BAY CITY, Mich. -- The Great
Lakes Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (GLIAC) announced the
recipients of the Spring 2008 GLIAC Commissioner's Awards. The
awards, sponsored by Meijer, Incorporated, are presented after the
Fall, Winter, and Spring athletic seasons to six male and six
female student-athletes that excel both in the classroom and on the
fields of play.
The six female student-athletes to receive the
Spring 2008 GLIAC Commissioner's Awards are: Pamela
Bullock of the University of Findlay; Stephanie
Cole of Grand Valley State University; Becky
Hoffman and Katie Kraai of Ferris State
University; Andrea Metz of Michigan Technological
University; and Lindsey Perry of Wayne State
University.
The six male student-athletes to receive the
Spring 2008 GLIAC Commissioner's Awards are: Eric
Atsma of Findlay; Matthew Cunningham and
Brett Witczak of Wayne State; Derek
Hinke of Grand Valley State; Joe Luli of
Mercyhurst College; and Timothy Sayers of
Hillsdale College.
"These 12 student-athletes exemplify what
collegiate athletics is all about," stated GLIAC Commissioner Tom
Brown. "Our conference, along with Meijer Incorporated, feel that
it is important to recognize these hard working student-athletes
for their outstanding performances in the classroom and on the
field of play. The GLIAC would like to thank Meijer for their
generous sponsorship of the 2008 Commissioner's Awards and for
helping us acknowledge the exceptional accomplishments of this
group."
The following are biographies of the Spring
2008 GLIAC Commissioner's Awards recipients:
Pamela Bullock has had a
distinguished career for the Findlay Women's Track & Field
teams, winning 14 conference titles during her tenure as an Oiler.
During her senior campaign while working on her master's degree in
education, Bullock earned All-American status in the 100-meter dash
and won four events at the 2008 GLIAC Outdoor championships by
taking first in the 100-meter dash, 200-meter dash, 4 x 100-meter
relay and 4 x 400-meter relay. During the indoor season, she
captured All-American honors in the 200-meter dash and 4 x
400-meter relay, while walking away with conference titles in the
55-meter dash, 200-meter dash and 4 x 400-meter relay. Overall, she
has been named All-American five times during her career.
As a senior with a biomedical science major,
Stephanie Cole led Grand Valley State with 13 wins
on the season, finishing with a record of 13-6. She compiled a
team-leading earned run average of 1.83 with 75 strikeouts. In
126.1 innings pitched, she gave up 99 hits and 45 runs, with 33 of
the runs earned. She pitched 14 complete games with seven shutouts.
She also recorded two saves on the season, while holding opposing
batters to an average of .208. Cole was a First Team All-GLIAC
selection following the 2008 season. Cole ranked 72nd in Division
II in earned run average and 55th in saves. She also finished the
season 16th in walks allowed per seven innings with 0.89. She
earned ESPN the Magazine Academic All-District IV honors in both
2006 and 2007. She was also an All-GLIAC Second Team selection in
her sophomore season in 2006.
Becky Hoffman, a senior on the
FSU women's golf team, is a social work major. The 2007-08 GLIAC
Women's Golf Athlete of the Year, is a two-time (2007 and 2008)
ESPN The Magazine/CoSIDA Academic All-America Second-Team selection
and a three-time (2004-05, 2006-07, and 2007-08) National Golf
Coaches Association (NGCA) Division II All-America Honorable
Mention honoree. She averaged a team-best 77.81 strokes per round
(2,490 total strokes) in 32 rounds this season and the four-time
(2004-08) All-GLIAC First-Team pick earned individual medalist
honors at the 2008 GLIAC Championships after claiming a playoff
win. The two-time (2006-07 and 2007-08) FSU MVP concluded her
four-year career as the program's all-time leader with a 78.31
career stroke average (9,240 total strokes) in 118 rounds. She led
Ferris State to a fourth-place national showing at the 2008 NCAA-II
Women's Golf Championships.
Katie Kraai, a senior on the
FSU softball team and a nursing major, earned 2008 All-GLIAC
First-Team accolades. She is a two-time (2005 and 2007) National
Fastpitch Coaches Association (NFCA) Scholar-Athlete and earned
2008 ESPN The Magazine/CoSIDA Academic All-District IV Softball
First-Team plaudits. A three-time (2006-08) GLIAC All-Academic Team
pick, Kraai was the recipient of FSU's 22nd annual Helen Bennett
Award for the Bulldogs' most outstanding female student-athlete.
Kraai, the school's all-time leader with 49 career doubles in 202
games, helped lead Ferris State to a share of the conference
regular-season championship title and a national tourney
fifth-place tying finish.
Andrea Metz, a senior majoring
in chemical engineering Michigan Tech, won the 1,500-meter run at
the 2008 GLIAC Outdoor Track & Field Championships in a school
record time of 4:38.33. Her time also provisionally qualified her
for the NCAA Track and Field Championships. The Marathon, Wis.,
native also ranks fifth in school history in the 3,000-meter run
(10:31.20) and eighth in the 5,000-meter run (18:35.86). She is
eligible for selection to the ESPN The Magazine Academic
All-American Team after being selected to the ESPN The Magazine
Academic All-District Team for cross country and track and field.
The three-time All-GLIAC Academic selection was named most improved
on the Michigan Tech women's track and field team in 2008.
Lindsey Perry is a senior
nursing major and first baseman for Wayne State. She earned her
third consecutive GLIAC All-Academic team selection in 2008, and
was a CoSIDA Academic All-District Second Team honoree. On the
field, she was one of three players to start all 53 games for WSU
in 2008 and was voted to the All-GLIAC Second Team. In addition,
she was selected to the NCAA Great Lakes Region All-Tournament
team. Perry earned the WSU Athletics Deans' Award for having
highest cumulative grade point average of any student-athlete in
the College of Nursing. She finished her collegiate career ranked
high in many WSU all-time categories: third in home runs (20) and
fielding putouts (979), fourth in slugging percentage (.512) and
fielding percentage (.985), sixth in runs scored (123) and doubles
(40), eighth in total bases (311), and ninth in hits (199) and RBI
(100).
Eric Atsma, a senior on the
Findlay men's golf team, was named first team All-GLIAC in 2008 for
the fourth year in a row. The 2005 GLIAC Freshman of the Year,
Atsma was named first team All-Great Lakes Region in 2006 and 2007,
and has been named to the GLIAC All-Academic team three times
during his career. Atsma tied the school record for lowest 18-hole
score with a 67 at the Ferris State Invitational in 2005, and then
tied the school record for lowest 54-hole score with a 217 at the
2007 Super Regional. The operations and logistics major finished
his career with the second lowest scoring average ever at UF after
coming in at 74.09.
Matthew Cunningham, a senior
catcher for the Warriors, garnered his fourth career GLIAC
All-Academic Team award in 2008. Having already earned his
bachelor's degree in public relations, Cunningham is currently
pursuing a master's degree in sports administration. This past
season, Cunningham played in 45 games, batted .265 and set
career-highs in at bats (132), runs scored (21), runs batted in
(18), walks (21), total bases (43) and sacrifice hits (6) while
serving as team captain for the second straight year. He completed
his WSU playing career tied for sixth all-time in games played
(178), tied for fourth in sacrifice hits (17), fifth in fielding
chances (864), sixth in putouts (762), and eighth in fielding
percentage (.979) in the annals of Wayne State baseball.
Senior second baseman Brett
Witczak earned a GLIAC All-Academic Team selection in his
first year of eligibility, having spent two years at Eastern
Michigan prior to his arrival at WSU in 2007. An ESPN The
Magazine/CoSIDA Academic All-District IV College Division
Second Team honoree in 2008, Witczak is a social studies education
major. He started 52 games at second base this season and batted
.320 with 29 RBI and 23 runs scored while finishing second on the
team with 19 multiple-hit games. Witczak was named to the All-GLIAC
First Team in 2008 after taking Second Team honors a year ago.
Derek Hinke, a senior
outfielder on the GVSU baseball team and statistics major, finished
the 2008 season batting .391, which was second on the team. He was
also the only Laker to start and play in every game this season.
Hinke recorded 192 at-bats, scoring 45 runs and knocking in a
team-leading 53 more. He hit six home runs on the season, a
team-best, and slugged .599 with 18 doubles and two triples. Hinke
walked 15 times and struck out just 21 to finish with an on-base
percentage of .430. Hinke earned numerous awards during the 2008
season. He was a First Team All-GLIAC selection, as well as an
Academic All-GLIAC honoree. He was also named to the Daktronics
North Central Region First Team and the 2008 First Team District IV
ESPN the Magazine Academic All-American. Hinke ranked in the top
100 in Division II in doubles per game (46th), doubles (81st) and
runs batted in per game (67th).
A senior business major and outfielder on the
Mercyhurst baseball team, Joe Luli batted a
career-high .364 in 2008, despite being limited to 37 games due to
injury. He led the Lakers with five home runs and 31
runs-batted-in, while being named second team All-GLIAC in his
senior campaign. He finished his career ranked sixth in school
history with 120 runs-batted-in, and seventh in home runs with 14.
After missing 15 games in the middle of the season, he returned to
bat .439 over the final 19 games with four homers and 23 RBI,
slugging .719 and posting at least one hit in 18 of those games. He
completed his career as a three-time All-GLIAC selection (one first
team award and two second team awards) and was a Collegiate
Baseball Preseason All-America selection in 2007.
Timothy Sayers, a senior speech major on the
Hillsdale men's track & field and cross country teams, had a
standout 2008 season. Sayers was a national qualifier in the
steeplechase event, the first time he's qualified for the NCAA
Championships. His time of 9:14.29 was good for 12th overall in the
nation in the event entering the national meet. Sayers was elected
team captain in all three sports in which he competed, a testament
to the respect he earned from a wide variety of teammates. He was
named All-GLIAC in four different events in the three different
sports, spanning all four years of his college career. In the
classroom, Tim earned Academic All-American honors six times in his
career, and was named to the GLIAC's All-Academic team in each year
of eligibility in cross country, indoor track and outdoor track. In
the community, he spent much time working Hillsdale-area youth in
organizations such as the Free Methodist Church, where he served as
a group leader and mentor to boys in junior high and high school.