NCAA News Archive - 2005

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Strong 'Top VIII' completes honors selections


Dec 19, 2005 3:59:25 PM



The NCAA Honors Committee has selected eight outstanding student-athletes for their athletics success, academic achievement and community service as recipients of the NCAA Today's Top VIII.

The awards will be presented at the NCAA Honors Celebration on Saturday, January 7, during the annual NCAA Convention in Indianapolis. The Convention will serve as the kick-off to the NCAA's Centennial with the theme, "Celebrating the Student-Athlete."

The 2006 Today's Top VIII are Samantha Arsenault, University of Georgia, swimming and diving; Sarah Dance, Truman State University, swimming and diving; Carter Hamill, Amherst College, outdoor track and field, indoor track and field, and cross country; Nicholas Hartigan, Brown University, football; DeMeco Ryans, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, football; Christine Sinclair, University of Portland, soccer; Richelle Simpson, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, gymnastics; and Jamie Southern, California State University, Fresno, softball.

The Honors Committee is composed of eight athletics administrators at member institutions and nationally distinguished citizens who are former student-athletes. The committee members are Cedric W. Dempsey, president emeritus of the NCAA; Susan Hartmann, professor of history at Ohio State University; Calvin Hill, a consultant to the NFL's Dallas Cowboys; Gibbs Knotts, faculty athletics representative at Western Carolina University; Valerie A. Richardson, associate athletics director for intercollegiate sports programs and senior woman administrator at Columbia University; Julie Power Ruppert, associate commissioner and senior woman administrator at the America East Conference; Thomas J. Brown, commissioner of the Great Lakes Intercollegiate Athletic Conference; and Timothy W. Gleason, commissioner of the Ohio Athletic Conference.

Following are summaries of the winners' accomplishments:

Samantha Arsenault
University of Georgia
Swimming and Diving

An Olympic gold medalist in the 800-meter freestyle relay in Sydney, Arsenault also was a member of the 2005 Division I national championship team at Georgia. The seven-time all-American was a member of the NCAA championship 200-meter and 400-meter medley relays and finished second on the 400-meter and 800-meter freestyle relay teams. The team captain earned a gold medal at the World Cup in Paris in the 200-meter freestyle.

A science education and biology major, she was both an NCAA and Southeastern Conference postgraduate scholarship winner. Arsenault received the Kappa Delta Epsilon Education Honor Society's "Perfect 4.0" award for four semesters with a perfect grade-point average and was the recipient of the Joel Eaves award for the Georgia student-athlete with the highest GPA entering their senior year.

A teacher's aide for three years, Arsenault was awarded the Peach of an Athlete Award by the Atlanta-area Boy Scouts for her community-service efforts and was the recipient of the Bell South Leadership Award.

Sarah Dance
Truman State University
Swimming and Diving

A key member of Truman's past four consecutive national championship teams, Dance was a 28-time all-American and a member of seven national championship freestyle relay teams. She holds national records in two events, the 400-yard and 800-yard freestyle relays, and is the school record holder in three events.

With a perfect grade-point average in exercise science with a minor in biology, Dance was named a 2005 NCAA Walter Byers Postgraduate Scholarship recipient. A four-time Mid-America Intercollegiate Athletics Association Presidential Scholar, she also was a four-time College Swimming Coaches Association of America academic choice. Named the 2005 ESPN The Magazine's Academic All-American of the Year, Dance currently is attending medical school at the University of Nebraska Medical Center.

Dance has overcome a hearing loss that requires her to wear hearing aids in both ears. She was a member of Alpha Sigma Gamma, a campus service sorority and a weekly volunteer in a hospital emergency room. In 2005, she was selected to present research at the National Strength and Conditioning Association Conference.

Carter Hamill
Amherst College
Outdoor Track and Field, Indoor Track and Field, Cross Country

Hamill was an 18-time all-American, a two-time NCAA champion in the outdoor 10,000-meter run and a three-time NCAA champion in the indoor 5,000 meters. The three-sport captain for two years holds school records in the 3,000- and 5,000-meter runs and the distance-medley relay.

A psychology major, Hamill was a three-time all-academic New England Small College Association Conference (NESCAC) selection and a member of Psi Chi, the National Psychology Honors Association.

In 2002, Hamill received the Gordon B. Perry Award for scholarship, citizenship and athletics. She also earned the Howard Hill Mossman Trophy awarded annually to the Amherst graduate "who has brought the greatest honor to the school in his or her career -- with the word honor relating both to achievement and to sportsmanship." A volunteer for the Massey Cancer Center in the Medical College of Virginia, Hamill currently works in production at NBC Sports.

Nicholas Hartigan
Brown University
Football

A first-team Walter Camp all-American and a finalist for the Walter Payton Award, Hartigan was the Ivy Group Player of the Year and received the Harry Agannis Award as the top senior football player in New England. The team captain holds several school and Ivy Group records.

A political science and history major, Hartigan was a semifinalist for the Draddy Award, the academic Heisman of football. The Brown University Presidential Fellow and 2005 academic all-Ivy selection also was a candidate for the Marshall Scholarship. A Rhodes Scholarship finalist, Hartigan also was named the 2005 CoSIDA Academic All-American of the Year.

A key contact for the football team for both the American Cancer Society's Relay for Life at Brown and the David Zucconi 5K Run in Providence, Rhode Island, Hartigan also organized a bench-a-thon to raise money for the Lawrence Rubida Fund benefiting cancer research.

DeMeco Ryans
University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa
Football

Named to the 2005 Sports Illustrated mid-year all-American team, Ryans was one of three finalists for the 2005 Butkus Award given to the best collegiate linebacker. A 2005 Walter Camp all-American, he was a semifinalist for the Rotary Lombardi Award, awarded annually to the college football lineman who best exemplifies the discipline of Vince Lombardi, in addition to outstanding performance and ability. In 2004, he was nominated for the Butkus Award, the Lott Award and the Bronko Nagurski Award.

A four-time recipient of the Black Scholars Award, Ryans will graduate cum laude in December 2005 with a management degree. A finalist for the 2005 Draddy award, he also was a National Football Foundation postgraduate scholarship recipient. In 2005, Ryans was named the Arthur Ashe Sports Scholar and was given the Paul W. Bryant Student-Athlete Award for scholarship in business administration.

Ryans was a 2005 Wuerffel Trophy Nominee, honoring the player who best combines academics and community service with on-field distinction, and a nominee for the ARA Sportsmanship Award, presented to a Division I football player who exemplifies sportsmanship both on and off the field.

Richelle Simpson
University of Nebraska, Lincoln
Gymnastics

An NCAA Woman of the Year top 10 finalist, Simpson was a nine-time all-American and a 2003 Honda Award finalist. Simpson was a two-time NCAA champion and a member of the Canadian national team that won a silver medal at the 2003 Pan American Games. She holds seven of the top 11 all-around scores in Nebraska history and has a school-record eight perfect "10s" in her career.

An international studies and French major, she earned postgraduate scholarships from the NCAA and the Big 12 Conference. The three-time National Gymnastic Coaches Association academic honoree also was named the 2005 Nebraska Female Student-Athlete of the Year and the Big 12 Conference Female Sportsperson of the Year.

An avid volunteer, Simpson was a member of the Nebraska Student-Athlete Advisory Committee. She also was the recipient of the AAI American Award, presented to a gymnast based on academics, athletics and civic responsibility.

Christine Sinclair
University of Portland
Soccer

Sinclair, a three-time Portland Female Athlete of the Year, was an integral member of the 2002 and 2005 NCAA Women's College Cup championship teams and the two-time most outstanding offensive player. A member of the Canadian national team since 2002, she is the second-highest scorer in Canadian women's soccer history. She also holds several NCAA Division I women's soccer records and is the school record-holder for single-season goals and career game-winning goals. She was the 2002 Honda Award winner for women's soccer, the 2004 Missouri Athletic Club Hermann Trophy Winner and was named one of 24 finalists for the 2005 FIFA World Player of the Year.

A life-sciences major, Sinclair was a member of the dean's list every term while at Portland. She is a three-time West Coast Conference Commissioner's Honor Roll selection and a two-time member of the WCC all-academic team.

Sinclair regularly serves as a volunteer at the Doernbecher Children's Hospital and the Ronald McDonald House, and she helped organize a soccer clinic for Portland's 2004 National Student-Athlete Day.

Jamie Southern
California State University, Fresno
Softball

A USA National Team member since 2002, Southern was a gold medalist at the 2002 Canada Cup and a silver medalist at the 2005 World Cup of Softball. Southern was a member of the three-time Western Athletic Conference championship team and received the 2005 Joe Kearney Award as the WAC female student-athlete of the year. Named the WAC Freshman of the Year and a four-time WAC pitcher of the year, she is the all-time career wins leader both at Fresno State and in the WAC. Southern holds 11 Fresno State pitching records. She currently plays for the Akron Racers of the National Pro Fastpitch League.

A liberal-studies major, Southern was a four-time Fresno State and WAC scholar-athlete selection. A seven-time member of the dean's list, she also received the Fresno State Torchlighter Award recognizing a senior who has lettered in two of the last three years and has at least a 3.5 cumulative grade-point average.

A member of the school's Student-Athlete Advisory Committee, Southern was a volunteer for Special Olympics and for the Fresno State Big Hero-Little Hero program. She also served as a teaching assistant and a volunteer reader at an elementary school.


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