Navy Sports

<p>For Immediate Release
Thursday, November 8, 2007
Contact: Jonathan Maggart (410) 293-8771</p>

<p>Navy Travels to Regional Championship on Saturday</p>

<p>ANNAPOLIS, Md. - The Navy men’s cross country team will compete at the NCAA Mid-Atlantic Region Championship this Saturday at 11 a.m., on Lehigh’s Goodman Campus Course in Bethlehem, Pa. </p>

<p>The top-two teams in the regional championship earn an automatic bid to the 2007 NCAA Championship at the Wabash Valley Family Sports Center in Terre Haute, Ind., on Monday, Nov. 19. In addition to team entry, the top-four runners not associated with one of the automatically qualified teams will earn a spot in the national championship. </p>

<p>Thirteen additional at-large teams and two individual at-large runners will be selected by the NCAA Division I Men’s and Women’s Track & Field Committee on Sunday night at 7 p.m. </p>

<p>Navy comes into the weekend voted as the eighth-best team in the region by the U.S. Track & Field/Cross Country Coaches Association (USTFCCCA). Georgetown, ranked 14th in the nation, and 29th-ranked Princeton are predicted to finish among the top-two teams this Saturday. Two weeks ago at the Patriot League Championship in Easton, Pa., the Midshipmen came up one-point short of tying for the title with American, the seventh-ranked team in the Mid-Atlantic Region. </p>

<p>In last year’s regional championship in Lock Haven, Pa., Navy placed ninth out of 28 teams. The Midshipmen have finished among the top-10 schools in the region at seven of the last-10 championships. </p>

<p>This Saturday’s championship will also push Navy’s runners to another level, as the race will be a 10k, as opposed to the 8k that every competitor has participated in during the fall. </p>

<p>All season, the Midshipmen have relied upon the services of seniors John Kress (Colorado Springs, Colo.) and John Olsen (Staten Island, N.Y.) to provide the front-end scoring punch. Kress, a two-time First-Team All-Patriot League runner, owns four top-five performances and led the team with a 27th-place finish at the regional championship one season ago. Olsen led the team across the finish line four times earlier this year and has five to-five showings to his credit. </p>

<p>Navy also possesses a solid blend of experience and youth in its depth and scoring, which was strongly evidenced at the league championship. Juniors Andrew Grant (Athens, Ga.) and Bill Prom (New Berlin, Wis.) each earned Second-Team All-Patriot League recognition by virtue of their respective ninth and 14th-place finishes. Freshman Chris Horel (Belford, N.J.) battled back from an early-season injury to round out Navy’s scoring with a 16th-place effort to capture Patriot League Rookie-of-the-Meet kudos. </p>

<p>Navy has made 10 team appearances at the NCAA Championship during the program’s 85-year history. The Midshipmen last traveled as a squad to the national championship in 1997, where they finished 21st.</p>

<p>For Immediate Release
Thursday, November 8, 2007
Contact; Jonathan Maggart (410) 293-8771</p>

<p>Mids Head to Regional Championship on Saturday</p>

<p>ANNAPOLIS, Md. - The Navy women’s cross country team will make the trip up to Lehigh’s Goodman Campus Course this Saturday for the 2007 NCAA Mid-Atlantic Region Championship. Race time is slated for 11 a.m. </p>

<p>The top-two teams in the regional championship earn an automatic bid to the 2007 NCAA Championship at the Wabash Valley Family Sports Center in Terre Haute, Ind., on Monday, Nov. 19. In addition to team entry, the top-four runners not associated with one of the automatically qualified teams will earn a spot in the national championship. </p>

<p>Thirteen additional at-large teams and two individual at-large runners will be selected by the NCAA Division I Men’s and Women’s Track & Field Committee on Sunday night at 7 p.m. </p>

<p>Navy, who came into the year unranked in the region, has ascended to a tie with fellow Patriot League foe Bucknell as the eighth-best team in the Mid-Atlantic Region by the U.S. Track & Field/Cross Country Coaches Association (USTFCCCA). The Midshipmen and the Bison tied for the league crown two weeks ago, as both teams finished with a team score of 58 points. After starting the year unranked out of 15 schools in the region, the Mids have ascended to the </p>

<p>In addition to the Bison, the Midshipmen will also face some steep competition against four schools that are ranked among the nation’s top-30 teams. In order to make its first trip to the NCAA Championship as a Division I program, Navy will have to go against fourth-ranked Princeton, 14th-ranked West Virginia, 20th-ranked Georgetown and 28th-ranked Penn State. </p>

<p>However, the Midshipmen have enjoyed some success in the last-two regional championships held at the Goodman Campus Course. Navy tied for eighth place during the 2001 regional before landing 10th four year later. At last year’s championship, the Mids finished 11th out of 32 teams in Lock Haven, Pa. </p>

<p>For Navy to have the success it has enjoyed during the 2007 campaign on Saturday, it will rely upon its tight packing between the first and fifth-fastest runners. In all seven races this year, the Midshipmen have not finished more than a minute off between their top-five runners, including three under-30 second spreads. Two weeks ago at the league championship, only 23.4 seconds separated Navy’s first and fifth-best clockings. </p>

<p>Leading the way in each of the past-two races is sophomore runner Amy Watson (Hampstead, Md.). In both of the most important races of the year, the Star Meet at Army and the Patriot League Championship, Watson has delivered Navy’s top performance. She won the Star Meet at Army and followed that effort with First-Team All-Patriot League honors with her fifth-place showing at the league championship. </p>

<p>The trio of Midshipmen runners Kyleigh Millhouse (Boiling Springs, Pa.), Arwyn Becker (Vail, Colo.) and Lexa Gass (Crescent, Pa.) each earned Second-Team All-Patriot League distinction by finishing among the top-14 runners at the league championship. Millhouse and Becker have scored in every race they have participated in this fall, while Gass has tallied points during her last-three races. </p>

<p>Since elevating to the Division I ranks in 1991, Navy has sent an individual to the NCAA Championship on four occasions. Melissa Foon was the last Navy runner to advance to the national championship in 2000, where she placed 75th overall.</p>

<p>**Story in USA Today mentions former Navy women’s soccer goalie Sarah Wilson '01 doing great things **</p>

<p>Commanders pushed to make bomb disposal choices</p>

<p>By Blake Morrison and Peter Eisler, USA TODAY</p>

<p>During their last six months in Baghdad last year, Navy Lt. Sarah Wilson and her team of explosive ordnance disposal technicians said goodbye to each other more than 70 times.</p>

<p>Each time they were called to dismantle a roadside bomb, they’d bump fists. Then, Wilson says, “we’d all say we love each other because if we never got to say anything else” ‹ if the bomb ended up exploding ‹ “we wanted to be able to say goodbye.”</p>

<p>After they arrived at the scene, they would often begin a perilous, painstaking task: taking apart the bombs, bagging the components and sending the parts back to a unit that analyzes them, much as investigators do on the television show CSI .</p>

<p>They were willing to take such risks, Wilson says, because “it’s the best shot our guys on the ground have of Š catching the bad guys.” If forensic teams can lift a fingerprint or identify materials used in a series of bombs, “we can connect him,” says Wilson, 27. “We know he’s a bombmaker.”</p>

<p>When roadside bombs became the insurgency’s weapon of choice in Iraq, explosives disposal teams became increasingly important in efforts to protect U.S. troops and crack the bombmaking networks. But now, top military officials appear to be compromising efforts to catch bombmakers in favor of expedience and mobility, a USA TODAY investigation shows.</p>

<p>A classified order, issued May 30 and reviewed by USA TODAY, gives commanders the authority to forgo calling in explosives technicians like Wilson to glean intelligence from improvised explosive devices, or IEDs. Instead, commanders may use engineers traveling with their regular units to simply detonate the bombs ‹ without gathering evidence from them. Engineers receive about 10% of the explosives training of technicians, and they’re not allowed to dismantle bombs.</p>

<p>Commanders and others see the process, dubbed “blow and go,” as a way to keep convoys and combat teams moving and safe from snipers and ambushes. But the Army’s new approach also runs counter to military doctrine ‹ and to the Pentagon’s long-term goal of getting one step ahead of the insurgency by
learning about the networks that build, plant and trigger IEDs. The weapon is responsible for at least 60% of U.S. casualties in Iraq. </p>

<p>“The blow-and-go strategy undermines and compromises those overall efforts by losing key biometrics and evidence needed to identify and capture the network of insurgents,” says Rep. Solomon Ortiz, D-Texas, a senior member of the House Armed Services Committee and chairman of the subcommittee on military readiness.</p>

<p>“This is a huge step backward in the long-term effort to prevent IED attacks from occurring in the first place,” Ortiz says, “and puts the troops at risk of facing more IED attacks for a long time to come.”</p>

<p>The head of the Army Asymmetric Warfare Office, which helps combat forces counter IEDs, also is concerned. “What are we accomplishing by blowing and going?” asks Col. Dick Larry. “You rid yourself of that one device, but the problem is Š you have not gotten any kind of exploitative information off it.” </p>

<p>In July, a USA TODAY investigation showed that, until last year, the Pentagon balked at pleas from officers in the field for safer vehicles to protect against IEDs. One of the explanations offered by Defense officials for not spending more money on the life-saving armor: that the military’s focus was on stopping bombmaking networks before they planted the explosives. </p>

<p>In its annual report last year, the military’s Joint IED Defeat Organization (JIEDDO), called attacking the networks “the lynchpin of our success.” Its deputy director, Robin Keesee, estimated last month that as many as 160 such insurgent cells have been identified in Iraq.</p>

<p>And the organization’s report listed forensic analysis of bombs ‹ determining how the devices were manufactured, and what parts and types of explosives were used ‹ among the efforts that were providing “unprecedented” intelligence capability.</p>

<p>Among the successes touted by the Pentagon: linking Iran to a particularly dangerous incarnation of the IED, the explosively formed penetrator. “Iranian TNT blocks removed from their packages have been seen on numerous occasions as IED components,” according to a Feb. 11 Pentagon PowerPoint presentation in Baghdad.</p>

<p>“I don’t want to give away the king’s secrets here, but yes, (forensic analysis) was fruitful,” says Paul Plemmons, a retired Army colonel who used to command a task force that dismantled bombs. “A bomber is a bomber, and they leave signatures. We saw patterns. We could track patterns.”</p>

<p>“We know the engineers are not going to collect forensic data, and the way you defeat that weapon is getting at the forensics,” Plemmons says. “We may lose the one device that will lead us to take a whole cell down if you blow and go.” </p>

<p>JIEDDO spokeswoman Christine DeVries would not characterize the importance of such analysis, saying that the group is wary about giving too much information to the enemy. But she did say it is “one of the tools that have enabled forces in theater to eliminate a significant number of IED cells.”</p>

<p>The need for mobility</p>

<p>When U.S. forces invaded Iraq in March 2003, few foresaw how prevalent or deadly roadside bombs would become. But by that fall, IEDs had emerged as the biggest threat to troops, and the teams that would dismantle the bombs ‹ the explosives technicians ‹ were stretched thin.</p>

<p>In the first months of the war, only a few dozen technicians were in Iraq. Today, including commanders, more than 500 are deployed, many embedded within units. </p>

<p>"When we were first there, the rules of engagement were, ‘Let’s just destroy all these IEDs,’ " recalls Marine Master Sgt. Michael Burghardt, an explosives technician.</p>

<p>During the past two years, Burghardt says, that approach changed. When he was working in Ramadi, Burghardt says, he was collecting intelligence from about 90% of the IEDs he handled.</p>

<p>Today, explosives technician teams try to collect evidence from “every scene,” says Army Col. Karl Reinhard, who commands the Army, Navy and Air Force explosives disposal teams in Iraq. From December 2006 through September 2007, he says technicians have handled more than 6,000 IEDs. Since the war began, he says, records show about 80,000 such bombs were planted.</p>

<p>“Some of the information we would glean would be negligible. Other times, it would be important,” Reinhard says. The danger of blowing and going, he says, is that “you never know which needle in the haystack is going to be an important needle.” </p>

<p>Military doctrine ‹ specifically, a publication titled Barriers, Obstacles and Mine Warfare for Joint Operations and prepared by the Joint Chiefs of Staff ‹ reinforces the unique role of explosives disposal teams. The document, dated April 26, characterizes the work of those teams as “an essential part of the overall effort to develop a detailed forensic database to target centers of gravity in the IED system.”</p>

<p>“In addition to developing actionable intelligence to support future operations,” the document says, reports from explosives disposal teams have “an immediate impact on refining unit level force protection-related
tactics, techniques and procedures.”</p>

<p>Since 2006, the military has taken significant steps to get more explosives disposal teams throughout the war zone.</p>

<p>Col. Kevin Lutz, an explosives technician set to replace Reinhard next year, says the military has tripled the number of explosives disposal teams in Iraq during the past 18 months ‹ going from about 50 to about 150 three-person teams. Even so, when the tech teams are called to an IED, getting them to the site and letting them gather the intelligence often takes time. Sometimes, the delay is 30 minutes. Occasionally, it extends for hours. </p>

<p>Engineers have been lobbying to take a more active approach in destroying roadside bombs for the past few years, Lutz and others say. The engineers’ traditional mission ‹ to breach obstacles to keep units mobile ‹ was arguably more important during the invasion of Iraq than it is now, given the military’s current role policing the country.</p>

<p>Nevertheless, officials set up a training course, taught by explosives technicians, to help prepare engineers to detonate IEDs. Reinhard says those engineers receive less than 100 hours of training. Explosives technicians train for more than 1,100 hours, he says.</p>

<p>On May 30, Lt. Gen. Raymond Odierno, the second-ranking U.S. commander in Iraq, issued the order that empowers commanders to let engineers blow and go. </p>

<p>“The intent of the order was to allow qualified individuals to detonate explosives rather than waiting for others who may not be readily available,” explains Brig. Gen. Michael Silva, an Army engineer who says he lobbied Odierno for the change. “It was a way to improve the efficiency of the route clearing team operations so we were actually enabling the soldiers to do the job that they needed to get done.”</p>

<p>IEDs ‘just an obstacle’</p>

<p>An instructor who teaches engineers at Fort Leonard Wood in Missouri says the order makes sense.</p>

<p>“If you look at IEDs as just an obstacle, one of the engineer functions is just to remove obstacles,” says Maj. Eric Goser, executive officer of the Counter Explosive Hazard Center. “Bottom line: The IED to an engineer is no different than a log obstacle,” Goser says. “A log Š is an obstacle. You deal with that obstacle in a certain way.”</p>

<p>Goser’s logic troubles explosives technicians. “The difference is, the log obstacle won’t kill you,” says Reynold Hoover, a former explosives technician who worked as a special agent with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms and served in the first Gulf War.</p>

<p>“You’re gaining mobility,” Hoover says, “but what you’re losing is the ability to find the bombmaker and the supply chain.”</p>

<p>Moreover, the amount of time saved by blowing and going may not be much, Reinhard says. He says a study done this year by his task force estimates “the expected value of the time they could save would be 20 minutes, on average.” </p>

<p>“Nobody wants to sit out on the battlefield for three to four hours,” he says. “Two or three years ago, they were waiting that long. It’s definitely not like that any more.”</p>

<p>Statistics on response times are classified, but Reinhard says explosives technicians are now able to arrive relatively quickly at IED sites. “For instance, in the north, 85% of the responses in the last week of September were 90 minutes or less,” he says. Lutz says a long wait for explosives technicians today is “an outlier.”</p>

<p>Engineer Silva, who is no longer on active duty, is skeptical. He believes information released by the explosives technicians may be “skewed” against giving engineers more of a role.</p>

<p>“My belief is that there was a parochialism engaged there ‹ parochial in the fact that they want to be the only ones Š blowing” IEDs, Silva says of explosives technicians.</p>

<p>Do risks outweigh benefits?</p>

<p>It’s unclear how often commanders have used the blow-and-go approach. Reinhard says records he reviewed showed engineers detonated “approximately 120” IEDs from June through mid-October ‹ about one a day.</p>

<p>But Army Col. Peter DeLuca, commander of the 20th Engineering Brigade, estimates engineers he oversees blow and go at least three or four IEDs each day ‹ far more than the records reviewed by Reinhard indicate.</p>

<p>“There’s been a ramp-up,” Reinhard explains. “They may both be true” he says of the figures. </p>

<p>Others aren’t certain. “No one is keeping good track of that,” says Larry, who heads the Army’s anti-IED efforts. “How do we know what they’re doing,” he says of engineers, “if they don’t report it?”</p>

<p>Odierno’s order specifies that engineers can only detonate relatively simple IEDs, using devices such as robots and the robotic arm of Mine Resistant Ambush Protected vehicles ‹ machines that keep troops out of harm’s way.</p>

<p>“We have very, very strict limitations about what we are and what we’re not supposed to blow up,” says Army Spc. Walter Hayden, the 1st Platoon team leader with the 1203rd Engineer Battalion. “If I ever have any kind of doubt,” he says, he calls in explosives technicians.</p>

<p>Silva says he can see the amount handled by engineers growing ‹ and the limitations on engineers being lifted as training improves. To date, neither DeLuca nor Reinhard believes any engineers have been hurt while blowing and going. </p>

<p>Despite reservations, Reinhard says he doesn’t “object to the engineers doing this provided that they can live within the bounds that sometimes you need to pause and take the time to exploit.”</p>

<p>But some explosives technicians fear that engineers will overstep their mission ‹ and make deadly mistakes. Burghardt says he and his team dismantled more than 900 IEDs during his three tours in Iraq. The one that
detonated ‹ the one that left six holes in his body, cracked his tailbone, threw him 10 feet and knocked him unconscious in September 2005, despite the protective gear he wore ‹ was unlike any he had seen.</p>

<p>“It was the first time we saw the tactic of where they double stacked it,” says Burghardt, 37 ,now stationed at Camp Fuji, Japan. “I was standing on top of the device when I was clearing it Š and they just leave enough earth in between” that the device beneath the other IED was difficult to spot.</p>

<p>Burghardt’s experience is what makes explosives technicians wary of the new order ‹ particularly, the idea that engineers will be able to discern a simple IED from a more sophisticated one. “What’s simple?” Burghardt asks rhetorically. “You’re not going to know that until it’s too late.”</p>

<p>Such mistakes put troops and civilians at risk. In a 2005 paper for the Marine Corps War College, Lutz chronicled cases in which mistakes by engineers cost lives.</p>

<p>Two different cases during the first Gulf War in 1991 “led to the massive chemical exposure and contamination of thousands of coalition forces and non-combatants, and the loss of seven United States soldiers,” Lutz wrote. The reason for one of the mishaps at As Salman Airfield in Iraq: “Engineers were clearing munitions they were unfamiliar with and that turned out to be some of the most deadly unexploded ordnance our inventory can produce.”</p>

<p>He wrote that, “buried within the Š investigations, point papers, after-action reports, lessons learned from the various units (now in Iraq) Š one can find repetitive incidents where the improper destruction of (explosives) led to severe contamination of the surrounding area and caused injury, death and destruction of equipment and facilities to both United States Armed Forces and to the local Iraqi civilian population.”</p>

<p>Explosives technician Plemmons put it more tersely. He says the difference between an engineer and an explosives technician handling an IED is like the difference between “your physician’s assistant” and “an orthopedic surgeon.”</p>

<p>Contributing: Tom Vanden Brook</p>

<p>For Immediate Release
Thursday, Nov. 8, 2007
Squash Contact: Stacie Michaud (410) 293-8773</p>

<p>ANNAPOLIS, Md. - After taking a week off from competition, the Navy squash team will be back in action this weekend when it plays host to a 13-team round robin that features two teams from the West Coast, as well as three women’s teams. With the recent renovation of the Halsey International Squash Courts, Navy now has 12 courts to facilitate a tournament of this magnitude. </p>

<p>“There are so many benefits of building the additional two courts in the last year and this is a great example of just that,” said Navy head coach Craig Dawson. “The additional courts have enabled us to grow this tournament and play host to a great weekend of squash.” </p>

<p>Navy will field a pair of teams, playing nicely into the hands of a program that has improved leaps and bounds under the direction of Dawson over the last eight years. Joining Navy in the round robin will be Columbia, Denison, Fordham, George Washington men and women, Haverford men and women, Hobart, Stanford, Vanderbilt, Virginia women and Washington. </p>

<p>The Midshipmen opened their season Oct. 26 when they traveled to Chicago to compete in a round robin hosted by Northwestern. Navy shut out Northwestern and Denison before top-10 ranked Western Ontario clipped the Mids, 6-3. </p>

<p>Navy’s top three players enter the weekend with unblemished records, including senior Tucker George who has been Navy’s No. 1 player for four years. George was able to keep his undefeated record intact by picking up a hard-fought five-game win over Western Ontario’s Chris Hanebury. George owned a 2-1 lead in the match when Hanebury evened the score by taking game four, 9-1. George, though, proved to more proficient in the decisive game, winning, 9-6. </p>

<p>Sophomore Nils Mattsson (Spring House, Pa.) has had little trouble with his first three opponents, defeating all three in three-game matches at the No. 2 slot. Meanwhile, team captain Jeff Sawin (Haverford, Pa.) is off to a great start as Navy’s No. 3 player and is looking to achieve the successes he enjoyed a year ago when he paced the Mids with a 28-4 record. </p>

<p>The Midshipmen will kick off the tournament Friday with a 2:00 pm matchup against Stanford, followed by a 4:00 pm battle against Fordham. Though the tournament covers three days, Navy will be in action on Friday (2 matches) and Saturday (3 matches) only. The Navy “B” squad will compete on Saturday (2 matches) and Sunday (1 match). </p>

<p>Navy Squash Round Robin Schedule
Friday
2:00 pm Navy vs. Stanford Halsey 1-5
4:00 pm Navy vs. Fordham Halsey 1-5
6:30 pm Stanford vs. Fordham Halsey 1-3
6:30 pm Denison vs. Washington Halsey 4-6
Saturday
9:00 am George Washington (w) vs. Virginia (w) Halsey 1-3
9:00 am Open Halsey 4-6
9:00 am Columbia vs. Navy B Bancroft 1-3
9:00 am Vanderbilt vs. Washington Bancroft 4-6
11:30 am Navy vs. Hobart Halsey 1-3
11:30 am Denison vs. Stanford Halsey 4-6
11:30 am Washington vs. Fordham Bancroft 1-3
11:30 am Columbia vs. George Washington Bancroft 4-6
2:00 pm Haverford vs. Navy Halsey 1-3
2:00 pm Haverford (w) vs. George Washington (W) Halsey 4-6
2:00 pm Vanderbilt vs. Fordham Bancroft 1-3
2:00 pm Virginia (w) vs. Navy B Bancroft 4-6
4:30 pm Hobart vs. Denison Halsey 1-3
4:30 pm Navy vs. Vanderbilt Halsey 4-6
4:30 pm Haverford vs. Stanford Bancroft 1-3
4:30 pm Haverford (w) vs. Virginia (w) Bancroft 4-6
Sunday
9:00 am Columbia vs. Vanderbilt Halsey 1-3
9:00 am Stanford vs. George Washington Halsey 4-6
9:00 am Fordham vs. Navy B Bancroft 1-5
11:30 am Vanderbilt vs. George Washington Halsey 1-3
11:30 am Columbia vs. Washington Halsey 4-6</p>

<p>For Immediate Release
Sent Thursday, November 8, 2007
Contact Justin Kischefsky (410) 293-8772</p>

<p>ANNAPOLIS, Md. - For the third-straight year, Navy’s Rachel Dougherty (Sr., Derwood, Md.) garnered Academic All-District 2 accolades for the sport of volleyball from the College Sports Information Directors of America for her performance in the classroom and on the court. Dougherty was named to the district’s first team on Thursday, the second year in a row in which she has received first-team honors. She also garnered second-team accolades in 2005. </p>

<p>She, along with the additional first-team recipients from across the country, are now placed onto the organization’s national ballot to select the Academic All-Americans for the sport. </p>

<p>Initial nominees for the all-district ballot must be of at least sophomore standing in the classroom, have attained a minimum 3.20 cumulative grade-point average and be a starter or key reserve on their team. CoSIDA’s District 2 consists of Division I colleges and universities located in Delaware, the District of Columbia, Maryland, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and West Virginia. </p>

<p>Academically, Dougherty has posted a 4.00 GPA during four of her six completed semesters at Navy and carries a cumulative 3.89 GPA as a physics major. She was selected as one of the Academy’s 15 Bowman Scholars for the 2007-08 academic year, which allows her to further her education after commissioning at the Naval Postgraduate School and provides her with early admission into the Navy’s nuclear surface warfare community. </p>

<p>As part of the requirements for the Bowman Scholars, Dougherty has to complete an independent study program at Navy. The subject title for her project is Isotopic Abundance Information from Proton Induced Gamma Ray Emission Measurements. </p>

<p>On the court, Dougherty has ranked among the NCAA leaders all season in service aces per game (0.53 sapg), as well as the among the leading attackers in the Patriot League with an average of 4.51 kills per game. Tuesday night she pounded down a career-high 30 kills in Navy’s five-game victory over UMBC, one of seven matches this season in which she has surpassed 20 kills. A two-time Patriot League Player-of-the-Week selection this year, Dougherty also has totaled four double-doubles in matches this season and tallied a .262 hitting percentage. </p>

<p>She recently became just the fifth player in Navy’s 17-year Division I era to record 1,000 career kills (currently with 1,093) and ranks fifth in Navy history with 269 career blocks. </p>

<p>Navy, 19-11 on the season, stands in fourth place in the Patriot League with a 6-8 record in league matches. The Midshipmen will close their regular season this weekend with matches Friday at Lafayette and Saturday at Lehigh. </p>

<p>District 2 Winners
University Division
FIRST TEAM
Rachel Dougherty, Navy, Sr., Derwood, Md., 3.89, Physics
Kailee Goold, West Virginia, Sr., Avon Lake, Ohio, 3.92, history and political science
Colleen Walsh, Delaware, Sr., Cleveland, Ohio, 3.75, Economics & Finance
Beth Gillming, Maryland, Sr., Cincinnati, Ohio, 3.72, Elementary Education
Rubena Sukaj, American, Jr., Tirana, Albania, 3.61, Business Administration / Accounting
Christa Harmotto, Penn State, Jr., Aliquippa, Pa., 3.34, Elementary Education</p>

<p>Friday’s men’s basketball game against Longwood will be broadcast on Sirius
Channel 114 at 7:30 p.m.</p>

<p>Navy def. American, 2-0, in Patriot League Semifinals</p>

<p>For Immediate Release
Friday, Nov. 9, 2007
Women’s Soccer Contact: Stacie Michaud (410) 293-8773</p>

<p>Fox Leads Navy to Patriot League Tournament Final</p>

<p>LEWISBURG, Pa. - A pair of goals by senior forward Brigitte Fox (La Mesa, Calif.) led the third-seeded Navy women’s soccer team to a 2-0 shutout over No. 2 seed American in the Patriot League Tournament semifinals on a rainy Friday afternoon played at Varsity Soccer Field in Lewisburg, Pa. It marked the first two goals scored by Fox in three appearances in the Patriot League Tournament during her collegiate career.</p>

<p>“We’re thrilled with the win today,” said Navy head coach Carin Gabarra, who has led Navy to wins in each of its last five Patriot League Tournament appearances. “There weren’t a lot of chances either way, but we were fortunate enough to put ours away.”</p>

<p>Though Navy collected its 10th shutout of the year, it wasn’t as easy as the final score might appear. American won the opening possession, taking the ball quickly to the box where a cross to First-Team All-Patriot League forward Kelsey Brasher deflected off a defender and to the feet of another of AU’s All-Patriot League forwards, Krystn Hodge. Hodge was on the doorstep when she kicked what was sure to result in a goal. However, she mis-hit the ball, sending it fluttering into the air where Navy junior keeper Lizzie Barnes (New Orleans, La.) was able to snatch the ball out of play.</p>

<p>Fifteen minutes elapsed before Navy was able to get off its first shot. Defensive Player of the Year Annette Scott lost her footing at the top of the box, enabling Navy junior midfielder CiAnna Weikle (Lakeville, Minn.) a wide-open opportunity at the goal, but the ball sailed just over the cross bar.</p>

<p>With 21 minutes left in the opening half, Barnes was lured out of the goal by Brasher, leaving the goal unmanned. Brasher, though, was unable to get a good touch on the ball as Navy junior defender Jenn Dunbar (Crofton, Md.) did a sensational job of challenging Brasher and getting the ball out of the box. Meanwhile, rookie defender Friederike Engel sent a shot from 25 yards out that Barnes swallowed up.</p>

<p>Just seconds later, Navy found itself with its own goal-scoring opportunity. Navy was on its attacking third when a mistake by an American defender allowed Midshipman midfielder Brittany White (Carmel, Ind.) to send a pass down the left sideline to Fox. Fox raced down the field with her defender at her footsteps and sent a shot from a tight angle that sailed past a diving Kelsey Wiggins, the Patriot League Goalkeeper of the Year. Wiggins has given up eight goals in 2007, four of of which have been scored by the Midshipmen.</p>

<p>“Brigitte’s shot was at an extremely tough angle,” said Gabarra. “In addition, she put it on her left foot and shot the ball which is something she has improved upon greatly since suffering a knee injury a few years ago.”</p>

<p>Navy’s 1-0 lead would hold at the half where most of the statistics showed a dead-even game. The Eagles held a 6-5 advantage in shots, while both teams were awarded a corner kick.</p>

<p>The Midshipmen sent three shots en route to the goal, including a 30-yard blast by junior defender Carey Young (Virginia Beach, Va.) that was saved, before American could get a good look at the goal. </p>

<p>The Eagles were held to just two shots in the second half with the best look a a 30-yard shot by Irene Karistinos that sailed wide right 17 minutes into the second stanza.</p>

<p>In the 65th minute, Weikle sent a ball to Fox who sprinted past her defender and caught the ball on the run. With only the keeper to beat, Fox fired off a 10-yard shot, looking to give the Mids a 2-0 lead. Wiggins, however, kept a solid foundation beneath her and anticipated the shot, making a flawless.</p>

<p>For a second time on the evening, Barnes came out of the goal to challenge an American forward. With just over 18 minutes remaining, Brasher passed off to Brooke Sheppard who would have had a wide-open look at the goal. Instead, Sheppard was stalked by Navy rookie midfielder Christine Calderon (Yorktown, Va.) who helped stymie the American rally.</p>

<p>Fox scored her second goal of the game at the 86-minute mark when Second-Team All-Patriot League midfielder Julie Reynolds (Sherman, Conn.) served Fox from mid-field. Fox ran the ball down again and chipped the ball over Wiggins’ head to give Navy the insurance goal.</p>

<p>Navy’s leading scorer this fall with 16 goals, Fox has been on fire as of late. She has produced nine goals in the last four games has accounted for nine of the Mids’ last 14 goals. Sixteen goals are the most by a Navy player since the late Stacy Finley set the record with 19 in 2002.</p>

<p>“We’ve put everything on Brigitte’s shoulders this year,” added Gabarra. "I talked to her about that very subject last spring and again this fall and Brigitte has embraced the opportunity. I really couldn’t ask more from her.</p>

<p>“Brigitte isn’t just fast, she’s a smart, skilled player who creates chances for her teammates and finishes those her teammates create for her.”</p>

<p>Fox and her Midshipmen teammates will face the winner of tonight’s Bucknell-Army contest on Sunday for the Patriot League Tournament title. Game time is slated for 1:00 pm at Varsity Soccer Field in Lewisburg, Pa. Additionally, a live broadcast of Sunday’s contest will be shown via [Bucknell</a> University || Official Athletic Site](<a href=“http://www.BucknellBison.com%5DBucknell”>http://www.BucknellBison.com) or <a href=“http://www.PatriotLeague.com(%5B/url%5D.)”>www.PatriotLeague.com(.)</a></p>

<p>For Immediate Release
Sent Friday, November 9, 2007
Contact Justin Kischefsky (410) 293-8772</p>

<p>Mids Fall in Season Opening Women’s Basketball Game</p>

<p>ROCK HILL, S.C. - Rice connected on 12-of-13 free throw attempts over the final 10 minutes of the game, including 8-of-8 shooting over the final six minutes, to record a 63-52 victory over the Navy women’s basketball team Friday evening at the Winthrop Coliseum in Rock Hill, S.C. The game served as the season opener for both programs.</p>

<p>“We have a lot to be encouraged by tonight,” said Navy head coach Tom Marryott. “I thought we were very smart on defense and we rebounded the ball well. Offensively, we just let too many opportunities get away from us. But overall, we have a lot to build on from our performance tonight.”</p>

<p>Despite starting a youthful lineup consisting of two juniors, one sophomore and two freshmen, the Mids jumped out to a 12-8 lead midway through the first half. The Owls, who posted a 19-14 record last year, answered by scoring seven of the next nine points to take a 15-14 lead. </p>

<p>The lead would change hands seven more times until a Morgan Hill (So., Portales, N.M.) jumper gave Navy a 26-25 advantage with 2:45 left to play before halftime. Rice would score the final six points of the half, however, to take a 31-25 lead at intermission.</p>

<p>The Owls quickly built a 38-30 lead early in the second half and soon took a 45-36 lead with 11:30 remaining in the game. Navy responded by scoring the next six points to pull to within three points at 45-42 with nine minutes showing on the clock. Whitney Davidson (Jr., New Oxford, Pa.) connected on a jumper to start the run, Hill followed with a pair of free throws and K.C. Gordon made a layup to cap the run. </p>

<p>The Owls would build their advantage back up to seven points on a number of occasions, including at 53-46 with just over five minutes left to play. The Mids would slice the margin back down to three points at 53-50 with 3:19 showing on the clock after Kalen Kropa (Jr., Reidsville, N.C.) made a field goal and Cassie Consedine (Fr., Bartlesville, Okla.) converted a pair of free throw attempts.</p>

<p>Over the closing minutes of the game, however, Navy’s offense turned the ball over once, missed 5-of-6 field goal attempts and misfired on a pair of free throw attempts. In contrast, Rice’s offense committed one turnover, made 2-of-4 attempts from the field and sank all six free throw attempts over the same span to seal the win.</p>

<p>The Owls made only three shots from the field over the final 10 minutes of the game, but managed to hold off the Mids with its shooting from the foul line. </p>

<p>Rice made 17-of-24 free throw attempts in the game, with Navy converting 8-of-11 attempts from the charity stripe.</p>

<p>Both teams made 21 field goals in the game and shot a near identical percentage from the field (38.2% for Navy, 36.8% for Rice). Navy held a 41-34 advantage on the glass, but the Mids turned the ball over 24 times in the game while forcing Rice into 15 turnovers.</p>

<p>Individually for Navy, Consedine became just the second freshman in Navy history to record a double-double in the opening game of the game with 12 points and 10 rebounds. She led Navy in both categories, was the only Mid to score in double figures and was one of five players on the squad to haul in at least five caroms in the contest.</p>

<p>Consedine and Angela Myers (Fr., San Antonio, Texas) became only the seventh and eighth freshman since starts were first recorded (in the 1984-85 season) to start the opening game of the year for Navy. </p>

<p>Rice was led by Tiffany Loggins who posted a double-double of her own with 22 points and 11 rebounds.</p>

<p>Navy will continue play at the Winthrop Classic with games Saturday at approximately 3 p.m. against the host Eagles and Sunday at 1 p.m. against North Texas.</p>

<p>For Immediate Release
Sent Friday, Nov. 9, 2007
Contact Justin Kischefsky (410) 293-8772</p>

<p>Navy Volleyball Tops Lafayette, Earns Playoff Berth</p>

<p>EASTON, Pa. - Rachel Dougherty (Sr., Derwood, Md.) and Alexa Gibbs (Jr., Springfield, Ill.) combined for 42 kills to help lead the Navy volleyball team to a four-game victory over Lafayette, Friday night at the Kirby Sports Center in Easton, Pa. Navy recorded its 20th victory of the season (20-11) with the 30-28, 28-30, 30-26, 30-27 victory over the Leopards (14-17). </p>

<p>The victory in the opening game of the match allowed Navy to clinch its third berth in the Patriot League Tournament over the last four years. The Mids, 7-6 in league play with only a match Saturday at Lehigh (4 p.m.) remaining in the regular season, will be the No. 4 seed in next week’s tournament.</p>

<p>“We are very happy with being able to secure a spot in the playoffs, as well as come away with a very hard-fought victory,” said Navy head coach Mike Schwob. “It was a typical Patriot League defensive match. Each game was close throughout and all could have easily gone the other way.”</p>

<p>The opening game was tied 13 times, including at 16-16 when the Mids tired to separate themselves with a quick 4-0 run. Navy then held a lead of at least three points until Lafayette rallied from a 28-25 deficit to tie the game at 28-28. Dougherty promptly knocked down a kill to take the Mids to game point, then Gibbs dropped in a service ace to give Navy the victory and a spot in the playoffs.</p>

<p>The second game also was tied at 28-28, but this time Lafayette was the team to record an ace and a kill to come away with the 30-28 victory and even the match at one game apiece.</p>

<p>Game three was tied at 17-17 when the Mids used a 5-0 run to give themselves some breathing room. Dougherty tallied a pair of kills, Marissa Watson (Jr., Redondo Beach, Calif.) added an ace, Dougherty posted another kill and Lafayette committed an attack error to account for Navy’s points during the run.</p>

<p>The Leopards soon climbed to within two points at 24-22 when Gibbs and Jessie Sims (Jr., Etowah, N.C.) connected on back-to-back kills and then combined on a block to give Navy a 27-22 lead and allow the Mids to play sideout volleyball over the remainder of the game.</p>

<p>Sims also made several plays down the stretch of the fourth game, tallying a kill and a service ace to break open a 26-26 game. The two points by Sims gave Navy a 28-26 advantage, which soon became 29-26 on an attack error by the Leopards. Lafayette pulled to within 29-27 on a kill, but Dougherty ended the match with her 22nd kill of the evening.</p>

<p>Navy held a 71-53 advantage in kills and totaled a .231 hitting percentage while holding the Leopards to a .133 percentage. Navy servers dropped in 10 aces on the night with Lafayette’s players responding with eight aces. The Leopards also held advantages of 75-70 in digs and 11.0-9.0 in team blocks.</p>

<p>Dougherty’s 22 kills paced all players in the match to set a new career-high for a four-game match. She set a career high for any match length Tuesday night when she posted 30 kills in Navy’s five-game win over UMBC. Gibbs tied a career high with 20 kills in tonight’s match, while adding a .457 attack percentage. Sims notched her second-straight double-double with 13 kills and 11 digs, while Watson distributed 60 assists. Keying the Navy defense was Aimee’ Burns with 20 digs, her second-straight match with at least 20 digs. </p>

<p>Lafayette’s offense was led by Kayly Elmer with 20 kills, while its defense was paced by 21 digs from Michaela Donohue and 20 from Kari Horn.</p>

<p>Mids Open Season With 88-72 Win Over Longwood</p>

<p>FARMVILLE, Va. – The Navy men’s basketball team went on a 36-14 run over a 12-minute span of the first half to break open a tight game and cruise to an 88-72 victory over Longwood in the season opener for both teams on Friday night. The Mids led 49-33 at halftime and held at least a 10-point lead for the last 30 minutes of the game.</p>

<p>Navy’s 88 points were the seventh most in a season opener and the most in an opener since the 1995-96 season (89 vs. Air Force). The 88 points were also the most for a Navy team since scoring 89 against Lafayette on Feb. 11, 2006, a span of 37 games.</p>

<p>“It was a great atmosphere tonight and we made a lot of shots which took the crowd out of the game in the first half. Everytime they made a run in the second half, we seemed to hit a big shot,” said Navy head coach Billy Lange. “I was really proud of our effort. This is the hardest-playing team I have coached. They get after it defensively and it is great to open the year with a road win.”</p>

<p>Longwood was playing in its first NCAA Division I game, and a rowdy crowd of 1,609 sporting white t-shirts was quieted by Navy’s stellar first-half play.</p>

<p>The Mids rode the hot hand of senior Greg Sprink (Cardiff-by-the-Sea, Calif.) in the first half. Sprink scored 17 points on 7-of-12 shooting with five rebounds and three assists to lead the Mids to the 16-point halftime cushion. Sprink’s third three-pointer of the first half gave Navy a 47-27 lead with just over a minute to play. It was part of a 50.0 percent (20-of-40) field-goal effort in the first half. Navy was aided by 14 Longwood turnovers, in which the Mids turned into 17 points.</p>

<p>Every time Longwood countered with a run in the second half, the Mids would answer with a three-pointer. The Lancers trimmed the margin to 12 with just over 15 minutes to play, when Kaleo Kina (Phoenix, Ariz.) connected on a three-pointer to push the lead to 15 at 56-41. Again, with 14 minutes to play and Navy sporting a 58-44 advantage, Bryce Brigham (Bellevue, Wash.) connected on a trey for a 17-point advantage. Lastly, Longwood trailed 63-50 with 11:52 to play when Adam Teague (Hickory, N.C.) netted a deep three from the corner to push the margin to 66-50.</p>

<p>Navy would then manage to take its biggest lead at 79-58 with 5:27 to play on a Chris Harris (Mechanicsville, Va.) layup, before coasting in for the final 88-72 decision.</p>

<p>The story of the night was the Navy defense which forced 22 Longwood turnovers and held the Lancers to 43.5 percent (27-of-62) from the field and 27.8 percent (5-of-18) from three-point range. Longwood did outrebound the Mids, 37-36.</p>

<p>“We wanted to cut down their penetration and limit their offensive rebounds,” said Lange. “We did that for the most part, but they started crashing hard at the end of the game and getting extra chances. It’s something we need to clean up, but it was a good effort for us. With the first game of the year, its more about what we do and not what the opponents do. We’ll look at the tape and make some adjustments. I think we could do better defensively, but it was a good start.”</p>

<p>The Mids were led by Sprink’s 28 points, eight rebounds and five assists. The senior captain was 9-of-19 from the field and made a concerted effort to share the ball.</p>

<p>“It takes pressure off everyone else when everyone is involved,” said Sprink. “We were knocking down shots and it makes our offense click a lot better when everyone is involved. We got the first-game jitters out and we’ll become more efficient as the season wears on.”</p>

<p>Sprink’s 28 led four Mids in double-figures. Harris tallied 12 points, two assists and two steals, Kina added 11 points, five steals and three assists and Teague came off the bench to score 11 points with four rebounds and three assists. Centers Ben Biles (Cramerton, N.C.) and freshman Mark Veazey (Lilburn, Ga.) combined for nine points and 11 rebounds.</p>

<p>The Mids shot 50.8 percent (33-of-65) from the field, including 44.8 percent (13-of-29) from three-point range. Navy was 9-of-11 (81.8 percent) from the free throw line. Navy recorded 21 assists on 33 made shots and recorded 19 turnovers.</p>

<p>The Mids will travel to Drexel on Sunday, for a 4:00 pm tip-off. Drexel was a 67-59 overtime winner against Penn on Friday night.</p>

<p>Navy Women’s Cross Country/Track & Field: Bonaire Runner Makes Her Mark at Naval Academy (Macon Telegraph)</p>

<p>Away at college
BONAIRE RUNNER MAKES HER MARK AT NAVAL ACADEMY</p>

<p>By Chris Deighan - Telegraph correspondent</p>

<p>Hers is not the image that comes to mind when picturing the prototypical
Marine.</p>

<p>Listed at an even five feet tall, sophomore Anna Bernal is the shortest athlete on the women’s cross country team at the Naval Academy. And all that running hasn’t exactly filled out her frame.</p>

<p>Still, success in the Marine Corps - Bernal plans to seek a commission after graduation - isn’t all about size and shape. There are other characteristics intrinsic in those who’ve earned the right to wear the uniform.</p>

<p>Courage, determination and spirit carry significance, as well. It is in these areas that Bernal displays the ability to fill the mold.</p>

<p>Here’s an example: Less than 24 hours after running six kilometers at the Patriot League Championship on Oct. 27, Bernal ran the Marine Corps Marathon.</p>

<p>“I wouldn’t recommend that for anyone,” Navy cross country coach Karen Boyle said.</p>

<p>Nevertheless, after slogging her way through what Boyle called a “grueling” race due to extreme muddy conditions and slick hills, Bernal ran the streets, parks and bridges of Washington, D.C., in 3:19:12. That time placed her 67th among the 8,000 women who finished the event.</p>

<p>Bernal said she first gravitated toward distance running as a freshman in high school because “it was something a lot of people thought I couldn’t do - so I wanted to proved them wrong.”</p>

<p>Not only did she compete, she excelled. At Mt. deSales in Macon, Bernal posted the best girls’ time at the GISA state meet her senior year. In the process, she established a legacy of success the Lady Cavaliers parlayed into a team championship last month - not that Bernal takes any credit for the accomplishment.</p>

<p>“I knew them when I was in high school and they all have a lot of drive themselves,” she said. “They have a lot of new girls running too and together they’re all really dedicated.”</p>

<p>Despite her Air Force surroundings while growing up in Bonaire, Bernal chose the Naval Academy, hoping to earn a path to the Marine Corps. She is a chemistry major because she enjoys the field, but doubts that discipline will have any specific application to her preferred commission: combat engineer.</p>

<p>According to Coach Boyle, Bernal fits well at Annapolis.</p>

<p>“She’s a great addition to the academy as well as the team,” Boyle said. “She’s one on those people that will do anything for the betterment of the naval academy - the institution itself as well as for the team.”</p>

<p>Bernal was among 12 runners chosen by Boyle to compete at the Patriot League final. The Midshipmen tied with Bucknell for first place, evidence the team improved as the season progressed, according to Boyle.</p>

<p>Bernal did not finish in the top seven so she won’t be eligible to compete when the team runs at the Mid Atlantic Regional Meet today. However, the current Navy club has a pair of seniors, so Bernal thinks she could fill one of those spots next season.</p>

<p>“I’m hoping I can step it up a little and help out,” she said.</p>

<p>Toward that end, the Houston Countian said she needs to work on her speed training and improve her time in the first leg of a race.</p>

<p>That progress is hindered by Bernal’s divergent athletic goals. She came into the academy wanting to run competitive cross country while also training for marathons.</p>

<p>“Sometimes it’s a little counterproductive to train for the two at the same time,” Boyle said.</p>

<p>While six kilometers seems like a long way, covering it involves a different approach than the mindset used when attacking a 10,000-meter outdoor track event. The game plan for running a marathon is completely different.</p>

<p>“If she wants to make the top seven, she’d have to focus in a little more on the shorter distance to where she can work on a little more turnover and not so much for distance,” Boyle said.</p>

<p>Noting that, she added that Bernal’s brightest future lies in the 10K and marathon. In fact, the sophomore Middie will participate in 10K tryouts during the coming week, despite the fact her body is still recuperating from the marathon effort.</p>

<p>The third of 11 children born to Ben and Kathleen Bernal, she learned the value of extra effort at an early age.</p>

<p>“Growing up in a big family makes you realize things don’t come easily,” she said. "It also promotes competition, like a competitive spirit when you’re young.</p>

<p>“When I got older I didn’t - I had two older brothers and I was real close to them growing up - so I didn’t care if (the opponents) were guys or girls,” she added. “I just wanted to beat them.”</p>

<p>Longwood Postgame
Navy basketball unleashed 20 minutes of hell, then coasted in the second half to wrap up a 88-72 win over Longwood last night. Greg Sprink led the way with 28 points, eight rebounds, 5 assists, and 3 steals. Not that he should have been the Patriot League preseason POY or anything. Nolan Richardson used the phrase “40 minutes of hell” to describe the way his Arkansas teams played, and for the first half the Mids did their best vintage Razorbacks impersonation. Navy set a frantic pace to start the game, and Longwood just couldn’t keep up. The Mids went on a 36-14 run after the Lancers were clearly gassed, and never looked back.</p>

<p>The Good: There’s a lot of it.
-First and foremost was the Navy defense, which forced 22 Longwood turnovers. Fourteen of those turnovers were by way of Navy steals. Kaleo Kina had 5, while Sprink and Clif Colbert had 3 apiece. Man to man defense made its glorious return.
-Navy’s bench outscored Longwood’s, 34-21. Leading the way off the bench was Adam Teague, with 11 points and 3 assists in 27 minutes. Mark Veazey impressed in his collegiate debut, scoring 8 points and grabbing 5 rebounds in 17 minutes.
-Navy needs a scoring threat to take pressure off of Greg Sprink, and against Longwood 4 different Mids scored in double figures. In addition to Sprink and Teague, Chris Harris had 12 points and the Flyin’ Hawaiian, Kaleo Kina, had 11.</p>

<p>The Bad:
-Navy had a tough time adjusting to its own pace early in the game, and it led to 19 turnovers of its own.
-The Mids were outrebounded by Longwood, 37-36.</p>

<p>The Ugly:
-Navy attempted 29 3-point shots. While they shot nearly 45% from behind the arc, there will be nights when those shots don’t fall.</p>

<p>Yes it was only Longwood, and yes, it was only one game. But it was a good start for a team with some challenging games ahead. The first of those games comes on Sunday against Drexel.</p>

<p>Mids Travel to City of Brotherly Love to Take on Drexel
– For more information, please visit [NavySports.com</a> - Official Athletic Site for Navy Athletics](<a href=“http://www.navysports.com%5DNavySports.com”>http://www.navysports.com)</p>

<p>Game Specifics
Date and Tip Time Nov. 11, 2007 at 4:00 pm EST
Location Philadelphia, Pa. | Daskalakis Ath. Center<br>
Tickets 1-866-4-DREXEL
Television None
Video Streaming Drexel / [Drexel</a> University Athletics](<a href=“http://www.drexeldragons.com%5DDrexel”>http://www.drexeldragons.com)
Radio None<br>
Webcast WNAV<br>
Gametracker None</p>

<p>ANNAPOLIS, Md. – There is no rest for the weary as the Navy men’s basketball team will head to the City of Brotherly Love to take on Drexel in a 4:00 pm tip-off on Sunday. After Navy’s season-opening 88-72 win over Longwood on Friday night, the Mids stayed the night in Farmville, Va., then bussed the five-plus hours on Saturday morning to Philadelphia. The Mids had a shootaround on Saturday night at Daskalakis Athletic Center.</p>

<p>Drexel is also coming off a grueling Friday night, although its travel schedule was not as hectic as Navy’s. The Dragons knocked off crosstown rival, Penn, in overtime, 67-59.</p>

<p>LOOKING FOR A PAIR
Navy won its season opener for the second straight year and has now won back-to-back season openers for the first time since 1995-96 and 1996-97.
• Navy is looking to start 2-0 for the first time since 2002-03 and for only the fourth time in the last 20 years. Navy started 2-0 in 2002-03, 1998-99 and 1993-94. The 1999 team won the Patriot League regular-season title and went 20-7 overall while the 1994 team won the Patriot League Tournament title.</p>

<p>ABOUT DREXEL
Drexel is coming off a sensational 23-9 record that included a spot in the National Invitation Tournament (NIT) a year ago. Many, however, feel that the Dragons were snubbed from an at-large NCAA Tournament berth after finishing fourth with a 13-5 record in the highly-competitive Colonial Athletic Association.
• The Dragons are paced by 6-9 senior center Frank Elegar, who averaged 16.0 ppg and 6.7 rpg a year ago. He was a member of the CollegeInsider.com’s Preseason Mid-Major All-America Team and this past summer, he competed in the Pan American Games as a member of the U.S. Virgin Islands National Team. He scored 14 points with 11 rebounds and four blocks in the win over Penn on Friday night. Tremayne Hawthorne and freshman Gerald Colds led the Dragons with 18 points. Colds was 6-of-9 from beyond the three-point line.</p>

<p>Drexel’s Projected Starters (2007-08 Stats)</p>

<p>LONGWOOD RECAP
The Mids won their second straight season-opener with an impressive 88-72 win at Longwood. The Lancers, which were playing their first-ever NCAA Division I game, were hoping to feed off a rowdy Willett Hall crowd of 1,609, the majority of which were wearing white T-shirts for Longwood’s “whitewash” promotion. However, Navy took control early with a dominating 36-14 first-half run and the lead never dipped below 12 points during the last 30 minutes en route to the win.
• The 16-point victory was the largest road win for Navy since a 73-47 decision over Morgan State on Dec. 8, 2005. It was the second-largest (behind Morgan State) road win for a Navy team coached by Billy Lange.
• The 16-point victory matched the sixth-largest victory margin under a Lange-coached team at Navy.
• Navy improved to 76-25 all-time in season openers.
• Navy’s 21 assists were the most for the Navy basketball team under head coach Billy Lange and the most since recording 22 against Colgate on Jan. 25, 2004.
• The Mids forced 22 turnovers, the most since forcing 24 against Lafayette on Jan. 13, 2007. Navy turned the 22 turnovers into 25 points. Fourteen of the 22 turnovers came via steals.
• Navy’s 13 three-pointers are tied for third most in school history. Six of the 11 times Navy has made at least 13 three-pointers in a game have come under head coach Billy Lange.
• Navy’s 88 points were the most since scoring 89 against Lafayette on Feb. 11, 2006.
• The 88 points were the eighth most in school history in a season opener, and the most in an opener since scoring 89 against Air Force on Nov. 25, 1995.
• Navy deployed its own version of “20 minutes of hell”, forcing 14 first-half turnovers, in which Navy turned into 17 points. Navy went 10 deep in the first half with all 10 players playing at least four minutes and nine of them scoring. The Mids scored 22 first-half bench points.
• Navy’s 50.8 shooting percentage marked the first time Navy shot over 50.0 percent in an opener since the 1998-99 opener when the Mids shot 54.2 percent against Rice.
• Greg Sprink’s 28 points against Longwood were the most in an opener since Cliff Rees also scored 28 against Mount St. Mary’s on Nov. 28, 1987.
• Navy placed four players in double figures for the first time since four players reached double figures in a 79-75 win over Howard on Dec. 4, 2006.</p>

<p>NAME OF THE GAME IS DEFENSE
Despite allowing 72 points, the most since a 78-63 loss to Bucknell on Feb. 2, 2007, the Navy defense made a name for itself on Friday night.
• Navy forced 22 turnovers (14 in the first half) while limiting Longwood to shoot 43.5 percent from the field.
• Navy was outrebounded, 37-36, after holding a four-rebound advantage after one half. Longwood crashed the boards hard in the second half after Navy had accumulated a comfortable lead.
• The Mids deployed “20 minutes of hell” in the first half, running the Lancers ragged. Longwood was visibly tired midway through the first half, as head coach Billy Lange kept inserting fresh players.
• The pace slowed considerably in the second half, but not before Navy had a 16-point halftime lead and scored 49 first-half points.</p>

<p>MIDS PROFICIENT FROM LONG RANGE
• Navy enters the Drexel contest having connected on at least one three-pointer in 125 consecutive games. The last time Navy did not make a trey came in the Jan. 26, 2003, contest against Colgate.
• Navy has made at least three three-pointers in 75 straight games and in 86-of-87 games under head coach Billy Lange.
• The Mids have had at least eight three-pointers in 41-of-87 games under Lange.
• Since the start of last year, Navy has made at least 10 treys 11 different times, posting a 7-4 record in those games.
• The Mids connected on a school-record 260 three-pointers last year, and attempted a school-record 726. Navy shot 195 more three-pointers than its opponent.</p>

<p>BENCH PRODUCTION
Five Navy players came off the bench Friday night, accounting for 34 points, 14 rebounds, 11 assists and four steals in 79 minutes. The fivesome was 14-of-23 (60.9 percent) from the field, including 5-of-9 (55.6 percent) from three-point range.
• The 34 points off the bench was the most since the bench scored 40 points against Stony Brook on Nov. 19, 2006.</p>

<p>SPRINK KEYS NAVY ATTACK
Greg Sprink may not have been voted preseason Patriot League Player of the Year, but he showed on Friday night that he may be the most-complete player in the league.
• The senior captain recorded team bests in points (28), rebounds (8) and assists (5) in leading the Mids to the 88-72 victory. It marked the 20th time in his career that he has scored at least 20 points and the ninth time he has scored at least 25 points.
• He scored from a variety of ways. He connected on three three-pointers, posted up five times to score and hit several pull-up jumpers. He also got to the free throw line eight times.
• All told with his points and assists, Sprink had a hand in 40 of Navy’s 88 points (45.5 percent).</p>

<p>Navy def. Stanford, 9-0
Navy def. Fordham, 9-0</p>

<p>For Immediate Release
Saturday, Nov. 10, 2007
Squash Contact: Stacie Michaud (410) 293-8773</p>

<p>Mids Sweep Stanford, Fordham in Squash Action
Annapolis, Md. - Led by senior Matt Wiggins’ (Sour Lake, Texas) first collegiate wins, the Navy squash team cruised past Stanford and Fordham Friday afternoon on the opening day of the Navy Squash Round Robin held at the Halsey International Squash Courts, as well as the Bancroft Hall Squash Courts in Annapolis. The 13-team round robin features teams from the region, as well as two West Coast programs and three women’s teams.</p>

<p>The Mids improved to 4-1 by defeating both Stanford and Fordham by 9-0 decisions. Navy was able to move its ladder around, enabling the opportunity for additional players to see varsity action including Wiggins, who has battled his way onto the varsity squash this season. Wiggins earned his first varsity win by handing Stanford’s Will Lewis a 9-5, 9-3, 9-5 loss, while following up with his second win of the day, a 9-5, 9-1, 9-0 victory over James Lechleitner of Fordham.</p>

<p>Sophomore Teddy George (West Hartford, Conn.) also earned his way onto the ladder Friday afternoon, defeating Fordham’s Tolga Suvar, 9-1, 9-0, 9-0, at the No. 8 spot.</p>

<p>Senior captain Jeff Sawin (Haverford, Pa.), along with rookies Allan Lutz (McLean, Va.) and Brad Seidel (Toledo, Ohio), sophomore Ben Mantica (Binghamton, N.Y.) and juniors Michael Beautyman Jr (Plymouth Meeting, Pa.), Allen Hartley (Charleston, W.Va.) and Christopher Zipf (Gladwyne, Pa.) all earned two wins on Friday.</p>

<p>Sawin, Lutz and Hartley were impressive against their Fordham foes, as all three earned 9-0, 9-0, 9-0 wins. Meanwhile, Zipf earned a hard-fought 3-2 win over Stanford’s Brad Pearson at the No. 7 spot. Pearson earned a 2-0 advantage over Zipf with 10-8 and 9-6 wins in the first two games. Zipf, however, turned the tables and took the next three games, 9-0, 9-3, 9-4, to win the match.</p>

<p>Though the tournament is slated to extend through Sunday, the Midshipmen play their final three matches on Saturday. Navy will battle Hobart, Haverford and Vanderbilt.</p>

<p>Navy def. Stanford, 9-0
Nov. 9, 2007 • Annapolis, Md.
1 Nils Mattsson (N) def. Andrew Burmon (S) 3-0 9-3, 9-0, 9-4
2 Jeff Sawin (N) def. Sam Gould (S) 3-0 9-2, 9-2, 9-0
3 Allan Lutz (N) def. Pat Bugas (S) 3-0 9-2, 9-2, 9-7
4 Ben Mantica (N) def. Andy Helppie-Schmeider (S) 3-0 9-3, 9-7, 9-3
5 Michael Beautyman Jr (N) def. Dave Herbert (S) 3-0 9-0, 9-6, 9-2
6 Brad Seidel (N) def. Ben Peterson (S) 3-0 9-1, 9-1, 9-2
7 Christopher Zipf (N) def. Brad Pearson (S) 3-2 8-10, 6-9, 9-0, 9-3, 9-4
8 Allen Hartley (N) def. Ananth Sridhar (S) 3-0 9-0, 9-5, 9-4
9 Matt Wiggins (N) def. Will Lewis (S) 3-0 9-5, 9-3, 9-5</p>

<p>Navy def. Fordham, 9-0
Nov. 9, 2007 • Annapolis, Md.
1 Jeff Sawin (N) def. Charles Sterken (F) 3-0 9-0, 9-0, 9-0
2 Allan Lutz (N) def. Steve Sangiacomo (F) 3-0 9-0, 9-0, 9-0
3 Ben Mantica (N) def. Jason Sheriff (F) 3-0 9-1, 9-1, 9-1
4 Michael Beautyman Jr (N) def. Charles Kromholz (F) 3-0 9-1, 9-0, 9-2
5 Brad Seidel (N) def. Brandon Abbatiello (F) 3-0 9-0, 9-2, 9-0
6 Christopher Zipf (N) def. Peter Slucky (F) 3-0 9-1, 9-2, 9-5
7 Allen Hartley (N) def. Steve Cinquino (F) 3-0 9-0, 9-0, 9-0
8 Teddy George (N) def. Tolga Suvar (F) 3-0 9-1, 9-0, 9-0
9 Matt Wiggins (N) def. James Lechleitner (F) 3-0 9-5, 9-1, 9-0</p>

<p>Navy finishes fifth at Mid-Atlantic Regional</p>

<p>For Immediate Release
Saturday, Nov. 10, 2007
Men’s Cross Country Contact: Jonathan Maggart (410) 293-8771</p>

<p>Navy Men Finish Fifth at NCAA Mid-Atlantic Region Championship</p>

<p>BETHLEHEM, Pa. - Led by seniors John Kress (Colorado Springs, Colo.) and John Olsen (Staten Island, N.Y.), the Navy men’s cross country team turned in a fifth-place finish among 28 teams at the NCAA Mid-Atlantic Region Championship Saturday morning at Lehigh’s Goodman Campus course on the campus of Lehigh University. Navy entered the competition ranked eighth in the region by the U.S. Track & Field/Cross Country Coaches Association.</p>

<p>Georgetown, ranked 14th in the country, won the regional (42 pts) after two runners finished among the top three and four others earned top-15 finishes. Villanova just edged out 29th-ranked Princeton to join Georgetown with an automatic bid to the 2007 NCAA Championship at the Wabash Valley Family Sports Center in Terre Haute, Ind. on Nov. 19. Villanova senior Robert Curtis captured the individual crown by covering the 10k course in 30:08 and helped lead the Wildcats to a four-point advantage over Princeton, 70-74.</p>

<p>American, who just clipped the Mids two weeks ago at the Patriot League Championship, finished eight points ahead of the Mids in fourth with 176 points. Navy, meanwhile, owned 184 points in fifth, just a point ahead of La Salle.</p>

<p>Kress paved the way for the Midshipmen, who placed fifth for the second straight year, by crossing the finish line just 00:01 ahead of Olsen. Kress earned a 16th-place finish with his 30:44, while Olsen fell in at 17th with a 30:45. By virtue of their top-25 finish, both Kress and Olsen earned All-Mid-Atlantic Region recognition. Junior Bill Prom (New Berlin, Wis.) placed 37th with a 31:19, followed by junior Andrew Grant (Athens, Ga.) in 54th (31:32), senior Lucas Burke (Bakersfield, Calif.) in 60th (31:46), rookie Andrew Hanko (Montville, N.J.) in 73rd (32:00) and sophomore Chris Horel (Belford, N.J.) in 104th (32:35).</p>

<p>Thirteen additionall at-large teams and two individual at-large runners will be selected by the NCAA Division I Men’s and Women’s Track & Field Committee on Sunday night at 7:00 pm.</p>

<p>NCAA Mid-Atlantic Region Team Standings (top 10 out of 28)
1 - Georgetown 42
2 - Villanova 70
3 - Princeton 74
4 - American 176
5 - Navy 184
6 - La Salle 185
7 - Duquesne 204
8 - Penn State 232
9 - Maryland 235
10 - Penn 257</p>

<p>Navy finishes 10th at Mid-Atlantic Regional</p>

<p>For Immediate Release
Saturday, Nov. 10, 2007
Women’s Cross Country Contact: Jonathan Maggart (410) 293-8771</p>

<p>Navy Women Place 10th at NCAA Mid-Atlantic Region Championship</p>

<p>BETHLEHEM, Pa. - Senior Arwyn Becker (Vail, Colo.) paced the Navy women’s cross country team to a 10th-place finish among the field of 28 teams at the NCAA Mid-Atlantic Region Championship Saturday morning at Lehigh’s Goodman Campus course on the campus of Lehigh University. Navy, who was unranked in the region at the beginning of the season, entered the competition tied for eighth in the region by the U.S. Track & Field/Cross Country Coaches Association, alongside Patriot League rival Bucknell.</p>

<p>Anchored by a second-place finish by sophomore Liz Costello, Princeton captured the team title with 56 points. Two Tigers finished among the top five, while another three were among the top 20. West Virginia held off Georgetown by two points, 77-79, to take second and join Princeton in earning an automatic bid to the 2007 NCAA Championship at the Wabash Valley Family Sports Center in Terre Haute, Ind. on Nov. 19. Three WVU runners finished among the top 10, while Georgetown also had three runners finish among the top 10, including junior Melissa Gerelli who took the individual crown in a time of 19:50.</p>

<p>Bucknell finished 18 points ahead of Navy (314-332) in fourth, while the Midshipmen owned a 15-point advantage over Duquesne, who placed 11th.</p>

<p>Navy has produced three consecutive top-10 performances in NCAA Mid-Atlantic Region Championships held at Goodman Campus. Meanwhile, the Mids improved upon their 11th-place finish a year ago among 32 competitors.</p>

<p>All-Patriot League runners Becker and Lexa Gass (Crescent, Pa.) were among Navy’s top finishers in the regional. Becker led the way with a 51st-place finish, covering the course in 21:55, her third-fastest time of the fall. Meanwhile, Gass, a sophomore, turned in a 66th-place mark of 22:12. Sophomore Erica Ziel (Saginaw, Mich.) put together back-to-back solid efforts at the Patriot League Championship and at the NCAA regional, placing 60th with a time of 22:04. Rounding out action for the Midshipmen were senior Kyleigh Millhouse (Boiling Springs, Pa.) in 7th (22:24), junior Maureen Dooley (Durham, Conn.) in 79th (22:26), sophomore Amy Watson (Hampstead, Md.) in 81st (22:29) and junior Katherine Wirtz (Willoughby Hills, Ohio) in 93rd (22:45).</p>

<p>Thirteen additional at-large teams and two individual at-large runners will be selected by the NCAA Division I Men’s and Women’s Track & Field Committee on Sunday night at 7:00 pm.</p>

<p>NCAA Mid-Atlantic Region Team Standings (top 10 out of 28)
1 - Princeton 56
2 - West Virginia 77
3 - Georgetown 79
4 - Penn State 93
5 - Villanova 115
6 - Penn 185
7 - La Salle 248
8 - Maryland 275
9 - Bucknell 314
10 - Navy 332</p>

<p>For Immediate Release
Sent Saturday, November 10, 2007
Contact Justin Kischefsky (410) 293-8772</p>

<p>Navy Offense Struggles in Loss</p>

<p>ROCK HILL, S.C. - The Navy women’s basketball team shot just 21 percent from the field and turned the ball over 21 times in a 47-33 loss to Winthrop, Saturday afternoon at the Winthrop Coliseum in Rock Hill, S.C. The Midshipmen fall to 0-2 on the opening weekend of the season with the loss, while the Eagles improved to 2-0.</p>

<p>“We never were able to get into any kind of offensive flow,” said Navy head coach Tom Marryott. “You can credit Winthrop for some of that, but we also share a great deal of the responsibility for failing to get into the offense.”</p>

<p>The Mids misfired on their opening 13 shots from the field as the Eagles built a 12-1 lead. Navy’s Cassie Consedine (Fr., Bartlesville, Okla.) finally broke the Navy scoring drought by sinking a jumper with 9:09 remaining in the half. </p>

<p>The Eagles would eventually build a 15-point advantage (20-5) with a little more than six minutes remaining in the half before going into intermission holding a 22-13 advantage.</p>

<p>Navy rallied and sliced the deficit down to just three points at 26-23 with 10:54 left in the game, but Winthrop tallied the next seven points to push the margin back to double figures at 33-23. The closest the Mids would come over the remainder of the game was seven points (37-30) with four minutes left on the clock.</p>

<p>While the Navy offense was struggling, its defense played fairly well, holding the Eagles to 30.8-percent shooting from the field and forcing 14 turnovers. Both teams finished the game with 39 rebounds.</p>

<p>Consedine accounted for six of Navy’s 11 made field goals on the afternoon and was the lone Mid to make multiple field goals. She finished with 14 points and hauled in a game-high 12 rebounds to record her second double-double in as many days, while also setting a Navy freshman class record with five blocked shots.</p>

<p>Winthrop was led in scoring by Tiffany Rodd who poured in 21 points to lead all players.</p>

<p>Navy will conclude play at the Winthrop Classic Sunday at 1 p.m. when the Mids face North Texas. Both the Mids and the Mean Green have lost to Winthrop and Rice over the first two days of the tournament.</p>

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