Team of the Week: Mount Holyoke Volleyball

Pictured above: Mount Holyoke Volleyball competing in their 2019-2020. Photo courtesy of Mount Holyoke College Athletics.

Pictured above: Mount Holyoke Volleyball competing in their 2019-2020. Photo courtesy of Mount Holyoke College Athletics.

By Gigi Picard ’22

Sports Editor 

This edition’s team of the week is Mount Holyoke Volleyball. 

Captain Brayden Walden ’21 talked about what the team has been up to. According to her, Mount Holyoke Volleyball held several virtual meetings in the summer and fall. During the summer, the team posted challenges on their social media as a way to build “relationships within the team,” Walden said. “This was always fun to do and see how others did it while also keeping our hands on a volleyball while away from campus,” she added.

There is currently one first-year on the team and two other walk-on players. Walden stated that they “fit into our team perfectly and we’ve all had fun getting to know them and slowly getting them used to the craziness that is the volleyball team[.]” She added that the new players are “super outgoing” and the team is overall happy with the new recruits. 

Additionally, Head Volleyball Coach Iris Carpio started a Friends of MHC Cans for Change collection over the summer with Assistant Rowing Coach Cara Murphy. Collectively, the team raised $1,500 for the NAACP. 

“With redemption centers closed due to the pandemic, we offered to drive and collect cans from colleagues and friends across campus at their homes for about two months and redeemed the recyclables for change that added up to a nice donation [toward] change,” Carpio said.

In terms of its fall training schedule, the team works out twice a week. Outside of workouts, the team meets virtually every other Saturday to catch up. According to Carpio, the team talks about their plans, academics, goals and other topics.

Walden reminisced about what the team misses besides playing on the court, including post-practice boba runs and team bonding. “I think the biggest thing [our] team misses about the season is just getting to be around each other and hanging out,” she said. “We are lucky that, while we’re a small team, we are also a pretty close-knit team. So I think we are all missing just seeing each other in person and getting to hang out with each other.”

”I'm extremely proud of how my team has handled all the ongoing issues,” Capro added. “It’s been a very heavy time for everyone and they have handled things with thoughtfulness, understanding [and] flexibility [while] supporting one another.”

Team of the Week: Mount Holyoke Fencing

Pictured above: Fencing Club Team Practice in Kendall Gym. Photo courtesy of Sophia Karr ‘21.

Pictured above: Fencing Club Team Practice in Kendall Gym. Photo courtesy of Sophia Karr ‘21.

By Gigi Picard ’22

Sports Editor

This edition’s team of the week is Mount Holyoke Fencing.  

The fencing team is a sports club coached by Debra Basili with approximately 20 members, including team captains Eva Volckova ’22 and Morgan Sammut ’22. 

Volckova explained the difference between club sports teams and varsity teams. “For many varsity teams, players must have years of experience in order to even be on the team, but with club sports, we anticipate that most people who join our club will not have prior experience,” she said.

Over the course of the semester, the team meets around twice a week on Zoom, but only on the weekends. Volckova stated that on Saturdays, the team does a workout along with a “Just Dance” break. Then, on Sundays, the team does bonding activities consisting mainly of trivia, “Among Us,” skribbl.io and other online games. 

As stated by Volckova, the team is a tight-knit group. They stayed connected over the summer via group chat. They also had weekly trivia nights and consistent workouts multiple times a week. “Although we can’t fence each other, we spend a good portion of our workouts practicing footwork, which will put us in a great position once we are able to practice in person again,” Volckova said.

Sammut said, “Going to fencing practice is something that would always cheer me up on campus. Even when I was stressed with assignments, fencing practice was always a place where I could go and everything was suddenly better.” Volckova added that the team misses each other, feeling the loss of their “Yeah yoke” chants before tournaments and their post- tournament dinners together.

Winter Sports Will Not Compete in 2020-2021 Season

Pictured above: the Mount Holyoke Basketball team ‘19-’20. Photo courtesy of  Mount Holyoke College Athletics Department.

Pictured above: the Mount Holyoke Basketball team ‘19-’20. Photo courtesy of Mount Holyoke College Athletics Department.

By Casey Roepke ’21

News Editor


The New England Women’s and Men’s Athletic Conference Presidents Council recently released their decision regarding winter sport competition for the 2020-2021 season. The decision to suspend championships and all conference play was made in a unanimous vote by the presidents of all 11 NEWMAC colleges, including Mount Holyoke and fellow Seven Sisters schools Smith and Wellesley.

According to the NEWMAC Presidents Council’s statement on winter sports, this decision was a direct result of COVID-19-related scheduling and travel restrictions. 

“Due to the shift in academic calendars, specifically the later start than normal of the second term and the majority of institutions imposing restrictions of both visitors on campus and travel off campus in an effort to reduce the potential spread and exposure of COVID-19, the Presidents have unanimously decided to suspend conference play and championships for winter sports,” the statement read.

Mount Holyoke student-athletes were alerted of the decision by an email from Director of Athletics Lori Hendricks ’92. According to Hendricks, the decision to lose another competitive season was “not unexpected, but still a disappointment.”

This decision directly impacts Mount Holyoke’s basketball and swimming and diving teams. Mount Holyoke Swimming and Diving Head Coach Dave Allen said that the decision matched his expectations.

“The swimming and diving coaches forwarded a proposal to move the [championship] meet to the end of March or April in the hopes of rescheduling the meet,” Allen said. “Unfortunately, there are so many factors and unknowns with COVID[-19], as well as the logistics to scheduling our meet, [that] it would be a real challenge to reschedule the meet.”

“I definitely had been anticipating that for a while,” Swimming and Diving co-Captain Naomi Brown ’21 said. “Especially with cases rising around the country it just doesn’t seem to be realistic to have sports competitions right now.”

She added that Allen had been preparing the team for the possibility of the suspension of the winter season. “The team was definitely bummed about the news, but Dave has been preparing us for all of the possibilities for a while,” Brown said. “So it wasn’t necessarily a shock.”

“I personally expected this,” Riley Hicks ’21, another one of the swimming and diving team’s co-captains, said. “Many of my teammates even assumed it was canceled before it was actually announced. Obviously, we are all very upset about this, but I had the mindset it would be canceled for the last few months so it is not shocking news.”

Winter sports like swimming and diving rely on the extended fall and winter seasons to train in anticipation of NEWMAC championships, so Brown had come to terms with a disrupted senior season. “We already knew the season would be kind of wacky with not being able to be on campus,” she said. “I definitely miss being around my teammates, but I’m thankful for the time we spend together remotely on Zoom, and we’ve been using this time to grow as a team.”

“We all wish we could be on campus in person, but are trying to make the best of this situation,” Hicks said. “This fall has been very difficult with a lot of new adjustments, but my team and I are hoping to be back in the spring and…able to practice and maybe have some virtual meets.”

“The team is disappointed and at the same time understands the decision,” Allen said. “At this point, we are hoping to be together on the pool deck in the spring. Practicing in person as a team will be a moral[e] boost compared to our current virtual practices.”

While specific teams within the College have independent freedom to hold practices and outside competitions in accordance with NCAA regulations for Division III teams and Mount Holyoke’s own health and safety measures, this decision coincides with the College’s remote fall term, which likely means winter sports will not have any in-person components.

“The cancellation of athletics in the spring all together might make me not want to return at all if that is an option,” Hicks said. “I have talked to many other teammates and other athletes and many have also said that athletics is a major factor in them returning this spring.”

The College will release further information about the spring 2021 term for student-athletes. The NEWMAC Presidents Council has not yet released their decision regarding spring competition.


Fat Bear King Crowned

Pictured above: Fat Bear Week Winner. Photo courtesy of Flickr.

Pictured above: Fat Bear Week Winner. Photo courtesy of Flickr.

By Margaret Connor ’23 

Copy Editor

The bears of Katmai National Park and Preserve are celebrities in their own right, with their antics broadcasted on explore.org’s Facebook page. Trail cameras throughout the park capture the wild world of these Alaskan Peninsula brown bears. While most bears are only identified by their unique identification number, a few bears, like 128 Grazer, 435 Holly and 32 Chunk have nicknames. Despite not having a nickname, ursine giants like 747 drew an online fanbase as they amassed their winter fat stores. 

Every year, beginning in late June, Katmai’s bears enter a biological state known as hyperphagia. Hyperphagia prevents the bears from feeling satiated, thereby encouraging them to eat massive quantities of food to store up enough energy to last through the cold months. One of these foods is salmon, which the bears fish for at waterfalls. 

Fat Bear Week is an annual event hosted by explore.org, Katmai Conservancy and Katmai National Park and Preserve. During Fat Bear Week, members of the public vote between two matched-up bears until only the fattest bear remains. Voting is done online through the explore.org website. Fat Bear Week is a single-elimination March Madness-style tournament. The site displays two photos of each bear: one from the summer before they put on weight and a recent photo from the beginning of fall showcasing the bears’ increased body mass. 

This year, Fat Bear Week ran from Sept. 30 to Oct. 6, when the public cast their final votes in a 12-bear showdown. The finalists were 747 and 32 Chunk. 

Both are adult male bears who occupy places at the top of the bear hierarchy, determining access to resources like salmon-fishing grounds. Positions on the hierarchy are challenged and maintained via physical confrontation, meaning that larger bears have the advantage in fights. However, according to explore.com’s “Meet the Bears of Fat Bear Week” page, “747 typically keeps his status by sheer size alone. Most bears recognize they cannot compete with him physically.” 

In final elimination rounds, 747 faced many valiant competitors, including 2019 champion “Queen of Corpulence” 435 Holly, two-time champion 480 Otis and seven-litter mother 402.

Indeed, 747 was crowned the champion of Fat Bear Week 2020, defeating 32 Chunk in the voting by 47,055 to 21,854. The 2020 runner-up 32 Chunk defeated 435 Holly in the semifinals, receiving over 30,000 votes. 

Though a dominant male who is “not hesitant to displace others from the resources he wants,” 747 has recently revealed a more sensitive side, playing with other bears and waiting his turn to scavenge fish. 

Team of the Week: Mount Holyoke Soccer

Picture above: Mount Holyoke College’s Soccer team. Photo courtesy of Mount Holyoke College Athletics.

Picture above: Mount Holyoke College’s Soccer team. Photo courtesy of Mount Holyoke College Athletics.

By Gigi Picard ’22

Sports Editor

The second module’s first team of the week is Mount Holyoke Soccer. 

The team’s captains for the 2020-2021 season are Maria Delgado ’21, Emma Robson ’21 and Sarah Forster ’23. 

Delgado stated that the team virtually connected biweekly during the summer and participated in team bonding activities, including Two Truths and a Lie, online Taboo and Scattergories. Additionally, the Lyons completed social media challenges. Robson said that the team meets over Zoom and “puts an emphasis on continuing to bond as a team and supporting one another virtually.” 

Delgado said that she misses a pre-game team tradition in the new online space. The team would huddle in a circle and each teammate would share a goal for the upcoming game. Then the team would march onto the field after a team chant. “Our desire to win a game wasn’t something we learned together; it’s something we all brought and we showed it,” Delgado said. “I miss coming together to share in that competitive drive, and I hope that if we are able to return, the first-years get the opportunity to share in that as well.” 

Robson echoed Delagado’s statement. “As a senior, I am definitely missing the traditions that come with your senior season,” Robson said. “I especially miss competing with my team, fun drills at practice, and team dinners. I think most of the team can also agree we just miss playing soccer and being with the team.” 

On Oct. 6, 2020, Chair of Physical Education and Director of Athletics Lori Hendricks officially announced the hiring of Interim Head Soccer Coach Kathy Brawn. 

“I am so impressed with the culture that Lori Hendricks, the other administrators and her staff have created within Athletics,” Brawn said. “I can already see the passion, commitment and loyalty the coaches have for their profession, MHC and, most importantly, their athletes. I am honored to be counted among them.” 

Brawn continued, “I am thrilled to be at MHC. Even though we are all working remotely, the Yoke community and Lyon athletic family have welcomed me with open paws. This is a wonderful place, and I feel fortunate to be a part of it.” 

The captains were a part of this hiring and transition process. “We are very excited to have Coach Brawn,” Robson said. “She has an impressive soccer background and has brought a lot of good new energy and leadership to the team. We are all really excited to work with her and for the future of the program.”

Brawn was previously the head coach for Colgate University soccer, ending her career at the university with 312 career wins, 11 conference titles and six NCAA Championship Tournament appearances. Additionally, Brawn coached five All-America selections, 31 All-Region honorees and 137 student-athletes that collected All-Conference recognition while at Colgate. Brawn has also been awarded with two United Soccer Coaches Northeast Region Coach of the Year awards and three conference Coach of the Year honors. 

Brawn introduced herself to the soccer team toward the end of the first module. “I have asked the players to share their attributes as athletes, teammates and friends. Based on their responses and what I am learning about them as human beings, I know the future is bright for Lyons’ soccer,” Brawn said. 

As far as what lies in store for the team, Brawn said, “The work ahead will be challenging and rewarding. Anytime you have a group of people willing to play for one another and not merely with one another, you can achieve incredible things. The quality work everyone is putting in today will go a long way toward achieving our goals tomorrow. We’ll start to see that the moment we step out on the field.”


UMass Amherst Opens New Lab in Partnership With Wasserman

Pictured above: UMass Amherst Skyline. Photo courtesy of Wikimedia.

Pictured above: UMass Amherst Skyline. Photo courtesy of Wikimedia.

By Gigi Picard ’22

Sports Editors

Wasserman, a sports marketing and management company, has entered a partnership with the University of Massachusetts Amherst. The company’s think tank, The Collective, aims to bring visibility to women in sports through various nonprofit partnerships and programs. 

Mount Holyoke News was able to learn more about UMass Amherst’s partnership from Nefertiti A. Walker, the chief diversity officer and interim vice chancellor for diversity, equity and inclusion who also serves as an associate professor of sport management at UMass Amherst. Wasserman chose to partner with UMass Amherst because of Walker’s research on women in sports, and because the university’s sport management program is considered one of the best in the United States. In 2019, the university was ranked first by SportBusiness. 

Through research projects, Walker said, “We are trying to understand consumer needs, consumer interests, research projects; we’re trying to better understand sexism and how it manifests itself and how we can create organizations that are more inclusive, how we can undo sexism.” So far, research projects are being conducted on social justice and the WNBA. The team is examining sexism and how women’s actions on social media are impacted by their involvement in social justice. 

Students at UMass Amherst can get involved with the research projects in two ways. The first is through assignments and projects constructed by UMass Amherst professors within the sport management program. 

Associate Department Chair and Associate Professor of Sport Management Nicole Melton is currently examining Angel City, the National Women’s Soccer League’s new Los Angeles expansion team, and the underrepresentation of certain student groups in sport management in one of her classes. 

Another way for students to get involved is through UMass Amherst’s newly created Laboratory for Inclusion and Diversity in Sport. According to Walker, since the laboratory opened this fall, application protocols for students are still in the works. Walker said that there would be an application and review process, “and once you’re a part of our lab, you begin to work with Wasserman immediately because most of our projects will be funneled through that lab.”

As of now, undergraduate, graduate and Ph.D. students are all a part of the laboratory. Melton and Walker meet with the laboratory students every Monday to first discuss sports, such as what sports-related events occurred over the weekend. Then, they all go over their projects and talk about what data is needed and who has already analyzed certain data. 

“It’s a lot of fun, and the students are so into it because we’re answering real-world questions,” Walker explained.

The outcome Walker expects from the laboratory research is “to impact change for women in sport,” she said. “The research that we do will highlight the inequities in a way that will answer a lot of questions. For instance, we know that there aren’t a lot of women coaching in the NBA. Why? We have assumptions as to why, but we don’t have a lot of empirical data that serves as evidence as to why.” 

An added benefit to working with Wasserman is its partnerships with international universities. Since partnering with the company, UMass Amherst has formed relationships with universities in Europe and Canada which they can now use to obtain data for the research projects.

Walker said that those interested in learning more can look for a coming website published by UMass Amherst for the laboratory featuring the work the university is doing with Wasserman.


Team of the Week: Mount Holyoke Field Hockey

Photo courtesy of Mount Holyoke College Athletics

Photo courtesy of Mount Holyoke College Athletics

By Gigi Picard ’22

Sports Editor

This module’s final team of the week is Mount Holyoke Field Hockey.  

Last fall, Mount Holyoke Field Hockey finished their season on Nov. 5 while competing at the New England Women's and Men's Athletic Conference Championship Quarterfinals against host Worcester Polytechnic Institute. 

Assistant Coach Emet Marwell talked about what the team did over the summer. According to Marwell, they formed a Black Lives Matter Committee in order “to lead anti-racism work within our team.” The goal of the committee is to educate the team and the community around them. 

Further, Field Hockey also participated in the Athletes Taking Action Challenge by starting a fundraiser and raising over $1,200 to donate to Girls Inc. and the Black Business and Professional Association. In addition, the team featured Throwback Thursday and Flashback Friday baby pictures of team members on their social media. 

The captains of Mount Holyoke Field Hockey are Julia Klein ’21 and Mirei Golding-Powers ’21.

Junior Leah Pendl-Robinson mentioned what the team is currently up to. The team has been holding biweekly meetings to check up on how the school is going for each of the athletes. In terms of how the first-year athletes are doing, Pendl-Robinson said they “fit right in,” are not “afraid to ask questions” and are “super enthusiastic.” 

Golding-Powers added that the team is planning virtual activities including a BFF quiz, a bake-off and a fact-matching game. “We also have smaller groups over social media platforms to include the first-years, which is always so fun,” she said. 

When asked what she missed most about the typical field hockey seasons, Pendl-Robinson said she missed “the team's chaotic but happy atmosphere before games to hype us up and having so many friends around to have a good laugh with.”

“I miss our night games under the lights on a cool fall night,” Golding-Powers said. “There's just something so special about walking out onto the turf with your team and hearing the music blasting from the speakers to play a home game.” 

Mount Holyoke Soccer will be featured as our next team of the week.

Wasserman Launches the Collective Think Tank

By Gigi Picard ’22 

Sports Editor

On Sept. 21, 2020, Wasserman — a sports marketing and talent management company representing over 150 female athletes — announced on Twitter a new think tank from their recently created division, The Collective. The new division is a team working to embrace women’s sports, entertainment and culture. 

Wasserman is based in Los Angeles with offices in cities around the world such as London, Amsterdam, Dubai and more. There are also other offices in the U.S., including ones in Raleigh, North Carolina, and Dallas, Texas. Wasserman officially launched The Collective, a division of the company, with the aim of bringing visibility to women’s sports. The current president of Wasserman is Mike Watts. Casey Wasserman, who founded the company in 2002, serves as chairman and chief executive officer.  

The company currently represents well-known female athletes such as Tobin Heath, Katie Ledecky, Simone Manuel and Megan Rapinoe, and received praise for making the representation of women in sports a priority. 

Olivia Wreford, marketing manager for Wasserman’s operations in Europe, the Middle East and Africa, blogged on the company’s website about The Collective on Aug. 7, 2019. The blog mentions the actions Casey took to ensure a “growth and development of women in sports and entertainment.” In an effort to do so, the Wasserman Foundation, led by Casey, promised $1 million to their nonprofit partners, such as Women in Sports and Events and Evolve Entertainment Fund. Additionally, Wasserman planned on increasing “the number of female agents, data analysts and marketers in the industry.

The Collective also partners with AT&T, Orreco/FitrWoman, Snow Monkey, Google, Concacaf and the International Cricket Council. “The goal is ultimately to move women forward,” said Thayer Lavielle, The Collective’s executive vice president. According to sports business news website Ministry of Sport, Lavielle will lead the new think tank with Shelley Pisarra, executive vice president of global insights at Wasserman. The Collective Think Tank is partnered with AT&T, ESPNW, Concacaf, Nationwide, EverFi and Royal Bank of Canada. The think tank has also begun partnering with professors and students from 10 universities including the Isenberg School of Management at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. Other participating schools include the School of Sport and Recreation and Tourism Management at George Mason University, the Ohio University College of Business and Ryerson University in Canada. These universities will launch research projects focusing on female fandom, consumption and purchasing power as well as how women who work in the business of sport are represented. At UMass Amherst, Nefertiti A. Walker, the vice chancellor, chief diversity officer and associate professor of sports management, talked about what it means for UMass Amherst to join the think tank. 

“Being a part of The Collective Think Tank allows us to leverage the power of multiple institutions and researchers, in our efforts to produce industry-changing research and insights on the economic power and social impact of women in sports,” a statement from UMass Amherst News and Media Relations said.“Several of those projects will be led by students, the future generation of sports marketers, while the balance will be led by the expertise of faculty academics.”“The unique thing about this think tank is it doesn’t exist in sports today, as it is, certainly in the women’s sports space,” Lavielle said about the project.

Original 9 Celebrate 50th Anniversary of $1 Contracts

Image courtesy of Flickr

Image courtesy of Flickr

By Gigi Picard ’22

Sports Editor

The Original 9 celebrate 50th anniversary of professional women’s tennis

The nation celebrates 50 years of women’s professional tennis 

50 years ago, nine women changed professional tennis with $1 contracts

Why women’s tennis changed 50 years ago with nine women and $1 contracts

Women’s tennis changed forever 50 years ago by nine women and $1 contracts

How nine women changed women’s tennis with $1 contracts

Women’s tennis has nine women and $1 contracts to thank 50 years later

Nine women, $1 contracts, two tournaments changed the world of women’s tennis

Tennis court battles: Nine women, $1 contracts, two tournaments

Nine women, $1 contracts, two tournaments, two men helped changed tennis

Women’s tennis celebrates the Original 9 and their counterparts 50 years later

Nine women, $1 contracts, two tournaments paved the way for women in tennis

On Sept. 23, 1970, female tennis players Rosie Casals, Nancy Richey, Billie Jean King, Valerie Ziegenfuss, Judy Tegart Dalton, Kerry Melville Reid, Jane Peaches Bartkowicz, Kristy Pigeon and Julie Heldman took a step forward in the fight for equal rights on the tennis courts. Two of them were Australian and seven were American. 

This year marks the 50th anniversary of when those nine women, called the “Original 9,” each signed a $1 contract under the guidance of World Tennis Magazine founder Gladys Heldman. King wrote about this event in The Players’ Tribune, where she said,  “With one unified voice, each of us signed a ceremonial $1 contract with Gladys to play in the inaugural Virginia Slims of Houston.”

“We drew a line in the sand and we put everything we had on that line,” King continued in The Tribune. “It was now up to us to create our own tour, to find a place to make a living and to breathe life into women’s professional tennis.”

Around the 1960s and 1970s, men’s tennis became increasingly popular, which meant that female tennis players were given fewer opportunities for pay and play. 

What ignited the women’s contract decision was the fact that former tennis player and promoter Jack Kramer would not reduce a specific tournament’s 12:1 ratio of men’s to women’s prize money. The women almost played in the Pacific Southwest Open in Los Angeles, California; however, the men’s champion would receive $12,500, while the women’s champion would receive only $1,500. 

A boycott was started by King and Casals, but it failed. “We wanted to be paid equally and we wanted to be treated fairly,” King said in The Tribune. “Originally we had hoped to partner with the men’s tennis tour and have a unified voice in the sport on a global basis. But the guys wanted no part of it. And not every women’s player wanted to join us.”

The women then regrouped and formed the Virginia Slims circuit, and with it, women’s professional tennis. Later, Heldman encouraged the nine to hold what would become the first Virginia Slims tournament in Houston, Texas. The name of the tournament is due to their sponsor, Virginia Slims, a cigarette brand owned by Philip Morris that Heldman was able to obtain.

“She knew how to get a sponsor, she had great connections,” Ziegenfuss said about Heldman in an interview with the Women’s Tennis Association.

The U.S. Lawn Tennis Association was not in support of the women. Instead, officials threatened to suspend any tennis players who took part in the tournament.

In March 2020, Julie Heldman sat down with Scott Flink from USOpen.org to discuss her mother and the Original 9. “At some level, the women who ended up being the Original 9 were brave, but at another level, there was not much to lose,” she said. “My favorite threat of theirs was that you can’t have two professional tournaments in the country at the same time, but that was not true. Their other threat was we could have a tournament, but it had to be amateur. Nobody wanted to do that. So my mother came up with the idea of everybody signing to become a contract pro. We went out and had that photo taken of all of us holding the $1 bills.”

Casals was the first winner of the invitational with Dalton as the runner-up. The prize money awarded was $7,500. In an interview on Sept. 16, 2020 with Matt Fitzgerald from tennis.com, Casals expressed her gratitude for Virginia Slims, the sponsor which allowed women’s tennis to become a professional sport. 

As of today, all members of the Original 9 are retired. Gladys Heldman passed away in 2003. In 1972, King helped pass Title IX legislation that would ban sex discrimination in sports. The following year, King announced a boycott of the U.S. Open tournament unless men and women were granted equal pay. Her campaign was successful, and men and women received equal prize money in that tournament. 

Also in 1973, King founded the WTA, which would bring together all of the women's professional tennis tournaments in a single tour. Virginia Slims stopped sponsoring women’s tennis in 1990 and General Foods took over as the new sponsor. This year the WTA announced that The International Tennis Hall of Fame also opened a new exhibit about the Original 9 called “We’ve Come a Long Way” in honor of the Original 9. 

While men and women receive equal prize money in tournaments, there is still a pay gap in tennis. According to CNBC, “At the 2015 Western & Southern Open in Ohio, Serena Williams was paid $495,000 for winning the women’s tournament title while Roger Federer was paid $731,000.” Further, CNBC added that even the top 100 female earners in tennis make 80 cents to the dollar of what the top 100 male earners make. The large pay disparity shows there is still a large inequality in some tennis tournaments.

Team of the Week: Mount Holyoke Cross Country

Image courtesy of Mount Holyoke College Athletics

Image courtesy of Mount Holyoke College Athletics

This week’s team of the week is Mount Holyoke Cross Country. 

Last year, Mount Holyoke Cross Country finished their season on Nov. 16 at the NCAA Division III Championships hosted by Bowdoin College. The Lyons placed seventh out of 54 teams with 267 points. Both Madeline Rieders ’21 and Hannah Rieders ’21 earned All-Region honors since they placed within the top 35 in their 6k course race. 

Coach Chris Kibler gave insight as to what the team has accomplished over the summer. According to him, the team has “kept up regular communication with Zoom calls, phone calls, text and group messages.”

Kibler also discussed fundraising for the Athletes Taking Action Challenge. “We were nominated by MHC Field Hockey, and were able to raise $1200 for two organizations that will continue to help move the Black Lives Matter movement in the right direction,” Kibler explained. “We were then able to nominate MHC Rowing and Bryn Mawr XC/T&F [Cross Country/Track and Field] to take on the challenge,”

Kibler continued to explain what MHCXC is up to this fall. The team has had virtual synchronous and asynchronous practices and will compete in virtual asynchronous races throughout the fall. In the team’s first week of competition, they placed 4th overall in a 3,000m race against national competitors.

“We had team tryouts just like every year during the first week of official practice, and had many outstanding efforts and several personal bests,” Kibler said. “I am so proud of the team for working hard for something bigger than themselves during a time of so much uncertainty. The adversity and experiences they face now are making them into the most incredible people in the world.”

In our next publication, Mount Holyoke Field Hockey will be highlighted as the team of the week

Mount Holyoke Athletics Eliminates Golf Team

Pictured Lahela Delaney ‘21. Photo courtesy of Mount Holyoke Athletics.

Pictured Lahela Delaney ‘21. Photo courtesy of Mount Holyoke Athletics.

By Gigi Picard ’22

Staff Writer

On Sept. 10, Director of Athletics Lori Hendricks announced the elimination of the Mount Holyoke Golf varsity team in a statement published on the Mount Holyoke athletics department website. 

Hendricks cited the decision as coming “after an extensive review of many factors, including student interest, indoor practice needs, competitive season, coaching support and conference alignment.” According to her, “This decision will allow the Department of Physical Education and Athletics to reallocate the resources from the program to support the broader-reaching priorities of the departmental strategic plan, enhancing the overall student-athlete experience at Mount Holyoke.”

 In its 2019-2020 season, the golf team competed in five tournaments between September and October. Their final tournament, the NYU Invitational, took place on Oct. 5, 2019, at the Forest Hill Field Club in Bloomfield, New Jersey. The Lyons placed fifth overall out of nine teams, with a finish of 690 strokes. Mount Holyoke Golf was expected to participate in more tournaments last April; however, the cancellation of Mount Holyoke varsity sports due to COVID-19 regulations prevented the team from competing. 

 Further in the announcement, Hendricks shared more information about the golf team’s history. “The program’s history dates back to the 1975-76 academic year and will be remembered through the student-athletes that have excelled among the nation’s top competition and multiple appearances at the NCAA Division III Championship Tournament,” Hendricks wrote. “Mount Holyoke College will continue to honor the history of the program, its tremendous golf alums and committed coaches.”

With regard to the Mount Holyoke Golf home course, The Orchards Golf Club, Mount Holyoke students, staff and alumni will still be able to use the course even after the discontinuation of the golf team. 

 Hendricks sent an email regarding the decision to all members within Mount Holyoke Athletics, including student-athletes, on Sept. 17. The College also officially released the same information to the public on Sept. 17, in an announcement which alluded to the possibility of further changes in the athletic department. The statement read, “As a direct follow-up to the strategic plan for Athletics, we will also be undertaking a comprehensive review of our Equestrian Center and initiating an academic program review of physical education.”

The Latest With Mount Holyoke Athletics

By Gigi Picard ’22

Sports Editor

Despite a national trend of cutting athletic programs due to COVID-19, Mount Holyoke College Athletics has not eliminated any varsity or club sports teams. During the spring 2019 semester, seasons were cut short and the final game played by student-athletes was a lacrosse scrimmage between Mount Holyoke and Smith colleges, which occurred just before both colleges closed for the academic year. 

In late August, athletes and coaches were reunited over Zoom for their traditional student-athlete barbecue. Led by Director of Athletics Lori Hendricks, the virtual Zoom event tried to bring back the lively spirit felt at barbecues from years past. One effort to bring the athletic community together was the unforgettable “Y-O-K-E” cheer. 

For Mount Holyoke Athletics, there are no in-person practices or competitions this semester. The College’s athletic programs this year will focus more on holistic community building rather than only the physical aspects of sports. 

Hendricks worked on the New England Women’s and Men’s Athletic Conference (NEWMAC) COVID-19 working group this summer, alongside several colleagues, directors of athletics, team physicians and athletic trainers. The purpose of the group was to develop plans and protocols for fall practices and competitions. Decisions were made at the conference level to host conference-only contests in the fall. Winter sport contests would be delayed until January.

For Hendricks, the future of the Mount Holyoke athletics department was a main consideration while working with the group. 

Hendricks explained that the department’s priorities and strategic plan lie with “competitive success, recruitment and retention, diversity and inclusion, student well-being, community integration and physical education.” Hendricks highlighted the importance of student-athlete safety during this time, as well as trying to find ways for fall sports to potentially compete in the spring. 

According to Hendricks, the current plan is to work with the NEWMAC conference — Mount Holyoke’s athletic conference — and the NCAA. “We are working with the NEWMAC and the NCAA to prepare a proposed competitive schedule for our fall, winter and spring teams in the spring semester. For squash and equestrian, who have different governing organizations, we are looking to their national leadership to provide guidance on spring schedules.” 

According to Associate Director of Athletics Erica Lemm, the Student Athletic Advisory Committee met during the summer to talk about the challenges presented by COVID-19 and other questions raised by the Black Lives Matter movement.  

“SAAC just added a Diversity and Inclusion subcommittee as well as [a] Diversity and Inclusion representative to [the] E-Board,” Lemm said. “Most importantly, they're laying the groundwork for important diversity, equity, and inclusion conversations to continue by creating a book club and discussing how best to have team dialogues,” she added.  

Mount Holyoke Athletics has plans to address NCAA legislation, host a virtual version of  the annual toy drive and continue to engage with Girl Inc., with whom they formed a partnership last year. The department also plans to recognize “teams of the week,” replacing last year’s regular “game of the week.” 

“Soon I'll be releasing programming for mental wellness, diversity and inclusion and leadership in conjunction with the NEWMAC,” Lemm said. “Additionally, we're continuing with the Student-Athlete Leadership Team and our newest group, the First-Generation and Ethnic Minority Student-Athlete Group.”

The future continues to remain uncertain for spring sports. Any further updates will be provided by the Mount Holyoke athletics department and the Mount Holyoke News.

Team of the Week: Mount Holyoke Basketball

Photo courtesy of Mount Holyoke College Athletics

Photo courtesy of Mount Holyoke College Athletics

By Gigi Picard ’22

Sports Editor

Instead of highlighting a game of the week, this semester Mount Holyoke News is going to highlight a team of the week in the Sports section. 

Up first is Mount Holyoke Basketball. Captain Ireland Clare Kennedy ’21 and Head Coach Jackie Ward talked to the Mount Holyoke News about what Basketball has been up to. 

According to Kennedy, Mount Holyoke Basketball has recently focused on team bonding. “We had a few fun ‘get to know you’ sessions, played games online like Pictionary and Taboo and were even introduced to a cool ball-handling app that we encourage one another to get involved in,” Kennedy said. 

Other basketball captains include Maria Delgado ’21, Kelly Lynch ’22 and Mikayla McEwen ’22. 

“Now that preseason has started, we've been focused more on workouts and voluntary team lifts over Zoom,” Kennedy added. “We've continued our birthday TikToks and hope to kick team bonding into a higher gear.” 

Ward stated that, starting on Oct. 1, coaching staff will be able to work with the players through virtual team practices which will consist of mental training, individual workouts and strength and conditioning, among others. 

Moreover, Ward is hopeful for a basketball spring season. “It may not be the most ideal situation, but our coaching staff is determined to give our team (especially the seniors) the best experience we can.”

Stay tuned for the next team of the week: Mount Holyoke Cross Country. 

COVID-19 Changes the Game for College Athletics

Photo courtesy of Pixy.org

Photo courtesy of Pixy.org

By Gigi Picard ’22

Sports Editor

After the onset of COVID-19 last spring, colleges across the U.S. canceled end-of-the-season athletic competitions. The three divisions within the NCAA had to reevaluate plans for future seasons across all sports. 

The future of football remained questionable because it is a contact-heavy sport. The Big Ten and PAC-12 NCAA Division I conferences originally canceled their football fall seasons. This sparked controversy and outrage among players and coaches. There has been pressure by the ACC, Big 12 and SEC conferences, all of which have begun their football season, for the Big Ten to play. The Big Ten recently considered revoting and starting a season. The return of other sports, whether they are played on the field, court or in the water is questionable as well.

Another decision colleges had to make concerned their own athletic departments. Some colleges in all NCAA divisions cut at least three varsity teams due to financial trouble as a result of COVID-19. Schools such as Stanford University, the University of Connecticut and the University of Minnesota were among those who had to cut athletic programs. Some sports that faced the chopping block included swimming and diving, tennis, golf, lacrosse, soccer, cross country, field hockey, rowing, squash, track and field and equestrian. These changes will take place after their 2020-2021 seasons.

Lyons in the Wild: Langhan Dee

Lyons in the Wild: Langhan Dee

Mount Holyoke News caught up with Langhan Dee, Class of 2004. Dee is being inducted into the Mount Holyoke College Athletics Hall of Fame in 2020 for her success in indoor and outdoor track. During her time at the College, Dee went to nationals for track three separate times, and placed in the top three more than once.

Divers place in NCAA DIII Northeast Regionals, Araujo wins unprecedented NEWMAC Coach of the Year

Divers place in NCAA DIII Northeast Regionals, Araujo wins unprecedented NEWMAC Coach of the Year

Three divers from Mount Holyoke qualified for the 2020 National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division III Northeast Diving Regionals at Springfield College on Feb. 28 and 29. Coach Rachael Araujo won the title of New England Women’s and Men’s Athletic Conference (NEWMAC) Coach of the Year this year. This win is a first in the Mount Holyoke Swim and Dive program history.

Track and Field completes indoor season

Track and Field completes indoor season

The Mount Holyoke College track and field team had a competition-packed weekend as eight of the Lyons traveled to Middlebury College to take on the 2020 Division III New England Championships. The Lyons finished the weekend placing 21 out of 26 teams, with seven points.