Author Archives: kbest

Golf

Nicolle Barmettler

Nicolle Barmettler

Sophomore Nicolle Barmettler became the first Bulldog to qualify for the NCAA Division II tournament in eight seasons as she was the top individual for the Bulldogs all season long.

Barmettler placed 18th out of the top golfers in the East region and found herself in the top 20 for the 10th time in as many tournaments this season. She had a scoring average of 78.75 and has landed in the top 20 in 18 of her 19 career tournaments through two seasons as a Bulldog. She won the season-opening William Jewell Fall Tune-up with a pair of 75s, tied for second at William Penn and third in the rain-shortened Missouri-St. Louis Invitational.

As a team, Truman placed 10th at the GLVC Championships in late April with Barmettler leading the way with rounds of 77, 79 and 81.

 

 

Softball

The Bulldogs softball team returned to NCAA regional play for the third-straight season and 17th overall time in school history.
Truman finished the regular season with a 30-18 record and garnered the No. 6 overall seed in the Midwest Regional. However, the offense that had propelled the Bulldogs all season went cold against some of the toughest pitchers in the region at the tournament, and they lost two games by scores of 3-0 and 2-0 to see their season come to an end.

Freshman Christa Reisinger was named the GLVC Freshman of the Year and was part of six All-GLVC selections for coach Erin Brown’s team. Reisinger hit .402 in 49 games with six doubles, four triples and nine home runs. Reisinger stole 42 bases out of 48 attempts to lead the GLVC by 15 steals. Senior pitcher Kindra Henze was the other first-team all-conference selection and posted a 1.93 ERA with a 12-9 overall record.

Fellow pitcher and senior Kelsea Dorsey earned second-team All-GLVC honors for the fourth straight year. The third team was dominated by infielders in senior third baseman Cate Simon, junior catcher Lex Van Nostrand and sophomore first baseman Ashley Murphy. Simon led the team in home runs with 11 and Van Nostrand was first in RBIs with 35.

Women’s Basketball

Michalina Tomczak

Michalina Tomczak

For the fifth time in program history, the Truman women’s basketball team reached the 20-win plateau as Amy Eagan’s Bulldogs finished 20-10 while advancing to the quarterfinal round of the Great Lakes Valley Conference postseason tournament.
The Bulldogs did it with a strong defensive effort as they held opponents on average to 55 points per game and set a school record with 130 blocked shots in a season. Of the 130 blocked shots, 59 came from senior Michalina Tomczak. She earned third-team all-conference honors and led the league in blocks. Her season total was the second-most by a Bulldog player, and she finished her career as one of only three Truman players to block more than 100 career shots.

Joining Tomczak on the all-conference team was senior guard Courtney Strait on the second team. Strait led the team in scoring at 10.5 points per game and will leave Truman with the most games played in a Bulldog uniform (115) and highest free throw shooting percentage ever at more than 86 percent.

As a team, Truman set a new school record in conference wins with 13 as they finished third in the GLVC West Division. They defeated Missouri-St. Louis 59-51 in the home tournament game Feb. 28 to set up their quarterfinal game against Quincy (Ill.) at the Family Arena in St. Charles. It was the ninth meeting between the Lady Hawks and Bulldogs over the course of three seasons, and this time Quincy got the upper hand with a 62-49 win over Truman.

 

Tennis

Lindsey Schlichting

Lindsey Schlichting

It was a tough year on the courts for the Bulldog tennis teams. The Truman women were 1-10 overall and the men were 1-11 in duals while both squads went 0-5 in the GLVC.

Freshman Gavin Hatter led the men in singles victories with five, and had half of the team’s doubles match wins with four. Sophomore Paul Province was second in wins, having registered four.

Sophomore Lindsey Schlichting had the top win total on the women’s side with four.

The squads were relatively young as only three seniors dotted the roster between the two programs.

Men’s Basketball

The 2015-16 version of Bulldog men’s basketball logged the fourth-most wins in program history, finishing with a 21-9 overall record under the direction of second-year head coach Chris Foster.

Truman, which also advanced to the Great Lakes Valley Conference tournament for the third time in as many seasons as conference members, landed four players on all-conference teams: junior Cory Myers (first-team and all-defensive team); senior Cole Myers (second-team); junior Kyle Kanaskie (second-team); and junior Dwight Sistrunk Jr. (all-defensive team).

Truman came out of the gate with just a 4-3 mark through the first seven games before stringing together an eight-game winning streak – capped with back-to-back double-digit home wins against McKendree (Ill.) and Illinois Springfield to sit at 12-3. After two losses on the road, the Bulldogs won eight of their final 11 to earn the No. 6 overall seed in the GLVC tournament. Truman picked up a 90-84 home win against Missouri-St. Louis in the opening round before coming up just short against the region’s No. 1 team, Wisconsin-Parkside, in the quarterfinal round in St. Louis.

This year’s group completed the first back-to-back-to-back 20-plus win seasons in program history. The Bulldogs graduate two seniors, Andrew Vander Zwaag and Cole Myers, while returning Cory Myers, Kanaskie, Sistrunk Jr., and 10 other squad members for the 2016-17 season, set to begin in November.

Baseball

For the third-straight season, the Truman baseball team won 20 games. The Bulldogs were 20-30 after last year’s run to the Division II World Series.

Junior transfer Nick Agliolo provided the early offensive spark as he hit above .400 for the better part of the first half of the season. Agliolo finished with a team-leading .360 batting average with eight doubles and three triples.

T.J. Wood

T.J. Wood

Senior T.J. Wood led the GLVC in stolen bases with 24 and finished his Truman career fourth in steals with 43. As a team, Truman again was near the top of the league in steals with 73 out of 103 attempts. Senior pitcher Mark Roberts wrapped up his Truman career as the all-time leader in innings pitched and tied for first in career starts with 42. Sophomore reliever Peter Young eclipsed both the career and season record for saves. Young had a 3-1 record with eight saves and finished his second season with 14, breaking the previous record by four.

Consistency was the issue with the Bulldogs this year as they had three, three-game winning streaks, and out of the seven GLVC West Division series, won one, lost three and split three with no four-game sweeps by either team. The Bulldogs played a record 31 games at home including 22 straight running from March 4 through April 3.

Gardner Named to Hall of Fame

Kenneth Gardner

Kenneth Gardner

Former Bulldog director of athletics and legendary track and field coach Kenneth Gardner has been selected for induction into the Mid-America Intercollegiate Athletics Hall of Fame in June.

Gardner is one of the founding fathers of both Truman Athletics and the Missouri Intercollegiate Athletics Association. He attended the University from 1939-1947, pausing to serve in the United States Army during World War II. He was an All-MIAA football and track performer, and also served the Army as a major in North Africa and Europe, earning the Silver Star and Purple Heart.

After finishing his degree in 1947, Gardner coached at Marceline High School from 1947-1951. He returned to Kirksville as an assistant football coach in June 1952, and also assisted with basketball and track and field. He became the head track and field coach and led the Bulldogs to a decade of dominance. From 1959 until 1968, the Bulldog track and field team won every indoor and outdoor MIAA championship contested. The Bulldogs won a total of 19 indoor titles from 1959-1980 and 15 outdoor titles from 1959-1979, all under Gardner’s leadership.

Gardner coached 39 individual NCAA Division II All-Americans and had 11 win individual national championships. He was a two-time recipient of the College Track and Field Coach of the Year award, served as college division referee at both the Drake and Kansas relays, was on the games committee for the Division II National Track and Field Championships, a chair of the Midwest Region for the Division II Football Championships and sat on the Division II Football National Committee. He was a charter member of the Truman Athletics Hall of Fame in 1983 and inducted into the Missouri Track and Field Hall of Fame in 1984.

Outstanding Senior Student-Athletes Recognized

Athlete Awards May 2016

Jerry Wollmering, athletic director (left) recognizes senior student-athletes Meghan Senne, Matt Peterson, Alexis Heffernan, Dominic Kacich and Alli Patterson.

Women’s soccer player Alexis Heffernan, volleyball player Alli Patterson and track and field athlete Dominic Kacich were named the Outstanding Senior Student-Athletes for the 2015-16 school year.

Heffernan became only the eighth Bulldog women’s soccer player to earn All-America honors this past fall. She earned her second-straight first-team All-GLVC selection for coach Mike Cannon and the 2015 GLVC champions while finishing her career ranked in the top 10 in goals, points and shots.

Patterson was a four-time all-conference player and two-time American Volleyball Coaches Association All-American for coach Ben Briney and the Bulldog volleyball team. She was the 2015 GLVC Volleyball Scholar-Athlete of the Year, a member of the 2014 GLVC championship team and finished her career ranked in the top 10 in total blocks and hitting percentage.

Kacich qualified and competed in the 400-meter dash at last year’s NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships. He has provisionally qualified for the national meet this year with his top time coming in April at the Kansas Relays. He has earned All-GLVC honors in both indoor and outdoor track and was named an Academic All-American by the College Sports Information Directors of America.

In addition, Matt Peterson and Meghan Senne were awarded the Dean’s Excellence Award for highest cumulative GPA for a student-athlete. Peterson was a three-year member of the men’s tennis team and an accounting major, while Senne was a four-year letter winner from the women’s swimming team and a psychology major.

Donors Give Back with Pitch Competition

Alumni Doug (’94) and Diane (’95) Villhard awarded $6,000 to Truman students as part of the inaugural Bulldog B.I.T.E elevator pitch competition.

An elevator pitch outlines the concept or idea for a product, service or project in a short period of time, typically from 30 seconds to three minutes. The length of the pitch mirrors the time spent waiting for and riding an elevator in a high-rise building. The purpose of the pitch is to spur the interest of a potential investor or financial backer.

Bulldog B.I.T.E., which stands for Business Innovation by Truman Entrepreneurs, allowed participants to pitch a for-profit or not-for-profit concept. Judges selected six teams to attend the live pitch competition in March in St. Louis to present their product to an alumni panel. Contestants were judged based on the problem, product/service solution, market, competition, value creation, seed money, a Q&A session and the presentation of the project.

William Fries, a junior computer science major, won first prize and earned $3,000. Fries won for his pitch of a small USB security device for protecting digital data, such as emails, passwords or encryption keys. The product keeps data offline and securely encrypted, while still allowing for easy access with a short pin.

Anthony Hill, a junior accounting major, won second place and $2,000 for SpiroRip, a notebook ripping device. Stephen Cutler, a junior business administration major, received third place and $1,000 for Lily Luggage, a luggage concept that combines motorized wheels with Bluetooth technology.

The judges for Bulldog B.I.T.E. were alumni Stacey George (’00), Amanda Gioia (’93), John Haney (’01), Marco Ilardi (’99), Chris LeBeau (’05), Cody Sumter (’10) and Kevin Tibbs (’95).

Alumnus Doug Villhard (center) talks with the finalists of the Bulldog B.I.T.E. elevator pitch competition.

Alumnus Doug Villhard (center) talks with the finalists of the Bulldog B.I.T.E. elevator pitch competition.

A Life-Altering Gift

Ken Rickli Tiffany Shearer

Ken Rickli Tiffany Shearer

Tiffany Shearer’s entire future, not to mention her ambition of attending college, was suddenly in peril when her mother abandoned her in 2012 at the start of her senior year at Affton High School.

“She said she was leaving to go on a three-week business trip and never returned home. The fact that my father has never been a part of my life, and my grandma had recently passed away, I really didn’t have any family or financial support,” Shearer said.

Getting through her senior year was physically, mentally and emotionally draining.

Earlier that same year, Affton High School and Truman alumnus Kenneth Rickli (’65) and his wife Kathleen created the Rickli Family Scholarship with a six-figure gift to the Truman State University Foundation. This renewable full-tuition scholarship is now awarded annually to an Affton High School senior who demonstrates great promise of future success at Truman. This scholarship has proved to be a godsend for Shearer.

“Being named a Rickli Scholar has meant the world to me,” she said. “Without this scholarship, I would not have been able to attend Truman and may never have been able to get the education that I have always worked so hard toward. The Truman experience has helped make my dreams a reality.”

Due to the Rickli’s generosity Shearer is thriving at Truman.

“Despite all of the challenges I have faced, I am extremely proud to say that of my six semesters here at Truman, this is my fourth semester receiving a 4.0 GPA, and my cumulative GPA is 3.88,” Shearer said.

Her future is very bright.