May 4, 2011
NOTRE DAME, Ind. — The Notre Dame Department of Athletics held its annual O.S.C.A.R.S. (Outstanding Student-Athletes Celebrating Achievements & Recognition Showcase) on Wednesday evening, May 3 inside Purcell Pavilion at the Joyce Center. This year marked the 10th anniversary for the traditional year-end gala honoring more than 750 student-athletes for their achievements on the field and in the classroom during the 2010-11 school year.
The presentation of the three major athletics awards – the Byron V. Kanaley Award, the Francis Patrick O’Connor Award and the Christopher Zorich Award – highlighted the evening’s festivities, while the Top Gun Award and Chuck Linster Award (for the highest grade-point averages by a graduating senior student-athlete and athletics student support staff, respectively) also were presented in conjunction with the Notre Dame Office of Academic Services for Student-Athletics. In addition, a member of each team was selected for the Notre Dame Monogram Club Most Valuable Player Award and the Notre Dame Club of St. Joseph Valley Rockne Student-Athlete Award. Also, the Leaders of Distinction awards were announced.
The Notre Dame Monogram Club also presented its postgraduate scholarship awards to a male and female student-athlete for the second consecutive year. Each of the winners received a one-time non-renewable grant of $5,000 to further their educations.
Three team awards also were handed out on Wednesday – The Trophy Award (recognizing excellence in community service) was presented to the softball team, while awards for the highest team GPA went to the Fighting Irish women’s tennis team (spring 2010 semester) and women’s golf team (fall 2010 semester), the second consecutive year that each of those team have been honored for the highest GPA among the 26 Notre Dame athletic teams.
Erin Marrone
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Women’s softball player Erin Marrone (Alexandria, Va.) was a triple winner as she received the Kanaley Award, was named the recipient of the Top Gun Award and was the female honoree of the Monogram Club Postgraduate Scholarship.
Men’s soccer player Jeb Brovsky (Lakewood, Colo.), men’s tennis player Tyler Davis (Nashville, Tenn.) and women’s soccer All-American Lauren Fowlkes (Lee’s Summit, Mo.) each walked away with two awards. While all three were recipients of the Kanaley Award, Brovsky took home the Zorich Award, Davis earned a Monogram Club postgraduate scholarship and Fowlkes was recognized with Leader of Distinction award.
Notre Dame’s top honor, the Byron V. Kanaley Award, also was handed out to two other outstanding individuals – baseball player Cole Johnson (Hudson, Ohio) and football player Chris Stewart (Spring, Texas).
The Kanaley Award, the most prestigious honor presented to an Irish student-athlete, has been given annually since 1926 to senior monogram athletes who have been most exemplary as both students and leaders. Chosen by the University’s Faculty Board on Athletics, the awards are named in honor of the 1904 Notre Dame graduate who was a member of the baseball team as an undergraduate. Kanaley went on to a successful banking career in Chicago and served the University as a lay trustee until his death in 1960.
In addition to Brovsky, sophomore Lindsay Brown (Newport Beach, Calif.), a member of the women’s soccer team, and hockey player Ben Ryan (Brighton, Mich.) received the Christopher Zorich Award. First presented in 1998, the Zorich Award was created to recognize contributions of Notre Dame student athletes to the University and community at-large. The award holds the name of two-time Fighting Irish All-American and 1991 graduate who went on to play in the National Football League for both the Chicago Bears and Washington Redskins before receiving his law degree from Notre Dame in 2002.
Irish junior soccer player Ellen Bartindale (St. Charles, Ill.) and men’s basketball player Tom Kopko (Chicago, Ill.) were the recipients of the O’Connor Award.
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Since 1993, the University has presented this award in the name of O’Connor, a former student-athlete who died in 1973 following his freshman year at Notre Dame. Pat was the son of William “Bucky” O’Connor, who played guard for the Notre Dame football team in the 1940s.
The O’Connor Award honors male and female student-athletes who best display the total embodiment of the true spirit of Notre Dame as exemplified by their contributions to their respective teams. To be considered, student-athletes must possess those qualities attributed to Pat O’Connor: caring, courage, confidence, encouragement, humility, honesty, humor, kindness and patience.
The Irish softball team was recognized with The Trophy Award for the year-long community service it performed in the South Bend and Michiana areas and on campus. It’s most notable fundraising effort of the season came in its Strike Out Cancer weekend as the squad showed its support for head coach Deanna Gumpf and her five-year old daughter, Tatum, who is battling acute lymphoblastic leukemia. Proceeds from the event have helped raise funds and awareness for pediatric leukemia, benefitting the South Bend Memorial Children’s Hospital pediatric oncology clinic.
Throughout the school year, the softball team completed more than 500 hours of community service, averaging 24 hours per person as the Irish partnered with more than nine non-profit organizations.
In addition to Fowlkes, seven student-athletes received the Leaders of Distinction – infielder Mick Doyle (LaGrange Park, Ill.), volleyball player Angela Puente (Redondo Beach, Calif.), women’s tennis player Kristen Rafael (Grand Prairie, Texas), Zach Schirtz (Rochester, N.Y.), swimmer Mike Sullivan (Franklin, Mass.), thrower Denes Veres (Ellwood City, Pa.) and fencer Avery Zuck (Portland, Ore.). These awards are presented to those individuals deemed exceptional leaders by their coaches and teammates.
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Overcoming an injury-plagued career was a resilient Marrone, who led the BIG EAST and ranked 20th nationally with a team-high .453 batting average before her junior season ended with a knee injury. Her 2010 batting average and on-base pct. (.604) set the single-season Notre Dame records. Her bat played a major role in the Irish effort to lead the nation with a .343 batting average last season.
As a sophomore, Marrone earned third team all-league honors before copping a spot on the NFCA all-region team. Marrone was also tabbed to ESPN The Magazine’s Academic All-District squad.
Marrone has displayed her versatility by playing several different positions for the Irish throughout her career (catcher, first base, second base, and each of the outfield positions).
A constant fixture on the dean’s list, the accounting major holds a 3.976 grade-point average. The Irish have made three straight trips to the NCAA Tournament with Marrone in the lineup while capturing a BIG EAST tournament title in 2009 and a regular-season crown in 2010.
Enrolled in the Mendoza College of Business, she will graduate with a degree in accounting from the Mendoza College of Business and will attend graduate school next year at Notre Dame and will major in accounting.
Brovsky started all 20 matches for the Irish during the 2010 season and tallied nine points on four goals and an assist. The midfielder was named to the all-BIG EAST first team and to the BIG EAST All-Championship team. The Vancouver Whitecaps FC selected Brovsky with the first pick in the second round (19th overall selection) during the2011 Major League Soccer SuperDraft.
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For his career, Brovsky played in 87 games, including 60 starts, and registered 42 points on 15 goals and 12 assists. The three-time all-BIG EAST honoree only missed one contest during his career. Brovsky helped Notre Dame to four straight NCAA Tournament appearances, including a trip to the quarterfinals in 2007. He also was instrumental in the Fighting Irish winning the BIG EAST Blue Division title in 2007 and 2008.
Brovsky was named a 2010 National Soccer Coaches Association of America (NSCAA) Scholar All-American. He earned a degree in management from Notre Dame’s Mendoza College of Business in December. Brovsky finished with a 3.472 cumulative grade point average. He launded his own non-profit organization, Peace Pandemic, to combat poverty, hatred, violence and hunger both nationally and internationally. Brovsky also helped engineer the Lifeworks Dream Team.
Davis has been a fixture on the Irish tennis team and starter the past four seasons and has helped Notre Dame earn four consecutive NCAA tournament berths. The first-ever two-time captain in the history of the men’s tennis program, he owns a 3.933 grade point average and has been a member of the Dean’s List in all seven semesters at the University. Davis will graduate with a degree in science business from the University’s College of Science and plans to attend medical school at Vanderbilt University in the fall.
He was recently named the first-ever male recipient of the American Eagle Outfitters Michael Tranghese Postgraduate Leadership. A three-time member of the BIG EAST Academic All-Star Team, he was the 2010 recipient of the BIG EAST Scholar-Athlete Sport Excellence award.
Davis has played in every match throughout his career and helped lead his Irish team to the 2008 BIG EAST Championship. Away from the tennis court, he serves a research assistant within biology department at the University. Davis also has been a member of Notre Dame’s Student-Athlete Advisory Council for three years and is an officer within that group while serving as the BIG EAST SAAC representative. He also is a hospital and nursing home volunteer and participates in a weekly “Read to a Child” program. Davis served as the chief organizer for the men’s tennis team’s participation in the Fighting Irish for Life program in 2009 that paired a local high school student with cancer to the squad for a semester. He also is a volunteer for the Lifeworks Dream Team that helps to lead interactive workshops with South Bend elementary children about reaching their dreams.
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A member of the 2010 national championship women’s soccer team, Fowlkes capped off a stellar career that saw her spend time at all three field positions for Notre Dame. A two-time NSCAA All-American and Capital One/CoSIDA Academic All-American (just the 13th Fighting Irish student-athlete ever to couple those honors in the same season twice, doing so in 2009 and 2010), Fowlkes went on to earn an NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship and the BIG EAST Institutional Scholar-Athlete Award, as she wound up her academic career as a science-business major in Notre Dame’s College of Science, where she sported a 3.619 cumulative grade-point average (GPA).
On the pitch, Fowlkes started all 25 matches in 2010, ranking fourth on the team in scoring with four goals and 13 points. She also was third on the squad with five assists, piling up the majority of offensive production during the NCAA Championship, when she tallied three goals and three assists (nine points).
Also a two-time all-BIG EAST selection, including the 2009 BIG EAST Co-Offensive Player of the Year, Fowlkes did some of her best work on the Fighting Irish back line as a central defender.
Fowlkes finished her career with 17 goals and 10 assists (44 points) in 95 career matches, starting 82 times. She also was a finalist for the 2010 Lowe’s Senior CLASS Award and remains a vital contributor to the United States youth national team programs, having played for her country at both the U-20 and U-23 levels, and helping Team USA strike gold at the 2008 FIFA U-20 Women’s World Cup in Chile.
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In January, Fowlkes was selected in the first round (fifth overall pick, tying the highest selection ever by a Notre Dame player) of the 2011 Women’s Professional Soccer (WPS) College Draft by the Philadelphia Independence, for whom she now plays.
One of 10 finalists for the 2011 Lowe’s Senior Class Award, Johnson has rebounded from an injury-plagued 2010 season with a stellar campaign in ’11. Johnson has pitched far better than his 3-6 record would indicate. Notre Dame has managed to score just 19 runs over his last 10 starts. He has a 2.78 ERA in 11 starts over 74.1 innings of work. He has struck out 57 and walked 19. Johnson leads the Irish pitching staff with nine quality starts. He ranks tied for third in the BIG EAST among starting pitchers in fewest home runs allowed (one), fifth in strikeouts looking (21), seventh in opposing batting average (.214), tied for seventh in innings pitched, tied for eighth in punch outs and tied for 11th in ERA.
Johnson, a co-captain in 2009, has the rare accomplishment of being named a captain as a pitcher. Over the last 32 seasons, Johnson is only the ninth pitcher to earn captain status. Johnson was one of 12 Irish student-athletes invited to join a faculty-mentoring program based on leadership, academic performance and athletic accomplishments. Johnson was selected from over 900 Notre Dame athletes, and the only sophomore inducted in 2009. He was also selected for the Notre Dame Rosenthal Leadership Academy, which is a special four-month program of seminars and workshops to develop leadership strategies, initiatives and skills.
In the classroom, Johnson maintains a 3.68 GPA in the College of Science as a double major in pre-professional studies and Spanish language and literature. He was named to the Dean’s List for the second time this past fall. Johnson has also been honored as a Big East academic all-star each of the last three years.
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A two-time team captain and four-time monogram winner, Doyle has started all 38 games for the Irish in 2011. While he has struggled at the plate, Doyle has been nearly flawless in the field. He has committed just three errors in 146 fielding chances – good for a .979 fielding percentage. Doyle has played in 160 games and started 142 over his Irish career.
Stewart, the only player in Notre Dame’s storied football history to tackle football and law school simultaneously, graduated with a degree from the College of Arts and Letters in history. He finished his undergraduate studies in only three and a half years with a 3.536 cumulative grade-point average. Stewart registered a 3.834 GPA in his final semester (2009 spring). He was a 2009 ESPN The Magazine First Team Academic All-District selection. Stewart was a member of the History Honors Program and was inducted into the Phi Alpha Theta honors fraternity.
The National Football Foundation chose Stewart as a National Scholar-Athlete. He receoved an $18,000 postgraduate scholarship and is one of 16 finalists for the 21st William V. Campbell Trophy, endowed by HealthSouth, which recognizes an individual as the absolute best scholar-athlete in the nation and is often referred to as “The Academic Heisman.”
Stewart has started more career games (31) than any other Irish player on the offensive side of the ball. He also carries a 23-game starting streak into this weekend’s contest with Utah. Stewart helped the Irish finish last season as the eighth-best offense in the country, averaging 451.8 yards per game, and helped the Notre Dame passing attack outgain opponents 288.6-228.6 yards per game this season.
Actively involved in numerous outreach efforts, Stewart journeyed to Haiti during his’09 spring break to help with the relief efforts following the deadliest earthquake in the nation’s history. He volunteered all last summer at the South Bend Youth Center and has participated in a fine arts initiative for area children. Stewart has also visited local children’s hospitals and raised funds for the St. Baldrick’s Foundation.
A defender, Bartindale appeared in eight games during the 2010 campaign and has played in 22 throughout her Notre Dame career. An unselfish player, she is a prime example of an individual who is ready when her name is called and is willing to do whatever she has to for the benefit of the team. Throughout her career, she has displayed great poise and maturity when she has had to play a significant role on the squad because of injuries.
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A Dean’s List student and member of the BIG EAST All-Academic Team, she currently is enrolled in the Mendoza College of Business as an accounting major and has a secondary major in psychology and owns better than a 3.8 grade point average.
A four-year walk-on on men’s basketball team, Kopko was a key practice player for the Irish throughout his career. He played in 31 contests with the Irish and appeared in 12 games during this past season. His best game in an Irish uniform came against Northern Illinois on Dec. 8, 2007 when he scored five points.
Kopko was a member of an Irish class that posted the most overall wins and BIG EAST victories in school history and was part of three NCAA tournament teams. From 2007-11, Notre Dame posted a 96-42 (.696) record and a 46-26 (.639) ledger in conference regular-season contests.
Presented with the Team Irish Award as the annual men’s basketball banquet, Kopko is slated to graduate in May with a degree in sociology and minor in computer applications from the College of Arts and Letters.
Brown, the third major award winner from the women’s soccer national-championship team, played in 17 games at forward for the Irish this season during her sophomore season after appearing in 14 games as a freshman in 2009. In her freshman season, she had one assist, tallying her first career point on an assist to teammate Melissa Henderson on Notre Dame’s second goal in a 5-0 victory over IUPUI.
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A member of the BIG EAST Academic All-Star Team, she is enrolled in the College of Arts and owns better than a 3.5 grade point average. This past year, Brown completed more than 190 community service hours, participated in the Clinton Global Conference and traveled to Nepal.
Ryan is the fifth hockey player to win the Zorich Award and the third in as many years joining Kevin Deeth (’09-’10) and Luke Lucyk (’08-’09). A four-time monogram winner at Notre Dame, Ryan served as one of the team’s alternate captains in ’10-’11. A key player in Notre Dame hockey’s run to the 2011 Frozen Four, he was sixth on the team in scoring with six goals and 19 assists for 25 points in 44 games. He finished his career, playing in 159 games with 35 goals and 62 points for 97 points.
Off the ice, Ryan oversaw the hockey team’s community service efforts. He started the Irish Hockey Youth Hockey Clinics that saw the team host free hockey clinics during the year that allowed kids from the local community to participate in skill development and play team-oriented small games.
A nominee for the prestigious College Hockey Humanitarian Award and the CCHA’s Mike and Marian Ilitch Humanitarian Award, Ryan also served as the team’s representative to the Student Athlete Advisory Committee (SAAC).
Ryan will graduate this month with a double major in psychology and economics. He is currently playing for the American Hockey League’s Milwaukee Admirals, the top farm team of the NHL’s Nashville Predators, in the Calder Cup playoffs.
Doyle, a two-time team captain, has started all 38 games for the Irish in 2011. While he has struggled at the plate, Doyle has been nearly flawless in the field. He has committed just three errors in 146 fielding chances – good for a .979 fielding percentage. Doyle has played in 160 games and started 142 over his Irish career.
Of the diamond, Doyle maintains a 3.461 GPA as a finance major in the Mendoza College of Business. He recently participated in the Rosenthal Leadership Academy, which develops, challenges, and supports student-athletes and coaches in their continual quest to become world-class leaders in athletics, academics, and life. The Notre Dame Leadership Academy provides comprehensive and cutting edge leadership development programming through interactive workshops, 360-degree feedback, one-on-one coaching, peer mentoring, and educational resources. Doyle has also served on the Student-Athlete Advisory Council.
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Doyle and teammate (Cole) Johnson have been involved with the Notre Dame team and its community-service efforts throughout time with the Irish program. Through Fighting Irish Fight for Life, he and the team recently adopted five-year old Brady Burkhart, who has been diagnosed with leukemia. Johnson has also worked with Habitat for Humanity, Center for the Homeless, Memorial Hospital Pediatric Cancer Center and other works in the local community.
They each participated in the Life Works Dream Team program at McKinley Primary School, which was a five-week program where he spent an hour a week teaching students about setting goals and overcoming obstacles. Johnson has also volunteered, independently from the team’s programs, weekly at La Casa de Amistad, a local South Bend Hispanic community center. He participated in varied programs in an effort to edify Hispanic youth and adults in development of leadership skills, increase knowledge and appreciation of their own culture, and develop stronger self-esteem, encouraging fuller participation as community members.
A solid defensive player who provided flexibility and depth to the Irish rotations on the volleyball court, Puente, a team co-captain, finished her career with 489 digs. She played in 266 sets during 96 Notre Dame matches and 11 of her 23 aces came during a standout senior campaign. Primarily playing the llibero and defensive specialist positions, Puente managed to collect five kills and even a block during her career. In 2009, she was one of eight players that helped Notre Dame win the Collegiate Beach Volleyball Challenge at Fiesta On Siesta Key team title.
Puente was a key defensive cog in Notre Dame’s memorable 14-0 BIG EAST regular-season run to capture the league title in 2009. Notre Dame advanced to the NCAA Tournament that season and made an appearance in the final match of the BIG EAST Championship one season prior.
She spent three summers working on a classified satellite program with Northrop Grumman and studied abroad in Spain during the summer of 2010. Puente will graduate with a degree in aerospace engineering from the College of Engineering.
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As a senior in 2010-11, Schirtz again served as Notre Dame’s team captain and posted a 16-8 regular season record in foil, ending his career with exactly 130 victories with the Irish. Then, in the postseason, Schirtz finished ninth at the Midwest Fencing Conference Championships to earn third-team all-conference honors.
For his career, Schirtz has posted a 130-37 regular season record. As a freshman, he earned a place in the NCAA Championships field and finished 11th to take home third-team All-America honors. He also finished as the NCAA Midwest Regional runner-up. His sophomore season was highlighted by a semifinal appearance at the Midwest Fencing Conference Championships to earn first-team all-conference honors. During his junior year, Schirtz finished seventh at the Midwest Fencing Championships for second-team all-conference accolades.
He will complete degree requirements for a degree in marketing from the Mendoza College of Business this month.
Sullivan, one of the few two-time team captains in the history of the men’s swimming and diving program. He helped lead the Irish to a pair of BIG EAST team titles and ended his career with an all-league citation in the 400 individual medley. Sullivan was a 2009 College Swimming Coaches Association of America (CSCAA) All-Academic Honorable Mention in 2009, the same year he won the team’s Patrick Reilly McManus Captains’ award.
Sullivan’s leadership qualities were apparent throughout his Irish career, as he earned a trio of all-BIG EAST honors with big swims in the 500 free, 200 back and 400 individual medley during a standout sophomore campaign. He will earn his degree in finance from the Mendoza College of Business.
Zuck comes off a successful year that saw him post a 34-3 record in sabre regular season action, helping the Irish to a record of 29-1. In postseason action, he went on to finish first at the NCAA Midwest Regional. Then, at the NCAA Championship, he finished second in sabre to claim his first NCAA silver medal and earn first-team All-America status.
In his four seasons, Zuck has topped the 100-win plateau and now has 135 regular season wins against just 26 losses. He also made three appearances at the NCAA Championships, earning First Team All-America honors in both 2010 and 2011 as well as Second Team All-America recognition in 2009.
He will graduate with a degree in finance from the Mendoza College of Business.
Veres, a senior and Notre Dame’s top thrower, placed third at the BIG EAST Indoor Championships in 2011 after winning the 2010 outdoor crown with a record-setting launch of 18.57 meters. Since he joined the Irish track and field program, he has been one of the team’s most consistent throwers in the shot put, weight throw, discus and hammer events. He participated in his first-ever NCAA Championship last year at the 2010 Outdoor Championships after finishing 11th in the shot put at the NCAA Regional Championships.
Veres is enrolled in the Mendoza College of Busines and will graduate with a degree in finance.
The Chuck Linster Award winner, Thomas Haddad (Clark, N.J.), is the manager for the men’s tennis team. He has a 3.848 grade point average and will graduate with a degree in finance and second major in mathematics from the Mendoza College of Business.
A full rundown of the award winners from Wednesday night’s OSCARS event follows:
2010-11 Byron V. Kanaley Award Recipients
Jeb Brovsky, Men’s Soccer
William Davis, Men’s Tennis
Lauren Fowlkes, Women’s Soccer
Cole Johnson, Baseball
Erin Marrone, Softball
Chris Stewart, Football
2010-11 Christopher Zorich Award Recipients
Lindsay Brown, Women’s Soccer
Jeb Brovsky, Men’s Soccer
Ben Ryan, Hockey
2010-11 Francis Patrick O’Connor
Ellen Bartindale, Women’s Soccer
Tom Kopko, Men’s Basketball
2010-11 Leaders of Distinction Award Recipients
Mick Doyle, Baseball
Angela Puente, Volleyball
Kristen Rafael, Women’s Tennis
Zach Schirtz, Men’s Fencing
Mike Sullivan, Men’s Swimming and Diving
Denes Veres, Men’s Track and Field
Avery Zuck, Men’s Fencing
2010-11 Top Gun Award Recipient
Erin Marrone, Softball (3.976)
2010-11 Chuck Linster Award Recipient
Thomas Haddad, Manager (3.848)
2010-11 Trophy Award Recipient
Softball
2010 Team High GPA Award Recipients
Women’s Tennis, 3.584 (Spring 2010)
Women’s Golf, 3.534 (Fall 2010)
2010-11 Notre Dame Monogram Club MVP Award Recipients
| Baseball | TBA |
| Men’s Basketball | Ben Hansbrough |
| Women’s Basketball | Becca Bruszewski |
| Men’s Cross Country | Dan Jackson |
| Women’s Cross Country | No award presented |
| Men’s Fencing | Avery Zuck |
| Women’s Fencing | Courtney Hurley |
| Football | Michael Floyd |
| Men’s Golf | TBA |
| Women’s Golf | Nicole Zhang |
| Hockey | T.J. Tynan |
| Men’s Lacrosse | TBA |
| Women’s Lacrosse | TBA |
| Rowing | TBA |
| Men’s Soccer | Steven Perry |
| Women’s Soccer | Melissa Henderson |
| Softball | TBA |
| Men’s Swimming and Diving | Frank Dyer |
| Women’s Swimming and Diving | Kim Holden |
| Men’s Tennis | Dan Stahl |
| Women’s Tennis | TBA |
| Men’s Track and Field | TBA |
| Women’s Track and Field | TBA |
| Volleyball (Co-MVP) | Kellie Sciacca |
| Andrea McHugh |
2010-11 Notre Dame Club of St. Joseph Valley Rockne Student-Athlete Award Recipients
| Baseball | Brian Dupra |
| Men’s Basketball | Tim Abromaitis |
| Women’s Basketball | Veronica Badway |
| Men’s Cross Country | TBA |
| Women’s Cross Country | Erica Watson |
| Men’s Fencing | Steve Kubik |
| Women’s Fencing | Sarah Borrmann |
| Football | David Ruffer |
| Men’s Golf | Tom Usher |
| Women’s Golf | So-Hyun Park |
| Hockey | Calle Ridderwall |
| Men’s Lacrosse | TBA |
| Women’s Lacrosse | TBA |
| Rowing | TBA |
| Men’s Soccer | Adam Mena |
| Women’s Soccer | Lauren Fowlkes |
| Softball | Erin Marrone |
| Men’s Swimming and Diving | Michael Sullivan |
| Women’s Swimming and Diving | Kim Holden |
| Men’s Tennis | Dan Stahl |
| Women’s Tennis | TBA |
| Men’s Track and Field | TBA |
| Women’s Track and Field | Kelly Langhans |
| Volleyball | Frenchy Silva |
2010-11 Rosenthal Leadership Academy Participants
Kailene Abt (Women’s Lacrosse)
Meredith Angell (Cheerleading)
Randy Babb (Men’s Cross Country/Track & Field)
Courtney Barg (Women’s Soccer)
Emily Barton (Women’s Swimming & Diving)
Shaylyn Blaney (Women’s Lacrosse)
Nick Beattie (Men’s Lacrosse)
Ryan Belecanech (Men’s Swimming & Diving)
Reggie Bentley (Men’s Fencing)
Jake Brems (Men’s Lacrosse)
Steven Brus (Men’s Swimming & Diving)
Madeline Buttinger (Women’s Track & Field)
Jordan Carlson (Men’s Cross Country/Track & Field)
Spencer Carter (Men’s Cross Country/Track & Field)
Katie Casey (Women’s Swimming & Diving)
Thomas Chase (Baseball)
Jason Choy (Men’s Fencing)
Anthony Cossell (Cheerleading)
Emily Crosby (Rowing)
Quinn Cully (Men’s Lacrosse)
Tyler Davis (Men’s Tennis)
Kristen Dealy (Volleyball)
Jackie Doherty (Women’s Lacrosse)
Mick Doyle (Baseball)
Brian Dupra (Baseball)
Keith Feldman (Men’s Fencing)
Dylan Fernandez (Cheerleading)
Niall Fitzgerald (Men’s Tennis)
Lauren Fowlkes (Women Soccer)
Gracie Fredlake (Women’s Swimming & Diving)
Kristy Frilling (Women’s Tennis)
Patrick Gaul (Hockey)
Nathan Geary (Men’s Swimming & Diving)
Madeline Genereux (Cheerleading)
Jenny Granger (Women’s Lacrosse)
Heidi Grossman (Women’s Swimming & Diving)
Ryan Guentzel (Hockey)
Jazmin Hall (Women’s Soccer)
Grace Hartman (Women’s Fencing)
Ellie Hilling (Women’s Lacrosse)
Abby Higgins (Women’s Cross Country/Track & Field)
Andrew Hills (Men’s Track & Field)
Molly Hirt (Women’s Cross Country/Track & Field)
Jack Howard (Men’s Cross Country/Track & Field)
Kim Holden (Women’s Swimming & Diving)
Becca Huffer (Women’s Golf)
Kelly Jenko (Cheerleading)
Mike Johnson (Hockey)
Natalie Johnson (Women’s Track & Field)
James Kaull (Men’s Fencing)
Sam Keeton (Men’s Tennis)
Morgan Kelley (Rowing)
John Kemp (Men’s Lacrosse)
Greg Klazura (Men’s Soccer)
Michael Knapp (Men’s Soccer)
Peter Koppel (Men’s Swimming & Diving)
Kelley Langhans (Women’s Track & Field)
Joe Lavin (Hockey)
Courtney Leader (Cheerleading)
Sean Lorenz (Hockey)
Billy Maday (Hockey)
Erin Marrone (Softball)
Shannon Mathews (Women’s Tennis)
Erin McConnell (Rowing)
Chrissie McGaffigan (Women’s Tennis)
Fraderica Miller (Women’s Basketball)
Joe Miller (Men’s Cross Country/Track & Field)
Blas Moros (Men’s Tennis)
Kelsey Murphy (Rowing)
Kristina Nhim (Women’s Golf)
Adam Norton (Baseball)
Joshua Nosal (Men’s Swimming & Diving)
Natalie Novosel (Women’s Basketball)
Casey O’Connor (Softball)
Stephanie O’Neill (Rowing)
Lian Osier (Women’s Fencing)
So-Hyun Park (Women’s Golf)
Max Pfeifer (Men’s Lacrosse)
Sadie Pitzenberger (Softball)
Amy Prestinario (Women’s Swimming & Diving)
Angela Puente (Volleyball)
Kristen Rafael (Women’s Tennis)
Calle Ridderwall (Hockey)
Ben Ryan (Hockey)
Jessica Rydberg (Women’s Cross Country/Track & Field)
Allison Rzepczynski (Cheerleading)
Kevin Schipper (Men’s Track & Field)
Zach Schirtz (Men’s Fencing)
Jessica Schuveiller (Women’s Soccer)
Kellie Sciacca (Volleyball)
Lauren Scott (Women’s Swimming & Diving)
Riley Sheahan (Hockey)
Marshall Sherman (Men’s Swimming & Diving)
Frenchy Silva (Volleyball)
Bobby Smith (Men’s Lacrosse)
Nevada Sorenson (Women’s Track & Field)
Joseph Spano (Baseball)
Dan Stahl (Men’s Tennis)
Kaitlyn Strand (Cheerleading)
Megan Sullivan (Women’s Lacrosse)
Michael Sullivan (Men’s Swimming and Diving)
Maggie Tamasitis (Women’s Lacrosse)
Rebecca Tracy (Women’s Cross Country/Track & Field)
Rachel Velarde (Women’s Cross Country/Track & Field)
Denes Veres (Men’s Track & Field)
Erica Watson (Women’s Cross Country/Track & Field)
Kristina Wright (Softball)
Avery Zuck (Men’s Fencing)