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NCAA News Release

Nine Finalists Chosen for Woman of the Year

For Immediate Release

Wednesday, September 16, 2009
Contact(s)

Jennifer Kearns
Associate Director of Public and Media Relations
317/917-6222



INDIANAPOLIS---The NCAA has selected nine finalists for the 2009 Woman of the Year award that will be presented in October.

The award honors female student-athletes who have excelled in academic achievement, athletics, service and leadership.

A committee of representatives from NCAA schools and conferences selected the top nine finalists from a pool of 30 honorees. Those individuals were identified from an initial pool of 132 conference and independent honorees representing all three NCAA divisions and multiple sports.

The NCAA Committee on Women’s Athletics will select the national winner. The recipient of the 19th annual award will be announced during the 2009 NCAA Woman of the Year awards event Oct. 18 in Indianapolis.

The 2008 NCAA Woman of the Year was former Tennessee women’s basketball student-athlete Nkolika Anosike.

Following are biographies of this year’s Woman of the Year finalists:

Amanda Blumenherst, Duke University
Atlantic Coast Conference
Golf

 Excerpt from personal statement: “My time in college has prepared me for the future, both on and off the golf course, and I am excited to take the talents and experiences I have been given to help others.”

A three-time National Golf Coaches Association and Golfweek national player of the year, Blumenherst was part of two Blue Devil national championship teams and three ACC title squads. The two-time Honda Award winner and four-time conference player of the year led Duke to 19 tournament victories during her career. Her 12 career individual wins tied a school record. Blumenherst captured the 2008 U.S. Women’s Amateur Championship, a national championship for the USGA, and was a member of the United States’ 2006 and 2008 Curtis Cup teams.

Blumenherst, a history major, twice earned ESPN the Magazine Academic All-America honors and was recognized as the 2008 ACC Scholar-Athlete of the Year for women’s golf. She also was a three-time all-ACC academic and ACC Honor Roll pick.

In addition to participating on Duke’s Student-Athlete Advisory Committee Executive Board,  Blumenherst served as chair of the Project Share Holiday Initiative, which raised more than $1,800 to purchase gifts for families in need.

Ashleigh Clare-Kearney, Louisiana State University
Southeastern Conference
Gymnastics

Excerpt from personal statement: “I am empowered despite my odds as a black female and feel prepared to contribute to society because of my experiences as a student, athlete and volunteer.”

Clare-Kearney owns NCAA national championships in the vault and the floor exercise. The first-team all-American and first-team all-SEC pick was the conference all-around and floor champion in 2008. That same year, Clare-Kearney was named the SEC Athlete of the Year. She has 114 individual career titles and five perfect scores to her credit.

Clare-Kearney, a three-time SEC academic honor roll selection, earned a bachelor’s degree in English in 2008 and is working on a master’s degree in sports management. She also was named an LSU Scholar-Athlete three times and twice earned the LSU Athletic Director’s Cup for Academic Excellence.

A two-time captain of the Tigers’ gymnastics team, Clare-Kearney was a 2007 NCAA Student-Athlete Leadership Conference participant. Twice chosen as a member of the SEC Good Works Team for her efforts in the community, she was president of LSU’s Student-Athlete Advisory Committee as a senior. Clare-Kearney regularly visited Our Lady of the Lake Children’s Hospital, served as a Hurricane Katrina and Hurricane Gustav relief volunteer and participated in Habitat for Humanity.

Julia Hopson, State University College at Fredonia
State University of New York Athletic Conference
Indoor and Outdoor Track and Field

Excerpt from personal statement: “In 2008 I was chosen to attend the NCAA National Student-Athlete Development Conference where I learned that I was different than most college students. I learned that as athletes, we are role models for those around us and also for those we don’t even know are watching us. This inspired me to be the leader that others saw in me.”

An NCAA national champion in the 20-pound weight throw, Hopson, a five-time all-American, was the 2008-09 Atlantic Region Female Field Athlete of the Year. In addition to earning 13 SUNYAC titles, she holds league records in the 20 pound weight throw and the hammer. Hopson also was a five-time East Coast Athletic Conference champion.

Hopson, an academic all-American, was a Dean’s List and Commissioner’s List selection and earned the SUNY Chancellor’s Award. A three-time team captain, she was a 2008 NCAA National Student-Athlete Development Conference participant. Hopson, a graphic design major, was one of 12 NCAA student-athlete artists featured in Statements, a student-athlete art show at the 2009 NCAA Convention in Washington, D.C., and in NCAA Champion magazine.

A member of the campus Student-Athlete Advisory Committee, Hopson led team efforts in the Fall Sweep, a community service project to rake leaves for those who couldn’t do it themselves. She also helped plan a dodge ball tournament to raise money for a local food kitchen.

Dani Huffman, Emory University
University Athletic Association
Volleyball

 Excerpt from personal statement: “My servant’s heart drives my life: a life that, I hope, will benefit children with disabilities and others, and provide them with the same passion for learning and living that my parents instilled in me.”

Huffman, a middle blocker, helped lead Emory to the 2008 NCAA Division III women’s volleyball national title and earned Most Outstanding Player honors for the championship tournament. The American Volleyball Coaches Association first-team all-South Region and first-team all-UAA pick was the female recipient of the Bridges Award as Emory’s most outstanding all-around athlete.

An NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship recipient, Huffman was a 2009 Phi Beta Kappa inductee. A three-time team captain, she was a 2008 CoSIDA third-team academic all-American and was named to the UAA All-Academic Team three times. She majored in American studies and French studies and plans to pursue a master’s degree in special education at Azusa Pacific University.

Off the court, Huffman taught Chinese students about the Bible on a 2005 missions trip to Chengdu, China, and traveled to India to build an orphanage during a second mission trip in July of this year. She also volunteered at the Atlanta Hospital Hospitality House and participated in the Eggelstein Hospital Children’s Reading Program.

Venessa Lee, Pittsburg State University
Mid-America Intercollegiate Athletics Association
Cross Country, Indoor and Outdoor Track and Field

Excerpt from personal statement: “My athletics pursuits and scholastic achievements have taught me life lessons and developed in me qualities that I will use throughout my life. Through these experiences, I have obtained appreciation for delayed gratification, self-motivation driven from within, and an aspiration to be the best and learned to push myself past limits to achieve the impossible.”

Lee was a three-time national champion in the 800 meter discipline for Pittsburg State. The five-time all-American also captured 13 MIAA track and field titles. Captain of the Gorillas’ track and field squad as a senior, she was named the 2008-09 Ken B. Jones Award recipient as the conference’s female student-athlete of the year.

An ESPN the Magazine first-team Academic All-America selection, Lee, who graduated in May, majored in biology and Spanish with minors in chemistry and physical science. She was a three-time MIAA all-academic team pick and was recognized on the Dean’s Scholastic Honor Roll and the All A’s Scholastic Honor Roll. A member of Tri Beta Biology Honors Society, Lee earned biology departmental honors and the Spanish Meritorious Achievement Award.

In addition to serving as a senator on the Student Government Association Senate, Lee was the campus affairs director for the Student Government Association Cabinet. She also volunteered with Big Brothers and Big Sisters, Habitat for Humanity, Special Olympics and a free health clinic.

Tracy Menzel, Kenyon College
North Coast Athletic Conference
Swimming and Diving

Excerpt from personal statement: “Throughout my academic and athletics career at Kenyon College, I have learned that with success and privilege come responsibility – to myself, to my teammates and to my community. My major, women’s and gender studies, has taught me the importance of tying education to social action.” 

Menzel was a member of three NCAA Division III championship teams and three North Coast title squads. The all-American was a 12-time all-conference selection who owns two NCAA individual national titles in the 100-meter breaststroke and one in the 200-meter medley relay. She earned the 2009 Daniel G. Ray Memorial Award as the varsity swimmer chosen by teammates and the coach as the most valuable member of the squad.

A Phi Beta Kappa, Menzel was an NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship recipient. The ESPN the Magazine Academic All-American was chosen to receive Kenyon’s Doris B. Crozier Award, which is presented to a student who was instrumental in developing major changes for the betterment of the social and intellectual life of the student body. 

Menzel facilitated small group discussions with first-year students as a peer advisor. She also served as a student member of the women and gender studies department advisory board and was co-manager of the Crozier Center for Women.

Lacey Nymeyer, University of Arizona
Pacific-10 Conference
Swimming and Diving

Excerpt from personal statement: “Without the opportunities provided to me through my participation in college athletics, I doubt I would have such a clear sense of self-worth and purpose outside the skills of my sport.”

Nymeyer, a silver medalist in the 400-meter freestyle relay at the Summer Olympics in Beijing, helped lead Arizona to the 2008 NCAA Division I women’s swimming and diving team championship. She also captured a gold medal at the 2007 FINA World Championships in the 800-meter freestyle relay. The two-time Pac-10 swimmer of the year and 26-time all-American also earned NCAA individual titles in the 100-yard and 200-yard freestyle.

The physical education major was a first-team all-Pac-10 pick and a four-time University of Arizona Academic Champion. The 2007-08 Toyo Tires Scholar-Athlete of the Year, Nymeyer also was recognized as the State Farm Pride of the Pac-10 medal winner.

Away from the pool, Nymeyer visited Haven House for Women and Casa De Los Ninos House for Children as part of team service projects. In addition to teaching swimming lessons to 5- through 9-year-olds and serving as a student teacher, she has been a featured speaker at middle schools and youth sports banquets.

Ashley Puga, Northwest Nazarene University
Great Northwest Athletic Conference
Cross country, Indoor and Outdoor Track and Field

Excerpt from personal statement: “I have learned the value of having others around me, the importance of maintaining a balanced life, and the results of diligently working hard in all that I do. Whether I am reaching out as peer mentor, competing with athletes at a national level, working on a group project or receiving instruction from coaches and professors, I can see the value each person contributes to my life.”

A two-time NCAA national champion in the 800 meters, Puga was the 2008-09 U.S. Track and Field and Cross Country Coaches of America’s Division II Women’s Track Athlete of the Year (2008-09). She also was honored as the USTFCCCA Division II West Region Indoor Track and Field Women’s Track Athlete of the Year. The nine-time all-American, who established 10 school records, has seven conference titles to her credit and was chosen as the 2008 GNAC Female Athlete of the Year.

Puga graduated summa cum laude in May after majoring in accounting and business administration. Selected as the 2008-09 GNAC Female Scholar-Athlete of the Year, she also was a three-time conference academic all-American.

In addition to volunteering as a peer mentor, Puga participated in a student-led investment club that invested $100,000 of the university endowment fund. She also created a capital markets program for high school students and was co-leader of Idaho and Beyond, a program targeting fourth-graders that focused on Idaho agriculture and world trade.

Kathleen Tafler, Grand Valley State University
Great Lakes Intercollegiate Athletic Conference
Soccer

Excerpt from personal statement: “Through athletics, I gained the clarity to focus on academics and gaining experiences in my community. These experiences have made me into the driven person I am today, and will enable me to achieve my goals now that my time on the field of play has ended.”

Tafler, a two-time Daktronics Division II player of the year, is the GLIAC all-time leader in goals and points. The three-time conference offensive player of the year is the only player in league history to record at least 40 goals and 40 assists. The Daktronics and National Soccer Coaches Association of America first-team all-American ranks third in NCAA history in goals (114) and points (269).

A 2008 NCAA Today’s Top VIII Award recipient and the 2008 ESPN the Magazine College Division Academic All-American of the Year, Tafler was a two-time NSCAA Scholar-Athlete all-America pick. She also was a two-time recipient of the GLIAC Commissioner’s Award for Academic and Athletic Excellence and made the Dean’s List from 2005-09. Tafler, a biomedical sciences major, graduated in the spring.

Tafler was a child life volunteer at Helen Devos Children’s Hospital, a patient transport volunteer with St. Mary’s Health Care and an emergency room volunteer at Trillium Health Care. She participated on the campus Student-Athlete Advisory Committee and assisted with the Michigan Science Olympiad as an event helper and competition judge. 

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