College

NDSU Wrestling Takes Home Honors

As voted by its coaches, the Western Wrestling Conference has announced postseason award winners for the 2014-15 season. North Dakota State University swept the honors as 184-pound junior Hayden Zillmer was named the WWC Wrestler of Year, 149-pound redshirt freshman Clay Ream was tabbed WWC Freshman of the Year and Bison head man Roger Kish was chosen by his peers as the WWC Coach of the Year.The Wrestler of the Year and Freshman of the Year awards were voted on by the league’s head coaches this past week, while the Coach of the Year balloting was determined after the NCAA West Regional/WWC Championships last month.Wrestler of the Year: NDSU – Hayden Zillmer, Jr., 184 lbs., Crosby, Minn. (Crosby-Ironton HS)Zillmer capped off a stellar season with a sixth-place finish in his weight class at the NCAA Division I Wrestling Championships two weeks ago. The Bison junior had to reel off five straight wins in the wrestlebacks after getting upset in the first round at nationals en route to earning the first All-America finish of his career. Zillmer, who entered the national tournament as the six seed at 184 pounds, finished his 2015 NCAA run with a 5-3 record. Two of his wins came over No. 2 Max Thomusseit and No. 4 Jack Dechow of Old Dominion during the streak and all five were over fellow seeded foes. Zillmer and his teammate Kurtis Julson were the lone two All-Americans in the WWC this year and marked the first time in program history that NDSU has produced two Division I All-Americans in the same season.Zillmer finished his 2014-15 campaign with a 36-7 record and a perfect 13-0 mark in duals. He was a three-time WWC Wrestler of the Week and won his second straight NCAA West Regional/WWC Championship title despite moving from 174 to 184 this year. The Crosby, Minn., native also took third at the prestigious Cliff Keen Las Vegas Invitational with a win over the then top-ranked wrestler in the nation and eventual national champion Gabe Dean of Cornell. He also placed fourth at the Midlands Championships and finished the year with eight falls, four tech falls and three major decisions. Zillmer also currently holds a 3.17 GPA while majoring in physical education.Freshman of the Year: NDSU – Clay Ream, RFr., 149 lbs., Wentzville, Mo. (Holt HS)Ream qualified for the NCAA Championships for the first time by earning an automatic bid after winning the 149-pound title at the NCAA West Regional/WWC Championships last month. At nationals, the North Dakota State redshirt freshman put together a solid run as he finished with a 2-2 record with a pair of big wins over the 2014 NCAA runner-up Joshua Kindig of Oklahoma State as well as Hunter Stieber of Ohio State.The Wentzville, Mo., native finished the year with a 25-13 overall record, which included a 10-3 mark in duals. Ream recorded seven pins, five major decisions and one tech fall en route to tallying 25 wins on the year. He also placed fourth at both the Bison Open and the Warren Williamson/Daktronics Open, while maintaining a perfect 4.0 GPA in biochemistry and molecular biology.Coach of the Year: Roger Kish (NDSU)Kish, who just completed his fourth season as NDSU’s head coach, was named the 2014-15 WWC Coach of the Year. The honor is Kish’s third straight, as he also received the award for both the 2012-13 season as well as the 2013-14 one. This year, Kish led his team to both the NCAA West Regional/WWC Tournament title as well as the WWC regular-season dual title with an unblemished 5-0 conference record.Kish led his 2014-15 club to a 9-4 overall record, which included a 22-21 win by criteria over No. 18 Wyoming. NDSU also finished the season ranked 20th on the final NWCA/USA Today Division I Team Coaches Poll. Kish also helped the Bison send a school record six wrestlers to nationals this year, as well as coach a program best two All-Americans in Zillmer and Julson.The Western Wrestling Conference is comprised of six schools including the Air Force Academy, North Dakota State, Northern Colorado, South Dakota State, Utah Valley and Wyoming. The conference formed in April 2006.

150 Ticket Packages Made Available for NCAA West Regional

The University of North Dakota Athletic Department and SCHEELS Arena announced Wednesday that approximately 150 reserved seating ticket packages have been made available for public sale for the 2015 Division I Men’s Ice Hockey West Regional.The tickets will be sold in person at the SCHEELS Arena box office at 9 a.m., Thursday, March 26. The packages are good for all three games of the tournament and are priced at $79 each.In addition there is a very limited amount of single game reserved seating tickets have been released to the public for the regional final to be played at 8 p.m. Saturday, March 28. These tickets will be sold in person only at the SCHEELS Arena box office at 9 a.m. Thursday, March 26. These single game tickets are good for the regional final only and are priced at $59 each.These tickets will be sold in person only at SCHEELS Arena, not online or on the phone.There is a limit of two tickets per person. There is no re-entry to SCHEELS Arena between games on Friday.

UND Women Accept Bid to WBI, Play at New Mexico Wednesday

The University of North Dakota will play its third postseason tournament in its last four seasons, officially accepting a bid to play in the Women’s Basketball Invitational (WBI) Monday. UND will head to Albuquerque, N.M. to play host New Mexico in the opening round of the 16-team tournament.UND is making its second appearance in the WBI after qualifying in 2011-12 due to its Great West Conference championship in the final year of transition to NCAA Division I status. North Dakota was the Big Sky Conference Tournament champion a season ago and earned the automatic berth in the NCAA Division I Tournament, the first in program history.”We’re very excited about this opportunity for our basketball program,” UND head coach Travis Brewster said. “It’s nice to know our body of work early in the season allowed this opportunity and now we need to take care of business.”The opening round for UND will come at host University of New Mexico against the Lobos. Game time is set for 8:00 p.m. Central on Wednesday.The full bracket can be seen here. 

Teschuk 5th in Mile, 7th in 3,000m at NCAA Indoor Championships

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. – In simple terms, it was the greatest individual performance in a single day in North Dakota State indoor track & field history.Bison junior Erin Teschuk (Winnipeg, Manitoba) earned a fifth-place finish in the mile and took seventh place in the 3,000m at the NCAA Indoor Championships on Saturday evening.Teschuk ran the mile first, finishing in a school-record time of 4:32.35 that trimmed another 1.90 seconds off her previous best – clocked on Friday evening in the NCAA semifinals.Overall, it was the fastest mile race in NCAA women’s history. Five women finished in under 4:33, while previously no more than two women had run that fast in the same NCAA final. Michigan State’s Leah O’Connor won in 4:27.18, which was a new meet record and No. 2 in collegiate history.Teschuk’s mile time on Saturday would have won the national title in 8 of the last 10 seasons. Her 4:32.35 stands as the 12th-fastest in NCAA Indoor Championships history.“I was hoping to place higher, but I gave it everything I had,” said Teschuk. “It’s exciting to hear that it ranks as one of the top times ever, so I’m very happy with that.”Exactly two hours after her outstanding performance in the mile, Teschuk came back to claim seventh in the 3,000m in a time of 9:07.92. Her performance was the second-fastest in NDSU history behind only her school-record 9:02.40 earlier this season.The mile-3,000m double was a tough challenge, but Teschuk had no regrets about tackling both events.“I was a little nervous to have both races on the same night,” she related. “I definitely thought I had a chance of being top-eight in both, so I did what I wanted to do. The 3K worked out better than I expected, and I really felt good in both races. I’m glad I did (both).”Teschuk’s fifth-place mile finish is the second-highest in NCAA Indoor Championships history by a Bison, behind only Leslie Brost’s fourth-place finish in the pole vault in 2012.Teschuk earned first-team All-America honors in both events – the sixth and seventh All-America distinctions in NDSU’s Division I era indoors, with Brost and Laura Hermanson (7th in 800m in 2009) as the only other first-teamers.Teschuk now owns the five fastest mile times in North Dakota State history. She improved the school record in the event on four different occasions this season, including on back-to-back days at the NCAA meet.“The great thing about Erin is she loves the competition,” said NDSU distance coach Andrew Carlson. “To run against those girls with what they did tonight, that helped Erin take it to a new level that she hadn’t been to before. Running personal bests and school records in the mile in back-to-back days is incredible.”Teschuk is now ranked 18th in the world this year in the mile.Both Teschuk and NDSU head women’s coach Stevie Keller were quick to praise Carlson on his leadership of the Bison distance runners in his first full season.“Honestly, words can’t even describe how thankful I am for Andrew and how much he has meant to me this season,” Teschuk stated. “He’s an amazing coach – not just for me but for everyone on our team. He does such a great job preparing us and motivating us.”“Erin has made unbelievable strides so far this year,” said Keller. “It’s a credit to Andrew on his hard work and to her for her commitment to training hard.”Following the meet, Teschuk wasn’t ready to reflect on her whirlwind, breakthrough season.“It’s been a lot to take in really – definitely a little overwhelming at times,” Teschuk said.Carlson was better able to see the big picture.“Erin’s true colors have come out this indoor season,” he said. “We look forward to what the future holds because she has all the talent in the world. She works hard, and she is really, really, really tough. With that combination, the sky is the limit. This is just the beginning.”Teschuk was proud to represent North Dakota State on the biggest stage.“It’s awesome. It fuels me to want to do more,” she said. “I want to get back on the track right now. It’s great to see that NDSU can run with all these schools.”

Lawrence Alexander Named Summit League Player of the Year; Richman Wins Coach of the Year

North Dakota State senior guard Lawrence Alexander was selected as The Summit League Men’s Basketball Player of the Year, and NDSU first-year head coach Dave Richman earned the league’s Coach of the Year award, the league announced Thursday, March 5. Redshirt freshman AJ Jacobson was named honorable mention All-Summit League, as well as earning a spot as the lone freshman on the All-Newcomer Team. Sophomore forward Dexter Werner won the league’s Sixth Man of the Year honor. Alexander becomes NDSU’s second consecutive Summit League Player of the Year and third overall, joining (2013-14) and Ben Woodside (2008-09). Richman’s honor is the third Coach of the Year award claimed by NDSU in the last seven years, after Saul Phillips won in 2008-09 and 2013-14. Alexander led the league in scoring with 20.8 points per contest in league play and 19.1 points per game overall. He also topped the league in minutes per game (38.6) and three-pointers made (93), setting a new NDSU single-season school record for treys. Nationally, Alexander ranks third in minutes per game, sixth in three-point percentage, 10th in three-pointers made per game, and 27th in scoring. Jacobson was the league’s top-scoring freshman, both overall (11.5 ppg) and in league play (11.8 ppg). He ranked second in the league in free throw percentage and eighth in three-point percentage. Jacobson made multiple three-pointers in 11 of 16 league games. Werner recorded nine games of seven or more rebounds this season and scored in double figures 12 times. He shot 50 percent from the floor in league games. Richman guided the Bison to a 20-9 regular season record and a 12-4 mark in league play for a share of their second consecutive Summit League regular season title, despite being picked fifth in the league’s preseason poll. He is the first rookie coach since 1983-84 to earn Summit League Coach of the Year honors.   Player of the YearLawrence Alexander, North Dakota State Newcomer of the YearDeondre Parks, South Dakota State Sixth Man of the YearDexter Werner, North Dakota State Defensive Player of the YearCody Larson, South Dakota State Coach of the YearDave Richman, North Dakota State First Team All-Summit LeagueLawrence Alexander, North Dakota StateObi Emegano, Oral RobertsSteve Forbes, Fort WayneCody Larson, South Dakota StateTyler Larson, South DakotaDeondre Parks, South Dakota StateSecond Team All-Summit LeagueKorey Billbury, Oral RobertsCJ Carter, OmahaGarret Covington, Western IllinoisGeorge Marshall, South Dakota StateBrett Olson, Denver Honorable Mention All-Summit LeagueMarcellus Barksdale, IUPUIJake Bittle, South Dakota StateJoe Edwards, Fort Wayne, North Dakota StateMike Rostampour, Omaha All-Newcomer TeamTre Burnette, South DakotaAJ Jacobson, North Dakota StateMax Landis, Fort WayneGeorge Marshall, South Dakota StateDeondre Parks, South Dakota State