Tag Archives: all-nescac

Linking Around the NESCAC | February 28

Happy Leap Year. Here’s a batch of links, including the all-NESCAC basketball teams after the jump:

Women’s Basketball | Amherst has sights set on repeat title (via Tufts Daily)

The Amherst women’s basketball team is in the midst of a remarkable run on par with some of the best ever seen in Div. III sports. In the past few years, the Lord Jeffs have not only established themselves as the perennial team to beat in the NESCAC but have also become the top Div. III team in the nation. In defeating Tufts on Sunday, defending national champion Amherst extended its winning streak to 46 games overall and 63 straight at home while clinching their third straight NESCAC championship and further cementing their position as the class of the conference.

Despite the team’s dominance in recent years, the man behind the magic remains hungry as ever. Coach G.P. Gromacki, currently in his fifth season at the helm of the Amherst women’s basketball program, wants to avoid feeling content. Instead, he chooses to focus on building from each victory, treating each game as a steppingstone towards — as he puts it — “something bigger.” Continue reading

Women’s Basketball | Midseason Award Predictions

It is no secret that I slacked a bit over the last couple of weeks. Between a late-winter break vacation and settling in for the new semester, I slacked on my content. So, to make up for it, we’re giving you a little extra this week. With a little over half of the conference slate in the books, we’re going to take a look at the front runners in the conference award categories.

NESCAC Player of the Year: Williams’ Claire Baecher

Of all of the season-long awards, this one may be the most up for grabs due to Baecher’s injury, which has kept her out of the teams past three games. But if she returns, it is hard to make the case for anyone else. Top four in the league in scoring with 15.3 per game, she can get points from just about anywhere on the floor. In fact, she is in the top seven in the league in the big three shooting categories: field goal percentage, 3-point percentage and free-throw percentage.

But what really sets her apart is her play when the ball isn’t in her hands. She is third in the league in rebounds at 7.5 per game, and second in defensive rebounds. But where she really stands out defensively is in the paint, where she is averaging 3.81 per game, nearly two more per game than anyone else in the conference. Tufts’ Hayley Kanner—second in the league in blocks—is closer to 15th-place Tracy Borsinger than Baecher. Clearly she has established herself as the conference’s biggest force in the paint this year.

If Baecher doesn’t make it back, Conn. College’s Tara Gabelman is probably the leading candidate. She is the only player in the league averaging a double-double with 15.9 points and 10.5 rebounds. Bowdoin’s Jill Henrickson, the NESCAC’s leading scorer and second in steals, rounds out the main candidates.

NESCAC Defensive Player of the Year: Tufts’ Tiffany Kornegay

For the past three seasons, the Jumbos have taken home every defensive player of the year award, and I don’t expect that to end this season. The 5-foot-6 guard is second in the NESCAC in rebounds at 7.9 per game fourth in steals at 2.7 per game. In conference she has been even better: She is the leading steals-getter and second in boards.

But the biggest measure of her defensive prowess may come in what people don’t do against her. So far, she has matched up with three guards in the top 10 in scoring in the NESCAC: Henrickson, Jenn Shinall and Jill Greenberg. The three combine to score 14.1 points per game. With Kornegay in the mix, they managed just 9.3, and that’s even with Henrikson having a rather big game. She can take star players out of games, and that’s what earns her the award.

The other major candidate would be Baecher, depending on whether she stays healthy and if she win Player of the Year.

NESCAC Rookie of the Year: Amherst’s Megan Robertson

Not much competition for this award. Robertson is the only freshman in the top 30 in the league in scoring or the top 20 in the league in rebounds. She is particularly dangerous crashing the offensive glass, and her 3.83 per game is second in the league. Though she gets her minutes off the bench, her contributions have been especially valuable for a Lord Jeffs side that has lost much of its height over the last couple of years. This award should be all but in the bag.

If you are really looking for another candidate, Tufts’ Kelsey Morehead may fit the bill. After a fast start, her numbers have cooled down a bit, but she is still a freshman starting point guard–a tall task for any first year–and 15th in the league in assists. While she will likely come up short this year, expect a lot from her down the line.

NESCAC Coach of the Year: Conn. College’s Brian Wilson

Wilson should be commended for his near perfect handling of his team’s situation over the past two years. When Shinall and Gabelmann left the team days after being arrested for possession of marijuana, Wilson had his work cut out for him. But after the Camels stumbled to a 1-8 finish in the 2010-2011 season, his work was just beginning. In less than a year, Wilson has managed to reincorporate the pair into the team, coach them both into all-conference caliber players, build up chemistry and confidence across his whole squad, and march them to a 4-2 record in the NESCAC so far that includes a victory over perennial powerhouse Williams. There is no other story in the conference that can even begin to compete with such a turn around.

NESCAC First Team

Forward Claire Baecher
Forward Tara Gabelmann
Guard Jill Henrickson
Guard Jenn Shinall
Guard Jill Greenberg

Field Hockey | Eleven NESCAC players from five teams named All-Americans

(Press release via NESCAC.com)

HADLEY, Mass. – Eleven players from five different NESCAC teams were honored as All-America by the National Field Hockey Coaches Association (NFHCA) on Tuesday. Continue reading

Football | Woah, Walter! Trinity’s Fallas wins second NESCAC Player of the Year honors

Trinity boasted one of the nation’s best defensive units this season, and the Bantams’ prowess was rewarded on an individual level when Walter Fallas earned his second consecutive NESCAC Defensive Player of the Year honors.

Fallas, a senior, was also selected to the All-NESCAC First Team for the third consecutive season after leading Trinity with 55 tackles in seven games. His 7.9 tackles per game ranked 12th in the NESCAC and he also recorded 7.0 tackles for a loss, including 4.5 sacks.

The Bantams defense ranked second in the country in total defense this season, allowing just 195.50 yards per game and recording four shutouts. The unit was also second in Div. III in ceding 8.13 points per game, a total that would have been substantially lower had it not given up 35 points on Nov. 5 versus Amherst, 5 more points than Trinity allowed the rest of the season. A Bantam has now won the award six out of the past eight seasons.

On the offensive end, Amherst running back Eric Bunker beat his brother Evan in the Lord Jeffs’ 35-28 win two weeks ago and with it took home NESCAC Offensive Player of the Year honors. He became the first Amherst player since ’05 to win the award, and is the first running back since ’04 to be chosen.

Bunker rushed for a league-high 106.6 yards per game with a 5.3 yards-per-carry average as the Lord Jeffs went a perfect 8-0 this season. He topped the century mark in six games and recorded a program-record 12 touchdowns. Bunker also earned All-NESCAC honors for the second straight season after being named to the Second Team in 2010.

Wesleyan freshman LaDarius Drew won NESCAC Rookie of the Year honors after finishing third among all backs in the league with 90.8 yards per game on a 4.2 yards-per carry average, though Drew slowed down in the final few weeks as teams began to stack the box against the Cardinals. However, three-touchdown games in consecutive weeks against Colby and Bates were enough to earn Drew the top rookie award.

Amherst coach E.J. Mills was the unanimous choice for NESCAC Coach of the Year for the second time in his career after guiding the Lord Jeffs to an unbeaten season and their second conference crown in the past three years.

The full first and second teams are listed below.  Continue reading

Volleyball | Hanczor becomes first Bowdoin player to earn All-America honors

(via NESCAC.com)

HADLEY, Mass. – Seniors Kristin Hanczor (Redding, Conn.) of Bowdoin and Amy Newman (Los Angeles, Calif.) of Connecticut College have earned All-America honors from the American Volleyball Coaches Association (AVCA).

Hanczor, the first-ever Polar Bear to earn All-America, was selected to the Second Team. Newman received Third Team honors for the second-straight fall after garnering honorable mention in 2009. The duo are the only two NESCAC players among the three teams announced on Tuesday.

The Co-Player of the Year in the NESCAC, Hanczor helped the Polar Bears post a school-record 27 wins, a first-place finish in the conference standings, the program’s first-ever conference title and NCAA Tournament appearance. Among the NESCAC leaders in multiple statistical categories, Hanczor, a middle blocker who played in every set for Bowdoin, finished with a .332 hitting percentage (1st NESCAC), 2.94 kills per set (9th), and 1.02 blocks per set (2nd) – all of which were career-best figures.

The All-NESCAC First Team selection finished her career as Bowdoin’s all-time leader in blocks (401) and second in kills (1,119).

Newman closed out her season pacing the NESCAC in kills for the second year in a row with a 5.10 average, nearly identical to the 5.17 per set figure she put up last autumn. The outside hitter completed her career with 1,315 kills, a figure that ranks second all-time at Connecticut College. The three-time All-NESCAC First Team member also recorded a career-best .316 hitting percentage.

Four individuals from the NESCAC earned honorable mention All-America, with Middlebury junior DS/L Caitlin Barrett, Trinity sophomore OH Hannah Brickley, and the Tufts tandem of senior DS/L Audrey Kuan and junior setter Kendall Lord receiving recognition.