Penn State Sports Magazine
Issue link: https://comanpub.uberflip.com/i/969330
B
etween the wrestlers winning yet an-
other national championship, the
football team winning the Fiesta Bowl and
the men's basketball team claiming its
second NIT crown, it's been a very good
year for team accomplishments at Penn
State. So good, in fact,
that it would be easy to
overlook a recent series
of impressive individ-
ual accomplishments.
Let's not do that.
Let's instead spotlight
a few of those school-
history-making per-
formances, starting
with Ally McHugh's
showing at the NCAA Women's Swimming
and Diving Championships in March. A
junior from Philadelphia and a member of
the U.S. national team, McHugh was com-
ing off a first-place performance at Big
Tens in the 1,650-meter freestyle. Her time
at that meet – 15 minutes, 43.34 seconds –
was a school record and was second na-
tionally this year, trailing only the 15:03.31
that five-time Olympic champion and cur-
rent Stanford sophomore Katie Ledecky
swam in November.
McHugh bettered that performance at
NCAAs, finishing in 15:36.27. Ledecky
took first place in 15:07.57, but McHugh's
second-place showing was the highest
ever by a Penn State swimmer at nationals.
"It was a big moment, and not only did
she handle it well, she crushed it," coach
Tim Murphy said. "It was just so fun to
watch."
With Ledecky setting the pace,
McHugh had to resist the urge to start out
too fast. She did that, and in the process
became Penn State's first first-team All-
American since 2015.
"Going into it I just wanted to have a lot
of fun," she said. "I was feeling really good
in warm-ups and I was excited to race
some really fast girls in my first A-finals
at the national championships. I was just
trying to swim my race plan and it went
really well, so I'm really happy with it."
McHugh was Penn State's only NCAA
qualifier, but with her performance in the
1,650 freestyle and ninth-place finish in
the 500 free, she single-handedly earned
the Nittany Lions the 29th spot in the
final standings.
Another school record fell when mid-
dle-distance standout Danae Rivers of
the track and field team shaved nearly six
seconds off her previous best time in the
1,500-meter race. Competing at the
Florida Relays in March, Rivers finished
in 4:10.82, good for third place. Her time
broke Marta Klebe's Penn State record,
which had stood since 2014.
Rivers, a sophomore from Derby, Conn.,
said that after 600 meters she was begin-
ning to feel her stamina start to ebb, but
she powered through to the finish. "At
that point, it's mind over matter," she said.
"I was just telling my body to breathe."
And about that school record? Said
Rivers, "It feels pretty good."
Another Penn State athlete took center
stage when Briannah Tsang turned in a
career-best score of 9.950 to share the
floor exercise title at the Big Ten Women's
Gymnastics Championships in March. It
was the fifth-highest score in Penn State
history, and in recognition of her per-
formance, Tsang was later named Big Ten
Co-Gymnast of the Year. A native of Van-
couver, British Columbia, she shared the
honor with Michigan's Paige Zaziski.
■
IN THE SPOTLIGHT
Ally McHugh's showing at NCAAs is one of several recent star turns by PSU athletes
|
VARSITY VIEWS
McHUGH
MEN'S GYMNASTICS
Pantazis, Nedoroscik win
Big Ten individual titles
Two Penn State athletes won individ-
ual titles at the Big Ten championships
April 7 at Michigan. Freshman Brennan
Pantazis won the