Completed Event: Men's Golf versus Temple Invitational on September 22, 2025 , , 13th of 13 (+52)
Final

Men's Golf
vs Temple Invitational
Ivy Champions (3) | Â League Champions (4) |
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Men's Tennis - Men's Soccer - Softball |
Women’s Rugby (15s and 7s) - Sailing - Skiing |
National Championship Appearances (9) | Nationally Ranked Teams (10) |
Women’s Cross Country (NCAA) Heavyweight Rowing (IRA) Lightweight Rowing (IRA) Women’s Rugby (NIRA) Sailing (ICSA) Skiing (NCAA) Men’s Soccer (NCAA) Men’s Squash (CSA) Men’s Tennis (NCAA) |
Men’s Tennis (14) Women’s Cross Country (26) Women’s Lacrosse (13) Lightweight Rowing (9) Heavyweight Rowing (8) Women’s Rowing (19) Women’s Rugby (1) Sailing (9) Men’s Squash (5) Women’s Squash (10) (highest ranking in parenthesis) |
First Team All-Ivy Athletes: 35 Total All-Ivy Athletes: 90 Ivy League Player of the Year (5): Kristina Mathis (Women’s Tennis), Wyatt Omsberg (Men’s Soccer - Defensive Player of the Year), Cha’Mia Rothwell (Women’s Indoor Track & Field - Most Outstanding Field Performer), Kiera Vrindten (Women’s Lacrosse - Goalkeeper of the Year), Dustin Shirley (Baseball)  Ivy League Rookie of the Year (3): Jason Liu (Men’s Golf), Dawson McCartney (Men’s Soccer), Schae Nelson (Softball) All-America (11): Wyatt Omsberg (Soccer - 3rd), Folarin Orimolade (Football - 1st), Luke Brown (Skiing - 2nd), Alexa Dlouhy (Skiing - 2nd), Lauren Jortberg (Skiing - 2nd), Brian McLaughlin (Skiing - 1st), Tanguy Nef (Skiing - 2nd), Foreste Peterson (Skiing - 1st), Fabian Stocek (Skiing - 1st), Thomas Woolson (Skiing - 1st), Alvin Heumann (Men’s Squash - 2nd), Helen Schlachtenhaufen (Outdoor Track & Field - 2nd) |
Ivy League Coach of the Year (4): Chad Riley (Men’s Soccer), Chris Drake (Men’s Tennis), Danielle Spencer (Co / Women’s Lacrosse), Shannon Doepking (Softball) EISA Alpine Coach of the Year (1): Peter Dodge (Men’s Alpine Skiing) National Coach of the Year (2): Peter Dodge (Alpine Skiing), Cami Thompson Graves (Nordic Skiing) All-American (21): Milla Anderson (Rugby - 1st), Lydia Blanchet (Skiing - 2nd), Luke Brown (Skiing - 2nd), Callan DeLine (Skiing - 1st and 2nd), Alexa Dlouhy (Skiing - 2nd), Lilly Durbin (Rugby - 1st), Rebecca McElvain (Sailing - 1st), Alvin Heumann (Men’s Squash - 1st), Lauren Jortberg (Skiing - 2nd), Brian McLaughlin (Skiing - 1st), Tanguy Nef (Skiing - 1st 2x), Katharine Ogden (Skiing, 1st 2x), Wyatt Omsberg (Men’s Soccer - 2nd), Ben Ose (Men’s Outdoor Track & Field - 2nd), Kat Ramage (Rugby - 1st), Danielle Ramay (Rugby - 1st), Frankie Sands (Rugby - 1st), Christopher Williford (Sailing - 1st) Academic All-District (5): Ben Hagaman (Football), Jack Heneghan (Football), Sara Lindquist (Volleyball), Ben Ose (Men’s Track & Field), Dustin Shirley (Baseball) Other Major Awards: Christopher Williford (Sailor of the Year),Tanguy Nef (USCSCA National Alpine Skier of the Year), Katharine Ogden (USCSCA National Nordic Skier of the Year) |
BASEBALL (Bob Whalen, Head Coach — 585-560-3, 29 yrs) 17-22-1, 12-8-1 Ivy (3rd) |
Dartmouth posted its 11th-consecutive winning season in conference play, matching the record for an Ivy League team that was set by the Big Green (1962-72). Down the stretch, the team won six straight games — including a series sweep of Princeton — but ended up just half a game shy of qualifying for the league championship series. Co-captain Dustin Shirley, an Academic All-District selection, was named the Ivy League Player of the Year and was one of six players to earn all-conference honors. As a team, Dartmouth led the league with a .272 batting average and ranked second in both on-base and slugging percentages. Sean Sullivan led Ivy League players with a .459 on-base percentage and was second in batting (.340), Shirley led the loop with 14 doubles and was second in slugging (.497), and Austen Michel had a league-high seven saves. |
MEN'S BASKETBALL (David McLaughlin, Head Coach — 14-40, 2 yrs) 7-20, 3-11 Ivy (8th) |
Dartmouth matched its overall record from the year before despite losing its top two returning scorers very early in the season. Captain Miles Wright helped pick up the slack, as did senior Taylor Johnson and freshman Chris Knight, each of whom averaged double-digit points, while sophomore Brendan Barry was nearly a fourth. Wright became the 29th player in program history to record 1,000 points, but the first to include 400 rebounds, 100 3-pointers and 100 steals to his ledger as well. The Big Green picked up a last-second victory over Loyola (Md.) early in the year, and added conference wins at home against Princeton, Brown and Columbia. |
WOMEN’S BASKETBALL (Belle Koclanes, Head Coach — 54-86, 5 yrs) 15-12, 7-7 Ivy (5th) |
The Big Green narrowly missed out on the Ivy League Tournament, but posted their best overall season and home records since 2008-09 at 15-12 overall and 9-4 in Leede Arena. Dartmouth’s biggest triumphs came in wins over Boston College and Colorado, the first in program history against ACC and Pac-12 teams, respectively. Against Columbia, the Big Green set a school record by scoring 35 points in the third quarter. Senior Kate Letkewicz, an All-Ivy League Second Team selection, inked her name in the Dartmouth record books in six different categories, including 15th all-time in scoring, 12th all-time in rebounds and third all-time in 3-point field goals made. Junior Cy Lippold also had a breakout year ranking second on the team in scoring while dishing out 144 assists, second-most in a single season at Dartmouth. |
MEN’S CROSS COUNTRY (Barry Harwick ’77, Head Coach — 25 yrs) 5th at Heps, 13th at Northeast Regional |
Dartmouth started the year with a perfect score in winning the Maribel Sanchez Souther Invitational on the 8K course at the Hanover Country Club. The Big Green would eventually take fifth at Heps at Van Cortlandt Park in the Bronx before finishing 13th at the NCAA Northeast Regional. |
WOMEN’S CROSS COUNTRY (Courtney Jaworski, Head Coach — 4 yrs) 2nd at Heps, 2nd at Northeast Regional, 29th at NCAAs |
The Big Green had an outstanding 2017 season that culminated in the program’s 12th trip to the NCAA National Championship Meet, tied for the most by any Ivy League team. Dartmouth started the year by posting a perfect 15 points to win the Maribel Sanchez Souther Invitational at the Hanover Country Club, with several top-three finishes throughout the rest of the fall. The Big Green were second at Heps in Van Cortlandt Park in the Bronx and followed that up with a second-place finish at the NCAA Northeast Regional Meet in Buffalo to punch their ticket to nationals. Junior Olivia Lantz posted fifth-place finish at Heps, earning All-Ivy League First Team honors in the process, while Sophomore Julia Stevenson and freshman Ella Ketchum each garnered All-Ivy League Second Team recognition. Stevenson would then lead Dartmouth at regionals with a ninth-place showing. |
EQUESTRIAN (Sally Batton, Head Coach — 29 yrs) 2nd at Ivy Show |
A great season from start to finish, Dartmouth finished no lower than third in any of the 10 shows they competed in. Five times, the Big Green came away as the top team, while also claiming reserve champion honors three more times. The team took second at the Ivy Show in Hanover in late August before Olivia Champ claimed fourth in the country in Individual Open Fences at the 2018 Intercollegiate Horse Show Association (IHSA) National Championship in Pennsylvania during the first weekend in May. |
FIELD HOCKEY (Amy Fowler, Head Coach — 145-166, 18 yrs) 7-10, 2-5 Ivy (7th) |
The Big Green posted seven wins for the third time in the last five years, highlighted by a three-game win streak near the end of the season. Katie Spanos was named to the conference’s second team, while team captains Morgan Philie and Sarah Tabeek were honorable mention selections. Spanos led the team n goals (9), assists (9) and points (27), a vast improvement from her freshman season (3-3-9). Her point total not only led the team in 2017, but helped the sophomore forward to finish sixth in the Ivy League. As just a sophomore, Spanos is one of the focal points in Dartmouth’s development that should lead to a bright future. |
FOOTBALL (Buddy Teevens ’79, Head Coach — 87-91-2, 18 yrs) 8-2, 5-2 Ivy (T-2nd) |
Two years removed from an Ivy League title, Dartmouth nearly earned a share of another, coming up just short of its goal in a tie for second place. The Big Green won their first five games (the last four of those by a combined eight points and two of them on the game’s final play), but suffered losses to Columbia and Harvard, also by a combined eight points. The season ended well, however, with a shutout win over Cornell, a trouncing of Brown and a high-scoring triumph (54-44) over Princeton, thanks to two touchdowns in the final second of play. No less than 16 players earned All-Ivy honors with Matt Kaskey and Jack Traynor being named to the first team as well as the Division I All-New England Team. Jack Heneghan finished his career with the fourth-most passing yards and total yards, then signed a free-agent contract with the San Francisco 49ers. |
MEN’S GOLF (Rich Parker, Head Coach — 13 yrs) 2nd at Ivy Championship |
Dartmouth tested itself against strong competition throughout the fall and spring seasons, and those challenges paid off down the stretch as the Big Green put together a terrific final round at the Ivy League Championship to move up four spots in the standings to finish second for the second time in the last three years. Senior Ian Kelsey was the Big Green’s top golfer, tying for fifth overall, just three strokes behind the leader, to earn a spot on the All-Ivy First Team. Freshman Jason Liu was named the Ivy League Rookie of the Year as he nearly matched Kelsey’s stroke average for the season. The Big Green also won the Cornell Spring Invitational with Kelsey earning medalist honors at the end of March. |
WOMEN’S GOLF (Alex Kirk, Head Coach — 6 yrs) T-5th at Ivy Championship |
Some solid results during the fall and spring led to a solid showing at the Ivy League Championship as Dartmouth placed fifth overall, matching last year’s finish for the team’s best in the last 14 years. The Big Green also had their best three-round total at the championship (935) and the smallest difference between their score and the champion (24 strokes). Senior Jessica Kittelberger and junior Catharine Roddy both made the All-Ivy Second Team, giving Dartmouth two all-conference players for the first time in 21 years. Earlier in the year, the Green picked up match-play victories over Wagner and Lehigh, as well as a third-place finish at the Hartford Invitational as a tune up for Ivies. |
MEN’S HOCKEY (Bob Gaudet ’81, Head Coach — 305-309-73, 21 yrs) 16-17-2, 11-10-1 ECAC (5th); 3-7 Ivy (6th) |
Dartmouth just missed out on a first-round bye in the ECAC Hockey postseason after finishing fifth in the league standings. The Big Green’s remarkable second-half turnaround make them one of the nation’s hottest team’s down the stretch. Three wins over top-10 teams included a sweep of Clarkson when the Golden Knights were ranked No. 2 and No. 7 in the national polls, the second of which was the 300th career victory for head coach Bob Gaudet ’81 at Dartmouth. The biggest win of the year, though, came on Dec. 16 when the team went on the road and turned a 3-0 first-period deficit into a 5-4 win against then-No. 2 and defending national champion Denver in the Mile High City. Devin Buffalo and Will Graber were named to the All-Ivy League Second Team for their breakout campaigns. |
WOMEN’S HOCKEY (Joe Marsh, Interim Head Coach — 5-19-3, 1 yr) 5-19-3, 3-16-3 ECAC (11th); 1-7-0 Ivy (T-5th) |
Dartmouth was led by interim head coach Joe Marsh (long-time head coach of the St. Lawrence men’s hockey team) while head coach Laura Schuler was coaching the Canadian Olympic Women’s Hockey Team to a silver medal in Pyeonchang. The Big Green’s first win of 2017-18 came in the form of a 1-0 road victory over Quinnipiac that saw starting netminder Christine Honor make a career-high, program record and NCAA record 61 saves. The team played a record nine home games in a row (Nov. 4 - Dec. 31), taking down Maine and Holy Cross during that time. At the conclusion of the season, Honor was named All-Ivy Honorable Mention, while Caroline Shaunessy was Academic All-Ivy. |
MEN’S LACROSSE (Brendan Callahan, Head Coach — 10-43, 4 yrs) 2-11, 0-6 Ivy (7th) |
Back for his fourth year at the helm, Brendan Callahan led his team to a 2-11 record in 2018. The Big Green opened the season on a high note, taking down Canisius by a score of 13-12 when Jack Korzelius netted the game winner with 1.9 seconds remaining. Two weeks later, Dartmouth had another close win, defeating Wagner at home, 9-8. The Green played two double overtime games in the last two weeks of the season, falling to both UMass Lowell and Penn. Korzelius became the ninth player in program history to be selected in the Major League Lacrosse Draft, taken by the Atlanta Blaze with the 56th overall pick. He and Austin Meacham were named second team All-Ivy to end the year. |
>WOMEN’S LACROSSE (Danielle Spencer, Head Coach — 18-13, 2 yr) 11-5, 5-2 Ivy (3rd) |
A resurgent season saw Dartmouth return to the Ivy League Tournament for the first time since 2013 thanks to a 5-2 conference mark and a third-place finish. The Big Green were led by three First-Team All-Ivy League selections, including the conference’s Goalkeeper of the Year Kiera Vrindten. Danielle Spencer was also tabbed as the Ivy League Co-Coach of the Year for her role in helping get the Big Green back into the postseason. First-teamer Ellie Carson became the eighth player in program history to reach 50 goals in a season, while second-team selection Kathryn Giroux re-wrote the history books once again on the draw control, boasting a 19-draw game at Jacksonville, the best figure of any collegiate player in the country in 2018. |
MEN’S HEAVYWEIGHT ROWING (Wyatt Allen, 4 yrs) 9th at IRA Regatta |
The heavyweight rowing team wrapped up its season at the IRA National Championship Regatta, claiming spots in the top 10 of the first, second and third varsity events for a 9th-place overall. In the fall season the Big Green took second place at the Princeton Chase, ahead of 36 teams. During the regular season, Dartmouth took wins over Boston University and Georgetown at home, and bested three teams in the Alumni Cup in Boston, sweeping all race events to finish first out of four teams. The Big Green finished the season ranked No. 11 in the top 20 of the US Rowing Collegiate Poll. |
MEN’S LIGHTWEIGHT ROWING (Sean Healey, 6 yrs) 8th at Eastern Sprints Regatta |
The Big Green faced tough competition in the lightweight rowing schedule and took wins over MIT, Temple and Delaware in the regular season. Dartmouth competed in the Head of the Charles in the beginning of the fall with a Lightweight 4+ boat that finished sixth overall, ahead of Penn and Harvard. At the Princeton Chase the Big Green had success in the Freshman 8+ with an eighth-place finish. Dartmouth finished the season at the Eastern Sprints Regatta as the team finished eighth overall and ended the year ranked 12th. |
WOMEN’S ROWING (Wendy Bordeau, 10 yrs) 6th Ivy League Championship |
Having completed nine seasons as head coach of the women’s rowing coach (2005-14), Wendy Bordeau returned in the fall of 2017 to lead the Big Green squad she has already taken to three NCAA Championship events. Dartmouth had a good season in 2017-18, winning every race against Boston College, Rhode Island and Bates, and defeating Cornell to retain the Parents’ Cup. The Big Green wrapped up their season at the Ivy League Championship, sending all five of their boats to the Grand Finals. They moved up two places from last year to take sixth with 37 points. Sabrina Bohrer was named first team All-Ivy, while Zoe Dinneen was tabbed to the second team. |
WOMEN’S RUGBY (Katie Dowty, Head Coach — 22-5, 3 yrs) 8-1, 3-0 Ivy (1st) |
Dartmouth had a great year in 2018, going 8-1 overall and 3-0 in conference matches. After starting the fall off on a three-game winning streak against No. 1 Quinnipiac, No. 3 Army West Point and Princeton, the Big Green shot into the national rankings as the top team in the country. Dartmouth defeated Harvard to win its third straight Ivy Championship title and followed that up with wins over AIC and the Crimson in the NIRA quarterfinal and semifinal, bringing the Green’s winning streak to eight straight. Dartmouth met defending champion Quinnipiac in the final, narrowly falling, 29-20. Milla Anderson, Lilly Durbin, Kat Ramage, Danielle Ramsay and Frankie Sands were named to the NIRA All-America first team, while Idia Ihensehkien was an honorable mention selection. |
SAILING (Justin Assad, 8 yrs) 13th At National Championships |
The Big Green had a great fall campaign in 2017, winning the Atlantic Coast Championship in coed competition and ending the fall season ranked No. 1. Junior sailor Christopher Williford was honored as the Coed Sailor of the Year from the New England Intercollegiate Sailing Association following the NEISA Championship where Dartmouth finished third to earn a trip to the ISCA Gill Coed National Championship. Representatives of the Big Green also sailed in the Sperry Women’s National Championship, placing 10th overall. At the Coed National Championship Dartmouth finished 13th. Six members of the team, including Williford, received All-NEISA honors at the end of the regular season. |
SKIING (Cami Thompson-Graves, Peter Dodge ’78, John Dwyer and Brayton Osgood, Coaches) 1st in EISA, 3rd at NCAAs |
Dartmouth once again won five of the six carnivals, including the EISA Championship for the second straight year, then went on to its best finish (third) at the NCAA Championships in seven years. Of the eight races at the NCAAs, half were won by Big Green skiers as Brian McLaughlin won the men’s giant slalom, Tanguy Nef claimed the men’s slalom, and freshman Katharine Ogden dominated both women’s Nordic races to become the first Dartmouth skier in 56 years to win two titles in one season. The Big Green finished up with a total of 11 All-America honors with that trio joined by Lydia Blanchet, Luke Brown, Callan DeLine (twice), Alexa Dlouhy and Lauren Jortberg, plus Nef again in the GS as he was the runner-up to McLaughlin. Nef and Ogden went on to be named the USCSCA Men’s Alpine Skier and Women’s Nordic Skier of the Year, respectively, while Peter Dodge and Cami Thompson-Graves garnered national Alpine Coach and Nordic Coach of the Year honors. |
MEN’S SOCCER (Chad Riley, Head Coach — 51-26-14, 5 yrs) 12-3-2, 6-0-1 Ivy (1st) |
Dartmouth finished another successful season in winning its fourth-straight Ivy League title and receiving the 15-seed in the NCAA College Cup to get a first-round bye. The Big Green saw eight players receive All-Ivy honors (four on the first team) while head coach Chad Riley was named the Coach of the Year, defender Wyatt Omsberg was named Defensive Player of the Year and Dawson McCartney named Rookie of the Year. Junior Eduvie Ikoba led the Big Green offensively with eight goals and three assists, ranking second among Ivy players in goals and points, while Justin Donawa and Dawson McCartney led the league with eight assists each. Freshman keeper Christopher Palacios had a strong rookie year, with a .573 goals-against average and 10 shutouts. |
WOMEN’S SOCCER (Ron Rainey, Head Coach — 30-26-10, 4 yrs) 7-10, 1-6 Ivy (7th) |
The Big Green started the season well with wins over FIU and Stony Brook at home, and also defeated Albany, Quinnipiac, UMass Lowell and Holy Cross in non-conference play. In Ivy League action the Big Green went to overtime against Penn, Yale, Brown and Harvard. In the season finale against Cornell, freshman Erin Kawakami scored the game-winning goal to end the year on a high note. Junior Remy Borinsky and senior Brittany Champagne were both selected to the All-Ivy First Team and Kawakami was a second-team choice. Borinsky ended the year with five goals, eighth-most in the league. |
SOFTBALL (Shannon Doepking, Head Coach — 85-79-1, 4 yrs) 22-18, 16-5 Ivy (1st) |
Dartmouth defied preseason predictions (that had the team finishing fifth) to win six of its seven Ivy League series and claim the regular-season title. The Big Green recorded the best ERA in the conference at 3.29, led by senior Breanna Ethridge who was second in the conference at 2.67. Serving as hosts of the Ivy League Championship Series, Dartmouth was upset by Harvard, denying the Green a berth at an NCAA Regional. In an 8-4 win over Cornell, the Big Green hit four consecutive home runs to tie an NCAA record. Shannon Doepking was chosen as the Ivy League Coach of the Year, and six players earned all-conference honors, four on the first team. But it was sophomore Micah Schroder, a second-team selection, who earned a spot on the NFCA All-Region Second Team. |
MEN’S SQUASH (Hansi Wiens, Head Coach — 88-67, 9 yrs) 13-5, 4-3 Ivy (3rd) |
The Dartmouth men’s squash team completed another historic season defeating Princeton once during the regular season and again in the Hoehn Cup final. The victory in the Hoehn Cup was the Big Green’s first since 2001. At the conclusion of the season, two members of the squash team were honored with posteason accolades. Senior co-captain, Glen Brickman was named to the 2017 Harrow Sports College Squash Players of the Men’s National Team Championship list. Junior Alvin Heumann was also honored with an All-Ivy First Team selection. |
WOMEN’S SQUASH (Hansi Wiens, Head coach — 68-77, 9 yrs) 7-10, 1-6 Ivy (7th) |
The Big Green started the season winning four of their first five matches, but struggled through the second half of the year. At the Kurtz Cup, Dartmouth defeated Middlebury and Williams to advance to the final before falling to Drexel in the finals, 6-3. Rebecca Brownell, Janel Gaube and Annie Blasberg competed in the CSA Individual Championships, where Gaube took three wins in her bracket before falling in the final. |
MEN’S SWIMMING (James Holder, Head Coach — 2-16, 2 yr) 1-7, 0-6 Ivy (7th at Ivy Championship) |
Dartmouth started the season off well, defeating Boston College at home. A few months later, the Big Green won the newly named Tate Ramsden Invitational, coming back after sitting in second place on day one to defeat UMass and SUNY New Paltz. Dartmouth finished in seventh place at the Ivy League Championship, breaking school records in the 800 free relay, 500 free (Connor LaMastra) and 200 fly (Connor LaMastra). Diver Justin Sodokoff had a good freshman year, finishing first in multiple meets and taking eighth on 1-meter and 11th on 3-meter at Ivies. Henry Senkfor was named Academic All-Ivy. |
WOMEN’S SWIMMING (James Holder, Head Coach — 2-14, 2 yr) 1-5, 0-5 Ivy (Ineligible for standings) |
The Big Green won the Tate Ramsden Invitational, finishing ahead of UMass and SUNY New Paltz at home. The two-day meet was highlighted by Hayley Winter’s record-breaking swim in the 1650 free. Dartmouth came in eighth place at the Ivy League Championship, breaking a few records along the way: Mackenzie Stumpf broke school records in the 100 and 200 breast, Cathleen Li took down the program record in the 100 fly and the 400 medley relay took down another record. Stumpf was named second team All-Ivy in both the 100 and 200 breast after taking second in both events, while Winter was named Academic All-Ivy. |
MEN’S TENNIS (Chris Drake, Head Coach — 121-69, 9 yrs) 20-6, 6-1 Ivy (T-1st) |
Dartmouth had a record-breaking year in 2017-18, starting the year on a record 12-match winning streak en route to their first ECAC Indoor title. Dartmouth ended the regular season with a record of 20-5, its fewest losses since an 18-4 season in 2012. The Green went 6-1 in Ivy League play, earning a share of the title with Columbia and the league’s automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament, where they fell to Oregon in the first round, 4-0. For the second time in the past three seasons, Chris Drake was named Ivy League Coach of the Year, while Charlie Broom and David Horneffer were named first team All-Ivy in singles and doubles, and Dan Martin was selected to the second team in singles. |
WOMEN’S TENNIS (Bob Dallis, Head Coach — 185-149, 16 yrs) 11-11, 4-3 Ivy (T-3rd) |
Women’s tennis ended 2017-18 with an overall record of 11-11 and went 4-3 in Ivy League play, taking down Yale, Cornell, Columbia and Penn to tie for third. Kristina Mathis was a unanimous selection for Player of the Year, just the third Big Green player to receive the honor in the last 19 years, and qualified for the NCAA Singles Championship, where she lost in the first round to a Northwestern opponent. Julia Schroeder was selected to the All-Ivy League Second Team for singles and First Team for doubles, plus earned the national ITA Cissie Leary Award for Sportsmanship. Abigail Chiu also appeared on the first team for doubles as Schroeder’s partner. |
MEN’S TRACK AND FIELD (Barry Harwick ’77, Head Coach, 26 yrs) Heps: 4th (in), 5th (out) |
Dartmouth enjoyed a wealth of success this season at home with two first-places finishes at Leverone during the indoor season and one at Memorial Field in the outdoor season. The standout performer of the year was junior Ben Ose who won the indoor heptathlon in Hanover in Februrary before claiming the outdoor decathlon title in May at Penn. Ose would go on to reach the NCAA Championship meet where he finished 15th in the decathlon in Oregon, earning Second Team All-America honors. |
WOMEN’S TRACK AND FIELD (Sandra Ford-Centonze, Head Coach, 26 yrs) Heps: 3rd (in), 6th (out) |
Winners of four indoor home meets, Dartmouth claimed third at Indoor Heps at Leverone as well. Once again, it was Cha’Mia Rothwell who shined brightest during the season as she won both the long jump and 60m hurdles in addition to a second-place showing in the 200m during the Ivy meet in Hanover. She would then go on to take the top spot in the 100mH during the outdoor championship and second in the long jump to cap 2017-18 with five All-Ivy League performances. |
WOMEN’S VOLLEYBALL (Gilad Doron, Head Coach — 19-29, 2 yrs) 10-13, 6-8 Ivy (6th) |
Dartmouth moved up two spots in the Ivy League standings from last year by finishing sixth. Throughout tournament play, Abby Kott and Tori Dozier were named all-tournament at the Cal Classic and the Dartmouth Invitational, while Sara Lindquist was all-tournament at the Holly Young Invite. The Big Green took down Penn (for the first time since 2006) and Princeton (for the first time since 2015) to end the season on a high note, defeating both in a single weekend for the first time in program history. Lindquist was named CoSIDA Academic All-District and Academic All-Ivy, while Dozier was an All-Ivy honorable mention. |