Four SCIAC Student-Athletes Earn NCAA Postgraduate Scholarships
Four SCIAC Student-Athletes were named NCAA Postgraduate
Scholarship recipients due to their academic and athletic
success. Caltech's Elette Boyle and
Redlands' Eric Wagar, Fritz
Nugent and Natalie Calderon were each
honored with the $7,500 scholarship.
Overall, 58 postgraduate scholarships were given to 29 male
student-athletes and 29 female student-athletes who participated in
spring sports, which include baseball, men's and women's golf,
men's lacrosse, women's rowing, softball, men's and women's tennis
and men's and women's outdoor track & field. Of the 58
scholarships, 19 were awarded to student-athletes at Division III
schools.
Elette Boyle graduated with honors from
Caltech last month with a degree in Mathematics and
she is now on her way to graduate school at MIT. This
Yamhill, Oregon native (Yamhill-Carlton HS) can add an NCAA
Postgraduate Scholarship to list accolades for 2007-08
year. Boyle led the Beavers track and field program as she
earned All-SCIAC honors in the high jump and
then earned the SCIAC/President's Award as Caltech's female
scholar-athlete of the year.
Fritz Nugent currently holds a 3.95 cumulative GPA
through the School of Education, in which he is pursuing a Master
of Arts in Higher Education. In 2006, he completed his Bachelor of
Arts with a 3.66 GPA as a Studio Arts major. He plans to use this
scholarship to pursue a second master's degree, focusing on the
Fine Arts. This season, he helped the Bulldog men take second in
the SCIAC by earning All-Conference honors in the 400m Hurdles,
High Jump, Long Jump and as a member of the 4x100m Relay. He capped
off an outstanding career at Redlands by capturing his second NCAA
Individual Championship with a first-place leap of 23' 6 ¾"
in the Long Jump. Last season, he won the NCAA Decathlon
Championship with a school-record total of 7,199 points. In
addition, he earned six College Sports Information Directors of
America (CoSIDA) Academic awards during his career, including twice
being named the College Division's Academic All-American of the
Year for Track & Field/Cross Country.
Natalie Calderon recently graduated from the
University of Redlands with a 3.797 cumulative GPA as a
Communicative Disorders major. She looks forward to attending
graduate school in Audiology. This season, she helped the Bulldog
women's track & field team win the SCIAC Championship for the
first time since 1978. This Dean's List member alone accounted for
68 of Redlands' 131 points by winning the Triple Jump, Long Jump,
100m Dash, 200m Dash, and 100m Hurdles, and contributing to the
first-place showing of the 4x400m Relay and the second-place finish
of the 4x100m Relay. She was named the SCIAC Track & Field
Female Athlete of the Year for the second-consecutive season and
later was crowned the Redlands Frank Serrao Senior Female
Student-Athlete of the Year. In addition to owning the school
records in the Long Jump and Triple Jump, she won the 2008 NCAA
Championships in both events, earning back-to-back titles in the
Long Jump. In 2007 and 2008, she earned CoSIDA Academic
All-District and All-American honors.
Eric Wagar also recently graduated from Redlands
with an outstanding 3.87 cumulative GPA as a Chemistry major and
Biology minor. He plans to attend dental school in Oregon,
beginning this fall. Earlier this month, he landed on the CoSIDA
Academic All-American At-Large Second Team. This season, he capped
off a strong, four-year tennis career by playing #2 singles and #1
doubles for the nationally-ranked Bulldogs, earning records of 28-6
and 20-15, respectively. Wagar helped Redlands tally a 20-8 overall
record, finish second in the conference and advance onto the NCAA
Team Championships for the 17th-consecutive season. This two-time
First Team All-SCIAC performer also earned a spot at the NCAA
Individual Championships for singles. Wagar was named the 2008
Frank Serrao Male Senior Student-Athlete of the Year for Redlands
and was honored with the ITA West Region Arthur Ashe Sportsmanship
and Leadership Award. He is a three-time recipient of the
prestigious Jim Verdieck Coach's Award and was voted Team MVP for
2008. Wagar landed on the Dean's List every semester of his college
career and earned Phi Beta Kappa honors as a senior.
The NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship was created in 1964 to promote
and encourage postgraduate education by rewarding the Association's
most accomplished student-athletes through their participation in
NCAA championship and/or emerging sports. Athletics and academic
achievements, as well as campus involvement, community service,
volunteer activities and demonstrated leadership, are evaluated. In
maintaining the highest broad-based standards in the selection
process, the program aims to reward those individuals whose
dedication and effort are reflective of those characteristics
necessary to succeed and thrive through postgraduate study in an
accredited graduate degree program.
For more information about the NCAA Postgraduate Scholarships, go
to the Education and Research link under the Academics and
Athletics tab at www.ncaa.org.













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