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.
"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.