Brooke Lee
Athletics, Fall 2016, Feature 4, Feature Stories

Double Duty: Roosevelt’s Multiple Sport Athletes

Brooke Lee

There was a time when competing at a high level in multiple sports was the norm. Jim Thorpe played almost everything, Bo Jackson knew football and baseball and Deion Sanders competed in prime time on the gridiron and the diamond.

Today specialization rules the day, as young athletes are often interested or steered toward committing to just one sport. However, in Roosevelt Athletics, there is a culture that embraces, rather than shuns, multi-sport student-athletes.

Seven student-athletes are competing in more than one sport, not counting cross country runners who also run track.

Brooke Lee

The women’s volleyball team features three two-sport student-athletes. Brooke Lee, a junior and first team All-Chicagoland Collegiate Athletic Conference outside hitter, shifts to the softball diamond in the spring. Sophomore Chelsey Crippen goes from middle blocker in volleyball to a presence on the basketball team, while newcomer Amy Kinney, who excelled in both volleyball and basketball in high school and community college, also plans to play both sports as a Laker.

Chelsey Crippen

Chelsey Crippen

“I was always more competitive in volleyball, and softball was just a way to have fun,” said Lee, who also is busy with biology studies and a packed schedule of campus organization commitments. “I live for the competitive energy, fire and excitement that I get playing volleyball. On the other hand, softball is amazing. I joined the team halfway through my freshman year and love it. Softball balances out the hectic atmosphere of volleyball.”

Both Lee and Crippen initially came to Roosevelt to solely play volleyball. In Crippen’s case, after her rookie season, the 6-foot 2-inch native of Sherrard, Ill., pursued an opportunity to join the women’s basketball team and gave head coach Keisha Newell’s squad valuable minutes in the frontcourt. She even scored a career-high 22 points off the bench in a road game at Olivet Nazarene.

“I find two-sport athletes display a great deal of appreciation for their sports. Because they are not specialized in one sport year round, there is less room for burnout.”
Keisha Newell, Roosevelt Women’s Basketball Coach

While there are certainly perks to staying so active by playing two sports in college, Crippen admits there are challenges to juggling such a jam-packed schedule. “Balancing academics, practices, games and social life is not easy,” said Crippen, who has played both sports since she was 7 years old. “Since I take 18 credit hours a semester, it is hard to do everything. I think it helps that most of my friends are on either the basketball or volleyball team, making it easier to stay focused since we have the same schedules.”

In addition to Crippen and Kinney, Newell’s squad also has a third two-sport student-athlete in junior Elie Donovan. A hustling three-point specialist on the basketball court, Donovan is now using that same hustle in a longer capacity as a cross country runner for the Lakers.

Elie Donovan

Elie Donovan

“Right now I would say running is my favorite sport,” Donovan admitted. “Basketball has always been something I enjoy and I love watching the NBA, but I like running because it pushes me to give everything I have.”

A couple of other two-sport athletes are joining Lee this spring on the softball team. Freshman runner Brianna McCormick and rookie basketball center Taylor Sterkowitz will compete in softball, while also participating in their respective track and basketball seasons, which run simultaneously at times.

“I like the fast-paced life of being a two-sport athlete,” said McCormick, a Fenwick High School graduate who is a pitcher when she is not running. “I’m never bored and there’s rarely a time when I don’t have some sort of workout, open gym, or practice to go to. It keeps me on my feet, and I like that.”

“I love knowing that I am going to be playing two completely different types of games because they are different atmospheres,” said Sterkowitz, who was a decorated athlete at Oak Forest High School.

Newell said she loves two-sport athletes because their skills are transferable. “They often display a high level of toughness and competitiveness,” Newell observed. “I find two-sport athletes also display a great deal of appreciation for their sports. Because they are not specialized in one sport year round, there is less room for burnout.”

All of the two-sport Lakers agreed that having strong bonds with teammates on each of their two squads has helped them manage the tough task of training and competing for more than one sport at the college level. They also concurred that their athletic friendships have made the transition from one season to the next much more enjoyable.

“There’s a feeling of satisfaction knowing I can squeeze everything in and maintain my grades, performance and sanity,” said Lee. “Being on two teams has surrounded me with the support system of two amazing groups of girls and coaches. At the end of the day, it’s all worth it.”

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Athletics, Feature 4, Spring 2016

Youth Movement

As UIC found, wherever a loose ball goes, Joshua Dillingham is usually nearby

Roosevelt’s men’s basketball program rebuilds

The Roosevelt men’s basketball team had some rebuilding to do after losing veteran leaders Tyree York, Joe Harks and Jeremiah Jackson to graduation the year before.

With nearly 60 percent of their previous year’s offense graduating, the Lakers took their lumps during a 12-15 season this past winter.

However, the short-term pain should result in long-term gain. That’s because Head Coach Joe Griffin’s team features young talent who played crucial roles in 2015-16, and those roles will only expand as they gain more experience.

Freshman guard Jake Ludwig proved to be a quick adapter to the college game. The St. Charles, Ill. native burst onto the scene as an offensive catalyst and finished the year leading the Lakers in scoring with 17.9 points per game. Wielding a propensity to get to the rim and make big shots, the 6-foot-1 rookie was named the 2015-16 Chicagoland Collegiate Athletic Conference Freshman of the Year, marking the first time a Roosevelt player has won that award, and an All-CCAC Second Team selection.

Kyle Bumbalough is as bright handling point guard duties as he is studying biology

Kyle Bumbalough is as bright handling point guard duties as he is studying biology

“Jake was a breath of fresh air for our program this year,” Griffin said. “What’s most impressive about Jake, however, are his intangibles. His toughness, intensity and desire to win are second to none. He is a special kid with a bright future, and he will be a cornerstone in our continued success as a program.”

Ludwig was joined in the backcourt by another rookie, point guard Kyle Bumbalough from New Castle, Ind. Bumbalough is just 5-foot-9, but his grit and reliable offensive leadership make him a big player in Griffin’s system.

Head Coach Joe Griffin’s team features young talent who played crucial roles in 2015-16, and those roles will only expand as they gain more experience.

“Kyle is one of the toughest little guys that we’ve been around,” said Griffin. “He is unique in that he plays bigger than his size, and he really had a solid freshman year. With more experience he will continue to get better and better. Like Jake, his motor and how hard he plays are his most valuable attributes, and he is as good an example of a true student athlete as there is, sporting a 3.9 GPA as a biology major.”

Sophomore forward Joshua Dillingham proved to be unstoppable at times during his second season. The team’s leading rebounder, Dillingham is a Bolingbrook, Ill.-native who showed flashes of dominance in the post when he was able to stay out of foul trouble. He provided Roosevelt fans a first-hand glimpse of his potential when he scored a career-high 26 points and almost single-handedly rallied the Lakers back against eventual CCAC tournament champion Robert Morris Illinois at the Goodman Center this past January.

Jake Ludwig was the CCAC’s top rookie and one of the best players in the league last year

Jake Ludwig was the CCAC’s top rookie and one of the best players in the league last year

“Josh has been an outstanding teammate and leader in his two years,” Griffin said of the 6-foot-4 Dillingham. “Like most young players, he is continuing to learn how to harness his energy and passion. He makes you happy to come to the gym every day just by his presence. The jump he made from his freshman to sophomore years is impressive and, if he can continue to make similar jumps, he will go down as one of the most memorable players in our short history.”

Those are just three of the young players Griffin has on his roster for next year and beyond, and reinforcements via the recruiting trail should give Roosevelt more talent to take a greater step forward in the rigorous CCAC.

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Athletics, Feature 2, Spring 2016

A Newell Day

Roosevelt’s women’s basketball program goes forward with new head coach Keisha Newell

Roosevelt’s women’s basketball program goes forward with new head coach Keisha Newell

Unusual circumstances affected the Roosevelt women’s basketball team two weeks before the start of the 2015-16 academic year.

Robyn Scherr-Wells, the head coach of the Lakers for the previous five seasons, left to take the same position at Davenport University in Grand Rapids, Mich. That left the Lakers without a head coach for the first time since 2009 and it forced Athletic Director Mike Cassidy to quickly find a replacement.

Fortunately, he found a woman with a passion for basketball that was balanced with a life perspective molded by some time away from the game.

Just 28 years old when she was named head coach last September, Keisha Newell had established herself as a gritty leader and hard-working offensive catalyst while playing point guard for Loyola University Chicago from 2007-10. After graduating, her leadership and nose-to-the-grindstone work ethic immediately landed her a position on Loyola’s coaching staff, where she helped recruit top-tier talent locally and across the country in an effort that led the Ramblers to one of their best finishes in program history in 2013.

In 2014, Newell stepped away from the NCAA Division I coaching grind and became a student-athlete recruiter in the admissions office at North Park University on Chicago’s northwest side. While at North Park, Newell (née Collins) started a family after marrying former Simeon and Ball State standout Anthony Newell and giving birth to the couple’s first child, a son named Kamryn.

Becky Williford showed leadership on and off the court

Becky Williford showed leadership on and off the court

It was during this time away from coaching that Newell sharpened her approach to using basketball as an opportunity to teach “big picture” lessons, and it made the Roosevelt job an attractive position when she was ready to get back into coaching.

“I definitely learned a lot from my experience on the outside,” Newell said. “It’s more than just basketball. It’s about sticking to basic principles, being good women and good citizens.” Don’t get her wrong. Newell likes to win. But winning is a bit broader in her mind. Winning involves getting results and achieving them with two bedrocks on display: respect and hard work.

Fortunately for Newell, the cupboard wasn’t bare in terms of good players and good people to instill such values when she arrived on campus.

“It’s more than just basketball. It’s about sticking to basic principles, being good women and good citizens.”
Keisha Newell, Roosevelt women’s basketball coach

Roosevelt’s student-athletes had trained on their own until the hiring of Newell was made official. They played pickup ball, lifted in the weight room and stayed close during the summer to make sure they didn’t miss a beat when their new coach took over. Led by senior point guard Becky Williford, a captain who has earned many accolades for her work on and off the court, this year’s Lakers were ready to prove to Newell and themselves that last year’s rough 8-win campaign was a confluence of difficult circumstances.

“They stayed in shape and they were motivated, even with not having a coach for a few months,” Newell observed. “Becky set the tone. I thought they faced a lot of adversity, and they really bought into the culture we wanted to build.”

Paige Gallimore averaged a team-leading 16 points per game.

Paige Gallimore averaged a team-leading 16 points per game.

With that buy-in and trust in a new staff, things clicked early for the Lakers. Roosevelt won its first three games and won nine, more than last season’s total all year, before Christmas. Wins became tougher to come by near the start of a new calendar year due to a grueling schedule, as seven Top 25 opponents provided stern test after stern test.

In the end Roosevelt qualified for the eight-team CCAC Tournament with 15 victories, nearly double that of 2014-15, before bowing out to regular season champion St. Francis (Ill.). Those accomplishments were “unbelievable” in the context of how the school year began, and Newell was even prouder with how the group achieved them.

“We emphasize that the spotlight is on them, that they are not just representing themselves, but their team and University as well,” Newell said. “Body language on and off the court is a big deal. We want them to think about how they would act in a professional setting and make sure that, just because they are on the court, they don’t lose sight of that. Everyone followed that, and everyone respected each other.”

Now that Newell will have her first off-season to prepare for year two, she is focused on reinforcing the foundation set this past year while restocking the roster to help her returning players. “Roosevelt is a gold mine,” Newell proclaimed. “When people get to know the tradition, the tight-knit community, and the campus, they want to be a part of this.”

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