Men's soccer trains in Brazil

Posted by Morgan Long

This past August, 21 members of the Skidmore men's soccer team went on a trip to Salvador, Brazil. Their 10 days spent in Brazil were both productive and recreational.

One major part of trip included a community service project with the Favela Project, which is a non-for profit organization that helps poor city children by giving them the resources to participate in soccer and giving some scholarships to the Brazilian Touch Soccer Tours. The Skidmore soccer team helped with this project by bringing soccer gear, shoes and uniforms to the children of Salvador, as well as raising money. "You name it, we brought it," said Coach Ron McEachen.

Through working with the people in the favelas, which is the Brazilian term for slum, many members of the Skidmore soccer teams say views on their lives changed forever. "It made us appreciate everything we had; it was heartwarming to see the little kids' faces light up when you gave them something," Matt Wolff '12 said.

In addition to community service work, the team did some training. They went to semi-pro and professional games. It was great practice for the fall semester at Skidmore because they played against competitive teams and always traveled to the training grounds of the other teams. "Every Brazilian kid knew how to play soccer since he or she was born," Sam Glickman '12 said.

Besides playing games, the team also became immersed in the culture by exploring Salvador. They went to a beach but even then, when they were just supposed to be enjoying the view, the team still wanted to play soccer and found that the locals shared their passion equally.

The food was also an adjustment but a pleasant one. They agreed the barbeque was phenomenal. In addition to the food, the soccer team experienced the nightlife of Brazil and had fun dancing to local live music.

Sports wrap: Tennis teams wallop Camels

Posted by Gabe Weintraub

Men's tennis moved to 2-0 by blanking Connecticut College, 9-0, on Sunday. Junior Luke Granger took the win at No. 1 singles, beating the Camels' George King in straight sets. Senior Spencer Cheng followed that by beating Craig Stanton in the No. 2 spot, also in straight sets. Granger's singles win, accompanied by his No. 2 doubles victory with Yahia Imam, earned him Liberty League co-performer of the week.

The team next plays on Oct. 1, when they host the ITA Regionals.

Women's Tennis

Led by first year Melissa Hirsch, women's tennis improved to 2-0 with an 8-1 win over Connecticut College on Sunday. Hirsch beat Connecticut's Cassie Smith in the No. 1 singles spot, and followed that with a win at No. 1 doubles along side sophomore Nataly Mendoza. Mendoza also had a win at No. 2 doubles over Becca Heupel. Hirsch was named performer of the week and first year Molly Nolan received co-rookie of the week honors after winning at No. 5 singles and No. 2 doubles along side junior Tory Engros.

The team next plays on Sept. 25 when they travel to William Smith for ITA Regionals.

Men's Soccer

Men's soccer suffered its first loss of the season, falling 1-0 to SUNY Plattsburgh Saturday night at Wachenheim Field. The game's only goal came in the 15th minute when Plattsburgh's Joey Jones redirected a ball off a restart by Chris Taylor.

Junior keeper Nick Peterson had five saves but his teammates were unable to sink an equalizer, missing opportunities in the 73rd and 76th minutes, and letting their record fall to 3-3-1.

Men's soccer next plays on Sept. 24, when they open Liberty League play at Hobart.

Women's Soccer

Women's soccer had its four-game unbeaten streak snapped on Sunday, losing 2-0 to Middlebury and dropping to 3-2-1 on the season.

Middlebury broke the game open in the second half, scoring two goals in a span of just more than two minutes, starting at the 70:05 mark.

The team will play again on Sept. 24 when they host William Smith.

Golf

Skidmore's golf team finished 10 strokes behind champion Rensselaer at the Middlebury College Duke Nelson Invitational on Sunday, settling for a fourth-place tie with Hamilton. St. Anselm was second, Manhattanville third. There were 25 teams competing. Senior Joe Flowers was Skidmore's top finisher, tying for fifth with 77-72—149.

The team looks to defend its Liberty League title on Sept. 25, traveling to Rochester for the 2010 championship.

Volleyball

The Skidmore College volleyball team went 4-0 to win the Union Invitational on Friday and Saturday. The Thoroughbreds were a perfect 12-0 in games, sweeping Cortland, Utica, Hartwick and Sage. The team's record now stands at 9-1.

Sophomore Carolyn Bottelier was named co-performer of the week after totaling 42 kills, 13 assists, six serving aces, 29 digs and three blocks with a 1.000 reception percentage in 29 attempts. She was also named to the All-Tournament team.

The team next plays on Oct. 1 at the Oneonta Red Dragon Invitational.

Field Hockey

No. 14 ranked Skidmore field hockey moved to 4-1 on Wednesday after fending off SUNY Oneonta, 5-2.

First year Kelly Blackhurst had three goals, giving her six on the season, coming just after earning co-rookie of the week honors for her performance against Union on Saturday.

The team will next play on Sept. 24, when they host No. 14 William Smith at Thoroughbred Field.

Fall sports teams in full swing

Posted by Pat Babbitt and Gabe Weintraub

Men's soccer

9/15

Utica 2, Skidmore 1

A penalty kick in extra time dropped the Thoroughbreds to 3-2-1 on Wednesday, lifting Utica to a 2-1 victory. Skidmore led for most of the first half, then surrendered a tying goal in the 60th minute.

The score remained tied to the end of regulation. Six minutes into extra time the Thoroughbreds were called for a penalty in the box, and Utica was awarded and converted a penalty shot, giving them the win.

The team plays next on Saturday, Sept. 18 at 7 p.m., hosting SUNY Plattsburgh.

9/12/2010:

RIT 3, Skidmore 0

At home, the men's soccer team lost 3-0 to RIT in the last game of the 2010 Skidmore Alumni Invitational.

Skidmore battled back and forth with RIT throughout the majority of the first half. RIT did not score its first goal until the 40th minute. Shortly after half, in the 50th minute of play, RIT gained a commanding lead with a second goal, followed eventually by a third.

9/10/2010

Skidmore 0, St. Vincent 0

In the first game of the Skidmore Alumni Invitational, the Thoroughbreds finished against the Bearcats with a tie, though Skidmore outshot the Bearcats 28-4.

9/4/2010

Skidmore 4, Lehman 0

The Cardinal Classic

Senior Matt Kelsey bolstered the Thoroughbreds in a bid for their third straight win. With two goals and one assist, Kelsey would later be named tournament offensive MVP. The Thoroughbreds controlled the tempo, outshooting Lehman 47-1.

9/3/2010

Skidmore 3, Southern Maine 0

The Cardinal Classic

In the first game of the Cardinal Classic, junior Diego Reinero led the charge by scoring the first goal of three by the team, in the 70th minute. Skidmore outshot Southern Maine 11-9.

Women's soccer

9/12/2010

Skidmore 3, Kenyon 1

The Cortland Red Dragon Invitational

Skidmore outshot and outscored Kenyon 20-3 and 3-1, respectively, as the women's team improved to 2-1-1. First year Christine Bellotti led the Thoroughbreds with two goals, with first year Gab Lawrence and junior Meghan Sleezer splitting the time in the net. Neither allowed a goal and Sleezer received the win. The women's soccer team went 1-0-1 at the tournament.

Bellotti would later earn co-rookie of the week honors due to her performance at the tournament. Skidmore improves to 2-1-1, and Kenyon falls to 1-4.

The team will host Manhattanville College on Saturday, Sept. 18 at 1 p.m.

9/11/2010

Skidmore 2, Cortland 2

The Cortland Red Dragon Invitational

The Thoroughbreds team battled back against Cortland College, tying their hosts 2-2 and holding through double overtime. Both goalies, Lawrence and Sleezer recorded saves.

Skidmore outshot Cortland 20-15 in the contest.

9/4/2010

Skidmore 4, New Paltz 1

At home, Skidmore beat New Paltz 4-1, the effort spearheaded by junior Elena Stansky who scored two goals in the Skidmore Invitational Tournament.

9/2/2010

Plattsburgh 2, Skidmore 0

In their first game hosting the Skidmore Invitational Soccer Tournament, the women lost 2-0 to Plattsburgh, who scored both goals early in the first half. Both Thoroughbred goalies, Sleezer and Lawrence, made three saves. Although managing to outshoot their opponents 11-9, Skidmore was unable to beat the Plattsburgh goalie.

Field hockey

9/11/2010

Skidmore 5, New Paltz 1

Senior Christine Kemp and first year Kelly Blackhurst combined for five goals to lead the No. 10 ranked Thoroughbreds past New Paltz, 5-1. The win brought the team's record to 2-1.

Senior Thoroughbred goalie  Liz Catinella allowed one goal and made one save.

The team next plays at 2 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 18 when they open league at home against Union College.

9/3/2010

Cortland 3, Skidmore 0

No. 5 ranked SUNY Cortland  shut out Skidmore 3-0, improving their record to 2-0.

Catinella had 12 saves.

9/1/2010

Skidmore 8, Castleton State  1

The Thoroughbreds opened their season by rolling over Castleton State, 8-1. Sophomore Annie Rosencrans had two goals and two assists on the game.

Golf

9/14/2010

Golfweek Division III Fall Invitational

The Thoroughbreds shot a third-round 296 to finish third of 15 in the Golfweek Division III Fall Invitational played at the Southern Dunes Golf and Country Club in Haines City, Florida.  The team finished ahead of defending NCAA champion Methodist College

First year Scott Pinder was Skidmore's top finisher, shooting a final round 71 to finish tied for 15th.

Skidmore is at the Middlebury Duke Nelson Invitational Saturday and Sunday.

Volleyball

9/12/10

Ithaca - Ithaca College Bomber Invitational

Skidmore volleyball went 3-1 at the tournament, improving upon their first two wins. The Thoroughbreds beat Geneseo, Union and Rutgers-Newark, but lost their second match to Baptist Bible.

In the first game, Skidmore beat Geneseo 3-1, with significant contributions by senior Meredith Palmer, junior Kelley Vershbow and sophomores Sam Friedman, Mallory Mendelsohn and Carolyn Botterlier.

Skidmore's only loss in the tournament was dealt by Baptist Bible. Vershbow, Palmer and Mendelsohn played well, offering a combined 31 kills, 11 digs and 18 assists.

Skidmore volleyball plays next on Friday, Sept. 17 at the Union College Invitational.

9/3/2010

Skidmore College beat both Union College and then Sage College 3-0, starting the season 2-0, recording match scores of 25-16, 25-15, 25-21 and then 25-14, 25-21, 25-15.

Men's tennis

9/13/2010

Skidmore's men's tennis team opened its 2010 fall season at the Middlebury Invitational after falling to the host school in the second round of the NCAA tournament in May.

Senior Yahia Imam and first year Oliver Loutsenko both reached the semifinals of the Singles C flight and freshman Danny Knight reached the semifinals of the Singles D flight.

The Thoroughbreds host Connecticut College at noon on Sept. 19.

Women's tennis

9/13/2010

Williams Invitational

First year Keirsten Sires represented the Skidmore women's tennis team in singles, and also in doubles, accompanied by classmate Sophia Bryan-Ajania.

Sires went 3-0 in singles, defeating Middlebury's Lauren Kelly 6-3, 6-2, Blake Harries 6-3, 6-1 and Whitney Hanson 6-0, 6-3.?Sires and Bryan-Ajania went 1-1 together, losing 8-2 to Williams' doubles team of Li/Shoemaker, but winning 8-6 over Middlebury's team of Paradies/Hanson.

The team next plays on Sunday, Sept. 19 at 3 p.m., hosting Connecticut College.

Extreme Athletes Fly Under the Radar

Posted by Gabe Weintraub

Not every Skidmore athlete plays on a varsity team. This week will see Skidmore's field hockey and women's soccer teams competing in NCAA championship tournaments, the start of the basketball and ice hockey seasons, and the continuation of the swimming and diving season, which has already begun. Those are the events that traditionally drive headlines and encompass "Skidmore athletics." Every day, however, students and faculty train and compete in activities their peers may never hear of. These are just a few examples.

Chris Lord '12

He might not be able to dunk like Michael Jordan, but Chris Lord '12 can still fly like His Airness.

Lord discovered skydiving the summer before his sophomore year and found himself immediately hooked. "It's as close to flying as you can get," he said. "You kind of feel like a superhero."

He completed his first jump, sharing a parachute with an instructor, while on vacation in North Carolina. "In a tandem jump you don't really have to do anything so you don't really have to worry about anything at all," said Lord. "I was nervous but at the same time I felt no pressure to perform at all. I knew that I would do it."

With his fledgling flight behind him, Lord moved on to an Accelerated Freefall program at Jumptown, a skydiving school in Orange, Mass., where he completed another eight jumps. The course began with jumps alongside two instructors who, while not attached to him, guided Lord through his descent. After three jumps with the instructors, he finally got the chance to fly on his own.

"It was pretty nerve wracking once I was actually in charge of myself," Lord said. "It's up to you, you have to pull the shoot. It's doable though, like learning to swim. It's like jumping into an ocean without knowing how to swim."

"I can hardly remember my first jump, it's all a blur," Lord said. "There's so much to take in, and that's why I've done it 12 more times since then. The more I do it, the more I can take in, the more I appreciate what's going on. Now I can swim, or, in this case, fly."

Back at school, Lord has taken it upon himself to teach others to fly as well, organizing trips to Skydive the Ranch in Gardiner. "I've taken 23 people for their first jumps," Lord said. "Everyone who's done it said that they loved it." He has an e-mail list of nearly 200 people and wants to start an official skydiving club at the college, although that has met some resistance. "I've talked to four people, including President Glotzbach, but they said we can't have the club because of insurance issues," he said. "Skidmore won't recognize that we have a skydiving 'club,' but we have a skydiving club."

A football player in high school and a rugby player at the college, Lord views skydiving as a fundamentally different athletic experience. "To me, this is just freedom," Lord said. "It's a sport, but it's not competitive. It's not about being the best, it's just about feeling. I had this one kid who was nearly crying the night before, saying he wasn't going to do it. I said just come, you'll be fine. He came down and the first thing he said to me was 'Chris, it was better than sex!'"

Part of the excitement comes from the anxiety before the jump. "I still get nervous going up," Lord said. "You're supposed to be nervous when you're jumping out of a plane because it's not exactly natural. People weren't necessarily meant to fly, but we do it anyways."

Hugh McAdam, assistant coach for Men's and Women's Crew

Rowing is unique among endurance sports because of the degree of violence it entails; not athlete against athlete but oar against water. A runner hitting the pavement with the force of a rower's stroke would have no knee tissue left in under a week. A sustained string of quick, explosive movements, rowing combines the prolonged elegance of distance running with the instantaneous destructive power of a single down of football.

That duality is what won Hugh McAdam's love for the sport. "It's a very soothing sport. If you're rowing well it's very rhythmic, it's like music," McAdam said. "On the other hand, it's also a way for me to release a lot of psychotic rage… It's very therapeutic to pull really really hard and go crazy for a little while."

McAdam is an assistant coach for Skidmore's men's and women's rowing teams. While he sees coaching as an eventual career move, at the moment it's more of an intermediate step. Coaching at Skidmore lets McAdam train with Head Coach Jim Tucci and further his chances of making the U.S. national team.

McAdam had never even seen a rowing shell before his first year at Washington College in 2004. "The assistant coach brought a boat up to campus and said to me, 'You're tall, skinny and athletic looking, you should try rowing,'" McAdam said. Originally from Nashua, N.H., he played a variety of sports in high school, ranging from football to snowboarding, but none of them ever took hold.

"My sophomore year our men's coach started pushing me to go to summer camps," McAdam said. He lacked the focus as a sophomore, but by the end of his junior year his times had improved enough to go to a camp at Penn A.C., the Pennsylvania Athletic Club Rowing Association.

"That's where I got my first real taste of high caliber rowing," McAdam said. "I was seven seat in a light 8+ and we won club nationals, which is the non-elite national championship. We also went to the Royal Canadian Henley in St. Catherine's, Canada, which is absolutely wild. They get 10 or 12 countries, 1,500 boats. It's an amazing regatta. After that summer, that's when I got really hooked."

After graduating as team captain, and with MVP honors to go along with a third place finish at the Knecht Cup on the Cooper River in Camden, N.J. and a fourth place finish at the Dad Vail Regatta on the Philadelphia's Schuylkill River, McAdam moved on to graduate school at St. Joseph's University. He also started training with the Undine Barge Club, a historic rowing club on Boathouse Row in Philadelphia. While training there he also switched from rowing sweep boats to sculling, placing his focus on the lightweight 2+.

Frustrated at grad school, McAdam met Tucci at the 2009 Masters National Championships in August. "We started chatting and he offered me this job. It was just too good of an opportunity to turn down," McAdam said.

Both believe McAdam can make the national team, but he has a long way to go. "I've only been at the top level of competition for maybe a year," McAdam said. He narrowly missed the top 12 at the 2009 Spring Speed Order, which the national team uses to scout recruits. The setback, however, doe not concern him. "The nature of the sport is it takes a long time," McAdam said. "You've got to lose 1,000 races to win one. I'm just starting that process of losing 1,000 races."

Peter Kabor, shop supervisor for the Theater Department and dance theater

Absence often makes the heart grow fonder, but one need not travel to far to find that separation. Peter Kobor just goes up.

Kobor, 36, works as the shop supervisor for the Theater Department and the dance theater, but spends his weekends atop the peaks of the Adirondack Mountains. On Oct. 18 Kobor summated Mount Marcy, completing his three-year quest to summit all 46 of the Adirondack High Peaks, the mountains in the range taller than 4,000 feet.

He came to hiking late, summating his first mountain after college. "I found a friend who was actually pursuing climbing all 46 peaks, and at the time I thought that was crazy," Kobor said. "I thought that was crazy. I thought that was something I could never accomplish or even try to accomplish."

The birth of his two children put the mountains on the backburner, but after a few years Kobor decided to give the Adirondacks another shot. "It was after four or five High Peaks that I decided I really wanted to do all of them," he said. "In the last six years I've summated 73 High Peaks combined. I've done a lot of them more than once, some in the winter."

The final summit earns Kobor membership to the Adirondack 46ers, an organization that records individuals who summit all 46 High Peaks. By the end of 2008 there were more than 6,000 official 46ers, dating back to the club's founders who finished the task in 1925.

With the High Peaks under his belt, Kobor has started working on Colorado's 54 "fourteeners," peaks exceeding 14,000 feet. Thus far he has summated five. He also hopes to complete the High Peaks again in the winter, a feat that only only 445 individuals have accomplished

"I just think everybody should get outside and hike," Kobor said. "Going to Colorado made me really appreciate my own backyard. You don't need mountains… there's something about being outside and being in touch with that energy in nature that allows everyday life to be much easier."

Above all else, he values the opportunity the mountains afford him to step away from society, even if for just a few hours. "It's just very rewarding for me to not be in touch with the world and then come back to it," he said. "You appreciate everything more. That cup of coffee means more to you, that plate of food is suddenly so important to you… I can't tell you how many times I'm dreaming of a Big Mac on my way out of the woods. It's the worst thing in the world but all you're thinking of is how good that horrible sandwich is going to taste. And it does."