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Top athletes at SPAA badminton championships head to zones

ST. PAUL – The top athletes from the St. Paul Athletics Association (SPAA) badminton championships held at Glen Avon School and St. Paul Regional High School on April 16 have moved on to compete at the Northeast Alberta Schools’ Athletic Association zone tournament. Zones are taking place April 23 at the Bold Centre in Lac La […]

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Top athletes at SPAA badminton championships head to zones

ST. PAUL – The top athletes from the St. Paul Athletics Association (SPAA) badminton championships held at Glen Avon School and St. Paul Regional High School on April 16 have moved on to compete at the Northeast Alberta Schools’ Athletic Association zone tournament.

Zones are taking place April 23 at the Bold Centre in Lac La Biche.

SPAA results

In the Junior Boys Singles category, Braylee Lesyk of F.G. Miller placed first, with Dailynn Lagimodiere from St. Paul Regional High School taking second place.

Kali Janz and Taylor Kissel both from Glendon respectively placed first and second in the Junior Girls Singles category.

Brooklyn Deschamps and Irelyn Loughran from St. Paul Regional placed first in the Junior Girls Doubles, while Xaraya Rajoo Hailey Axley from Two Hills tail took second place.

Competing at Junior Boys Doubles, two pairs from St. Paul Regional will move on to the zones tournament. Tate Wilson and Cohen Roche placed first, and Ryder Lee and Seth Martin placed second.

In the Junior Mixed Doubles category, Joe/Makenna also from St. Paul Regional won first place, while Jacob/Kaylee from F.G. Miller won second.

Intermediate

Hawke Cardinal from Kehewin Community Education Centre placed first in the Intermediate Boys Singles category but he will not be attending zones. Henry Goertzen from Two Hills Mennonite School placed second, and Silva Watchmaker also from Kehewin placed third. Goertzen and Watchmaker will be competing at zones.

In the Intermediate Girls Singles category, Natalie Leroux and Riann Henderson both from Regional, respectively placed first and second, and will be attending zones.

Erin Mari and Dagne St. Arnault, and Koreana Weimer and Laura Rying, both pairs from St. Paul Regional, also respectively placed first and second in the Intermediate Girls Doubles.

St. Paul Regional earned the top two spots in the Intermediate Boys Doubles and Intermediate Mixed Doubles, as well. Anicio Alvarez and Mathew Zarowny took first place in the Boys Doubles, while Robert Sandmeyer and Kaiden Gratton took second place. Bo Dallaire and Annalise Morton placed first in Intermediate Mixed, while Carl/Porscha won second.

Senior

In the Senior Boys Singles category, Kurt Poulin from École du Sommet placed first, while Vaughn Ockerman from F.G. Miller placed second.E

Aubrey Sorochan from Two Hills School and Katelynn Jacula from Ashmont School respectively placed first and second in the Girls Singles.

Two pairs from Two Hills School won the Senior Girls Doubles. Raeanna Krahn and Miranda Mandryk won first place, while Daisy Steinbrecker and Ava Toma won second.

In Boys Doubles, Holden Kwiatkowski and Chris Feland from Glendon won first place, while Kingston Williams and Kayden DeSchover from St. Paul Regional won second.

Kayl Warawa and Sebastian Ang from St. Paul Regional claimed first place in Senior Mixed Doubles, while Alexander Kennedy and and Trish Labrie claimed second.

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Princeton University

Well that turned into a busy Thursday for TigerBlog.  It was the good kind of busy, of course — the kind of busy you get when your team is heading into the postseason.  The Princeton men’s lacrosse team will host Towson in the opening round of the NCAA tournament tomorrow at 2:30. The Tigers are […]

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Well that turned into a busy Thursday for TigerBlog. 

It was the good kind of busy, of course — the kind of busy you get when your team is heading into the postseason. 

The Princeton men’s lacrosse team will host Towson in the opening round of the NCAA tournament tomorrow at 2:30. The Tigers are the No. 3 seed, and the Tigers are unseeded.

Those are the kinds of sentences you can write when both teams have the same nickname. 

Princeton and Towson meet for the fourth time, with all of those meetings as NCAA tournament games. The first one was a famous one, back in 1991, when Towson defeated Princeton 14-13 in three overtimes at Palmer Stadium (TigerBlog was there).

After the game, Princeton goalie Scott Bacigalupo vowed that his team would never lose an overtime game again — and it didn’t, not on his watch. In fact, two of those OT wins would come in NCAA championship games in which Batch was in goal, in 1992 against Syracuse and 1994 against Virginia. 

The Princeton women, by the way, play UMass this afternoon at 5 at Johns Hopkins in their first NCAA game. It’s the third meeting between the two, and the first two were also NCAA games. That’s fairly interesting, at least to TigerBlog. 

Towson, meanwhile, is coached by one of TB’s favorite people he’s met in the lacrosse world, Shawn Nadelen, a former Princeton assistant under Bill Tierney from 2002-04. During that time, who was Nadelen’s roommate? 

TB gives you a few paragraphs to guess. 

The usual pregame writing gets a bit more extensive when it’s an NCAA tournament game. Then you can throw in a few other things that came up out of the blue. 

First, there was the selection of Princeton’s Coulter Mackesy as a Tewaaraton Award finalist, one of five, along with Army’s Jackson Eicher, Notre Dame’s Chris Kavanagh, Harvard’s Sam King and Cornell’s CJ Kirst. All five finalists are attackmen.

Then, just as TB was getting that under control, an email with the USA Lacrosse All-American team was sent. Princeton had seven honorees: Mackesy on first team, defenseman Colin Mulshine on second team, offensive middie Chad Palumbo and defensive middie Cooper Mueller on third team and goalie Ryan Croddick, defensive middie Jackson Green and offensive middie Tucker Wade as honorable mention. 

Wade’s father Ryan, by the way, was a first-team All-American at North Carolina. And Mueller’s dad? You know all about Kit Mueller. 

Cooper Mueller is the kind of player who is a hugely deserving All-American but who is often overlooked because of the position he plays. Mueller, though, put up extraordinary numbers this season, and yet his biggest impact isn’t really measurable. The same is true of Green who is a walk-on from the football team and now a lacrosse All-American.

As for the Princeton women, they had five USA Lacrosse All-Americans: McKenzie Blake (second team), Haven Dora (third team) and Dylan Allen, Amelia Hughes and Jami MacDonald (all honorable mention). 

Beyond all of that, TigerBlog also wrote a feature story about McKnight Pederson, a longstick midfielder/defenseman on the Princeton men’s team. McKnight is a senior whose career has unfortunately been defined by injuries. 

At the same time, it’s also been defined by his spirit, which is just incredible. He is, as TB calls him in the story, the “heart and soul” of the team. To fully appreciate it you have to watch him day after day. TB hopes he was able to capture that spirit. 

The story will be up today. It would have been up yesterday were it not for everything else going on.

In the world of lacrosse, this is the best time of year. It’s also the most unforgiving. 

Each weekend that comes by brings with it one goal for every team that has been fortunate enough to make it this far. And what is that? 

Everybody wants to have practice Monday. Not everybody will. 

And if you’re TigerBlog? You definitely want to have a busy week next week. 

If you feel differently, you’re in the wrong line of work. 

Trivia answer: Nadelen lived with John Mack, Princeton’s current Ford Family Director of Athletics.



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Track & Field Heads to New Haven for 2025 Ivy League Heptagonal Outdoor Championships

Story Links Watch (ESPN+) Live Results CAMBRIDGE, Mass. – After a regular season filled with record breaking and astonishing performances, Harvard track & field travels south to New Haven, Connecticut for the 2025 Ivy League Heptagonal Outdoor Championships, hosted by […]

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CAMBRIDGE, Mass. – After a regular season filled with record breaking and astonishing performances, Harvard track & field travels south to New Haven, Connecticut for the 2025 Ivy League Heptagonal Outdoor Championships, hosted by Yale University on Saturday, May 10 and Sunday, May 11. Both days of competition will air live on ESPN+.

WHAT TO KNOW:

  • Once again, Harvard is emerging as a contender for Ivy League titles for both the men’s and women’s teams.
  • The Crimson wrapped the regular season at a pair of meets last weekend, highlighted by a record breaking showing at the Jim Green Invitational in Lexington, Kentucky from senior Izzy Goudros.
  • An All-America Second Team honoree in the heptathlon last season, Goudros reset her Ivy League record in the heptathlon, collecting 5807 points to do so. In her run to breaking the Ivy League record, Goudros set personal-bests in the 200m (23.40) and the shot put (12.06m/39’7″). 
  • With her mark last weekend, Goudros now ranks fifth nationally in the heptathlon.
  • Along with Goudros, two other Crimson student-athletes broke conference records this season as well.
  • The defending Ivy League champion in the women’s discus throw, sophomore Milina Wepiwé reset her Ivy League record in the discus with an attempt of 59.75m (196’0″) at the Penn Relays. An All-America First Team honoree last year, Wepiwé is ninth nationally in the discus this year.
  • The 2025 NCAA women’s indoor 800m runner-up, senior Victoria Bossong is once again a national contender in the 800m. At the Tom Jones Invitational, Bossong posted a time of 1:59.48, breaking a 35-year-old Ivy League record held by Meredith L. Rainey ’90. A native of Cumberland Foreside, Maine, Bossong ranks third nationally in the women’s 800m this season.
  • In all, the Crimson lead the Ivy League in eight events on the women’s side, while it also holds the No. 1 spot in three events on the men’s side.

UP NEXT:

The Crimson continue the postseason in Fairfax, Virginia next weekend, featuring at the 2025 ECAC/IC4A Outdoor Championships.

For complete coverage of Harvard Track & Field, follow us on Twitter (@HarvardTFXC) and Instagram (@harvardtfxc).

 





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Head Women’s Volleyball Coach in Kutztown, PA for Kutztown University

Details Posted: 09-May-25 Location: Kutztown, Pennsylvania Type: Full-time Categories: Coaching Coaching – Volleyball Sector: Collegiate Sports Salary Details: The starting salary for this position is negotiable. Competitive benefits package. Required Education: 4 Year Degree The Department of Athletics at Kutztown University invites applications for the position of Head Women’s Volleyball Coach. Kutztown University is an […]

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Details

Posted: 09-May-25

Location: Kutztown, Pennsylvania

Type: Full-time

Categories:

Coaching

Coaching – Volleyball

Sector:

Collegiate Sports

Salary Details:

The starting salary for this position is negotiable. Competitive benefits package.

Required Education:

4 Year Degree

The Department of Athletics at Kutztown University invites applications for the position of Head Women’s Volleyball Coach. Kutztown University is an NCAA Division II member institution which competes in the Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference (PSAC). The Head Coach is responsible for all phases of the women’s volleyball program including recruitment of prospective student-athletes, academic success of student-athletes, game preparation and strategy, supervision of assistant coaches, scheduling, organizing camps and clinics in support of Kutztown athletics, fund raising, adherence to NCAA rules and regulations, and general administrative duties. In addition, the Head Coach will be responsible for supporting the philosophy, goals, and mission of the University and its Intercollegiate Athletics program as well as adherence to Departmental, University, Conference and NCAA policies and procedures.

Minimum Qualifications 

  • At least 3 years of coaching experience in the sport of volleyball  
  • Demonstrate ability in skill development, staff supervision, and general administrative duties 
  • An understanding of NCAA rules compliance  
  • Prior successful experience in recruiting qualified student-athletes 
  • Fiscal management skills 
  • Excellent organizational and communications skills 
  • Candidate must complete a successful interview 

Preferred Qualifications 

  • Coaching experience at the NCAA collegiate level 
  • Coaching experience at NCAA DII institution 

About Kutztown University

Kutztown University enrolls approximately 9,000 students in graduate and undergraduate programs. The University is located adjacent to the borough of Kutztown in a charming rural setting and is within 20 minutes driving time of the diverse metropolitan areas Allentown/Bethlehem and Reading, and within 60 minutes of the Philadelphia metropolitan area. The University is very interested in hiring employees who have had extensive experience with diverse populations.


Connections working at Kutztown University



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Outdoor Track Heads to MAAC Championships

The Canisius men’s and women’s outdoor track teams compete in the 2025 Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference Outdoor Track & Field Championships this weekend at Rider University’s Michael P. Brady Track & Field Complex in Lawrenceville, N.J. The two-day event begins on Saturday and finishes on Sunday. Both days will feature live coverage on ESPN+. The […]

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The Canisius men’s and women’s outdoor track teams compete in the 2025 Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference Outdoor Track & Field Championships this weekend at Rider University’s Michael P. Brady Track & Field Complex in Lawrenceville, N.J.

The two-day event begins on Saturday and finishes on Sunday. Both days will feature live coverage on ESPN+.

The Golden Griffins head into the postseason coming off a successful outing in the Cardinal Classic at the Polisseni Track & Field Complex on the campus of St. John Fisher in Pittsford, N.Y. back on April 26.

Seniors Pat Garland and Kayla Schmidt won their respective 10,000-meter races to highlight a day at the track that saw the Golden Griffins record a combined 10 results in the top 10.

Junior Jacqueline Appenheimer recorded a pair of top-10 finishes as she took fourth in the women’s 1500-meter final and placed ninth in the women’s 800-meter race. Appenheimer was one of two racers to place in the top 10 of the women’s 800m as senior Taylor Heschke claimed fourth.

Canisius had five runners place within the top 15 of the men’s 5000-meter race as freshman Ryan Giglia took sixth, sophomore Brody Jones placed seventh, graduate student Max Chew claimed 11th, senior Kevin Board finished 13th and freshman Nathaniel Fisher took 15th.

In the 2024 MAAC Outdoor Track & Field Championships, the Golden Griffins earned three medals (two silver, one bronze) and had five student-athletes athletes qualify for the finals in their respective events.

Appenheimer and senior Kayla Schmidt placed fifth and seventh, respectively, in the women’s 1500-meter final. Graduate student Jules Jones placed sixth in the 800m final, while Schmidt (17:40.38) took fourth in the women’s 5000-meter race.

MAAC ALL-ACADEMIC TEAMS ANNOUNCED

The MAAC announced the Outdoor Track & Field All-Academic Teams on Friday. Canisius had a total of 25- student-athletes, 14 women and 12 men, recognized for their efforts on the track and in the classroom.

 

To be eligible for the MAAC All-Academic Team, a student-athlete must complete two semesters at their institution and hold a cumulative grade point average of 3.20 on a 4.0 scale.

The complete list of honorees can be found below.

2025 Men’s MAAC Outdoor Track & Field All-Academic Team



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Marquette Volleyball Announces The 2025 Non-Conference Schedule

We are officially 112 days away from the start of the Tom Mendoza Era of Marquette volleyball. How do we know this? Because Mendoza and the Golden Eagles announced their 2025 non-conference schedule on Friday afternoon. Let me tell you what: It’s on par with the schedule that we’ve seen for the last decade or […]

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We are officially 112 days away from the start of the Tom Mendoza Era of Marquette volleyball. How do we know this? Because Mendoza and the Golden Eagles announced their 2025 non-conference schedule on Friday afternoon.

Let me tell you what: It’s on par with the schedule that we’ve seen for the last decade or so for Marquette.

Six of Marquette’s opponents qualified for the NCAA tournament last season, led by Wisconsin, which reached the Elite Eight. All but one team finished .500 or better last season with eight foes winning at least 20 games. We’ll be nice to San Diego and point out that nine of the 12 opponents won at least 19 games.

The upside of the level of difficulty? All but 3 matches will be in Milwaukee and eight of the nine home games will be at the McGuire Center. The lone exception there is the yearly contest against Wisconsin, which returns to Fiserv Forum this fall.

Let’s go to a quote from new head coach Tom Mendoza on his first ever non-conference schedule at Marquette:

“Elite student-athletes choose Marquette because they get the experience and education Marquette provides while competing at the top level nationally,” Mendoza said. “Our non-conference schedule not only gives our team the opportunity to compete to win at the highest level but also brings great volleyball to Milwaukee at both the Al and Fiserv.”

Let’s go in order real quick like!

Marquette will start off the 2025 season with their only road trip of non-conference action, and it’ll be a real team bonding trip as they travel all the way out to Hawaii for the 2025 Rainbow Wahine Classic. MU will open up the campaign and the Classic against host Hawaii. That’s an NCAA tournament test out of the gate, but Marquette is 2-0 all time against Hawaii. That match is on Friday, August 29, and they will stay in Honolulu to take on San Diego and Utah State on the next two days. Marquette is 0-1 all time against USD after facing them in an event hosted by Hawaii in 2017, and this will be the first ever meeting against USU.

From there on out, it’s nothing but home dates. The first six come as Friday/Saturday/Sunday events at the McGuire Center. First up starting on September 5th is Western Kentucky, and they will be followed by Dayton and Buffalo the next two days. This is the 3rd straight year that Marquette has faced both WKU and Dayton, as the trio have rotated on who is hosting the event. Both the Hilltoppers and the Flyers went to the NCAA tournament last season, with Dayton getting to the Sweet 16 after defeating Tom Mendoza’s South Carolina team in the first round. Much like the previous weekend, Marquette will round things out on Sunday with a match against a Bulls team that they have never played before.

The next weekend is a little bit lighter fare for the Golden Eagles. The Friday/Saturday/Sunday schedule is Ball State, James Madison, and Milwaukee. JMU is the only team on the slate that was under .500 last season. Marquette last faced Ball State in 2022 in an NCAA tournament match at the McGuire Center, and the Golden Eagles have won 14 straight contests against Milwaukee after a victory at the Al last season.

The final three non-con battles of the season will be doozies, and all right in a row, just about. First it’s Wisconsin at Fiserv Forum on Wednesday, September 17th, then Florida Gators and new head coach Ryan Theis returning to the McGuire Center on Friday, and then Minnesota on Sunday. All three teams won at least one NCAA tournament match last season with UW going to the Elite 8 and the Gators getting to the Sweet 16.

Is it a tough schedule, considering that Marquette returns just one starter from last year in Hattie Bray and only one every night rotation player in Natalie Ring behind her? Yeah, probably. It’s not as insanely tough as the schedule the last two years when Ryan Theis was trying to challenge his loaded roster, but it’s enough to give MU chances to 1) get wins and 2) build their RPI up. Remember: The Big East is as wide open as it has been in years, given that Creighton has changed their head coach just like Marquette has and the Bluejays return just two of the women who started at least 17 matches for them last season.

By the way, since it’s in the press release: Season tickets are $75 and go on sale starting on Monday, May 12th. That does not include a ticket to the Wisconsin match at Fiserv Forum, but it does get you early access to buy those tickets, which go on sale to the general public on Thursday, June 26th.

Here’s the full schedule and most of the start times.

2025 Marquette Volleyball Non-Conference Schedule

Date Opponent Time (CT)
Date Opponent Time (CT)
Friday, August 29 at Hawaii TBD
Saturday, August 30 vs San Diego (at Hawaii) TBD
Sunday, August 31 vs Utah State (at Hawaii) TBD
Friday, September 5 Western Kentucky 7:00 PM
Saturday, September 6 Dayton 2:00 PM
Sunday, September 7 Buffalo Noon
Friday, September 12 Ball State 7:00 PM
Saturday, September 13 James Madison 6:00 PM
Sunday, September 14 Milwaukee 3:00 PM
Wednesday, September 17 Wisconsin (at Fiserv Forum) 7:00 PM
Friday, September 19 Florida 7:00 PM
Sunday, September 21 Minnesota TBD

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Rowan’s Jason Agyemang Named Thomas M. Gerrity Most Outstanding Athlete; NJAC Men’s Outdoor All-Conference Announced

Story Links PITMAN, NJ — Rowan University junior Jason Agyemang (North Plainfield, NJ/North Plainfield) has been selected as the NJAC’s Thomas M. Gerrity Most Outstanding Athlete to highlight the 2025 NJAC Men’s Outdoor Track & Field All-Conference Team.   Additionally, The College of New Jersey freshman Maxim Rychkov (Robbinsville, NJ/Robbinsville) was […]

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PITMAN, NJ — Rowan University junior Jason Agyemang (North Plainfield, NJ/North Plainfield) has been selected as the NJAC’s Thomas M. Gerrity Most Outstanding Athlete to highlight the 2025 NJAC Men’s Outdoor Track & Field All-Conference Team.
 
Additionally, The College of New Jersey freshman Maxim Rychkov (Robbinsville, NJ/Robbinsville) was named Outstanding Track Athlete; Stockton University sophomore Ahmad Fogg (Egg Harbor Twp., NJ/Egg Harbor Twp.) was named Outstanding Field Athlete; and Rowan freshman Jamir Brown (Riverside, NJ/Riverside) was named Rookie of the Year. Rowan head coach Dustin Dimit and his staff were voted the Bill Fritz Coaching Staff of the Year by their peers.
 

All-Conference honors were determined by finish at the recent NJAC Outdoor Track & Field Championship and major awards were voted on by the league’s nine head coaches.
 
Agyemang swept the hurdles over the weekend, hitting personal bests and NCAA top-10 times in both the 110 and 400 hurdles events. He ran the second-fastest 110 hurdles time in NCAA Division III this season with a time of 13.74 seconds. That ranks as the third-fastest all-time in D3 history. His winning time of 52.69 seconds in the 400 hurdles ranks as the sixth-fastest in D3 this year. Agyemang was a Week 6 NJAC Track Athlete of the Week.
 
Rychkov completes the sweep of the indoor and outdoor Outstanding Track Athlete honors in just his rookie season. He swept the sprints, cracking 21 seconds in the 200 meters with a 20.98. That time is a personal best, TCNJ school record, and currently the fifth-fastest in NCAA Division III this season. He posted a winning time of 10.51 seconds in the 100 meters and currently sits 21st nationally in that event. The two-time NJAC Rookie of the Week also ran a leg of the Lions’ 4×100 meter relay squad that posted a 41.77 for second place.
 
Fogg also sweeps the season honors as both the indoor and outdoor Outstanding Field Athlete. He won the long jump with a season-best 7.34 meter leap, which ranks eighth in D3 this season as he seeks a nationals qualification. He also posted a season-best mark of 14.54 meters in the triple jump, finishing third in a tough field as all three top placers were within the NCAA top 20. Fogg was a Week 5 NJAC Field Athlete of the Week honoree.
 
Brown adds to the sweeps, taking home the outdoor Rookie of the Year honor to add to his indoor top rookie honor. The freshman hurdles sensation clocked a 13.60 in the 110 hurdles preliminary, setting a new NCAA D3 record, conference meet record, and Rowan program record. That time was also the best by a freshman among all NCAA divisions this year. He came in under the old NJAC championship meet record of 13.64 that stood for nearly 25 years, set by Glassboro State’s Garry Moore in 1981. In addition to his top D3 time in the 110 hurdles, he also currently owns the #11 time in the 400 hurdles.
 
Dimit and his staff are named the Bill Fritz Coaching Staff of the Year for the tenth consecutive season as he guided Rowan to its tenth straight outdoor title. Their 2025 Profs garnered 10 event wins, nine second-place finishes, and 10 third-place finishes en route to 313 points, which included four podium sweeps. They guided two major award winners in Most Outstanding Athlete Jason Agyemang and Rookie of the Year Jamir Brown, coaching the duo to top all-time D3 times in the 110 hurdles.
 


2025 NJAC MEN’S OUTDOOR TRACK & FIELD ALL-CONFERENCE

THOMAS M. GERRITY MOST OUTSTANDING ATHLETE


Jason Agyemang, Rowan

OUTSTANDING TRACK ATHLETE

Maxim Rychkov, TCNJ

OUTSTANDING FIELD ATHLETE

Ahmad Fogg, Stockton

ROOKIE OF THE YEAR

Jamir Brown

BILL FRITZ COACHING STAFF OF THE YEAR

Rowan

(Dustin Dimit, Norm Tate, Eric DuBois, Ryan Gebhardt, Milton Goode, John Oberg, Joseph Kalnas, Jassina Surles, Seth Spicer, Francis Terry)

CLICK HERE FOR FULL ALL-CONFERENCE TEAM



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