Penn State Sports Magazine
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F
our signees inked their letters of intent
during the November signing period,
becoming the first full recruiting class to
join Carolyn Kieger at Penn State.
The four-member class is comprised of
Maddie Burke of Doylestown, Pa.; Kaci
Donovan of Owego, N.Y.; Nan Garcia of
Jeffersonville, Ind.; and Leilani Kapinus
of Madison, Wis. The new Lady Lions will
join the program next year.
"I'm so excited to welcome these four
young women into our program and the
Penn State family," Kieger said. "They are
going to help us in the classroom, on the
court and in the community. Fans are
going to love watching them, the players
are going to love playing with them, and I
cannot wait to coach all four of these
young women."
Kapinus, a 5-foot-10 point guard, is the
most highly rated of the Lady Lions' re-
cruits, ranking eighth at her position and
30th nationally according to ESPN
HoopGurlz. She's averaged 14.7 points
and 9.4 rebounds per game throughout
her career at James Madison Memorial
High, earning honorable mention All-
State honors in 2018 while also claiming
conference Defensive Player of the Year
recognition. Kapinus holds school single-
game records for steals (10), blocks (nine)
and made free throws (11).
A track and field standout who placed in
the top 10 in the triple jump at Wiscon-
sin's state championship meet, Kapinus
said she chose Penn State "because it has
the best coaching staff in the country, and
the players made me feel welcome."
"I'm ready to win some national cham-
pionships," she said.
Burke, a 6-0 guard, has excelled at Cen-
tral Bucks West since her freshman sea-
son. She helped lead the team to a 49-27
record during her first three seasons, in-
cluding a Suburban One League champi-
onship as a freshman. She entered her
senior year with averages of 12.4 points
and 6.3 rebounds per game.
Burke, whose twin sister, Allie, is headed
to American University to play volleyball,
is ranked among the top 50 players in her
class by Preferred Athlete (No. 27), Blue
Star (No. 39) and Prospect Nation (No. 48),
while ASGR has her rated 80th overall.
She was invited to the 2018 USA
Women's U17 World Cup team trials and
was also a finalist for the 2017 USA Bas-
ketball Women's U16 national team.
Donovan is a two-time All-State and
three-time All-Conference pick from
Owego Free Academy. The 6-1 guard tal-
lied a single-season school record 542
points as a junior, leading the Indians to a
19-2 record, Metro Division champi-
onship and Section IV Class B runner-up
finish. After the season, she was named to
the first-team All-State squad and was
the Section IV Class B Player of the Year.
A member of the varsity basketball team
at Owego Free Academy since seventh
grade, Donovan has amassed 1,456 points
(14.1 ppg), 504 rebounds (4.9 rpg), 236 as-
sists (2.3 apg) and 229 steals (2.2 spg). She
ranks second in school history in scoring
and went into her senior season needing
only 271 points to break Owego's all-time
scoring record.
Donovan helped the Philadelphia Belles
AAU team finish first in the U17 bracket
of the Nike Tournament of Champions in
Chicago earlier this year. She attended the
U17 U.S. national team trials at the
Olympic Training Center in May 2018.
Donovan, whose father, Bill, is a 1991
Penn State graduate, said one of the rea-
sons she chose the Lady Lions was be-
cause of her familiarity with the school.
"I've always loved being on campus," she
said. "My parents told me that I attended
my first Blue and White game 10 days be-
fore I was born, so Penn State has always
felt like home to me. I'm so lucky to be
going to college at the place that I love."
Garcia, a 6-0 guard, is ranked 24th at her
position by the College Girls Basketball
Report. She led Jeffersonville High in
points, steals and blocks during her soph-
omore and junior seasons and went into
her senior year with 1,081 points (14.8
ppg), 486 rebounds (6.7 rpg), 138 steals (1.9
spg) and 88 assists (1.2 apg). She averaged
19.9 points and 9.0 rebounds per game as
a junior while shooting 51 percent from the
floor and 41 percent from 3-point range.
Garcia is a two-time recipient of the
News and Tribune Player of the Year
award, in addition to being named an
IBCA Supreme 15 All-State honoree. She
represented Puerto Rico, her home coun-
try, this past summer at the FIBA Cen-
trobasket U17 Women's Championships.
A two-sport athlete who has won All-
Area honors in softball, Garcia said she
chose Penn State "because I believe it will
be a home far away from home. I love the
family atmosphere."
■
W O M E N ' S B A S K E T B A L L
PSU lands four players in November signing period
McDaniel scores 40
in victory over Panthers
Kamaria McDaniel recorded the
third 40-point game in school his-
tory when she led Penn State to a
78-73 victory over Pitt in the Big
Ten/ACC Challenge on Dec. 5 at the
Bryce Jordan Center.
McDaniel's 40 points were the
most ever scored by a Lady Lion
player in the BJC. The junior guard
became the