BABSON PARK, Mass.—Five student-athletes from three different programs were honored for their hard work in competition and the classroom when the College Sports Communicators (CSC) announced its women’s Academic All-District At-Large teams on Tuesday afternoon.
Field hockey senior Berit Sharrow (Denver, Colo.) was recognized for the third consecutive season, while women’s lacrosse seniors Kathryn Blake (Medfield, Mass.) and Clare Connolly (Hanover, Mass.) and women’s alpine ski senior Amelie Alkier (Collingwood, Ontario) and sophomore Sonnie Travis (Park City, Utah) were all named to the CSC Academic All-District team for the first time in their respective careers.
The at-large program recognizes the top student-athletes from the sports of beach volleyball, bowling, crew, fencing, field hockey, golf, gymnastics, ice hockey, lacrosse, rifle, skiing, men’s volleyball, water polo and wrestling.
A three-time National Field Hockey Coaches Association (NFHCA) All-America first-team selection, Sharrow capped her career with six goals and seven assists for 19 points in 23 starts last fall. She won her third straight New England Women’s and Men’s Athletic Conference (NEWMAC) Defensive Player of the Year award as the Beavers tied for first in Division III with 13 shutouts and ranked third with a 0.57 goals against average.
One of the most decorated players in program history, Sharrow earned four all-conference and all-region honors, and was selected as the NFCA Region I Player of the Year in 2022 and 2024. She helped the Beavers post 44 shutouts in 93 career starts while producing 19 goals and 21 assists for 59 points.
Alkier put together the best season of her career with three top-five and 10 top-10 finishes over 14 races to help the women’s alpine ski team match the top result in school history by placing third at the United States Collegiate Ski and Snowboard Association (USCSA) National Championships. She placed fifth in the MacConnell Division standings and earned All-America honors in the slalom by coming in eighth and the combined standings by placing ninth in addition to coming in 18th in the giant slalom at nationals.
A two-time All-MacConnell Division selection, Alkier concluded her career with four All-America awards.
Blake concluded her career by earning All-NEWMAC second-team honors for the first time in her career after scoring a career-high 52 goals to go along with 24 assists for a career-best 76 points in 19 games this past spring. She contributed at least one point in every contest and scored three or more goals in 10 games as the Beavers captured their second consecutive regular season league title before advancing to the second round of the NCAA Tournament for the third year in a row.
Blake played 71 career games at Babson and ranks eighth in program history with 59 assists and is 16th in both goals (119) and points (178).
The all-time Division III leader in draw controls, Connolly put together the best season of her career with 59 goals and four assists for 63 points to go along with a single-season record 243 draw controls on the way to earning Intercollegiate Women’s Lacrosse Coaches Association (IWLCA) All-America first-team accolades. She ranked second nationally in both total draw controls and draw controls per game (12.79), and her 243 are the second highest total in Division III history behind only Julia Ryan for Claremont-Mudd-Scripps, who finished with 346 this season.
A two-time All-American, three-time all-region and 2025 NEWMAC Player of the Year, Connolly ranks first all-time in Division III and second in NCAA history with 766 draw controls, while scoring 117 goals and contributing 11 assists for 128 points in 78 career games with the Beavers. She was the NCAA statistical champion for draw controls per game in both 2023 and 2024, and is the only player in Division III history to win 200 or more draws in three consecutive seasons.
Travis completed 10 of her 12 races and recorded one podium finish and eight top-10 results to help the Babson women’s alpine ski team come in second in the MacConnell Division and tie for second at the USCSA Eastern Regional Championships before placing third at nationals. She finished eighth in the conference standings and put together one of her best weekends of the season by placing fourth in the giant slalom and fifth in the slalom in the regionals at Sugarloaf Mountain back in February. Travis also finished 22nd in the GS and 31st in the combined standings during the national championships at Mount Bachelor.
The 2024 MacConnell Division Rookie of the Year, Travis has earned all-league honors in back-to-back seasons and took home USCSA All-America honors in the slalom as a first-year in 2024.
Since 1952, CSC (formerly CoSIDA) has honored more than 20,000 outstanding student-athletes across the NCAA. To be eligible, a student-athlete must be a starter or key reserve and maintain a GPA of 3.50 on a 4.0 scale.