Season in Review

Skip Ivery
Skip Ivery
Setting the Scene:
The Wittenberg University men's and women's track and field teams put together one of the finest seasons in school history in 2003-04.

The men finished third in the North Coast Athletic Conference Indoor Championships and second in the NCAC Outdoor Championships in 2004, and three All-America honors were earned by Tiger athletes. Senior Tim Gaal (Amanda, Ohio/Clearcreek) capped his career with his third trip to the NCAA Division III Outdoor Championship meet and his second All-America honor in the javelin. Senior Skip Ivery (Columbus, Ohio/Groveport-Madison) took home a raft of awards during the indoor and outdoor seasons, none of which were bigger than his third and fourth All-America honors in the hurdles events.

The women finished fifth in the NCAC Indoor Championships and fourth in the NCAC Outdoor Championships, and two athletes advanced to the NCAA Division III Championships. Senior Kelly Zilli (Dayton, Ohio/Alter) earned her first All-America honor, to go along with numerous All-NCAC awards, and senior Geri Woessner (Dayton, Ohio/Oakwood) finished 13th in the heptathlon and 18th in the javelin at the NCAA Division III Outdoor Championship meet.

National Finishes:
Four Wittenberg University track and field athletes traveled to Decatur, Ill. for the 2004 NCAA Division III Outdoor Track and Field Championships at Millikin University and three returned home with All-America honors.

Wittenberg finished in a tie for 44th place with seven points in the men's team competition as Ivery and Gaal both earned All-America honors for a second straight year. Wittenberg finished in a tie for 54th place with three points in the women's team competition as Zilli earned All-America honors in her first appearance in the national meet and Woessner posted two top-20 finishes.

Gaal placed in the top 11 for the third straight year in the javelin. With a throw of 202-9 inches, less than four feet short of his Wittenberg and NCAC record, Gaal finished fourth in the 2004 event. At the 2003 NCAA Division III Championship meet, Gaal posted a throw of 197-1, good for a second-place finish. He won the javelin four straight years at the NCAC championships, in addition to capturing first place in the decathlon each of the last two years. He holds the Wittenberg and NCAC records in the javelin at 206-0.



Kelly Zilli
Kelly Zilli

Gaal, also a four-year letterwinner in football as a defensive back, had the 12th best throw in the nation coming into the meet. In 2002, Gaal placed 11th at the national meet in the javelin.

Ivery, the defending NCAA Division III 110-meter hurdles champion, finished seventh in 2004 with a finals time of 14.95. In the preliminary heat, Ivery posted a blistering school-record time of 14.36. Last year, Ivery set a track record at St. Lawrence University with a time of 14.63. It was just the third NCAA track and field title for a Wittenberg athlete, and the first since Sheila Simon won the high jump in 1983.

It was Ivery's fourth track and field All-America honor. He was also second in the 55-meter hurdles at the 2003 NCAA Division III Indoor Track and Field Championships and fourth in the same event at the 2004 NCAA Division III Indoor Track and Field Championships. He won four NCAC indoor hurdles titles and three NCAC outdoor hurdles titles in his career, and he was the Great Lakes Region Indoor Track Athlete of the Year in 2004. He was also the NCAC Sprinter/Hurdler of the Year at both the indoor and outdoor championship meets in 2004. Ivery ranked 15th in the nation in the 110-meter hurdles coming into the national meet.

In the preliminary heat of the 800 meters, Zilli recorded a school-record time of 2:13.44, and then in the finals she turned in a time of 2:15.46, good for sixth place and her first All-America honor. Zilli, a two-time NCAC indoor 800-meter champion and a two-time NCAC outdoor 800-meter champion, also earned six All-NCAC awards as a relay runner in her career. Zilli holds school records in the 500 meters, 800 meters, indoor and outdoor pole vault and as a member of four indoor and outdoor relay events.

Zilli ranked 14th in the nation in the 800 meters prior to the national meet.

Rounding things out, Woessner finished 13th in the heptathlon and 18th in the javelin. The school and conference record-holder in the heptathlon, Woessner turned in a mark of 4,343 at the national meet, the second highest point total of her career. She finished first in the heptathlon at the NCAC meet three times in four years, and she added her first career title in the javelin at the 2004 meet, setting a school record in the process.

Woessner is one of the finest female athletes in school history with 12 varsity letters to her credit, four each in track, soccer and basketball. Woessner's mark in the heptathlon placed her ninth going into the national meet, and her mark in the javelin placed her 18th prior to the weekend's festivities.

Joe Rumschlag in the long jump
Joe Rumschlag
Postseason Honors (Outdoor):
Gaal was named NCAC Field Events Athlete of the Year for the second straight year and Ivery was named NCAC Sprinter/Hurdler of the Year.

Track athletes earn All-NCAC recognition with a top-three finish in the NCAC meet. The Tiger men claimed second place in the outdoor championship meet for the second straight year. The Tiger women finished fourth in the outdoor meet for a second straight year. 

Gaal successfully defended his decathlon title with a season-best point total of 5,720, and he won his fourth NCAC crown in the javelin with a mark of 184-6. In addition, he finished third in the long jump, sixth in the high jump and eighth in the triple jump. The finishes in the decathlon, javelin and long jump were all good for All-NCAC honors.

Ivery won the 110-meter hurdles and the 400-meter hurdles. The 110-meter hurdles crown was his third straight and the two individual titles gave Ivery eight NCAC hurdles first-place finishes in his career, including the four 55-meter hurdles titles he won in the indoor championships.

Neither Ivery or Gaal scored as many points as junior Joe Rumschlag (Maumee, Ohio/Toledo Christian), who took All-NCAC honors with a third-place finish in the 100 meters, second in the 200 meters, second in the decathlon, second in the triple jump and first in the long jump for the second straight year. In addition, juniorJason Toman (Greenville, Ohio/Greenville) placed third in the 400-meter hurdles to garner All-NCAC honors for a second straight year.

In the relay events, Wittenberg placed third in both the 1600- and 400-meter events. In the 400-meter relay, sophomore David Bazzel (Tipp City, Ohio/Tippecanoe), senior Alex Yurovitsky (Richmond Heights, Ohio/Lyndhurst Brush), freshman Gregg Carter (Wellsville, Ohio/Wellsville) and sophomore Matt Locke (South Charleston, Ohio/Southeastern) teamed up for the All-NCAC finish. In the 1600-meter relay, Locke, Yurovitsky, Toman and Rumschlag were All-NCAC.

For the women, Woessner claimed first place in the heptathlon for the third time in four years and all-conference honors in the event. The mark of 4,455 broke her own school and conference records. She added her first career title in the javelin with an NCAA provisional mark of 132-3, a school record. Woessner also was all-conference with a third-place finish in the long jump with a mark of 16-6 1/2. She also placed fourth in the shot put and high jump.

Zilli won in the 800 meters for the second straight year. She also anchored the second-place 1600-meter relay to a new school record. The first three legs of that event were run by sophomore Anna Finkelstein (Whitehall, Mich./Reeths-Puffer), freshman Antonette Green (Euclid, Ohio/Euclid) and freshman Jessica McClish (Shelby, Ohio/Shelby).

Rounding things out, senior Becky Barnes (Williamsport, Ohio/Westfall) broke the school record in the 10,000 meters with a time of 38:54.06, good for third place, and she followed that with a second-place finish in the 3,000-meter steeplechase in a time of 11:58.71. Freshman Lisa Nicholls (North Bend, Ore./North Bend)placed third in the hammer throw with a mark of 105-9.

Postseason Honors (Indoor):
The Tiger men placed third in the NCAC indoor championship meet with 94 points. A large portion of those points came from Ivery, who was named Sprinter/Hurdler of the Year, and Rumschlag, who garnered Field Events Athlete of the Year.

Ivery claimed his fourth straight 55-meter hurdles title in a meet record time of 7.55. Rumschlag won titles in the long jump (22-1/2) and in the 200-meter dash - with a school-record time of 22.75 - and finished second in the triple jump (42' 8-34") and the 400-meter run (51.44).

In addition, the 800-meter relay quartet of Bazzel, Carter, Toman and Locke finished first, and Carter placed third in the 200 meters.

On the women's side, the Tigers placed fifth with 41.5 points. Zilli was the team's lone individual champion, as she staked her claim to the 800 meters for a second straight year with a time of 2:20.60.

In the 1600-meter relay, Wittenberg placed second in a time of 4:08.83, earning All-NCAC honors for McClish, Green, Zilli and Finkelstein.

CROSS COUNTRY


Becky Barnes
Becky Barnes
Setting the Scene:
The Wittenberg University men's and women's cross country teams finished 10th and eighth in the 2003 North Coast Athletic Conference Championship meet respectively.

Postseason Honors:
Just one Tiger runner earned any kind of awards in cross country in 2003. SeniorBecky Barnes (Williamsport, Ohio/Westfall) placed 18th in the NCAC meet, her best finish ever, which was good for Honorable Mention all-conference honors.

Barnes also ran well at the NCAA Division III Great Lakes Regional Championship meet, where she placed 30th in a large field. That finish earned her a place on the All-Region Team. After the season, Barnes and sophomore Tracy Butler (Ft. Wayne, Ind./Homestead) were named to the United States Track Coaches Association All-Academic Team for their exploits in both cross country and track and field.

Super Seniors:
Both the men's and women's teams graduated three runners off the 2003 teams.

For the women, the senior troika of Barnes, Jenny Brill (Worthington, Ohio/Thomas Worthington) and Nikki Norcia (Brunswick, Ohio/Brunswick)formed a strong leadership core. Barnes was the most accomplished runner among the three as she served as team captain and led the team in every 2003 event.

For the men, the three seniors were Andrew Hobson (Columbus, Ohio/Upper Arlington)Jeff Domingus (London, Ohio/London) and Tim Damopoulos (Grove City, Ohio/Grove City), who formed a similarly strong leadership group in 2003. Domingus and Damopoulos finished in the top five scorers for the Tigers in every event in 2003.

The Coach:
Steve Shutt (Allegheny '94) took over the coaching reins of the Wittenberg University men's and women's cross country and track & field teams in 1999. Since then he has put the teams in position for NCAC championships every year. Under Shutt, Wittenberg's track & field teams have set 38 men's and women's school records. Dozens of Tiger athletes have claimed NCAC titles in track and one has also done so in cross country. More than 60 athletes have earned All-NCAC honors, eight have been NCAA Division III national qualifiers, 15 have been Coaches Association Academic All-Americans and six have been named NCAC Athlete of the Year in indoor or outdoor track and field.

Shutt was a four-year letterwinner for the Allegheny indoor and outdoor track and field squads, earining all-conference honors in the pole vault. Shutt came to Wittenberg after serving as the assistant coach at Hillsdale College, where he also served as director of the intramural program. While at Hillsdale, Shutt coached several national qualifiers and an All-American.