2011-12 NCAC Directory & Record Book

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2011-12 NCAC Directory President.................................................Tom Chema, President Hiram College Vice President..................................... Mark Erickson, President Wittenberg University

Web Site.......................................................www.northcoast.org Affiliation...........................................................NCAA Division III Founded.............................................................. February, 1983

Executive Director.............................. Keri Alexander Luchowski

Championship Sports.............................23 (11 men, 12 women)

Assistant Executive Director....................................Bret Billhardt

Intercollegiate Officiating Association.................... 440/871-8100

Assistant Executive Director.................................... Sue Penicka

Baseball................................................................ Rich Fetchiet

Legal Counsel........................................................Dennis Butler

Basketball (Men).............................................................. Bill Ek

Accountant......................................................................Jim Loy

Basketball (Women)..................................................Diane Plas

Mailing Address................................................. P. O. Box 16679 Cleveland, Ohio 44116

Cross Country/Track.................................................. Marv Frye

Street Address...................................815 Crocker Road, Suite 5 Westlake, Ohio 44145

Field Hockey/Lacrosse (Women)...........................Candis Parry Football......................................................................Andy Pfaff

Phone.................................................................... 440/871-8100

Softball.................................................................. John DeLuca

Fax........................................................................ 440/871-4221

Tennis................................................................. Don Hunsinger

E-Mail........................................................ ncac@northcoast.org

Volleyball...................................................................Diane Plas

2011-12 NCAC Presidents’ Council PRESIDENT JAMES H. MULLEN, JR. Allegheny College

PRESIDENT MARK ERICKSON Wittenberg University

PRESIDENT DALE T. KNOBEL Denison University

PRESIDENT GRANT H. CORNWELL The College of Wooster

PRESIDENT BRIAN W. CASEY DePauw University

JEFF ANKROM Wittenberg University Co-Chair, Faculty Representatives

PRESIDENT THOMAS V. CHEMA Hiram College PRESIDENT S. GEORGIA NUGENT Kenyon College PRESIDENT MARVIN KRISLOV Oberlin College PRESIDENT ROCKWELL“ROCK” JONES Ohio Wesleyan University PRESIDENT PATRICK WHITE Wabash College

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ROGER INGLES Ohio Wesleyan University Co-Chair, Athletic Directors SONYA McKAY Denison University Co-Chair, Faculty Representatives AMY WILLIAMS Kenyon College Co-Chair, Athletic Directors KERI ALEXANDER LUCHOWSKI Executive Director


2011-12 DIRECTORY & SCHEDULE GUIDE Welcome to the 28th season of the North Coast Athletic Conference Welcome to the North Coast Athletic Conference's 28th season of operation. As you review the pages of this publication, we hope you see how the founding principles of the NCAC have persevered and how they have contributed to the quality collegiate experience of our student-athletes. This is a unique publication; this guide serves as a viewbook of each of our 10 member institutions, while also serving as a fact-filled directory of names, phone numbers and records. Over the years this guide has proven to be a handy tool for administrators, coaches and media. We wish to take this opportunity to thank the past and current presidents, administrators, coaches, sports information directors, athletic trainers and athletic department personnel who have helped make the North Coast Athletic Conference a success, and who have helped make the publication of a book of this scope possible.

CONTENTS About the NCAC................................................... 4 Academic Calendars.......................................... 66 All-Decade Teams, NCAC.............................62-63 All-Sports Championship.................................... 42 Allegheny College......................................... 10-11 Calendar of Events, NCAC................................ 67 Champions, NCAC........................................43-44 Champions, NCAA............................................. 65 Championship Calendar, NCAA......................... 65 CoSIDA Academic All-Americans..................58-59 Denison University........................................12-13 Dennis Collins.................................................... 39 DePauw University........................................14-15 Directory............................................................... 2 Faculty Representatives....................................6-7 Hiram College...............................................16-17 History, NCAC...............................................30-31 Hunsinger and Smith Awards............................. 61 Kenyon College.............................................18-19 Map.................................................................... 68

NCAA Division III................................................ 66 NCAC Online...................................................... 56 Oberlin College.............................................20-21 Ohio Wesleyan University.............................22-23 Overnight Addresses.......................................... 56 Postgraduate Scholars....................................... 57 Presidents............................................................ 5 Presidents Council............................................... 2 Records, NCAC.............................................45-56 Review, 2010-11 NCAA...................................... 64 Scholar-Athlete Award, NCAC.......................60-61 Sport Sponsorship.............................................. 56 Staff, NCAC.......................................................... 8 Standings, 2010-11 NCAC............................40-41 Supervisors of Officials........................................ 9 Timeline, NCAC.............................................32-39 Wabash College............................................24-25 Wittenberg University....................................26-27 Wooster, The College of................................28-29

Affiliate Membership - Field Hockey Earlham College Director of Athletics: Frank Carr

765/983-1483 carrfr@earlham.edu

Associate Director of Athletics/ Field Hockey Coach: Jill Butcher

765/983-1481 butchji@earlham.edu

2010 Record:

2-15, 7th in NCAC

Location:

Richmond, Indiana

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ALLEGHENY COLLEGE * DENISON UNIVERSITY * DEPAUW UNIVERSITY * HIRAM COLLEGE * KENYON COLLEGE OBERLIN COLLEGE * OHIO WESLEYAN UNIVERSITY * WABASH COLLEGE * WITTENBERG UNIVERSITY * COLLEGE OF WOOSTER

Founded in 1983, the North Coast Athletic Conference is dedicated to fostering a complementary relationship between intercollegiate athletics and the pursuit of academic excellence. Consisting of 10 academically selective colleges and universities in Ohio, Indiana and Pennsylvania — Allegheny College, Denison University, DePauw University, Hiram College, Kenyon College, Oberlin College, Ohio Wesleyan University, Wabash College, Wittenberg University, The College of Wooster, along with affiliate member Earlham College — the NCAC believes that high-level athletic programs need not be sacrificed in order to meet rigid academic standards. Significantly, all 10 NCAC institutions have been granted chapters of Phi Beta Kappa, the preeminent honor society for colleges and universities. Only 276 of the more than 3,000 four-year institutions in the United States have been so honored. A member of the National Collegiate Athletic Association's Division III, the NCAC features championship competition in 23 sports — 11 for men and 12 for women. The 12 women's sports are among the most offered by any Division III conference, and the equality in number and emphasis between men’s and women’s athletics is just one of the elements that sets the North Coast apart. The goals of the conference express the best aspirations of American Andy Manson, DePauw amateur athletics. The NCAC brings together

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a group of institutions which share a common allegiance to academic quality and to the conduct of athletics so as to support the educational purpose. Intercollegiate athletics can and should complement academic life, rather than compete with it, and sports should enhance the experience of students during their college years. This type of academic and athletic commitment has been led by the 10 school presidents, who have taken an active role in Sarah Vorder Bruegge, Allegheny the governance of the conference. Forty-eight teams from all 23 North Coast sports and all nine members competed in the NCAA post-season during the 2010-11 academic year. The NCAC added one more NCAA Division III swimming championship as Denison claimed its first men’s title, ending Kenyon's 31-year reign. Conference members have accumulated 62 national championships since the league was formed in February of 1983. In the past academic year, 207 All-America or Capital One/CoSIDA Academic All-America certificates were distributed to student-athletes from North Coast schools. The NCAC's commitment to equity, its broad base of athletic programs, and an unwavering insistence on excellence in academics has served as a model for conferences throughout the country. The North Coast has shown not only that these ideals can coexist, but that they can flourish. The NCAC continues as a pace-setter in the 21st century.


NCAC Presidents Thomas V. Chema, Hiram College & President, NCAC Thomas V. Chema, JD, enters the second year of his term as president of the North Coast Athletic Conference. Chema, now in his ninth year at Hiram, became president after serving as a voting member on the Hiram College Board of Trustees for 11 years and chairing the Institutional Advancement Committee. He began his professional career in 1971 with the Cleveland based law firm of Arter & Hadden, becoming a partner in 1979. He took a temporary leave from the law firm in 1983 to serve as the Executive Director of the Ohio Lottery Commission, and became Chairman of the Ohio Public Utilities Commission in 1985. He was appointed as the Executive Director of the Gateway Economic Development Corporation in 1990. Chema was responsible for overseeing both the public and private

partnerships that helped finance construction for Progressive Field and Quicken Loans Arena in downtown Cleveland. Following the project's completion, Chema resumed his law practice and began consulting across the country for future sports and entertainment-related economic development projects. Hiram College has witnessed tremendous growth during Chema's tenure as enrollment has increased by more than 50 percent to go along with increased gains in out-ofstate and minority student populations. He is a trustee on numerous civic and charitable boards, including the Ohio Legal Assistance Foundation, Sisters of Charity of St. Augustine Health System, St. Ignatius High School, Ohio Hunger Task Force, Historic Gateway Neighborhood Economic Development Corporation. Chema serves as Chair of the Board of UHHS/CSAHA-Cuyahoga and Kids Voting Program. In 2011-12, he started a term as a member of the NCAA Division III Presidents' Council. Chema is a 1968 graduate of the University of Notre Dame, and a 1971 cum laude graduate of Harvard Law School.

James H. Mullen, Jr. Allegheny College

Dale T. Knobel Denison University

Brian W. Casey DePauw University

Thomas V. Chema Hiram College

S. Georgia Nugent Kenyon College

Marvin Krislov Oberlin College

Rock Jones Ohio Wesleyan University

Patrick E. White Wabash College

Mark H. Erickson Wittenberg University NCAC Vice President

Grant H. Cornwell The College of Wooster

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Faculty Athletics Representatives Jeff Ankrom, Chair Jeff Ankrom, professor of economics and provost at Wittenberg University, enters the first year of his second stint as co-Chair of the NCAC Faculty Representatives in the Conference’s governance system. In that position, he is one of four chairs of the NCAC Sports Caucus. The Sports Caucus is the assembly of athletic administrators from each Conference member college as well as the faculty athletic representatives from each member college. The four chairs act as an executive committee for the Sports Caucus, setting agendas and chairing the various meetings of the Sports Caucus and its subgroups, the athletic directors and the faculty representatives. Beyond that,

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the chairs typically serve on standing current committees. Among their most important duties is serving on the Presidents’ Council and attending those meetings, representing the Sports Caucus. Ankrom joined the Wittenberg faculty in 1982, and has taught students in public finance as well as monetary theory and policy. He has published papers in the Eastern Economic Journal, Scandinavian Journal of Economics and Litigation Economics Review. Ankrom has visited and done research on Nordic economies while living in Sweden during sabbatical visits at the Swedish Institute for Social Research. He became provost in 2009, and is active in FARA (Faculty Athletic Representatives Association), and is a long-serving faculty athletics representative at Wittenberg. He is a member of the NCAA Financial Aid Committee. Ankrom is a graduate of Otterbein College with a B.A., and received his M.A. and Ph.D. degrees from the University of Notre Dame.

Sonya McKay Denison University Chemistry

Kirk Combe Denison University English

Pam Propsom DePauw University Psychology

Audrey Cunningham Hiram College Communication

Clayton Koppes Oberlin College Biology

Barbara MacLeod Ohio Wesleyan University Economics

David Markwardt Ohio Wesleyan University Zoology

Jeff Ankrom Wittenberg University Economics


Sonya McKay, Chair Sonya McKay, associate professor of chemistry at Denison University, enters her first year as co-Chair of the NCAC Faculty Representatives in the Conference’s governance system. In that position, she is one of four chairs of the NCAC Sports Caucus. The Sports Caucus is the assembly of athletic administrators from each Conference member college as well as the faculty athletic representatives from each

member college. The four chairs act as an executive committee for the Sports Caucus, setting agendas and chairing the various meetings of the Sports Caucus and its subgroups, the athletic directors and the faculty representatives. Beyond that,

Earl Kissell Hiram College Economics

Sarah Murnen Kenyon College Psychology

the chairs typically serve on standing current committees. Among their most important duties is serving on the Presidents’ Council and attending those meetings, representing the Sports Caucus. McKay’s academic interests lie in the investigation of biologically important molecules, including peptides and collagen, using solid phase peptide synthesis and NMR. She has served as the university’s women’s faculty representative since 2008. She recently served as the faculty shepherd for the 17-month renovation and expansion of Denison's Ebaugh Laboratories, which house the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry. The renovation was designed to advance Denison’s “hands-on,” experiential teaching and learning, where collaboration is a key element. McKay, a former swimming student-athlete, is a graduate of Kenyon College with a B.A., and received her Ph.D. from the University of Wisconsin.

Timothy Shutt Kenyon College English

Tracie Paine Oberlin College Rhetoric & Composition

Not Pictured: Lauren Paulsen Kirk Nesset Allegheny College Geoffrey Klinger DePauw University Shelley Judge The College of Wooster

Tobey Herzog Wabash College English

Wendy Gradwohl Wittenberg University Management

John Ramsay The College of Wooster Mathematical Sciences

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NCAC Staff Executive Director In June 2011, Keri Alexander Luchowski fully stepped into the role of executive director after serving as the acting director of the conference for the previous two years. She enters her 13th year with the NCAC, having also filled assistant and associate executive director positions since she joined the league for the 1999-00 academic year. Named acting executive director in July 2009, Alexander Luchowski assumed all administrative roles within the conference office as well as administration of the Intercollegiate Officiating Association (IOA). She also played an instrumental role in the conference’s most recent transition, ushering DePauw University (IN) into the conference as an official member in the fall of 2011. A 1992 graduate of Wheeling Jesuit University, she served three years as the communications coordinator of the National Professional Soccer League, now named the Major Indoor Soccer League, before joining the NCAC. Alexander Luchowski is a member of the College Sports Information Directors of America (CoSIDA), Division III Commissioners Association (DIIICA), the National Association of Division III Athletic Administrators (NADIIIAA) and the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics (NACDA), as well as the National Association of Collegiate Women's Athletics Administrators (NACWAA) and Women in Sports and Events (WISE). She also serves on the NACDA Under Armor Athletic Director of the Year selection committee. She is currently the NCAA Division III Great Lakes Women's Soccer Chair. While earning her undergraduate degree at Wheeling Jesuit, she played for the women’s soccer team for four years, twice earning Academic All-America honors. She was the WVIAC Female Scholar-Athlete of the Year in l991. In 1995, she earned a master’s degree in sports administration from Kent State University. Alexander is a Cleveland-area native and graduated from Notre Dame Academy. She resides in North Ridgeville with her husband, Paul.

Assistant Executive Director Bret Billhardt enters his second year with the the North Coast Athletic Conference. He moves into the assistant director role after serving as the assistant to the executive director in 2010-11. He will assist with media relations, website maintenance and publications, as well as a wide range of conference administrative duties. Prior to the NCAC, he spent two years as assistant sports information director at Washington & Jefferson College, where he compiled statistics, designed publications, updated the Presidents' website and was a media contact for the school’s 26 varsity sports. He also served as W&J's NCAA representative during five different teams' national tournament appearances. A 2008 graduate of Otterbein University, Billhardt worked three years as a student assistant in the Cardinals' Sports Information Office. As an undergraduate, he interned with the Perry (Ohio) Recreation Department, and recently served as the official scorer for the Washington (Pa.) Wild Things Independent League baseball team.

Assistant Executive Director Sue Penicka enters her 13th year as Assistant Executive Director of the North Coast Athletic Conference. She designs the conference’s publications, manages the office operation and assists with administration, compliance and media relations. She joined the NCAC after spending eight years as sports information director at Case Western Reserve University. In that time, she handled the publicity efforts of a 22-sport varsity program. Prior to her tenure at Case, Penicka worked in sports information at the Midwestern Collegiate Conference (now the Horizon League), Kent State University and the Cleveland Force professional indoor soccer team. Penicka is a member of the College Sports Information Directors of America (CoSIDA) and has served on CoSIDA's Academic All-America selection committee. She is a graduate of Mount Union College with a degree in English, and holds a master’s degree in sports administration from Kent State.

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NCAC Supervisors of Officials Field Hockey/Women's Lacrosse

Baseball

Rich Fetchiet

Rich Fetchiet, who also serves as the Big Ten Conference Supervisor, enters his eighth season as supervisor of baseball officials for the NCAC. A graduate of Eastern Michigan, he has been involved in umpiring for 36 years. Fetchiet's resume includes Division I conference tournaments, NCAA Regionals and the College World Series. The founder of the Collegiate Baseball Umpires Alliance, he resides in Ann Arbor, Michigan.

Candis Parry

Women's Basketball/Volleyball

Diane Plas

Diane Plas enters her 26th year as supervisor of women’s basketball officials for the NCAC and its subsidiary, the Intercollegiate Officiating Assoc. She is in her 12th year as supervisor of volleyball officials for the North Coast, and has served the Mid-American Conference and other regional leagues for many years in that capacity. A former Division I basketball official, Plas is a graduate of Bowling Green where she was an intercollegiate athlete. She resides in Wellington, Ohio.

Football

Andy Pfaff

Men's Basketball

Bill Ek

Bill Ek enters his first season as supervisor of men’s basketball officials for the NCAC and its subsidiary, the Intercollegiate Officiating Assoc. He has been a collegiate basketball official since 1987, and is currently working games in the Big Ten, Mid-American and Summit conferences. Ek also serves the OAC, AMC, PAC, MIAA and other regional leagues as an officials’ supervisor. He is a graduate of Kent State University and resides in Uniontown, Ohio.

Marv Frye

Andy Pfaff begins his 15th season as supervisor of football officials for the NCAC and its subsidiary, the Intercollegiate Officiating Assoc. He was a collegiate football official for 28 years, culminating his career as the senior referee of the Mid-American Conference officiating staff. The retired educator, a University of Akron graduate, has been active in Ohio officiating circles. Pfaff was inducted into the Summitt County Sports Hall of Fame in 2006. He resides in Uniontown, Ohio.

Softball

John DeLuca

Cross Country/Track & Field

Marv Frye begins his 14th season as director of NCAC cross country and track & field officiating. He serves as the starter in the NCAC cross country championship and assists the NCAC hosts with selection of the officials for the indoor and outdoor NCAC track & field championships. Frye retired from Ohio Wesleyan in 1997 having completed an outstanding 37-year tenure at the University, where he established himself as a legend in collegiate running sports. He resides in Delaware, Ohio.

Candis Parry begins her 15th season as supervisor of field hockey and women’s lacrosse officials for the NCAC. A nationally ranked collegiate official in both sports, she coached both sports at the collegiate level for 11 seasons, most notably as Brown University’s head coach in the Ivy League for seven years. Parry earned an undergraduate degree from Ursinus College and a master’s at Ithaca College. The Philadelphia native now resides in Indianapolis.

John De Luca, in his ninth season as the NCAC supervisor of softball officials, is the first person to hold the position. He is no stranger to umpiring, having been inducted into the National Softball Hall of Fame as an umpire in 2003. De Luca is also the Ohio Director of the NSA, amateur softball's ruling body. He has worked men's and women's World Series and NCAA Tournaments. He has nearly 27 years of NCAA assigning experience, with stints in all three divisions. He resides in the Cleveland, Ohio area.

Tennis

Don Hunsinger

Don Hunsinger enters his fifth season as director of NCAC tennis. He serves as the liaison between the NCAC office and the conference tennis coaches and assists with administration of the NCAC Tournament. Hunsinger retired from Oberlin in January 2008 having completed an outstanding 31year tenure at the College, serving in various capacities ranging from athletic director to football coach to tennis director. He resides in Wakeman, Ohio.

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Allegheny College The first to be founded -- in 1815 -- of the venerable North Coast Athletic Conference institutions, Allegheny today remains at the fore among the nation's colleges of arts and sciences. Keeping standards high and avoiding gimmicks or fads, Allegheny believes that its graduates' success is rooted in rigorous liberal arts preparation: experience in multiple disciplines; important historical perspective; and exceptional ability to think critically and to use the English language forcefully and correctly, in writing as well as speech. The more than 2,100 students come from 37 states and 32 countries. The student-faculty ratio is 14/1; the average class size 22. Allegheny is a high-contact teaching institution, but faculty are also prominent practitioners of the disciplines they teach. When students discover that their chemistry professor is also a leading chemist, for example, they learn the difference between studying a subject and being part of the discipline itself. This explains, in part, the leadership positions to which Alleghenians regularly rise -- in business, government, social service, the professions, and more. Another reason is the Senior Project, a substantial piece of original research done by each student in his or her major field, which not only develops unusual self-confidence, but demands integration of the knowledge and skills developed over four years. Allegheny is especially well-known for pre-professional education; acceptance rates to law and medical schools roughly double the national average. There is strength throughout all 30 majors, however. Further encouraged are double majors and student-designed majors, which are tailored by the student and advisor to the student's personal goals.

Athletic Facilities Allegheny offers excellent facilities not only for its 21 varsity teams and seven intercollegiate clubs, but also for its popular intramural and recreational programs. Robertson Athletic Complex, encompassing 80 picturesque acres on the northwest edge of campus, provides for baseball, cross country, football, lacrosse, rugby, soccer, softball, tennis and track & field, as well as informal recreation. Built in 1948, the brick-and-steel football stadium accommodates 3,500 spectators and the working press. The Frank B. Fuhrer Field included an eight-lane, Olympic-style track, FieldTurf field, lights and a state-of-the-art scoreboard. A 1986 addition included locker rooms and a large training center. Other additions include 12 lighted tennis courts with U.S. Open surface, dugouts for the baseball field, and press boxes and scoreboards for the baseball, football and soccer complexes. The Wise Sport and Fitness Center opened in October of 1997, quadrupling the space available for all athletics and recreational programs. The Center includes a performance arena which seats 1,000, a spacious multi-purpose sports and recreation forum, and facilities for personal fitness activities. The Wise Center is connected to the Mellon Recreation Building, housing a six-lane, 25-yard pool with separate diving well. The gallery seats 650. Mellon also contains racquetball courts, locker rooms and additional athletics offices. The golf team hosts home events at The Country Club north of campus.

Bentley Hall, Allegheny College

Prominent Alumni William McKinley 1865, 25th President, United States Clarence Darrow 1878, Noted Attorney (Scopes “Monkey” Trial) Ida Tarbell 1880, Leading Muckraker and Lincoln Biographer Thomas Francis, Jr. '21, Created Polio Vaccine with Dr. Jonas Salk Paul Siple '32, Originator of the Wind-Chill Factor Raymond P. Shafer '38, Statesman; Former Governor of Pennsylvania Barbara Robinson '48, Children’s Author (“Best Christmas Pageant Ever”) Glenn Jones '52, Founder, Jones International University, first nationally   accredited online university William E. "Bill" Crofut '58, Folk Singer Glenn Beckert '62, Former Major League Baseball player, Chicago Cubs William J. Ruehle '64, Vice President and CFO, Broadcom Corporation Robert Vukovich '65, Pres., CEO & Chairman, Wellspring Pharmaceuticals, Inc. Douglas Durst '66, President, Durst Organization Garry C. Myers '68, Highlights for Children, Inc. Robert C. Woodworth '69, President and CEO, Pulitzer, Inc. Ben Burtt '70, Oscar Winning Sound Designer (“Star Wars”, “E.T.”) Chris L. Groenendaal '70, Broadway singer Q. Todd Dickinson '74, Former United States Assistant Secretary of Commerce Michael Piraino '74, CEO, National Court Appointed Special Advocates (CASA) Robert Marchman '80, Executive Vice President, Market Surveillance,   Regulation for the NYSE Jane Earll '80, Pennsylvania State Senator Robert D. Dowling '81, Noted Cardiovascular Surgeon, Univ. of Louisville Hospital T. Michael Miller '81, President and CEO, OneBeacon Insurance Marc Schmittlein '82, President and CEO, St. Paul Travelers Insurance William S. Demchak '84, Vice Chairman, PNC Financial Services Dag J. Skattum '84, C-Head, Global Mergers & Acquisitions, J.P. Morgan   & Company Rick Dohr '87, Music Director and Pianist, The Eagles and Don Henley Tim Hoffman '88, Noted Pediatric Cardiovascular Surgeon, Columbus   Children's Hospital Michael Ryan '93, youngest appointed Cleveland Municipal Court Magistrate

Allegheny Directory Director of Athletics: TBA Associate Director of Athletics: Bill Ross Assistant Director of Athletics: Mandy Prusia Faculty Representative: Lauren Paulsen Faculty Representatives: Kirk Nesset Sports Information Director: James Kramer Sports Information FAX: Athletic Department Secretary: Lori Riggle Bonnie Mailliard Athletic Department FAX: Athletic Trainer (ATC): Jamie Plunkett Wise Center Press Table: Robertson Field Press Box: Switchboard:

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814/332-2824 814/332-2316 814/332-2824 814/332-6029 814/332-4331 814/332-5952 814/337-1217 814/332-3350 814/332-3351 814/337-1217 814/332-2817 814/332-6754 814/332-6754 814/332-3100

Bill Ross Associate Director of Athletics

Mandy Prusia Assistant Director of Athletics


A Quick Look at Allegheny Name: Allegheny College Location: Meadville, Pennsylvania 16335 Founded: 1815 President: James H. Mullen, Jr. Enrollment: 2,100 (987 men, 1,113 women) Student/Faculty Ratio: 14/1 Colors: Blue and Gold Nickname: Gators Varsity Sports: 21 (10 men, 11 women) Affiliation: NCAA Division III

Athletics Staff Baseball

Football

Soccer (W)

Tennis (W)

Basketball (M)

Golf (M)

Softball

Track & Field (M)

Basketball (W)

Golf (W)

Swimming & Diving (M)

2011: 16-14, sixth in NCAC Coach: Kelly Swiney Office Phone: 814/332-2830 kelly.swiney@allegheny.edu 2011: 7-19, eighth in NCAC Coach: Jim Driggs Office Phone: 814/332-2819 jdriggs@allegheny.edu 2011: 17-10, third in NCAC Coach: Kate Costanzo Office Phone: 814/332-2807 kate.costanzo@allegheny.edu

Cross Country (M)

2010: NCAC Champion Coach: Brent Wilkerson Office Phone: 814/332-3318 brent.wilkerson@allegheny.edu

Cross Country (W)

2010: second in NCAC Coach: Brent Wilkerson Office Phone: 814/332-3318 brent.wilkerson@allegheny.edu

2010: 7-3, third in NCAC (tie) Coach: Mark Matlak Office Phone: 814/332-2826 mark.matlak@allegheny.edu 2011: fourth in NCAC Coach: Jeff Groff Office Phone: 814/332-2811 jeff.groff@allegheny.edu 2011: NCAC Champion Coach: Jeff Groff Office Phone: 814/332-2811 jeff.groff@allegheny.edu

Lacrosse (W)

2011: 12-6, third in NCAC Coach: Stephanie Janice Office Phone: 814/332-2828 sjanice@allegheny.edu

Soccer (M)

2010: 8-8-3, third in NCAC (tie) Coach: Angelo Panzetta Office Phone: 814/332-5208 angelo.panzetta@allegheny.edu

2010: 14-3-4, fourth in NCAC Coach: Michael Webber Office Phone: 814/332-4782 michael.webber@allegheny.edu 2011: 7-21, sixth in NCAC (tie) Coach: Sandra Sanford Office Phone: 814/332-2815 sandra.sanford@allegheny.edu 2011: seventh in NCAC Coach: Erin Detwiler Office Phone: 814/332-2808 edetwiler@allegheny.edu

Swimming & Diving (W) 2011: third in NCAC Coach: Erin Detwiler Office Phone: 814/332-2808 edetwiler@allegheny.edu

Tennis (M)

2011: 13-9, third in NCAC Coach: Jared Luteran Office Phone: 814/332-2809 jared.luteran@allegheny.edu 2011: ind - third in NCAC out - fourth in NCAC Coach: Brent Wilkerson Office Phone: 814/332-3318 brent.wilkerson@allegheny.edu

Track & Field (W)

2011: ind - second in NCAC out - third in NCAC Coach: Brent Wilkerson Office Phone: 814/332-3318 brent.wilkerson@allegheny.edu

Volleyball (W)

2010: 9-23, fifth in NCAC (tie) Coach: Bridget Sheehan Office Phone: 814/332-2822 bridget.sheehan@allegheny.edu

2011: 12-6, fourth in NCAC Coach: Jared Luteran Office Phone: 814/332-2809 jared.luteran@allegheny.edu

Web Site - www.alleghenysports.com President: James H. Mullen, Jr. - james.mullen@allegheny.edu

Faculty Rep: Lauren Paulsen - lauren.paulsen@allegheny.edu

Athletics Director: TBA

Faculty Rep: Kirk Nesset - knesset@allegheny.edu

Assoc. Athletics Director: Bill Ross - bill.ross@allegheny.edu

Sports Information Director: James Kramer - jkramer@allegheny.edu

Asst. Athletics Director: Mandy Prusia - mandy.prusia@allegheny.edu

Athletic Trainer (ATC): Jamie Plunkett - james.plunkett@allegheny.edu

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Denison University Denison University is a private, coeducational college of liberal arts and sciences. Founded in 1831 as a literary and theological institution by frontier Baptists, Denison has since evolved into an independently administered and financed university providing students with a challenging academic curriculum of the highest quality and a vast array of diverse extracurricular programs. The University offers three different bachelor's degrees (B.A., B.S. and B.F.A.) among 48 major fields of study. There are also interdepartmental majors and individually designed majors for those who desire a truly personalized education. Full-time enrollment is 2,162, divided nearly equally between men and women. About one-third are residents of Ohio and another third are from the Mid-Atlantic or New England regions. In a typical year, all 50 states are represented and international students come to Denison from more than 30 countries around the world. Ethnic minorities make up approximately 10 percent of the student population. Denison operates on a two-semester academic calendar from September to May. The three-week May Term is a period for students to travel or take advantage of numerous internships with professors, corporate organizations and government agencies. More than 500 courses and 800 classes are offered each year; the average class size is 19, with a student/faculty ratio of approximately 10/1. About half of Denison's graduates continue their education at graduate and professional schools across the United States and abroad. Each year, Denison grads are accepted to top law, medical, dental and business schools. The University's Career Development Center assists students in their preparation for these programs. Dale T. Knobel became Denison's 19th president on July 1, 1998.

Athletic Facilities

Denison boasts some of the finest facilities for athletic competition among the nation's small colleges. Basketball and volleyball contests are played in Livingston Gymnasium, which is housed in the spacious Denison Physical Education Center. Livingston, which features a recently refinished hardwood floor, holds 2,000 fans and is equipped with new scoreboards, game clocks and public address components. New chair-back seating and bleachers were added in 2005. Also located within the Physical Education Center is Gregory Natatorium, which features a six-lane, 25-yard pool with an electronic timing system and gallery seating for 800. The Mitchell Recreation and Fitness Center opened in October of 1994. The complex is highlighted by a regulation six-lane, 200-meter track. The facility also includes a large strength room, an aerobics and multi-purpose room, and a fitness apparatus room. The Alumni Memorial Field House, which has a 150-meter rubberized track and several basketball and volleyball courts, is used primarily for intramural and recreational activities. In 2006, Deeds Field-Piper Stadium home to the Big Red football, field hockey, lacrosse and outdoor track teams, underwent a $3 million renovation which included the installation of FieldTurf artifical surface, a new synthetic Olympic-size track, and new concession stands as well as new visiting bleachers and a brick retaining wall which surrounds the stadium. Piper Stadium, named for the late, legendary single-wing coach, Keith Piper, also added four 75-foot light standards, equipping the facility for night contests. Just a few steps away from the stadium is the lighted Barclay-Thomsen Field for soccer, as well as other game fields and a complex of 12 recently resurfaced lighted tennis courts. Fields for baseball and softball opened in 1990; lighting standards were added in the spring of 2005. The golf team competes at the Donald Ross designed Granville Golf Course located less than one-half mile from campus.

Swasey Chapel, Denison University

Prominent Alumni

George Stibitz ’26, Father of Digital Computing, Bell Laboratories Woody Hayes ’35, Former Head Football Coach, Ohio State University J. Reid Anderson ’38, Inventor and Founder, Verbatim Corporation Hal Holbrook ’48, Award-Winning Motion Picture, Television and Stage Actor Kenny Meyer ’50, Former Head Coach, NFL San Francisco 49ers Bill Clarke ’51, Co-Founder, Habitat for Humanity Richard Lugar ’54, U.S. Senator, Indiana Hal Walker ’54, Pioneering African-American News Correspondent, CBS and ABC William Bowen ’55, Former President, Princeton Univ. and the Mellon Foundation Bill Giles ’56, Owner and Chairman, MLB Philadelphia Phillies Bill Esrey ’61, Former Chairman and CEO, Sprint Corporation Bill Mobley ’63, Chancellor Emeritus, Texas A&M University Michael Eisner ’64, Former President and CEO, Walt Disney Company; Founder, The Tornante Company Tony Hall ’64, U.S. Ambassador to U.N. for Hunger; Former U.S. Congressman Pete Brown ’65, Senior Vice President, NFL Cincinnati Bengals John Canning Jr. ’66, Chairman and CEO, Madison Dearborn Partners; Co-Owner, MLB Milwaukee Brewers Terry Jones ’70, Founder, Travelocity.com and Kayak.com Jim Petro ’70, Former Attorney General, State of Ohio David Waller ’70, Deputy Director General, U.N. International Atomic Energy Agency Tom Hoaglin ’71, Chairman and CEO, Huntington Bancshares, Inc. Phil Jacobs ’73, President, AT&T Business Communications John Clarke ’74, NASA Astrophysicist, Hubble Space Telescope Joe Banner ’75, President and CEO, NFL Philadelphia Eagles Molly O’Neill ’75, Best-Selling Author; Staff Writer, New York Times Bobby Rahal ’75, Indy 500 Winner; Co-Owner, Rahal Letterman Racing Susan Whiting ’78, Chairman, Nielsen Media Research, Nielsen Corporation Kelly Brown Douglas ’79, Renowned Theologian; 1st Black Female Episcopal Priest George Bodenheimer ’80, President and CEO, ESPN and ABC Sports; Co-Chair Disney Media Networks Douglas Holtz-Eakin ’80, Senior Economic Advisor for John McCain; Former Director, Congressional Budget Office and Chief Presidential Economic Advisor Steve Carell ’84, Award-Winning Motion Picture and Television Actor Matthew Harrington ’84, President and CEO, Edelman Public Relations Chris Curtin ’94, Vice President, Walt Disney Company Jennifer Garner ’94, Award-Winning Motion Picture, Television and Stage Actor Daniel Meyer ’94, Resident Conductor, Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra

Denison Directory Director of Athletics: Nan Carney-DeBord Senior Associate Director of Athletics: Lynn Schweizer Associate Director of Athletics: Sara Lee Assistant Director of Athletics: Gregg Parini Faculty Representative: Kirk Combe Faculty Representative: Sonya McKay Sports Information Director: Craig Hicks Sports Information/Athletic Department FAX: Athletic Department Secretary: Cathy Harvey Cindy Londot Athletic Trainer (ATC): Brian Hortz Livingston Gymnasium Press Table: Deeds Field Press Box: Switchboard:

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740/587-6428 740/587-6657 740/587-6290 740/587-6678 740/587-6247 740/587-6363 740/587-6546 740/587-6362 740/587-6580 740/587-6475 740/587-6441 740/587-6708 740/587-6708 740/587-0810

Nan Carney-DeBord Director of Athletics

Lynn Schweizer Associate Director of Athletics


A Quick Look at Denison Name: Denison University Location: Granville, Ohio 43023 Founded: 1831 President: Dale Knobel Enrollment: 2,162 Student/Faculty Ratio: 10/1 Colors: Red and White Nickname: Big Red Varsity Sports: 23 (11 men, 12 women) Affiliation: NCAA Division III

Athletics Staff Baseball

Football

Soccer (M)

Tennis (M)

Basketball (M)

Golf (M)

Soccer (W)

Tennis (W)

Basketball (W)

Golf (W)

Softball

Track & Field (M)

Cross Country (M)

Lacrosse (M)

Swimming & Diving (M)

2011: 16-20, fifth in NCAC Coach: Mike Clark Office Phone: 740/587-6714 clarkm@denison.edu 2011: 8-18, seventh in NCAC Coach: Bob Ghiloni Office Phone: 740/587-6586 ghilonir@denison.edu 2011: 28-1, NCAC Champion Coach: Sara Lee Office Phone: 740/587-6290 lees@denison.edu 2010: fourth in NCAC Coach: Phil Torrens Office Phone: 740/587-8576 torrensp@denison.edu

Cross Country (W)

2010: fourth in NCAC (tie) Coach: Phil Torrens Office Phone: 740/587-8576 torrensp@denison.edu

2010: 4-6, sixth in NCAC (tie) Coach: Jack Hatem Office Phone: 740/587-6604 hatemj@denison.edu 2011: third in NCAC Coach: Rodney Butt Office Phone: 740/587-6580 buttr@denison.edu 2011: fourth in NCAC Coach: Rick Bailey Office Phone: 740/587-6580 baileyr@denison.edu 2011: 11-4, NCAC Co-Champion Coach: Mike Caravana Office Phone: 740/587-6590 caravanam@denison.edu

Lacrosse (W)

2011: 13-5, NCAC Champion Coach: Kristin Ramey Office Phone: 740/587-5664 rameyk@denison.edu

2010: 10-8-1, third in NCAC (tie) Coach: Rob Russo Office Phone: 740/587-5735 russo@denison.edu 2010: 16-5-4, second in NCAC (tie) Coach: Gail Murphy Office Phone: 740/587-5728 murphyg@denison.edu 2011: 30-9, NCAC Champion Coach: Tiffany Ozbun Office Phone: 740/587-6784 ozbunt@denison.edu 2011: NCAC Champion Coach: Gregg Parini Office Phone: 740/587-6678 parini@denison.edu

Swimming & Diving (W)

2011: NCAC Champion Coach: Gregg Parini Office Phone: 740/587-6678 parini@denison.edu

Field Hockey

2011: 13-8, second in NCAC Coach: Peter Burling Office Phone: 740/587-6689 burling@denison.edu 2011: 16-5, NCAC Champion Coach: Peter Burling Office Phone: 740/587-6689 burling@denison.edu 2011: ind - sixth in NCAC out - fifth in NCAC (tie) Coach: Mark FitzPatrick Office Phone: 740/587-6661 fitzpatrickm@denison.edu

Track & Field (W)

2011: ind - seventh in NCAC out - seventh in NCAC Coach: Mark FitzPatrick Office Phone: 740/587-6661 fitzpatrickm@denison.edu

Volleyball (W)

2010: 12-18, fourth in NCAC Coach: Lynsey Whisner Office Phone: 740/587-5733 whisnerl@denison.edu

2010: 8-11, fourth in NCAC Coach: PJ Soteriades Office Phone: 740/587-6584 soteriades@denison.edu

Web Site - www.denisonbigred.com President: Dale Knobel - knobel@denison.edu

Faculty Rep: Kirk Combe - combe@denison.edu

Director of Athletics: Nan Carney-DeBord - carneydebord@denison.edu

Faculty Rep: Sonya McKay - mckay@denison.edu

Sr. Assoc. Director of Athletics: Lynn Schweizer - schweizer@denison.edu

Sports Information Director: Craig Hicks - hicksc@denison.edu

Associate Director of Athletics: Sara Lee - lees@denison.edu

Athletic Trainer (ATC): Brian Hortz - hortzb@denison.edu

Assistant Director of Athletics: Gregg Parini - parini@denison.edu

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DePauw University Founded in 1837 by the Methodist church, DePauw University is a private, selective, coeducational, residential, undergraduate College of Liberal Arts and School of Music. The University or specific degree programs are accredited by the North Central Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools, University Senate of the United Methodist Church, Committee on Professional Training of the American Chemical Society, National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education, Indiana Professional Standards Board for the State of Indiana, Commission on Accreditation of Allied Health Education Programs, and the National Association of Schools of Music. Forty-two majors are offered in the College of Liberal Arts, and three degree programs are offered in the School of Music. Courses and advising successfully prepare students for professional post-graduate programs in law, medicine, business, engineering, and ministry. DePauw has 36 major buildings on 695 acres, including a 520-acre nature park featuring The Janet Prindle Institute for Ethics and the new Bartlett Reflection Center, located in Greencastle, Indiana, a 45-minute drive west of Indianapolis. Historic East College, built in 1877, is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

Athletic Facilities The $7.2 million Lilly Physical Education and Recreation Center was dedicated in April of 1982. The Center is named in memory of Eli Lilly, Josiah K. Lilly and Josiah K. Lilly Jr., great-grandfather, grandfather and father, respectively, of Ms. Ruth Lilly of Indianapolis, the Center’s main benefactor. Upon completion, the Lilly Center was one of the finest and most complete recreation and sports facilities among all small colleges and universities in the United States. The center includes a 25-yard by 25-meter pool with 10 lanes, six racquetball courts, complete locker room facilities, class and conference rooms. An addition to the Center in 1990 was a hardwood floor in the fieldhouse and auxiliary gymnasium. Truly a multipurpose facility, the Center often is the site of several intercollegiate activities on a single day. In 1997 the weight room underwent an extensive renovation and addition and now is one of the finest fitness centers at any small college in the nation. The main section of the Center is the Raymond "Gaumey" Neal Fieldhouse, named in honor of the coach of DePauw’s undefeated, untied and unscored upon 1933 football team. The fieldhouse includes a one-tenth mile track and other indoor track facilities, a 2,400-seat basketball and volleyball arena and three multipurpose courts which can accommodate volleyball, tennis, badminton, soccer and many other sports. Nearly $3 million of the funds for the Lilly Center were raised by the members of the 1933 football team, exclusively through donations made by the surviving members. The team, whose 7-0 record and 136-0 point total over their opponents put them in the elite in the history of college football, chose to honor their coach, the architect of many DePauw football powers in the 1930s and 1940s.

East College, DePauw University

Prominent Alumni Lee Hamilton ’52, former Congressman and Vice Chair of the 9/11 Commission Vernon Jordan ’57, former presidential advisor and senior managing director, Lazard Freres & Co., LLC Joseph Flummerfelt ’58, internationally acclaimed conductor Ferid Murad ’58, 1998 Nobel Prize Winner in Medicine Karen Koning Abu Zayd ’63, Commissioner-General, U.N. Relief & Works Agency The Honorable Dan Quayle ’69, 44th United States Vice President Tim Solso ’69, CEO and Chairman, Cummins Inc. James Stewart ’73, Pulitzer Prize-Winning Author and Editor-at-Large for Smart Money Mark Emkes '75, chairman and CEO, Bridgestone Americas Holding, Inc. Barbara Kingsolver ’77, Novelist Janet Risi Field ’81, President and CEO, Independent Purchasing Cooperative, Inc. Kathy Patterson Vrabeck ’85, President of Legendary Digital, Legendary Pictures Bret Baier ’92, Primary Anchor for FOX News Angie Hicks ’95, CEO, Founder of Angie's List Elisa Villanueva Beard '98, COO of Teach for America Brad Stevens ’99, Head Basketball Coach, Butler University

DePauw Directory Director of Athletics: Page Cotton 765/658-4938 Associate Director of Athletics: Mary Bretscher 765/658-4946 Faculty Representative: Geoffrey Klinger 765/658-5942 Faculty Representative: Pam Propsom 765/658-4574 Sports Information Director: Bill Wagner 765/658-4630 Sports Information FAX: 765/658-4708 Athletic Department Secretary: Ginny Kersey 765/658-4934 Athletic Department FAX: 765/658-4964 Athletic Trainer (ATC): Rex Call 765/658-4937 Blackstock Stadium Press Box: 765/658-4510 Neal Fieldhouse: 765/658-4509 Walker Field: 765/658-4691 or 765/658-4624 Indoor Tennis & Track Center: 765/658-6631 Indoor Tennis & Track Center FAX: 765/658-6628 Switchboard: 765/658-4800

14

Page Cotton Director of Athletics

Mary Bretscher Associate Director of Athletics


A Quick Look at DePauw Name: DePauw University Location: Greencastle, Indiana 46135 Founded: 1837 President: Brian W. Casey Enrollment: 2,352 Student/Faculty Ratio: 10/1 Colors: Old Gold & Black Nickname: Tigers Varsity Sports: 21 (10 men, 11 women) Affiliation: NCAA Division III

Athletics Staff Baseball

Field Hockey

Soccer (M)

Tennis (M)

Basketball (M)

Football

Soccer (W)

Tennis (W)

Basketball (W)

Golf (M)

Softball

Track & Field (M)

Cross Country (M)

Golf (W)

Swimming & Diving (M)

2011: 19-21 Coach: Jake Martin Office Phone: 765/658-4929 jmartin@depauw.edu 2011: 19-9 Coach: Bill Fenlon Office Phone: 765/658-4940 bfenlon@depauw.edu 2011: 25-4 Coach: Kris Huffman Office Phone: 765/658-4960 khuffman@depauw.edu 2010: second in SCAC Coach: Kori Stoffregen Office Phone: 765/658-4945 kstoffregen@depauw.edu

Cross Country (W)

2010: second in SCAC Coach: Kori Stoffregen Office Phone: 765/658-4945 kstoffregen@depauw.edu

2010: 13-7 Coach: Gina Preston Wills Office Phone: 765/658-4931 reginapreston@depauw.edu 2010: 9-2 Coach: Robby Long Office Phone: 765/658-4944 rlong@depauw.edu 2011: 4th in SCAC Coach: Vince Lazar Office Phone: 765/658-4921 vlazar@depauw.edu 2011: SCAC Champions Coach: Vince Lazar Office Phone: 765/658-4921 vlazar@depauw.edu

Lacrosse (M)

2012-13: First Varsity Season Coach: TBA

Lacrosse (W)

2010: 14-2-2 Coach: Brad Hauter Office Phone: 765/658-4958 bradhauter@depauw.edu 2010: 10-7 Coach: John Carter Office Phone: 765/658-4961 jcarter@depauw.edu 2011: 32-11-1 Coach: Bonnie Skrenta Office Phone: 765/658-4967 bskrenta@depauw.edu 2011: SCAC Champions Coach: Adam Cohen Office Phone: 765/658-4119 acohen@depauw.edu

Swimming & Diving (W) 2011: second in SCAC Coach: Mary Bretscher Office Phone: 765/658-4946 mbretscher@depauw.edu

2012-13: First Varsity Season Coach: TBA

2011: 17-7 Coach: Scott Riggle Office Phone: 765/658-4935 sriggle@depauw.edu 2011: 14-10 Coach: Scott Riggle Office Phone: 765/658-4935 sriggle@depauw.edu 2011: in: n/a out: fourth in SCAC Coach: Kori Stoffregen Office Phone: 765/658-4945 kstoffregen@depauw.edu

Track & Field (W)

2011: in: n/a out: second in SCAC Coach: Kori Stoffregen Office Phone: 765/658-4945 kstoffregen@depauw.edu

Volleyball

2010: 22-14 Coach: Deb Zellers Office Phone: 765/658-4969 dzellers@depauw.edu

Web Site - www.depauw.edu/ath/ President: Dr. Brian W. Casey - briancasey@depauw.edu

Faculty Rep: Pam Propsom - propsom@depauw.edu

Director of Athletics: Page Cotton - pagecotton@depauw.edu

Sports Information Director: Bill Wagner - bwagner@depauw.edu

Assoc. Director of Athletics: Mary Bretscher - mbretscher@depauw.edu

Athletic Trainer (ATC): Rex Call - rcall@depauw.edu

Faculty Rep: Geoffrey Klinger - klinger@depauw.edu

15


Hiram College Founded in 1850, Hiram College continues today as one of the nation’s most well respected liberal arts institutions. Located in Northeast Ohio’s Western Reserve Area, Hiram attracts students from throughout the United States and 24 countries. Hiram’s academic calendar, known as the Hiram Plan, is unique to the nation. The College offers students one of the country’s oldest and most respected study abroad programs. More than 50 percent of Hiram students study abroad during their four years on campus. Recognized as a Baccalaureate-I institution by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, Hiram is one of only 13 percent of colleges and universities to be awarded a chapter of the prestigious honor society Phi Beta Kappa. Hiram enrolls 1,240 students in its traditional program and more than 300 adult learners in the Weekend College, the first program of its kind in Ohio.

Athletic Facilities

The Coleman Center, Hiram College

Prominent Alumni James A. Garfield, 20th President of the United States Galen J. Roush ‘15, Founder of the Roadway Corporation

Among the benefits enjoyed by all Hiram College students is access to outstanding athletic and recreational facilities on campus. These facilities provide ample opportunities for student-athletes to train, practice, and play while also allowing for plenty of usage by the intramural and club sport programs. The Hiram College Sports Complex is the home for intercollegiate, intramural, club and recreational sports, and exercise. The Complex consists of outdoor competition venues and the brand new Les and Kathy Coleman Sports, Recreation, and Fitness Center, which was completed in 2005 and is one of the finest facilities in the NCAC, housing indoor competititon venues. The Coleman Sports Center includes a competition gymnasium, two separate fieldhouses, a fitness center, weight room, racquetball courts, a pool, and an indoor track, along with a presentation of Hiram’s athletic history and other facilities. The existing Harley C. and Mary Hoover Price Gymnasium includes Hollinger Court, a newly refurbished hardwood performance arena with seating capacity for 2,000, and serves as the primary indoor competition facility. The Alumni Memorial Pool is an Olympic-sized, six-lane, 50-meter facility that is home to the Terrier swimming & diving teams. The natatorium features a spacious, elevated grandstand for spectators. The T. Alfred and C. Inex Fleming Fieldhouse has undergone extensive interior and exterior renovations and houses two courts with a new synthetic surface perfect for a variety of usages, training rooms, classrooms, and a locker room area. The facility also houses the intramural program and provides athletic teams with an indoor practice facility in inclement weather. The Dr. Myrtis E. Herndon Field, a state-of-the-art softball complex, features a game field with an all-dirt infield and a natural grass outfield with a warning track, full-size brick dugouts for home and visiting teams, storage areas, and practice space. The angular outfield dimensions provide a marked contrast from the symmetrical parks found at most college softball fields. Hiram’s largest outdoor facility is the Charles A. Henry Field, home to the Hiram football team. Henry Field can accommodate more than 2,000 fans and its two-story, wired press box is regarded as one of the finest in the NCAC and NCAA Division III. Lights and a synthetic turf field were added in time for the 2011 season. The baseball team plays at the Robert O. Fishel Field and the soccer teams play at the Hiram Soccer Complex. All three of these venues are offset by the beautiful Western Reserve landscape.

Robert O. Fishel ‘36, Former Executive Vice President/Media Relations of the

American League of Professional Baseball Clubs

Allyn Vine ‘36, Scientist for Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute; helped

develop minisub Alvin that located the Titantic shipwreck

William Kelly ‘40, Leader in the field of animal nutrition; developed Bil-Jac dog

food

David L. Bell, Sr. ‘54, Emmy Award winning film and television producer Dirk Zimmerman ‘56, Senior Vice President of New Ventures/CBS William D. White ‘57, Former National League President, MLB All-Star Andrew Stofan ‘58, Former Associate Administrator to the NASA Space

Station Project and Former Director of the Lewis Space Center

Barbara London ‘68, Assistant Curator of the Museum of Modern Art; founded

the first museum-based video program in the country

Jan Reed Hopkins ‘69, Anchor of Cable News Network (CNN) Lance Liotta ‘69, researcher at the National Cancer Institute, National

Institutes of Health

Larry Bouts ‘71, Chairman and CEO of Six Flags Theme Parks Charity and Michael Chelky ‘74, founded own computer company; featured in

Money magazine as “The New Millionaires”

Dean Scarborough ‘77, President and CEO, Avery Dennison Corporation Randall Dearth ‘86, President and CEO of Lanxess Corporation

Hiram Directory Director of Athletics: Tom Mulligan Assistant Director of Athletics/SWA: Ellen Dempsey Assistant Director of Athletics: Jim Johnston Faculty Representative: Earl Kissell Faculty Representative: Audrey Wagstaff Cunningham Sports Information Director: Jeff Hoedt Sports Information FAX: Athletic Department FAX: Athletic Trainer (ATC): Jim Johnston Henry Field Press Box: Switchboard:

330/569-5940 330/569-5350 330/569-5351 330/569-5477 330/569-5424 330/569-5495 330/569-5392 330/569-5392 330/569-5351 330/569-5342 330/569-3211

Tom Mulligan Director of Athletics

16

Ellen Dempsey Assistant Director of Athletics/SWA


A Quick Look at Hiram Name: Hiram College Location: Hiram, Ohio 44234 Founded: 1850 President: Thomas V. Chema Enrollment: 1,240 (558 men, 682 women) Student/Faculty Ratio: 12/1 Colors: Blue & Red Nickname: Terriers Varsity Sports: 14 (7 men, 7 women) Affiliation: NCAA Division III

Athletics Staff Baseball

Cross Country (W)

Lacrosse (M)

Softball

Basketball (M)

Football

Lacrosse (W)

Swimming (M)

Basketball (W)

Golf (M)

Soccer (M)

Swimming (W)

Cross Country (M)

Golf (W)

Soccer (W)

Volleyball (W)

2011: 9-19, ninth in NCAC Coach: Howard Jenter Office Phone: 330/569-5348 jenterhe@hiram.edu

2011: 14-12, fifth in NCAC Coach: Steve Fleming Office Phone: 330/569-5346 flemingsr@hiram.edu

2011: 12-14, sixth in NCAC Coach: Andrea Preston Office Phone: 330/569-5352 prestonar@hiram.edu

2010: ninth in NCAC Coach: Earl Kissel Office Phone: 330/569-5477 kissellet@hiram.edu

2010: n/a Coach: Earl Kissel Office Phone: 330/569-5477 kissellet@hiram.edu

2010: 1-9, eighth in NCAC Coach: Randy Moore Office Phone: 330/569-5345 moorera@hiram.edu

2011: seventh in NCAC Coach: Craig Adams Office Phone: 330/569-5780 adamsca@hiram.edu

2011: fifth in NCAC Coach: Danielle Emans Office Phone: 330/569-5780 emansdj@hiram.edu

2012-13: First Varsity Season Coach: Brian Jenkins Office Phone: 330/569-5341 jenkinsb@hiram.edu

2012-13: First Varsity Season Coach: Erika Blozie Office Phone: 330/569-5347 blozieem@hiram.edu

2010: 6-12-0, sixth in NCAC Coach: Carl Capellas Office Phone: 330/569-5344 capellascp@hiram.edu

2010: 5-12-2, seventh in NCAC (tie) Coach: Bob Dean Office Phone: 330/569-5968 deanrr@hiram.edu

2011: 29-14, second in NCAC (tie) Coach: Kristin Tassey Office Phone: 330/569-5478 tasseyke@hiram.edu

2011: ninth in NCAC Coach: Jack Groselle Office Phone: 330/569-5343 grosellejr@hiram.edu

2011: eighth in NCAC Coach: Jack Groselle Office Phone: 330/569-5343 grosellejr@hiram.edu

2010: 24-10, NCAC Co-Champion Coach: Ellen Dempsey Office Phone: 330/569-5350 dempseyee@hiram.edu

Web Site - www.hiram.edu/athletics President: Thomas V. Chema - chematv@hiram.edu

Faculty Rep: Earl Kissell - kissellet@hiram.edu

Director of Athletics: Tom Mulligan - mulligante@hiram.edu

Faculty Rep: Audrey Wagstaff Cunningham - cunninghamae@hiram.edu

Assistant Athletic Director/SWA: Ellen Dempsey - dempseyee@hiram.edu

Sports Information Director: Jeff Hoedt - hoedtjm@hiram.edu

Assistant Athletic Director: Jim Johnston - johnstonjw@hiram.edu

Athletic Trainer (ATC): Jim Johnston - johnstonjw@hiram.edu

17


Kenyon College Kenyon College is a private liberal arts institution with a 187-year reputation for teaching students to think critically, to question the world and their place in it, and to communicate with clarity and conviction. Kenyon’s strong academic program annually sends a large percentage of its graduates to the nation’s leading graduate and professional schools. Kenyon is situated in the central Ohio village of Gambier, population 2,000. Many members of the faculty and administration reside in the picturesque village, forming a unique community of learning. Gambier is five miles east of Mount Vernon, 50 miles north of Columbus and 100 miles south of Cleveland. Founded in 1824 by Episcopal Bishop Philander Chase, Kenyon is one of the oldest private colleges west of the Allegheny mountains. In the 1800s, Kenyon educated many of the nation’s leaders, including President Rutherford B. Hayes and Lincoln cabinet member Edwin M. Stanton. Twentieth-century graduates include the late Swedish Prime Minister Olof Palme, actor Paul Newman, poet Robert Lowell, author E.L. Doctorow, and many leaders in science, medicine, law, literature and business. The Kenyon Review, founded in 1939 by poet and critic John Crowe Ransom, is now edited by Kenyon’s English department faculty and enjoys world-wide literary prominence. Kenyon became a coeducational institution in 1969. Enrollment is approximately 1,600.

Athletic Facilities Kenyon is home to one of the most exciting athletic centers of any small college in the country. Spacious, welcoming, architecturally stunning and equipped with top-flight facilities, the Kenyon Athletic Center opened in January 2006. Among the Center’s features are: an Olympic-sized pool, an indoor track and indoor tennis courts, a recreational gym, a 12,000-square-foot weight and fitness area, squash and racquetball courts, as well as multipurpose rooms for aerobics, dance, and yoga. Varsity athletes have ample locker-room space and access to the sports-medicine and training suite. The Center contains Tomsich Arena, home to the varsity volleyball and basketball teams, as well as a cafe, study lounges, conference rooms, a broadcast video lab and a 120-seat auditorium/movie theater that can be used to produce and screen game films while providing another campus venue for movies and lectures. Video production is just one technological feature that makes the building a state-of-the-art resource. The building also incorporates wireless computer access and multimedia facilities. The building complements many of the attractive sites that Kenyon already uses for its home athletic events. The baseball team competes at McCloskey Field, the softball team at its new complex and both soccer teams, as well as the women's lacrosse team, compete on Mavec Field. The Kenyon men's lacrosse, football and field hockey teams all play on McBride Field, which sports an OmniGrass artificial surface. Surrounding McBride field is the completely renovated Wilder Track, which is home to the Lords and Ladies track and field teams.

Old Kenyon, Kenyon College

Prominent Alumni Rutherford B. Hayes 1842, 19th President, United States Novice G. Fawcett '31 Educator; President, The Ohio State University Bill Veeck '36, Owner, Professional Baseball Teams W. Donald McNeill '40, Business Executive; U.S. National Tennis Champion, 1940 William H. Rehnquist '46, Chief Justice, U.S. Supreme Court William Gass '47, Novelist Henry J. Abraham '48, Educator; Author Olaf S. J. Palme '48, Swedish Prime Minister Paul L. Newman '49, Actor James P. Storer '49, Broadcasting Executive E.L. Doctorow '50, Novelist Jonathan H. Winters '50, Actor; Comedian Richard L. Thomas '53, Banker P.F. Kluge '64, Novelist; Journalist Ned Smyth '70, Sculptor Gregory P. Andorfer '73, Emmy Award-Winning Television Producer (Planet Earth) Kristina Peterson '73, President and Publisher, Fodor's Travel Guides, Random House Geri Coleman Tucker '74, Managing Editor, Gannett Company James M. Borgman '76, Pulitzer Prize-Winning Cartoonist, Cincinnati Enquirer Nancy C. Zafris '76, Award-Winning Writer Bill Watterson '80, Cartoonist (Calvin and Hobbes) Wendy MacLeod '81, Playwright (The House of Yes) Allison Janney '82, Emmy-award winning and Tony-nominated actress (West Wing) Adam R. Davidson '86, Cannes Film Festival- and Oscar-Winning Film Director Chris Eigeman '88, Actor Laura Hillenbrand '89, author (Seabiscuit)

Kenyon Directory Director of Athletics: Peter Smith Associate Director of Athletics - Facilities: Doug Zipp Assistant Director of Athletics - Compliance: Amy Williams Assistant Director of Athletics: Suzanne Helfant Assistant Director of Athletics: Matt Burdette Faculty Representative: Timothy Shutt Faculty Representative: Sarah Murnen Sports Information Director: Marty Fuller Sports Information FAX: Busines Manager: Debbie Cole Athletic Department FAX: Athletic Trainer (ATC): Andy Wheeler Tomsich Arena Press Table: McBride Field Press Box: Switchboard:

18

740/427-5811 740/427-5460 740/427-5024 740/427-5222 740/427-5810 740/427-5218 740/427-5373 740/427-5471 740/427-5401 740/427-5456 740/427-5402 740/427-5018 740/427-5865 740/427-5155 740/427-5000

Peter Smith Director of Athletics

Suzanne Helfant Assistant Director of Athletics


A Quick Look at Kenyon Name: Kenyon College Location: Gambier, Ohio 43022 Founded: 1824 President: S. George Nugent Enrollment: 1,600 (752 men, 848 women) Student/Faculty Ratio: 10/1 Colors: Purple and White Nickname: Lords/Ladies Varsity Sports: 22 (11 men, 11 women) Affiliation: NCAA Division III

Athletics Staff Baseball

Field Hockey

Soccer (M)

Tennis (M)

Basketball (M)

Football

Soccer (W)

Tennis (W)

Basketball (W)

Golf (M)

Softball

Track & Field (M)

Cross Country (M)

Lacrosse (M)

Swimming & Diving (M)

2011: 13-17, seventh in NCAC Coach: Matt Burdette Office Phone: 740/427-5810 burdettem@kenyon.edu 2011: 9-16, sixth in NCAC Coach: Dan Priest Office Phone: 740/427-5556 priestd@kenyon.edu 2011: 15-12, fourth in NCAC Coach: Suzanne Helfant Office Phone: 740/427-5222 helfants@kenyon.edu 2010: seventh in NCAC Coach: Duane Gomez Office Phone: 740/427-5273 gomez@kenyon.edu

Cross Country (W)

2010: third in NCAC Coach: Duane Gomez Office Phone: 740/427-5273 gomez@kenyon.edu

2010: 10-11, third in NCAC Coach: Chrissy Needham Office Phone: 740/427-5232 needhamc@kenyon.edu 2010: 0-10, ninth in NCAC Coach: Ted Stanley Office Phone: 740/427-5260 stanleyt@kenyon.edu 2011: eighth in NCAC Coach: Chris Ehmer Office Phone: 740/427-5913 ehmerc@kenyon.edu 2011: 5-9, fifth in NCAC Coach: Doug Misarti Office Phone: 740/427-5261 misartid@kenyon.edu

Lacrosse (W)

2011: 9-6, fifth in NCAC Coach: Meredith Buzzi Office Phone: 740/427-5648 buzzim@kenyon.edu

2010: 15-3-2, second in NCAC Coach: Chris Brown Office Phone: 740/427-5564 brownch@kenyon.edu 2010: 8-7-2, fifth in NCAC Coach: Kelly Bryan Office Phone: 740/427-5796 bryank@kenyon.edu 2011: 10-24, sixth in NCAC (tie) Coach: Erin O'Neill Office Phone: 740/427-5263 oneillee@kenyon.edu 2011: second in NCAC Coach: Jim Steen Office Phone: 740/427-5554 steen@kenyon.edu

Swimming & Diving (W)

2011: second in NCAC Coach: Jessen Book Office Phone: 740/427-5982 bookj@kenyon.edu

2011: 17-4, NCAC Champion Coach: Scott Thielke Office Phone: 740/427-5620 thielkes@kenyon.edu 2011: 15-6, second in NCAC Coach: Scott Thielke Office Phone: 740/427-5620 thielkes@kenyon.edu 2010: ind - fifth in NCAC out - seventh in NCAC Coach: Duane Gomez Office Phone: 740/427-5273 gomez@kenyon.edu

Track & Field (W)

2010: ind - fourth in NCAC out - fifth in NCAC Coach: Duane Gomez Office Phone: 740/427-5273 gomez@kenyon.edu

Volleyball (W)

2010: 13-16, fifth in NCAC (tie) Coach: Katie Charles Office Phone: 740/427-5164 charlesk@kenyon.edu

Web Site - athletics.kenyon.edu President: S. Georgia Nugent - nugent@kenyon.edu

Asst. Director of Athletics: Suzanne Helfant - helfants@kenyon.edu

Director of Athletics: Peter Smith - smithp@kenyon.edu

Faculty Rep: Timothy Shutt - shutt@kenyon.edu

Associate Dir. of Athletics - Facilities: Doug Zipp - zippd@kenyon.edu

Faculty Rep: Sarah Murnen - murnen@kenyon.edu

Asst. Dir. of Athletics - Compliance: Amy Williams - williamsah@kenyon

Sports Information Director: Marty Fuller - fullerm@kenyon.edu

Asst. Director of Athletics: Matt Burdette - burdettem@kenyon.edu

Athletic Trainer (ATC): Andy Wheeler - wheelerw@kenyon.edu

19


Oberlin College Oberlin College is the most national of all liberal arts colleges. Its students consistently come from every state in the nation as well as from many foreign countries. Oberlin is unique in that it combines one of the nation's foremost liberal arts colleges with a world-famous conservatory of music. Moreover, the Oberlin Conservatory is the only one devoted entirely to the training of musicians at the undergraduate level. The presence of the two divisions on one campus encourages a broad view of areas of interest and an awareness of their connection. Students in one division often enroll in courses in the other. Enrollment averages 2,300 in the College and 500 in the Conservatory. The College of Arts and Sciences awards the B.A. degree and offers strong programs in all areas of the humanities, natural sciences and social sciences; the Conservatory of Music awards the B.Mus. degree in performance, composition, music history, music education, historical performance, electronic and computer music, and jazz studies. A five-year, doubledegree program leading to both the B.A. and B.Mus. is offered, and selected programs in both divisions award master's degrees. Founded in 1833, Oberlin was the nation's first coeducational college and an early leader in the education of blacks. By the turn of the century, one-third of the nation's black graduates of predominately white colleges had graduated from Oberlin. In addition, more Oberlin graduates earn Ph.D.s than do graduates of any other undergraduate institution. Oberlin's size is a distinct asset -- it is large enough to offer some 900 courses, yet small enough for students to make contributions to the community. Students are encouraged to take responsibility for their program of study and to spend at least one semester off campus. Winter Term allows further time for individual projects. Concerts and theatrical productions abound, and the Allen Memorial Art Museum is recognized as one of the nation's finest college museums.

Athletic Facilities The Jesse Philips Physical Education Center, a 115,000 square-foot facility, is the hallmark of Oberlin’s athletic complex. Philips Gymnasium is the home site of the basketball and volleyball teams. In addition to hosting numerous intramural and recreational activities, the center houses Carr Pool, the site of two NCAA and 14 NCAC championship meets. The Philips Center has two weight rooms, a cardio-fitness area, racquetball, squash and table tennis courts and an area set up for practicing golf. The John W. Heisman Club Field House, linked to the Philips Center, includes a six-lane 200-meter track and four tennis courts. Outdoor facilities include the 3,500-seat football and track stadium, Dill Field; an allweather running track; 12 all-weather tennis courts; and playing fields for baseball, field hockey, lacrosse, soccer, softball, and intramural and club sports. Oberlin’s climbing wall, opened in September 2003, towers 25 feet over the north lobby of the Philips Center and sports eight anchors for top-roping and lead climbing and a bouldering cave. The College's newest facility, Robert Kahn Track and Shults Field, opened in the fall of 2007. The complex, made possible by generous gifts from Robert Kahn '55 and Dick Bailey '55, hosted men's and women's soccer as well as men’s lacrosse matches and multiple track and field meets. The venue also features lights, bleacher-style seating, a concession area and a full press box. Williams Field House is Oberlin's newest facility, used for practice and club teams.

Science Center, Oberlin College

Prominent Alumni Moses Fleetwood Walker 1883, First Black Professional Baseball Player Charles M. Hall 1885, Discovered Modern Method of Producing Aluminum Robert Millikan 1891, Nobel Prize Winner in Physics Edwin Reischauer '31, Former U.S. Ambassador to Japan Walter Heller '35, Chief Economic Advisor to President Kennedy Roger Sperry '35, Nobel Prize Winner in Medicine Stanley Cohen '45, Nobel Prize Winner in Medicine and Physiology Carl Rowan '47, Diplomat and Syndicated Columnist Donald Henderson '50, Led Worldwide Effort to Eradicate Smallpox John Kander '51, Composer ("Cabaret") John Mack '51, Pulitzer Prize-Winning Author ("Lawrence of Arabia") William Goldman '52, Academy Award-Winning Screenwriter ("Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid", "All The President's Men") Nancy Hays Teeters '52, Vice President and Chief Economist, IBM Eduardo Mondalane '53, Led Country of Mozambique to Freedom Johnnetta Cole '57, First Female Black President, Spelman College James Fixx '57, Author ("The Complete Book of Running") John Vinocur '61, Executive Director, International Herald Tribune James Burrows '62, Emmy Award-Winning Director ("Taxi", "Cheers", "Frasier", "Will & Grace") Dennis Barrie '70, Founding Director, Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Amy Gittler '72, Lawyer, Argued Landmark Case at Supreme Court Jerry Greenfield '73, Co-Founder, Ben & Jerry's Ice Cream Julie Taymor '74, Theater and Film Director Jonathan Kingdon '75, Director of College Scouting, NFL Oakland Raiders Elizabeth Welch King '80, Director of Corporate Marketing, Microsoft Liz Phair '89, Pop and Alternative Rock Artist Ed Helms '96, Actor, Comedian, "The Daily Show with Jon Stewart", "The Office"

Oberlin Directory Director of Athletics: William Roth Associate AD for Development & Alumni Affairs/SWA: Natalie Winkelfoos Asst. AD for Internal Operations: Mike Snyer Asst. AD for Intercollegiate Sports: Eric Lahetta Faculty Representative: Clayton Koppes Faculty Representative: Tracie Paine Asst. AD for Communications: Mike Mancini Sports Information/Athletic Department FAX: Administrative Assistant: Carrie Ragnoni Carrol Wilhelm Athletic Trainer (ATC): Tim Carver Philips Gymnasium Press Box: Savage Stadium Press Box: Switchboard:

20

440/775-6401 440/775-6463 440/775-8519 440/775-8534 440/775-8317 440/775-8366 440/775-8503 440/775-8957 440/775-8840 440/775-8500 440/775-8514 440/775-8024 440/775-8006 440/775-8121

William Roth Director of Athletics

Natalie Winklefoos Assoc. AD/Senior Women's Administrator


A Quick Look at Oberlin Name: Oberlin College Location: Oberlin, Ohio 44074 Founded: 1833 President: Marvin Krislov Enrollment: 2,829 (1,194 men, 1,635 women) Student/Faculty Ratio: 12/1 (College); 8/1 (Conservatory) Colors: Crimson and Gold Nickname: Yeomen/Yeowomen Varsity Sports: 22 (11 men, 11 women) Affiliation: NCAA Division III

Athletics Staff Baseball

Field Hockey

Soccer (M)

Tennis (M)

Basketball (M)

Football

Soccer (W)

Tennis (W)

Basketball (W)

Golf (M)

Softball

Track & Field (M)

Cross Country (M)

Lacrosse (M)

Swimming & Diving (M)

2011: 16-23, eighth in NCAC Coach: Adrian Abrahamowicz Office Phone: 440/775-5676 adrian.abrahamowicz@oberlin.edu 2011: 2-23, ninth in NCAC Coach: Isaiah Cavaco Office Phone: 440/775-8407 isaiah.cavaco@oberlin.edu 2011: 8-18, seventh in NCAC Coach: Kerry Jenkins Office Phone: 440/775-8546 kerry.jenkins@oberlin.edu 2010: fifth in NCAC Coach: Ray Appenheimer Office Phone: 440/775-8525 ray.appenheimer@oberlin.edu

Cross Country (W)

2010: NCAC Champion Coach: Ray Appenheimer Office Phone: 440/775-8525 ray.appenheimer@oberlin.edu

2010: 6-11, sixth in NCAC Coach: Deb Ranieri Office Phone: 440/775-8511 deb.ranieri@oberlin.edu 2010: 4-6, fifth in NCAC Coach: Jeff Ramsey Office Phone: 440/775-8968 jeff.ramsey@oberlin.edu 2011: ninth in NCAC Coach: Mitch Gillam Office Phone: 440/775-8507 mitch.gillam@oberlin.edu 2011: 7-9, sixth in NCAC Coach: Topher Grossman Office Phone: 440/775-5171 topher.grossman@oberlin.edu

Lacrosse (W)

2011: 4-9, seventh in NCAC Coach: Liz Longley Office Phone: TBA liz.longley@oberlin.edu

2010: 7-10-1, third in NCAC (tie) Coach: Blake New Office Phone: 440/775-8506 blake.new@oberlin.edu 2010: 4-14-0, seventh in NCAC (tie) Coach: Kristen Hayden Office Phone: 440/775-5789 kristen.hayden@oberlin.edu 2011: 5-27, eighth in NCAC Coach: Mimi Mahon Office Phone: 440/775-8536 mmahon@oberlin.edu 2011: sixth in NCAC Coach: Mark Fino Office Phone: 440/775-8492 mark.fino@oberlin.edu

Swimming & Diving (W) 2011: sixth in NCAC Coach: Mark Fino Office Phone: 440/775-8492 mark.fino@oberlin.edu

2011: 7-17, sixth in NCAC Coach: Adam Shoemaker Office Phone: 440/775-8559 adam.shoemaker@oberlin.edu 2011: 12-13, fourth in NCAC Coach: Constantine Ananiadis Office Phone: 440/775-6752 constantine.ananiadis@oberlin.edu 2011: ind - fourth in NCAC out - third in NCAC Coach: Ray Appenheimer Office Phone: 440/775-8525 ray.appenheimer@oberlin.edu

Track & Field (W)

2011: ind - third in NCAC out - second in NCAC Coach: Ray Appenheimer Office Phone: 440/775-8525 ray.appenheimer@oberlin.edu

Volleyball (W)

2010: 6-24, seventh in NCAC Coach: Erica Rau Office Phone: 440/775-8505 erica.rau@oberlin.edu

Web Site - www.goyeo.com President: Marvin Krislov - marvin.krislov@oberlin.edu

Asst. AD for Communications: Mike Mancini - mike.mancini@oberlin.edu

Director of Athletics: William Roth - william.roth@oberlin.edu

Asst. AD for Internal Operations: Mike Snyder - mike.snyder@oberlin.edu

Associate Director of Athletics for Development & Alumni Affairs/SWA:

Faculty Rep: Clayton Koppes - Clayton.Koppes@oberlin.edu

Faculty Rep: Tracie Paine - Tracie.Paine@oberlin.edu

Natalie Winkelfoos - natalie.winkelfoos@oberlin.edu

Asst. AD for Intercollegiate Sports: Eric Lahetta - eric.lahetta@oberlin.edu

Athletic Trainer (ATC): Tim Carver - tim.carver@oberlin.edu

21


Ohio Wesleyan University    Founded in 1842, Ohio Wesleyan is an independent undergraduate liberal arts university affiliated with The United Methodist Church. Ohio Wesleyan confers the Bachelor of Arts, Bachelor of Fine Arts, and Bachelor of Music degrees. The University also offers combined-degree (3-2) programs in engineering, optometry, and physical therapy. Degree programs are offered through 22 academic departments and several interdisciplinary programs. Distinctive features of the academic program include the Arneson Institute for Practical Politics and Public Affairs; The Woltemade Center for Economics, Business, and Entreprenuership; the Sagan National Colloquium; the Honors Program and opportunities for independent research, internships, and off-campus study. Ohio Wesleyan employs 138 full-time faculty, of whom 38 percent are female and seven percent are minority. Nearly 100 percent of the tenure-track faculty hold a Ph.D. or the highest degree attainable in their field. The student-faculty ratio is about 11:1. Ohio Wesleyan currently enrolls about 1,850 students, divided nearly evenly between men and women, from 45 states and 57 countries. About 58 percent of the students are from the Midwest; another 22 percent are from the East Coast. Multicultural enrollment is 20 percent. Diversity, creativity, leadership, and service are emphasized throughout the co-curriculum. Students are active in nearly 100 clubs and organizations, as well as departmental student boards, academic honoraries, music and theatre productions, fraternities and sororities, and an extensive intramural sports program. More than 85 percent of the students are involved in community service projects.

Athletic Facilities

The crown jewel of Ohio Wesleyan's athletic facilities is Selby Field, home of the football, field hockey, track & field, and lacrosse contingents. An OmniGrass artificial playing surface was installed for the 2006-07 academic year and lights were installed for the 2010-11 academic year, making Selby one of the most impressive venues among NCAA Division III institutions. The fourth-largest college-owned field in NCAA Division III, the facility seats 9,100. Selby also houses the George Gauthier Track, an Ameritan FP surface installed for the 2006-07 academic year, and was host to the NCAA Division III outdoor track & field championships in 2011. Roy Rike Field hosts soccer, primarily under the lights, and is widely regarded as one of the Midwest's finest facilities for the sport. The centerpiece of Ohio Wesleyan's athletic facilities is the Branch Rickey Physical Education Center, prized for both its size and versatility. The Richard Gordon Field House floor was resurfaced in November 2008, and the track was refinished with a state-ofthe-art encapsulated surface in December 2008. Indoor practice for fall and spring sports can be handled there as well: floor space is larger than a football field, accommodating four courts for tennis and two for basketball and volleyball. Branch Rickey Arena, seating 2,300, hosts varsity basketball and volleyball contests. Also in the Center are five handball/ racquetball courts, and a squash court. Offices and locker rooms also are part of Edwards Gymnasium, which is connected by tunnel to the Rickey Center. The Meek Aquatics & Recreation Center, a 10-lane, geothermally heated facility, opened in fall 2010. Softball is played at Margaret Sagan Field. Baseball is played at Littick Field, and tennis at the Tennis Centre.

University Hall, Ohio Wesleyan University

Prominent Alumni Charles W. Fairbanks, 1872, Vice President of the U.S. Branch Rickey '04, Baseball Executive Norman Vincent Peale '20, Clergyman; Author Arthur Flemming '27, Former Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare F. Sherwood Rowland '48, Nobel Prize Laureate in Chemistry Kisoon Hyun '52, One of Six Women Members, National Assembly of Korea Robert P. Bauman '53, Former CEO, SmithKline and Beecham Jim Berry '55, Cartoonist ("Berry's World") David Hobson '58, Representative, U.S. Congress Tom Butters '60, Director of Athletics Emeritus, Duke University George Conrades '61, Executive Chairman, Akamai Technology, Inc. Paul E. Gillmor '61, Representative, U.S. Congress Shirin Tahir-Kheli '61, Special Asst. to the President/Sr. Dir. for Democracy, Human Rights and International Operations Richard Gordon '62, Real Estate Developer Gary Schaal '63, Former President, PGA of America Edward D. Miller '64, Dean, Johns Hopkins Medical School Barry Clemens '65, 11-year NBA Player Robert Gillespie '66, Former President and CEO, Key Corp Woodrow Clark II '67, 2007 Nobel Peace Prize Co-Recipient Larry Heinzerling '67, Director, World Services, Associated Press Richard North Patterson '68, Novelist Thomas R. Tritton '69, former President, Haverford College Jo Ann Hermann Emerson '72, Representative, U.S. Congress Wendie Malick '72, Actress Tom Stinson '75, Sportswriter, Atlanta Journal-Constitution Fred Baron '76, Producer, Moulin Rouge James Henke '76, Vice President of Exhibitions, Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Gregory Moore '76, Editor, The Denver Post David Wetherell '76, CEO, CMGI, Inc. Bob DiBiasio '77, Vice President of Public Relations, Cleveland Indians Susan Headden '77, Pulitzer Prize-Winning Journalist Tom Jolly '77, Sports Editor, The New York Times Keith Rucker '93, Five-year NFL player

Ohio Wesleyan Directory Athletics Director: Roger Ingles Senior Women's Administrator: Marge Redmond Associate Athletics Director: Michael C. Hollway Assistant Athletics Director: Mike DeWitt Faculty Representatives: David Markwardt Faculty Representative: Barbara MacLeod Sports Information Director: Mark Beckenbach Sports Information FAX: Office Manager: Tracey Coleman Athletic Department FAX: Athletic Trainer (ATC): Todd Miller Rickey Arena Press Table: Selby Field Press Box: Switchboard:

22

740/368-3738 740/368-3736 740/368-3732 740/368-3744 740/368-3880 740/368-3547 740/368-3340 740/368-3332 740/368-3726 740/368-3751 740/368-3747 740/368-3342 740/368-3346 740/368-2000

Roger Ingles Director of Athletics

Marge Redmond Senior Women's Administrator


A Quick Look at Ohio Wesleyan Name: Ohio Wesleyan University Location: Delaware, Ohio 43015 Founded: 1842 President: Rock Jones Enrollment: 1,850 (888 men, 962 women) Student/Faculty Ratio: 11/1 Colors: Red and Black Nickname: Battling Bishops Varsity Sports: 23 (11 men, 12 women) Affiliation: NCAA Division III

Athletics Staff Baseball

Football

Soccer (M)

Tennis (M)

Basketball (M)

Golf (M)

Soccer (W)

Tennis (W)

2010: 4-10-3, sixth in NCAC Coach: Bob Barnes Office Phone: 740/368-3757 rcbarnes@owu.edu

2011: 5-11, sixth in NCAC Coach: Michelle Parish Office Phone: 740/368-3758 mmparish@owu.edu

Softball

Track & Field (M)

2011: 25-16, second in NCAC Coach: Tyler Mott Office Phone: 740/368-3743 tamott@owu.edu 2011: 16-11, third in NCAC (tie) Coach: Mike DeWitt Office Phone: 740/368-3744 mddewitt@owu.edu

Basketball (W)

2011: 15-12, second in NCAC Coach: Stacey Ungashick Reed Office Phone: 740/368-3986 sjreed@owu.edu

Cross Country (M)

2010: third in NCAC Coach: Matt Wackerly Office Phone: 740/368-3831 mmwacker@owu.edu

Cross Country (W)

2010: fourth in NCAC (tie) Coach: Matt Wackerly Office Phone: 740/368-3831 mmwacker@owu.edu

2010: 2-8, sixth in NCAC (tie) Coach: Michael C. Hollway Office Phone: 740/368-3732 mchollwa@owu.edu 2011: second in NCAC Coach: Ian Miller Office Phone: 740/368-3742 itmiller@owu.edu

Golf (W)

2011: sixth in NCAC Coach: Jana Shipley Office Phone: 740/368-3768 jlshiple@owu.edu

Lacrosse (M)

2011: 10-4, NCAC Tri-Champion Coach: Mike Plantholt Office Phone: 740/368-3730 maplanth@owu.edu

Lacrosse (W)

2011: 3-12, sixth in NCAC Coach: Meg Grossman Office Phone: 740/368-3735 megrossm@owu.edu

2010: 19-2-2, NCAC Champion Coach: Jay Martin Office Phone: 740/368-3727 jamartin@owu.edu

2011: 23-14, second in NCAC (tie) Coach: Cassie Cunningham Office Phone: 740/368-3737 cccunnin@owu.edu

Swimming & Diving (M) 2011: eighth in NCAC Coach: Dick Hawes Office Phone: 740/368-3740 rlhawes@owu.edu

Swimming & Diving (W) 2011: seventh in NCAC Coach: Dick Hawes Office Phone: 740/368-3740 rlhawes@owu.edu

Field Hockey

2011: 9-11, seventh in NCAC Coach: Eddie Echeverria Office Phone: 740/368-3726 eddieech@hotmail.com

2011: in - second in NCAC out - second in NCAC Coach: Kris Boey Office Phone: 740/368-3731 kwboey@owu.edu

Track & Field (W)

2011: in - NCAC Champion out - NCAC Champion Coach: Kris Boey Office Phone: 740/368-3731 kwboey@owu.edu

Volleyball (W)

2010: 2-28, eighth in NCAC Coach: Taryn Haas Office Phone: 740/368-3725 tahaas@owu.edu

2010: 7-9, fifth in NCAC Coach: Marge Redmond Office Phone: 740/368-3736 meredmon@owu.edu

Web Site - bishops.owu.edu President: Rock Jones - rfjones@owu.edu

Faculty Rep: David Markwardt - ddmarkwa@owu.edu

Athletics Director: Roger Ingles - rdingles@owu.edu

Faculty Rep: Barbara MacLeod - bamacleo@owu.edu

Senior Women's Administrator: Marge Redmond - meredmon@owu.edu

Sports Information Director: Mark Beckenbach - mlbecken@owu.edu

Associate Athletics Director: Michael C. Hollway - mchollwa@owu.edu

Athletic Trainer (ATC): Todd Miller - tcmiller@owu.edu

Assistant Athletics Director: Mike DeWitt - mddewitt@owu.edu

23


Wabash College Founded in 1832, Wabash College is a private liberal arts college for men located in Crawfordsville, Indiana. Its mission is to educate men to think critically, act responsibly, lead effectively, and live humanely. Wabash’s liberal arts curriculum includes 23 majors, with strong pre-professional programs in health sciences, law and business. Wabash, jointly with Columbia and Washington universities, offers a 3-2 engineering program, as well as a strong teacher education program. The College draws young men from approximately 30 states and 24 countries. Students at Wabash follow only one rule, the Gentleman’s Rule: “A Wabash man will conduct himself, at all times, as a gentleman and responsible citizen.” Consequently, Wabash students enjoy more freedom than students at other colleges and universities across the nation. The students’ ability to make the link between the trust the College places in them and the responsibility that goes with such freedom helps them lead wise and productive lives. Outside the classroom, Wabash offers a wide range of activities, including 10 national fraternities, workshops, seminars, visiting artists and lecturers, films, music, theater, forensics, and intramural sports. Wabash men are also active in community service projects ranging from on- and off-campus mentoring, tutoring and coaching, to fund-raising for local non-profit agencies.

Athletic Facilities The College’s football team competes in Byron P. Hollett Little Giant Stadium, a 5,000-seat stadium that overlooks the Wabash campus. A new artificial surface and new scoreboard were added to the facility in 2010. The $20 million Allen Athletics and Recreation Center, dedicated in January, 2001, provides 170,000 square feet of room to play. The facility houses the Class of 1950 Natatorium, an eight-lane pool with a moveable bulkhead and a 375-seat balcony. Track athletes compete indoors on the 200-meter Robert H. Johnson Track in the Knowling Fieldhouse and outdoors on the recently refurbished J. Owen Huntsman Track. Chadwick Court, home to the Wabash basketball team for most of the last century, has been modernized and now seats approximately 1,800. The Max E. Servies Wrestling Room and the Class of 1952 Fitness Center, as well as racquetball courts, equipment room, and training room are also part of the Allen Center. Wabash soccer competes at Mud Hollow Stadium, which was renovated in 2011. Tennis players enjoy the three indoor and six outdoor courts that comprise the John P. Collett Tennis Center. A new baseball stadium, Wabash Ballpark, for use by baseball team, opened last spring. It has individual seating for 245 fans, and new scoreboard, rest rooms, concession stand and press box.

Chapel on the Wabash Campus

Prominent Alumni Thomas Riley Marshall 1873, Former Vice President of the United States Lawrence Sanders '40, Former New York Times Best Selling mystery writer Stanley H. Huntsman '54, Head Track & Field Coach for 1988 United States Olympic Team; Former NCAA Champion Track Coach at Tennessee & Texas Robert E. Allen '57, Retired Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, A.T.&T. Robert Wedgeworth '59, Retired University Librarian, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign; Past President of the American Library Association Dr. Russell Nichols '63, Past President, Hanover College David E. Kendall '66, Attorney, Williams & Connolley, Washington D.C.; Personal Attorney of former President Bill Clinton and current Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton Stephen Goldsmith '68, FormerDeputy Mayor of New York City; former Special Advisor to President George W. Bush; Professor, Harvard University; Former Mayor, City of Indianapolis Dean F. Reynolds '70, CBS-TV News Correspondent, Chicago, IL; Covered Persian Gulf War for ABC News from Tel Aviv, Israel Dr. Tom Roberts '70, Professor of Pathology and Chair of Medical Sciences at the Dana Farber Cancer Research Institute, Harvard University Dr. Trey Holland '71, Former President of the United States Golf Association K. Donald Shelbourne '72, Former Team Physician of the Indianapolis Colts Mark Miles '76, President, Indianapolis 2012 Super Bowl Committee; Former Executive Director, Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP); Chaired Organizing Committee of Pan American Games, Indianapolis Kevin Clifford '77, President & CEO, American Funds Distributors Peter H. Metzelaars '82, Retired NFL Tight End; Played in four Super Bowls with the Buffalo Bills; Current assistant coach, Indianapolis Colts William J. Wheeler '83, Executive Vice President and CFO, MetLife, Inc. Tim Padgett '84, Miami Bureau Chief, Time Magazine Rich Calacci '91, Chief Revenue Officer, Bleacher Report

Wabash Directory Director of Athletics: Joe Haklin Assistant to the Director of Athletics: Antoine Carpenter Faculty Representative: Tobey Herzog Sports Information Director: Brent Harris Sports Information FAX: Athletic Department Secretary: Debbie Starnes Athletic Department FAX: Athletic Trainer (ATC): Mark Colston Chadwick Court Press Table: Little Giant Stadium Press Box: Switchboard:

765/361-6233 765/361-6243 765/361-6204 765/361-6165 765/361-6424 765/361-6220 765/361-6447 765/361-6159 765/361-6268 765/361-6268 765/361-6100

Joe Haklin Director of Athletics

24

Antoine Carpenter Assistant to the Director of Athletics


A Quick Look at Wabash Name: Wabash College Location: Crawfordsville, Indiana 47933 Founded: 1832 President: Patrick E. White Enrollment: 900 (900 men) Student/Faculty Ratio: 9.4/1 Color: Scarlet Nickname: Little Giants Varsity Sports: 11 (11 men) Affiliation: NCAA Division III

Athletics Staff Baseball

Football

Swimming (M)

Basketball (M)

Golf

Tennis (M)

2011: 22-22, NCAC Champion Coach: Cory Stevens Office Phone: 765/361-6454 stevensc@wabash.edu

2011: 20-6, third in NCAC (tie) Coach: Antoine Carpenter Office Phone: 765/361-6243 carpenta@wabash.edu

Cross Country (M)

2010: second in NCAC Coach: Roger Busch Office Phone: 765/361-6017 buschr@wabash.edu

2010: 8-2, second in NCAC Coach: Erik Raeburn Office Phone: 765/361-6300 raeburne@wabash.edu

2011: sixth in NCAC Coach: Mac Petty Office Phone: 765/361-6238 pettym@wabash.edu

2011: third in NCAC Coach: Steve Barnes Office Phone: 765/361-6272 barness@wabash.edu

2011: 18-10, third in NCAC Coach: Jason Hutchison Office Phone: 765/361-6353 hutchisj@wabash.edu

Track & Field (M)

2011: ind - NCAC Champion out - NCAC Champion Coach: Clyde Morgan Office Phone: 765/361-6279 morganc@wabash.edu

Wrestling

2011: 11-4 in dual matches Coach: Brian Anderson Office Phone: 765/361-6190 andersob@wabash.edu

Soccer (M)

2010: 6-10-0, eighth in NCAC Coach: Roberto Giannini Office Phone: 765/361-6208 gianninir@wabash.edu

Web Site - sports.wabash.edu President: Patrick E. White - whitep@wabash.edu

Faculty Rep: Tobey Herzog - herzogt@wabash.edu

Director of Athletics: Joe Haklin - haklinj@wabash.edu

Sports Information Director: Brent Harris - harrisb@wabash.edu

Asst. to the Dir. of Athletics: Antoine Carpenter - carpenta@wabash.edu

Athletic Trainer (ATC): Mark Colston - colstonm@wabash.edu

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Wittenberg University Wittenberg is an independent liberal arts university of high quality and outstanding reputation. It was founded in 1845 by pioneering Lutherans who sought to integrate their European heritage with the vitality of westward-expanding America. It became Wittenberg’s fundamental purpose to educate the “creative minority of a civilization," and to develop in harmony the intellectual, spiritual, aesthetic, social and physical qualities which characterize wholeness of person. Wittenberg encourages students to pursue opportunities for independent study as well as off-campus and international programs. The importance of a strong community spirit also is emphasized and one way this is achieved is through the community service program. Every sophomore is required to participate in a 30-hour community service project of his or her own design. Wittenberg has always been committed to diversity. Although the University is affiliated with the Evangelical Lutheran Church of America, virtually every religious faith is represented on campus. Of the 1,950 students, more than 50 percent are from outside Ohio, including an ever-growing international student body representing more than 40 countries. Nearly 15 percent of the student body comes from varied racial and cultural backgrounds. Wittenberg’s strong academic reputation is borne in the fact that the University has a chapter in Phi Beta Kappa.

Athletic Facilities The Wittenberg athletic facilities, a unique blend of old and new, provide opportunities for a wide variety of recreational and fitness activities. The Health, Physical Education and Recreation Center (HPERC) is the centerpiece of athletic activity. The main unit, Pam Evans Smith Arena, can be converted to three full-sized basketball courts, three volleyball courts or three tennis courts. It seats 3,000 spectators for intercollegiate athletic events, and 4,300 for concerts and other public events. A second unit houses six raquetball courts with an upper balcony for instruction and a 25-meter by 25-yard swimming pool with one- and three-meter diving boards, and a spectator viewing area. An athletic training room, locker rooms and team rooms are also located in the HPERC, which connects to the Wittenberg Field House, home of the Tigers since 1929, which houses offices and a state-of-the-art weight training facility. A 4,622-square-foot extension off the front of the HPERC opened in August 2005. The Bob Rosencrans Hall of Honor Fitness Center includes a wide range of weight training and cardiovascular equipment. Edwards-Maurer Field and Earl F. Morris Track were renovated in 2005. EdwardsMaurer Field has a state-of-the-art artificial playing surface and Earl F. Morris Track is a 400-meter track outfitted with a similarly cutting-edge surface. The entire complex is lighted, and also serves as home to the Tiger football, track, field hockey, men's and women's soccer and men's and women's lacrosse teams. The David and Georgianna Albright Tennis Complex, a $2 million project completed in 1997, houses 12 lighted tennis courts with a Dynaflex surface. Six of the courts are lighted, including two sunken center courts with space for seating. Situated a few blocks from campus are Bill Edwards Field, which offers playing and practice fields, and Betty Doughman Dillahunt Field, home of the Tiger softball team. Less than two miles from campus, Carleton Davidson Stadium, which opened in 2004, is the home of Tiger baseball. Owned and maintained by the City of Springfield, Carleton Davidson Stadium has seating capacity of 1,061, a media center, and locker rooms with showers.

Myers Hall, Wittenberg University

Prominent Alumni Isaac Funk 1860, Co-Editor, Funk and Wagnalls Standard Dictionary Adam Wagnalls 1866, Co-Editor, Funk and Wagnalls Standard Dictionary Earl F. Morris '30, Attorney; Past President, American Bar Association Bill Edwards '31, Member of National Football Foundation Hall of Fame Elwood V. Jensen '40, Renowned Cancer Researcher Richard L. Kuss '45, Retired President, Bonded Oil Company Ronald Li '50, Former Chairman, Hong Kong Stock Exchange Robert I. Kipness '52, Artist; Internationally known printmaker Eldon Miller '61, Former Head Basketball coach at Wittenberg,Western Michigan,   Ohio State and Northern Iowa Bill Martin '62, Retired U. of Michigan Athletic Director; former President, USOC John E. McLaughlin '64, Security Council Analyst, CNN America; Senior Fellow,   Johns Hopkins University Lanty Smith '64, Former Chairman and Interim CEO, Wachovia Securities Lee Endress '66, Director, College of Security Studies, Asia-Pacific Center for Security Studies Fred Mitchell '69, Sportswriter, Chicago Tribune John Meier '69, Chair, CEO, Libbey Inc. Wesley C. Bates '70, President and CEO, Stanley Steemer International James R. Rebhorn '70, Actor, Meet the Parents, Independence Day, Seinfeld, My Cousin Vinny Chuck Williamson '70, Retired CEO, Unocal Thailand, Ltd. Catherine Cox '72, Broadway Actress Jennette Bradley '74, Former Treasurer and Lieutenant Governor, State of Ohio Kyleen Hale '75, VP, Nationwide Insurance Janet Jackson '75, President and CEO, United Way of Central Ohio Milt Thompson '76, Attorney-President, Grand Slam Companies Scott K. McCune '79, VP Worldwide Sports, Entertainment & Leasing, Coca Cola Pat O'Conner '80, President, Minor League Baseball Tim Kremchek '81, Cincinnati Reds Team Physician Lois Raimondo '81, Photojournalist, Washington Post Regina Nelson '86, Senior Director, Licensed Business Dev., Polo Ralph Lauren Marcy Baruch '91, Singer/Songwriter, Guitarist Lauren Schmidt '00, Television Writer, The West Wing, Private Practice Jason Waltman '01, FX Artist/Developer, PDI/Dreamworks

Wittenberg Directory Director of Athletics: Garnett Purnell 937/327-6472 Assistant Director of Athletics/SWA: Becky Hall 937/327-6460 Assistant Director of Athletics: Ali Teopas 937/327-6489 Faculty Representative: Jeff Ankrom 937/327-7930 Faculty Representative: Wendy Gradwohl 937/327-7903 Sports Information Director: Ryan Maurer 937/327-6114 Sports Information FAX: 937/327-6112 Athletic Department FAX: 937/327-6428 Athletic Trainer (ATC): Ellen Crosbie 937/327-6467 HPER Center Press Box: 937/327-6129, 937/327-6126 Edwards-Maurer Field Press Box: 937/327-6129, 937/327-6126 Switchboard: 937/327-6231

26

Garnett Purnell Director of Athletics

Becky Hall Assistant Director of Athletics/SWA


A Quick Look at Wittenberg Name: Wittenberg University Location: Springfield, Ohio 45501 Founded: 1845 President: Mark H. Erickson Enrollment: 1,950 (878 men, 1,072 women) Student/Faculty Ratio: 14/1 Colors: Red and White Nickname: Tigers Varsity Sports: 23 (11 men, 12 women) Affiliation: NCAA Division III

Athletics Staff Baseball

Football

Soccer (W)

Basketball (M)

Golf (M)

Softball

2011: 20-18, third in NCAC Coach: Jay Lewis Office Phone: 937/327-6494 jlewis@wittenberg.edu 2011: 20-9, second in NCAC Coach: Bill Brown Office Phone: 937/327-6454 wbrown@wittenberg.edu

Basketball (W)

2011: 12-14, fifth in NCAC Coach: Sarah Jurewicz Office Phone: 937/327-6457 sjurewicz@wittenberg.edu

2010: 10-1, NCAC Champion Coach: Joe Fincham Office Phone: 937/327-6498 wfincham@wittenberg.edu 2011: NCAC Champion Coach: Jeff Roope Office Phone: 937/327-6463 jroope@wittenberg.edu

Golf (W)

2011: second in NCAC Coach: Jeff Roope Office Phone: 937/327-6463 jroope@wittenberg.edu

2010: 13-5-1, second in NCAC (tie) Coach: Kwame Lloyd Office Phone: 937/327-6496 klloyd@wittenberg.edu 2011: 13-24, fourth in NCAC Coach: Becky Hall Office Phone: 937/327-6460 rhall@wittenberg.edu

Swimming & Diving (M) 2011: fourth in NCAC Coach: Natalie Koukis Office Phone: 937/327-6446 nkoukis@wittenberg.edu

Cross Country (M)

Lacrosse (M)

Swimming & Diving (W)

Cross Country (W)

Lacrosse (W)

Tennis (M)

Field Hockey

Soccer (M)

Tennis (W)

2010: sixth in NCAC Coach: Craig Penney Office Phone: 937/327-6493 cpenney@wittenberg.edu 2010: seventh in NCAC Coach: Craig Penney Office Phone: 937/327-6493 cpenney@wittenberg.edu 2010: 15-4, NCAC Champion Coach: Kelley Hubbell Office Phone: 937/327-6499 khubbell@wittenberg.edu

2011: 14-2, NCAC Tri-Champion Coach: George Harris Office Phone: 937/327-6451 gharris@wittenberg.edu 2011: 9-6, fourth in NCAC Coach: Beth Hemminger Office Phone: 937/327-6490 bhemminger@wittenberg.edu 2010: 5-10-3, seventh in NCAC Coach: Steve Dawson Office Phone: 937/327-6456 sdawson@wittenberg.edu

Track & Field (M)

2011: ind - seventh in NCAC out - fifth in NCAC (tie) Coach: Craig Penney Office Phone: 937/327-6493 cpenney@wittenberg.edu

Track & Field (W)

2011: ind - fifth in NCAC out - sixth in NCAC Coach: Craig Penney Office Phone: 937/327-6493 cpenney@wittenberg.edu

Volleyball (W)

2010: 32-3, NCAC Co-Champion Coach: Paco Labrador Office Phone: 937/327-6492 flabrador@wittenberg.edu

2011: fifth in NCAC Coach: Natalie Koukis Office Phone: 937/327-6446 nkoukis@wittenberg.edu 2011: 14-7, fifth in NCAC Coach: Justin Stuckey Office Phone: 937/327-6453 jstuckey@wittenberg.edu 2011: 19-6, fifth in NCAC Coach: Justin Stuckey Office Phone: 937/327-6453 jstuckey@wittenberg.edu

Web Site - www.wittenberg.edu/news/athletics President: Mark H. Erickson - merickson@wittenberg.edu

Faculty Rep: Jeff Ankrom - jankrom@wittenberg.edu

Director of Athletics: Garnett Purnell - gpurnell@wittenberg.edu

Faculty Rep: Wendy Gradwohl - wgradwohl@wittenberg.edu

Asst. Director of Athletics/SWA: Becky Hall - rhall@wittenberg.edu

Sports Information Director: Ryan Maurer - rmaurer@wittenberg.edu

Asst. Director of Athletics: Ali Teopas - ateopas@wittenberg.edu

Athletic Trainer (ATC): Ellen Crosbie - ecrosbie@wittenberg.edu

27


The College of Wooster An aspiration for excellence has marked The College of Wooster since its founding in 1866. Nationally regarded for its leadership in undergraduate education in the natural sciences, international affairs and business, Wooster's innovative curriculum emphasizes independent learning. The keystone of Wooster's curriculum is Independent Study (I.S.), which has had a proven record of success for more than 50 years. I.S. requires every student in the senior year to explore, with a faculty mentor, a particular topic or problem in his or her major. These tutorials result in theses, musical performances, scientific research, creative writing, theatrical productions and exhibitions. The challenge of I.S. is supported through the most generous faculty research and study program in the United States, which permits faculty members to work in major research centers around the world. Wooster grants the Bachelor of Arts, the Bachelor of Music and the Bachelor of Music Education degrees. More than 90 percent of Wooster faculty members hold doctorates or terminal degrees, and a student may choose from approximately 40 major fields of study. Approximately 1,800 students from 45 states and 40 countries are enrolled, with a studentfaculty ratio of 11/1.

Athletic Facilities Wooster offers an impressive array of athletic facilities. The Armington Physical Education Center sits at the heart of campus. Completed in 1973, this facility houses Timken Gymnasium, which seats 3,400 for varsity basketball and volleyball competition. There is another regulation-sized gym on the upper level of the complex that quickly converts from a basketball, volleyball and dance area to four courts for handball, racquetball or squash. The natatorium also sits on the upper level and includes a six-lane pool, two diving boards, a dry-land training area and gallery seating for 500. Armington also houses a spacious weight room and personal conditioning area. A training room, which offers a complete range of services for all student-athletes, is available as well. John P. Papp Stadium, where the Scot football, field hockey, men's lacrosse and track & field teams compete, was renovated in 2009 when artificial turf and lights were added. The stadium seats 4,500 and features a large press box, an electronic scoreboard and an eight-lane, 400-meter track. Art Murray Field is home to the Wooster baseball team. A precision-trimmed turf with an infield tarpaulin, two dugouts, an electronic scoreboard and an elevated press box with seating for 20 highlight this facility. The soccer and women's lacrosse teams play at Carl Dale Memorial Field, which is adjacent to the baseball complex and has bleacher seating for 1,000. Ten tennis courts at the General D.J. Hard Memorial complex are located on campus. One of the College's nicest facilities is the L.C. Boles Memorial Golf Course. This beautiful nine-hole layout rolls along 3,000 yards of scenic Ohio countryside. The course features a driving range and two practice greens. Wooster's cross country teams also use the course to train and compete.

Wooster Directory Director of Athletics: Keith D. Beckett Assistant Director of Athletics: Brenda Meese Assistant Director of Athletics: David Brown Assistant to the Athletic Director: Meghan Horn Athletic Operations Manager: Nate Whitfield Faculty Representative: John Ramsay Faculty Representative: Shelley Judge Sports Information Director: Hugh Howard Sports Information FAX: Administrative Assistant: Bonnie Hughes Athletic Department Secretary: Diane Lash Athletic Department FAX: Athletic Trainer (ATC): Tom Love Timken Gymnasium Press Table: Papp Stadium Press Box: Art Murray Field Press Box: Switchboard:

Kauke Hall, The College of Wooster

Prominent Alumni L.W. St. John '06, Athletic Director, Ohio State University Arthur H. Compton '13, Nobel Prize Winner in Physics J.W. Pocock '38, Chairman, Association of Governing Boards Eric H. Boehm '40, Founder, American Bibliographic Center Howard V. Yergin, Jr. '42, CEO, Caltex Petroleum Corporation Stanley C. Gault '48, Retired CEO, Goodyear and Rubbermaid Earl "Bud" Wendell '50, Retired President and CEO, Gaylord Entertainment David D. Dowd '51, U.S. District Court Judge Robert H. Atwell '53, Former President, American Council on Education Jerrold K. Footlick '56, Former Senior Editor, Newsweek Gary S. Grimes '58, CEO, A.G. Spalding Company John P. Papp '60, Leading American Gastroenterologist Paul E. Gillmor '61, Majority Leader, Ohio Senate Richard Noble '64, Professor of Medical Ethics, Michigan S. Robson Walton '66, Chairman, Wal-Mart Foundation Timothy P. Smucker '67, Chairman, J.M. Smucker Company Stephen R. Donaldson '68, Best-Selling Author of Fantasy Novels Susan Q. Stranahan '68, Pulitzer Prize-Winning Journalist Solomon Oliver '69, U.S. District Court Judge Larry Shyatt '73, Head Basketball Coach, Clemson Erie Mills '75, International Opera Star Blake Moore '80, Attorney; Former NFL Offensive Lineman Vince Cellini '81, Anchor, The Golf Channel Mary Neagoy '83, Senior Vice President, Communications, Nickelodeon

330/263-2189 330/263-2173 330/263-2503 330/263-2300 330/263-2286 330/263-2579 330/263-2297 330/263-2374 330/263-2209 330/263-2349 330/263-2499 330/263-2537 330/263-2190 330/287-3000 x4466 330/287-3000 x4477 330/287-3000 x4469 330/263-2000 Keith Beckett Director of Athletics

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Brenda Meese Assistant Director of Athletics


A Quick Look at Wooster Name: The College of Wooster Location: Wooster, Ohio 44691 Founded: 1866 President: Grant H. Cornwell Enrollment: 1,800 (850 men, 950 women) Student/Faculty Ratio: 11/1 Colors: Black and Old Gold Nickname: Fighting Scots Varsity Sports: 23 (11 men, 12 women) Affiliation: NCAA Division III

Athletics Staff Baseball

Football

Soccer (W)

Basketball (M)

Golf (M)

Softball (W)

2011: 22-17, fourth in NCAC Coach: Tim Pettorini Office Phone: 330/263-2180 tpettorini@wooster.edu 2011: 31-3, NCAC Champion Coach: Steve Moore Office Phone: 330/263-2176 smoore@wooster.edu

Basketball (W)

2011: 3-22, eighth in NCAC Coach: Ashley Reid Office Phone: 330/263-2181 areid@wooster.edu

2010: 5-5, third in NCAC (tie) Coach: Mike Schmitz Office Phone: 330/263-2177 mschmitz@wooster.edu 2011: fifth in NCAC Coach: Rich Danch Office Phone: 330/263-2170 rdanch@wooster.edu

Golf (W)

2011: third in NCAC Coach: Lisa Campanell Komora Office Phone: 330/263-2174 lcampanell@wooster.edu

2010: 11-6-2, NCAC Champion Coach: David Brown Office Phone: 330/263-2503 dvbrown@wooster.edu 2011: 14-20, fifth in NCAC Coach: Lori Schimmel Office Phone: 330/263-2679 lschimmel@wooster.edu

Swimming & Diving (M)

2011: fifth in NCAC Coach: Rob Harrington Office Phone: 330/263-2178 rharrington@wooster.edu

Cross Country (M)

Lacrosse (M)

Swimming & Diving (W)

Cross Country (W)

Lacrosse (W)

Tennis (M)

Field Hockey

Soccer (M)

Tennis (W)

2010: eighth in NCAC Coach: Dennis Rice Office Phone: 330/263-2175 drice@wooster.edu 2010: sixth in NCAC Coach: Dennis Rice Office Phone: 330/263-2175 drice@wooster.edu 2010: 16-6, second in NCAC Coach: Brenda Meese Office Phone: 330/263-2173 bmeese@wooster.edu

2011: 5-9, fourth in NCAC Coach: Carl Festa Office Phone: 330/263-2509 cfesta@wooster.edu 2011: 10-6, second in NCAC Coach: Liz Ford Office Phone: 330/263-2182 eford@wooster.edu 2010: 6-7-3, ninth in NCAC Coach: Graham Ford Office Phone: 330/263-2348 gford@wooster.edu

2011: fourth in NCAC Coach: Rob Harrington Office Phone: 330/263-2178 rharrington@wooster.edu

Track & Field (M)

2011: ind - eighth in NCAC out - eighth in NCAC Coach: Dennis Rice Office Phone: 330/263-2175 drice@wooster.edu

Track & Field (W)

2011: ind - sixth in NCAC out - fourth in NCAC Coach: Dennis Rice Office Phone: 330/263-2175 Personal Phone: 330/264-9421 drice@wooster.edu

Volleyball (W)

2010: 18-14, third in NCAC Coach: Sarah Davis Office Phone: 330/263-2172 sadavis@wooster.edu

2011: 4-18, eighth in NCAC Coach: Hayden Schilling Office Phone: 330/263-2452 hschilling@wooster.edu 2011: 7-13, seventh in NCAC Coach: Hayden Schilling Office Phone: 330/263-2637 hschilling@wooster.edu

Web Site - www.woosterathletics.com President: Grant H. Cornwell - gcornwell@wooster.edu

Asst. Director of Athletics: Nate Whitefield - nwhitfield@wooster.edu

Director of Athletics: Keith Beckett - kbeckett@wooster.edu

Faculty Rep: John Ramsay - jramsay@wooster.edu

Asst. Director of Athletics: Brenda Meese - bmeese@wooster.edu

Faculty Rep: Shelley Judge - sjudge@wooster.edu

Asst. Director of Athletics: David Brown - dvbrown@wooster.edu

Sports Information Director: Hugh Howard - hhoward@wooster.edu

Asst. to Athletic Director: Meghan Horn - mhorn@wooster.edu

Athletic Trainer (ATC): Tom Love - tlove@wooster.edu

29


NCAC History The fall of 1984 launched the first playing season for the experiment called the North Coast Athletic Conference, a new playing conference in the NCAA’s Division III. The Conference’s new principles and goals were revolutionary in the conservative world of college athletics at the time. As we mark the NCAC’s 28th year of operation, the Conference, with its strong commitment to equity and excellence, has been a model to change the face of college athletics at all levels in the NCAA. That leadership in the early 1980s has also trickled down and changed the face of sports programs at the high school level. Most prominent was the NCAC’s stance, written into the preamble of its constitution, that women’s sports would have equity with men’s sports. Except for a few conferences that had just added women’s sports (like the Big Ten in 1983), the NCAC was the first to state that this was a key goal of operation. Hard to believe today, but in 1984, most every conference was setup for men’s college sports only—and then, just for football and men’s basketball. NCAC members withdrew from conferences that resisted adding women’s sports. NCAC founders decided that women’s sports and all sports were important to their colleges and stated so in their new constitution (there are now 23 NCAC sports). As a result, the NCAC emphasized all sports, including swimming, soccer, field hockey, and volleyball, in addition to football and men’s basketball. This also was wildly revolutionary. Some of the major results of these decisions was that coaching staffs had to be increased, fields and facilities expanded and the overall budgets of NCAC colleges jumped dramatically. These proactive positions were well ahead of the punitive nature of the Title IX debate, which came in the later 1980s. College Presidents made these decisions, along with key input

from their men’s and women’s athletic administrators and faculty athletic representatives. There is no way these advances could have been made without the commitment of these NCAC presidents. Presidential leadership was another key principle of the NCAC. This also was rather rare in those days and still is, even today. However, it was the strength of the presidents and their commitment to adding programs, adding budget, and adding facilities, which set the NCAC apart from its competition. Athletic and academic excellence have not only survived in the NCAC model, they have prospered. Early skeptics labeled the NCAC noncompetitive because of its high academics and new principles. How could academically selective colleges, such as the NCAC members, compete with other conferences and in NCAA Championships? The answer is 58 NCAA National Championships in 27 playing seasons. Each year the NCAC is strongly represented in NCAA post-season competition. Whether it is the College of Wooster’s baseball and men's basketball teams going to the Division III Championship game in recent years or Ohio Wesleyan winning the men’s or women’s national soccer crown, or Allegheny winning the NCAA football title, or Kenyon’s incredible run of national swimming championships, the men's title broken by Denison after the Lords claimed 31 straight, the proof is there. The NCAC is one of the elite athletic conferences amongst the 41 in NCAA Division III, the association’s largest division. Consider that in its first six years, the NCAC won national titles in the traditional "power" sports of football (Allegheny, 1990) and men’s basketball (Ohio Wesleyan, 1988). NCAC men’s and women’s basketball squads have always done well in the national championship series. In addition to Ohio Wesleyan’s men’s title in 1988, both Wittenberg (1994) and Wooster (2003, 2007, 2011) have advanced to the Division III Final Four. Wittenberg has made more NCAA Tournament appearances than any other school in Division III. The success of Ohio Wesleyan’s women’s squad has been indicative of the emergence of that sport in the NCAC, as the Bishops advanced to the Women’s Division III Final Four in 2001. NCAC swimming and diving has dominated the national scene to an incredible degree. Kenyon College, under legendary coach Jim Steen, has been the equivalent, or better, of John Wooden’s UCLA national championship teams in Division I men’s basketball. While Wooden won eight straight NCAA titles, he pales somewhat to Steen’s squads, which have racked up 31 straight men’s titles and 23 women’s titles (17 consecutively). Denison broke the women's streak in 2001, then ended the men's in 2011 by one point. Kenyon has also added three national women’s tennis titles to the NCAC’s total of 58 to date. NCAC soccer has long been amongst the finest in the nation, with Ohio Wesleyan In a photo that appeared in Sports Illustrated in June, 2009, Wooster pitcher Mark Miller walks off the field as the University winning the men’s crown in 1998, after comof St. Thomas celebrates its national championship. The Fighting Scots tore through the tournament to reach the national championship game without dropping a game, only to lose twice to the Tommies, including the deciding title game that ing very close over the previous 15 years. Women’s soccer has developed at a faster went 12 innings. Wooster has twice finished runner-up in the NCAA Division III Baseball Championship. 30


serving on the founding Executive Committee of the NCAA in 1906, its first year. Wittenberg’s William Kinnison and Michele T. Myers and Dale Knobel of Denison also served on the Council. Five NCAC Administrators have served on the NCAA Management Council for Division III, the most notable being Al Van Wie, the retired Wooster athletic director, who also served as an NCAA Vice-President during his tenure, 198690. Founding Executive Director Dennis Collins served a four-year term (1992-1996), followed by former Allegheny Associate Athletic Director Maureen Hager (1997-99). Bob Malekoff, the former athletic director at Wooster, served a term and Bob Rosencrans, the former athletic director at Wittenberg, served a partial term in 1992. Garnett Purnell, Director of Athletics at Ohio Wesleyan claimed the NCAC's first NCAA women's soccer championship with a 1-0 defeat of Amherst in 2001. Wittenberg served a four-year term that ended The Battling Bishops repeated the feat in 2002, topping Messiah, 1-0. Shown above: Ohio Wesleyan celebrates the in 2010. 2002 title at Artificial Turf Stadium on the campus of Hobart and William Smith Colleges. The back-to-back NCAA Professor Jeff Ankrom, one of Wittenberg’s Division III titles were the first since the University of California at San Diego won from 1995-97. faculty athletic representatives, has been very active on NCAA committees, including a stint pace, with many good teams around the league, as Ohio Wesleyan won as a Vice President of the national Faculty Athletics Representatives Astwo national championships over the past decade. sociation. Several NCAC faculty representatives have also been active in Over the past 27 years, the NCAC has had great performances this national group. Ankrom is currently chair of the NCAA DIII Financial from its baseball squads (five in the World Series), men’s and women’s Aid Committee. The Conference has also been well represented on many lacrosse teams (in the national title games), and outstanding individual national committees, as numerous administrators and coaches have performances from golf and track stars. served on sports and legislative committees over the past 27 years. NCAC student-athletes are named to All-America teams on a regular basis, including some earning National Player of the Year honors, such Brian Nelson of the College of Wooster in Division III men’s basketball and Kenyon's Josh Mitchell in Division III men's swimming. Many NCAC coaches have been honored by their peers as National Coach of the Year, including Denison's Gregg Parini (2011) in men's swimming, Nan Carney-Debord (2001), former women’s basketball coach at Ohio Wesleyan and former OWU men’s basketball coach Gene Mehaffey (1988). Both Jay Martin and Bob Barnes of Ohio Wesleyan have also been honored as national soccer coaches of the year and there have been many others in the NCAC’s history. Coaches like Denison’ Keith Piper in football and Kenyon’s Steen are undoubtedly bound for their sport’s respective Halls of Fame. However, NCAC student-athletes give meaning to the word “student”. They are among the leaders, as a conference, in winning NCAA Post-Graduate Scholarships and in earning berths on the Academic All-America teams sponsored by the College Sports Information Directors Association. Beyond the steps taken for equity in athletics and the demon- Jim Steen, the highly successful Kenyon swimming coach, counsels his team at a recent NCAA Championship. Steen has coached his men's squads to 29 NCAA titles and the women strated athletic and academic excellence, the NCAC has produced to 21 - an astounding 50 championships. leaders at the NCAA level, which have fought for the Conference’s ideals at the national level. The bottom line is that the NCAC provides college athletic oppor Six NCAC Presidents have served on the NCAA’s Presidents Countunities for 5,000 student-athletes in 23 sports ‑ without the benefit of a cil, including Tom Chema, President of Hiram, who begins his first term major TV contract, and is funded directly from the regular college budget. this fall. Chema is the current president of the NCAC. Two of this group Beyond that, NCAC member colleges graduate nearly 85 percent of our have served as the national chairs of the Presidents Council. Thomas student-athletes each year. Courtice, President of Ohio Wesleyan, served as chair (2002) to end his four-year tenure (1998-2002) on the Council. His predecessor at OWU, David Warren, also served as chair during his term, 1988-92. This OWU service follows a tradition in the NCAA, with the Reverend Herbert Welch, 31


NCAC Timeline February, 1983 The formation of the NCAC is announced at joint news conferences in Cleveland, Columbus and Pittsburgh. Allegheny, Case Western Reserve, Denison, Kenyon, Oberlin, Ohio Wesleyan and Wooster are the seven charter members. Competition is slated to begin in the fall of 1984. Kenyon's Philip Jordan (far left) is elected first North Coast president. February, 1984 Dennis Collins of Cleveland is named NCAC executive director. April, 1984 The North Coast announces that it will sponsor championship competition in 21 sports, 11 for men and 10 for women, the most of any NCAA Division III conference at the time. October, 1984 The Oberlin women's cross country team wins the North Coast's first championship event, which is held at the Delaware Country Club. Vanessa Jones of Ohio Wesleyan is the individual champion. Within the next hour, Allegheny takes the men's title with Wooster's Todd Fach earning top individual honors. May, 1985 Wooster uses seven team titles and two second-place finishes to win the NCAC's first All-Sports championship. The North Coast completes its inaugural season with 14 of 21 champions ranked nationally. Kenyon takes national titles in men's and women's swimming to lead the way. October, 1985 In a battle of unbeaten teams, CWRU and Denison square off for the North Coast football championship. CBS films the game and clips are shown nationally during a feature

NCAC PRESIDENTS FLY THE FLAG: Presidents were the driving force behind the formation of the NCAC. Six of the seven original presidents are pictured here, including first NCAC President Phil Jordan (far left). Tournament. The Gator women also were selected for the NCAA Tournament. May 1987 Denison's Scott Shorney won the long jump championship at the NCAA Division III Championships. He also placed in five final events -- an unprecedented feat in the history of the Div. III Championship. Vince VanBurik of Case Western Reserve claimed the championship in the 800 meters ... Ohio Wesleyan hosts the NCAA Division III Golf Championship at Mansfield's Westbrook Country Club. The Bishops finished ninth, followed by Wooster in 10th ... Ohio Wesleyan men's lacrosse closes out its season with a 9-5 loss to Hobart in the NCAA Div. III Championship game.

BIG RED IN THE BIG APPLE: Denison's undefeated football season in 1985 helped establish national respect for the NCAC. Here, CBS sportscaster Brent Musburger ranks the North Coast champs with some pretty competitive programs. on "The NFL Today." Denison wins and goes on to an undefeated season, claiming the conference title and advancing into the NCAA playoffs -- all with the "archaic" single-wing offense. March, 1986 The NCAC hosts the NCAA Division III Swimming & Diving Championships in Canton. Kenyon sweeps the men's and women's titles. November 1986 Denison's Chris Spriggs set major and unique NCAA football record for all divisions. He became the first 4,000-yard rusher to pass for over 2,000 yards. March 1987 Allegheny men's basketball becomes the first NCAC squad invited to the NCAA Division III Men's Basketball

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Los Angeles Raiders. May, 1988 Wooster wins its third NCAC All-Sports championship in four years, withstanding spring surges from Kenyon and Ohio Wesleyan. June, 1988 Earlham and Wittenberg accept invitations to join the NCAC, pushing conference membership to nine schools in three states. The two schools will begin play in the fall of 1989.

December, 1987 Dick Schultz, newly elected executive director of the NCAA, makes a visit to an NCAC Presidents' Council meeting in Columbus. Schultz, as part of a six-month tour, spends two days with the North Coast brass. The visit is a rare Division III stop.

January, 1988 Wooster athletic director Al Van Wie is elected NCAA Division III vice president. George Andrews, professor of math at Oberlin, is named chairman of the NCAA's Faculty Representative Council for Division III. Denison women's athletic director Cheryl Marra is named to the NCAA Committee on Women's Athletics. March, 1988 Ohio Wesleyan wins the NCAA Division III championship in men's basketball. Bishop senior Scott Tedder is named national Player of the Year. April, 1988 Ohio Wesleyan's basketball team meets President Ronald Reagan in the Oval Office, a first for a Division III team in any sport ... CWRU's Erwin Grabisna is the first NCAC player to be chosen in the NFL draft. A 6-3, 250-pound defensive end, Grabisna is taken in the sixth round by the

NCAA MEETS NCAC: In a summit meeting of collegiate sports VIPs, newly-elected NCAA Executive Director Dick Schultz (right) visited the December, 1987 meeting of the NCAC Presidents' Council. Schultz is pictured here with then-NCAC President Andrew DeRocco of Denison.


August, 1988 Denison football standout Grant Jones is named NCAA College Division Academic All-American of the Year. March, 1989 Kenyon wins its 10th straight national championship in men's swimming, a feat never before accomplished by any team in any sport or NCAA division. Kenyon's women's swimmers claim their sixth consecutive national crown. Seven NCAC swim teams finish in the top 20 at the national meet. May, 1989 A contingent of Kenyon All-America swimmers meets President George Bush at the White House ... Ohio Wesleyan wins its first NCAC All-Sports title, breaking Wooster's grip on the trophy by taking championships in four of eight spring sports. September, 1989 Earlham and Wittenberg begin playing full NCAC schedules. The NCAC now has nine members spanning three states. January, 1990 David Warren, president of Ohio Wesleyan and the NCAC, is elected chair of the NCAA Presidents' Commission Division III Subcommittee. In this position, Warren serves as the primary spokesman for Division III. March, 1990 Oberlin's Ann Gilbert leads the nation in scoring, becoming the third woman in Division III basketball history to average 30 points per game ... Wittenberg wins its first North Coast title, posting a 29-2 record in men's basketball. May, 1990 Ohio Wesleyan's Keith Rucker and the CWRU duo of Sheila Ballado and Kevin Luthy win individual titles in the shot put, 100-meter hurdles and decathlon, respectively, at the NCAA Track & Field Championships. December, 1990 Allegheny's football team caps an extraordinary season by claiming the NCAA Division III championship with a 21-14 victory against Lycoming in the Amos Alonzo Stagg Bowl. The Gators finish 13-0-1 under the direction of first-year head coach Ken O'Keefe.

January, 1991 Led by Division III Vice President Al Van Wie, the NCAC heads a broad-based group at the NCAA Convention in an effort to eliminate multi-divisional classification in NCAA sports, including the participation of Division I programs in Division III football. April, 1991 The NCAC institutes the Scholar-Athlete Award, which will annually honor one male and one female student-athlete from each North Coast school for outstanding academic and athletic achievement. May, 1991 Ohio Wesleyan becomes the first NCAC member to claim three consecutive All-Sports championships. October, 1991 Kenyon's Becky Little is one of 10 finalists for the NCAA Woman of the Year award. Little, an All-America swimmer and 1991 magna cum laude graduate, had earlier been named Ohio's Woman of the Year. November, 1991 Oberlin basketball standout Ann Gilbert is named Honda Division III Athlete of the Year. The Honda award is the most notable honor in Division III women's athletics ... Three NCAC men's soccer teams receive NCAA Tournament berths for the second consecutive year. North Coast champ Ohio Wesleyan caps a 22-2 season with a trip to the national semifinals. December, 1991 The NCAC is instrumental in the formation of the Intercollegiate Officiating Association, an alliance of NCAA Division III institutions that will oversee all aspects of officiating for its membership. January, 1992 Ohio Wesleyan's Keith Rucker becomes the first Division III football player to participate in the Hula Bowl, an all-star game for outstanding college seniors. March, 1992 Kenyon runs its string of national swim titles to 13 for men and nine for women. North Coast entries win 27 of 40 events and a total of eight NCAC men's and women's squads post top-20 finishes.

WE'RE NUMBER ONE: Head coach Ken O'Keefe and his squad celebrate Allegheny's 21-14 win over Lycoming in the 1990 Amos Alonzo Stagg Bowl. May, 1992 NCAC Executive Director Dennis Collins is appointed to the NCAA Council ... Ohio Wesleyan uses six top-three finishes in the spring to overcome a four-point deficit and win its fourth consecutive NCAC All-Sports crown ... A group of 34 recently graduated student-athletes from seven NCAC institutions spend 10 days touring and playing football in Russia. The trip features an exhibition game with the semi-pro Moscow Bears. The NCAC squad posts a 50-0 victory. September, 1992 Ohio Wesleyan's Keith Rucker becomes the first NCAC player to participate in a regular-season NFL game when his Phoenix Cardinals play at Tampa Bay. Rucker earns a starting role on the defensive line by mid-season. October, 1992 Denison football coach Keith Piper celebrates his 71st birthday by becoming the 24th coach in NCAA history to record 200 wins and just the 14th to do so at one school. Piper, renowned for employing the single wing, an offensive set that all but disappeared from collegiate and professional football in the early 1950s, reaches the milestone with a 29-24 victory at home against Earlham. November, 1992 Seven NCAC squads receive invitations to the NCAA Soccer Championships. Ohio Wesleyan's men advance to the national semifinals for the third consecutive season. January, 1993 Denison President Michele Tolela Myers is elected to a four-year term on the NCAA Presidents' Commission. March, 1993 Kenyon's Kelley Wilder claims an NCAA indoor track championship in the 1500-meter run. Wilder goes on to win the 1500 at the outdoor nationals, becoming the third woman in Division III history to win both events.

OWU CAGERS MEET REAGAN: With its NCAA Division III championship in 1988, the Ohio Wesleyan men's basketball team rode a crest of national recognition. Here, the Bishop entourage is congratulated by President Ronald Reagan. Ohio Wesleyan was the first Division III champion to be honored with a visit to the White House.

May, 1993 Kenyon gives the NCAC another Division III team title, cruising to the national championship in women's tennis. The Ladies top Gustavus Adolphus, 7-2, in the finals to cap a 25-1 season.

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NCAC Timeline the third NCAC student-athlete to earn the award in four years, joining Oberlin's Ann Gilbert (1991) and Kenyon's Jennifer Carter (1993). March, 1995 Kenyon continues to dominate NCAA swimming & diving, winning its 16th consecutive men's championship and 12th straight women's crown. Senior Carla Ainsworth wins three individual events and is named national Swimmer of the Year for the third time ... CWRU's Leslie Kindling wins the NCAA high jump title to become the North Coast's fourth indoor track & field national champion. April, 1995 Kenyon's Carla Ainsworth is one of two recipients of the 1995 Walter Byers Scholarship, one of the most prestigious honors bestowed by the NCAA. Ainsworth is the only Division III student-athlete among eight finalists ... Oberlin claims the North Coast women's lacrosse crown, snapping Denison's streak of 10 straight titles and leaving Kenyon's men's and women's swim squads as the only teams to claim every NCAC championship. May, 1995 Wooster edges Wittenberg, Allegheny and six-time defending champ Ohio Wesleyan to win its fourth NCAC All-Sports title. Only 3.5 points separate the top four schools ... Kenyon claims its second NCAA women's tennis crown with a 5-4 win over UC-San Diego. October, 1995 Earlham wins the NCAC men's cross country crown for the school's first North Coast title. HAPPY ANNIVERSARY: Donna Lopiano, then executive director of the Women's Sports Foundation, was the featured speaker at the North Coast's 10th anniversary dinner in February, 1994. Lopiano addressed the significant leadership role played by the NCAC in increasing athletic opportunities for girls and women in sport. August, 1993 The NCAC kicks off its 10th season of competition with the release of 10th anniversary all-star teams in all 21 sports. February, 1994 The NCAC sponsors a dinner in conjunction with National Girls & Women in Sport Day. The event, which draws a sellout crowd of 375, is the focal point of the North Coast's 10th anniversary celebration. Donna Lopiano, executive director of the Women's Sports Foundation, is the featured speaker. April, 1994 Denison secures its 10th straight NCAC women's lacrosse title, joining Kenyon's swim teams as the only 10-time conference champions. May, 1994 Ohio Wesleyan edges Denison by 1.5 points to claim its sixth straight All-Sports championship ... CWRU's Bill Sudeck becomes the first coach to win NCAC championships in cross country, indoor track and outdoor track in the same season. August, 1994 Oberlin tennis standout Carl Erikson is named GTE Academic All-American of the Year.

December, 1995 A crew of football officials from the NCAC is selected to work the Amos Alonzo Stagg Bowl for the second time in four years. January, 1996 Kenyon graduate Carla Ainsworth is honored as one of the NCAA's Top Eight award winners. Other 1996 recipients include Olympic swimmer Jenny Thompson and women's basketball standout Rebecca Lobo.

March, 1997 Ohio Wesleyan's Kris Sanders wins the pole vault at the NCAC Indoor Track & Field Championships, marking the first time the women's event is officially scored at a collegiate conference championship. April, 1997 The NCAC announces that it will sponsor softball as its 22nd championship sport beginning with the 1997-98 academic year. The North Coast's 11 women's sports ranks fourth among the 88 conferences in all three divisions of the NCAA. The NCAC's 22 total sports ranks sixth overall. May, 1997 Kenyon claims its third NCAA Division III women's tennis title with a 6-3 win over Trinity (Texas) ... Wooster caps a 46-8-1 season in baseball with a second-place finish in the NCAA Tournament. The Scots break the Division III record for home runs (104). Ohio Wesleyan's Soni Lloyd wins the 200-meter dash at the NCAA Track & Field Championships to become the North Coast's 11th national champion in outdoor track. November, 1997 Wittenberg senior volleyball standouts Kim Woodring and Beth Nowicki break NCAA Division III career records for kills and assists, respectively. The players share NCAC Player of the Year honors as the Tigers post an impressive 34-4 record and claim their second North Coast title in three years. Allegheny, Wittenberg and Wooster compile 9-1 records during the regular season to forge the first tri-championship in NCAC football history. January, 1998 Ohio Wesleyan and NCAC president Tom Courtice is elected to a four-year term on the NCAA Division III Presidents' Council. The 11-member Council governs all operations within Division III.

February, 1996 Gene Mehaffey of Ohio Wesleyan becomes the 11th men's basketball coach in NCAA history to win 500 games when his Bishops top Wooster in the quarterfinals of the NCAC Tournament. May, 1996 Wittenberg rolls to a record 146 points on the way to its first NCAC All-Sports title. October, 1996 The NCAC unveils its first web site, which provides information about the conference and its members. November, 1996 Wittenberg volleyball standout Kim Woodring breaks the NCAA Division III single-season record for kills (821) ... Kenyon drops a 2-1 decision in four overtimes to New Jersey in the finals of the NCAA Men's Soccer Championships.

October, 1994 Ohio Wesleyan's Jay Martin becomes the 20th collegiate men's soccer coach to win 300 games.

January, 1997 Allegheny associate athletics director Maureen Hager is appointed to a two-year term on the newly created NCAA Division III Management Council.

November, 1994 Kenyon swim sensation Carla Ainsworth (right) is named Honda Division III Athlete of the Year for 1994. She is

February, 1997 Denison's men upset Kenyon at the NCAC Swimming & Diving Championships, snapping

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the Lords' streak of 43 consecutive conference championships. Kenyon's women win their 13th straight title.

SWIM KINGS: Matt Miller celebrates Kenyon's win in the 400-yard freestyle relay at the 1997 NCAA Division III Swimming & Diving Championships. The Lords won an unprecedented 31 consecutive NCAA titles from 1980-2010.


March, 1998 Case Western Reserve, a charter member of the NCAC, announces that it will leave the conference following the 1998-99 academic year. The Spartans will compete on a full-time basis in the University Athletic Association ... Kenyon extends its streaks of consecutive NCAA Division III men's and women's swim crowns to 19 and 15, respectively. No other men's and women's teams in NCAA history -- any sport, any division -- have won as many consecutive titles. Junior Marisha Stawiski wins three individual events and is named Swimmer of the Year. April, 1998 Wittenberg sweeps a doubleheader from Kenyon in the first softball contests in NCAC history. Allegheny, CWRU and Denison also field teams in the sport's first season of conference competition. Allegheny wins four of five North Coast games to claim the inaugural NCAC title. May, 1998 Denison posts top-four finishes in 18 of 22 sports to claim the NCAC All-Sports championship for the first time since 1985-86 ... Kenyon falls just short of a successful defense of its NCAA women's tennis title, placing second at the national tournament. Erin Hockman and Caryn Cuthbert win the Division III doubles championship for the Ladies; Cuthbert places second nationally in singles. November, 1998 Ohio Wesleyan claims the NCAC's first NCAA Division III men's soccer championship with a 2-1 double-overtime win over Greensboro. It is the Bishops' second Division III national crown. December, 1998 Hiram and Wabash accept invitations to join the NCAC, pushing conference membership to 10 schools in three states. May, 1999 Denison claims its second consecutive NCAC All-Sports championship and its third overall with top-three finishes in 17 of 22 sports. March, 2000 Kenyon swimming extends its national championship run to 21 straight for the men and 17 for the women. A total of 63 men's and women's swimmers from 12 North Coast squads earned 174 all-American honors.

WABASH MAKES IT 10: Wabash College and Hiram College accepted invitations to become members of the North Coast Athletic Conference in December of 1998, to bring the NCAC to 10 members. Pictured here are (left to right) are Thomas B. Courtice, president of Ohio Wesleyan University and the NCAC, Andrew T. Ford, president of Wabash College and Dennis Collins, executive director of the NCAC. This photo was taken following a news conference in downtown Indianapolis on December 21, 1998; Earlier that day, a news conference was held in downtown Cleveland to announce Hiram as a new NCAC member. May, 2000 Denison wins a third consecutive NCAC All-Sports championship. The Big Red posted top-two finishes in 14 sports, including six titles - in women's cross country, field hockey, women's indoor track, women's lacrosse, men's lacrosse and men's tennis. October, 2000 Ohio Wesleyan capped their 2000 campaign with a perfect run through the inaugural NCAC Women's Soccer Tournament. In the semifinals, Ohio Wesleyan held off Denison, 1-0. The Bishops then used another 1-0 score to beat tournament runner-up Allegheny in the final. The Gators had defeated Wittenberg, 2-0, in their semifinal game. November, 2000 Ohio Wesleyan men's soccer had a perfect run through the inaugural NCAC Men's Soccer Tournament. In the

semifinals, Ohio Wesleyan held off Denison, 3-0. The Bishops then went one better, defeating tournament runner-up Earlham, 4-0, in the final. The Quakers had defeated Allegheny, 2-0, in their semifinal game. February, 2001 The Ohio Wesleyan women's basketball team advances to the NCAA Division III national semifinals, becoming the first team in NCAC history to advance to that point in the national playoffs. The Battling Bishops finished third in the nation after defeating Emmanuel in the third-place game, capping a postseason run filled with comebacks and nailbiting finishes. Ohio Wesleyan won its third consecutive NCAC championship. Head Coach Nan Carney-DeBord is named NCAA Division III Coach of the Year. January, 2001 Wooster Athletics Director Bob Malekoff is appointed to a two-year term on the NCAA Division III Management Council. March, 2001 Kenyon men's swimming extends its national championship run to 22 straight. Denison women's swimming claims its first-ever national championship in any sport and ended Kenyon's championship run at 17. May, 2001 Denison opened the inaugural NCAC softball tournament with a 3-0 win over Wittenberg. The Big Red advanced through the tournament and won the title with a 2-0 win over Wooster in the final. May, 2001 Denison wins fourth consecutive and fifth overall NCAC All-Sports championship. The Big Red's championship campaign featured six NCAC titles -- outright crowns in women's cross country, women's indoor track & field, women's lacrosse, men's tennis and softball, plus a cochampionship in field hockey.

A DAY AT THE PARK: The NCAC held its annual President's Dinner at Jacobs Field, in 2005. Hiram President Thomas Chema (pictured above, left) hosted the conference athletic administrators, faculty representatives and others in a loge during a Cleveland Indians game. Denison President, Dale Knobel (pictured, right) threw out the game's first pitch. Chema and Knobel shared a moment with Indians mascot, Slider, before the game.

November, 2001 Ohio Wesleyan claims NCAC's first NCAA women's soccer crown with a 1-0 defeat of Amherst. Akeya Terrell was named the Most Outstanding Defensive Player of the tournament.

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NCAC Timeline Denison tied Ohio Wesleyan for the most All-Sports trophies earned consecutively (six) ... Wittenberg's Skip Ivery wins t h e 11 0 - m e t e r high hurdles at the NCAA Division III Outdoor Track and Field Championship Meet at St. Lawrence University in Canton, NY. Wittenberg placed ninth place as a team, the program’s highest finish ever. August, 2003 The North Coast Ohio Wesleyan coach Jay Martin came very close to winning a national championship for Athletic Confermany years. He finally landed the Battling Bishops', and the NCAC's, first NCAA men's soccer ence kicks off its year-long 20th Anchampionship in 1998. niversary celebration. The league February, 2002 named 20th anniversary teams in each of its 22 chamAllegheny's Phil Ness and Kenyon's Suzanne Helfant pionship sports. join Sara DeCosta, Herman Edwards, Jeff Gordon, David Robinson and Dara Torres as 2002 Sports Ethics Fellows. September, 2003 The Institute for International Sport selects Sports Ethics Kenyon's Ashley Rowatt is named the NCAA Woman of the Fellows to recognize those individuals who consistently Year for the state of Ohio. The award, which is presented demonstrate an interest in promoting the ideals of ethics to just one woman in each of the fifty states, honors and fair play in sport and society. outstanding female student-athletes who have excelled in academics, athletics and community leadership, and have May, 2002 completed their collegiate athletics eligibility. Denison wins fifth straight and sixth overall NCAC AllSports championship. Denison posted top-two finishes November, 2003 in 12 of 22 sports. Kenyon's Ashley Rowatt is named NCAA Woman of The Year. She is November, 2002 the first Division III athlete to earn the Ohio Wesleyan wins a second straight NCAA women's award, and also the first swimmer. soccer title with a 1-0 win over Messiah ... After earning the 2002 NCAC Field Hockey Championship at the concluFebruary, 2004 sion of the regular season, Wittenberg swept undefeated Denison women's swimming wins throught the inaugural NCAC Field Hockey Tournament and their first NCAC swimming and Ashley Rowatt claimed the title with a 6-2 win over Wooster ... Wabash diving championship. The Big Red wins the NCAC football championship, its first in any sport are only the second team to win a since joining the league in 1999 ... Wabash and Wittenberg league title since the NCAC's first faced off in the second round of the NCAA football playoffs, championship in 1985. marking the first time two NCAC teams qualified for the tournament. March, 2004 Kenyon men's swimming stretches its national championFebruary, 2003 ship run to 25 straight. The Kenyon women claimed their Wooster men's basketball finishes third at the NCAA tour20th overall national title ... Denison's Lynn Schweizer joins nament. Bryan Nelson is named NABC Division III Player Bill Buckner, Chris Drury, Kristine Lilly and Michael Phelps of the Year ... Earlham's Jill Butcher joins Lance Armstrong, as 2004 Sports Ethics Fellows. Marion Jones, Ross Powers and Robin Roberts as 2003 Sports Ethics Fellows. May, 2004 Denison wins an unprecedented seventh straight NCAC March, 2003 All-Sports Trophy, bringing their total to eight - more than Kenyon men's swimming extends its national championany other conference school. Denison posted top-two ship run to 24 straight. The Kenyon women claimed their finishes in 10 of 22 sports. 19th national title ... Allegheny's Jeremy Scott sets an Ohio College record in the pole vault with a leap of 18' 2 September, 2004 3/4" at the NCAC Indoor Track & Field Championships. Wooster's Kayla Heising is named is named the NCAA A week earlier, he jumped 18' 8", a personal best, at the Woman of the Year for the state of Ohio. She is also US Track & Field Indoor Championships. He finished in one of 10 finalists for the national NCAA Woman of the second place, earning a berth on the US Team that would Year award. compete at the World Championships in England. At the time, Scott was ranked third in the US and 10th in the November, 2004 world in the pole vault. The Denison women's cross country team earns its first berth in the NCAC Division III Championship and finishes May 2003 eighth in the 24-team field. Denison wins its sixth straight, and seventh overall, NCAC All-Sports championship. The Big Red have won more AllMarch, 2005 Sports championships than any other conference school. The Kenyon men win their 26th consecutive NCAA Division

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III swimming & diving championship ... Ohio Wesleyan's Roger Ingles is named a 2005 Sports Ethics Fellow. The list of Sports Ethics Fellows for 2005 is called “A Celebration of Division III,” and recognizes 12 individuals who consistently demonstrate an interest in promoting the ideals of ethics and fair play in sport and society ... The NCAC announces they will upgrade football officiating crews in the fall of 2005, when the conference will field seven-man officiating crews. May, 2005 Denison wins its eighth-straight NCAC All-Sports Trophy, bringing their total to nine - more than any other conference school. Denison posted 11 top-two finishes in 22 sports. July, 2005 The NCAC and the University Athletic Association agree to play each other in a non-conference football scheduling agreement, which will begin in the fall of 2008 and continue through 2009. Nineteen games involving NCAC-UAA matchups are scheduled for 2008 and the home sites will flip for the same 19 matchups the following year. Thirteen members from the two conferences are involved. This agreement is considered historic because collegiate conferences in football do not, as a rule, cross schedule with an organized agreement. August, 2005 Denison's Jill Boo is named the NCAA Woman of the Year for the state of Ohio. October, 2005 Ohio Wesleyan claims its 100th NCAC championship when the men's soccer team completes its perfect 9-0 campaign. The Battling Bishops lead all NCAC teams with 100 conference championships since the league began play in 1984. November, 2005 Hiram claims the NCAC volleyball championship, its first in any sport since joining the league in 1999. February, 2006 The NCAC broadcasts its men's basketball tournament over the internet. Audio broadcasts of the women's tournament games was also provided ... Wooster senior Kyle Witucky was named one of 16 finalists for the 2006 Bob Cousy Award. March, 2006 The NCAA announced former Kenyon great Carla Ainsworth was selected as the Division III Most Outstanding Swimmer over the past 25 years of NCAA championship competition. The honor was bestowed in conjunction with the NCAA's celebration surrounding the 25th Anniversary of Women's Championships ... The Kenyon men win their 27th consecutive NCAA Swimming & Diving Championship. Senior Andrejs Duda is named 2006 Swimmer of the Year. Denison head coach Gregg Parini is named Coach of the Year after the Big Red turn in a second-place finish ... Wittenberg men's basketball reaches the championship game of the NCAA Division III Men's Basketball Tournament. The Tigers lead the entire game, but fall, 59-56, in the final two seconds on a three-point shot by Virginia Wesleyan. Tiger seniors Dane Borchers and Daniel Russ were each named to the all-tournament team ... Wooster's Alpha A. Alexander was selected by the NCAA as one of its "100 Most Influential Student-Athletes," a highly-prestigious list, part of the year-long NCAA Centennial Celebration (1906-2006). May, 2006 Denison wins its ninth-straight NCAC All-Sports Trophy, bringing their total to 10 - more than any other conference school. Denison posted 10 top-two finishes, and claimed seven championships, in 22 sports. June, 2006 Denison Athletic Director Larry Scheiderer was selected


NCAA Division III Swimming & Diving Championship. Since 1980, Division III has known no other swimming title-holder ... The Kenyon women won their 21st NCAA Division III swimming & diving championship, and their first since 2004 ... Wooster advanced to the semifinals of the NCAA Div. III men's basketball tournament for the second time in five years. The Fighting Scots finished fourth. May, 2007 Ohio Wesleyan wins its seventh overall NCAC All-Sports Trophy, and first since the 1993-94 season. The Battling Bishops' win halts the nine-year streak of championships posted by runner-up Denison. OWU posted 10 top-two finishes, and claimed six championships, in 22 sports.

The Denison doubles combination of Marta Drane and Kristin Cobb advanced to the Division III Doubles Championship match in 2008. They made the national semifinals in 2009 and 2010 as well. The duo was named First Team All-NCAC three times, and Drane was voted conference player of the year in 2010. as the 2005-06 GeneralSports TURF Systems AD of the Year for the central region of NCAA Division III. September 2006 The NCAC announces it is joining with virtually all of the NCAA Division III athletic conferences to roll out a Sportsmanship/Fan Behavior initiative for the 2006-07 academic year. The NCAC mission statement reads: In a unified effort to promote respect for student-athletes, coaches and officials in intercollegiate athletics, the North Coast Athletic Conference and its 10 member institutions pledge their commitment to build positive spirit in the stands and on the fields of our athletic events. The initiative's slogan: Be Loud * Be Proud * Be Positive was featured on items such as banners and signs at NCAC-member athletic facilities. October, 2006 The Oberlin women won their second NCAC Cross Country Championship, and first since the inaugural event was contested in 1984. The Yeowomen are in the books for winning the first championship in NCAC history. November, 2006 NCAC champion Ohio Wesleyan advanced to the semifinals of the NCAA Division III Men's Soccer Tournament, before falling 1-0 to Wheaton. The game featured two of the winningest coaches ever in college men's soccer. OWU's Jay Martin reached the 500-win mark during his 29th season as a head coach, a feat unsurpassed in the annals of college men's soccer, while Wheaton's Joe Bean was the first college men's soccer coach to reach the 600-win mark. Their combined total of 1121 wins is believed to be the most among two coaches in one game in the history of college soccer. The Bishops made their NCAA-record 29th NCAA appearance ... Denison suffered a 1-0, double overtime loss to unbeaten Calvin in the Sectional round of the NCAA Div. III Women's Soccer Tournament. It was the second consecutive season that the Big Red had advanced to the round of 16 ... For the second straight year, NCAC champion Wittenberg (35-8) fell to eventual champion Juniata in the semifinal round of the NCAA Div. III Volleyball Tournament. Emily Bell became just the second player in Wittenberg or NCAC history to earn a spot on the NCAA Division III All-Tournament team after the Tigers' Emily Dixon was so recognized in 2005. March, 2007 The Kenyon men won their NCAA-record 28th straight

November, 2007 The Allegheny men's cross country team placed seventh of 32 teams at the NCAA Division III championships, held at St. Olaf College ... The Ohio Wesleyan men's soccer team earned their record 30th berth in the NCAA Tournament. The Battling Bishops bowed out in the second round after tying Transylvania, 0-0 in double overtime and then falling 4-3 in penalty kicks ... Wittenberg volleyball advanced to the semifinals of the NCAA Tournament for the third straight year. The Tigers entered the semifinal match with a perfect 38-0 record, having only dropped six games the entire season. Wittenberg fell to eventual national champion Washington (Mo.) 25-30, 30-25, 30-28, 30-15 - the only game losses the Tigers had suffered in the 2007 postseason, conference and NCAA play included. January, 2008 The North Coast announces its Branch Rickey Initiative, a commitment to promoting the hiring and retention of administrators and coaches who bring racial diversity athletics departments. The Initiative honors Rickey, an Ohio Wesleyan alum who also coached and served as the athletic director at both OWU and Allegheny upon graduating from college. The Initiative was announced at the NCAC's Diversity Hiring and Title IX Workshop. March, 2008 The Kenyon men's and women's swim teams claimed matching NCAA championships. The Lords won their record 29th consecutive title, while the Ladies won their second straight and 22nd overall. The Ladies own the longest consecutive women's title streak at 17 (1984-2000). May, 2008 The Denison women's tennis team advances to the NCAA

Tournament semifinals for the first time. The Big Red dropped a 5-1 decision to defending national champion Washington & Lee in the semis, but then rebounded for a 5-2 victory over Pomona-Pitzer in the consolation game. The Denison doubles team of Marta Drane and Kristin Cobb advanced to the finals of the Div. III Doubles Championship. They fell 6-4, 6-3 in the final match ... Kenyon men's tennis advances to the NCAA Div. III Tournament quarterfinals for the first time. Lord sophomore Michael Greenberg, the NCAC Player of the Year, wins the Div. III men's singles championship with a 3-6, 6-4, 6-4 victory in the championship match. He was also named the ITA National and Central Region Player of the Year ... Ohio Wesleyan wins its second straight NCAC All-Sports Trophy after posting top-five finishes in 19 of 22 sports. The Battling Bishops collected six conference championships, as well as another six second-place finishes. The award is OWU's eighth overall. June, 2008 Denison's Erin Gorsich wins the inaugural Pam Smith NCAC Woman of the Year award. The award honors one female senior student-athlete based on academic achievement, athletics excellence, service and leadership ... Wabash Athletic Director Vernon Mummert was selected as the 2007-08 AstroTurf AD of the Year for the central region of NCAA Division III. The program recognizes athletic directors who have shown administrative excellence within the campus and/or college community for the current academic year. September 2008 The North Coast unveils its 25th anniversary logo and begins the 25th season of competition. The NCAC distributes commemorative items, plans to host a panel at the NCAA Convention and will have a celebration as part of the conference's annual meetings. January 2009 The NCAC partnered with the NCAA to sponsor a panel at the national convention entitled "Academics, Athletics and Today’s Sports Culture Expectations and Realities.� The panel featured New York Times columnist Bill Pennington, Denison president Dale Knobel and Ohio Wesleyan women's basketball coach Nan Carney-DeBord. March 2009 Oberlin and Ohio Wesleyan tie for the NCAC women's indoor track crown. The title is the first for the Yeowomen and the third straight, and eighth overall, for the Bishops. The co-champs are not only the first in the 25-year history of the women's event, but also in the history of track in the NCAC - men's or women's, indoors or out ... Kenyon's men's swimming team won its record 30th consecutive NCAA Division III title. The Ladies also claimed the DIII crown, their 23rd overall, and third consecutive. The Ladies own the longest consecutive women's title streak at 17 (1984-2000).

Kenyon sophomore Michael Greenberg won the NCAA III men's singles title in 2008. He was named the North Coast's Player of the year three times in his career, and was also named the ITA National and Central Region Player of the Year as a junior.

May 2009 Wooster baseball reaches the championship game of the NCAA Division III tournament before losing twice, and finishing second to St. Thomas ... Denison and Ohio Wesleyan tie for the All-Sports Championship. It is the first tie in the 25-year history of the conference ... The NCAC celebrated 25 years with a reception and dinner as part of the annual meetings, hosted by Ohio Wesleyan. OWU's men's soccer coach and former AD Jay Martin, and retired Battling Bishop coach and administrator Dick Gordin were featured speakers. Honored were 17 25-year verterans with Silver Anniversary Awards ... The Denison women's doubles team of Kristin Cobb and Marta Drane advance to

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NCAC Timeline President Mark H. Erickson is elected as Vice President … The NCAC announces DePauw University will become the 10th member of the conference, beginning with the 2011-12 season. August, 2010 Women’s golf kicks off its inaugural season as the NCAC’s 23rd sponsored championship sport. September, 2010 The NCAC launched its new website at www.northcoast.org … Thirty-four-year Ohio Wesleyan men’s soccer coach Jay Martin is inducted into the Ohio Soccer Hall of Fame. November, 2010 Oberlin cross country runner Joanna Johnson is named the Great Lakes Region Runner of the Year … The Ohio Wesleyan men’s soccer team and the Denison women’s soccer team both advanced to the quarterfinal round of the 2010 NCAA Tournament.

DENISON CLAIMS 12TH ALL-SPORTS AWARD: Denison representatives accept the 2011 Dennis M. Collins All-Sports Award, for the university's first all-sports title since 2008-09. From left to right are Assistant Athletic Director Sara Lee, President Dale Knobel, Athletic Director Larry Scheiderer, Associate Athletic Director Lynn Schweizer, Faculty Athletics Representative Sonya McKay and Faculty Athletics Representative Ted Burczak. the semifinals of the NCAA III doubles tournament ... For the first time since 2001, Denison's men's lacrosse team reaches the quarterfinals in the national tournament. June 2009 NCAC Executive Director Dennis Collins passes away. Collins helped found the conference in 1983 and served as its Executive Director for 25 years ... Kyle Holliday of Ohio Wesleyan wins the inaugural Don Hunsinger Award. The award honors one male senior student-athlete based on academic achievement, athletics excellence, service and leadership. July, 2009 NCAC Associate Executive Director Keri Alexander Luchowski is named Acting Executive Director of the North Coast in advance of a national search to fill the position. September, 2009 Kenyon's Tracy Menzel named one of nine finalists for the 2009 NCAA Woman of the Year Award. The Award, one of the most prestigious honors the NCAA bestows, recognizes senior student-athletes who have distinguished themselves throughout their collegiate careers in the areas of academic achievement, athletics excellence, service, Tracy Menzel and leadership ... Wooster announces the addition of women's golf, to begin play in the 2010-11 season. The sport will be the 23rd for the Fighting Scots athletic program. As a result, the NCAC will sponsor women's golf as its 23rd championship sport, beginng in 2010-11. October, 2009 Earlham announces it will depart the NCAC for the Heartland Collegiate Athletic Conference, beginning with the 2010-11 season. November, 2009 The Oberlin women's cross country team qualifies for the NCAA Division III championship meet as a team.

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December, 2009 The NCAC Presidents' Council approves a proposal to retain Earlham as an affiliate NCAC member in field hockey - the NCAC's first such member ... Wittenberg football advanced to the NCAA Division III quarterfinals, before falling to UW-Whitewater, 31-13. The loss was their first all season long. February, 2010 The women's basketball tournament Most Valuable Performer trophy is re-christened the Nan Nichols Award to honor the former women's basketball coach and administrator from Wooster who had an instrumental role in the formation of the NCAC.

December, 2010 Three with ties to the NCAC are inducted into the Ohio Basketball Hall of Fame, including Pam Evans Smith, Scott Tedder and the Ohio Wesleyan 1988 Men’s National Championship Team. February, 2011 Denison’s Katie Navarre is one of 13 recipients for the NCAA’s Women Enhancement Postgraduate Scholarship for Careers in Athletics. March, 2011 Denison’s Katie Navarre earns second NCAA postgraduate scholarship after being selected as one of 29 female recipients from the fall sports season for the prestigious NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship … Wabash wins its first NCAC Indoor Track & Field Championship ... Hiram announces the addition of men's and women's lacrosse. The teams will begin play in 2013 ... The Wooster men’s basketball

April, 2010 Ohio Wesleyan announces the addition of women's golf for the 2010-11 season. March, 2010 The Kenyon men claimed their record 31st consecutive national swimming & diving championship by a record margin, racking up 696 points after four days of competition. The title extends the longest streak in NCAA sports at any division in any sport ... Wabash's Mac Petty is awarded an NABC Guardian of the Game Award.

Mac Petty

May, 2010 Wittenberg claims its first NCAC men's lacrosse championship, sharing the title with Ohio Wesleyan ... Wittenberg wins its second All-Sports championship, and first since 1995-96. The Tigers posted top-five finishes in 18 of 22 sports. In 2009-10, award was named the Dennis M. Collins All-Sports Award in honor of the NCAC's first executive director, who passed away in 2009 ... Wittenberg golfer Jordan Millice wins an NCAA Elite 88 Award, given to the the student-athlete with the highest cumulative grade point average participating at the finals site for each of the association's 88 championships each year ... Oberlin hosts the 2010 NCAA Division III Men's Tennis Championships. June, 2010 Hiram College President Thomas V. Chema is named President of the NCAC, while Wittenberg University

Denison alum Katie Navarre was 2009 NCAC Outdooor Track Middle/Distance Athlete of the Year as well as the 2009 Cross Country Runner of the Year. During the 2010-11 academic year, she earned NCAA PostGraduate and Women's Enhancement scholarships, and was selected as the conference's Pam Smith Award winner. She was named one of 30 finalists for the NCAA Woman of the Year award.


team advances to the national championship game, falling to St. Thomas, 78-54. The second-place finish marked the Scots’ best finish in NCAA Tournament play … The Denison men claimed their first-ever national swimming & diving championship, ending 31-time national champion Kenyon's streak by one-point, 500.5-499.5. April, 2011 Ohio Wesleyan’s David Gatz was awarded a 2011 Walter Byers Postgraduate Scholarship. Recipients of the Walter Byers scholarship must have a grade-point average of at least 3.5, demonstrate evidence of superior character and leadership, and show that participation in athletics has been a positive influence on their personal and intellectual development. … Ohio Wesleyan Sports Information Director Mark Beckenbach was elected to be inducted into the CoSIDA Hall of Fame ... Wabash wins its first NCAC baseball championship. The Little Giants also earn their first trip to the NCAA Tournament ... Allegheny goes down in the record books as the first NCAC women's golf champion. Gator Hannah Schonau-Taylor is the championship

medalist; she also is named Player of the Year.

finishes in 18 of 23 sports.

May, 2011 Wabash wins its first NCAC Outdoor Track & Field Championship, completing the sweep of 2010-11 league track titles ... Wittenberg hosts, and wins, its first NCAA Div. III men's lacrosse tournament game. The Tigers topped Adrian, 8-7, in an overtime thriller ... The Denison women's and the Kenyon men's tennis teams capped their seasons with runs to the Quarterfinal rounds of their respective NCAA Div. III Tournament. Denison's Kristin Cobb is named an Arthur Ashe ITA award winner ... Wittenberg golfer Jordan Millice wins a second consescutive NCAA Elite 88 Award at the NCAA Div. III Men's Golf Championship. The award is given to the the student-athlete with the highest cumulative grade point average participating at the finals site for each of the association's 88 championships each year ... Ohio Wesleyan hosts the men's and women's 2011 NCAA Div. III Outdoor Track & Field Championships at Selby Field ... Denison wins its 12th all-sports championship. The Big Red totalled seven league titles and posted top-five

June, 2011 Keri Alexander Luchowski is named NCAC Executive Director after a national search. She served two years in an interim role and is only the second conference executive in league history ... Denison Athletic Director Larry Scheiderer is selected as the 2010-11 Under Armour AD of the Year for the central region of NCAA Division III. He earns the award for the second time. Larry Scheiderer August, 2011 Hiram's Tom Chema is named to the NCAA Division III Presidents Council ... DePauw announces it will add men's and women's lacrosse beginning with the 2013 season.

DENISON WINS NATIONAL TITLE, ENDS KENYON’S HISTORIC 31-YEAR STREAK On Saturday, March 26, 2011, the longest championship streak in the history of college sports came to an end as the Denison men’s swimming and diving team won its first-ever NCAA national title. In what was the closest swimming and diving meet in the history of the NCAA, at any level (Division I, II or III), Denison edged fellow NCAC member Kenyon by one point (500.5 to 499.5) to claim the championship trophy and end Kenyon’s 31-year stranglehold on the title. Pretty amazing when you consider that over 3,800 points are scored at the national meet. It all came down one point. It doesn’t get any closer than that. With Denison leading by nine points heading into the final event on the final day of the meet, the 400-yard freestyle relay, the Big Red knew they needed at least a third-place finish to come away with the team championship. Kenyon won the relay in dominating fashion. Denison managed to get the third-place they needed as freshman Spencer Fronk, swimming the anchor leg of the final race in his very first championship, out-touched Emory’s anchor at the wall to take the position by just 32 hundredths of a second. The 13 Denison swimmers Photo courtesy of Ben K. Moser and two divers set two national records and won four national event titles, while compiling 47 All-America swims and dives at the championship. The 16 Kenyon swimmers turned in one record perfomance, claimed fine event titles and posted 38 All-America swims. Denison and Kenyon are age-old rivals separated by just 24-miles of winding road in Central Ohio. They have boasted the top-two swimming and diving programs in the nation for the better part of 20 years. One common thread between both sides of the rivalry, Denison head coach Gregg Parini: • Parini, is a 1982 graduate of Kenyon College, where he swam for current Lords' skipper, Jim Steen. • Parini was a sophomore member of Kenyon’s first national championship in 1980, when the Lords' streak began. He would go on to become an 18-time All-American and a seven-time national champion at Kenyon. • Parini, who is entering his 25th year at Denison, accepted the head swimming position in 1987, and in 2001, his women’s swimming team ended Kenyon’s streak of 17-consecutive NCAA women’s swimming & diving national championships, which still stands as the longest consecutive championship streak at any level of women's college sports.

Dennis Collins, Executive Director 1984-2009 Dennis Collins became the first Executive Director of the North Coast Athletic Conference when the league began its inaugural playing season in 1984. For 25 years, he led one of the most successful conferences in all three divisions of the NCAA. Behind his leadership, the Conference provided quality intercollegiate experiences for more than 5,000 student-athletes annually in 22 championship sports.

Dennis Collins Executive Director 1984-2009

Collins was a respected national leader and had served as President of the NCAA Div. III Commissioners Association, a group he helped to organize in 1989. From 1992-1996, he served as a member of the NCAA Council, the national association’s equivalent of a board of directors. In the same period, he chaired the NCAA District IV Postgraduate Scholarship Committee, served on the Division Special Restructuring Taskforce and in 1999 and completed a six-year term on the NCAA Interpretations Committee. He was awarded the prestigious Meritorious Service Award from the Div. III Commissioners' Association in 2006. He was a founder of the Intercollegiate Officiating Association,

a cooperative amongst 27 NCAA/NAIA colleges that provides regional officiating services. Collins served 17 years as that group’s chief administrator. He served on Presidential Advisory/Visiting Committees at both Carnegie Mellon University and Bates College. He also served on the Games Committee of five Kickoff & Pigskin Classics, college football's opening games, between 1984 and 2002. Over the years, Collins guided two membership expansions of the Conference—one in 1988, adding Earlham and Wittenberg, and the addition of Hiram and Wabash Colleges in 1998. Prior to coming to the NCAC, Collins served five years as communications director for the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics. He also was sports information director/athletic-alumni director at Case Western Reserve University and news director/sports information director at Otterbein College. For an eight-year period, he operated his own firm, Collins Communications, which provided public relations and photographic services to regional and national clients such as the National Football League. He was a graduate of The Ohio State University with an undergraduate degree in journalism and served four years in the U.S. Coast Guard.

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NCAC Standings, 2010-11 Baseball Final Standings Member NCAC Overall 1. Wabash*................................. 9-5.............. 22-22 2. Ohio Wesleyan..................... 11-5.............. 25-16 3, Wittenberg.............................. 9-5.............. 20-18 4. Wooster . ............................... 9-4.............. 22-17 5. Denison.................................. 8-7.............. 16-20 6. Allegheny............................... 5-6.............. 16-14 7. Kenyon................................... 5-9.............. 13-17 8. Oberlin................................. 5-10.............. 16-23 9. Hiram.................................... 1-11................ 9-19 *Top four places determined by NCAC tournament Player of the Year: John Holm, WAB Pitcher of the Year: Mike Pereslucha, ALL Newcomer of the Year: Zack Mathie, WOO Coach of the Year: Tyler Mott, OWU & Jay Lewis, WIT NCAA Representatives: WAB

Men's Basketball Final Standings

Member NCAC Overall 1. Wooster*.............................. 14-2................ 31-3 2. Wittenberg . ......................... 12-3................ 20-9 3. Wabash................................ 11-5................ 20-6 Ohio Wesleyan..................... 11-5...............16-11 5. Hiram...................................... 8-8.............. 14-12 6. Kenyon................................. 5-10................ 9-16 7. Denison................................ 5-11................ 8-18 8. Alleghey............................... 4-12................ 7-19 9. Oberlin................................. 1-15................ 2-23 *NCAC Tournament champion Player of the Year: Ian Franks, WOO Newcomer of the Year: Aaron Stefanov, HIR Coach of the Year: MMike DeWitt, OWU NCAA Representatives: WOO, WIT

Championship Results Member Points 1. Oberlin................................................. 33 2. Allegheny............................................. 58 3. Kenyon................................................. 84 4. Denison.............................................. 105 Ohio Wesleyan................................... 105 6. Wooster.............................................. 122 7. Wittenberg......................................... 137 Individual Champion: Joanna Johnson, OBE Newcomer of the Year: Kristina Martin, ALL Coach of the Year: Ray Appenheimer, OBE NCAA Representatives: OBE, OWU, WIT

Field Hockey Final Standings Member NCAC Overall 1. Wittenberg.................... 11-1.............15-4 2. Wooster*.......................10-2.............16-6 3. Kenyon............................8-4........... 10-11 4. Denison...........................6-6............. 8-11 5. Ohio Wesleyan................5-7..............7--9 6. Oberlin..........................2-10............. 6-11 7. Earlham........................0-12.............2-15

*NCAC Tournament champion

Player of the Year (O): Amanda Artman, WOO Player of the Year (D): Claire Chapman, KEN Newcomer of the Year: Katie McMahon, DEN Coach of the Year: Kelley Hubbell, WIT NCAA Representative: WOO

Women's Basketball

Football

Final Standings Member NCAC Overall 1. Denison*.......................14-0.............28-1 2. Ohio Wesleyan..............10-4...........15-12 3. Allegheny........................9-5...........17-10 4. Kenyon............................8-6...........15-12 5. Wittenberg......................5-5...........12-14 6. Hiram............................4-10...........12-14 7. Oberlin.......................... 3-11.............8-18 8. Wooster.........................1-13.............3-22

Final Standings

*NCAC Tournament champion

Player of the Year: Shaina Kaiser, DEN Newcomer of the Year: Erica Restich, ALL Coach of the Year: Sara Lee, DEN NCAA Representative: DEN

Men's Cross Country Championship Results Member Points 1. Allegheny............................................. 35 2. Wabash................................................ 64 3. Ohio Wesleyan..................................... 83 4. Denison................................................ 89 5. Oberlin............................................... 114 6. Wittenberg......................................... 154 7. Kenyon............................................... 193 8. Wooster.............................................. 222 9. Hiram................................................. 261 Individual Champion: Chris Marker, ALL Newcomer of the Year: Jake Ponton, WAB Coach of the Year: Brent Wilkerson, ALL NCAA Representatives: ALL, DEN, OWU, WAB

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Women's Cross Country

Member NCAC Overall 1. Wittenberg*............................ 6-0................ 10-1 2. Wabash.................................. 5-1.................. 8-2 3. Allegheny............................... 4-2.................. 7-3 Wooster.................................. 4-2.................. 5-5 5. Oberlin................................... 3-3.................. 4-6 6. Denison.................................. 2-4.................. 4-6 Ohio Wesleyan....................... 2-4.................. 2-8 8. Hiram...................................... 1-5.................. 1-9 9. Kenyon................................... 0-6................ 0-10 *Overall record includes NCAA Playoffs Player of the Year (O): Ben Zoeller, WIT Player of the Year (D): C.J. Gum, WAB Newcomer of the Year: Richard Barnes, WOO Coach of the Year: Joe Fincham, WIT NCAA Representative: WIT

Men's Golf Championship Series Results Member Accum. Score 1. Wittenberg....................................... 1497 2. Ohio Wesleyan................................. 1526 3. Denison............................................ 1555 4. Allegheny......................................... 1560 5. Wooster............................................ 1570 6. Wabash............................................ 1639 7. Hiram............................................... 1669 8. Kenyon............................................. 1729 9. Oberlin............................................. 1862 Dick Gordin Award: Nate Fridley, OWU Bob Nye Award: Craig Osterbrock, WIT Coach of the Year: Jeff Roope, WIT NCAA Representative: WIT

Women's Golf Championship Series Results Member Accum. Score 1. Alleghney......................................... 1318 2. Wittenberg....................................... 1416 3. Wooster............................................ 1644 4. Denison............................................ 1706 5. Hiram............................................... 1767 6. Ohio Wesleyan................................. 1883 Overall Medalist: Hannah Schonau-Taylor, ALL Player of the Year: Hannah Schonau-Taylor, ALL Coach of the Year: Jeff Groff, ALL NCAA Representative: ALL

Men's Lacrosse Final Standings Member NCAC Overall 1. Wittenberg......................4-1.............14-2 Denison...........................4-1............. 11-4 Ohio Wesleyan................4-1.............10-4 4. Wooster...........................2-3...............5-9 5. Kenyon............................1-4...............5-9 6. Oberlin............................0-5...............7-9 Player of the Year: Mark DeOliveria, WIT Newcomer of the Year: Spencer Schnell, OWU Coach of the Year: Topher Grossman, OBE NCAA Representatives: DEN, OWU, WIT

Women's Lacrosse Final Standings Member NCAC Overall 1. Denison*.........................6-0.............13-5 2. Wooster...........................4-2.............10-6 3. Allegheny........................4-2.............12-6 4. Wittenberg......................3-3...............9-6 5. Kenyon............................3-3...............9-6 6. Ohio Wesleyan................1-5.............3-12 7. Oberlin............................0-6...............4-9 *Positions 1-4 determined by NCAC Tournament

Player of the Year (O): Jensen Paterson, ALL Player of the Year (D): Brigid Donahue , KEN Newcomer of the Year: Cassie Greenbaum, WOO Coach of the Year: Nichole Johnson, WIT NCAA Representative: DEN

Men's Soccer Final Standings

Member NCAC Overall 1. Ohio Wesleyan*..................7-0-1............. 19-2-2 2. Kenyon................................6-1-1............. 15-3-2 3. Denison...............................4-3-1............. 10-8-1 Allegheny............................4-3-1............... 8-8-3 Oberlin................................4-3-1............. 7-10-1 6. Hiram...................................3-5-0............. 6-12-0 7. Wittenberg...........................2-5-1............. 5-10-3 8. Wabash...............................2-6-0............. 8-10-0 9. Wooster...............................0-6-2............... 6-7-3 *NCAC Tournament Champion Player of the Year (O): Tyler Wall, OWU Player of the Year (D): Peter Nolan , KEN Newcomer of the Year: Andrew Parmelee, KEN Coach of the Year: Jay Martin, OWU NCAA Representatives: KEN, OWU


Women's Soccer Final Standings

Member NCAC Overall 1. Wooster...............................5-1-1............. 11-6-2 2. Denison*.............................5-2-0............. 16-5-4 Wittenberg...........................5-2-0............. 13-5-1 4. Allegheny............................4-1-2............. 14-3-4 5. Kenyon................................3-2-2............... 8-7-2 6. Ohio Wesleyan....................1-5-1............. 4-10-3 7. Hiram...................................1-6-0............. 5-12-2 Oberlin................................1-6-0............. 4-14-0 *NCAC Tournament Champion Player of the Year (O): Jen Clemmer, DEN Player of the Year (D): Kelsey Peters, WOO Newcomer of the Year: Allison Buzzard, ALL Coach of the Year: David Brown, WOO NCAA Representative: ALL, DEN

Softball Final Standings Member NCAC Overall 1. Denison.........................12-2.............30-9 2. Hiram*........................... 11-3...........29-14 Ohio Wesleyan.............. 11-3...........23-14 4. Wittenberg......................7-7...........13-24 5. Wooster...........................6-8...........14-20 6. Kenyon..........................4-10...........10-24 Allegheny......................4-10.............7-21 8. Oberlin..........................1-13.............5-27

*NCAC Tournament champion

Player of the Year: Erica Evans, DEN Pitcher of the Year: Rebecca Dyer, DEN Newcomer of the Year: Jen Anderson, OWU Coach of the Year: Cassie Cunningham, OWU NCAA Representative: HIR

Women's Track, Indoor

Men's Tennis Final Standings Member NCAC Div. Overall 1. Kenyon*..........................3-0.............17-4 2. Denison...........................3-0.............13-8 3. Wabash...........................2-1...........18-10 4. Allegheny........................2-1.............12-6 5. Wittenberg......................1-2.............14-7 6. Oberlin............................1-2.............7-17 7. Ohio Wesleyan................0-3............. 9-11 8. Wooster...........................0-3.............4-18

*Standings determined by NCAC Tournament Player of the Year: Jeremy Polster, KEN Newcomer of the Year: Patrick Cole, ALL Coach of the Year: Jason Hutchison, WAB NCAA Representatives: DEN, KEN

Women's Tennis

Championship Results Member Points 1. Ohio Wesleyan................................... 228 2. Allegheny........................................... 125 3. Oberlin............................................... 114 4. Kenyon............................................... 112 5. Wittenberg........................................... 54 6. Wooster................................................ 41 7. Denison................................................ 25 MVP (Sprints/Hurdles): Alexis Marissa Clardy, OBE MVP (Mid/Distance): Kat Zimmerly, OWU MVP (Field): Lauren Butler, ALL Coach of the Year: Kris Boey, OWU NCAA Representatives: OBE, OWU

Women's Track, Outdoor

Final Standings Member NCAC Overall 1. Denison*.........................6-0.............16-5 2. Kenyon............................5-1.............15-6 3. Allegheny........................2-4.............13-9 4. Oberlin............................4-2...........12-13 5. Wittenberg......................3-3.............19-6 6. Ohio Wesleyan................1-5............. 5-11 7. Wooster...........................0-8.............7-13

Championship Results Member Points 1. Ohio Wesleyan................................... 262 2. Oberlin............................................... 143 3. Allegheny........................................ 132.5 4. Wooster.............................................. 103 5. Kenyon................................................. 81 6. Wittenberg........................................ 71.5 7. Denison................................................ 23

Player of the Year: Kristin Cobb, DEN Newcomer of the Year: Leah Ann Miller, WIT Coach of the Year: Peter Burling, DEN NCAA Representatives: DEN, OBE

MVP (Sprints/Hurdles): Beth Muller, ALL MVP (Mid/Distance): Joanna Johnson, OBE MVP (Field): Abena Boamah-Acheampong, WOO Coach of the Year: Kris Boey, OWU NCAA Representatives: ALL, OBE, OWU, WOO

*Standings determined by NCAC Tournament

Volleyball

Men's Swimming

Men's Track, Indoor

Championship Results Member Points 1. Denison......................................... 1774.5 2. Kenyon.......................................... 1572.5 3. Wabash.............................................. 805 4. Wittenberg......................................... 691 5. Wooster........................................... 671.5 6. Oberlin............................................... 659 7. Allegheny........................................... 633 8. Ohio Wesleyan................................... 398 9. Hiram.............................................. 334.5 Swimmer of the Year: Al Weik, DEN Diver of the Year: Gabe Dixson, DEN Swim Coach of the Year: Gregg Parini, DEN Diving Coach of the Year: Jason Glorius, DEN NCAA Representatives: ALL, DEN, KEN, WAB, WOO

Championship Results Member Points 1. Wabash.............................................. 208 2. Ohio Wesleyan................................... 202 3. Allegheny............................................. 86 4. Oberlin.............................................. 85.5 5. Kenyon................................................. 40 6. Denison................................................ 35 7. Wittenberg........................................... 31 8. Wooster............................................. 14.5

Final Standings Member NCAC Overall 1. Wittenberg*...................13-1.............32-3 Hiram............................13-1...........24-10 3. Wooster...........................9-5...........18-14 4. Denison...........................7-7...........12-18 5. Kenyon............................5-9...........13-16 Allegheny........................5-9.............9-23 7. Oberlin..........................4-10.............6-24 8. Ohio Wesleyan..............0-14.............2-28

MVP (Sprints/Hurdles): Ethan Freet, OWU MVP (Mid/Distance): Dee Salukombo, DEN MVP (Field): Matt Scheller, WAB Coach of the Year: Clyde Morgan, WAB NCAA Representative: ALL, DEN, OWU, WAB

Player of the Year: Shaina Bryan, HIR Libero of the Year: Kelley Johnson, WOO Newcomer of the Year: Ana Maricic, KEN Coach of the Year: Paco Labrador, WIT NCAA Representative: WIT

Women's Swimming

Men's Track, Outdoor

Championship Results Member Points 1. Denison............................................ 1829 2. Kenyon............................................. 1482 3. Allegheny........................................... 944 4. Wooster.............................................. 857 5. Wittenberg......................................... 792 6. Oberlin............................................... 627 7. Ohio Wesleyan................................... 435 8. Hiram................................................. 298 Swimmer of the Year: Ksenia Golovkina, DEN Diver of the Year: Lizzie Litwak, DEN Swim Coach of the Year: Erin Detwiler, ALL Diving Coach of the Year: Jason Glorius, DEN NCAA Representatives: DEN, KEN, WIT

Championship Results

Member

*NCAC Tournament Champion

Points

1. Wabash........................................... 311.5 2. Ohio Wesleyan................................... 135 3. Oberlin............................................... 127 4. Allegheny........................................... 115 5. Denison................................................ 35 Wittenberg........................................... 35 7. Kenyon................................................. 29 8. Wooster............................................. 26.5 MVP (Sprints/Hurdles): Ethan Freet, OWU MVP (Mid/Distance): Kevin McCarthy, WAB MVP (Field): Matt Scheller, WAB Coach of the Year: Clyde Morgan, WAB NCAA Representatives: ALL, DEN, OBE, OWU, WAB

41


All-Sports Championship, 2010-11 Denison Claims 12th All-Sports Title Denison posted top-five finishes in 18 of 23 sports on the way to its record 12th North Coast Athletic Conference All-Sports Championship. The Big Red opened the year with top-five finishes in six of the seven fall sports, and vaulted into first place in the All-Sports standings after winning three outright championships in the winter season: women's basketball, men's swimming and women's swimming. DU capped off the year with with a strong showing in the spring season, finishing in the top-five in nine of the 10 sports, including outright titles in women's lacrosse, softball and women's tennis to go along with a share of the men's lacrosse crown (tied with Ohio Wesleyan and Wittenberg). The Big Red secured the 2011 All-Sports title by compiling 169.5 total points. Wittenberg, which led the All-Sports standings after the fall season, and was second after the winter season, totaled 161.0 points to earn second place in the final standings. The Tigers also turned in 18 top-five finishes, including outright titles in field hockey, football and men's golf, and shared titles in volleyball (Hiram) and men's lacrosse. Ohio Wesleyan finished third (159.0), followed by Allegheny (150.5) and Wooster (139.0) in fourth and fifth, respectively. Kenyon (137.5), Oberlin (118.5), Wabash (79.5) and Hiram (59.5) rounded out position six through nine.

All-Sports Championship 2010-11 Standings 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9.

NCAC All-Sports Champions

Denison University......................................... 169.5 Wittenberg University..................................... 161.0 Ohio Wesleyan University.............................. 159.0 Allegheny College........................................... 150.5 The College of Wooster.................................. 139.0 Kenyon College.............................................. 137.5 Oberlin College............................................... 118.5 Wabash College *............................................. 79.5 Hiram College................................................... 59.5

2010-11 Denison 2009-10 Wittenberg 2008-09 Ohio Wesleyan Denison 2007-08 Ohio Wesleyan 2006-07 Ohio Wesleyan 2005-06  Denison 2004-05  Denison 2003-04  Denison 2002-03  Denison

2001-02  2000-01  1999-00  1998-99  1997-98  1996-97  1995-96  1994-95  1993-94

Denison Denison Denison Denison Denison Wooster Wittenberg Wooster Ohio Wesleyan

1992-93  1991-92  1990-91  1989-90  1988-89  1987-88  1986-87  1985-86  1984-85

Ohio Wesleyan Ohio Wesleyan Ohio Wesleyan Ohio Wesleyan Ohio Wesleyan Wooster Wooster Denison Wooster

Cross Country, Men Cross Country, Women Field Hockey Football Soccer, Men Soccer, Women Volleyball Fall

ALL 10.0 9.0 -- 7.5 7.0 7.0 5.5 46.0

DEN 7.0 6.5 7.0 4.5 7.0 8.5 7.0 47.5

HIR 2.0 -- -- 3.0 5.0 3.5 9.5 23.0

KEN 4.0 8.0 8.0 2.0 9.0 6.0 5.5 42.5

OBE 6.0 10.0 5.0 6.0 7.0 3.5 4.0 41.5

OWU 8.0 6.5 6.0 4.5 10.0 5.0 3.0 43.0

WAB * 9.0 -- -- 9.0 3.0 -- -- 21.0

WIT 5.0 4.0 10.0 10.0 4.0 8.5 9.5 51.0

WOO 3.0 5.0 9.0 7.5 2.0 10.0 8.0 44.5

Basketball, Men Basketball, Women Swimming, Men Swimming, Women Indoor Track, Men Indoor Track, Women Winter Baseball Golf, Men Golf, Women Lacrosse, Men Lacrosse, Women Softball Tennis, Men Tennis, Women Outdoor Track, Men Outdoor Track, Women Spring 2010-11 TOTALS

3.0 8.0 4.0 8.0 8.0 9.0 40.0 5.0 7.0 10.0 -- 8.0 4.5 7.0 8.0 7.0 8.0 64.5 150.5

4.5 10.0 10.0 10.0 5.0 4.0 43.5 6.0 8.0 7.0 9.0 10.0 10.0 9.0 10.0 5.5 4.0 78.5 169.5

6.0 5.0 2.0 3.0 -- -- 16.0 2.0 4.0 6.0 -- -- 8.5 -- -- -- -- 20.5 59.5

4.5 7.0 9.0 9.0 6.0 7.0 42.5 4.0 3.0 -- 6.0 6.0 4.5 10.0 9.0 4.0 6.0 52.5 137.5

2.0 4.0 5.0 5.0 7.0 8.0 31.0 3.0 2.0 -- 5.0 4.0 3.0 5.0 7.0 8.0 9.0 46.0 118.5

7.5 9.0 3.0 4.0 9.0 10.0 42.5 9.0 9.0 5.0 9.0 5.0 8.5 4.0 5.0 9.0 10.0 73.5 159.0

7.5 -- 8.0 -- 10.0 -- 25.5 10.0 5.0 -- -- -- -- 8.0 -- 10.0 -- 33.0 79.5

9.0 6.0 7.0 6.0 4.0 6.0 38.0 7.5 10.0 9.0 9.0 7.0 7.0 6.0 6.0 5.5 5.0 72.0 161.0

10.0 3.0 6.0 7.0 3.0 5.0 34.0 7.5 6.0 8.0 7.0 9.0 6.0 3.0 4.0 3.0 7.0 60.5 139.0

* Wabash is an all-male institution

42

Denison's championship season was highlighted by seven NCAC titles. The Big Red also picked up two second-place finishes on the year in women's soccer (tied with Wittenberg) and men's tennis to help secure the All-Sports victory. They improved their position in the final standings from last year by two spots, jumping from third to first. The All-Sports champion earns the Dennis M. Collins Award, given annually to the school that performs the best across the NCAC's 23 sports. Ten points are awarded for a first-place finish, nine for a second, eight for a third, and so on. Men's and women's performances are combined, exemplifying the North Coast's commitment to equity and balance among programs. Wooster won three of the first four All-Sports championships, interrupted only by Denison in year two. Ohio Wesleyan followed with a six-year run leading to titles by Wooster (twice), Wittenberg (once), Denison (nine), OWU (twice), a tie between Denison and OWU in 2009 and finally Wittenberg's title last spring. Ohio Wesleyan leads the way with 129 team championships during the NCAC's 27 playing seasons. Denison is next with 116 titles, followed by Allegheny (106), Kenyon (96), Wittenberg (73) and Wooster (72).


NCAC Champions Baseball Streak: WAB - 1 Most titles: WOO - 13 2011 Wabash 2010 Wooster 2009 Wooster 2008 Ohio Wesleyan 2007 Ohio Wesleyan 2006 Wooster 2005 Wooster 2004 Wooster 2003 Ohio Wesleyan 2002 Wooster 2001 Ohio Wesleyan 2000 Ohio Wesleyan 1999 Allegheny 1998 Wooster 1997 Allegheny 1996 Ohio Wesleyan 1995 Wooster 1994 Ohio Wesleyan 1993 Allegheny 1992 Ohio Wesleyan 1991 Wooster 1990 Wooster 1989 Ohio Wesleyan 1988 Wooster 1987 Wooster 1986 Ohio Wesleyan 1985 Allegheny Wooster Basketball (M) Streak: WOO - 7 Most titles: WOO- 14 2011 Wooster 2010 Wooster 2009 Wooster 2008 Wooster 2007 Wooster 2006 Wooster 2005 Wooster 2004 Wittenberg 2003 Wooster 2002 Wittenberg 2001 Wittenberg 2000 Wooster 1999 Wooster 1998 Wooster 1997 Wittenberg 1996 Wittenberg 1995 Wooster 1994 Wittenberg 1993 Allegheny Wittenberg 1992 Wittenberg Wooster 1991 Wittenberg 1990 Wittenberg 1989 Allegheny Wooster 1988 Allegheny Ohio Wesleyan 1987 Ohio Wesleyan 1986 Allegheny Ohio Wesleyan 1985 Ohio Wesleyan Basketball (W) Streak: DEN - 1 Most titles: WIT - 12 2011 Denison

2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 1991 1990 1989 1988 1987 1986 1985

Wittenberg Denison Kenyon Denison Wittenberg Kenyon Wittenberg Wittenberg Wittenberg Allegheny Ohio Wesleyan Ohio Wesleyan Ohio Wesleyan Wittenberg Wittenberg Kenyon Wittenberg Wittenberg Wittenberg Ohio Wesleyan Ohio Wesleyan Wittenberg Wittenberg Wooster Allegheny Allegheny Allegheny Allegheny Allegheny Wooster

Cross Country (M) Streak: ALL - 7 Most titles: ALL - 10 2010 Allegheny 2009 Allegheny 2008 Allegheny 2007 Allegheny 2006 Allegheny 2005 Allegheny 2004 Allegheny 2003 Kenyon 2002 Allegheny 2001 Kenyon 2000 Kenyon 1999 Kenyon 1998 Denison 1997 Allegheny 1996 Earlham Wittenberg 1995 Earlham 1994 CWRU 1993 CWRU 1992 Denison 1991 Denison 1990 Denison 1989 Wooster 1988 CWRU 1987 Wooster 1986 CWRU 1985 CWRU 1984 Allegheny Cross Country (W) Streak: OBE - 2 Most titles: ALL - 11 2010 Oberlin 2009 Oberlin 2008 Kenyon 2007 Allegheny 2006 Oberlin 2005 Denison

2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 1991 1990 1989 1988 1987 1986 1985 1984

Denison Denison Allegheny Kenyon Denison Denison Denison Wooster Wooster Wooster Kenyon Allegheny Allegheny Allegheny Allegheny Allegheny Allegheny Allegheny Wooster Allegheny Allegheny Oberlin

Field Hockey Streak: WIT- 2 Most titles: WIT - 10 2010 Wittenberg 2009 Wooster Wittenberg 2008 Wooster 2007 Kenyon Wittenberg Wooster 2006 Wooster 2005 Oberlin 2004 Wittenberg 2003 Oberlin Wittenberg Wooster 2002 Wittenberg 2001 Wooster 2000 Denison Wittenberg 1999 Denison 1998 Wittenberg Denison 1997 Wittenberg 1996 Wittenberg 1995 Ohio Wesleyan 1994 Denison 1993 Ohio Wesleyan 1992 Ohio Wesleyan 1991 Ohio Wesleyan 1990 Ohio Wesleyan 1989 Ohio Wesleyan 1988 Ohio Wesleyan 1987 Ohio Wesleyan 1986 Denison Wooster 1985 Denison 1984 Denison Wooster Football Streak: WIT - 2 Most titles: WIT- 10 2010 Wittenberg 2009 Wittenberg 2008 Wabash 2007 Wabash 2006 Wabash

2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 1991 1990 1989 1988 1987 1986 1985 1984

Wittenberg Wabash Wooster Allegheny Wabash Wittenberg Wittenberg Wittenberg Wittenberg Allegheny Wittenberg Wooster Allegheny Wittenberg Allegheny Allegheny Wittenberg Allegheny Allegheny Kenyon Ohio Wesleyan Allegheny Allegheny Denison Denison CWRU

Golf (M) Streak: WIT - 2 Most titles: OWU - 14 2011 Wittenberg 2010 Wittenberg 2009 Ohio Wesleyan 2008 Ohio Wesleyan 2007 Ohio Wesleyan 2006 Allegheny 2005 Ohio Wesleyan 2004 Ohio Wesleyan 2003 Ohio Wesleyan 2002 Ohio Wesleyan 2001 Allegheny 2000 Ohio Wesleyan 1999 Allegheny 1998 Allegheny 1997 Allegheny 1996 Allegheny 1995 Allegheny 1994 Ohio Wesleyan 1993 Ohio Wesleyan 1992 Wittenberg 1991 Allegheny 1990 Ohio Wesleyan 1989 Ohio Wesleyan 1988 Ohio Wesleyan 1987 Ohio Wesleyan 1986 Allegheny 1985 Wooster Golf (W) Streak: ALL - 1 Most titles: ALL - 1 2011 Allegheny Lacrosse (M) Streak: OWU, WIT - 2; DEN - 1 Most titles: OWU - 18 2011 Denison Ohio Wesleyan Wittenberg 2010 Ohio Wesleyan Wittenberg

2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 1991 1990 1989 1988 1987 1986 1985

Denison Denison Ohio Wesleyan Denison Ohio Wesleyan Denison Ohio Wesleyan Wooster Ohio Wesleyan Denison Ohio Wesleyan Denison Kenyon Ohio Wesleyan Denison Ohio Wesleyan Denison Ohio Wesleyan Ohio Wesleyan Denison Ohio Wesleyan Ohio Wesleyan Ohio Wesleyan Ohio Wesleyan Ohio Wesleyan Ohio Wesleyan Ohio Wesleyan Denison Denison

Lacrosse (W) Streak: DEN - 1 Most titles: DEN - 16 2011 Denison 2010 Wooster 2009 Wooster 2008 Ohio Wesleyan 2007 Wooster 2006 Denison 2005 Ohio Wesleyan 2004 Wooster 2003 Wooster 2002 Wooster 2001 Denison 2000 Denison 1999 Denison 1998 Oberlin 1997 Oberlin 1996 Denison 1995 Oberlin 1994 Denison 1993 Denison 1992 Denison 1991 Denison 1990 Denison 1989 Denison 1988 Denison 1987 Denison 1986 Denison 1985 Denison Soccer (M) Streak: OWU - 3 Most titles: OWU - 19 2010 Ohio Wesleyan 2009 Ohio Wesleyan 2008 Ohio Wesleyan 2007 Kenyon 2006 Ohio Wesleyan 2005 Ohio Wesleyan 2004 Ohio Wesleyan Wooster

43


NCAC Champions 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 1991 1990 1989 1988 1987 1986 1985 1984

Denison Wooster Ohio Wesleyan Ohio Wesleyan Ohio Wesleyan Ohio Wesleyan Ohio Wesleyan Kenyon Kenyon Ohio Wesleyan Ohio Wesleyan Kenyon Wittenberg Kenyon Ohio Wesleyan Ohio Wesleyan Kenyon Wooster Ohio Wesleyan Ohio Wesleyan Ohio Wesleyan Denison Ohio Wesleyan

Soccer (W) Streak: WOO - 1 Most titles: OWU -9 2010 Wooster 2009 Denison 2008 Denison 2007 Wittenberg 2006 Ohio Wesleyan 2005 Denison 2004 Ohio Wesleyan 2003 Allegheny 2002 Ohio Wesleyan 2001 Ohio Wesleyan 2000 Ohio Wesleyan 1999 Ohio Wesleyan 1998 Denison 1997 Denison 1996 Wooster 1995 Ohio Wesleyan 1994 Wooster 1993 Denison 1992 Denison 1991 Wooster 1990 Ohio Wesleyan Wooster 1989 Allegheny Ohio Wesleyan 1988 Allegheny 1987 Allegheny 1986 Allegheny 1985 Allegheny 1984 Denison Softball Streak: DEN- 3 Most titles: DEN - 8 2011 Denison 2010 Denison Ohio Wesleyan 2009 Denison 2008 Allegheny 2007 Denison 2006 Denison 2005 Ohio Wesleyan 2004 Allegheny Ohio Wesleyan 2003 Denison 2002 Denison

44

2001 2000 1999 1998

Denison Wittenberg Allegheny Allegheny

Swimming (M) Streak: DEN - 3 Most titles: KEN - 23 2011 Denison 2010 Denison 2009 Denison 2008 Kenyon 2007 Kenyon 2006 Kenyon 2005 Kenyon 2004 Kenyon 2003 Kenyon 2002 Kenyon 2001 Kenyon 2000 Kenyon 1999 Kenyon 1998 Kenyon 1997 Denison 1996 Kenyon 1995 Kenyon 1994 Kenyon 1993 Kenyon 1992 Kenyon 1991 Kenyon 1990 Kenyon 1989 Kenyon 1988 Kenyon 1987 Kenyon 1986 Kenyon 1985 Kenyon Swimming (W) Streak: DEN - 3 Most titles: KEN - 23 2011 Denison 2010 Denison 2009 Denison 2008 Kenyon 2007 Kenyon 2006 Kenyon 2005 Kenyon 2004 Denison 2003 Kenyon 2002 Kenyon 2001 Kenyon 2000 Kenyon 1999 Kenyon 1998 Kenyon 1997 Kenyon 1996 Kenyon 1995 Kenyon 1994 Kenyon 1993 Kenyon 1992 Kenyon 1991 Kenyon 1990 Kenyon 1989 Kenyon 1988 Kenyon 1987 Kenyon 1986 Kenyon 1985 Kenyon Tennis (M) Streak: KEN - 5 Most titles: KEN - 14 2011 Kenyon 2010 Kenyon

2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 1991 1990 1989 1988 1987 1986 1985

Kenyon Kenyon Kenyon Denison Kenyon Kenyon Kenyon Kenyon Denison Denison Denison Denison Denison Wooster Kenyon Denison Kenyon Kenyon Kenyon Wooster Denison Kenyon Wooster Denison Denison Denison Denison Wooster

Tennis (W) Streak: DEN - 10 Most titles: KEN - 15 2011 Denison 2010 Denison 2009 Denison 2008 Denison 2007 Denison 2006 Denison 2005 Denison 2004 Denison 2003 Denison 2002 Denison 2001 Kenyon 2000 Kenyon 1999 Kenyon 1998 Kenyon 1997 Kenyon 1996 Kenyon 1995 Kenyon 1994 Denison 1993 Kenyon 1992 Kenyon 1991 Kenyon 1990 Kenyon 1989 Kenyon 1988 Kenyon 1987 Kenyon 1986 Kenyon 1985 Allegheny Indoor Track (M) Streak: WAB - 1 Most titles: OWU - 9 2011 Wabash 2010 Ohio Wesleyan 2009 Ohio Wesleyan 2008 Ohio Wesleyan 2007 Allegheny 2006 Allegheny 2005 Allegheny 2004 Allegheny 2003 Allegheny

2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 1991 1990 1989 1988 1987 1986 1985

Ohio Wesleyan Ohio Wesleyan Ohio Wesleyan Ohio Wesleyan Wooster Wittenberg Wittenberg CWRU CWRU Allegheny Allegheny Denison Ohio Wesleyan Ohio Wesleyan Wooster Denison Denison Denison

Indoor Track (W) Streak: OWU - 5 Most titles: OWU - 10 2011 Ohio Wesleyan 2010 Ohio Wesleyan 2009 Ohio Wesleyan Oberlin 2008 Ohio Wesleyan 2007 Ohio Wesleyan 2006 Allegheny 2005 Allegheny 2004 Denison 2003 Denison 2002 Allegheny 2001 Denison 2000 Denison 1999 Denison 1998 Denison 1997 Wittenberg 1996 Allegheny 1995 Allegheny 1994 Ohio Wesleyan 1993 Allegheny 1992 Allegheny 1991 Ohio Wesleyan 1990 Ohio Wesleyan 1989 Ohio Wesleyan 1988 Wooster 1987 Allegheny 1986 Wooster 1985 Ohio Wesleyan Outdoor Track (M) Streak: WAB - 1 Most titles: ALL - 8 2011 Wabash 2010 Ohio Wesleyan 2009 Ohio Wesleyan 2008 Ohio Wesleyan 2007 Allegheny 2006 Allegheny 2005 Allegheny 2004 Allegheny 2003 Allegheny 2002 Wittenberg 2001 Ohio Wesleyan 2000 Ohio Wesleyan 1999 Ohio Wesleyan 1998 Allegheny 1997 Wittenberg 1996 Wittenberg 1995 Wittenberg 1994 CWRU

1993 1992 1991 1990 1989 1988 1987 1986 1985

Allegheny Allegheny Denison Ohio Wesleyan Denison Denison Denison Denison Denison

Outdoor Track (W) Streak: OWU - 3 Most titles: ALL - 13 2011 Ohio Wesleyan 2010 Ohio Wesleyan 2009 Ohio Wesleyan 2008 Allegheny 2007 Ohio Wesleyan 2006 Allegheny 2005 Allegheny 2004 Denison 2003 Allegheny 2002 Allegheny 2001 Allegheny 2000 Allegheny 1999 Allegheny 1998 Ohio Wesleyan 1997 Ohio Wesleyan 1996 Allegheny 1995 Ohio Wesleyan 1994 Allegheny 1993 Allegheny 1992 Allegheny 1991 Ohio Wesleyan 1990 Allegheny 1989 Ohio Wesleyan 1988 Wooster 1987 Wooster 1986 Wooster 1985 Wooster Volleyball Streak: WIT- 5; HIR- 1 Most titles: WIT - 16 2010 Hiram Wittenberg 2009 Wittenberg 2008 Wittenberg 2007 Wittenberg 2006 Wittenberg 2005 Hiram 2004 Wittenberg 2003 Wittenberg 2002 Wittenberg 2001 Wittenberg 2000 Wittenberg 1999 Wittenberg 1998 Wittenberg 1997 Wittenberg 1996 Ohio Wesleyan 1995 Wittenberg 1994 Ohio Wesleyan 1993 Wittenberg 1992 Wittenberg 1991 Allegheny 1990 Allegheny 1989 Allegheny 1988 Allegheny 1987 Kenyon 1986 Kenyon 1985 Allegheny 1984 Wooster


NCAC Records Baseball Batting Batting Average, season .534 (87-163), Drew Caravella (OWU), 2002 Batting Average, career .458 (164-358), Joe Musgrove (ALL), 1994-97 At Bats, season 223, Sean Karpen (WOO), 2009 At Bats, career 681, Matt Miller (WOO), 2001-04 Runs, season 79, Trevor Urban (WOO), 1997 Runs, career 224, Trevor Urban (WOO), 1996-99 Hits, season 97, Sean Karpen (WOO), 2009 Hits, career 297, Drew Caravella (OWU), 1999-2002 Doubles, season 25, Travis Snyder (WOO), 1997 Joe Musgrove (ALL), 1996 Doubles, career 66, Rick Sforzo (WOO), 1984-87 Triples, season 9, Ben Couch (ALL),1999 Triples, career 22, Jake Calcei (KEN), 2006-09 Home Runs, season 21, Matt Jackson (WOO), 1997 Home Runs, career 53, Drew Caravella (OWU), 1999-2002 Total Bases, season 168, Travis Snyder (WOO), 1997 Total Bases, career 531, Drew Caravella (OWU), 1999-2002 Slugging Percentage, season 1.045 (92-88), Mark Senkowitz (OWU), 1992 Slugging Percentage, career .796 (531-667), Drew Caravella (OWU), 1999-2002 Runs Batted In, season 89, Drew Caravella (OWU), 2002 Runs Batted In, career 293, Drew Caravella (OWU), 1999-2002 Walks, season 54, Mike Milligan (OWU), 1986 Walks, career 114, Jake Frank (WOO), 2002-05 Hit By Pitch, season 30, Brandon Boesiger (WOO), 2006 Hit By Pitch, career 74, Brandon Boesiger (WOO), 2004-07 Strikeouts, season 48, Jake Sankal (WOO), 2008 Strikeouts, career 146, Chris McComish (OWU), 1984-87 Hitting Streak, season 29, Kurt Kapferer (WOO), 2006 Stolen Bases, season 57, Mike Penn (ALL), 1994 Stolen Bases, career 133, Mike Penn (ALL), 1992-94 Sacrifice Bunts, season 11, Kevin Creehan (ALL), 1996 Sacrifice Flies, season 10, Dave Croci (WIT), 1994

Pitching Earned Run Average, season 0.96 (5-46.2), Dean Peterson (ALL), 1993 Earned Run Average, career 2.06 (30-131.1), Mike Bird (OWU), 1995-96 Wins, season 15, Hank Jones (OWU), 1986 Wins, career 34, Matt Rodgers (WOO), 1994-97 Winning Percentage, season 1.000 (11-0), Adam Samson (WOO), 2007 Kevin Tatar (WIT), 1990 Winning Percentage, career 1.000 (19-0), Drew Binkowski (WOO), 1997-98 Consecutive Wins, season 12, Tyler Mott (OWU), 2003 Games Pitched, season 27, Greg Kaiser (OWU), 1991 Games Pitched, career 74, Ken Baker (ALL), 1996-99 Games Started, season 17, Chris Lynn (KEN), 2004 Games Started, career 52, John Nye (OWU), 1987-91 Complete Games, season 11, Mitch Swaggert (KEN), 1998 Kevin Tatar (WIT), 1990 Complete Games, career 26, Kris Cooper (WIT), 1993-96 Relief Appearances, season 26, Mark Miller (WOO), 2008 Ken Baker (ALL), 1997 Relief Appearances, career 73, Matt Streicher (DEN), 2001-04 Innings Pitched, season 113.2, Justin McDowell (WOO), 2009 Innings Pitched, career 328.1, John Nye (OWU), 1987-91 Shutouts, season 4, Matt Rodgers (WOO), 1995 Tim Bruzdewicz (ALL), 1988 Shutouts, career 6, Matt Rodgers (WOO), 1994-97 Scott Oberschlake (OWU), 1993-96 Tim Bruzdewicz (ALL), 1986-88 Strikeouts, season 119, Tim Bruzdewicz (ALL), 1988 Strikeouts, career 282, Curt Moenter (OWU), 1999-2002

Strikeouts/9 IP, season 14.19 (90-57.1), Drew Shamrock (DEN), 2007 Strikeouts/9 IP, career 10.91 (196-161.2), Jim Miller (OWU), 1988-91 Walks, season 65, Hank Jones (OWU), 1986 Walks, career 195, Jim Miller (OWU), 1988-91 Fewest Walks/9 IP, season 0.55 (3-49.0), Jason Drum (DEN), 1994 Fewest Hits/9 IP, season 4.73 (27-51.1), Graham Wyllie (ALL), 1995 Saves, season 13, Mark Miller (WOO), 2008 Saves, career 26, Mark Miller (WOO), 2007-09 Dean Peterson (ALL), 1991-93 Hit Batsmen, season 23, Joey Niezer (WAB), 2007 Hit Batsmen, career 45, Phil Brua (OBE), 2008-11 Consecutive Shutout Innings, season 25.2, Drew Shamrock (DEN), 2004 Consecutive Hitless Innings, season 12.1, Hank Jones (OWU), 1986 Wild Pitches, season 19, Peter Wyatt (OBE), 2001 Fielding Putouts, season 438, Drew Caravella (OWU), 2001 Putouts, career 1550, Drew Caravella (OWU), 1999-2002 Assists, season 151, Brendan Holsberry (KEN), 2006 Assists, career 519, Steve Goodhart (OWU), 1992-95 Errors, season 32, Jim Bartlett (WOO), 1998 Scott Walberry (OWU), 1987 Errors, career 80, Scott Walberry (OWU), 1985-88 Passed Balls, season 24, Michael Small (OBE), 2001

Ohio Wesleyan first baseman Drew Caravella holds nine NCAC baseball records, including the single-season batting average (.534), and career marks in hits (297) and home runs (53). A fourtime All-NCAC pick, Caravella was named NCAC Player of the Year in 2002. Nationally, he was a three-time All-America player, earning National Player of the Year honors in 2002.

45


NCAC Records TEAM RECORDS Batting Batting Average, season 397 (607-1528), Ohio Wesleyan, 1998 At Bats, game 65, Earlham vs. Rose-Hulman, 3/15/1995 At Bats, season 1858, Wooster, 2009 Runs, game 42, Hiram vs. Lake Erie, 3/13/2002 Runs, season 548, Ohio Wesleyan, 2001 Runs, Inning 18, Kenyon vs. Oberlin, 4/5/2005 Oberlin vs. Lake Erie, 4/30/2004 Hits, game 34, Hiram vs. Lake Erie, 3/13/2002 Hits, season 664, Ohio Wesleyan, 2001 Doubles, game 10, Ohio Wesleyan vs. Earlham, 4/1/2007 Wittenberg vs. Denison, 4/23/2002 Wooster vs. Kenyon, 3/28/1986 Doubles, season 140, Ohio Wesleyan, 2001 Triples, game 5, Earlham vs. Crown, 3/17/2009 Triples, season 27, Wooster, 2010 Home Runs, game 13, Wooster vs. Kenyon, 3/29/1986 Home Runs, season 104, Wooster, 1997 Total Bases, game 77, Wooster vs. Kenyon, 3/29/1986 Total Bases, season 1098, Wooster, 1997 Runs Batted In, game 39, Hiram vs. Lake Erie, 3/13/2002 Runs Batted In, season 506, Ohio Wesleyan, 2001 Walks, game 17, Hiram vs. Olivet, 3/6/2005 Walks, season 267, Wooster, 1986 Hit By Pitch, gane 11, Allegheny vs. LaRoche, 4/2/2009 Hit By Pitch, season 107, Wooster, 2006 Strikeouts, game 17, Ohio Wesleyan vs. Allegheny, 5/4/2002 Oberlin vs. Hiram, 4/13/2001 Strikeouts, season 302, Wooster, 1997 Stolen Bases, game 14, Denison vs. Oberlin, 4/28/2001 Wooster vs. Oberlin, 4/23/1994 Stolen Bases, season 145, Allegheny, 1994 Pitching Earned Run Average, season 2.51 (111-397.2), Wooster, 2007 Complete Games, season 25, Ohio Wesleyan, 1992 Innings Pitched, game 17.0, Earlham vs. Rose-Hulman, 3/15/1995

46

Innings Pitched, season 447.1, Wooster, 2009 Shutouts, season 8, Denison, 2004 Ohio Wesleyan, 1994 Strikeouts, game 20, Ohio Wesleyan vs. Centre, 3/19/1989 Strikeouts, season 396, Wooster, 2007 Strikeouts/9 IP, season 9.43 (298-284.1), Denison, 2004 Walks, game 16, Ohio Wesleyan vs. Indiana State, 3/10/1985 Wittenberg vs. Marietta, 5/1/2007 Walks, season 256, Ohio Wesleyan, 1991 Fewest Walks/9 IP, season 2.32 (96-373.0), Wooster, 2004 Fewest Hits/9 IP, season 7.54 (333-397.2), Wooster, 2007 Hit Batsmen, game 9, Oberlin vs. Allegheny, 4/10/2005 Hit Batsmen, season 68, Allegheny, 2007 Saves, season 14, Wooster, 2008 Allegheny, 1993 Wild Pitches, game 9, Hiram vs. Rose-Hulman, 3/2/2010 Fielding Putouts, game 51, Earlham vs. Rose-Hulman, 3/15/1995 Putouts, season 1342, Wooster, 2009 Assists, game 34, Ohio Wesleyan vs. Marian, 3/13/1990 Assists, season 588, Wooster, 2009 Errors, game 11, Hiram vs. Lake Erie, 4/12/2007 Wooster vs. Baldwin-Wallace, 3/29/2007 Case Reserve vs. Allegheny, 4/7/1998 Wooster vs. North Park, 5/27/1988 Errors, season 129, Oberlin, 2001 Double Plays, game 5, Wooster vs. St. Thomas, 5/26/2009 Wabash vs. Olivet, 3/22/2003 Wooster vs. Denison, 4/11/1995 Double Plays, season 58, Wooster, 1997 Passed Balls, game 5, Oberlin vs. Earlham, 5/5/2001 Oberlin vs. Union, 3/26/2001 Fielding Percentage, season 968, Wooster, 2002 Victories Wins. season 46, Wooster, 1997 Wins, season (NCAC games) 20, Ohio Wesleyan, 1992 Winning Percentage, season 881 (37-5), Allegheny, 1993 Winning Percentage(NCAC games), season 1.000 (15-0), Wooster, 2007 Ohio Wesleyan, 2000

Winning Streak 27, Wooster, 2007 Winning Streak (NCAC games) 36, Wooster, 2006-08 Winning Streak (NCAC games), One Season 15, Wooster, 2007 Ohio Wesleyan, 2000 Allegheny, 1993

Men's Basketball Points Season 897 Scott Tedder (OWU) 757 Lee Rowlinson (OWU) 713 Scott Tedder (OWU) 685 Josh Estelle (WAB) 652 Byron Beard (OBE)

1987-88 1987-88 1986-87 1999-00 1985-86

Career 2501 Scott Tedder (OWU) 2303 Chip Winiarski (OBE) 2037 James Cooper (WOO) 1985 Travis Schwab (OWU) 1957 Bryan Nelson (WOO)

1984-88 1986-90 2004-08 2000-04 1999-03

Rebounds Season 357 Chris Donovan (KEN) 342 Lee Rowlinson (OWU) 296 Greg Morris (WOO) 295 Brad Baldridge (WIT) 295 Brad Baldridge (WIT)

1994-95 1987-88 1996-97 1989-90 1990-91

Career 1010 Ryan Gorman (WOO) 961 Bryan Nelson (WOO) 947 Chris Donovan (KEN) 831 Dane Borchers (WIT) 827 Stan Aukamp (WOO)

1995-99 1999-03 1991-95 2004-07 1988-92

Assists Season 216 Marcus Amos (ALL) 198 Pete Waters (DEN) 194 Terry Gray (ALL) 191 Mike Smith (OWU) 184 Shaka Smart (KEN)

1988-89 1984-85 1986-87 1987-88 1998-99

Career 684 Terry Gray (ALL) 618 Anthony Robinson (WIT) 542 Shaka Smart (KEN) 516 Derrick Owens (ALL) 500 Justun Lott (OWU)

1984-88 1992-96 1995-99 1989-93 1991-95

Steals Season 123 Deron Black (ALL) 114 Michael Brown (OBE) 105 Scott Tedder (OWU) 100 Matt Hall (ERL) 96 Perry Junius (ALL)

1995-96 1985-86 1987-88 1996-97 1990-91

Career 323 Scott Tedder (OWU) 259 Antwyan Reynolds (WOO) 254 Matt Hall (ERL) 249 Nick Catanzarite (ALL) 248 Wes Smith (WAB)

1984-88 1998-02 1993-97 1999-03 2007-11


Men's Cross Country

Women's Basketball Points Season 778 Ann Gilbert (OBE) 749 Ann Gilbert (OBE) 604 Kelly Heil (OWU) 593 Kim Huber (ALL) 576 Christi Clay (DEN)

1989-90 1990-91 2002-03 1995-96 1993-94

Career 2112 Kelly Heil (OWU) 2053 Kim Huber (ALL) 1969 Shannon Ferguson (ERL) 1802 Krista Jacobs (OWU) 1794 Kim Graf (KEN)

2002-05 1992-96 1990-94 1988-92 1993-97

Rebounds Season 360 Katy Sturtz (OWU) 333 Jill Myers (OWU) 329 Jennifer Young (ALL) 315 Jill Myers (OWU) 315 Jennifer Young (ALL)

2000-01 1987-88 1991-92 1986-87 1990-91

Career 1217 Jill Myers (OWU) 1127 Katy Sturtz (OWU) 1078 Danielle Rogers (WIT) 1021 Krista Jacobs (OWU) 925 Karen Schell (KEN)

1984-88 1998-02 1989-93 1988-92 1995-99

Assists Season 177 Suzanne Helfant (ALL) 172 Suzanne Helfant (ALL) 167 Jill Swanson (ALL) 165 Serafina Nuzzo (DEN) 161 Suzanne Helfant (ALL)

1985-86 1986-87 1984-85 2010-11 1987-88

Career 601 Suzanne Helfant (ALL) 529 Christy Evans (WOO) 462 Tyler Cordell (OWU) 456 Amanda Schmidt (ALL) 436 Nzinga Broussard (OBE)

1984-88 1988-92 2001-11 1993-97 1998-02

Steals Season 129 Nzinga Broussard (OBE) 125 Lisa Smith (ALL) 117 Amanda Schmidt (ALL) 110 Mary Jo Domurat (CWRU) 110 Nzinga Broussard (OBE)

2001-02 1986-87 1993-94 1986-87 1998-99

Career 412 Nzinga Broussard (OBE) 345 Christi Clay (DEN) 312 Amanda Schmidt (ALL) 280 Cristina Briboneria (OBE) 268 Allison McCombe (DEN)

1998-02 1990-94 1993-97 2001-05 1992-96

NCAC CHAMPIONS 2010 Chris Marker (ALL) 2009 Jeramie Parker (ALL) 2008 Grant Russo (DEN) 2007 Ryan Place (ALL) 2006 Marco Dozzi (ALL) 2005 Chris Carrier (ALL) 2004 Kevin Pool (ALL) 2003 Kevin Pool (ALL) 2002 Michael Baird (KEN) 2001 Ben Hildebrand (KEN) 2000 Vince Evener (KEN) 1999 Joe Dunham (DEN) 1998 Joe Dunham (DEN) 1997 Dan Denning (KEN) 1996 Dan Denning (KEN) 1995 Jeremy Kaufman (WIT) 1994 Brian Casselberry (CWRU) 1993 Steve Cullen (CWRU) 1992 Mike Collyer (DEN) 1991 Jason Kelley (WOO) 1990 Jason Kelley (WOO) 1989 Karl Knoll (CWRU) 1988 Scott Michalek (WOO) 1987 Todd Fach (WOO) 1986 Todd Fach (WOO) 1985 Mark Roshon (CWRU) 1984 Todd Fach (WOO)

25:24 25:53 24:56 25:24 27:01 26:08 26:29 26:12 25:10 26:00 25:17 26:15 26:14 26:26 26:27 26:03 26:02 25:57 26:24 26:11 26:30 26:12 25:38 26:49 25:46 27:01 27:26

Women's Cross Country NCAC CHAMPIONS 2010 Joanna Johnson (OBE) 2009 Katie Navarre (DEN) 2008 Joanna Johnson (OBE) 2007 Joanna Johnson (OBE) 2006 Katie Wieferich (WOO) 2005 Katie Wieferich (WOO) 2004 Christine Collins (KEN) 2003 Julie Hufnagel (DEN) 2002 Abi Gerstle (WIT) 2001 Abi Gerstle (WIT) 2000 Shannan Rieder (ERL) 1999 Laura Shults (KEN) 1998 Amy Schuckert (ALL) 1997 Libbie Stansifer (CWR) 1996 Shannon Fox (OBE) 1995 Shannon Fox (OBE) 1994 Emily Moorefield (WOO) 1993 Tina Chase (ALL) 1992 Kelley Wilder (KEN) 1991 Alyse Holden (ALL) 1990 Kara Berghold (KEN) 1989 Sue Castor (ALL) 1988 Tara Craig (OWU) 1987 Christine Dudeck (ALL) 1986 Jennifer Shaver (ALL) 1985 Jennifer Shaver (ALL) 1984 Vanessa Jones (OWU)

22:03 22:09 21:02 22:48 24:11 (6K) 22:30 22:55 18:55 18:46 19:09 18:40 19:31 19:50 19:35 18:49 19:19 18:55 18:57 19:18 18:32 18:21 18:51 19:36 17:21 18:52 19:08 18:51

Field Hockey Goals Goals, game 5, Maggie Gilligan (KEN) vs. Oberlin, 2009 Tori Casanta (WIT) vs. Oberlin, 2008 Blair Ufer (WIT) vs. Denison, 2004 Cathy Paulson (OWU) vs. Mary Baldwin, 1984 Goals, season 29, Amanda Artman (WOO), 2008 Meg Filoon (DEN), 1984 Goals, career 104, Amanda Artman (WOO), 2006-10 Assists Assists, game 4, Beth Korkin (OWU) vs. U. of the South, 1996 Assists, season 17, Emily White (WOO), 2000 Assists, career 49, Amanda Artman (WOO), 2006-10 Points Points, game 12, Tori Casanta (WIT), 2008 Points, season 71, Amanda Artman (WOO), 2008 Points, career 257, Amanda Artman (WOO), 2006-10 Goalkeeping Saves, game 34, Cathie Herrick (KEN) vs. DePauw, 1989 Saves, season 490, Kelly Cochran (ERL), 1997 Saves, career 1332, Robin Cardin (OBE), 1984-87 Shutouts, season 12, Karen Thompson (KEN), 2006 Elise Ludwig (DEN), 1999 Sara Hamilton (WIT), 1997 Judy Skwiertz (WOO), 1984 Shutouts, career 30, Sara Hamilton (WIT), 1995-98 TEAM RECORDS Goals Goals, game 12, Ohio Wesleyan vs. Earlham, 9/10/1994 Ohio Wesleyan vs. Mary Baldwin, 9/22/1984 Goals, Both Teams, game 12, Ohio Wesleyan (12) vs. Earlham (0), 9/10/1994 Ohio Wesleyan (10) vs. Muskingum (2), 10/13/1984 Ohio Wesleyan (12) vs. Mary Baldwin (0), 9/22/1984 Goals, season 93, Denison, 1984 Assists Assists, game 9, Kenyon vs. Lake Erie, 10/14/1986 Goalkeeping Saves, game 4, Kenyon vs. DePauw, 9/17/1989 Fewest Goals Allowed, season 11, Ohio Wesleyan, 1987 Shutouts, season 13, Ohio Wesleyan, 1987

Scott Tedder

Nzinga Broussard

Emily White

Todd Fach

47


NCAC Records Victories Victories, season 18, Kenyon, 2006 Denison, 1984 Winning Streak 14, Ohio Wesleyan, 1989 Winning Streak, NCAC games 22, Ohio Wesleyan, 1988-90 Unbeaten Streak 14, Ohio Wesleyan, 1991 Ohio Wesleyan, 1989 Unbeaten Streak, NCAC games 34 (33-0-1), Ohio Wesleyan, 1987-90 Winning Margin 12, Ohio Wesleyan (12) vs. Earlham (0), 9/10/1994 Ohio Wesleyan (12) vs. Mary Baldwin (0), 9/22/1984

Passing Yards Season 3521 Russ Harbaugh (WAB) 3306 Greg Neuendorf (DEN) 3135 Matt Hudson (WAB) 3074 Greg Neuendorf (DEN) 2997 Ben Zoeller (WIT) Career 9390 Justin Rummell (ERL) 8595 Jake Knott (WAB) 8420 Matt Hudson (WAB) 8154 Brad Hensley (KEN) 7150 Rich Judd (WOO) Receptions Season 91 Glenn Campbell (HIR) 87 Ted Taggart (KEN) 84 Harry von Kann (KEN) 82 Kurt Casper (WAB) 78 Anthony Johnson (OBE) Career 224 Brandon Good (WOO) 221 Ryan Short (WAB) 214 Felix Brooks-Church (OBE) 207 Glenn Campbell (HIR) 200 Chris Schubert (OBE) Receiving Yards Season 1386 Josh McKee (WIT) 1228 Kody Lemond (WAB) 1143 Todd Stoner (KEN) 1095 Glenn Campbell (HIR) 1086 Ben Fortkamp (DEN) Career 2975 Josh McKee (WIT) 2884 Harry von Kann (KEN) 2836 Brandon Good (WOO)

48

Mike Russell (WAB) Ryan Short (WAB)

2004-07 2000-02

All-Purpose Yards Season 2634 Tony Sutton (WOO) 2203 Tony Sutton (WOO) 2041 Chris Schubert (OBE) 2016 Matt Capone (OWU) 1997 Jon Warga (WIT)

2004 2003 2007 2001 1990

Career 6415 6301 5483 5374 5170

2002-04 2004-07 1997-01 1997-00 2004-06

Tony Sutton (WOO) Chris Schubert Matt Capone (OWU) Casey Donaldson (WIT) Tristan Murray (WIT)

Men's Golf

Football Rushing Yards Season 2240 Tony Sutton (WOO) 1955 Tony Sutton (WOO) 1836 Jon Warga (WIT) 1639 Casey Donaldson (WIT) 1636 Shane Ream (ALL) Career 5613 Tony Sutton (WOO) 5112 Casey Donaldson (WIT) 4350 Alby Coombs (KEN) 4248 Chris Spriggs (DEN) 4048 Shane Ream (ALL)

2594 2527

2004 2003 1990 1998 2000 2002-04 1997-00 2003-06 1983-86 1998-01

2005 2001 2008 2000 2010 2002-06 2000-02 2006-09 1991-94 1995-98

2010 1989 2009 2000 1997

NCAC CHAMPIONS 2011 Craig Osterbrock (WIT) 2010 Jesse Chiero (OWU) 2009 Jeff Neiman (OWU) 2008 Jesse Chiero (OWU) 2007 Kyle Martin (OWU) 2006 Chris Moore (ALL) 2005 Justin Schroeder (OWU) 2004 Chad Poling (OWU) 2003 Jay Tilton (OWU) 2002 Ben Rathfon (ALL) 2001 Nate Smith (ALL) 2000 Kurt Bitner (WIT) 1999 Nate Smith (ALL) 1998 Nate Smith (ALL) 1997 Bobby Ruffing (ALL) 1996 Mike Gasper (ALL) 1995 Bobby Ruffing (ALL) 1994 Matt Foley (DEN) 1993 J.W. Wilson (OWU) 1992 J.W. Wilson (OWU) 1991 Matt Alcorn (KEN) 1990 Rick Lyons (WIT) 1989 Todd Benware (OWU) 1988 Todd Benware (OWU) 1987 Jim Irvin (OWU) 1986 Bob Jones (DEN) 1985 Scott Nye (WOO)

Women's Golf NCAC CHAMPIONS 2011 Hannah Schonau-Taylor (ALL)

1995-98 2000-02 1995-98 2007-10 2004-07

2010 2008 1984 2010 1997 20082006-09 1995-98

371 669 640 220 219 218 142 147 142 150 147 139 144 146 151 75 141 147 150 149 146 147 154 225 226 231 225

Justin Schroeder

326

Men's Lacrosse Goals Goals, game 10, Evan Bliss (KEN) vs. St. Vincent, 3/25/2000 Andy Greaves (OWU) vs. Wittenberg, 5/1/1990 Chris Wolfington (DEN) vs. Marietta, 4/18/1990 10, Jeff Mayer (WIT) vs. Marietta, 4/11/90 Goals, season 64, Dave Maguire (OWU), 1997 Dave Maguire (OWU), 1996 Goals, career 225, Dave Maguire (OWU), 1995-98 Assists Assists, game 9, Victor Maddux (DEN) vs. Oberlin, 4/1/1997 Victor Maddux (DEN) vs. RIT, 3/29/1997 Rich Franz (OWU) vs. Oberlin, 4/6/1988 Blair Morrison (OWU) vs. Wooster, 4/17/1985 Jim Applegate (WOO) vs. Ashland, 4/5/1985 Assists, season 61, Blair Morrison (OWU), 1985 Assists, career 137, Rob Alvino (OWU), 1985-88 Points Points, game 15, Andy Greaves (OWU) vs. Oberlin, 3/31/1993 Points, season 100 (62-38), Jason Fogelson (OWU), 2000 Points, career 321, Dave Maguire (OWU), 1995-98 Points/Game, season 6.6 (79-12), Jim Applegate (WOO), 1985 Points/Game, career 5.05 (197-39), Josh Cole (KEN), 1994-96 Saves Saves, game 34, David Smolev (OBE) vs. Wooster, 4/3/2002 Chris Alpaugh (KEN) vs. Guilford, 3/8/1990 Saves, season 310, David Smolev (OBE), 2002 Saves, career 1067, David Smolev (OBE), 1999-2002 Saves Percentage, season .737 (72-202), Bill Hall (DEN), 1985 Saves Percentage, career .697 (201-463), Dan O’Neil (OWU), 1984-87 TEAM RECORDS Goals Goals, game 36, Ohio Wesleyan vs. Oberlin, 4/19/2000 Goals, season 314, Ohio Wesleyan, 2000 Goals, Both Teams 43, Ohio Wesleyan (16) vs. Whittier (27), 4/27/2002 Fewest Goals Allowed, game 0, Denison vs. Otterbein, 4/27/2010 Wooster vs. Milwaukee Engineering, 3/1/2010 Denison vs. Hendrix, 2/29/2008 Denison vs. Oberlin, 4/22/2003 Ohio Wesleyan vs. Wittenberg, 4/15/2003 Wittenberg vs. Oberlin, 4/5/2003 Denison vs. Oberlin, 4/9/2002; Wittenberg vs. Oberlin, 4/6/2002 Wooster vs. Oberlin, 4/3/2002 Wittenberg vs. Oberlin, 3/23/2002 Kenyon vs. Oberlin, 3/20/2002


Wittenberg vs. Oberlin, 3/17/2001 Ohio Wesleyan vs. Wooster, 4/11/2000 Denison vs. Wittenberg, 3/29/1995 Ohio Wesleyan vs. Ohio State, 4/11/1987 Assists Assists, game 23, Ohio Wesleyan vs. Oberlin, 4/23/1997 Ohio Wesleyan vs. Oberlin, 4/18/2001 Ohio Wesleyan vs. Oberlin, 4/17/2002 Assists, season 221, Ohio Wesleyan, 1985 Goalkeeping Saves, game 34, Kenyon vs. Guilford, 3/8/1990 Oberlin vs. Wooster, 4/3/2002 Saves Percentage, season .703 (81-192), Kenyon, 1996 Victories Wins, season 17, Ohio Wesleyan, 1985 Winning Percentage, season .895 (17-2), Ohio Wesleyan, 1985 Winning Streak 16, Ohio Wesleyan, 1985 Winning Streak (NCAC games) 34, Ohio Wesleyan, 1987-94 Winning Margin 34 (36-2), Ohio Wesleyan vs. Oberlin, 4/19/2000

Assists, career 139, Beth Hemminger (WOO), 2000-03 Points Points, game 15, Frankie De Lavis (KEN) vs. Redlands, 4/26/2007 (6-9) Points, season 112, Jensen Paterson (ALL), 2011 (74-38) Points, career 300, Beth Hemminger (WOO), 2000-03 (161-139) Saves Saves, game 32, Alysia Oakley (OBE) vs. Ithaca, 3/31/1996 Saves, season 296, Bernadette Delgado (OBE), 1985 Saves, career 950, Ali Livingston (WIT), 1993-96 Saves Percentage, season .755 (96-296), Bernadette Delgado (OBE), 1985 Saves Percentage, career .634 (358-621), Tracy Scott (OWU), 1995-97 TEAM RECORDS Goals Goals, game 29, Kenyon vs. Earlham, 4/25/1998 Goals, season 266, Denison, 1998 Goals, Both Teams 45,Ohio Wesleyan (25) vs. Morrisville State (20), 4/5/2009 Kenyon (24) vs. Oberlin (21); 4/26/2006 Ohio Wesleyan (23) vs. Kenyon (22) 4/21/1998 Fewest Goals Allowed, game 0, Kenyon vs. Dallas, 4/3/2004 Ohio Wesleyan vs. Medaille, 3/23/2003 Wooster vs. Earlham, 4/14/2001 Ohio Wesleyan vs. Earlham, 4/7/2001 Oberlin vs. Earlham, 3/24/2001 Kenyon vs. Earlham, 4/19/2000 Denison vs. Allegheny, 4/15/2000 Denison vs. Earlham, 3/25/1998 Kenyon vs. Earlham, 1997 Fewest Goals Allowed, season 51, Denison, 1987 Assists Assists, game 17, Ohio Wesleyan vs. Earlham, 4/30/1996 Assists, season 133, Ohio Wesleyan, 1996

Beth Hemminger

Women's Lacrosse Goals Goals, game 11, Molly Bloom (OBE) vs. Agnes Scott, 3/30/2010 Goals, season 80, Cheryl Connolly (DEN), 1994 Goals, career 237, Laura Peace (DEN), 1998-2001 Assists Assists, game 9, Leah Sack (KEN) vs. Wooster, 3/24/2010 Frankie De Lavis (KEN), vs. Redlands, 4/26/2007 Assists, season 42, Kati Robbins (WIT), 2001

Goalkeeping Saves, game 32, Oberlin vs. Ithaca, 3/31/1996 Saves Percentage, season .696 (91-205), Denison, 2008 Victories Wins, season 15, Kenyon, 2010 Denison, 1992 Winning Percentage .938 (15-1), Denison, 1992 Winning Streak 15, Denison, 1992 Winning Streak (NCAC games) 49, Denison, 1991-96 Winning Margin 26, Kenyon (29) vs. Earlham (3), 4/25/1998

Men's Soccer Goals Goals, game 9, Mark Phillips (KEN) vs. Case Reserve, 1994 Goals, season 25, Mark Phillips (KEN), 1993 Bryan Bundy (OWU), 1986 Goals, career 74, Ian Banda (WOO),1987-90 74, Mark Phillips (KEN),1991-94 Assists Assists, game 4, Oliver Miller-Farrell (OBE) vs. Earlham, 2008 Josh Curtis (WIT) vs. Hiram, 2002 David Pedreschi (OWU) vs. Oberlin, 1998 Ziv Arie (ALL) vs. Waynesburg, 1993 Scott Gillanders (OWU) vs. Susquehanna, 1990 Ian Banda (WOO) vs. Case Western Reserve 1989 Matt Byers (OWU) vs. Earlham, 1986 Assists Assists, season 20, Wayne Street (OWU), 1994

Wayne Street Assists, career 51, Wayne Street (OWU), 1991-94 Points Points, game 18, Mark Phillips (KEN) vs. Case Reserve, 1994 Points, season 59, Mark Phillips (KEN), 1993 Points, career 180, Mark Phillips (KEN), 1991-94 Goalkeeping Saves, game 25, Mike Wallace (OBE) vs. Ohio Wesleyan, 1984 Saves, season 209, Martin Crawford (DEN), 1986 Saves, career 481, Ken Cohen (ALL), 1994-97 Shutouts, season 15, Reed Welch (OWU), 1991 Shutouts, career 37.5, Reed Welch (OWU), 1988-91

49


NCAC Records TEAM RECORDS Goals Goals, Game 15, Ohio Wesleyan vs. Susquehanna, 9/8/1990 Goals, season 81, Kenyon, 1996 Goals, Both Teams 15, Ohio Wesleyan (15) vs. Susquehanna (0), 9/8/1990 Assists Assists, game 12, Ohio Wesleyan vs. Susquehanna, 9/8/1990 Goakeeping Saves, game 25, Oberlin vs. Ohio Wesleyan, 9/26/1984 Fewest Goals Allowed, season 6, Ohio Wesleyan, 2009 Shutouts, season 17, Ohio Wesleyan, 2009 Victories Victories, season 23, Ohio Wesleyan, 2000 Winning Streak 23, Ohio Wesleyan, 2000 Winning Streak, NCAC games 24, Ohio Wesleyan, 2007-10 Unbeaten Streak 30 (29-0-1) Ohio Wesleyan, 2004-05 Unbeaten Streak, NCAC games 31 (30-0-1), Ohio Wesleyan, 2007-10 Winning Margin 15, Ohio Wesleyan (15) vs. Susquehanna (0), 9/8/1990

Women's Soccer Goals Goals, game 5, Alexis Emrick (ALL) vs. Grove City, 1997 Becky Wentz (DEN) vs. Hiram, 1992 Goals, season 43, Katy Sturtz (OWU), 1998 Goals, career 112, Katy Sturtz (OWU), 1998-2001

Saves, career 723, Molly Hewes (OWU), 1986-89 Shutouts, season 14, Courtney Cobb (DEN), 2009 Meghan O'Rourke (WIT), 2007 Elizabeth Clapacs (DEN), 1998 Lisa Hall (WOO), 1991 Shutouts, career 43, Meghan O'Rourke (WIT), 2004-07 TEAM RECORDS Goals Goals, game 16, Kenyon vs. Defiance, 9/2/1998 Goals, season 90, Ohio Wesleyan, 2002 Goals, Both Teams 16, Kenyon (16) vs. Defiance (0), 9/2/1998 Assists Assists, game 9, Ohio Wesleyan vs. Augustana, 9/10/2000 Kenyon vs. Washington & Jefferson, 9/10/1994 Kenyon vs. Hiram, 9/19/1992 Goalkeeping Saves, game 43, Wooster vs. Denison, 10/1/1985 Fewest Goals Allowed, season 4, Ohio Wesleyan, 2002 Shutouts, season 20, Ohio Wesleyan, 2002 Victories Victories, season 24, Ohio Wesleyan, 2002 Winning Streak 60, Ohio Wesleyan, 2001-03 Winning Streak, NCAC games 29, Ohio Wesleyan, 2000-03 Unbeaten Streak 60 (60-0-0), Ohio Wesleyan, 2001-03 Unbeaten Streak, NCAC games 35 (31-0-4), Allegheny, 1985-89 Winning Margin 16, Kenyon (16) vs. Defiance (0), 9/2/1998

Assists Assists, game 4, Stacie Rose (OWU) vs. Capital, 1991 Assists, season 17, Megan Whiteside (DEN),1993 Assists, career 53, Sarah Wall (OWU), 2002-05 Points Points, game 10, Alexis Emrick (ALL) vs. Grove City, 1997 Becky Wentz (DEN) vs. Hiram, 1992 Points, season 95, Katy Sturtz (OWU), 1998 Points, career 248, Katy Sturtz (OWU), 1998-2001 Goalkeeping Saves, game 43, Dawn Crownover (WOO) vs. Denison, 1985 Saves, season 262, Laura Warner (HIR), 1999 Katy Sturtz

50

Softball Batting Batting Average, season .496 (68-137), Alea Bruggeman (WIT), 2000 Batting Average, career .421 (205-487), Rachel Ryan (ALL), 2006-09 At Bats, season 162, Emily Sack (DEN), 2007 At Bats, career 553, Emily Sack (DEN), 2004-07 Runs, season 51, Erin Porter (DEN), 2006 Runs, career 144, Linsey Longstreth (OWU), 2003-06 Hits, season 72, Brie Berkopec (DEN), 2010 Hits, career 196, Stephanie Zunic (HIR), 2006-09 Doubles, season 22, Sarah Fetters (WIT), 2007 Doubles, career 55, Stephanie Zunic (HIR), 2006-09 Triples, season 10, Erin Porter (DEN), 2006 Triples, career 18, Linsey Longstreth (OWU), 2003-06 Home Runs, season 10, Brie Berkopec (DEN), 2010 Erica Evans (DEN), 2011 Home Runs, career 25, Brie Berkopec (DEN), 2007-10 Total Bases, season 120, Brie Berkopec (DEN), 2010 Total Bases, career 306, Erica Evans (DEN), 2008-11 Slugging Percentage, season .755 (105-139), Erin Porter (DEN), 2006 Slugging Percentage, career .726 (230-317), Jen Lorenzen (ALL), 1998-2000 Runs Batted In, season 49, Alex Murray (DEN), 2010 Claire Kopko (DEN), 2006 Runs Batted In, career 131, Chastine Romanello (HIR), 2006-09 Walks, season 30, Lauren Lynn (DEN), 2011 Linsey Longstreth (OWU), 2006 Walks, career 87, Linsey Longstreth (OWU), 2003-06 Hit By Pitch, season 13, Emily Bradley (OWU), 2010 Hit By Pitch, career 35, Emily Bradley (OWU), 2007-10 Strikeouts, season 38, Christy Shadle (WOO), 2001 Strikeouts, career 92, Megan Samuel (HIR), 2006-09 Hitting Streak, season 19, Amy Mazur (OWU), 2003 Stolen Bases, season 31, Abby Bodenlos (ALL), 2007 Stolen Bases, career 57, Abby Bodenlos (ALL), 2005-07 Sacrifice Bunts, season 26, Maggie Combs (WOO), 2003


Sacrifice Flies, season 5, Claire Kopko (DEN), 2006 Pitching Earned Run Average, season 0.40 (8-140.1), Courtney Zollars (DEN), 2001 Earned Run Avg, career 1.50 (99-461.1), Emily Thornton (OWU), 2000-03 Wins, season 19, Giannina Coccaro (ALL), 2005 Carey Oakes (WIT), 2000; Wins, career 49, Courtney Zollars (DEN), 1999-2002 Winning Percentage, season .857 (18-3), Courtney Zollars (DEN), 2001 Winning Percentage, career .750 (33-11), Becky Palmer (CWRU), 1998-99 Games Pitched, season 36, Claire Martin (OWU), 2006 Games Pitched, career 106, Stephanie Hemmingson (KEN), 2005-08 Games Started, season 32, Natalie Barone (WOO), 2005 Games Started, career 77, Giannina Coccaro (ALL), 2003-06 Angie Barone (WOO), 2001-04 Complete Games, season 32, Natalie Barone (WOO), 2005 Complete Games, career 70, Giannina Coccaro (WOO), 2003-06 Innings Pitched, season 226.0, Natalie Barone (WOO), 2005 Innings Pitched, career 546.0, Giannina Coccaro (WOO), 2003-06 Shutouts, season 8, Angie Barone (WOO), 2001 8, Courtney Zollars (DEN), 2001 Shutouts, career 16, Giannina Coccaro (ALL), 2003-06 Courtney Zollars (DEN), 1999-2002 Strikeouts, season 212, Courtney Zollars (DEN), 2002 Angie Barone (WOO), 2001 Strikeouts, career 577, Angie Barone (WOO), 2001-04 Strikeouts/7 IP, season 9.49 (193-142.1), Courtney Zollars (DEN), 2002 Strikeouts/7 IP, career 7.52 (577-537.1), Angie Barone (WOO), 2001-04 Walks, season 132, Kassie Scherer (KEN), 1998 Walks, career 365, Angie Barone (WOO), 2001-04 Fewest Walks/7 IP, season 0.60 (12-140.1), Courtney Zollars (DEN), 2001 Fewest Hits/7 IP, season 3.59 (72-140.1) Courtney Zollars (DEN), 2001 Saves, season 4, Jen Anthony (DEN), 2006 Hit Batters, season 24, Brooke Boswell (WIT), 2010 Hit Batters, career 48, Giannina Coccaro (ALL), 2003-06 Wild Pitches, season 21, Angie Barone (WOO), 2003 Wild Pitches, career 65, Angie Barone (WOO), 2001-04

Fielding Putouts, season 408, Katie Speakman (DEN), 2003 Putouts, career 1,241, Chastine Romanello (HIR), 2006-09 Assists, season 171, Carey Oakes (WIT), 2000 Assists, career 444, Stephanie Zunic (HIR), 2006-09 Errors, season 21, Megan Troxell (HIR), 2010 Errors, career 59, Ali Silver (DEN), 2007-10 Passed Balls, season 22, Kristen Dix (OBE), 2010 Passed Balls, career 45, Leslie Carroll (KEN), 1998-2001 TEAM RECORDS Batting Batting Average, season .341 (245-719), Case Western Reserve, 1998 At Bats, game 48, Hiram vs. Thomas More, 5/8/2009 At Bats, season 1322, Denison, 2010 Runs, game 30, Wooster vs. Wentworth, 3/11/2003 Runs, season 276, Denison, 2010 Runs, Inning 13, Ohio Wesleyan vs. Oberlin, 4/6/2004 Wooster vs. Centenary, 3/16/200 Hits, game 23, Wittenberg vs. Case, 4/2/2010 Wittenberg vs. Oberlin, 4/19/2008

Hits, season 446, Denison, 2010 Doubles, game 8, Wittenberg vs. Oberlin, 4/19/2008 Ohio Wesleyan vs. Wittenberg, 4/16/2008 Allegheny vs. Oberlin, 4/11/2008 Kenyon vs. Obelrin, 4/13/2007 Wittenberg vs. Thomas More, 4/30/2001 Doubles, season 94, Denison, 2010 Triples, game 4, Allegheny vs. Mount Union, 3/29/2009 Allegheny vs. Oberlin, 4/12/2005 Ohio Wesleyan vs. Denison, 4/23/2004 Wittenberg vs. Oberlin, 4/14/2001 Triples, season 23, Allegheny, 2005 Ohio Wesleyan, 2004 Home Runs, game 5, Hiram vs. DePauw, 5/15/2011 Home Runs, season 33, Denison, 2010 Total Bases, game 39, Hiram vs. DePauw, 5/15/2011 Total Bases, season 659, Denison, 2010 Runs Batted In, game 22, Wooster vs. Wentworth, 3/11/2003 Runs Batted In, season 250, Denison, 2010 Walks, game 23, Oberlin vs. Lake Erie, 4/11/2002 Walks, season 138, Ohio Wesleyan, 2006 Hit By Pitch, game 4, Ohio Wesleyan vs. Wittenberg, 4/7/2010 Kenyon vs. Medaille, 3/11/2007 Hit By Pitch, season 23, Wittenberg, 2000

Beth Hemmingson

51


NCAC Records Strikeouts, game 20, Wooster vs. Denison, 4/7/2002 Strikeouts, season 189, Oberlin, 2010 Stolen Bases, game 13, Hiram vs. Marywood, 3/3/2002 Stolen Bases, season 80, Hiram, 2002

Double Plays, season 16, Hiram, 2007 Ohio Wesleyan, 2006 Wittenberg, 2001 Fielding Percentage, season .965, Hiram, 2009 Passed Balls, game 7, Oberlin vs. Potsdam, 3/23/2008

Pitching Earned Run Average, season 0.82 (31-265.1), Denison, 2000 Complete Games, season 35, Wooster, 2005 & 2004 Allegheny, 2004 Innings Pitched, game 12.0, Allegheny vs. Oho Wesleyan, 4/27/2002 Innings Pitched, season 308.2, Denison, 2007 Shutouts, season 19, Denison, 2001 Strikeouts, game 20, Denison vs. Wooster, 4/7/2002 Strikeouts, season 283, Denison, 2006 Strikeouts/7 IP, season 6.98 (254-254.2), Ohio Wesleyan, 2008 Walks, game 12, Wittenberg vs. Capital, 3/20/2001 Walks, season 223, Kenyon, 1998 Fewest Walks/7 IP, season 1.13 (22-136.1), Oberlin, 2005 Fewest Hits/7 IP, season 4.24 (161-265.1), Denison, 2001 Hit Batsmen, game 4, Wittenberg vs. Ohio Wesleyan, 4/7/2010 Wittenberg vs. Case, 4/2/2010 Wittenberg vs. St. Francise, 3/7/2001 Hit Batters, season 28, Wittenberg, 2010 Saves, season 6, Denison, 2011 Wild Pitches, game 7, Wooster vs. Bethany, 4/17/2005 Wild Pitches, season 33, Wooster, 2003

Fielding Percentage, season 32, Oberlin, 2001

Fielding Putouts, game 36, Allegheny vs. Ohio Wesleyan, 4/27/2002 Putouts, season 926, Denison, 2007 Assists, game 25, Ohio Wesleyan vs. Ohio Northern, 3/23/2004 Assists, season 477, Ohio Wesleyan, 2004 Errors, game 11, Oberlin vs. Ohio Wesleyan, 4/6/2004 Errors, season 118, Kenyon, 1998 Double Plays, game 3, Allegheny vs. Hiram, 4/16/2008 Denison vs. Ohio Wesleyan, 4/10/2008 Kenyon vs. Hiram, 4/28/2007 Ohio Wesleyan vs. Olivet, 3/26/2006 Wittenberg vs. Hiram, 4/22/2001

52

100-Yard Butterfly 48.47 Aaron Cole (DEN) 200-Yard Butterfly 1:47.51 Pedro Monteiro (KEN) 200-Yard Medley Relay 1:30.18 Kenyon Mpitsos-Ohning-Carruthers-Turk 400-Yard Medley Relay 3:18.96 Denison Barry-Nemeth-Bagley-Geissiinger 200-Yard Freestyle Relay 1:20.89 Denison Geissinger-Bagley-Barczak-Behnke 400-Yard Freestyle Relay 2:59.53 Denison Bagley-Barczak-Curtis-Geissinger 800-Yard Freestyle Relay 6:39.05 Denison Thurston-Geissinger-Catlin-Curtis One-Meter Diving 590.35 John Hreha (ALL) Three-Meter Diving 541.20 Doug Tucker (ALL)

Victories Wins. season 33, Denison, 2006 & 2001 Wins, season (NCAC games) 16, Denison, 2001 Winning Percentage, season .825 (33-7), Denison, 2001 Winning Percentage(NCAC games), season .941 (16-1), Denison, 2001 Winning Streak 10, Denison, 2007 Winning Streak (NCAC games), One Season 12, Denison, 2007 Winning Streak (NCAC games) 13, Ohio Wesleyan, 2005-06

Aaron Cole Jessica Berkowitz

1998 2010 2009 2009 2009 2009 2002 1991

Ksenia Golovkina

Women's Swimming & Diving

Jake Lewing

Men's Swimming & Diving CHAMPIONSHIP RECORDS 50-Yard Freestyle 19.98 John Geissinger (DEN) 100-Yard Freestyle 43.96 John Geissinger (DEN) 200-Yard Freestyle 1:37.33 John Geissinger (DEN) 500-Yard Freestyle 4:25.17 David Curtis (DEN) 1000-Yard Freestyle 9:40.17 P.J. Schaner (DEN) 1650-Yard Freestyle 15:20.94 Elliot Rushton (KEN) 200-Yard Individual Medley 1:51.11 Jake Lewing (DEN) 400-Yard Individual Medley 3:56.55 Dan Thurston (DEN) 100-Yard Backstroke 48.85 Robert Barry (DEN) 200-Yard Backstroke 1:47.85 Quinn Bartlett (DEN) 100-Yard Breaststroke 56.12 David Lazarus (KEN) 200-Yard Breaststroke 2:01.23 David Gatz (OWU)

1999

2009 2009 2009 2009 1987 2005 2010 2009 2011 2011 2010 2009

CHAMPIONSHIP RECORDS 50-Yard Freestyle 23.19 Olivia Zaleski (DEN) 100-Yard Freestyle 50.43 Olivia Zaleski (DEN) 200-Yard Freestyle 1:49.10 Alyssa Swanson (DEN) 500-Yard Freestyle 4:51.18 Hilary Callen (DEN) 1000-Yard Freestyle 10:18.66 Jessica Berkowitz (KEN) 1650-Yard Freestyle 16:56.53 Tamara Carty (DEN) 200-Yard Individual Medley 2:04.59 Emily Schreder (DEN) 400-Yard Individual Medley 4:22.88 Emily Schroeder (DEN) 100-Yard Backstroke 54.91 Olivia Zaleski (DEN) 200-Yard Backstroke 2:00.82 Emily Schroeder (DEN) 100-Yard Breaststroke 1:02.91 Ksenia Golovkina (DEN) 200-Yard Breaststroke 2:16.40 Ksenia Golovkina (DEN) 100-Yard Butterfly 54.84 Olivia Zaleski (DEN) 200-Yard Butterfly 2:01.80 Hannah Salz (KEN)

2009 2009 2010 2010 1994 2001 2011 2011 2011 2010 2011 2011 2009 2011


200-Yard Medley Relay 1:41.17 Denison 2009 Zaleski-Golovkina-Rich-Hohl 400-Yard Medley Relay 3:44.62 Denison 2010 Zaleski-Blachly-Rich-Swanson 200-Yard Freestyle Relay 1:32.50 Denison 2011 Nuess-Golovkina-McClusky-Swanson 400-Yard Freestyle Relay 3:24.80 Denison 2009 Zaleski-Novinger-Rich-Hohl 800-Yard Freestyle Relay 7:27.33 Denison 2011 Swanson-Wamgstad-Schroeder-Callen One-Meter Diving 421.20 Ann Kelley (KEN) 1992 Three-Meter Diving 470.00 Melissa Moody (ALL) 1991

Men's Track & Field (In) CHAMPIONSHIP RECORDS 55-Meter Dash 6.48 Clemon Choice (OWU) 55-Meter Hurdles 7.55 Skip Ivery (WIT) 200-Meter Dash 22.38 Matt Churpek (OWU) 400-Meter Dash 49.78 Chris Wilson (ERL) 800-Meter Run 1:52.72 Geoff Lambert (WAB) 1500-Meter Run 3:58.52 Cary Snyder (KEN) 1-Mile Run 4:10.84 Tony Dipre (ALL) 3000-Meter Run 8:34.04 Ryan Place (ALL) 5000-Meter Run 14:40.42 Dan Princic (ALL) 800-Meter Relay 1:29.99 Ohio Wesleyan Martin-Choice-Churpek-Stillman 1600-Meter Relay 3:22.77 Oberlin Turner-Morris-El-Shair-Wimberly Distance Medley Relay 10:25.31 Allegheny Dipre-Brush-Eyer-Parker Long Jump 23' 6-1/2" Scott Shorney (DEN) Triple Jump 47' 4 3/4" Craig Neeley (OWU) High Jump 6' 10" Mark Speer (KEN) Pole Vault 18' 2 3/4" Jeremy Scott (ALL) Shot Put 56' 9-3/4" Keith Rucker (OWU) Pentathlon 3228 Wes Chamblee (WAB)

2000 2004 2000 1999 2007 2002 2010 2009 2003 2000 2009 2009 1988 2002 1988 2003 1991 2010

Men's Track & Field (Out) CHAMPIONSHIP RECORDS 100-Meter Dash 10.65 Reggie Ray (WOO) 110-Meter Hurdles 14.53 Dwight Carter (WIT) 200-Meter Dash 21.41 Reggie Ray (WOO) Stanley Drayton (ALL) 400-Meter Dash 48.22 Ty Stillman (OWU) 400-Meter Hurdles 52.86 Wes Chamblee (WAB) 800-Meter Run 1:51.73 Geoff Lambert (WAB) 1500-Meter Run 3:54.19 Tony Dipre (ALL) 3000-Meter Steeplechase 9:12.36 Tim Dunham (DEN) 5000-Meter Run 14:54.98 Chris Marker (ALL) 10,000-Meter Run 30:56.99 Brendan Callahan (WOO) 400-Meter Relay 41.38 Ohio Wesleyan Martin-Churpek-Michalski-Stillman 1600-Meter Relay 3:16.99 Ohio Wesleyan Patrick-Ellis-P.Osborn-N.Osborn Long Jump 23' 10-1/4" Scott Shorney (DEN) Triple Jump 48' 11-1/4" Modu Jagne (WAB) High Jump 6' 9-3/4" Matt Ospeck (CWR) Pole Vault 16' 9" Jeremy Scott (ALL) Shot Put 55' 3" Keith Rucker (OWU) Discus 175' 5" Erwin Grabisna (CWRU) Javelin 206' 0" Tim Gaal (WIT) Hammer 179' 3" Kyle Faris (OWU) Decathlon 6,420 Josh Guerrieri (WIT)

2000 1994 2000 1991 1999 2010 2006 2009 1994 2010 2002 2000

2011 2010 2001 2011 2004 2006 2007 1995 2011 2011 2011 2010

2009 1988 2000 1987 2002

Wes Chamblee

Craig Neeley

Lauren Butler

Geri Woessner

1991 1988 2002 2010 2001

Women's Track & Field (In) CHAMPIONSHIP RECORDS 55-Meter Dash 7.28 Jackie Berner (DEN) 55-Meter Hurdles 8.38 Melanie Cluss (DEN) 200-Meter Dash 25.82 Jackie Berner (DEN) 400-Meter Dash 57.66 Akeya Terrell (OWU) 800-Meter Run 2:15.82 Stephanie Moss (OWU) 1500-Meter Run 4:41.15 Leah Shouey (ALL) 1-Mile Run 5:03.76 Kat Zimmerly (OWU)

3000-Meter Run 10:02.96 Kat Zimmerly (OWU) 5000-Meter Run 17:19.82 Joanna Johnson (OBE) 800-Meter Relay 1:44.98 Denison Gray-Nickel-Westerfeld-Berner 1600-Meter Relay 4:04.43 Oberlin Levine-Vernon-Miller-Clardy Distance Medley Relay 12:41.52 Allegheny Graham-Svetlak-Knupp-Shouey Long Jump 18' 4 3/4" Katie Walker (KEN) Triple Jump 37' 9-1/2" Emily Pfeufer (ALL) High Jump 5' 7" Leslie Kindling (CWRU) Pole Vault 11' 1-1/2" Sarah Bechtel (OWU) Laura Vernon (OBE) Shot Put 43' 2-1/4" Lauren Butler (ALL) Pentathlon 2915 Madeline Schultz (OBE)

2003 2001 2002 2003 2001 2005 2011

Jeremy Scott

53


NCAC Records Women's Track & Field (Out) CHAMPIONSHIP RECORDS 100-Meter Dash 12.25 Jackie Berner (DEN)

2003

100-Meter Hurdles 14.85 Melanie Cluss (DEN)

2001

200-Meter Dash 25.04 Casey Ridgeway (OWU)

2007

400-Meter Dash 56.65 Jill Westerfeld (DEN)

2001

400-Meter Hurdles 1:02.64 Sara Bohall (ERL)

2008

800-Meter Run 2:14.87 Clara Shaw (OBE)

2010

1500-Meter Run 4:33.36 Leah Shouey (ALL)

2005

3000-Meter Run 10:16.30 Tina Chase (ALL)

1994

3000-Meter Steeplechase 11:11.35 Emma Lisull (OWU)

2010

5000-Meter Run 16:44.68 Katie Wieferich (WOO)

2007

10,000-Meter Run 36:01.69 Katie Navarre (DEN)

2009

400-Meter Relay 48.44 Wooster 1988 Belcher-McCauley-Kazmierski-Bukhala 1600-Meter Relay 3:55.50 Ohio Wesleyan Ridgeway-Shinn-Reiter-Shaffer

2007

Long Jump 18' 4-3/4" Leslie Kindling (CWRU)

1994

Triple Jump 38' 4-1/4" Apryl Wynn (OBE)

2001

High Jump 5' 6-1/2" Kari Bonomo (ALL)

1996

Pole Vault 11' 9 3/4" Sarah Sammel (ALL) Jill Berner (WOO) Shot Put 43' 9" Laura Finkes (DEN) Discus 145' 6" Laura Finkes (DEN) Javelin 146' 7" Tiffany Bennett (ALL) Hammer 172' 9" Liz Earley (ALL) Heptathlon 4,455 Geri Woessner (WIT)

54

2006 2006 2004 2003 2003 2008 2004

Volleyball Attack Kills, 3-game match 26, Tonya Andrews (ALL) vs. Grove City, 9/22/1998;    Tonya Andrews (ALL) vs. Manchester, 9/4/1999 Kills, 4-game match 33, Molly McCoy (ALL) vs. Case, 10/22/1997 Kills, 5-game match 55, Kim Woodring (WIT) vs. Ohio Northern, 9/28/1996 Kills, Season (1984-2000) 821, Kim Woodring (WIT), 1996 (146 games) Kills, Season (30-point format, 2001-07) 668, Monica McDonald (WIT), 2002 (144 games) Kills, Season (25-point format, 2008-) 447, KateLynn Riley (WOO), 2008 (116 games) Kills, Career 2458, Dawn Reinhardt (WIT), 1995-98 (529 games) Kills/Game, Season (1984-2000) 5.62, Kim Woodring (WIT), 1996 (821 in 146 games) Kills/Game, Season (30-point format, 2001-07) 4.64, Monica McDonald (WIT), 2002 (668 in 144 games) Kills/Game, Season (25-point format, 2008-) 3.85, KateLynn Riley (WOO), 2008 (447 in 116 games) Kills/Game, Career 4.65, Dawn Reinhardt (WIT), 1995-98 (2458 in 529 games) Attempts, 3-game match 56, Molly McCoy (ALL) vs. Thomas More, 9/28/1996; 56, Tonya Andrews (ALL) vs. Grove City, 10/14/2000 Attempts, 4-game match 85, Molly McCoy (ALL) vs. Case, 10/22/1997 Attempts, 5-game match 111, Jaime Salay (DEN) vs. Ohio Wesleyan, 10/27/1997 Total Attempts, Season (1984-2000) 1760, Jaime Salay (DEN), 1997 (115 games) Total Attempts, Season (30-point format, 2001-07) 1365, Cori Arnold (KEN), 2002 (132 games) Total Attempts, Season (25-point format, 2008-) 1296, Mary Myers (KEN), 2009 (109 games) Total Attempts, Career 5192, Jaime Salay (Denison), 1994-97 (455 games) Total Attempts/Game, Season (1984-2000) 15.30, Jaime Salay (DEN), 1997 (1760 in 115 games) Total Attempts/Game, Season (30-point format, 2001-07) 11.02, Megan Finch (ALL), 2005 (1267 in 115 games) Total Attempts/Game, Season (25-point format, 2008-) 11.89, Mary Myers (KEN), 2009 (1296 in 109 games) Total Attempts/Game, Career 11.41, Jaime Salay (DEN), 1994-97 (5192 in 455 games) Hitting Percentage, Game (10-14 att) .846 (11-0/13), Megan Margala (OWU) vs. Allegeny,10/14/05; .846 (11-0/13), Traci Stoner (ALL) vs. Fredonia State, 10/25/05 Hitting Percentage, Game (15-19 att) .750 (12-0/16), Shana Toth (Hiram) vs. Waynesburg, 9/9/2005 Hitting Percentage, Game (20+ att) .783 (18-0/23), Sheila Gisbrecht (OWU) vs. Case, 10/23/93 Hitting Percentage, Season (3 att/game) (1984-2000) .368 (583-91/1336), Molly Dietz (ALL), 1990 Hitting Percentage, Season (3 att/game) (30-point format, 2001-07) .382 (316-66/654), Jackie Williams (WIT), 2007

Hitting Percentage, Season (3 att/game) (25-point format, 2008-) .379 (256-53/535), Jackie Williams (WIT), 2008 Hitting Percentage (3 att/game) .329 (1761-627/4745), Molly McCoy (ALL), 1994-97 (535 games) Assists Assists, 3-game match 58, Sarah Yuskewich (WIT) vs. Ohio Northern, 9/4/2004 Assists, 4-game match 75, Shana Heilbron (OWU) at Bluffton, 9/12/2000 Assists, 5-game match 93, Beth Nowicki (WIT) vs. Ohio Northern, 9/28/1996 Assists, Season (1984-2000) 2081, Shelli Habegger (WIT), 2000 (144 games) Assists, Season (30-point format, 2001-07) 2125, Sarah Yuskewich (WIT), 2002 (143 games) Assists, Season (25-point format, 2008-) 1127, Claire Koneval (DEN), 2009 (107 games) Assists, Career 6151, Sarah Yuskewich (WIT), 2001-04 (481 games) Assists/Game, Season 14.45, Shelli Habegger (WIT), 2000 (2081 in 144 games) Assists/Game, Season (30-point format, 2001-07) 14.86, Sarah Yuskewich (WIT), 2002 (2125 in 143 games) Assists/Game, Season (25-point format, 2008-) 10.53, Claire Koneval (DEN), 2009 (1127 in 107 games) Assists/Game, Career 12.78, Sarah Yuskewich (WIT), 2001-04 (6151 in 481 games) Service Aces Service Aces, 3-game match 9, Theresa Rhoads (HIR) vs. Oberlin, 9/25/2002 Service Aces, 4-game match 12, Julie Stowers (DEN) vs. Hiram, 10/27/2004 Service Aces, 5-game match 10, Adrienne Knox (OWU) vs. Centre, 9/7/2001 Service Aces, Season (1984-2000) 88, Holly Swank (KEN), 1987 (94 games)

Monica McDonald


Service Aces, Season (30-point format, 2001-07) 129, Vicki Kajder (ALL), 2003 (142 games) Service Aces, Season (25-point format, 2008-) 50, KateLynn Riley (WOO), 2008 (116 games) Service Aces, Career 292, Vicki Kajder (ALL), 2000-03 (489 games) Service Aces/Game, Season (1984-2000) 1.09, Miriam Hoffman (OWU), 1986 (73 in 67 games) Service Aces/Game, Season (30-point format, 200107) 0.91, Vicki Kajder (ALL), 2003 (129 in 142 games) Service Aces/Game, Season (25-point format, 2008-) 0.46, Keeley McAnnis-Entenman (ERL), 2008 (45 in 98 games) Service Aces/Game, Career 0.72, Holly Swank (KEN), 1985-88 (275 in 383 games)

Total Blocks, 3-game match 21 (21-0), Tonya Andrews (ALL) vs. Dickinson, 9/27/1997 Total Blocks, 4-game match 15 (9-6), Molly Dietz (ALL) vs. Elizabethtown, 10/27/1990 (15-0), Stacy Gerko (ALL) vs. Waynesburg, 9/29/1990; (14-1), Judy Hruska (KEN) vs. Akron, 9/18/1990; Total Blocks, 5-game match 32 (11-21), Julie Bradley (ALL) vs. Edinboro, 9/30/1987 Total Blocks, Season 302 (189-113), Molly Dietz (ALL), 1990 (128 games) Total Blocks, Career 976 (575-401), Molly Dietz (ALL), 1988-91 (495 games) Total Blocks/Game, Season 2.68, Julie Bradley (ALL), 1987 (271 in 101 games) Total Blocks/Game, Career 1.97, Molly Dietz (ALL), 1988-91 (976 in 495 games)

Digs Digs, 3-game match 37, Caitlin Krupka (DEN) vs. Ohio Dominican, 9/6/2005 Digs, 4-game match 54, Kristen Shockley (OWU) vs. Bluffton, 9/16/1998 Digs, 5-game match 62, Michelle Urton (OWU) vs. Mount Union, 9/2/1998 Digs, Season (1984-2000) 835, Kim Woodring (WIT), 1996 (146 games) Digs, Season (30-point format, 2001-07) 814, Emilie Schmid (WIT), 2003 (111 games) Digs, Season (30-point format & libero, 2004-07) 1056, Emilie Schmid (WIT), 2004 (121 games) Digs, Season (25-point format & libero, 2008-) 734, Ali Drushal (WOO), 2008 (112 games) Digs, Career 2690, Emilie Schmid (WIT), 2001-04 (440 games) Digs/Game, Season (1984-2000) 5.81, Christi Clay (DEN), 1991 (604 in 104 games) Digs/Game, Season (30-point format, 2001-07) 7.33, Emilie Schmid (WIT), 2003 (814 in 111 games) Digs/Game, Season (30-point format & libero, 200407) 8.73, Emilie Schmid (WIT), 2004 (1056 in 121 games) Digs/Game, Season (25-point format & libero, 2008-) 6.55, Ali Drushal (WOO), 2008 (734 in 112 games) Digs/Game, Career 6.11, Emilie Schmid (WIT), 2001-04 (2690 in 440 games)

Matches/Games Played Matches Played, Career 183, Molly Dietz (Allegheny), 1988-91 Games Played, Career 535, Molly McCoy (Allegheny), 1994-97

Blocks Solo Blocks, 3-game match 21, Tonya Andrews (ALL) vs. Dickinson, 9/27/1997 Solo Blocks, 4-game match 15, Stacy Gerko (ALL) vs. Waynesburg, 9/29/1990 Solo Blocks, 5-game match 11, Julie Bradley (ALL) vs. Edinboro, 9/30/1987; Molly Dietz (ALL) vs. Mercyhurst, 9/12/1989 Solo Blocks, Season 202, Judy Hruska (KEN), 1990 (101 games) Solo Blocks, Career 575, Molly Dietz (ALL), 1988-91 (495 games) Block Assists, 3-game match 13, Julie Bradley (ALL) vs. Messiah, 10/10/1987 Block Assists, 4-game match 8, Melissa Hill (OWU) vs. Kenyon, 9/22/2001 Block Assists, 5-game match 21, Julie Bradley (ALL) vs. Edinboro, 9/30/1987 Block Assists, Season 173, Julie Bradley (ALL), 1987 (101 games) Block Assists, Career 401, Molly Dietz (ALL), 1988-91 (495 games)

TEAM RECORDS Attack Kills, 3-game match 70, Allegheny vs. Grove City, 9/22/1998 Kills, 4-game match 82, Ohio Wesleyan at Bluffton, 9/12/2000 Kills, 5-game match 96, Wittenberg vs. Goshen, 9/30/1995 Kills, single season (1984-2000) 2303, Wittenberg, 1996 (155 games) Kills, single season (2001-07) 2356, Wittenberg, 2002 (150 games) Kills, single season (2008-) 1386, Wittenberg, 2008 (113 games) Kills/game, single season (1984-2000) 15.44 (1945/126 games), Wittenberg, 1997 Kills/game, single season (2001-07) 16.51 (1998/121 games), Wittenberg, 2004 Kills/game, single season (2008-) 12.27 (1386/113 games), Wittenberg, 2008 Attack Attempts, 3-game match 190, Allegheny vs. Grove City, 9/22/1998 Attack Attempts, 4-game match 270,Ohio Wesleyan vs. Bluffton, 9/16/1998 Attack Attempts, 5-game match 306, Denison vs. Ohio Wesleyan, 10/27/1997 Attack Attempts, single season (1984-2000) 5926, Wittenberg, 1996 (155 games) Attack Attempts, single season (2001-07) 5726, Wittenberg, 2002 (150 games) Attack Attempts, single season (2008-) 4429, Hiram, 2008 (132 games) Attack Attempts/game, single season (1984-2000) 42.98 (5544/129 games), Ohio Wesleyan,1998 Attack Attempts/game, single season (2001-07) 40.94 (4421/108 games), Ohio Wesleyan, 2001 Attack Attempts/game, single season (2008-) 37.33 (4107/110 games), Oberlin, 2008 Hitting Percentage, 3-game match .581 (48-5/74), Allegheny vs. Methodist, 10/11/2003 Hitting Percentage, 4-game match .375 (56-11/120), Ohio Wesleyan vs. Case, 10/23/1993 Hitting Percentage, 5-game match .392 (58-11/120), Ohio Wesleyan vs. Allegheny,10/14/2005

Hitting Percentage, single season (1984-2000) .272 (1400-490/3351), Ohio Wesleyan, 1993 (103 games) Hitting Percentage, single season (2001-07) .317 (1998-556/4549), Allegheny, 2003 (142 games) Hitting Percentage, single season ((2008-) .254 (1386-473/3594), Wittenberg, 2008 (113 games) Assists Assists, 3-game match 65, Wittenberg vs. Ohio Northern, 9/24/2004 Assists, 4-game match 78, Ohio Wesleyan at Bluffton, 9/12/2000 Assists, 5-game match 94, Wittenberg vs. Ohio Northern, 9/28/1996 Assists, single season (1984-2000) 2132, Wittenberg, 2000 (145 games) Assists, single season (2001-07) 2274, Wittenberg, 2002 (150 games) Assists, single season (2008-) 1279, Wittenberg, 2008 (113 games) Assists/game, single season (1984-2000) 14.70 (2132/145 games), Wittenberg, 2000 Assists/game, single season (2001-07) 15.97 (1932/121 games), Wittenberg, 2004 Assists/game, single season (2008-) 11.32 (1279/113 games), Wittenberg, 2008 Service Aces Service Aces, 3-game match 23, Allegheny vs. Oberlin, 9/6/2003 Service Aces, 4-game match 26, Denison vs. Hiram, 10/27/2004 Service Aces, 5-game match 20, Ohio Wesleyan vs. Centre, 9/7/2001 Service Aces, single season (1984-2000) 357, Ohio Wesleyan, 1986 (67 games) Service Aces, single season (2001-07) 265, Allegheny, 2001 (107 games) Service Aces, single season (2008-) 182, Oberlin, 2008 (110 games) Service Aces/Game, single season (1984-2000) 5.33 (357/67 games), Ohio Wesleyan,1986 Service Aces/Game, single season (2001-07) 2.48 (265/107 games), Allegheny, 2001 Service Aces/Game, single season (2008-) 1.65 (182/110 games), Oberlin, 2008 Digs Digs, 3-game match 139, Ohio Wesleyan vs. Denison, 9/5/1998 Digs, 4-game match 193, Ohio Wesleyan vs. Bluffton, 9/16/1998 Digs, 5-game match 224, Ohio Wesleyan vs. Wittenberg, 10/27/1993 Digs, single season (1984-2000) 3749, Ohio Wesleyan, 1998 (129 games) Digs, single season (2001-07) 2883, Allegheny, 2005 (115 games) Digs, single season (2008-) 2128, Hiram, 2008 (132 games) Digs/Game, single season (1984-2000) 29.06 (3749/129 games), Ohio Wesleyan,1998 Digs/Game, single season (2001-07) 26.91 (2799/104 games), Denison, 2004 Digs/Game, single season (2008-) 18.76 (2045/109 games), Denison, 2011

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NCAC Records Blocks Block Solos, 3-game match 22, Allegheny vs. Marietta, 9/10/1988 Allegheny vs. Carlow, 9/12/1987 Block Solos, 4-game match 23, Allegheny vs. Brockport State, 9/10/1991 Block Solos, 5-game match 25, Ohio Wesleyan vs. John Carroll, 9/5/2006 Block Solos, single season 307, Allegheny, 1990 (128 games) Block Assists, 3-game match 36, Allegheny vs. Buffalo, 10/11/1988 Block Assists, 4-game match 24, Ohio Wesleyan vs. Kenyon, 9/22/2001 Block Assists, 5-game match 54, Allegheny vs. Edinboro, 9/30/1987 Block Assists, single season 656, Allegheny, 1987 (114 games) Total Blocks, 3-game match 29 (17 s, 24 a), Allegheny vs. Edinboro, 9/9/1987 Total Blocks, 4-game match 27.5 (23 s, 9 a), Allegheny vs. Brockport State, 9/6/1991 Total Blocks, 5-game match 42 (15 s, 54 a), Allegheny vs. Edinboro, 9/30/1987 Points Points Scored, single game (1984-2000) 24, Ohio Wesleyan vs. Denison, 10/25/1997 Points Scored, 30-point format, single game (2001-07) 44, Wooster vs. Urbana, 9/11/2004 Points Scored, single set, 25-point sets (2008-) 30, Oberlin vs. John Carroll, 9/30/2009 Ohio Wesleyan vs. Hiram, 9/27/2008 Points Scored, 3-game match (1984-2000) 49, Ohio Wesleyan vs. Wooster, 10/17/1998 (18-16, 16-14, 15-7) Points Scored, 30-point format, 3-game match (01-07) 99, Hiram vs. Allegheny, 10/22/2004 (39-37, 30-24, 30-16) Points Scored, 25-point sets, 3-set match (2008-) 80, Oberlin vs. John Carroll, 9/30/2009 (25-20, 30-28, 25-23) Points Scored, 4-game match (1984-2000) 61, Ohio Wesleyan vs. Urbana, 10/30/1993 (15-6, 15-7, 16-18, 15-13) Points Scored, 30-point format, 4-game match (01-07) 127, Ohio Wesleyan vs. PSU-Behrend, 9/17/2005 (30-28, 33-31, 28-30, 36-34) Points Scored, 25-point sets, 4-set match (2008-) 103, Hiram vs. Ohio Wesleyan, 9/27/2008 (25-21, 28-30, 25-13, 25-10) Points Scored, 5-game match (1984-2000) 82, Ohio Wesleyan vs. Denison, 10/25/1997 (15-5, 16-18, 12-15, 15-6, 24-22) Points Scored, 30-point format, 5-game match (01-07) 157, Hiram vs. Case Reserve, 10/3/2001 (40-42, 37-35, 34-36, 36-34, 10-15) Points Scored, 25-point sets, 5-set match (2008-) 110, Kenyon vs. Wooster, 9/25/2010 (22-25, 25-21, 23-25, 25-18, 15-12) Victories Wins 38, Wittenberg, 2007 Winning Percentage .974 (38-1), Wittenberg, 2007 Winning Streak 38, Wittenberg, 2007 Winning Streak, NCAC Matches 67, Wittenberg, 2005-10

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NCAC Athletic Department Overnight Addresses Allegheny Athletic Department Allegheny College; 520 N. Main St.; Meadville, PA 16335-3902; (814) 332-2818

Oberlin Athletic Department Oberlin College; Philips Gymnasium; 200 Woodland St.; Oberlin, OH 44074; (440) 775-8967

Denison Athletic Department Denison University; Livingston Gymnasium; Granville, OH 43023; (740) 587-6604

Ohio Wesleyan Athletic Department Ohio Wesleyan University; Edwards Gym; 61 S. Sandusky St.; Delaware, OH 43015; (740) 368-3734

DePauw Athletic Department DePauw University; 702 S. College Avenue Greencastle, IN 46135; (765) 658-4934

Wabash Athletic Department Wabash College; Allen Athletics Center; 301 W. Wabash Ave.; Crawfordsville, IN 47933; (765) 361-6233

Earlham Athletic Department Earlham College, National Road West Richmond, IN 47374 (765) 983-1483

Wittenberg Athletic Department Wittenberg University; Wittenberg Warehouse; 225 N. Fountain Ave.; Springfield, OH 45504; (937) 327-6498

Hiram Athletic Department Hiram College; c/o Hiram College Service Center; 11715 Garfield Rd.; Hiram, OH 44234; (330) 569-5345

Wooster Athletic Department College of Wooster; Armington Physical Education Center; 1267 Beall Ave.; Wooster, OH 44691; (330) 263-2201

Kenyon Athletic Department Kenyon College; 221 Duff St.; Gambier, OH 43022; (740) 427-5470

NCAC Office 815 Crocker Road; Suite 5; Westlake, OH 44145; (440) 871-8100

NCAC Championship Sports (23) FALL - Men (3) WINTER - Men (3) Cross Country (10) Basketball (10) Football (10) Swimming & Diving (10) Soccer (10) Track & Field, Indoor (9)

SPRING - Men (5) Baseball (10) Golf (10) Lacrosse (6) Tennis (9) Track & Field, Outdoor (9)

FALL - Women (4) WINTER - Women (3) Cross Country (9) Basketball (9) Field Hockey (8) Swimming & Diving (9) Soccer (9) Track & Field, Indoor (8) Volleyball (9)

SPRING - Women (5) Golf (7) Lacrosse (7) Softball (9) Tennis (8) Track & Field, Outdoor (8)

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NCAA Postgraduate Scholarships The NCAA annually awards 174 postgraduate scholarships, 87 for men, 87 for women, in the amount of $7,500 to student-athletes who have excelled academically and athletically and are in their final year of intercollegiate athletics competition. Nominees must maintain at least a 3.200 grade-point average and perform with distinction in varsity competition. The student-athlete must also intend to continue academic work beyond the baccalaureate degree as a part-time or full-time graduate student. The NCAC has had 123 honorees in its 26 seasons of competition. The scholarships have been earned by student-athletes from nine schools in 18 different sports. Kenyon is second in all Division III institutions with 56 honorees since the inception of the NCAA program in 1965 (see chart below), followed by Denison (44) in third. DePauw (19) is tied for 22nd, Wabash (17) is tied for 27th, Ohio Wesleyan (13) is tied for 41st and Wooster (12) is tied for 42nd.

NCAA Postgraduate Scholarships 2010-11 Michael Mpitsos, KEN (Swim) Katie Navaree, DEN (CC) Robert Carlisle, ALL (Football) Michael Harmanis, OWU (Soccer) Jeramie Parker, ALL (CC) Mark Sullivan, KEN (Football)

Julie Hufnagel, DEN (CC) Skip Ivery, WIT (FB) Jeff Krigbaum, OWU (Soccer)

2009-10 Monica Schaffer, ALL (Soccer) David Gatz, OWU (Swim) Kathryn Leech, KEN (Swim)

2001-02 Madeleine C.-Brooks, KEN (Swim) Kate Dunne, WOO (FH) Kate Flikkema, DEN (Swim) Jason Job, OWU (Golf) Ben Whittam, ALL (Swim)

2008-09 Kyle Holliday, OWU (BKB) Elizabeth Carlton, KEN (Swim) Kristen Hohl, DEN (Swim) Tracy Menzel, KEN (Swim) 2007-08 Josh Mitchell, KEN (Swim) 2006-07 Sheldon Steiner, WOO (Base) Elaine Binkley, DEN (CC) Rick Drushal, WOO (FB) Pat Millikan, WAB (FB) Josh Warren, OWU (Soccer) Anne Young, DEN (Soccer) Ben Chojnacki, OWU (BKB) 2005-06 James Berger, KEN (Swim) Travis Brennion, KEN (Swim) Sarah Wall, OWU (Soccer) Colleen Wirtz, DEN (Soccer) Kyle Witucky, WOO (BKB) 2004-05 Jill Boo, DEN (Swim) Sarah Peck, DEN (Swim) Matt Schlingman, WOO (BKB) 2003-04 Mark C.-Brooks, KEN (Swim) Kayla Heising, WOO (Swim)

2002-03 Daniel Kiepfer, KEN (Swim) Ashley Rowatt, KEN (Swim)

2000-01 Lloyd Baron, KEN (Swim) Erica Carroll, KEN (Swim) Matt Churpek, OWU (Track) Amy DeVito, DEN (Swim) Brian Goldthorpe, DEN (Swim) Brett Holcomb, KEN (Swim) Neala Kendall, KEN (Swim) Nate Smith, ALL (Golf) Katie Sprague, DEN (Swim) 1999-00 Aaron Cole, DEN (Swim) Jon Dunhan, DEN (FB) Matt Mahaffey, WOO (FB) Kathleen O'Connor, DEN (Swim) Rebecca White, KEN (Swim) 1998-99 Allison Edsall, DEN (Swim) Erin Hockman, KEN (Tennis) Kelly Lotts, DEN (Swim) Dawn Reinhardt, WIT (VB) Jason Rusnak, DEN (BKB) Rebecca Stanford, KEN (Swim) Marisha Stawiski, KEN (Swim) Matthew Trumbull, DEN (Swim) Anne Tuttle, DEN (Swim) Katherine Varda, KEN (Swim)

1997-98 Robin Blume-Kohout, KEN (Swim) Emily Butler, DEN (Swim) Jennifer Erdos, ALL (Swim) Lisa Natzke, KEN (Swim) Kent Rafey, WIT (FB) Sharon Sanborn, CWRU (Swim) Justin Thoms, KEN (Swim) Kevin Vorenkamp, OWU (Soc) 1996-97 Beth Belanger, KEN (Swim) Casey Chroust, DEN (BKB) Kristin Goldthorpe, DEN (Swim) Kelly James, WOO (Soccer) Katie Petrock, KEN (Swim) Warren Phillips, ALL (Track) Nick Reiser, ALL (FB) Tom Richner, DEN (Swim) Keri Schulte, KEN (CC/Track) Derek Zurn, KEN (Diving) 1995-96 Marcey Jacobs, DEN (Soccer) Debbie King, WOO (Swim) Scott Schwartz, WIT (BKB) 1994-95 Alison Begg, DEN (Swim) John Butcher, KEN (Diving) John Cave, KEN (Swim) Kate Comerford, KEN (Soccer) Steve Cullen, CWRU (CC/Track) Michelle Duffey, DEN (Soccer) Jamie Harless, KEN (BKB) Mike Heithaus, OBE (Swim) Leslie Kindling, CWRU (Track) Scott Meech, WOO (BKB)) Laura Moeller, ALL (CC/Track) 1993-94 Carl Erikson, OBE (Tennis) Nancy Moon, CWRU (Soccer) Claire Roberts, WOO (Soc/Trk) Tasha Willis, KEN (Swim)

1992-93 Jennifer Carter, KEN (Swim) David DeWitt, DEN (Swim) Kevin Frye, DEN (BKB) Matt Medford, CWRU (Track) Kelley Wilder, KEN (CC/Track) 1991-92 Jonathan Fortkamp, DEN (FB) Darren Hadlock, ALL (FB) Kevin Mills, KEN (Soccer) 1990-91 Becky Little, KEN (Swim) Jamie Meek, CWRU (FB) Dave Stevenson, OBE (Swim) 1989-90 Guy Genin, CWRU (Swim) 1988-89 Erin Finneran, KEN (Swim) Greg Hanchin, CWRU (Wrestling) Chris Hutter, CWRU (FB) 1987-88 Grant Jones, DEN (FB) Kevin Locke, DEN (BKB) Ann Osborne, OWU (BKB) Teresa Zurick, KEN (Swim) 1986-87 Beth Biegelson, CWRU (Soccer) David Craig, OBE (Soccer) Beth Welty, KEN (Swim) 1985-86 Rob Danielson, DEN (Swim) Brian Gearinger, DEN (FB) Deborah Neil, KEN (Swim) Dan Waldeck, KEN (FB) 1984-85 Krissan Mueller, KEN (Track) Chris Russell, KEN (BKB)

Scholarship Awards 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 10. 13. 15. 16.

Emory University.................................................... 71 Kenyon College.................................................... 56 Denison University.............................................. 44 Nebraska Wesleyan University.............................. 42 Massachusetts Institute of Technology.................. 40 Johns Hopkins University....................................... 35 Trinity University (Texas)........................................ 34 Luther College........................................................ 33 Washington & Lee University................................. 33 Gustavus Adolphus College................................... 30 Wartburg College................................................... 30 Carleton College.................................................... 30 Pomona-Pitzer Colleges........................................ 27 University of the South........................................... 27 University of California-San Diego......................... 26 Augustana College................................................. 24

17. 18. 20. 22. 25. 27. 30.

Haverford College.................................................. 23 Cornell College (Iowa)........................................... 22 Kalamazoo College................................................ 22 Case Western Reserve University......................... 20 Central College (Iowa)........................................... 20 DePauw University............................................... 19 University of St. Thomas (Minn.)............................ 19 Wheaton College (Ill.)............................................ 19 Williams College.................................................... 18 University of Chicago............................................. 18 University of Redlands........................................... 17 Wabash College................................................... 17 California Institute of Technology........................... 17 Wesleyan University (Conn.).................................. 16 St. Olaf College...................................................... 16 Washington Univ.-St. Louis.................................... 16

34. 37. 41. 44.

University of Scranton............................................ 16 Franklin & Marshall College................................... 15 Hope College......................................................... 15 Washington & Jefferson College............................ 15 Colorado College................................................... 14 Claremont-Mudd-Scripps Colleges........................ 14 Concordia College (Min.)....................................... 14 Muhlenberg College............................................... 14 Simpson College.................................................... 13 Springfield College................................................. 13 Ohio Wesleyan..................................................... 13 Albion College........................................................ 12 Alma College.......................................................... 12 Occidental College................................................. 12 Tufts University...................................................... 12 The College of Wooster....................................... 12

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CoSIDA Academic All-Americans 速 2010-11

First Team Kale Booher, OWU (xc/track) Tony Dipre, ALL (xc/track) Seth Einterz, WAB (xc/track) Joanna Johnson, OBE (xc/track) Katie Navarre, DEN (xc/track) Second Team Robert Carlisle, ALL (football) Kelly Foley, WIT (soccer) Jeramie Parker, ALL (xc/track) Mark Sullivan, KEN (football) Third Team Kodey Haddox, KEN (basketball) Ryan Harmanis, OWU (soccer) Jordan Millice, WIT (golf) Paige Piper, WOO (soccer) Erin Plews-Ogan, WOO (xc/track) Alisa Vereshcagin, DEN (swimming) 2009-10

First Team Rita Cook, OWU (softball) David Gatz, OWU (swimming) Jay Keener, WOO (soccer) Chantal Koechli, WOO (soccer) Peter Shorten, DEN (soccer) Ryan Story, WOO (lacrosse) Mark Sullivan, KEN (football) Second Team Kale Booher, OWU (track) Jesse Chiero, OWU (golf) Kelly Foley, WIT (soccer) Katie Navarre, DEN (cross country) Sarah Shinn, OWU (track) Tim Uher, WIT (track) Third Team Sarah Cook, OWU (softball) Tony Dipre, ALL (track) Ellen Witkoski, KEN (softball) 2008-09

First Team Chantal Koechli, WOO (soccer) Elizabeth Carlton, KEN (swimming) Kristen Hohl, DEN (swimming) Tracy Menzel, KEN (swimming) David Gatz, OWU (swimming) Michael Barnes, DEN (track) Second Team Kyle Holliday, OWU (basketball) Sarah Ash, DEN (soccer) Michael Machala, KEN (swimming) Third Team Jay Keener, WOO (soccer) Ryan Story, WOO (lacrosse) Kelly Adams, KEN (softball) 58

Jake Calcei, KEN (baseball) Justin Held, DEN (baseball) 2007-08 First Team Jamison Dague, OWU (soccer) @ Josh Mitchell, KEN (swimming) @ Elizabeth Carlton, KEN (swimming) Kristen Hohl, DEN (swimming) Second Team Michael Barnes, DEN (track) Emily Bell, WIT (volleyball) James Clear, DEN (baseball) Sarah Fetters, WIT (softball) David Gatz, OWU (swimming) Third Team Erin Gorsich, DEN (tennis) 2006-07

First Team Kyle Sherman, OWU (baseball) Nathan Bates, WAB (xc/track) Elaine Binkley, DEN (xc/track) @ Rick Drushal, WOO (football) Jamison Dague, OWU (soccer) Josh Warren, OWU (soccer) @ Tim Presto, WOO (soccer) Second Team Sheldon Steiner, WOO (baseball) Sarah Fetters, WIT (softball) Marco Dozzi, ALL (xc/track) Marie Rymut, OWU (xc/track) Katie Wieferich, WOO (xc/track) Elizabeth Carlton, KEN (swimming) Kristen Hohl, DEN (swimming) 2005-06

First Team Elaine Binkley, DEN (track/xc) Jared Bogan, WAB (baseball) Sarah Wall, OWU (soccer) @ Josh Warren, OWU (soccer) Colleen Wirtz, DEN (soccer) Second Team Nathan Bates, WAB (track/xc) Jimmy Berger, KEN (swimming) Travis Brennion, KEN (swimming) Jamison Dague, OWU (soccer) Sarah Downs, OWU (softball) Meggie Feran, OWU (track/xc) A.J. Jezierski, DEN (basketball) Andy Warnock, OWU (basketball) Katie Wieferich, WOO (track/xc) Third Team Rebecca Allison, KEN (swimming) Erin Coughlin, DEN (tennis)

2004-05

First Team Matt Schlingman, WOO (basketball) Jill Boo, DEN (swimming) Sarah Peck, DEN (swimming) Elaine Binkley, DEN (track/xc) Sarah Wall, OWU (soccer) Second Team Gabriel Rodrigues, KEN (swimming) Garrett Silvert-Nofle, OWU (soccer) Third Team Katie Lohnes, OWU (swimming) Lauren Fellure, OWU (track/xc) Colleen Wirtz, DEN (soccer) 2003-04

First Team Skip Ivery, WIT (track) Jeff Krigbaum, OWU (soccer) Second Team Joan Anderson, ALL (soccer) Jill Boo, DEN (swimming) Melanie Cluss, DEN (track) Kayla Heising, WOO (swimming) Julie Hufnagel, DEN (c. country) Aaron Polack, ALL (football) Matt Schlingman, WOO (basketball) Agnese Ozolina, KEN (swimming) Third Team Lauren Clark, DEN (swimming) David Holder, OWU (swimming) Adam Mandel, DEN (baseball) 2002-03

First Team Kayla Heising, WOO (swimming) Daniel Kieper, KEN (swimming ) @ Ashley Rowatt, KEN (swimming) @ Second Team Ryan Hartschuh, WOO (football) Third Team Jesse Gregory, KEN (baseball) Katie Holland, KEN (swimming) Chris Vorenkamp, OWU (soccer) 2001-02

First Team Katie Buchert, OWU (soccer) Second Team Jason Job, OWU (golf) Erica Downs, ALL (softball) Jeremy Scott, ALL (track) Jared McNeilly, ALL (football) Ben Whittam, ALL (swimming) Madeleine Courtney-Brooks, KEN (swimming)

Kate Flikkema, DEN (swimming) Third Team Bruce Kinsel, OWU (track) Brad Cain, OWU (soccer) Charlie DeLacey, DEN (basketball) Ashley Rowatt, DEN (swimming) 2000-01

First Team Susan Bettcher, DEN (track) Matt Churpek, OWU (track) Brian Goldthorpe, DEN (swimming) Neala Kendall, KEN (swimming) Stephanie Moss, OWU (track) Joshua White, KEN (swimming) Second Team Susan Bettcher, DEN (c.country) Charlie DeLacey, DEN (basketball) Vince Evener, KEN (c. country) Mark Foran, KEN (football) Katie Sprague, DEN (swimming) Third Team Tim Halterman, OWU (swimming) Matthew Sowa, ALL (tennis) 1999-00

First Team Aaron Cole, DEN (swimming) Jonathan Dunham, DEN (football) Matt Mahaffey, WOO (football) Second Team Lloyd Baron, KEN (swimming) Susan Bettcher, DEN (c. country) Stephanie Moss, OWU (track) Anthony Togliatti, KEN (football) Erin Wimmers, KEN (volleyball) Third Team Mike Campbell, OWU (soccer) Matt Churpek, OWU (track) Josh Estelle, WAB (basketball) Joel Norton, DEN (baseball) 1998-99

First Team Jonathan Dunham, DEN (football) Martin Forman, OWU (soccer) Second Team Matt Glassman, KEN (football) Tom Courtad, CWR (football) Matthew Mahaffey, WOO (football) Matt Trumbull, DEN (swimming) Eric Nigh, DEN (track) Third Team Dawn Reinhardt, WIT (volleyball) Mike Campbell, OWU (soccer)


1997-98

First Team Kristen Beutler, DEN (soccer) John Camillus, OWU (basketball) Dan Denning, KEN (c. country) Dan Denning, KEN (track) Jennifer Erdos, ALL (swimming) Eric Heise, OWU (baseball) Sharon Sanborn, CWR (swimming) @ Torsten Seifert, KEN (swimming) @ Justin Thoms, KEN (swimming) Second Team Chrissy Swartz, OWU (lacrosse) Third Team Tracy Lemonovich, CWR (c. country) 1996-97

First Team Craig Anderson, OWU (football) Casey Chroust, DEN (basketball) Dan Denning, KEN (c. country) Jim Fox, CWR (basketball) @ Kristin Goldthorpe, DEN (swimming) @ Justin Krueger, OWU (soccer) Tom Mager, CWR (baseball) Tom Mager, CWR (football) Kenyon Meadows, CWR (football) Amy Rowland, KEN (tennis) Sharon Sanborn, CWR (swimming) Second Team Kathy Aros, WIT (soccer) Dan Denning, KEN (track) Jennifer Erdos, ALL (swimming) J.R. Kidd, OWU (football) Sandra Oh, CWR (soccer) Missy Rau, ALL (volleyball) Josh Sanders, OWU (football) Third Team Chrissy Swartz, OWU (lacrosse) 1995-96

First Team Craig Anderson, OWU (football) Jennifer Bruny, CWR (track) Doug Finefrock, CWR (football) Jim Fox, CWR (basketball) Kristin Goldthorpe, DEN (swimming) Abby Kennedy, ALL (softball) Justin Krueger, OWU (soccer) Sandra Oh, CWR (soccer) Second Team Scott Ameduri, CWR (tennis) Dan Corfman, WIT (football) Polly Doyle, OWU (lacrosse) Justin Fisk, CWR (football) Scott Schwartz, WIT (basketball)

Third Team Kathy Aros, WIT (soccer) Dan Denning, KEN (c. country) Dan Denning, KEN (track) Erika Henriksson, OWU (soccer) Amy Rowland, KEN (tennis) Mark Walsh, KEN (golf) Matt Willoughby, OWU (soccer) 1994-95

First Team Carla Ainsworth, KEN (swimming) @ Craig Anderson, OWU (football) John Butcher, KEN (diving) John Cave, KEN (swimming) Mike Heithaus, OBE (swimming) Jen Kraly, OWU (volleyball) Greg Reinhart, ALL (baseball) Second Team Steve Cullen, CWR (CC/track) Tara Dickert, ALL (softball) Jennifer Eddy, ALL (track) Jamie Harless, KEN (basketball) Third Team Casey Chroust, DEN (basketball) Michelle Duffey, DEN (soccer) Jim Fox, CWR (basketball) Sandra Oh, CWR (soccer) 1993-94

First Team Carla Ainsworth, KEN (swimming) @ Ziv Arie, ALL (soccer) Carl Erikson, OBE (tennis) @ Jen Kraly, OWU (volleyball) Second Team Bobbi Ashby, WIT (soccer) John Cave, KEN (swimming) Tim Dunham, DEN (CC/track) Erin Foley, OWU (Field Hockey) Mike Heithaus, OBE (swimming) Third Team Jeff McClish, OWU (baseball) Scott Sherman, KEN (tennis) 1992-93

First Team John Butcher, KEN (diving) Jennifer Carter, KEN (swimming) David DeWitt, DEN (swimming) Carl Erikson, OBE (tennis) Jay Gindin, CWR (swimming) Second Team Ellen Kick, OWU (volleyball) Alex Nagle, CWR (football) Karen Porath, OWU (basketball) Kevin Ramsier, OWU (football) Katja Zerck, KEN (tennis)

Third Team Roger Buelow, CWR (Fencing) Amy Kirsch, ALL (softball) Nancy Moon, CWR (soccer) 1991-92

1987-88

First Team Grant Jones, DEN (football) @ Jeff Kaplan, OWU (soccer) Kevin Locke, DEN (basketball)

First Team David DeWitt, DEN (swimming) Molly Dietz, ALL (volleyball) Carl Erikson, OBE (tennis) Jay Gindin, CWR (swimming) Darren Hadlock, ALL (football) Eric Hicks, WOO (tennis) Adam Lechman, ALL (football)

Second Team Greg Hanchin, CWR (wrestling) Matt Hiestand, WOO (baseball) Chris Hutter, CWR (football) Tiffany Jeisel, DEN (swimming)

Second Team Suzanne Boyer, CWR (soccer) Mike Hudy, OWU (baseball) Mark Senkowitz, OWU (baseball)

1986-87

Third Team Carissa Conner, WOO (field hockey) Stacie Rose, OWU (soccer) 1990-91

First Team Mike Bissler, CWR (football) Becky Little, KEN (swimming) Victor Terebuh, WIT (football) Second Team Juli Althoff, OWU (swimming/track) Kathryn Pongonis, DEN (volleyball) Third Team Jeff Baller, WIT (baseball) Jerry Cicolani, WIT (baseball) 1989-90

First Team Mark Slayman, OWU (basketball) Second Team Tim Bolser, DEN (football) Victor Terebuh, WIT (football) Third Team Jerry Cicolani, WIT (baseball) Guy Genin, CWR (swimming) 1988-89

First Team Chris Hutter, CWR (football) Second Team Greg Hanchin, CWR (wrestling) Steve Ims, CWR (CC/track) Steve Rosiek, CWR (football) Mark Slayman, OWU (basketball) Heather Spencer, KEN (volleyball)

Third Team Ann Osborne, OWU (tennis) First Team Robert Burnett, DEN (swimming) David Craig, OBE (soccer) Kevin Locke, DEN (basketball) Second Team Jeff Kaplan, OWU (soccer) Rob Voce, KEN (football) Beth Welty, KEN (swimming) Third Team Greg Hanchin, CWR (wrestling) 1985-86

First Team Kevin Connell, OWU (football) James Drougas, CWR (tennis) Kathy Kuhar, ALL (softball) Nora Land, WOO (volleyball) Dan Waldeck, KEN (football) Second Team David Craig, OBE (soccer) Deborah Neil, KEN (swimming) Honorable Mention Lisa Diment, WOO (basketball) 1984-85

First Team Jim Donnelly, CWR (football) James Drougas, CWR (tennis) Karen Light, WOO (volleyball) Krissan Mueller, KEN (track) Chris Russell, KEN (basketball) Second Team Mike Bukuts, CWR (football) Doug Dempsey, OWU (football) Honorable Mention Russ Miller, WOO (baseball) Brian Sullivan, WOO (baseball) @ Academic All-America速 of the Year

59


NCAC Scholar-Athlete Award The NCAC Scholar-Athlete Award is given annually to one man and one woman from each North Coast School. Instituted in the 1990-91 season, the Award honors outstanding academic and athletic achievement. Allegheny Don Shufran, 1990-91 Katie Tiedemann, 1990-91 Darren Hadlock, 1991-92 Julie Talbot, 1991-92 Kristie Kachuriak, 1992-93 Jason Richey, 1992-93 Ziv Arie, 1993-94 Serena Fraser, 1993-94 Joy Kosiewicz, 1994-95 Greg Reinhart, 1994-95 Deron Black, 1995-96 Amy Sacunas, 1995-96 Melissa Rau, 1996-97 Chuck Stefanini, 1996-97 Jen Erdos, 1997-98 Mike Matott, 1997-98 Allison Pyewell, 1998-99 Ben Wyrick, 1998-99 Kyle Kopnitsky, 1999-2000 Patrick Madigan, 1999-2000 Meredith Stone, 2000-01 Brett Zook, 2000-01 Janie Senchak, 2001-02 Ben Whittam, 2001-02 Adam Fletcher, 2002-03 Jane Och, 2002-03 Lauren Moser, 2003-04 Jon Turner, 2003-04 John Bradey, 2004-05 Sarah Johnston, 2004-05 Vince Werner, 2005-06 Ashley Rogerson, 2005-06 Marco Dozzi, 2006-07 Scarlett Graham, 2006-07 Glenna Kramer, 2007-08 Mateo Villa, 2007-08 Katie Murphy, 2008-09 Joe McMahon, 2008-09 Monica Schaffer, 2009-10 Andy Schleihauf, 2009-10 Robert Carlisle, 2010-11 Rebecca Lendyak, 2010-11 Case Western Reserve Kevin Luthy, 1990-91 Michelle Sabick, 1990-91 Jay Gindin, 1991-92 Michelle Sabick, 1991-92 Joe Scharpf, 1992-93 Sue Waniewski, 1992-93 Nancy Moon, 1993-94 Nilesh Shah, 1993-94 Carole Bruner, 1994-95 60

Steve Cullen, 1994-95 Jody Chattin, 1995-96 Jim Fox, 1995-96 Jim Fox, 1996-97 Sandra Oh, 1996-97 Will Bryant, 1997-98 Amy Schuster, 1997-98 Bryan Moloney, 1998-99 Rachel Rau, 1998-99 Denison Dave Dukat, 1990-91 Katy Pongonis, 1990-91 Jonathan Fortkamp, 1991-92 Christina Monacelli, 1991-92 Dave DeWitt, 1992-93 Christine Talarico, 1992-93 Tim Dunham, 1993-94 Megan Whiteside, 1993-94 Alison Begg, 1994-95 Douglas Day, 1994-95 Marcey Jacobs, 1995-96 Dan Stoner, 1995-96 Casey Chroust, 1996-97 Kristin Goldthorpe, 1996-97 Kristen Beutler, 1997-98 Steve Hettrich, 1997-98 Kelly Lotts, 1998-99 Eric Nigh, 1998-99 Aaron Cole, 1999-2000 Megan Tarr, 1999-2000 Susan L. Bettcher, 2000-01 Brian Goldthorpe, 2000-01 Charles DeLacey, 2001-02 Meredith V. Rieder, 2001-02 Meghan Overom, 2002-03 Jared C. Smith, 2002-03 Julie Hufnagel, 2003-04 Adam Mandel, 2003-04 Jill Boo, 2004-05 Kurt Federer, 2004-05 Kimberly Murley, 2005-06 Louis Sorgi, 2005-06 Elaine Binkley, 2006-07 Bryce Peterson, 2006-07 James Clear, 2007-08 Kim Cochran, 2007-08 Kristen Hohl, 2008-09 Michael Barnes, 2008-09 Anna Rusch, 2009-10 Peter Shorten, 2009-10 Katie Navarre, 2010-11 Dan Crawford, 2010-11

Earlham Adam Lingo, 1990-91 Rebecca Voelkel, 1990-91 Elizabeth Hall, 1991-92 Scott Pearson, 1991-92 Karim Hammad, 1992-93 Patty Wonnell, 1992-93 Craig Gottschalk, 1993-94 Tiffany Harris, 1993-94 Nathan Boyce, 1994-95 Melissa Muller, 1994-95 Lara Singer, 1995-96 Andy White, 1995-96 Dave Cleveland, 1996-97 Katie McCarthy, 1996-97 Troy Gottfried, 1997-98 Mary Johnstone, 1997-98 Orion Creamer, 1998-99 Hilde Thomason, 1998-99 Mandy Rieff, 1999-2000 Andrew Sampson, 1999-2000 Shannon Reider, 2000-01 Chris Wilson, 2000-01 Michael Faile, 2001-02 Becky Graseck, 2001-02 Andrew Graham, 2002-03 Kjersti Knox, 2002-03 Alan Campbell, 2003-04 Logan Fitzatrick, 2003-04 Josiah Young, 2004-05 Rita Lawson, 2004-05 Kevin Hunter, 2005-06 Adair Lindsay, 2005-06 Justin Colanese, 2006-07 Lauren Rosen, 2006-07 Liz Buehler, 2007-08 David Hibbard-Rode, 2007-08 Victor Anciano, 2008-09 Michelle Crane, 2008-09 Max Crumley-Effinger, 09-10 K. McAnnis-Entenman, 09-10

Hiram Erica Gordon, 1999-2000 Jeff Smith, 1999-2000 Justine Beshara, 2000-01 Brandon Clay, 2000-01 Don Beesing, 2001-02 Stephanie Schnetz, 2001-02 Emmalisa Brown, 2002-03 Brad Maguth, 2002-03 Elizabeth Groselle, 2003-04 Michael Kennedy, 2003-04 A.J. White, 2004-05

Shana Toth, 2004-05 Max Kravitz, 2005-06 Shana Toth, 2005-06 Kathleen Moore, 2006-07 Kelsey Resnick, 2006-07 Kelsey Resnick, 2007-08 Megan Taylor, 2007-08 Kelsey Resnick, 2008-09 Whitney Dropsey, 2008-09 Philip Major, 2009-10 Whitney Dropsey, 2009-10 Kristen Cooney, 2010-11 Ryan Greenhill, 2010-11 Kenyon B.J. Kenyon, 1990-91 Becky Little, 1990-91 Jennifer Catino, 1991-92 Patrick McFadden, 1991-92 Jennifer Carter, 1992-93 Mike Marshall, 1992-93 Colleen Severance, 1993-94 Scott Sherman, 1993-94 Carla Ainsworth, 1994-95 John Butcher, 1994-95 Laura Noah, 1995-96 Mark Walsh, 1995-96 Emily Sprowls, 1996-97 Mark Toews, 1996-97 Nicole Canfield, 1997-98 Dan Denning, 1997-98 Christine Breiner, 1998-99 Shaka Smart, 1998-99 James Sheridan, 1999-2000 Erin Wimmers, 1999-2000 Kelly Johnson, 2000-01 Josh White, 2000-01 Kristofer Chaney, 2001-02 Mark Courtney-Brooks, 2001-02 Jesse Gregory, 2002-03 Ashley Rowatt, 2002-03 Jeremy Martinich, 2003-04 Agnese Ozolina, 2003-04 Gabe Rodrigues, 2004-05 Katy Zeanah, 2004-05 Travis Brennion, 2005-06 Katy Zeanah, 2005-06 Paige MacDonald, 2006-07 Josh Mitchell, 2006-07 S. Hemmingson, 2007-08 Josh Mitchell, 2007-08 Elizabeth Carlton, 2008-09 Devin Catlin, 2008-09

Holly Bacon, 2009-10 Mark Sullivan, 2009-10 Kelly Schorling, 2010-11 Mark Sullivan, 2010-11 Oberlin Melissa Merrill, 1990-91 Grant Fletcher, 1991-92 Laura Haldeman, 1991-92 Natalie Celeste, 1992-93 Carl Erikson, 1992-93 Carl Erikson, 1993-94 Megan Schulte, 1993-94 Michael Heithaus, 1994-95 Emily Norland, 1994-95 Ted Lytle, 1995-96 Margaret Mittner, 1995-96 Shannon Fox, 1996-97 Eric Nordstrom, 1996-97 Sam Krasnow, 1997-98 Alysia Oakley, 1997-98 Christopher Davis, 1998-99 Amie Ely, 1998-99 Christiana Nwofor, 1999-00 Jonathan Wilson, 1999-2000 Elizabeth Chandler, 2000-01 John Limouze, 2000-01 Nzinga Broussard, 2001-02 Sam Hobi, 2001-02 Laura Feeney, 2002-03 Zachary Pretzer, 2002-03 Shannon Houlihan, 2003-04 Andrew Roebuck, 2003-04 Jaime Johnson, 2004-05 Mark Knee, 2004-05 Meg Reitz, 2005-06 David Wilson, 2005-06 Zachary Tesler, 2006-07 Barrie Newberger, 2006-07 Marie Barnett, 2007-08 Chase Palmer, 2007-08 Nicole Ouellet, 2008-09 Kyle Taljan, 2008-09 Clara Shaw, 2009-10 Dan Jaffe, 2009-10 Joanna Johnson, 2010-11 Solomon Turner, 2010-11 Ohio Wesleyan Juli Althoff, 1990-91 Barry Pry, 1990-91 Kristin Deifendeifer, 1991-92 Reed Welsch, 1991-92 Angie Mouch, 1992-93


Layne Thrasher, 1992-93 Erin Foley, 1993-94 Brad Moore, 1993-94 Jen Kraly, 1994-95 Obi Moneme, 1994-95 Meg Sheehan, 1994-95 Polly Doyle, 1995-96 Justin Krueger, 1995-96 Craig Anderson, 1996-97 Nicole Detling, 1996-97 Kevin Vorenkamp, 1997-98 Katie White, 1997-98 Martin Forman, 1998-99 Sara White, 1998-99 Clayton Jones, 1999-2000 Kristin Shockley, 1999-2000 Matt Churpek, 2000-01 Stephanie Moss, 2000-01 Leslie Welsh, 2000-01 Katie Buchert, 2001-02 Jason Job, 2001-02 Emily Smythe, 2002-03 Chris Vorenkamp, 2002-03 Jeff Krigbaum, 2003-04 Amy Work, 2003-04 N. Jonhenry, 2004-05 Jen Musbach, 2004-05 Andy Warnock, 2005-06 Sarah Wall, 2005-06

Marie Rymut, 2006-07 Josh Warren, 2006-07 Jamison Dague, 2007-08 Steffi Graf, 2007-08 Kyle Holliday, 2008-09 Leah Schmelzer, 2008-09 David Gatz, 2009-10 Rita Cook, 2009-10 Kyle Herman, 2010-11 Laura Van Hoey, 2010-11 Wabash Josh Estelle, 1999-2000 Ryan Freeman, 2000-01 Jared Smit, 2001-02 Nathan Boulais, 2002-03 Mike Mack, 2003-04 Colin Fahey, 2004-05 Jared Bogan, 2005-06 Nathan Bates, 2006-07 Adrian Pynenberg, 2007-08 Jay Horrey, 2008-09 Chad Sorenson, 2009-10 Seth Einterz, 2010-11 Wittenberg Jeanette Baier, 1990-91 Victor Terebuh, 1990-91

Holly Everhart, 1991-92 Jeff Fortkamp, 1991-92 Roberta Ashby, 1992-93 Brenden Wetherton, 1992-93 Aaron Perry, 1993-94 Michelle Tobbe, 1993-94 Dave Caine, 1994-95 Wendy Johnecheck, 1994-95 Jodi Ahnmark, 1995-96 Scott Schwartz, 1995-96 Staci Bertelli, 1996-97 Xan Smith, 1996-97 Sarah Jurewicz, 1997-98 Kent Rafey, 1997-98 Julien Lazarus, 1998-99 Dawn Reinhardt, 1998-99 Chris MacLaren, 1999-00 Shana L. Ryan, 1999-2000 Aaron Edsall, 2000-01 Shana Ryan, 2000-01 Tiffany Keller, 2001-02 Brian Armstrong, 2002-03 Emily Duh, 2002-03 Skip Ivery, 2003-04 Geri Woessner, 2003-04 Andy Bonar, 2004-05 Sarah Yuskewich, 2004-05

Sebastian Missura, 2005-06 Emily Hiscar, 2005-06 Tristan Murray, 2006-07 Kathy Hittle, 2006-07 Sarah Fetters, 2007-08 Andy Vanover, 2007-08 Manny Lamarre, 2008-09 Jackie Williams, 2008-09 Erin Slattery, 2009-10 Michael Condon, 2009-10 Jeremy Block, 2010-11 Amy Cox, 2010-11 Wooster Kathy Behringer, 1990-91 Paul Gamble, 1990-91 Carissa Conner, 1991-92 Mark Marando, 1991-92 Tammy Berger, 1992-93 Jason Kelley, 1992-93 Clarissa Roberts, 1993-94 John Tomlinson, 1993-94 Scott Meech, 1994-95 Meg Wood, 1994-95 Tim Hallett, 1995-96 Debbie King, 1995-96 Bill Hubbard, 1996-97 Kelly James, 1996-97 H. Heitsenrether, 1997-98

Travis Nieman, 1997-98 Emily Gorka, 1998-99 Sean Malone, 1998-99 Ian Lauer, 1999-2000 A. Washington, 1999-00 Nick Chiorian, 2000-01 Sandy Tecklenburg, 2000-01 Matt Englander, 2001-02 Miriam Esber, 2001-02 Ryan Hartschuh, 2002-03 Becca Stinson, 2002-03 Kayla Heising, 2003-04 Ryan Snyder, 2003-04 Matt Schlingman, 2004-05 Brianna Lux, 2004-05 Kyle Witucky, 2005-06 Lindsay Tingley, 2005-06 Rick Drushal, 2006-07 Katie Wieferich, 2006-07 Laura Ayer, 2007-08 Stephen Zumbrun, 2007-08 Eric Grinnell, 2008-09 Taryn Higgins, 2008-09 Chantal Koechli, 2009-10 Jay Keener, 2009-10 Matthew Pullara, 2010-11 Suzanne Capehart, 2010-11

NCAC Pam Smith and Don Hunsinger Awards Denison alumnae Katie Navarre, a four-time AllAmerican, was selected as the winner of the 2011 Pam Smith Award. The Pam Smith Award, which recognizes one female senior student-athlete, commemorates former Wittenberg women's basketball coach and associate director of athletics Pam Smith. Smith had a profound impact on the athletes she coached and students she taught over her illustrious Tiger career that spanned more than two decades. She led the Tigers to eight Div. III tournament appearances, 12, 20-win seasons and 11 NCAC regular season championships. Navarre was a vital member of the Denison cross country and track & field teams over her four-year career. She earned four All-American accolades, including a sixth-place finish in the 2009 NCAA Division III Cross Country Championships, the best finish by a DU runner in school history. In addition, she picked up seven All-NCAC certificates in her career, and the 2009 NCAC Outdoor Track Distance Runner of the Year, and Cross Country Runner of the Year that fall, She held a 3.96 grade point average and is a member of Phi Beta Kappa, and earned the rare of honor of being awarded two NCAA-sponsored scholarships.

A three-time NCAC champion, Ohio Wesleyan graduate Kyle Herman was named the 2011 Don Hunsinger Award winner. The Don Hunsinger Award, which recognizes one male senior student-athlete, commemorates the former Oberlin administrator and coach. Over a span of more than three decades, Hunsinger served Oberlin as athletic director and chairman of the department of physical education, while also serving stints as head coach of Yeoman football, baseball and men's and women's tennis teams. He also assisted with the men's and women's basketball programs. Herman, a four-year member of the OWU cross country, indoor track and field and outdoor track and field squads, captured three relay championships and was a member of six NCAC championship teams. He also earned five All-NCAC honors during her career. Herman, who plans to teach history in Beruit, lead youth groups and coach track and field. He is a member of Phi Beta Kappa, and served as president of the student body his senior year.

NCAC Pam Smith Award Winners

NCAC Don Hunsinger Award Winners

2011 Katie Navarre, DEN

2011 Kyle Herman, OWU

2010 Sarah Shinn, OWU

2010 J. David Gatz, OWU

2009 Tracy Menzel, KEN

2009 Kyle Holliday, OWU

2008 Erin Gorsich, DEN

Katie Navarre

Kyle Herman

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20th Anniversary Teams, 1993-03 Baseball

C-Jason Bogenrife (OWU) 98-01 1B - Drew Caravella (OWU) 99-02 2B - Steve Goodhart (OWU) 92-95 SS - Dan Marchetti (OWU) 1997-00 3B - Ryan Missler (OWU) 1996-98 OF - Joe Loudenslager (OWU) 00-03 OF - Bryan Magoteaux (WIT) 96-99 OF - Shaun Rice (OWU) 01-02 OF - Jared Treadway (WOO) 99-02 OF - Trevor Urban (WOO) 96-99 DH - Joe Musgrove (ALL) 94-97 UT - Derek Johnson (DEN) 98-01 P - Matt Englander (WOO) 99-02 P - Tyler Mott (OWU) 01-04 P - Jeff Mountain (ALL) 97-00 P - Brad Roser (OWU) 92-94 P - John Werner (WOO) 99-02

Men's Basketball

G - Matt Croci (WIT) 91-94 G - Jamie Harless (KEN) 92-95 G - Brian Malinowski (DEN) 93-96 G - Ryan Taylor (WIT) 98-01 F - Joe DesJean (WAB) 00-03 F - Chris Donovan (KEN) 92-95 F - John Ellenwood (WOO) 97-00 F - Bryan Nelson (WOO) 00-03 C - Ryan Gorman (WOO) 96-99 C - Travis Schwab (OWU) 01-04

Women's Basketball

G - Nzinga Broussard (OBE) 99-02 G - Christi Clay (DEN) 91-94 G - Megan Coughlin (OWU) 97-00 G - Stephany Dunmyer (KEN) 97-00 F - Kim Graf (KEN) 94-97 F - Beth Green (WIT) 91-94 F - Kim Huber (ALL) 92-95 F - Karen Schell (KEN) 96-99 C - Sara Jurewicz (WIT) 95-98 C - Katy Sturtz (OWU) 99-02

Men's Cross Country

Brock Babcock (DEN) 99-02 Michael Baird (KEN) 99-02 Brian Casselberry (CWRU) 91-94 Steve Cullen (CWRU) 91-94 Dan Denning (KEN) 94-97 Joe Dunham (DEN) 97-00 Vince Evener (KEN) 97-00 Ben Hildebrand (KEN) 99-02 Jeremy Kaufman (WIT) 95-95 Eric Nigh (DEN) 95-98

Women's Cross Country

Gretchen Baker (KEN) 93-96 Tina Chase (ALL) 90-93 Shannon Fox (OBE) 93-96 Abi Gerstle (WIT) 99-02 Emily Moorefield (WOO) 93-94 Shannon Rieder (ERL) 97-00 Amy Schuckert (ALL) 95-98 Keri Schulte (KEN) 93-96 Sandy Tecklenburg (WOO) 97-00 Lori Tuchfeld (OBE) 99-02

Golf

Ryan Casciani (OWU) 96-99 Mike Gasper (ALL) 96-99 Jason Job (OWU) 99-02 Jeff Nimeh (WOO) 95-98 Chad Poling (OWU) 01-04 Ben Rathfon (ALL) 2002-04 Bobby Ruffing (ALL) 95-98 Joe Salvaggio (ALL) 93-96 Jay Tilton (OWU) 00-03 John Wiler (ALL) 92-95

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Field Hockey

F - Wizzie Crocker (DEN) 91-94 F - Beth Korkin (OWU) 93-96 F - Amy Kraus (WIT) 94-97 F - Elissa McCarthy (DEN) 95-98 F - Emily White (WOO) 98-01 M - Rebecca Aldred (ERL) 00-03 M - Katie Doyle (WOO) 92-95 M - Miriam Esber (WOO) 98-01 M - Karen Lancaster (DEN) 01M - Jo-El Miller (WIT) 95-98 M - Emily Norland (OBE) 91-94 D - Mariah Dumanis (OWU) 93-96 D - Kate Dunne (WOO) 98-01 D - Heather Heitsenrether (WOO) 94-97 D - Brianna Quinn (OBE) 99-02 D - Rebecca Russ (WIT) 99-02 G - Sara Hamilton (WIT) 95-98 G - Pam Walker (OBE) 98-01

Football

QB - Jake Knott (WAB) 99-02 QB - Paul Bell (ALL) 91-94 RB - Casey Donaldson (WIT) 97-00 RB - Marcus Booker (WIT) 93-96 RB - Jim Mormino (ALL) 94-97 RB - Matt Capone (OWU) 97-01 WR - Brandon Good (WOO) 95-98 WR - Mike Aljancic (WIT) 98-01 WR - Ronnie Anderson (ALL) 93-96 TE - Nathan Six (ALL) 95-98 TE - Ryan Short (WAB) 99-02 C - Brad Goe (ALL) 91-94 OL - Chad Peterman (WOO) 96-99 OL - Xan Smith (WIT) 93-96 OL - Mark Chubb (WIT) 91-94 OL - Ron Cunningham (WIT) 92-95 OL - Anson Park (ALL) 92-95 K - Jimmy Watts (WIT) 93-96 DL - Nick Reiser (ALL) 93-96 DL - Mike Sanders (WIT) 91-94 DL - Juan Howard (WIT) 98-01 DL - Brad Horst (WOO) 96-99 DL - Blair Hammer (WAB) 00-04 LB - Andy Pope (WIT) 99-02 LB - Kent Rafey (WIT) 94-97 LB - Seth Duerr (WOO) 96-99 LB - Jason Whitehead (WIT) 92-95 DB - Ken Pope (WIT) 95-98 DB - Bryan Magoteaux (WIT) 95-98 DB - Seth Mastrine (WOO) 97-00 DB - John Hauser (WIT) 99-02 DB - Ryan Spicer (OWU) 90-93 P - Matt Mahaffey (WOO) 96-99 P - Don Siler (ERL) 91-94 RS - Russ Fedyk (WIT) 95-98

Men's Lacrosse

A - Ryan Berger (DEN) 99-02 A - Matt Coughlin (OWU) 99-02 A - Jason Fogelson (OWU) 98-01 A - Dave Maguire (OWU) 95-98 A - Darren McGurn (OWU) 95-98 M - Ethan Ewing (DEN) 91-94 M - Ryan Kelley (OBE) 93-96 M - Chris LeMoult (OWU) 92-95 M - Derick Stowe (KEN) 98-01 M - Dan Stroka (OWU) 97-00 M - Kevin Sullivan (DEN) 00-03 D - David Auch (OWU) 97-00 D - Mike Collins (KEN) 95-98 D - Zach Gagel (OWU) 97-00 D - Alex Jacobs (DEN) 96-99 D - Blaire Modic (KEN) 99-02 G - Marc Jacobsen (DEN) 92-95 G - Peter Royer (DEN) 99-02

Women's Lacrosse

A - Elizabeth Barry (OBE) 94-97 A - Cheryl Connelly (DEN) 91-94 A - Jenny Feldman (OWU) 96-99 A - Laura Peace (DEN) 98-01 A - Kati Robbins (WIT) 98-01 M - Beth Hemminger (WOO) 00-03 M - Alison Offenburger (DEN) 96-99 M - Katherine Roberts (OBE) 95-98 M - Wendy Scranton (OBE) 92-95 M - Meg Wood (WOO) 92-95 D - Sarah Bennett (DEN) 92-95 D - Danielle D'Orazio (DEN) 00-03 D - Bartley Mitchell (DEN) 93-96 D - Cara Romanowski (WIT) 00-03 D - Laura Slingluff (WOO) 92-95 G - Tracy Scott (OWU) 95-97 G - Abbe Stewart (DEN) 00-03

Men's Soccer

F - Jay Freund (WIT) 91-94 F - Obi Moneme (OWU) 92-95 F - Kelsey Olds (KEN) 95-98 F - Mark Phillips (KEN) 91-94 F - Wayne Street (OWU) 91-94 M - Wayne Albertson (KEN) 93-96 M - Chris Duff (OWU) 90-93 M - Philip Hoffman (OWU) 98-01 M - Kulu Moyo (KEN) 99-02 M - Chris Vorenkamp (OWU) 99-02 D - Jason Chiero (OWU) 93-95 D - Chris Hayes (OWU) 96-99 D - Kyle Henry (ALL) 99-02 D - Chris Lindsey (ERL) 96-99 D - Jonas Osterberg (WIT) 90-93 D - Leigh Sillery (KEN) 90-93 G - Orion Creamer (ERL) 95-98 G - James Marks (ALL) 98-01

Women's Soccer

F - Annie Gillespie (WOO) 94-97 F - Dana Grandmaison (DEN) 98-01 F - Karen Larson (WIT) 92-95 F - Hilary Marx (KEN) 92-95 F - Katy Sturtz (OWU) 98-01 M - Kathy Aros (WIT) 93-96 M - Sarah Finke (DEN) 99-02 M - Jane Och (ALL) 99-02 M - Allison Pyewell (ALL) 95-98 M - Katherine Roberts (OBE) 94-97 M - Megan Whiteside (DEN) 90-93 D - Kelly James (WOO) 93-96 D - Abby Jenkins (OWU) 97-00 D - Liz Orr (ALL) 99-02 D - Meredith Rieder (DEN) 98-01 D - Shana Ryan (WIT) 97-00 G - Shely Holt (ERL) 98-01 G - Sarah Newlin (WIT) 92-95

Softball

C - Carrie McCaughtry (HIR) 98-01 INF - Carissa Clagg (WIT) 98-01 INF - Jen Lorenzen (ALL) 97-00 INF - Erin O'Neill (KEN) 99-02 INF - Christy Schneider (WIT) 99-02 OF - Laura Fromm (ALL) 95-98 OF - Lauren Hornish (ALL) 98-01 OF - Kerri Horst (WOO) 00-02 OF - Kristi Kose (KEN) 98-99 OF - Courtney Pitt (DEN) 00-03 OF - Beth Walters (WIT) 00-03 UT - Norah Gillam (WIT) 02P - Carey Oakes (WIT) 97-00 P - Robin Shesky (DEN) 98-01 P - Emily Thornton (OWU) 00-03 P - Courtney Zollars (DEN) 99-02

Men's Swimming & Diving

50 Free - Aaron Cole (DEN) 96-00 100 Free - Aaron Cole (DEN) 96-00 200 Free - Read Boon (KEN) 99-03 500 Free - M. Bonomo (KEN) 98-02 1650 Free - M. Bonomo (KEN) 98-02 200 IM - Read Boon (KEN) 99-03 400 IM - Brett Holcomb (KEN) 97-01 100 Fly - Aaron Cole (DEN) 96-00 200 Fly - Pedro Monteiro (KEN) 96-98 100 Back - E. De Avila (KEN) 99-01 200 Back - Tom Rushton (KEN) 97-01 100 Brst - Julien Lazarus (WIT) 95-99 200 Brst - Julien Lazarus (WIT) 95-99 1M Dive - John Hreha (ALL) 00-03 3M Dive - John Hreha (ALL) 00-03

Women's Swimming & Diving

50 Free - Kayla Heising (WOO) 00-04 100 Free - C. Ainsworth (KEN) 91-95 200 Free - A. Ozolina (KEN) 01-04 500 Free - Tamara Carty (DEN) 99-03 1650 Free - Tamara Carty (DEN) 99-03 200 IM - Liz Whittam (WOO) 01-04 400 IM - Ashley Rowatt (KEN) 99-03 100 Fly - Mollie Parrish (DEN) 98-02 200 Fly - M. Courtney-Brooks (KN) 98-02 100 Back - Beth Galloway (KEN) 00-04 200 Back - Beth Galloway (KEN) 00-04 100 Brst - A. Heidinger (DEN) 98-02 200 Brst - Adie Curtner (KEN) 98-99 1M Dive - Becky White (KEN) 96-00 3M Dive - Kelley Anderson (ALL) 01-04

Men's Tennis

Singles W. Cham-A-Koon (WOO) 91-92, 94-95 Casey Clagett (WIT) 00-03 Carl Erickson (OBE) 91-94 Amit Garg (CWRU) 96-99 Lee Hays (DEN) 96-99 Bryan Heft (WIT) 98-01 Mike Herrick (KEN) 02Cole Newman (DEN) 97-00 Ed Peterson (KEN) 92-95 Nilesh Saldanha (WOO) 01-04 Doubles W. Cham-A-Koon/J. Weaver (WOO) Ousmane Diop/Carl Erickson (OBE) Lee Hayes/Jeremy Edesses (DEN)

Women's Tennis

Singles Caryn Cuthbert (KEN) 97-00 Emily Figel (WIT) 02Lauren Gerlach (DEN) 01-04 Erin Hockman (KEN) 96-99 Anna-Britt Mahler (OWU) 99-02 Bethany Pribilla (OBE) 94-97 Brooke Roeper (KEN) 99-02 Kristen Sherrill (OWU) 94-96 Tegan Tindall (KEN) 93-96 Ali St. Vincent (KEN) 95-98 Doubles Caryn Cuthbert/Erin Hockman (KEN) Lauren Gerlach/Alison Hughes (DEN) Kristen Sherrill/Shelly Smart (OWU)

Men's Indoor Track & Field

55 Dash - Clem Choice (OWU) 99-02 55 HH - Skip Ivery (WIT) 01-04 300 Dash - Jason Love (WIT) 94-97 400 Dash - Ty Stillman (OWU) 00-01 800 Run - Tony Kauke (WOO) 95-98 1500 Run - Joe Dunham (DEN) 98-00 3000 Run - Michael Baird (KEN) 99-03 5000 Run - Dan Princic (ALL) 99-03

Long Jump - C. Neeley (OWU) 99-02 Triple Jump - C. Neeley (OWU) 99-02 High Jump - C. Neeley (OWU) 99-02 Pole Vault - Jeremy Scott (ALL) 99-03 Shot Put - Ed Kalaher (CWRU) 93-96

Women's Indoor Track & Field

55 Dash - Jackie Berner (DEN) 01-04 55 HH - Melanie Cluss (DEN) 01-04 300 Dash - Stacy Walker (WIT) 95-98 400 Dash - J. Westerfield (DEN) 98-02 800 Run - Amy Shuckert (ALL) 95-99 1500 Run - M. Poole (WOO) 94-97 3000 Run - Laura Feeney (OBE) 00-03 5000 Run - N.e Morandi (ALL) 99-03 Long Jump - J. Williams (WOO) 99-02 Triple Jump - S. Houlihan (OBE) 01-04 High Jump - L. Kindling (CWRU) 92-95 Pole Vault - Jen Surace (ALL) 99-03 Shot Put - A. Albrecht (OWU) 95-98

Men's Outdoor Track & Field

100 Dash - Reggie Ray (WOO) 98-00 110 HH - Skip Ivery (WIT) 01-04 200 Dash - Reggie Ray (WOO) 98-00 400 Dash - Ty Stillman (OWU) 00-01 400 HH - Scott Cothren (HIR) 01-04 800 Run - Andre Street (OBE) 99-02 1500 Run - Joe Dunham (DEN) 98-00 3000 Steeple - J. Kaufman (WIT) 93-96   Eric Nigh (DEN) 96-99 5000 - H. Thirumurthy (OBE) 95-98 10,000 - B. Casselberry (CWRU) 91-94 Long Jump - C. Neeley (OWU) 99-02 Triple Jump - C. Neeley (OWU) 99-02 High Jump - C. Neeley (OWU) 99-02 Pole Vault - Jeremy Scott (ALL) 00-03 Shot Put - Ed Kalaher (CWRU) 93-96 Discus - Ed Kalaher(CWRU) 93-96 Javelin - Warren Phillips(ALL) 94-97 Decathlon - Josh Guerrieri (WIT) 98-01

Women's Outdoor Track & Field

100 Dash - Jackie Berner (DEN) 01-04 110 HH - Melanie Cluss (DEN) 01-04 200 Dash - Jackie Berner (DEN) 01-04 400 Dash - Jill Westerfield (DEN) 98-02 400 HH - A. Gillespie (WOO) 95-96, 98 800 Run - Amy Shuckert (ALL) 96-99 1500 Run - Amy Shuckert (ALL) 96-99 3000 Run - Tina Chase (ALL) 91-94 3000 Steeple - C. Benson (ALL) 01-04 5000 - Shannon Rieder (ERL) 98-01 10,000 Run - Tina Chase (ALL) 91-94   Shannon Rieder (ERL) 98-01 Long Jump - J. Williams (WOO) 98-02 Triple Jump - Apryl Wynn (OBE) 02-99 High Jump - Emma Brown (HIR) 00-03 Pole Vault - Jen Surace (ALL) 99-03 Shot Put - S. Gisbrecht (OWU) 92-95 Discus - Laura Finkes (DEN) 00-04 Javelin - Tiffany Bennett (ALL) 00-03 Heptathlon - G. Woessner (WIT) 01-04

Volleyball

Sheila Gisbrecht (OWU) 91-94 Beth Green (WIT) 90-93 Tiffany Keller (WIT) 99-02 Carrie Kraly (OWU) 93-96 Monica McDonald (WIT) 01-04 Teresa Murphy (WIT) 99-02 Beth Nowicki (WIT) 94-97 Dawn Reinhart (WIT) 95-98 Jamie Salay (DEN) 94-97 Sarah Yuskewich (WIT) 01-04 Kim Woodring (WIT) *94-97


10th Anniversary Teams, 1984-93 Baseball C - Mark Senkowitz (OWU) 90-92 1B - Jeff Brown (WIT) 89-92 INF - Steve Cook (ALL) 90-93 INF - Rick Grimm (ALL) 88-89 INF - Cary McConnell (WOO) 86-89 INF - Rick Sforzo (WOO) 84-87 INF - Scott Walberry (OWU) 85-88 OF - Matt Hiestand (WOO) 87-90 OF - Greg Justice (OWU) 90-93 OF - Scott Tedder (OWU) 85-88 DH - Dave Kessler (WOO) 85-86 P - Tim Bruzdewicz (ALL) 86-88 P - Hank Jones (OWU) 85-86 P - Dean Peterson (ALL) 91-93 P - Rob Pischetta (WOO) 84-87 P - Kevin Tatar (WIT) 87-90 P - Chip Winiarski (OBE) 87-90 Men's Basketball G - Erich Riebe (WOO) 88-92 G - John Robic (DEN) 84-86 G - Ed Saxon (CWRU) 89-92 G - Chip Winiarski (OBE) 86-90 F - Garret Daggett (ALL) 85-89 F - Brian Stadnik (ALL) 83-87 F - Scott Tedder (OWU) 84-88 C - Stan Aukamp (WOO) 88-92 C - Brad Baldridge (WIT) 87-91 C - Lee Rowlinson (OWU) 84-88 Women's Basketball G - Ann Gilbert (OBE) 89-91 G - Suzanne Helfant (ALL) 84-88 G - Ann Osborne (OWU) 84-88 G - Jill Tibbe (KEN) 84-88 F - LaWanda Crawl (WOO) 86-90 F - Shannon Ferguson (ERL) 90-94 F - Beth Green (WIT) 90-94 F - Krista Jacobs (OWU) 88-92 C - Jill Myers (OWU) 84-88 C - Karen Porath (OWU) 89-93 Men's Cross Country Mike Collyer (DEN)89-92 Todd Fach (WOO)84-87 Paul Fleming (WOO) 83-86 Jason Kelley (WOO) 89-92 Karl Knoll (CWRU) 88-89 Jeff Lowenguth (ALL) 86-89 Ed Menis (CWRU) 85-86 Matt Nemeth (OBE) 88-91 Scott Pearson (ERL) 88-91 Vince Van Burik (CWRU) 84-87 Women's Cross Country Kara Berghold (KEN) 88-91 Sue Castor (ALL) 88-91 Sarah Cox (OBE) 83-86 Chris Dudek (ALL) 84-87 Alyse Holden (ALL) 88-91 Vanessa Jones (OWU) 1981-84 Lynda Kohl (ALL) 87-90 Jennifer Shaver (ALL) 85-86 Patty Smanik (WOO) 84-87 Kelley Wilder (KEN) 89-92 Golf Matt Alcorn (KEN) 88-91 Todd Benware (OWU) 87-90 Mark Farrell (DEN) 85-88 Jim Irvin (OWU) 86-87 Rick Lyons (WIT) 89-92 Scott Nye (WOO) 82-85

Jim Swanson (ALL) 89-92 Greg Wilhelm (OWU) 88-90 J.W. Wilson (OWU) 91-94 Dan Wyant (OWU) 86-89 Field Hockey F - Carissa Conner (WOO) 88-91 F - Lo.Hendershott (OWU) 89-90 F - Lisa Longstreth (OBE) 87-90 F - Tara Maloney (DEN) 83-86 F - Carol Martin (WOO) 82-85 F - Leedsie O'Connell (DEN) 87-90 F - Gina Reif (ERL) 90-92 M - Betsy Jennings (KEN) 86-89 M - Lisa McInally (WIT) 88-91 M - Cathy Ronan (OWU) 88-89 M - Betsy Seiler (DEN) 84-87 D - R. Buckingham (OWU) 85-88 D - Linda DeMichele (OWU) 86-89 D - Le. Hendershott (OWU) 86-89 D - Jess Skolnikoff (WOO) 85-88 G - Robin Cardin (OBE) 84-87  Football QB - Fred DiSanto (CWRU) 1981-84 QB - Jeff Filkovski (ALL) 87-90 RB - Stanley Drayton (ALL) 89-92 RB - Brian Grandison (WOO) 88-91 RB - Chris Spriggs (DEN) 83-86 RB - Jon Warga (WIT) 87-90 WR - Todd Stoner (KEN) 1981-84 WR - Ted Taggart (KEN) 88-90 TE - Sean McCabe (KEN) 88-91 C - Jeff Fortkamp (WIT) 88-91 OL - Ron Bendekovic (ALL) 89-92 OL - Jeff Court (OWU) 87-90 OL - Brian Gearinger (DEN) 82-85 OL - Mike Mates (ALL) 84-87 OL - Mark Raiff (CWRU) 82-85 K - Mike Weber (CWRU) 83-85 DL - Erwin Grabisna (CWRU) 85-87 DL - Dan Holland (DEN) 84-87 DL - Fred Manley (CWRU) 1981-84 DL - Mike Parker (ALL) 85-88 DL - Keith Rucker (OWU) 89-81 DE - T.J. Florkiewicz (ALL) 91-92 DE - Brock Jones (WOO) 84-87 DE - Neil Ringers (OWU) 87-90 LB - Traver Johnson (WIT) 90-93 LB - Keith LaDu (OBE) 84-87 LB - Wayne Mack (ALL) 89-92 LB - Jay Todd (CWRU) 83-86 DB - Tony Bifulco (ALL) 88-91 DB - Dean Hood (OWU) 83-86 DB - David LaCarte (ALL) 87-90 DB - Rex Stapleton (DEN) 86-89 DB - Ron Stepanovic (CWRU) 82-85 P - Steve Schott (DEN) 88-91 Men's Lacrosse A - Rob Alvino (OWU) 85-88 A - Jim applegate (WOO) 82-85 A - Tom Bryan (DEN) 87-90 A - Steve Davidow (WOO) 1998-91 A - Andy Greaves (OWU) 90-93 M - Charlie Blanchard (OWU) 85-88 M - Toby Boucher (OWU) 85-88 M - Jay Dugan (DEN) 83-86 M - Tim James (OWU) 90-93 M - Chris Jeliffe (KEN) 87-90 M - Neil Ringers (OWU) 88-91 D - Dave Breschi (DEN) 83-86 D - Mike Tiedemann (OWU) 90-93 D - Kevin Wall (OWU) 89-92

D - Mike Warnes (OWU) 87-90 G - Rich Flynn (OWU) 88-91

1M Dive - John Butcher (KEN) 92-95 3M Dive - Doug Tucker (ALL) 89-92

Shot Put - Keith Rucker (OWU) 89-92 Pole Vault - K. Luthy (CWRU) 88-91

Women's Lacrosse A - Jodi Bennyhoff (WIT) 87-90 A - Jessica Brown (KEN) 85-88 A - Meg Filoon (DEN) 82-85 A - C. Mendelson (DEN) 86-89 A - Christina Monacelli (DEN) 89-92 A - Jen Sherbrooke (DEN) 87-90 A - Chrissy Talarico (DEN) 90-93 A - Betty Title (WOO) 83-86 D - Tammy Barnes (WOO) 90-93 D - Sharon Dewey (DEN) 89-92 D - Debbie Graeber (OWU) 90-93 D - Betsy Jennings (KEN) 87-90 D - Tara Maloney (DEN) 84-87 D - Wendy Stetson (KEN) 84-87 D - R. Sugarman (OBE) 87-90 G - Cathie Herrick (KEN) 87-90

Women's Swimming & Diving 50 Free - Patricia Abt (KEN) 84-87   Brooke Henderson (WOO) 86-89 100 Free - Patricia Abt (KEN) 84-87 200 Free - J. Berkowitz (KEN) 90-93 500 Free - J. Berkowitz (KEN) 90-93 1650 Free - K. Thoman (ALL) 88-91 200 IM - J. Carter (KEN) 90-93 400 IM - M. Nelson (KEN) 87-90 100 Fly - Kristie Stacy (KEN) 89-92   Amy Heasley (KEN) 85-88 200 Fly - Amy Heasley (KEN) 85-88 100 BCK - Erin Finneran (KEN) 86-89 200 BCK - K.Mathews (KEN) 88-91 100 BRST - J. Gury (KEN) 86-89 200 BRST - J. Carter (KEN) 90-93 1M Dive - Ann Kelley (KEN) 89-92 3M Dive - M. Moody (ALL) 88-91   Natalie Gibbs (DEN) 86-89

Women's Indoor Track & Field 55 Dash - C. Wright (OWU) 92-95 60 HH - K. McNamara (OWU) 88-91 300 Dash - D. Moultan (ALL) 88-91 440 Dash - D. Moultan (ALL) 88-91 500 Run - S. Lamie (OWU) 89-92 600 Run - S. Kazmierski (WOO) 85-88 880 Run - Bea Huste (KEN) 83-86 1000 Run - Kate Fechtel (DEN) 89-91 Mile - Chris Dudeck (ALL) 85-88 3000 Run - Kelley Wilder (KEN) 90-93 2-Mile - Chris Dudeck (ALL) 85-88 High Jump - Juli Althoff (OWU) 88-91 Long Jump - U. Bukhala (WOO) 85-88   Trish Schoonover (OWU) 85-86 Triple Jump - U. Bukhala (WOO) 85-88 Shot Put - Sandie Starr (ALL) 84-87

Men's Soccer F - Ian Banda (WOO) 87-90 F - Bryan Bundy (OWU) 83-86 F - Mike Donovan (KEN) 89-92 F - Andy Kessinger (OWU) 88-91 M - Charley Bolster (DEN) 82-85 M - Matt Byers (OWU) 83-86 M - Chris Duff (OWU) 90-93 M - Scott Gillanders (OWU) 87-90 M - Adam Lingo (ERL) 88-91 M - Kevin Mills (KEN) 88-91 D - David Craig (OBE) 83-86 D - Drew Dimatos (OWU) 85-88 D - Ben Helm (WIT) 88-92 D - Mphatso Namwali (WOO) 89-92 D - Kirk Neureiter (WOO) 86-89 G - Jeff Kaplan (OWU) 84-87 Women's Soccer F - Chris Knapp (OWU) 89-92 F - Georganne Morin (ALL) 85-88 F - Suzanne Sauers (WIT) 89-90 F - Nellie Springer (ALL) 85-88 F - Stasha Wyskiel (KEN) 85-88 M - Michelle Kaup (DEN) 89-92 M - Angie Mouch (OWU) 89-92 M - Stacie Rose (OWU) 88-91 M - Sue Scudder (ALL) 85-87 M - Barbie Thompson (WOO) 89-92 D - Sheila McElroy (CWRU) 86-89 D - Ellie Pennington (ALL) 86-89 D - Sarah Turgeon (KEN) 85-88 D - Sue Waniewski (CWRU) 89-92 D - Mandy Whalen (DEN) 91-94 G - Lisa Hall (WOO) 90-93 Men's Swimming & Diving 50 Free - Jim Born (KEN) 83-86 100 Free - Jim Born (KEN) 83-86 200 Free - D. Mulvihill (KEN) 85-88 500 Free - D. Mulvihill (KEN) 85-88 1650 Free - T. Creech (KEN) 85-89   P.J. Schaner (DEN) 87-90 200 IM - John Landreth (KEN) 89-92 400 IM - Craig Hummer (KEN) 84-87   Nate Llerandi (KEN) 87-90 100 Fly - J. Bradshaw (CWRU) 88-89   Matt Scheerhorn (DEN) 91-94 200 Fly - Jay Gindin (CWRU) 89-93 100 BCK - B. Dowdall (KEN) 90-93 200 BCK - D. Stevenson (OBE) 88-91 100 BRST - John Cave (KEN) 92-95 200 BRST - C. Lownes (DEN) 85-88

Men's Tennis Singles Martin Bulow (WIT) 90-93 Moustapha Diop (OBE) 89-92 Brad Downing (DEN) 86-89 Carl Erikson (OBE) 91-94 Anthony Fernandez (WOO) 89-92 Steve Kuri (WOO) 87-90 Bill McLean (DEN) 83-86 Steve Ozcomert (KEN) 85-88 Bob Savitt (WOO) 82-85 Dvid Schilling (DEN) 86-89 Doubles Adam Brewer-Steve Kuri (WOO) Ousmane Diop-Carl Erikson (OBE) Will Knox-Brian Maebius (DEN) Women's Tennis Singles Claire Howard (KEN) 83-86 Hallie King (DEN) 91-94 Julia Kipka (KEN) 86-89 Kathryn Lane (KEN) 89-92 Sheryl Myers (WIT) 90-93 Liz Richards (WOO) 90-93 Lynn Schneebeck (KEN) 85-88 Tory Thomas (ALL) 84-87 Kavita Varma (OBE) 88-91 Katja Zerck (KEN) 92-93 Doubles Amy Bellamah-Jane Siddons (DEN) Clara Campbell0Julia Kipka (KEN) Brennan Harbin-Britt Harbin (KEN) Men's Indoor Track & Field 60 Dash - S. Shorney (DEN) 86-88 60 HH - Mark Spear (KEN) 85-88 300 Dash - S. Drayton (ALL) 90-93 440 Dash - S. Shorney (DEN) 86-88 600 Run - D. Hudson (ALL) 90-93 880 Run - Trey Dunham (DEN) 91-94 1000 Run - G. Tressler (CWR) 85-88 Mile - Karim Hammad (ERL) 90-93 3000 Run - Tim Dunham (DEN) 91-94 5000 Run - S. Pearson (ERL) 89-92 3-Mile - Todd Fach (WOO) 85-88 High Jump - Mark Speer (KEN) 85-88 Long Jump - S. Shorney (DEN) 86-88 Triple Jump - S.Shorney (DEN) 86-88

Men's Outdoor Track & Field 100 Dash - S. Shorney (DEN) 86-88 110HH - Mark Speer (KEN) 85-88 200 Dash - S. Drayton (ALL) 90-93 400 Dash - R. Welch (OWU) 84-86 400 IH - Matt Medford (CWRU) 90-93 800 Run - G. Tressler (CWRU) 85-88 1500 Run - G. Tressler (CWRU) 85-88 3000 Stple - Ti. Dunham (DEN) 91-94 5000 Run - S. Pearson (ERL) 89-92   Nick Marshall (OBE) 83-86 10,000 Run - S. Pearson (ERL) 89-92 High Jump - Mark Speer (KEN) 85-88 Long Jump - S. Shorney (DEN) 86-88 Triple Jump - S. Shorney (DEN) 86-88 Discus - Keith Rucker (OWU) 89-92 Javelin - Jeff Katowitz (KEN) 87-90 Shot Put - Keith Rucker (OWU) 89-92 Pole Vault - K. Luthy (CWRU) 88-91 Women's Outdoor Track & Field 100 Dash - R. Belcher (WOO) 86-88 100HH - L. Encarnacion (CWRU) 89-92 200 Dash - S. O'Neill (WOO) 91-94 400 Dash - S. Kazmierski (WOO) 85-88 400 IH - K. McNamara (OWU) 88-91 800 Run - Alyse Holden (ALL) 89-92 1500 Run - Kelley Wilder (KEN) 90-93 3000 Run - Chris Dudeck (ALL) 85-88 5000 Run - Lynda Kohl (ALL) 88-91   Linda Stephenson (WOO) 85-88 10,000 Run - Lynda Kohl (ALL) 88-91 High Jump - Juli Althoff (OWU) 88-91   Leslie Kindling (CWRU) 92-95 Long Jump - U. Bukhala (WOO) 85-88 Triple Jump - U. Bukhala (WOO) 85-88 Discus - Amy Yothers (OWU) 90-93 Javelin - Stasha Wyskiel (KEN) 86-89 Shot Put - Sandie Starr (ALL) 84-87 Volleyball Jodie Bauman (ERL) 88-91 Pam Breitbeil (OBE) 88-92 Molly Dietz (ALL) 88-91 Carol Frederick (ALL) 86-89 Beth Green (WIT) 90-93 Gwen Herron (ALL) 83-86 Karen Light (WOO) 81-84 Heather Spencer (KEN) 85-88 Renea Surrena (ALL) 88-91 Holly Swank (KEN) 85-88

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NCAA Review, 2010-11 Denison wins men's swimming crown Denison earned an NCAA Division III championship in men's swimming & diving to highlight the North Coast Athletic Conference's efforts on the national level during the 2010-11 academic year. The title runs the NCAC's championship count to 58 over 27 playing seasons. Kenyon's domination of Division III men's swimming ended last year as the Lords's streak of consecutive national championships was stopped at 31 by North Coast rival Denison. No other men's or women's teams in NCAA history -- any sport, any division -- have won as many consecutive titles (see chart below). The next-longest men's streak of 14 is shared by Arkansas in Division I men's indoor track & field, Hobart in Division III men's lacrosse. The Kenyon Ladies' swimming streak ended at 17 but remains the longest for a women's team in any division, and totals 23 over the past 27 years. The longest active streak in any division currently is 14 by Methodist women's golf. All 23 of the NCAC's sports were represented in national competition last year. Highlights include Wooster men's basketball team's appearance in the NCAA Championship championship game. The Fighting Scots fell to St. Thomas,

NCAA Championship Streaks

2010-11 NCAA Appearances

1. 2. 3. 4. 6. 7. 8. 12.

Denison....................................................................................... 11 (men's cross country, women's soccer, women's basketball, men's & women's swimming, men's indoor & outdoor track & field, women's lacrosse, men's & women's tennis, men's lacrosse) Ohio Wesleyan............................................................................8 (men's & women's cross country, men's soccer, men's & women's indoor track & field, men's & women's outdoor track & field, men's lacrosse) Wittenberg...................................................................................7 .(women's cross country, football, volleyball, men's basketball, women's swimming, men's golf, men's lacrosse) Allegheny.....................................................................................7 (men's cross country, women's soccer, men's swimming, men's indoor & outdoor track & field, women's golf, women's outdoor track & field) Oberlin..........................................................................................5 (women's cross country, women's indoor track & field, women's tennis, men's & women's outdoor track & field) Wabash.........................................................................................5 (men's cross country, men's swimmming, men's indoor & outdoor track & field, baseball) Kenyon..........................................................................................4 (men's soccer, men's & women's swimming, men's tennis) Wooster........................................................................................4 (field hockey. men's basketball, men's diving, women's outdoor track & field) Hiram.............................................................................................1 (softball)

Kenyon (men's swimming & diving - III) ...........................31 Kenyon (women's swimming & diving - III) ......................17 Methodist (women's golf - II/III)............................................14* Arkansas (men's indoor track & field - I)................................ 12 Hobart (men's lacrosse - III).................................................. 12 Louisiana State (women's outdoor track & field - I)............... 11 Cal Poly-San Luis Obispo (women's cross country - II)........... 10 Iowa (wrestling - I)................................................................... 9 North Carolina (women's soccer - I)........................................ 9 USC (men's outdoor track & field - I)....................................... 9 Yale (men's golf - national collegiate)...................................... 9 Abilene Christian (women's outdoor track & field - II)............. 8 Adams State (women's cross country - II)............................... 8 Arkansas (men's outdoor track & field - I)............................... 8 Cal State-Bakersfield (men's swimming & diving - II).............. 8 Lander (men's tennis - II)......................................................... 8

*Active Streak

Active Streaks 1. Methodist (women's golf - II/III)............................................. 14 2. Western Washington (women's rowing - II)............................. 7 Drury (men's swimming & diviing - II)...................................... 7

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the same school that defeated the Wooster baseball squad for the national title in 2009. Wittenberg's volleyball team advanced to the regional finals. Both men's and women's soccer sent a pair of teams to the national tournament field. The Ohio Wesleyan men and the Denison women each advanced three rounds into the tourney before falling in the quarterfinals. Three men and two women earned All-America honors in cross country. The top team finish was 13th, accomplished by the Wabash men's squad. The Denison women's basketball team posted an undefeated regular season and advanced to the national tournament for the sixth time in the past seven seasons, while DU's women's swim team was second at the NCAA meet. Kenyon placed second in the men's and fourth in the women's swimming championships. Allegheny's distance medley relay won the Gators' first championship in indoor track, while the Ohio Wesleyan men took the distance medley relay title. The Hiram softball team put a rainy, constantly disrupted regular season behind them to advance to the regional championship game. In the first season as a conference sport, Allegheny's women's golf team earned an at-large bid to the NCAA Championships and finished sixth.


NCAA Championships, 2011-12 Baseball Regionals Finals

May 16-20 May 25-29

Men's Basketball First Round Second Round Sectionals Finals

March 1 March 3 March 9-10 March 16-17

Women's Basketball First Round March 2 Second Round March 3 Sectionals March 9-10 Finals March 16-17 Cross Country Regionals Finals

Nov. 12 Nov. 19

Field Hockey First Round Second & Third Finals

Nov. 9 Nov. 12-13 Nov. 19-20

Football First Round Second Round Quarterfinals Semifinals Finals

Nov. 19 Nov. 26 Dec. 3 Dec. 10 Dec. 17

Men's Golf Finals

May 15-18

Women's Golf Finals

May 8-11 or May 9-12

Men's Lacrosse First Round Second Rounds Quarterfinals Semifinals Finals

May 9 May 12 May 16 May 20 May 27

Appleton, Wisconsin

Salem, Virginia

Holland, Michigan Oberlin, Ohio Winneconne, Wisconsin

Dudley, Massachusetts

Salem, Virginia Howey-in-the-Hills, Florida

Angola, Indiana

Women's Lacrosse First Rounds May 9 Regionals May 12-13 Finals May 19-20

Montclair, New Jersey

Men's Soccer First Rounds Sectionals Finals

Nov. 10-13 Nov. 18-20 Dec. 2-3

San Antonio, Texas

Women's Soccer First Rounds Sectional Finals

Nov. 11-13 Nov. 18-20 Dec. 2-3

San Antonio, Texas

Softball First Round Finals

May 10-14 or 11-14 May 18-22

Salem, Virginia

Swimming & Diving Finals (men's) Mar. 21-24 Finals (women's) Mar. 21-24

Indianapolis, Indiana Indianapolis, Indiana

Men's Tennis Regionals Finals

May 11-13 May 22-27

Cary, North Carolina

Women's Tennis Regionals Finals

May 11-13 May 22-27

Cary, North Carolina

Indoor Track & Field Finals Mar. 9-10

Mankato, Minnesota

Outdoor Track & Field Finals May 24-26

Clermont, California

Volleyball Regionals Finals

Nov. 11-13 Nov. 18-20

St. Louis, Missouri

Boston, Massachusetts

NCAA Championship Totals Men's Basketball Ohio Wesleyan Football Allegheny Men's Golf Allegheny Men's Soccer Ohio Wesleyan Women's Soccer Ohio Wesleyan

Year(s)

Total

1988

1

1990

1

1983

1

1998

1

2001, 02

2

Total NCAA Championships: Allegheny: 2 Denison: 2 Kenyon: 54 Ohio Wesleyan: 4

Year(s) Men's Swimming & Diving Denison 2011 Kenyon 1983, 84, 85, 86, 87, 88, 89, 90, 91, 92, 93, 94, 95, 96, 97, 98, 99, 2000, 01, 02, 03, 04, 05, 06, 07, 08, 09, 10 Women's Swimming & Diving Denison 2001 Kenyon 84, 85, 86, 87, 88, 89, 90, 91, 92, 93, 94, 95, 96, 97, 98, 99, 2000, 02, 03, 04, 07, 08, 09 Women's Tennis Kenyon 1993, 95, 97

Total 1 28

1 23

3

NCAA championships owned by NCAC members since Feb. 1983: 62 NCAA championships earned by NCAC teams: 58 * * Note: NCAC play began with the 1984-85 season

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Academic Calendars, 2011-12 Fall Classes Begin Fall Break Thanksgiving Break Fall Classes End Fall Exams Winter Break Spring Classes Begin Spring Break Spring Classes End Spring Exams Commencement

Allegheny Aug. 9 Oct. 17-18 Nov. 21-25 Dec. 13 Dec. 15-19 Dec. 20-Jan. 15 Jan. 16 Mar. 12-16 Apr. 30 May 2-8 May 12

Denison Aug. 29 Oct. 17-18 Nov. 21-25 Dec. 13 Dec. 15-19 Dec. 20-Jan.15 Jan. 16 Mar. 12-16 Apr. 30 May 2-8 May 13

DePauw @ Aug. 24 Oct. 15-23 Nov. 23-27 Dec. 9 Dec. 12-16 Dec. 17- Jan. 29 Jan. 30 Mar. 24-Apr. 1 May 10 May 12-17 May 20

Hiram ** Aug. 29 Sept. 20 Nov. 23-29 Nov. 18/Dec. 20 Nov. 21-23/Dec. 21 Dec. 22 -Jan.8 Jan. 9 Mar. 5-1 Apr. 6/May 8 Apr. 9-11/May 9 May 12

Kenyon Aug. 25 Oct. 6-7 Nov. 21-27 Dec. 9 Dec. 12-16 Dec. 17-Jan. 15 Jan. 16 Mar. 3-18 May 4 May 7-11 May 19

Fall Classes Begin Fall Break Thanksgiving Break Fall Classes End Fall Exams Winter Break Spring Classes Begin Spring Break Spring Classes End Spring Exams Commencement

Oberlin Sept. 6 Oct. 22-30 Nov. 24-27 Dec. 13 Dec. 17-21 Dec. 22/Feb. 5* Feb. 6 Mar. 24-Apr.1 May 12 May 16-20 May 28

Ohio Wesleyan Aug. 22 Oct. 12-16 Nov. 19-27 Dec. 9 Dec. 12-15 Dec. 16-Jan. 15 Jan. 16 Mar. 10-18 May 3 May 5-10 May 13

Wabash Aug. 28 Oct. 13-16 Nov. 19-27 Dec. 9 Dec. 12-17 Dec. 18-Jan. 15*** Jan. 16 Mar. 3-11 Apr. 27 Apr. 30-May 5 May 13

Wittenberg Aug. 22 Oct. 17-18 Nov. 23-25 Dec. 9 Dec. 12-16 Dec. 17-Jan. 8 Jan. 9 Mar. 5-9 May 2 May 4-7 May 12

Wooster Aug. 29 Oct. 15-18 Nov. 23-27 Dec. 9 Dec. 12-15 Dec. 16-Jan. 15 Jan. 16 Mar. 10-25 May 4 May 7-10 May 14

@ DePauw off-campus winter term Jan. 3-27; on-camapus winter term Jan. 4-25 ** Hiram 12-week session/3-week session * Oberlin Winter term Jan. 4-30 *** Wabash Written Comprehensives for Seniors Jan. 9-10; Oral Comprehensives for Seniors Jan. 11-13

In this way, Division III provides an integrated environment for student-athletes to take responsibility for their own paths, follow their passions and find their potential through a comprehensive educational experience. What we stand for: Proportion Appropriate relation of academics with opportunities to pursue athletics & other passions Comprehensive Learning Opportunity for broad-based education and success

Follow your passions and discover your potential. The college experience is a time of learning and growth – a chance to follow passions and develop potential. For student-athletes in Division III, this happens most importantly in the classroom and through earning an academic degree. The Division III experience provides for passionate participation in a competitive athletics environment, where student-athletes push themselves to excellence and build upon their academic success with new challenges and life skills. And student-athletes are encouraged to pursue the full spectrum of opportunities available during their time in college.

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Passion Playing for the love of the game, competition, fun and self-improvement. Responsibility Development of accountability through personal commitment and choices Sportsmanship Fair and respectful conduct toward all participants and supporters. Citizenship Dedication to developing responsible leaders and citizens in our communities.


2011-12 Calendar of Events AUGUST 2011 2 Tuesday 13 Saturday 15 Monday SEPTEMBER 2011 13 Tuesday 14 Wednesday 25 Sunday 27 Tuesday OCTOBER 2011 2 Sunday 3 Monday 19 Wednesday 29 Saturday TBA Sunday NOVEMBER 2011 2 Wednesday 2 Wednesday 2 Wednesday 4-5 Fri.-Sat. 5 Saturday 5 Saturday 5 Saturday 8 Tuesday 14 Monday 15 Tuesday TBA Sunday DECEMBER 2011 6 Tuesday 15 Thursday JANUARY 2012 11-14 Wed.-Sat. 11/12 Wed./Thurs. 13 Friday 29 Sunday FEBRUARY 2012 15 Wednesday 16-18 Thurs.-Sat. 21 Tuesday 24-25 Fri.-Sat. 25-26 Sat.-Sun. MARCH 2012 2-3 Fri.-Sat. APRIL 2012 21-22 Sat.-Sun. 24 Tuesday 26 Thursday 27-29 Fri.-Sun. 28-29 Sat.-Sun. 28-29 Sat.-Sun. MAY 2012 1 Tuesday 3 Thursday 3 Thursday 3 Thursday 3-5 Thurs.-Sat. 4-5 Fri.-Sat. 4-5 Fri.-Sat. 5 Saturday 6 Sunday 7 Monday 8 Tuesday 16-17 Wed.- Thur.

Cross Country Coaches' Meeting IOA Football Officiating Clinic Sports Information Directors' Meeting Softball Coaches' Meeting Swimming & Diving Coaches' Meeting Student-Athlete Advisory Committee Meeting Baseball Coaches' Meeting (may meet earlier) NCAC Athletic Directors/Faculty Reps' Meetings NCAC Sports Caucus Meeting Tennis Coaches' Meeting Cross Country Championships (M&W) IOA Women's Basketball Officiating Clinic Field Hockey Tournament Semifinals Men's Soccer Tournament Semifinals Women's Soccer Tournament Semifinals Volleyball Championships Field Hockey Tournament Championship Men's Soccer Tournament Championship Women's Soccer Tournament Championship Soccer Coaches' Meeting (M&W) Field Hockey Coaches' Meeting Athletic Trainers' Meeting IOA Men's Basketball Officiating Clinic

Ohio Wesleyan Ohio Wesleyan Denison if needed (Kenyon) Denison Ohio Wesleyan Ohio Wesleyan Columbus, Ohio Columbus, Ohio Denison Wittenberg Otterbein TBA (high seeds) TBA (high seeds) TBA (high seeds) TBA (high seed) TBA (high seed) TBA (high seed) TBA (high seed) Ohio Wesleyan Ohio Wesleyan Alliance, Ohio TBA

Volleyball Coaches' Meeting NCAC Presidents’ Council

Ohio Wesleyan Ann Arbor, MI

NCAA Convention NCAC AD Meeting (at NCAA Convention) NCAC Meeting (at NCAA Convention) SAAC Meeting

Indianapolis, IN Indianapolis, IN Indianapolis, IN Denison

Swimming & Diving Coaches Meeting (M&W) Swimming & Diving Championships (M&W) Basketball Tournament Quarterfinals (M&W) Basketball Tournament Semifinals and Championships (M&W) Heptathlon (M)/Pentathlon (W) Indoor Track & Field Championships (M&W) Men's & Women's Golf Event I Basketball Coaches' Meetings Tennis Coaches' Meeting Tennis Championships (M&W) Combined Events Track & Field Championship (M&W) NCAC Men's & Women's Golf Event II Football Coaches' Meeting Softball Coaches' Meeting Women's Lacrosse Championship Semifinals Baseball Coaches' Meeting Baseball Championship Softball Tournament Outdoor Track & Field Championships (M&W) Women's Lacrosse Championship Men's Lacrosse Coaches' Meeting Women's Lacrosse Coaches' Meeting Track & Field Coaches' Meeting Annual NCAC Meetings

Canton, Ohio Hiram at Canton, Ohio TBA (high seeds) TBA (high seeds) Ohio Wesleyan Wabash Allegheny Ohio Wesleyan Kenyon Kenyon Ohio Wesleyan Oberlin Ohio Wesleyan TBA (tournament site) TBA (high seed) Chillicothe, Ohio Chillicothe, Ohio TBA (high seed) Allegheny TBA (high seed) Kenyon Wooster Ohio Wesleyan Wooster 67



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