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Sarah Wall - 3-time All-American, 2-time Academic All-American®

Sarah Wall vs Capital 2004
Sarah Wall vs Capital 2004
Sarah Wall vs Emory 2003
Sarah Wall vs Emory 2003
Sarah Wall vs Allegheny 2004
Sarah Wall vs Allegheny 2004
Sarah Wall vs Denison 2002
Sarah Wall vs Denison 2002

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Sarah Wall - 2002 Nat'l Semi Final vs Wm. Smith College
Sarah Wall - 2002 Nat'l Semi Final vs Wm. Smith College
Sarah Wall - 2002 National Finals vs Messiah College
Sarah Wall - 2002 National Finals vs Messiah College
Sarah Wall - 2002 National Finals vs Messiah College
Sarah Wall - 2002 National Finals vs Messiah College

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Ohio Wesleyan All-American Defies Science, Returns to Soccer

Three-time All-American excelling in return from severe car accident

DELAWARE, Ohio, Oct. 6, 2005 - It's not really anything new to see Ohio Wesleyan senior forward Sarah Wall running all over the field, helping the Battling Bishop women's soccer team to another spot in the National Soccer Coaches Association of America Division III national rankings.

What is amazing is that Wall is playing at all.In February, the three-time All-America forward was driving to her home in Columbus when she was involved in a one-car accident. Her vehicle hit the guardrail, flipped, and before it skidded to a halt, Wall's back was dragged along the road through the broken driver's window. All told, she had two fractured vertebrae, a brachial plexus (stretched nerve) in her shoulder and torn ligaments in her spine as well as the road rash on her back. Wall underwent surgery to fuse her vertebrae and had rods inserted on either side of her spine, with hooks into the spine to help keep the bones and rods in place. The prognosis wasn't bright. "The surgeon said that he had never seen that injury before without paralysis (resulting)," Wall says. But Wall's determination was something else that the surgeon had likely never seen. "Even within a week of the surgery, when there was uncertainty as to if she could come back, her insistence and drive on being part of the team was amazing," says Ohio Wesleyan head coach Bob Barnes. "She said she was going to be a good captain whether or not she played."

The road back wasn't smooth by any means. Wall was able to begin driving three weeks after the operation and begin exercising six weeks afterward. Three months after the surgery, she was able to get rid of the back brace, then spent the summer trying to get back into shape. "My day job here was summer research, but when I wasn't doing that I was trying to work out and get into some semblance of fitness," Wall says.

Wall was cleared to play two weeks before the start of the season, and to watch her play, one would never guess what she has gone through just to get there. Always the focus of the other team's defense, Wall has filled more of a setup role this season. She leads the North Coast Athletic Conference with seven assists and recently broke the conference's career assists record. "She's very special," Barnes says. "Her ability to raise the level of play of those around her and her ability to change roles on the team is remarkable."

"By now, I'm pretty close (to where I was before)," Wall says. "I may have lost a step or two, and fitness for playing a game is nothing like just going out and running. I still get some pain in my back muscles and spine, but if they hadn't operated it would have been three months in bed and six months in a brace."

A pre-med major and an Academic All-America honoree, Wall still plans to become an orthopedic surgeon, but the experience has changed her long-term outlook somewhat.

"(Orthopedic surgery) was my career plan – I interned with one during high school – but the accident, surgery and hospital stay gave me a whole new perspective on the doctor-patient relationship. Being able to see what the patient experiences coming out of surgery is good knowledge to have."

But Wall doesn't see herself doing the cutting-edge surgery that gave her the chance to take the field for Ohio Wesleyan this fall. "No, just knees and shoulders," she smiles.

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Wall Voted Academic All-American® of the Year

Nov. 30, 2005

Ohio Wesleyan senior Sarah Wall was voted Academic All-America® Team Member of the Year, highlighting the 2005 ESPN The Magazine Academic All-America® College Division Women's Soccer teams. Wall was a first-team Academic All-America® selection for the second straight season.Senior Sarah Wall "This was completely unexpected," Wall says. "I had been on the team last year, but never in a million years had I thought that they'd have named me Academic All-American® of the Year."

A starting forward for the Battling Bishops, Wall recently became the first women's soccer player in North Coast Athletic Conference history to be named NCAC Offensive Player of the Year for four straight seasons. She ranks third in the NCAC in scoring with 9 goals and a league-high 14 assists this season and finished her career with 71 goals and 52 assists. Wall became one of 20 players in NCAA Division III history to surpass the 50-assist mark, setting the NCAC career record in that category along the way. Wall is a double major in pre-medicine and psychology with a cumulative grade point average of 3.82.

"I don't think athletes get recognized enough for their academic endeavors," Wall says. "I'm not sure I can say that I deserve (this) over anyone else on the first team, but I'm proud of it." "I think what Sarah accomplishes off the field is more amazing than what she accomplishes on the field," says Ohio Wesleyan head coach Bob Barnes. "She's a three-time All-America and four-time conference player of the year, but few people realize she's a pre-med and psychology major, and she's going to finish in (seven semesters), what with missing a semester after her car accident. To do all that and maintain a 3.8 GPA is amazing."

Although Ohio Wesleyan has had more than 50 student-athletes voted to the Academic All-America® teams, Wall is only the second Ohio Wesleyan student-athlete to be voted Academic All-American® of the Year. Martin Forman was awarded that honor after leading the Battling Bishop men's soccer team to the NCAA Division III championship in the 1998-99 academic year.

The Academic All-America® program honors 816 male and female student-athletes annually who have succeeded at the highest level on the playing field and in the classroom. Individuals are selected through voting by CoSIDA, the College Sports Information Directors of America.

To be eligible, a student-athlete must be a varsity starter or key reserve, maintain a cumulative GPA of 3.20 on a scale of 4.00 and have reached sophomore athletic and academic standing at his/her current institution. Since the program's inception in 1952, CoSIDA has bestowed Academic All-America® honors on more than 14,000 student-athletes in Division I, II, III and NAIA covering all NCAA championship sports.

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