The Community Connection

Umstead goes out as national champion

Senior from Upper Perkiomen helps UConn win NCAA title

- By Bill Arsenault For Digital First Media

The University of Connecticu­t field hockey team captured the national championsh­ip and senior Casey Umstead was a key performer for the Huskies.

Umstead (Upper Perkiomen) started all 23 games including a 2-1 shootout victory over North Carolina in the semifinals on Nov. 17 and a 2-1 triumph over Maryland in the championsh­ip game on Nov. 19, both in Louisville, Ky. She was named to the All-Tournament team as the Huskies finished 23-0 and were ranked No. 1 by the National Field Hockey Coaches Associatio­n.

The 5-foot-5 standout was named Big East Conference Defender of the Year and earned her second straight All-Big East selection (she was a second team pick as a sophomore). As a junior, she earned NFHCA All-Mideast Region first team and was a third team NFHCA All-American selection. Those announceme­nts are still to come for this season.

Umstead can put her name in the scorebook, too. She was second on the team in scoring with 15 goals and 16 assists for 46 points with four game-winners. She started every game for the Huskies the past three seasons (70) and finished with 79 starts in 93 games for her career. And, she totaled 60 goals and 40 assists for 120 points during that time, a number of the goals coming on penalty strokes. She was a freshman member of the 2014 national championsh­ip team, the Huskies losing in the semifinals the past two seasons.

“The seniors worked tirelessly to create a Golden Era of UConn field hockey,” coach Nancy Stevens said. “Casey played with two national title teams and in four consecutiv­e Final Fours. More importantl­y, she is a superb student and has applied to graduate school to become a physician’s assistant.”

North Carolina’s semifinal loss was the final game for senior Gab Major (Spring-Ford) who led the Tar Heels with 30 points with eight goals and a team-high 14 assists. She had an assist on the only score against the Huskies. Major played 93 games with 66 starts and finished with 113 points on 40 goals and 33 assists with seven gamewinner­s.

Senior Chillano and redshirt sophomore Steele had standout seasons with the Duke field hockey team which finished 17-4 after just missing out on the Final Four with a 3-2 loss to Maryland in the quarterfin­als. Chillano was named to the Atlantic Coast Conference first team after scoring eight goals with four assists for 20 points with four game-winners. She also had three defensive saves. Steele gave up 29 goals (1.33 goals against average) with 74 saves and seven shutouts. She was named to the ACC second team.

The Kutztown sophomore kicked off the wrestling season at the East Stroudsbur­g Open on Nov. 12. He won his first match at 133 pounds 7-1 but dropped his second match 10-2. Then he exited the tourney with a medical forfeit in the first consolatio­n match. Miller, who was 15-9 as a true freshman, came back to score an 8-2 victory but the Golden Bears were beaten 24-10 by Pitt-Johnstown on Nov. 17. Redshirt freshman Tommy Killoran (Boyertown) competed at 285 pounds and was 0-2 at East Stroudsbur­g.

The Penn State senior defender led the team, the Big Ten Conference and Division I in defensive saves with 10. Fretz started all 22 games for the sixth-ranked Nittany Lions and led the team in minutes played with 1,561. She also picked up a goal and helped Penn State finish 17-5 on the season. Earning an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament, the Nittany Lions defeated defending champion Delaware 2-1 in overtime before dropping a 4-3 decision to Connecticu­t in the quarterfin­als.

The 5-foot-5 junior goalkeeper was named to the All-Tournament team after leading the Shippensbu­rg field hockey team to its second straight NCAA Division II Championsh­ip with a 4-1 victory over LIU-Post in the title game on Nov. 19 in Louisville, Ky. Mooney had six saves in the game. She started all 21 games for the Raiders who finished 17-4. She gave up 38 goals (1.45 goals against average) and had 96 saves (.744 save percentage). Shippensbu­rg defeated Stonehill 6-1 and East Stroudsbur­g 2-1 in the semifinals to earn its spot in the title game.

The senior defender was named the Most Outstandin­g Player after she led the Middlebury field hockey team to a 4-0 victory over Messiah to capture the NCAA Division III Championsh­ip on Nov. 18 in Louisville, Ky. Schweppe started all 22 games for the 20-2 Panthers and had five goals and seven assists for 17 points with a game-winner. She also had a defensive save, helping the back side limit foes to 22 goals with nine shutouts. Messiah entered the title game as the No. 1 seed and the defending champion, the Falcons seeing their 44-game win streak snapped. And, it was the first time the team has been shut out in 58 games.

The sophomore place kicker led the Villanova football team in scoring with 50 points. The 5-foot-11, 205-pounder connected on 26 of 27 extra points and was good on eight of 10 field goal attempts with a long of 46. Senior defensive back Rasaan Stewart (Perkiomen Valley) was the third leading tackler on the team with 63, including 33 solos. He also had an intercepti­on and a fumble recovery. Villanova finished 5-6 overall and 3-5 in the Colonial Athletic Associatio­n.

The sophomore is off to a great start as a freestyle sprinter for the Elizabetht­own men’s swim team. He captured the 50 free (22.74), the 100 free (50:36) and swam the anchor leg on the winning 200 medley relay (1:45.00) in a 153-47 victory over Lebanon Valley on Nov. 20. He’s 4-1 in the 50 thus far and he won that event in a 135121 loss to Drew on Nov. 18. He also swam anchor on the winning 200 free relay (1:33.23) and was a member of the 200 medley relay which finished second (1:41.46).

 ?? COURTESY UCONN ATHLETICS ?? UConn senior Casey Umstead (Upper Perkiomen).
COURTESY UCONN ATHLETICS UConn senior Casey Umstead (Upper Perkiomen).

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