigan, who has a proven record as a fundraiser, spearheaded changes in the Army A Club and ticket operations that have resulted in more than $20 million dollars in major gifts and record-setting annual giving during his tenure. During that time the funding for a new lacrosse facility, that is scheduled to break ground, was secured. In addition to his role in enhancing revenues for Army Athletics, Corrigan led a strategic planning process that developed a new mission statement and goals for the department. In his first full two years at West Point, Corrigan has overseen a program that owns eight Patriot League regular season or tournament championships and sent eight teams to the NCAA postseason (rifle). Thirty-three cadets have earned a major award from their conference,. In 2012-13 alone, Army accounted for more than 100 all-league citations. Hockey’s Cheyne Rocha and lacrosse’s Brendan Buckley each captured the Senior CLASS Award in their respective sports, making Army the only school in the nation to have multiple winners in 2012-13. The 2012-13 season was one of the most successful in recent memory on the fields of friendly strife. Army teams combined to post an overall record of 236-183-8. The program’s .562 winning percentage was the highest in eight years. The winter sports programs had their best season in five years as the women’s basketball team won the Patriot League regular season title, the men’s basketball team posted its first winning season in 28 years and the rifle squad advanced to the NCAA Championships for the 10th consecutive season. It was also a great year in the competition against fellow service academies. Army split the season series versus Navy, 16-16-1, marking the best winning percentage against the Mids (.500) since 2004-05. The Black Knights owned a 4-2-1 record against Air Force, improving the record to 20-18-2 (.525) versus service academy foes in 2012-13. Cadet-athletes have continued to thrive in the classroom under Corrigan’s watch. In his two full

BOO CORRIGAN DIRECTOR OF ATHLETICS 3RD YEAR NOTRE DAME, 1990 Rules committee and the Atlantic Coast Conference Men’s Lacrosse Committee, while serving on the Executive Budget Committee at Duke. Prior to arriving at Duke in August of 2008, he oversaw Notre Dame’s corporate relations and marketing as an associate athletic director for five years. During his stint at Notre Dame, Corrigan spearheaded the redesign of its official athletics website and creation of 15-20 hours of original video content weekly. That resulted in a 35 percent increase in page views and unique users. Corrigan also worked directly with ISP Sports, CSTV, and NBC Sports from a sales and marketing standpoint. Before joining the staff at Notre Dame, Corrigan spent nearly three years as the associate athletic director for marketing at the United States Naval Academy. He was responsible for turning the marketing department from a deficit to profit in his first year with full budget responsibility for the department. Corrigan also was intimately involved with the re-branding of the Annual Giving Campaign (The Blue and Gold), which led to an increase of 75 percent year over year donations. His collegiate experience also includes a stint as assistant director of marketing at Florida State from 1992-95. Corrigan is a 1990 University of Notre Dame graduate with a degree in economics. He is married to the former Kristen Aceto, a former field hockey and lacrosse player at the University of Virginia who also earned a master’s degree from the school. The couple has three children, Finley, Tre and Brian. He is the youngest of seven children of Gene and Lena Corrigan.

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director of athletics on Feb. 1, 2011. “We have an opportunity to work every day with a truly exceptional group of young people,” Corrigan said. “The opportunities they receive through intercollegiate athletics will help shape their own leadership styles as they become officers in the U.S. Army. We have a great team that focuses daily on our cadetathletes. We strive to enhance their overall experience as they develop into the leaders our nation needs.”

years, Army has boasted seven Academic All-Americans, including six first-team selections. Lacrosse’s Brendan Buckely became the first Army athlete to capture Academic All-American of the Year honors in 2012. In 2011, the Black Knights’ football team boasted two first-team CoSIDA Academic All-Americans, a first for the program since 1957. Since the start of the 2011-12 season, Army boasts six Patriot League Scholar-Athletes of the Year, including Buckley, a two-time overall men’s winner. Twenty of Army’s 24 NCAA programs scored above the national average in the 2013 NCAA APR report. The men’s cross country and wrestling teams earned public recognition for finishing in the top 10 percent of their respective sport. The cross country squad boasted a perfect score of 1,000. In addition, former football standout Andrew Rodriguez, Class of 2012, became the first Army player to win the National Football Foundation’s Willam V. Campbell Trophy, which is presented annually to the nation’s top football scholar-athlete. Rodriguez later was honored with the Amateur Athletic Union’s James E. Sullivan Award as the top amateur athlete in the country. He was the first Army player to receive the award since 1946 and was just the third player in history (Peyton Manning, Tim Tebow) to win both the Campbell Trophy and Sullivan Award. Army has been the focus of national attention since Corrigan’s arrival. He was instrumental in supporting the CBS documentary, “Game of Honor,” that chronicled the Black Knights’ 2011 football season leading up to its annual showdown with arch-rival Navy. Not only was the two-hour program broadcast to a national audience on Showtime, but also won the Emmy Award for Best Sports Documentary. The Army football team was also the focus of a behindthe-scenes book titled, “Soldiers First,” written by New York Times writer Joe Drape. Corrigan has also made his mark on the aesthetics of historic Michie Stadium. In order to upgrade the appearance and provide a better experience for Army fans, Corrigan implemented a Michie Stadium branding and signage campaign that began in 2011. The first phase of the project was completed prior to the 2012 season. In addition to his duties at West Point, Corrigan has been an active leader in the Patriot League, serving as chairman of the conference’s Broadband Committee. Corrigan, who was the senior associate athletic director for external affairs at Duke University starting in August 2008, brings a wealth of leadership to his post. He is a proven administrator with 18 previous years of experience in all areas of revenue generation, external affairs, staff management and leadership. Corrigan’s chief responsibilities at Duke included the oversight of the Blue Devil corporate partnerships and the Marketing, Promotions, Ticket, Internet Operations, Sports Information and Video Services departments. In only two years at Duke, Corrigan was responsible for the negotiation of multi-media rights to ISP. A supervisor of the 2009 NCAA Champion women’s tennis and 2010 NCAA Champion men’s lacrosse programs, Corrigan was a part of three NCAA Championships at Duke in just two seasons. He is currently a member of the NCAA Men’s Lacrosse

ATHLETIC DIRECTOR


NCAA QUALIFIER 11 CONSECUTIVE YEARS (2004-2014) • 2005 NATIONAL CHAMPIONS

TRONSRUE MARKSMANSHIP CENTER

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Army’s athletic program has been significantly enhanced by several state-of-the-art facilities benefiting numerous Black Knight athletes. The construction and improvement of facilities on the West Point campus has had a positive impact on Army’s 25 intercollegiate sports. The prominent rise of the rifle team as one the top programs in the nation, capturing its first NCAA title in 2005, followed by third in 2006, runnerup-honors in 2007 and 2008, fourth place in 2012 and sixth in 2013, is due partly to Tronsrue Marksmanship Center. Completed in January 2000, the range underwent major reconstruction after a portion of the facility was destroyed by fire in 1996. The indoor marksmanship center, located next to Gillis Field House along the banks of the Hudson, is equipped with three ranges to include housing the club pistol team. The rifle range has 20 firing points, six more than the former range, with distances of 10 meters for air rifle and 50 feet for smallbore. The air rifle range, used exclusively for air gun training and competition, also has 20 firing points and is shared by both the rifle and pistol teams. Army acquired 40 (20 smallbore, 20 air rifle) state-of-the-art electronic targets by MEGAlink in November of 2006 to put Tronsrue on the cutting edge of technology. Tronsrue Marksmanship Center was unveiled on a national stage when Army hosted the 2003 NCAA Men’s and Women’s Rifle Championships, marking the national championship’s first appearance at West Point since 1991. Five years later the Black Knights hosted the 2008 NCAA Championships, the fifth time in the NCAA’s 29-year rifle history that West Point was chosen as the host site. Army first hosted the tournament in 1981, the second year that the rifle championships came under the NCAA’s auspices. The Black Knights hosted the championship four years later, finishing fifth in putting the finishing touches on an 11-2 season. The NCAA Championships returned to West Point in 1991, and the Black Knights took sixth in air rifle. Army was host again in 2003 and 2008, finishing runner-up in the latter. Tronsrue took center stage again in 2004 when it hosted the Great America Rifle Championships with the Black Knights placing second. Funding for the reconstruction and renovation of the range was included in West Point’s Bicentennial Campaign plan as part of its “Margin of Excellence” initiative. Government funds were utilized along with private funds. The lead donors for the project were George Marion Tronsrue III (USMA ’78) and Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Petrie (USMA ’67). On April 13, 2002, the center was dedicated to honor the American soldier and Tronsrue’s father (George Marion Tronsrue, USMA ’52), a fouryear member of the Army rifle team. “Tronsrue is the largest collegiate rifle facility in the country,” stated Wigger, the beneficiary of the state-of-the-art facility. “It already has had an immense impact on recruiting. Bringing a prospective candidate into this facility is paramount to a football recruit viewing Michigan’s Stadium in Ann

Arbor or Notre Dame Stadium in South Bend, Ind., for the first time. It is the same effect. “Not only does it provide us an ideal practice facility, but a range that gives us pride knowing it is the best in the country. The dividends are evident in the number of records we have broken and continually challenge.” Army captured the Great America Rifle Conference regular-season title in 2005 and 2008 with unbeaten 6-0 marks. The Black Knights won their first-ever GARC Championship in 2008 after finishing runner-up four straight years. The Black Knights have posted top NCAA finishes along with compiling

a 98-42 dual mark over the last 12 years. Army captured its first NCAA title in 2005 after edging Jacksonville State by a point, was second in 2007 and 2008, third in 2006 along with placing fourth (2004/2012), fifth (2010, sixth (2009. 2013) and eighth (2011) during that period.

ARMY TRONSRUE RECORDS

Individual Air Rifle, 60 Shots (600): 595 Richard Calvin vs. Murray State, 1/17/14 Richard Calvin vs. Kentucky, 1/14/2012 Smallbore 3-Position (600): 591 Kelly Buck vs. West Virginia, 11/14/10+ Aggregate: 1180 Kelly Buck vs. West Virginia (591 SM, 589 AR), 11/14/10 Team

2013 ARMY CROSS COUNTRY

TRONSRUE RECORDS

Individual Air Rifle, 60 Shots (600): 596 Sarah Scherer (TCU), 11/19/2011 Maren Prediger (West Virginia), 10/16/2013 Smallbore 3-Position (600): 591 Kelly Buck (Army), 11/14/2010 Nicco Campriani (West Virginia), 11/14/2010 Team Air Rifle, 240 Shots (2400): 2369 Kentucky, 1/19/14 Smallbore 3-Position, 240 Shots (2400): 2337 Army vs. TCU, 11/10/07 Abalo (589), Kern (584), Scherer (586), Amiot (578) Combined, 480 shots (4800): 4695 (2327 SM, 2358 AR) Kentucky, 1/19/14

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Air Rifle, 240 Shots (2400): 2357 vs. Jacksonville State, Ole Miss, 1/27/13 Calvin (592), Todaro (589), Gestl (589), Matthews (587) Air Rifle, 240 Shots (2400): 2357 vs. NC State & Nebraska, 11/18/07 Abalo (590), Kern (589), Scherer (587), Hess (591) Smallbore 3-Position, 240 Shots (2400): 2337 vs. TCU, 11/10/07 Abalo (589), Kern (584), Scherer (586), Amiot (578) Combined, 480 shots (4800): 4681 vs. Alaska Fairbanks, 1/16/07 Abalo (587/584), Fiddes (592/583), Hess (589 AR), Amiot (588 AR) Kern (584 SM), Hamilton (574 SM) +mark shares range record


2013-14 A RIFLE

ARMY RECORDS

INDIVIDUAL 597, Stephen Scherer Olympic Trials, 03/02/08 597, Chris Abalo Junior Olympics, 03/21/06 Air Rifle, Season Avg.: 589.46, Chris Abalo, 2007-08 Smallbore Three-Position (600): 591, Kelly Buck. 11/14/10 Smallbore Standing: 199, John Fiddes vs. Ohio State, 1/21/06 Smallbore Kneeling: 199, Chris Abalo vs. Kentucky, 10/08/05 Smallbore Season Avg.: 586.167, Chris Abalo, 2007-08 Air Rifle, 60 Shots (600):

2357 vs. NC State & Nebraska, Nov. 18, 2007: Wesley Hess (591), Chris Abalo (590), Brian Kern (589), Stephen Scherer (587) Smallbore Three-Position, 240 Shots (2400): 2337 vs. Texas Christian, Nov. 10, 2007: Chris Abolo (589), Stephen Scherer (586), Brian Kern (584), Davida Amiot (578)

2008 NCAA Smallbore Sweep (l-r): Stephen Scherer (3rd), Brian Kern (2nd), Chris Abalo (1st)

Combined Air Rifle/Smallbore, 480 shots (4800): 4686 vs. Navy, Feb. 9, 2008: Chris Abalo (588/588), Stephen Scherer (591/585), David Amiot (583/582), Brian Kern (580 SB), Wesley Hess (589 AR)

ARMY AT THE NCAA CHAMPIONSHIPS YEAR 1979-80 1980-81 1981-82 1982-83 1983-84 1984-85 1985-86 1986-87 1989-90 1990-91 1991-92 2001-02 2003-04 2004-05 2005-06 2006-07 2007-08 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13

COACH MASTER SGT. KEN HAMILL MASTER SGT. KEN HAMILL MASTER SGT. KEN HAMILL MASTER SGT. KEN HAMILL MASTER SGT. KEN HAMILL MASTER SGT. KEN HAMILL (RET.) MASTER SGT. KEN HAMILL (RET.) MASTER SGT. KEN HAMILL (RET.) MASTER SGT. KEN HAMILL (RET.) MASTER SGT. KEN HAMILL (RET.) MASTER SGT. KEN HAMILL (RET.) MAJ. RON WIGGER MAJ. RON WIGGER MAJ. RON WIGGER MAJ. RON WIGGER MAJ. RON WIGGER MAJ. RON WIGGER MAJ. RON WIGGER MAJ. RON WIGGER MAJ. RON WIGGER MAJ. RON WIGGER MAJ. RON WIGGER

SMALLBORE 4473 4561 4537 4561 4575 4559 4622 4572 4579 --4558 --4638 2328 2318 2307 2318 2219 2291 2273 2325 2308

AIR 1428 1499 1477 1512 1483 1504 1516 1522 --1485 --1541 1538 2331 2332 2337 2334 2320 2336 2323 2333 2336

2013 ARMY CROSS COUNTRY

The NCAA began sponsoring collegiate rifle in 1979-80 #Army was third in smallbore in 1990 !Sixth in air rifle in 1991 +Seventh in smallbore in 1992 •Army finished fifth in air rifle in 2002 and ninth overall (prior to that only included places for teams that competed in both events). •Army captured its first NCAA title in school history at the 2005 Championships. •The Black Knights have garnered top-three finishes under present head coach Ron Wigger four of the past nine years.

AGGREGATE 5901 6060 6014 6073 6058 6063 6138 6094 4579 1485 4558 1541 6176 4659 4650 4644 4652 4539 4627 4596 4658 4644

PLACE 7TH 6TH 6TH 5TH 6TH 5TH 3RD 6TH # ! + 9TH 4TH 1ST 3RD 2ND 2ND 6TH 5TH 8TH 4TH 6TH

•After capturing the team title in 2005, Army copped the bronze in 2006 and the silver the next two years. •The Black Knights captured their first individual and team title in smallbore in 2008 when Chris Abalo led an Army sweep (first in NCAA history) of the top three places en route to winning that discipline.

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NCAA QUALIFIER 11 CONSECUTIVE YEARS (2004-2014) • 2005 NATIONAL CHAMPIONS

TEAM Air Rifle, 240 Shots (2400): 2357 vs. Jacksonville State & Ole Miss, Jan. 27, 2013: Richard Calvin (592), Joseph Todaro (589), Alyssa Gestl (589), Michael Matthews (587)


2013-14 A RIFLE

COACH RON WIGGER WIGGER

NCAA QUALIFIER 11 CONSECUTIVE YEARS (2004-2014) • 2005 NATIONAL CHAMPIONS

MAJ. RON WIGGER Eastern Kentucky ‘83 14 Seasons 110-48 Army’s rifle program has prospered under the leadership of Maj. Ron Wigger, a two-time National Coach of the Year selection, since he took over the reins 14 years ago. Ranked among the winningest coaches in school history, he became just the third to record 100 wins in school history in a road win at Nebraska on Feb. 2, 2013. Wigger has led Army to four top-three finishes at the NCAA Championships. That run included the national title (2005), back-to-back runner-up finishes (2007 & 2008) along with a bronze (2006). Earning its 11th consecutive bid to the NCAAs in 2014, Army has been among the top eight qualifiers since 2004. The Black Knights captured the NCAA smallbore title in 2008, along with crowning an individual champion for the first time in school history. Army finished second in smallbore, both team and individual at the 2012 championships. Wigger started rewriting Army’s record book soon after taking over the program. The Black Knights earned a team berth to the NCAA Championships in air rifle by his second year (2001-02). Army qualified in both disciplines in 2004, then put West Point on the map the following year winning its first-ever NCAA title. The Black Knights won by the closest margin in NCAA history, edging Jacksonville State by a single point for the crown, along with dethroning perennial powerhouse and six-time defending champion Alaska Fairbanks. Not only was it Army’s first national title in rifle history, but the first since pistol captured the NRA crown in 1991. It was also the first NCAA title by any Army varsity program since 1949 (fencing). The Black Knights started their 2004-05 “Cinderella” season winning eight straight matches that included a perfect 6-0 Great America Rifle Conference (GARC) mark en route to capturing their first regular-season title. Army placed runner-up at the conference championships for the second straight year. Honors continued to roll in for the team that etched its name into the history annals as a school-record five riflemen earned All-America accolades by the National Rifle Association (NRA), and Wigger repeated as the national and GARC Coach of the Year. It was Wigger’s third GARC coaching honor over a four-year span.

The 2005-06 campaign was capped with Army finishing among the top four at the NCAAs for the third straight year after capturing the bronze trophy. Army’s 9-2 season mark was its highest win total (broken the following year) since a 13-3 showing in 1998-99. Included in its season highlights was snapping Navy’s 12-match series

team honors in smallbore. One of the finest coaches in the history of the program, Wigger has developed 19 firstteam, 19 second-team and six honorable mention All-Americans, who have combined for 44 certificates.Kim Pienkowski was a firstteam All-America selection in air rifle Wigger’s inaugural year, becoming the first Black Knight named to that unit since 1991. A three-time honoree under Wigger, she was an honorable mention selection in both disciplines her senior year. Chris Abalo made history in 2005 as the first Army plebe selected an All-American in both guns and just the second Black Knight to accomplish that feat. He repeated the next three years, setting a school record with eight first team All-America ertificates. The most decorated shooter in school history, Abalo excelled both nationally and internationally. In 2008 he captured Army’s first NCAA individual title (smallbore), set a national smallbore prone record and NCAA smallbore mark, and competed with the USA Team at the World Cup. He is also the first rifleman to earn the Army Athletic Association award. Twice he was voted the NCAA Shooter of the Match and was a three-time GARC Shooter of the Year. Wigger also coached an Olympian in Stephen Scherer, who competed at the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing . At the 2012 NCAA Championships, Matthews finished second in smallbore in leading the Black Knights to runner-up honors in that discipline and second highest finish at the national meet. Three Black Knights earned All-America honors and Wigger was among four CRCA nominees for Coach of the Year. Two-time team captain Paul Charbonneau, a four-year member of Wigger’s first class, was a four-time All-American. David Amiot and Brian Kern joined Abalo and Scherer in garnering AllAmerica certificates in 2008. In another Army first, Abalo and Wesley Hess competed at the World Junior Shooting Championships in the spring of 2006, with Abalo setting the pace for Team USA in two of the three events in which he qualified. Wigger has enjoyed an equally prosperous showing in the GARC where Army crowned eight individual champions, three shooter of the year certificates (Abalo) and a pair of rookie citations (Abalo and Scherer). Army captured the GARC smallbore title in 2012 along with crowing an individual champion in All-American Kelly Buck. The Black Knights took third at the 2011 GARC Championship with a young team following back-to-back fifth-place finishes in 2009 and 2010. Army put the finishing touches on its 201213 season beating Navy for the fourth straight year en route to posting a 10-3 mark for its most

WIGGER HAS MENTORED I5 NRA ALLAMERICANS WHO HAVE EARNED 44 CERTIFICATES (19 FIRST TEAM, 19 SECOND TEAM AND SIX HONORABLE MENTIONS) win streak, a second-place finish at the GARC Championships followed by the Black Knights’ third straight trip to the NCAA Championships. The team concluded the season with a visit to the White House in April 2006 where Army (based on its 2005 title) was among a dozen NCAA championship teams that met with the President during a special ceremony in the Rose Garden. Five Black Knights were selected by the NRA for All-America honors, equaling the school mark set the previous year, en route to earning seven certificates. Army finished runner-up at the NCAAs in 2007 and 2008 with five and four Black Knights receiving All-America certificates, respectively. In 2008, Wigger’s sharpshooters won the team’s first GARC Championship. Army posted a 10-2 dual mark in 2007 and bettered that in 2008 in a 10-1 showing. Prior to winning its first NCAA title in 2005, Wigger guided the Black Knights to a fourthplace finish at the 2004 championships after meeting the qualifying standards in both disciplines for the first time since 1987. Wigger concluded his second year at the helm by leading Army’s air rifle team to a berth at the 2002 NCAA Tournament and a fifthplace finish in that discipline after edging Navy by a point. It was the first time that the Black Knights, who were reinstated to the varsity ranks in 1997-98 following a three-year hiatus, qualified since 1992. Since taking over the program in the fall of 2000, Wigger had a school record five earn AllAmerica certificates in 2005, 2006 and 2007. Michael Matthews, Richard Calvin and Joseph Todarao are the latest shooters to earn All-America honors. Calvin and Matthews earned firstteam accolades in air rifle and smallbore, respectively, with Todardo selected for second-

2013 ARMY CROSS COUNTRY

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2013-14 A RIFLE

THE WIGGER FILE •Since taking over the reins in 2000-01, Ron Wigger has breathed new life into the program. Army had an NCAA individual qualifier in air rifle his first season and earned a team berth (first since 1992) in that event the following year. •Army has qualified the last 10 years for the NCAAs in both team events, and finished in the top four six times. Its selection in 2004 was Army’s first since 1987, while its fourth-place finish was the team’s second-best at the time. •The Black Knights captured their first NCAA title in school history in 2005, took the bronze in 2006 and the silver the next two years. •The Army mentor was recognized nationally as the Coach of the Year in 2004 and 2005 by the Collegiate Rifle Coaches Association. •Wigger has mentored 15 NRA All-American who have earned 45 certificates (19 first team, 19 second team and seven honorable mentions). •He earned coaching honors three times in the GARC, including back-to-back honors in 2004 and 2005. •Since joining the Great America Rifle Conference (GARC), Wigger has led the Black Knights to the regular-season crown in 2006 and 2008 along with the school’s first championship title in 2008. •He was among the final six shooters vying for one of two 1992 Olympic team spots. His sister, Deena, competed at the 1988 Olympic Games where she finished 10th in smallbore. •Wigger was the smallbore prone champion in the Master Service (Military) category at the 2006 National Championships. He was runnerup at the Senior Men’s Prone Rifle and 37th out of 93 overall in 2008. • He was selected captain of the US International Trophy Team that was comprised of the top 20 smallbore prone shooters in the country firing against teams from Great Britain, Australia, Canada and South Africa in August 2012.

2013 ARMY CROSS COUNTRY

WIGGER YEAR-BY-YEAR

Year 2000-01 2001-02 2002-03 2003-04 2004-05 2005-06 2006-07 2007-08 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13 2013-14

Record 7-1 5-4 7-6 8-3 8-2 9-2 10-2 10-1 7-6 7-4 6-6 9-3 10-3 7-5

Pct. .875 .556 .538 .727 .800 .818 .833 .909 .538 .636 .500 .750 .769 .583

(14 Years)

110-48 .696

GARC NCAAs ---4th 9th 5th --2nd 4th 2nd 1st 2nd 3rd 2nd 2nd 1st 2nd 5th 6th 5th 5th 3rd 8th 4th 4th 4th 6th 4th

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NCAA QUALIFIER 11 CONSECUTIVE YEARS (2004-2014) • 2005 NATIONAL CHAMPIONS

and international levels. Ranked among the nation’s top shooters in smallbore prone, Wigger competed for one of two berths in that event at the 2004 Olympic Trials. The Army mentor was awarded the International Distinguished Shooter Badge by USA Shooting in the summer of 2002 based on his gold medal performance in smallbore prone at the 1988 World Cup in Mexico City. Runner-up at the USA Shooting National Championships in 1987 and 1991, Wigger was a member of the All-Guard smallbore rifle team that captured the 1993 national team championship at Camp Ron Wigger (right) with his father, Lones, a two-time Olympic gold med- Perry, Ohio. He was also among the final six shooters alist and four-time qualifier who holds 29 world records. competing for a spot on the 1992 Olympic Team. wins since 2007-08. The Black Knights finished Wigger placed first in his signature event in third during the GARC’s regular-season, placed the Master Service (Military) category at the fourth at the championships, and was sixth at 2006 National Championships, and seventh the NCAAs. among 256 shooters in the Open Division. Over the past 13 years, Wigger’s teams have At the 2008 USA Shooting National established school marks, shattering team and Championships, he was runner-up in the Senior individual records that were on the books when Men’s Prone Rifle event and 37th overall. he took over the program. All three team scores He also holds the Distinguished Rifleman (air rifle, smallbore and aggregate), along with Marksmanship Badge. seven individual marks, were broken and reset As a collegian, Wigger was a member his first three years. of Eastern Kentucky’s nationally ranked Abalo holds three of the six individual school rifle team that finished third at the 1983 marks and shares another. Buck is Army’s NCAA Championships. Commissioned in the record-holder in smallbore and John Fiddes Infantry Branch following graduation (1983), owns the smallbore standing mark. Wigger earned his master’s degree in sport Competing against the top rifle programs management at the U.S. Sports Academy in in the nation, Wigger ranks second all-time Daphne, Ala. on the school’s coaching list. Wigger was Wigger’s sister, Deena, competed at the instrumental in Army joining the Great America 1988 Olympic Games, finishing 10th in Rifle Conference in 2001-02. He guided Army smallbore, while his father, Lones, is a two-time to a fourth-place finish its inaugural year in the Olympic gold medalist and four-time qualifier. GARC, one of the top conferences in the country, Lones, one of the inaugural members of the and his efforts earned him Coach of the Year USA Shooting Hall of Fame, was inducted into plaudits. His peers bestowed that honor upon the Olympic Hall of Fame in 2008. him in 2004 and 2005 after Wigger guided This summer Wigger’s family - father, sister, Army to second place during the 2004 regular brother Danny, along with matriach and coach season, while going undefeated in 2005. (mother Mary Kay) - combined thier talents Army has collected its share of GARC honors to finish runner-up in the National Smallbore (86) during the 13 years it has been a member. Prone Any Sight Team Championship. After collecting seven certificates the first two Wigger and his wife, the former Lorraine years, the Black Knights were awarded eight in Bravo, reside at West Point with their daughters: 2004, 15 in 2005, 10 in 2006, nine in 2007, Alicia, 22; Karina, 20; and Michelle, 15. 11 in 2008, eight between 2009-11, eight in 2012 and five in 2013. Overall, Army has 30 first-team certificates, 35 second team and 21 honorable mentions. Charbonneau became the first Black Knight crowned a GARC champion in 2003. Abalo, a five-time GARC champion, won a pair of titles in smallbore and aggregate, while Scherer captured the air rifle title in 2008 and was runner-up to Abalo in the aggregate. Wigger has carved out an impressive slate both as a coach and competitor at the national

COACH RON WIGGER


STAFF & SPOTTERS CHART

2013-14 A RIFLE

NCAA QUALIFIER 11 CONSECUTIVE YEARS (2004-2014) • 2005 NATIONAL CHAMPIONS

RICHARD JOHNSON Assistant 3rd Season UMass-Lowell ‘99 Richard Johnson closed out his third season with the team after joining head coach Ron Wigger’s staff in March of 2011. He was named the Great America Rifle Conference Assistant of the Year in 2014 as Army’s athletes combined for five certificates. Johnson helped mentor Army to 10 wins in 2013 for the most victories since 2007-08, along with three Black Knights earning AllAmerica certificates for the second straight year. His first year with the team, Johnson was instrumental in Army posting its highest finish (fourth) at the NCAAs since earning runner-up honors in 2008, along

DANIELLE CUOMO

with crowning a Great America Rifle Conference champion. Since joining the staff, Army has compiled a 26-11 mark and finished fourth the last two years at the GARC Championships. A competitive smallbore shooter for over 25 years, Johnson is a three-time Massachusetts state champion. He captured the 3-position Junior State title in 1985 and defended his title the following year when he was also crowned the Prone Junior State champion. Johnson was the founder and director of the junior marksmanship program at Harvard (2005-11) for youngsters between 10-20 years old interested in competitive shooting. He provided instruction in firearm safety, along with teaching marksmanship skills, and has had several members graduate into the collegiate level of competition. He also served at the same time as head coach of the Massachusetts Junior Rifle Team (2006-11) that was comprised of the top shooters within the state. Following graduation from UMass-Lowell with a bachelor of science degree in meteorology in 1999, Johnson was an assistant staff meteorologist at MIT for eight years. The first assistant under Wigger, Johnson was on hand in 2011 when the Black Knights headed to the NCAA Championships for the eighth straight year where they finished eighth in smallbore and eighth in air rifle. A licensed USA shooting level 1 rifle official and advanced rifle coach, Johnson and his wife Ann have a son Erik (19) who is a sophomore at RPI.

ALYSSA GESTL

MICHAEL MATTHEWS

2013 ARMY CROSS COUNTRY

OLIVIA NARDONE

RON WIGGER HEAD COACH

www.goARMYsports.com• Page 14

JOSEPH TODARO

RICK JOHNSON Assistant Coach

COL. MARK GAGNON Officer Representative


MEET THE TEAM

2013-14 A RIFLE MICHAEL MATTHEWS

ABOUT MATTHEWS • Four-time NCAA Participant (2011, 2012, 2013, 2014) • Runner-up in Smallbore at 2012 NCAA Championships • Two-time NRA Smallbore All-American Second Team 2012, First Team 2013 • Competed at 2012 Olympic Trials • 2012 National Junior Prone Champion; Finalist for Olympic Team • Member of National Junior Team • Seven-Time All-GARC Selection SB - 1st team 2013, 2nd team 2012, 2014 AR - Honorable mention 2013 Combined - 2nd team 2013, Honorable mention 2012, 2014 • Member of Army’s record-tying air rifle team (2357 in 2013) • 2012 Gold Medalist in Men’s 50m Smallbore Three-Position at National Junior Olympic Shooting Championships • 2011 NJOS All-Star in Air Rifle • Four-year letterwinner 2013-14: Ranked among Army’s leaders in smalbore for fourth straight year ... season-high 585 fired against Murray State tied for second highest on team followed by 584 recorded three times, last in win over Navy ... earned medalist honors five times (Ole Miss, Coast Guard, President’s Trophy Match, Murray State and Navy) ... second straight year copped medalist honors in Navy match that earned him a share of the Army Athlete of the Week honors ... runner-up twice vs. Memphis and in triangular at NCAA Qualifier ... turned in Army’s top score (577) at GARC Championships ... season-high 589 in air rifle recorded during the fall in runner-up finish at President’s Trophy Match (earned medalist honors in smallbore) and at NRA Sectionals in the spring ... during course of season shows 579 average in smallbore and 584 in air rifle.

2010-11: Ranked among Army’s top shooters in both disciplines ... made presence felt immediately ... captured medalist honors in air rifle (587) and tied for runner-up honors in smallbore (577) against Nebraska in second match of season ... turned in Army’s top air rifle score of 584 that ranked third in GARC match against Ole Miss ... posted season-best 588 in that discipline against defending GARC champion and No. 1 West Virginia ... recorded Army’s top air rifle score (586) in second-place finish against Ohio State ... was the Black Knights’ high shooter (587) in that discipline at the NRA Sectionals ... recorded career-high 589 that was a point behind the winner in final regular-season match against USP in NCAA Qualifier ... mark tied for third-highest Black Knight air rifle score of the season ... recorded a 581 at GARC Championships that listed 26th ... posted season-best 582 in smallbore in second-place finish against Ole Miss ... recorded a 578 as part of Army’s smallbore scoring unit in win over Navy ... fired a 573 mark in smallbore at the GARC Championships that listed-1522nd en route to finishing 20th in the aggregate scoring with an 1154 ... one of two freshmen and three underclassmen selected to compete on the Army team at the NCAA Championships ... posted Army’s top score in air rifle (577) in first appearance ... one of three Black Knights to compete at the National Junior Olympic Shooting Championships ... was runner-up in air rifle and named an all-star in air rifle along with earning a spot on the National Junior Rifle Team.

2013 ARMY CROSS COUNTRY

2012-13: Army’s top shooter in smallbore ... medalist in five meets and second twice ... team-high 589 recorded in triangular sweep of Jacksonville State and Ole Miss tied career mark ... second highest score of season, 588, recorded in season-opener against No. 1 ranked West Virginia ... posted a 585 at NCAA Qualifier ... among leaders in air rifle as career-best 592 was one point off team high ... fired that score twice, first against Memphis and in a triangular sweep of The Citadel and North Carolina State ... second highest mark of 589 posted against Murray State and Navy ... swept both disciplines twice ... first meet was against Memphis during the fall followed by triangular at The Citadel in January ... member of Army’s record-tying air rifle unit that combined for a 2357 ... contributed 587. 2011-12: Capped the season placing runner-up in smallbore at the NCAA Championships ... authored career high 589 to place second in the relay scoring at the NCAAs after being nipped on center shots as both shooters posted the same score ... fired a 99.6 in the individual finals to place second after being outshot 688.6-687.6 ... earned

PRIOR TO WEST POINT: Member of the Spalding County Shooters in Griffin, Ga., for several years ... competed twice at the National Junior Olympics ... earned a pair of letters as a pitcher on the baseball team at Norcross H.S. before turning attention to rifle. PERSONAL: Given name is Michael Anthony Matthews ... parents are Chris and Mary Matthews ... has three siblings, Jacob, Andrew and Luke ... brother Jacob is a pitcher on the baseball team at Mercer University ... enjoys fishing, hunting, rafting and swimming in his spare time ... majoring in Arabic and Russian.

Smallbore Air Rifle

589 589 592 592

MATTHEWS’ CAREER HIGHS

vs. Jacksonville State/Ole Miss NCAA Championships vs. The Citadel/NC State vs. Memphis

1/27/13 3/9/12 1/27/13 10/15/12

www.goARMYsports.com • Page 15

NCAA QUALIFIER 11 CONSECUTIVE YEARS (2004-2014) • 2005 NATIONAL CHAMPIONS

Senior Johns Creek, Ga. Norcross

NRA All-America certificate as second-team selection in smallbore ... previous high in smallbore was a 585 set in a second-place finish in triangular with TCU and Murray State .... qualified for shoot-off (top eight) in smallbore at the GARC Championships ... bested three others for the eighth and final spot after tying with a 579 ... posted second highest score (101.6) in the finals to finish fifth ... seasonhigh 586 in air rifle recorded in third-place finish over Navy ... placed fourth in the collegiate competition at the Olympic Trials and 16th in the Open Division with a combined score of 1173 (584-589) in December ... in April captured Men’s 50m Smallbore Three-Position at National Junior Olympic Shooting Championships (NJOSC) to earn spot on National Junior Team ... two months later crowned National Junior Prone champion ... posted 2311 to trail winning mark by four points, then outpointed the leader 3089.0-3087.9 for the eighth spot among nine finalists on US Olympic Team in Men’s 50m Rifle Three Position competition.


2013-14 A RIFLE

NCAA QUALIFIER 11 CONSECUTIVE YEARS (2004-2014) • 2005 NATIONAL CHAMPIONS

JOSEPH TODARO

SENIOR Bridgewater, N.J. Immaculata ABOUT TODARO •Team captain •Two-time NRA Smallbore All-American Second Team 2013 and 2012 •Four-time All-GARC Honors Three-time in Smallbore - First Team 2014, Second Team 2012, Honorable Mention 2013 Second Team Combined Scoring (2014) •Three-Time NCAA Participant (2014, 2013 and 2012) •Two-time CRCA Academic All-American (2012 and 2013) •2013 Collegiate Smallbore Three-Position Champion (NRA National Outdoor Rifle and Pistol Championships) •Member of Army’s record-tying air rifle team (2357 in 2013) •Four-year letterwinner 2013-14: Turned in Army’s top score of the season firing a career-high 586 in smallbore, along with ranking among the leaders in air rifle ... earned medalist honors three times in smallbore against Ohio State (586), North Carolina State (581) and triangular sweep (583) in NCAA Qualifier ... posted runner-up honors four times to include meet against No. 1-ranked West Virginia firing a 585 ... posted third-place finishes three times in that discipline ... career-high 591 in air rifle earned runnerup honors in conference win over North Carolina State ... previous high of 590 recorded against conference rival Kentucky in posting Army’s second highest score in the meet ... earned GARC honors in smallbore for third straight year highlighted by selection to the first team, along with second-team honors in the combined scoring.

MEET THE TEAM

scores of 1186 (78) and 1181 (70) to finish eighth overall among a field of 200 shooters that included Olympians, members of the Army Marksmanship Unit, along with the nation’s top junior and collegiate shooters. 2011-12: Member of Army’s counting unit in every smalbore match and most of the air rifle competitions ... shattered career mark by 10 points in smallbore in first meet of season ... tied for runner-up honors with classmate Michael Matthews as both posted 584s in win over Memphis ... bettered that mark with 585 in second-place finish against Nebraska in November ... earned medalist honors with a 582 in regular-season finale against USP and SUNY Maritime in NCAA Qualifier ... one of four Black Knights to earn GARC honors in smallbore with selection to the second unit ... tied with two others for eighth place in the relay scoring at the conference championships with a 579, but came up short in the shoot-off to advance (top eight) to the individual finals ... recorded a career-high 586 in air rifle at the President’s Trophy Match that tied for third-place honors ... broke former mark of 582 set freshman year at the same meet ... recorded second-highest mark of 584 at the NCAA Qualifier ... fired a 574 at the conference championships to place 21st in the aggregate scoring with an 1153 ... member of Army’s scoring unit at the NCAA Championships in both disciplines ... helped the Black Knights take runner-up honors in smallbore with a 2325, just three points off Kentucky’s winning mark as the Wildcats defended their title ... added a 574 in air rifle the next day as Army finished fourth in the aggregate scoring for its highest finish since garnering runner-up honors in 2008. 2010-11: Worked way into the lineup in the latter half of the fall campaign ... member of Army’s counting unit in both guns in the President’s Trophy Match as the Black Knights defended their title ... fired a 565 in smallbore and season-best 582 in air rifle ... recorded 566s smallbore scores in the next two matches against GARC rivals Ole Miss and West Virginia followed by 573 and 570, respectively, in air rifle ... fired in the second half of the season against Ohio State, Navy and USP in the NCAA Qualifier and regular-season finale ... member of the counting unit in air rifle against Ohio State ... 574 individual smallbore score against Navy was the fifth highest recorded by a Black Knight and a career high ... competed individually at GARC Championships in both disciplines ... tied career-high 574 in smallbore to finish 20th overall posting Army’s fourth-highest score in that event ... turned in a 573 in air rifle for a combined 1147 total.

2013 ARMY CROSS COUNTRY

2012-13: Earned second straight trip to the NCAA Championships ... performance throughout the year earned NRA All-America certificate in smallbore with selection to the second team for second straight year .... placed 13th in the relay scoring in smallbore at the NCAAs with a 577 and turned in Army’s second highest score in air rifle (585) ... earned conference (GARC) honors in smallbore with selection as an honorable mention ... fired Army’s top smallbore score (580, placed 12th) at the GARC Championships and turned in team’s second highest combined mark of 1162 (580 SB and 582 AR) to place 19th ... season-high 583 (two off career mark) smallbore score recorded at the NCAA Qualifier in sweep of USP and SUNY-Maritime ... fourth time finishing among the top two ... tied for medalist honors with a 580 in win over Ohio State ... second best mark of 581 took second in win over Memphis ... also placed second (579) in triangular sweep of The Citadel and Ole Miss ... broke career mark in air rifle with a 589 tying for runner-up honors with Richard Calvin in win over Ohio State ... equaled that score two meets later in triangular split with Jacksonville State and Ole Miss as Army tied its school air rifle mark with a 2357 ... fired a 587 mark in air rifle in sweep of The Citadel and North Carolina State ... third best score (586) posted at the NCAA Qualifier ... edged Ohio State’s Lyman Remington by a point, 2367-2366, to capture the Collegiate Smallbore Three-Position title at the NRA National Outdoor Rifle and Pistol Championships in July ... fired

www.goARMYsports.com• Page 16

PRIOR TO WEST POINT: Competed five years for the Somerset Rifle Club in Central New Jersey ... earned plethora of state titles over that period while setting 16 national smallbore records over a two-year span ... runner-up in Class B (smallbore) at the 2009 Junior Nationals after finishing third in Class C the previous year ... qualified four straight years for Junior Olympics in smallbore and met the standard in air rifle in 2007 ... served as team captain between 2008-10 ... led team to 2008 National anysight prone title ... finished second in the nation in smallbore firing an 1154 at the 2010 NRA Indoor Championships ... graduated with honors from Immaculata H.S. with a 3.65 grade point average.

Smallbore Air Rifle

586 591

TODARO’S CAREER HIGHS vs. Ohio State vs. North Carolina State

11/16/13 02/07/14


2013-14 A RIFLE ALYSSA GESTL

MEET THE TEAM

Personal: Given name is Alyssa Sue Gestl ... parents’ names are Erin and Shelley Gestl ... brother Alex (17) ... grandfathers Ernest Gestl and Dennis Mantz served in the military ... comes from a shooting family that includes father, brother, uncle (Eric Gestl) and grandfather (Ernest Gestl) ... majoring in Management.

Sophomore

Palmyra, Pa. Palmyra Area

2013-14: Member of Army’s firing unit in both disciplines this season ... turned in team’s top score in air rifle at the GARC Championships posting a career-high 590 to tie for 11th place ... one of just four Black Knights to score a 590 or above in that discipline ... previous high of 588 recorded in third-place finish in conference win over North Carolina State ... tied for third-place with a 585 in triangular sweep at NCAA Qualifier ... averaged a 586.75 in last four meets of season ... recorded a career high 580 in smallbore in first meet of the season against Ole Miss to earn runner-up honors in Army’s sweep of top three places ... equaled that mark in third-place finish against Murray State ... six times placed in top four in that discipline - runner-up, third and fourth twice ... second highest score (579) fired at the NCAA Qualifier in a third-place showing.

-17-

2012-13: Worked way into the lineup as member of the firing unit in air rifle by the first meet of the season ... posted a 579 and bettered that mark by 10 points in the first meet of the winter campaign with a career high 589 ... score earned third-place honors in sweep of The Citadel and North Carolina State ... equaled that mark in triangular split with Jacksonville State and Ole Miss firing Army’s second highest score on air rifle unit that tied school mark of 2357 ... tied personal -best 589 earning share of medalist honors with teammate Richard Calvin in NCAA Qualifier sweep of USP and SUNY-Maritime ... posted a 587 in runner-up finish in GARC regular-season finale against Nebraska ... tied for Army’s second highest air rifle mark at the GARC Championships with a 586 ... season-high 575 in smallbore recorded at the President’s Trophy Match ... score was Army’s second highest of the meet and just one point shy of third-place honors ... second highest score of 574 posted against Nebraska ... fired a combined score of 1154 (568 SB, 586 AR) in first trip to the GARC Championships.

2013 ARMY CROSS COUNTRY

Prior to West Point: Competed five times at the Junior Olympics ... posted third-place finishes in age group in both disciplines in 2008 ... placed sixth overall and first in age group the following year ... qualified for the American Legion after placing in the top 15 nationally in 3-position air rifle ... high women in prone anysights at the NRA nationals in 2010 ... high women in prone in the state of Pennsylvania (2008-12) ... lettered twice in volleyball at Palmyra Area ... co-captain ... member of the National Honor Society. Smallbore Air Rifle

580 580 590

GESTL’S CAREER HIGHS Murray State Ole Miss GARC Championships

1/17/14 10/5/13 3/02/14

www.goARMYsports.com • Page 17

NCAA QUALIFIER 11 CONSECUTIVE YEARS (2004-2014) • 2005 NATIONAL CHAMPIONS

ABOUT GESTL •Two-time NCAA participant - 2014 and 2013 Lone underclassman on Army’s Unit in 2013 First female to qualify for the NCAAs as a freshman since Kelly Buck in 2009 •Member of Army’s record-tying air rifle team • Named a 2014 GARC Scholar-Athlete •Two-year Letterwinner


2013-14 A RIFLE

MEET THE TEAM

NCAA QUALIFIER 11 CONSECUTIVE YEARS (2004-2014) • 2005 NATIONAL CHAMPIONS

OLIVIA NARDONE

Sophomore Winchester, Mass. Winchester

ABOUT NARDONE •NCAA participant in 2014 •Two-year Letterwinner 2013-14: Started off the season firing individually, but performances earned spot on firing unit by the fourth meet of the year ... broke career smallbore mark in first meet of season posting Army’s fourth highest score (572) ... bettered that mark with 573 against host Ohio State before shattering it with a 576 in home conference meet against Nebraska ... recorded career mark in air rifle as member of firing unit against defending champion and GARC rival West Virginia ... 587 score tied for Army’s top mark in the meet ... equaled it against conference foe Kentucky and broke it against GARC rival Nebraska (588) ... closed out the regular season setting a career mark for third time during the season firing a 592 as medalist in a triangular sweep in the NCAA Qualifier ... score tied for Army’s third best of the season ... posted Army’s third highest score at the GARC Championships as the Black Knights earned the bronze in the team scoring ... compiled a 588.67 average in the last three meets of the season. 2012-13: Came into own latter half of season of season in both disciplines ... fired personal-best 585 air rifle score that ranked second highest by a Black Knight and fourth overall in win over Ohio State ... recorded second highest score in that discipline behind 579 posted against Navy ... top smallbore score of 568 recorded in triangular split with Jacksonville State and Ole Miss ... equaled that mark at the NCAA Qualifier in the regular-season finale.

2013 ARMY CROSS COUNTRY

Prior to West Point: Competed with Massachusetts Rifle Association of Woburn for five years ... qualified as distinguished expert in both three-position smallbore and air rifle ... helped team to runner-up honors in 2009 and third place in 2011 at Army Junior Post Championships ... member of scoring unit that set national Intermediate Junior Smallbore Team mark ... listed among President’s 100 in junior smallbore and air rifle in 2012 ... state 3-position air rifle champion and placed third at Nationals in women’s 50m prone D Class in 2011 ... qualified for the National Junior Olympic Rifle Championship twice (2011-12) and three times for National Junior Olympic 3-position air rifle championships (20102012) ... personal best of 384 in women’s air rifle, 556 in smallbore and 572 in International air rifle ... NRA certified junior coach ... spent three years coaching the Massachusetts junior rifle program. Personal: Given name is Olivia Margaret Nardone ... parents’ names are Gerald and Susan Nardone ... twin sister Alexis is a member of the rifle team at the University of Alaska Fairbanks ... brother Alexander (9) ... earned varsity letter in music at Winchester H.S. ... member of National Honor Society, National Italian Honor Society and Senior Orchestra ... majoring in Systems Engineering.

www.goARMYsports.com• Page 18

Smallbore Air Rifle

NARDONE’S CAREER HIGHS

576 592

vs. Nebraska NCAA Qualifier

2/9/14 2/22/14


MEET THE TEAM

2013-14 A RIFLE DANIELLE CUOMO Freshman

ABOUT CUOMO •NCAA participant in 2014 Second straight year a freshman qualified One of three females competing - a school first •Letterwinner 2013-14: Fired a 561 competing individually in first smallbore competition of the season ... bettered that mark by 18 points in the next meet recording a carer-high 579 against No. 1-ranked West Virginia for Army’s fourth highest score ... performance earned a spot on the counting unit in the next two meets - Presidents’s Trophy Match and Ohio State ... also member of Army’s firing unit at the NRA Sectionals with a 574 for the second highest score on the team ... turned in a 578 tying for third-place honors against North Carolina State competing individually ... worked way into Army’s firing unit in air rifle in the second half of the season ... careerhigh 587 was the team’s second highest score recorded at the NRA Sectionals .... mark bettered previous high by five points posted against GARC rival Kentucky ... posted a 585 in tying for third-place in triangular sweep at the NCAA Qualifier.

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Prior to West Point: Member of the Valley Stream Central High School District team and the Valley Stream PAL Club team ... crowned New York State air rifle champion senior year after earning runner-up honors in smallbore junior season ... tied the state air rifle mark with a 291 ... finished in the top three in state in both disciplines competing at JORC (Junior Olympic Rifle Competition) Championships ... runner-up in both disciples in 2011 and 2012, and third in 2013 ... 17th at the JORC nationals in smallbore junior year ... county champion in both disciplines ... set county record in air rifle (195 with 15 center shots) ... posted highest team average in smallbore ... team MVP twice, along with serving as captain junior and seniors years.

2013 ARMY CROSS COUNTRY

Personal: Given name is Danielle Cuomo ... parents are Joanne and Steven Cuomo ... twin sister Stefania (18), along with brother George (20) ... member of National Honor Society, Science Honor Society and vice president of Thespian Honor Society. ... major is undeclared.

Smallbore Air Rifle

579 587

CUOMO’S CAREER HIGHS vs. West Virginia NRA Sectionals

10/26/13 1/24/14

www.goARMYsports.com • Page 19

NCAA QUALIFIER 11 CONSECUTIVE YEARS (2004-2014) • 2005 NATIONAL CHAMPIONS

Valley Stream, N.Y. Valley Stream Central


2013-14 A RIFLE

NCAA QUALIFIER 11 CONSECUTIVE YEARS (2004-2014) • 2005 NATIONAL CHAMPIONS

Army Earns 11th Straight NCAA Bid Army’s sixth-ranked rifle team puts the finishing touches on the season with a trip to the NCAA Championships, its 11th straight, being hosted by Murray State Friday and Saturday (March 14-15) at the Pat Spurgin Rifle Range and CFSB Center, in Murray, Ky. Among the teams Army will be competing against are 2013 champion and No. 1 ranked West Virginia, along with the 2012 and 2011 champions, TCU and Kentucky, respectively. Rounding out the rest of the eight-team field are Alaska Fairbanks, Jacksonville State, Memphis and Nebraska. The Black Knights captured the NCAA title in 2005, along with second-place finishes in 2007 and 2008 and a third in 2006. Army, which finished sixth at the NCAAs last year, heads to the meet with a team consisting of two upperclassmen and three underclassmen. Seniors Michael Matthews and Joseph Todaro are making their fourth and third consecutive trips, respectively, to the NCAAs with sophomore Alyssa Gestl her second straight appearance. Sophomore Olivia Nardone and freshman Danielle Cuomo will be competing for the first time and will write their names, along with Gestl, into Army’s history annals as the largest Black Knight female counters at the NCAAs. Matthews is looking to duplicate his performance at the 2012 NCAAs when he finished runner-up in smallbore to become just the third Black Knight to place among the top two at the championships. He has ranked among Army’s leading scorers throughout his career in that discipline, and joins classmate Todaro, who has fired the top score this season, as the pace setters for the team having led the Black Knights in a majority of the matches. Todaro recorded a career and team-best smallbore score of 586 in a meet against Ohio State followed by a 585 against West Virginia, with Matthews’ top two marks a 585 (vs. Murray State) and 584 recorded twice. Matthews’ career-high 589 was fired at the NCAAs in 2012 and duplicated in 2013. Matthews’ career best in air rifle is a 592 with Todaro’s career mark a 591 recorded this season. Army’s strength has been air rifle and four of its team members have fired in the 590 range. Nardone posted the highest mark this season among the Black Knight contingent with a 592 in a triangular sweep at the NCAA Qualifier in earning medalist honors for the first time. Gestl was Army’s top scorer in air rifle at the GARC Championships with a 590, and Cuomo’s season-best is a 587. The Great America Rifle Conference (GARC), which Army is a member of, is well represented at the NCAAs with over half the berths held by its members led by defending NCAA champion No. 1 West Virginia, along with No. 2 Kentucky, No. 4 Nebraska, No. 6 Army and No. 8 Memphis. The Wildcats were runner-up at the NCAAs the past two years after winning the title in 2011. West Virginia captured its fifth straight GARC Championship in its last outing with Kentucky earning the silver followed by third-place Nebraska and fourth-place Army in rounding out the top half of the nine-team field. “You build all season towards the NCAA Championships,” noted Army head coach Ron Wigger, who has been the architect of Army’s success.” Obviously you have to qualify which is a major accomplishment any year. That we have been able to do it eleven years in a row says a lot about our cadets who have come through the program and maintained that consistency. “Our goal all season was to perform at our highest level and peak at the NCAA Championships and give our best performance possible. I don’t want to go in there thinking we are going to finish in a certain place, we just want

NCAA Championships

to go out and put up our best performance; the outcome takes care of itself. “We have a lot of potential, but the competition is stiff with Kentucky, West Virginia and Alaska performing at a very high level.” Four of Army’s five dual losses this season were conference matches against the Mountaineers, Wildcats, Cornhuskers and the Tigers, and the tough competition resulted in top team and individual scores for the Black Knights. Army’s high mark in air rifle was a 2356, which is just one point shy of the school record set in 2013.

2013-14 ACCOMPLISHMENTS TEAM ► Defeated Navy for the fifth straight year ► Headed to the NCAAs ranked No. 6 for the second straight year ► 11th straight year earned an NCAA bid ►Three of Army’s dual losses were to three of the top four teams in No. 1 West Virginia, No. 2 Kentucky and No. 4 Nebraska members of the GARC along with the Black Knights ►Captured the President’s Trophy Match for the seventh time in the last nine year

INDIVIDUAL ►Michael Matthews Fourth straight year competing at the NCAAs Two-time 2014 All-GARC selection Named to second team in AR Honorable mention in the combined scoring ► Joseph Todaro Team captain Third straight year competing at the NCAAs Two-time 2014 All-GARC selection Named to the first team in smallbore; Second time in the combined scoring ► Alyssa Gestl Second straight year competing at the NCAAs Named a 2014 GARC Scholar Athlete One of three females competing at the NCAAs

2013 ARMY CROSS COUNTRY C

www.goARMYsports.com• Page 20

►Olivia Nardone Earned first trip to NCAAs ►Danielle Cuomo Earned first trip to NCAAs Second straight year a freshman is on the counting team


2013-14 A RIFLE

2013-14 STATISTICS

2013-14 RESULTS (7-5, 3-4 GARC) Opponent at Ole Miss* at Memphis* COAST GUARD at West Virginia* at President’s Trophy Match at Ohio State MURRAY STATE KENTUCKY* at NRA Sectionals at Navy* NORTH CAROLINA STATE* NEBRASKA* NCAA Qualifier USP SUNY-Maritime GARC Championships 02/23 Smallbore 02/24 Air Rifle

SB 2304 2293 2297 2325 2305 2313 2324 2303 2299 2306 2306 2301

Army A.R. 2336 2333 2327 2344 2349 2332 2344 2352 2343 2334 2356 2349

2310 2310

2347 2347

AGG 4640 4629 4624 4695 5809 4655 4668 4697 4642 4640 4662 4669

Opponent A.R. AGG. 2325 4597 2327 4629 2231 4367 2358 4669 1st 2300 2338 4655 2300 2352 4652 2328 2369 4655

SB 2272 2302 2136 2327

2297 2272 2311

4657 4657 4653

2339 2318 2358

4636 4590 4669 3879 4243

4th 4th 3rd

2299 2354

® SEASON HIGHS TEAM

INDIVIDUAL

Smallbore

Smallbore

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586.........Joseph Todaro vs. Ohio State ........................... 11/16/13 2013 ARMY CROSS COUNTRY

2325 ......vs. West Virginia ...........................................10/26/13 2324 ......vs. Murray State ........................................... 01/17/14 2313 ......vs. Ohio State ...............................................11/16/13 2310 ......vs. USP/SUNY Maritime (NCAA Qualifier) ...02/22/14 2306 ......vs. Navy .........................................................02/01/14 2306 ......vs. North Carolina State............................... 02/07/14 Air Rifle

2356 ......vs. North Carolina State............................... 02/07/14 2354 ......GARC Championships ..................................03/02/14 2349 ......vs. Nebraska.................................................02/09/14 2449 ......President’s Trophy Match ............................11/02/13 2344 ......vs. Murray State ........................................... 01/17/14 2344 ......vs. West Virginia ...........................................10/26/13 Aggregate 4669 ......vs. West Virginia ...........................................10/26/13 4668 ......vs. Murray State ........................................... 01/17/14 4662 ......vs. North Carolina State............................... 02/07/14 4657 ......vs. USP/Suny Maritime (NCAA Qualifier) ....02/22/14

585.........Joseph Todaro vs. West Virginia ....................... 10/26/13 585.........Michael Matthews vs. Murray State ................ 01/17/14 584 ........Joseph Todaro vs. Kentucky ............................. 01/19/14 584 ........Michael Matthews vs. Ole Miss ........................ 10/05/13 584 ........Michael Matthews at President’s Trophy........ 11/02/13 583.........Joseph Todaro at NCAA Qualifier ...................... 02/22/14 583.........Joseph Todaro at NRA Sectionals .................... 01/24/14 583.........Joseph Todaro vs. Murray State ....................... 01/17/14 583.........Michael Matthews vs. West Virginia ................ 10/26/13 Air Rifle

595.........Richard Calvin vs. Murray State ....................... 01/17/14 593.........Richard Calvin vs. Kentucky ............................. 01/19/14 593.........Richard Calvin at GARC Championships.......... 03/02/14 592.........Richard Calvin vs. North Carolina State .......... 02/07/14 592.........Olivia Nardone at NCAA Qualifier ..................... 02/22/14 591 .........Joseph Todaro vs. North Carolina State .......... 02/07/14 590.........Alyssa Gestl at GARC Championships ............. 03/02/14 590.........Richard Calvin vs. Nebraska ............................ 02/09/14 590.........Joseph Todaro vs. Kentucky ............................. 01/19/14 589.........Michael Matthews at NRA Sectionals .............. 01/24/14 589.........Michael Matthews at President’s Trophy......... 11/02/13 www.goARMYsports.com • Page 21

NCAA QUALIFIER 11 CONSECUTIVE YEARS (2004-2014) • 2005 NATIONAL CHAMPIONS

Date 10/05 19/06 10/19 10/26 11/02 11/16 11/17 01/19 01/24 02/01 02/07 02/09 02/22


NCAA QUALIFIER 11 CONSECUTIVE YEARS (2004-2014) • 2005 NATIONAL CHAMPIONS

2013-14 A RIFLE The Great America Rifle Conference welcomed Navy into the fold last year and Akron this year. bringing the league to nine teams in joiing Army, Kentucky, Memphis, Mississippi, Nebraska, West Virginia and North Carolina State. The GARC has been hailed as the toughest conferences in the country. Army head coach Ron Wigger knew that the future of the Black Knights’ program would be enhanced and strengthened when he opted to join the GARC 13 years ago. Not only is it a conference that excels at the range, but in the classroom as well. Army captured the National Collegiate Rifle Championship title in 2005, and though it was the Black Knights’ first-ever, it was the 19th time that a member of the GARC claimed that honor. 2013 NCAA champion West Virginia has captured 15 titles and has been runner-up seven times. Kentucky captured its first NCAA title in 2011 and runner-up honors six times to include 2012 and 2013. The GARC, which began in 1998, has been well represented at the NCAA Championships the last few years with a national champion in Army (2005), West Virginia (2009, 2013) and Kentucky (2011), along with 10 runner-ups and a pair of third-place finishes. At the 2005 NCAA Championships, Army captured the title with a 4659 composite, two points higher than third-place Nebraska with Kentucky grabbing the final spot in the six-team field. The Huskers were second at the 2006 NCAA Championships followed by third-place Army with Mississippi and Kentucky finishing sixth and seventh, respectively. The Black Knights were runner-up in 2007 with GARC champion Kentucky finishing fourth. Army won the silver again in 2008 with the Cornhuskers, Wildcats and Mountaineers sweeping the fourth through six spots, respectively. West Virginia captured the NCAA title in 2013 with Kentucky taking runner-up honors for the second straight year with Army placing sixth and Nebraska seventh. In 2009, the Mountaineers captured the title and led a GARC sweep of the third through sixth spots in 2010 with West Virginia third followed by the Wildcats (fourth), Army (fifth) and Nebraska (sixth). Kentucky captured the crown in 2011 and West Virginia was second with Army placing eighth, while the Wildcats were runner-up in 2012 with the Black Knights finishing fourth. Army quickly solidified its position in the GARC, finishing fourth at the championships its first year (2001-02) along with runner-up honors four straight seasons before laying claim to its first title in 2008. The Black Knights finished third in 2011 behind West Virginia and Kentucky, and captured the smallbore title in 2012. Army claimed the regular-season title in 2005 and 2008. Army has earned 61 all-league certificates, 20 honorable mentions, crowned eight champions and garnered eight major awards with Wigger tabbed for coaching citations in 2002, 2004 and 2005.

2013 GARC RECAP

2014 CHAMPIONSHIP RESULTS SB

AIR

Total

West Virginia

2337

2363

4700

Kentucky

2308

2364

4672

Nebraska

2314

2351

4665

ARMY

2299

2354

4653

Memphis

2297

2337

4634

Mississippi

2275

2350

4625

Navy

2291

2321

4612

North Carolina State

2285

2318

4603

Akron

2285

2305

4590

AA

2014 HONORS Shooter of the Year ........................................Emily Holsopple (Kentucky) Rookie of the Year .................................................Sonya May (Kentucky) Senior of the Year......................................... Emily Holsopple (Kentucky) Sportsmanship Award ............................................................... Nebraska Coach of the Year .......................................Butch Woolbright (Memphis) Assistant of the Year ................................................Rick Johnson (Army) Scholar Athletes ................................................. Olivia Nardone (Army)

2013 ARMY CROSS COUNTRY

2014 ARMY GARC HONORS Smallbore 1st Team 2nd Team Air Rifle 2nd Team Combined 2nd Team Hon. Mention Scholar Athlete

www.goARMYsports.com• Page 22

Joseph Todaro Michael Matthews Richard Calvin Joseph Todaro Michael Matthews Olivia Nardone

Sunny russell (Nebraska), Emily Holsopple (Kentucky), West Virginia (Maren Prediger), Elizabth Lee (Memphis), Abbey Stanec (Ole Miss), Maddy Pike (North Carolina State), Jodi Cull-Host (Navy)


GARC HONORS/AWARD

Paul Charbonneau

2013-14 A RIFLE

Chris Abalo

SECOND TEAM 2002 .......Jared Lostetter ...................................................Air Rifle 2003 .......Kim Pienkowski ..............................................Aggregate .................Paul Charbonneau ......................Smallbore, Aggregate 2004 .......John Fiddes ..................................... Air Rifle, Aggregate .................Paul Charbonneau .........................................Smallbore .................Lucas Leinberger ...........................................Smallbore 2005 .......David Amiot ..................................... Air Rifle, Aggregate .................John Fiddes .................................Smallbore, Aggregate .................Lucas Leinberger ...........................................Smallbore .................Mike Jablonski ...................................................Air Rifle .................Paul Charbonneau .........................................Aggregate 2006 .......Lucas Leinberger ........................Smallbore, Aggregate .................John Fiddes .................................Smallbore, Aggregate .................David Amiot ........................................................Air Rifle 2007 .......David Amiot ....................................................Smallbore .................Wesley Hess .......................................................Air Rifle .................John Fiddes ....................................................Aggregate 2008 .......Brian Kern ....................Smallbore, Air Rifle, Aggregate 2011 .......Kelly Buck .......................................................Aggregate 2012 .......Joseph Todaro ..............................................Smallbore .................Michael Matthews.......................................Smallbore .................Richard Calvin ..................................................Air Rifle 2013 .......Richard Calvin ..................................................Air Rifle .................Michael Matthews...................................... Aggregate 2014 ...... Michael Matthews.......................................Smallbore .................Richard Calvin ..................................................Air Rifle .................Joseph Todaro ............................................. Aggregate

Wesley Hess

Brian Kern

2007 .......Brian Kern ......................................................Smallbore .................David Amiot ....................................................Aggregate 2008 .......David Amiot ........................................................Air Rifle 2009 .......Wesley Hess ...................................................Aggregate .................Stephen Scherer ................................................Air Rifle 2011 .......Will Mengon ...................................................Aggregate 2012 .......Will Mengon ...................................................Smallbore .................Richard Calvin ............................................. Aggregate .................Michael Matthews...................................... Aggregate 2013 .......Michael Matthews...........................................Air Rifle .................Joseph Todaro ..............................................Smallbore 2014 .......Michael Matthews...................................... Aggregate SHOOTER OF THE YEAR 2006/07/08 .................................................................Chris Abalo ROOKIE OF THE YEAR 2005 ..............................................................................Chris Abalo 2008 .................................................................... Stephen Scherer COACH OF THE YEAR 2002 ............................................................................ Ron Wigger 2004 ............................................................................ Ron Wigger 2005 ............................................................................ Ron Wigger SCHOLAR ATHLETE 2005 .......................................................................Mike Jablonski 2007/08 .......................................................................David Amiot 2010 ................................................................... Chris Malachosky 2011 ................................................................... Chris Malachosky 2012 ................................................................... Chris Malachosky 2013 ................................................................... Chris Malachosky

2013 3 ARMY ARMY CROSS CROSS COUNTRY COUNTRY

HONORABLE MENTION 2002 .......Jared Lostetter ...............................................Aggregate 2003 .......Kim Pienkowski ...............................Smallbore, Air Rifle 2004 .......John Fiddes ................................................... Smallbore .................Lucas Leinberger ...........................................Aggregate 2005 .......Paul Charbonneau .........................................Smallbore .................John Fiddes ........................................................Air Rifle 2006 .......John Fiddes ........................................................Air Rifle .................David Amiot ....................................................Aggregate

GARC CHAMPIONS 2003 .......Paul Charbonneau .........................................Smallbore 2005 .......Chris Abalo ..................................Smallbore, Aggregate 2007 .......Chris Abalo ......................................Smallbore, Air Rifle 2008 .......Stephen Scherer ................................................Air Rifle 2008 .......Chris Abalo .....................................................Aggregate 2012 .......Kelly Buck .......................................................Smallbore 12-TIME SELECTION Chris Abalo.........................................................................2005-08 11-TIME John Fiddes .......................................................................2004-07 EIGHT-TIME Paul Charbonneau .......................................................2003-2005 SEVEN-TIME David Amiot .......................................................................2005-08 SIX-TIME Stephen Scherer ...............................................................2008-09 FIVE-TIME Lucas Leinberger...............................................................2004-06 Kim Pienkowski ...................................................................... 2003 Mike Jablonski ........................................................................ 2005

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First Team 2004 .......Paul Charbonneau ......................... Air Rifle, Aggregate 2005 .......Chris Abalo ...................Smallbore, Air Rifle, Aggregate .................Mike Jablonski ............................Smallbore, Aggregate .................Paul Charbonneau .............................................Air Rifle 2006 .......Chris Abalo ...................Smallbore, Air Rifle, Aggregate 2007 .......Chris Abalo ...................Smallbore, Air Rifle, Aggregate .................John Fiddes ........................................................Air Rifle 2008 .......Chris Abalo ...................Smallbore, Air Rifle, Aggregate .................Stephen Scherer ..........Smallbore, Air Rifle, Aggregate .................Wesley Hess .......................................................Air Rifle 2009 .......Stephen Scherer .........................Smallbore, Aggregate .................Wesley Hess .......................................................Air Rifle 2011 .......Kelly Buck .......................................................Smallbore 2012 .......Kelly Buck ....................................Smallbore, Aggregate 2013 .......Michael Matthews.......................................Smallbore 2014 .......Joseph Todaro ..............................................Smallbore

Kelly Buck


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ALL-AMERICANS

FIRST TEAM

NCAA QUALIFIER 11 CONSECUTIVE YEARS (2004-2014) • 2005 NATIONAL CHAMPIONS

Year 1942 1947 1948 1949 1951 1956 1957 1958 1963 1964 1965 1966 1968 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1990

Name Richard Wise Amos Mathews Lucien Bolduc Amos Mathews Lucius Bolduc Amos Mathews Stewart Peterson Gordon Rogers Gordon Rogers James Jones William Bradburn William Bradburn William Bradburn Michael Fuller David Taylor David Cannella+ David Cannella + David Cannella^ Rhonda Barush* Gordon Taras* Gordon Taras* Randy Powell* Dale Herr*

Year 1991 2001 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2012 2013

Name Dale Herr Kim Pienkowski^ Paul Charbonneau^ Chris Abalo+ Chris Abalo+ Chris Abalo+ Wesley Hess^ Chris Abalo+ Stephen Scherer+ Brian Kern* Wesley Hess^ Kelly Buck* Kelly Buck* Michael Matthews* Richard Calvin^

Richard Calvin (USMA ’14)

Eight-Time Selection Chris Abalo, 2005-08 Five-Time Selection David Cannella, 1982-84 Three-Time Selection Amos Mathews, 1947-49 William Bradburn, 1963-65

SECOND TEAM Year 1936 1940 1942 1948 1950 1952 1962 1963 1964 1965 1967 1969 1970 1971

Name C.T. Compton Walter Gunster John Baer Howard Wehrle William DeGraf Lucien Bolduc William DeGraf Stewart Paterson John King John Ward Ladd Metzner John Ward Michael Wilkan Gary Chambers Paul Bigelman David Taylor Jim Plunkett Robert Strong Peter Kippie Jim Plunkett Robert Strong

Year 1971 1972 1974 1978 1981 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987

Name (cont’d) Greg Wenzloff Gary Stinnett Robert Strong Robert Jacobs Gary Stinnett Daniel Szarenski Daniel Szarenski David Cannella+ Robert Jacobs* Rhonda Barush* Rhonda Barush* David Cannella* Rhonda Barush^ Randy Powell+ Gordon Taras+ Rhonda Barush* Randy Powell^ Gordon Taras^

Year 1988 1991 1992 2002

Name Randy Powell+ Dale Herr Duncan Lamb* Jared Lostetter^

2003 Paul Charbonneau* 2004 Paul Charbonneau* 2005 Mike Jablonski+ Lucas Leinberger* David Amiot^ 2006 Lucas Leinberger* David Amiot^ John Fiddes* 2007 David Amiot* Brian Kern* 2008 David Amiot+ Brian Kern^ 2012 Kelly Buck^

2013 ARMY CROSS COUNTRY

Michael Matthews*

Joseph Todaro* 2013 Joseph Todaro*

Joseph Todaro (USMA ’14)

HONORABLE MENTION Year Name 1970 Jim Plunkett 1971 Blake Gendron Myron Pangman 1972 Blake Gendron Jim Plunkett 1972 Blake Gendron Jim Plunkett

Year Name 1981 William Schneider* Robert Jacobs^ 1984 Gordon Taras^ 1988 Dale Herr^ 2000 Kim Pienkowski^ 2003 Kim Pienkowski+

^air rifle, *smallbore, +smallbore & rifle

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Michael Matthews (USMA ’14)

Year Name 2005 Paul Charbonneau^ 2006 John Fiddes^ Brian Kern* 2007 John Fiddes*

HIGHLIGHTS Eight-Time All-Americans Chris Abalo ‘08 (SB 05-08; AR 05-08) David Cannella ‘84 (SB 881-84; AR 05-08) Randy Powell ‘88 (SB 85-88; AF 85, -88) Six-Time All-Americans Gordon Taras ‘87 (SB 85-87; AR 84, 85, 87)


HISTORY

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2013 ARMY CROSS COUNTRY

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2013-14 A RIFLE

NCAA QUALIFIER 11 CONSECUTIVE YEARS (2004-2014) • 2005 NATIONAL CHAMPIONS

Rifle has enjoyed a long and distinguished 83-year history at West Point since testing its mettle in 1919 when it outshot Pennsylvania 940-849 in the lone match of the season. By the time the NCAA began sponsoring collegiate rifle in 1979-80, the sport had been in place at the U.S. Military Academy for 58 years, never had a losing record, and posted 15 undefeated seasons, while suffering no more than two losses on 31 occasions. The rich tradition of the sport continues today under present coach Ron Wigger, who rewrote the history annals after leading Army to its first NCAA Rifle Championship in school history following a one-point edging of Jacksonville State for the 2005 crown. It also proved to be the closest title match in NCAA history. Army, placing fourth in 2004, was third in 2006, followed by a pair of runner-up finishes in 2007 and 2008. Following its inaugural season in 1919 under Capt. P.W. Newgarden, Army returned to the varsity ranks from 1923 through 1936. During that span, rifle registered seven undefeated seasons along with a school-record 12 wins competing outdoors in 1925. The Black Knights turned in an exceptional effort during the 1933 season, registering a 6-1 record indoors and unblemished 5-0 mark during the spring outdoor campaign. The sport was discontinued for the 1937 and 1938 seasons before returning to the range in 1939, which was also the inaugural year of the Army-Navy rivalry. The Mids edged Army the first two years of the series, but the Black Knights erased that early start by winning 11 of the next 13 matches, including a run of six straight, in pulling out to an 11-4 lead in the rivalry. After Navy claimed the next three matches, the Black Knights strung together a pair of 5-0 runs during a 14-4 stretch to pull out to a commanding 25-11 advantage that helped carry Army through some rough times. Navy dominated the series from the 1990s into the new millennium before Army snapped loose from a 12-match losing streak on Mid soil in the Black Knights’ regular-season finale in 2006. Army has won the last three matches to hold a 37-30 lead. Army ushered in the decades of the ‘40s with a 43-4 record over a five-year span, including three unbeaten seasons (1941, 1942 and 1944). Overall, the sharpshooters registered an 84-10 mark, including a school- record 13 wins during the 1946 campaign. The Black Knights bettered their win total in the decade of the ‘50s, compiling 100 wins along with breaking the school victory total after going undefeated with a 16-0 showing in 1957-58, followed by unbeaten marks in 1958-59 (15-0) and 1959-60 (8-0) under Master Sgt. O.L. Gallman, the first coach to reach the 100-win plateau during his nine-year tenure (1955-63). Army was dominant in the 1960s, compiling 91 wins along with a 12-0 mark and a first-place finish at the NRA Sectionals in 1966-67. The 1970s were the most prolific in school history as Army compiled 102 wins, with the 1977-78 squad registering a school-record 18-0 mark under Master Sgt. Ken Hamill. Included among the wins were victories over the Coast Guard, the Royal Military College of Canada, Navy and Ohio State along with a first-place finish at the NRA Sectionals. Two years later (1980), the NCAA sponsored its first rifle championships, and Army finished among the leaders as it tied for seventh place that inaugural year. West Point took center stage the following year as host for

the NCAA Rifle Championships with freshman David Cannella, who would go on to become one of the finest shooters in school history, helping Army to a sixth-place finish. The Black Knights qualified all four years for the NCAA tournament during Cannella’s tenure, during which time he earned eight AllAmerica accolades to include five first-team certificates. The Black Knights found themselves part of the NCAA field the first 12 years, finishing as high as third in 1986. Army was runner-up in smallbore and fourth in air, while three shooters were accorded All-America honors that year. Rhonda Barush placed ninth in smallbore at the NCAAs and Gordon Taras was 15th as both garnered All-America accolades. Barush closed out her career as a five-time All-American after making that list all four years, while Taras went on to become a six-time All-American. Army competed in the MAC (Mid-Atlantic and Metropolitan Championships) in the mid ‘80s, winning the title over a three-year period (1987-89) during which time Randy Powell, an eight-time All-American, helped write the headlines. Rifle was discontinued at the intercollegiate ranks in the mid-90s, competing the next three years at the club level before returning to varsity status in 1997-98. Capt. Doug Clark, an Air Force exchange officer, took over the program’s head reins when it returned to the intercollegiate ranks. Army compiled a 17-7 mark its first year back, but was not eligible to compete at the NCAA Championships until the following season. The Black Knights posted a 13-1 mark Clark’s second year and hosted the Mid-Atlantic Championships, where they finished first in smallbore and third in the aggregate scoring. Clark led Army to a 35-14 record during his three-year tenure, capped in 2000 when plebe Kim Pienkowski was accorded honorable mention NRA All-America honors in air rifle. Three members of the squad, Ben Minchhoff, Pienkowski and Joy Monson, qualified for the final tryouts for the 2000 U.S. Olympic Team. Wigger took over the program the following year and met with instant success as Army’s lone loss in a 7-1 campaign was to Navy. Pienkowski qualified individually for the NCAAs in air rifle, where she finished 12th in her first appearance. She was selected for first team NRA All-America honors in air rifle, the first Black Knight named to that unit since Cannella in 1984. Army joined the Great America Rifle Conference, considered one of the top leagues in the country, in 2001-02. Wigger was voted “Coach of the Year” after leading Army to a fourth-place finish its inaugural season. The Black Knights then put the finishing touches on the 2002 campaign by qualifying for the NCAA Tournament in air rifle, their first visit as a team since 1991, where they edged Navy by a point for fifth place. Jared Lostetter, who finished ninth at the NCAAs after qualifying individually in air rifle, teamed with Paul Charbonneau, Pienkowski and Jesus Tavaras as that foursome combined for a 1541. Lostetter was selected a second team All-American in air rifle, and Pienkowski was named to the All-Academic team. The Black Knights, who hosted the 2003 NCAA Tournament, did very little traveling that year as the top teams in the country dotted Army’s home schedule. Army, however, failed to qualify for the NCAAs, but two members of the squad were accorded All-America honors. Pienkowski was tabbed an honorable mention in both smallbore and air rifle, while Charbonneau was selected to the second unit in smallbore, the first Black Knight named in that discipline since 1992. Charbonneau, a GARC second team all-star pick in smallbore and the aggregate scoring, took medalist honors in smallbore at the 2003 championships, breaking his own school mark with an 1177. The 2003-04 season was another banner year as the Black Knights finished fourth in the team scoring at the NCAAs after qualifying for the first time in both events since 1987. It was also Army’s best showing since placing third in 1986. Army posted its highest score of the season in both smallbore and aggregate en route to placing fourth. Wigger, along with Navy’s coach Bill Kelley, was selected as “Co-Coach of the Year” by the Collegiate Rifle Coaches Association. It was the second honor for Wigger that season, having been selected for that same accolade by the GARC. Charbonneau, who was eighth individually in air rifle at the NCAAs, capped the season with a pair of All-America certificates in air rifle and smallbore. He was also named to the Collegiate Rifle Coaches Association All-Collegiate team. The Black Knights were runner-up that year at the GARC Championships, their highest showing since joining the league.

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The 2005 team captured the first NCAA title in school history

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HISTORY


HISTORY

2013-14 A RIFLE COACHING RECORDS Coach Years Capt. P.W. Newgarden 1 Self Coached 1 Maj. C.A. Bagby 3 Lt. R.A. Schow 1 Capt. F.A. Macon 2 Capt. H.C. Barnes 2 Lt. F.X. Mulvihill 5 Lt. T.S. Riggs 1 Lt. O.C. Kromer 2 Capt. R.L. Jewett 1 Lt. Col. J.L. Throckmorton 3 Maj. C.F. Leonard 1 Maj. H.N. Moorman 1 Lt. R.A. Wise 1 Maj. C.E. Mowry 1 Lt. Col. George Murray 3 Col. E.T. Miller 2 Maj. J.R. Waterman 1 Sgt. Maj. O.L. Gallman 9 Sgt. Maj. A.J. O’Neill 10 Master Sgt. Ken Hamill

21

Capt. Doug Clark Maj. Ron Wigger Totals

3 14 89

Season 1919 1923 1924-26 1927 1928-29 1930-31 1932-35 1936 1939-40 1941 1942, 47-48 1943 1944 1945 1946 1949-51 1952-53 1954 1955-63 1963-67 1968-74 1967-68 1974-94 1997-00 2000-

W L 1 0 5 1 22 0 7 1 10 1 10 2 40 4 9 1 11 3 9 0 22 4 11 1 10 0 4 2 13 1 29 6 17 4 10 1 101 12 95 13

Pct. 1.000 .833 1.000 .875 .909 .833 .909 .900 .786 1.000 .846 .917 1.000 .667 .929 .829 .810 .909 .894 .880

279 54

.838

35 14 110 48 834 163

.714 .696 .836

mark. The Black Knights headed to the NCAA championships with one senior, three sophomores and a freshman who combined their talents to lead the team to fifth place honors. The Black Knights qualified for the NCAA Championships in 201011, defeated Navy during the regular-season and captured the President’s Trophy Match for the second straight year. Buck was named a first-team All-American (smallbore) by the NRA for Army’s first selection since 2009. Her 591 in smallbore broke the school mark that had been on the books since 2007. Buck was also a first-team GARC selection in smallbore and a second-team pick in the combined scoring. Army posted a 6-6 mark, finished third at the GARC Championships for its highest finish since 2008, and was eighth at the NCAA Championships. The Black Knights placed fourth in the team scoring at the NCAA Championships in 2011-12 and were runner-up in smallbore. Michael Matthews was second individually in that event with Buck reaching the individual finals in both disciplines. Army captured the smallbore title at the GARC and Buck was medalist. Three Black Knights were accorded All-America honors with Buck picking up a pair in smallbore (first team) and air rifle (second team). She was joined by Matthews and Joseph Todaro, who were selected for second team honors in smallbore. Army defended its President’s Trophy Match and defeated Navy en route to a 9-3 mark. Army earned its 10th straight trip to the NCAAs in 2012-13 and finished sixth. The Black Knights posted a 10-3 dual mark, that included its fourth straight win over Navy, for their most wins since 2007-08. Three Black Knights earned NRA All-America honors, equaling last year’s total, and seven were accorded CRCA All-Academic honors . Matthews and Todaro were All-America selections for the second straight year and Richard Calvin garnered his first certificate. Matthews and Calvin were first-team picks in smallbore and air rifle, respectively, with Todaro a second-team selection in smallbore. Calvin is the 15th Black Knight under Wigger to earn All-America honors as Army has earned 44 certificates (19 first team, 19 second team and six honorable mentions) during his 13 years at the helm. Wigger reached the 100-win plateau during the season, and is just the third coach in Academy history to do so in listing second all-time with 103.

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NCAA QUALIFIER 11 CONSECUTIVE YEARS (2004-2014) • 2005 NATIONAL CHAMPIONS

The combination of the experience returning and the talent of the newcomers would prove a perfect fit for Army’s magical ride in 200405. The Black Knights captured the GARC regular-season title with a perfect 6-0 mark, while posting an 8-2 dual record. After posting the third-highest score in the country at the NCAA Qualifier, Army fell by four points to arch-rival Navy in its final dual match. Army walked off with a majority of the GARC awards, claiming 15 of 30 all-star certificates along with copping two of the major awards with freshman sensation Chris Abalo named the “Rookie of the Year” and Wigger repeating as “Coach of the Year.” The Black Knights finished second at the conference championships and Abalo earned medalist honors in smallbore and the aggregate scoring. The next stop was the NCAA Championships where Army found itself in second place the opening day, trailing defending champion Alaska Fairbanks by six points following the smallbore competition. Army scored a 2321 in air rifle the final day to nip Jacksonville State, first in that discipline, by a point for the 2005 NCAA title. Just three points separated the top four place winners. Abalo finished fourth in both events and Leinberger was seventh in air rifle, while Wigger repeated as National “Coach of the Year.” Five Black Knights combined for a school-record seven All-America certificates with Abalo garnering first team honors and Mike Jablonski second team plaudits in both events. Highlighting the 2005-06 dual meet season was Army’s first win over Navy since 1990, snapping the Mids’ 12-match series win streak, en route to posting a 9-2 mark. Army also wrestled the President’s Trophy Match from Navy. Named the GARC “Shooter of the Year”, Abalo led Army to runner-up honors at the conference championships. The Black Knights put the final touches on the campaign by earning the bronze at the NCAA Championships. Five Black Knights were selected for NRA All-America honors with Abalo repeating as a firs- team pick in both events, while John Fiddes also garnered a pair of certificates. Abalo was crowned an NRA National Collegiate champion in smallbore and air rifle based on his performance at the NRA Sectionals, which coincided with the NCAA Qualifier. The 2006-07 season saw Army defeat Navy for the second straight year along with recording its first win over the Midshipmen at West Point since 1985, en route to a 10-2 mark - its highest total since 1998-99. The Black Knights were runner-up at the NCAA and GARC Championships. Abalo repeated as the GARC’s top shooter along with being named the CRCA “Shooter of the Match” at the NCAAs where he finished third in air rifle and fourth in smallbore. In 2007-08, Abalo led the Black Knights to their first-ever GARC Championship, runner-up honors at the NCAAs and first-ever team title in smallbore, along with winning the Palmyra Tournament. Army closed out the year with a 10-1 mark that included its third straight win over Navy. The most decorated shooter in school history, Abalo was the GARC’s “Shooter of the Match” for the third straight year, captured the NCAA smallbore title, set a national smallbore prone record and NCAA smallbore record, and repeated as a first team All-American in both events. Stephen Scherer became just the third Cadet in West Point history to compete at the Olympic Games (Beijing) after finishing first at the Trials in air rifle. The GARC “Rookie of the Year,” he finished third in smallbore and fifth in air rifle at the NCAAs along with earning first team All-America honors. Caught in a rebuilding year in 2008-09, Army turned in a strong showing at the NCAA Championships with a sixth-place finish. Team captain Wesley Hess and freshman Kelly Buck finished fourth individually in air rifle and smallbore, respectively. Hess was named the Great America Conference’s “Senior of the Year,” repeated as a first team GARC all-star in air rifle along with earning honorable mention in the combined scoring. He capped his senior year with first team NRA All-America honors in air rifle for the second time in his career. A young Army put together a strong showing late in 2009-10 to continue the Black Knights’ long tradition of qualifying for the NCAA tournament with its seventh straight berth. The team captured the President’s Trophy Match and posted a win over Navy in Annapolis, Md., in highlighting the second half of the season en route to a 7-4


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HISTORY


YEAR-BY-YEAR RESULTS 1919 (1-0) Coach: CPT P.W. Newgarden Captain: none listed 940 Pennsylvania 849

1750 1725 1734

1794 1793 916 683 1334 1104 1819 1838 1829 1106 1829

1924 (7-0) Coach: MAJ C.A. Bagby Captain: R.V. Lee 102d Cav., NJ NG 71st Regt., NY N.G. 107th Regt., NY N.G. 102nd Engrs., NY N.G. 10th Inftry, NY N.G. Missouri Texas A & M 1925 (12-0) Coach: MAJ C.A. Bagby Captain: J.W. Black 7th Regt., NY N.G. City College of NY New York Univ. Syracuse Old Guard of NY Pennsylvania Hawaii 71st Regt., NY N.G. w/Oregon AC 7th Regt., NY N.G. 102d Cav, NJ N.G. Oregon Agr. College

1732 1721 1705 1593 1739 1563

1743 1824 1705 1751 2632 1253 1727

1665 1592 858 633 1211 1065 1626 1811 1705 1740 1068 1659

1926 (3-0) Coach: MAJ C.A. Bagby Captain: R.K. McDonough 1346 Old Guard NY 1280 2256 102d Eng., NY NG 2205 2308 71st Regt., NY NG 2288

1297 800 2266 1381 2281 2275 2262 2265

1927 (7-1) Coach: LT R.A. Schow Captain: B.A. Daughtry George Washington Old Guard of N.Y. 102nd Eng., NY NG Norwich 71st Regt., NY NG Essex Troop of N.J. Ft. Orange Post, A.L. 10th Inf., NY N.G.

2230 2185 1390 1838 2274

1928 (4-1) Coach: CPT F.A. Macon Captain: N.B. Forrest Essex Troop of N.J. 71st Regt., NY NG. George Washington Ft. Orange Post, A.L. 102nd Engrs., NYNG

1305 775 2207 1326 2277 2247 2148 2179

2234 2115 1381 1725 1224

1931 (4-2) Coach: CPT H.C. Barnes Captain: J.W. Hansborough 1105 U.S. Marine Corps 1123 with D.C. Nat’l Guard 1119 with George Washington1046 with Columbia 1014 2343 N.Y. Stock Exchange 2216 1326 Essex Troop of N.J. 1275 1932 (10-2)* Coach: LT F.X. Mulvihill Captain: W.R. Huber 1261 Essex Troop of N.J. 1236 1368 Boston College 1088 1348 N.Y. Stock Exchange 1324 1338 Old Guard of New York 1326 2334 71st Regt., N.Y.N.G. 2286 798 U.S. Marine Corps 814 w/D.C. Nat’l Guard No. 1 813 w/D.C. Nat’l Guard No. 2796 w/N.Y. Stock Exchange 791 w/George Washington 776 w/3rd Cavalry 735 w/Maryland Nat’l Guard 725 *outdoor season

1340 1342 1356 1351 1352 1340 1313

1933 (5-0)* Coach: LT F.X. Mulvihill Captain: J.M. Breit 1285 Jersey Rifle Assn. 818 Old Guard of N.Y. 1340 Essex Troop of N.J. 1330 N.Y. Stock Exchange 1318 N.Y. Stock Exchange *outdoor season

1358 1355 1340 1362 1356 1367

1369 1365 1382

2216 2293 2294 2304 2254 1305

1929 (6-0) Coach: CPT F.A. Macon Captain: H. Milwit Virginia Military Inst. 010 Essex Troop of N.J. 2227 71st Regt., N.Y.N.G. 2254 Ft. Orange Post, A.L. 2157 102nd Engrs., N.Y.N.G. 2221 Old Guard of New York 1219

1930 (6-0) Captain: CPT H.C. Barnes Captain: K.H. Ewbank 1402 George Washington 1335 2248 71st Regt., N.Y.N.G. 2163 2341 Essex Troop of N.J. 2270 2304 Norwich 2114 804 Old Guard of New York 802 2755 102nd Engrs., N.Y.N.G. 2651

1933 (8-1) Coach: LT F.X. Mulvihill Captain: R.W. Hain New York University Brooklyn Poly. Inst. Fordham Syracuse Columbia w/MIT N.Y. Stock Exchange Cornell w/RPI

1357 1359

1934 (7-1) Coach: LT F.X. Mulvihill Captain: G.B. Dany III Fordham Lehigh w/New York University N.Y. Stock Exchange w/Columbia Mass. Inst. Tech. N.Y. Stock Exchange Vermont

1269 1332 1248 1252 1333 1317 1352 1312 1197

1266 810 1311 1328 1278

1362 1349 1360 1369 1366 1385 1364 1358

1939 (6-2) Coach: LT O.C. Kromer Captain: J.K. Boles New Hampshire Columbia Fordham Coast Guard Syracuse George Washington Yale Navy

1337 1259 1334 1372 1270 1360 1361 1412

1373 1368 1364 1378 1391 1370

1940 (5-1) Coach: LT O.C. Kromer Captain: W.E. Gunster Yale MIT George Washington Coast Guard New York University Navy

1350 1354 1361 1321 1358 1392

1347 1378 1366 1355 1369 1411 1387 1374 1369

1941 (9-0) Coach: CPT R.L. Jewett Captain: J.C. McClure New York University Fordham The Citadel MIT Georgetown Navy Penn State Lehigh St. John’s

1295 1286 1348 1350 1347 1392 1371 1377 1320

1942 (8-0) Coach: MAJ J.L. Throckmorton Captain: R.A. Wise 1384 New York University 1361 1384 Fordham 1286 1389 Lehigh 1384 w/Yale 1330 1392 Penn State 1370 1397 MIT 1358 1390 Navy 1362 1395 George Washington 1335 1943 (11-1) Coach: MAJ C.F. Leonard Captains: H.F. Wehrle*, A.R. Shiely 1397 MIT 1334 1378 Fordham 1283 1404 New York University 1343 1376 Yale 1350 2778 Oregon 2726 1380 Niagara 1464 1389 Lehigh 1371 1409 Cornell 1366 w/Carnegie-Mellon 1359 w/Columbia 1333 1402 Arizona forfeit 1389 Navy 1381 *war class, graduated early

1351 1393 1380 1397 1374 1382 1414 1382 1372 1382 1392 1379 1392 1377

1946 (13-1) Coach: MAJ C.E. Mowry Captain: R.F. Dickson Mt. Vernon Rifle Club 1345 Notre Dame 1284 Coast Guard 1383 VMI 1338 Mt. Vernon Rifle Club 1351 Brooklyn Poly. Inst. 1203 Wisconsin 1167 New Mexico Mil. Inst. 1286 New York University 1241 Virginia Tech 1285 Wheaton 1295 Coast Guard 1374 Texas A & M 1367 Navy 1358

1947 (8-1) Coach: LTC J.L. Throckmorton Captain: W.D. Brown 1355 Brooklyn Poly. Inst. 1328 1364 Mt. Vernon Rifle Club 1311 1378 Mt. Vernon Rifle Club 1308 1382 Coast Guard 1388 1375 King’s Point 1246 1383 Rutgers 1360 1387 MIT 1365 1392 Coast Guard 1389 1382 Navy 1374 1948 (6-3) Coach: LTC J.L. Throckmorton Captain: W.W. Plummer 1402 Rutgers 1345 1385 Pennsylvania 1215 1391 Fordham 1325 w/New York University 1366 1398 Maryland 1399 1382 George Washington 1353 1387 Coast Guard 1398 1391 MIT 1344 1394 Navy 1406 1st CCNY R.O.T.C. Tournament 1st, 2nd Eastern Intercollegiates 1949 (10-1) Coach: LTC George J. Murray Captain: A.C. Mathews 1411 Fordham 1317 1400 Cornell 1362 1394 City Coll. of N.Y. 1364 1403 New York University 1384 w/Penn State 1367 1406 Maryland 1430 with MIT 1377 1416 Rutgers 1328 1405 Coast Guard 1402 1414 Navy 1402 1418 Columbia 1351

2013 ARMY CROSS COUNTRY

1935 (10-0) Coach: LT F.X. Mulvihill Captain: J. Williamson Yale w/Fordham N.Y. Stock Exchange w/New York Univ. Lehigh w/Coast Guard Syracuse w/MIT Vermont w/Colgate

1197 1348 1298 1335 1296 1308 1358 1287

1303 1266 1345 1331 1371 1309 1334 1315 1295 1165

1936 (9-1) Coach: LT T.S. Riggs Captain: C.M. McCorkle 1337 Fordham 1256 896 New Hampshire 875 1345 Drexel 1309 1346 N.Y. Stock Exchange 1293 1350 Essex Troop of N.J. 1294 1360 George Washington 1356 1357 Yale 1340 1376 113th Infantry 1312 1370 Lehigh 1372 w/MIT 1329 rifle discontinued in 1937 and 1938

1944 (10-0) Coach: MAJ H.N. Moorman Captain: J.R. Waterman 1395 New York University 1271 1394 Oregon 1341 1396 Yale 1268 1386 Coast Guard 1352 1393 Virginia Tech 1375 1407 Coast Guard 1353 1408 Mt. Vernon Rifle Club 1351 1415 Detroit 1366 1418 Brooklyn Poly. Inst. 1320 1427 Navy 1364

1379 1364 1400 1363 1384 1381

1945 (4-2) Coach: LT R.A. Wise Captain: J.B. Bennet New York University Coast Guard Yale MIT Coast Guard Navy

1301 1372 1285 1295 1364 1398

1950 (9-2) Coach: LTC George J. Murray Captain: L.E. Bolduc 1417 Massachusetts 1337 1388 Maryland 1395 w/MIT 1374 w/Cornell 1336 1391 City Coll. of N.Y. 1358 1398 City Coll. of N.Y. 1341 1422 Columbia 1357 1389 Coast Guard 1401 1417 Cornell 1354 1425 Navy 1421 1406 Lehigh 1338 1951 (10-3) Coach: LTC George J. Murray Captain: S. Paterson 1408 Columbia 1350 1421 Clarkson 1365 1414 King’s Point 1372 1424 Maryland 1440 with MIT 1432 1415 City Coll. of N.Y. 1399 w/New York University 1395 1431 Norwich 1386 1412 MIT 1431 1414 City Coll. of N.Y. 1380 1424 Coast Guard 1398

1426 Navy 1418 Fordham

1402 1423 1416 1418 1420 1416 1425 1415 1420

1431 1406 1414 1429 1425 1418 1420 1414 1424

1409 1385

1952 (8-2) Coach: COL E.T. Miller Captain: S. Paterson Cornell King’s Point Georgetown Coast Guard New York University Fordham (ROTC) Navy City Coll. of N.Y. Maryland w/MIT

1389 1397 1383 1397 1350 1389 1410 1347 1424 1423

1953 (9-2) Coach: COL E.T. Miller Captain: G.A. Volker Georgetown St. John’s King’s Point MIT City Coll. of N.Y. w/New York University Cornell City Coll. of N.Y. w/Fordham Maryland Navy

1381 1412 1370 1422 1373 1355 1398 1385 1378 1437 1420

1954 (10-1) Coach: MAJ J.R. Waterman Captain: J.R. Shelter 1421 Texas A & M 1370 1391 Cornell 1382 1407 Georgetown 1387 1440 Vermont 1386 1421 New York University 1364 1420 Coast Guard Academy 1395 1424 Mass. Inst. Tech. 1411 1436 Maryland 1431 1420 Fordham 1400 w/City Coll. of N.Y. 1364 1423 Navy 1424

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1955 (11-1) Coach: MSgt O.L. Gallman Captain: R.C. Werner 1420 City Coll. of N.Y. 1385 1417 Georgetown 1403 w/Cornell 1397 1408 New York University 1382 1410 St. John’s 1405 1412 MIT 1406 1427 Norwich 1415 w/Boston University 1374 1410 Coast Guard Academy 1389 1422 Maryland 1383 1423 Navy 1428 1433 Fordham 1389 1956 (10-1) Coach: MSgt O.L. Gallman Captain: C.C. Ege 1429 Georgetown 1382 1430 SUNY-Maritime 1321 1448 Yale 1407 1442 New Hampshire 1398 1426 City Coll. of N.Y. 1346 1418 *Coast Guard 1418 1424 Virginia Tech 1418 w/Maryland 1398 1430 Norwich 1386 w/Vermont 1354 1427 Navy 1432 *Army won -- top score standing pos. 1956-57 (12-1) Coach: MSgt O.L. Gallman Captain: G.B. Rogers 1435 West Virginia 1391 1431 Norwich 1406 w/Yale 1397 1432 St. John’s 1437 w/New York University 1362 1428 MIT 1412 w/New Hampshire 1405

www.goARMYsports.com • Page 29

NCAA QUALIFIER 11 CONSECUTIVE YEARS (2004-2014) • 2005 NATIONAL CHAMPIONS

1819 1834 1847 1858 2712 1389 1786

1923 (5-1) Coach: none listed Captain: none listed 7th Regt., NY N.G. w/Texas A & M 7th Regt., NY N.G. w/Georgetown 102d Cav., NJ.N.G. w/Chicago

2013-14 A RIFLE


2013-14 A RIFLE

NCAA QUALIFIER 11 CONSECUTIVE YEARS (2004-2014) • 2005 NATIONAL CHAMPIONS

1421 City Coll. of N.Y. 1440 Virginia Tech w/Coast Guard 1422 Maryland 1441 VMI 1439 Navy

1400 1428 1405 1410 1370 1434

1957-58 (16-0) Coach: MSgt O.L. Gallman Captain: J.H. Jones 1427 Catholic University 1346 1423 MIT 1416 w/New Hampshire 1400 1439 Yale 1379 w/Drexel 1373 1438 VMI 1387 1446 St. John’s 1443 1456 Norwich 1421 w/Fordham 1361 1445 Mass. Inst. Tech. 1414 1450 City Coll. of N.Y. 1391 1443 Lehigh 1392 1425 Coast Guard 1397 1447 Virginia Tech 1432 w/Maryland 1430 1432 Navy 1431

1962-63 (13-3) Coach: MSgt O.L. Gallman Captain L.J. Sturbois 1433 West Virginia 1434 1451 Maryland 1432 w/Yale 1415 w/Niagara 1389 1438 Rutgers 1337 1444 Penn State 1424 1438 Norwich 1402 1441 Coast Guard 1410 w/77th Infantry Div 1341 1436 MIT 1425 w/Canisius 1355 1423 St. John’s 1429 w/City College of NY 1412 4th Coast Guard Invit’l 1447 Navy 1449 1449 Air Force 1433 w/RMC 1381 1st NRA Sectionals

1444 1443

1958-59 (15-0) Coach: MSgt O.L. Gallman Captain: W.S. Smith 1419 Virginia Tech 1417 w/The Citadel 1416 w/West Virginia 1404 w/VMI. 1399 w/Washington & Lee 1362 1438 MIT 1412 1433 Yale 1385 1435 Maryland 1419 1437 City Coll. of N.Y. 1423 1445 Coast Guard 1416 1432 Air Force 1422 1443 Canisius 1364 1433 St. John’s 1430 w/Villanova 1399 1st New London Invit. Tourn. 1435 Navy 1429 1959-60 (8-0) Coach: MSgt O.L. Gallman Captain: G.R. Stanley 1434 Fordham 1389 1423 MIT 1410 1442 St. John’s 1418 1423 Coast Guard 1403 1447 City Coll. of N.Y. 1432 1440 New Hampshire 1415 1459 Yale 1397 1st New London Invit. Tourn. 1452 Navy 1449 1st NRA Sectionals 1960-61 (6-3) Coach: SMaj O.L. Gallman Captain: L.C. Berra 1434 Maryland 1398 1437 Penn State 1410 1421 City Coll. of N.Y. 1422 1422 St. John’s 1431 1419 Coast Guard 1420 1440 Mass. Inst. Tech. 1424 1426 Canisius 1380 w/Buffalo 1363 1448 Navy 1442 1961-62 (10-3) Coach: SMaj O.L. Gallman Captain: M.E. Brown 1422 Yale 1435 1435 Canisius 1415 w/Providence 1388 1432 Penn State 1424 with Villanova 1399 1427 The Citadel 1432 1442 *Coast Guard 1442 1439 St. John’s 1423 w/MIT 1408 w/Buffalo 1398 1435 West Virginia 1423 w/City Coll. of N.Y. 1417 1428 Navy 1439 *Army won -- top score standing pos.

1446 1457 1437 1st 1452 1450 1448 1st

1963-64 (11-1) Coach: SMaj. A.J. O’Neill Captain: M.E. Wikan West Virginia 1448 w/77th Infantry Div 1355 St. John’s 1435 w/VMI 1426 Penn State 1426 Lehigh 1386 w/Canisius 1379 Air Force 1430 Coast Guard Invit’l The Citadel 1441 w/CCNY 1412 Navy 1442 RMC 1396 NRA Sectionals

1964-65 (10-1) Coach: SMaj A.J. O’Neill Captain: W.J. Bradburn 1447 St. Peter’s 1423 1445 West Virginia 1441 1418 St. John’s 1429 1456 Air Force 1432 1458 Coast Guard 1421 w/Penn State 1393 1446 City Coll. of N.Y. 1409 1st Coast Guard Invitational 1446 Massachusetts 1406 w/Alfred 1391 1459 Navy 1434 1462 Royal Military College 1391 1st NRA Sectionals

YEAR-BY-YEAR RESULTS

1967-68 (6-3) Coach: SGT Kenneth Hamill Captain: J.R. Williams 1333 St. Peter’s 1263 1352 City Coll. of N.Y. 1364 w/Coast Guard 1274 1358 West Virginia 1364 1397 Air Force 1368 5th Coast Guard Invitational 1392 Alfred 1326 w/Murray State 1410 1378 Navy 1367 1st NRA Sectionals 1439 Royal Military College 1391 1968-69 (6-3) Coach: SMaj A.J. O’Neill Captain: J.G. Cox 1383 Coast Guard Academy 1315 1367 St. Peter’s 1255 1363 City Coll. of N.Y. 1338 1381 Penn State 1299 1363 Air Force 1385 4th Coast Guard Invitational 1386 Fordham 1176 1374 West Virginia 1385 1394 Navy 1406 1452 Royal Military College 1396 1st NRA Sectionals 1969-70 (9-2) Coach: SMaj A.J. O’Neill Captain: H. Leonard 1398 Coast Guard 1355 1405 City Coll. of N.Y. 1345 w/St. Peter’s 1272 1399 West Virginia 1390 w/Penn State 1339 1418 Hofstra 1007 5th Coast Guard Invitational 1408 VMI 1355 1398 Murray State 1420 w/East Tennessee State1415 1388 Navy 1385 1462 Royal Military College 1381 1st NRA Sectionals 1970-71 (10-2) Coach: Maj A.J. O’Neill Captain: C.D. Moore 1404 Coast Guard 1348 1414 City Coll. of N.Y. 1364 2838 Tennessee Tech 2839 1408 VMI 1367 1412 Penn State 1349 w/West Virginia 1337 2817 Air Force 2759 1st Coast Guard Invitational 2821 Murray State *2821 w/E. Tennessee State 2794 1423 St. John’s 1382 1407 Navy 1389 1470 Royal Military College 1411 1st NRA Sectionals *Murray St. won, most direct targets hit

L.J. Sturbois (USMA ‘63) 7th 2749 2227 2797 1st 1456

USMA Invitational at West Virginia at St. John’s Navy NRA Sectionals Royal Military College

2807 2235 2777 1421

1973-74 (8-1) Coach: SMaj A.J. O’Neill Captain: G. Stinnett 2812 Lehigh 2618 2811 City Coll. of N.Y. 2467 2796 77th ARCOM 2454 2791 West Virginia 2820 w/Air Force 2756 2nd USMA Invitational 2794 at Penn State 2718 2248 St. John’s 2139 2792 at Navy 2786 1456 at Royal Military College1432 1st NRA Sectionals

2013 ARMY CROSS COUNTRY

1965-66 (9-1) Coach: SMaj A.J. O’Neill Captain: M.B. Fuller 1441 Yale Rifle Club 1397 1449 West Virginia 1462 1450 City Coll. of N.Y. 1423 w/St. John’s 1413 1447 Air Force 1432 1446 Penn State 1430 1449 VMI 1437 3rd Coast Guard Invitational 1460 Coast Guard 1422 1455 Navy 1444 1448 Royal Military College 1410 1st NRA Sectionals

1966-67 (12-0) Coach: SMaj A.J. O’Neill Captain: C. Swanson 1355 St. Peter’s 1335 1379 The Citadel 1356 w/West Virginia 1355 1388 City Coll. of N.Y. 1286 w/Coast Guard 1270 1373 Norwich 1305 1400 Penn State 1330 1356 Air Force 1300 1449 Air Force 1424 3rd Coast Guard Invitational 1376 St. John’s 1316 1378 Navy 1373 1451 Royal Military College 1390 1st NRA Sectionals

www.goARMYsports.com• Page 30

1971-72 (10-0) Coach: SMaj A.J. O’Neill Captain: R.A. Strong 2801 City Coll. of N.Y. 2683 1413 Coast Guard 1366 2827 77th ARCOM 2418 2815 St. John’s 2207 2849 Air Force 2705 3rd USMA Invitational 2841 Delaware-H.V. League 2807 1408 West Virginia 1380 w/Penn State 1363 1402 Navy 1393 1st NRA Sectionals 1459 Royal Military College 1392 1972-73 (10-2) Coach: SMaj A.J. O’Neill Captain: D. Morgenstern 1377 Lehigh 1307 2771 City Coll. of N.Y. 2647 w/William & Mary 2606 2750 Coast Guard 2667 w/St. Peter’s 2558 w/77th ARCOM 2410 2750 Penn State 2699 3308 at Air Force 3241

1974-75 (9-3) Coach: MSgt Ken Hamill Captain: R.D. Ghent 2783 MIT 2690 w/Lehigh 2577 2748 at West Virginia 2830 2782 City Coll. of N.Y. 2577 w/77th ARCOM 2516 2739 at Air Force 2740 5th USMA Invitational 2808 Penn State 2699 2207 at St. John’s 2162 2762 Navy 2814 2216 at Coast Guard 2073 w/Providence 1962 1457 Royal Military College 1424 1st NRA Sectionals 1975-76 (6-5) Coach: MSgt Ken Hamill Captain: J.D. Riojas 2738 City Coll. of N.Y. 2451 2142 at MIT 2168 w/Norwich 2189 2727 Air Force 2722 2781 Dartmouth 2687 w/Syracuse 2555 9th USMA Invitational 2222 St. John’s 2116 2746 at Penn State 2661 w/West Virginia 2828 2769 at Navy 2825 1st NRA Sectionals 1452 at Royal Military College1408

1976-77 (9-1) Coach: MSgt Ken Hamill Captain: J.J. Luther 2720 MIT 2683 w/Coast Guard 2654 2217 at St. Peter’s 2044 2741 at Norwich 2683 2704 Dartmouth 2623 w/77th ARCOM 2432 5th USMA Invitational 2220 at St. John’s 2206 2756 Penn State 2691 2794 Navy 2798 1st NRA Sectionals 1371 Royal Military College 1298 1977-78 (18-0) Coach: MSgt Ken Hamill Captain: W.J. McArdle 2213 at Coast Guard 2128 2802 MIT 2767 w/Villanova 2156 2250 St. Peter’s 2014 w/Kings Point 1980 2816 77th ARCOM 2357 2240 Norwich 2206 w/St. John’s 2173 w/Dartmouth 2135 w/Columbia 2101 w/King’s College 2053 3rd West Point Invitational 2805 at Penn State 2736 w/Ohio State 2756 w/Lehigh 2663 1396 at RMC 1230 2798 at Navy 2786 2274 Hofstra 2158 w/Princeton 2071 1st NRA Sectionals 1978-79 (13-1) Coach: MSgt Ken Hamill Captain: D. Szarenski 2247 St. John’s 2165 2790 77th ARCOM 2420 1st Norwich Invitational 2786 at VMI 2678 w/William & Mary 2675 2247 Cornell 2085 w/Dartmouth 2079 w/St. Peter’s 2055 2811 Royal Military College 2440 5th West Point Invitational 2240 Air Force 2234 2248 at MIT 2179 w/Norwich 2121 2792 at Penn State 2674 w/Indiana (Pa.) 2629 5624 Navy 5634 1st NRA Sectionals


YEAR-BY-YEAR RESULTS

1980-81 (12-2) Coach: MSgt Ken Hamill Captain: W. Schneider 4568 St. John’s 4495 4498 at Eastern Kentucky 4522 2261 77th ARCOM 1967 4560 at Ohio State 4356 w/West Virginia 4564 w/Rose Hulman 4403 w/Penn State 4370 4556 Virginia 4088 w/St. Peter’s 3592 1st NRA Sectionals 4th West Point Invitational 4478 VMI 4253 1418 RMC 1260 5713 Navy 5685 4559 at MIT 4311 w/N.E. College All-Stars4384 6th NCAA Championships - Team 5th NCAA Championships - Air 6th NCAA Champ. - Smallbore 1981-82 (15-3) Coach: MSgt Ken Hamill Captain: B.F. Malloy 2191 at Air Force 2171 2249 Cornell 2104 2263 at St. John’s 2275 4553 Lehigh 4356 w/King’s College 4303 w/MIT 4143 4525 USP 4311 with Dartmouth 4252 4491 William & Mary 4152 4515 Canisius 4005 5989 at VMI 5479 w/East Tenn. State 6151 w/North Carolina State 5884 w/William & Mary 5691 9 at Royal Military College 4 1st West Point Invitational 1st NRA Sectionals 5665 at Navy 5637 5990 West Virginia 6139 w/St. John’s 5969 6th *NCAA Championships *at Lexington, Va. 1982-83 (11-1) Coach: MSgt Ken Hamill Captain: J.J. Timmer 4502 Phil. Coll. of Pharmacy 4250 2249 Air Force 2145 w/Penn State 2128 3rd E. Kentucky Invit. - Free 3rd E. Kentucky Invit. - Air 4440 Kentucky Invitational 5th Xavier Invitational - Free 4th Xavier Invitational - Air 6039 St. John’s 5853 w/King’s College 5848 4565 Dartmouth 4224 w/Coast Guard 4223 6072 at West Virginia 6144 1st NRA Sectionals 1st West Point Invitational 2261 William & Mary 2136 4526 Lehigh 4384 7559 Navy 7553 6045 at MIT 5856 5th *NCAA Champ. - Team

4th *NCAA Champ. - Air Rifle 5th *NCAA Champ. - Smallbore *at Cincinnati, OH 1983-84 (16-1) Coach: Ken Hamill Captain: Dave Cannella 3750 Cornell 3554 w/Pennsylvania 3461 w/USP 3391 w/Columbia 2917 3727 at Air Force 3624 3773 at St. John’s 3754 6018 West Virginia 6212 w/MIT 5861 w/Coast Guard 4274 1st NRA Sectionals 1st West Point Invitational 4546 at VMI 4253 w/North Carolina State 4401 w/William & Mary 4388 w/The Citadel 4289 7561 at Navy 7506 6080 MIT 5927 w/King’s College 5818 w/Lehigh 5731 6th *NCAA Championships *at Murray State

2277 6091 ind. ind. ind. 6108 4576 6114 1st 1st 4592 7601 6066 5th

1984-85 (11-2) Coach: Ken Hamill Captain: Al Scott Pennsylvania 2149 w/USP 2030 w/Princeton 1923 Air Force 5956 w/Coast Guard 5466 Xavier Tournament Eastern Kentucky Tournament Kentucky Tournament King’s College 5795 at MIT 4375 w/Northeastern 3934 w/Wentworth 3379 St. John’s 5997 NRA Sectionals West Point Invitational at West Virginia 4648 Navy 7496 at East Tenn. State 6115 NCAA Championships

1985-86 (15-1) Coach: Ken Hamill Captain: Rhonda Barush 6064 Air Force 5998 w/Texas El Paso 5927 6122 North Carolina State 5805 6076 Cornell 5719 w/King’s College 5675 6091 MIT 5745 3768 St. John’s 3755 6106 St. John’s 6021 w/King’s College 5783 w/Cornell 5768 w/MIT 5743 w/Lehigh 5726 w/VMI 5630 w/Coast Guard 5393 6155 West Virginia 6224 7629 Navy 7596 3rd NCAA Championships - Team 2nd NCAA Champ. - smallbore 4th NCAA Champ. - air rifle

The 1985-86 Team (15-1, 3rd at NCAA Championships) 5883 SUNY-Maritime

5349

1st 1st 4495 5990 6009 6042 6105

$Smallbore $Air Rifle Clarkson 4212 DePaul 5149 Lehigh 5797 VMI 5613 The Citadel 5887 with South Florida 6179 with West Virginia loss 7634 Navy 7646 1st %Smallbore 1st %Air Rifle 6th ^NCAA Champ. - Team 5th ^NCAA Champ. - SB 6th ^NCAA Champ. - Air Rifle *Kentucky Tournament; !Xavier Tournament @NRA Sectionals; $West Point Invitational %MAC Championships ^Morgantown, W.V.

2788 1st 6021 5934 1st 6067 5903 5903 6067 4406 6067 4406 6091 7607 1st

Royal Military College NRA Sectionals Clarkson Cornell West Point Invitational DePaul SUNY-Maritime New Jersey Tech Norwich Coast Guard VMI Yale West Virginia Navy MAC Championships

2539 5884 5136 5001 5493 5249 5565 3905 5669 3729 6231 7608

1989-90 (19-1) Coach: Ken Hamill Captain: Sandy Stevens 6021 USP 5383 6041 at VMI 5533 6026 MIT 5499 w/Kutztown 4178 6067 Xavier 5989 w/King’s College 5978 w/North Carolina State 5655 6051 at The Citadel 5979 2787 at RMC 2497 4586 Clarkson 4456 w/Cornell 4040 1st NRA Sectionals 1st West Point Invitational 6085 DePaul 5678 w/Norwich 5489 w/Coast Guard 5413 w/New Jersey Tech 4143 w/Wentworth 3810 w/Yale 3699 3773 at St. John’s 3719 6089 West Virginia 6183 7608 at Navy 7579 1st MAC Champ. - Air 2nd MAC Champ. - Smallbore 3rd NCAA Champ. - Smallbore *NRA Sectionals

2013 ARMY CROSS COUNTRY

5946 2nd 5th 2nd 2nd 3819 3613 5945 6047 6148 6062 6110 2712 1st 1st

1986-87 (14-4) Coach: Ken Hamill Captain: Paul Arthur North Carolina State *Smallbore *Air Rifle !Smallbore !Air Rifle Air Force New Jersey Tech King’s College Cornell Murray State MIT St. John’s Royal Military College @Smallbore @Air Rifle

3rd 6031 3753 2254 3751 6054 5999 6039 6100 1307 6086 4484 5931 2nd 4562 4480

5711 4562 4580 7609 3781 3407 5836 5586 6215 5769 6041 2548

1987-88 (15-4) Coach: Ken Hamill Captain: Randy Powell VMI Invitational VMI Air Force Wyoming St. John’s King’s College New Jersey Tech MIT South Florida Royal Military College West Virginia Fordham SUNY-Maritime West Point Invitational Clarkson DePaul w/Coast Guard w/Wentworth Lehigh Norwich Navy

5726 3730 2033 3816 5946 5230 5834 6202 1276 6222 4116 5405 4408 4146 4081 3933 4289 4137 7661

1988-89 (16-3) Coach: Ken Hamill Captain: Christopher Chavez 3769 USP 3182 6025 King’s College 5930 6003 North Carolina State 5785 1514 Air Force 1520 6083 MIT 5675 1529 St. John’s 1515 6040 Jacksonville 5913

3753 6105 3790 3797 2nd 2nd 3720

1990-91 (19-4) Coach: Ken Hamill Captain: Dale Herr USP 3249 at Ohio State 6079 w/Xavier 5954 w/Akron 5602 Drexel 3488 North Carolina State 3534 w/Kutztown 2070 Kentucky Invitational Walsh International Match St. John’s 3776

w/King’s College at Canisius at MIT John Jay RMC Clarkson w/DePaul w/Norwich w/Coast Guard w/Yale w/VMI w/Cornell w/Wentworth 2nd NRA Sectionals 6094 at West Virginia 7574 Navy 7th NCAA Championships 3766 6108 3661 5495 4537

3808 3796 3736 6069 3772 3785 5175 6053

3804 7547 4th 2nd 6th

3746 6007 6049 3738 3752 3742 8th

3675 3809 5686 2051 4744 4422 4413 4403 4348 4313 4301 4116 3912

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6179 7578

1991-92 (18-1) Coach: Ken Hamill Captain: Duncan Lamb Phila. Pharm./Science 3243 Penn State 3564 Drexel 3452 w/John Jay 2857 at Jacksonville State 6023 Kings College 3686 w/MIT 3605 at St. John’s 3766 at Royal Military College4117 Cornell 5375 w/DePaul 5820 w/Norwich 5981 w/Coast Guard 5973 w/Merchant Marine 5214 w/VMI 5716 w/Wentworth 5540 w/Yale 3890 at North Carolina State 3540 at Navy 7573 MAC Tourney (Air) MAC (Smallbore) at NCAA Championships (Smallbore only) 1992-93 (15-6) Coach: Ken Hamill Captain: Will Carter USP at Norwich at MIT with Wentworth Drexel St. John’s with John Jay King’s College with Kutztown with Johns Hopkins at Xavier Tournament

www.goARMYsports.com • Page 31

3295 6078 5873 n/a 3466 3788 3104 3745 2097 3450

NCAA QUALIFIER 11 CONSECUTIVE YEARS (2004-2014) • 2005 NATIONAL CHAMPIONS

1979-80 (10-2) Coach: MSgt Ken Hamill Captain: S.R. Garza 2227 at Air Force 2221 4495 North Carolina State 4301 1st Norwich Invitational 4500 St. John’s 4369 w/Cornell 4278 1375 at Royal Military College1200 3rd West Point Invitational 5619 William & Mary 5442 2801 at Penn State 2694 w/West Virginia 2902 w/Ohio State 2757 5609 at Navy 5650 1st NRA Sectionals win MIT win Lehigh T,7th *NCAA Championships *at East Tennessee State

2013-14 A RIFLE


2013-14 A RIFLE

NCAA QUALIFIER 11 CONSECUTIVE YEARS (2004-2014) • 2005 NATIONAL CHAMPIONS

5938 Alaska Fairbanks 5971 West Point Open w/Coast Guard w/Cornell w/DePaul w/Merchant Marine w/VMI w/Yale 5487 Royal Military College 6037 NRA Sectional vs. Canisius 7581 Navy

6139 6056 5133 5760 4756 5772 3432 4705 5539 7627

1993-94 (12-6) Coach: Ken Hamill Captain: Mark Strong 3712 USP 3504 3613 John Jay 2489 5903 at VMI 5460 w/Appalachian State 4836 2247 Kutztown 1961 3725 King’s 3701 with Drexel 2580 3744 at St. John’s 3775 5973 MIT 5841 w/Norwich 6092 3761 Alaska Fairbanks 3870 5980 at Coast Guard 6072 6079 Wentworth 5184 w/DePaul 5598 w/Merchant Marine 4725 6041 Canisius 5622 6069 West Virginia 6148 7599 at Navy 7638 ind. MAC Championships* ind. at NCAA Championships *West Point, NY Rifle designated as club sport from 1994-97 1997-98 (17-7) Coach: Capt. Douglas Clark Captain: Chris Boyer 5778 Penn State 5640 5851 Merchant Marine 4837 w/Kutztown 3590 w/Princeton 4002 w/Wentworth (W) N/A 5902 Norwich 6124 w/IUPUI (W) N/A 5819 Drexel 5656 w/MIT 5439 5777 West Virginia 6163 N/A Air Force (L) N/A w/Wyoming (L) N/A 5891 Coast Guard 5647 w/DePaul (W) N/A 5895 USP 5784 w/Duquesne 5938 w/SUNY-Maritime 5441 w/VMI 5676 5821 Kings College 5812 w/Villanova (W) N/A w/Navy 6134 5843 Canisius 5799 w/Trinity (W) N/A N/A Royal Military College (L) N/A 6th MAC Championships (Air)* *Annapolis, Md. 1998-99 (13-3) Coach: Capt. Douglas Clark Captain: Chris Boyer 5878 USP 5618 w/MIT 5459 3689 at Duquesne 3714 5852 at MIT 5549 w/Mass. Maritime 3961 3rd President’s Cup 11th at Kentucky Invitational 7th at Ohio State Invitational 5932 Penn State 5772 5875 Norwich 61088 w/King’s College 5804 w/Coast Guard 5783 w/VMI 5622 w/Trinity 3658 w/Villanova 3160 w/St. John’s 1274 5962 Penn State* 3063 2230 Royal Military College 1937 7371 Navy 7666 * NRA Sectionals

1999-2000 (5-4) Coach: Capt. Douglas Clark Captain: Ben Minchoff 3718 at Univ. of the Sciences 3703 3rd President’s Trophy# 5931 Nebraska 6107 with Norwich University 6057 2nd Conn. Yankee Shootout 6031 at Air Force 7094 4th at Air Force Invitational 2nd USMA Invitational 5973 Duquesne^ 5846 with Penn State^ 5846 2nd NRA Sectionals 6031 Coast Guard 5931 556 at Royal Military College 427 7548 at Navy 7694 #Annapolis, Md.; ^Wilkes-Barre, Pa. 2000-01 (7-1) Coach: Maj. Ron Wigger Captain: Joy Monson 6070 USP 5446 w/Kings College 5717 2nd President’s Trophy# 6096 Norwich 5995 w/TCU 5592 w/Akron 5517 2nd Xavier Walsh Invitational* 1st Buckeye Invitational^ 6058 MIT 5403 2nd Palmyra Invitational$ 2nd NCAA Sectionals% 2197 Royal Military College 2032 7610 Navy 7710 #New London, Conn.; *Cincinnati, Ohio ^Columbus, Ohio; $Wilkes-Barre, Pa. %Cambridge, Mass. 2001-02 (5-4) Coach: Maj. Ron Wigger Captain: Paul Kavanaugh 6147 Xavier 6158 6108 Kentucky 6127 6140 Jacksonville State 6110 1st President’s Trophy 6082 TCU 5586 w/The Citadel 5182 2nd Buckeye Tournament 6141 Alaska-Fairbanks 6243 w/Norwich 6054 at RMC N/A 7625 at Navy 7692 4th GARC Tournament 5th NCAA Championships AR

YEAR-BY-YEAR RESULTSS

6152 vs. Alaska Fairbanks^ 6271 1st NRA Sectionals 7702 at Navy 7769 6170 GARC Tournament% 2nd 6164 NCAA Championships# 4th *GARC Match #Annapolis, Md. ^Cincinnati, Ohio %West Point, N.Y. #Murray, Ky. 2004-05 (8-2, 6-0 GARC) Coach: Maj. Ron Wigger Captain: Paul Charbonneau 4647 Kentucky* 4588 4645 West Virginia* 4552 2nd President’s Trophy# 4643 vs. Xavier^* 4641 4682 vs. Nebraska^* 4611 4649 Norwich 4547 4679 at Mississippi* 4569 4641 at Memphis* 4563 6218 vs. Ohio State! 5925 6246 vs. Alaska Fairbanks 6253 5815 Navy 5819 4647 GARC Championships% 3rd 4659 NCAA Championships# 1st *GARC Match #New London, Conn. ^Cincinnati, Ohio ! Palmyra, Pa. %Oxford, Miss. #Colorado Springs, Colo. 2005-06 (9-2, 6-1 GARC) Coach: Maj. Ron Wigger Captain: Lucas Leinberger 4666 at Kentucky* 4638 4639 vs. Memphis* 4606 4668 West Virginia* 4551 1st at President’s Trophy# 4665 North Carolina State* 4487 4666 USP 4343 4657 Nebraska* 4676 Xavier* 4548 4671 Alaska Fairbanks 4728 4667 vs. Ohio State^ 4532 4670 Mississippi* 4629 5844 Navy 5803 4665 GARC Tournament% 2nd 4650 NCAA Championships* 3rd *GARC Match #Colorado Springs, Colo. ^Palmyra, Pa. %Oxford, Miss.

The 2005-06 team with President George W. Bush 4658 at USP (NCAA Qualifier) 4651 GARC Champ.+ 1st 4652 NCAA Championships ^ 2nd * GARC Match +Oxford, Miss. ^ West Point, N.Y. 2008-09 (7-6, 3-3 GARC) Coach: Maj. Ron Wigger Captain: Wesley Hess 4598 at The Citadel 4416 w/North Carolina State* 4418 4600 at Nebraska 4619 5760 vs. Air Force 5690 4595 Mississippi* 4586 4616 West Virginia* 4659 5704 President’s Trophy# 2nd 4590 at Kentucky* 4658 w/Memphis* 4550 4620 Texas Christian 4633 4590 Ohio State^ 4520

4628 Alaska Fairbanks 4645 4627 at NRA Sectionals 5776 Navy 5782 4625 USP (NCAA Qualifier) 4256 4553 GARC Champ+ 6th 4539 NCAA Champ^ 6th *GARC Match, #Colorado Springs, Colo., +Oxford, Miss.,^Fort Worth, Texas

2013 ARMY CROSS COUNTRY

2002-03 (7-6, 3-2 GARC) Coach: Maj. Ron Wigger Captains: Paul Kavanaugh, Kim Pienkowski 6113 Kentucky* 6106 UTEP 6038 6192 at Jacksonville St.* (Ala.) 6173 6153 Tennessee Tech 6161 Murray State 6157 6151 TCU 6021 USP 5697 President’s Trophy^ 2nd 6135 vs. Xavier#* 6193 at Buckeye Tournament% 1st 6171 Mississippi* 6060 West Virginia* 6214 6125 Alaska Fairbanks 6256 7648 Royal Military College 7203 7692 Navy 7696 6151 at GARC Tournament 5th *GARC Match ^West Point, N.Y. #Walsh Tournament, Xavier, Ohio %Columbus, Ohio 2003-04 (8-3, 3-1 GARC) Coach: Maj. Ron Wigger Captain: Paul Charbonneau 6142 Xavier* 6131 6124 Akron 6068 6125 TCU 5790 w/USP 5719 2nd President’s Trophy# 6123 Mississippi* 6030 w/Memphis* 5953 6146 at Kentucky* 6202 6155 West Virginia 6040 6148 vs. Nebraska^ 6131

www.goARMYsports.com• Page 32

2006-07 (10-2, 5-1 GARC ) Coach: Maj. Ron Wigger Captain: John Fiddes 4679 vs. Mississippi* 4574 4657 at Nebraska* 4656 4661 Memphis* 4524 4638 West Virginia* 4514 1st President’s Trophy 4642 TCU 4621 USP 4108 4626 Kentucky* 4667 4681 Alaska Fairbanks 4692 2nd Palmyra Tournament 4661 vs. Ohio State# 4426 4574 at North Carolina St.* 4484 vs. The Citiadel 4207 5811 Navy 5744 2nd GARC Tournmaent% 2nd NCAA Championships** *Lincoln, Neb.; ^West Point, N.Y. #Palmyra Tournament; %Oxford, Miss. **Fairbanks, Alaska 2007-08 (10-1, 6-0 GARC) Coach: Maj. Ron Wigger Captain: Matthew Hamilton 4660 Akron 4490 4673 at Mississippi* 4579 4675 vs. West Virginia* 4600 1st President’s Trophy 4678 at Texas Christian 4601 4660 North Carolina State* 4505 4660 Nebraska* 4584 4644 at Ohio State 4675 Alaska-Fairbanks 4688 4648 vs. Memphis* 4479 4671 vs. Kentucky* 4632 5842 at Navy 5745

2009-10 (7-4, 3-3 GARC) Coach: Maj. Ron Wigger Captain: Charles Ridge 4545 at Jacksonville State 4503 4638 North Carolina State* 4572 4598 Nebraska* 4615 4583 at Mississippi* 4561 4583 vs. Memphis* 4523 5789 President’s Trophy 1st 4562 at West Virginia* 4638 4606 Coast Guard 4250 4621 Kentucky* 4672 4570 Ohio State# 4608 4626 NRA Sectionals 5770 at Navy 5738 4627 USP (NCAA Qualifier) 4404 4599 GARC Championships+ 5th 4608 NCAA Championships^ 5th *GARC Match, #Palmyra Tournament +Oxford, Miss.,^Fort Worth, Texas 2010-11 (6-6, 2-4 GARC) Coach: Maj. Ron Wigger Captain: John Manzano 4586 vs. Memphis* 4581 4605 at Nebraska* 4619 4622 vs. Murray State 4654 4610 at Kentucky* 4672 5770 President’s Match 1st 4639 Old Miss* 4642 4659 West Virginia* 4680 4613 Columbus State 4610 4625 at The Citadel 4418 4625 vs. North Carolina St* 4488 4587 vs. Ohio State# 4631 4616 NRA Sectionals (Phil, Pa.) 5816 Navy 5768 4643 USP (NCAA Qualifier) 4300

2311

GARC Championships+

3rd

4596 NCAA Championships^ 8th *GARC Match, # Palmyra Tournament +Oxford, Miss., ^Columbus, Ga. 2011-12 (9-3, 4-2 GARC) Coach: Maj. Ron Wigger Captain: Tommy Carr 4663 4649 4637 4651 4663 4658 4666 4666 4646 4634 4631 4674 4666

vs. Memphis 4605 at Ole Miss* 4625 at West Virginia* 4693 President’s Trophy 1st North Carolina St* 4575 Nebraska* 4598 TCU 4692 Murray State 4636 Kentucky* 4693 at Ohio State 4611 NRA Sectionals (Phil, Pa.) at Navy 4567 USP (NCAA Qualifier) 4259 SUNY-Maritime 2114 4653 GARC Championships+ 5th 4658 NCAA Champioships^ 4th *GARC Match, +Oxford, Miss. ^Columbus, Ohio 2012-13 (10-3, 4-2 GARC) Coach: Maj. Ron Wigger Captain: William Mengon 4631 4658 4650 4638 5790 4664

West Virginia* 4709 Memphis* 4631 vs. Murray State 4620 at Kentucky 4716 President’s Trophy 2nd at The Citadel 4460 vs. North Carolina St* 4584 4684 Ohio State 4602 4628 NRA Sectionals (Phil, Pa.) 4676 Jacksonville State 4675 Ole Miss* 4654 4773 Navy 4620 4645 at Nebraska* 4631 4666 USP (NCAA Qualifier) 4309 SUNY-Maritime 4131 4645 GARC Championships+ 4th 4644 NCAA Championships^ 6th *GARC Match, +Oxford, Miss. ^Columbus Ohio


2013-14 SCHEDULE FALL

WINTER JANUARY

OCTOBER 5 6 19 26

at Ole Miss* at Memphis* COAST GUARD at West Virginia*

8 a.m. 8 a.m. 11 a.m. 8 a.m.

NOVEMBER 2

President’s Trophy Match (Air Force, Army, Coast Guard, Navy) (Annapolis, Md..)

8 a.m.

17 19 24

MURRAY STATE KENTUCKY* NRA Sectionals (Philadelphia, Pa.)

FEBRUARY 1 at Navy* 7 22

NORTH CAROLINA STATE* NCAA QUALIFIER vs. USP/SUNY-MARITIME

3 p.m. 9 a.m. 2 p.m.

3 a.m. 3 p.m. 9 a.m.

MARCH

*GARC Match All times Eastern

@ARMY_RIFLE

@ARMYATHLETICS

ARMYBLACKKNIGHTS

ARMYATHLETICS

1-2

GARC Championships (Oxford, Miss.)

8 a.m.

14-15

NCAA Championships (Murray, Ky.)

All Day

Home matches in BOLD CAPS


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