WILLIAMSBURG | STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING | SPORTS MEDICINE | ACADEMICS | TRIBE ATHLETICS | W&M | HISTORY | 2010 TRIBE | STAFF | FIELD HOCKEY
FIELD HOCKEY | STAFF | 2010 TRIBE | HISTORY | W&M | TRIBE ATHLETICS | ACADEMICS | SPORTS MEDICINE | STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING | WILLIAMSBURG
WILLIAMSBURG | STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING | SPORTS MEDICINE | ACADEMICS | TRIBE ATHLETICS | W&M | HISTORY | 2010 TRIBE | STAFF | FIELD HOCKEY
FIELD HOCKEY | STAFF | 2010 TRIBE | HISTORY | W&M | TRIBE ATHLETICS | ACADEMICS | SPORTS MEDICINE | STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING | WILLIAMSBURG
THIS IS TRIBE FIELD HOCKEY Busch Field.............................................................3 Field Hockey Alumni..............................................5
COACHING STAFF
Head Coach Peel Hawthorne.................................7 Assistant Coach Tess Ellis....................................8 Assistant Coach Wesley Drew..............................8
2010 TRIBE
FOLLOW THE TRIBE ON SOCIAL MEDIA NETWORKS
2010 Roster.............................................................9 Season Preview.................................................... 11 2010 Schedule.......................................................13
HISTORY
Tradition and History............................................15
W&M Athletics available on FaceBook, YouTube and Twitter.
THE COLLEGE
William and Mary..................................................17 Administration......................................................19
TRIBE ATHLETICS
One Tribe...............................................................21 First-Class Facilities.............................................23 Athletic Administration........................................25 Tribe Club..............................................................27 The Tribal Fever....................................................29
ACADEMICS
Academic Support................................................31 Tribe in the Community: SAAC...........................33
SPORTS MEDICINE
Facilities................................................................35 Staff........................................................................36
STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING
Facilities........................................................................... 37 Staff........................................................................38
WILLIAMSBURG AREA
Williamsburg.........................................................39 Attractions.............................................................40 Click on each section or page to advance to that location in the guide.
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ANNA DAVIS
CAA Silver Anniversary Selection 2005 CAA Defensive Player of the Year 2005 All-American
KAREN THORNE Two-Time All-American U.S. National Team Player
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WILLIAMSBURG | STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING | SPORTS MEDICINE | ACADEMICS | TRIBE ATHLETICS | W&M | HISTORY | 2010 TRIBE | STAFF | FIELD HOCKEY
NEW BUSCH FIELD FEATURES - New AstroTurf 12TM - A fully automated and eco-friendly, state-of-the-art watering system - New backstops and netting behind the goals - Decorative fencing on the north side of the field that separates the concrete walkway from the field
The facility was made possible by a generous grant from Anheuser-Busch Brewing Corporation. Busch Field opened in June of 1989 with the Busch Gardens-William and Mary Soccer Tournament, and was dedicated on November 1, prior to the men’s soccer game against East Carolina. The first field hockey competition on the turf was September 30, 1989, a 7-0 victory for the College over American. In its initial season at Busch Field, the Tribe went 3-0, out-scoring opponents, 16-1.
ALL-TIME RECORD AT BUSCH FIELD
YEAR OVERALL 1989 3-0 1990 6-1-1 1991 6-3-1 1992 6-1 1993 10-5 1994 4-3 1995 8-1 1996 5-6 1997 5-5 1998 6-4 1999 6-4 2000 6-1 2001 9-1 2002 7-1 2003 8-2 2004 6-5 2005 5-5 2006 6-1 2007 7-4 2008 4-7 2009 3-7 OVERALL 126-67-2
PCT. 1.000 .813 .650 .857 .667 .571 .889 .455 .500 .600 .600 .857 .900 .875 .800 .545 .500 .857 .636 .364 .300 .651
CONF 2-0 1-1 4-0 2-1 4-2 1-2 2-0 1-3 2-1 3-2 3-1 2-1 1-1 3-1 3-0 4-1 2-2 3-1 1-3 2-2 0-3 46-28
PCT. 1.000 .500 1.000 .667 .667 .333 1.000 .250 .667 .600 .750 .667 .500 .750 1.000 .800 .500 .750 .250 .500 .000 .622
BUSCH FACILITY UPGRADES The W&M field hockey program plays on a world-class surface after Busch Field was renovated in the summer of 2009 with AstroTurf 12TM. The renovation of the 20-year-old facility included a total revamp of the field, underlying pad, and drainage systems to create a competition surface that ranks alongside those used at the U.S. National Training Centers in Virginia Beach, Virginia, Chula Vista, California as well as at the 2008 Olympic Games.
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M, INSTALLED IN 2009, INCLUDED THE BUSCH FIELD’S NEW AST ROTURF 12T WAT ER SYST EM WITH CAN NONS. T ADD ITION OF A STAT E-OF-THE-AR
Click to view more on Busch Field
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FIELD HOCKEY | STAFF | 2010 TRIBE | HISTORY | W&M | TRIBE ATHLETICS | ACADEMICS | SPORTS MEDICINE | STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING | WILLIAMSBURG
Busch Field has been the permanent home of the William and Mary field hockey program since the 1990 season. The facility opened in 1989, and the field hockey program played three contests on it during the 1989 season. The Tribe has enjoyed a distinct home-field advantage over the last 21 seasons, amassing a 126-67-2 record (.651) at Busch Field.
WILLIAMSBURG | STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING | SPORTS MEDICINE | ACADEMICS | TRIBE ATHLETICS | W&M | HISTORY | 2010 TRIBE | STAFF | FIELD HOCKEY
FORME R TRIBE FIELD HOCKEY COACH ES CAROLI NE HAUSSE RMAN, FRAN HERMA NCE, NANCY PORTER-ENGM AN AND JEAN STETTLER ALONG WITH CURRENT HEAD COACH PEEL HAWTH ORNE AND DIRECTOR OF SPECIA L EVENTS MILLIE WEST.
D AMY UMBACH BOK KER ’95 IS HEA RD. NFO STA AT CH COA SE ROS LAC
JULIE ZOOLKOSKI ’03
Head Field Hockey Coach at Slippery Rock
KA RI N BROW ER CO RBETT ’92 IS HEAD LACROSSE COAC H AT PE NN .
GINNY SUTTON TURNER ’05 Head Field Hockey Coach at Davidson
CH RISTINE PARAD IS ’84 IS HEAD LAC ROSSE COACH AT AM HERST COLLEG E.
KELLY MCQUADE ’04 Head Field Hockey Coach at VCU
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ALU MA E IN THE SPR ING OF 2010 CUR RENT TRI BE PLAYERS AND W&M Y FOR THE CUR E GAM E. AT THE ANNUAL ALU MNAE AND PLA
TRIBE FIELD HOCKEY ALUMNAE LIST
W&M FIELD HOCKEY CLASS OF 1980, SHARRA KELLY, PEEL HAWTHORNE AND PIXIE HAMILTON, AT THE WOMEN IN SPORTS WEEKEND
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FIELD HOCKEY | STAFF | 2010 TRIBE | HISTORY | W&M | TRIBE ATHLETICS | ACADEMICS | SPORTS MEDICINE | STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING | WILLIAMSBURG
JOAN IE QU INN MI LH OU S ’91 IS HEAD FIE LD HOCK EY COAC H AT VILLA NOVA .
WILLIAMSBURG | STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING | SPORTS MEDICINE | ACADEMICS | TRIBE ATHLETICS | W&M | HISTORY | 2010 TRIBE | STAFF | FIELD HOCKEY
Assistant Coach 15th Season at W&M
HEAD COAC H PEEL HAWT HORNE RA NKS 10TH AM ONG ACTIV E DIV ISION I HEAD COAC H WITH 286 CA REER VICTO RIES.
Entering her 24th season on the sidelines for William and Mary, Peel Hawthorne is on the brink of tremendous personal milestones while also looking to direct her most talented and experienced team in years. Since returning to her alma mater in 1987, Hawthorne has compiled a 255-200-2 overall record (.560) and a 69-53 (.566) ledger in the Colonial Athletic Association. Including four seasons at Connecticut College, she is 286-217-5 (.568) in her coaching career, and ranks very high in several all-time and active coaching records. Entering the fall of 2010, she is eighth among active Division I coaches with 508 games coached and 10th in the same cohort with 286 wins. Among active coaches across all divisions, she is 15th in games coached and 20th in games won, and all-time in field hockey she is 21st in games coached and 28th in games won.
Tess Ellis enters her 15th year and third stint as a William and Mary coach in 2010, rejoining the team after a year away coaching at the high school level in Williamsburg. She will assist with all aspects of running the Tribe’s nationally-competitive program, from practice-planning to recruiting, and have a special emphasis on training the College’s goalkeepers.
WESLEY DREW Assistant Coach First Season at W&M
Hawthorne has led William and Mary to the NCAA Tournament twice, in 2000 and again in 2002. After a 12-8 regular season in 2000, the Tribe was awarded one of eight at-large berths and took No. 5 Michigan to double-overtime before falling 3-2. Two years later, another 12-8 season produced another at-large selection, and another match-up with the No. 5-ranked team (this time Maryland), and another double-overtime affair that ended 2-1 against the Tribe.
Click to view the introduction to W&M Field Hockey.
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Former Tribe standout Wesley Drew enters her first season on the sidelines after spending four years starring in the midfield at William and Mary. Drew will be responsible for assisting in all aspects of the running a nationally competitive field hockey program, including developing practice plans, game-day coaching, and recruiting.
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FIELD HOCKEY | STAFF | 2010 TRIBE | HISTORY | W&M | TRIBE ATHLETICS | ACADEMICS | SPORTS MEDICINE | STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING | WILLIAMSBURG
TESS ELLIS
WILLIAMSBURG | STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING | SPORTS MEDICINE | ACADEMICS | TRIBE ATHLETICS | W&M | HISTORY | 2010 TRIBE | STAFF | FIELD HOCKEY
Senior Forward
AUS
ICHELLE KR EW INGH SENIOR FORWARD M
JENNIFER HARR Senior Forward
NAME Camilla Hill Allison Moran Sarah Morehouse Mikala Savaides Rebecca Wagner Taylor Gladey Michelle Krewinghaus Jenna Cinalli Danielle Scissom Jesse Ebner Leah Zamesnik Christine Johnson Ashley Kyle Elizabeth Loudy Jennifer Harr Caitlyn Davies Colleen Patterson Lynsey Clyburn Giovanna Golen Taylor Hodge Erica Eng Kelsey Nawalinski Ashley Kintzing Mia Cherry Maria Caro Chaney Manganello Elizabeth Frey
POS. GK M/F M F/M F F/M F F D M M D/M F M F/M D/M F/M M/D M/F F D/M/F F/M M/D D/M D/M D GK
CL. R-Jr. So. R-Fr. R-Jr. Sr. Fr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Fr. Jr. So. So. Sr. R-Jr. R-So. Fr. R-So. Fr. Fr. Sr. R-Jr. Jr. Fr. So. Fr. R-So.
HT. 5-6 5-4 5-8 5-5 5-5 5-2 5-4 5-7 5-7 5-10 5-2 5-6 5-3 5-5 5-5 5-4 5-7 5-8 5-7 5-3 5-4 5-4 5-5 5-5 5-8 5-6 5-9
HOMETOWN Williamsburg, Va. Wynnewood, Pa. Burke, Va. Burke, Va. Virginia Beach, Va. Mountaintop, Pa. Yorktown, Va. Fredericksburg, Va. Virginia Beach, Va. Sinking Spring, Pa. Norfolk, Va. Williamsburg, Va. San Diego, Calif. Midlothian, Va. Virginia Beach, Va. Hellertown, Pa. Yorktown, Va. Norfolk, Va. Charlotte, N.C. Louisville, Ky. Morristown, N.J. Downingtown, Pa. Chesapeake, Va. Yorktown, Va. Martinsville, N.J. Richmond, Va. Virginia Beach, Va.
HIGH SCHOOL Jamestown Merion Mercy Academy Lake Braddock Lake Braddock Princess Anne Crestwood Tabb Chancellor Frank W. Cox The Hill School Granby Jamestown Scripps Ranch James River Frank W. Cox Moravian Academy Tabb Granby Charlotte Country Day Louisville Collegiate Madison Villa Maria Academy Great Bridge Grafton Bridgewater-Raritan St. Catherine’s School Frank W. Cox
Click on each player’s name to visit their bios at TribeAthletics.com
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FIELD HOCKEY | STAFF | 2010 TRIBE | HISTORY | W&M | TRIBE ATHLETICS | ACADEMICS | SPORTS MEDICINE | STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING | WILLIAMSBURG
REBECCA WAGNER
NO. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 52
KESLEY NAWALINSKI Junior Forward
SENIOR FORWARD ERICA ENG
MIKALA SAVAIDES Junior Forward
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WILLIAMSBURG | STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING | SPORTS MEDICINE | ACADEMICS | TRIBE ATHLETICS | W&M | HISTORY | 2010 TRIBE | STAFF | FIELD HOCKEY
FORWARDS
The Tribe had terrific scoring depth last season, with seven players scoring at least three goals and four providing at least three assists. In 2010, the aim will be to maintain that distribution and increase the points scored by each player in a deep and experienced attacking unit. Leading the way will be the senior trio of Jenna Cinalli, Erica Eng, and Rebecca Wagner. Cinalli leads all returning players with 16 career goals, and will be looking to replicate the success she found as a sophomore when she had eight goals and two assists. Wagner is the team’s second-leading scoring with 10 career tallies, including three in 2009 and four in 2008, and is also a pin-point passer in the box with a team-high seven assists. Eng came on strong last year and tied for the team lead with five goals, scoring three in the overtime win against Rutgers and becoming the first Tribe player to score two against Old Dominion since before the NCAA began sponsoring field hockey.
MIDFIELDERS
The midfield also has a strong mix of experience and depth, and could also reap the benefits of several forwards dropping back or defenders pushing up to create a fluid and very responsive presence on both sides of the half. Among the true midfielders, two veterans who are expected to make the starting line-up are senior Elizabeth Loudy and sophomore Allison Moran. Loudy appeared in every match except against Virginia, and made nine starts over the course of the season. Supporting the Tribe attack, Loudy made her first-career score in the win over Appalachian State. Moran was also very effective in pushing forward on the attack, moving the ball up the field and creating opportunities for her teammates to go to goal. She was one of just three players to start every match, and did so as a true freshman.
Click to view the season preview video.
ELIZABETH LOUDY Senior Midfielder
JENNA CINALLI Senior Forward
CAMILA HILL
DEFENSE
The back line is one of the Tribe’s youngest units, with five underclassmen in the sixplayer rotation, but two returning starters and an abundance of talent could turn the defense into one of the best in the conference. Looking to lead the squad in front of the goal is the tandem of senior Danielle Scissom and all-conference sophomore Maria Caro. Scissom started the first six matches last season and appeared in 10 overall, while she has made 30 appearances in her first three years. Caro was an all-rookie selection a year ago, starting 17 of the Tribe’s 18 games. She had a pair of defensive saves to lead the team, and added two goals and an assist.
Junior Goalkeeper
GOALKEEPERS
The Tribe again looks to be strong between the pipes, with junior Camilla Hill returning as the undisputed starter after splitting time last season. Hill grew into the starter’s role as the season progressed, saving 76% of the shots against her and ranking among the national top-25 in that category. Her first complete game came against then-No. 5 Virginia, when she stopped 16 shots to keep her team in the game and give the Tribe a shot at the win. Moving into the top reserve spot this season is sophomore Elizabeth Frey, who was an all-state selection in high school and led Cox High to back-to-back Virginia AAA state titles.
DANIELLE SCISSOM Senior Defender
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FIELD HOCKEY | STAFF | 2010 TRIBE | HISTORY | W&M | TRIBE ATHLETICS | ACADEMICS | SPORTS MEDICINE | STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING | WILLIAMSBURG
William and Mary looks to return to the top of a deep Colonial Athletic Association this season with the leadership and experience of a 10-player senior class, as well as the potential for one of the most potent attacks in the country. A very challenging schedule will test the Tribe early, but head coach Peel Hawthorne ‘81 is confident in her team’s ability to not only succeed in its early non-conference matches, but also gain the experience necessary to challenge for a conference title.
WILLIAMSBURG | STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING | SPORTS MEDICINE | ACADEMICS | TRIBE ATHLETICS | W&M | HISTORY | 2010 TRIBE | STAFF | FIELD HOCKEY
Saturday Saturday Sunday
21 28 29
at Richmond (Scrimmage) vs. Kent State vs. Rutgers
Richmond, Va. 11 AM Harrisonburg, Va. 11 AM Harrisonburg, Va. 11:30AM
4 5 10 11 17 19 26 29
NORTHWESTERN RADFORD DAVIDSON PENN VERMONT at North Carolina at Northeastern * at Richmond
WILLIAMSBURG 2 PM WILLIAMSBURG 2 PM WILLIAMSBURG 4 PM WILLIAMSBURG 3 PM WILLIAMSBURG 7 PM Chapel Hill, N.C. 1 PM Boston, Mass. 2 PM Richmond, Va. 4:30 PM
1 3 8 10 15 18 22 24 31
TOWSON * DELAWARE * at Hofstra * at Drexel * DUKE at Virginia JAMES MADISON * VCU * OLD DOMINION *
WILLIAMSBURG 7 PM WILLIAMSBURG 1 PM Hempstead, N.Y. 3 PM Philadelphia, Pa. 12 PM WILLIAMSBURG 7 PM Charlottesville, Va. 6 PM WILLIAMSBURG 7 PM WILLIAMSBURG 1 PM WILLIAMSBURG 1 PM
CAA Semifinals CAA Championship
Campus Sites Campus Sites
SEPTEMBER SATURDAY SUNDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY FRIDAY Sunday Sunday Wednesday
OCTOBER FRIDAY SUNDAY Friday Sunday FRIDAY Monday FRIDAY SUNDAY SUNDAY
NOVEMBER Saturday Sunday
6 7
Home Games in WHITE CAPS at Busch Field * CAA Matches All times are Eastern Schedule and times subject to change
RESERVE A ROOM
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FIELD HOCKEY | STAFF | 2010 TRIBE | HISTORY | W&M | TRIBE ATHLETICS | ACADEMICS | SPORTS MEDICINE | STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING | WILLIAMSBURG
AUGUST
WILLIAMSBURG | STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING | SPORTS MEDICINE | ACADEMICS | TRIBE ATHLETICS | W&M | HISTORY | 2010 TRIBE | STAFF | FIELD HOCKEY
POST SEASON APPEARANCES
Wesley Drew ’10 was a two-time FirstTeam All-CAA and VaSID All-State selection.
The Tribe advanced to the NCAA Tournament in 2000 and 2002 (pictured), while garnering four berths in the AIAW Nationals in 1975, 1976, 1979 and 1980.
ALL-T IM E RESU LTS:
TH E TR IBE HAS WON 10 OR MOR E M AT A SEASON 18 OF TH CH ES IN E LAST 24 YEARS.
RECORDS
Basia Deren Braddish ’83 holds the Tribe program records for goals (69) and points (152) in a career.
ALL-AMERICANS
Anna Davis ’06 is one of 10 Tribe players to earn AllAmerica honors, garnering first-team accolades in 2005.
W&M HALL OF FAME
Cheryl Boehringer ’91, who was an AllAmerican and the SAC Player of the Year in 1990, is one of 27 members of the Tribe field hockey family to be inducted into the W&M Athletics Hall of Fame.
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SEASON ARCHIVES
Check out the Tribe’s past season archive at TribeAthletics.com that includes statistics, rosters, schedules, photos and more from past W&M field hockey seasons.
S HOLDS THE W&M ALL-TIM E ROSTER: CRISTINA LIM PEN PLAYED WITH 82. SCH OOL RECORD FOR CAR EER GAM ES
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FIELD HOCKEY | STAFF | 2010 TRIBE | HISTORY | W&M | TRIBE ATHLETICS | ACADEMICS | SPORTS MEDICINE | STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING | WILLIAMSBURG
HONORS
WILLIAMSBURG | STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING | SPORTS MEDICINE | ACADEMICS | TRIBE ATHLETICS | W&M | HISTORY | 2010 TRIBE | STAFF | FIELD HOCKEY
Click to hear about Pittsburgh Steeler Head Coach Mike Tomlin’s W&M experience.
CA M PUS LIFE
ALUM NI THOMAS JEFFERSON 1762
Fifth President of the United States
Click to hear about Derek Cox’s W&M experience.
Jacksonville Jaguars
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strong commitment to undergraduate research. The College, which became a state university in 1906, has been designated a “Public Ivy,” and for nine straight years has been ranked by U.S. News & World Report as the sixthbest public university in the country – and the nation’s top small public university.
“William & Mary can make a good case for being the most selective public college in America. Its size . . . is ideal, the envy of a good many prestigious private colleges. Its setting and its own lush campus . . . provide the stuff calendars are made of. Its academic program . . . is no nonsense, followed by impressive placement in graduate schools and jobs.” Richard Moll, author of The Public Ivys: A Guide to America’s Best Public Undergraduate Colleges and Universities
DEREK COX ’09
The College of William and Mary is a public university located in Williamsburg, Va. Founded in 1693 by Royal Charter issued by King William III and Queen Mary II of England, William and Mary is the second oldest college in the country after Harvard. William and Mary has a long history of liberal arts education and a growing research and science curriculum that demonstrates a
S COOL W&M FACTS AND RA NK ING
Also referred to as “the alma mater of a nation,” the College has educated four U.S. Presidents – George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, James Monroe and John Tyler, which is the third most of any college in the country. William and Mary also claims several firsts, including the 1776 creation of Phi Beta Kappa – the country’s first academic honor society – the first honor code of conduct
for college students, and the first collegiate law school, established in 1779. William and Mary is also home to the Sir Christopher Wren Building – the country’s oldest academic building still in use – and the President’s House, the oldest home of a university president still in use.
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FIELD HOCKEY | STAFF | 2010 TRIBE | HISTORY | W&M | TRIBE ATHLETICS | ACADEMICS | SPORTS MEDICINE | STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING | WILLIAMSBURG
W M .EDU
WILLIAMSBURG | STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING | SPORTS MEDICINE | ACADEMICS | TRIBE ATHLETICS | W&M | HISTORY | 2010 TRIBE | STAFF | FIELD HOCKEY
Rector Henry C. Wolf ‘64, J.D. ‘66 Virginia Beach, Va. Vice Rector John W. Gerdelman ‘75 Secretary Janet M. Brashear ‘82
Williamsburg, Va.
Virginia Beach, Va.
MEMBERS
D COACH JIM MYE LAYCOCK W. TAYLOR REV ELEY (LEFT) WITH HEA TER RY DRISCOLL (RIG HT) (CENTER) AND ATH LETI CS DIRECTOR VIRG INIA IN 2009. AT FOLLOWI NG THE TRIBE’S WIN
Taylor Reveley was sworn in as the 27th president of the College of William and Mary on September 5, 2008, after serving as interim president since February 2008. Before assuming his current post, he served as dean of William & Mary Law School for almost a decade, starting in August 1998. He is the John Stewart Bryan Professor of Jurisprudence. Reveley received his A.B. from Princeton University’s Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs in 1965. At Princeton, he was elected to Phi Beta Kappa and rowed on the lightweight crew for two years. Reveley went to law school at the University of Virginia, receiving his J.D. in 1968. During the United States Supreme Court’s 1969 term, he clerked for Justice William J. Brennan, Jr.
W. TAYLOR REVELEY, III W&M President
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Reveley has extensively studied and written about the constitutional division of the war powers between the President and Congress. In 1972-73, he spent 13 months studying the war powers while an International Affairs Fellow of the Council on Foreign Relations in New York City and a Fellow of the Woodrow Wilson Center for Scholars in Washington, D.C. He is the author of War Powers of the President and Congress: Who Holds the Arrows and Olive Branch? (University of Virginia Press, 1981).
Charles A. Banks III Gloucester, Va. Colin G. Campbell Williamsburg, Va. Thomas E. Capps Richmond, Va. Timothy P. Dunn ‘83 Rectortown, Va. Sarah I. Gore ‘56 Newark, Del. R. Philip Herget III Alexandria, Va. Kathy Y. Hornsby ‘79 Williamsburg, Va. Dennis H. Liberson ‘78 Great Falls, Va. Suzann W. Matthews ‘71 McLean, Va. Anita O. Poston, J.D. ‘74 Norfolk, Va. Robert E. Scott, J.D. ‘68 New York, N.Y. Michael Tang ‘76 Elk Grove Village, Ill. John Charles Thomas Richmond, Va. Jeffrey B. Trammell ‘73 Washington, D.C.
2009-2010 FACULTY REPRESENTATIVES
Katherine M. Kulick Alexandra Duckworth
William&Mary Richard Bland
2009-2010 STUDENT REPRESENTATIVES
Sarah D. Rojas D. Ryan Goodwin
William&Mary Richard Bland
2009-2010 STAFF LIAISON
Mary S. Molineux
PPFA President
Sandra Day O’Connor, who retired as Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court, was named twenty-third Chancellor of the College by the College of William and Mary Board of Visitors. Justice O’Connor’s appointment became effective at her April 2006 investiture; she succeeded Dr. Henry A. Kissinger, former United States Secretary of State, who was appointed in 2000. The post of Chancellor has been an important one since the College was chartered in 1693 by King William III and Queen Mary II of Great Britain. Until 1776, the Chancellor was an English subject – usually the Archbishop of Canterbury or the Bishop of London – who served as the College’s advocate to the crown, while a colonial president oversaw the day-to-day activities of the Williamsburg campus. Following the Revolutionary War, George Washington was appointed as the first American chancellor; later President John Tyler held the post. The first woman to serve on the United States Supreme Court, Justice O’Connor was born in El Paso, Texas, on March 26, 1930. She earned a B. A. in economics (magna cum laude) from Stanford University, and went on to receive an LL. B. from Stanford Law School, where she graduated third in her class. Her classmate, the late Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist, graduated first in the class.
SANDRA DAY O’CONNOR W&M Chancellor
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FIELD HOCKEY | STAFF | 2010 TRIBE | HISTORY | W&M | TRIBE ATHLETICS | ACADEMICS | SPORTS MEDICINE | STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING | WILLIAMSBURG
OFFICERS
WILLIAMSBURG | STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING | SPORTS MEDICINE | ACADEMICS | TRIBE ATHLETICS | W&M | HISTORY | 2010 TRIBE | STAFF | FIELD HOCKEY
by the NACDA and USA Today in 1993-94, is a program that honors institutions maintaining a broad-based program, achieving success in many sports, both men’s and women’s. W&M has placed among the top 100 nationally in 13 of the program’s 17 years, while leading the CAA on eight occasions, including this past season. W&M has produced more CAA Championships than any program in the league’s history. The College
2010 WOME N’S TRACK & FIE LD CAA
All-American Running Back
James Madison Old Dominion George Mason VCU UNC Wilmington Hofstra East Carolina Navy Richmond Towson American Loyola Georgia State Delaware Northeastern Virginia Tech Villanova Binghamton Buffalo Drexel UMass
98
60 48 45 39 35 25 24 21 20 11 8 8 8 6 3 2 2 1 1 1 1
CAA CHAM PIONSHIPS BY SCHOOL 21
Along with its accomplishments on the field of play, the Tribe is just as successful in the classroom, epitomizing the term student-athlete. The W&M Athletics Department routinely ranks among the national leaders in the NCAA released Academic Progress Report and Graduation Rates per sport. Since the inception of the CAA Scholar-Athlete of the Year, W&M has produced 30 honorees, more than any school in the conference.
CHA MPIONS
WILLIAM AND MARY
JONATHAN GRIMES
owns 98 league crowns, nearly 40 more than its closest competitor. The Tribe raked in the awards in 2009-10 as well, tallying a combined 182 all-conference honors, 36 All-America honors and eight league players of the year. During the 2008-09 season, the Green and Gold produced an overall athletics winning percentage of 67.6, while racking up a combined 813 wins.
2010 NIT PARTIC IPA NT
20-TI ME CA A CHA MPIONS
SARAH JONSON
All-American Defender
2010 ME N’S CROSS COU NTRY CAA
CHA MPIONS
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FIELD HOCKEY | STAFF | 2010 TRIBE | HISTORY | W&M | TRIBE ATHLETICS | ACADEMICS | SPORTS MEDICINE | STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING | WILLIAMSBURG
The College of William and Mary sponsors 23 varsity sports and provides students with a unique and successful balance of athletics and academics. The Tribe Athletics Department was 78th nationally (as of June 3) in the Learfield Sports Directors’ Cup Standings for 2009-10, a number that topped the Colonial Athletic Association (CAA) programs and ranked third in the state of Virginia. The Directors’ Cup, which was created
WILLIAMSBURG | STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING | SPORTS MEDICINE | ACADEMICS | TRIBE ATHLETICS | W&M | HISTORY | 2010 TRIBE | STAFF | FIELD HOCKEY
M A RT IN FA M
MC 23
ILY STAD IU M
ENN G E LSE N T A N K C A COR M
IS C E NT E R
in June of 2008. This past summer, the Laycock Center renovated the foyer to include photos, information and memorablia on the Tribe’s storied football tradition. This past summer, the announcement of the first phase of the Martin Family Stadium to the current facilty at Albert-Daly Field was made. The new stadium features a 1,000-seat pavilion, which features a state-of-the-art press box, filming positions and restroom facilities. The
A LB E RT-DA LY
W&M STUD E N
FIE LD
T R EC C E NT E R
project will begin in the fall of 2010 and be complete in 2011. In the summer of 2009, Busch Field experienced a renovation that included a total revamp of the field, underlying pad, water cannon and drainage system. The renovation created a competition surface that ranks alongside those used at the U.S. National Training Centers in Virginia Beach, Va., Chula Vista, Calif., and
KA PLA N AR ENA
ZA BLE STAD IU M
that used at last year’s Olympic Games. In 2005, Kaplan Arena received an upgrade with the installation of 6,900-square foot permanent wood floor along with rubberized sports flooring on the open end of the arena to accomodate track and field and other multipurpose activities.
PLU ME RI PAR K
BUSC H FIE LD
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FIELD HOCKEY | STAFF | 2010 TRIBE | HISTORY | W&M | TRIBE ATHLETICS | ACADEMICS | SPORTS MEDICINE | STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING | WILLIAMSBURG
William and Mary is committed to building and maintaining outstanding facilities for all 23 of its varsity athletic teams. The College has demonstrated this commitment by investing nearly $20 million toward the construction and upgrade of its athletics facilities during just the last seven years. Among W&M’s recent projects was the completion of the $11 million, 30,000-square foot Jimmye Laycock Football Center, which was dedicated
WILLIAMSBURG | STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING | SPORTS MEDICINE | ACADEMICS | TRIBE ATHLETICS | W&M | HISTORY | 2010 TRIBE | STAFF | FIELD HOCKEY
Click to view a message from Terry Driscoll
VOLU NTEER OF TER RY DRISCOLL HONORED TRIBE CLUB TRIBE’S THE YEA R KEN HALLA (’86) AT THE MAD ISON . ES JAM R 2009 HOM ECOM ING WIN OVE
Under the steady guidance and watchful eye of Terry Driscoll, the William and Mary Athletics Department has solidified its standing as one of the nation’s preeminent broad-based programs. As Driscoll enters his 15th year as athletics director, he has overseen an unprecedented era of improvement in terms of funding and facilities while also maintaining the College’s rich history of producing well-rounded student-athletes. Driscoll oversees a program that is committed to balancing academic demands with athletic success. One of the department’s stated goals each year is to finish among the top 100 in the annual Director’s Cup rankings, which has happened in all but one of the years that Driscoll has been the director. In the last seven years, the Tribe’s program has combined for a total of 29 Colonial Athletic Association (CAA) titles. This past season, W&M claimed three CAA titles (Men’s and Women’s Cross Country and Women’s Track & Field). In 2002-03, W&M had a school-record 10 teams compete in the NCAA Tournament, with four teams winning conference titles and six that finished in the top 25 at the end of their respective seasons. Overall, no institution in the CAA can claim more alltime league championships than the 98 William and Mary has earned.
• In the Summer of 2010, the committment of a significant gift to fully fund the addition of MARTIN FAMILY STADIUM to Albert-Daly Field, the home of Tribe soccer and lacrosse. Named in honor of Eff and Patty Martin, and their children, Andrew, Christine and Julia ’09, the facility will be a 1,000-seat pavilion, which features a state-of-the-art press box, filming positions and restroom facilities. The project will be completed in the spring of 2011.
STEVE COLE
BOBBY DWYER
PAMELA MASON
PETE CLAWSON
MIKE PRITCHETT
DAN WAKELY
SPENCER MILNE
MILLIE WEST
Associate AD, Internal Affairs
Sr. Associate AD, Development
• The $11 million, 30,000-square foot JIMMYE LAYCOCK FOOTBALL CENTER (dedicated in June 2008). • $7 million specifically for men’s basketball and the naming of KAPLAN ARENA for the gift from Jim (Class of ’57) and Jane Kaplan (Class of ’56).
Assistant AD, Compliance and Educational Services
Assistant AD, Media Relations
• Upgrades to ZABLE STADIUM, including a permanent lighting system (2005), new artificial playing surface (Field Turf Pro) in 2006, a new video scoreboard (2007) and a new tartan all-weather synthetic track surface (2008). • The recently completed renovation to BUSCH FIELD with a new playing surface, AstroTurf 12™, underlying pad and drainage systems to create a competition surface that ranks alongside that used at the U.S. National Training Centers in Virginia Beach, Virginia, Chula Vista, California and that used at the 2008 Olympic Games. • The construction of PLUMERI PARK, home of Tribe baseball, in 1999 due in large part to the generous donation by Joseph J. Plumeri II (Class of 1966).
Assistant AD, Facilities and Operations
Assistant AD, Business Affairs
• The $1 million natural grass facility for soccer and lacrosse, ALBERT-DALY FIELD, (dedicated in August 2004) was made possible by longtime athletic benefactors Jim and Bobbie Ukrop (classes of ’60 and ’61, respectively). • Busch Courts opened in September of 2001 as the home for Tribe tennis, includes eight individual hard courts, stadium seating for 500 people and state-of-the-art lighting system. In the spring of 2010, the college honored long-time Tribe staff member Millie West by naming the facility the MILLIE WEST TENNIS FACILITY.
Dir. of Marketing, Promotion and Ticket Operations
Director of Special Projects
TERRY DRISCOLL Director of Athletics 15th Year at W&M
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FIELD HOCKEY | STAFF | 2010 TRIBE | HISTORY | W&M | TRIBE ATHLETICS | ACADEMICS | SPORTS MEDICINE | STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING | WILLIAMSBURG
In his 15 years of guiding the William and Mary Athletic Department, Athletics Director Terry Driscoll has overseen a significant number of facility enhancements for a number of Tribe’s athletic programs. It total, W&M has dedicated nearly $30 million to facilities enhancements under Driscoll. Here is a look at some of the facility enhancements on Driscoll’s watch:
WILLIAMSBURG | STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING | SPORTS MEDICINE | ACADEMICS | TRIBE ATHLETICS | W&M | HISTORY | 2010 TRIBE | STAFF | FIELD HOCKEY
Joe ’74 and Linda Montgomery with Jim Kaplan ’57
, TODD SM ITH AND MIC HAE L SAHADY, BAR BARA SAHADY THE ANNUAL AT BILL SILEO WON THE FIRST FLIG HT . -AM JOE PLU MER I GOLF PRO
Whether you are a former Tribe student-athlete, a proud alum, a Tribe parent or a fan of William and Mary Athletics, you are invited to join the Tribe Club. By donating to the unrestricted fund or to a specific sport, you are providing opportunities for many young men and women to experience both academic and athletic excellence here at the College. In addition to supporting our student-athletes with generous gifts, Tribe Club members receive exclusive benefits based on their giving level, as well as invitations to tailgates, pre-game and halftime events, golf outings and regional Tribe Club social events. To join, you can make a contribution to the Tribe Club online at www.TribeClub.com or send your donation to PO Box 399, Williamsburg, VA, 23187. Thanks to all those who are loyal members of the Tribe Club family. Your support of our gifted and talented athletes is truly appreciated. We could not succeed without you!
BOBBY DWYER
MONTY MASON
AL ALBERT
BRIAN RANEY
Sr. Associate AD, Development
Associate Director of Development
CHRIS BRAIG Director of Special Events
Tribe Club Chairman
Assistant Director of Development
CRISTEN MCQUILLAN
Assistant Director of Special Events
MI LLIE WEST WITH JOE PLU ME RI ’66 AT THE WOME N IN SPORTS BRU NCH.
THE TRIBE CLUB AND THE OVERY HONENBERGER GROUP (FINANCIAL ADVISORS) HOSTED THE ANNUA L OYSTER ROAST AT T PLUME RI PARK. Betsey Nagelsen and head men’s tennis coach Peter Daub
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TRIBE CLUB WEB SITE
JEAN BEALL Business Manager
PEGGY LUKAS
Senior Administrative Assistant
CLICK HERE TO DONATE 28
FIELD HOCKEY | STAFF | 2010 TRIBE | HISTORY | W&M | TRIBE ATHLETICS | ACADEMICS | SPORTS MEDICINE | STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING | WILLIAMSBURG
Established in 1948 to create support for William and Mary Athletics, the Tribe Club is made up of alumni and friends of the College’s athletics programs. Due to the fact that W&M receives no aid from the state for its sports programs, the Tribe Club is the sole provider of scholarships for William and Mary’s student-athletes. Additionally, money raised annually by the Tribe Club helps defray a portion of the operating expenses for program support.
WILLIAMSBURG | STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING | SPORTS MEDICINE | ACADEMICS | TRIBE ATHLETICS | W&M | HISTORY | 2010 TRIBE | STAFF | FIELD HOCKEY
FIELD HOCKEY | STAFF | 2010 TRIBE | HISTORY | W&M | TRIBE ATHLETICS | ACADEMICS | SPORTS MEDICINE | STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING | WILLIAMSBURG
THE TRIBAL FEVER WEB SITE CLICK HERE TO JOIN The Tribal Fever is a student run fan club focused on William & Mary Athletics. The goal of The Tribal Fever is to create and maintain a culture of school spirit centered around athletic events and expanding into the College community as a whole. The Tribal Fever also plans to increase awareness of sporting events on campus with a goal of increasing student attendance at Tribe sports events. Additionally, we plan to foster opportunities to create a better bond between students and studentathletes.
LAST SEASON, T R IBA L FEV ER ORGA N IZ ED BU VA R IOUS ATH LE S T R IPS TO T IC EV ENTS, IN CLUD ING TH E T R IBE’ S FOOTBA LL U PSET OF V IRG IN IA .
Click to see the Tribe’s new mascott, the Griffin.
THE GRIFFIN W&M Mascot
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William & Mary’s Griffin is a mythical creature with the body of a lion and the head of an eagle. The coat of arms of King William and Queen Mary was adorned with lions, and the lion’s body of our mascot evokes our historic royal founding and early history. The eagle’s head of the Griffin suggests the national symbol of the United States and represents the presidents, leaders, and productive citizens whom William & Mary has trained for centuries.
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WILLIAMSBURG | STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING | SPORTS MEDICINE | ACADEMICS | TRIBE ATHLETICS | W&M | HISTORY | 2010 TRIBE | STAFF | FIELD HOCKEY
JASON SIMMS
Director of Academic Support for Athletics
- Time Management - Advanced Study Skills - Note-Taking Techniques - Career Planning - Acing Final Exams - Community Standards
- Introduction to Study Skills - Learning and Memory - Test-Taking Strategies - Money Management - Academic Planning - And more…
Campus Resources - Faculty Advising Program Academic, personal and professional goal setting assistance provided by faculty advisors. Ratio of freshmen to advisors is 12 to 1.
As Director of Academic Support, Jason Simms acts as an academic advisor to the College’s varsity athletes and is currently in his third year at W&M. Simms assists student-athletes in maintaining excellence in the classroom, scheduling classes, and assisting in future planning. Simms brought a diverse background to the W&M Athletic Department from his work at Salisbury University. He acted as the Associate Dean of Admissions as well as the Director of Minority Recruitment. In regards to athletics, Simms worked as the Admissions Athletics Liaison and an Assistant Men’s Basketball Coach for the SU Sea Gulls.
The Academy The Academy is a unique semester-long series of workshops and tutorial sessions designed to assist high – achieving student-athletes in making a smooth transition to the College of William and Mary. Workshop topics include:
- Counseling Center Counseling and psychological services available for a range of issues including personal concerns and interpersonal issues.
ALA N B. MI LLE R HA LL SS THE NEW MASON SCH OOL OF BUSINE
- Dean of Students Office Offers disability services coordination, four-day campus-wide orientation, and skill-enrichment counseling. - Writing Resource Center Offers an oral communication studio and writing consultants with convenient office hours.
PAMELA MASON
Asstistant Athletic Director for Compliance and Educational Services
Pamela Mason took over full time duties of the College’s compliance office on April 1, 2006, and she was promoted to Assistant AD for Compliance and Educational Services in July 2008. Previously, she served as the Associate Director of Development for two years. She is W&M’s Senior Women’s Administrator. Under Mason, the compliance office works with the NCAA Eligibility Center to determine initial eligibility of all incoming freshmen and continues to monitor student-athlete eligibility throughout their college careers. Mason is also responsible for educating all student-athletes, coaches, staff and boosters on the NCAA rules.
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PA M ELA M ASON (PI CT UR ED WI TH HE R HUSBAN D MONT Y AT TH E WOM EN IN SPORTS WE EK END) IS TH E TR IBE ’S SE NIOR WOM EN ’S ADM INI ST RA TOR
Click to view a message from Pamela Mason on women’s athletics at W&M.
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FIELD HOCKEY | STAFF | 2010 TRIBE | HISTORY | W&M | TRIBE ATHLETICS | ACADEMICS | SPORTS MEDICINE | STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING | WILLIAMSBURG
Click to view a message from Jason Simms on Academics at W&M.
ACADEMIC ADVISING PHILOSOPHY Sound academic advice can make the crucial difference between a coherent and exciting education that satisfies personal and professional goals and one that is fragmented and frustrating. Academic advising is recognized at the College as important to the development of its students, a natural extension of teaching and an important professional obligation on the part of its faculty.
WILLIAMSBURG | STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING | SPORTS MEDICINE | ACADEMICS | TRIBE ATHLETICS | W&M | HISTORY | 2010 TRIBE | STAFF | FIELD HOCKEY
FIELD HOCKEY | STAFF | 2010 TRIBE | HISTORY | W&M | TRIBE ATHLETICS | ACADEMICS | SPORTS MEDICINE | STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING | WILLIAMSBURG
Along with hard-work and dedication both on the field and in the classroom, the William and Mary Athletic Department and its student-athletes also strive to make a positive impact in the community. In 2010, various Tribe athletic programs donated their time and energy in different capacities throughout Williamsburg and the Hampton Roads area. Among the dozens of activities, Tribe teams read at local schools, volunteered at youth camps, doing community-based service projects and collected food, clothing and money for non-profit organizations.
Tribe baseball reached out into the community this past year participated in Fitness Night at The Arc of Greater Williamsburg. Tribe student-athletes helped 40 members of The Arc engage in exercises and baseball activities for two hours and talked about the importance of exercise and developing healthy eating habits.
Click to view Tribe baseball’s event at The Arc of Greater Williamsburg.
Among the leaders in the Tribe’s efforts in the community is the Student Athletic Advisory Council (SAAC). The SAAC’s goal is to provide a communications link between student athletes and the athletic administration, while promoting and supporting the athletic department, college and local community. The Council is composed of two representatives from each varsity team and the cheerleading team. Selected athletic administrators are non-voting members of the Council.
STUDENT-ATH LET E ADVISORY COU
NC IL
Last season, members of the Tribe football program volunteered at various youth football camps, including as coaches during the opening week of conditioning practice for the Williamsburg Hornets Youth Football and Cheerleading League.
W&M ME N’S GYMNASTIC S SPONSOR ED A CA NNED FOOD DR IVE THAT COLLECTED OV ER 3,500 POUNDS OF FOOD AND CLO TH ING FOR FISH, A WI LLI AMSBURG-BASED , NON-DE NOMI NATIONA L CHAR ITY, IN 2010.
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ED PU T ON A BASK ET BA LL HE LP ’S EN OM W E IB TR E ARC ESS NI GHT FOR TH SU CC ESSFUL FI TN LI AMSBURG. OF GR EATE R W IL
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WILLIAMSBURG | STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING | SPORTS MEDICINE | ACADEMICS | TRIBE ATHLETICS | W&M | HISTORY | 2010 TRIBE | STAFF | FIELD HOCKEY
ANDY CARTER
JOHN KNAUL
MICHELE HEISEL
LISA SHOOK
DEIDRE CONNELLY
TRACEY EISEN
SHAWN LUCCI
BRYCE MUELLER
Assistant A.D., Health Services
MONT LI NK ENAU
SPORTS PSYCH
The Division of Sports Medicine at the College of William and Mary is responsible for the health care of nearly 450 student-athletes in 23 intercollegiate sports at the country’s second-oldest institution of higher learning. The athletic training program focuses on the prevention, evaluation, treatment and rehabilitation of athletic injuries for all intercollegiate student-athletes. Tribe athletes have the luxury of rehabilitating and treating injuries in a state-of-the-art athletic training facility. There are eight full-time certified athletic trainers and two graduate assistants from Old Dominion University’s post-graduate athletic training educational program on staff. In addition, a group of undergraduate students serve as athletic training aides and assist in the daily operation of the sports medicine program. W&M Student-Athletes work with an online meal planning for balanced nutrition through Sports Medicine as well.
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Renée Cork heads the William and Mary Sports Medicine staff and holds the title of Assistant Athletic Director for Heath Services. Cork is in her 19th year at the College and in 2007 was honored as the National Trainers’ Association Assistant Athletic Trainer of the Year. Cork is joined on the sports medicine staff by a pair of veteran trainers in Senior Associate Athletic Trainer Andy Carter and Associate Athletic Trainer John Knaul. Carter joined the William and Mary staff in 2000 as an associate athletic trainer. A William and Mary alumnus and former Tribe student athletic trainer, he is in his seveth year as the head football athletic trainer, overseeing the sports medicine services for the team. He and his wife, Kristina, who is a physical therapist at Advanced Specialty Center of Williamsburg Physical Therapy, reside in Williamsburg. Knaul, who earned his bachelor’s degree of Alfred University and
ILL
Associate Athletic Trainer
G ER SU IT E
Senior Assistant Athletic Trainer
TH UNDERWATER TREADM AQUATIC TH ERAPY POOL WI
Senior Associate Athletic Trainer
STEVE COLE TRAIN ING ROOM
Assistant Athletic Trainer
his master’s at Elmira College, is in his 11th year at William and Mary. He and his wife, Katie, reside in Williamsburg. Lisa Shook and Michele Heisel enter their sixth seasons with W&M athletics and both hold the title of Senior Assistant Athletic Trainers. Shook holds a bachelor’s degree from Salisbury University and a master’s from Western Carolina. She is the head athletic trainer for the men’s basketball program. Heisel, who resides in Williamsburg with her husband, Ian, who is an assistant strength and conditioning coach at the College, holds a bachelor’s degree from California University of Pennsylvania and a master’s from Virginia. Tracey Eisen and Bryce Mueller return for their third seasons as Assistant Athletic Trainers. Eisen, who is originally from Silver Springs, Md., completed her undergraduate degree at Pittsburgh and her graduate work at George Washington. Bryce earned his bachelor’s
Senior Assistant Athletic Trainer
Assistant Athletic Trainer
Sports Psychology Consultant
Assistant Athletic Trainer
degree from Northern Iowa, while receiving his master’s degree from West Virginia. Shawn Lucci joins the staff full time after spending the last two years as a graduate assistant. She earned her undergraduate degree from the University of Pittsburgh and received her master’s from Old Dominion this past year. Michael Potter is in his seventh year on the staff as the team physician. The team physician oversees the full-time athletic training staff and has overall responsibility for supervising the sports medicine program. A family practice/sports medicine specialist, Potter earned his medical degree from Texas A&M. He completed his residency at the Riverside Family Practice in Newport News and his sports medicine fellowship at Wake Forest University. Potter is in private practice with the Virginia Center of Athletic Medicine (VCAM) of Tidewater Physicians Multispecialty Group (TPMG).
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FIELD HOCKEY | STAFF | 2010 TRIBE | HISTORY | W&M | TRIBE ATHLETICS | ACADEMICS | SPORTS MEDICINE | STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING | WILLIAMSBURG
RENEE CORK
WILLIAMSBURG | STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING | SPORTS MEDICINE | ACADEMICS | TRIBE ATHLETICS | W&M | HISTORY | 2010 TRIBE | STAFF | FIELD HOCKEY
FIELD HOCKEY | STAFF | 2010 TRIBE | HISTORY | W&M | TRIBE ATHLETICS | ACADEMICS | SPORTS MEDICINE | STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING | WILLIAMSBURG
JOSEPH W. MONTGOMERY STRENGTH TRAINING CENTER AT A GLANCE • 16,000 pounds of free weights • 7,000 pounds of dumbbells • 6,000 pounds of rubber bumper plates • 20 dynamax medicine balls • 24 custom-built Olympic platforms • 18 multipurpose power racks with adjustable benches • 10 dumbbell benches • 6 glute-ham benches • 4 adjustable abdominal benches • 6 dip bars • 2 power squats • 2 ground-based jammers • Fully-equipped plyometric area • Wide variety of selectorized machines
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S PIC PLAT FOR M M LY O T IL U B CUSTOM-
JOH N SAU ER STR ENGTH AND CONDIT
ION ING ROOM
JOHN RICH
Assistant Strength and Conditioning Coach
JOHN SAUER STRENGTH AND CONDIT IONING ROOM OV ER 7,000 LBS . OF DUM BELLS
JOHN SAUER
Director of Speed, Strength and Conditioning 23rd Year at W&M
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IAN HEISEL
Assistant Strength and Conditioning Coach
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WILLIAMSBURG | STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING | SPORTS MEDICINE | ACADEMICS | TRIBE ATHLETICS | W&M | HISTORY | 2010 TRIBE | STAFF | FIELD HOCKEY
VIRGINIA BEACH
VERIZON WIRELESS VIRGIN IA BEACH AMPH ITHEATER
W&M HOSPITALITY GUIDE
COLON IA L W ILLI A
MSBU RG
The Williamsburg area is host to a number of unique places that attract thousands of visitors each year. Some of the most popular destinations include Busch Gardens and Water Country - two of the most impressive theme parks on the east coast - and both are less than a 10-minute drive from the W&M campus. Another of Williamsburg’s most popular areas is New Town, which is a vibrant 365-acre community with more than 170 shops and restaurants. Additionally, New Town offers a 12-screen movie theatre and regularly hosts outdoor concerts and special events.
WATER COU NT RY USA 39
BUSCH GARDENS
Just an hour away from campus is Virginia Beach, which is home to some of the most popular beaches in the region. Also located in the area is the Virginia Beach Amphitheater - a venue that hosts dozens of concerts each year.
NEW TOWN 40
FIELD HOCKEY | STAFF | 2010 TRIBE | HISTORY | W&M | TRIBE ATHLETICS | ACADEMICS | SPORTS MEDICINE | STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING | WILLIAMSBURG
COLONIAL WILLIAMSBURG