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2002-03 WINTER SPORTS ROUNDUP
Hope's rich tradition of excellence in intercollegiate
athletics has never been more evident than during the recently
completed winter sports season.
Three of the four winter championships in the Michigan
Intercollegiate Athletic Association (MIAA) were won or shared by
Hope teams. All four teams were represented in NCAA championship
play.
Hope basketball fans were treated to unprecedented success
as the men's and women's teams combined for a cumulative 54-6
season record. The MIAA's most valuable basketball players both
came from Hope. Seniors Amanda Kerkstra and Don Overbeek took
similar paths to Hope having graduated from the same high school
(Calvin Christian in suburban Grand Rapids, Mich.). They each
excelled at center and ended their careers as All-Americans.
The Flying Dutch won a fourth consecutive MIAA championship
and were the last team in all of NCAA Division III women's
basketball to have an unbeaten record.
The Flying Dutchmen shared the MIAA men's championship with
Albion in a season climaxed by the 500th coaching victory for
Glenn Van Wieren.
Hope claimed a league-record 20th MIAA women's swimming
crown.
The success of the winter sports teams has given Hope a
commanding lead for the MIAA Commissioner's Cup, which is
presented to the member school with the best cumulative
performance in all 18 of the MIAA-sponsored sports. In addition
to topping the Commissioner's Cup standings, Hope was also ahead
in the MIAA men's and women's all-sports races.
On the national level, Hope ranks 24th out of 248 Division
III colleges after the winter season in the Directors' Cup
standings of the National Association of Collegiate Directors of
Athletics.
WOMEN'S BASKETBALL
The Flying Dutch recorded the first undefeated regular
season in Hope women's basketball history enroute to winning the
conference championship and a berth in the NCAA Division III
playoffs.
Coach Brian Morehouse's Dutch reeled off 31 consecutive
victories before bowing in the NCAA Sectional tournament
championship game. The men's basketball team was undefeated
during the regular season twice (1983-84 and 1994-95) and the
1995-96 team finished with 32 victories.
The Flying Dutch won the MIAA championship a fourth
consecutive year, compiling a 104-12 overall record. The team
gained a berth in the NCAA playoffs for the seventh time in
school history by winning the conference tournament.
The traditional net-cutting at the end of the MIAA
tournament championship game had a special meaning for the team.
After each player and coach had climbed a ladder to snip a part
of the net, it was presented to Mrs. Connie Hinga Boersma '49,
widow of longtime Hope fan Max Boersma '46 who died in January.
The team also dedicated their season to Mr. Boersma's memory.
Senior Amanda Kerkstra of Grandville, Mich. was named a
Division III Kodak All-American by the Women's Basketball Coaches
Association. She ended her career as Hope's alltime leading
scorer with 1,521 points. This season she became the first Hope
player to lead the MIAA in scoring, averaging 16.5 points a game.
Senior Amy Baltmanis of Paw Paw, Mich. will go into the
record books as the most durable player in Hope basketball
history. The All-MIAA guard started in every game from her first
as a freshman to the last as a senior -- a string of 116
consecutive games. Research by the Hope College sports
information office determined that no player in NCAA Division III
women's basketball history compiled a longer streak.
The accomplishments of coach Brian Morehouse '91 were
acknowledged by his peers when he was named the Russell Athletic/WBCA District
Coach of the Year for the second time in three years. In seven
seasons as coach, Morehouse has guided the Flying Dutch to a 155-
41 record, including 81-17 in league games.
MEN'S BASKETBALL
Nationally ranked the entire season, the Flying Dutchmen
enjoyed their 24th consecutive winning campaign and climbed back
atop the Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic Association.
A pair of clutch victories on the road in the final week of
the regular season gained the Flying Dutchmen a league co-
championship with Albion. It was a record 31st MIAA crown for
the Flying Dutchmen.
A complicated tie-breaker formula to determine the host and
top-seeded team in the conference tournament resulted in a coin
toss which Hope lost, sending the Flying Dutchmen to Albion for
the post-season classic which determines the MIAA representative
to the NCAA championships. And on top of all that, Hope was
paired against rival Calvin in the semi-finals in a gymnasium
that sits only 1,300 people.
The 152nd renewal of this storied rivalry, played on a
neutral floor for only the fourth time since it began in 1920,
was not for the faint of heart going into overtime before Hope
prevailed 81-80. Amazingly, only 13 points separate these two
teams over all the games that have been played.
The victory sent the Flying Dutchmen into the championship
game against the host Britons. Using outstanding defense, the
Flying Dutchmen prevailed 61-48 to advance to the Division III
playoffs for the 17th time in school history.
The MIAA tournament championship game victory also marked a
milestone for longtime coach Glenn Van Wieren '64. It was the
500th over his 26-year coaching career. With victory assured,
Hope students attending the championship game rushed on to the
floor and hoisted Van Wieren on their shoulders in tribute to
the accomplishment.
Hope's NCAA tournament run was short-lived as the Flying
Dutchmen bowed to Wisconsin-Oshkosh in the second round, 84-77.
The Flying Dutchmen finished with a 23-5 record marking 22nd
consecutive year that Hope has won 15 or more games in a season.
One of Hope's victories was over Reformed Church sister-college
Northwestern, Iowa, which went on to win the NAIA Division III
national championship.
Senior Don Overbeek of Wyoming, Mich., was voted the MIAA's
most valuable player. He also received all-region honors from
the College Basketball Coaches Association and national
recognition as a second team Division III All-American by
d3hoops.com.
Overbeek and senior captain Chad Carlson of Holland, Mich.,
joined a men's basketball honor roll of players who have scored
more than 1,259 points in their career. Overbeek ended with
0,000 points and Carlson with 1,034.
A unique feature of Hope sports teams over the years has
been the number of siblings who have competed together. This
year brothers Chad and Jeff (a freshman) Carlson were in the
starting lineup together most of the season.
SWIMMING & DIVING
Hope's most decorated women's athletic program added another
MIAA championship to its collection as the Flying Dutch won the
conference swimming meet.
The Flying Dutchmen, meanwhile, finished runnerup in the
men's championship and went on to place 13th at the Division III
nationals.
Coach John Patnott has guided Hope swimming teams to 25 MIAA
championships and the accomplishments at nationals raise to 105
the number of All-Americans under his tutelage.
Hope placed 13 swimmers on the All-MIAA team. Two seniors,
Erin VandenBerg of Beverly Hills, Mich., and Brian Slagh of
Zeeland, Mich., each received All-MIAA honors a fourth consecutive
year. The achievement of Erin VandenBerg was especially
meaningful because her older sister Betsy '01 was also an All-
MIAA swimming four consecutive years.
Also receiving All-MIAA honors junior Audrey Arnold of
Richmond, Ind., senior Daniel Bouwens of Zeeland, Mich., freshman
Lisa Ekdom of Holland, Mich., sophomore Kari Foust of Plymouth,
Mich., junior Chris Hamstra of Zeeland, Mich., junior Ian Kobes
of Holland, Mich., freshman Meagan O'Neil of Troy, Mich.,
freshman David Ornee of Zeeland, Mich., senior Kelly Parker of
Battle, Creek, Mich., and junior Michelle Smith of Olympia,
Wash., sophomore Erika Steele of Portage, Mich.
The Flying Dutchmen had three All-America performances at
the NCAA championships. Slagh finished seventh in the 200-yard
freestyle. He counted 11 career All-America efforts.
Two freestyle relay teams (200 and 400 yards) also had All-
America finishes. The relay members included freshman Travis
Barkel of Zeeland, Mich., Hamstra, sophomore Jeff Heydlauff of
Chelsea, Mich., Ornee, and Slagh.
ICE HOCKEY
The Hope ice hockey club team continued to excel nationally,
finishing second in the American Collegiate Hockey Association
tournament. A year ago the Flying Dutchmen were fifth in their
first national tournament experience.
After winning three games to advance to the finals, the
Flying Dutchmen were defeated in the national championship game
by Muskegon Community College 4-2.
Two seniors were named all-tournament team: defender Scott
Van Timmeren of Holland, Mich., and goalkeeper Ben Von Eitzen of
Vicksburg, Mich. The team is coached by Chris Van Timmeren '97.
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