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Call it a no-brainer, but Western Connecticut’s two All-Americans — Catherine Nathans and Tom McDonald — were named the Danbury university’s Athletes of the Year.
In 2007, Catherine Nathans became the most decorated women’s soccer player to ever put on a Colonials’ uniform. In her second season at WestConn, after transferring from Iona College, she helped lead her team to the Little East Conference regular-season and tournament titles, the NCAA New England Region Championship and Western’s first-ever appearance in the NCAA Women’s Soccer Final Four at Disney’s Wide World of Sports in Lake Buena Vista, FL.
This past fall, Nathans, of New Fairfield, led the team in scoring with 17 goals, seven assists, for 41 total points. Eight of her 17 goals were game-winning goals. In two seasons, she has the same amount of game-winning goals as the number she wears proudly on her back each game, 14.
And she’ll be back for her senior season this fall.
Her long list of post-season honors are quite impressive. She was named to:
Like Nathans, McDonald was the first player at Western in a particular sport to be named to an All-America team. And he recently completed his playing career as one of the top left tackles the WestConn football team has ever had.
Game in and game out over the past four seasons, McDonald was the last line of defense on the Colonial quarterback’s blind side.
This past fall, not only his coaching staff, but nearly every coach in the nation recognized him among the elite at his position. The New Jersey Athletic Conference coaches named him to their Offensive All-Star First Team. And the coaches in the Eastern College Athletic Conference named Tom to the Southeast Region All-Star First Team.
In college football, the National Football Coaches Association Division III All-America Team is widely recognized as the pinnacle of football All-America team. There isn’t a Second, Third or Honorable Mention category… Since 1945 the NFCA has recognized the top players nationally and since 1965 if you were not one of the top 11 offensive or defensive players in the United States, you weren’t a true All-American.
It’s been a rough first three weeks for the Fairfield Ludlowe football team.
Still winless, it did finally break into the scoring column during its 34-10 loss against St. Joseph.
Sophomore Sean Anderson broke the drought with a 32-yard field goal. And the Falcons first touchdown of the season came on defense.
Junior outside linebacker Nico Martire forced a fumble, which was scooped up by senior linebacker Ben Brennan at the Ludlowe 20 yard line. Aided by a key block by sophomore strong safety Matt Tierno, Brennan raced 80 yards for the score.
Ludlowe plays its homecoming game next Saturday against Norwalk.
This season is the 50th anniversary of the first Ludlowe-Warde football game…. OK, newbies to the area may not realize that Fairfield Ludlowe and Fairfield Warde are actually the former Roger Ludlowe and Andrew Warde high schools, and that Fairfield High was a consolidation project that lasted for less than 20 years.
In his personal blog, News 12 weatherman Paul Piorek posts that the two schools should acknowledge that first game when the Mustangs meet the Falcons on Thanksgiving Day. He outlines his proposal in a letter to Warde headmaster James Coyne.
Piorek will be at the Warde-New Canaan game tonight. Can’t find him in the crowd? The 1976 Andrew Warde grad admits he’ll be the one cheering “Go Eagles!” Yes, the Falcons were once the Flying Tigers, and Warde had been the Crimson Eagles.
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