Penn State Men's Gymnastics Media Guide

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TABLE OF CONTENTS

Table of Contents • Credits.................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................2 Quick Facts • 2022 Schedule.............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................. 3 2022 Nittany Lion Roster and Roster Information........................................................................................................................................................................................................................ 4 Head Coach Randy Jepson.............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................5-10 Assistant Coaches..............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................11 2022 Nittany Lion Bios.................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................12-30 Program History............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................31-38 Year-by-Year Results....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................39-44 Series History/Captains....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................45

2022

Letterwinners................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................46-47

CREDITS Content and Layout . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Matt Jackson Yearbook Cover . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Steve Love Photo Credits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Mark Selders, Craig Houtz On the cover: Nick Mock, Andres Perez Gines For more information on Penn State Men's Gymnastics,

STATEMENT OF NONDISCRIMINATION Penn State University is committed to equal access to programs, facilities, admission and employment for all persons. It is the policy of the University to maintain an environment free of harassment and free of discrimination against any person because of age, race, color, ancestry, national origin, religion, creed, service in the uniformed services (as defined in state and federal law), veteran status, sex, sexual orientation, marital or family status, pregnancy, pregnancy-related conditions, physical or mental disability, gender, perceived gender, gender identity, genetic information or political ideas. Discriminatory conduct and harassment, as well as sexual misconduct and relationship violence, violates the dignity of individuals, impedes the realization of the University’s educational mission, and will not be tolerated. Direct all inquiries regarding the nondiscrimination policy to the Affirmative Action Office, The Pennsylvania State University, 328 Boucke Building, University Park, PA 16802-5901, Email: aao@ psu.edu, Tel (814) 863-0471

visit GoPSUsports.com.

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12-TIME NATIONAL CHAMPIONS


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QUICK FACTS • 2022 SCHEDULE PENN STATE UNIVERSITY Location . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . University Park, Pa. Founded . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1855 Enrollment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47,559 Nickname . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Nittany Lions Colors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Blue & White Conference . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Big Ten Home Facility . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Rec Hall (5,812) President . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Dr. Eric J. Barron VP for Intercollegiate Athletics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sandy Barbour Sport Administrator . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Mary Bolich Faculty Representative . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Dennis Scanlon Athletics Website . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www.GoPSUsports.com COACHING STAFF Head Coach . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Randy Jepson, 31st season Alma Mater . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Penn State ’82 Overall Record . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 414-96 (.812) Record at Penn State . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 414-96 (.812) Assistant Coach . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Carlos Vazquez, 10th season Alma Mater . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Temple, ’84 Assistant Coach . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Tony Beck, 6th season Alma Mater . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Penn State ’13

JANUARY Fri.

7

ARMY WEST POINT

UNIVERSITY PARK, PA.

6 p.m.

Fri.

14

at West Point Open

West Point, N.Y.

7 p.m.

Sat.

15

at West Point Open

West Point, N.Y.

7 p.m.

Sat.

22

at Navy Open

Annapolis, Md.

2 p.m.

Sat.

29

ILLINOIS*

UNIVERSITY PARK, PA.

4 p.m.

FEBRUARY Sat.

5

at Nebraska*

Lincoln, Neb.

7:30 p.m.

Sat.

12

at Winter Cup

Frisco, Texas

7:30 p.m.

PROGRAM HISTORY First Varsity Year . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1931 All-Time Record . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 679-165 (.805) NCAA titles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1948, 1953, 1954, 1957, 1959, 1960, 1961, 1965, 1976, 2000, 2004, 2007 Big Ten title . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2003, 2008, 2015, 2019 NCAA Indvidual Event Champions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54 NCAA Individual All-Around Champions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 NCAA National Coach of the Year . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 Big Ten Gymnast of the Year . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 Big Ten Freshmen of the Year . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Big Ten Coaches of the Year . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4

Sun.

27

at Winter Cup

Frisco, Texas

6:30 p.m.

Sat.

5

OHIO STATE*

UNIVERSITY PARK, PA.

2 p.m.

Sat.

12

SPRINGFIELD

UNIVERSITY PARK, PA.

4 p.m.

STRATEGIC COMMUNICATIONS Assistant Director of Communications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Matt Jackson Cell Phone . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 814-876-2710 E-mail . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . mjj5328@psu.edu Fax . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 814-863-3165 Mailing Address . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 101 Bryce Jordan Center University Park, Pa. 16802 Instagram/Twitter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . PennStateMGYM Facebook . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . PennStateMensGymnastics

Sat.

19

at Michigan*

Ann Arbor, Mich.

TEAM INFORMATION 2021 Overall Record . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-4 2021 Big Ten Championships Finish . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5th 2021 NCAA Finish (Finals) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . DNQ

MARCH

3:30 p.m.

APRIL Fri.

1

B1G CHAMPIONSHIPS

UNIVERSITY PARK, PA.

7 p.m.

Sat.

2

B1G CHAMPIONSHIPS

UNIVERSITY PARK, PA.

7 p.m.

Fri.

15

at NCAA Championships

Norman, Okla.

7 p.m.

Sat.

16

at NCAA Championships

Norman, Okla.

7 p.m.

* – Big Ten meet; Home meets in BOLD CAPS at Rec Hall All times Eastern

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2022 NITTANY LION ROSTER ALPHABETICAL

2022

Name Michael Artlip Kaleb Booth Brandon Campbell Chase Clingman Matt Cormier Ethan Dick Michael Jaroh Josh Karnes Eric Lung Nick Mock Andres Perez Gines Jalen Peterson Josh Reinstein Derek Schlagenhauf Robbie Shamp Matt Sulham Nate Warren Colin Wingrove Brady Yamamato

Pos. AA FX/VT PH/SR PH/FX/VT/PB AA AA AA AA AA PH/PB AA AA SR AA AA AA AA AA AA

Elig. So. Sr. So. Jr. So. So. So. Fr. R-Jr. Sr. Sr.+ Jr. Jr. Fr. Jr. So. Jr. So. Sr.

Ht. 5-6 5-7 6-0 5-10 5-6 5-6 5-7 x 5-3 5-11 5-8 5-7 x x 5-7 5-8 5-5 5-7 5-10

LIONS BY LOCATION Arizona (2): Mock, Yamamoto Colorado (1): Schlagenhauf Louisiana (1): Shamp Massachusetts (1): Cormier Michigan (1): Jaroh New Hampshire (1): Campbell

Hometown/Club Team Bellaire, Texas/Strake Jesuit College Preparatory Knoxville, Tenn./Hardin Valley Academy Goffstown, N.H./Bishop Guertin Leesburg, Va./Loudoun County Milton, Mass./Milton Herald Island, Auckland, New Zealand/Rosmini College Northville, Mich./Connections Academy Erie, Pa./Erie North Brunswick, N.J./North Brunswick Township High Chandler, Ariz./Basha High Bayamon, Puerto Rico/University Gardens Woodbridge, Va./C.D. Hylton Williamsville, N.Y. Windsor, Colo./Fossil Ridge Marrero, La./Thomas Jefferson Burke, Va./Lake Braddock Secondary School Centre Hall, Pa./Penns Valley Alpine, Utah/Lone Peak Glendale, Ariz./Basha High

LIONS BY ELIGIBILITY Senior+ (1): Perez Gines Seniors (3): Booth, Mock, Yamamoto Redshirt Junior (1): Lung Junior (5): Clingman, Peterson, Reinstein, Shamp, Warren

New Jersey (1): Lung

Sophomores (7): Artlip, Campbell, Cormier, Dick, Jaroh, Sulham, Wingrove

New York (1): Reinstein

Freshmen (2): Karnes, Schlagenhauf

New Zealand (1): Dick Pennsylvania (2): Karnes, Warren Puerto Rico (1): Perez Gines Tennessee (1): Booth Texas (1): Artlip Utah (1): Wingrove Virginia (3): Clingman, Peterson, Sulham

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12-TIME NATIONAL CHAMPIONS


HEAD COACH RANDY JEPSON

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RANDY JEPSON Head Coach • 31st Season Penn State ’82 Record at PSU: Overall Record:

414-96 (.812) 414-96 (.812) Championships coaching staff.

Under the direction of Randy Jepson, the 2000, 2004, and 2007 National Coach of the Year, the Penn State men's gymnastics program has carried on the proud tradition of excellence and achievement established by its forebearers. After guiding his teams to three national championships and four Big Ten titles, Jepson serves as a symbol of Penn State's vaunted heritage as he enters his 31st season as head coach of the Nittany Lions in 2022. Testament to his impact upon and dedication to the Penn State program and the sport overall, Jepson received the prestigious CGA Honor Coach Award in 2011. Bestowed annually, the Honor Coach Award recognizes CGA member coaches with 25 years or more of service to the sport of gymnastics. Presented with the honor at the NCAA/CGA Awards Banquet in April, Jepson received a special introduction by Bill Ballister, his coach and mentor while at the University of Oregon. A member of the Penn State staff since 1983, Jepson was appointed head coach on July 6, 1992 after serving one season as the interim head coach, succeeding long-time head coach Karl Schier. During Jepson's coaching tenure at his alma mater, Penn State student-athletes have earned AllAmerica honors 126 times. He has also mentored 13 individual national champions, including Mark Sohn, the first gymnast to win four-consecutive pommel horse national crowns. Jepson also championed the renovation efforts of the White Building, the Penn State training gymnasium, transforming the facility into the top collegiate training site in the country. JEPSON'S BACKGROUND Before his appointment as acting head coach, Jepson spent six seasons as an assistant to Schier, who retired on October 1, 1991. Jepson is the sixth head coach in the 74-year history of the Penn State men's gymnastics program and only the third in the last 66 years. Gene Wettstone coached from 1939-76 and was succeeded by Schier, one of his former athletes, who served from 1977-91. Jepson received the interim tag on April of 1991, the year he was named Assistant Coach of the Year by the National Association of Collegiate Gymnastics Coaches for his outstanding work. Seven months prior to that, he coached Mike Masucci to a gold medal in the all-around as head coach of the U.S. team that participated in the Cup of Puerto Rico international meet in San Juan. Masucci also captured gold medals in four events. A native of Portland, Ore., Jepson lettered for three years at the University of Oregon and was an NCAA finalist on the rings his sophomore year. He transferred to Penn State in 1982, when the Ducks dropped their gymnastics program. In his one season as a Nittany Lion, Jepson was captain and won All-America honors on rings. A Nissen-Award nominee as a senior, Jepson posted a perfect score of 10.0 on rings in a meet against a team from the Soviet Union in 1983 at Rec Hall. Jepson joined the Lions' coaching staff as a graduate assistant in 1983 and worked in that capacity for two seasons. His first season as an assistant coach was 1985-86. Jepson has been instrumental in guiding Penn State gymnastics to berths on the U.S. Senior National and Developmental squads, and in addition was a member of the 1997 and 2005 USA World

A member of the National Association of Collegiate Gymnastics Coaches, Jepson served as secretary and treasurer of the United States Elite Coaches Association. In years past, Jepson has served as men's program director at Woodward Gymnastics Camp in Woodward, Pa. In addition, Jepson directed the North team that won the gold medal at the 1993 United States Olympic Festival. Jepson has also been heavily involved in national team training camps, helping to prepare teams for the 1999 World Championships in China and the 2000 Olympic Games in Sydney, Australia. He was also selected as assistant coach for the 1999 Pan American Games team in Winnipeg, Canada. In 2006, Jepson served as an assistant coach for Team USA at the World Championships and in a meet versus France and Switzerland. In February of 2008, Jepson served as head coach of a six-man U.S. team in a dual meet versus Canada, leading the Americans to victory. Later that year, countless hours spent overseeing the training of world class gymnast and Penn State assistant coach Kevin Tan paid off for Jepson, as Tan realized a lifelong dream by earning a spot on the U.S. Olympic Team. Jepson served as Tan's personal coach, accompanying him to Beijing, China for the 2008 Summer Games, where he captured a bronze medal in the team competition. He added the World University Games to his resume when he led the USA team in Naples, Italy in 2019. Jepson received his master's degree from Penn State in exercise sport and science, with an emphasis in biomechanics, in 1990. He and his wife, Sue, a Penn State alum, and their four children - Adam and Anna, who both currently attend Penn State, Emily, and Maggie - reside in Centre Hall. JEPSON'S CAREER/YEAR-BY-YEAR 2021 • Senior Parker Clayton earned All-America recognition with an eighth-place on rings. • Jack Baldwin earned the NCAA Elite 90 Award. It marked the fourth-straight year the Penn State program had a gymnast earn the prestigious national award. 2020 • Five Penn State gymnasts were named CGA Regular Season All-Americans in a season that was cancelled on March 12 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Earning the All-America honors were Alex Frack (high bar), Sam Zakutney (parallel bars), Isaac Hammett (rings), Stephen Nedoroscik (pommel horse), Nick Mock (pommel horse). • Nedoroscik became the seventh Penn State gymnast to win the Nissen-Emery Award. He was the first specialist to ever win the award. The senior's 15.900 against Air Force was the nation's highest score in the event in over five years. He was also voted the CGA National Specialist of the Year. • Nedoroscik traveled to Melbourne, Australia, during the season and finished first on pommel horse in the World Cup event. • Seven Nittany Lions made the Academic All-Big Ten Team. 2019 • Penn State won its fourth Big Ten title with a team score of 410.350. • Junior Sam Zakutney won an individual Big Ten title on parallel bars with a score of 14.325. • Zakutney was a first team All-Big Ten honoree, while sophomore Parker Clayton, junior Stephen Nedoroscik and senior Noah Roberson all made the second team. • The Lions finished sixth at the NCAA Championships with a team score of 399.725. • Nedoroscik earned All-America honors with a runner-up finish on pommel horse, while Roberson

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HEAD COACH RANDY JEPSON

2022

picked up All-America status on rings. • Roberson won the NCAA Elite 90 Award for a third consecutive season. He was the first Penn State student-athlete to win the award three times and was just the sixth athlete to do so in the history of the award across all NCAA sports. • Roberson was also voted a first team CoSIDA Academic All-American for a second time. • Zakutney earned one CGA National Gymnast of the Week honor and two Big Ten Gymnast of the Week awards. Nedoroscik and junior Isaac Hammett were each named Big Ten Gymnast of the Week once. • Ten gymnasts earned CGA Academic Honors. Eleven were named Academic All-Big Ten. 2018 • Penn State finished sixth at the NCAA Champioship meet with team score of 401.991 • Sophomore Stephen Nedoroscik won his second-straight individual NCAA National Championship as he captured the pommel horse title with a 14.666 score. • Penn State had four athletes combine for five All-American citings as Nedoroscik and Colin Coates earned AA honors on the pommel horse, Greg Tamargo earned a nod on the still rings, and Sam Zakutney earned two citings, one on parallel bars and the other on the high bar. • Penn State took third at the 2018 Big Ten Championships with a team score of 406.350. • Stephen Nedoroscik and freshman Brennan Pantazis both took home individual Big Ten titles, earning them First Team All-Big Ten. Nedoroscik won the pommel horse and Pantazis won the floor exercise. • Noah Roberson became a two-time Elite 90 Award winner. He was the fifth Penn State studentathlete to receive the award and the first since wrestler Matt Brown earned the prestigious honor in 2013. Moreover, Roberson was the second men's gymnast to earn the honor as Miguel Pineda garnered the award in 2011. • Roberson also earned First Team At-Large CoSIDA Academic All-America honors. Roberson became the fourth men's gymnast in Penn State history to earn CoSIDA Academic All-America honors and the first since 2012. He joined Miguel Pineda, the program's only two-time honoree, 2011 and 2012, as well as Jose Palacios, 2001, and Joe Roemer, 1995. • Sam Zakutney won two Big Ten Gymnast of the Week honors and Brennan Pantazis and Alex Frack each one a Big Ten Freshman of the Week award. • Thirteen gymnasts earned CGA Academic Honors for the 2017-18 academic year. Nine were honored by the Big Ten and named Academic All-Big Ten. Noah Roberson and Michael Burns were both named Big Ten Distinguished Scholars. 2017 • Freshman Stephen Nedoroscik became the 54th Penn State men's gymnast to earn an individual NCAA National Championship as he captured the pommel horse title. • Nedoroscik was the first competitor of the night on the apparatus and held onto the lead the entire championship, scoring a career-high 14.900. • Nedoroscik is the 10th Nittany Lion to earn the pommel horse title and the first since Luis Vargas earned the victory in the 2005 season. Furthermore, the freshman pommel horse specialist is the third freshman to capture an individual NCAA event title in the last five years and only the fourthever Penn State men’s gymnast to earn an individual event title. Nedoroscik joins the company of Mark Sohn (1988 pommel horse), Trevor Howard (2013 floor exercise) and Thad Lawson (2015 floor exercise) as the only four Penn State freshman men’s gymnasts to earn individual event titles. • Senior Leroy Clarke, Jr. earned his third All-American nod, finishing eighth on the pommel horse. • Freshman Sam Zakutney earned All-American honors, finishing fifth on the parallel bars. • Zaktuney garnered Big Ten Freshman of the Year honors, capturing nine titles and 21 podium finishes in his first season donning the Blue and White. • Zakutney is the first Nittany Lion to earn the honor since Trevor Howard captured it in the 2013 campaign. Furthermore, the Ottawa, Ontario native is one of just four Nittany Lions to earn the award as Felix Aronovich earned it in 2010 and Mike Dutka captured the honor in 1997. • Zakutney and freshman Favian Valdez each earned Big Ten Freshman of the Week honors four times in their first season as a Nittany Lion. • Noah Roberson garnered the Elite 90 award for the 2017 NCAA Division I Men's Gymnastics Championship. Roberson is the fifth Penn State student-athlete to receive the award and the first since wrestler Matt Brown earned the prestigious honor in 2013. Moreover, Roberson is the second men’s gymnast to earn the honor as Miguel Pineda garnered the award in 2011. • In the classroom, 11 gymnasts earned CGA Academic Honors for the 2016-17 academic year. 2016 • Two Nittany Lions posted All-America finishes as Penn State finished fifth at the NCAA Men's

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Gymnastics Championship meet. • Senior Trevor Howard earned four All-America honors in his senior campaign finishing in the top eight in the all-around, floor exercise, vault and still rings. • Howard is the first Penn State gymnast to earn All-America honors all four years of competing since Kevin Tan (2001-04). He is also just the fourth Penn State men's gymnast to grab All-America honors all four years in the history of the program, finishing his career as a seven-time All-American under Coach Jepson's tutelage. • Howard earned his third Big Ten title, capturing the win on the high bar at Ohio State. • Howard was a 2016 Nissen-Emery Award finalist, while Noah Roberson was an Elite-90 finalist. • The 2016 Nittany Lions placed fourth at the Big Ten Championships and had five individuals qualify for the individual event finals. • Five Penn State gymnasts finished the season ranked in the top-20 nationally in individual events. • The Nittany Lions posted their second-straight perfect season inside Rec Hall, winning all three of its home meets in the 2016 campaign. • Penn Sate swept all six individual event titles at the West Point Open for the the second time in the history of the program. 2015 • Penn State tallied a perfect home campaign in 2015, including capturing the Big Ten Championship at Rec Hall. • The Nittany Lions notched their third Big Ten Conference Championship with a score of 436.700, edging out the entire field in a finale that came down to the final rotation. • Six individuals (Trevor Howard, Thad Lawson, Tristian Duverglas, Leroy Clarke Jr., Craig Hernandez, Alexis Torres) all competed in the individual event finals for the Nittany Lions. Trevor Howard competed in four individual event titles, the most of any gymnast, and earned Penn State’s lone individual event title on the still rings. Senior Matthew Fellerman earned the Big Ten all-around title for the Nittany Lions, posting a 87.200. Trevor Howard and Matthew Felleman were both named All-Big Ten First Team honorees. • Jepson led Penn State to a third-place finish at the 2015 NCAA Championships, which marked the highest finish since the 2012 campaign. • Thad Lawson captured the NCAA individual floor title, marking the fourth national champion on the floor exercise in Penn State history and the secod in the past three years. He is also the second freshman in Penn State history to • Tristian Duverglas, Leroy Clarke Jr., Alexis Torres, Matthew Felleman and Thad Lawson all earned All-American honors at the NCAA Championships • In the classroom, seven Nittany Lions earned College Gymnastics Association (CGA) ScholarAthlete All-American honors and five student-athletes earned Academic All-Big Ten 2014 • Three Nittany Lions posted All-America finishes as Penn State finished sixth at the NCAA Men's Gymnastics Championship meet. Craig Hernandez (pommel horse), Trevor Howard (parallel bars) and Alexis Torres (still rings) all finished the 2014 season as All-Americans. • Penn State set one team school record and tied another team school record during the 2014 season. Their score of 74.550 in the floor exercise against Minnesota tied the school record (Ohio State 2/2/13 and Springfield College 2/23/13). The Nittany Lions broke their school record 75.050 in the vault when they tallied a score 75.100 at the Big Ten Championships (3/21/14). • In the classroom, six Nittany Lions earned College Gymnastics Association (CGA) Scholar-Athlete All-America honors and four Nittany Lions were named to the Academic All-Big Ten team. • Trevor Howard went onto post first team All-Big Ten honors as he captured the rings title with a career high score of 15.825. •As a team, Penn State finished third at the Big Ten Championships. The team finished within the top five in all six events. The Nittany Lions registered a second-place finish on the vault (75.100) and a third-place finish on the parallel bars (73.900), while also finishing fourth on the floor exercise (73.700), pommel horse (71.450), rings (74.00) and high bar (69.850). •Senior captain Adrian Evans was honored with the Big Ten Medal of Honor and the Ernest B. McCoy Memorial Award. 2013 • For the fourth time in the last 40 years of Penn State men's gymnastics, the Nittany Lions posted an undefeated regular season, registering a 13-0 record, marking the 19th undefeated regular season in school history. Jepson guided his squad to its first perfect regular season since 2003. Inside Rec Hall, PSU posted its third consecutive undefeated season, recording a 4-0 mark in the building.

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HEAD COACH RANDY JEPSON • The Nittany Lions set three new school records during the 2013 regular season, while resetting one record multiple times. On opening weekend, Felix Aronovich and Mathew Felleman topped the school record on the high bar vs. Army, scoring 15.500. The next weekend Felleman matched the mark. Wasef Burbar followed with a new record, notching 15.800 and 16.000 scores in consecutive weeks. Burbar then flew to a 15.800 mark at Temple before recording the fourth highest score in NCAA history with a 16.00 showing against Springfield. Craig Hernandez broke his own record on the pommel horse with a 15.750 mark at the Navy Open and Nestor Rodriguez set the parallel bar record at Temple, scoring 15.800. • Six Nittany Lions earned All-America honors, led by Aronovich, who brought home his third AllAmerica status and second career all-around All-America honor. Adrian Evans earned his second straight All-America distinction on the pommel horse, while Scott Rosenthal and Parker Raque both stood on the podium as All-Americans on the still rings. Along with Howard, Matthew Felleman rounded out the group with his first career All-America honor after a 14.850 showing and a fourthplace finish. • Jepson guided Trevor Howard to an NCAA Championship title in the floor exercise, as the freshman posted a career-best score of 15.800. Howard also earned All-America status. • PSU finished fourth at the 2013 NCAA National Championship, highlighted by six Nitany Lions qualifying for eight individual routines. • Penn State finished third at the Big Ten Championship, led by Hernandez, who claimed his second consecutive pommel horse championship. Trevor Howard also picked up Big Ten Freshman of the Year honors while Aronovich grabbed first team All-Big Ten honors. • Off the court, three Nittany Lions earned 2012-13 Big Ten Distinguished Scholar honors, including Aronovich, Evans and Rosenthal. Nine more PSU gymnasts earned All-America Scholar Athlete honors by the CGA. 2012 • Penn State boasted its 11th undefeated season inside of historic Rec Hall under Jepson, collecting victories against Army, NCAA Champion Illinois, Minnesota and Temple. The Nittany Lions also claimed victories at Springfield College and at Ohio State. The Lions also won their 14th straight West Point Open title and competed in an international competition with the Puerto Rico National Team. • Penn State set a trio of team records on the season, including a program-best team score of 360.600 in a dual meet victory over Temple. The Blue and White also rocked their way to a schoolrecord score of 60.300 on the pommel horse against Temple and now top the still rings charts after posting a tally of 62.400 vs. Minnesota. • With seven different Nittany Lions earning All-American honors, the 2012 squad tied the 1959 team for the second most All-Americans in a single season. The eight total All-American nods were the most for a PSU squad since 2003 and are tied for the 10th most all-time at Penn State. Felix Aronovich (all-around, parallel bars), Adrian Evans (pommel horse), Craig Hernandez (pommel horse), Nihir Kothari (still rings), Parker Raque (floor exercise), Néstor Rodríguez (high bar) and Scott Rosenthal (still rings) all earned All-American accolades. • Penn State grabbed a third place team finish at the NCAA Championships, hosted by Oklahoma. The Nittany Lions had seven student-athletes qualify for eight total routines during the individual finals at the NCAA Championships. • The Nittany Lions posted a third place showing at the Big Ten Championships and tied the school record for most All-Big Ten selections at a single championship with three. Craig Hernandez (pommel horse) and Scott Rosenthal (still rings) both captured individual championships to earn All-Big Ten honors, while Felix Aronovich was an All-Big Ten pick, as well. The three All-Big Ten picks tie the 2008 and 2004 squads for most in school history. • Junior Felix Aronovich qualified for the all-around at the XXX Olympiad held in London, England. Aronovich represented his home country of Israel and placed 32nd in the individual all-around with an overall score of 83.199. • Junior Scott Rosenthal broke a four-year old school record on the still rings when he swung his way to a score of 16.300 twice during the season. Rosenthal ended the season with 10 of the top 12 scores in school history on the still rings, posting nine of those scores in 2012. • Freshman Craig Hernandez toppled the school record on the pommel horse by tallying a mark of 15.700 twice during the season. The rookie finished the campaign with four of the top five scores on the apparatus. • It was a banner year in the classroom, as well, for Penn State. Miguel Pineda earned his second straight nod to the CoSIDA Academic All-America squad and was one of a school-record five Nittany Lions to earn Big Ten Distinguished Scholar laurels. The Blue and White also set a school standard with 11 Academic All-Big Ten selections and 12 CGA All-America Scholar-Athletes.

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CAREER HONORS • NATIONAL COACH OF THE YEAR (’00, ’04 & ’07) • NATIONAL ASSISTANT COACH OF THE YEAR (’91) • CENTRAL REGION COACH OF THE YEAR (’08 &’12) • BIG TEN COACH OF THE YEAR (’03, ’08, ’15 & ’19) • CGA HONOR COACH AWARD (’11) INTERNATIONAL EXPERIENCE • WORLD UNIVERSITY GAMES (’19) • USA OLYMPIC PERSONAL COACH(’08) • USA VS. CANADA HEAD COACH(’07) • USA WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP COACHING STAFF (’97, ’05 & ’07) • USA WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP ASSISTANT COACH (’06) • USA PAN-AM GAMES ASSISTANT COACH (’99) • USA VS. AUSTRALIA HEAD COACH (’97) • USA CUP OF PUERTO RICO HEAD COACH (’90) PENN STATE UNDER JEPSON • THREE-TIME NATIONAL TEAM CHAMPIONS • 13 NCAA INDIVIDUAL EVENT CHAMPIONS • 49 ALL-AMERICANS ON 120 OCCASIONS • FOUR-TIME BIG TEN TEAM CHAMPIONS • ONE BIG TEN GYMNAST OF THE YEAR • FOUR BIG TEN FRESHMAN OF THE YEAR • 36 FIRST TEAM ALL-BIG TEN SELECTIONS • 28 BIG TEN INDIVIDUAL EVENT CHAMPIONS • SEVEN COSIDA ACADEMIC ALL-AMERICANS • 143 CGA ALL-AMERICA SCHOLAR-ATHLETES • 168 ACADEMIC ALL BIG-TEN SELECTIONS

2011 • Penn State went undefeated at home in Rec Hall, claiming wins over Army, defending NCAA Champion Michigan, Springfield College, and Ohio State; knocked off two-time reigning Big Ten Champion Illinois, Minnesota, and Iowa on the road; and won its 13th consecutive West Point Open crown. The Nittany Lions also traveled to San Juan for an international dual meet with the Puerto Rico National Team. Penn State established a season-high team score of 356.750 in a tri-meet at Oklahoma. • Penn State placed second in its qualifying session at the National Collegiate Championships to advance to the team finals for the first time since 2008. The Nittany Lions used a record-setting performance in the still rings, scoring a 62.300, to qualify. Penn State finished in sixth place at the team finals. • Four Nittany Lions earned All-America recognition at the National Collegiate Championships, the most since 2007. Wasef Burbar (high bar), Miguel Pineda (still rings), Parker Raque (floor exercise, vault), and Scott Rosenthal (still rings) each secured All-America honors for the first time in his career. • Junior Parker Raque came through in the clutch for Penn State at the National Collegiate Championships, setting career highs in three events (floor exercise, still rings, vault) to lead the Nittany Lions. In the individual event finals, he scored a career best 15.400 in the floor exercise and tied a personal high that he set in the national qualifier in the vault (16.050) to earn All-America honors in each event.

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• Penn State placed fourth at the Big Ten Championships, highlighted by a conference-high team rings score of 60.650. Junior Scott Rosenthal placed second in the still rings in the individual event finals, earning Second Team All-Big Ten honors. • Jepson was recognized with the 2011 College Gymnastics Association Honor Coach Award at the NCAA/CGA Award Banquet in Columbus, Ohio in April. The Honor Coach Award is bestowed annually to CGA member coaches with 25 years or more of service to the sport of gymnastics. • Junior Miguel Pineda not only excelled in the competition arena but also in the classroom in 2011. A science major, he was honored as the NCAA Elite 88 Award winner and was named to the CoSIDA/ Capital One Academic All-America and CGA All-America Scholar Athlete First Teams. In addition, Pineda was a Big Ten Distinguished Scholar Award recipient and earned Academic All-Big Ten honors for the second straight year. • A standout competitive season in 2011 was only surpassed by the team's performance in the classroom. The Nittany Lions earned the Penn State Varsity "S" Award and boasted 11 CGA AllAmerican Scholar Athletes, nine Academic All-Big Ten honorees, and three Big Ten Distinguished Scholar Award recipients. 2010 • With a multitude of injuries of varying degrees to a host of veterans, Penn State was forced to rely heavily on its talented freshman class in 2010. Of the 452 total routines performed by Nittany Lion gymnasts, 237 were contributed by true freshmen or 52 percent. If sophomores (or gymnasts with two years or fewer of competitive collegiate experience) were included, that number jumps to 327, meaning underclassmen accounted for a remarkable 72 percent of Penn State routines. • The Nittany Lions opened the season by winning their 12th consecutive West Point Open. Penn State also gained a home victory over William & Mary and swept a tri-meet versus Minnesota and Temple at Rec Hall. Penn State established a season-high team score of 354.450 in a home loss to Oklahoma. • Felix Aronovich was named Big Ten Co-Freshman of the Year, becoming the first Nittany Lion to receive the conference award since Mike Dutka in 1997. Aronovich competed in every meet, earning 13 top three finishes, including seven titles. • At the Big Ten Championships, Penn State overtook two higher ranked teams, including host Ohio State, to place a surprising third. Senior Nick Virbitsky earned Second Team All-Big Ten honors, contributing Penn State's top showing in the individual event finals by placing second in the floor exercise. • In his final performance as a collegiate athlete, senior Noam Shaham finished sixth in the high bar in the individual finals of the National Collegiate Championships to earn his first career All-America honor. • Twelve Nittany Lions, an impressive 60 percent of the 2010 roster, were honored as CGA AllAmerica Scholar Athletes. Nine received first team accolades, including Miguel Pineda and Logan Wyman, who were two of just four gymnasts nationwide to earn perfect 4.0 GPAs, while three were recognized on the second team. In addition, Pineda, Wyman, Noam Shaham and Philip Harris were named Big Ten Distinguished Scholars and eight Nittany Lions received Academic All-Big Ten honors. 2009 • The Nittany Lions began the season by winning their 11th consecutive West Point Open. The 2009 home schedule was highlighted by a 348.900-348.350 victory over Big Ten rival Michigan, which would go on to finish second at the National Collegiate Championships. Penn State established a season-high team score of 356.300 in a loss at Oklahoma. • Casey Sandy penned the final chapter of one of the most storied careers in the vaunted history of Penn State men's gymnastics with a stellar senior year. He captured 29 titles, including seven in the pommel horse and six in the parallel bars. He tied the single season conference record by earning five Big Ten Gymnast of the Week awards and shattered the career mark for winning a total of 11 league honors. In the midst of his exceptional senior season, Sandy also was able to further his international gymnastics career by winning the all-around on both days at the Elite Canada 2009 thereby securing himself a roster spot on the Canadian National Team. Sandy's march towards history and assault on the Penn State record book was slowed only by injury, as he suffered a severe toe sprain at the Big Ten Championships. Refusing to be hindered by the injury, he gutted out a win in the all-around in the qualifier at the National Collegiate Championships. Sandy then went on to earn his eighth and ninth All-America honors of his career with top eight finishes in all-around and vault finals. • Sandy's brilliant season and exceptional career culminated with him being presented with the 2009 Nissen-Emery Award, becoming Penn State's NCAA-record sixth recipient of the sport's most prestigious honor. He was also named Penn State Male Athlete of the Year for the second consecutive time.

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• Five Nittany Lions (four on the first team) were recognized as All-America Scholar Athletes by the College Gymnastics Association while six received Academic All-Big Ten honors. 2008 • For the second consecutive year, historic Rec Hall was the site of a Penn State championship, as the Nittany Lions captured the program's second Big Ten title in front of their home fans. The competition and the Penn State victory was aired live to a national television audience on the Big Ten Network. • Randy Jepson was named Big Ten Coach of the Year for the second time in his career and was also honored as the CGA Central Region Coach of the Year. Assistant Coach Slava Boiko was recognized as CGA Central Region Assistant Coach of the Year. • Casey Sandy had arguably the greatest individual season in the storied history of Penn State men's gymnastics. He tied a conference record by earning Big Ten Male Gymnast of the Week accolades four times en route to being unanimously selected as the 2008 Big Ten Gymnast of the Year. In leading Penn State to the Big Ten championship, Sandy won individual conference titles in the parallel bars and all-around. He then went on to dominate at the national collegiate championships, capturing the NCAA all-around crown to become the first Penn State gymnast to win the Big Ten and NCAA all-around championships in the same year. Sandy secured a total of six All-America honors, the most ever by a Nittany Lion at a single NCAA Championships, giving him seven for his career. • Derek Helsby placed fourth in the all-around at the Big Ten Championships to become just the second Nittany Lion in program history to earn All-Big Ten honors in three consecutive seasons. After an excellent senior season, Helsby was selected as a Nissen-Emery Award finalist. • Tommy Ramos capped off a brilliant career by claiming his second Big Ten still rings championship in addition to earning his sixth All-America honor by placing third in the rings at the National Collegiate Championships. • Seven different Nittany Lions were ranked in the top 20 in the final individual GymInfo national rankings. • Penn State posted a season-high score of 360.550 in a win over Ohio State at St. John Arena in Columbus in a meet broadcast by the Big Ten Network. • Under Randy Jepson's guidance and tutelage, Penn State assistant coach Kevin Tan earned a spot on the U.S. Olympic Team and went on to win a bronze medal in the team finals at the Summer Olympic games in Beijing, China. 2007 • In front of its home fans at historic Rec Hall, Penn State captured its NCAA-record 12th national championship, posting a season-high team score of 221.000 to edge two-time defending titlewinner Oklahoma. • Randy Jepson was named National Coach of the Year for the third time in his career while Slava Boiko and Kevin Tan were honored as National Assistant Coaches of the Year. • Matt Cohen punctuated his brilliant Nittany Lion career by becoming Penn State's fifth NissenEmery Award winner. • Four Nittany Lions earned All-America honors: Tommy Ramos (rings, parallel bars, high bar), Casey Sandy (pommel horse), Vladi Klurman (rings), Nick Virbitsky (floor exercise). • Tommy Ramos and Casey Sandy recorded runner-up finishes in the rings and pommel horse, respectively, at the Big Ten Championships and the National Collegiate Championships. • Penn State placed second at the Big Ten Championships, just .100 behind Ohio State. • Tommy Ramos (rings), Vladi Klurman (vault), Casey Sandy (pommel horse), and Matt Cohen (allaround) all spent significant time as the No. 1-ranked competitor in the nation in individual events. 2006 • Penn State captured its ninth-consecutive West Point Open title. • Freshman Casey Sandy took the collegiate gymnastics world by storm, capturing at least a share of eight titles, including three-straight all-around wins, through the first three meets of the 2006 season. However, a broken arm in mid-February ended his promising season. • The Nittany Lions edged Stanford, 216.800-216.750, in a highly competitive dual meet at the Bryce Jordan Center. Sophomore Derek Helsby took the all-around and pommel horse titles en route to winning the Gene Wettstone Award. • In a special ceremony following a dual meet win over William & Mary, a sculpture was donated to the All-Sports Museum honoring the legacy and contributions of former head coach Gene Wettstone. • Sophomore Tommy Ramos continued Penn State's conference dominance on the still rings, winning the title at the Big Ten Championships and give the Nittany Lions rings champions in five of the last six years. • Derek Helsby earned four All-American honors (all-around, pommel horse, rings, parallel bars) while

12-TIME NATIONAL CHAMPIONS


HEAD COACH RANDY JEPSON Tommy Ramos secured two (rings and parallel bars), helping Penn State to finish fourth at the NCAA Championships. 2005 • Jepson reached the 225-win milestone with Penn State's first place-finish at the West Point Open, its eighth-consecutive title at the annual meet. • International competition returned to Rec Hall for the first time in 21 years, as a team of Japanese College All-Stars ventured to University Park for a dual meet. Penn State posted a season-high team score (224.150) in a narrow defeat. • Luis Vargas punctuated his Nittany Lion career by earning five All-America honors at the 2005 NCAA Championships, successfully defending his all-around crown, and capturing the pommel horse title. • Vargas garnered the Big Ten's highest honor, the Jesse Owens Male Athlete of the Year Award. • As a freshman, Santiago Lopez added his name to prestigious list of Penn State All-Americans, placing fourth in the event finals of the vault at the NCAA Championships. 2004 • The 2004 National Coach of the Year, Jepson and the Lions celebrated their NCAA-record 11th national title when they posted a season-high 223.350, beating two-time defending champion Oklahoma by over one point. Sophomore Luis Vargas took the all-around, becoming Penn State's first all-around champion since 1973. • Kevin Tan finished his career by capturing back-to-back national championships on the still rings and also won his third-straight Big Ten Championship on the apparatus. Tan also won the Big Ten title on the parallel bars. • The Lions finished second at the Big Ten Championships behind host Illinois. • With Vargas and Tan's All-American honors, Penn State tacked on two more champions to its NCAArecord, giving them 48 overall. \ 2003 • Jepson celebrated 200 wins on Feb. 22, 2003, vs. Ohio State. The Lions won the meet 220.000216.875. He went on to be named the 2003 Big Ten Coach of the Year. • The Nittany Lions won their first Big Ten Championship since joining the league in 1993. Penn State scored a 220.500, almost two points ahead of the No. 2 Ohio State Buckeyes (218.600), en route to blowing away the competition for the title in Columbus, Ohio. • Kevin Tan became Penn State's sixth NCAA champion on the still rings and second in three years. Tan also successfully defended his Big Ten titles on the rings, marking the third straight year a Lion took home the title in that event. • Penn State's eight All-America citations set a school record for All-American honors, besting the six the Lions earned in 1991. • The Lions finished third in the NCAA team competition. 2002 • Penn State was the No. 1 team in the country on Jan. 14, earning a No. 1 regular-season ranking for the first time since March 15, 1999. • Kevin Donohue became the first Nittany Lion in 17 years to earn All-America honors in the allaround. He and Kevin Tan combine to earn five All-America honors at the NCAA Championships in Norman, Okla. • The Lions posted its second-straight third place showing at the Big Ten Championships, finishing behind Ohio State and Michigan, while edging out Minnesota. Kevin Donohue becomes the first Nittany Lion since Mike Dutka in 1998 to win multiple Big Ten titles, capturing top honors on high bar and parallel bars. Kevin Tan win the rings crown, making it the second-straight year a Nittany Lion has won the event. 2001 • Struggling with consistency, Penn State peaked at the end of the season, posting its best score of the year at the Big Ten Championships in Rec Hall, edging out Illinois for third place. It was the Lions' best finish since a second-place showing in 1998. • The Lions qualified for the NCAA team finals despite a No. 8 seeding and jumped ahead of Michigan State in the final rotation to place fifth overall at the end of the championship. • Chris Lakeman became the 45th Nittany Lion to win an NCAA individual title and the first rings champion since 1991. • Kevin Tan was the first Nittany Lion freshman under Randy Jepson to earn All-America honors, receiving the recognition on rings.

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• Dominic Brindle added an All-America vault certificate entering the event finals with two to his credit. • Jay Kim performed beyond expectations, leading the charge on the vault team en route to earning All-America status. 2000 • Along the way to a No. 3 national ranking the Nittany Lions knocked off two higher-ranked opponents (Ohio State and Oklahoma) and the nation's top all-arounders twice, while winning two major opens (West Point Open, Southwest Cup) and surpassing the 230.00 mark three times. • Penn State stumbled just once during the regular season and finished second to last at the Big Ten Championships. • The Lions saved their best performance for last coming from behind to edge Michigan by 0.125 for an NCAA-record 10th national title, with a school-record 231.975. • Brandon Stefaniak, who was instrumental in the team's rally, successfully defended his individual national crown on the pommel horse, giving Penn State an NCAA-record 44 individual titles. 1999 • The Lions posted a fourth-place NCAA finish with a year that was capped by Brandon Stefaniak's pommel horse title. He became the Lions' first NCAA Champion since 1991. Ron Roeder, Eddie Seng and Adam Benas also grabbed All-America honors. 1998 • Despite numerous injuries, the Nittany Lions rolled through the 1998 regular season with an 11-3 record (tied for fifth-most wins in school history), including a then-school record 231.150 in a win over Nebraska. • Seemingly rejuvenated by the return of all-arounder Mike Dutka in late February, Penn State entered the postseason poised for a run at a national championship. Behind the strength of Dutka's four individual titles, the Lions nearly won the Big Ten crown, placing second to Iowa by less than a point. However, Dutka went down on vault at the NCAA East Regional with a broken foot. Penn State ended up finishing fourth to the Hawkeyes by .05. • Five Lions still managed to qualify as individuals for the NCAA Championships in the Bryce Jordan Center. Ron Roeder emerged as a star, earning All-America honors on the floor exercise and rings, while Brandon Stefaniak was an All-America on pommel horse with sixth-place finish. 1997 • Jepson led a mix of youth and experience to a fifth-place showing at the NCAA Championships. J.M. Michel earned All-America honors on the high bar with a sixth-place finish. Mike Dutka, who Jepson coached at the World Championships over the summer, finished only 0.075 points away from becoming an All-American in the all-around. • The Nittany Lions placed third at both the Big Ten Championships and the NCAA East Regional. During the regular season, Dutka earned a spot on the U.S. Senior National Team at the Winter Cup in February. In addition, captain Joe Roemer became the first Penn State gymnast to ever earn GTE Academic All-America honors, garnering a spot on the second team. 1996 • The season ended with the Nittany Lions placing sixth at the NCAA Championships. Joe Roemer tied for third on the floor exercise, earning All-America scholar-athlete recognition for the secondconsecutive year. • The Lions placed third at the NCAA East Regional after also finishing the Big Ten Championships in third place. Junior Roy Malka was 10th in the all- around competition at both events. 1995 • Penn State's third-place trophy at the NCAA Championships was the Nittany Lions' top performance under Jepson to date and the best outcome since finishing second in 1991. Two Lions, Tony Pansy and Tom Ellefson, earned All-America honors on the parallel bars. • Jepson's NCAA East Regional Championships came on his home floor. The Lions finished fourth at the Big Ten Championships at Illinois, as Pansy and Lee Ricketts were co-champions on the horizontal bar with 9.80 marks. • The team was recognized for having the 10th-highest team grade point average in the country among men's gymnastics teams. The 3.009 the Nittany Lions carried was the best in the Big Ten and second among teams competing in the NCAA Championships. Furthermore, sophomore Joe Roemer was one of 49 recognized as All-America scholar-athlete.

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1994 • Capturing third place at both the Big Ten and the NCAA East Regional Championships, the Nittany Lions advanced to the 1994 NCAA Championships, where they finished sixth. 1993 • At the 1993 NCAA East Regional, Penn State posted its second-highest score of the season, but was unable to crack the top three in the team standings. Thus, for the first time since 1977, Penn State did not field a team at the NCAA Championships. The school's streak of 15-consecutive appearances in the NCAA meet was the nation's longest entering the season. • Two Nittany Lions represented the program at the NCAA Championships. Senior captain Mike Masucci placed 11th on parallel bars and 16th on pommel horse. Sophomore Joel Neuwirth was 20th on the pommel horse. • The Nittany Lions placed sixth at the Big Ten Championships. Masucci reached the finals on three events, sharing the high bar title with a score of 9.725 and was named All-Big Ten.

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1992 • As acting head coach during the 1992 season, Jepson directed Penn State to a fifth-place showing at the Big Ten Championships and fourth place in the NCAA East Regional. In the school's 15thconsecutive appearance at the NCAA Championships, Penn State placed seventh. RANDY JEPSON'S COACHING PHILOSOPHY Our philosophy for success is simple. Whether it's in the classroom or in the gym, the only way for a student-athlete to reach his full potential is through honest, hard work...a lot of it. The Penn State athletic administration has done an outstanding job over the years in providing our program with the resources, coaching staff, and facilities we need to reach the highest levels of success in our sport both in the NCAA program and in the international arena as well. Additionally, our teams face the nation's stiffest competition year after year to challenge our athletes as they prepare to become the nation's finest gymnasts. With this foundation to build on, the staff prepares our athletes through the most up-to-date training techniques available. Every year it is our goal to be the strongest and most physically prepared team in the country. Our comprehensive strength and conditioning program has enabled our teams to continually meet this challenge. We also believe that to be on top, our athletes need to perform quality gymnastics and not do just enough to "get by." Therefore, we emphasize skills appropriate for the challenges of today's code of points and continually stress the importance of consistent, solid routine performance. Academically speaking, our student athletes are provided with a wide variety of resources to ensure that they have every opportunity to experience success in the classroom in addition to the gym. The Morgan Academic Support Center is provided exclusively for Penn State student athletes and offers academic advising, a free tutorial service, priority scheduling, and a Freshman Enrichment Program designed to better enable the first-year student to handle the transitions and academic challenges facing the collegiate freshman athlete. At Penn State, we have built a reputation as a leader in the development of the student athlete and firmly believe that academic and athletic success go hand in hand, are attainable, and are expected. With all of the various resources available to our student athletes to ensure success the only remaining key is their own commitment, sacrifice, and effort. It is this hard work...and lots of it...that has and will continue to enable them to achieve their academic and competitive dreams.

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ASSISTANT COACHES

CARLOS VAZQUEZ

TONY BECK

Temple ’84 Assistant Coach 10th Season

Penn State ’13 Assistant Coach 6th Season

Vazquez enters his 10th season with the Nittany Lions in 2022 after spending 20 years as the head coach of the men's program at Capital Gymnastics National Training Center in Burke, Va. In addition to his 28 years on collegiate coaching staffs, Vazquez has served as a U.S. Junior National Team coach since 1992, including serving as an assistant coach for the Junior Pan American Championships in Sao Palo, Brazil in 1992. Among the gymnasts under Vazquez's tutelage were 2008 Olympian Justin Spring and U.S. National Team members Jay Nardelli, Jason Furr, Dan Gill, Tim McNeal and Abhinov Ramani. Vazquez has been a member of USA Gymnastics Pro since 1985. He was a four-time letterwinner at Temple and served as the team captain from 1982-84. He graduated from Temple with a bachelor's degree in electrical engineering.

Beck enters his sixth season as an assistant coach for Penn State men’s gymnastics in 2022 after serving as the volunteer assistant coach for two seasons. As a volunteer assistant coach for the Nittany Lions, Beck helped with the daily practices and competition, while working closely with on-campus recruiting. In his final season as the volunteer assistant coach, Beck played a vital role in the Blue and White’s third Big Ten Championship and a third-place finish at the NCAA Championships. Following his graduation from Penn State, Beck started the first men’s gymnastics program at Centre Elite Gymnastics where he produced numerous regional and state champions. For his efforts, he was named the 2015 Pennsylvania Coach of the Year. The Eastern Pennsylvania native has also served as a judge from the Junior National level to the collegiate level and was an instructor at the International Gymnastics Camp where he coached weekly camps focusing on technique and skill development. As a student-athlete for the Blue and White, Beck earned a fourth-place finish on the parallel bars at the 2010 Big Ten Championships and a ninth-place finish on the pommel horse at the 2011 NCAA Championships. Beck also helped the team to two third-place finishes in the Big Ten Championships in 2010 and 2012 before the Nittany Lions placed second in his senior campaign. In 2013, Penn State went on to place fourth at the NCAA Championships with Beck placing sixth on the high bar. Beck attended Northampton High School and competed for the Lehigh Valley Sports Academy. Competing at the Visa Championships at the junior level, Beck placed sixth on the floor exercise and 11th in the all-around competition, while earning the 2008 Pennsylvania Most Outstanding Senior Award. A native of Northampton, Pa., Beck graduated from Penn State with a bachelor’s degree in recreation, parks, and tourism management and was on the dean’s list as well as a 2013 CGA Academic All-American.

12-TIME NATIONAL CHAMPIONS

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2022 ROSTER

MICHAEL ARTLIP 2021 • FRESHMAN SEASON Season: Completed seven routines on vault, four on floor, four on pommel horse and one on high bar...Posted three top-five finished on vault, including a win with a season-best 14.30 against Minnesota...Competed on vault at the Big Ten Championships. vs. Illinois (1/31): Made collegiate debut and finished fourth on vault with a score of 14.05. at Ohio State (2/14): Scored season bests on floor (13.50) and pommel horse (13.25)...Scored 14.25 on vault while tying for sixth place. at Iowa (2/20): Tied for fifth on vault with a score of 14.25. at Minnesota (3/6): Picked up first career event win, tying for first on vault with a season-best score of 14.30. at Big Ten Championships (4/3): Finished 34th on vault with a score of 13.35.

SOPHOMORE ALL-AROUND Hometown: Bellaire, Texas High School: Strake Jesuit College Prep

PERSONAL Parents are Mark and Kathryn Artlip…Has one younger brother, John, and one younger sister, Allison…Won two district titles in diving… Enrolled in the College of Engineering.

2022

Major: Enrolled in the College of Engineering

PRIOR TO PENN STATE Prepped at Strake Jesuit College Preparatory and trained at the Houston Gymnastics Academy and at the Houston Gymnastics Center… Finished fifth on vault and sixth on floor at the 2019 Junior Olympics…Took fourth on vault and 16th in all-around at the 2019 U.S. Gymnastics Championships…Finished fifth on vault at the 2018 Junior Olympics Qualifier…Named a USA Gymnastics Academic AllAmerican three times.

SEASON/CAREER BEST SCORES

12

SEASON

FLOOR

POMMEL

2021

13.500

13.250 14.300 11.800

CAREER

13.500

13.250 14.300 11.800

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12-TIME NATIONAL CHAMPIONS

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VAULT

P-BARS

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2022 ROSTER

KALEB BOOTH CAREER Awards: Earned on Academic All-Big Ten Award. 2021 • JUNIOR SEASON Awards: Earned a spot on the Academic All-Big Ten Team.

SENIOR FX/VT Hometown: Knoxville, Tenn. High School: Hardin Valley Academy Major: Kinesiology

Season: Completed 11 routines on floor and nine on vault, including both at the Big Ten Championships and NCAA Championships... Qualified for the NCAA Championships Finals in both events...Scored season bests in both events at the NCAA Championships -- 14.033 on floor in the finals and 14.40 on vault in the prelims...Posted three top-five finishes on vault and two on floor. Army West Point (1/16): Finished third on floor and fourth on vault. Nebraska (2/7): Tied for fourth on vault with a score of 14.10 and scored 13.60 on floor. at Ohio State (2/14): Tied for fifth on floor with a score of 13.85 and scored 13.95 on vault. at Iowa (2/20): Scored 14.10 on vault and 13.45 on floor. Navy (2/27): Took fifth on vault with a score of 14.00 and scored 13.50 on floor. at Big Ten Championships (4/3): Finished 19th on floor with a score of 13.85 and tied for 21st on vault with a score of 14.05. at NCAA Prelims (4/16): Advanced to the finals in two events, scoring a season-best 14.40 on vault and 14.00 on floor. at NCAA Finals (4/17): Tied for 27th on floor with a season-best score of 14.033 and took 37th on vault with a score of 13.666. 2020 • SOPHOMORE SEASON Season: Completed seven routines on floor and eight routines on vault…Posted three top-three finishes on floor, including a win with a season-best score of 14.650 at Nebraska…Had a runner-up finish on vault at Air Force...The 2020 season was canceled March 12 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. at Army West Point Open (1/10-11): Tied for fifth on vault with a season-best 14.300…Finished sixth in the event with a 13.800 in the individual competition. Army West Point (1/18): Scored 13.550 on vault. Ohio State (1/25): Finished third on floor with a 13.800. at Air Force (2/1): Was the runner-up on vault with a 14.000 and tied for third on floor with a 13.200. at Nebraska (2/29): Took first on floor after scoring a season-best 14.650 and was sixth on vault with a 14.000. at Illinois/vs. Michigan (3/7): Scored 13.900 on vault. 2019 • FRESHMAN SEASON • AT UIC Season: Competed on floor and vault in 10 meets, including the NCAA Championships. vs. Minnesota/Nebraska (2/23): Scored a season-high 14.2500 on vault. vs. Cal/Oklahoma (3/23): Earned a season-best 13.9500 on floor and added a 14.1500 on vault. at NCAA Championships (4/19): Earned 13.400 on floor. PRIOR TO PENN STATE Was a three-time state champion on floor and vault at Hardin Valley Academy...Won the regional vault championship and went on to place sixth in the nation on vault and seventh on floor....Was a three-time Academic All-American...Was a 12-year member of Tataru’s Gymnastics and Tumbling. PERSONAL Mom is Theresa Booth...Has one older brother, Jonah...Hobby is listening to music...Majoring in kinesiology.

SEASON/CAREER BEST SCORES SEASON

FLOOR

2019

13.950 14.250

POMMEL

2020

14.650 14.300

2021

14.033 14.400

CAREER

14.650 14.400

12-TIME NATIONAL CHAMPIONS

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H-BAR

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BRANDON CAMPBELL 2021 • FRESHMAN SEASON Season: Did not compete in any meets. PRIOR TO PENN STATE Prepped at Bishop Guertin High School and trained at Gymnastics Village and at the New England Academy of Gymnastics…Led team to five top-five finishes in the state, including three state titles, as well as four regional titles…RD Men’s International Team Cup Champions and Level 10 sixth place on the pommel horse…Was a two-time national qualifier.

SOPHOMORE PH/SR

PERSONAL Parents are Lisa Campbell and Sean Campbell…Has one younger brother, Dillon, and one younger sister, Reese…Is a Chief Master Sgt. in the Civil Air Patrol…Enrolled in the Division of Undergraduate Studies.

Hometown: Goffstown, N.H. High School: Bishop Guertin

2022

Major: Enrolled in the Division of Undergraduate Studies

SEASON/CAREER BEST SCORES SEASON

FLOOR

POMMEL

RINGS

VAULT

P-BARS

H-BAR

2021 CAREER

14

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12-TIME NATIONAL CHAMPIONS


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2022 ROSTER

CHASE CLINGMAN CAREER Awards: Earned one Academic All-Big Ten honor and one CGA second-team All-America Scholar-Athlete award. 2021 • SOPHOMORE SEASON Awards: Earned a spot on the Academic All-Big Ten Team and was a CGA second-team All-America Scholar-Athlete. Season: Competed on pommel horse and high bar against Army West Point.

JUNIOR PH/FX/VT/PB/HB Hometown: Leesburg, Va. High School: Loudoun County Major: Enterprise Technology Integration

Army West Point (1/16): Placed second on pommel horse with a score of 13.35 and took seventh on high bar. 2020 • FRESHMAN SEASON Season: Completed three routines on pommel horse…The 2020 season was cancelled March 12 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. William & Mary (2/15): Scored a season-best 13.100 to take sixth on pommel horse. PRIOR TO PENN STATE Prepped at Loudoun County High School and trained with Apollo Gymnastics for 16 years…Was a Future Stars National Team member in 2012…Competed in the Junior Olympics from 2013-2016, then again in 2018 and was a five-time Men’s Gymnastics Junior Olympic qualifier…Won national recognition in all-around (second place), pommel horse (third place) and parallel bars (third place) in Junior Olympic competition in 2014…Was the Region 7 all-around champion and Virginia State all-around champion in 2014…Earned thirdplace finishes in both all-around and high bar in the 2015 Junior Olympics…Competed in all-around and high bar again in the 2016 Junior Olympics, this time earning first-place finishes in both events…Earned a third-place finish in the Virginia State all-around Championship…Returned to the Junior National Olympics in 2018 as an elite qualifier and earned an 11th-place finish all-around and fifth-place on pommel horse…Was third place in Region 7 on pommel horse and second place at the Virginia State All-Around in 2018… Was a two-time USGA Academic All-American. PERSONAL Parents are Geoff and Cindy…Has one sister, Courtney, and one brother, Nathan, who competed on the club gymnastics and ski teams at James Madison University…Majoring in enterprise technology integration.

SEASON/CAREER BEST SCORES SEASON

FLOOR

POMMEL

RINGS

VAULT

P-BARS

H-BAR

2020

13.100

2021

13.350 10.700

CAREER

13.350 10.700

12-TIME NATIONAL CHAMPIONS

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2022 ROSTER

MATT CORMIER CAREER Awards: Won one Big Ten Freshman of the Week award. 2021 • FRESHMAN SEASON Awards: Won one Big Ten Freshman of the Week award (2/1).

SOPHOMORE ALL-AROUND Hometown: Milton, Mass. High School: Milton Major: Enrolled in the Division of Undergraduate Studies

Season: Completed nine routines on floor, eight on vault, eight on parallel bars, eight on high bar, and two on rings...Posted seven events wins, including three on floor, three on vault and one on high bar...Had team's top five floor routines of the season, including a season-best 14.90...Competed on floor, vault, parallel bars and high bar at the Big Ten Championships and NCAA Championships... Advanced to the NCAA Finals and finished tied for ninth on floor. Illinois (1/31): Made collegiate debut and posted two event wins, scoring a season-best 14.60 on vault and 14.35 on floor...Tied for second on high bar and was fifth on parallel bars. Nebraska (2/7): Took first on floor with a score of 14.75 and was the runner-up on high bar with a season-best score of 13.90...Was third on parallel bars and tied for fourth on vault. at Ohio State (2/14): Posted two event wins, taking first on floor for the third-straight meet with a score of 14.60 and tying for first on vault with a score of 14.55. at Iowa (2/20): Matched his season-best score of 14.60 while taking first on vault and added an event win with a 13.25 on high bar. at Minnesota (3/6): Was the runner-up on floor with a score of 14.60. Michigan (3/20): Finished fourth on floor with a score of 14.20 and scored a season-best 13.50 while taking fifth on parallel bars. at Big Ten Championships (4/3): Finished tied for ninth on floor (14.25), tied for 17th on parallel bars (12.85), tied for 24th on high bar (12.70) and 35th on vault (13.25) at NCAA Prelims (4/16): Advanced to NCAA Finals after scoring a season-best 14.90 on floor...Also competed on vault (13.366), parallel bars (12.966), and high bar (13.166). at NCAA Finals (4/17): Tied for ninth on floor with a score of 14.566.

2022

PRIOR TO PENN STATE Prepped at Milton High School and trained at the Massachusetts Elite Gymnastics Academy and at the American Gymnastics Training Center…Finished sixth on floor and 21st all-around at the Junior World Championships… Was the 2019 Junior Olympic National Champion on floor and vault as well as a third-place finish on parallel bars and high bar, and finished fourth on the rings and all-around…Took third on floor and 10th all-around at the 2018 Junior Olympics. PERSONAL Parents are Dennis and Michelle Cormier…Has one older brother, Zachary, and one younger brother, Owen…Zachary swims at Union College…Enrolled in the Division of Undergraduate Studies.

SEASON/CAREER BEST SCORES

16

SEASON

FLOOR

2021 CAREER



POMMEL

RINGS

VAULT

P-BARS

H-BAR

14.900

12.250

14.600

13.500

13.900

14.900

12.250

14.600

13.500

13.900

12-TIME NATIONAL CHAMPIONS


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2022 ROSTER

ETHAN DICK CAREER Awards: Won one Big Ten Freshman of the Week award. 2021 • FRESHMAN SEASON Awards: Won one Big Ten Freshman of the Week award (3/1).

SOPHOMORE ALL-AROUND Hometown: Herald Island, Auckland, New Zealand High School: Rosmini College Major: Enrolled in the Division of Undergraduate Studies

Season: Completed 11 routines on parallel bars, 10 on pommel horse, six on vault, six on high bar, three on floor, and two on rings... Posted one event win on parallel bars and one on high bar...Qualified for the all-around finals at the NCAA Championships with a score of 80.464 in the prelims and went on to finish 14th...That all-around score was the team's best of the season. Army (1/16): Made collegiate debut and finished third on pommel horse and parallel bars. Illinois (1/31): Posted first career event win while scoring 13.65 on parallel bars and tied for fourth on pommel horse. at Ohio State (2/14): Finished fourth on parallel bars (13.65), eighth on vault (14.05) and ninth on pommel horse (13.10). at Iowa (2/20): Finished third on pommel horse (13.25) and tied for third on parallel bars (13.25). Navy (2/27): Recorded season-high scores on three events while finishing first on high bar (13.35), second on parallel bars (13.70) and third on vault (14.15). at Minnesota (3/6): Took third on pommel horse. Michigan (3/20): Scored a season-best 13.30 on pommel horse. at Big Ten Championships (4/3): Finished tied for 15th on high bar (13.00), 16th on parallel bars (13.00), tied for 22nd on floor (13.75) and tied for 32nd on pommel horse (12.00). at NCAA Prelims (4/16): Qualified for the finals with the team's best all-around score (80.464) of the season, scoring 13.633 on floor, 13.166 on pommel horse, 12.933 on rings, 14.066 on vault, 13.366 on parallel bars and 13.033 on high bar. at NCAA Finals (4/17): Finished 14th in the nation all-around with a score of 78.732. PRIOR TO PENN STATE Prepped at Rosmini College…Competed at the Oceania Championships, helping his team take second place…Won the all-around title at the 2019 Australia and Oceania Championships…Finished fifth on floor and 11th in the all-around at the 2018 Commonwealth Games… Competed at the 2018 World Cup and the World Championships…took sixth on the pommel horse and eighth on the high bar at the 2017 Japan Junior International Championships…Was a five-time all-around champion in New Zealand. PERSONAL Parents are Paul and Kathryn Dick…Has one older brother, Henry, and one younger brother, Sam…Enrolled in the Division of Undergraduate Studies.

SEASON/CAREER BEST SCORES SEASON

FLOOR

POMMEL

RINGS

VAULT

P-BARS

H-BAR

2021

13.900

13.300

12.933

14.150

13.700

13.350

CAREER

13.900

13.300

12.933

14.150

13.700

13.350

12-TIME NATIONAL CHAMPIONS

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2022 ROSTER

MICHAEL JAROH CAREER Awards: Earned one first-team All-Big Ten honor (2021)...Won one Big Ten Gymnast of the Week award and two Big Ten Freshman of the Week honors. 2021 • FRESHMAN SEASON Awards: Earned a spot on the All-Big Ten first team...Won one Big Ten Gymnast of the Week award (2/8) and two Big Ten Freshman of the Week honors (2/8. 3/23).

SOPHOMORE ALL-AROUND Hometown: Northville, Mich. High School: Connections Academy

2022

Major: Enrolled in the Division of Undergraduate Studies

Season: Completed nine routines on pommel horse, eight on vault, eight on parallel bars, eight on high bar, seven on rings and three on floor...Posted two event wins on high bar, one on pommel horse and one on vault...Advanced to finals of the NCAA Championships in two events, finishing 10th on parallel bars and 30th on pommel horse...Earned first-team All-Big Ten recognition following the Big Ten Championships after tying for fifth all-around...Was fifth on parallel bars, tied for fifth on pommel horse and vault and ninth on high bar at the Big Ten Championships. Illinois (1/31): Made collegiate debut and placed third on parallel bars (13.40). Nebraska (2/7): Picked up three event wins, scoring a season-best 14.10 on pommel horse, 14.55 on vault and 14.00 on high bar...Also posted a season-best score of 13.75 on rings while finishing second. at Iowa (2/20): Tied for first on high bar (13.25) and was second on vault (14.40). Navy (2/27): Was the runner-up on pommel horse (14.00) and vault (14.25). at Minnesota (3/6): Tied for third on pommel horse. at Big Ten Championships (4/3): Earned first-team All-Big Ten recognition after tying for fifth all-around (80.400)...Was fifth on parallel bars (13.85), tied for fifth on pommel horse (13.60) and vault (14.45) and ninth on high bar (13.40). at NCAA Prelims (4/16): Advanced to the NCAA Finals on pommel horse (13.70) and parallel bars (13.766)...Scored 79.497 all-around. at NCAA Finals (4/17): Placed 10th on parallel bars (13.766) and 30th on pommel horse (12.366). PERSONAL Parents are Ron and Cindy Jaroh…Has a twin sister, Jessica…Father was a gymnast at Cuyahoga Community College…Uncle, Jack, was a gymnast at Eastern Michigan…Uncle, Steve Burke, played for the Dallas Cowboys…Enrolled in the Division of Undergraduate Studies.

SEASON/CAREER BEST SCORES

18

SEASON

FLOOR

POMMEL

RINGS

VAULT

P-BARS

H-BAR

2021

13.066

14.100

13.750

14.600

13.950

14.000

CAREER

13.066

14.100

13.750

14.600

13.950

14.000

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12-TIME NATIONAL CHAMPIONS


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2022 ROSTER

JOSH KARNES

FRESHMAN ALL-AROUND Hometown: Erie, Pa. High School: Erie Major: Enrolled in the Division of Undergraduate Studies

12-TIME NATIONAL CHAMPIONS

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2022 ROSTER

ERIC LUNG CAREER NOTES & RECORDS Career: Earned two Academic All-Big Ten honors. 2021 • JUNIOR SEASON Awards: Earned a spot on the Academic All-Big Ten Team. Season: Completed seven routines on floor, three on high bar and two on rings. Posted one event win on floor.

REDSHIRT JUNIOR ALL-AROUND

at Ohio State (2/14): Placed third on floor (14.20). at Iowa (2/20): Finished third on floor (13.85). Navy (2/27): Won floor with a season-best score of 14.50. at Minnesota (3/6): Finished fourth on floor (13.95).

Hometown: North Brunswick, N.J.

2020 • SOPHOMORE SEASON Awards: Earned a spot on the Academic All-Big Ten Team.

High School: North Brunswick Township

Season: Completed eight routines on rings, six on parallel bars, six on high bar and five on floor…Posted first career event win on parallel bars with a season-best 13.300 during the team portion of the West Point Open (1/10)…Posted two podium finishes on parallel bars, two on floor and one on rings… The 2020 season was cancelled March 12 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

2022

Major: Marketing

at Army West Point Open (1-10/11): Finished first on parallel bars with a 13.300 during the team competition…Scored a season-best 13.550 on rings during the team competition and then took third in the event during the individual competition the following day. Army West Point (1/18): Was the runner-up on parallel bars with a 13.000. Ohio State (1/25): Scored a season-best 13.350 to tie for fourth on high bar…Took fifth with a 13.350 on rings. at Air Force (2/1): Was the runner-up on floor with a 13.450…Took fourth on rings. William & Mary (2/15): Posted three top-five finishes, including a runner-up performance with a 13.750 on floor…Took fourth on parallel bars and fifth on rings. at Nebraska (2/29): Scored a season-best 14.200 to tie for fourth on floor…Tied for fifth on both rings and high bar. 2019 • FRESHMAN SEASON Season: Did not compete. PRIOR TO PENN STATE Trained at Surgent’s Elite Club in the Junior Elite League for five years while attending North Brunswick Township High School… Competed in the 2018 Junior Olympics men’s nationals and earned first place all-around and first place on floor exercise… Finished second on rings and sixth on pommel horse in 2018…Competed in the 2018 West Point Open and placed first on high bar and floor in the preliminaries and finals. PERSONAL Son of Yui and Yuen Lung…Has one older brother, Lawrence…Majoring in marketing.

SEASON/CAREER BEST SCORES

20

SEASON

FLOOR

2020

13.100

POMMEL

RINGS

VAULT

P-BARS

H-BAR

2021

13.350 10.700

CAREER

13.350 10.700

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12-TIME NATIONAL CHAMPIONS


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2022 ROSTER

NICK MOCK CAREER Awards: Named a CGA Regular Season All-American in 2020…Earned a spot on the All-Big Ten second team in 2021...Earned two Academic All-Big Ten honors...Received one Big Ten Men's Lacrosse Sportsmanship Award (2021)...Won one Big Ten Gymnast of the Week award. 2021 • JUNIOR SEASON Awards: Named second-team All-Big Ten...Earned a spot on the Academic All-Big Ten Team...Received a Big Ten Sportsmanship Award for men's gymnastics.

SENIOR PH/PB Hometown: Chandler, Ariz. High School: Basha Major: Aerospace Engineering

Season: Completed 11 routines on pommel horse and three on parallel bars, including both at the Big Ten Championships and NCAA Championships...Posted the nation's highest score (14.800) of the season on pommel horse...Posted three event wins on pommel horse...Advanced to final round of the NCAA Championships on pommel horse. Army West Point (1/16): Won pommel horse with a score of 13.70. Illinois (1/31): Finished third on pommel horse. at Ohio State (2/14): Won pommel horse with a score of 14.80, which was the nation's highest score of the season in the event. at Minnesota (3/20): Won pommel horse with a score of 13.60. Michigan (3/20): Finished third on pommel horse (14.15). at Big Ten Championships (4/3): Took third on pommel horse (13.90) and earned a spot on the All-Big Ten second team. at NCAA Prelims (4/16): Advanced to the NCAA Finals with a score of 13.80 on pommel horse...Also competed on parallel bars (12.90). at NCAA Finals (4/17): Finished 27th on pommel horse (12.766). 2020 • SOPHOMORE SEASON Awards: Named a CGA Regular Season All-American…Earned a spot on the Academic All-Big Ten Team. Season: Posted the nation’s fourth-highest national qualifying average on pommel horse (13.967), the seventh-highest season average (13.519) and the fifth-best single routine (14.450)…Completed eight routines on pommel horse and five on parallel bars…Had three runnerup finishes on pommel horse, including a season-best score of 14.450 against Ohio State (1/25)…Had one runner-up finish on parallel bars with a season-best score of 13.250 at Air Force (2/1)…The 2020 season was cancelled March 12 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. at Army West Point Open (1/10-11): Finished second on pommel horse during the team competition with a score of 14.200 and went on to finish sixth in the individual competition the following day…Took fourth on parallel bars during the team competition. Army West Point (1/18): Took fourth on both pommel horse and parallel bars. Ohio State (1/25): Scored a season-best 14.450 on pommel horse to finish second and scored 13.200 while taking sixth on parallel bars. at Air Force (2/1): Was the runner-up on both pommel horse (13.900) and parallel bars (13.250). William & Mary (2/15): Finished third on pommel horse with a 13.800. 2019 • FRESHMAN SEASON Season: Completed 12 routines on pommel horse while competing in 11 meets, including the Big Ten Championships and the NCAA Championships…Posted five top-five finishes, including two in the top three. at West Point Open (1/11-12): Scored a 13.700. at UIC/vs. Springfield (2/10): Was the runner-up with a score of 13.050. Air Force/ Navy (2/23): Posted a score of 13.750. at Ohio State (3/2): Scored a personal-best 14.000 while taking fourth. at Arizona State Invitational: Finished third with a score of 13.650. Michigan/Illinois (3/16): Took fifth with a 13.400. at Big Ten Championships (4/5-6): Finished 15th with a score of 13.500. at NCAA Championships (4/19-20): Took 31st with a score of 13.000. PRIOR TO PENN STATE Trained at Aspire Jr. Sun Devils Club for 13 years and attended Basha High School…Helped his team win state titles from 2008-2018… Was the state pommel horse champion in 2017 and the state parallel bars champion in 2017…Finished second on pommel horse at nationals in 2017 and 2018…Awarded MVP in 2017 and captain in 2018. PERSONAL Son of Melissa and Corey Mock…Has three brothers, Zack, Frankie and Rocco…Majoring in aerospace engineering.

SEASON/CAREER BEST SCORES SEASON

FLOOR

POMMEL

RINGS

VAULT

P-BARS

H-BAR

2019 14.000 2020

14.450 13.250

2021 14.800 13.100 CAREER 14.800 13.250

12-TIME NATIONAL CHAMPIONS

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2022 ROSTER

ANDRES PEREZ GINES CAREER Awards: Earned one Academic All-Big Ten award. 2021 • JUNIOR SEASON Awards: Earned a spot on the Academic All-Big Ten Team. Season: Completed nine routines on parallel bars, nine on high bar and five on pommel horse...Posted two event wins on parallel bars...Competed on parallel bars and high bar at the Big Ten Championships and NCAA Championships.

SENIOR ALL-AROUND Hometown: Bayamon, Puerto Rico High School: University Gardens Major: Biobehavioral Health

Nebraska (2/7): Tied for first on parallel bars with a score of 13.40. at Ohio State (2/14): Posted a season-best score of 14.25 on parallel bars while posting a runner-up finish and added a third-place showing on high bar (13.15). Navy (2/27): Won parallel bars with a score of 14.05. Michigan (3/20): Placed third on parallel bars (14.10) and was fifth on high bar with a season-best score of 13.30. at Big Ten Championships (4/3): Tied for 20th on parallel bars (12.80) and was 23rd on high bar (12.75). at NCAA Prelims (4/16): Competed on parallel bars (12.966) and high bar (12.833). 2020 • SOPHOMORE SEASON Season: Completed six routines on high bar, four on pommel horse and four on parallel bars...Posted two event victories on high bar, including a season-best 13.800 in his collegiate debut against Army West Point (1/18)…The 2020 season was cancelled March 12 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

2022

Army West Point (1/18): Took first on high bar with a season-best 13.800 in his collegiate debut…Scored season-best 12.450 while tying for sixth on pommel horse. Ohio State (1/25): Scored 13.100 on high bar. at Air Force (2/1): Tied for first on high bar with a score of 13.100…Scored season-best 13.150 while taking fifth on parallel bars. PRIOR TO PENN STATE Prepped at University Gardens High School…Was a 2019 Pan-American Games all-around finalist and also competed at the 2019 Stuttgart World Championships…Was the 2018 and 2019 Puerto Rico National all-around champion…Was an all-around finalist at the 2017 Central American Games…Earned a bronze medal on the parallel bars and was a finalist on the floor and the high bar at the 2014 Youth Pan American Games…Competed in the 2014 Youth Olympic Games in Nanjing, China. PERSONAL Parents are Deyra Gines Lopez and Mario Perez Irizarry…Has one older brother, Mario, and two older sisters, Aixa and Deyraliz…Majoring in biobehavioral health.

SEASON/CAREER BEST SCORES SEASON

P-BARS

H-BAR

2020 12.450 13.150

13.800

2021

22

FLOOR

POMMEL

RINGS

VAULT

12.050 14.250

13.300

CAREER 12.450 14.250

13.800

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12-TIME NATIONAL CHAMPIONS


<<

2022 ROSTER

JALEN PETERSON CAREER Awards: Earned one Academic All-Big Ten award. 2021 • SOPHOMORE SEASON Awards: Earned a spot on the Academic All-Big Ten Team Season: Competed on floor and rings against Army West Point.

JUNIOR ALL-AROUND

2020 • FRESHMAN SEASON Season: Did not compete.

Hometown: Woodbridge, Va.

PRIOR TO PENN STATE Prepped at C.D. Hylton High School and trained at Apollo Gymnastics…Competed in the 2017 Junior Olympic Nationals where he earned a first-place finish on floor…Helped lead Apollo Gymnastics to regional and state championships in the 2017-2018 season.

High School: C.D. Hylton Major: Management

PERSONAL Son of Marla Peterson…Has one sister, Malayna, and two brothers, Mykel and Jeremiah...Majoring in management.

SEASON/CAREER BEST SCORES SEASON

FLOOR

POMMEL

RINGS

VAULT

P-BARS

H-BAR

2020 2021

11.700

CAREER

11.700

12-TIME NATIONAL CHAMPIONS



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2022 ROSTER

JOSH REINSTEIN

JUNIOR RINGS Hometown: Williamsville, N.Y. High School:

2022

Major: Corporate Innovation and Entrepeneurship

SEASON/CAREER BEST SCORES SEASON

FLOOR

POMMEL

RINGS

VAULT

P-BARS

H-BAR

2020 2021

12.700

CAREER 12.700

24



12-TIME NATIONAL CHAMPIONS


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2022 ROSTER

DEREK SCHLAGENHAUF

FRESHMAN ALL-AROUND Hometown: Windsor, Colo. High School: Major: Enrolled in the College of Health and Human Development

12-TIME NATIONAL CHAMPIONS



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2022 ROSTER

ROBBIE SHAMP CAREER Career: Won one Big Ten Freshman of the Week award...Earned one Academic All-Big Ten honor. 2021 • SOPHOMORE SEASON Awards: Earned a spot on the Academic All-Big Ten Team. Season: Completed six routines on floor, three on rings and three on vault...Posted two top-three finishes on floor, one on rings and one on vault...Competed on floor at the Big Ten Championships and NCAA Championships.

JUNIOR ALL-AROUND Hometown: Marrero, La.

Army West Point (1/16): Finished third on vault and tied for third on rings. Illinois (1/31): Tied for second on floor (14.20). Nebraska (2/7): Finished third on floor (14.10) and scored a season-best 13.05 on rings. at Ohio State (2/14): Scored a season-best 14.25 on vault. at Big Ten Championships (4/3): Tied for seventh with a season-best score of 14.30 on floor. at NCAA Prelims (4/16): Scored 13.80 on floor.

High School: Thomas Jefferson

2020 • FRESHMAN SEASON Awards: Won one Big Ten Freshman of the Week award (2/4).

Major: Kinesiology

Season: Completed six routines on floor, six on vault and two on high bar…Posted two event wins on vault and one on floor...The 2020 season was cancelled March 12 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

2022

at Army West Point Open (1/10-11): Scored season-best 14.250 on vault and season-best 12.950 on high bar in collegiate debut. Army West Point (1/18): Won vault with a score of 14.150 and took second on floor with a score of 13.400. Ohio State (1/25): Tied for fourth on floor with a score of 13.700. at Air Force (2/1): Took first on floor (14.100) and vault (14.050). at Nebraska (2/29): Scored a season-best 14.200 on floor to tie for fourth. at Illinois/vs. Michigan (3/7): Scored 14.100 on vault and 13.950 on floor. PRIOR TO PENN STATE Prepped at Thomas Jefferson High School and trained with All Star Gymnastics… Competed in the National Championships in 2014, 2016, 2018 and 2019… Finished 13th all around, second on floor and second on vault in 2014… Earned a first-place finish on vault, second place on floor, tied for ninth on parallel bars, 12th on high bar and 11th all around in 2016… Placed first on floor, sixth on vault and 11th all around in 2018...Finished third on floor and sixth on vault at nationals in 2019...Named Louisiana Gymnastics State Champion at the high school level in all around in 2016 and 2017… Was the Gymnastics State Champion in his club career from 2016-2019. PERSONAL Parents are Robert and Lidya Shamp… Has one older sister, Isela, and one younger brother, Charles…Helped high school baseball team win state titles from 2016-2019...Majoring kinesiology.

SEASON/CAREER BEST SCORES

26

SEASON

FLOOR

2020

14.200 14.250

2021

14.300 13.050

14.250

CAREER

14.300

14.250



POMMEL

12-TIME NATIONAL CHAMPIONS

RINGS

13.050

VAULT

P-BARS

H-BAR


<<

2022 ROSTER

MATT SULHAM 2021 • FRESHMAN SEASON Season: Did not compete. GYMNASTICS BACKGROUND Prepped at Lake Braddock Secondary School and trained at Broadway Gymnastics School, at Armory Athletics, and at Apollo Gymnastics…Finished fourth all-around at the 2019 Region 7 Championships…Was the runner-up all-around at the 2018 Virginia State Championships…Took third on vault at the 2017 Junior Olympics Championships.

SOPHOMORE ALL-AROUND

PERSONAL Parents are Clifford and Patricia Sulham…has one older brother, CJ…Enrolled in the Division of Undergraduate Studies.

Hometown: Burke, Va. High School: Lake Braddock Major: Enrolled in the Division of Undergraduate Studies

12-TIME NATIONAL CHAMPIONS



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2022 ROSTER

NATE WARREN CAREER Awards: Earned one Academic All-Big Ten honor. 2021 • SOPHOMORE SEASON Awards: Earned a spot on the Academic All-Big Ten Team. Season: Completed 10 routines on rings, three on floor, two on vault and two on high bar...Posted one top-three finish on floor and one on rings...Competed on rings at the Big Ten Championships and the NCAA Championships.

JUNIOR ALL-AROUND Hometown: Centre Hall, Pa. High School: Penns Valley Major: Materials Science and Engineering

Army West Point (1/16): Was the runner-up on floor (13.20). Navy (2/27): Posted season-best scores on rings (13.40) while taking third and on floor (13.25). at Big Ten Championships (4/3): Tied for 17th on rings (13.35). at NCAA Prelims (4/16): Scored 13.00 on rings. 2020 • FRESHMAN SEASON Season: Completed three routines on rings, three on vault, three on parallel bars, three on high bar and one on floor…Posted one podium finish on floor and one on parallel bars...The 2020 season was cancelled March 12 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. at Army West Point Open (1/10-11): Scored season-bests on rings (12.700) and parallel bars (12.900). Army West Point (1/18): Finished runner-up on high bar while scoring a season-best 13.200. Ohio State (1/25): Scored 12.550 on rings and 12.700 on vault. William & Mary (2/15): Scored a season-best 13.000 on vault.

2022

PRIOR TO PENN STATE Prepped at Penns Valley Area High School and trained at Centre Elite Gymnastics (2014-19) and Nittany Gymnastics (2006-13)...Won state titles on pommel horse and rings in 2017...Won state title on pommel horse and took fourth on rings at nationals in 2018...Won 2019 Pennsylvania Senior of the Year Award after winning all-around state title, including a title on parallel bars...Finished seventh on high bar at 2019 nationals. PERSONAL Parents are Bob Warren and Roni Warren...Has one older brother, Zeke...Both parents and brother attended Penn State...Majoring in materials science and engineering.

SEASON/CAREER BEST SCORES

28

SEASON

FLOOR

2020

13.700

POMMEL

RINGS

VAULT

P-BARS

H-BAR

12.700

13.00O

12.900

13.200

2021

13.250 13.400

13.500 11.950

CAREER

13.700

13.500



12-TIME NATIONAL CHAMPIONS

13.400

12.900

13.200


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2022 ROSTER

COLIN WINGROVE 2021 • FRESHMAN SEASON Season: Completed four routines on vault...Placed third in three of the four meets. Illinois (1/31): Placed third with a score of 14.40. Nebraska (2/7): Took third with a score of 14.25. Michigan (3/20): Finished third with a season-best score of 14.5.

SOPHOMORE ALL-AROUND Hometown: Alpine, Utah High School: Lone Peak

GYMNASTICS BACKGROUND Prepped at Lone Peak High School and trained at USA Gym World, at Airtime Gymnastics, and at All-American Gymnastics…Finished seventh on rings and 15th all-around at the 2019 National Championships…Took fifth on rings and 15th all-around at the 2018 National Championships…Finished third on vault and 10th all-around at the 2017 National Championships… Was the 2016 Junior Olympic vault national champion. PERSONAL Parents are Bruce and Jaleen Wingrove…Has one older brother Cameron and three younger brothers: Alex, Spencer, and Eric…Enrolled in the Division of Undergraduate Studies.

Major: Enrolled in the Division of Undergraduate Studies

SEASON/CAREER BEST SCORES SEASON

FLOOR

POMMEL

RINGS

VAULT

P-BARS

H-BAR

2021 14.500 CAREER 14..500

12-TIME NATIONAL CHAMPIONS



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2022 ROSTER

BRADY YAMAMOTO 2021 • JUNIOR SEASON Season: Completed routines on vault and high bar against Army West Point before suffering a season-ending injury. Army West Point (1/16): Finished fifth on high bar and tied for fifth on vault.

SENIOR ALL-AROUND Hometown: Glendale, Ariz. High School: Basha Major: Kinesiology

2020 • SOPHOMORE SEASON Season: Completed three routines on floor, three on vault, three on parallel bars and three on high bar…Posted one event win while scoring a season-best 13.600 on floor against Army West Point…Had two podium finishes on high bar, including a season-best 13.550 against William & Mary…The 2020 season was cancelled March 12 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. at Army West Point Open (1/10-11): Scored a season-best 11.900 on parallel bars during the team competition. Army West Point (1/18): Finished first on floor with a season-best score of 13.600…Scored a season-best 14.000 on vault while taking fourth...Finished third on high bar (12.950). Ohio State (1/25): Scored 13.850 on vault and 13.450 on floor. William & Mary (2/15): Scored a seasonbest 13.550 to place third on high bar. 2019 • FRESHMAN SEASON Season: Completed a routine on floor, vault, parallel bars, and high bar at the West Point Open. at West Point Open (1/11-12): Tied for the best score (13.950) on rings during the team event…Tied for the second-best score (14.100) on floor during the team event.

2022

PRIOR TO PENN STATE Trained at Jr. Sun Devils Club for 13 years and attended Basha High School…Helped team win state titles from 2004-2018…Team went 6-0 in 2017 with an undefeated season…Earned individual state title for all-around, high bar and vault in 2017…Was the 2015 Junior Olympics national champion on rings…Was the Junior Elite national champion on high bar…Earned two All-America honors and was the team captain in 2018. PERSONAL Son of Michael and Kimberly Yamamoto…Has two brothers, Brandon and Bryson…Father played arena football…Majoring in kinesiology.

SEASON/CAREER BEST SCORES SEASON

FLOOR

POMMEL

RINGS

VAULT

P-BARS

H-BAR

2021 14.500 CAREER 14..500

30



12-TIME NATIONAL CHAMPIONS


<<

PROGRAM HISTORY 2009 Casey Sandy

ALL-AMERICANS NOTES: Bold indicates NCAA Event Champion * - Indicates tied for NCAA Event Champion

2020 Parker Clayton

Still Rings

2008 Tommy Ramos Casey Sandy

2020 NCAA Championships not held due to COVID-19 2019 Stephen Nedoroscik Noah Roberson 2018 Stephen Nedoroscik Sam Zakutney

Pommel Horse Still Rings

Colin Coates Greg Tamargo

Pommel Horse Parallel Bars High Bar Pommel Horse Still Rings

2017 Stephen Nedoroscik Sam Zakutney Leroy Clarke, Jr.

Pommel Horse Parallel Bars Pommel Horse

2016 Trevor Howard

Leroy Clarke Jr. 2015 Leroy Clarke Jr. Tristan Duverglas Matthew Felleman Trevor Howard Thad Lawson Alexis Torres 2014 Craig Hernandez Trevor Howard Alexis Torres 2013 Felix Aronovich Adrian Evans Matthew Felleman Trevor Howard Parker Raque Scott Rosenthal 2012 Felix Aronovich Adrian Evans Craig Hernandez Nihir Kothari Parker Raque Néstor Rodríguez Scott Rosenthal 2011 Wasef Burbar Miguel Pineda Parker Raque Scott Rosenthal 2010 Noam Shaham

Floor Exercise Vault Still Rings All-Around Still Rings Parallel Bars Still Rings All-Around High Bar All-Around Floor Exercise Still Rings Pommel Horse Parallel Bars Still Rings

2007 Vladi Klurman Tommy Ramos Casey Sandy Nick Virbitsky 2006 Derek Helsby

Tommy Ramos 2005 Santiago Lopez Luis Vargas

2004 Kevin Tan Luis Vargas

2003 Kevin Donohue Ludwig Kern Zach Roeder Kevin Tan

All-Around High Bar Pommel Horse High Bar Floor Exercise Still Rings Still Rings

Luis Vargas 2002 Kevin Donohue Kevin Tan

All-Around Parallel Bars Pommel Horse Pommel Horse Still Rings Floor Exercise High Bar Still Rings High Bar Still Rings Floor Exercise Vault Still Rings High Bar

2001 Dominic Brindle Jay Kim Chris Lakeman Kevin Tan 2000 Adam Benas Dominic Brindle Ted Johnson Chris Lakeman Rob Saliski Brandon Stefaniak 1999 Adam Benas

All-Around Vault Still Rings All-Around Floor Exercise Pommel Horse Still Rings Vault Parallel Bars Still Rings Still Rings Parallel Bars High Bar Pommel Horse Floor Exercise All-Around Pommel Horse Still Rings Parallel Bars Still Rings Parallel Bars Vault All-Around Floor Exercise Pommel Horse Parallel Bars High Bar Still Rings All-Around Pommel Horse Parallel Bars High Bar High Bar Vault Pommel Horse Vault Still Rings High Bar High Bar Parallel Bars All-Around Floor Exercise Vault Still Rings Parallel Bars Vault Vault Still Rings Still Rings High Bar High Bar Still Rings Floor Exercise Still Rings Vault * Pommel Horse

Ron Roeder Eddie Seng Brandon Stefaniak 1998 Ron Roeder Brandon Stefaniak

High Bar Parallel Bars Still Rings Vault Pommel Horse Floor Exercise Still Rings Pommel Horse

1997 J.M. Michel

High Bar

1996 Joe Roemer

Floor Exercise

1995 Tom Ellefson Tony Pansy 1992 Adam Carton Wayne Cowden Mike Masucci Mike Reichenbach 1991 Rich Briggs Adam Carton

Parallel Bars Parallel Bars Floor Exercise Vault Still Rings Pommel Horse Still Rings

Wayne Cowden Mark Sohn

Still Rings Pommel Horse Still Rings Vault Still Rings Pommel Horse

1990 Wayne Cowden Mark Sohn

Still Rings Pommel Horse

1989 Adam Carton Mark Sohn 1988 Mark Sohn

High Bar * Pommel Horse Pommel Horse

1987 Chris Laux

Still Rings

1986 Chris Laux

Still Rings Vault

1985 Mike Ambrozy Terry Bartlett Steve Friedman

Vault All-Around Still Rings Vault High Bar

1984 Kenn Viscardi

Still Rings

1983 Terry Bartlett Todd Ladman Kenn Viscardi

High Bar Parallel Bars Pommel Horse Still Rings

1982 Terry Bartlett Randy Jepson Steve Marino

Vault Still Rings High Bar

Parallel Bars

12-TIME NATIONAL CHAMPIONS



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PROGRAM HISTORY

1981 Bill Stanley

Pommel Horse

1965 Steve Cohen Ed Isabelle

1980 Tom Forster

Vault Mike Jacobson

1976 Gene Whelan 1974 Bruce Atkins

All-Around Parallel Bars 1964 Ed Isabelle Vault Allen Porter

1973 Marshall Avener

2022

1972 Marshall Avener

1963 Tom Seward Bud Williams

All-Around * Floor Exercise Parallel Bars Still Rings

All-Around Parallel Bars Still Rings

1962 Gregg Weiss

Parallel Bars

All-Around * Parallel Bars Vault

1970 Marshall Avener

Vault

Dick Swetman Paul Vexler 1968 Bob Emery

Parallel Bars All-Around Pommel Horse Parallel Bars All-Around Parallel Bars High Bar * Still Rings

1961 John Donahue Gerry Scheffer Tom Seward Gregg Weiss

Larry Yohn 1960 Lee Cunningham Robert Mumau Vincent Neuhauser Gerry Schaeffer Gregg Weiss

All-Around Parallel Bars Jay Werner

1967 Steve Cohen Bob Emery Paul Vexler 1966 Steve Cohen

Ed Isabelle

All-Around Still Rings Parallel Bars All-Around Vault All-Around Floor Exercise Pommel Horse High Bar All-Around

1959 Lee Cunningham David Dulaney John Hidinger Don Littlewood Vincent Neuhauser Armando Vega

Jay Werner

32

All-Around Floor Exercise High Bar Side Horse

All-Around Pommel Horse Still Rings Vault Parallel Bars

1971 Marshall Avener Tom Dunn James Kruest

1969 Tom Dunn Bob Emery

All-Around Side Horse All-Around Floor Exercise High Bar All-Around Floor Exercise Parallel Bars High Bar



Flying Rings Flying Rings Floor Exercise All-Around Floor Exercise Side Horse Still Rings Parallel Bars Flying Rings

High Bar Rope Climb Rope Climb Flying Rings All-Around Floor Exercise Parallel Bars High Bar All-Around Still Rings Parallel Bars High Bar Flying Rings All-Around Side Horse High Bar Tumbling Rope Climb Rope Climb Rope Climb All-Around Floor Exercise Still Rings Parallel Bars High Bar Flying Rings All-Around Floor Exercise Still Rings Flying Rings

12-TIME NATIONAL CHAMPIONS

1958 Lee Cunningham David Dulaney Robert Foht Phillip Mullen Edwin Sidwell Jay Werner 1957 Phillip Mullen Armando Vega

Dion Weissend 1956 Robert Foht Phillip Mullen Armando Vega

1955 Burritt Haag Paul Heim Karl Schwenzfeier

Dion Weissend 1954 John Baffa Jean Cronstedt

Burritt Haag Bob Lawrence Manuel Procoppio Karl Schwenzfeier

Frank Wick 1953 Jean Cronstedt

James Hazen Karl Schwenzfeier

1952 Jean Cronstedt

NOTES:

All-Around High Bar Tumbling Parallel Bars Rope Climb Flying Rings Floor Exercise Flying Rings Rope Climb All-Around Free Exercise Side Horse Flying Rings Parallel Bars High Bar High Bar Parallel Bars Rope Climb All-Around Free Exercise Flying Rings Parallel Bars Rope Climb Side Horse All-Around Free Exercise Side Horse Parallel Bars High Bar Flying Rings High Bar Flying Rings All-Around Free Exercise Parallel Bars High Bar Rope Climb Side Horse All-Around Flying Rings All-Around Free Exercise Flying Rings Parallel Bars Side Horse Parallel Bars All-Around Free Exercise High Bar Parallel Bars Flying Rings All-Around Free Exercise Flying Rings Parallel Bars High Bars

Bold indicates NCAA Event Champion * - Indicates tied for NCAA Event Champion


<<

PROGRAM HISTORY Parallel Bar 1951 David Benner James Schultz Rudolph Valentino

Side Horse Rope Climb Tumbling

1950 David Benner Lee Perna

Side Horse Rope Climb

1948 William Bonsall

Steve Greene Joseph Linn William Meade Ray Sorensen

1942 Edwin Anderson Charles Lebow Sydney Rudman Charles Senft Sol Small Edwin Trybala Fred Young Harold Zimmerman

All-Around Free Exercise Flying Rings High Bar Side Horse Flying Rings Parallel Bars Rope Climb Tumbling All-Around Free Exercise Side Horse Flying Rings High Bar Parallel Bars Tumbling High Bar All-Around Flying Rings Long Horse Rope Climb Parallel Bars High Bar Rope Climb Parallel Bars Tumbling

NOTES:

Bold indicates NCAA Event Champion * - Indicates tied for NCAA Event Champion

12-TIME NATIONAL CHAMPIONS



33


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PROGRAM HISTORY

12 12 10 8 6 6 4 4 3 3 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1

NCAA TEAM CHAMPIONSHIPS

Penn State Oklahoma Illinois Nebraska Michigan Stanford California Southern Illinois Iowa State Ohio State Florida State UCLA Arizona State Chicago Indiana State Michigan State USC Temple

NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP RECORDS

2022

Total Individual Event Titles (one year) 4 Jean Cronstedt, Penn State, 1954 (PB, HB, FX, AA) Robert Lynn, USC, 1962 (PB, HB, FX, AA) 3 Armando Vega, Penn State, 1959 (PB, PB, AA) Tied with 17 others Repeat NCAA Champions 4 Mark Sohn, Penn State (PH 1988-91) Chad Fox, New Mexico (V 1986-89) 3 Armando Vega, Penn State (PB 1956-59) Tied with 11 others Total Individual Event Titles (career) 7 Joe Giallombardo, Illinois (T 1938-40, AA 1938-40, FR 38) Jim Hartung, Nebraska (AA 1980-81, SR 1980-82, PB 1981-82) 6 Jean Cronstedt, Penn State (PB 1953-54, HB/FX 1954, AA 1953-54) Armando Vega, Penn State (PB 1956-59, SR 1959, AA 1957-59) Tied with 4 others Total Team Individual Event Titles (one year) 6 Penn State (1954, 1959); Michigan (1963) 5 Nebraska (1980, 1981) 4 Illinois (1940, 1941, 1958) Nebraska (1982, 1983); Ohio State (1996, 1997) USC (1962); UCLA (1984)

12 NCAA TEAM CHAMPIONSHIPS

2007 2004 2000 1976 1965 1961 1960 1959 1957 1954 1953 1948

Penn State (221.000) Penn State (223.350) Penn State (231.975) Penn State (432.075) Penn State (68.50) Penn State (88.50) Penn State (112.50) Penn State (152.00) Penn State (88.50) Penn State (137.00) Penn State (91.50) Penn State (55.00)

NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP RUNNER-UP 1991 1984 1973 1969 1956 1955 1942

Penn State (285.95) Penn State (281.25) Penn State (323.025) Penn State (160.45) Penn State (67.50) Penn State (69.00) Penn State (30.00)

ALL-TIME INDIVIDUAL NCAA EVENT CHAMPIONS

62 54 51 40 36 36 29 28 28 24

Illinois Penn State Oklahoma Nebraska Michigan Stanford California Ohio State UCLA USC

NCAA POMMEL HORSE CHAMPION

2018 2017 2005 2000 1999 1991 1990 1989 1988 1954 1948

NCAA STILL RINGS CHAMPION

2004 2003 2001 1991 1990 1969 1959

1991

Casey Sandy Luis Vargas Luis Vargas Marshall Avener Steve Cohen Steve Cohen Mike Jacobson Gregor Weiss Jay Werner Armando Vega Armando Vega Karl Schwenzfeier Jean Cronstedt Jean Cronstedt Ray Sorenson

1965 1954

Thad Lawson Trevor Howard Tom Seward (tie) Jean Cronstedt

NCAA VAULT CHAMPION

Adam Carton

Gene Whelan Tom Dunn (tie) Armando Vega Armando Vega Armando Vega Jean Cronstedt Jean Cronstedt Ray Sorenson Hal Zimmerman

NCAA HIGH BAR CHAMPION

Mike Jacobsen Jean Cronstedt

NCAA FLYING RINGS CHAMPION ^

1960 1959 1954

Jay Werner Jay Werner Manuel Procopio

NCAA ROPE CLIMB CHAMPION ^

1959 1956

Don Littlewood Philip Mullen

NCAA TUMBLING CHAMPION ^

1959

NCAA FLOOR EXERCISE CHAMPION

2015 2013 1963 1954

Kevin Tan Kevin Tan Chris Lakeman Adam Carton Wayne Cowden Paul Vexler (tie) Armando Vega

NCAA PARALLEL BARS CHAMPION

1976 1971 1959 1957 1956 1954 1953 1948 1942

NCAA ALL-AROUND CHAMPION

2008 2005 2004 1973 1967 1966 1965 1961 1960 1959 1957 1955 1954 1953 1948

Stephen Nedoroscik Stephen Nedoroscik Luis Vargas Brandon Stefaniak (tie) Brandon Stefaniak Mark Sohn Mark Sohn Mark Sohn (tie) Mark Sohn Robert Lawrence Steve Greene

2000 2004 2007

Dave Dulaney

NCAA COACH OF THE YEAR

Randy Jepson Randy Jepson Randy Jepson

^ - Indicates a discontinued event BOLD - Denotes current student-athlete/coach

Since 1938, Penn State has seen 117 studentathletes earn All-America honors on 319 occasions. The Nittany Lions have had at least one All-American in 64 of the 80 seasons since the NCAA Championships began.

34



12-TIME NATIONAL CHAMPIONS


<<

PROGRAM HISTORY BIG TEN TEAM CHAMPIONSHIPS

2019 2015 2008 2003 2019 2015 2008 2003

Penn State (410.350) Penn State (436.700) Penn State (360.450) Penn State (220.500)

BIG TEN COACH OF THE YEAR

Roy Malka Tom Ellefson Tony Pansy 1993 Mike Masucci 1992 Mike Masucci BOLD - Denotes current student-athlete 1995

Randy Jepson Randy Jepson Randy Jepson Randy Jepson

BIG TEN GYMNAST OF THE YEAR

NITTANY LIONS AT THE OLYMPIC GAMES

Casey Sandy

2012

BIG TEN FRESHMAN OF THE YEAR

2008 2004 1992

2008 2017 2013 2010 1997

2019 2018

Sam Zakutney Trevor Howard Felix Aronovich Mike Dutka

BIG TEN INDIVIDUAL EVENT CHAMPIONS

Sam Zakutney Stephen Nedoroscik Brennan Pantazis 2016 Trevor Howard 2015 Matthew Felleman Trevor Howard 2014 Trevor Howard 2013 Craig Hernandez 2012 Craig Hernandez Scott Rosenthal 2008 Tommy Ramos Casey Sandy 2006 Tommy Ramos 2004 Kevin Tan 2003 Kevin Tan 2002 Kevin Donohue Kevin Tan 2001 Chris Lakeman 1998 Mike Dutka 1995 Tom Ellefson 1993 Mike Masucci 2021 2019 2018 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2008 2007 2006 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1998

Parallel Bars Pommel Horse Floor Exercise High Bar All Around Still Rings Still Rings Pommel Horse Pommel Horse Still Rings Still Rings All-Around Parallel Bars Still Rings Still Rings Parallel Bars Still Rings Parallel Bars High Bar Still Rings Still Rings All-Around Floor Exercise Pommel Horse Vault Vault Parallel Bars High Bar

FIRST-TEAM ALL-BIG TEN

Michael Jaroh Sam Zakutney Steven Nedoroscik Brennan Pantazis Trevor Howard Matthew Felleman Trevor Howard Trevor Howard Felix Aronovich Craig Hernandez Felix Aronovich Craig Hernandez Scott Rosenthal Scott Rosenthal Nick Virbitsky Derek Helsby Tommy Ramos Casey Sandy Derek Helsby Casey Sandy Derek Helsby Tommy Ramos Chad Buczek Kevin Tan Luis Vargas Kevin Tan Luis Vargas Kevin Donohue Kevin Tan Chris Lakeman Adam Benas Mike Dutka

1988 1984 1976

1972 1968

1964

Felix Aronovich Tommy Ramos Kevin Tan Luis Vargas Terry Bartlett Ian Shelley Terry Bartlett Terry Bartlett Marshall Avener Gene Whelan Wayne Young Karl Schier * Gene Wettstone ^ Marshall Avener Jim Culhane Steve Cohen Bill Meade ^ Armando Vega # Gene Wettstone # Armando Vega Greg Weiss

Israel Puerto Rico U.S.A. Puerto Rico Great Britain Great Britain Great Britain Great Britain U.S.A. U.S.A. U.S.A.

1960

Jean Cronstedt Gar O’Quinn Karl Schier Armando Vega Gene Wettstone * Gene Wettstone # Bill Bonsall Louis Bordo Ray Sorensen Gene Wettstone *

1956 1952 1948

Sweden U.S.A. U.S.A. U.S.A. U.S.A. U.S.A. U.S.A.

U.S.A. U.S.A. U.S.A.

U.S.A. U.S.A.

* - Coach ^ - Manager # - Judge

NISSEN-EMERY AWARD The Nissen-Emery Award is the highest honor in collegiate gymnastics. Awarded in recognition of outstanding athletic achievement, academic excellence and sportsmanship, it is equivalent to college football’s Heisman Trophy. Presented annually to the top collegiate male senior gymnast in the U.S., the award was originally named the Nissen Award after George Nissen, a former NCAA Champion, for his contributions to the sport. In 1997, it was renamed the Nissen-Emery Award in honor of former Penn State gymnast Dr. Robert Emery for his support of the sport. Emery won the award in 1969. Penn State’s seven recipients ranks second for the most in the award’s history. The first award was presented in 1966.

PENN STATE’S NISSEN-EMERY AWARD WINNERS 2020 2009 2007 1987 1976 1969 1967

Stephen Nedoroscik Casey Sandy Matt Cohen Spider Maxwell Gene Whelan Bob Emery Steve Cohen

GENE WETTSTONE AWARD Presented annually to Penn State’s most outstanding gymnast, the Gene Wettstone Award was established in 2006 to honor the legacy and contributions of former legendary Penn State head coach Gene Wettstone. From 1938 to 1979, he raised the level of intercollegiate gymnastics in Happy Valley and nationwide. Known as “Mr. Gymnastics,” he led the Nittany Lions to nine national championships, 13 Eastern crowns, and 35 national individual titles. Thirteen of his Nittany Lion gymnasts competed in the Olympic Games.

12-TIME NATIONAL CHAMPIONS

GENE WETTSTONE AWARD WINNERS 2017 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006

Sam Zakutney Trevor Howard Trevor Howard Trevor Howard Mackenzie Dow Felix Aronovich Felix Aronovich Noam Shaham Casey Sandy Casey Sandy Casey Sandy Derek Helsby



35


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PROGRAM HISTORY COSIDA ACADEMIC ALL-AMERICA

2021 Jack Baldwin 2019 Noah Roberson 2018 Noah Roberson 2017 Noah Roberson 2012 Miguel Pineda 2011 Miguel Pineda 2001 Jose Palacios 1995 Joe Roemer

COLLEGE GYMNASTICS ASSOCIATION ALL-AMERICA SCHOLAR-ATHLETES

2021 Michael Artlip, Jack Baldwin, Parker Clayton, Chase Clingman, Ethan Dick, Alex Frack, Eric Lung, Nick Mock, Brennan Pantazis, Andres Perez Gines, Jalen Peterson, Robbie Shamp, Nate Warren 2020

2022

Jack Baldwin, Brayden Borromeo, Chase Clingman, Andres Perez Gines, Cannon Johnson, Eric Lung, Stephen Nedoroscik, Nate Warren, Sam Zakutney 2019 Jack Baldwin, Brayden Borromeo, Michael Burns, Nick Mock, Stephen Nedoroscik, Noah Roberson, Chris Sands, Alex Thomason, Wyatt Tyndall, Sam Zakutney 2018 Jack Baldwin, Brayden Borromeo, Michael Burns, Colin Coates, Benjamin Cooperman, Alex Frack, Stephen Nedoroscik, Noah Roberson, Chris Sands, Greg Tamargo, Alex Thomason, Wyatt Tyndall, Sam Zakutney 2017 Joseph Boyle, Brayden Borromeo, Michael Burns, Franz Card, Ben Cooperman, Dominic DiFulvio, Stephen Nedoroscik, Noah Roberson, Chris Sands, Alex Thomason, Wyatt Tyndall 2016 Michael Burns, Franz Card, Ben Cooperman, Dominic DiFulvio, Noah Roberson, Chris Sands, Greg Tamargo, Wyatt Tyndall 2015 Nestor Rodriguez, Joe Boyle, Benjamin Cooperman, Craig Hernandez Franz Card, Tristan Duverglas Christian McSwain 2014 Franz Card, Adrian Evans Dominic DiFulvio, Preston Gall, Craig Hernandez, Ingvar Jochumsson 2013 Adrian Evans, Scott Rosenthal, Felix Aronovich, Parker Raque, Ingvar Jochumsson, Preston Gall, Tony Beck, Matthew Chelberg, Craig Hernandez 2012 Felix Aronovich, Matthew Chelberg, Mackenzie Dow, Adrian Evans, Matthew Felleman, Preston Gall, Craig Hernandez, Nihir Kothari, Miguel Pineda, Parker Raque, Scott Rosenthal, Logan Wyman, Warren Yang 2011

36

Matt Albrecht, Felix Aronovich, Matt Chelberg, Adrian Evans, Ingvar Jochumsson, Nihir Kothari, Miguel Pineda, Parker Raque, Scott Rosenthal, Logan Wyman, Warren Yang 2010 Matt Albrecht, Matt Chelberg, Mackenzie Dow, Nick Grant, Matt Greenfield, Allen Harris, Philip Harris, Miguel Pineda, Parker Raque, Scott Rosenthal, Noam Shaham, Logan Wyman 2009 Josh Borromeo, Matt Greenfield, Allen Harris, Miguel Pineda, Noam Shaham, Logan Wyman 2008 Matt Greenfield, Allen Harris, Derek Helsby, Noam Shaham, Brad Spicer 2007 Matt Cohen, Matt Greenfield, Allen Harris, Derek Helsby, Justin Miklos, Noam Shaham 2006 Matt Bowman, Chad Buczek, Matt Cohen, Derek Helsby 2005 Chad Buczek, Matt Cohen, Casey McIntyre, Jerker Taudien 2004 Ludwig Kern, Jerker Taudien, Casey McIntyre 2003 Ludwig Kern, Jose Palacios , Jerker Taudien 2002 Nathaniel Eng, Ludwig Kern, Jose Palacios, Zachary Rimler, Jerker Taudien 2001 Jose Palacios. 2000 Dominic Brindle, Jose Palacios 1999 1996

Danny Beigel , Jose Palacios Joe Roemer

1995

Joe Roemer

ACADEMIC ALL-BIG TEN 2021 Jack Baldwin, Kaleb Booth, Chase Clingman, Alex Frack, Eric Lung, Nick Mock, Brennan Pantazis, Andres Perez Gines, Jalen Peterson, Josh Reinstein, Robbie Shamp, Nate Warren 2020 Jack Baldwin, Brayden Borromeo, Alex Frack, Eric Lung, Nick Mock, Stephen Nedoroscik, Sam Zakutney 2019 Jack Baldwin, Brayden Borromeo, Michael Burns, Alex Frack, Stephen Nedoroscik, Noah Roberson, Chris Sands, Greg Tamargo, Alex Thomason, Wyatt Tyndall, Sam Zakutney 2018

2017

2016

2015



Brayden Borromeo, Michael Burns, Stephen Nedoroscik, Greg Tamargo, Noah Roberson, Chris Sands, Alex Thomason, Wyatt Tyndall, Sam Zakutney Joseph Boyle, Michael Burns, Franz Card, Colin Coates, Benjamin Cooperman, Dominic DiFulvio, Christian McSwain, Jeremy Munn, Noah Roberson, Chris Sands, Alex Thomason, Wyatt Tyndall Joseph Boyle, Franz Card, Colin Coates, Benjamin Cooperman, Dominic DiFulvio, Christian McSwain, Jeremy Munn, Noah Roberson, Greg Tamargo

12-TIME NATIONAL CHAMPIONS

2014 2013

Joseph Boyle, Franz Card, Dominic DiFulvio, Craig Hernandez, Chritian McSwain Adrian Evans, Preston Gall, Craig Hernandez, Ingvar Jochumsson

Felix Aronovich, Matthew Chelberg, Mackenzie Dow, Adrian Evans, Preston Gall, Craig Hernandez, Ingvar Jochumsson, Nihir Kothari, Parker Raque, Scott Rosenthal 2012 Felix Aronovich, Matthew Chelberg, Mackenzie Dow, Adrian Evans, Preston Gall, Ingvar Jochumsson, Miguel Pineda, Parker Raque, Scott Rosenthal, Logan Wyman, Warren Yang 2011 Matt Albrecht, Felix Aronovich, Matt Chelberg, Mackenzie Dow, Miguel Pineda, Parker Raque, Scott Rosenthal, Logan Wyman, Warren Yang 2010 Matt Albrecht, Matt Greenfield, Allen Harris, Philip Harris, Miguel Pineda, Noam Shaham, Logan Wyman, Warren Yang 2009 Josh Borromeo, Matt Greenfield, Allen Harris, Noam Shaham, Logan Wyman, Warren Yang 2008 Josh Borromeo, Matt Greenfield, Allen Harris, Derek Helsby, Santiago Lopez, Noam Shaham 2007 Josh Borromeo, Matt Bowman, Matt Cohen, Derek Helsby 2006 Matt Bowman, Chad Buczek, Matt Cohen, Derek Helsby, Santiago Lopez 2005 Matt Bowman, Chad Buczek, Matt Cohen, Ludwig Kern, Casey McIntyre, Zak Rimler, Ed Seward, Jerker Taudien 2004 Chad Buczek, Nat Eng, Ludwig Kern, Casey McIntyre, Zak Rimler, Ed Seward, Kevin Tan, Jerker Taudien, Steve Tobin 2003 Kevin Donohue, Nat Eng, Kyle Fernandez, Ludwig Kern, Jose Palacios, Zak Rimler, Kevin Tan, Jerker Taudien, Steve Tobin, Duke Van Vleet 2002 Kevin Donohue, Kevin Tan, Duke Van Vleet 2001 Dominic Brindle, Kevin Donohue, Jose Palacios 2000 Dominic Brindle, Josh Malecki, Jose Palacios, Brandon Stefaniak 1999 Daniel Beigel, Tobias Ekman, Josh Malecki, Brandon Stefaniak 1998 Daniel Beigel, Roy Malka, Mark Minutaglio, Brandon Stefaniak 1997 Daniel Beigel, Tyson Bryant, Tom Ellefson, Roy Malka, Mark Minutaglio, Joe Roemer 1996 Tyson Bryant, Tom Ellefson, Roy Malka, Mark Minutaglio, Joe Roemer 1995 Mark Cooper, Joe Roemer 1992 Brad Rocklein


<<

PROGRAM HISTORY BIG TEN DISTINGUISHED SCHOLAR

2021

Jack Baldwin 2020 Jack Baldwin 2019 Jack Baldwin, Noah Roberson, Chris Sands 2018 Michael Burns, Noah Roberson 2017 Michael Burns, Noah Roberson Chris Sands, Wyatt Tyndall 2016 Noah Roberson 2014 2013

Adrian Evans Felix Aronovich, Adrian Evans, Scott Rosenthal

2012 Felix Aronovich, Adrian Evans, Miguel Pineda, Scott Rosenthal, Logan Wyman 2011 Miguel Pineda, Scott Rosenthal, Logan Wyman 2010 Philip Harris, Miguel Pineda, Noam Shaham, Logan Wyman 2009 Logan Wyman

NCAA POSTGRADUATE SCHOLARSHIP 2013 Scott Rosenthal 2012 Miguel Pineda Logan Wyman 2005 José Palacios 1993 Joe Roemer

BIG TEN POSTGRADUATE SCHOLARSHIP 2013 Scott Rosenthal

BIG TEN MEDAL OF HONOR 2020 Stephen Nedoroscik 2014 Adrian Evans

2014

ERNEST B. MCCOY MEMORIAL AWARD Adrian Evans

2021

ELITE 88/90 WINNER Jack Baldwin

2019 Noah Roberson 2018 Noah Roberson 2017 Noah Roberson 2011 Miguel Pineda BOLD - Denotes current student-athlete

12-TIME NATIONAL CHAMPIONS



37


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PROGRAM HISTORY

2022

INDIVIDUAL SCHOOL RECORDS FLOOR EXERCISE 1. 15.850 Casey Sandy 2. 15.800 Trevor Howard 15.800 Trevor Howard 15.800 Parker Raque 5. 15.725 Thad Lawson 6. 15.650 Alexis Torres 7. 15.600 Casey Sandy 15.600 Casey Sandy 9. 15.550 Nick Virbitsky 15.550 Santiago Lopez 15.550 Christian McSwain

1/12/08 4/9/15 4/21/13 3/17/12 4/11/15 3/1/14 4/19/08 2/2/08 3/8/08 3/15/08 2/6/15

POMMEL HORSE 1. 15.950 Craig Hernandez 2. 15.900 Stephen Nedoroscik 3. 15.750 Craig Hernandez 4. 15.700 Craig Hernandez 15.700 Craig Hernandez 6. 15.650 Craig Hernandez 15.650 Casey Sandy 8. 15.600 Craig Hernandez 9. 15.550 Craig Hernandez 10. 15.500 Craig Hernandez 15.500 Craig Hernandez

1/24/15 2/1/20 1/19/13 4/20/12 3/24/12 1/28/12 3/14/09 3/17/12 3/19/12 4/10/14 3/6/12

STILL RINGS 1. 16.300 16.300 3. 16.250 4. 16.100 16.100 16.100 7. 16.000 16.000 9. 15.900 15.900 15.900 15.900 15.900 15.900

2/12/12 1/14/12 4/10/15 3/24/12 2/25/12 1/27/12 2/27/15 4/18/08 4/20/12 4/7/12 4/6/12 3/17/12 4/4/11 2/19/11

Scott Rosenthal Scott Rosenthal Trevor Howard Scott Rosenthal Scott Rosenthal Scott Rosenthal Alexis Torres Tommy Ramos Scott Rosenthal Scott Rosenthal Scott Rosenthal Scott Rosenthal Miguel Pineda Scott Rosenthal

FLOOR EXERCISE 1. 76.100 at NCAA Team Finals 2. 75.800 Ohio State 3. 75.500 Iowa 4. 75.250 at NCAA Qualifier 5. 74.550 Minnesota 74.550 Springfield College 74.550 Ohio State 8. 74.300 NCAA Team Finals 9. 74.200 West Point Open 10. 74.100 at Illinois

VAULT 1. 16.400 2. 16.250 3. 16.150 4. 16.100 16.100 16.100 16.100 8. 16.050 16.050 16.050 16.050 16.050 16.050 16.050

Vladi Klurman Vladi Klurman Santiago Lopez Vladi Klurman Santiago Lopez Casey Sandy Allen Harris Santiago Lopez Santiago Lopez Casey Sandy Nick Grant Mackenzie Dow Parker Raque Parker Raque

3/8/08 2/24/08 1/12/08 2/2/08 3/8/08 4/18/08 3/8/08 2/24/08 2/16/08 3/22/08 3/20/10 4/1/11 4/16/11 4/14/11

PARALLEL BARS 1. 15.800 Néstor Rodríguez 2. 15.700 Alexis Torres 3. 15.650 Trevor Howard 4. 15.600 Casey Sandy 5. 15.500 Casey Sandy 15.500 Trevor Howard 8. 15.450 Matthew Felleman 9. 15.400 Felix Aronovich 15.400 Felix Aronovich

2/16/13 1/24/15 1/16/15 1/12/08 2/2/08 4/11/14 1/24/15 3/23/12 1/30/11

HIGH BAR 1. 16.000 2. 15.800 3. 15.550 4. 15.500 15.500 15.500 7. 15.450 15.450 15.450 10. 15.350 15.350

2/23/13 2/16/13 1/11/14 1/19/13 1/12/13 1/12/13 2/6/15 2/16/13 1/24/09 1/19/13 3/19/11

Wasef Burbar Wasef Burbar Matt Felleman Matthew Felleman Felix Aronovich Matthew Felleman Matthew Felleman Matthew Felleman Casey Sandy Waef Burbar Wasef Burbar

TEAM SCHOOL RECORDS

4/10/15 2/6/15 2/27/15 4/9/15 3/1/14 2/23/13 2/2/13 4/11/14 1/17/14 3/2/13

VAULT 1. 75.100 Big Ten Championships 2. 75.050 Army 3. 74.800 Michigan 74.800 at Navy Open 5. 74.600 at Big Ten Championships 6. 74.450 at Arizona State 7. 74.300 at Michigan 74.300 Minnesota 9. 74.200 Michigan 74.200 at Temple w/William & Mary

3/21/14 1/12/13 1/24/15 1/19/13 4/5/13 3/4/16 3/14/14 3/1/14 3/16/13 2/16/13

POMMEL HORSE 1. 75.250 Army 2. 75.000 Michigan 3. 74.850 at Navy Open 4. 74.600 at Temple w/ William & Mary 5. 74.200 Ohio State 6. 74.050 Springfield College 7. 72.850 Temple 8. 72.600 at Minnesota 9. 72.350 Iowa 9. 72.300 NCAA Qualifier

1/12/13 1/24/15 1/19/13 2/16/13 2/2/13 2/23/13 2/8/14 3/23/13 3/25/17 4/19/13

PARALLEL BARS 1. 75.950 Michigan 2. 75.900 at West Point Open 3. 75.550 Ohio State 4. 74.750 Springfield College 5. 74.700 Iowa 6. 73.950 at Illinois 7. 73.900 Big Ten Championships 8. 73.750 at Arizona State 73.750 Army 10. 73.600 Ohio State

1/24/15 1/16/15 2/6/15 2/23/13 2/27/15 3/2/13 3/21/14 3/4/16 1/12/13 2/2/13

STILL RINGS 1. 77.600 2. 77.250 3. 76.750 4. 76.400 5. 76.350 6. 75.950 7. 75.900 8. 75.500 9. 75.200 10. 75.100

4/10/15 3/2/13 2/16/13 4/9/15 1/16/15 2/6/15 2/23/13 1/12/13 4/19/13 1/11/14

HIGH BAR 1. 76.050 Army 1/12/13 2. 75.550 at Navy Open 1/19/13 3. 74.850 at Temple w/ William & Mary 2/16/13 4. 74.050 Springfield College 2/23/13 5. 73.500 Minnesota 3/1/14 6. 73.300 at Michigan 3/14/14 7. 73.250 Ohio State 2/2/13 8. 72.800 NCAA Qualifier 4/19/13 9. 72.450 Michigan 3/16/13 10. 72.350 at Big Ten Championships 3/27/15

38

at NCAA Team Finals at Illinois at Temple w/ William & Mary at NCAA Qualifier at West Point Open Ohio State Springfield College Army NCAA Qualifier Army



12-TIME NATIONAL CHAMPIONS

ALL-AROUND 1. 91.550 2. 91.500 3. 91.350 4. 91.000 5. 90.950 6. 90.750 7. 90.650 8. 90.550 9. 90.500 10. 90.300

TEAM SCORE 1. 447.850 2. 446.850 3. 446.550 4. 444.700 5. 444.300 6. 443.600 7. 440.900 8. 440.800 9. 440.200 10. 438.900

Casey Sandy Casey Sandy Casey Sandy Casey Sandy Casey Sandy Casey Sandy Casey Sandy Alexis Torres Casey Sandy Casey Sandy

Army Springfield College at Temple w/William & Mary vs. Michigan Ohio State Ohio State at Navy Open Iowa Minnesota at Illinois

1/19/08 4/4/08 4/18/08 2/24/08 3/21/09 1/12/08 3/22/08 2/27/15 4/16/09 3/14/09

1/12/13 2/23/13 2/16/13 1/24/15 2/2/13 2/6/15 1/19/13 2/27/15 3/1/14 3/2/13


<<

YEAR-BY-YEAR RESULTS 1931 (1-0)

Head Coach: John Rammacher

March 28 Colgate

1932 (0-1) Feb. 27

W, 37-17

Head Coach: John Rammacher

at Army

L, 1-53

1933 (0-2)

Head Coach: Nelson Walke

No Results Available

1934 (0-1)

Head Coach: Nelson Walke

No Results Available

1935 (1-1) March March

Head Coach: Nelson Walke

Panzer School of PE at Army

1936 (0-2) Feb. 8 Feb. 15

Head Coach: Nelson Walke

Illinois at Army

L, 21-34 L, 2-52

1937 (0-3) Feb. 6 Feb. 13 Feb 17

Head Coach: Julian Glasser

at Army at Navy Temple

L, 8-46 L, 11-43 L, 12-42

1938 (2-3) Jan. 15 Jan. 22 Jan. 29 Feb. 5 Feb. 19 Jan. 14 Feb. 4 Feb. 11 March 4 March 25

Feb. 1 Feb. 8 Feb. 15 Feb. 22 March 1 March 8 March 8 March 22 Jan. 23 Jan. 24 Feb. 7 Feb. 14 Feb. 21 Feb. 28 March 4 March 28 Feb. 13 Feb. 19 Feb. 27 March 6 March 13 May 1 Feb. 12 Feb. 26 March 11 May 6

NAAU

W, 13-5 W, 13-2 W, 15-3 W, 12-6 1st 1st

Head Coach: Gene Wettstone

Navy at Army Intercollegiates NAAU (4)

1945 (1-0)

W, 30-15 L, 18-27 W, 49-5 W, 37-17 W, 30-24 T, 27-27 1st 2nd

Head Coach: Gene Wettstone

at Navy Indiana Army (4) at Temple Intercollegiates (6) NAAU (7)

1944 (0-2)

W, 32-22 L, 16-38 W, 29.5-15.5 W, 29.5-23.5 L, 26-28 W, 44-10 W, 43-11 NTS

Head Coach: Gene Wettstone

at Chicago at Minnesota Princeton Temple at Navy at Army Intercollegiates (4) NCAA Championships (5)

1943 (4-0)

L, 13-41 W, 12-42 L, 6-48 W, 40-14 W, 38-14 L, 21.5-32.5 NTS

Head Coach: Gene Wettstone

Navy at Army Chicago Minnesota at Temple at Princeton MIT (2) Intercollegiates (3)

1942 (4-1-1)

W, 43-11 L, 16-38 W, 34.5-19.5 L, 12-42 L, 14-40

Head Coach: Gene Wettstone

at Navy Temple at Army Dartmouth MIT at Princeton Intercollegiates (1)

1941 (5-2)

W, 29-25 W, 38-16 L, 8.5-45.5 L, 9-45 L, 14-40

Head Coach: Gene Wettstone

Kutztown at Navy at Princeton Temple Army

1940 (3-3) Feb. 3 Feb. 10 Feb. 17 Feb. 17 Feb. 26 March 2 March 23

Head Coach: E. C. Bischoff

West Chester Western Reserve at Navy at Army Temple

1939 (2-3)

W, 35-19 L, 9-45

L, 2-4 L, 0-6 Forfeit, 0-6 NTS

1946 (2-0) Feb. 9 Feb. 16 March 9

1947 (5-0) Feb. 1 Feb. 8 Feb. 15 Feb. 22 March 1 March 8 May 2-3

Feb. 7 Feb. 12 Feb. 19 Feb. 26 March 5 March 12 April 30 Jan. 28 Feb. 11 Feb. 18 Feb. 25 March 4 March 11 April 1

at North Carolina at Maryland Army at Navy at Syracuse Temple Intercollegiates (5) March 30-31 NCAA Championships (10) North Carolina at Army Navy Syracuse at Temple EIGA Championship (11) March 21-22 NCAA Championships (12) at Michigan State at Illinois at Navy at Syracuse Temple Army EIGA Championship (1) March 27-28 NCAA Championships (11) Jan. 30 Feb. 6 Feb. 13 Feb. 20 Feb. 27 March 6 March 13 April 2-3

W, 78-34 L, 38-58 W, 58-38 W, 56-40 W, 52.5-43.5 9th

Head Coach: Gene Wettstone

Jan. 30 Jan. 31 Feb. 14 Feb. 21 Feb. 28 March 7 March14

1954 (6-0)

W, 74.5-33.5 W, 69-42 L, 40-55.5 L, 39.5-56.5 L, 37-59 W, 52-44 4th 11th

Head Coach: Gene Wettstone

Jan. 17 Feb. 9 Feb. 16 Feb. 23 March 1 March 8

1953 (6-0)

W, 59.5-52.5 L, 37-59 L, 46.5-49.5 L, 41-55 L, 33.5-62.5 NTS 10th

Head Coach: Gene Wettstone

Feb. 3 Feb. 5 Feb. 10 Feb. 17 Feb. 24 March 3 March 10

1952 (4-1)

W, 61-51 L, 40-56 L, 42-54 L, 47-49 L, 40-54 NTS 5th

Head Coach: Gene Wettstone

Michigan State at Army Navy Syracuse at Temple Intercollegiates (6) NCAA Championships (1)

1951 (3-3)

W, 71.5-40.5 W, 71-25 W, 55-41 W, 55-41 W, 52.5-43.5 1st 1st

Head Coach: Gene Wettstone

at Michigan State at Syracuse Army at Navy Temple Intercollegiates (4) National AAU (9)

1950 (1-4)

W, 69-57 W, 58-38 W, 66-30 W, 66-30 W, 54-42 1st 3rd

Head Coach: Gene Wettstone

Minnesota Syracuse at Army Navy at Temple Eastern Intercollegiates (1) NCAA Championships (9)

1949 (1-4)

W, 65-31 W, 53-40 Canceled

Head Coach: Gene Wettstone

at Minnesota at Navy Army at Syracuse Temple Intercollegiates (5) NAAU (8)

1948 (5-0) Jan. 21 Feb. 14 Feb. 21 Feb. 28 March 6 March 13 March 27

Head Coach: Gene Wettstone

Navy at Army Intercollegiates

W, 71-41 W, 67.5-61.5 W, 50.5-45.5 W, 59.5-36.5 W, 58-36 W, 56.5-39.5 1st 1st

Head Coach: Gene Wettstone

Michigan State Syracuse Navy at Army at Temple at West Virginia EIGA Championship (4) NCAA Championships (13)

W, 72-40 W, 63-33 W, 65-31 W, 58-38 W, 61-35 W, 63-33 1st 1st

1955 (6-1)

Head Coach: Gene Wettstone

Jan. 29 West Virginia Feb. 5 Illinois Feb. 12 at Navy Feb. 19 Army Feb. 23 at Pittsburgh Feb. 26 Temple March 5 at Syracuse March 12 EIGA Championship (5) March 25-26` NCAA Championships (14)

1956 (5-1)

W, 75-53 L, 62-66 W, 53-43 W, 50-46 W, 54-42 W, 52-43 W, 51-45 1st 2nd

Head Coach: Gene Wettstone

Jan. 28 at West Virginia Feb. 4 at Temple Feb. 11 Syracuse Feb. 18 at Army Feb. 25 Navy March 3 Pittsburgh March 9-10 EIGA Championship (1) March 23-24 NCAA Championships (15)

1957 (6-0)

Head Coach: Gene Wettstone

Feb. 2 Feb. 6 Feb. 9 Feb. 16 Feb. 23 March 2

West Virginia Temple at Navy at Syracuse Army at Pittsburgh March 8-9 EIGA Championship (11) March 22-23 NCAA Championships (5)

1958 (6-1)

at Temple at West Virginia at Army Syracuse Navy Pittsburgh March 7-8 EIGL Championship (6) March 22 at Michigan April 11-12 NCAA Championships (16) Temple West Virginia Army at Navy at Syracuse at Pittsburgh EIGL (17) Michigan March 20-21 NCAA Championships (18)

W, 55.5-43.5 W, 73-23 W, 63-33 L, 41.5-54.5 W, 69-27 W, 57-39 1st

Head Coach: Gene Wettstone

Springfield Temple Navy Army Pittsburgh Syracuse NCAA Championships

1962 (5-1)

W, 57.5-37.5 W, 54-42 W, 53.5-42.5 W, 67-29 W, 52-43 W, 55-38 1st W, 54.5-41.5 1st

Head Coach: Gene Wettstone

Temple West Virginia Navy Army Syracuse Pittsburgh NCAA Championships

1961 (5-1)

W, 63-33 W, 62-32 L, 45.5-50.5 W, 68.5-27.5 W, 61.5-34.5 W, 58-38 NTS W, 51-45 3rd

Head Coach: Gene Wettstone

Jan. 10 Jan. 31 Feb. 7 Feb. 14 Feb. 21 Feb. 28 March 7 March 14

1960 (5-1)

W, 60-36 W, 70.5-25.5 W, 63.5-32.5 W, 67-29 W, 49.5-46.5 W, 58-38 1st 1st

Head Coach: Gene Wettstone

Jan. 11 Feb. 1 Feb. 8 Feb. 15 Feb. 22 March 1

1959 (7-0)

W, 64-31 W, 62-34 W, 62-34 L, 38-58 W, 57-39 W, 63-33 2nd 2nd

W, 57-39 W, 63-33 L, 37.5-58.5 W, 52.33-43.33 W, 59.5-36.5 W, 49-47 1st

Head Coach: Gene Wettstone

Springfield Temple Navy Army Syracuse Pittsburgh EIGL Championships NCAA Championships

W, 64-32 W, 61.5-34.5 W, 62.5-33.5 L, 42-54 W, 56-40 W, 52.5-43.5 2nd 9th

Head Coach: Gene Wettstone 1st

12-TIME NATIONAL CHAMPIONS



39


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YEAR-BY-YEAR RESULTS

1963 (5-1)

Head Coach: Gene Wettstone

Springfield Temple Navy Army Syracuse Pittsburgh EIGL Championships NCAA Championships

1964 (7-1)

Head Coach: Gene Wettstone

West Virginia Massachusetts Springfield Temple Navy Army Syracuse Pittsburgh NCAA Championships

1965 (8-0)

West Virginia Massachusetts Springfield Navy Jan. 20 Pittsburgh Jan. 23 Army Feb. 13 Syracuse Feb. 20 Temple March 6-7 EIGL Championships (4) April 2-3 NCAA Championships (23)

2022 Jan. 7 Jan. 14 Jan. 21 Feb. 4 Feb. 11 Feb. 18 Feb. 25 March 3-4 March 31April 1

Springfield at Army at Massachusetts Navy at Syracuse at Temple at Pittsburgh March 2-4 EIGL Championships (5) Jan. 11 Jan. 18 Jan. 25 Feb. 1 Feb. 8 Feb. 15 Feb. 22

40

W, 183.30-158.10 L, 186.20-187.80 W, 185.70-171.90 W, 186.70-177.65 W, 176.95-166.05 W, 193.45-174.30 W, 186.55-132.90 T-1st 4th

Head Coach: Gene Wettstone

Jan.13 Jan 20 Jan. 27 Feb. 3 Feb. 10 Feb. 14 Feb. 24

1969 (8-0)

W, 184.05-148.05 W, 176.75-176.70 W, 180.75-171.30 W, 164.65-145.50 W, 188.95-168.50 W, 177.60-157.75 W, 185.60-175.05 W, 185.70-183.60 1st 1st 6th

Head Coach: Gene Wettstone

Massachusetts Springfield Army Navy Syracuse Temple Pittsburgh EIGL Championships (42) NCAA Championships (23)

1968 (7-0)

W, 66-30 W, 93-25 W, 66.50-51.50 W, 73-45 W, 94-26 W, 83-36 W, 75-43 W, 85-33 1st 1st

Head Coach: Gene Wettstone

Massachusetts Springfield Army Pittsburgh Air Force Navy Syracuse Temple EIGL Championships NCAA Regionals NCAA Championships

1967 (6-1)

W, 70-26 W, 154.85-126.85 W, 161.25-153.85 L, 159.30-164.25 W, 166.30-151.30 W, 165.35-161.80 W, 165.90-154.85 W, 161.20-133.30 T-4th

Head Coach: Gene Wettstone

Dec. 12 Jan. 9 Jan. 16

1966 (8-0)

W, 54-42 W, 55-41 W, 62-34 W, 49-47 L, 45-51 W, 62-34 2nd 5th

W, 190.30-175.00 W, 184.70-174.60 W, 188.65-176.90 W, 188.05-172.35 W, 185.30-130.05 W, 188.45-187.80 W, 171.65-107.65 2nd

Head Coach: Gene Wettstone

Springfield Army Massachusetts Navy Syracuse Temple Pittsburgh Southern Connecticut Eastern Championships NCAA Championships

W, 159.75-151.90 W, 160.11-149.72 W, 160.80-151.62 W, 160.38-152.43 W, 134.70-95.65 W, 163.62-162.46 W, 161.65-104.21 W, 162.83-157.45 1st 2nd

1970 (7-2)

Head Coach: Gene Wettstone

Jan. 10 Jan. 17 Jan. 31 Feb. 4 Feb. 7 Feb. 14 Feb. 21 Feb. 24 Feb. 28

Springfield at Army Navy at Massachusetts Syracuse at Temple at Pittsburgh at West Virginia Southern Connecticut March 5-7 EIGL Championships (11) April 2-4 NCAA Championships (4)

1971 (8-0)

Head Coach: Gene Wettstone

Jan. 9 Jan. 16 Jan. 23 Jan. 30 Feb. 5 Feb. 13 Feb. 20 March 1

at Springfield at Syracuse at Navy Army Massachusetts Temple at Southern Connecticut Pittsburgh March 11-13 EIGL Championships (19) April 1-3 NCAA Championships (10)

1972 (8-0)

Springfield at Army at Massachusetts Navy Syracuse at Temple Southern Connecticut at Pittsburgh March 8-11 EIGL Championships April 6-8 NCAA Championships (20) at Cornell at Springfield at Syracuse at Navy Army Massachusetts Temple Michigan at Southern Connecticut Pittsburgh March 2-3 EIGL Championships (4) April 5-7 NCAA Championships (21) Cornell Springfield at Pittsburgh Syracuse Navy at Massachusetts at Temple at Army S. Connecticut at Michigan March 7-9 EIGL Championships (22) April 4-6 NCAA Championships (6) Jan. 8 Jan. 11 Jan. 18 Jan. 29 Feb. 1 Feb. 8 Feb. 15 Feb. 22

W, 154.85-134.85 W, 160.00-153.20 W, 158.95-136.95 W, 162.15-148.80 W, 164.90-159.90 W, 162.00-157.80 W, 160.10-159.95 W, 155.85-150.00 W, 164.95-162.45 L, 160.20-161.05 1st 7th

1976 (7-1)

W, 201.70-161.90 L, 200.50-202.60 W, 206.55-187.05 W, 207.90-190.45 W, 210.45-198.40 W, 213.35-213.10 L, 210.05-219.40 L, 207.55-216.85 3rd NTS

12-TIME NATIONAL CHAMPIONS

Head Coach: Gene Wettstone

Dec. 13 Jan. 10 Jan. 24 Jan. 31 Feb. 7 Feb. 14 Feb. 21 Feb. 25

at Massachusetts Springfield Ohio State York at Temple Southern Connecticut at Indiana State at Pittsburgh March 12-13 NCAA Regionals (6) April 1-3 NCAA Championships (25)

1977 (5-3)

Massachusetts at Springfield Southern Illinois at Ohio State Pittsburgh Temple at Southern Connecticut Indiana State March 18-19 NCAA Regionals (26)

1978 (7-2)

W, 203.85-186.95 W, 209.75-192.95 W, 209.40-190.30 W, 210.80-180.75 W, 208.25-203.35 W, 211.95-211.55 L, 211.90-214.25 W, 205.30-143.00 1st 1st

Head Coach: Karl Schier

Dec. 11 Jan. 8 Jan. 15 Jan. 22 Feb. 2 Feb. 5 Feb. 12 Feb. 19

W, 198.40-198.05 W, 210.70-201.05 L, 205.55-207.75 W, 207.15-184.40 W, 202.10-179.85 W, 214.10-209.65 L, 213.35-218.45 L, 212.35-216.15 2nd

Head Coach: Karl Schier

Dec. 2-3 Dec. 10 Dec. 16 Jan. 6 Jan. 13 Jan. 21 Jan. 27 Feb. 4 Feb. 17 Feb. 18

at Ball State Invitational (44) 3rd at Massachusetts W, 205.15-188.80 Michigan State W, 205.15-196.80 at Springfield W, 209.80-186.85 at Pittsburgh W, 211.10-181.00 at Temple W, 211.95-197.05 York W, 204.05-192.20 Southern Connecticut W, 214.50-213.35 at Indiana State L, 209.45-217.45 at Southern Illinois L, 214.00-216.10 March 24-25 NCAA Regionals (6) 1st April 6-8 NCAA Championships (21) 6th

1979 (9-1)

Head Coach: Karl Schier

Nov. 10-11 at Cornell Open (22) Dec. 8-9 Penn State Invitational Jan. 6 Springfield Jan. 13 Pittsburgh Jan. 20 at York Temple (46) Feb. 2 Indiana State Feb. 10 at Ohio State vs. Minnesota (27) vs. Illinois (27) Feb. 17 Southern Illinois March 2 at Southern Connecticut March 23-24 NCAA Regionals (28) April 5-7 NCAA Championships (28)

1980 (7-3)

NTS 2nd W, 216.80-184.50 W, 216.35-188.60 W, 216.10-212.05 W, 218.75-197.25 W, 221.15-214.15 W, 215.60-213.30 W, 215.60-212.35 W, 215.60-209.40 W, 218.70-217.10 L, 218.20-220.10 1st 6th

Head Coach: Karl Schier

Farmingdale Invitational (45) 1st UIC L, 261.55-262.65 at Pittsburgh W, 257.65-227.00 Ohio State W, 265.35-262.45 York W, 268.35-253.25 Southern Connecticut L, 268.65-271.75 at Indiana State W, 271.60-267.40 at Southern Illinois W, 270.85-257.55 Northern Illinois W, 269.10-260.75 at Temple W, 260.75-193.75 at Southern Connecticut L, 271.30-278.35 LSU W, 275.05-269.45 NCAA Championships (1) 8th

Head Coach: Gene Wettstone

Pittsburgh at Springfield at Michigan State at Slippery Rock Massachusetts Temple Indiana State Southern Connecticut March 14-15 NCAA Regionals (23) April 3-5 NCAA Championships (24)



W, 151.85-140.30 W, 161.85-151.25 W, 158.00-145.05 W, 159.30-153.70 W, 164.30-149.55 W, 162.70-157.80 W, 165.55-160.80 W, 166.35-163.20 L, 165.30-165.60 W, 137.90-108.00 1st 2nd

Head Coach: Gene Wettstone

Dec. 1 Jan. 5 Jan. 12 Jan. 19 Jan. 26 Feb. 2 Feb. 9 Feb. 16 Feb. 23 Feb. 25

1975 (5-3)

W, 156.75-148.50 W, 153.15-143.65 W, 160.30-151.75 W, 160.15-153.10 W, 152.55-131.85 W, 161.05-154.10 W, 161.05-152.40 W, 135.00-101.95 1st 3rd

Head Coach: Gene Wettstone

Dec. 2 Jan. 6 Jan. 13 Jan. 20 Jan. 27 Feb. 3 Feb. 10 Feb. 12 Feb. 17 Feb. 24

1974 (9-1)

W, 159.45-156.15 W, 153.65-136.50 W, 157.55-142.65 W, 162.65-145.30 W, 164.30-155.25 W, 163.80-157.95 W, 162.20-156.10 W, 156.05-136.30 1st 3rd

Head Coach: Gene Wettstone

Jan. 8 Jan. 15 Jan. 22 Jan. 29 Feb. 5 Feb. 12 Feb. 19 March 1

1973 (9-1)

L, 158.15-158.20 W, 158.90-139.50 W, 160.00-155.45 W, 162.60-156.35 W, 153.45-117.15 L, 162.20-163.65 W, 151.92-113.23 W, 133.85-102.20 W, 164.75-155.05

1981 (7-3) Jan. 16 Jan. 24 Jan. 30 Feb. 6 Feb. 13 Feb. 20

Head Coach: Karl Schier

Syracuse at Ohio State Southern Connecticut at LSU Temple at Indiana State vs. Southern Illinois (24) March 6 at Northern Illinois March 8 at UIC March 14 Pittsburgh April 2-4 NCAA Championships (29)

W, 270.60-241.85 L, 268.85-271.15 W, 268.85-257.80 L, 267.55-269.80 W, 270.80-250.65 W, 271.15-253.80 W, 271.15-264.95 L, 267.20-269.90 W, 272.10-270.90 W, 277.35-255.20 6th


<<

YEAR-BY-YEAR RESULTS 1982 (11-0)

Head Coach: Karl Schier

Dec. 4-5

Windy City Invitational (9) 6th Dec. 11-12 Farmingdale Invitational (45) 1st Jan. 16 at Syracuse W, 265.75-246.00 Jan. 23 Ohio State W, 273.70-272.30 Feb. 6 Massachusetts W, 275.55-243.20 Feb. 13 at Southern Connecticut W, 272.05-256.75 Feb. 14 at Temple W, 274.00-254.35 Feb. 19 Northern Illinois W, 272.65-271.05 March 5 at Indiana State W, 266.75-263.75 March 7 at Southern Illinois W, 273.45-267.95 vs. LSU (23) W, 273.45-264.65 March 13 UIC W, 279.40-272.95 March 20 at Pittsburgh W, 281.30-267.40 April 1-3 NCAA Championships (29) 3rd

1983 (9-2)

Head Coach: Karl Schier

Nov. 19-20 Windy City Invitational (9) Jan. 15 at Syracuse Jan. 22 at Ohio State Jan. 28 Indiana State Feb. 5 Nebraska Feb. 11 Southern Connecticut Feb. 18 North Carolina State March 4 at Northern Illinois March 5 at UIC March 12 Southern Illinois March 12 Pittsburgh March 19 Temple April 7-9 NCAA Championships (6)

1984 (13-2) Oct. 29 Jan. 15 Jan. 21 Feb. 4 Feb. 11 Feb. 17 Feb. 25 March 4 March 5 March 7 March 9 March 10 March 15 March 17 April 12-14

Head Coach: Karl Schier

Metro Open (5) Syracuse Ohio State at Nebraska vs. Ohio State (29) vs. LSU (29) UIC at Southern Connecticut Northern Illinois at William & Mary at North Carolina State at Georgia at Southern Illinois at Indiana State Temple at Pittsburgh NCAA Championships (30)

1985 (13-1)

Metro Open (5) at Syracuse Southern Illinois Indiana State Nebraska at Ohio State East Stroudsburg Southern Connecticut Georgia March 4 at Iowa vs. BYU (31) March 6 at Northern Illinois March 9 at UIC March 16 Pittsburgh March 23 at Temple April 12-13 NCAA Championships (29) Nov. 16 Jan. 19 Jan. 24 Jan. 26 Feb. 1 Feb. 1 Feb. 8 Feb. 15 March 5 March 8 March 14 April 4-5

1st W, 277.85-263.15 W, 278.95-274.35 L, 275.15-278.85 W, 275.15-274.75 W, 275.15-270.30 W, 277.10-229.30 W, 277.25-265.10 L, 261.30-272.10 W, 279.45-246.00 W, 277.95-236.00 W, 279.45-273.25 W, 278.10-277.40 W, 275.65-270.65 W. 277.75-240.75 W, 279.05-267.35 2nd

Head Coach: Karl Schier

Nov. 10 Jan. 19 Jan. 25 Jan. 25 Feb. 2 Feb. 9 Feb. 16

1986 (8-1-1)

12th W, 279.10-265.20 L, 276.10-278.90 W, 273.95-264.30 L, 280.05-282.45 W, 270.40-269.20 W, 279.10-263.15 W, 276.35-275.85 W, 271.75-265.50 W, 276.95-275.25 W, 276.95-266.15 W, 284.45-124.90 3rd

1st W, 284.10-223.90 W, 281.60-275.50 W, 281.60-267.95 W, 288.15-280.75 L, 281.05-283.90 W, 286.80-270.65 W, 286.80-267.50 W, 286.80-265.30 W, 281.10-278.70 W, 281.10-270.20 W, 282.25-268.70 W, 284.00-275.70 W, 286.25-262.60 W, 283.55-271.60 3rd

1987 (12-0)

Head Coach: Karl Schier

Nov. 8-9 Dec. 5-6 Jan. 17

Metro Invitational (5) 1st Farmingdale Open (45) 1st at Syracuse W, 277.50-234.45 vs. Cornell (11) W, 277.50-229.75 Jan. 24 Southern Connecticut W, 280.55-255.55 Jan. 31 East Stroudsburg W, 281.15-254.65 Feb. 13 Southern Illinois W, 281.55-270.95 Feb. 22 at Ohio State W, 278.85-277.50 March 1 at Iowa W, 276.70-276.15 March 4 at Northern Illinois W, 279.25-268.85 March 7 at UIC W, 278.75-262.70 vs. Wisconsin (32) W, 278.75-267.35 March 14 Pittsburgh W, 284.95-249.05 March 21 Navy W, 284.00-272.40 April 23-25 NCAA Championships (30) 3rd

1988 (10-5)

Head Coach: Karl Schier

Jan. 15 Jan. 22 Jan. 24 Jan. 29

Syracuse at Southern Connecticut at East Stroudsburg UIC Temple Feb. 5 at Navy Feb. 13 Northern Illinois Feb. 20 Ohio State Feb. 26 at Southern Illinois March 2 at Houston Baptist March 5 at New Mexico vs. Illinois (33) vs Western Michigan (33) March 12 at Pittsburgh March 19 Iowa April 14-16 NCAA Championships (29)

1989 (10-4)

W, 265.70-256.35 L, 262.75-264.30 W, 272.45-255.75 W, 273.25-265.60 W, 273.25-266.50 L, 275.30-275.60 W, 279.75-274.65 L, 278.70-278.75 W, 271.45-257.35 W, 276.55-199.10 L, 271.35-279.70 L, 271.35-283.85 W, 371.35-260.40 W, 282.40-259.45 W, 284.25-283.50 10th

Head Coach: Karl Schier

Jan. 14 Jan. 20

at Syracuse W, 263.70-256.85 Southern Connecticut W, 268.20-244.70 East Stroudsburg W, 268.20-224.45 Jan. 27 New Mexico W, 266.95-133.30 Feb. 4 at Temple W, 269.25-260.30 vs. Navy (25) W, 269.25-265.65 Feb. 10 Navy W, 275.95-269.10 Feb. 18 at Ohio State L, 264.50-276.95 Feb. 25 Houston Baptist L, 270.85-281.50 Feb. 25 Southern Illinois W, 270.85-260.85 March 3 at Northern Illinois W, 272.20-267.25 vs. Iowa (34) L, 272.20-277.05 March 4 at UIC L, 270.30-270.40 March 18 Pittsburgh W, 270.25-258.05 April 13-15 NCAA Championships (29) 9th

1990 (9-3) Jan. 12 Jan. 26

Head Coach: Karl Schier

Syracuse Temple Kent State Feb. 2 at Iowa Feb. 10 Northern Illinois Feb. 17 Ohio State Feb. 24 at Pittsburgh March 2 at Houston Baptist vs. Oklahoma (35) March 11 UIC March 17 at Michigan State vs. UW-Oshkosh (16) April 7 NCAA Regionals April 19-21 NCAA Championships (36)

W, 270.55-265.55 W, 274.45-264.45 W, 274.45-264.00 L, 272.10-278.80 W, 275.60-270.45 L, 277.90-279.15 W, 274.95-260.65 W, 271.75-269.55 L, 271.75-271.85 W, 282.20-274.10 W, 277.00-274.85 W, 277.00-255.80 3rd 7th

Head Coach: Karl Schier

Metro Open (5) Syracuse at Southern Connecticut at East Stroudsburg Northern Illinois Temple Ohio State Iowa at Southern Illinois at Georgia at Pittsburgh NCAA Championships (29)

1st W, 271.85-237.50 W, 271.35-256.50 W, 271.45-253.40 W, 276.30-254.15 W, 276.30-260.85 W, 282.65-279.60 T, 277.65-277.65 L, 272.15-279.20 W, 278.45-268.05 W, 274.80-253.65 10th

12-TIME NATIONAL CHAMPIONS

1991 (11-4)

Head Coach: Karl Schier

Jan. 19 Jan. 26 Feb. 2 Feb. 9

at Syracuse Kent State Navy at Temple vs. Navy (25) vs. James Madison (25) Feb. 15 at Ohio State Feb. 23 Iowa March 6 at BYU March 9 Wooden Invitational (30) Oklahoma Stanford UCLA Cal State Fullerton Cal Santa Barbara March 16 Michigan State April 6 NCAA Regionals (27) April 18-20 NCAA Championships

1992 (12-3)

W, 276.90-267.25 W, 281.30-265.20 W, 279.50-263.95 W, 277.10-272.20 W, 277.10-257.30 W, 277.10-227.95 L, 279.15-281.00 W, 281.85-275.55 W, 279.40-277.35 4th L, 280.10-286.30 L, 280.10-284.80 L, 280.10-282.45 W, 280.10-273.60 W, 280.10-270.80 W, 283.55-274.80 2nd 2nd

Head Coach: Randy Jepson

Jan. 10-11 at West Point Open (1) 2nd Jan. 25 at Navy Invitational (5) 1st Temple W, 275.75-267.35 William & Mary W, 275.75-261.75 Kent State W, 275.75-260.70 at Navy W, 275.75-257.80 Feb. 1 Kent State W, 278.95-265.20 Feb 15 Ohio State L, 280.55-284.20 Feb. 22 at Illinois W, 281.35-278.35 Feb. 28 Temple W, 281.95-275.80 March 8 at Iowa L, 281.35-283.05 March 13 at Michigan State L, 281.05-281.60 March 14 at Michigan Invitational (10) 1st at Michigan W, 281.60-278.40 Kent State W, 281.60-273.75 Syracuse W, 281.60-273.35 Western Michigan W, 281.60-261.45 March 21 BYU W, 283.50-281.65 March 27-28 Big Ten Championships (13) 5th April 11 NCAA Regionals (31) 4th April 23-25 NCAA Championships (29) 7th

1993 (7-2)

Head Coach: Randy Jepson

Jan. 8-9 Jan. 15 Jan. 23

at West Point Open (1) 4th Syracuse W, 270.40-270.15 at Temple W, 272.70-269.30 vs. Kent State (25) W, 272.70-262.95 vs. Navy (25) W, 272.70-236.20 Jan. 30 Pittsburgh W, 268.60-250.88 Feb. 13 Michigan State W, 277.65-275.65 Feb. 20 Iowa W, 275.00-271.75 Feb. 27 at Ohio State L, 274.50-284.65 March 6 at Nebraska L, 274.50-281.35 March 20-21 Big Ten Championships (36) 6th April 3 NCAA East Regionals (13) 4th April 16-17 NCAA Championships (33) NTS

1994 (10-2) Dec. 10 Dec. 10 Dec. 10 Jan. 7-8 Jan. 15 Jan. 22 Feb. 11

Head Coach: Randy Jepson

Michigan Kent State Pittsburgh at West Point Open (1) at Syracuse Temple at Michigan State vs. Western Michigan (16) Feb. 12 at Michigan Feb. 26 Ohio State March 4 at BYU Michigan State (37) March 9 at Pittsburgh March 26-27 Big Ten Championships April 9 NCAA Regionals (1) April 22-23 NCAA Championship (6)

W, 272.50-262.75 W, 272.50-254.55 W, 272.50-252.80 2nd W, 279.20-269.95 W, 277.75-268.25 W, 275.55-272.45 W, 275.55-251.80 L, 277.05-278.85 L, 277.90-284.80 W, 276.90-270.65 W, 276.90-272.15 W, 270.85-257.70 3rd 3rd 6th



41


>>

YEAR-BY-YEAR RESULTS

1995 (38-6)

Head Coach: Randy Jepson

2022

Dec. 3

at MIT Invitational (19) 1st Temple W, 224.45-224.40 Michigan W, 224.45-218.22 Michigan State W, 224.45-218.12 Syracuse W, 224.45-216-15 Army W, 224.45-213.40 MIT W, 224.45-166.60 Vermont W, 224.45-170.40 Southern Connecticut W, 224.45-155.10 Jan. 13 at West Point Open (1) 2nd Temple L, 221.35-221.45 Syracuse W, 221.35-219.40 Army W, 221.35-215.60 Navy W, 221.35-213.25 Massachusetts W, 221.35-207.75 James Madison W, 221.35-204.75 Springfield W, 221.35-200.00 Radford W, 221.35-194.00 Southern Connecticut W, 221.35-098.35 Jan. 21 at Navy Invitational (5) 1st Pittsburgh W, 224.75-213.45 James Madison W, 224.75-212.15 William & Mary W, 224.75-208.85 Radford W, 224.75-199.80 Feb. 10 Nebraska W, 227.95-226.50 Feb. 18 at Ohio State L, 229.20-229.85 vs. New Mexico (27) W, 229.20-228.35 Feb. 25 Michigan State W, 228.95-218.65 March 5 at Temple L, 221.35-221.45 vs. Syracuse (25) W, 221.35-219.40 March 11 at Michigan Invitational 1st Michigan W, 229.60-227.70 Temple W, 229.60-227.60 UIC W, 229.60-227.10 Western Michigan W, 229.60-222.40 March 18 BYU W, 228.85-225.35 Army W, 228.85-220.20 March 25-26 Big Ten Championships (13) 4th April 8 NCAA Regionals 1st April 20-22 NCAA Championships (27) 3rd

1996 (30-7)

Head Coach: Randy Jepson

Dec. 2 at UMass Invitational (19) 2nd Jan. 12-13 at West Point Open (1) 1st Jan. 19-20 at Windy City Open (9) 4th Jan. 26 Temple W, 223.35-213.35 Feb. 10 at Illinois W, 224.85-222.95 Feb. 17 Ohio State L, 225.00-227.85 March 7 at BYU L, 222.50-224.25 vs. Michigan State (3) W, 222.50-221.50 vs. Michigan (3) W, 222.50-207.50 March 15 Army W, 226.40-217.025 March 15 Michigan W, 226.40-206.70 March 30-31 Big Ten Championships (27) 3rd April 13 NCAA Regionals (31) 3rd April 25-27 NCAA Championships (38) 6th

1997 (16-6)

Head Coach: Randy Jepson

Jan. 10-11 at West Point Open (1) 2nd Jan. 18 at Windy City Open (9) 4th Jan. 25 Syracuse W, 224.40-208.65 Feb. 1 at Michigan State W, 226.95-225.13 Feb. 8 Illinois W, 229.55-224.15 Feb. 21 at Ohio State L, 228.35-234.45 March 1 New Mexico W, 228.975-224.675 March 13 at Temple W, 226.70-223.60 vs. Navy (25) W, 226.70-219.20 March 16 at Nebraska L, 228.45-230.00 March 22-23 Big Ten Championships (36) 3rd April 5 NCAA Regionals (1) 3rd April 17-19 NCAA Championships (31) 5th

42

1998 (19-3)

Head Coach: Randy Jepson

2001 (12-5)

Head Coach: Randy Jepson

Jan. 9-10 at West Point Open (1) 1st Temple W, 219.975-219.15 Navy W, 219.975-210.10 Massachusetts W, 219.975-209.25 Army W, 219.975-200.80 Cal Santa Barbara W, 219.975-200.10 James Madison W, 219.975-185.00 Syracuse W, 219.975-179.40 Southern Connecticut W, 219.975-153.30 Jan. 16 Temple W, 226.625-218.625 Massachusetts W, 226.625-216.55 Jan. 24 at Michigan W, 226.15-223.80 vs. Iowa (10) L, 226.15-228.40 Jan. 31 at Illinois L, 224.80-226.975 vs. Michigan (13) W, 224.80-223.05 Feb. 7 Michigan State W, 227.125-225.00 Feb. 21 Ohio State W, 230.55-227.225 March 7 Gold’s Challenge (39) 2nd March 14 at Nebraska W, 231.15-230.025 March 20-21 Big Ten Championships (10) 2nd April 4 NCAA Regionals (19) 4th April 16-18 NCAA Championships (6) NTS

Jan. 13 at Massachusetts L, 202.155-204.65 Jan. 19-20 at West Point Open (1) 1st Massachusetts W, 205.40-198.05 Temple W, 205.40-195.05 Army W, 205.40-193.95 Navy W, 205.40-192.25 Springfield W, 205.40-180.65 James Madison W, 205.40-176.40 Southern Connecticut W, 205.40-167.25 Jan. 27 Army W, 208.45-199.90 Feb. 3 Michigan L, 207.65-209.50 Feb. 17 at Temple W, 204.65-202.00 vs. William & Mary (25) W, 204.650-200.30 Feb. 24 at Ohio State L, 208.20-217.20 March 3 at Southwest Cup (40) 3rd Oklahoma L, 208.925-215.25 Michigan State L, 208.95-210.40 Stanford W. 208.95-205.425 March 18 Michigan State W, 213.20-187.55 March 23-24 Big Ten Championships (6) 3rd April 4-5 NCAA Championships (27) 5th

1999 (17-3)

Jan. 11-12 at West Point Open (1) 1st Massachusetts W, 209.50-204.00 Temple W, 209.50-199.45 Army W, 209.50-199.05 Navy W, 209.50-197.05 Springfield W, 209.50-190.55 Southern Connecticut W, 209.50-180.80 James Madison W, 209.50-172.95 Jan. 19 Massachusetts W, 212.90-208.20 Jan. 26 at Michigan W, 212.25-209.70 Feb. 2 Illinois W, 215.60-213.95 Feb. 16 Temple W, 213.55-207.75 Feb. 23 Ohio State L, 216.225-216.325 March 2 at Southwest Cup (4) Cal Santa Barbara W, 215.95-208.40 March 9 at Navy W, 215.30-204.00 March 16 Army W, 215.60-204.15 March 22 at Big Ten Championships (36) 3rd April 5-6 at NCAA Championsips (41) NTS

Head Coach: Randy Jepson

Jan. 8-9 Jan. 16 Jan. 23

at West Point Open (1) 1st at Massachusetts W, 225.675-223.65 at Temple W, 228.75-212.00 vs. William & Mary (25) W, 228.75-213.85 Feb. 5 Michigan W, 226.50-226.175 Feb. 13 Army W, 228.45-207.00 Feb. 20 Illinois W, 224.20-222.90 Feb. 27 at Ohio State L, 228.05-230.95 March 6 at UC Santa Barbara Invitational (39) 2nd UC Santa Barbara W, 223.95-214.825 Michigan L, 223.95-226.40 California W, 223.95-223.40 Washington W, 223.95-191.75 March 14 at Nebraska L, 226.875-228.975 March 26-27 Big Ten Championships (31) 4th April 10 NCAA Regionals (13) 3rd April 22-24 NCAA Championships (29) 4th

2000 (14-1)

Head Coach: Randy Jepson

Jan. 7-8

at West Point Open (1) 1st Massachusetts W, 228.85213.90 Temple W, 228.85-212.40 Army W, 228.85-208.50 Navy W, 228.85-201.65 Springfield W, 228.85-189.70 James Madison W, 228.85-183.80 Southern Connecticut W, 228.85-181.55 Jan. 15 Massachusetts W, 224.35-214.20 Jan. 22 Temple W, 228.375-215.45 Feb. 4 at Michigan L, 227.30-230.55 vs. Minnesota (10) W, 227.30-223.425 Feb. 19 at Illinois W, 227.00-224.85 Feb. 26 Ohio State W, 229.025-228.50 March 4 Nebraska W, 231.05-223.70 March 10 at Southwest Cup (40) 1st Oklahoma W, 230.35-230.10 March 17 Big Ten Championships (16) 6th March 30-31 NCAA Championships (31) 1st



12-TIME NATIONAL CHAMPIONS

2002 (14-1)

2003 (16-0) Jan. 10

Head Coach: Randy Jepson

Head Coach: Randy Jepson

at West Point Open (1) 1st Temple W, 208.40-207.30 Army W, 208.40-203.55 Springfield W, 208.40-193.95 Southern Connecticut W, 208.40-184.90 Jan. 18 at Navy Open 1st William & Mary W, 217.25-199.65 Navy W, 217.25-193.60 James Madison W, 217.25-177.55 Jan. 25 Michigan W, 219.40-210.35 Feb. 7-8 Winter Cup (43) NTS Feb. 15 at Temple W, 216.95-207.45 vs. Illinois (25) W, 216.95-213.35 Feb. 22 Ohio State W, 220.00-216.875 March 1 at Illinois W, 217.25-216.45 vs. Iowa (13) W, 217.25-213.75 March 8 at Southwest Cup (4) 1st Illinois W, 219.30-214.075 Temple W, 219.30-209.725 March 15 Army W, 221.525-210.575 March 28 at Big Ten Championships (27) 1st April 13 NCAA Championships (4) 3rd


<<

YEAR-BY-YEAR RESULTS 2004 (16-1)

Head Coach: Randy Jepson

Jan. 10

at Army W, 215.60-206.55 vs. Springfield (1) W, 215.60-195.15 Jan. 17 Illinois W, 219.15-212.775 Jan. 23 at Michigan L, 212.00-215.725 Jan. 30-31 at West Point Open (1) 1st Nebraska W, 214.625-210.90 Army W, 214.625-208.70 Temple W, 214.625-206.15 Navy W, 214.625-200.35 Springfield W, 214.625-198.70 James Madison W, 214.625-188.00 Southern Connecticut W, 214.625-187.40 M.I.T W, 214.625-142.90 Feb. 6-7 at Winter Cup (43) NTS Feb. 14 Temple W, 213.225-206.975 Feb. 21 at Ohio State W, 218.80-218.75 Feb. 28 William & Mary W, 216.475-207.275 March 6 at Stanford W, 216.35-214.575 March 13 Army W, 218.800-207.475 March 19-20 Big Ten Championships (13) 2nd April 2-4 NCAA Championships (13) 1st

2005 (14-2)

Head Coach: Randy Jepson

Jan. 8 Jan. 21

at Army W, 217.05-207.85 Navy W, 216.875-207.325 Temple W, 216.975-203.50 Jan. 28-29 at West Point Open (1) 1st Iowa W, 217.75-216.375 Nebraska W, 217.75-210.80 Army W, 217.75-209.45 Temple W, 217.75-205.825 Navy W, 217.75-203.00 William & Mary W, 217.75-202.15 Springfield W, 217.75-193.75 James Madison W, 217.75-192.15 M.I.T. W, 217.75-169.30 Feb. 4-5 at Winter Cup (43) NTS Feb. 12 at Illinois L, 221.35-221.825 Feb. 19 Michigan W, 222.60-219.575 Feb. 26 Ohio State L, 215.50-222.075 March 12 at William &Mary W, 219.40-214.15 March 25-26 Big Ten Championships (10) 4th April 7-9 NCAA Championships (1) 4th

2006 (11-2)

Head Coach: Randy Jepson

Jan. 7 at Army W, 206.650-199.150 Jan. 13 Temple W, 202.450-190.050 Jan. 21 at Michigan W, 209.400-206.450 Jan. 27-28 at West Point Open (1) 1st Army W, 206.750-199.500 Temple W, 206.750-197.050 Navy W, 206.750-196.600 Springfield W, 206.750-182.700 M.I.T. W, 206.750-172.650 James Madison W, 206.750-171.050 Feb. 2-4 at Winter Cup (43) NTS Feb. 19 Stanford W, 216.800-216.750 Feb. 25 at Ohio State L, 216.300-209.050 March 4 William & Mary W, 213.550-205.100 March 11 at California L, 219.100-216.525 March 24-25 Big Ten Championships (10) 5th April 6-8 NCAA Championships (1) 4th

2007 (15-2)

Head Coach: Randy Jepson

Jan. 13 Jan. 21

Army W, 214.200-192.650 at Temple Invitational (25) 1st Temple W, 210.225-198.600 William & Mary W, 210.225-190.850 James Madison W, 210.225-160.300 Jan. 26-27 at West Point Open (1) 1st Temple W, 214.700-205.500 Army W, 214.700-199.500 Navy W, 214.700-197.750 Springfield W, 214.700-190.250 M.I.T. W, 214.700-185.050 James Madison W, 214.700-174.100 Feb. 3 Michigan L, 215.800-216.750 Feb. 8-10 at Winter Cup (43) NTS Feb. 17 Illinois W, 220.150-205.250 Feb. 24 Ohio State W, 218.150-215.600 March 3 at William & Mary W, 212.800-191.750 vs. Navy (47) W, 212.800-191.700 March 10 at Stanford L, 214.800-216.700 vs. Iowa (38) W, 214.800-204.750 March 30-31 Big Ten Championships (36) 2nd April 12-14 NCAA Championships (6) 1st

2011 (13-2)

Head Coach: Randy Jepson

Jan. 8 Jan. 14

Army W, 343.300-319.100 at West Point Open (1) 1st Temple W, 347.000-328.300 Army W, 347.000-320.000 Navy W, 347.000-319.600 Springfield W, 347.000-319.400 Jan. 22 Michigan W, 350.400-346.900 Jan. 30 at Temple W, 351.600-341.400 vs. Army (25) W, 351.600-259.500 Feb. 12 Springfield W, 352.300-316.300 Feb. 19 at Illinois W, 352.100-351.000 Feb. 26 Ohio State W, 353.500-342.500 March 5 at Minnesota W, 351.600-344.600 vs. Iowa (36) W, 351.600-333.800 March 19 at Oklahoma L, 366.400-356.750 vs. Illinois (41) L, 359.100-356.750 April 1 Big Ten Championships (13) 4th April 15 NCAA Championships (27) 6th

2012 (12-1)

Head Coach: Randy Jepson

Army W, 358.500-333.600 at Michigan L, 356.950-354.300 Temple W, 353.350-337.350 Minnesota W, 354.200-343.450 at Winter Cup (43) NTS at Illinois W, 352.300-351.000 at Ohio State W, 360.550-353.050 William & Mary W, 357.700-338.900 Navy W, 357.700-336.700 March 15 at California L, 360.400-351.300 March 22 Oklahoma L, 357.850-356.650 April 4-5 Big Ten Championships (6) 1st April 17-19 NCAA Championships (38) 4th

Army W, 349.800-321.600 at Michigan L, 340.300-338.450 West Point Open (1) 1st Temple W, 352.000-342.300 Army W, 352.000-326.200 Navy W, 352.000-324.000 Springfield College W, 352.000-322.200 Arizona State W, 352.000-318.900 Brockport W, 352.000-247.300 Feb. 2-4 Winter Cup (43) NTS Feb. 12 at Springfield College W, 350.500-323.500 Feb. 18 Illinois W, 347.800-346.500 Feb. 25 at Ohio State W, 355.500-347.200 March 17 Minnesota W, 359.300-347.900 March 24 Temple W, 360.600-342.200 April 6-7 Big Ten Championships (31) 3rd April 19-20 NCAA Championships (42) 3rd

2009 (11-4)

2013 (13-0)

2008 (7-3)

Head Coach: Randy Jepson

Jan. 12 Jan. 19 Jan. 26 Feb. 2 Feb. 7-9 Feb. 16 Feb. 24 March 8

Head Coach: Randy Jepson

Jan. 10 Jan. 16

Jan. 14 Jan. 21 Jan. 27

Head Coach: Randy Jepson

Army W, 344.250-309.550 at West Point Open (1) 1st Navy W, 345.200-329.150 Temple W, 345.200-328.050 Springfield W, 345.200-326.200 Army W, 345.200-317.750 MIT W, 345.200-312.900 Jan. 24 Michigan W, 348.900-348.350 Jan. 31 at Minnesota L, 345.850-344.500 Feb. 14 at Illinois L, 345.500-339.800 Feb. 28 Ohio State W, 347.600-346.500 March 6 at Temple W, 347.550-332.300 March 8 at William & Mary W, 347.850-340.050 vs. Navy (47) W, 347.850-336.450 March 14 California L, 355.150-353.800 March 21 at Oklahoma L, 366.850-356.300 April 3 Big Ten Championships (36) 5th April 16 NCAA Championships (6) NTS

Jan. 14 Jan. 19

2010 (8-5)

Jan. 11 Army W, 431.900 - 410.300 Jan. 17-18 at West Point Open (1) 1st Army W, 428.100-413.050 Navy W, 428.100-400.800 Springfield College W, 428.100-388.950 Temple W, 428.100-398.650 William & Mary W, 428.100-416.700 Jan. 25 at Navy Open (5) 1st Navy W, 420.900-408.10 Springfield W, 420.900-391.80 Temple W, 420.900-398.05 William & Mary W, 420.900-414.25 Feb. 8 Temple W, 431.550-401.600 Feb. 15 Illinois* W, 436.050-431.150 Feb. 20-22 at Winter Cup (43) NTS March 1 Minnesota* W, 440.200-431.500 March 7 at Puerto Rico 2nd Puerto Rico W, 428.550-405.450 Michigan L, 438.800-428.550 March 14 at Michigan* L, 439.200-432.000 March 28-29 at Big Ten Championships (29) 3rd April 10-12 NCAA Championships (10) 6th

Head Coach: Randy Jepson

Jan. 9 Jan. 15

Army W, 341.000-314.350 at West Point Open (1) 1st Temple W, 349.850-338.700 Springfield W, 349.850-329.000 Army W, 349.850-321.850 Navy W, 349.850-317.750 Jan. 24 at Michigan L, 355.650-344.750 Jan. 31 William & Mary W, 341.450-321.400 Feb. 20 Illinois L, 354.600-345.950 Feb. 27 at Ohio State W, 353.600-347.100 March 6 Minnesota W, 350.150-348.250 Temple W, 350.150-330.900 March 13 at California L, 354.650-344.300 March 20 Oklahoma L, 359.250-354.450 April 3 Big Ten Championships (27) 3rd April 16 NCAA Championships (1) 8th

12-TIME NATIONAL CHAMPIONS

Army W, 447.850-404.150 at Navy Open (5) 1st William & Mary W, 440.900-409.400 Temple W, 440.900-407.050 Navy W, 440.900-398.800 Springfield College W, 440.900-391.150 Brockport W, 440.900-165.750 Feb. 2 Ohio State W, 444.300-432.300 Feb. 7-9 Winter Cup (43) NTS Feb. 16 at Temple W, 446.550-421.300 vs. William & Mary (25) W, 446.550-417.750 Feb. 23 at Springfield College W, 446.850-403.300 March 2 at Illinois W, 438.900-436.250 March 16 Michigan W, 437.300-430.400 March 23 at Minnesota W, 433.650-428.000 April 5 Big Ten Championships (36) 2nd April 19-21 NCAA Championships (6) 4th

2014 (14-2)

Head Coach: Randy Jepson

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YEAR-BY-YEAR RESULTS 2015 (12-3)

Head Coach: Randy Jepson

Jan. 11 Army W, 426.700-403.000 Jan. 16-17 at West Point Open (1) 1st Army W, 439.400-416.150 Temple W, 439.400-402.050 Jan. 24 Michigan * W, 444.700-436.350 Feb. 6 Ohio State * W, 443.600-431.400 Feb. 14 at Illinois L, 441.300-434.500 Feb. 19-21 at Winter Cup (43) NTS Feb. 27 Iowa * W, 440.800-435.750 March 6 at Puerto Rico 2nd Michigan L, 431.000-425.100 Puerto Rico W, 425.100-395.700 Temple W, 425.100-394.650 March 15 at Nebraska 2nd Minnesota * L, 434.000-432.100 Iowa * W, 432-100-429.250 Nebraska * W, 432.100-426.050 March 27-28 at Big Ten Championships (29) 1st, 436.700 April 9-11 at NCAA Championships (10) 3rd, 432.900

2016 (10-4) Jan. 9 Jan. 15-16

Jan. 23 Jan. 30 Feb. 13 Feb. 18-20

Feb. 27 March 4 March 11 March 19 April 1-2 April 15-16

Head Coach: Randy Jepson

Army W, 424.450-403.400 at West Point Open (1) 1st, 424.850 at Minnesota L, 432.750-418.500 Illinois W, 430.200-429.200 at Ohio State L, 444.500-433.250 at Winter Cup (43) NTS at Iowa w/Nebraska 2nd, 424.000 at Arizona State W, 430.450-413.700 Nebraska W, 433.600-431.100 at Michigan L, 431.650-420.700 at Big Ten Championships (27) 4th, 427.150 at NCAA Championships (27) 5th, 424.400

2017 (11-4)

2020 (10-3)

Head Coach: Randy Jepson

Jan. 10-11 at West Point Open (1) Jan. 18 at Army West Point Jan. 25 Ohio State Feb. 1 at Air Force Feb. 15 William & Mary Feb. 29 at Nebraska March 7 at Illinois vs. Michigan

1st of 7, 403.400 W, 390.350-372.600 W, 405.900-405.000 W, 399.600-375.800 W, 403.750-381.100 L, 406.950-403.200 L, 406.900-402.200 L, 404.100-402.200

--2020 season was cancelled on March 12 due to COVID 19

2021 (4-4)

Head Coach: Randy Jepson

Jan. 16 Army^ Jan. 31 Illinois* Feb. 7 Nebraska* Feb. 14 at Ohio State* Feb. 20 at Iowa* Feb. 27 Navy^ March 6 at Minnesota* March 20 Michigan* Apr. 3 at B1G Championships Apr. 16-17 at NCAA Prelims

W, 383.650-355.200 W, 399.300-399.150 W, 406.900-403.050 L, 405.500-403.900 L, 398.850-393.550 W, 403.600-398.600 L, 404.300-398.250 L, 414.200-400.500 5th, 396.800 4th, 402.356

^ Virtual meet

Head Coach: Randy Jepson

at West Point Open (1) 1st, 412.350 Army W, 414.200-396.050 at Springfield W, 408.100-384.550 Illinois L, 411.350-404.650 Ohio State L, 419.150-417.750 Feb 16&18 at Winter Cup NTS Feb. 25 at Navy W, 409.400-399.250 March 4 at Nebraska w/Iowa 3rd, 409.600 March 18 Michigan W, 409.200-405.300 March 25 Iowa W, 420.400-414.000 April 7-8 at Big Ten Championships (14) 4th, 411.200 April 21 at NCAA Champ Qualifier (1) 4th, 410.500

2022

Jan. 13-14 Jan. 21 Jan. 29 Feb. 3 Feb. 11

2018 (15-6)

Head Coach: Randy Jepson

Jan. 13-14 at West Point Open (1) 1st, 406.850 Jan. 20 Army West Point W, 407.600-384.100 Jan. 27 Illinois (DD) L, 412.500-405.900 Feb. 9 at Ohio State W, 417.400-414.900 Feb. 15,17 at Winter Cup NTS Feb. 24 Minnesota (DD) L, 404.350-402.400 Mach. 3 at Iowa 2nd, 396.550 March 10 at Arizona State 1st, 402.450 March 17 Nebraska L, 404.500-401.500 March 24 at Michigan W, 407.350-405.050 April 6-7 Big Ten Championships (10) 3rd,406.350 Apr. 20-21 NCAA Championships (32) 6th, 401.991

2019 (16-4)

Head Coach: Randy Jepson

Jan. 11-12 at West Point Open (1) 1st of 7, 407.500 Jan. 19 at Army West Point W, 396.500-390.800 Jan. 26 Nebraska W, 409.700-395.000 Feb. 10 at UIC W, 395.450-356.550 vs. Springfield W, 395.450-372.900 Feb. 23 Navy W, 410.300-393.950 Air Force W, 410.300-392.650 March 2 at Ohio State L, 413.25-409.00 March 9 at Arizona State 1st of 5, 402.100 March 15 Illinois W, 407.800-406.90 Michigan L, 409.55-407.800 March 23 at Minnesota L, 410.950-398.200 vs. Iowa L, 406.350-398.200 April 5-6 Big Ten Championships (31) 1st of 7, 410.350 April 19-20 NCAA Championships (13) 6th of 6, 399.725 (1) at Army, West Point, N.Y.; (2) Princeton, N.J.; (3) Boston, Mass.; (4) Philadelphia, Pa.; (5) at U.S. Naval Academy, Annapolis, Md.; (6) at Penn State University, University Park, Pa.; (7) New York, N.Y.; (8) Dallas, Texas; (9) Chicago, Ill.; (10) at University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich.; (11) at Syracuse University, Syracuse, N.Y.; (12) Boulder, Colo.; (13) at University of Illinois, Champaign, Ill.; (14) Los Angeles, Calif.; (15) at University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N.C.; (16) at Michigan State University, East Lansing, Mich.; (17) Pittsburgh, Pa.; (18) Berkeley, Calif.; (19) at University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Mass.; (20) Ames, Iowa; (21) at University of Oregon, Eugene, Ore.; (22) at Cornell University, Cornell, N.Y.; (23) at Southern Illinois University, Carbondale, Ill.; (24) at Indiana State University, Terre Haute, Ind.; (25) at Temple University, Philadelphia, Pa.; (26) at Illinois State University, Normal, Ill.; (27) at Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio; (28) at LSU, Baton Rouge, La.; (29) at University of Nebraska, Lincoln, Neb.; (30) at UCLA, Los Angeles, Calif.; (31) at University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa; (32), at University of Chicago, Chicago, Ill.; (33) at University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, N.M.; (34) at Northern Illinois University, DeKalb, Ill.; (35) at Houston Baptist University, Houston, Texas; (36) at University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minn.; (37) at BYU, Provo, Utah; (38) at Stanford University, Palo Alto, Calif.; (39) at University of California at Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, Calif.; (40), Tempe, Ariz.; (41) Oklahoma University, Norman, Okla; (42) Springfield, Mass.; (43) Las Vegas, Nev.; (44) at Ball State University, Muncie, Ind.; (45) SUNY-Farmingdale, East Farmingdale, N.Y.; (46) York University, Toronto, Canada; (47) College of William &

44

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12-TIME NATIONAL CHAMPIONS


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SERIES HISTORY/CAPTAINS YEAR-BY-YEAR

ALL-TIME DUAL SERIES RECORDS Opponent Air Force Arizona State Army BYU California Chicago Colgate Cornell Dartmouth East Stroudsburg Georgia Houston Baptist Illinois Indiana Indiana State Iowa James Madison Kent State Kutztown LSU Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Michigan State Minnesota MIT Navy Nebraska New Mexico North Carolina NC State Northern Illinois

W 2 3 44 4 0 3 1 3 1 5 3 2 16 1 7 10 1 5 1 3 1 17 13 13 11 3 41 7 2 2 2 9

L 0 0 18 0 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 10 0 4 8 0 0 0 1 0 1 12 1 7 0 11 5 1 0 0 2

T 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

1st Mtng 1966 2016 1932 1985 2006 1941 1931 1973 1940 1985 1984 1988 1936 1943 1975 1986 1991 1990 1939 1980 1951 1964 1958 1949 1941 1940 1937 1983 1988 1951 1983 1980

Opponent Ohio State Oklahoma Panzer Pittsburgh Princeton Slippery Rock Southern Connecticut Southern Illinois Springfield College Stanford Syracuse Temple UIC West Chester West Virginia Western Michigan Western Reserve William & Mary Wisconsin UW-Oshkosh York (Canada) Totals

W 20 0 1 39 4 1 15 10 22 2 39 58 9 1 10 2 1 10 1 1 4 477

L 13 5 0 0 1 0 7 3 3 1 4 10 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 127

T 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2

1st Mtng. 1976 1990 1935 1955 1939 1975 1969 1977 1961 2004 1947 1937 1980 1938 1954 1988 1938 1984 1987 1990 1976

Records do not include invitationals or opens BOLD - denotes 2022 opponent

ALL-TIME TEAM CAPTAINS 1931 1932 1933 1934 1935 1936 1937 1938 1939 1940 1941 1942 1943 1944 1945 1946 1947 1948 1949 1950 1951 1952 1953 1954 1955 1956 1957 1958 1959 1960 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965

R. G. Thrasher H. W. Davidson M. J. Hesch D.H. Masters D. H. Masters Peter Lektrich R. A. Mattern S. E. Beck Raymond J. Runkle Albert Kligman M. G. Beck B. H. Stahl Charles E. Senft Louis J. Bordo Harold Frey Harold Frey Harold Frey Raymond S. Sorenson Raymond S. Sorenson William Bonsall Joseph A. Mirenzi Rudolph Valentino Owen Wilkinson Robert B. Kenyon Albert W. Wick, Frank M. Wick Karl K. Schwenzfeier Hugh F. Kline Dion E. Weissend Robert E. Foht Armando Vega Jay Werner Robert Mumau Gregor R. Weiss Tom Seward Mike Jacobson Mike Jacobson Pete Saponaro

1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000

Ed Isabelle Steve Cohen Don Spiker Bob Emery John Kindon Tom Dunn Tom Dunn Billy Mitchell Marshall Avener Jim Kruest Steve Bazil Paul Fagan Ira Stolzer Kurt Pflieger Bob Desiderio Tony Muffoletto Dan Desiderio Tom Forster Randy Jepson Steve Marino Kenn Viscardi Terry Bartlett Mario Gonzalez Chris Laux Marcelo Ribeiro Kurt Schier Mark Sohn Jamie Downer Rich Briggs Mike Masucci Jim Delaney Dave Riordan Tony Pansy Roy Malka Joe Roemer Roy Malka Tim Lashua Dominic Brindle

2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022

Dominic Brindle Adam Benas Jose Palacios Duke Van Vleet Steve Tobin Chad Buczek Matt Cohen Santiago Lopez Josh Borromeo Allen Harris Matt Albrecht Miguel Pineda Parker Raque Adrian Evans Tristan Duverglas Leroy Clarke Jr. Dominic DiFulvio Ben Cooperman Chris Sands Brayden Borromeo Brennan Pantazis Andres Perez Gines

12-TIME NATIONAL CHAMPIONS

National Year W L T Finish 1931 1 0 0 — 1932 0 1 0 — 1933 0 2 0 — 1934 0 1 0 — 1935 1 1 0 — 1936 0 2 0 — 1937 0 3 0 — 1938 2 3 0 — 1939 2 3 0 — 1940 3 3 0 — 1941 5 2 0 — 1942 4 1 1 2nd 1943 4 0 0 1st 1944 0 2 0 — 1945 1 0 0 1st 1946 2 0 0 — 1947 5 0 0 — 1948 5 0 0 1st 1949 1 4 0 — 1950 1 4 0 12th 1951 3 3 0 11th 1952 4 1 0 9th 1953 6 0 0 1st 1954 6 0 0 1st 1955 6 1 0 2nd 1956 5 1 0 2nd 1957 6 0 0 1st 1958 6 1 0 3rd 1959 7 0 0 1st 1960 5 1 0 1st 1961 5 1 0 1st 1962 5 1 0 8th 1963 5 1 0 4th 1964 7 1 0 4th 1965 8 0 0 1st 1966 8 0 0 6th 1967 6 1 0 4th 1968 7 0 0 — 1969 8 0 0 2nd 1970 7 2 0 — 1971 8 0 0 3rd 1972 8 0 0 3rd 1973 9 1 0 2nd 1974 9 1 0 7th 1975 5 3 0 — 1976 7 1 0 1st 1977 5 3 0 — 1978 7 2 0 6th 1979 9 1 0 6th 1980 7 3 0 8th 1981 7 3 0 6th 1982 11 0 0 3rd 1983 9 2 0 3rd 1984 13 2 0 2nd 1985 13 1 0 3rd 1986 8 1 1 10th 1987 12 0 0 3rd 1988 10 5 0 10th 1989 10 4 0 9th 1990 9 3 0 7th 1991 11 4 0 2nd 1992 12 3 0 7th 1993 7 2 0 — 1994 10 2 0 — 1995 6 2 0 3rd 1996 6 2 0 6th 1997 6 2 0 5th 1998 11 3 0 — 1999 9 3 0 4th 2000 14 1 0 1st 2001 12 5 0 5th 2002 14 1 0 8th 2003 16 0 0 3rd 2004 16 1 0 1st 2005 14 2 0 4th 2006 11 2 0 4th 2007 15 2 0 1st 2008 7 3 0 4th 2009 11 4 0 7th 2010 8 5 0 8th 2011 13 2 0 6th 2012 12 1 0 3rd 2013 13 0 0 4th 2014 14 2 0 6th 2015 12 3 0 3rd 2016 10 4 0 5th 2017 11 4 0 Qualifier 2018 15 6 0 6th 2019 16 4 0 6th 2020 10 3 0 N/A 2021 4 4 0 Qualifier Totals 679 165 2

Head Coach Rammacher Rammacher Walke Walke Walke Walke Glasser Bischoff Wettstone Wettstone Wettstone Wettstone Wettstone Wettstone Wettstone Wettstone Wettstone Wettstone Wettstone Wettstone Wettstone Wettstone Wettstone Wettstone Wettstone Wettstone Wettstone Wettstone Wettstone Wettstone Wettstone Wettstone Wettstone Wettstone Wettstone Wettstone Wettstone Wettstone Wettstone Wettstone Wettstone Wettstone Wettstone Wettstone Wettstone Wettstone Schier Schier Schier Schier Schier Schier Schier Schier Schier Schier Schier Schier Schier Schier Schier Jepson Jepson Jepson Jepson Jepson Jepson Jepson Jepson Jepson Jepson Jepson Jepson Jepson Jepson Jepson Jepson Jepson Jepson Jepson Jepson Jepson Jepson Jepson Jepson Jepson Jepson Jepson Jepson Jepson Jepson

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LETTERWINNERS

2022

A Abboud, Matt Abraham, Karl Albrecht, Matt Ambrozy, Michael Alvarez, Raymond Anderson, E Anderson, Ralph Anderson, Robert Antonio, Shaun Arnold, Douglas Aronovich, Felix Artlip, Michael Aser, Glenn Atkins, Brandt Atkins, George Avener, Marshall

2000-03 1987-88, 90 2009-11 1985-88 2003 1942 1934-35 1950 2006-09 1975 2010-13 2021-pres. 1985-86 1971-73 1974 1971-73

B Baffa, John 1952-54 Baldwin, Jack 2018-2021 Barclay, G 1943 Bartlett, Terry 1982-85 Bayuk, Edward 1968-69 Beck, Merrell 1938-40 Beck, Samuel 1936-38 Beck, Tony 2010-13 Beigel, Danny 1996-99 Benas, Adam 1998-2000, 02 Benner, David 1949-51 Berliner, Jermone 1947 Bernstein, William, (V-12) 1944 Besong, Patrick 1978-80 Bice, Blair 1962 Biesterfeldt, Herman 1956-57 Bizal, Steven 1973-75 Blaha, Wesley 1952 Bonet, Paul 1990 Bond, Charles (V-12) 1944 Bonsall, William 1943-49 Booth, Kaleb 2020-pres. Bordo, L 1941-43 Borromeo, Brayden 2017-20 Borromeo, Josh 2006-09 Boudreau, Robert 1953-56 Bowman, Matt 2004-06 Boyle, Joseph 2015-17 Bray, George 1967-68 Bressler, Scott 1969-70 Briggs, Rich 1990-93 Brindle, Dominic 1998-01 Brunning, John 1962 Bruns, Greg 2009 Bryant, C. W. 1934 Bryant, Tyson 1994-97 Buhl, Bernard 1960 Bunes, Len 1968-70 Burbar, Wasef 2011-14 Burns, Michael 1978-80 Burns, Michael 2016-2019 Burt, Paul 1978-79 Burtnett, Tom 1963-65 Bush, J 1942 Butler, Larry 1973-76 Buczek, Chad 2003-06

46

C Campell, Thomas Capetola, Louis Card, Franz Carnahan, Cody Carton, Adam Chandler, Frank Chase, David Chelberg, Matt Cherry, Ray Christie, Albert Chu, Jason Clark, James Clark, Tom Clarke Jr., Leroy Clayton, Parker Cline, Hugh Clingman, Chase Close, Guy Coates, Colin Coggeshall, David Cohen, Steve Cohen, Matt Cohn, Sol Coller, John Collins, Doug Cooper, Jesse Cooper, Mark Cooperman, Benjamin Corbin, William Cormier, Matt Corrigan, Jim Cowden, Tabor Cowden, Wayne Cowen, Graeme Cressman, George Creveling, Benson Criley, Richard Cronstedt, Jean Crumlish, John Culhane, Jim Cunningham, Lee Curtiss, Dan D Dailey, Mike Darling, Timothy Davidson, H. W. Delaney, Jim DeSantis, Martin Desiderio, Daniel Desiderio, Robert Dick, Ethan Diliberto, Joseph Dillon, William DiFulvio, Dominic Donahue, John Donatelli, Frank Donohue, Kevin Douglass, David Dorfman, Richard Dow, Mackenzie Downer, Jamie Downer, Michael Drass, Rob Dries, Don Dulaney, David Duncan, Donald Dunn, Tom Dutka, Mike Duverglas, Tristan



1951 1962 2014-17 2007 1988-92 1975-76 1966-67 2010-13 1962-64 1949-50 2008 1947-48 1968-70 2014-17 2018-2021 1954-56 2020-pres. 1937 2015-18 1966-67 1965-67 2004-07 1956 1956 1964-66 1973-76 1992-95 2015-18 1960 2021-pres. 1968-70 1991 1989-92 1958-60 1939 1939 1960-61 1952-54 1983 1963-65 1958-60 1964

1984-86 1982 1931-32 1990-94 1966-68 1977-80 1975-79 2021-pres. 1974-75 1971-73 2014-17 1958, 1961 1958 2000-03 1951 1974 2010-13 1988, 1990-91 1989 1988-90 1966 1957-59 1939 1969-71 1996, 1998 2012-15

E Eddy, Gerald (V-12) Ekman, Tobias Ellefson, Tom Emery, Bryon Emery, Robert Eng, Nat Esposito, Steven Evans, Adrian

1944, 1947 1998-2001 1994-97 1947-48 1967-69 2002-04 1983 2011-14

F Fagan, Chris Fagan, Paul Faries, R. Faust, Vincent Fegley, Charles Fehl, Jesse Feldman, Stanley Felleman, Matthew Fernandez, Kyle Frey, Harold Fields, H Foht, Robert Fonahoe, John Forester, Tom Forsyth, M Fosnocht, Bruce Fosnocht, William Foster, Ned Frack, Alex Friedman, Steve Fritch, Leroy Fust, Joe

1977 1973, 1975-76 1931 1971-73 1955, 1957 1949 1938-40 2012-15 2002-03 1943-46 1942 1956-58 1957 1978-80 1931 1960-61 1959-60 1950-51 2018-21 1982-85 1954-56 1979

G Gaitonis, Michael Gall, Preston Garvelli, Joe Gaumer, Lee Gerardo, James Gillespie, Charles Gillespie, Martin Glou, Ronald Glover, Walter Gluyas, Thomas Gonzalez, Armando Gonzalez, Fredrick Gonzalez, Jose Gonzalez, Mario Gordon, Cyrus Gorgol, J Gotherman, W Graf, Robert Grant, Nick Gray, Thomas Grazier, Alton Greaves, Harry Greene, Michael Greene, Stephen Greenfield, Matt Greenly, D Grey, R Griffiths, Tony

12-TIME NATIONAL CHAMPIONS

1944-45 2011-14 1966 1944-45 1988 1938-40 1982-83 1960 1946 1935 1991 1982 1982 1983-87 1936 1943 1942 1971-74 2010 1978-80 1951 1950 1971-74 1944-48 2007-10 1943, 1947 1943 1984-87

H Haag, Burritt 1954-55 Hagenbuch, Keith 1961 Haigh, S. E. 1938 Hallman, Howard 1944 Hamel, William 1949-50 Hammett, Isaac 2017-20 Harlacher, Gene 1961-63 Harris, Allen 2007-10 Harris, Philip 2010 Harshbarger, C. Kenneth 1946 Hayden, Quest 2015-18 Hazen, James 1951-53 Heilbrum, David 1962 Heiler, Walter 1957 Heim, Paul 1954-55 Helsby, Derek 2005-08 Hendrickson, William 1950-51 Hernandez, Craig 2012-15 Hesch, M. J. 1931-33 Hidinger, John 1957, 1959 Hilbrish, Charles 1961 Hill, Colin 2009-12 Hobart, Edwin 1946 Hoffman, L. S. 1932 Holden, W. H. 1934 Hommas, Warren 1953-54 Horstick, C. E. 1932-33 Howachyne, Peter 1948 Howard, Trevor 2013-16 Hoyt, J. 1931 Hugus, Frank 1934-35 Humphries, William 1951 Hunsinger, James 1975-77 I Isabelle, Ed J Jacobson, Mike Jamieson, Larry Jaroh, Michael Jenkins, William Jepson, Randy Jochumsson, Ingvar Johnson, Cannon Johnson, Derek Johnson, Ted Johnson, Wayne Jones, Ralph Juliano, John K Kalbfus, Charles Kaufman, S. D. Keller, Chris Keller, Williams Kenyon, Robert Kerber, Earl Kern, Ludwig Kim, Jay Kimmel, Jeff Kimmel, Sam Kindon, John Kirkpatrick, J. G. Kligman, Albert Klotz, H. Richard Klurman, Vladi Kochman, Ron Koenig, Robert Kothari, Nihir Koty, Patrick Krabbe, Logan Krauss, Jack Kreidler, Robert Kruest, James Kump, Donald Kurowski, Michael

1964-66 1963-65 1951 2021-pres. 1963-65 1982 2011-14 2020 1977 1998-2001 1969-71 1938 1972-74 1949 1933 1989 1964 1952-53 1950-51 2002-05 2000-03 1982-84 1970-72 1967-69 1932 1937-39 1948 2005-08 1966 1969-71 2011-13 1982 2019 1941 1950, 1952-53 1971-74 1950 1948-49


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LETTERWINNERS L Ladman, Tom Lakeman, Chris Lashua, Tim Laux, Chris Lawfer, Norwood Lawrence, Robert Lawson, Thad Lebow, C Lektrick, Peter Lesko, T Leu, Gilbert Levan, W Lewis, William Linn, Joseph (V-12) Litow, Joseph Littlewood, Donald Loeber, W Lofgren, Ernest Lomady, Wendell Lopez, Santiago Lowry, W Loughram, Jack Ludwig, Brian Lung, Eric

1982-83 1998-2001 1996-99 1984-87 1948 1952-54 2015 1942-43 1933-36 1940 1957 1931 1939 1944, 1948 1967-69 1958-59 1940 1959 1948-49 2005-08 1940 1967 1976 2019-pres.

M Mailman, Richard 1954 Malecki, Josh 1998-2001 Malka, Roy 1995-98 Mangus, Marvin 1944-45 Mann, Sidney 1934-35 Manning, Brian 2014-15 Marino, Steven 1980-83 Markle, Ron 1973 Marshall, Albert 1964 Marshall, Charles 1955 Marshall, William 1955 Martin, John 1963-65 Martin, Stephen 1948 Mason, Howard 1950 Masucci, Mike 1990-93 Masters, Don 1933-35 Masters, H 1931 Mattern, Raymond 1935-37 Maxwell, Michael 1984-87 Maxwell, R. A. 1931-32 McCormick, Pete 1964-65 McEwen, Ryan 1993 McIntyre, Casey 2002, 2004-05 McSparren, Lloyd 1962-63 McSwain, Christian 2014-17 Meade, William 1943, 1947-49 Meeker, L 1941 Megrail, Francis 1937 Merritt, Ivan 1978 Michel, J.M. 1994-97 Miklos, Justin 2004-07 Minutaglio, Mark 1995-98 Mirenzi, Joseph 1949-50 Mitchell, Phil 1986 Mitchell, William 1970-72 Mock, Nick 2019-pres. Morris, William 1948 Morrow, Kenneth 1960-61 Motz, G. E. 1938 Muffoletto, Tony 1976-79 Mullen, Philip 1956-58 Mumau, Robert 1960-61 Munn, Jeremy 2014-17 Murphy, William 1971-74

N Nasveschuk, Kent Nedoroscik, Stephen Neiger, Warren Neuhauser, Vincent Neuwirth, Joel O Olsen, Jan Osborne, Markham Oster, John Oxman, H. Jerrold

1975 2017-20 1944-47 1958-60 1992-93 1986 1979 1988 1958

P Page, Tom 1961 Painton, Robert 1980, 1982-83 Palacios, Jose 1999-2000, 2003 Palmer, David 1958-59 Pansy, Tony 1993-97 Pantazis, Brennan 2018-21 Paoletti, Dennis 1964-66 Parker, Kenneth 1954 Parton, William 1937-38 Paxton, William 1954-56 Perez Gines, Andres 2020-pres. Perna, Lee 1950 Peterson, Jalen 2020-pres. Petroff, Timothy 1945-47 Pfleiger, Kurt 1974-77 Philips, C. E. 1931-32 Pieo, R 1941 Pierce, Adam 2002 Pineda, Miguel 2009-12 Pokras, Byron 1961 Pomeroy, Alan 1955 Porter, Allen 1963-64 Postich, Salvester 1949-50 Potter, Dudley 1955 Poydock, Albert 1955 Procopio, Manuel 1952-54 R Radcliffe, George Ramos, Tommy Raque, Parker Reichenback, Mike Rehm, Donald Rehm, Richard Reinstein, Josh Rhinehelder, Rich Ribeiro, Marcelo Ricketts, Lee Riordan, Dave Rimler, Zak Roberson, Noah Rodriguez, Nestor Roeder, Ron Roeder, Zack Roemer, Joe Rocklein, Brad Rorabaugh, Mathew Rorabaugh, Irwin Rosenthal, Scott Ross, Gary Rossi, Joseph Rudman, Sydney Runkle, Raymond Runyan, Rick

1939 2005-08 2010-13 1989-92 1955 1956, 1957 2021-pres. 1977-79 1985-87 1994-95 1991-95 2002-05 2016-2019 2011-15 1996-99 2001-04 1994-97 1991-92 1937 1936 2010-13 1978 1947 1942 1937-38 1966-67

S Sabella, J. G. 1938 Sabo, William 1952 Saliski, Rob 1998-2001 Sanabria, Ismael 2013-15 Sands, Chris 2016-2019 Sandy, Casey 2006-09 Savadove, Louis 1957-59 Saylor, Harlom 1939 Sayre, George 1961 Sanders, Casey 1969-70 Sankey, Robert 1949 Saponaro, Pete 1963-65 Schaefer, Gerald 1960-61 Schaefer, H. Page 1939-40 Scheiner, Harvey 1944 Schier, Kurt 1986-89 Schlengel, William 1962-63 Schultz, James 1957 Schwenzfeier, Karl 1952-55 Scofield, Gene 1963, 1965-66 Seifried, Glen 1950 Senft, Charles 1940-42 Seng, Eddie 1996-2000 Seward, Ed 2002-05 Seward, Tom 1961-63 Sforza, F.P. 1962-64 Shaffer, Richard 1951-52 Shaham, Noam 2007-10 Shamp, Robbie 2020-pres. Shelley, Ian 1984-87 Shmuckler, H 1940 Shultz, David 1951-53 Sidwell, Edwin 1956-58 Simon, Glenn 1980, 1982 Simon, Gregg 1980-83 Simon, Paul 1976-79 Small, S 1941-43 Smith, Joshua 2015-16 Sohn, Mark 1988-91 Sorensen, Raymond 1943, 1947-48 Sopper, William 1953 Spicer, Brad 2005-08 Spiese, Richard 1950, 1954 Spiker, Don 1966-68 Stahl, Benjamin 1939-41 Stahl, Roy 1971-74 Stallone, Joseph 1977, 1979-80 Stanley, William 1982-84 Stevens, Adie 1956-58 Stogoski, Donald 1948 Stolzer, Ira 1973-76 Stefaniak, Brandon 1996, 1998-2000 Streator, Harold 1939 Sumner, G 1940 Suydam, Bergen 1937 Swank, Ralph 1959 Swetman, Dick 1968-70

Tyndall, Wyatt U Uransky, Jon

T Tan, Kevin Tarmargo, Greg Taudien, Jerker Taylor, Tom Terwilliger, George Teti, John Thasher, R Thomason, Alex Thompson, James Thompson, John Thompson, W. H. Thorpe, Roger Tobin, Steve Todaro, Mario Torres, Alexis Trivino, Vic Trybala, E Turner, Josh

Z Zakutney, Sam Zimmerman, H

12-TIME NATIONAL CHAMPIONS

2001-04 2015-2019 2002-05 1970-71 1936, 1939-40 1941-43 1931 2017-2019 1980, 1982 1980 1932 1975 2002-05 1952-53, 1956 2013-16 1977-79 1941-42 1994

2016-2019 1996

V Valdez, Favian 2017-20 Valenti, Dominic 1997-99 Valentino, John 1944 Valentino, Rudolph 1949-51 Van Vleet, Duke 2000-04 Vargas, Luis 2003-05 Vastola, Peter 1974-77 Vazquez, Francisco 2011 Vega, Armando 1956-57, 1959 Vexler, Paul 1967-69 Virbitsky, Nick 2007-10 Viscardi, Kenneth 1980, 1983-84 W Wagner, Henry 1937 Wan, Jacob 1990 Ward, Wilbur 1938-40 Warner, Larry 1966-68 Warren, Nate 2020-pres. Warrington, C 1942 Watson, Justin 1999 Watson, Tony 1965 Weaver, Elmer 1938-40 Weiss, Greggor 1960-62 Weiss, Matt 1996 Weissend, Dion 1955-57 Weissend, Kurt 1977-80 Weller, Harold 1947 Werner, Jay 1958-59 Wetzel, John 1951 Whelan, Gene 1976 Wick, Albert 1952-54 Wick, Frank 1952-54 Wilkinson, Owen 1951-52 Williams, Gary 1964-66 Williams, Glenn 1969, 1971 Williams, George 1961-63 Wilson, Doug 1989-93 Wingrove, Colin 2021-pres. Wintersteen, William 1944-45 Wirtschafter, Stanely 1943, 1946-47 Wood, Brandy 1993-97 Wroten, Chris 1977 Wyman, Logan 2009-11 Y Yamamoto, Brady 2019-pres. Yang, Warren 2008-10, 2012 Yohn, Larry 1960-62 Young, Blake 2014-16 Young, F 1942-43 Young, Jerry 1971-74 Yu, Norman 1952-53 2017-20 1942

Bold indicates on 2022 roster



47


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