Hall of Honor Archives - 91Ƶ News /now/news/tag/hall-of-honor/ News from the 91Ƶ community. Wed, 04 Feb 2026 21:35:10 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 ODAC Hall of Fame: Jewel Lehman ’87 /now/news/2026/odac-hall-of-fame-jewel-lehman-87/ /now/news/2026/odac-hall-of-fame-jewel-lehman-87/#respond Thu, 05 Feb 2026 19:00:00 +0000 /now/news/?p=60549 In August 2025, the Old Dominion Athletic Conference announced its inaugural class of 50 to the ODAC Hall of Fame. Four Royals were named to the ODAC’s first-ever class. Over the next week, 91Ƶ Athletics will celebrate all four inductees with articles highlighting their illustrious playing and post-91Ƶ careers. Our next inductee is Jewel Lehman ’87.

91Ƶ’s final ODAC Hall of Famer, Lehman had a standout volleyball career for the Royals. She was an AVCA South Regional All-American in 1986. She was a three-time ODAC Player of the Year (1984, 1985, and 1986) and was a four-time All-ODAC First Team honoree.

While at 91Ƶ, her teams won four straight ODAC Championships from 1983-86. At the time of her graduation, she was 91Ƶ’s all-time leader in career service aces with 203, and set the single-season service aces record with 108. After her graduation in 1987, she became the first woman to have her jersey retired. She was also inducted into the 91Ƶ Hall of Honor immediately following her graduation, as a part of the class of 1987.

After leaving 91Ƶ, Lehman had a strong career on the sidelines as a women’s volleyball coach at the Division I and Division III levels. At DI Campbell University, she patrolled the sidelines from 1994-97. In her four seasons, she coached the Camels to 69 wins, and is second all-time in career coaching wins at the school.

Lehman then earned her doctoral degree in exercise science from the University of North Carolina-Greensboro and returned to coaching at DIII Goshen College. She was the head coach of the Maple Leafs women’s volleyball team from 2004 to 2008. She is also a professor and department chair of kinesiology at Goshen.

Lehman, along with 91Ƶ’s three other ODAC Hall of Fame inductees, will be celebrated on Saturday, Feb. 7, at the men’s basketball game against Roanoke inside Yoder Arena. Tipoff is set for 2 p.m.

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ODAC Hall of Fame: Erik Kratz ’02 /now/news/2026/odac-hall-of-fame-erik-kratz-02/ /now/news/2026/odac-hall-of-fame-erik-kratz-02/#respond Wed, 04 Feb 2026 21:35:09 +0000 /now/news/?p=60552 In August 2025, the Old Dominion Athletic Conference announced its inaugural class of 50 to the ODAC Hall of Fame. Four Royals were named to the ODAC’s first-ever class. Over the next week, 91Ƶ Athletics will celebrate all four inductees with articles highlighting their illustrious playing and post-91Ƶ careers. Our next inductee is Erik Kratz ’02.

It could be argued that Kratz is the most successful athlete to come out of 91Ƶ. A four-year member of the Diamond Royals, Kratz was an NCAA Second Team All-American in 2002 and a First Team All-South Region honoree in 2001 and 2002. Those two seasons also saw Kratz named the ODAC Player of the Year and All-ODAC First Team. He was named All-ODAC Second Team during the 2000 season.

He holds the ODAC and 91Ƶ career record in doubles (77), hits (220), and putouts (1019), and the 91Ƶ record in runs scored (147), home runs (33), RBIs (159), batting average (.415), slugging percentage (.762), total bases (404), and games played (155). Kratz had his jersey retired after his final game in 2002, and was inducted into the 91Ƶ Hall of Honor in 2012.

He was drafted in the 2002 MLB Draft by the Toronto Blue Jays, and made his MLB debut in 2010 for the Pittsburgh Pirates. In his 11-year MLB career, he played for the Pirates, Philadelphia Phillies, Blue Jays, Kansas City Royals, Houston Astros, New York Yankees, Milwaukee Brewers, San Francisco Giants, and the Tampa Bay Rays. In 2019, he was selected for Team USA in the 2019 WBSC Premier12, in which he was named the best catcher of the tournament.

Kratz is now the head varsity baseball coach at Dock Mennonite Academy, where he graduated from in 1998. He is also a co-host of the YouTube podcast Foul Territory.

Kratz, along with 91Ƶ’s three other ODAC Hall of Fame inductees, will be celebrated on Saturday, Feb. 7, at the men’s basketball game against Roanoke inside Yoder Arena. Tipoff is set for 2 p.m.

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ODAC Hall of Fame: Missy Hensley ’92 /now/news/2026/odac-hall-of-fame-missy-hensley-92/ /now/news/2026/odac-hall-of-fame-missy-hensley-92/#comments Mon, 02 Feb 2026 19:00:00 +0000 /now/news/?p=60526 In August 2025, the Old Dominion Athletic Conference announced its inaugural class of 50 to the ODAC Hall of Fame. Four Royals were named to the ODAC’s first-ever class. Over the next week, 91Ƶ Athletics will celebrate all four inductees with articles highlighting their illustrious playing and post-91Ƶ careers. Our next inductee is Missy Hensley ’92.

Hensley had one of the best women’s basketball careers in ODAC history. A four-year standout for 91Ƶ, she played in Harrisonburg from 1988-92. During that time, she was named a Kodak All-American Honorable Mention (1992) and a Kodak Regional All-American (1992). At the time of her graduation, she was the ODAC’s all-time leading scorer and would hold that honor for six years. She currently sits fourth all-time in the ODAC for total points with 2,163. That number is also tops in the 91Ƶ record book, along with being the Royals’ all-time leader in scoring average at 22.5 points per game. She led all of Division III in scoring when she averaged 29.8 points per game during the 1992 season.

She was a two-time All-ODAC First Team member and a two-time All-ODAC Second Teamer. She was also named to the VaSID All-State First Team in 1992. Hensley had her jersey retired in 1992, becoming the first women’s basketball player to have that honor. She was also inducted into the 91Ƶ Hall of Honor in 1992.

After leaving 91Ƶ, she earned her master’s degree from James Madison University. She was an administrator in Shenandoah County for 15 years, including serving as the principal at Central High School from 2012-19. During that time, she was named the 2016 Virginia Secondary Principal of the Year and Central was named a 2015 National Blue Ribbon School. In 2019, Hensley was named the principal at Harrisonburg High School.

Hensley, along with 91Ƶ’s three other ODAC Hall of Fame inductees, will be celebrated on Saturday, Feb. 7, at the men’s basketball game against Roanoke inside Yoder Arena. Tipoff is set for 2 p.m.

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ODAC Hall of Fame: Leonard Dow ’86 /now/news/2026/odac-hall-of-fame-leonard-dow-86/ /now/news/2026/odac-hall-of-fame-leonard-dow-86/#respond Thu, 29 Jan 2026 19:00:00 +0000 /now/news/?p=60515 In August 2025, the Old Dominion Athletic Conference announced its inaugural class of 50 to the ODAC Hall of Fame. Four Royals were named to the ODAC’s first-ever class. Over the next week, 91Ƶ Athletics will celebrate all four inductees with articles highlighting their illustrious playing and post-91Ƶ careers. Our first inductee is Leonard Dow ’86.

Dow was a standout on the basketball court for the Royals from 1983 to 1986. In 1985, he was named the ODAC Player of the Year. He was a four-time All-ODAC First Team and etched his name in the record books as the all-time career leader in points (2,192), rebounds (1,102), and scoring average (20.4 points per game). He also set the record for most points in a season by a first-year when he scored 534 points in his first season. His jersey was retired in 1986 and he was inducted into the in 1987.

A giant on the basketball court, Dow has been an even bigger force when it comes to his faith during the 40 years since his graduation from 91Ƶ. He was a founder of the Oxford Circle Christian Community Development Association in Philadelphia, and for nearly 20 years was a pastor at Oxford Circle Mennonite Church. In 2017, he left the church to become the vice president of community and church development for Everence, leading the effort to serve emerging diverse communities and churches that historically have been underserved.

He also serves on the board of directors for The City School, Missio Seminary, The Brooklyn Peace Center, and The Common Place.

Dow, along with 91Ƶ’s three other ODAC Hall of Fame inductees, will be celebrated on Saturday, Feb. 7, at the men’s basketball game against Roanoke inside Yoder Arena. Tipoff is set for 2 p.m.

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‘91Ƶ is family’: Highlights from Homecoming 2025 /now/news/2025/emu-is-family-highlights-from-homecoming-2025/ /now/news/2025/emu-is-family-highlights-from-homecoming-2025/#comments Wed, 15 Oct 2025 04:48:39 +0000 /now/news/?p=59877 As Dorothy “Dottie” Nolt Weber ’75 can attest, there’s a special kind of magic in the air in the days leading up to Homecoming. The retired teacher, who taught for 40 years at Lancaster Mennonite High School, has had plenty of her students go on to attend 91Ƶ. And on Thursday, as she parked her car near the Sadie Hartzler Library to catch up with Systems Librarian Audrey Shenk, she bumped right into one of them.

“I get out of the car and these two girls are running by and, all of a sudden, one of them says, ‘Hi, Dottie,’” said Weber. That student turned out to be Maria Longenecker, a senior biology major who had Weber as an eighth grade teacher.

“Maria was one of the students I wanted to see,” Weber said. “And here she was, the first person I meet on campus. It’s unbelievable.”

Her husband Tim chimed in: “You have to understand, we could be at the top of Mount Everest and she’d know somebody. We could go anywhere and inevitably someone will say, ‘There’s Dottie!’”

Weber recalled last being on campus in 2005 to cater the wedding reception of alumna and former faculty member Catherine R. Mumaw. She was one of nearly 70 members of the Class of 1975 making a special trip back to 91Ƶ this weekend for their milestone 50th reunion during Homecoming 2025. 

Members of the 91Ƶ Class of 1975 reunite at Martin Chapel on Friday.

As she and a group of classmates sat at a table in the Seminary Building on Friday leafing through a Shenandoah yearbook from 1975, they marveled at old photos and reminisced, sharing stories and memories from their time at 91Ƶ. 

“It’s amazing who I can remember from these photos,” someone says. 

Another alumna asks, “Does anyone remember taking classes in the old chicken house? Is this the building where it used to be?”

One of those classmates, Julia Shultz King ’75, traveled all the way from Melbourne, Australia, to attend the homecoming festivities. After graduating with a nursing degree, she worked for the Medical College of Virginia and eventually the Virginia Commonwealth University Health System, before serving as a missionary with Youth With A Mission. She has lived the past 13 years in Australia. 

She shared a story about putting out a fire in the Northlawn dormitory, after someone had left a candle near the window and a curtain had caught alight. This was the first reunion she could remember attending. She had missed the 50th reunion for her high school in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, because Australia had been in lockdown in 2021, and so “it made me extra want to be here,” she said. 

“I’m happy to be well enough that I could travel alone to get here,” King said.

Her friend, Weber, said something similar: “Who knows, at this age, you might not be able to come back in another five years.”

Alumni from the Class of 1975 pose for a group photo.

This group of alumni, said Harrisonburg Mayor Deanna Reed, who serves as director of alumni engagement and community connections at 91Ƶ, was the only graduating class to ever create a two-volume yearbook. The Class of 1975 welcomed Alex Haley, author of Roots, to campus as part of a lecture music series. And the cross country team made 91Ƶ history, becoming the National Christian College Athletic Association cross country champion that year. 

“There was also a unique tradition that happened during y’all’s time here,” she said. “Newly engaged students were thrown in the fishing pond. A lot of people got engaged that year, from what I’ve learned.”

Homecoming weekend is all about celebrating and reconnecting with one another, with this campus, and with the values that make 91Ƶ such a special place, Reed said during the on Saturday morning. “Whether you’re an alum returning after many years or a student just beginning your journey, this is a time to remember that 91Ƶ is family,” she said. “And there’s always a place for you here.”

Keep reading for highlights and photos from the weekend’s events!

Alumni attending the Class of 1975 gathering read through an old issue of The Weather Vane.

Seated on a couch in the Student Union, Doris Horst Toll ’79 and her husband Marvin took the morning on Saturday to relax and unwind as they sipped on a hot cocoa from Common Grounds and flipped through the latest issue of The Weather Vane student newspaper. The couple from Michigan had returned for Homecoming to connect with old friends and had attended the at Lehman Auditorium the night before. “It brought back a lot of good memories of being in that chapel as a student,” she said.


Hall of Honor

The four 2025 Hall of Honor inductees were recognized during a kickoff celebration (pictured) and later inducted at a ceremony in MainStage Theater. Left to right: 91Ƶ Athletic Director Carrie S Bert, Phil Guengerich ’70, Justin Reesor ’10, Mitchell Leap ’12, 91Ƶ Interim President Rev. Dr. Shannon W. Dycus, and David Falk ’15.

MainStage Theater was packed to the gills on Saturday for a ceremony celebrating this year’s four Hall of Honor inductees: 

  • Athletics events coordinator Phil Guengerich ’70 was introduced by 91Ƶ Athletic Director Carrie S Bert ’97.
  • Volleyball middle blocker Justin Reesor ’10 was introduced by former teammate Ben Yoder ’08
  • Soccer forward Mitchell Leap ’12 was introduced by former coach Roger Mast ’85.
  • Basketball center David Falk ’15 was introduced by former coach Kirby Dean.

An alumna attending the ceremony, Debbie Swartley ’08, of Penn Laird, Virginia, ran cross country and track while at 91Ƶ, and said she typically comes to Homecoming every year. “It’s just so much fun to be back on campus,” she said. “We typically walk around to see the changes for people who haven’t been here in awhile, and the kids love it.”


Gatherings and reunions

A gathering at Northlawn celebrated 50 years of 91Ƶ’s social work program.

The weekend featured several gatherings, including:

  • one celebrating the 50th anniversary of 91Ƶ’s social work program and the tenure of Professor Deanna Durham
  • a gathering of alumni shaped by their experiences in the Middle East during 50 years of faculty-led interculturals to the region, 
  • and a 50th anniversary get-together for alumni of the recently rebranded 91Ƶ Washington Semester program.
Avery Trinh ’22 and his mom, Rebecca Dietz ’79.

An alumnus of the D.C. program, Avery Trinh ’22, was attending the lattermost gathering with his mother, Rebecca Dietz ’79. Both of them were in the program while it was called different names (Trinh was in WCSC in Fall 2021, while Dietz was in WSSY from 1977-78) and under different program directors (Trinh was led by Ryan Good, while his mom was taught by Ryan’s father, Nelson Good). In fact, Trinh said, his mom used to babysit Ryan Good. 

It was his first homecoming since graduating from 91Ƶ, Trinh said, and the D.C. reunion offered a way for both him and his mom to get involved. 

“There’s always a lot of chatter about how 91Ƶ is changing,” he said. “The reason I really enjoyed my time here is the professors who taught me. They were in it to help students grow. So, as long as people like them stick around, I think 91Ƶ is in good hands.”

Chris Fretz ’05 (right) at the Homecoming Kickoff Celebration on Saturday morning in Lehman Auditorium.

It had been a little more than a decade since Chris Fretz ’05 had been back to Harrisonburg. But for the economic development grad, who now works as a web developer for a marketing agency in Lancaster, the 20th reunion was enough of a draw to bring him back to campus. His wife, Lindsey Frye ’04, was a student and staff member for the D.C. program and so they also attended the 50th anniversary gathering. 

Some of the biggest changes he’s noticed since he’s been gone include Common Grounds’ move upstairs and the renovation of the old gym into the MainStage Theater, though other changes less visible have been just as significant. 

“It’s been encouraging to see the growing diversity of 91Ƶ and to see that the administration is really looking to meet students where they’re at,” Fretz said. 


Meet-and-greet with Interim President Dycus

91Ƶ Interim President Rev. Dr. Shannon W. Dycus answers questions from senior nursing major Emily Suarez Nunez.

At a meet-and-greet with 91Ƶ’s interim president inside the Campus Center, the Rev. Dr. Shannon W. Dycus answered questions from first-generation student and senior nursing major Emily Suarez Nunez. Dycus spoke about her path to 91Ƶ and to the leadership position she’s held since July 1, as well as what excites her most. 

She called on alumni to loudly and proudly share the stories of 91Ƶ’s successes and talk to others about how 91Ƶ has impacted their lives, their children’s lives, and the ways their families have been nurtured by the university.

“We’re not proud enough about who 91Ƶ is, but we have an amazing community here, a meaningful mission, and it shows up across the world,” said Dycus, who is the first Black woman to serve in the role. “And I am most excited about being able to be the person who gets to advocate for that everywhere I go.”


TenTalks

Fabrice Guerrier MA ’15 (conflict transformation) presents during the annual 91Ƶ TenTalks on Saturday.

At the annual hosted at Martin Chapel on Saturday afternoon, 91Ƶ’s three 2025 alumni award winners each had 10 minutes to impact, influence, and inspire the audience. This marked the first time that alumni award winners presented at the event.

The speakers were: 

  • Jessica “Jess” King ’96, recipient of the Distinguished Service Award, has led equity-driven public sector organizations for more than 20 years. She spoke on the theme of fear and the role it’s played in her career and in her life.
  • Outstanding Alum of the Year Brittany Caine-Conley MDiv ’14, one of the lead organizers for Congregate Charlottesville, shared her experiences making connections with local justice groups leading up to the white supremacist rally in 2017 and spoke on the importance of solidarity.
  • Alum of the Year Fabrice Guerrier MA ’15 (conflict transformation), founder and CEO of the first collaborative worldbuilding production house for science fiction and fantasy storytelling, spoke about the power of imagination. He invited audience members to close their eyes and picture building a city on a new planet in the year 2035.

Royal City Celebration

Premiere Band, a quintet playing classic rock songs, performs at Royal City Celebration on the Front Lawn on Saturday.

Outside on the Front Lawn, the Royal City Celebration had everyone grooving to live music from the Richmond-based Premiere Band and savoring bites from food trucks offering barbecue, tacos, and ice cream. The crisp fall temperature and clear skies could not have been more perfect for the occasion.

The event also featured 91Ƶ’s second annual crowning of a homecoming court, which included:

  • Seniors Jamaury Starks and Royale Parker
  • Juniors Christopher Varone and Janaria Kenreich
  • Sophomores Bennett de Tenley and Shawna Hurst
  • First-years Johnathan Badowski and Logan Turchetta
Royals fans take in a men’s soccer match against Randolph on Saturday. The Royals won the match 2-1.
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Hall of Honor:Justin Reesor ’10 /now/news/2025/hall-of-honor-justin-reesor-10/ /now/news/2025/hall-of-honor-justin-reesor-10/#respond Wed, 08 Oct 2025 11:50:00 +0000 /now/news/?p=59650 This is the fourth and final profile about the 2025 inductees of the 91Ƶ Athletic Hall of Honor. For more information about the Hall of Honor and a full list of inductees, visit.

Justin Reesor ’10 grew up in a Mennonite family in Stouffville, Ontario, Canada, where he played volleyball in middle and high school. His cousin, Allan Reesor-McDowell ’02, played on the 91Ƶ men’s volleyball team—and Reesor had traveled to see him play at a tournament in New York. His uncle, Robert Reesor ’89, and sister, Denise Reesor ’07, also attended 91Ƶ.

While visiting his sister, Reesor fell in love with the 91Ƶ campus and Harrisonburg. “I thought it was a beautiful area, and I liked the idea of a small college with smaller classes and easier access to professors.” Reesor arrived in fall 2006 prioritizing academics and his social life, but after walking on during a scrimmage, he spent four years as a middle blocker on the 91Ƶ men’s volleyball team under Coach Steve Benson.

Reesor made an immediate impact. In his first season, he was named the North East Collegiate Volleyball Association (NECVA) Western Conference Rookie of the Year and 91Ƶ Newcomer of the Year. He earned spots on the NECVA All-Western Division Second Team in 2009 and the NECVA All-Western First Team in 2010. At the time of his graduation, Reesor led the Royals in career blocks (462) and sets played (406), and ranked fifth in career kills (867). 

While at 91Ƶ, Reesor majored in business administration and minored in accounting. He now serves as senior director of finance at Accumulus Synergy. He and his wife, Rachel Mast Reesor ’09, have three children: Emma (10), June (7), and Charlie (4). 

Reesor will be honored at a ceremony on Saturday, Oct. 11, at 10 a.m. in the MainStage Theater (University Commons 170) during Homecoming 2025. For a full schedule of Homecoming events and activities, visitemu.edu/homecoming.

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Hall of Honor:Mitchell Leap ’12 /now/news/2025/hall-of-honor-mitchell-leap-12/ /now/news/2025/hall-of-honor-mitchell-leap-12/#respond Thu, 02 Oct 2025 11:50:00 +0000 /now/news/?p=59646 This is the third of four profiles about the 2025 inductees of the 91Ƶ Athletic Hall of Honor. For more information about the Hall of Honor and a full list of inductees, visit .

Mitchell Leap ’12, a health and physical education major, followed in the footsteps of his parents, Bill ’86 and Renee Kreider Leap ’85, and attended 91Ƶ after a successful soccer career at Eastern Mennonite School in Harrisonburg, a city he “always liked.” His mother has worked in 91Ƶ’s financial aid office since 1986. “I’d been around 91Ƶ all my life, and I thought it would be a good place to continue my education and play soccer.” 

During his four years as a forward under head men’s soccer coach Roger Mast, Leap was a two-time All-ODAC First Team honoree, earning the distinction in 2009 and 2011, and made the Second Team in 2008. He received VaSID All-State First Team honors in 2011 and VaSID All-State Second Team honors in 2008 and 2009. One of the most prolific scorers in 91Ƶ men’s soccer history, Leap ranks fourth all-time in the Royals’ record book for career goals (35) and fifth for total points (80).

Leap looks back fondly on the tight-knit campus community at 91Ƶ. “There’s value in attending a place where you feel like you know everybody and everybody knows you.” His connection to 91Ƶ Men’s Soccer continued after graduation: his brother, Parker Leap ’16, also played forward for the Royals, and his cousin, Justin Carey MBA ’21, has served as head coach since 2022. 

Today, Leap lives in Lynchburg, Virginia, with his wife of nine years, Amber, and their three children—Rory (6), Rhema (3), and Mesa (1). He works in full-time ministry with the Fellowship of Christian Athletes, serving as area representative for the City of Lynchburg and Amherst County. 

Leap will be honored at a ceremony on Saturday, Oct. 11, at 10 a.m. in the MainStage Theater (University Commons 170) during Homecoming 2025. For a full schedule of Homecoming events and activities, visit emu.edu/homecoming.

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Hall of Honor:David Falk ’15 /now/news/2025/hall-of-honor-david-falk-15/ /now/news/2025/hall-of-honor-david-falk-15/#respond Thu, 25 Sep 2025 11:50:00 +0000 /now/news/?p=59640 This is the second of four profiles about the 2025 inductees of the 91Ƶ Athletic Hall of Honor. For more information about the Hall of Honor and a full list of inductees, visit.

David Falk ’15, a general studies major with a concentration in business, grew up in Madison, Virginia, where he had an impressive high school basketball career. He spent a postgraduate year playing at Hargrave Military Academy in Chatham, Virginia, before head men’s basketball coach Kirby Dean recruited him to 91Ƶ. 

As a 6-foot, 6-inch center, Falk played in 105 games with 56 starts, tallying 1,058 career points in four seasons with the Runnin’ Royals. He was a two-time ODAC First Team honoree, earning the distinction in 2014 and 2015; he received VaSID All-State First Team honors those same two years. Falk also made the D3hoops.com All-South Region Third Team in 2014 and the D3hoops.com All-South Region Second Team in 2015.

At the time of his graduation, Falk held an 91Ƶ career record for blocks (214) and ranked third all-time in career rebounds with 952. Today, he still holds 91Ƶ records for most rebounds in a game (28 vs. Lynchburg on Feb. 28, 2014), most rebounds in a season (375 in 2013-2014), and most blocked shots in a season (82 in 2013-2014).

After learning life lessons from Coach Dean—including “having perspective” and “to always have faith in God”—Falk returned to Madison where he and his wife, Katelynn, live with their two children, Preslee (4) and McCoy (2), on a 2,000-acre farm focused on cattle, corn, and soybeans.

Falk will be honored at a ceremony on Saturday, Oct. 11, at 10 a.m. in the MainStage Theater (University Commons 170) during Homecoming 2025. For a full schedule of Homecoming events and activities, visitemu.edu/homecoming.

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Hall of Honor: Phil Guengerich ’70 /now/news/2025/hall-of-honor-phil-guengerich-70/ /now/news/2025/hall-of-honor-phil-guengerich-70/#comments Thu, 18 Sep 2025 11:50:00 +0000 /now/news/?p=59633 This is the first of four profiles about the 2025 inductees of the 91Ƶ Athletic Hall of Honor. For more information about the Hall of Honor and a full list of inductees, visit .

Phil Guengerich ’70 was a staple at 91Ƶ sporting events between 2000 and 2013. His part-time position as athletic events coordinator turned into a full-time role responsible for ticket sales, concessions, game events, and some fundraising. 

Guengerich graduated with a degree in elementary education from 91Ƶ, where he played on the soccer team and met his wife, Susan Hess Guengerich ’69. He taught fifth grade at Linville-Edom Elementary School in Rockingham County, Virginia, for 30 years before returning to 91Ƶ. 

“I came back because I loved working with young people, always enjoyed sports, and was familiar with 91Ƶ.” He joined his father, Paul T. Guengerich, who worked part-time in alumni relations into his 90s after having served in various full-time capacities from 1964 to 1981. His mother, Marjorie Yoder Guengerich ’68, earned a teaching degree from 91Ƶ. His three children—Melani Guengerich Novinger ’96, Gail Guengerich ’98, and John Guengerich ’01—also graduated from 91Ƶ. 

Guengerich used his experience in classroom management to train his staff of work-study students to run 91Ƶ events like a well-oiled machine—from setting up pre-game to slinging hot dogs and hamburgers in-game to doing laundry post-game. While he got to know staff members and assigned jobs accordingly, he expected students to “dress neatly, be courteous, prompt, and accepting of all people.” 

Guengerich managed some high-profile events at 91Ƶ, including multiple ODAC Championships and games during the 2003 women’s basketball Sweet 16 run and 2010 Runnin’ Royals Elite Eight berth, but says his best memories are the friendships he built with 91Ƶ Athletics personnel, work-study staff, student-athletes, and business owners who supported the university.

Guengerich will be honored at a ceremony on Saturday, Oct. 11, at 10 a.m. in the MainStage Theater (University Commons 170) during Homecoming 2025. For a full schedule of Homecoming events and activities, visitemu.edu/homecoming.

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Hall of Honor: Gina Campbell Troyer /now/news/2024/hall-of-honor-gina-campbell-troyer/ /now/news/2024/hall-of-honor-gina-campbell-troyer/#comments Wed, 09 Oct 2024 13:00:00 +0000 /now/news/?p=57714 Gina Troyer ‘93, a liberal arts major with a special education certification and a minor in coaching, was hesitant about playing sports in college after feeling a “little burned out” from playing volleyball, basketball and softball in high school. However, after initially enrolling at Lord Fairfax Community College in Middletown, Virginia, she transferred to Bridgewater College to play softball and then to Eastern Mennonite College where she played volleyball and basketball for four years and softball for three.

As a Royal, Troyer was a three-time All-ODAC First Team honoree and a two-time all-Region middle hitter. During her sophomore year, 91Ƶ women’s volleyball won the ODAC championship, defeating Bridgewater in a thrilling five-set championship match. At the time of her graduation in 1993, Troyer held 91Ƶ career records for kills (969) and blocks (347) and now sits third all-time on both of those lists. As an 91Ƶ basketball forward, Troyer graduated fourth all-time in career rebounds with 648. She played first base on the 1990 softball team that won the ODAC championship, is fourth all-time in the Royals’ record book for stolen bases in a season (1990) with 24, and earned a spot on the All-ODAC Second Team in 1992.

Troyer said she “had a great experience playing sports” at 91Ƶ with teammates that were her closest friends and a coaching staff that was “so supportive.” Troyer retired in June 2023 after teaching special education for 30 years at Turner Ashby High School (Bridgewater) where she coached girls’ varsity volleyball for 24 years and junior varsity softball for four years. 

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Hall of Honor: Bianca Ygarza /now/news/2024/hall-of-honor-bianca-ygarza/ /now/news/2024/hall-of-honor-bianca-ygarza/#comments Wed, 02 Oct 2024 14:00:00 +0000 /now/news/?p=57717 Bianca Ygarza ‘14 (nursing) played basketball with her sister Alicia Ygarza ‘16 at Penn Manor High School in Millerville, Pennsylvania, and chose to continue her career at 91Ƶ to study nursing after Coach Kevin Griffin made a trip to see her play. “He was interested in developing my basketball skills and interested in my development as a person.”

At 91Ƶ, Ygarza developed into a versatile post player who became the only woman in program history to capture All-ODAC First Team honors three times, earning the distinction in 2012, 2013 and 2014; she received VaSID All-State Second Team honors those same three years. During her sophomore and senior years, Ygarza made the D3hoops.com All-South Region Third Team and won the 91Ƶ Female Athlete of the Year award. She still remembers pulling out an exciting win against rival Bridgewater in “the kind of moment athletes dream of” to spark a 22-4 record for the 2011-2012 season—a season she shot 58 percent from the field, an 91Ƶ record that stands today. Ygarza also ranks seventh all-time in scoring with 1,215 points and eighth in career rebounds with 671.

Ygarza played the last two of her four seasons with her sister. Ygarza currently works as a nurse at UPMC Lititz hospital, close to where the two grew up. She also serves as an adjutant general officer for human resources in the Army Reserve with her unit in Waldorf, Maryland. She still plays basketball regularly and looks forward to introducing her four-year-old son, Jace, to the game.

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Hall of Honor: Michael Allen /now/news/2024/hall-of-honor-michael-allen/ Mon, 30 Sep 2024 14:00:00 +0000 /now/news/?p=57711 Michael Allen ‘13, a liberal arts major with minors in Spanish and music, is a Fork Union, Virginia, native who leaped into 91Ƶ and its record books after having competed in track and field at Louisa County High School. A standout jumper and sprinter for the Royals between 2009 and 2013, Allen qualified for the NCAA Track & Field Championships three times and was an 11-time All-ODAC performer in the triple jump and long jump.

In 2009, Allen set 91Ƶ records for the indoor triple jump (14.43m) and indoor long jump (7m), and in 2010, he set the university record for the outdoor triple jump (14.85m) and tied the outdoor long jump record (7.26m) set by Jim Herr ‘79; those records still hold today. Allen also stands in the Top 10 in program history for the indoor high jump (1.92m), the indoor 55m dash (6.76s), and the outdoor 200m dash (22.3s).

Allen was twice named ODAC Rookie of the Year in 2009 (indoor and outdoor); he was also selected as Male Athlete of the Meet at the ODAC Outdoor Track & Field Championships in 2009 and 2011. Allen qualified for the NCAA Track & Field Championships (indoor and outdoor in triple jump and long jump in 2009 and outdoor in triple jump in 2010).

A 2013 Cords of Distinction recipient, Allen said he was able to reshape who he was at 91Ƶ through track, music, and meeting people. “It really brought me out of my shell.” Allen is currently the lead musician at Harvest Church of God in Charlottesville and continues to play bass at his home House of God church in Gordonsville, Virginia.

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Hall of Honor: Roland Landes /now/news/2024/hall-of-honor-roland-landes/ /now/news/2024/hall-of-honor-roland-landes/#comments Wed, 18 Sep 2024 14:00:00 +0000 /now/news/?p=57696 Roland Landes wore many hats over the course of three decades at 91Ƶ, serving as an exemplary employee and coach of five different sports: men’s cross country, baseball, men’s basketball, women’s cross country, and track and field. His longest coaching tenures were as head men’s cross-country coach for nine seasons in two separate stints from 1967-1971 and 1973-1976 and as head men’s baseball coach for five seasons from 1979-1983.

As head men’s cross-country coach, Landes oversaw teams that won four National Christian Colleges Athletic Association (NCCAA) championships and two ODAC championships, including the inaugural ODAC championship in 1976. Another coaching highlight came when Landes stepped in as head men’s basketball coach for the 1972-1973 season: “It was the first year Lou Campanelli was at James Madison. They had scholarship players, and we hadn’t recruited at all. We beat them 72-71.”

Landes finished his 16-year 91Ƶ coaching career in 1983 with a 223-141 record. He also served as assistant professor of physical education from 1968-1982 and as supervisor of auxiliary services from 1984 until his retirement in 1998. He has fond memories of his time working with students in the classroom and on the playing fields. “The kids were just a joy to teach and to coach, and they didn’t hold anything back. They always gave 100 percent, and I really appreciated that and 91Ƶ’s spiritual emphasis that I thought was important for the whole person.


Give to 91Ƶ’s new track & field complex in honor of Landes here:

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Save the date for Homecoming and Family Weekend 2024 /now/news/2024/save-the-date-for-homecoming-and-family-weekend-2024/ Thu, 29 Aug 2024 13:28:00 +0000 /now/news/?p=57527 Alumni, parents, students and community members are invited to celebrate 91Ƶ’s Homecoming and Family Weekend Oct. 11-13, 2024. This year’s events include a Royal City Celebration, a theater production of “Lightning Thief: The Percy Jackson Musical,” a new track & field complex dedication, as well as program and affinity gatherings, alumni and athletic awards, athletic events, TenTalks, and more!

“This year’s festivities will feature a ‘lion’s share’ of new and exciting events, including the Royal City Celebration, which invites all class reunions, affinity groups, department and club gatherings to meet at Thomas Plaza and the Front Lawn for food, fellowship and fun!” said Deanna Reed, Harrisonburg mayor and 91Ƶ director of alumni engagement & community connections. “In addition to the gathering, which promises to be the largest at Homecoming, all are invited to follow the ‘yellow brick road’ to campus for musical theater showings, athletic events, and the return of the ever-popular TenTalks presentations. This year there’s no place like HOMEcoming!”

The homecoming website is your complete source for events, updates, and registration.


91Ƶ’s alumni award winners are:
Dr. Lee Roy Berry Jr. ’66; Kendra Conrad Bailey ’03, MA ’05; and Seth Crissman ’09. MDiv ’15.

91Ƶ Athletics will recognize four Hall of Honor awardees:
longtime employee and coach Roland Landes; standout jumper and sprinter Michael Allen ’13; volleyball, basketball and softball player Gina Campbell Troyer ’93; and basketball star Bianca Ygarza ’14.


Look for the ⓕ Facebook icon that denotes a livestreamed event. Go to the to view these events; recordings will also be available after the event. You do not need a Facebook account to view the livestream.

Athletics events will be streamed through the website.

Here are a few highlights of the weekend. See the full schedule for more details.

Friday

Jubilee Alumni, those who have graduated 50 years ago or more, will gather for a program and luncheon that includes the induction of the class of 1974. *

Art Gallery Opening, from 4-5 p.m. in the Margaret Martin Gehman Gallery, features artworks from 91Ƶ alumni artists Rebecca Souder Gish ’09, Rhoda Miller ’03, and Jon Styer ’07. 

– Musical Theater Production of “Lightning Thief: The Percy Jackson Musical.91Ƶ students and community members play multiple roles in this epic rock musical version of Rick Riordan’s beloved young-adult novels about an underachieving kid who discovers he is a demigod. Tickets for the show, held in the Studio Theater at 7 p.m., are $20 for adults, $18 for seniors, $10 for children 18 and younger, and $6 for college students. 

Saturday

– Recognizing Hall of Honor and alumni award winners, the Opening Celebration Breakfast features a welcome by President Susan Schultz Huxman.

– A Hall of Honor Ceremony at the MainStage Theater from 10-11 a.m. will celebrate this year’s inductees.

– New to this year’s lineup of events, the Royal City Celebration invites all class reunions, affinity groups, department and club gatherings to follow the yellow brick road for food, fellowship, and fun! Meal tickets to the gathering, held from 11 a.m.-1 p.m. on Thomas Plaza and the Front Lawn, are $20 for adults and $9 for children ages 5 to 11. *

– See Royals athletics in action on the brand new Turf Field with Field Hockey vs. Sweet Briar at noon, Women’s Soccer vs. Guilford at 3 p.m., and Men’s Soccer vs. Lynchburg at 6 p.m. The Women’s Volleyball team takes on Lynchburg in Yoder Arena at 2 p.m.

– Prepare to be impacted, influenced and inspired at the annual 91Ƶ TenTalks. Modeled on TED Talks presentations, this event in Suter Science Center 106 from 2-3 p.m. features alumna and novelist Ashley Mellinger ’24; Adesola Johnson, senior biology major; and Dr. Mark Metzler Sawin, 91Ƶ professor of history, speaking for 10 minutes each with a Q&A at the end.*

– Turn out for the new track & field complex dedication at 3:30 p.m.

“Lightning Thief: The Percy Jackson Musical.” Another chance to catch this exhilarating spectacle starting at 7 p.m. in the Studio Theater.

Sunday

– Worship with 91Ƶ Chamber Singers at 9:30 a.m. at Park View Mennonite Church.

“Lightning Thief: The Percy Jackson Musical.” A third and final showing of the epic rock musical, capping Homecoming and Family Weekend 2024, starts at 7 p.m.

*Registration required


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Tales from the turf /now/news/2024/tales-from-the-turf/ /now/news/2024/tales-from-the-turf/#comments Thu, 18 Jul 2024 15:49:05 +0000 /now/news/?p=57153 91Ƶ’s field hockey coaches, players share stories and successes through the years

When 91Ƶ built a turf field in 1989, it became the first school in the Old Dominion Athletic Conference (ODAC) to do so. 91Ƶ’s field hockey athletes, who began playing on the field that fall, welcomed the switch from grass to artificial turf. The new surface complemented the speedy and skilled set of players; they could move the ball up the pitch faster and with more control and pass and shoot with more accuracy and power. The other schools in the ODAC were less than thrilled with the change, recounts Sandy Brownscombe, coach of the 91Ƶ team from 1978-93.

“Everybody was upset,” she said. “They thought we had an unfair advantage. There was even discussion that we shouldn’t be allowed to host the conference tournament if we were the No. 1 seed.”

Fortunately, for 91Ƶ and for the future of field hockey, those discussions soon ground to a halt. Eventually, the other ODAC schools, as well as countless high schools and colleges across the country, installed turf fields for their own field hockey programs.

“It’s the way the game was meant to be played,” Brownscombe said.

A sport with success

91Ƶ’s turf field, along Park Road north of Suter Science Center, has witnessed the school’s leading scorers and legendary goalkeepers play on its pitch. Field hockey has more athletes inducted in 91Ƶ’s Hall of Honor (18 players) and more teams in the hall (two: the 1980 and 1995 squads) than any other sport at the school. By comparison, men’s soccer, which has the second-most inductees, has 12 players and one team in the hall. Two coaches who led the field hockey program, Brownscombe and Miriam “Mim” Mumaw ‘61, are also in the hall.

91Ƶ field hockey teams have won 11 ODAC titles and appeared at 11 national tournaments (two Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women [AIAW] and nine National Collegiate Athletic Association [NCAA] tournaments). The 1995 team, which advanced further than any other in school history, competed in the final four of the NCAA Division III field hockey tournament and placed third in the country.

From 1979 to 2003, Royals field hockey celebrated an unparalleled streak of success with teams advancing every year during those 25-seasons to the final four of their conference—the Virginia Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women (VAIAW) from 1979-81 and the ODAC from 1982-2003. For six straight seasons, from 1995 to 2000, 91Ƶ field hockey went undefeated in ODAC play. (The 1987 and 2007 teams were also undefeated in the ODAC.)

91Ƶ Athletics Hall of Honor 

Field Hockey Players (year graduated)
  (1983)
  (1985)
  (1986)
  (1988)
  (1991)
  (1992)
  (1994)
  (1996)
  (1996)
  (1997)
  (1998)
  (1999)
  (2000)
  (2000)
  (2003)
  (2005)
  (2008)
  (2010)

Coaches (years inducted)
 (2002)
 (2004)

Teams
(years inducted)
 (2012)
 (2008)

An era begins

Field hockey’s start in America is credited to Constance Applebee who played the sport in England and introduced it while on a tour of northeastern U.S. women’s colleges in 1901. She served as athletic director of Bryn Mawr College in Pennsylvania from 1904-28 and co-founded the American Field Hockey Association.

Miriam “Mim” Mumaw

It began as a club sport at 91Ƶ in 1970 under Mumaw, a trailblazing athletic director who coached the women’s basketball (1966-75) and women’s volleyball (1968-79) teams.

Before that, students interested in field hockey like Fannie Bomberger Miller ‘71 played on area club teams composed of coaches from nearby schools and colleges.

“When I would tell kids from Virginia that I played hockey, they were like, ‘What’s that?’” said Miller, who came to 91Ƶ from Manheim, Pennsylvania.

She played on the Shenandoah Valley club team from 1967-68. By the time 91Ƶ fielded its own team, Miller said, she was too busy with her nursing coursework to join.

A group of students from the Lancaster, Pennsylvania, area had played field hockey in high school and wanted to start a team at 91Ƶ, Mumaw said. So, she volunteered to get them started, serving as inaugural coach for that first season. Field hockey became a varsity sport at 91Ƶ in 1971, with coach Dianne Gates taking the helm for four years.

“I was more of a faculty adviser than a coach,” Mumaw said. “Dianne’s the one who developed the program.”

The Title IX Act of 1972 mandated equal funding for women’s sports. “A lot of the expansion in women’s athletics came from that,” Mumaw said. “We were fortunate to have Madison College (now JMU) and Bridgewater College close by because we could play them in almost any sport.”

In those days, 91Ƶ’s women athletes competed in the AIAW. 91Ƶ became one of the founding members of the ODAC in 1976, beginning with men’s sports. ODAC added women’s sports in 1982.

When Mumaw left 91Ƶ in 1979 for a sabbatical-turned-permanent residency in Washington, D.C, she rented out her basement to Brownscombe for a year. Brownscombe, who also coached the women’s basketball (1978-89) and men’s volleyball (1991-98) teams, led the field hockey program for 16 seasons.

Sandy Brownscombe coaches from the sidelines.

The 1980 team

For as long as 91Ƶ has fielded a team—and even longer, Pennsylvania and the Lancaster region has been a hotbed of field hockey talent. As a coach, Brownscombe ran a field hockey camp at Camp Hebron (Pennsylvania) during the summers that helped to recruit players to 91Ƶ. In fact, a majority of the players throughout 91Ƶ’s history began playing the sport in high schools around Pennsylvania.

“The rest of the hockey world had not figured out, until we started getting really good, how great these Lancaster County girls were,” Brownscombe said. “Then they began to realize, ‘Oh, these kids are great players, they’re great people, and they’re great students.’”

For an example of their integrity, look no further than the 1980 AIAW regional tournament match between 91Ƶ and Mary Washington. That game ended in a 0-0 tie, and both teams headed to a separate practice field for penalty strokes. When a Mary Washington player took her first penalty stroke, the ball slipped past 91Ƶ goalkeeper Shirley Yoder Faust and through a hole in the net. The umpire, unaware of the hole, signaled a missed shot. It was then, Brownscombe said, that Faust approached the umpire and pointed out the hole.

Joanne Brenneman Speigle, a player on the 1980 Royals field hockey team, moves the ball past a defender.

“They came up to me, and the umpire asked, ‘Why would your goalie tell me it was a goal when I said it wasn’t?’” Brownscombe said. “Shirley looked at me and said, ‘Because it’s the truth,’ and the official just shook her head.”

That 1980 team, which went on to win those penalty strokes, finished third at the state tournament and second at the regional tournament. That year marked the first time Royals field hockey, or any sports team at the school, would qualify for a national tournament. It finished 13th and was inducted in the Hall of Honor in 2012.

“The players on that team saw the transition of field hockey at 91Ƶ from just another team to one that had to be reckoned with,” Brownscombe said.

The 1980 Royals field hockey team
Many of 91Ƶ’s field hockey athletes through the years have continued serving the school long after they graduated and played their final games. Former players like Anne Kaufman Weaver ‘88 and Evon Bergey ‘79 served as members of the 91Ƶ Board of Trustees. Bergey, mother of Music Professor Benjamin Bergey and chair of the 91Ƶ Presidential Search Committee in 2016, only played field hockey for one season in 1978, but plays a role in one of coach Sandy Brownscombe’s cherished memories.

As the team geared up for a game during the season, Brownscombe said, Bergey approached her and told her she was going to a wedding on Saturday.

“I asked her, ‘Who’s going to score? We need you. You’re our offense,” said the coach.

The game was early Saturday morning and the wedding was that night in Souderton, Pennsylvania. Bergey was in the wedding party and was expected to be there on Friday night. She flew in for the game on Saturday and then flew right back to Pennsylvania after it ended.

“She scored the only goal that game,” Brownscombe said. “We won 1-0.”

The ‘hay’ days of hockey

Before the turf field arrived on campus, the field hockey players practiced and played on a grass field that ran from the top of the tennis courts to the physical plant, through what is now the softball field.

Brownscombe recalled regularly painting lines on the field with the soccer coach, whose field was next to them, where the new track complex is. One year, she said, her players arrived at the field and found the grass so long it looked like hay.

“Fortunately, one of the captains had worked at the physical plant all summer and was allowed to drive a truck, so the other players could throw the grass in it,” she said. “Sure, it was frustrating, but that’s what we did.”

Field hockey and soccer players often had to stop practices for cross-country meets, which ran right across the 50-yard line of our grass fields. When they did get to play, it was in front of a passionate group of fans: the boys in the three-story Oakwood dormitory.

“They were rowdy,” Brownscombe said. “They would be watching out their windows and be shouting at the players.”

Linda Burkhart Myers ‘86, the 1985 ODAC Player of the Year and a member of the 1985 team that won the conference, played for the Royals after transferring from Goshen College in 1983. 

“Hockey was my first love, and the team was like a second family,” she said. “The other players were fun to goof around with but also were serious about working hard to play better hockey.”
Jeané Horning Hershey prepares to take a shot. “To this day, whenever I hear the thump of a ball hitting the back of a goal, it takes me right back to the 91Ƶ turf,” Hershey said.
“Some of my friends showed up and spray-painted a sheet ‘Go EMC!’ It was fun to have their support,” Jeané Horning Hershey said. (91Ƶ was known as Eastern Mennonite College at the time).

The ’90s teams

Tina Book ‘91 played on the field hockey team for four seasons in the late 1980s and returned to coach the team in 1994 after Brownscombe left. She remembered playing on the turf field the first year it was installed.

“It made the game faster, and it also allowed us to score more,” the 1989 ODAC Player of the Year said. “I feel like we were so adaptive to the turf.”

Indeed, all of the top scorers in the 91Ƶ record books—players like Jeané Horning Hershey ‘94—made their mark on the turf. Hershey, once the career record leader in goals and points scored, now ranks sixth in career goals and eighth in career points at 91Ƶ.

In 1992 and 1993, the Royals defeated rival and perennial ODAC powerhouse Lynchburg College in back-to-back conference finals matches to advance to the first round of the national tournament. It was the start of seven national tournament appearances that decade. (The Royals returned to the national tournament in 2000 and 2003.)

A program from the first round of the 1993 NCAA Division III field hockey tournament where the Royals lost 3-0 to Messiah

“We had a good camaraderie, and I don’t remember any drama,” Hershey said. “I just remember working hard and doing the best we could.”

Former goalkeeper Jen Kooker Peifer ’96, who played on the team from 1992-95, held the career saves record for 23 years before it was broken in 2018 by Kelsey Troyer. Peifer’s career save percentage record (89.8 percent) remains intact. She was inducted in the Hall of Honor as an athlete and as a member of the 1995 team.

That ‘95 squad posted a remarkable 21-2 overall record, an 8-0 conference record and a historic run to the final four at nationals. “I think that’s one of the best teams that 91Ƶ has ever had in any sport,” Peifer said.

The 1995 Royals field hockey team (Jen Kooker Peifer, back row, left)

Small but mighty

Kristina Landis Yoder ’09

When Kristina Landis Yoder ’09 joined the field hockey team in 2006, she had heard all about its history of success.

“There was definitely a sense of honor in carrying on those traditions,” she said. “We always had pride in being a small but mighty team.”

Yoder recounted starting each morning of preseason practice with a three-mile run, followed by three practices held throughout the day. During her playing career, from 2006-08, the team led by coach Brenda Bechler made it to the ODAC finals every year only to be defeated by Lynchburg each time. Their first meeting, in 2006, ended in a tie and went into a second overtime before Lynchburg prevailed in penalty strokes.

“I don’t think there was any other game in my career that all of us played so hard and ran so hard,” she said. “That year, they didn’t expect us to make it that far, and we did. It was exhilarating and fun and by far the most memorable game I’ve ever played.”

A bright future

Chardonnay “Char” Hope

In February 2024, Chardonnay “Char” Hope took the reins as the new field hockey coach. She succeeds Ashley “Stick” Kishorn, who had coached the team since 2017.

Prior to coming to 91Ƶ, Hope was the head field hockey coach at ODAC school Ferrum College. She said she had researched the Royals’ success, and it was what drew her to taking the job.

“A championship history and a winning mindset is embedded in the roots of this program,” Hope said. “There are many athletes and coaches who have paved the way for our current team and me.”

Turf as old as time

The 91Ƶ turf field has a rich history. Its playing surface, which was last replaced in 2006, is now used by the men’s and women’s soccer teams and women’s lacrosse team, in addition to the field hockey team. But, after 18 years of dutiful service, it’s showing its age. The turf no longer has the same bounce or cushion it once had. Sections of the surface are peeling away, presenting a safety hazard to the athletes who use it.

“Replacing the turf field is absolutely necessary to avoid injuries and attract the level of players that will build a winning team,” Hershey said.

Peifer agreed with her former teammate: “If you want athletes to come to 91Ƶ, having top-tier athletic facilities is paramount. When they’re touring schools, the facilities that impress them play a big part in where they want to go.”

The turf field, one of the oldest in the ODAC, has lived nearly two industry-standard lives. The school is set to install new carpet and a top-of-the-line pad this summer. 91Ƶ Athletics Director Carrie Bert said the new and improved field will be “visually appealing and, more importantly, provide more consistent ball play and a significantly safer experience for athletes and officials.”

Support our student-athletes and a new turf field through an immediate gift or multi-year commitment. Give today at emu.edu/turf-field, or contact kirk.shisler@emu.edu for more details.

91Ƶ Field Hockey

All-time record
513-376-19
All-time ODAC record
269-117-4
ODAC Tournament record
54-20 (.730)
NCAA Division III bids
9 (1992-93-95-96-97-98-99-2000-03)
NCAA Tournament record
4-8 (.333)
ODAC Championships
11 (1985-87-92-93-95-96-97-98-99-2000-03)
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