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LCSC will add
women’s track during the
next school year
3-19-07
Lewis-Clark
State College will recognize women’s track
as an official sport and the team will start
competing during the 2007-08 indoor and
outdoor seasons, LCSC President Dene K.
Thomas and Athletic Director Gary Picone
have announced.
The addition of
women’s track will give LCSC six women’s and
five men’s sports. LCSC currently offers
men’s and women’s cross country, basketball,
tennis and golf, along with women’s
volleyball and men’s baseball.
“We are excited
to be able to add women’s track to the
athletic program,” Picone says. “I have
every confidence that the program will
flourish under the leadership of coach Mike
Collins.”
“Considering
the importance of women's sports and Title
IX, I am especially pleased with the
addition of another women's sport,” Thomas
says.
This is the
first sport LCSC has added since starting
both the men’s and women’s golf programs in
1996.
“It is fitting
for LCSC to make a women's sport its first
addition in 11 years,” Thomas says. “We
looked at several possibilities, and women's
track is the best fit for us at this time.”
Collins, who is
the LCSC men’s and women’s cross country
coach, also will coach the women’s track
team. Despite not having a track team
previously, LCSC has had a few cross country
runners compete in some spring track meets.
LCSC also has a national champion in track
in Tausha Kuzmic, who won the women’s
marathon title at the 2005 NAIA track and
field championships in Louisville.
“We are very
excited about this new dimension coming to
the running program here at LC,” Collins
says. “We have roughed out a basic 10-year
plan with the first stage of the plan being
the indoor and outdoor part of the schedule
and transitioning into that first. So, the
first couple of years it will be a team made
up of predominately distance runners, but we
definitely won't be turning away the field
athletes or the sprinters if they want to go
ahead and come here. Over time the plan
enlists specialty coaches and specific
recruiting for those areas.”
The team
will practice at Lewiston High School’s
Vollmer Bowl, a facility Collins has used
before, thanks to his relationship with
former Lewiston High track coach Wade
Hillman and current track coach Keith
Stuffle. Collins says it will be a positive
for the high school and college athletes to
interact and help each other.
Collins says
he’s excited to attract some of the top
track and field athletes in Idaho and the
Pacific Northwest to LCSC.
“Our climate
here in the valley is one that bodes well
for these athletes where they can still
spend a good part of the year outdoors with
their training,” Collins says. “In the past
8 years we have had 30 All-Americans in
cross country and track and field, including
a national champion in track. We have had
multiple teams and individuals qualify for
national championships in both and track and
cross country, so the basic framework has
already been set up. This was all done with
young hard-working athletes that were not
going to get an opportunity to compete at a
bigger school, yet found here the chance to
compete and have experiences that truly no
other institution in the state can offer.
There aren't too many schools that can say
year in and year they are sending people to
the national championships.”
Although no
schools in the Frontier Conference currently
offer track, 27 schools in the NAIA Cascade
Conference, NCAA Division III Northwest
Conference, and NCAA Division II Great
Northwest Athletic Conference have track
programs in Idaho, Washington, Oregon and
parts of California. |