Mariel Zagunis Fencing Roster
Sabre
Zagunis is set to take part in her fourth straight Olympic Games. In 2004 she became the first U.S. fencer to win an Olympic gold medal in 100 years and the first U.S. women’s fencer to win gold. In 2008, she won a second gold and also added a team bronze. If she wins a medal in Rio, Zagunis would tie former Fighting Irish track & field All-American/head coach Alex Wilson (’32) for the most medals won by a Notre Dame athlete in Olympic competition (four).
Regarded as the most decorated fencer in U.S. history, Zagunis is the No. 1 ranked U.S. fencer (women’s sabre) and is also No. 3 in the world. She was the U.S. Olympic flag bearer for the 2012 Games in London.
Zagunis is a five-time Senior World Cup Champion (2005, 2009-12) and she was inducted into FIE Hall of Fame in 2013. She is the first U.S. fencer to have four World Championship gold medals and she has finished the year as the world No. 1 five times.
In two seasons at Notre Dame, she was the 2005 NCAA Championship runner-up and then she went on to win the 2006 NCAA Championship. In 2005 she also helped the Irish to the NCAA Team Championship.
She is the daughter of Robert and Cathy Zagunis, who were both rowers on the 1976 U.S. Olympic Team.
Twitter:Â @marielzagunis
Read:Â Strong of Heart: Mariel Zagunis
CAREERÂ HONORS
- 2004, 2008, 2012, 2016 Olympic Games Participant (United States)
- 2004 & 2008 Olympic Gold Medalist (Individual Sabre)Â
- 2008 Olympic Bronze Medalist (Team Sabre)
- 2012 United States Olympic Flag Bearer
- 2006 NCAA Sabre Champion
- 2005 NCAA Team Champion
- 2005 NCAA Sabre Runner-Up
- 2006 World Cup Points Champion Member of U.S. National Team
Highly-decorated sabre talent who owns the most unique accomplishments of any competitor in U.S. fencing history, headlined by gold-medal performances at the 2004 Olympics in Athens and 2008 Olympics in Beijing … was selected to lead the 529-member United States Olympic Team as the American flag bearer in the 2012 Olympics in London … after two years at Notre Dame, elected to turn professional and give up her remaining collegiate eligibility prior to the 2006-07 season … won NCAA women’s sabre title in 2006, besting her Olympic teammate Emily Jacobson of Columbia in rematch of title bout from 2005 (when Zagunis played a lead role in ND winning the combined NCAA team title) … finished 2006 as the No. 1 women’s sabrist in the world, according to the FIE rankings … as a pro, ended as the year-end world No. 1 in 2009, ’10 and ’11 … her most noteworthy fencing accomplishments include becoming: the first U.S. fencer to win an Olympic gold medal in 100 years; the first U.S. women’s fencer ever to clinch an Olympic medal finish; the third fencer (first since 1968) – and sixth woman – ever to be the U.S. Olympic flag bearer (in ’12); the second U.S. fencer to win an FIE World Cup season points title (in ’06); one of the first U.S. fencers (from either gender), along with club teammate Becca Ward, ever to reach a World Championship gold-medal bout (silver medal, in ’06), with only one previous U.S. fencer having earned a World Championship medal … if she wins a medal in London, Zagunis would tie former Fighting Irish track & field All-American/head coach Alex Wilson (’32) for the the most medals won by a Notre Dame athlete in Olympic competition — Wilson earned four medals for his native Canada at the 1928 Amsterdam Olympics (bronze in 4×400-meter relay) and the 1932 Los Angeles Olympics (silver in 800 meters; bronze in both 400 meters and 4×400-meter relay) … tremendous athlete (youth soccer player) with great tactical skill … employs tireless training and “all-business” approach for every bout (regardless of the level of competition ) … benefited from training under former Notre Dame assistant coach Ed Korfanty, developing a wide variety of actions on the strip … very goal-oriented in all aspects of her life, including extensive endurance training … her background in soccer can be seen in her athleticism, speed, anticipation skills and quick reaction time … delayed enrolling at Notre Dame one year in order to pursue Olympic dream … product of Oregon Fencing Alliance, along with eventual Notre Dame teammates Valerie Providenza, Patrick Ghattas and Bill Thanhouser … one of seven athletes featured in the Showtime special “Bud Greenspan Presents Athens 2004: Stories of Olympic Glory” … that special (Nov. ’05) told the inspiring tale of Zagunis and other Olympians … honored by her home state of Oregon as the 2004 Bill Hayward Amateur Athlete of the Year … finished collegiate career with a .962 winning pct. (75-3) in regular season bouts with the Irish, ranking third in the history of Notre Dame women’s fencing behind former foilists Maria Panyi (.980; 146-3) and Sara Walsh (.970; 231-7) … her .826 career win pct. (38-8) in NCAA round-robin bouts ranks fourth among ND women’s fencers, behind foilists Molly Sullivan (.915; 54-5), Alicja Kryczalo (.913; 84-8) and Walsh (.870; 80-12).
2008 OLYMPIC NOTES: Left Notre Dame midway through junior season, in spring of 2007, and elected to turn professional, give up her remaining collegiate eligibility and focus on her Olympic training in her hometown area of Portland … successfully defended her gold medal in individual sabre competition at 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing … defeated teammate Sada Jacobson 15-8 in gold-medal match to lead a 1-2-3 American finish in the event … also helped United States claim a bronze medal in team sabre competition to become the first Irish fencer to earn two medals in the same Games … that also marked first time a U.S. team won a medal at a World Championships or Olympic Games.
2006 WORLD CUP POINTS TROPHY: Won Las Vegas Grand Prix to conclude impressive 2006 World Cup circuit that included: silver medals in Orleans (France) and Budapest; bronze in Klagenfurt (Germany) and Vancouver; and 10th-place in Lamezia Terme, Italy, and Hanoi, Vietnam … finished atop women’s sabre World Cup rankings – her 198 points were 12 more than runner-up Sophia Velikaia of Russia (186) – and received prestigious World Cup trophy in Turin, Italy, at 2006 FIE World Championships … joined longtime U.S. sabre teammate Sada Jacobson (in ’03, ’04 and ’05) as only American fencers (male or female, in any weapon) ever to win a World Cup total-points trophy … earlier won three Junior World Cup titles (’02-’04) … recognized by U.S. Olympic Committee as one of three honorees for June 2006 Athlete of the Month (also swimmer Michael Phelps and track-and-field’s Lashinda Demus) … runner-up finish in Orleans (Feb. ’06) included wins over France’s Leonore Perrus (round-of-16), Poland’s Olga Socha (15-8 quarterfinal) and Italy’s Gioia Marzocca (15-11 semifinal) before narrowly losing to France’s Anne-Lise Touya in final (13-15), with nearly 3,000 spectators on hand to see that matchup between 2004 Olympic champ and 2005 world champion … headed to Budapest later that month, with 15-10 win over China’s Xue Tan in round-of-16 (their first meeting since the 2004 Olympic final), a quarterfinal win over Japan’s Sakura Kaneko (15-10) and 15-14 semifinal vs. Ukraine’s Olga Kharlan before losing final to Russia’s Velikaia (10-15) … competed in Lamezia Terme (March 10) days before helping Notre Dame win NCAA title … combined with Thompson, Sada Jacobson and former Columbia fencer Emma Baratta to win women’s sabre team competition in Hanoi (in addition to her 10thplace finish) … lost to Ward in Klagenfurt semifinals before picking up bronze in Vancouver … her third World Cup event in June of ’06 included combining with Ward, Thompson and Sada Jacobson for thrilling title-match win over Russia (45-44) at Las Vegas, in addition to her individual title after facing a tough field, with key wins over Thompson (round-of-32), recent Notre Dame signee Eileen Hassett (round-of-16; 15-7), a pair of French fencers in the quarterfinals (15-14 vs. Perrus) and semifinals (15-12 vs. Touya), and Italy’s Ilaria Bianco in 15-14 title bout.
2006 WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP: The 2006 World Championship in Turin (a.k.a. Torino), Italy, saw Zagunis beat Germany’s Alexandrea Bujdoso in the quarterfinals (15-10), followed by a 15-10 semifinal vs. her U.S. teammate Sada Jacobson before losing 11-15 final bout to the 16-year-old sensation Ward … the finalists became second and third U.S. fencers (men or women) ever to earn individual medals at the World Championships and first to reach World Championship individual title bout … opened in the 89-fencer women’s sabre field with 15-9 win over Germany’s Amelie Zerfass before round-of-32 win over Poland’s Irena Wieckowska (15-13) … Jacobson, who fenced at Yale, defeated top seed Touya of France in the quarterfinals … former Stanford foilist Iris Zimmermann is the only other U.S. fencer with a World Championship medal (bronze, ’99).
2004 OLYMPIC NOTES: Signed letter-of-intent with Notre Dame in Nov., 2002, and graduated the next spring before embarking on 15-month training regimen for shot at Olympics … cutoff for qualifying was April 1 and she narrowly missed one of the two initial U.S. spots (’04 Games did not include three-fencer women’s sabre team competition) … she and Emily Jacobson were contending for the final spot and it came down to a bout in late March at a tournament in Italy, vs. Emily’s sister Sada … Sada’s 15-14 win left her sister 10th in the world rankings – just ahead of Zagunis, who continued to train and was granted another chance when Nigeria declined to send its fencer Jacqueline Esimaje … Zagunis, who had risen to sixth in the world, received the open spot as the highest-ranked fencer not already in the Olympic field (the African region had no other sabreists in the top-100) … headed to Athens and Helleniko Sports Center, where she beat Japan’s Madoka Hisagae in round-of-16 (15-13; long 2:39 bout), Azerbaijan’s Elena Jemayeva in quick quarterfinal (15-11) and Catalina Gheorghitoaia of Romania in 15-10 semifinal … commanded gold-medal bout vs. China’s Xue Tan, jumping out to 8-2 lead while fencing with tenacity and clever tactics … Xue battled back to 10-6 before the bout ended 15-9, with Zagunis ceremonially tossed in the air by members of the U.S. team.
OTHER RECENT RESULTS: Finished second behind teammate Sada Jacobson at 2006 Pan-American Games (Oct.) in Venezuela, also helping U.S. win the Pan-Am women’s sabre team title … helped U.S. women’s sabre team win 2005 World Championship (Oct. 15; in Leipzig, Germany), with 45-36 win over Russia in finale that avenged loss in 2004 World Championship final … named USATODAY.com’s “Olympic Athlete of the Week” for lead role in winning world title … went 15-8 in three stints vs. Russia to lead the way, after strong stints vs. Hungary in 45-27 semifinal (she went 18-4) and vs. France in 45-32 semifinal (9-4) … teamed with Sada Jacobson, Ward and Thompson on 2005 world championship team that did not allow more than 38 points in a bout (45-38 vs. Great Britain in round-of-16) … took ninth in ’05 World Championship individual competition, losing to Ward (13-15) in unlucky round-of-16 matchup … won 2005 World Junior Championships (individual and team), in Linz, Austria, during late March (days after helping ND win NCAA title) … her march to ’05 World Junior title included 15-13 quarterfinal vs. Ward, 15-9 semifinal vs. Ukraine’s Kharlan and 15-9 final win over Russia’s Velikaia … combined with Emily Jacobson, Ward and Thompson to win ’05 World Junior team title … placed sixth at Junior World Cup in Budapest (Jan. ’05; lost to Ward in quarterfinals) before winning two Senior World Cups – in Klagenfurt, Austria (June 4-5) and Vancouver (July 9-10) – and then battling illness to place sixth at World Cup in Welkenraedt, Belgium (May 14-15) and reaching title bout at Las Vegas World Cup (June 17-19; lost 13-15 to Poland’s Socha) … combined with Sada Jacobson, Ward and Thompson to win team bronze at Las Vegas (’05) … World Cup win in Austria included 15-4 bout with Providenza, 15-12 quarterfinal vs. Great Britain’s Louise-Bond Williams, 15-5 semifinal with Germany’s Sybil Klemm and 15-13 title bout vs. Ward … placed third at North American Cup in Overland Park, Kan. (Jan. ’05; wins over both Jacobson sisters) … won Junior World Cup in Sosnowiec, Poland (fall ’04) – beating Poland’s Malgorzata Kozaczuk in 15-4 quarterfinal, Ward in semifinals (15-11) and Poland’s Marta Wator in 15-10 final – before heading to White House for reception to honor 2004 Olympians … won ’04 Junior World Cup in Louisville, Ky., besting Annika Eiremo in 15-9 quarterfinal, Thompson in semifinals (15-6) and Ward in 15-9 final … placed sixth at ’04 Junior World Cup in Ariccia, Italy, and second at N.A.C. in Richmond, Va. – with wins over Bond-Williams (15-3) and Ward (15-11) before 13-15 final vs. Emily Jacobson.
IN THE RECORD BOOKS: Just a handful of U.S. fencers had stood on Olympic medal stands prior to Zagunis, the previous being sabre bronze medalist Peter Westbrook at the 1984 games in Los Angeles (field thinned by boycott) … combined with Sada Jacobson (bronze) as first U.S. women’s fencers ever to win Olympic medals (also first time two U.S. fencers had medaled at same Games in 100 years) … the only previous U.S. fencers to win Olympic gold came in 1904 men’s “single sticks” competition, when many top Europeans did not attend due to the difficulty in reaching middle America (St. Louis) … prior to 2004 – when former Notre Dame standouts Ruth Riley (basketball), Kate Sobrero and Shannon Boxx (soccer) helped their teams win gold in Athens – just two Olympic gold medalists had ties to Notre Dame: basketball players Vince Boryla (’48, London) and Adrian Dantley (’76, Montreal), with Boryla having transferred … no previous Olympiad had featured more than two medalists with connections to Notre Dame and it had been 28 years since more than one had medaled (two each in ’32, ’48 and ’76) … the only other previous Olympic medalist with ties to Notre Dame fencing is epeeist Bjorn Vaggo (silver in ’84 at L.A., fencing for Sweden) … became second incoming/returning Notre Dame student-athlete (first in 84 years) to win Olympic medal, joining Gus Desch (bronze in 400-meter dash; 1920, Antwerp) … combined with men’s epee alum Jan Viviani to make Notre Dame one of just four schools (also St. John’s, Columbia,, Princeton) with multiple former/current fencers on U.S. team’s full 15-fencer roster at 2004 Olympics.
OTHER TOP RESULTS: Her many unique accomplishments include becoming: the first fencer to win three World Championships in one season (2001 u-17 and u-20 individual, u-20 team); first U.S. fencer to hold four World Championship titles in span of nine months (also ‘0 overall team title); only U.S. fencer to win multiple Junior World Cup point titles (’02-’04); youngest fencer to win FIE World Championship; first U.S. fencer to finish atop World Cup point standings (’02); and recordholder for medals in junior/cadet World Cup Championships (8, plus 4 medals at senior-level World Championships) … placed sixth 2004 Senior World Cup in Orleans, France, while helping U.S. women’s sabre team finish as 2004 World Championship runnerup … won 2001 World Junior Championship as 15-yearold (beating Sada Jacobson in 15-11 final), joining Zimmermann as second U.S. fencer to win two World Championships (Kazimieras Campe and Ray Sexton were the only previous U.S. fencers to win a World Championship) … lost to Emily Jacobson at 2004 Junior World Championships (6-15) … first held U.S. overall number-one ranking in 2001, when she was named U.S. Fencing’s female athlete of the year … also won 2001 Junior Olympics and u-16 national titles … two previous U.S. fencers had won Junior World Cup titles (Felicia and Iris Zimmermann; ’95 and ’97 foil) … combined with Sada Jacobson for first U.S. 1-2 finish in World Cup standings.
AS A SOPHOMORE (2006): Her NCAA championship performance was preceded by dominating regular season (46-2; .957), the 8th-best win pct. ever by any ND women’s fencer (best in women’s sabre, also 7th-most women’s sabre wins) … ND women’s fencing MVP (also women’s sabre MVP), after postseason that included winning NCAA Midwest Regional before topping Columbia’s Emily Jacobson (her Olympic teammate) in NCAA title bout … her 18-0 record at Northwestern Duals included 5-1 win over Stanford’s Eva Jellison before key wins at NYU Duals (13-1), vs. Ohio State’s Siobhan Byrne (5-3) and Eileen Grench (5-3), Columbia’s Baratta (5-3), the St. John’s pair of Kasia Wieronski (5-1) and Olga Ovtchinnikova (5-4), and Yale’s Carly Guss (5-1), with lone loss to Columbia’s Jacobson (3-5) … 9-0 in limited action at ND Duals and 6-1 at UCSD Duals (1-5 loss to Jellison) … allowed just four touches in winning six Regional poll bouts, followed by 15-5 quarterfinal vs. Northwestern’s Emily Pasternak (15-5), narrow win over Providenza in semifinals (15-13) and final win over OSU’s Byrne (15-4) … posted 11-3 record on day-1 at NCAAs in Houston, with top win vs. Columbia’s Jacobson (5-3) after having gone 0-4 in previous college bouts vs. her fellow nationalteamer … other top day-1 wins included sweeps of Harvard’s Carolyn Wright (5-0) and Alexa Weingarden (5-1) and SJU’s Ovtchinnikova (5-1) and Wieronski (5-1), also defeating Providenza (5-3), Duke’s Allison Schafer (5-0), Lauren Phillips of Rutgers (5-1), Penn’s Cassandra Partyka (5-4), Yale’s Guss (5-3) and Cornell’s Alexandra Heiss (5-2) … her losses came vs. two All-Americans, Columbia’s Baratta (1-5) and Duke’s Ibtihaj Muhammad (3-5), plus 4-5 defeat to UCSD’s Raelyn Jacobson … a 6-3 record on day-2 tied her for fourth in round-robin standings, advancing to semifinals due to +43 totalpoint indicators (PSU’s Sophia Hiss was +31) … scored key day-2 win over Hiss (5-2), OSU’s Byrne (5-3) and Stanford’s Jellison (5-4), plus other wins over UNC’s Jennifer Kling (5-0) and Northwestern duo of Mai Van Vu (5-1) and Pasternak (5-0) … day-2 losses came vs. OSU’s Grench (3-5), club teammate Thompson of PSU (2-5) and Wayne State’s Katarzyna Kuzniak (4-5) … avenged loss to Baratta in semifinals, despite deficits of 0-4, 5-8 and 6-12 (she won seven of next eight for 13-13 tie) … Baratta then scored on parry-riposte, as did Zagunis, who scored decisive touch (15-14) on straight attack after Baratta briefly hesitated on her own attack … the final did not produce nearly as much drama, with 8-3 lead before winning the title-bout rematch from Jacobson (15-8).
AS A FRESHMAN (2005): Enjoyed impressive debut on college scene by finishing second at 2005 NCAAs and recording near-perfect record (29-1; .967) during 2004-05 regular season … tied ND foilist Kryczalo and Penn State sabreist Franz Boghicev for best round-robin records (21-2) in 144-fencer NCAA field … played key role in historic rally to edge Ohio State for NCAA title (173-171; OSU held 24-point edge after two days of men’s bouts) … combined with Providenza (19-4) for dominating 40-win total in round-robin … just three previous pairs of teammates (men or women) have posted more combined NCAA wins in same weapon (since format began in ’96) … owned best total-points indicator (+66) in entire field (four shutouts, seven 5-1 bouts, six 5-2, two 5-3, two 5-4) … helped set NCAA record for wins by a women’s team (103-35) … joined Kryczalo and epeeist Amy Orlando in reaching their respective final bouts (ND’s 2004 squad had been the first ever to do that in NCAA women’s competition) … 11th ND fencer (men or women) to reach NCAA final as a freshman … sat atop sabre standings after day-1 (13-1), with wins over Providenza (5-2), OSU’s Byrne (5-0) and Amelia Galliard (5-2), PSU’s Laura Hillstrom (5-1), Harvard’s Wright (5-4) and Duke’s Muhammad (5-0) … lone loss on first day came vs. PSU’s Hiss, the ’04 runner- up (3-5) … combined with Providenza for 12-0 start in Sunday’s tension-packed rounds … helped knock St. John’s from chase with wins over All-Americans Christina Crane (5-1) and Wieronski (5-4), adding top wins over Penn’s Katelyn Sherry (5-1) and Columbia’s Baratta (5-1) … dropped 1-5 bout to Columbia’s Jacobson for her second and final defeat in roundrobin … registered 15-5 semifinal win over OSU’s Byrne before falling to Jacobson in final (11-15) … missed 2005 Regional (World Cup conflict) but was granted exemption into NCAAs … swept OSU fencers at Midwest Fencing Conference Championships (5-0 vs. Byrne, 5-1 vs. Grench, 5-3 vs. Galliard) … opened 11-1 at NYU Duals, posting sweep of OSU (5-3 vs. Byrne, 5-1 vs. Gaillard and Grench) while dropping 3-5 bout to Columbia’s Jacobson … 18-0 record at ND Duals included wins over Byrne (5-3), Grench (5-2) and Galliard (5-2).
PREP & PERSONAL: Played soccer starting at age of five, competing on state-select teams and earning three letters as midfielder at Valley Catholic High School … her brother Marten fenced at Penn State (’03- ’06) while brother Merrick is a top-ranked youth fencer … daughter of Robert and Cathy Zagunis, who were collegiate rowers (at Oregon State and Connecticut College, respectively) before competing wit U.S. rowing team at 1976 Olympics in Montreal … Mariel Leigh Zagunis … born March 3, 1985, in Portland, Ore. anthropology major, in College of Arts and Letters.
Zagunis’ Career Record
Year | W | L | Pct. | NCAA Finish |
2005 | 29 | 1 | .967 | 2nd |
2006 | 46 | 2 | .958 | 1st |
Career | 75 | 3 | .962 |
Zagunis in the NCAAs (38-8 in round-robin, +109 in touches) | |
2005: 21-2 round-robin (+66 in touches) Cassie Frey (Pennsylvania) …………………………………….. 5-1 Katelyn Sherry (Pennsylvania) ……………………………….. 5-1 Marisa Romero (Air Force)………………………………………. 5-1 Emma Baratta (Columbia/Barnard) ………………………… 5-1 Emily Jacobson (Columbia/Barnard)…………………… L, 1-5 Rachel Liebing (Cal State Fullerton)………………………… 5-0 Christina Crane (St. John’s) …………………………………….. 5-1 Kasia Wieronski (St. John’s)…………………………………….. 5-4 Carly Guss (Yale) …………………………………………………….. 5-3 Carolyn Wright (Harvard)………………………………………… 5-4 Alexa Weingarden (Harvard) …………………………………… 5-2 Ivana Zgaljic (Cornell) ……………………………………………… 5-2 Laura Hillstrom (Penn State) …………………………………… 5-1 Sophia Hiss (Penn State) …………………………………….. L, 3-5 Emma Nostrand (Drew) ………………………………………….. 5-2 Ibtihaj Muhammad (Duke) ………………………………………. 5-0 Allison Schafer (Duke)……………………………………………… 5-0 Halli Melnitsky (Haverford) …………………………………….. 5-2 Siobhan Byrne (Ohio State) …………………………………….. 5-0 Amelia Galliard (Ohio State) …………………………………… 5-2 Valerie Providenza (Notre Dame) ……………………………. 5-2 Lauren Dunn (Northwestern) …………………………………. 5-1 Mai Van Vu (Northwestern) …………………………………….. 5-3 • Defeated Byrne in semifinals (15-5) • Lost to Jacobson in final (11-15) |
2006: 17-6 round-robin (+43 in touches) Valerie Providenza (Notre Dame) ……………………………. 5-3 Raelyn Jacobson (UC San Diego) ………………………… L, 4-5 Allison Schafer (Duke)……………………………………………… 5-0 Lauren Phillips (Rutgers) ………………………………………… 5-1 Ibtihaj Muhammad (Duke)…………………………………… L, 3-5 Olga Ovtchinnikova (St. John’s) ……………………………… 5-1 Kasia Wieronski (St. John’s)…………………………………….. 5-1 Cassandra Partyka (Pennsylvania)………………………….. 5-4 Emma Baratta (Columbia/Barnard) …………………….. L, 1-5 Emily Jacobson (Columbia/Barnard) ………………………. 5-3 Carly Guss (Yale) …………………………………………………….. 5-3 Carolyn Wright (Harvard)………………………………………… 5-0 Alexa Weingarden (Harvard) …………………………………… 5-1 Alexandra Heiss (Cornell) ………………………………………. 5-2 Siobhan Byrne (Ohi8o State) …………………………………… 5-3 Eileen Grench (Ohio State) …………………………………. L, 3-5 Eva Jellison (Stanford) ……………………………………………. 5-4 Caitlin Thompson (Penn State)……………………………. L, 2-5 Sophia Hiss (Penn State) ………………………………………… 5-2 Jennifer Kling (North Carolina) ……………………………….. 5-0 Mai Van Vu (Northwestern) …………………………………….. 5-1 Emily Pasternak (Northwestern)……………………………… 5-0 Katarzyna Kuzniak (Wayne State)………………………… L, 4-5 • Defeated Baratta in semifinals (15-14) • Defeated E. Jacobson in final (15-8) |