2021-22 Penn State Track & Field/Cross Country Yearbook

Page 8

COACHING STAFF

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Holmberg was also named Mid-Atlantic Region Athlete of the Year, and a first team All-American in both Indoor and Outdoor.

Fritz

SPENCE 16th Year Missouri State, ’97 Assistant Coach

WOMEN’S JUMPS & MULTI’S

Fritz Spence enters his 16th year coaching the Nittany Lion wom¬en’s jumpers and multi-event athletes. He has had outstanding results in his time with the Nittany Lions, overseeing 33 All-America efforts, nine top-5 NCAA finishers, 22 conference champions, also contributed to two top-four finishes at the NCAA Championships (2008 and ’10) a Big Ten triple crown (2009 and ’10), and USTFCCCA Scholar Team of the Year (2010). He is a five time USTFCCCA Mid-Atlantic Region Assistant Coach of the Year honoree. Spence helped steer Maddie Holmberg to her second career Big Ten Championship in 2021, closing out her career a Big Ten Heptathlon title and Second Team All-America honors with a sixth place finish at the NCAA Outdoor Championships. Holmberg earned regional qualification in the long jump and was joined at the regional meet by high jumper Carlie Wilson. Wilson and Breana Gambrell both scored points for Penn State at the Big Ten Championships, with Gambrell placing fifth in the long jump and seventh in the triple jump, and Wilson placing sixth in the high jump with a PR at the meet. Spence guided senior Maddie Holmberg to just the second Big Ten championship in program history in the pentathlon event in 2020. Holmberg’s score of 4,274 points is second in PSU history. Also under Spence’s tutelage, Alexa Parks became the first Nittany Lion to clear 6-0 (1.83m) in the high jump event to set the new school record. Spence’s athletes scored points in the pentathlon, long jump, high jump and triple jump with Maddie Holmberg and Alexa Parks advancing to the NCAA Indoor Championships. Parks and Holmberg were each awarded All-America honors due to the cancellation of the NCAA Indoor Championships due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Spence was awarded with the USTFCCCA Women’s MidAtlantic Region Assistant Coach of the Year. Spence earned the fifth Assistant Coach of the Year honor of his career. This marks the first time in he has earned women’s indoor assistant coach of the year. The women’s mutli-event athletes and jumpers continued success in 2019. Maddie Holmberg qualified for the NCAA Indoor Championships in the pentathlon. Holmberg earned secondteam All-American honors with a ninth place finish at the indoor championships. Breana Gambrell and Alexa Parks each qualified for the NCAA East Prelims in the long jump and the high jump respectively. In 2018, junior Maddie Holmberg had the No. 1 performance in program history in the heptathlon with her total score of 5,976 points set at the Big Ten Track & Field Outdoor Championships and her third-place finish at the NCAA Outdoor Championships was the highest of any heptahlete in school history. Holmberg also owns the multi-record in the shot put with her indoor mark of 46-0.50 (14.03m) and outdoor mark 44-8.25 (13.62m). In the Penn State record books, Holmberg ranks No. 10 in the 200m at 23.79, No. 3 in the long jump (20-10.75/6.36m), and also has the No. 7 time in the 100-meter hurdles at 13.70.

Megan McCloskey had an outstanding season closing out her career with a fourth-place finish at the NCAA Championships in the high jump (5-10/1.78m). During the 2018 indoor season, she tied the No. 3 height in indoor history with a clearance of 5-10.50 (1.79m). She was a three-time NCAA Outdoor Championships qualifier in the high jump and named a 2018 first team All-American. Multiple athletes turned in spectacular performances during the 2017 season under Spence’s watch. Holmberg grabbed the No. 3 spot in program history with her performance in the heptathlon and her total of 5,636 and qualified for the NCAA Outdoor Championship meet in her sophomore season. She also took the multi-record in the shot put with her mark of 42-6.25 (12.96m) and posted the No. 7 time in program history in the 100meter hurdles at 13.70, qualifying for the outdoor championships in the heptathlon. Dannielle Gibson earned indoor and outdoor AllAmerica honors in the triple jump recording the all-conditions top mark at 45-1.75 (13.76w) in her gold medal performance at the Big Ten Championships. She was the 2017 NACAC Champion in the triple jump and was also a three-time NCAA qualifier. McCloskey cleared the then-No. 2 mark in program history in the high jump during the 2017 out¬door season clearing 5-11.50 (1.82m) and was also ranked as the No. 3 high jumper in indoor history with a clearance of 5-10.50 (1.79m) during the 2018 indoor season. Kaitlyn Lopez also put up a lifetime best of 42-9.25 (13.04m) in the triple jump, No. 5 best performance in program history and 19-8.00 (5.99m) in the long jump. In 2017, Spence coached Gibson to a silver medal in the triple jump at the Big Ten Indoor Championships earning second-team honors with a best of 42-11.75 (13.10m). At the NCAA Indoor Cham¬pionships Gibson earned second-team All-American honors with a 10th-place finish in the triple jump. During the outdoor Big Ten Meet, Gibson again brought home a silver medal in the women’s triple jump with her mark of 42-9.50 (13.04m). The women’s high jump featured McCloskey going 5-10.50 (1.79m) and Ahmenah Richardson clearing 5-9.25 (1.76m) who finished fourth and fifth, respectively. Gibson received Mid-Atlantic Field Athlete of the Year honors for her efforts during the outdoor season. She went on to finish with second-team All-American honors in the triple jump at the outdoor meet in Eugene, Oregon, before going on to capture gold in the triple jump 44-5.00 (13.54m) at the NACAC U-23 Championships. Under the guidance of coach Spence, Gibson, a sophomore, tallied a third-place finish in the triple jump. Gibson scored six points for Penn State with her leap of 42-3.50 during the 2015 Big Ten Outdoor Track & Field Championships. Gibson would also finish fourth in the long jump with her personal-best jump of 202.25 (6.15m), her jump of 20-2.25 (6.15m) ranks 10th all-time at Penn State. Gibson would go on to qualify for the NCAA East Prelims in the long jump and the triple jump. In the vertical jumps, Richardson, cleared a height of 5-8 (1.74m) during the Big Ten Indoor Track & Field Championships and 5-9.25 (1.76m) in the high jump during the Big Ten Outdoor Track & Field Championships. Richardson also qualified for the NCAA East Prelims in the high jump and she ended her 2015 season with a personal-best of 5-11.25 (1.81m). Spence also guided Brittney Howell to an outstanding 2014 out¬door campaign, highlighted by an outstanding long jump at the NCAA East Prelims. Howell also turned in a pair of scoring performances at the Big Ten Outdoor Championships. Howell posted Penn State’s top long jump mark among Nittany Lions during the 2014 campaign going 20-4.50 (6.21m) during the indoor season and 20-10.75 (6.37m) during the outdoor season. The performance ranks No. 5 indoors and No. 3 outdoors in the all-time Penn State standings. Coming into her own in 2014 was freshman high jumper, India McCoy. McCoy notched a lifetimebest clearance of 5-10.00 (1.78m) during the outdoor season. GOPSUSPORTS.COM

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