窪蹋勛圖厙

 

The 'intelligent' game

- November 17, 2010

Jeanette Huck
Tigers captain Jeanette Huck takes the ball up the field. (Nick Pearce Photo)

In soccer, its called game intelligence: the ability to interpret a situation on the field and quickly execute a mentally prepared move.

Theres certainly no shortage of intelligence among the players of the Tigers womens soccer team. More than half of the players on the womens soccer roster15were named Academic All-Canadians (AAC), achieving an 80 per cent average or a 3.43 GPA during the 2009-10 academic year.

That fact was just one of many achievements highlighted at the 12th annual 窪蹋勛圖厙Academic All-Canadian Luncheon held Wednesday, Nov. 17 in the McInnes Room. In total, 96 student athletes made the prestigious Academic All-Canadian list, a 窪蹋勛圖厙record. As well, star basketball player Alex Leggewith a 4.27 GPAwas named among the top-8 Academic All-Canadians in the country.

Taryn McKenna, a second-year arts student and keeper for the Tigers, says she actually does better and is more motivated when soccer is in season during the first three hectic months of the fall semester. The team, which placed second in the regular season, just returned from Atlantic University Sport (AUS) playoffs at Acadia, although didnt make it to the championship game.

Its very intense, but its actually easier to get your work done when were all in it together, says Ms. McKenna, a religious studies major from Oakville, Ont.

Midfielder Kate MacDonald, who cracked the list for the first time, says she figured out the right balance of athletics and academics in her fourth yearand her teammates were a big help.

They practiced every weekday from 5 to 7 p.m., and then, after dining together, would head over en masse to the library. That commitment carried over to everyone, says Ms. MacDonald, from Enfield, N.S. We were motivated to do well for ourselves and as a team.

Ensuring that the players performed well, on the pitch and in their studies, was a priority for Coach Jack Hutchison. He made sure we had study rooms available when we were away for games, hed get us in touch with tutors if we needed it and hed excuse us from practice if we had to study or finish class assignments, says Ms. MacDonald. He understands were here for school first.

Team captain Jeanette Huck, who credits effective time management for her third appearance on the AAC list, credits Coach Hutchison with recruiting players who realize that varsity soccer isnt solely about being able to dribble up the field and make passes. The players coming into the program are well-rounded and really hard workers.

Ms. Huck, a commerce student, and Ms. MacDonald, a kinesiology major, were also named to AUS All-Star teams.