Bishop Ireton High School | Archive | October, 2012

Broome Sweeps by Cardinals on Senior Day, 30-29

Junior Andrew Latrash makes diving catch that set up PJ Zingler's 7-yd scamper for a TD on the next play.

Potomac’s junior Jalen Broome scored three times Saturday, including the game-winner on a 16-yard reverse late in the final quarter, to spoil Bishop Ireton’s Senior Day 30-29.  The Cardinals’ quarterback PJ Zingler scored all 4 Ireton touchdowns in his final Fannon Field performance.

Both teams struggled through a scoreless first quarter, exchanging fumbles, before Ireton drew first blood with an 11-play, 90-yard drive.  Zingler teamed up with junior Phil Thomas on a 46-yard pass play to the Potomac 39.  The senior quarterback had his best day rushing of the year, and picked up 13 on a scramble to the visitors’ 21. Austin Carter gained 13 more on a Zingler aerial, Daniel Frazier rushed for 6 more before Zingler ran up the middle for the first of his touchdowns from 3 yards away.  Matt Bocchi gave Ireton a 7-0 advantage with 6:47 left in the first half.

Potomac answered immediately on their third play of the ensuing possession, on 3rd and 10, when sophomore Josh Hansan hauled in a Kevin Havermann pass and lugged it to the Ireton 8.  Broome took over there running from the “wildcat” formation and dashed into the endzone from six yards out. Phillip Bennett’s PAT tied the game at 7-7.

Ireton was stymied on its next two possessions while holding Potomac School in check on their next drive.  When Havermann got his next chance, however, he connected with Hansan once again on a spectacular 56-yard pass  that the fleet-footed Panther would catch one-handed in stride and streak untouched to the end zone.  The Cardinals committed a penalty on the point after touchdown, opening the door for the Panthers to elect for a 2pt conversion and the successful effort pushed their lead to 15-7.

The Cardinals, behind a pair of Brandon Price-Williams rushes of 12 yards, soon drove Ireton deep into Potomac territory, but when the Panthers seemingly couldn’t slow the Cardinal offense, the clock stepped in to end the half, preventing a Bishop Ireton tally.

The teams exchanged punts to open the third quarter, but then Cardinals started their second possession of the third quarter near midfield. Zingler scrambled 21 yards to the Potomac 30, Price-Williams then ripped off 14 more yards, putting the Cardinals on the 10. Three plays later, Zingler had his second 3-yard touchdown and Bocchi’s PAT pulled Ireton to 15-14, with 6:04 remaining in the third.

Potomac would drive to midfield on the ensuing possession before once again forced to punt.  Starting their next opportunity, a 75-yard scoring drive, the home team continued to pound the ball at the visitors on the ground as 7 straight running plays carried Ireton inside the Panther 20. Sophomore Andrew Latrash made a great catch on the sideline at the Potomac 7 yard line setting up Zingler’s 7-yard run for his third score. The PAT gave Ireton a short-lived 21-15 advantage.

The Panthers quarterback, Kevin Havermann, led the Panthers on a passing attack that overcame a pair of Potomac penalties and into Ireton territory as the game moved into the 4th quarter. Broome bolted for 13 yards down to the Cards’ 4-yard line, then finished the drive with a touchdown run and the PAT pushed the white-jerseyed McLean school back in front 22-21.

Again the teams stalled and exchanged punts, setting up the late game heroics. With Ireton starting their final scoring drive on their own 32, Price-Williams ripped off a 17 and 8 yard runs followed by a Zingler sprint that would be erased by a holding penalty. The lanky quarterback then found Austin Carter on third down and a mile, and the rangy senior wideout gathered in the pass, zigged and zagged through tacklers, and 29 yards down field for a drive-sustaining first down.  Price-Williams again bulled inside, dragging Panthers to the Potomac 1 yard line. Two plays later, Zingler scored his fourth touchdown of the game.  Coach Tony Verducci looked to extend the advantage to 7, so the point after touchdown saw Zingler roll right, scramble, and then throw back to the far left side of the end zone to a wide open Latrash for two points and a 29-21 lead with 3:44 to play.

Lady Luck would smile on the opponents, as she so often has this  season with the Cardinals. Ireton was looking to drive the kickoff deep toward the Ireton sideline. Instead, the kick was a “mis-hit”  resulting in an onside-kick type boot and recovered on the Ireton 49. With great field position, Potomac attacked immediately to regain the lead.

Havermann hit Broome for a 7-yard gain, Hansan for 20, then junior Chris Martin for 5 more.  The Cardinals forced an incomplete pass, stuffed the Panthers for no gain on a third down rush setting up the play-of-the-game on 4th and 4 on the Ireton 16.

The junior quarterback rolled hard to the right, showing sweep, then pitching back suddenly to the reversing Broome, who broke a tackle 10 yards behind the line of scrimmage as he sped back toward the Ireton sideline on the reverse. He broke another tackle at the line of scrimmage, then shot down the sideline past the last Cardinal defender a play that stunned the senior day crowd with what would be the game-winning score.  Quickly, the Panthers lined up and, again with Broome in the wildcat formation, snapped the ball to the athletic junior who plowed off tackle and through a pair of tacklers for a 2-point conversion and a 30-29 lead.  When asked if a conviction they could “end it right here” motivated the second year Potomac head coach, Patrick Duffy,  to eschew the tie and go for a “do or die” two-point conversion, he smiled and replied, “our kicker had injured his toe and I thought it was a our best chance.”

After a muffed kickoff return, the Cardinals started their final drive on their own 16.  Daniel Frazier took a pass in the flat and charged past, over, and around a host of Panthers before being forced out of bounds at the Ireton 40. But the drive stalled near midfield on downs and the disappointed Cardinals could only watch as the visiting Panthers repeatedly took at knee to run out the clock.

For the Cardinals (0-9) the final contest of the 2012 campaign comes on the road at Pope John Paul the Great Saturday at 2pm.  Ireton’s last visit to Dumfries was a disappointing 26-22 setback on a last minute touchdown for the Wolves. This will be the third meeting in the series, the redbirds pounded the Arlington Diocese’s newest high school on Fannon Field in 2011, 35-0.

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Ireton frosh honored by Fairfax County Athletic Council

County Chairman of the Board of Supervisors, Sharon Bulova (left) with Bishop Ireton freshman Amy Krotine, at the “Champions of Character” Award ceremony.

Fairfax County’s Athletic Council has selected Bishop Ireton freshman Amy Krotine as an honoree in their 10th annual Fairfax County Champions of Character Awards presented on Oct 23rd at a ceremony at the Fairfax County Government Center.  The Cardinal soccer player is a varsity goalkeeper on the 2012 team as well as an active member of a travel team in Alexandria.  She was selected as a female athlete from the Lee District of Fairfax County. Amy is the daughter of Mr. & Mrs. Michael Krotine of Alexandria.

The Council’s award recognizes many of the same principles embraced at Bishop Ireton, according to athletic director, Bill Simmons. “When you look at our Salesian approach to living and our athletic commitment to the tenents of the Positive Coaching Alliance, you can see that Amy has grown up with family values and team values that reflect those principles and values.  She is not only an exceptional teammate, but clearly a tremendous representative of our School and her family.  They are proud of her on her club team, and we are very proud of her as well.”

The award recognizes athletes, coaches, and parents. Athletes honored demonstrate respect for opponents, officials, teammates, including those of every skill level.   They encourage and inspire teammates, play within the rules, promoting friendly competition, demonstrating courage in defeat and moderation in victory.  These award winners show a willingness to sacrifice personal goals for team goals, and give back to the team and honor the game.  “What more would want from an athlete  than to be recognized for these qualities?” said the Ireton AD. “I couldn’t ask for a better type of person to represent our School.”

In recognizing the young Cardinal, the Council  noted in their award that she plays goalkeeper for the U-15 LMVSC Patriots.  The citation read in part, “Amy hasn’t always played goalkeeper for the Patriots, however. When the Patriots found themselves without a keeper three years ago , Amy was the first one to step up to say she would play that position. Since that time, she has been 100% committed to being the best goalkeeper she could be. Due to her incredible work ethic, Amy has earned a position as a goalkeeper on the Virginia State ODP [Olympic Development Program] team for the past two years. In keeping with her commitment to her team as its goalkeeper, Amy was honored by earning a position at the next level, the Regional ODP team. Amy is a champion with extraordinary character.”

Amy and her Cardinal teammates open the 2012 WCAC championship tournament on Tuesday when they host Paul VI Catholic High School on Fannon Field, gametime is set for 3:30pm. Admission is free.

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Varsity Cheerleaders raise awareness for Down Syndrome

Varsity Cheerleaders raise money and participate in the Buddy Walk.

Congratulations to the Bishop Ireton Varsity Cheerleading team for being the 2012 Volunteer of the year for the Down Syndrome Association of Northern Virginia and raising over $1,200 for the organization and participating in the Buddy Walk last Saturday! Great job team!

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Cross Country Grabs 2d in Girls, 4th in Boys at Georgetown Prep

Bishop Ireton's varsity girls gather after Georgetown Prep race.

Freshman Maggie Lohrer turned out one of her top performances of the season, taking 2nd place in the unseeded varsity girls race with a time of 21:08, followed by Katie Necochea (21:41), Alex Georgi (22:46), and Isabelle Wilcox (22:56) who all finished in the top 20.  Sidwell Friends claimed the number one spot in the race and 1st among the unseeded varsity girls teams overall, with Ireton taking 2nd overall.

For Ireton’s varsity boys, Connor Pearson took 15th overall in a time of 18:12 in the unseeded race, with Jack Leyden finishing in 18:18.  Ireton placed 4th overall for the unseeded boys varsity race, behind Sidwell Friends, Gilman, and McDonogh.

Bishop Ireton’s JV Boys also took fourth overall behind Atlee, Gilman, and St. John’s College, with Joe Simko (20:40) and Patrick Coyne (20:42) finishing in the top 20.  Ireton’s Natalie Irwin finished 10th in the girls JV race with a time of 23:45.

Freshman Thomas Ward led Ireton’s freshman boys with a time of 21:35, followed by Josh Cordoba at 21:48.  Overall, the freshman boys placed 8th with Yorktown taking the top spot in the race.
For Ireton’s freshman girls, Sabrina Ruiz led at 28:19 with Noelle Miranda close behind at 28:30.

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Cardinals Soar at their 1st “Head of the Charles” race in Boston

Cardinals race under the bridge at historic Head of the Charles Regatta in Boston

This past weekend, for the first time ever, the Bishop Ireton Rowing Team traveled to Boston, Massachusetts to compete in the 48th Annual Head of the Charles Regatta – the largest 2-day rowing race in the world with over 300,000 spectators each year – and came away with strong results.
Competing in the Youth 8+ event, the Men’s team qualified for next year’s race by finishing in the top half of the field of 85 teams in 34th place overall. The boat of Kevin Shoop, Joseph Gorman, Weston Birkett, Stephen Barlow, Josh Martini, William Colbert, Drew Woods, James Lewiski, and Conor Padden finished the day as the 18th fastest American high school.
Also in the Youth 8+, the Women’s side finished 49th in a field of 85 boats. The crew of Ashley Aust, Catherine Babiec, Allison Lee, Lyndsay Martini, Brianna Burke, Jessica Kammen, Esther Bouquet, Anna Rapp, and Noelle Chaney covered the course in barely 20 minutes – only a few seconds out of qualifying for next year’s regatta.
Both boats competed to the best of their abilities on the unfamiliar course in heavy winds and, in doing so, represented the Bishop Ireton Cardinals well. When asked about his thoughts on the race, Head Coach Eric Gehrke replied, “I am very proud of the the entire team today – not just the athletes that earned a trip to Boston, but also those at home that helped push our entire program to a higher level. Everyone that picks up a Bishop Ireton oar was a part of today’s racing and deserves some of the credit for getting us here. I look forward to coming back next year and continuing our improvement.”
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A Win That Got Away

Sophomore Grace Hamilton's (6) goal in the first half looked like the game winner until the final 8 munutes of the contest gave Good Counsel a come-from-behind win.

As the teams prepared for a key WCAC girls soccer show down, Bishop Ireton Coach Gino Leon was concerned about his team’s focus.  Good Counsel was again undefeated in the WCAC regular season, suffering some key injuries, but focused on their first chance to face Bishop Ireton since the stunning 2-0 upset by the Cardinals in last fall’s conference playoffs.  The worry about focus proved to be unnecessary in the physical 2-1 come-from-behind win for the Falcons.

Leon’s team came out aggressively and played the visitors from Olney even from the opening kick, in fact, the Cardinals had the best scoring opportunities throughout the opening half. Grace Hamilton gave the hosts a 1-0 lead with 19 minutes left in the opening half with a perfectly placed shot from more than 20 yards away on the left side.  The line drive was just above the reach of the Falcon goalkeeper and tucked just under the crossbar.  Minutes later Adrienne Maday put another great shot on goal, but a spectacular save kept the Cardinal lead at one.

As the winds swirled and clouds gathered, the rumble of thunder with 15:20 remaining in the second half caused a mandatory 30-minute stoppage in play.  The unscheduled break may have been just the breather the Falcons needed, as the Cardinals seemed to be pushing the Olney, Maryland squad on the smaller Ireton field to the verge of fatigue.  Just about 35 minutes later, a rejuvenated Good Counsel retook the field and displayed the grit of a potential champion.

The Falcons began to press the attack on the Cardinals and while Ireton countered, the field seemed to begin to tip in the blue and gold clan visitors’ way.  On a free kick deep in the Ireton, Cardinal keeper Brenna Heany  was screened by the mass of bodies and the Falcons’ Parr slipped a low line drive in the net to tie the score with 7:44 to play.

The tying goal was a shot of adrenaline for the Falcons and, as a steady rain began to fall, so did the pressure from Good Counsel. The Washington Post player-of-the-year in 2011, Midge Purse showed why she is 0ne of the area’s best when she gave the visitors the lead at 4:55 to play with a series of moves and scorching liner into the corner of net to stun the home team who had so expertly negated her play for the first 72 minutes.

The rain increased in the contest’s final minutes and Good Counsel settled into a smothering defense at midfield, clogging the middle, and turning away the Ireton offense as it struggled to gain the offensive zone.  The rain continued, the daylight fled, and Ireton’s hopes to tie the contest faded as the clock raced to :00.

Bishop Ireton will play its final home game Tuesday when they host Bishop McNamara on Fannon Field. Senior day activities will precede the 4pm start time and the JV contest will follow.  Next week will see the start of the WCAC playoff tournament.

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And a Win that Didn’t

Senior Mori Diane scored the game winner in the game's 76th minute at Good Counsel Friday.

Bishop Ireton’s boys soccer team hadn’t strung together consecutive wins in the WCAC in more than 3 years, but a determined squad went into Kline Stadium Friday and overcame a 2-goal deficit enroute to a 3-2 win over Good Counsel to give them back-to-back wins in conference play.  The Cardinals hope to stretch the streak to three when they play the conference finale at Bishop McNamara on Tuesday.

The game, delayed by weather, got off on the wrong foot for the Cardinals, who misplayed a pass on the opening whistle into a breakaway goal with only 14 seconds gone in the contest. Good Counsel added to the lead not long afterwards and quickly the visiting redbirds were staring a 2-0 deficit in the face.

These Cardinals wouldn’t fold, however, and freshman Joey Faddoul got Bishop Ireton on the board with his second goal in as many games.  A redirected shot to junior Kyle Delaney resulted in a header that found the net and suddenly Ireton had rebounded to tie the game by the halftime intermission, setting up the drama ahead in the final half of play.

As the squads battled through the final 40 minutes, Good Counsel appeared to get a huge break when a penalty kick was awarded around the 20 minute mark. As the Ireton faithful watched nervously, junior goalkeeper Andrew Perham came up with a huge save, deflecting the kick wide of the net to keep the game knotted at 2.

The spectacular save buoyed the Cardinals with new life and senior Mori Diane took the visitors’ fate on his shoulders with little more than  3 minutes remaining in the game with a series of thrilling moves to split the defense and bury the ball deep the Falcons net with the game winner.  Good Counsel pressed their attack but the Ireton defense was up to the task and preserved the hard fought road win.

Ireton improves to 6-7 on the season 3-5 in the WCAC with a date with the Mustangs on the road to end the conference regular season and a non conference senior day final game on Friday with Middleburg Academy. Senior day activities will precede the 4:3opm varsity-only contest. The JV will complete their season on Tuesday when they tangle with the Mustangs.

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Mistakes Plague Cardinals in 41-13 setback

Senior Austin Carter had a touchdown reception and a 60 yard kickoff return against PVI Friday night in Fairfax.

Turnovers and big plays, a season-long problem for the Cardinals, continued Friday night as the winless redbirds played another hard hitting, determined game, but again saw errors and bad breaks sink their chances to claim their first win of the season, falling to Paul VI on the Panthers’ homecoming, 41-13 in Fairfax.

The Cardinals suffered three interceptions, one for a 92-yard touchdown, and a fumble in the contest. The interception for a score, when Ireton had driven to the PVI 4 yard line, seemingly turned the game. An Ireton touchdown could have drawn the visitors to 21-14 in the third quarter, instead the Panther lead suddenly ballooned to 27-7. The Panthers had their share of problems as well, with three touchdowns negated by penalties.

Paul VI fumbled the ball to Ireton on their opening possession of the game, the teams then exchanged punts. On Ireton’s second possession of the game, they drove to the Panther’s 4 after a Daniel Frazier pass reception, but the burly senior fumbled the ball and PVI recovered deep in their own territory.

A 60-yard run by senior Tim Knowles got PVI out of the hole into great field possession and the stunned Cardinals saw another Panther senior, fullback Will Shourds take  a misdirection handoff the last 32 yards on the next play to get the home team on the scoreboard with 3:26 left in the first half. Ireton’s next drive stalled and the Cardinal punt put PVI on their own 11 yard line.

Paul VI then drove the ball, aided by 21 yard pass completion and a reverse by Owen Costello, to the Ireton 10. Three plays later Shourds bulled 3 yards into the end zone for his second touchdown and the PAT gave the hosts a 14-0 with 6:38 left in the half.

The Cardinals put together a good drive on their next possession, capped by an 18-yard reception by Dan Frazier, but the drive stalled on downs.  Bishop Ireton held the black and gold on their next possession, and after a punt took over on their own 14.

Senior Justin Paige made a acrobatic grab  near midfield for a 31 yard gain on 3rd and 14, but senior cornerback Nick Carpenter of picked off the PJ Zingler aerial on the next play to stop the Cardinal drive, returning the ball to the Ireton 35.

Paul VI would shoot themselves in the foot with a holding penalty wiping out a nifty scramble for a touchdown by Carpenter, playing quarterback on the offensive side of the ball.  Ireton stopped that drive and took over on their own 34.  Paige would haul in another long pass from Zingler to give Ireton a first down on the PVI 36.  Ryan O’Connor, a sophomore safety, plagued the Cardinals with an interception at the goal line to stop the drive and end the first half.

Austin Carter turned near disaster on the second half-opening kickoff into a great return to set Bishop Ireton up with field position at the PVI 40.  Initially, Carter let the kickoff head for the end zone, but the ball died on the Ireton 1, forcing him to pick it up and head up field. He did, breaking tackles, then bursting into the open, sprinted into Panther territory before being corralled.  7 plays later Carter would convert a screen pass up the middle into a touchdown and junior Joseph Bagnerise’s PAT had the Cardinals on the board early in the third quarter at 14-7.

Following an unsuccessful Ireton onside kick attempt, the Panthers went right to work. O’Connor bolted for 23 yards, Tyler Scanlon for 14 more, and following a nine yard loss, Jamon Cofield went 17 yards for PVI’s third TD and a 21-7 advantage.

The game-changing play for the visiting Cardinals  now lay ahead. A personal foul gave Ireton the ball at the PVI 46, and six plays later, the Cardinals were knocking on the door at the Panther 4 yardline.  PVI sophomore cornerback Spencer Hayes smelled out the quick pass to the sideline and stepped in front of Ireton’s Austin Carter to intercept the ball. 92 yards later he danced untouched into the end zone and Paul VI celebrated a 27-7 lead when they were dangerously close to seeing their lead shrink to 21-14 with 4:28 left in the third quarter.

Bishop Ireton took over on their next drive on their own 37 but stalled on the PVI 36 and the possession went over to the Panthers on downs. They methodically drove the ball down the field with Carpenter dashing 33 yards for another homecoming touchdown and the rout was on at 34-7 with 11:51 left in the contest.

Again the Cardinals were stopped on downs on the PVI 34. Cofield swept around end and was off to the end zone with an apparent touchdown, but for the second time in the game a holding penalty would wipe out a long touchdown run for the Panthers.  Ireton punted on their next possession and for the third time a touchdown was wiped out by a penalty this time on a punt return for a potential score.

The damage was temporary for Paul VI however as the first play from scrimmage saw the speedy Cofield sprint around end and dash untouched 71 yards to the end zone with 3:58 remaining.

The Cardinal reserves continue to play hard on Ireton’s final possession of the contest. Junior Darnell Duckett had a zig zagging 21-yard gain on the first play of the drive, then hauled in an Andrew Latrash pass for 19 more yards. Latrash then executed a quarterback draw and, aided by a key block from Max Sanasack, was pushed out of bounds at the PVI 4 yard line.  Latrash capped the 9 play, 70 drive with a 10-yard toss to Bagnerise for Ireton’s second score with 2:17 remaining.  An errant snap spoiled the PAT, and as reserves on both sides ran out the clock on the 41-13 final.

The loss dropped the Cardinals to 0-8 on the year with senior day scheduled for their final home game of the season next Saturday when they host Potomac School for a 2pm kickoff.

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Mix of Veterans, Youngsters Pace strong season for Cross Country

Senior Katie Necochea is the 2012 girls Alexandria City cross country champion.

Ireton’s varsity girls have once again made a strong showing within the last two meets.  Katie Necochea claimed the number one spot in the Alexandria City Cross Country Championships at Episcopal High School, with a finish of 20:54.  Maggie Lohrer, who was recently ranked by Mile Stat as one of the 50 fastest freshmen in Virginia, placed 3rd with a time of 21:18.  The varsity girls placed second overall, just five points behind Episcopal.

The varsity boys fell shy of TC William’s lead, claiming second place overall.  Duke Roach finished 4th at 18:12, with Connor Pearson finishing 6th at 18:31 and Michael LoGrande placing 7th in 18:45.  Jack Leyden led the JV boys race, finishing first at
19:18.  Patrick Coyne finished 13th at 20:46, helping the team place 2nd overall.  JV girls finished third overall behind Episcopal and TC Williams, with Riley Lopez finishing 8th in 24:42, Loren Gant taking 10th in 25:35, Annie Bartletta finishing 11th at 25:58, and Anna Chelak rounding out the top 15 at 25:58.

At the Bullis School Meet in Potomac, Md., Ireton’s boys took five of the top ten slots, with Duke Roach finishing 3rd, 17:54, Jack Leyden finishing 4th, 18:03, Connor Pearson claiming 5th, 18:10, Michael LoGrande taking 8th place, 18:22, and Kyle Delaney finishing in 8th, 18:40.  Runners from Edmund Burke claimed 1st and 2nd.  The top spot for girls went to Bullis, with Katie Nechochea and Maggie Lohrer finishing 2nd and 3rd in 20:45 and 21:07.  Alex Georgi placed 5th in 22:08, Isabelle Wilcox took 9th at 23:03 and Kaitlin Luzik rounded out the top ten at 23:08.

Next for Ireton is the Georgetown Prep Fall Classic in Bethesda, Md., on October 20th.

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Babiec Named US Rowing Academic all American

Cardinal rower, Catherine Babiec, (second from right) competed for the US in rowing on the Wannsee River outside Berlin, Germany. She was one of three Cardinals rowing at the highest levels in the summer.

Bishop Ireton rower, Catherine Babiec, was among fifty-five student athletes placed on the 2012-13 USRowing Scholastic Honor Roll and another 73 student-athletes earned honorable mention honor roll recognition, the association announced Monday.  She is the daughter of Dr. & Mrs. Dan Babiec of Alexandria, Virginia.

The USRowing Scholastic Honor Roll recognizes high school seniors who have excelled in both academics and rowing. Applicants must be USRowing members, have rowed or coxed at least one year, and successfully competed at or above the league or regional level. In total, more than 222 nominations were received from 94 rowing organizations.

USRowing is a nonprofit organization recognized by the United States Olympic Committee as the governing body for the sport of rowing in the United States. USRowing’s official suppliers include Boathouse Sports, Vespoli, WinTech, Filippi, Croker Oars, Rudy Project, Concept2, Nielsen Kellerman, PowerHTV and Ludus Tours. USRowing also receives generous support from the National Rowing Foundation and its corporate sponsors and partners ANXeBusiness Corp, Voxer, EZ Dock, EMCVenues and Whole Foods. For more information, visit www.usrowing.org. The USRowing National Team program relies on strong partnerships to enable continued success. New opportunities exist to support the teams through the next quadrennial, culminating with the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio. America Rows, which supports diversity in rowing and the USRowing adaptive programs also benefit from corporate support. For more information, please contact Beth Kohl at beth@usrowing.org.

2012-2013 USRowing Scholastic Honor Roll Recipients
Name, Affiliation

Fatuma-Ayaah Ali-Rinderkhecht, River City Rowing Club
Catherine Babiec, Bishop Ireton High School
Eileen Bates, Lakeside School
Micah Baum, Camp Randall Rowing Club
Foster Bayles, Lincoln Park Junior Crew
Sarah Burns, Fox Chapel High School
Sinead Carolan, Texas Rowing Club
Christine Cavallo, Orlando Area Rowing Society
Matthew Coupin, Oakland Strokes
Patrick Crane, Boston College High School
Trevor Day, Tempe Junior Crew
Joseph Figura, New Trier High School
James Gloyd, Concord High School
Hugo Gomez, Parati Competitive Rowing
Quinn Gruver, Maritime Rowing Club/New Canaan Crew
Juliette Hackett, Pacific Rowing Club
Blake Halim, Pine Crest School
Colleen Hamilton, Fox Chapel High School
Alden Harwood, Weston High School
Jessica Hatch, St. Andrew Rowing Club
Nathan Heinzman, Washington-Lee High School
Meredith Hilton, National Cathedral School
John Hocter, Loyola Academy
Jacqueline James, Mount Saint Joseph Academy
Madison Kerst, Long Beach Rowing Association
Raymond Lancaster, Charlotte Youth Rowing
Brendan Larkin, St. Andrew Rowing Club
Beth Ann Less, St. Ursula Academy
Shu Liu, Parati Competitive Rowing
Brinna Ludwig, Lower Merion High School/Whitemarsh Boat Club
Jake Marshall, Dublin Crew
Jesus Mathus, Jesuit College Preparatory School of Dallas
Matthew McDermott, St. Joseph’s Collegiate Institute
Hailey Miller, NorCal Crew
Kathryn Mirabella, Mount Saint Joseph Academy
Lucas Neuroth, Dublin Crew
Catherine O’Brien, Loyola Academy
Rachel Osmundsen, Rose City Rowing Club
Elizabeth Pate, Oakland Strokes
Kelly Power, Fox Chapel High School
Julia Rigothi, Poughkeepsie High School
Danielle Sawtelle, Lake Braddock High School
Solomon Seckler, Pine Crest School
Tyler Sheldon, Bainbridge High School
Joy Shen, Culver Academy
Wilson Sink, Charlotte Youth Rowing
Simisola Tani-Olugbemi, Los Gatos Rowing Club
Grace Tucker, Upper Arlington High School
Priya Veeraraghavan, Texas Rowing Club
Chris Wales, Seattle Rowing Center
Rachel Walton, New Trier High School
Eliza Weaver, New Trier High School
Julia Wolf, New Trier High School
Sharon Wu, Stanford Rowing Center
Sharon Zhang, Dublin Crew

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