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Basketball analytics investment is key to NBA wins and other successes

For their new study, Wang and his colleagues gathered data on each of the 30 NBA teams, over a period from 2009 to 2023, 2009 being the year that NBAstuffer.com started compiling team data. For every team in each season during this period, the researchers recorded an “analyst headcount,” meaning the number of basketball operations […]

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Basketball analytics investment is key to NBA wins and other successes

For their new study, Wang and his colleagues gathered data on each of the 30 NBA teams, over a period from 2009 to 2023, 2009 being the year that NBAstuffer.com started compiling team data. For every team in each season during this period, the researchers recorded an “analyst headcount,” meaning the number of basketball operations analytics staff employed by a team. They considered an analyst to be data analysts, software engineers, sports scientists, directors of research, and other technical positions by title, but also staff members who aren’t formally analysts but may be known to be particularly active in the basketball analytics community. In general, they found that in 2009, a total of 10 data analysts were working across the NBA. In 2023, that number ballooned to 132, with some teams employing more analysts than others.Their finding that teams with a higher analytics headcount tended to win more games wasn’t entirely surprising.The study is also co-authored by Anette “Peko” Hosoi, the Pappalardo Professor of Mechanical Engineering at MIT.A data analyst’s work can also influence in-game strategy. Case in point: Over the last decade, NBA teams have strategically chosen to shift to shooting longer-range three-pointers, since Philadelphia 76ers President of Basketball Operations Daryl Morey SM ’00 determined that statistically, shooting more three-pointers wins more games. Today, each of the 30 NBA teams employs at least one basketball analytics staffer. And yet, while a data analyst’s job is entirely based on data, there is not much data on the impact of analysts themselves.The MIT researchers aimed in their new study to quantify the influence of NBA team analysts, specifically on winning games. To do so, they looked to major sources of sports data such as ESPN.com, and NBAstuffer.com, a website that hosts a huge amount of stats on NBA games and team stats, including hired basketball analytics staff, that the website’s managers compile based on publicly available data, such as from official team press releases and staff directories, as well as LinkedIn and X profiles, and news and industry reports.If you filled out a March Madness bracket this month, you probably faced the same question with each college match-up: What gives one team an edge over another? Is it a team’s record through the regular season? Or the chemistry among its players? Maybe it’s the experience of its coaching staff or the buzz around a top scorer.“This paper hits nicely not just in sports but beyond, with this question of: What is the tangible impact of big data analytics?” says co-author Arnab Sarker PhD ’25, a recent doctoral graduate of MIT’s Institute for Data, Systems and Society (IDSS). “Sports are a really nice, controlled place for analytics. But we’re also curious to what extent we can see these effects in general organizational performance.”While the study focuses on professional basketball, the researchers say the findings are relevant beyond the NBA. They speculate that college teams that make use of data analytics may have an edge over those who don’t. (Take note, March Madness fans.) And the same likely goes for sports in general, along with any competitive field.“Teams and leagues are spending millions of dollars on embracing analytical tools without a real sense of return-on-investment,” Wang notes.“I don’t know of any analyst who’s being paid million,” says study author Henry Wang, a graduate student in the MIT Sports Lab. “There is still a gap between how the player is being valued and how the analytics are being valued.”Since then, data analysis has expanded to many other sports, in an effort to make use of the varied and fast-paced sources of data, measurements, and statistics available today. In basketball, analysts can take on many roles, using data, for instance, to optimize a player’s health and minimize injury risk, and to predict a player’s performance to inform draft selection, free agency acquisition, and contract negotiations.Across the sports world, data analysts have grown in number and scope over the years. Sports analytics’ role in using data and stats to improve team performance was popularized in 2011 with the movie “Moneyball,” based on the 2003 book “Moneyball: The Art of Winning an Unfair Game” by Michael Lewis, who chronicled the 2002 Oakland Athletics and general manager Billy Beane’s use of baseball analytics to win games against wealthier Major League Baseball teams.In addition to analytics headcount, the researchers also compiled data on other win-influencing variables, such as roster salary (Does a higher-paid team win more games?), roster experience (Does a team with more veterans win more games?), consistent coaching (Did a new coach shake up a team’s win record?) and season injuries (How did a team’s injuries affect its wins?). The researchers also noted “road back-to-backs,” or the number of times a team had to play consecutive away games (Does the wear and tear of constant travel impact wins?).All of these factors play some role in a team’s chance to advance. But according to a new study by MIT researchers, there’s one member who consistently boosts their team’s performance: the data analyst.Numbers value“The model learns all these effects, so we can see, for instance, the tradeoff between analyst and roster salary when contributing to win total,” Wang explains.The new study, which was published this month in the Journal of Sports Economics, quantifies the influence of basketball analytics investment on team performance. The study’s authors looked in particular at professional basketball and compared the  investment in data analytics on each NBA team with the team’s record of wins over 12 seasons. They found that indeed, teams that hired more analytics staff, and invested more in data analysis in general, tended to win more games.Data returnAnalytics department headcount had a positive and statistically significant effect on team wins even when accounting for other factors such as a team’s roster salary, the experience and chemistry among its players, the consistency of its coaching staff, and player injuries through each season. Even with all of these influences, the researchers found that the depth of a team’s data analytics bench, so to speak, was a consistent predictor of the team’s wins.“We’re still at a point where the analyst is undervalued,” Wang says. “There probably is a sweet spot, in terms of headcount and wins. You can’t hire 100 analysts and expect to go in 82-and-0 next season. But right now a lot of teams are still below that sweet spot, and this competitive advantage that analytics offers has yet to be fully harvested.”What’s more, they were able to quantify basketball analytics’ value, based on their impact on team wins. They found that for every four-fifths of one data analyst, a team gains one additional win in a season. Interestingly, a team can also gain one additional win by increasing its roster salary by .6 million. One way to read this is that one data analyst’s impact is worth at least million.“What we’re trying to measure is a team’s level of investment in basketball analytics,” Wang explains. “The best measure would be if every team told us exactly how much money they spent every year on their R&D and data infrastructure and analysts. But they’re not going to do that. So headcount is the next best thing.”The researchers plugged all this data into a “two-way fixed effects” model to estimate the relative effect that each variable has on the number of additional games a team can win in a season.

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Big 12 Track and Field Garners 110 All-American Honors at 2025 NCAA Outdoor Championship

Story Links Big 12 student-athletes collected 110 All-American honors at the 2025 NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championship hosted at Oregon’s Hayward Field.   First Team honors were earned by those who finished among the top 8 in their respective events, while Second Team honors were given to those who placed ninth […]

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Big 12 student-athletes collected 110 All-American honors at the 2025 NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championship hosted at Oregon’s Hayward Field.
 
First Team honors were earned by those who finished among the top 8 in their respective events, while Second Team honors were given to those who placed ninth through 16th place.
 
BYU led the Conference in First Team All-Americans with 11 honors followed by TCU and Texas Tech tying with six honors apiece.
 
 
2025 NCAA Outdoor Track and Field All-Americans
First Team
Zach Extine, Arizona – Men’s 110 Meter Hurdles
Jayden Davis, Arizona State – Men’s 400 Meters
Alexis Brown, Baylor – Women’s Long Jump
Nathaniel Ezekiel, Baylor – Men’s 400 Meter Hurdles
Molly Haywood, Baylor – Women’s Pole Vault
Demario Prince, Baylor – Men’s 110 Meter Hurdles
Ben Barton, BYU – Men’s Decathlon
Danny Bryant, BYU – Men’s Shot Put
James Corrigan, BYU – Men’s 3,000 Meter Steeplechase
Lexy Halladay-Lowry, BYU – Women’s 3,000 Meter Steeplechase
Eli Hazlett, BYU – Men’s 4×400 Meter Relay
Jonah Heimuli, BYU – Men’s 4×400 Meter Relay
Meghan Hunter, BYU – Women’s 800 Meters
Trey Jackson, BYU – Men’s 4×400 Meter Relay
Sami Oblad, BYU – Women’s 400 Meters
Josh Taylor, BYU – Men’s 4×400 Meter Relay
Creed Thompson, BYU – Men’s 10,000 Meters
Fred Moudani-Likibi, Cincinnati – Men’s Shot Put
Amanda Ngandu-Ntumba, Cincinnati – Women’s Discus
John Adesola, Houston – Men’s 110 Meter Hurdles
Grant Levesque, Houston – Men’s Decathlon
Jamar Marshall Jr., Houston – Men’s 110 Meter Hurdles
Rachel Joseph, Iowa State – Women’s 400 Meters
Rodgers Kiplimo, Iowa State – Men’s 10,000 Meters
Joash Ruto, Iowa State – Men’s 3,000 Meters Steeplechase
Ashton Barkdull, Kansas – Men’s Pole Vault
Bryce Barkdull, Kansas – Men’s Pole Vault
Erica Ellis, Kansas – Women’s Pole Vault
Alexander Jung, Kansas – Men’s Decathlon
Dimitrios Pavlidis, Kansas – Men’s Discus
Selva Prabhu, K-State – Men’s Triple Jump
Emil Uhlin, K-State – Men’s Decathlon
Blair Anderson, Oklahoma State – Men’s Long Jump
Fouad Messaoudi, Oklahoma State – Men’s 5,000 Meters
Brian Musau, Oklahoma State – Men’s 5,000 Meters
Emma Robbins, Oklahoma State – Women’s Hammer Throw
Amelliah Birdow, TCU – Women’s 400 Meter Hurdles
Iyana Gray, TCU – Women’s 4×100 Meter Relay
Teanna Harlin, TCU – Women’s 4×100 Meter Relay
Irene Jepkemboi, TCU – Women’s Javelin
Indya Mayberry, TCU – Women’s 4×100 Meter Relay
London Tucker, TCU – Women’s 4×100 Meter Relay
Temitope Adeshina, Texas Tech – Women’s High Jump
DeSean Boyce, Texas Tech – Men’s 400 Meters
Ernest Cheruiyot, Texas Tech – Men’s 10,000 Meters
Oskar Edlund, Texas Tech – Men’s 400 Meter Hurdles
Shelby Frank, Texas Tech – Women’s Discus and Hammer Throw
Victoria Gorlova, Texas Tech – Women’s Triple Jump
Joy Naukot, West Virginia – Women’s 10,000 Meters
Sarah Tait, West Virginia – Women’s 3,000 Meter Steeplechase
 
Second Team
Jenica Bosko, Arizona – Women’s Long Jump
Tapenisa Havea, Arizona – Women’s Shot Put
Youssef Koudssi, Arizona – Men’s Discus
Zach Landa, Arizona – Men’s Shot Put
Reinaldo Rodrigues, Arizona – Men’s Long Jump
Jayden Davis, Arizona State – Men’s 4×400 Meter Relay
Malik Franklin, Arizona State – Men’s 4×400 Meter Relay
Ines Lopez, Arizona State – Women’s Discus
Mateo Medina, Arizona State – Men’s 4×400 Meter Relay
Trevin Moyer, Arizona State – Men’s 4×400 Meter Relay
Alexis Brown, Baylor – Women’s 4×100 Meter Relay
Janae De Gannes, Baylor – Women’s Long Jump
Michaela Francois, Baylor – Women’s 4×100 Meter Relay
Tiriah Kelley, Baylor – Women’s 200 Meters and 4×100 Meter Relay
Hannah Lowe, Baylor – Women’s 4×100 Meter Relay
Riley Chamberlain, Baylor – Women’s 1,500 Meters
Carlee Hansen, BYU – Women’s 1,500 Meters
Jenna Hutchins, BYU – Women’s 5,000 Meters
Taylor Lovell, BYU – Women’s 3,000 Meter Steeplechase
Joey Nokes, BYU – Men’s 10,000 Meters
Adaobi Tabugbo, UCF – Women’s 100 Meter Hurdles
Juliette Laracuente-Huebner, Cincinnati – Women’s Heptathlon
Ryan Rieckmann, Cincinnati – Men’s Javelin
Macaela Walker, Cincinnati – Women’s 400 Meter Hurdles
Nick Bianco, Colorado – Men’s Decathlon
Trey East III, Houston – Men’s 4×400 Meter Relay
Demarien Jacobs, Houston – Men’s 4×400 Meter Relay
Antrea Mita, Houston – Men’s High Jump
Sahfi Reed, Houston – Men’s 4×400 Meter Relay
King Taylor, Houston – Men’s 4×400 Meter Relay
Robin Kwemoi Bera, Iowa State – Men’s 5,000 Meters
Maelle Porcher, Iowa State – Women’s 5,000 Meters
Jacob Cookinham, Kansas – Men’s Shot Put
Ebba Cronholm, Kansas – Women’s 3,000 Meter Steeplechase
Bryce Foster, Kansas – Men’s Shot Put
Tayton Klein, Kansas – Men’s Decathlon
Aaliyah Moore, Kansas – Women’s 800 Meters
Sofia Sluchaninova, Kansas – Women’s Discus
Monique Hardy, K-State – Women’s Hammer Throw
Safhia Hinds, K-State – Women’s 400 Meter Hurdles
Riley Marz, K-State – Men’s Javelin
Shalom Olotu, K-State – Women’s Long and Triple Jump
Isca Chelangat, Oklahoma State – Women’s 5,000 Meters
Denis Kipngetich, Oklahoma State – Men’s 10,000 Meters
Annie Molenhouse, Oklahoma State – Women’s Heptathlon
Maria Bienvenu, TCU – Women’s Javelin
Kashie Crockett, TCU – Men’s 200 Meters
Iyana Gray, TCU – Women’s 100 Meters
Indya Mayberry, TCU – Women’s 100 and 200 Meters
Fanny Arendt, Texas Tech – 800 Meters
Zoe Burleson, Texas Tech – Women’s Discus
Ernest Cheruiyot, Texas Tech – Men’s 5,000 Meters
Mario Paul, Texas Tech – Men’s 400 Meter Hurdles
Destiny Smith, Texas Tech – Women’s 100 Meter Hurdles
Shaemar Uter, Texas Tech – Men’s 400 Meters
Tamiah Washington, Texas Tech – Women’s Triple Jump
 





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Ask the AD with Russo & Rizzo on ESPN 106.3 – June 24, 2025

Story Links Keiser Director of Athletics Kris Swogger visited Russo & Rizzo on ESPN West Palm 106.3 on Tuesday, June 24, for his recurring “Ask the AD” segment. During this time, Swogger discussed the world of college sports, all things in Keiser Athletics, and more.   Russo & Rizzo airs Monday through […]

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Keiser Director of Athletics Kris Swogger visited Russo & Rizzo on ESPN West Palm 106.3 on Tuesday, June 24, for his recurring “Ask the AD” segment. During this time, Swogger discussed the world of college sports, all things in Keiser Athletics, and more.
 

Russo & Rizzo airs Monday through Friday on 106.3 on your FM dial. Fans can also listen live by clicking HERE.
 

ESPN West Palm is Palm Beach County and the Treasure Coast’s home for sports, featuring entertaining and engaging sports talk, the best coverage of the local-area stories, and a presence at the biggest sports marketing events in the community.    

 


General athletic news can be found at KUSeahawks on Facebook, kuseahawks on Instagram, and kuseahawks on X.
 





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Ten Hornets Named CSC Academic All-District in Track and Field

Men’s Track and Field | 6/25/2025 10:31:00 AM Story Links June 24, 2025-Emporia State track and field had a combined nine athletes earn Academic All-District honors as selected by College Sports Communicators. For the men Ty Anderson, Jonah Remsberg, Immanuel Dukpe, Mitch Budke, and a Brooks Lowe were named CSC […]

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Men’s Track and Field | 6/25/2025 10:31:00 AM

June 24, 2025-Emporia State track and field had a combined nine athletes earn Academic All-District honors as selected by College Sports Communicators. For the men Ty Anderson, Jonah Remsberg, Immanuel Dukpe, Mitch Budke, and a Brooks Lowe were named CSC Academic All-District for their work in the classroom while Mia Manley, Abigael Reid Harelson, Madison Vermetten, Savanah Stewart and Isabel Vikoler were honored for the women.
 
Ty Anderson has a 3.60 GPA in business and earned First-Team All-American honors on the track.  The school record holder in the 100m at 10.13 he finished seventh in the 100m at the NCAA Outdoor Championships.
 
Mitch Budke has a 3.93 GPA in social science education and was ranked 16th in the central region in the javelin.  His mark of 63.26m (207-6) is ranked 35th nationally.
 
Immanuel Dukpe has a 3.67 GPA in health and human performance and was a two-time First-Team All-American outdoors. A school record holder in the 400m at 46.29 and as a member of the 4x400m relay at 3:06.66 he placed eighth in both events at the NCAA Outdoor Championships.
 
Brooks Lowe maintains a 3.51 GPA in physical education and was ranked seventh nationally with a mark of 69.16m (226-11) in the javelin.
 
Jonah Remsberg maintains a 3.54 GPA in health and human performance and was a two-time Second-Team All-American in the multi-events.  He is ranked second in Emporia State history in the heptathlon with 5,265 points and is second in the decathlon with 7,033 points.  He placed 11th at the NCAA Indoor Championships in the heptathlon and was ninth outdoors in the decathlon.
 
Mia Manley has a 4.00 GPA in elementary education and is ranked second all-time at Emporia State in the pole vault.  She cleared 3.87m (12-08.25) at the ESU Relays to rank 11th in the region and 29th in the nation outdoors.
 
Abigael Reid Harelson has a 3.63 GPA in health and human performance and was a second-team All-American in the 400m hurdles.  She ran 59.95 to rank second all-time at Emporia State on her way to the MIAA Championship in the 400m hurdles. She finished 11th in the nation at the NCAA Championships after entering the competition ranked 23rd nationally.
 
Savannah Stewart maintains a 3.99 GPA in health and human performance and is ranked tenth all-time in the pole vault at Emporia State both indoors and outdoors. She cleared 3.43m (11-03.00) to rank 34th in the region outdoors after going over 3.36m (11-00.25) indoors to rank 38th in the region.
 
Madison Vermetten has a 3.91 GPA in biology and is ranked in the top ten at Emporia State in the weight throw indoors along with the hammer outdoors.  She had a mark of 17.41m (57-01.50) in the indoor weight throw that ranks third all-time at ESU, 14th in the region, and 35th in the nation. Her hammer throw of 52.48m (172-2) was 18th in the region and 55th in the nation while ranking fifth all-time for the Hornets.
 
Isabel Vikoler had a 3.99 graduate GPA in forensic science and is ranked in the top ten in the multi-events in Emporia State history. She was ranked 19th in the region in the heptathlon with 4,546 points outdoors while ranking 21st regionally with 3,125 points in the pentathlon indoors. She was also in the top 50 regionally in the 60m hurdles indoors and long jump outdoors.
 

To be nominated, student-athletes must be at least a sophomore academically and athletically and maintain at least a 3.50 cumulative grade point average. They must rank in the top 50 of the region in at least one event in either cross country, indoor or outdoor track & field.
 
The Division II CSC Academic All-America® program is partially supported financially by the NCAA Division II national governance structure to assist CSC with handling the awards fulfillment aspects for the program.
 
Academic All-District® honorees were considered for advancement to the CSC Academic All-America® ballot. Student-athletes selected as CSC Academic All-America® finalists are denoted with an asterisk and will advance to the national ballot to be voted on by CSC members. First-, second- and third-team Academic All-America® honorees will be announced July 16. 
 
2025 Emporia State Track & Field CSC Academic All-District Honors

 
 



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In-State Freshmen Avery LaPlaca and Gracie Armato Sign with Volleyball Program

Story Links STOCKTON, Calif. – The Pacific volleyball program stayed in the Northern California area to find its two newest recruits in freshmen Avery LaPlaca from Sacramento and Gracie Armato from Brentwood, bringing Head Coach Greg Gibbons‘ roster up to 15 student-athletes. LaPlaca, out of Sacramento Country Day High School, lettered three […]

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STOCKTON, Calif. – The Pacific volleyball program stayed in the Northern California area to find its two newest recruits in freshmen Avery LaPlaca from Sacramento and Gracie Armato from Brentwood, bringing Head Coach Greg Gibbons‘ roster up to 15 student-athletes.

LaPlaca, out of Sacramento Country Day High School, lettered three times in her high school career as a defensive specialist compiling over 100 aces and three league titles, highlighted by a trip to the state semi-finals in 2023. A standout student as well, LaPlaca made her high school’s honor roll all four years and will be majoring in Health, Exercise and Sport Science.

She enters the Tiger family already with deep immediate family roots at Pacific as her grandfather, Nick LaPlaca (1968), was a member of both the football and baseball programs while her brother, Nick Santos LaPlaca (2024), was also a member of the baseball program.

Armato, a recent graduate of Heritage High School, ended her high school career as the record holder for single season kills, the league MVP and the BVAL MVP. Also, a prolific student, Armato was a member of her high school honor roll, a scholar athlete, received Heritage High School’s Athletic Director’s Academic Award and a California State Seal of Civic Engagement. While at Pacific, she will be pursuing a degree in business marketing/advertising.

“Avery brings depth at the defensive position and Gracie is a very experienced setter with amazing energy and an extreme competitor. They add a lot to our team and excited to get started,” Gibbons said.

Pacific volleyball returns to the court for its 2025 season on August 29 against Cal Baptist in Northridge, Calif.

Tigers Tickets

Tickets for upcoming events can be purchased through the PacificTigers.com tickets tab, or by calling the Box Office at 209-946-2474.  Groups of 10 or more are eligible for a group discount and exclusive fan experiences.

 

Stay Social

For all the latest on Pacific Volleyball, be sure to follow the team on X (@PacificVball), Instagram (@pacificvolleyball) and Facebook page (Pacific Volleyball).

#PacificProud

 





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Pro Beach Volleyball Was a Hit at EHP Resort in East Hampton

Pro Beach Volleyball Was a Hit at EHP Resort in East Hampton Pro Beach Volleyball Was a Hit at EHP Resort in East Hampton Link 0

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Track & Field and Cross Country Teams Boast 10 CSC Academic All-District Selections

Story Links GREENWOOD, Ind. – College Sports Communicators announced its 2024-25 Academic All-District selections for the sports of cross country and track & field with 10 Panthers being recognized for their efforts in the classroom this academic year.   Earning Academic All-District honors were Divine Aniamaka, Natalie Block, Cailin Kinas, […]

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GREENWOOD, Ind. – College Sports Communicators announced its 2024-25 Academic All-District selections for the sports of cross country and track & field with 10 Panthers being recognized for their efforts in the classroom this academic year.
 
Earning Academic All-District honors were Divine Aniamaka, Natalie Block, Cailin Kinas, Jack Misky, Jeremiah Johnson, Lucas Picco, Liam Richards, Isabel Roloff, Olivia VanZeeland, and Kallie Volk.
 
Aniamaka earns his first spot on the CSC Academic All-District Team after earning the Student-Athlete of the Season from the Horizon League this past spring campaign. He was also named a member of the Horizon League All-Academic Team this spring. He currently has a 3.84 GPA while studying biomedical engineering at Milwaukee.
 

Block was named to her second consecutive CSC Academic All-District squad after earning her first distinction a season ago. Like Aniamaka, Block was also named the Spring Student-Athlete of the Season this spring and was also a part of the Outdoor Track & Field All-Academic Team. Block is in graduate school at Milwaukee and has a 3.95 GPA following her undergraduate degree in biomedical sciences.
 

Kinas earned her second-straight CSC academic distinction following her first honor as a junior in 2024. Kinas made it a clean sweep during the Horizon League season for Milwaukee earning a spot on the All-Academic Team in the fall season with cross country, the winter season with indoor track & field, and the spring season for outdoor track & field. Wrapping up her fourth year at Milwaukee, Kinas owns a 4.00 GPA and is a nutritional sciences major.
 

Misky is the third repeat honoree from College Sports Communicators and earns All-District honors for the second-straight year. This year Misky was a member of the Horizon League All-Academic Team for the outdoor track & field season. Following the spring semester, Misky has a 3.77 GPA in the kinesiology program.
 

Johnson also picked up All-Academic recognition from the Horizon League this spring season and makes his debut as a Panther on the Academic All-District Team. In his two years at Milwaukee, Johnson now owns a 3.75 GPA as a graduate student in the information science & technology program.
 
Picco earns his first Academic All-District honor for the first time in his career, following a strong sophomore campaign with the Panthers. Through his first two years studying at UW-Milwaukee, Picco has a 3.77 GPA and is studying economics.
 
Richards makes his debut on the Academic All-District Team as a sophomore after being named a member of the Horizon League All-Academic Team this spring. Richards currently owns a 3.51 GPA while studying mechanical engineering at UW-Milwaukee.
 
Roloff was a two-time selection to the Horizon League All-Academic Team, earning honors in both the indoor and outdoor seasons. This is her first time selected as a member of the CSC Academic All-District team. Following her junior year at Milwaukee, Roloff owns a 4.00 GPA and is studying accounting.
 
VanZeeland also makes her debut on the Academic All-District team as announced by CSC. VanZeeland was recognized twice this year by the Horizon League as a member of the All-Academic Team. While at Milwaukee, VanZeeland has earned a 3.91 GPA through her junior year in the kinesiology program.
 

Volk rounds out Milwaukee’s Academic All-District honorees with her first career selection for Milwaukee. Volk was named to the Horizon League Outdoor Track & Field All-Academic Team. She currently boasts a 4.00 GPA while studying kinesiology at Milwaukee.
 





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