PAC 60th anniversary team (Women's Basketball)

The Presidents’ Athletic Conference (PAC), formally organized in 1955 by charter members Case Institute of Technology, Western Reserve University, John Carroll University, and Wayne State University, is celebrating its 60th anniversary throughout the 2014-15 academic year. The PAC will be recognizing 60 of its outstanding student-athletes that have competed as members of both present, and past, league-affiliated institutions in 19 championship sports with the creation of 60th anniversary celebratory teams.

Sixteen of the PAC’s past and present members are participating in the yearlong celebration project. All 10 of the PAC’s current members were automatically included, while past league members must have had at least a 10-year affiliation with the conference to participate.

Both past and present PAC members receive “automatic” selections on the 60th anniversary teams based on the institution’s membership time. Each school also has the opportunity to nominate a limited number of additional “at-large” student-athletes for consideration.

Sport-specific advisory committees, made up of five-six past and present PAC coaches and administrators, determine additional “at-large” student-athletes to be recognized in order to reach 60 student-athletes on each celebratory team.





Name School Years Competed Hometown/High School
Emilee Ackerman Westminster College 2004-08 Greensburg, Pa./Hempfield
Ackerman completed her four year career at Westminster as the most decorated Titans women’s basketball player in the history of the program. A two-time First Team All-PAC honoree, Ackerman is the only player in team history to be recognized as an honorable mention All-America selection. She was a key member of the 2006-07 program that set a team record for wins in a season (22) and qualified for the NCAA Division III Championships. She was also a member of the 2004-05 Titan squad that won the school’s first-ever PAC title and qualified for the Division III Championships for the first time in school history (Westminster lost in the second round, the farthest the Titans have ever gone in the tournament). She holds the school record in career points (1,483), points in a season (611) and season scoring average (23.5). Ackerman is also tied first in Titan history a 13.6 points per game average during her career. She also holds the top four single game scoring performances in school history, including a school-best 37 points on Feb. 23, 2008 against Geneva. She holds the highest field goal percentage in Titan history with a minimum of three seasons played (46.9%, 506-of-1,078). Her 194 made field goals in 2008 rank first in school history, while her 506 career made field goals stand third best. She shot 16-for-16 from the free throw line on Feb. 29, 2008 against Washington & Jefferson, which is also a Westminster record. Ackerman was named to the D3Hoops.com All-Great Lakes Region team twice (2007 third team, 2008 first team), earned CoSIDA ESPN The Magazine First Team Academic All-America honors (first in team history) and was named to the PAC Academic Honor Roll in 2006 and in 2008.
Nikki Babik Bethany College 2001-05 Johnstown, Pa./Westmont-Hilltop
Babik helped the Bison to two NCAA Tournament appearances and two PAC Championships. A four-time All-PAC selection, she was twice named to the league’s second team. Babik currently ranks first in Bethany history with 204 three-pointers and ninth among Bethany’s career points leaders with 1,206. Her 59 three-pointers in 2003-04 are the second-most in Bison single-season history.
Kelly Barzak Thiel College 2009-13 Warren, Ohio/Howland
Barzak scored 1,405 career points for the Tomcats, the third most in program history. She also recorded 774 career rebounds, the fifth most in program history. She is also the program’s all-time leader in blocks (288). Barzak was a four-time All-PAC selection, earning Second Team honors in 2010, 2012 and 2013.
Devin Beasley Thomas More College 2010-14 Burlington, Ky./Conner
Beasley, a three-time All-PAC selection, was named an All-Great Lakes Region selection by D3hoops.com after the 2013-14 season. As a senior she led all NCAA Division III counterparts in in assist-to-turnover ratio at 5.2 and was second in the nation in total assists with 238. Beasley established new Thomas More single-game (18), single-season (238) and career (531) assists records.
Theresa Berg Grove City College 1989-93 Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio/Cuyahoga Falls
Berg was a three-time All-PAC selection, earning First Team honors as a junior and senior and Second Team honors following her sophomore campaign. As a senior she averaged 19.6 points per game, 4.5 rebounds per game and 4.2 assists per game while finishing the season with 21 made three-pointers. As a junior she averaged 17.6 points per game, 4.5 rebounds per game and 3.2 assists per game while shooting at an 80 percent rate from the free throw line. Berg, the fifth 1,000-point scorer in program history, is Grove City’s all-time leader in three-point efficiency (37.9%). She ranks third all-time in points (1,347) and free throws made (250), fourth in assists (281) and free throw percentage (77.9%) and sixth in scoring average (14.8 PPG). She was inducted into the Grove City College Athletic Hall of Fame in 2010.
Amber Bodrick Thiel College 2005-09 Boardman, Ohio/Cardinal Mooney
A four-year starter with the Tomcats, Bodrick finished with 1,867 career points, the second most in program history. She scored 51 points in a single game in 2006, the highest single-game point output in program history. She totaled 535 points as a freshman (2005-06), which was the most by a freshman in school history.  Bodrick also recorded 828 career rebounds, tying her for the third most in program history. She converted 75 career three-point attempts, the eighth most in program history. Bodrick was a four-time All-PAC First Team pick.
Liz Broughton Bethany College 1993-97 Zanesville, Ohio/West Muskingum
Broughton helped lead the Bison to their first PAC title and NCAA Division III Tournament appearance in program history in 1997. A three-time All-PAC selection, she finished her career seventh on the Bethany career scoring list with 1,250 points.
Amy Buxbaum Carnegie Mellon University 1988-92 Johnstown, Pa./Ferndale
Buxbaum was a member of Carnegie Mellon’s 1988-89 and 1989-90 PAC Championship teams. She ranks first on the Tartan’s career charts with 933 rebounds and 189 blocks and is ninth among all-time scorers 1,019 points. She also holds the school’s single-season record with 189 blocks.
Cynthia Bynum Thiel College 1984-88 Swissvale, Pa./Swissvale
Bynum amassed 1,203 career points with the Tomcats, the sixth most in program history. She is also the program’s all-time career rebounding leader (1,073). She also ranks second in career blocks (121), fourth in career assists (226) and fifth in career steals (222) in program history. Bynum was a three-time All-PAC performer, earning First Team nods as a sophomore and senior. She was an All-PAC Second Team pick as a junior.
Chris Carlson Grove City College 1987-91 Ashville, N.Y./Panama Central
Carlson earned PAC Most Valuable Player and All-PAC First Team honors following the 1991 season. She also claimed WBCA All-Region honors as a senior. Carlson was recognized as a member of the All-PAC First Team as a junior and was an All-PAC Honor Mention selection as a sophomore. The fourth 1,000 point scorer in program history, she ranks fourth in career points scored (1,337), fifth in scoring average (14.9 PPG) and eighth in rebounding (632). Named the 1991 Grove City College Sportswoman of the Year, Carlson was inducted into the Grove City College Athletic Hall of Fame in 2011.
Carolyn Cochrane Grove City College 1985-89 Denville, N.J./Morris Knolls
Cochrane earned PAC Most Valuable Player and All-PAC First Team honors in 1989. She was also recognized as an All-PAC First Team selection as a junior and was an All-PAC Second Team pick during her sophomore campaign, helping the program to a 12-0 conference record and Grove City’s only league title. Cochrane was the third 1,000-point scorer in program history and currently ranks first in rebounding average (12.9 RPG), ninth in points scored (1,153), seventh in career field goal percentage (.476) and ninth in career scoring average (13.4 PPG). She is Grove City’s only player to reach 1,000 career rebounds (1,110). Selected as the 1989 Grove City College Sportswoman of the Year, Cochrane was inducted into the Grove City College Athletic Hall of Fame in 2011.
Stephanie Cunningham-Roskandich Bethany College 1994-99 Brooke, W.Va./Brooke
Cunningham-Roksandich had a storied career with the Bethany women’s basketball program. She helped lead the Bison to 73-29 record during her career and win its first PAC title in school history (1997). Bethany reached postseason play four times throughout her career, including the 1997 NCAA Division III Championships and the ECAC Championships in 1995, 1996 and 1999. After earning PAC Freshman of the Year distinction in 1995, Cunningham-Roksandich was a First Team All-PAC selection in 1996 and 1997 and a Second Team choice in 1999. She averaged 13.7 points, 7.6 rebounds and 2.2 steals per game over her career. She owns the school record with 12 steals in a game, and in that same matchup with Notre Dame (Md.) College in 1995, she recorded the first triple-double in school history with 11 points, 10 rebounds and 12 steals. Once her career was complete, Cunningham-Roksandich ranked second in all-time points scored with 1,443 (still ranked fifth), second in career rebounds with 800 (still third) and was the all-time leader in steals with 228 (still third). Cunningham-Roksandich was inducted into the Bethany College Hall of Fame in 1999. 
Heather Dawkins Washington & Jefferson College 1990-94 McDonald, Pa.
Dawkins continues to rank as one of the most dominating forces in Washington & Jefferson women’s basketball history. A six-foot-two center, she ranks as the career rebound leader at the College with 942. She also holds the single-season rebound record with 318. Dawkins’ record of 464 points in a single-season also stood for 10 years. She ranks sixth on W&J’s all-time scoring list with 1,265 points. Following the 1993-94 season, Dawkins was named the PAC Player of the Year and became the second W&J women’s basketball player to earn All-America honors. She was twice named PAC and W&J MVP and was also a two-time All-PAC First Team performer. During her senior season, Dawkins led W&J to the school’s first-ever PAC women’s basketball championship as well as its first trip to the ECAC Championship Tournament.
Nicole Dickman Thomas More College 2007-11 Park Hills, Ky./Notre Dame Academy
Dickman was a four-time All-PAC selection and four-time All-Great Lakes region pick by D3hoops.com. She ranks second at Thomas More in career scoring with 1,532 points and second in career rebounding with 887. She also ranks second in career field goals made (586), fourth in career free throws attempted (454) and free throws made (310) and sixth in career field goal attempts (1,050). Dickman holds four of the top 10 spots on Thomas More’s single-season rebounding list.
Maggie Gibson Washington & Jefferson College 2006-10 Greensburg, Pa./Greensburg Central Catholic
Gibson is the only player in W&J history to score 1,000 points and grab 1,000 rebounds. She is the program’s career rebounding leader with 1,125, and her 1,166 career points ranks ninth in school history. Her teams produced three of the top four single-season victory totals in school history, including the 2008-09 squad which won a school-record 24 games. Gibson proved to be a durable player as she played in more games (116) than any other player in school history. She is also fourth in school history in blocked shots (82).
Bobbie Jo Graham Waynesburg University 1988-1992 Pittsburgh, Pa./Fox Chapel
Graham made Waynesburg’s transition from the NAIA to the PAC a smooth one by playing two years in the Division III ranks. She led the Yellow Jackets to back-to-back conference titles in 1991 and 1992. Waynesburg won a third-straight championship in 1993. For her efforts, she was named PAC Player of the year following the 1991-92 campaign and was a First Team All-PAC selection following the 1990-91 season. Graham finished her playing days as Waynesburg’s all-time leading scorer with 1,756 points. She also holds the career record for career rebounds (965) and rebounds in a season (252).
Katie Hardie Bethany College 2000-04 Youngstown, Ohio/Cardinal Mooney
Over her four-year career with the Bison, Hardie notched three All-PAC honors, which includes claiming PAC Player of the Year honors in 2002. She led the Bison to three PAC titles and three NCAA Division III Tournament appearances. She also etched her name in the Bison record books, ranking fourth in career rebounds (795) and sixth in points scored (1,262).
Emily Hays Washington & Jefferson College 2005-09 Youngstown, Ohio/Boardman
Hays was named the 2009 PAC Women’s Basketball Player of the Year. A three-time All-PAC choice (first team in 2009, she was a member of W&J’s 2006 PAC Championship team. Hays helped the Presidents make four postseason appearances, including a pair of trips to the NCAA Division III Championship Tournament. Her 1,147 career points rank 10th in W&J. She also finished her career with 537 rebounds and was a 51 percent field goal shooter.
Anne Haynam Hiram College 1984-88 Kinsman, Ohio/Badger
Haynam was a four-time All-PAC honoree, including a First Team selection her junior year (1986-87) when she led the PAC in scoring with a 17.9 points per game average. She was the second player in Hiram women’s basketball history to go over the 1,000-career point mark and currently ranks fifth all-time with 1,157 points. A two-time team captain and team MVP, she also excelled as a playmaker and ball hawk from her point guard position, ranking first in career steals and fourth in career assists. Haynam received the Petroskey Award in 1988 as Hiram’s Female Student-Athlete of the Year and was inducted into the William H. Hollinger Athletic Hall of Fame at Hiram in 2000. Haynam was also a First Team All-PAC performer in softball, and was the PAC Player of the Year and an All-America honoree in field hockey, leading her team to PAC titles in both sports. She finished her Hiram career with a total of 12 varsity letters.
Karin Hendrickson Grove City College 1995-99 New Wilmington, Pa./Wilmington
Hendrickson was named the 1999 PAC Most Valuable Player and earned All-PAC First Team honors as a senior. Also selected as an All-PAC First Team member as a junior and an All-PAC Second Team pick following her freshman and sophomore seasons, she became the seventh 1,000-point scorer in Grove City history. Hendrickson is Grove City’s all-time leader in steals with 247 and ranks third career assists (347), fourth in career rebounds (711) and 10th in career points (1,081). She helped the Wolverines to consecutive ECAC Championship Tournament appearances in 1997 and 1998, including an ECAC Tournament title in 1997. Named the 1999 Grove City College Sportswoman of the Year, Hendrickson was inducted into the Grove City College Athletic Hall of Fame in 2014.
Dianne Hess Dish Bethany College 1983-87 Beallsville, Pa./Beallsville
Hess-Dish was a two-time First Team All-PAC selection for the Bison. She was also a part of a new era of Bethany women’s basketball, participating in the inaugural season of PAC women’s basketball in 1984-85. Hess-Dish ranks fourth in program history with 1,461 career points. She was inducted into the Bethany College Hall of Fame as a member of the Class of 2001.
Kayla Hilko Chatham University 2007-11 North Huntington, Pa./Norwin
Hilko is Chatham’s all-time leading scorer with 1,091 points. A four-time PAC Honorable Mention selection, she is also the program’s all-time leader in made field goals with 370, made free throws with 304 and career free throw percentage (78.6%). Hilko scored the most points in a single game in Chatham history with 39 against Westminster on February 13, 2008. She also holds the school’s single-game mark for made free throws (12) against Pitt-Greensburg on November 22, 2008.
Hannah Hunter Waynesburg University 2008-12 Hopewell, Pa./Hopewell
Over four years, Hunter built a reputation as one the greatest all-around point guards in program history. A starter from the day she stepped on campus, she ended her Yellow Jacket career as Waynesburg’s all-time career assists leader (457), while also piling up 1,144 points. She also pulled down 433 rebounds and swiped 234 steals over 109 games played. She was selected as a Honorable Mention, Second Team and First Team All-PAC pick during her sophomore through senior years, respectively. Hunter was at the point for two of the greatest seasons in Yellow Jacket history. During her junior and senior campaigns, the Yellow Jackets went a combined 41-17 overall and won the 2011 ECAC South title. Waynesburg qualified for a second-straight ECAC tournament in 2012. Also a standout in the classroom, Hunter was a two-time member of the PAC Spring Academic Honor Roll.
Elisha Jones Waynesburg University 2007-2011 Russell, Pa./Eisenhower
Jones is not only one of the top women’s basketball players in Waynesburg history, but perhaps its greatest female student-athlete of all-time. Over four years as a starting forward, Jones compiled 1,372 points, 150 blocks and 621 rebounds. She was a first-team All-PAC honoree as a senior, following Second Team laurels as both a sophomore and junior. With Jones leading the charge as a senior, Waynesburg won its first ECAC South title in 2011. Along with being a prodigious post player, Jones is also known as one of the school’s greatest track and field student-athletes. She won multiple PAC titles in the javelin and was a three-time national qualifier and two-time All-American in the event. Jones was also a four-year member of the PAC Spring Academic Honor Roll and a two-time USTFCCCA All-Academic pick.
Jill (Kamerer) Smith Bethany College 1996-2001 Rayland, Ohio/Buckeye Local
Smith was a four-year letter winner for a Bison women’s basketball program that won four PAC Championships and made three NCAA Division III Tournament appearances. As a freshman, Smith averaged 12.4 points and 7.4 rebounds as a reserve player, helping Bethany to its first PAC title. After missing most of the 1998 season due to injury, she bounced back to earn her initial First Team All-PAC award, leading the conference in scoring at 16.6 points per game, and when on to earn First Team All-PAC honors during both the 2000 and 2001 seasons. In 2000, she led the league in scoring (19.7 PPG) while ranking first in field goal percentage (.515) and third in rebounds (7.5 RPG). In the following season, Smith was named the PAC MVP after leading the league in points per game for the second-straight year (20.5). She averaged a double-double in the PAC Championship Tournament (19.5 points, 10.5 rebounds), helping the Bison to their third NCAA Tournament appearance. Smith finished her career as Bethany’s all-time leading scorer with 1,914 points, a record which still stands. She also held Bethany single-season record for points (551). Smith was inducted into the Bethany College Hall of Fame as a member of the Class of 2014.
Brenda Kanar Grove City College 1983-87 Uniontown, Pa./Laurel Highlands
Kanar was a three-time All-PAC selection, earning Second Team honors as a junior and senior. She averaged 11.6 points per game, 5.6 rebounds per game and 2.4 assists per game as a senior. As a junior she averaged 16.7 points per game, 5.8 rebounds per game and 2.9 assists per game. Knar earned First Team All-Women’s Keystone Conference after strong freshman campaign in Grove City’s final year before entering the PAC (13.0 PPG, 7.6 RPG). She also earned First Team All-WKC after her junior season. She helped Wolverines to their first and only PAC title, finishing 17-3 overall and 12-0 in the PAC in 1987. Kanar became just the second 1,000-point scorer in program history and still ranks seventh in school history in scoring average (13.8), eighth in points (1,183;) and is tied for 10th in assists (202). She was inducted into the Grove City College Athletic Hall of Fame in 2013.
Michaela Kempton John Carroll University 1985-88 Bellerose, N.Y./St. Dominic’s
Kempton was a three-year starter for John Carroll, earning PAC Most Valuable Player honors following the 1987-88 season. An All-PAC Honorable Mention in 1987, Kempton set John Carrol’s single-season rebounding mark with 325 during her senior season. She graduated with 876 career points and 724 career rebounds in 68 games played. John Carroll compiled a 48-19 record during Kempton’s three years as a starter.
Kennan Killeen Washington & Jefferson College 2006-10 Pittsburgh, Pa./Mt. Lebanon
Killeen was selected as the 2009-10 PAC Women’s Basketball Player of the Year. She was a four-time All-PAC selection (first team in 2010, second team in 2007, 2008, 2009) and helped lead the Presidents to four postseason appearances, including a pair of trips to the NCAA Division III Women’s Basketball Championship Tournament. She is the eighth-leading scorer in W&J history (1,189) and ranks third in career assists (440). An 85.6 percent career free throw shooter (339-of-396), Killeen fifth in Division III during 2007-08 season in free throw percentage (90.5%). 
Katie Kitchen Thomas More College 2009-14 Alexandria, Ky./Campbell County
Kitchen, a three-time All-PAC selection, was a four-time PAC Academic Honor Roll awardee. She ranks fifth at Thomas More in career free throws attempted (397), sixth in free throws made (277), seventh in points scored (1,213), seventh in three-point field goals attempted (359) and three-point field goals made (120) and ninth in field goals made (408).
Juliana Klocek John Carroll University 1989-92 Mount Pleasant, Pa./Geibel
Klocek earn All-PAC First Team honors following the 1988-89 season, John Carroll’s final season as a member of the PAC. She was also named to the All-Ohio Athletic Conference Second Team in 1990. Twice named John Carroll’s team MVP, Klocek concluded her career with 1,247 points and continues to rank among all-time leaders in free throw percentage (.781, tied for second all-time).
Tricia Kosenina Thiel College 1989-93 Imperial, Pa./West Allegheny
Kosenina is Thiel’s all-time scoring leader with 2,086 points. A shooting guard, she made 150 three-pointers in her career, the second most in program history. She also ranks 10th in program history with 154 career steals. A four-time All-PAC First Team selection, Kosenina was named the PAC Freshman of the Year in 1989-90 after she scored a then single-season school record 384 points. She was inducted into the Thiel College Athletic Hall of Fame in 2004.
Lisa Lightner Carnegie Mellon University 1985-89 Altoona, Pa./Bishop Guilfoyle
Lightner was a member of Carnegie Mellon’s 1988-89 PAC Championship team. She was a three-time All-PAC selection, earning First Team honors twice and Second Team honors once. She holds single-game records for blocks and assists at Carnegie Mellon with eight turn backs and 10 assists. Lightner ranks third in career scoring (1,346), assists (298) and steals (221) and is fifth all-time in blocks (105).
Allison Long Thomas More College 2009-13 Hebron, Ky./Conner
Long, a four-time All-PAC performer, was named the PAC Player of the Year following the 2012-13 season. She also claimed All-America honors following her senior season by DIIINews, D3hoops.com and the WBCA. A 2013 finalist for the Jostens Trophy, Long earned Capital One Academic All-America honors as a senior. Twice named an All-Great Lakes region pick by D3hoops.com, she ranks third at Thomas More in career points (1,505), assists (363), three-point field goals made (212) and three-point field goals attempted (510).
Beth Lora Grove City College 1994-98 Avon Lake, Ohio/Avon Lake
Lora was a four-time All-PAC selection for Grove City, earning First Team honors following her junior and senior seasons while claiming Second Team honors after her freshman and sophomore campaigns. As a senior she averaged 12.0 points per game and 5.5 rebounds per game while converting 81.0 percent of her free throw attempts. As a junior she averaged 14.6 points per game and 6.0 rebounds per game, totaled 37 steals and knocked down 50 percent of her field goal attempts. Lora led the Wolverines to consecutive ECAC Championship Tournament appearances in 1997 and 1998, including an ECAC Championship in 1997. She was the sixth 1,000-point scorer in program history and ranks fourth all-time in free throws made (246), sixth all-time in points (1,250), seventh in steals (132) and 10th in scoring average (13.0).
Dawn Martin Hiram College 1987-91 Ashtabula, Ohio/Ashtabula
Martin was an All-PAC selection during both her freshman and sophomore seasons and was just the third player in Hiram women’s basketball history to go over the 1,000-career point mark. Her 1,360 points currently ranks fourth on the program’s all-time scoring list. A deadly shooter from inside the paint, she is Hiram’s all-time leader in both field goals attempted and field goals made and also ranks third in career rebounds with 753. She was twice selected as a team captain and team MVP. Martin received the Petroskey Award in 1991 as Hiram’s Female Student-Athlete of the Year and was inducted into the William H. Hollinger Athletic Hall of Fame at Hiram in 2004. She was also an All-PAC performer in women’s volleyball and was a PAC champion in track and field.
Terri McDivitt Hiram College 1982-86 Ravenna, Ohio/Southeast
McDivitt was a First Team All-PAC selection as a junior and senior during the first two seasons of women’s basketball in the PAC. She was the first player in Hiram women’s basketball history to go over the 1,000-career point mark and currently ranks six on the program’s all-time scoring list with 1,079 points. A three-time team captain and two-time team MVP, she was also a force on the boards and currently ranks sixth in career rebounds. An All-Ohio Academic honoree in 1985, McDivitt was twice selected as the winner of the Petroskey Award, given to Hiram’s Female Student-Athlete of the Year (1985 and 1986). She was inducted into the William H. Hollinger Athletic Hall of Fame at Hiram in 1998. McDivitt was also a First Team All-PAC performer in women’s volleyball and was a PAC champion in track and field.
Shawndra McDonald Washington & Jefferson College 2000-04 Houston, Tex./Westfield
McDonald is the third-leading scorer in W&J history with 1,536 points. A lightning quick point guard, McDonald also connected on 175 career three-pointers. She is W&J’s career assists leader (482) and was a leading player on the 2002-03 PAC Championship team that went 23-2 and hosted a NCAA Division III Championship Tournament second round game. A four-time All-PAC selection, which includes three First Team awards, McDonald helped W&J advance to the 2004 ECAC Division III South Tournament Championship game.
Devin McGrath Saint Vincent College 2009-13 Robinson Twp., Pa./Our Lady of Sacred Heart
McGrath was named an All-PAC First Team selection in 2012 and 2013 after earning Second Team honors in 2011. During her senior season she led the team with 16.1 points per game and 10.3 rebounds, along with a team-high 86 steals. In 2012, she averaged 12.9 points and 8.4 rebounds per game, including six double-doubles. McGrath Scored 31 points and had 14 rebounds in Saint Vincent’s NCAA Division III Championship Tournament game against York in 2012. As a sophomore she averaged 10.9 points and 6.3 rebounds per game. McGrath finished her career with 1,387 points and 875 rebounds.
Amanda (Stanonik) McGuinness Washington & Jefferson College 2002-06 North Versailles, Pa./East Allegheny
McGuinness was a three-time All-PAC selection for W&J, earning First Team honors in 2006. A member of two PAC Championship teams (2003, 2006), she also helped the Presidents advance to four postseason appearances, including three trips to the NCAA Division III Championship Tournament. She totaled 1,046 points (12th in program history), 577 rebounds, 159 steals and 98 three-pointers and was an 81.2 percent free throw shooter during her career.
Brenda McNicol John Carroll University 1984-87 Hubbard, Ohio/Hubbard
McNicol was a four-year starter at John Carroll. She scored her 1,000th career point in her final game as a Blue Streak. An All-PAC Second Team selection during the conference’s inaugural year of play (1984-85), she was also honored as an All-PAC Second Team pick in 1986. McNicol was listed among the top 14 scorers in the league in each of her final three seasons (13th in 1985, 11th in 1986, seventh in 1987).
Abby Moose Grove City College 2001-05 Mercer, Pa./Mercer
Moose was a three-time All-PAC First Team honoree for Grove City. As a senior she averaged 17.8 points per game, 4.1 rebounds per game, 3.3 steals per game and 2.8 assists per game. During her junior season Moose averaged 12.5 points per game, 2.6 steals per game and 2.4 assists per game. As a sophomore she averaged 13.0 points and 2.2 steals while knocking down 62 three-point field goals. Moose missed a portion of senior season to help Team U.S.A. to the gold medal at the 2005 Deaflympics in Melbourne, Australia (averaged 10.6 points, 2.2 assists and 1.8 steals, including 19 points in the gold-medal game). She also led Team U.S.A. to a gold medal at the 2007 World Deaf Basketball Championships and a silver medal at the 2009 Deaflympics. Moose was the eighth player in program history to reach the 1,000-point mark (did so in the same week she won the 2005 Deaflympic gold medal) and is Grove City’s all-time leader in three-pointers made (172). She also ranks second in program history in steals (228), seventh in points (1,209) and is tied for 10th in assists (202). She led the Wolverines to an ECAC Championship Tournament appearance in 2005. Moose was named the 2005 Grove City College Sportswoman of the Year.
Leah Prisuta Geneva College 2009-13 Beaver Falls, Pa./Riverside
A three-year contributor on Geneva’s women’s basketball squad, Prisuta overcame a season-ending injury prior to her 2011-12 season to average 10 points and 5.2 rebounds as a senior. The Golden Tornadoes were voted PAC Team Sportsmanship Award winners after the conclusion of the 2012-13 season.
Kelley Richardson Bethany College 2000-04 Follansbee, W.Va./Brooke
Richardson was a four-year standout for the Bethany women’s basketball program. Leading the team to four-straight PAC crowns, along with three-straight NCAA Division III Tournament appearances, Richardson was voted the PAC’s Player of the Year as a senior. During her tenure she also collected two First Team All-PAC selections and a Second Team All-PAC selection. Richardson holds Bethany’s all-time rebounding mark with 1,010, is the program’s single-season scoring leader with 556 points scored during the 2002 season. She also ranks second on the all-time scoring list with 1,755 points.
Jennifer Rodkey Bethany College 1993-96 Canfield, Ohio/Canfield
A four-time All-PAC selection, including First Team honors as a senior in 1995-96, Rodkey helped lead the Bison to ECAC Tournament appearance in 1995 and 1996, the program’s first-ever postseason invitations. She ranks first in Bison history for most three-point field goals in a game (7) and is eighth on the career scoring list with 1,217 points. Rodkey graduated as the program’s all-time leader in three-pointers made and still ranks fourth with 147.
Rachel Rouan Geneva College 2008-12 Youngstown, Ohio/Austintown Fitch
A three-year contributor with the Golden Tornadoes’ women’s basketball program, Rouan appeared in 88 games throughout her career. Helping Geneva transition to full NCAA Division III membership, Rouan averaged 7.3 points and 6.5 rebounds as a senior.
Rosanne Scott Bethany College 1996-2000 Struthers, Ohio/Struthers
Scott was a standout for the Bison women’s basketball program. After earning PAC Freshman of the Year distinction and First Team All-PAC honors in 1996, she went on to earn three more First Team All-PAC selections and two additional PAC Player of the Year awards. Scott was also voted a D3Hoops.com Third Team All-America selection in 2000. During her tenure, she helped the Bison to three PAC titles and two trips to the NCAA Division III Championship Tournament. Following her brilliant career, Scott stood first on the College’s all-time scoring list and currently ranks third among all-time scorers with 1,636 career points. She also owns the record for career assists with 493 as well as career steals (323). Scott is also third on the program’s all-time career three-point field goals made list with 152. Her 47-point performance against Point Park on January 6, 1998, remains the most points ever scored by a Bison in a single game. In 2013, Scott was inducted into the Bethany College Hall of Fame.
Brittany Sedlock Saint Vincent College 2008-12 Northern Cambria, Pa./Northern Cambria
A two-time PAC Player of the Year, Sedlock led the Bearcats to consecutive NCAA Division III Championship Tournament appearances. In 2012, she averaged 16.7 points and 10.1 rebounds per game and was named an Honorable Mention All-American by d3hoops.com, after being named a First Team All-Great Lakes Region. In 2011 she averaged 16.8 points and nine rebounds and earned fourth team All-America honors from d3hoops.com. She totaled 1,462 points during her career.
Julie Sierota Thiel College 1989-90 Erie, Pa./McDowell
Sierota scored 1,388 career points, the fourth most in program history. She also pulled down 722 career rebounds, the seventh most in school history. She ranks third in program history with 100 career blocks and ninth with 169 steals. Sierota was a four-time All-PAC selection, earning First Team nods three times (1987, 1989, 1990). She was inducted into the Thiel College Athletic Hall of Fame in 2002.
Christine Slater Grove City College 2007-11 Aliquippa, Pa./Center
Slater was a four-time All-PAC selection, earning First Team honors following both her junior and senior seasons. As a senior she averaged 18.8 points per game, 8.4 rebounds per game and shot 46 percent from the floor. She averaged 16.0 points per game and 8.8 rebounds per game during her junior campaign. Slater also earned All-PAC Second Team honors as a sophomore (15.4 PPG, 9.9 RPG) and a freshman (11.9 PPG, 7.2 RPG). She became the 10th player in program history to cross the 1,000-point barrier and just the second to do so as a junior. Slater is Grove City’s all-time leader in minutes played (3,411) and is second in school history in points (1,634), scoring average (15.6 PPG), rebounds (901) and games played (105). One of just two players with three 400-plus point seasons, Slater is also is tied for third in school history in three-point field goals made (117), fifth in steals (145) and eighth in rebounding average (8.6 RPG).
Kelly Stacey Washington & Jefferson College 1987-91
Stacey finished her career as the school’s all-time leading scorer (men or women) with 1,766 career points. She was a four-time First Team All-PAC selection and a two-time winner of the conference’s Most Valuable Player award. In 1989, she led the PAC in scoring with 18.7 points per contest. As a sophomore, Stacey set a school record for points in a season by netting 450 markers for an average of 21.4 points per game. During her four years at the College, Stacey led the team in scoring all four seasons and was the top scorer in the PAC on three occasions. Following her junior year, she was named to the Kodak All-District team.
Desiree Sterling Westminster College  2003-07 Newton Falls, Ohio/Newton Falls
Sterling was a four-time All-PAC selection, including a pair of First Team honors. She was named the PAC Freshman of the Year in 2004 and was selected as the PAC Player of the Year in 2007. She is second on the school’s all-time scoring list with 1,451 points, while her 433 points in 2007 ranks third in school history. Her 13.4 career points per game average stands third in Titan history, while her 137 career three-point field goals also rank third-highest. Her career 35.5 percent (147-of-414) three-point field goal percentage stands first in program history. Sterling was a key member of the 2006-07 Westminster team that set a team record for wins in a season (22) and qualified for the NCAA Division III Championships. She was also a member of the 2004-05 Titan team that won the school’s first-ever PAC title and qualified for the Division III Championships for the first time in school history (Westminster lost in the second round, the farthest the Titans have ever gone in the tournament).
Leigh (Sulkowski) Slowey Washington & Jefferson College 2002-06 Upper St. Clair, Pa./Upper St. Clair
Sulkowski, a 2006 finalist for the Jostens Trophy as National Player of the Year, finished her career as W&J’s all-time leading scorer (men or women) with 2,034 career points. She also totaled 710 career rebounds, 251 steals, 199 assists and 133 blocks. She is also third in school history with 172 career three-pointers. Sulkowski became the first basketball player in school history to earn All-America honors during all four years of her career. She shot just under 50 percent for her career (734-for-1,481) from the field and 74 percent (376-for-507) from the free throw line. As a senior, Sulkowski ranked second in NCAA Division III with an average of 22.8 points per game (school-record 616 points). She also collected 6.9 rebounds and shot over 52 percent (217-of-416; 52nd nationally). A three-time PAC Player of the Year, Sulkowski scored in double figures 94 times, including 59 20-plus point games. She was honored as the PAC Player of the Week an astounding 19 times. The six-foot guard led Washington & Jefferson to an 86-23 record, a school record for victories at the time of her graduation. The Presidents claimed two PAC titles under her leadership and made four postseason appearances, including three trips to the Division III Championship Tournament.
Erica Tallo Westminster College 2001-05 Oakdale, Pa./West Allegheny
Tallo was a four-year letter winner and starter for the Titans. A team co-captain as a junior and senior, she was a key player on 2004-05 PAC championship and NCAA Division III playoff squad.A three-time All-PAC honoree, including First Team honors as a sophomore, Tallo also earned PAC Coaches Honors as a freshman. The team MVP as a junior, she ranks fourth all-time in career scoring with 1,227 points, third all-time in career rebounding (929), first all-time in career blocked shots (93) and fourth all-time in career steals (207). A graduate of West Allegheny High School, Tallo majored in English. She currently resides in Rochester, Pa., where she is the associate membership director at Bairel Family YMCA. She was inducted into the Titan Sports Hall of Fame in 2013.
Robin Thayer Roberts Westminster College 1999-2002 Salem, Ohio/South Range
The first Westminster College women's basketball player to score over 1,200 career points, Thayer Roberts led her team in scoring in each of her four seasons under head coach Jan Reddinger. She was the team's all-time leading scorer when she graduated in 2002 and held that title for five years. Thayer Roberts, a 6-1 guard, ranks third in school history with 1,287 points. She averaged 12.6 points per game for her career, including 16.2 during a junior season in which the Titans posted a 16-9 record. Her 405 points that season ranks fourth in school history. A two-time PAC Coaches' Honors recipient (all-conference equivalent for provisional members), Thayer Roberts collected 452 rebounds and 153 assists while starting 101 of 102 career games played. She graduated from Westminster cum laude with a degree in financial economics. A native of Salem, Ohio and a graduate of South Range High School, Thayer Roberts is currently an associate financial advisor at HBK Sorce Financial.
Jayme Thiem Thomas More College 2007-09 Cold Springs, Ky./Newport Central Catholic
Thiem, a two-time All-PAC selection, earned 2008 PAC Player of the Year honors. A two-time D3hoops.com First Team All-Great Lakes selection, she was also named to the 2007 D3hoops.com All-American team. Thiem ranks seventh in career free throws made (225) and 10th in career assists (199) and holds the number eight spot on Thomas More’s single-season assists list with 116 during the 2008-09 season. She also holds two of the Saints’ top five single-season free throws made records (T-2nd, 129 in 2007-08; 4th, 126 in 2008-09).
Brooke Warner Thomas More College 2003-07 Maineville, Ohio/Kings
Warner was twice named an All-PAC selection. She ranks sixth at Thomas More in career rebounds (661) and assists (303). She is also ninth in career free throws attempted (332), 10th in free throws made (242) and 13th in career points (1,091).
Audrey Warnock John Carroll University 1986-89 Parma, Ohio/Valley Forge
Warnock earned All-PAC recognition four times, including a First Team selection in 1988, and was the team MVP in 1989. She set John Carroll’s single-game points scored record when she posted 37 against Grove City on January 14, 1989 – a record that stood for over 20 years. At the time of her graduation, Warnock held school records in career field goals made (598) and career free throw percentage (.739). She finished her career with 1,382 points and helped the team go 58-32 during her four years with the program.
Tammy Willrich Thiel College 1996-2000 Girard, Ohio/Girard
Willrich ranks seventh on Thiel’s all-time scoring list with 1,132 points. She made 109 career three-pointers, the fifth most in program history. Willrich is Thiel’s all-time leader in steals (251) and ranks third in program history in career assists (262). Willrich was a four-time All-PAC honoree, earning First Team honors in 1999 and 2000 and Second Team accolades in 1997 and 1998.
Lynne (Unice) Yater Washington & Jefferson College 1990-94 Washington, Pa./Trinity
Yater graduated as the most accomplished women’s basketball point guard in Washington & Jefferson College history. She ended her career as the Presidents’ assist leader with 446, a record which remained for 10 years, until she was passed by Shawndra McDonald ’05. Yater remains second on W&J's all-time assist chart. She also poured in 1,034 career points as a five-foot-four guard. One of 13 women’s players in school history to score 1,000 points, she led her teams to 57 wins over her four-year career, including a 19-5 record as a senior which brought the PAC and ECAC Division III South Championships to Washington & Jefferson. The ECAC postseason title was the first in school history. A three-time All-PAC selection, Yater formed a strong inside-outside alliance with another W&J Hall of Famer, Heather Dawkins. During the 1992-93 season, Yater was 11th in the nation in assists per game.
Monica Yustak Grove City College 1983-87 Carnegie, Pa./Carlynton
Yustak was named the 1987 PAC Most Valuable Player and earned All-PAC First Team honors as a senior, helping lead the program to its first and only league championship. She was also honored with an All-PAC Second Team selection as a sophomore, Grove City’s first year as league members. She totaled 960 points during her three seasons with the Wolverines and is tied for third in program history in scoring average (15.5 PPG). She also ranks third in career free throw percentage (.785), sixth in rebounding average (9.0 RPG) and is tied for seventh in field goal percentage (.476). Yustak was a 2012 Grove City College Athletic Hall of Fame inductee.