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The 2012-13 NSU Women's Track and Field Media Guide

TRANSCRIPT

W W W. N S U S PA R TA N S. C O M 3

NSU President ....................................................................... 4NSU Athletics Director ...................................................... 5About Norfolk State University .................................... 6The Year of the Spartan .................................................... 8NSU Athletics Highlights ...............................................10About Hampton Roads ...................................................12NSU Athletics Foundation ............................................14Strength & Conditioning Program ...........................15Athletics Administration ...............................................16Coaching Staff

Director of T&F Kenneth Giles ...................................19 Head Women’s Coach Ronda Berard ......................20 Assistant Coaches ..........................................................21 Meet the 2012-13 Spartans

Roster .................................................................................22 Season Outlook ..............................................................23 Schedule ...........................................................................24 Returner Profi les .............................................................25 Newcomer Profi les ........................................................30NSU 2011-12 Season In Review ..................................34NSU’s Track Olympians ...................................................35The Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference .....................36

Norfolk State University

2012-13 Women’s Track

Quick Facts

University InformationLocation ...................................................................Norfolk, Va.Founded ................................................................................1935 Enrollment ..........................................................................7,100Mascot............................................................................ Spartans School Colors .....................................................Green & Gold Affi liation ..................................................................... Division IConference ....................Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference President ........................................................Dr. Tony AtwaterAthletics Director ........................................... Marty L. MillerAthletics Phone ..............................................(757) 823-8152 Ticket Offi ce .....................................................(757) 823-9009

Sports InformationSID ........................................................................ Matt Michalec Email ....................................................... [email protected] SID Phone .........................................................(757) 823-2628 SID Fax ...............................................................(757) 823-8218 Cell .......................................................................(757) 633-6022Mailing Address ......... NSU Offi ce of Sports Information 700 Park Ave., Norfolk, VA 23504Website ..............................................www.nsuspartans.com

Coaching Staff Director of Track & Field ........ Kenneth Giles (10th year)Head Women’s Coach ................ Ronda Berard (8th year)Alma Mater ............................. Southwestern Louisiana ‘90Assistant Coaches ................. Jerry Price, Serge Bengono .........................................................................Harry FreemanTrack Offi ce ......................................................(757) 823-2104

Team Information2011-12 MEAC Indoor Finish ...........................................5th2011-12 MEAC Outdoor Finish .....................................10thLetterwinners Returning/Lost ......................................11/9Newcomers ...............................................................................13

The 2012-13 NSU Women’s Track Media Guide was written, edited and produced by the NSU Sports Information Offi ce, director Matt Michalec and assistant Mike Bello. Photography was provided by Jerry S. Altares, Mark’s Digital Photography, SWI Sports Images, Adam Streur Photography, the Detroit Lions and NSU Marketing Services. Special design assistance was provided by S_Gray Design.

TABLE OF CONTENTS NORFOLK STATE UNIVERSITY 2012-13WOMEN’S TRACK & FIELD MEDIA GUIDE

W W W. N S U S PA R TA N S. C O M 4

NORFOLK STATE UNIVERSITY 2012-13WOMEN’S TRACK & FIELD MEDIA GUIDENSU PRESIDENT

Dr. Tony AtwaterPresident

Tony Atwater was appointed the fi fth president of Norfolk State University on April 22, 2011. He previously served as a Senior Fellow of the American Associ-ation of State Colleges and Universities, a leadership association serving more than 400 public colleges and universities nationwide.

Atwater served as president and chief executive offi cer at Indiana University of Pennsylvania (IUP), a comprehensive, doctoral/research university. It is the fi fth largest university in Pennsylvania and

the largest within the Pennsylvania State System of Higher Education. As president, he led a population of more than 14,600 students and nearly 1,700 employees; oversaw an annual university budget of $220 million; and supported six academic colleges and the School of Graduate Studies and Research. He also directed operations at three regional campuses.

Prior to serving as IUP president, he served as provost and vice president for academic affairs at Youngstown State University in Ohio. In this capacity, he oversaw academic programs, academic policy and academic assessment. He also provided leadership and strategic direction to approximately 750 faculty members, serving six academic colleges, the School of Graduate Studies and Research, and the library.

Other administrative assignments have included serving as dean of the College of Professional Studies and Education at Northern Kentucky University; chairperson of the Rutgers University Department of Journalism and Mass Media; and special assistant to the provost at the University of Connecticut. He also served as associate vice president for academic affairs at the University of Toledo.Throughout his career, Atwater has assumed signifi cant community leadership roles. These efforts include serving on the Governor’s Task Force on Youth and Substance Abuse Prevention in Kentucky;

the Board of Trustees of the Northwest Ohio Public Television Foundation; and the Indiana County Chamber of Commerce. He was also a member of the 2000-01 delega-tion of Leadership Cincinnati and the Ad-visory Board of KeyBank in the Northeast Ohio Region. Additionally, he was past president of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication.

A native of Nashville, Tenn., Atwater earned a Ph.D. in communication research from Michigan State University in 1983, where he was the recipient of a competitive doctoral fellowship. He completed post-doctoral studies in the Department of Communication at the Uni-versity of Michigan in 1989. He also earned a bachelor’s degree in mass media arts from Hampton University in 1973. Addition-ally, he holds three graduate certifi cates in higher education administration from the Harvard Graduate School of Education.

Atwater is a Ford Foundation Postdoctoral Fellow and is the author of approximately 30 refereed journal articles on news se-lection behavior in the mass media – the subject of his research interests.

W W W. N S U S PA R TA N S. C O M 5

SAMPLE TEXT NORFOLK STATE UNIVERSITY 2011-12WOMEN’S TRACK & FIELD MEDIA GUIDE

NORFOLK STATE UNIVERSITY 2012-13WOMEN’S TRACK & FIELD MEDIA GUIDENSU ATHLETICS DIRECTOR

Marty Miller has been called many things during his tenure at Norfolk State University. Some have called him a rock. Others have referred to him as one of Norfolk State’s greatest ambassadors. Re-gardless of the label, what’s clear is that Miller has served his alma mater in various capacities for more than 40 years, providing NSU with stability in times of need.

His professional career at Nor-folk State has included stints in the

areas of fi nancial aid, career services, student affairs and athletics. After winning more than 700 games as the

school’s baseball coach, Miller was named NSU’s acting athletics director on December 16, 2004. He was appointed to the permanent athletics director post on March 18, 2005.

Early in Miller’s tenure, he was confronted with many challeng-es, the biggest one being the hiring of a football coach. Miller and his search committee worked during the Christmas and New Year’s holidays to fi nd a football coach. The hard work paid off when the decision was made to hire Pete Adrian from Bethune-Cookman. With approval of then-President Dr. Marie V. McDemmond, Adrian became the fi rst white head coach in any major sport at NSU and the second ever in MEAC football history.

Another major challenge upon Miller’s appointment as Direc-tor of Athletics was that he inherited a defi cit exceeding $1,100,000. With his knowledge of fi nancial planning and strong administrative skills, the defi cit was eliminated in FY10 and the department ended the year with a positive fund balance of over $1,200,000.

The NSU athletics department has also made a number of major facilities improvements. With help from alumni, fans, friends and the Department of Facilities Management, the athletics de-partment was able to raise funds to renovate and purchase new equipment for the weight room. In 2007, the school completed a major renovation of the NSU Softball Field, which included the in-stallation of new team dugouts and a press box. Bleacher renova-tions to Joseph Echols Hall were completed for the 2008-09 basket-ball season. A new state-of-the-art track surface was completed in the summer of 2010.

The crown jewel of the facility upgrades made in Miller’s fi rst seven years as athletics director is the purchase of two new Dak-tronics LED video display boards at William “Dick” Price Stadium. The project is scheduled for completion during the summer of 2012.

Another highlight of his tenure as athletics director includes NSU capturing the last eight Talmadge Layman Hill awards, given annually to the top men’s sports program in the conference. NSU has received a total of $185,000 for winning the awards. Miller was also presented in March 2006 with the Tom Fergusson Memorial Award, given annually to the area’s top sportsman by the Norfolk Sports Club. Miller also presided over one of the more historic years in NSU lore in 2011-12. An NSU-record six Spartan teams won MEAC titles, which included the fi rst-ever championships for the football, men’s basketball and women’s bowling teams during

their Division I tenure. The men’s basketball team made its mark in NCAA Tournament history by scoring an upset of No. 2 seed Mis-souri in the second round of the NCAA West Region in March of 2012.

Miller is no stranger to winning. His career record as baseball coach was 718-543-3. Miller fi rst started making a name for himself as a player at NSU from 1965-68. He hit .380 as a sophomore; .438 with eight doubles, two triples, three homers and 27 RBI as a junior; and .406 as a senior, when he became the fi rst Spartan player to be named an NCAA College Division All-American. Miller was an All-CIAA baseball selection in 1967 and 1968, and led the nation in doubles in 1968.

Miller graduated with a bachelor’s degree in mathematics in 1969. An ROTC member in college, Miller was commissioned a sec-ond lieutenant in the U.S. Army after he graduated. While on active duty, Miller was signed by the Minnesota Twins. Miller returned to his alma mater in 1972 as an assistant to baseball coach Bob Andrews. The next season, Miller inherited the head-coaching job, which he held until early in 2005.

Miller is the winningest baseball coach in CIAA history, having led the Spartans to a 584-374-3 record in their years in the league. Miller’s ledger in the CIAA includes 17 conference championships, including seven in a row from 1987-93; 12 post-season appearanc-es; 15 CIAA Coach of the Year awards; six All-Americans and 22 players signed to pro contracts. He also won the 1980 NAIA District 19 Coach of the Year award after his team won the District 19 title. Between 1993-97, Miller won fi ve consecutive Louisville Slugger Awards, given to championship coaches. He was one of a select few baseball coaches to receive the award for fi ve consecutive years.

In 1997, NSU honored Miller by building the Marty L. Miller Baseball Field. One year later, Miller led NSU to the MEAC Tourna-ment championship round in the Spartans’ fi rst year in the league. He was named the MEAC Coach of the Year in 2000, and NSU reached the championship round again in 2001.

The year 2003 was also a special one for Miller. In February, Miller was inducted into the CIAA’s John B. McLendon Hall of Fame. In May, Miller earned his 700th career win with the Spartans when sixth-seeded NSU upset No. 2 Delaware State in the MEAC tournament. In August, Miller the player was honored as one of eight inductees into the Norfolk State University Athletics Founda-tion Sports Hall of Fame.

Miller was also inducted into the Hampton Roads African American Sports Hall of Fame in 2010. He was also chosen to serve in March 2011 on the Hampton Roads Sports Hall of Fame Commit-tee and is also a member of the Virginia Sports Hall of Fame Hon-ors Court. In October 2012, Miller was inducted into the Hampton Roads Sports Hall of Fame.

Miller, a native of Danville, Va., is a current member and past president of the Norfolk Sports Club. He and his wife Liz have one son, Marty Eric, a former NSU outfi elder.

Marty MillerDirector of Athletics

W W W. N S U S PA R TA N S. C O M6

ABOUT NSU NORFOLK STATE UNIVERSITY 2012-13WOMEN’S TRACK & FIELD MEDIA GUIDE

For more information on Norfolk State University, its academic programs and

community service projects, research, campus facilities, and other amenities,

please call the Offi ce of Communications and Marketing at (757) 823-8373.

Norfolk State University was founded in 1935 as a beacon of hope to the region’s youth—especially within the African American commu-nity. Brought to life in the midst of the Great Depression, the university was named the Norfolk Unit of Virginia Union University at its founding and was one of the last historically black institutions established in the Commonwealth of Virginia. By 1969, Norfolk State University began its transformation into a vibrant, independent college and was bestowed university status in 1979. More than 75 years later, the University remains a source of inspi-ration for those who aspire to fulfi ll their dreams. A four-year public insti-tution, NSU is located in the dynamic Hampton Roads region of Virginia and is close to the Virginia Beach oceanfront and downtown Norfolk. Additionally, NSU is one of the nation’s largest HBCUs with an enrollment of nearly 7,000 students and a faculty of nearly 300, with more than half holding terminal degrees. The University off ers a variety of academic programs within the following schools and colleges: College of Liberal Arts; the College of Science, Engineering and Technology; the Honors College; the School of Business; the School of Education; the Ethelyn R. Strong School of Social Work; the School of Extended Learning; and the Graduate School. NSU off ers 32 undergraduate, 16 master’s and three doctoral degrees.

Expanding Learning Capacity

Norfolk State University has been recognized as one of the top 25 producers of cyber security professionals, according to US Black Engineer and Information Technology Magazine. Additionally, the University has also been named in recent years as one of the top 50 producers of African-American Ph.D. recipients, according to Inside Higher Ed. The fi nding, based on a National Science Foundation report, says that Histor-ically Black Colleges and Universities are graduating a growing share of African Americans who go on to earn Ph.D.s in science and engineering. NSU’s Dozoretz National Institute for Mathematics and Applied Sciences (DNIMAS), established in 1985, is specifi cally geared toward increasing the number of Ph.D.s in science technology, engineering, and mathe-matics. More than 50 percent of DNIMAS scholars have earned advanced degrees. Norfolk State University also has been named a “military friendly school,” which means that the university is successful at off ering the nec-essary fi nancial benefi ts, fl exibility in scheduling and support programs to service members. Most recently, the university entered into an agree-ment with the U.S. Navy to provide the bachelor’s degree in interdisci-plinary studies through the Navy College Program Distance Learning Partnership coordinated through the School of Extended Learning. The Navy’s distance learning program is vital in providing sailors with the best possible options for obtaining higher educational degrees wherever they may be assigned. Now, sailors may apply to Norfolk State University to obtain a degree in interdisciplinary studies in an online environment. Our School of Extended Learning expertly places the convenience of the digital age at the fi ngertips of learners. The School works with the academic and administrative units of the University by serving as an extension of the NSU campus. It off ers coursework through distance education, continuing education and certifi cate programs. Additional degree programs include Master of Arts degrees in Pre-Elementary Edu-cation, Elementary Education (Pre-K-6), Pre-Elementary Early Education with an emphasis on Childhood Special Education and Urban Education, as well as graduate certifi cates in Transition Special Education and Bilin-gual Special Education.

Building for the Future

The University is building for the future with the construction of a three-story, 132,000-square-foot library that houses library services, archives and a 24/7 Internet café, individual and group study rooms, a multimedia project room, virtual conference room, a 24-hour study area, exercise equipment, and an African art gallery. One of the new library’s distinguishing features is a 90-foot high glass atrium that provides areas

to display current student and faculty artwork, and also serves as a gathering area for multi-purpose events. The new library provides the latest technology and create an exciting study and research environ-ment for students. Upon completion in December 2011, the library has also reshaped the look of the campus. The old library was razed and a beautiful quadrangular pedestrian mall between the new library and the New Student Center was created. From the days of the Great Depression to the Digital Age, Norfolk State University continues to achieve. Today, NSU remains an active and vital component of the Hampton Roads region, the Commonwealth of Virginia and the nation. Our faculty researchers have forged partnerships that have created cutting-edge virtual learning environments and the world’s smallest laser - both of which will have an impact on our every-day lives. Our graduates establish and lead corporations, distinguish themselves in their industries and fi elds of study and provide humanitar-ian aid around the world. Norfolk State University has played a vital role in our community in the past, is serving in a critical role today, and will continue to be an academic leader in the future.

Behold the Green and Gold! ®

Location: Historic Norfolk, Va.; 134-acre campus 2 miles from downtown NorfolkExtended

Campus Center: Virginia Beach Higher Education CenterHistory: • Founded in 1935 as the Norfolk Unit of Virginia Union University • Became the independent Norfolk Polytechnic College in 1942 • Became an independent institution in 1969 • Granted University status in 1979Enrollment: 7,100President: Tony Atwater, Ph.D.Faculty: 274 full-time equivalentDegree Off erings: 32 bachelor’s degrees; 16 master’s degrees; 3 doctoral degreesAthletics: 15 intercollegiate teams (Division I; competing in Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference – MEAC)Student

Organizations: 125Website: www.nsu.edu

NORFOLK STATE UNIVERSITY

QUICK FACTS

W W W. N S U S PA R TA N S. C O M 7

Sept. 7, 1935 – Samuel Fischer Scott appointed Director of Norfolk Unit of Virginia Union University

Sept. 18, 1935 – Norfolk Unit of Virginia Union University opened on the second fl oor of the Hunton Branch YMCA Building on Brambleton Avenue

June 1938 – Lyman Beecher Brooks became Director of Norfolk Unit of VUU

March 1942 – The Norfolk Polytechnic College was chartered to take over the functions and assets of the Norfolk Unit of Virginia Union University.

Feb. 29, 1944 – The Norfolk Division of Virginia State College was established by an act of the General Assembly

April 25, 1951 – The City of Norfolk transferred the deed of the Memorial Park Golf Course to the college as a permanent site

Sept. 1955 – The College moved into a new multipurpose administration classroom building on Corprew Avenue

Sept. 1956 – Norfolk Division of Virginia State College changed from a two-year junior college to a four-year, degree granting institution

1960 – James D. Gill Gymnasium erected

1969 – Mills Godwin Jr. Student Center opened

Feb. 1, 1969 – Norfolk State College emerged as an independent, four-year institution

1970 – Twin Towers dormitories erected

1972 – Lyman Beecher Brooks Library erected

1974 – Technology Center opened

May 1975 – College granted its fi rst master’s degree

June 1975 – President Lyman B. Brooks retired

July 1, 1975 – Harrison Benjamin Wilson became 2nd president

1977 – Samuel F. Scott men’s dormitory opened

1979 – Norfolk State became a University

Aug. 1979 – Academic programs re-organized into nine schools

1982 – Joseph G. Echols Hall erected

1984 – Harrison B. Wilson administration building erected

1996 – L. Douglas Wilder Performing Arts Center erected

July 1997 – Marie V. McDemmond became 3rd president

May 2000 – First independent doctoral degree awarded

2005 – Alvin J. Schexnider became interim president

July 2006 – Carolyn W. Meyers became 4th president

2007 – The Marie V. McDemmond Center for Applied Research dedicated

2010 – University celebrated its 75th anniversary

April 22, 2011 – Tony Atwater became 5th president

March 15, 2012 – New Lyman Beecher Brooks Library dedicated

Norfolk State University TimelineTimeline

Lyman Beecher Brooks Library erectedppointed Director 1972 Lyman Bee

NORFOLK STATE UNIVERSITY 2012-13WOMEN’S TRACK & FIELD MEDIA GUIDENSU TIMELINE

W W W. N S U S PA R TA N S. C O M8

NORFOLK STATE UNIVERSITY 2012-13WOMEN’S TRACK & FIELD MEDIA GUIDE

NSU Athletics Director Marty L. Miller proclaimed that the 2011-12 school year would be “The Year of the Spartan” even before it began. His words proved to be prophetic as Spartan athletic teams brought home six (6) Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference titles – the biggest yearly haul in school history.

The NSU men’s cross country and track and fi eld programs captured a yearly sweep of the MEAC titles in cross country, indoor and outdoor track and fi eld for the fourth consecutive year. But that is nothing new – led by head coach Kenneth Giles, the

Spartan men’s cross country and track programs have secured 25 MEAC championships in the last 13 years.

Meanwhile, the Spartan football team surprised the so-called experts by winning its fi rst-ever MEAC title and reaching the Division I FCS playoff s for the fi rst time. Coach Pete Adrian’s team fi nished 9-2 and reached as high as

No. 19 in the national FCS rankings, the highest in the history of the program.

But the NSU men’s basketball team was the squad that left an indeli-ble mark not only in school record books, but in NCAA lore. Coach Anthony Evans’ Spartans won their fi rst-ever MEAC title in early March. One week later, NSU pulled one of the biggest stunners in modern day NCAA Tournament history by becoming just the fi fth No. 15 seed to ever defeat a No. 2 seed, shocking Missouri 86-84 in

a West Region second-round game. The Spartans fi nished the year with a school Division I-era record 26 victories.

Just two days after the Missouri upset, NSU secured yet another MEAC title as Wilhelmenia Harrison’s women’s bowling team also captured its fi rst-ever crown.

Spartan athletes and coaches also had a banner year individually:• Seven athletes earned All-America honors• Three athletes won MEAC Player of the Year awards• Four athletes won MVP accolades at their respective MEAC championship events• Two coaches (Wilhelmenia Harrison, Pete Adrian) were named MEAC Coach of the Year• Three coaches (Harrison, Kenneth Giles, Anthony Evans) were named

Most Outstanding Coach at their respective MEAC championship events• And two coaches (Adrian, Evans) earned national Coach of the Year hon-

ors by at least one organization

Indeed, 2011-12 was defi nitely a year to “Behold!”

THE YEAR OF THE SPARTAN

W W W. N S U S PA R TA N S. C O M 9

NORFOLK STATE UNIVERSITY 2012-13WOMEN’S TRACK & FIELD MEDIA GUIDESAMPLE TEXTATHLETICS HIGHLIGHTS NORFOLK STATE UNIVERSITY 2011-12WOMEN’S TRACK & FIELD MEDIA GUIDE

W W W. N S U S PA R TA N S. C O M1 0

NORFOLK STATE UNIVERSITY 2012-13WOMEN’S TRACK & FIELD MEDIA GUIDEATHLETICS HIGHLIGHTS

The Norfolk State University intercollegiate athletics program has experienced unprecedented success at the NCAA Division I level during the past seven years (2005-12). This period of progress has been highlighted by improvements in virtually every area critical to transforming the NSU athletics program into a highly competitive program that will consistently challenge for Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference (MEAC) and NCAA Division I championships. The catalyst for these advancements has been Marty Miller, who was appointed athletics director at NSU in December 2004 and will continue to lead the Spartan athletic program for at least the next fi ve years. Miller be-lieves that the mission of the athletics program is an extension of the mission of Norfolk State University. He places an emphasis on areas that impact the welfare of student-athletes. Improving graduation rates, gender equity, and the retention of student-athletes are equally – if not more – important, than winning conference and national championships. However, the initiatives designed to enhance the student-athlete experi-ence and improve the overall administrative process have been successful due to the achievements of the teams and individual student-athletes. Perhaps the biggest achievement came in early 2009, when the athletics department was recertifi ed to receive NCAA accreditation for the next 10 years. By achieving certifi cation status, NSU is considered to be operating its athletics program in substantial conformity with operating principles adopted by the NCAA’s Division I membership. Numerous staff and coaching hires have been made to enhance the de-partment’s effi cacy. New personnel have been hired in the areas of academic support, compliance, business operations and development to meet the growing demand in those departments. Head coaches have been hired in every sport since Miller took over, with great success across the board.

Pete Adrian has orchestrated the steady progress of the football team, which culminated in the program’s fi rst-ever MEAC title and NCAA Division I playoff appearance in 2011. Men’s basketball coach Anthony Evans kept the banner year for NSU rolling after leading the Spartans to the MEAC champi-onship in 2012 and perhaps the most defi ning moment in the history of NSU athletics: an upset of No. 2 seed and nationally-ranked No. 3 Missouri in the NCAA tournament second round.

Kenneth Giles’ cross country and track teams have dominated the MEAC, amassing 20 conference titles since 2005, while Wilhelmenia Harrison led NSU to its fi rst-ever bowling champion-ship in 2012.

Claudell Clark, meanwhile, helped guide the baseball team to a runner-up fi nish at the MEAC Championships in 2008 and 2011. Brandon Duvall was named the MEAC Coach of the Year in 2010 after guiding the volleyball team to its best overall and MEAC record in Division I. Heidi Cavallo led the Spartan softball team to just its second winning conference season during the MEAC era in 2012. The accomplishments of NSU stu-dent-athletes in the classroom since 2005 have been equally impressive. The number of student-athletes annu-ally named to the MEAC Commission-er’s All-Academic Team has steadily increased the last several years, reaching a record 67 in 2011-12.

Academics• Had 79 student-athletes earn a spot on the Athletics Director’s Honor Roll (min. GPA:

3.0) in the spring of 2012• Had record 67 student-athletes (sophomores or higher) named to MEAC All-Aca-

demic team (min. GPA: 3.0) in 2011-12• Increased student-athlete graduation success rate from 40% to 62% • Won the inaugural Division I Football Championship Subdivision Academic Progress

Rate Award for having the MEAC’s highest cumulative APR for three straight years from 2008-09 to 2010-11

• David Kemboi was one of 50 student-athletes nationwide named to the 2006-07 Division I Men’s Cross Country All-Academic team as selected by the United States Track and Field and Cross Country Coaches Association (USTFCCCA)

• Thea Aspiras named to the 2010-11 National Tenpin Coaches Association (NTCA) All-Academic First Team

• Women’s tennis earned the Intercollegiate Tennis Association (ITA) All-Academic Team Award in 2011 and ‘12 for having a team GPA of at least 3.20; 3 players each year named ITA Scholar-Athletes for having a GPA of 3.50 or better

Program Awards• Won the last eight MEAC men’s all-sports

awards (Talmadge Layman Hill Award) and earned the NSU Athletics Depart-ment $185,000 from 2005-12

• Won both the football and men’s basket-ball MEAC Championships in 2011-12, just the second time in 20 years a MEAC school pulled off the feat

• Had the baseball, men’s basketball and football teams all post winning records in 2007-08 for the fi rst time in the Division I era

Facilities• Added two new state-of-the-art Daktronics video boards to Dick Price Stadium

(spring/summer 2012)• Resurfaced the NSU Tennis Complex and installed new nets (summer 2012)• Renovated and resurfaced the Dick Price Stadium track (summer 2010)• Renovated the Joseph G. Echols Memorial Hall basketball arena to add new chair-

back seating (August 2008 and 2009)• Completed refurbishing of women’s sports locker rooms in Gill Gymnasium (fall

2008)• Completed softball fi eld renovations in 2007-08, including construction of a press

box, dugouts and restrooms• Replaced the outfi eld wall at Marty L. Miller Baseball Field (summer 2007)• Renovated weight room in Gill Gymnasium in 2005, increasing size of existing room

and purchasing new equipment

Nor folk State University

Athletics Seven-Year Highlights(2005-Present)

The following is a list of accomplishments and improvements

the NSU athletics program has experienced since 2005.

Basketball player Rodney McCauley (left) and bowler

Jessica Overton (right) were named the 2012 Male

and Female Scholar Ath-letes of the Year, respective-ly, at the department’s end-of-year awards ceremony.

McCauley and Overton were two of the record 67 student-athletes named

to the MEAC All-Academic Team for 2011-12.

Kenneth Giles has led the men’s track and fi eld team to seven

straight indoor/outdoorconference title sweeps

W W W. N S U S PA R TA N S. C O M 1 1

NORFOLK STATE UNIVERSITY 2012-13WOMEN’S TRACK & FIELD MEDIA GUIDESAMPLE TEXTATHLETICS HIGHLIGHTS NORFOLK STATE UNIVERSITY 2012-13WOMEN’S TRACK & FIELD MEDIA GUIDE

Football• Won school’s fi rst-ever MEAC title in 2011 and made fi rst NCAA Division I FCS playoff appearance• Went 9-3 overall in 2011, the most wins in the D-I era and most for any Spartan football team since going 10-2 in 1984• Off ensive lineman Blake Matthews and kicker Ryan Estep named to Associated Press FCS All-America second team in 2011• Quarterback Chris Walley named 2011 MEAC Co-Off ensive Player of the Year, NSU’s fi rst ever; Matthews named MEAC Off ensive Lineman of the Year• Won three diff erent HBCU national titles in 2011 – the Boxtorow.com, HSRN and American Sports Wire Black College Football polls• Had three straight winning seasons in 2009 (7-4), 2010 (6-5) and 2011 (9-3) for fi rst time since the mid-90s• A record 10 NSU players were named All-MEAC in both 2007 and 2011, and 38 overall named All-MEAC from 2007-11• Pete Adrian named NSU’s fi rst MEAC Football Coach of the Year in 2007 and then again in 2011• Adrian also named FCS Coach of the Year by College Sporting News in 2011

• Earned school’s fi rst-ever national FCS national ranking in 2007 and reached as high as 18th in 2011 in the FCS Coaches Poll

• Had its fi rst NFL draftee since 1996 when Don Carey was selected by the Cleveland Browns in the sixth round of the 2009 draft

Cross Country• Won 11 of the last 12 MEAC men’s titles, including a conference-record seven

straight from 2000-06• Won the school’s fi rst-ever MEAC women’s title in 2009• Sent a runner to the NCAA Division I National Cross Country Championship for the

fi rst time in school and MEAC history in 2006 (David Kemboi)• Head coach Kenneth Giles named MEAC Men’s Most Outstanding Coach for 11 of

the past 12 seasons

Men’s Basketball• Won school’s fi rst-ever MEAC Championship in 2012 and earned fi rst NCAA Division I

Tournament berth• As No. 15 seed, defeated No. 2 seed Missouri in NCAA second round, just the fi fth time

ever a 15th seed knocked off a 2nd seed in the NCAA Tournament• Finished the year with a 26-10 record, a Division I-era wins record and the most victories

at NSU since 1994-95• Kyle O’Quinn named MEAC Player of the Year, MEAC Defensive Player of the Year, MEAC

Tournament Most Outstanding Performer and the Lou Henson Award winner (national mid-major player of the year) in 2012

• Head coach Anthony Evans named the Clarence “Big House” Gaines Award winner as top minority basketball coach in Division I

• O’Quinn taken with the 49th overall pick in 2012 NBA Draft by the Orlando Magic, the fi rst MEAC player drafted since 1998 and the fi rst NSU player since 1988

• Nominated for an ESPY Award for Best Upset for the win over Missouri

Track & Field

• Became fi rst MEAC men’s track program to win both the indoor and outdoor confer-

ence championships for seven consecutive academic years (2006-12)• Sprinter Sean Holston placed sixth at the 2012 NCAA indoor championships, earn-

ing fi rst-team All-America honors• Holston, Champagne Bell, Aramis Massenburg and Darris Shelton earned honorable

mention All-America honors at the NCAA outdoor championship in 2011, while Keith Nkrumah did the same in 2012

• Won the school’s fi rst MEAC women’s indoor championship in 10 years in 2010, and fi rst outdoor title in 10 years in 2011

• Had two athletes (Marlon Woods, Corey Vinston) earn NCAA Division I All-American status in the same championship meet for the fi rst time in school history in 2009

• Head coach Kenneth Giles named MEAC Men’s Most Outstanding Coach 14 times

Bowling• Won school’s fi rst-ever MEAC title in 2012• Wilhelmenia Harrison named MEAC Coach of the Year in both 2011 and 2012• Topped previous school record of 67 wins with a 91-40 campaign in 2011-12• Thea Aspiras named to the All-MEAC fi rst team in both 2011 and 2012, a fi rst for

NSU, while Chelsea Krall earned second team honors in 2012• Aspiras also named to the NTCA All-America second team and the MEAC Rookie of

the Year in 2011, each a fi rst for NSU• Reached as high as No. 10 in the national rankings in 2011-12, topping the previous

best of 16th in 2010-11

Media Exposure• Made numerous appearances on national media outlets, including ESPN and CBS,

as well as in national newspapers such as The New York Times following upset of Missouri in NCAA men’s basketball tournament

• Received over 90,000 web site visits in March 2012, a record for a single month for www.nsuspartans.com

• Averaged over 29,000 web site visits per month during the 2010-11 academic year, the best one-year period in school history

• Conducted live video streaming for all basketball, football, baseball, softball and volleyball home games in 2011-12 for the fi rst time ever

• Redesigned www.nsuspartans.com in the summer of 2010• Conducted live video streaming for the fi rst time in 2009-10, broadcasting 16 athlet-

ic events on the department’s web site• Began airing a weekly radio show, Inside Spartan Sports, on Fox Sports affi liate

WXTG 102.1 FM in January 2009• Had fi ve sporting events televised on ESPN networks (three football games, two

men’s basketball) in 2008-09• Hosted the school’s fi rst two nationally-televised softball games in 2007 and 2008• Had six sporting events televised on ESPN networks (three football games, two

men’s basketball, one softball) in 2007-08, most in school history• Transitioned the department’s web site from the www.nsu.edu domain to the

current www.nsuspartans.com domain in the fall of 2007

NSU became the fi rst MEAC school since 2003 to sweep the MEAC men’s and women’s indoor track and fi eld titles when they accomplished the feat in 2010.

Defensive back Don Carey be-came the fi rst Spartan football player to be drafted in 13 years when the Browns selected him

in the 2009 draft.

W W W. N S U S PA R TA N S. C O M1 2

NORFOLK STATE UNIVERSITY 2012-13WOMEN’S TRACK & FIELD MEDIA GUIDEHAMPTON ROADS

The vibrancy of city life, the charm of the sea-shore, the verdant countryside, the wild preserves and the historic landmarks are just a few of the features found in Hampton Roads. The area, which includes the cities of Norfolk, Virginia Beach, Ches-apeake, Portsmouth, Newport News, Hampton and Suff olk, has a growing population of about 2 million.

There are numerous attractions within each city. Norfolk has its Waterside, a festive marketplace similar to those in Baltimore, St. Louis and Boston. The fi nancial and cultural hub of Virginia, Norfolk is the home of the world’s largest naval installation and serves as headquarters for the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). As a cultural center, its features include the Chrysler Museum, the Douglas MacArthur Memorial, the Nauticus National Maritime Center, the Virginia Symphony and several theater companies, including Norfolk State University’s own NSU Players.

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NORFOLK STATE UNIVERSITY 2012-13WOMEN’S TRACK & FIELD MEDIA GUIDESAMPLE TEXTHAMPTON ROADS NORFOLK STATE UNIVERSITY 2012-13WOMEN’S TRACK & FIELD MEDIA GUIDE

Besides a long and beautiful coastline, Virginia Beach off ers numerous landmarks, including the fi rst landing cross (where the fi rst settlers touched the shores of the New World in 1607, 13 years before the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth Rock); The Adam Thor-oughgood House, probably the oldest brick house in America, dating back to 1636; and Mount Trashmore, a project that turned a mountain of solid waste into an innovative recreational compound with bicycle trails, picnic areas, and soapbox derby and cross-country courses around two lakes used for a myriad of recre-ational water sports. The unique 17-mile Chesapeake Bay Bridge Tunnel links Virginia Beach with Virginia’s Eastern Shore and a national wildlife refuge.

The Virginia Sports Hall of Fame and the Children’s Museum are located in Portsmouth. Newport News has the Mariners’ Museum, which houses one of the world’s most extensive nautical collections, while Hampton is home of the Air and Space Museum.

NSU is just off Interstate 264 within walking dis-tance of downtown and other major area attractions, such as the Scope, Chrysler Hall and MacArthur Center Mall.

Hampton Roads has three daily newspapers, one African-American weekly, three independent TV sta-tions and more than 30 radio stations.

W W W. N S U S PA R TA N S. C O M1 4

NORFOLK STATE UNIVERSITY 2012-13WOMEN’S TRACK & FIELD MEDIA GUIDEATHLETICS FOUNDATION

A BRIEF OVERVIEW

Norfolk State University’s proud legacy of achievement in collegiate athletics began at the NCAA Division II level as a member of the Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association (CIAA). NSU was one of the league’s most dominant programs, winning championships in every sport the school off ered. In 1997, NSU joined the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference (MEAC), one of only two NCAA Division I conferences comprised of historically black colleges and universities. Other conference members include: Bethune-Cookman University, Coppin State University, Delaware State University, Florida A&M University, Hampton University, Howard Univer-sity, the University of Maryland Eastern Shore, Morgan State University, North Carolina A&T State University, North Carolina Central University, Savannah State University and South Carolina State University. NSU made an immediate impression in the conference in 2000-01, winning the Talmadge Layman Hill Award – presented annually to the member whose men’s teams compile the most points based on team fi nishes in conference competition. The Spartans have won the Talmadge Layman Hill Award each year from 2005-12. In all, NSU has won men’s conference titles in basketball, cross country, football, and indoor and outdoor track. The NSU women have won MEAC championships in cross country, indoor and outdoor track, basketball and bowling during their tenure in the conference.

Why Support Norfolk State University Athletics?• NSU competes at the nation’s highest level of intercollegiate athlet-ics – National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I – and is a member of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference (MEAC).• The need to increase funding for scholarships for deserving stu-dent-athletes motivated by achievement both in athletics and academ-ics.• Improvements and maintenance of equipment and facilities enable NSU student-athletes to perform at their full potential.• A competitive athletics program contributes to the enjoyment of the collegiate experience.

Total Sports - 15

Women’s SportsBasketballBowling

Cross CountryIndoor Track & Field

Outdoor Track & FieldSoftballTennis

Volleyball

Men’s SportsBaseball

BasketballCross Country

FootballIndoor Track & Field

Outdoor Track & FieldTennis

...........................................................................

Norfolk State University

Athletics Foundation

Board of DirectorsFran Steward, President

Merv Pitchford, Vice PresidentJohn Warren, Treasurer

Craig Cotton, Executive DirectorMarty Miller, Athletics Director

Michael K. BrownCurtis Maddox*Langston PowellZackary Rogers

James Satterfi eld*Donna Sample Smith

Joel Wagner

* - Emeritus

W W W. N S U S PA R TA N S. C O M 1 5

The NSU Strength and Conditioning Program is administered by Reese Bridgman, NSU’s assistant AD for strength and conditioning. Bridgman has 28 years of coaching experience in athletics at the high school, college and professional levels. His resume includes a seven-year stint as head strength and conditioning coach at Central Florida, where he worked with future profes-sionals such as Daunte Culpepper, Asante Samuel and Brandon Marshall of the NFL and Mike Maroth of Major League Baseball. The NSU Strength and Conditioning Program exists to provide all NSU student-athletes with scientifi cally-sound performance-enhancement programs in the areas of strength, speed, explosive power and sports nutrition. Programs are conducted in the NSU athletics weight room, a 2,000-square foot facility in Gill Gymnasium that houses the equipment and accessories needed to devel-op championship-level NCAA Division I athletes. The strength and conditioning program also uses the NSU athletics department’s game and practice fi elds.The program develops athletes by means of function-al strength training for strength and power utilizing Olympic lifts, power lifts, plyometric drills and additional supplementary lifts, particularly dumbbell exercises. The program trains speed in both linear and change-of-direc-tion movement. Athletes are taught recovery by develop-ing good eating habits that are appropriate for athletes training at the Division I level and by emphasizing the correct amount of rest. Athletes are trained in a team setting as a part of a year-round program. Athletes train two times per week in season and three to four times per week during the remainder of the year with a break between semesters and at the end of their sport’s season. Their annual plan consists of in-season, off season, preseason and holiday

programs. All training schedules are administered within NCAA guidelines for contact time with athletes in both required programs and voluntary programs. Part of the emphasis within the NSU Strength and Conditioning Program is on the student-athlete develop-ing lifetime character qualities of teamwork, discipline, dedication, determination, respect for others and respect for hard work. Student-athletes are also expected to de-velop an interest in lifetime fi tness. “The Strength and Conditioning Program at NSU tries to remember that our athletes came to us to participate in and excel in their given sport, not to become weight lifters or body builders,” Bridgman says. “For this reason, we approach strength and conditioning as a means to an end, and we encourage our athletes to learn from and enjoy the journey.”

STRENGTH & CONDITIONING NORFOLK STATE UNIVERSITY 2012-13WOMEN’S TRACK & FIELD MEDIA GUIDE

W W W. N S U S PA R TA N S. C O M1 6

NORFOLK STATE UNIVERSITY 2012-13WOMEN’S TRACK & FIELD MEDIA GUIDEATHLETICS ADMINISTRATION

SHERIE CORNISH GORDON

Sherie Cornish Gordon is en-tering her seventh year in athletics administration at Norfolk State for the 2012-13 school year, currently serving as the senior associate ath-letics director for administration and as the department’s senior woman administrator.

Gordon’s primary responsibilities are supervising fi ve sports (bowling, volleyball, softball, men’s tennis and women’s tennis), managing the department’s budget, supervision of the equipment and facility operations, oversight of game-day management and providing strategic guidance for the department’s marketing, promotions and development initiatives. Gordon came to NSU in 2005 after serving as a se-nior administrative assistant at American University. She also served as an athletics department intern at Maryland in 2004-05 and as an assistant women’s basketball coach at her alma mater, Morgan State, during the 2003-04 school year. Gordon is currently a participant in the NCAA Path-ways Program (formerly NCAA Fellows Program). She is a 2006 graduate of the National Association of Collegiate Women Athletics Administrators’ (NACWAA) Institute for Administrative Advancement, a 2009 graduate of the NCAA Leadership Institute for Ethnic Minority Males and Females and a 2010 and 2011 participant in the NACDA Mentoring Institute. In addition, Gordon is a member of NACWAA, the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics (NACDA), the Collegiate Athletics Business Management Association (CABMA) and the Minority Opportunities Athletics Association (MOAA). She currently serves on the program committee for CABMA. Gordon was an accomplished basketball player at Morgan State, where she scored more than 1,000 career points. She was a four-year letterwinner and was a team captain her fi nal three seasons. A native of Severna Park., Md., Gordon earned her bachelor’s degree in sports administration from Morgan State in 2002 and her master’s in sports management from Temple in 2004. Gordon currently resides in Suff olk, Va., with her husband, Ross, and son, Ethan.

CRAIG COTTON

Craig Cotton enters his 12th year as associate athletics director for external operations in 2012-13 at Norfolk State. He is also in his seventh year as executive director of the NSU Athletics Foundation. Cotton joined the NSU athletics staff after serving as marketing manager

at Howard University. Cotton’s primary duties at NSU include developing and managing marketing and public relations projects with particular focus on the “Team Spartan Corporate Partners Program,” a comprehensive sports marketing initiative designed to attract corporate sponsorship and funding for the athletics program. Previously, Cotton worked for seven years in the Delaware State Public Relations Offi ce. He arrived at the Dover, Del.,-based institution in 1992 and served as sports information director for two years before his ap-pointment as the university’s director of public relations and marketing in 1994. From 1988-1992, Cotton was associate director of sports information at Temple. He worked for seven years (1981-1988) as sports information director and adminis-trative assistant to the director of intercollegiate athletics at Maryland Eastern Shore. Cotton was also was a press operations manager for the United States Olympic Committee (USOC) at the 1996 Summer Games in Atlanta, Ga.; 1995 Pan American Games in Mar del Plata, Argentina; and the 1994 U.S.

Olympic Festival in St. Louis, Mo. Cotton is a native of Greensboro, N.C., and a 1980 graduate of North Carolina A&T State, where he earned a bachelor’s degree in English-mass communications. He received the M.Ed. degree at Temple in 1995. Cotton and his wife, Cynthia, reside in Norfolk, Va.

KAREN HOLMES

Karen Holmes begins her fourth year on staff in the Norfolk State ath-letics department in 2012-13. As the associate athletics director for mar-keting and corporate development, her primary responsibilities are to plan, coordinate and execute athlet-ic fundraising and outreach events

and to recruit corporate sponsors for the department. Prior to NSU, Holmes served as the foundation man-ager at the Norfolk Convention & Visitors Bureau. She was responsible for planning and directing the foundation’s operations to include fundraising, staffi ng, budgeting and research. Holmes has also held positions as a business account representative at Opportunity, Inc., in Norfolk and as a se-nior marketing consultant in television and radio. Holmes is a member of the National Association of Collegiate Women Athletics Administrators (NACWAA), National Association of Athletic Development Directors (NAADD), National Association of Collegiate Marketing Administra-tors (NACMA) Hampton Roads Chamber of Commerce and the Association of Fundraising Professionals (AFP). Holmes also serves as the MEAC’s NAADD representative. Holmes, a native of Philadelphia, Pa., graduated magna cum laude with a bachelor’s degree in interdis-ciplinary studies from NSU in 1998. She is also a 2010 graduate of the NACWAA’s Institute for Administrative Advancement.

ALISHA TUCKER

Alisha Tucker is entering her seventh year working in the Norfolk State athletics department during the 2012-13 season. She is in her third year as the associate athletics director for student services after serving as assistant athletic director for compliance for the previous four

years. In her current role, she provides oversight for the compliance and athletics academic support offi ces. In addition to her duties at NSU, Tucker is involved in administrative activities on the national level. Tucker was appointed to the NCAA’s Amateurism Fact-Finding Committee in 2010 and will serve on that committee until 2014. She also is a member of the NCAA Low Resource Institution working group and NCAA Academic Performance Program Users working group. In addition, Tucker serves as a peer reviewer for the NCAA’s Division I Athletics Certifi cation program. She is also instrumental in working with the NCAA’s Supplemental Support Fund which provided monies to NSU in support of athletics academic initiatives. In 2011, Tucker was selected to participate in the NACWAA (National Association for Collegiate Women Athletics Administrators) Institute for Administrative Advancement (West Class) as well as the NCAA Regional Rules Seminar Advanced Tract. Before coming to Norfolk State, Tucker served as the athletics eligibility specialist and curriculum coordi-nator at Marshall. She began her career as an intern at Michigan State in 2001. She was promoted to assistant compliance coordinator and then earned a promotion to compliance coordinator at MSU in 2003. Tucker has also worked in compliance offi ces at Villanova and Richmond. Tucker earned her bachelor’s degree in English liter-ature and composition from Virginia in 1996. She earned her master’s in sports management from Old Dominion in 2001. A Hampton native, Tucker was a track and fi eld

athlete at Hampton High School. She was also a sprinter and hurdler on the Virginia track team. Tucker was also the liaison between the student-government and the athletics department serving on various committees. She is also a member of Zeta Phi Beta Sorority, Inc., and currently resides in Portsmouth, Va.

DR. CARRAY BANKS JR.

Dr. Carray Banks Jr. is in his third year as Norfolk State’s faculty athletic representative in 2012-13. In this capacity, he represents NSU and its faculty in relationships with the NCAA and MEAC. The faculty’s voice and infl uence regarding inter-collegiate athletics are channeled

primarily through the faculty athletic representative. Banks, who is also the head of the Department of Technology in the College of Science, Engineering and Technology at NSU, has lent his talents to many athletic endeavors at the University. He worked for six years as an academic enhancement counselor for the men’s basket-ball team. In addition, he has served on the NSU Athletics Foundation Sports Hall of Fame selection committee as well as the chairman of the steering committee for NSU’s NCAA recertifi cation in 2008. He was also a staple at home athletic events, serving as member of the offi cial game clock management team at Spartan basketball and football games for several years. Banks supervised the data generation and graphic media advertisements on the graphics display boards during football games at William “Dick” Price Stadium. Banks received his bachelor’s degree in industrial arts education from Elizabeth City State, his master of arts degree from Ball State, and his doctor of philosophy degree in vocational and industrial education from Penn State. Banks resides in Virginia Beach with his wife, Alesia, and daughter, Aliyah.

JACQUELINE NICHOLSON

Jacqueline Nicholson will begin her fi fth year working in the Norfolk State athletics department in 2012-13. She enters her third year as the assistant athletics director for academic support after serving as athletics academic coordinator for her fi rst two years.

Nicholson oversees the operations of the Stu-dent-Athlete Academic Support Offi ce, which includes a team of academic coordinators, interns and tutors. She also advises players on issues of NSU and NCAA eligibility requirements and monitors progress toward their degrees, with specifi c responsibilities toward the men’s basketball, football, men’s track and fi eld and baseball teams. Nicholson oversees the NCAA/CHAMPS Life Skills Program and the Spartan Youth Club and serves as the advisor for the Student Athlete Advisory Committee (SAAC). Nicholson also assists with the submission of NCAA APR reports and APP reports. Previously, Nicholson worked as an academic coor-dinator intern at Virginia Tech during the 2007-08 school year, assisting with the Hokies football team. She also served as a graduate assistant in the university academic advising center at Virginia Tech from 2005-07. Nicholson is a member of the National Association of Collegiate Women Athletics Administrators (NACWAA), a certifi ed member of the National Association of Academic Advisors for Athletics (N4A), and the National Academic Advising Association (NACADA). She serves on the awards committee for NACWAA and the membership committee for N4A. Nicholson is a 2011 graduate of NACWAA’s Institute for Administrative Advancement and a 2011 and ’09 graduate of the N4A Professional Development Institute. A native of Clayton, N.J., Nicholson was a four-year

W W W. N S U S PA R TA N S. C O M 1 7

ATHLETICS ADMINISTRATION NORFOLK STATE UNIVERSITY 2012-13WOMEN’S TRACK & FIELD MEDIA GUIDE

letterwinner for the Hokies track and fi eld team as a sprinter and hurdler. She was a member of the Virginia Tech all-academic team and athletics director’s honor roll. She earned her bachelor’s degree in human development in 2005 and her master’s in educational leadership and policy studies with a focus in higher education in 2007, both from Virginia Tech. Nicholson and her daughter Kylie reside in Chesa-peake, Va.

REESE BRIDGMAN

Reese Bridgman is in his fi fth year as the Spartans’ strength and conditioning coach in 2012-13. Bridgman oversees the strength and conditioning eff orts for all 15 of Norfolk State’s sports programs. Bridgman previously served as the strength and conditioning coach

for the Newport News Apprentice School’s football pro-gram from 2005-07. He was also the Builders defensive coordinator in 2007 after coaching the defensive line in 2005 and 2006. Before moving to the Hampton Roads area, Bridg-man was the head strength and conditioning coach for Central Florida from 1997-2003. Bridgman helped train 20 UCF football players who went on to make active NFL rosters, including the likes of Daunte Culpepper, Asante Samuel, Travis Fisher, Atari Bigby, Steve Edwards, Brandon Marshall and Rashad Jeanty. Other top-notch athletes he helped tutor at UCF include Major League pitcher Mike Maroth. Along with his strength and conditioning expertise, Bridgman has an extensive background as a football coach at the high school, college and professional levels. Bridgman coached two seasons in the Arena Football League. He coached linemen and was the strength coach for the Orlando Predators in their ArenaBowl runner-up season of 1995. The following year, he worked in the same capacity for the Milwaukee Mustangs. Bridgman’s one stint as a head football coach came at East Central Community College in his home state of Mississippi from 1992-94. He has also worked as an assistant football coach at NAIA Georgia Southwestern College and at a pair of Division II schools, Southeast Oklahoma State and East Texas State (now known as Texas A&M-Commerce). He also was men’s track coach during his tenure at Southeastern Oklahoma State. Bridgman, a native of Tylertown, Miss., got his foot-ball coaching start at Hattiesburg (Miss.) Prep in 1983. Bridgman is certifi ed through the National Strength and Conditioning Association (NSCA), the Collegiate Strength and Conditioning Coaches Association (CSCCA), and the National Association of Speed and Explosion (NASE). He was recognized by the NSCA as a Registered Strength and Conditioning Coach with Distinction (RSC-C*D) in 2011. Bridgman received his bachelor’s degree in athletic administration and coaching from Southern Mississippi in 1985. He earned his master’s in physical education with an emphasis in exercise physiology from East Texas State (Texas A&M-Commerce) in 1986. He and his wife, Kelly, reside in Chesapeake.

MEGHAN ANTINARELLI

Meghan Antinarelli begins her third year in 2012-13 as assistant athletics director for sports medicine at NSU. Previously, she served for eight years as an athletic trainer within the department. In her current role, Antinarelli oversees the operations and policies of the sports

medicine department. Antinarelli, who is originally from Wellesley, Mass., received her bachelor’s degree in health and physical education from the University of Massachusetts in 1998. She received her master’s degree in athletic training at

Old Dominion University in 2001. She and her husband, Joseph, live in Suff olk and have one son, Nicholas.

MATT MICHALEC

Matt Michalec enters his 10th full year heading up the Norfolk State sports information depart-ment during the 2012-13 athletic campaign. After serving as sports information director for eight years, Michalec was promoted to assistant athletics director for communica-

tions in the spring of 2011. Michalec is in charge of coordinating media relations eff orts for all 15 of NSU’s athletics programs. His duties include the production of press guides, serving as the media liaison for the athletics department, keeping statistics at all home athletic contests, and maintaining the university athletics web site. In 2012, Michalec earned the District 3 Fred Stabley Writing Award for event coverage from the College Sports Information Directors Association (CoSIDA) for his recap of the NSU football team’s MEAC Champion-ship-clinching win over Morgan State. In 2006, he was named the Black College Baseball SID of the Year. Previously, Michalec worked for two years as a part-time sports reporter and editorial assistant at the Daily Press newspaper in Newport News, Va. Michalec graduated magna cum laude with a bach-elor’s degree in English and a minor in communications from Old Dominion in 2002. He served as sports editor for ODU’s student newspaper during his time there. He got his professional start by working for two years as a sportswriter at the York Town Crier and Poquoson Post newspapers in York County, Va. Michalec is a member of the College Sports Informa-tion Directors of America (CoSIDA) and the Virginia Sports Information Directors (VaSID). Michalec and his wife, Annie, live in Newport News and have a son, Brandon, and daughter, Alexis.

MIKE BELLO

Mike Bello enters his third year as assistant sports information director at Norfolk State in 2012-13 after a pair of internships at Division I institutions. At NSU, he serves as the main contact for volleyball, men’s basketball, softball and bowling. Prior to arriving at NSU, Bello

spent the 2009-10 season at the University of South Florida as a full-time intern, where he was the main contact for track and fi eld and cross country as well as the secondary contact for men’s basketball and football. While at USF, Bello was part of a new initiative there that did away with traditional printed media guides and went to a new, interactive and online format that featured videos, photos and text all intermixed on a web-based platform. His duties at USF also included the upkeep and expansion of records for men’s basketball and football, being in charge of the offi cial stats at football games, assisting with several softball tournaments as well as reg-ular season softball and volleyball games, and numerous multi-media initiatives. During the 2008-09 athletics season, Bello worked as an intern in the sports information offi ce at Harvard. There, he was the main contact for men’s tennis and men’s volleyball while assisting with the promotion of all 41 sports, the most in Division I. One of his main duties at Harvard was running all multi-media initiatives, from streaming home football, basketball and hockey games to cutting up highlight clips following those contests. He also spent the 2007-08 season volunteering with the sports information offi ce at Kent State University as part of his graduate work there. Bello has also volunteered with numerous league

and NCAA sporting events, including the 2009 Women’s Volleyball Final Four, the 2009 NCAA East Regional in men’s basketball, the 2009 Women’s Frozen Four, the 2009 NCAA Lacrosse Championships, the 2008 MAC Basketball Championships, as well as the 2010 BIG EAST Championships in baseball and men’s and women’s golf. He has also volunteered with the Cleveland Glad-iators of the Arena Football League and the Boston Break-ers of the Women’s Professional Soccer League. Bello earned a bachelor of arts degree from Penn State in journalism in 2004, and a master of arts degree in recreation and sports management in 2009 from Kent State.

DERRICK COLES

Derrick Coles starts his third year as the compliance coordinator at Norfolk State in 2012-13. His duties consist of handling many of the day-to-day operations of NSU’s compliance offi ce, specifi cally: mon-itoring playing/practice seasons, monitoring recruiting contacts/calls,

overseeing the National Letter of Intent program, NCAA Special Assistance Fund and MEAC reports. In addition, Coles assists the associate athletics direc-tor with rules education for coaches and student-athletes and serves as a member of the eligibility certifi cation team. Before coming to Norfolk State, Coles was the assistant director of sports information at Hampton. Coles assisted with the day-to-day activities of the Offi ce of Sports Information, as well as serving as the primary media contact for women’s basketball, volleyball, bowling and men’s and women’s tennis. He was also the secondary media contact for football. Before coming to Hampton, Coles spent six years as an assistant within the athletic department at Virginia Union. His duties included assisting the sports information department with programs, media guides and game-day activities, as well as working with the com-pliance offi ce in reviewing academic records, practice schedules and athlete eligibility matters. Coles received his bachelor’s degree in marketing from Virginia Union in 2007 and his master’s in sports management from Virginia State in 2009. He is a native of Richmond, Va., and his volunteer work includes the Special Olympics, the Rudy Johnson Foundation, the James Farrior Foundation, Richmond Sports Backers and Upward Sports Academy. Coles is an active member of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc., and is also a member of the National Association for Athletics Compliance (NAAC).

CHRISTINA RUFFIN

The 2012-13 campaign will mark Christina Ruffi n’s second year working in the Norfolk State athletics department as the athletics academic coordinator. Ruffi n’s responsibilities include advising all NSU student-athletes on issues of NCAA eligibility requirements and

monitoring progress toward their degrees. Ruffi n is also in charge of coordinating the academic support eff orts for women’s basketball, women’s track and fi eld, volleyball and bowling while assisting with football. She also oversees the tutoring and life skills program. Ruffi n came to Norfolk State from Georgia State, where she worked as a tutorial coordinator and football academic graduate assistant from January 2010 through June 2011. Before moving to Atlanta, Christina worked for North Carolina State as a 4-H agent in Hertford Coun-ty, N.C. A native of Smithfi eld, Va., Ruffi n was a four-year letterwinner for the North Carolina A&T women’s tennis team. She was a member of the MEAC and N.C. A&T

W W W. N S U S PA R TA N S. C O M1 8

NORFOLK STATE UNIVERSITY 2012-13WOMEN’S TRACK & FIELD MEDIA GUIDEATHLETICS ADMINISTRATION

all-academic teams. Ruffi n earned her bachelor’s degree in sport science and fi tness management with a concen-tration in business administration from N.C. A&T in 2008 and her master’s in sport administration from Georgia State in 2011.

JESSICA COLE

The 2012-13 season will mark Jessica Cole’s fourth year as the head assistant athletic trainer at Norfolk State. Previously, Cole served as the assistant athletic trainer at Virginia State in Petersburg, Va., for two years from 2007-09. She also worked for two and a half years as the athletic

trainer at Chelsea Community Hospital Outpatient Physi-cal Therapy in her native Chelsea, Mich. Cole earned her bachelor’s degree in athletic train-ing from Florida Southern in 2004. She completed her senior internship with the WNBA’s Detroit Shock in 2004, and earned her master’s degree in exercise physiology from Eastern Michigan in 2008.

NICOLE EMANATO

Nicole Emanato begins her third year as the assistant athletic trainer at Norfolk State in 2012-13. Prior to coming to NSU, Emanato served as the assistant athletic trainer at Chestnut Hill College in Philadel-phia, Pa., for two and a half years. A native of Lykens, Pa., Emanato

received her bachelor’s degree in athletic training with a minor in recreation fi tness management from Lock Haven in 2004. She earned her master’s degree in psychology at Shippensburg in 2007. Emanato currently resides in Virginia Beach, Va. She and her husband, Filiberto, were married in May 2012.

A.J. CORBIN

A.J. Corbin begins his fi rst full year as Coordinator of Athletic Facilities and Operations at Norfolk State in 2012-13. His duties include operational and facility manage-ment, management of game day student and event staff , acting as a liaison with on-campus departments

such as Parking, Campus Police, University Operations and Maintenance, and assisting with bid submission, planning and hosting of assigned NCAA, MEAC and other non-athletic events. Prior to his appointment, Corbin served the previous eight seasons on the NSU baseball coaching staff as an assistant coach. Spartan hitters earned 22 All-MEAC selections during Corbin’s time as an assistant coach. Three of those players, Ernie Banks, Juan Serrano and Brandon Hairston, reached the professional ranks. In 2011, NSU batted .302 as a team, No. 2 in the MEAC. That marked the third straight year in which the team batting average was .300 or better. The 2009 Spartans hit .312 as a team, which ranked second in the MEAC and was the best team average NSU posted under Corbin’s guidance. Corbin made a name for himself as a versatile player at NSU under former coach Marty Miller from 2001-04. Corbin played every position but center fi eld during his Spartan career, but saw most of his time on the mound and at fi rst base. He ranks in the top 10 in school history in games played (185, fourth), at-bats (614, fi fth), doubles (38, ninth), runs batted in (121, tied for ninth) and home runs (17, tied for eighth). Corbin batted .279 for his career and logged a 4.12 ERA in 32 pitching appearances. He was named to the MEAC All-Tournament Team as a junior and senior, lead-ing the Spartans in home runs in both seasons. He was also named to the fi rst team Black College Baseball Elite

squad as a relief pitcher his senior year. A native of Gloucester, Va., Corbin earned his bache-lor’s degree in interdisciplinary studies from NSU in 2004. He is currently pursuing his master’s degree in business administration from the University of Phoenix. Corbin and his wife, Tilya, reside in Norfolk.

WILLIAM WRIGHT

William Wright moves into his 10th year as the head equipment manager at Norfolk State for 2012-13. Previously, Wright worked as parking supervisor in NSU’s Offi ce of Parking and Transportation. He also served as a security offi cer at NSU. A native of Portsmouth, Va.,

Wright is a Norcom High School graduate, where he let-tered in football, basketball and track. He was a member of the 1984 NSU CIAA championship football team. Wright earned his bachelor’s degree in interdisciplin-ary studies with a minor in physical education in 1995. He is currently pursuing his master’s degree in administra-tion. Wright has four daughters, Chiquita, Nikieya, Britney and Ashley; three granddaughters and one grandson.

NATHANIEL BELL, SR.

Nathaniel Bell, Sr., is in his 17th year as assistant equipment man-ager for the Norfolk State athletics department during the 2012-13 season. A native of Norfolk, Va., Bell is a 1994 graduate of Maury High School, were he lettered in football, and wrestling. Bell and his wife,

Paulette, live in Norfolk with their daughter Maeva, and their son, Nathaniel Jr.

JASMINE FRAZIER

Jasmine Frazier was hired in Jan-uary of 2013 to serve as the Travel Coordinator for the Norfolk State athletics department. The former Spartan volleyball player is familiar with the inner workings of NSU athletics after hav-ing served as an intern for a semes-

ter with the department’s business offi ce in the spring of 2012. During that time, Frazier helped prepare budget spreadsheets and purchase and travel requisitions for the athletic teams. As an undergrad, Frazier also served as a tutor to fellow student-athletes for various business and fi nance courses. She was a member of the MEAC All-Academic Team during both of her two years at Norfolk State and fi nished in the top 5 in the NSU record book in single season blocks and in the top 10 in career blocks. Frazier received her bachelor of science degree in fi nance from Norfolk State in May 2012. She was a mem-ber of the Dean’s List and was an Honor’s School Scholar while graduating with a 3.4 GPA.

MICHELLE MacFARLANE

Michelle MacFarlane begins her third year in the Norfolk State athlet-ics department in 2012-13 with the title of Administrative and Program Specialist III. She came to NSU after spending six years at Eastern Virginia Med-ical School as an administrative

assistant. While there, MacFarlane’s duties included composing correspondence, recording and distributed minutes of faculty meetings, handling travel and catering arrangements, organizing and creating fl yers, and fi ling and organizing grades. During her time at EVMS, she also worked for Jack-son Hewitt Tax Service as a tax preparer and instructor of

basic tax course. MacFarlane completed classes at Old Dominion and Kee Business College, where she received her medical assistant diploma prior to working at Eastern Virginia Medical School.

SHIRLEY BROOKS

Shirley Brooks is in her 13th year as the football administrative assis-tant for the Norfolk State athletics department for the 2012-13 season. Brooks oversees all administrative aspects of the program, including coordinating special events, team travel, player fi les and day-to-day

operations. A native of Hertford, N.C., Brooks has three children: Derek, Dietrich and Verletita. She graduated cum laude with her bachelor’s degree in tourism and hospitality management from NSU in 2010.

FRANK TYREE

Frank Tyree enters his second year as an assistant strength and conditioning coach at Norfolk State in 2012-13. Tyree’s responsibilities including designing and implement-ing workouts for men’s and women’s track & fi eld and men’s and women’s basketball, as well as assisting with

workouts for football and baseball. Prior to coming to Norfolk State, Tyree spent three years as a sports performance coach at The Edge Sports Performance Center in Roanoke, Va., from 2008-11. There, Tyree trained middle school, high school, college and inspiring professional athletes in football, basketball, wrestling, baseball and soccer. He also worked with the Cave Spring High School football team that transitioned from 2-8 during his fi rst year to 10-2 the following season, advancing to the Group AA semifi nals. During the 2011 season, Tyree’s off -season training again helped the Knights advance to the Group AA semifi nals. Tyree also volunteered under Master Strength Coaches Bill Gillespie and Dave Williams at Liberty. While at Liberty, Tyree worked with the football, women’s basketball and volleyball programs. He also volunteered under Master Strength Coach Greg Werner while earning his bachelor’s of science in kinesiology at James Madison. During his two years at JMU from 2005-06, Tyree assisted with men’s and women’s track and fi eld, baseball, men’s and women’s soccer, volleyball, men’s and women’s tennis and women’s swimming and diving. Tyree is a native of Rocky Mount, Va., where he taught sixth grade social studies at Benjamin Franklin Middle School after graduating in 2003 from The Uni-versity of Virginia’s College at Wise. While at BFMS, Tyree coached middle school track and fi eld. Tyree is certifi ed through the Collegiate Strength & Conditioning Coaches Association and the National Strength & Conditioning Association. He currently resides in Virginia Beach.

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NORFOLK STATE UNIVERSITY 2012-13WOMEN’S TRACK & FIELD MEDIA GUIDESAMPLE TEXTDIRECTOR OF TRACK & FIELD NORFOLK STATE UNIVERSITY 2012-13WOMEN’S TRACK & FIELD MEDIA GUIDE

Kenneth Giles is in his 10th year as the head men’s track and fi eld coach at NSU and 14th as head men’s cross country coach. He is also in his fourth season as NSU’s director of track and fi eld programs. In that capacity, he oversees the operations of both men’s and women’s track and cross country programs with an empha-sis on recruiting, scheduling and home track meet operations.

Giles led the NSU cross country team to a record seven consecu-tive MEAC titles from 2000-06 and four more from 2008-11. NSU also

captured top-12 fi nishes at the NCAA Southeast Cross Country Regional in 2002 (12th) and 2005 (8th). In the only two seasons under Giles that the Spartans did not win the conference cross country title (1999 and 2007), they fi nished second.

Giles has also guided the Spartans’ track team to seven straight sweeps of the MEAC indoor and outdoor titles (2006-12). As an assistant track coach, he helped the Spartans to one MEAC indoor and one MEAC outdoor championship, both of which came in the 2000-01 school year.

During his tenure at NSU, Giles’ Spartans have won six individu-al MEAC cross country championships and earned three NCAA All-Southeast Region honors. One of those, David Kemboi, became the fi rst NSU and MEAC runner to qualify for the NCAA National Championship race.

Since taking over as head track coach, Giles’ athletes have won 75 individual conference championships and garnered more than 150 All-MEAC honors on the track. More than 30 of his pupils have qualifi ed for the NCAA Regionals and seven have advanced to the NCAA National Championship meet. During his tenure as head coach, Giles has also tutored six athletes who have earned USTFCCCA All-America honors. Both Marlon Woods and Corey Vinston earned All-American honors in the long jump at the 2009 NCAA Indoor Championship. The previous year, Woods was named the 2008 NCAA Southeast Region Field Athlete of the Year. In the last two seasons, four Spartan men have earned honorable mention All-America status: sprinter Sean Holston, long jumper Darris Shelton and hurdlers Keith Nkrumah and Aramis Massenburg.

While Giles served as an assistant, he worked with three other Spartan All-Americans: Desmond Kapofu in the triple jump, Adrian Shears in the high jump and Olympian Christopher Brown in the 400 meters.

For his success in cross country and track, Giles has been named MEAC Most Outstanding Coach 25 times.

Giles coaches from his own running expertise. He was a stand-out 800-meter runner in college. In 1985, Giles earned Junior College All-American status by fi nishing eighth at the indoor national meet in the 800 for Hagerstown (Md.) Community College. He continued his success in that event at the University of North Florida, where he broke the school’s 800-meter indoor record.

At one time, Giles was also the personal coach for Brown, a for-mer Division I All-American sprinter at NSU. Brown, a four-time for his native Bahamas, won a silver medal in the 4x400 relay at the Beijing Summer Olympics in 2008 and a gold in the same event at the London Olympics in 2012.

Giles earned his bachelor’s degree from UNF in 1987. He is married to the former Dr. Jeterfonee Jones, and they have two children: Kenneth Jr. (16) and Ebone Kennya (13).

Kenneth GilesDirector of Programs

Head Men’s Track Coach

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NORFOLK STATE UNIVERSITY 2012-13WOMEN’S TRACK & FIELD MEDIA GUIDEHEAD COACH RONDA BERARD

Ronda Berard is in her eighth year as head women’s track and fi eld and cross country coach at NSU. She also serves as assistant director of track and fi eld programs. In all, Berard is in her 18th year on the coaching staff in the NSU athletics department.

In 2009, Berard helped the Spartan women’s cross country team win its fi rst-ev-er MEAC title. During track

season, the Spartans won their fi rst MEAC indoor title since 2000, and placed second at the conference outdoor championship. The Spartans won another MEAC title in 2011 when they captured the confer-ence outdoor title. Later that same season, one of Berard’s protégés, long jumper Champagne Bell, earned honorable mention All-America honors by advancing to the NCAA National Outdoor Track & Field Championship.

In her fi rst year as head coach, Berard directed the Spartans to runner-up fi nishes in the 2005 MEAC Cross Country Championship and in the 2006 MEAC Indoor Track & Field Championship. NSU has also fi n-ished as runner-up at three other MEAC cross coun-try and track championships during Berard’s tenure.Prior to taking over the reins of the program from long-time coach LaVerne Sweat in 2005-06, Berard served as an assistant coach for the Spartans for 10 seasons. Berard’s tenure as an assistant included two other MEAC championships, the 2000 indoor and 2001 outdoor titles. As an assistant, Berard helped coach two other Division I All-Americans: 400-meter world champion Debbie Dunn, who earned a pair of All-American honors in 2000, and long jumper Tian-na Goldring (2004).

Berard came to NSU from Granby High School, where she was the assistant track coach in 1994-95.Berard earned her bachelor’s degree in criminal justice in 1990 from the University of Southwest-ern Louisiana (now Louisiana-Lafayette). She was a

scholarship track athlete at USL, and also played on the women’s basketball team. Berard was a two-time Sun Belt Conference champion in the discus throw, and at one time held the school’s shot put and dis-cus records.

Berard earned her master’s degree in special edu-cation/severe disabilities rehabilitation counseling from NSU in 1997. She is also a 2008 graduate of the NCAA Women Coaches Academy.

Berard, a Louisiana native, is a Diamond Lifetime member of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc., and is an active member of the organization’s Chesapeake/Virginia Beach Alumnae Chapter. She is married to Patrick Berard Sr. They have two children: Patrick Jr. and Aronji.

Ronda BerardHead Women’s Track

Coach

Berard and Giles with their 2010 MEAC Indoor Most

Outstanding Coach awards.

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Jerry Price is in his third season as an assistant track and fi eld coach at NSU. He will work primarily with the hurdlers.

Price brings 23 years of coaching experience to NSU. Most recently, Price was the head boys and girls track coach at Matoaca High School in Chesterfi eld, Va., from 1999-2009. His teams there won a total of eight district championships. Price coached numerous award-winning athletes at Matoaca. Among them are former Spartans Shanneka Claiborne (sprints) and Aramis Massenburg (hurdles), who

both won MEAC championships in their respective events.

Prior to Matoaca, Price was the head boys and girls track coach at James River High School, also in Chesterfi eld, from 1996-99. He got his start in coaching as an assistant at Leesville High School in Leesville, La., from 1988-90. Price has also served since 2006 as president and head coach of the Diamond Track & Field Club in Colonial Heights, Va.

A standout football player and track athlete in high school, Price graduated from Alabama A&M University with a bachelor’s degree in sociology in 1984.

Jerry PriceAssistant Coach

Serge Bengono is in his seventh season as an assistant track coach at Norfolk State University. He coaches NSU’s sprinters and relay teams.

Bengono came to NSU from Virginia Commonwealth University, where he as-sisted during the 2005 outdoor season.

Bengono boasts a wealth of collegiate and international experience. He is a two-time Summer Olympian, having competed in the 1996 (Atlanta) and 2000 (Sydney) Games for his native Cameroon in the 100 meters and on the 4x100 relay team.

Bengono lettered three years at George Mason University and excelled in the short sprints (60, 100 and 200 meters) and on the 4x100 relay team. He won the IC4A title in the 100 meters as a sophomore in 2001. At one time Bengono owned school records in the 60 meters (6.74), 100 meters (10.25) and as part of the 4x100 relay team (39.65).

Bengono transferred to George Mason from Huston-Tillotson College in Austin, Texas, where he won multiple NAIA All-American honors and also played soccer as a freshman in 2000.

Bengono earned his bachelor’s degree in communication from George Mason in 2003 and his master’s in education with a con-centration in school counseling from Cambridge College.

Harry Freeman returns to the Spartan women’s cross country and track and fi eld program this year as an assistant coach. He will work with the cross country and long-distance runners. Last year, Freeman served as the head men’s and women’s cross country and track and fi eld coach at Clafl in University in Orangeburg, S.C.

Overall, this will be Freeman’s sixth season working on the NSU track and fi eld staff . He was an assistant coach from 2006-11, working fi rst with the men’s program (2006-08) and then the women’s (2008-09) before assist-ing with both from 2009-11. Freeman

had a hand in the NSU men and women capturing 14 MEAC titles during that time.

Freeman was an assistant coach for the St. Augustine’s College men’s and women’s cross country and track programs from

1990-96 and 1998-2005. Freeman guided the Falcons to the 2000 Division II Southeast Region Cross Country title, and was named the regional Coach of the Year that season.

Freeman also helped the Falcons to 16 NCAA Division II indoor and outdoor track team championships during his tenure.

Freeman was also a standout runner for the Falcons from 1979-83. He was the three-time CIAA Cross Country Most Outstanding Performer and was the 1982 NCAA Division II Southeast Regional champion. That same year, Freeman became the fi rst Division II cross country All-American in CIAA history.

Freeman has more than 15 years of experience in directing sum-mer youth programs in the Raleigh, N.C. area and in the Hampton Roads region. He also has a decade of classroom teaching experi-ence, most recently as a physical education teacher in the Newport News Public Schools system.

Freeman earned his bachelor’s degree in physical education from St. Augustine’s in 1983.

Harry FreemanAssistant Coach

Serge BengonoAssistant Coach

ASSISTANT COACHES NORFOLK STATE UNIVERSITY 2012-13WOMEN’S TRACK & FIELD MEDIA GUIDE

W W W. N S U S PA R TA N S. C O M2 2

NORFOLK STATE UNIVERSITY 2012-13WOMEN’S TRACK & FIELD MEDIA GUIDE

Name Ht. Cl. Event Hometown/Previous School

Champagne Bell 5-6 Jr. Jumps/Sprints Norfolk, Va./Booker T. WashingtonVamonie Boddie 5-7 Fr. Hurdles Hampton, Va./Phoebus HSRa’Shaun Combs 5-4 So. Sprints Hampton, Va./Bethel HSTorie Cunningham 5-4 So. Sprints Richmond, Va./Meadowbrook HSTiara Davis 5-10 So. Pole Vault Norfolk, Va./Lake Taylor HSAmethyst Edmond 4-9 Fr. Sprints Hampton, Va./Kecoughtan HSKiara Howell 5-5 Fr. Throws Chesapeake, Va./Grassfi eld HSNavia Howell 5-6 Fr. Throws Chesapeake, Va./Grassfi eld HSJamia Hutto 5-7 Sr. Middle Distance Orlando, Fla./Oak Ridge HSKassandra Irizarry 4-10 So. Long Distance Bridgeton, N.J./Bridgeton HSRayiana Johnson 5-7 Jr./R-So.* Sprints Chester, Pa./Chester HSTori Lewis-Johnson 5-8 So. Middle Distance Hampton, Va./Bowie StateBrittney McCants 5-6 So. Sprints Virginia Beach, Va./Kempsville HSKaydianne McKenzie 5-4 So. Sprints/Jumps Hampton, Va./Phoebus HSPurity Mitei 5-6 Fr. Distance Nairobi, Kenya/St. CatherineKellen Rutto 5-7 R-Sr. Long Distance Eldoret, Kenya/Moi Siongioi Girls HSAshley Sessoms 5-6 Jr. Sprints Hampton, Va./Hampton HSAlicea Teamer 4-11 Sr. Sprints Waldorf, Md./Maurice McDonough HSJazmine Vaughan 5-4 Fr. Hurdles/Sprints Hampton, Va./Phoebus HSQua’Nesha Wallace 5-6 Fr. Sprints Richmond, Va./Armstrong HSRachel Webb 5-7 Fr. Distance Newport News, Va./Menchville HSVenus Whitties 5-7 So. Hurdles/Jumps Chesapeake, Va./Western Branch HSCharity Wilson 5-5 Fr. Middle Distance Chesapeake, Va./Grassfi eld HSChristal Wilson 5-6 Fr. Sprints Chesapeake, Va./Grassfi eld HS* Johnson is a junior for indoor season and redshirt sophomore for outdoor season

Director of T&F Programs: Kenneth GilesHead Women’s Coach/Assistant Director of T&F Programs: Ronda BerardAssistant Coaches: Jerry Price, Serge Bengono, Harry Freeman

2012-13 ROSTER

W W W. N S U S PA R TA N S. C O M 2 3

13 Newcomers Signify New Beginning for NSU Women’s Track13 Newcomers Signify New Beginning for NSU Women’s TrackWith just four seniors and 13 newcomers on its 24-member ros-ter, the future is bright for the NSU women’s track and fi eld team. The Spartans will be looking to improve on their fi fth-place fi n-ish at the 2012 MEAC Indoor Championship and 10th-place re-sult from the conference outdoor meet. While this year’s team is short on experience, it is long on potential.

Head coach Ronda Berard and Director of Track & Field Kenneth Giles will look to junior Champagne Bell and senior Kellen Rutto as stabilizing forces. Bell is a three-time MEAC long jump cham-pion who qualifi ed for the NCAA East Preliminary Round last year. As a freshman in 2011, Bell was an honorable mention out-door All-American after advancing to the NCAA national meet. She is also the Spartans’ top 400-meter runner, placing fi fth at the conference outdoor meet last season.

Rutto is one of the team’s quartet of seniors. She won the MEAC steeplechase title as a sophomore in 2011, and placed in the top fi ve in both the steeplechase and 5,000 meters last spring at the conference outdoor championship meet. Coaches are hoping to have her services this indoor season after she sat out the fall cross country season due to injury.

In addition to Bell, sophomore jumper Kaydianne McKenzie will also be counted on to challenge in jumping events at the MEAC championships. McKenzie placed ninth in the triple jump at both conference indoor and outdoor meets last season. She also helps out on the Spartans’ relay teams.

Further strengthening NSU’s lineup in the fi eld events will be sophomore pole vaulter Tiara Davis and freshmen throwers Kiara and Navia Howell. Davis made an immediate impact as a fresh-man, scoring at both the indoor and outdoor meets. She placed fi fth at the MEAC Indoor Championship and was runner-up at the outdoor championship.

Twins Kiara and Navia Howell will give the Spartans a boost in the throwing events, where the team did not have a presence last year. Kiara broke the state of Virginia high school shot put record (49-11.5) last year and is a four-time state Group AAA champion in that event. She also doubled as outdoor state dis-cus champ as a senior, as well. Navia was runner-up to her sister in the discus throw at the state outdoor meet last year and was also all-state in the shot put.

The Spartans have also added depth in two other areas where they lacked it last year: the middle distance and hurdles events. In the middle distance, the Spartans will look to fi rst-year soph-omore Ra’Shaun Combs and transfer Tori Lewis-Johnson. Combs was a state qualifi er in the 800 meters and anchored Bethel High School’s state title-winning 4x400 relay team as a senior in 2011. Lewis-Johnson, who transferred from Bowie State, will also com-pete in the 800 meters after running on the Spartans’ cross coun-try team this fall.

SEASON OUTLOOK NORFOLK STATE UNIVERSITY 2012-13WOMEN’S TRACK & FIELD MEDIA GUIDE

Freshmen Vamonie Bod-die and Jazmine Vaughan give the Spartans a pair of talented hurdlers. High school teammates at Phoebus High School in Hampton, both Bod-die and Vaughan were all-state performers in the 100 and 300-meter hurdles during their fi nal prep season. Giles thinks Boddie will be stronger at the 400-meter distance in college, while Vaughan will likely contribute in the 60 and 100-meter distances. They will team with sophomore Venus Whitties to form the core of NSU’s hurdles lineup.

Bell should continue to remain NSU’s top quarter-miler, but the Spartans should be much improved in the shorter sprints this year, as well. Sophomore Torie Cunningham had a solid rook-ie campaign last year, placing sixth in the MEAC in the 60 me-ters. Giles said she has made great strides in the off -season and should also be a factor at 200 meters this year.

Cunningham will be pushed by fi rst-year sophomore Brittney McCants. McCants was a state qualifi er in the 100 meters as a high school senior who has run under the 12-second mark as a prep athlete. Fellow rookie Qua’Nesha Wallace will add depth in the sprints, as will senior Alicea Teamer. Giles has lauded Teamer for her leadership in off season workouts and practices.

Jamia Hutto returns for one fi nal indoor season to help anchor the Spartans in the middle and longer distances. Sophomore Kassandra Irizarry (3,000/5,000) and freshman Rachel Webb (mile) will also play a key role for the Spartans.

Giles is looking forward to seeing the Spartans hit the track for their fi rst competition.

“It’s a young group that will have the chance to grow together as a team,” Giles said. “They are enthusiastic about the season and believe in the coaching staff . With that attitude, they can’t help but get better.”

Alicea TeamerSenior Sprinter

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NORFOLK STATE UNIVERSITY 2012-13WOMEN’S TRACK & FIELD MEDIA GUIDE

INDOOR SEASON

Date Site/Event Location Dec. 8 CNU Holiday Open Newport News, Va. Jan. 5 Penn State Relays University Park, Pa. Jan. 19-20 CNU Captains Invitational Newport News, Va. Jan. 25-26 Virginia Tech Hokie Invitational Blacksburg, Va. Feb. 1-2 UNC Gene Anderson Invitational Chapel Hill, N.C. Feb. 14-16 MEAC Indoor Championships Landover, Md. March 8-9 NCAA Indoor Championships Fayetteville, Ark.

OUTDOOR SEASON

March 14-16 Shamrock Invitational Myrtle Beach, S.C. March 22-23 William & Mary Tribe Invitational Williamsburg, Va.March 30 Virginia Invitational Charlottesville, Va.April 4-6 Florida Relays Gainesville, Fla. April 13 Norfolk State Relays Norfolk, Va.

April 19-20 Morgan State Legacy Meet Baltimore, Md. April 25-27 Penn Relays Philadelphia, Pa. May 2-4 MEAC Outdoor Championships Greensboro, N.C. May 23-25 NCAA East Preliminary Round Greensboro, N.C. June 5-8 NCAA Outdoor Championships Eugene, Ore.

Home meet in bold is at William “Dick” Price Stadium

2012-13 SCHEDULE

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Champagne Bell5-6 JuniorSprints/JumpsNorfolk, Va.Booker T. Washington HS

2011-12: Indoor: Won the MEAC Indoor long jump title for the second straight year with a personal-best mark of 20 feet, 3 inches … placed second in the long jump at the Tyson Invitational (19-11) … fi nished second in the long jump at the CNU Holiday Open (19-3.5) … also high jumped for the fi rst time as a Spartan, posting the team’s top four marks … season-best high jump with a 5-4.25 at the CNU Vince Brown Invitational, good enough for a fi rst-place fi nish … posted an indoor PR in the 200 (24.93) en route to a sixth-place fi nish at the Hokie Invitational … also fi nished fourth in the long jump at the Va. Tech meet (18-9) … crossed the fi nish line fi fth in the 400m at the MEAC Indoor Championship in a season-best time of 56.34. Outdoor:

Completed the yearly sweep of the MEAC long jump titles with her personal-best jump of 20-5.25 … that was one of two meets where she cleared 20 feet during the season … also won the long jump with a mark of 20-4.25 at the NSU Relays … jumped 19-8.25 to take seventh place in the invitational section of the long jump at the Florida Relays … an NCAA East Preliminary Round qualifi er for the second straight year, Bell placed 38th in the region with a top jump of 18-9.75 … also ran on both the 4x100 and 4x400 relay teams … helped the Spartans fi nish seventh in the 4x100 at the MEAC Outdoor Championship (47.46 seconds).

2010-11: Indoor: Won the MEAC indoor long jump title with a jump

of 19 feet, 5.5 inches … also placed second at the conference meet in the 400 (56.18) and seventh in the 200 (25.34) … also ran the second leg on NSU’s 4x400 meter relay team that placed eighth at the MEAC indoor meet … season-best long jump was 20 feet, 1.75 inches in a second-place fi nish at Penn State … ran a season-best 400m time of 55.82 to place third at the Virginia Tech Hokie Invitational. Outdoor:

Earned honorable mention USTFCCCA honors at the NCAA Outdoor Championship by placing 22nd overall (19-6.75) … jumped a then-PR of 20 feet, 3 inches to win the silver medal at the MEAC Outdoor Championship … also PR’ed in the 400 at the MEAC outdoor meet, clocking a 53.86 … placed eighth at the conference meet in the 200 meters (24.21, season-best) and ran a leg on the Spartans’ fi rst-place 4x100 relay (45.41) … fi nished 10th at the NCAA East Regional in the long jump (20-0.25) and also qualifi ed for the regional in the 400 meters and with the 4x100 relay team.

High School: Four-year letterwinner…named team MVP her fresh-man, junior and senior seasons…a Nike Indoor All-American as part of Booker T. Washington’s 4x400, 4x200 and sprint medley relays during her senior season…was state runner-up in the outdoor 400 meters (55.65)…her PR in the 400 was 55.47…also placed fi fth at the VHSL Group AAA state outdoor meet in the long jump with a PR of 19 feet...was runner-up in the long jump at the 2009 AAU Junior Olympics.

Personal: Champagne Tsai Bell was born on Jan. 3, 1991…daughter of Wanda Bell…majoring in sociology. Personal Records

Indoor

200: 24.93 (2012 Hokie invitational)400: 55.82 (2011 Hokie Invitational)Long Jump: 20-3 (2012 MEAC Indoor)Outdoor

400 Meters: 53.86 (2011 MEAC Outdoor)Long Jump: 20-5.25 (2012 MEAC Outdoor)

Torie Cunningham5-4 SophomoreSprintsRichmond, Va.Meadowbrook HS

2011-12: Indoor: An impact sprinter for NSU in her rookie season, Cunningham competed in the 60 and 200 meter events … clocked a season-best 60m time of 7.63 in the prelims at the Hokie Invitational … went on to fi nish eighth in that event at Va. Tech (7.67) … placed sixth in the 60 at the MEAC Indoor Championships in a time of 7.66 … season-best 200m time was 25.20, good for 19th at Penn State. Outdoor: Ran two sub-11.00 100 dashes during outdoor season, with a season-best of 11.90 at the NSU Relays, where she fi nished sixth … clocked a PR of 24.32 in the 200-meter prelims at the MEAC Outdoor Championship, fi nishing 12th … helped the 4x100 relay team to a seventh-place fi nish at the conference championship meet … also ran with the 4x400 team at Morgan State.

High School: Lettered four years in both basketball and track … won the Central District and Central Region titles during outdoor season in both the 100 and 200 meters in her fi nal prep year … placed eighth at the state Group AAA meet in the 100 as a senior, when she earned All-Metro honors … placed second in both the 55 and 300 meters at the district indoor championship as a senior … also swept the 100 and 200 district and regional titles as a junior … placed third at the outdoor state meet in both events as a junior … district 100 meter champion and eighth-place fi nisher at the state outdoor meet as a sophomore … helped the Meadowbrook basketball team to a share of the district championship as a senior … a Central District all-academ-ic team selection, Cunningham was also named the Meadowbrook Scholar Athlete of the Year as a senior.

Personal: Torie Monet’ Cunningham was born on Oct. 15, 1992 … daughter of Thomas Cunningham and Bertina Harris … majoring in kinesiotherapy … has two sisters, one cousin and a brother-in-law who also attended NSU.

Personal Bests

Indoor

60 Meters: 7.63 (2012 Hokie Invitational)Outdoor

100 Meters: 11.87 (High School)200 Meters: 24.32 (2012 MEAC Outdoor)

RETURNER PROFILES NORFOLK STATE UNIVERSITY 2012-13WOMEN’S TRACK & FIELD MEDIA GUIDE

W W W. N S U S PA R TA N S. C O M2 6

Jamia Hutto5-7 SeniorMiddle/Long DistanceOrlando, Fla.Oak Ridge HS

2011-12: Cross Country: Placed 27th overall at the MEAC Cross Coun-try Championship, fi nishing the 5K course in 20:44.76. Indoor: Earned a pair of top-10 fi nishes at the MEAC Indoor Championship, fi nishing sixth in the 3,000 meters (10:52.36) and eighth in the mile (5:21.46) … her times in both events represented her season bests. Outdoor: Fin-ished 12th in the 1,500 meters at the MEAC Outdoor Championship … season-best 1,500m time was 4:56.73, which earned her a sixth-place fi nish at Morgan State.

2010-11: Cross Country: Placed 15th at the UMES Lid-Lifter (22:54.53)…fi nished 22nd at the UMES Cappy Anderson Invitational in 20:29…was 29th in 16:35 at the 2.5-mile Colonial Inter-Regional Chal-lenge at William & Mary…fi nished 15th in 20:38 at Great American…capped off her season with a 19th-place fi nish at the MEAC Champi-onship (season-best 19:38.60). Indoor: Did not compete. Outdoor:

Placed 12th in both the 5,000m and 3,000m steeplechase at the MEAC Outdoor Championship.

2009-10: Cross Country: Earned All-MEAC honors by fi nishing 15th in 19:52.55 at the MEAC Championship. Indoor: Ran a leg on NSU’s 4x800 relay team which posted the fourth-fastest time in the MEAC (12:35.71)…also ran a leg on the Spartans’ distance medley relay team which came in fourth at the MEAC Indoor Championship (12:36.79). Outdoor: Ran her season and college-best 5,000-meter time of 19:45.44 at the Colonial Relays…ran a season and college-best in the 1,500m (5:04.50) at the Sea Ray Relays…placed seventh at the MEAC Outdoor Championship in the 5,000 and ninth in the steeplechase.

2008-09: Cross Country: Just missed All-MEAC honors at the MEAC Cross Country Championship when she fi nished 16th in 19:16. Indoor: Ran on the distance medley team that posted a season-best time of 12:31.28 and fi nished third at the MEAC Indoor Champi-onship…fi nished 13th in the mile (5.25.45) and 10th in the 3,000 (11:06.06) at the MEAC Indoor Championship. Outdoor: Ran 20:46.90 in the 5,000 and 5:17.49 in the 1,500 at the outdoor championship.

High School: Ran a personal-best time of 18:31.16 in the 5K…won the state title in the mile (4:56.96, PR) as a sophomore…had personal-bests of 57.34 in the 400, 2:14.07 in the 800 and 10:39.11 in the 3K.

Personal: Jamia Renae Hutto…born on Aug. 6, 1990…daughter of Cleo and Camille Hutto…majoring in graphic design.

Personal Records

Cross Country

5,000m: 18:31.16 (High School)Indoor

Mile: 4:56.96 (High School)Outdoor

1,500m: 4:52.40 (High School)3,000m SC: 13:06.35 (2010 MEAC OD)5,000m: 19:45.44 (2010 Colonial Relays)

Tiara Davis5-10 SophomorePole VaultNorfolk, Va.Lake Taylor HS

2011-12: Indoor: Placed fi fth in the pole vault at the MEAC Indoor Championship, clearing a height of 9 feet, 11.75 inches … won the pole vault at the Coach O Invitational, tying her PR of 10-6 … regis-tered a sixth-place fi nish at the CNU Vince Brown Invitational (10-0.5). Outdoor: MEAC Outdoor Championship runner-up with a person-al-best of 10-7.5 … also placed second at the Shamrock Invitational

with a top eff ort of 10-6 … won the pole vault event at the NSU Relays (10-0).

High School: Lettered three years in track and fi eld … won the East-ern District indoor and outdoor titles in the pole vault as a senior … cleared a district meet-record 9 feet, 6 inches to win the championship … cleared a personal-best 10-6 to fi nished tied for sixth at the state outdoor Group AAA meet, earning all-state honors … named the team MVP as a senior … also won the district outdoor title as a junior, when she earned the team’s Most Improved award.

Personal: Tiara Denise Davis was born on Oct. 24, 1992 … daughter of Tyrone and Tara Davis … majoring in history.

Personal Records

Indoor

Pole Vault: 10-6 (2012 Coach O Invitational)Outdoor

Pole Vault: 10-7.5 (2012 MEAC Outdoor)

RETURNER PROFILES NORFOLK STATE UNIVERSITY 2012-13WOMEN’S TRACK & FIELD MEDIA GUIDE

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RETURNER PROFILES

Kassandra Irizarry4-10 SophomoreLong DistanceBridgeton, N.J.Bridgeton HS

2011-12: Cross Country: Finished 38th at the 2011 MEAC Champion-ship with a time of 21:17.14 … ran a season-best time of 19:58.82 at the UMES Cappy Anderson Invitational. Indoor: Placed seventh in the 3,000 meters at the CNU Vince Brown Invitational (11:21.48) … also ran the 3,000 at the CNU Holiday Open, and meets at UNC, George

Mason and Virginia Tech. Outdoor: Placed eighth in the 3,000m stee-plechase at the MEAC Outdoor Championship in a time of 12:18.08 … clocked a season-best steeplechase time of 12:14.65 in a third-place fi nish at the NSU Relays.

High School: Four-year letterwinner in both track and cross country…was a two-time all-conference cross country performer…high school PR was 19:32 for 5,000 meters.

Personal: Kassandra Marie Irizarry was born on July 28, 1993…daugh-ter of Barbara Irizarry…majoring in nursing.

Personal Records

Cross Country

5,000 Meters: 19:58.82 (2011 UMES Cappy Anderson Invitational)Indoor

3,000 Meters: 11:21.48 (2012 CNU Vince Brown Invitational)Outdoor

3,000 Meter Steeplechase: 12:14.65 (2012 NSU Relays)

Rayiana Johnson5-7 Junior/RS-SophomoreSprintsChester, Pa.Chester HS

2011-12: Indoor: Ran a season-best 60m time of 7.91 seconds in the prelims at the Coach O Invitational at UMES … fi nished fourth with a fi nals time of 7.94. Outdoor: Did not compete.

2010-11: Indoor: Placed 10th in the 60 meters at the MEAC Indoor Championship in a season-best time of 7.71 seconds … placed fourth in both the 60 and 200 meters at the CNU Vince Brown Invitational … ran a time of 7.72 in the 60 and a season-best time of 25.68 in the 200 at CNU. Outdoor: Ran the anchor leg on NSU’s fourth-place 4x400 me-ter relay team (3:45.02) … helped the 4x100 team run a time of 45.69

at the Florida Relays, NSU’s second-best time of the season … ran the 100 meters in fi ve diff erent meets during the season.

High School: Four-year letterwinner in track and cross country…All-Delco selection all four years…indoor state champion in the 200 meters as a senior…was the Delco 100 and 200 champion during outdoor season…ran a meet record and personal-best time of 11.69 in the 100 meters at the Delco championship…as a junior, won state indoor titles in the 60 and 200, and outdoor titles in the 100 and 200…ran a meet-record and PR of 24.04 in the 200 meters at the state in-door championship…ran a PR of 7.45 seconds in the 60 meters, which was the fourth-fastest high school time in the nation in 2009.

Personal: Rayiana Alayiha Johnson was born on Oct. 6, 1991…daughter of Reginald and Crystal Johnson…plans to major in physical therapy.

Personal Records

Indoor

60 Meters: 7.45 (High School)Outdoor

100 Meters: 11.69 (High School)200 Meters: 24.04 (High School)

Kaydianne McKenzie5-4 SophomoreSprints/JumpsHampton, Va.Phoebus HS

2011-12: Indoor: Set a new indoor triple jump PR of 36 feet, 10.5 inch-es at the UNC Dick Taylor Invitational … took seventh place in that event … took third place in the triple jump at the Coach O Invitational (36-9.5) … took ninth place in the triple jump at the MEAC Indoor Championship (36-5.5). Outdoor: Established a new PR of 38-11 in the triple jump at Morgan State, taking second place … fi nished ninth in the triple jump at the MEAC Outdoor Championship (38-10.25) …

took fi fth place in the long jump at the NSU Relays with a season-best 18-7.75 … also ran on NSU’s 4x100 and 4x400 relay teams.

High School: A two-year letterwinner … won the Peninsula District outdoor championship in the triple jump as a senior … placed fi fth in the Easter Region and 10th at the state Group AAA outdoor meet in the same event … ran a leg on Phoebus’ fi fth-place 4x100 and 4x400 meter relay teams at the state meet … the 4x400 team won the regional championship … fi rst-team Daily Press All-Star in the triple jump for both indoor and outdoor seasons as a senior.

Personal: Kaydianne Renee’ McKenzie was born on Jan. 6, 1993 … daughter of Trina Leggette … majoring in physical education.

Personal Records

Indoor

Triple Jump: 36-10.5 (2012 UNC Dick Taylor Invitational)Outdoor

Long Jump: 18-7.75 (2012 NSU Relays)Triple Jump: 38-11 (2012 Morgan State Legacy Meet)

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Ashley Sessoms5-6 JuniorSprintsHampton, Va.Hampton HS

2011-12: Indoor: Ran a leg on both the distance medley (ninth place) and 4x400 relay (13th place) at the MEAC indoor meet … placed seventh in the 400 meters at the Coach O Invitational hosted by UMES. Outdoor: Ran the 800 meters in four diff erent competitions, with a best time of 2:24.33 at the NSU Relays … that time was good enough for eighth place … also ran on NSU’s 4x400 relay team in all fi ve meets that the team entered.

2010-11: Cross Country: Earned her fi rst varsity letter of her career during cross country season. Indoor: Ran the second leg of NSU’s eighth-place distance medley relay team at the MEAC indoor meet (13:52.22) … ran the third leg on NSU’s 4x400 relay team that clocked

a season-best time of 3:51.74 at Penn State … also competed in the 200 and 400 meters during indoor season. Outdoor: Competed in the 200, 400 and 800 meters during outdoor season … again was a key factor in NSU’s relay teams … helped the 4x400 team run a 3:53.37 at the Penn Relays.

High School: Lettered four years in track and two in cross country…fi nished second in the Peninsula District in the 400 meters (outdoor) and 500 meters (indoor) during her senior year…placed eighth in the 500 at the state meet…fi rst-team Daily Press All-Star as well as an all-state performer in the 500…placed second in the 400 meters at the district outdoor meet her junior year…ran a leg on the school record-setting 4x800 meter relay team as a sophomore.

Personal: Ashley Desiree Sessoms was born on Dec. 27, 1992…daughter of Eric and Vicki Sessoms…major in fashion merchandising.

Personal Records

Indoor

300 Meters: 40.81 (High School)500 Meters: 1:17.32 (High School)Outdoor

200 Meters: 25.67 (High School)400 Meters: 57.19 (High School)

Kellen Rutto5-6 SeniorMiddle/Long DistanceEldoret, KenyaMoi Siongiroi Girls HS

2011-12: Cross Country: Earned All-MEAC honors for the third year in a row … fi nished ninth at the MEAC XC Championship in a time of 19:35.42. Indoor: Earned fi fth place at the MEAC Indoor Champi-onship in the 5,000 meters (19:14.73) … fi nished ninth in the 3,000 meters at the conference meet (10:58.90) … season-best 5,000m time was 19:00.76, good enough for eighth place at the Tyson Invitational. Outdoor: Took two top-four fi nishes at the MEAC Outdoor Champion-ship … placed third in the steeplechase (11:38.62) and fourth in the 5,000 (19:19.31) … season-best 5,000m time was 19:06.14 at the Penn Relays.

2010-11: Cross Country: All-MEAC for the second straight year after placing fi fth at the conference championship meet…ran a person-al-best 5K cross country time of 18:31.50 at the MEAC meet to help the Spartans to a third-place fi nish…earned three MEAC Athlete of the Week awards during the season, following the UMES Lid-Lifter and both meets at William & Mary…was the individual winner at the UMES Lid-Lifter (19:31.75)…fi nished 12th overall at U.Va…was fi fth overall, second on NSU, in 18:57.53 at the UMES Cappy Anderson Invitational…also placed 12th overall at the 2.5-mile Colonial Inter-Re-gional Challenge at W&M (15:11)…placed second overall at the Great American XC Invitational (19:05.8), helping NSU fi nish third out of 19 teams…fi nished fourth at the Tribe Open in 23:08 for the 6K course.

Indoor: Ran a season-best 3,000m time of 10:54.94 at Penn State, placing 14th…ran a season-best 5,000m time of 18:52.52 to win the event at the CNU Holiday Open…at the MEAC Indoor Championship, placed seventh in the 5,000m, 11th in the 3,000m and ran a leg on the eighth-place distance medley relay team. Outdoor: Ran an outdoor PR of 18:26.86 to earn 16th place at the Raleigh Relays…MEAC outdoor champion in the steeplechase…also placed fi fth at the conference outdoor meet in the 5,000m (18:57.73).

2009-10: Cross Country: Finished sixth at the MEAC Cross Country Championship in 19:00.57 to help the Spartans to their fi rst-ever conference title…earned All-MEAC honors at the cross country championship…paced the Spartans at the NCAA Southeast Regional by fi nishing the 6K course in 22:44.56. Indoor: Finished third in the 3,000 meters at the MEAC Indoor Championship in a season-best time of 10:39.46. Outdoor: Ran a season-best 5,000-meter time of 18:28.89 at Wake Forest…placed third in the 3,000m steeplechase at the MEAC Outdoor Championship (11:34.54)…was fourth in the 5,000 meters (18:55.55).

High School: Posted career-best times of 22:41 in the 6K and 4:47 in the 1,500.

Personal: Kellen Cherotich Rutto…born on Dec. 29, 1987…daugh-ter of Alexander and Elizabeth Rutto…majoring nursing…wants to become a nurse.

Personal Records

Cross Country

5,000 Meters: 18:31.50 (2010 MEAC XC Champ.)Indoor

Mile: 5:26.63 (2010 Va. Tech Invitational)3,000 Meters: 10:39.46 (2010 MEAC ID)Outdoor

1,500 Meters: 4:47 (High School)3,000m Steeplechase: 11:34.54 (2010 MEAC OD)5,000 Meters: 18:26.86 (2011 Raleigh Relays)

RETURNER PROFILES NORFOLK STATE UNIVERSITY 2012-13WOMEN’S TRACK & FIELD MEDIA GUIDE

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For the latest in Norfolk State University athletics, including news,

schedules, statistics, player biographies, video features and more, visit

www.nsuspartans.com.

Alicea Teamer4-11 SeniorSprintsWaldorf, Md.McDonough HS

2011-12: Indoor: Competed in the 60, 200 and 400 meters during the season … also ran a leg on NSU’s 4x400 relay team at the MEAC Indoor Championship … ran a 60m PR of 8.23 at the CNU Holiday Open. Outdoor: Competed in the 400 meters and on NSU’s 4x100 and 4x400 relay teams … helped the 4x100 team to a seventh-place fi nish at the MEAC Outdoor Championship … ran a season-best 400m time of 1:01.16 at the NSU Relays, good for 12th place.

2010-11: Indoor: Ran a season-best 60m time of 8.09 at George Mason … also competed in the 200 meters during a number of meets during the season. Outdoor: Competed in the 100, 200 and 400 meter

events during outdoor season.

2009-10: Indoor: Ran a season-best 60-meter time of 8.28 seconds at the Maryland Invitational. Outdoor: Clocked a season-best 100-meter time of 12.99 seconds at Wake Forest.

High School: Was a two-sport athlete at McDonough, participating on the basketball and track and fi eld teams…earned second-team all-county honors in basketball and track her freshman and sophomore years…was fi rst-team all-county in track and second-team all-county in basketball as a junior…posted times of 7.61 in the 55 meters and 46.37 in the 300 at the 2008 SMAC Indoor Track Championships…was named to the SMAC All-Academic second team as a senior.

Personal: Alicea S. Teamer…born on Feb. 14, 1991…majoring in exercise science…wants to become an athletic trainer or physical therapist.

Personal Records

Indoor

60 Meters: 8.23 (2011 CNU Holiday Open)Outdoor

100 Meters: 12.99 (2010 Wake Forest Open)

Venus Whitties5-7 SophomoreHurdles/JumpsChesapeake, Va.Western Branch HS

2011-12: Indoor: Competed in the 60-meter hurdles and the pen-tathlon in her debut season for NSU … placed 12th in both events at the MEAC Indoor Championship … season-best 60m hurdles time was 9.05, good for seventh place at the CNU Holiday Open … ran on the distance medley relay squad at CNU and the 4x400 relay team at UMES’ Coach O Invitational. Outdoor: Ran a leg on the 4x100 and 4x400 relay teams at the Shamrock Invitational.

High School: All-Southeastern District in the 100 hurdles, 300 hurdles, 4x400 relay and long jump as a senior … state Group AAA qualifi er in both hurdling events, where she placed eighth in both … helped Western Branch win the state outdoor championship as a senior … ran a leg on the fourth-place 4x400 meter relay team at the state outdoor meet her junior year … placed sixth in the 400 hurdles at the AAU Junior Olympics following her sophomore year.

Personal: Venus Annie Reid Whitties was born on Jan. 10, 1992 … daughter of Meredith Whitties and Vicki Jones-Whitties … majoring in sociology … mother is a former NSU cheerleader and dance team member, and older brother Meredith Jr. played football and track at NSU from 2006-09.

Personal Records

Indoor

60 Hurdles: 9.05 (2011 CNU Holiday Open)Outdoor

100 Hurdles: 15.01 (High School)

RETURNER PROFILES NORFOLK STATE UNIVERSITY 2012-13WOMEN’S TRACK & FIELD MEDIA GUIDE

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NEWCOMER PROFILES NORFOLK STATE UNIVERSITY 2012-13WOMEN’S TRACK & FIELD MEDIA GUIDE

Ra’Shaun Combs5-3 SophomoreMiddle DistanceHampton, Va.Bethel HS

2011-12: Sat out as a non-qualifi er.

High School: Lettered in both cross country and track … state Group AAA outdoor meet qualifi er in the 800, long jump and on the 4x400 re-lay team at Bethel as a senior … ran the anchor leg on the Bruins’ state championship-winning 4x400 team that season … was 10th in the long jump and 11th in the 800 meters … Peninsula District 800 meter champion as a senior, as well … PR is 2:16.39 … fi nished seventh in the 800 meters at the state indoor championship as a senior.

Personal: Ra’Shaun Ava Combs was born on Feb. 4, 1993 … daughter of Ernestine Combs and Shaun Parker … majoring in kinesiology.

Personal Records

Outdoor

800 Meters: 2:16.39 (High School)

Vamonie Boddie5-7 FreshmanHurdlesHampton, Va.Phoebus HS

High School: Four-year letterwinner in track … three-time Peninsula District 300 meter hurdles champion … won the state Group AAA

title in the 300 hurdles as a sophomore … Eastern Region champion in the 300 hurdles as a senior, when she ran a season-best 42.58 … placed sixth in the state meet in the 100 meter hurdles as a senior (PR of 14.57) … named a Daily Press All-Star in the 300 hurdles as a senior … was also an indoor all-state performer in the 55 meter hurdles as a senior … helped Phoebus fi nish as state outdoor runner-up her sophomore year, running a leg on the fourth-place 4x400 relay team in addition to her victory in the 300 hurdles.

Personal: Vamonie S. Boddie was born on Jan. 13, 1994 … daughter of Vanessa Boddie … majoring in kinesiotherapy.

Personal Records

Outdoor

100 Meter Hurdles: 14.57 (High School)

Amethyst Edmond5-1 FreshmanSprintsHampton, Va.Kecoughtan HS

High School: Lettered four years in track and two in cross country … placed third at the Peninsula District outdoor meet in the 400 meters as a senior … also named to the all-district cross country team … an honor roll and National Honor Society student … team MVP her junior year.Personal: Amethyst DeShawn Edmond was born on Feb. 18, 1994 … daughter of Charles and Elizabeth Edmond … majoring in biology.

Personal Records

Outdoor

400 Meters: 58.29 (High School)

Kiara Howell5-5 FreshmanThrowsChesapeake, Va.Grassfi eld HS

High School: The Virginia High School League all-time shot put record holder with a throw of 49 feet, 11.5 inches … set that mark in winning the Southeastern District outdoor shot put championship her senior year … fi ve-time state champion (four-time shot put champ,

once in the discus) … swept the VHSL state Group AAA shot put in-door and outdoor titles her junior and senior years … doubled as state outdoor discus champ as a senior … PR in the discus is 149-1, which she recorded in winning the state title in that event her fi nal year … teammates with twin sister Navia and fellow NSU recruits Charity and Christal Wilson.

Personal: Kiara Aaron Howell was born on Jan. 30, 1994 … daughter of Melvin Howell … father is an NSU alumnus … majoring in business.

Personal Records

Outdoor

Shot Put: 49-11.5 (High School)Discus: 149-1 (High School)

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Navia Howell5-7 FreshmanThrowsChesapeake, Va.Grassfi eld HS

High School: Four-year letterwinner at Grassfi eld … state Group AAA outdoor championship qualifi er in the shot put and discus … set a

new PR in the discus (130-3) in fi nishing as state runner-up her senior year … fi nished second behind her twin sister, Kiara … also placed eighth in the shot put … was also Southeastern District runner-up be-hind only her sister in the shot put with a PR of 39-4.25 … was Eastern Region champion in the discus as a sophomore.

Personal: Navia Aaron Howell was born on Jan. 30, 1994 … daughter of Melvin Howell … father is an NSU alumnus … majoring in kinesio-therapy.

Personal Records

Outdoor

Shot Put: 39-4.25 (High School)Discus: 130-3 (High School)

Tori Lewis-Johnson5-8 SophomoreMiddle DistanceHampton, Va.Bowie State/Bethel HS

At Bowie State (2011-12): Finished seventh in the triple jump at the CIAA Indoor Championship … nominated for the National Society of Leadership and Success.

High School: Four-year letterwinner in both track and cross country … PR of 20:39 in cross country… ran a personal best 2:24 in the 800m … was a state Group AAA outdoor championship qualifi er in the triple jump and 4x800 relay … was Peninsula District outdoor champion in the mile and top-fi ve in the triple jump, 3,200m and long jump … was the student council vice-president and historian.

Personal: Tori Lanee Lewis-Johnson was born on April 21, 1993 … daughter of Wayne Johnson and Toni Mazaiwana … majoring in man-agement information systems.

Personal Records

Cross Country

5,000 Meters: 20:39 (High School)Outdoor

800 Meters: 2:24 (High School)

Brittney McCants5-6 SophomoreSprintsVirginia Beach, Va.Kempsville HS

2011-12: Sat out the year as a non-qualifi er.

High School: State Group AAA indoor championship qualifi er in the 55 meters … placed fourth in the event … high school PR in the 55m was 7.02 … fi nished third in the region in the 55 as well … fi nished third at both the Beach District and Eastern Region outdoor meets in the 100 meters … registered PRs of 11.81 in the 100 and 24.80 in the 200m.

Personal: Brittney R. McCants was born on Feb. 28, 1993 … daughter of Linda Graham … majoring in biology.

Personal Records

Outdoor

100 Meters: 11.81 (High School)200 Meters: 24.80 (High School)

NEWCOMER PROFILES NORFOLK STATE UNIVERSITY 2012-13WOMEN’S TRACK & FIELD MEDIA GUIDE

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NEWCOMER PROFILES NORFOLK STATE UNIVERSITY 2012-13WOMEN’S TRACK & FIELD MEDIA GUIDE

Qua’Nesha Wallace5-6 SophomoreSprintsRichmond, Va.Armstrong HS

2011-12: Sat out as a non-qualifi er.

High School: Played two years of basketball and ran track for one year

at Armstrong … state qualifi er in the 100 meters as a senior … was Capital District 100 and 200 meter champion and ran on the victorious 4x100 relay team … went on to place third in the regional in the 100 … also won the district 55 meter dash during indoor season, qualify-ing her for the state indoor meet as well.

Personal: Qua’Nesha Sherrita Wallace was born on April 18, 1993 … daughter of Sherry Wallace and Jerrelle Johnson … majoring in inter-disciplinary studies.

Personal Records

Outdoor

100 Meters: 12.18 (High School)200 Meters: 25.60 (High School)

Jazmine Vaughan5-4 FreshmanHurdles/SprintsHampton, Va.Phoebus HS

High School: A four-year letterwinner at Phoebus … high school teammates with fellow Spartan Vamonie Boddie … a state outdoor

meet qualifi er in the 100 and 300 hurdles, in addition to the long jump … fi nished sixth at the Eastern Region outdoor meet in the triple jump and 300 hurdles … district runner-up in the 100 hurdles … placed fi fth at the state indoor championship in the 55 hurdles her senior year … was state runner-up and district champion in the same event as a junior … state qualifi er in the 100 meters as a sophomore, and in the 55 hurdles (indoor) and 110 hurdles (outdoor) as a freshman.

Personal: Jazmine Dosinic Vaughan was born on Sept. 7, 1994 … daughter of Tony and Paulean Robinson … majoring in kinesiology.

Personal Records

Outdoor

100 Meter Hurdles: 14.3 (High School)

Purity Mitei5-6 FreshmanLong DistanceEldoret, KenyaSt. Catherine Girls HS

Personal: Purity Mitei was born on April 1, 1994… Daughter of Henry and Josephine Mitei… Has an older brother, Hosea Too, 30… Majoring in accounting.

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NEWCOMER PROFILES

Rachel Webb5-8 FreshmanLong DistanceNewport News, Va.Menchville HS

High School: Three-year letterwinner in basketball … lettered in cross country and track and fi eld her senior year … was Peninsula District

outdoor champion in the 800 meters and mile run … fi nished sixth in the region in the 800 and seventh in the mile (PR of 5:22.17) … was the runner-up at the district cross country championship her senior year … earned the Peninsula District Most Outstanding Senior Award … named an AP scholar her junior year.

Personal: Rachel Faye Webb was born on July 12, 1994 … daughter of Aaron and Sandra Webb … majoring in political science.

Personal Records

Cross Country

5,000 Meters: 20:20.38 (High School)Outdoor

800 Meters: 2:23.04 (High School)Mile: 5:22.17 (High School)

Charity Wilson5-5 FreshmanMiddle DistanceChesapeake, Va.Grassfi eld HS

High School: Lettered all four years on the Grassfi eld track team … also played one year of basketball … competed in events ranging from the 300m hurdles to the 400 and 500 meters, in addition to the 4x400 relay team … ran a leg on the fi fth-place 4x400 relay team at the state Group AAA outdoor meet … PR in the 300 hurdles was 47.10.

Personal: Charity Noel Wilson was born on Nov. 11, 1993 … daughter of Fred and Erika Williams … mother Erika and sister Courtney have both attended school at NSU … majoring in kinesiotherapy.

Christal Wilson5-8 FreshmanSprintsChesapeake, Va.Grassfi eld HS

High School: Ran track all four of her years at Grassfi eld … teammates with fellow freshman Charity Wilson (no relation) and Kiara and Navia Howell … Southeastern District runner up and fi fth-place Eastern Region fi nisher in the 400 meters … an all-state performer as part of Grassfi eld’s fi fth-place 4x400 relay team at the state Group AAA outdoor meet … also was part of Grassfi eld’s all-state 4x400 indoor relay team her junior year … a recipient of the VHSL Athletic Academic Excellence Award.

Personal: Christal Renee Wilson was born on Feb. 10, 1994 … daugh-ter of McClinton and Margo Wilson … mother is an NSU alumna … majoring in food science.

NORFOLK STATE UNIVERSITY 2012-13WOMEN’S TRACK & FIELD MEDIA GUIDE

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NORFOLK STATE UNIVERSITY 2012-13WOMEN’S TRACK & FIELD MEDIA GUIDE

2011-12 NSU WOMEN’S TRACK & FIELD

INDOOR PERFORMANCE LIST

Event Time/Mark Athlete/Event 60m 7.38 Shanneka Claiborne/CNU Holiday Open200m 24.61 Shanneka Claiborne/Tyson Invitational400m 56.34 Champagne Bell/MEAC Indoor Champ. 800m 2:28.01 Ashley Sessoms/Virginia Tech InviteMile Run 5:21.46 Jamia Hutto/MEAC Indoor Champ.3,000m 10:52.36 Jamia Hutto/MEAC Indoor Champ. 5,000m 19:00.76 Kellen Rutto/Tyson Invitational60mH 9.05 Venus Whitties/CNU Holiday Open 4x400 3:55.58 Bell, Claiborne, Whitties, Bell/ Virginia Tech Invite DMR 12:55.46 Hutto, McKenzie, Sessoms, Rutto MEAC Indoor Champ. (2-17-12)LJ 6.17m/20-03.00 Champagne Bell/MEAC Indoor Champ. HJ 1.63m/5-04.25 Champagne Bell/CNU Vince Brown Invite TJ 11.24m/36-10.50 Kaydianne McKenzie/Dick Taylor InvitePV 3.36m/11-00.25 Katie Wright/CNU Vince Brown Invite SP N/AWT N/APenta. 2,760 points Venus Whitties/MEAC Indoor Champ.

2012 MEAC Indoor Track & Field ChampionshipFeb. 16-18, 2012Landover, Md.

Final Team Results1) Hampton 161.52) UMES 1213) North Carolina A&T 674) Florida A&M 555) Norfolk State 456) Morgan State 427) Savannah State 378) Bethune-Cookman 34.59) South Carolina State 2910) North Carolina Central 2711) Coppin State 2112) Delaware State 1213) Howard 7

NSU’s 2012 MEAC Indoor ChampionsChampagne Bell – Long Jump

2011-12 NSU WOMEN’S TRACK & FIELD

OUTDOOR PERFORMANCE LIST

Event Time/Mark Athlete/Event 100m 11.76 Shanneka Claiborne/Morgan State Legacy200m 24.32 Torie Cunningham/MEAC Outdoor Champ. 400m 55.05 Champagne Bell/Raleigh Relays 800m 2:24.33 Ashley Sessoms/NSU Relays1,500m 4:56.73 Jamia Hutto/Morgan State Legacy 3,000mSC 11:38.62 Kellen Rutto/MEAC Outdoor Champ.5,000m 19:06.14 Kellen Rutto/Penn Relays100mH N/A400mH N/A4x100 46.60 Cunningham, McKenzie, Bell, Claiborne/ Florida Relays 4x400 3:56.26 Bell, McKenzie, Sessoms, Teamer/ Penn Relays LJ 6.23m/20-05.25 Champagne Bell/MEAC Outdoor Champ.HJ 1.50m/4-11.00 J’Na Johnson/Morgan State LegacyTJ 11.86m/38-11.00 Kaydianne McKenzie/Morgan State LegacyPV 3.24m/10-07.50 Tiara Davis/MEAC Outdoor Champ.SP N/ADiscus N/AJavelin N/AHept. N/A

2012 MEAC Outdoor Track & Field ChampionshipMay 3-5, 2012Greensboro, N.C.

Final Team Results1) Hampton 1362) UMES 1063) North Carolina A&T 674) Morgan State 80.55) Florida A&M 676) Savannah State 517) Bethune-Cookman 48.58) South Carolina State 489) North Carolina Central 3510) Norfolk State 3211) Delaware State 2412) Howard 1013) Coppin State 7

NSU’s 2012 MEAC Outdoor ChampionsChampagne Bell – Long Jump

2012 NCAA East Preliminary Round (May 24-26, Jacksonville, Fla.)Champagne Bell – 38th in long jump (5.73m/18-9.75)

2011-12 IN REVIEW

W W W. N S U S PA R TA N S. C O M 3 5

NSU’S TRACK OLYMPIANS NORFOLK STATE UNIVERSITY 2012-13WOMEN’S TRACK & FIELD MEDIA GUIDE

Norfolk State University track and fi eld boasts six former athletes who have competed in the Summer Olympic Games. They have combined for a total of seven Olympic medals. A former Spartan has compet-ed at every Summer Olympic Games since 1996. Chris Brown (far right in above photo) has competed in the last four Olympic Games for his native Bahamas, and won a gold medal with the 4x400 meter relay

team at London in 2012.

Men Year-Location Event Result

Anthony Hall 1976-Montreal Javelin 15thSteve Riddick 1976-Montreal 4x100 relay Gold medalTim Montgomery 2000-Sydney 4x100 relay Gold medalBrian Lewis 2000-Sydney 4x100 relay Gold MedalChris Brown 2000-Sydney 400m 1st Round 4x400 relay 4th place 2004-Athens 400m Semis 2008-Beijing 400m 4th place 4x400 relay Silver medal 2012-London 400m 4th place 4x400 relay Gold medal

Women Year-Location Event Result

Chandra Sturrup 1996-Atlanta 100m 4th place 4x100 relay Silver medal 2000-Sydney 100m 6th place 4x100 relay Gold medal 2004-Athens 100m 1st Round 4x100 relay 1st Round 2008-Beijing 100m Semis 2012-London 4x100 relay 1st Round

Norfolk State University

Track & Field Olympians

W W W. N S U S PA R TA N S. C O M3 6

ABOUT THE MEACTHE MID-EASTERN ATHLETIC CONFERENCE

The Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference (MEAC) begins its 43rd year of intercollegiate competition heading into the 2012-13 academic school year. Located in Norfolk, Va., the MEAC is made up of 13 outstanding historically black institutions across the Atlantic coastline: Bethune-Cookman University, Coppin State University, Delaware State University, Florida A&M University, Hampton University, Howard University, University of Maryland Eastern Shore, Morgan State University, Norfolk State University, North Carolina A&T State University, North Carolina Central University, Savannah State University and South Carolina State University.

The MEAC sponsors 15 Division I (FCS) sports with automatic qualifying bids for NCAA postseason competition in baseball, bowling, men’s and women’s basketball, men’s and women’s cross country, football, men’s and women’s tennis, men’s and women’s track and fi eld, softball and volleyball.

MEAC student-athletes excel on and off the fi eld and several have been recognized on ESPN The Magazine/CoSIDA Academic All-America and All-District teams. The MEAC awards two post-graduate scholarships of $5,000 each annually to one male and one female student-athlete who have excelled academically and athletically and are in their fi nal season of intercollegiate athletics eligibility and competition under MEAC and NCAA regulations.

HISTORYIn 1969, a bold ad hoc group of innovators long associated with intercollegiate athletics

met in Durham, N.C., to discuss the feasibility of organizing a new conference. From these dis-cussions, they formed a steering and planning committee to fully investigate the idea, present a detailed report with recommendations to interested collegiate institutions and construct a workshop to outline proposals.

After selecting a proposal and adopting a program, seven institutions (Delaware State College, Howard University, University of Maryland Eastern Shore, Morgan State University, North Carolina A&T State University, North Carolina Central University and South Carolina State College) agreed to become the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference. Their major objective was to establish, organize and supervise an intercollegiate athletic program among a compact group of educational institutions of high academic standards with a sound philosophy of co-curricular activities. The conference agreed to seek Division I status for its sports.

The conference was confi rmed in 1970, kicking off its fi rst season of competition in football in 1971.

In 1978, the MEAC reached a milestone when it selected Kenneth A. Free to be its fi rst full-time commissioner. Free served the conference for 18 years before stepping down in May of 1996. In July 1996, Charles S. Harris was named commissioner and served in the capacity until April 2002. On September 1, 2002, Dr. Dennis E. Thomas was named commissioner and has served in the position for nine years.

The conference’s fi rst expansion occurred in October 1979 when Bethune-Cookman College and Florida A&M University were voted into the MEAC as new members. Original members Morgan State, North Carolina Central and Maryland Eastern Shore withdrew from the conference at the end of the 1979-80 fi scal year. Maryland Eastern Shore was readmitted in 1981 and Morgan State returned in 1984. Florida A&M opted to resign in 1984 but rejoined the conference in 1986. Coppin State College was granted admittance in 1985, becoming the ninth member institution.

The MEAC expanded again in the 1990s with the inclusion of Hampton University (1995) and Norfolk State University (1997). The conference expanded once again in 2007, adding Winston-Salem State University. Following the 2009-10 academic/athletic season, however, Winston-Salem State withdrew from the conference and returned to Division II. On July 1, 2010, the MEAC made its most recent expansion with the admittance of North Carolina Central and Savannah State University.

On June 8, 1980, the MEAC was classifi ed as a Division I conference by the NCAA. Prior to that year, the conference operated as a Division II conference. The month after it achieved Division I status, the MEAC received an automatic qualifi cation to the NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball Championship. Currently, the conference has automatic qualifying bids for NCAA postseason play in baseball (since 1994), men’s basketball (since 1981), women’s basketball (since 1982), football (since 1996), softball (since 1995), men’s and women’s tennis (since 1998), and volleyball (since 1994).

The MEAC initiated cross country in 1980, and North Carolina A&T earned the inaugural men’s crown. The fi rst women’s cross country championship took place a year later, with Howard winning the fi rst of its seven titles. Indoor Track and Field was also added in 1981, with South Carolina State capturing the men’s title and Howard winning the women’s crown.

Tennis and golf returned as MEAC-governed sports in 1981 after a fi ve-year hiatus. South Carolina State won all seven of the conference’s golf championships from 1972-

1983 before the sport was discontinued after the 1983 championship. Baseball, which began in 1972, was discontinued following the 1977 season. It was

brought back as a MEAC-governed sport along with women’s volleyball in 1983. Women’s softball became a MEAC-sanctioned sport in 1992.

Bowling was offi cially sanctioned as a MEAC sport in 1999. The MEAC was the fi rst conference to secure NCAA sanctioning for women’s bowling by adopting the club sport prior to the 1996-97 school year.

SPORTS HIGHLIGHTSThe MEAC has enjoyed tremendous athletic success over the years. In 2008, Maryland

Eastern Shore (UMES) defeated Arkansas State 4-2 to win the NCAA Women’s Bowling National Championship, a fi rst for the conference and institution. The Lady Hawks repeated the feat in 2011 and 2012. Also during 2011, UMES won the United States Bowling Congress (USBC) Intercollegiate Team Championships (ITC), becoming the fi rst team to win two national championships during the same season.

In men’s basketball, UMES became the fi rst historically black college/university (HBCU) to participate in the National Invitational Tournament (NIT) in 1974. The Hawks defeated Manhattan, 84-81, in the fi rst round before falling to Jacksonville by two points in the second round. Before the Jacksonville loss, UMES had the best record in the nation at 27-1. That same year, Morgan State won the NCAA College Division II National Championship and junior center Marvin “The Human Eraser” Webster was named the Division II Player of the Year. The 1981 tournament champion Howard Bison became the fi rst MEAC team to play in the NCAA Division I Basketball Championship.

Coppin State, Hampton and Norfolk State made history in the NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball Tournament by accounting for half of the six No. 15 seed over No. 2 seed upsets in tourney annals. Coppin State defeated South Carolina in 1997, Hampton defeated Iowa State in 2001 and NSU ousted Missouri in 2012. ESPN’s SportsCenter ranked the CSU and Hampton wins among the Top 10 greatest tournament upsets of all time, while NSU’s win over Missouri was nominated for the Best Upset ESPY in 2012.

In women’s basketball, South Carolina State won the Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women (AIAW) Division II National Championship in 1979. In 1982, Howard be-came the fi rst MEAC women’s team to participate in the NCAA Division I Women’s Basketball Championship. SCSU earned the conference’s bid in 1983 and became the fi rst MEAC team, men or women, to win an opening-round game in the NCAA Division I Basketball Tournament.

In 2010, The North Carolina A&T Lady Aggies defeated Wake Forest and Charlotte be-fore falling to Miami in the third round of the Women’s National Invitation Tournament (WNIT). North Carolina A&T became the fi rst MEAC team and historically black college/university to win two consecutive basketball games in a national postseason tournament.

The No. 13 Hampton Lady Pirates faced No. 4 Kentucky in the 2011 NCAA Division I Women’s Basketball Tournament. The 13th seed was the highest seed earned by a MEAC women’s basketball program since the inception of the 64-team bracket in 1994.

In football, the MEAC was instrumental in constructing the Freedom Bowl All-Star Classic, the Heritage Bowl and the Gold Bowl. Prior to Division I competition, the MEAC com-peted in the Gold Bowl, held in Richmond, Va., which matched the MEAC champion against the champion of the Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association (CIAA). South Carolina State represented the MEAC in 1976 and 1979, winning both outings over Winston-Salem State and Norfolk State respectively. In addition to the 1976 and 1979 crowns, South Carolina State won MEAC football titles in 1974-78, 1980-83, 1994, 2004, 2008 and 2009. The Bulldogs were also named co-champions along with Bethune-Cookman and Florida A&M in 2010.

On the track, Hampton’s Francena McCorory set an American record in the 400m dash with a time of 50.54 and defended her national indoor title at the 2010 NCAA Indoor Champion-ships. McCorory, a two-time All-American and three-time MEAC indoor champion in the 400m dash, became the fi rst back-to-back NCAA indoor 400m champion since Suziann Reid of Texas (1998 and 1999). McCorory was named the U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association (USTFCCCA) Division I National Athlete of the Year for the 2010 Indoor Track and Field season.

In outdoor track and fi eld, North Carolina Central won the fi rst three MEAC titles. The quartet of Melvin Bassett, Robert Ouko, Julius Sang and Larry Black set the world record in the sprint medley relay with a time of 38.19 in the 1972 Olympics. MEAC women began outdoor track and fi eld conference competition in 1980. In 1982, South Carolina State won the AIAW Division II Outdoor Track and Field National Championship.

The MEAC has showcased more than 27 athletes in the Olympics. Among them, 11 have earned medals during the Summer Games.

In 2003, Florida A&M became the fi rst MEAC school to win a volleyball match in the NCAA Championship, with a fi rst-round win over Winthrop. In 2004, the Lady Rattlers became the fi rst historically black college/university to rank in the Top 25 of the American Volleyball Coaches Association (AVCA) national poll.

South Carolina State’s women’s tennis team earned the conference’s fi rst Intercolle-giate Tennis Association (ITA) ranking in a 2005 poll, reaching No. 72.

In softball, Bethune-Cookman earned the conference’s fi rst-ever at-large bid to the NCAA Softball Championship in 2005. The Lady Wildcats defeated Florida, Central Florida and South Florida in the Florida Regional to become the fi rst MEAC school to win an NCAA Division I Softball Regional. Bethune-Cookman ended the 2005 season with the conference’s fi rst-ever rankings in the fi nal softball polls, reaching as high as No. 18.

Florida A&M was the fi rst MEAC baseball team to advance to NCAA postseason play in 1994, falling to Southeastern Louisiana in a best-of-three series. During the 2002 campaign, Bethune-Cookman advanced to the Gainesville Regional and became the fi rst MEAC team to win in the NCAA Tournament with a 7-4 victory over Florida International.

NORFOLK STATE UNIVERSITY 2012-13WOMEN’S TRACK & FIELD MEDIA GUIDE

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