What was the greatest year in ¶¶ŅõĢ½Ģ½ sports history? Was it 1912, when Albert Gutterson, class of 1912, won a gold medal in Stockholm with a new Olympic record in the long jump? Was it 1931, when undergrad Edith Pritchard ā€™31 posted 28 perfect scores in rifle and set a Womenā€™s Individual Intercollegiate NRA match record? Was it 1964, when Bobby Mitchell '68 shattered numerous ¶¶ŅõĢ½Ģ½ football records and set an NCAA record for rushing attempts and yards per game? Was it 1972, when Barbara Ann Cochran ā€™78 won gold in slalom at the Olympic Games in Sapporo, Japan? Was it 1996, when the ¶¶ŅõĢ½Ģ½ menā€™s hockey team made it to the Frozen Four with future NHL stars Martin Saint Louis ā€™97 and Tim Thomas ā€™97?  Was it 2005, when the menā€™s basketball team defeated #4 Syracuse in the NCAA tournament? Was it 2010, when the ¶¶ŅõĢ½Ģ½ womenā€™s basketball team took down Wisconsin in the NCAA tournamentā€”led by Courtnay Pilypaitis ā€™10, the first NCAA player to record over 1,900 points, 800 rebounds, and 600 assists?  Or was it the 2021-2022 season?  

While these historic years, teams, and student-athletes provided plenty of excitement and glory, consider the case that the widespread success made this past year the greatest yearā€”of all timeā€”for ¶¶ŅõĢ½Ģ½ Athletics.  

Hereā€™s the case: ¶¶ŅõĢ½Ģ½ teams compiled the universityā€™s best-ever collective team winning percentage of .617 while maintaining a 3.4 GPA as a department. Along the way they racked up six conference championships and placed second in the America East  Commissionerā€™s Cup. The Catamounts were also fifth out of 71 non-football schools across the country in the Learfield Directorsā€™ Cup, which measures overall department athletic success. A record 13 athletes represented ¶¶ŅõĢ½Ģ½ and five different countries in the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics. And a record six teams represented ¶¶ŅõĢ½Ģ½ in NCAA championships. All of this during the middle of the global COVID-19 pandemic. 

What year could top that? If you have others to propose, weā€™d love to hear from you. Drop us a note at magazine@uvm.edu

And if you need more convincing about the wonders and success of this past year in ¶¶ŅõĢ½Ģ½ sports, hereā€™s a sketch: 

This past winter, Catamount sports fans were rewarded with banner seasons from the perennially powerful ¶¶ŅõĢ½Ģ½ ski team and John Beckerā€™s menā€™s basketball squad. The hoop Cats steamrolled their way to their ninth America East tournament title since 2003 with an 84-43 win over UMBC, and they took the fourth-seeded Arkansas Razorbacks to the limit in the first-round of the NCAA tournament before falling 74-71.  

Twin Championships

Joachim Lindstol skis the Slalom

On the slopes, the ¶¶ŅõĢ½Ģ½ ski team won its 38th Eastern Intercollegiate Ski Association title and finished second in the nation behind only Utah at the NCAA Championships. ¶¶ŅõĢ½Ģ½ student-athletes captured three individual national titles at the championships including U.S. Olympian Ben Ogden ā€™22, who swept both Nordic races, and Mathias Tefre, ā€™23 who became the fourth Catamount in program history to win back-to-back national titles in the slalom. 

November 7, 2021, was an ecstatic day for thousands of ¶¶ŅõĢ½Ģ½ soccer fans at Virtue Field as the ¶¶ŅõĢ½Ģ½ womenā€™s soccer team won its first-ever America East Conference Championship against New Hampshire. 

COVID-19 severely limited the womenā€™s season in 2020ā€”the Cats played just six games, finishing with a 1-4-1 record. Coach Kristi Huizengaā€™s squad got off to a quick start in 2021, winning three of their first four before dropping back-to-back contests to America East rivals Binghamton and Stony Brook. ā€œWe were disappointed and frankly a little mad at ourselves after the Stony Brook game,ā€ said midfielder Alyssa Oviedo ā€™22. ā€œI think that sparked something in us.ā€ 

The Cats didnā€™t lose another conference game the rest of the season. ¶¶ŅõĢ½Ģ½ defeated UAlbany 4-1 in the semifinal of the conference tournament, and Cricket Basa ā€™22 scored the only goal of the championship game against New Hampshire in the 80th minute to clinch the conference title at Virtue Field in front of a womenā€™s soccer record crowd of 2,017 fans. The Catamounts advanced to the NCAA Tournament for the second time in program history, but fell 2-0 in a tight contest at Princeton.  

Women's Soccer Team celebrates (left), men's soccer team kicks a ball (right)

As co-president of the ¶¶ŅõĢ½Ģ½ Student-Athlete Advisory Council during the uncertain 2020-21 season, Oviedo ā€™22 was acutely aware of the anxiety student-athletes were experiencing due to COVID. Distancing requirements often removed student-athletes from the essence of successful team playā€”working out and practicing together. ā€œIt was really tough to stay connected,ā€ Oviedo said. ā€œWith so many games cancelled weā€™d say to ourselves, ā€˜you never know if this is going to be the last game of our season.ā€™ā€  

Oviedo worked to help connect student-athletes on different teams through events like ā€œBetter Together,ā€ which invited athletes to participate in fun, COVID-safe group games at Virtue Field. ā€œWe had girls on the lacrosse team and boys on the basketball team just taking penalty kicks. We had field hockey girls trying to toss lacrosse balls to each other. It was one way to physically bring student-athletes back together.ā€ 

uvm field hockey team celebrates a win together

Outstanding team defense and goaltending were the hallmarks of the menā€™s soccer team early in the season. The Cats reeled off five straight wins without being scored on, beating Iona, Lehigh, Colgate, Princeton, and UMass by a collective 10-0 score. ¶¶ŅõĢ½Ģ½ forwards and strikers increasingly found the back of the net as the season progressed, and the Cats finished with another five-game winning streak, establishing themselves as the two-seed in the America East Tournament. After dispatching NJIT 3-2 in the semifinals, the menā€™s championship game also came down to a single score late in the game. It was Yves Borieā€™s G ā€™23 goal at the 68th minute against New Hampshire, a team unbeaten in conference play during the regular season and ranked sixth in the country, that delivered the sixth America East Championship in menā€™s program history and the first for head coach Rob Dow. 

ā€œEveryone had the best game of their season,ā€ said Dow of his teamā€™s performance in the final. ā€œAt the end of the game there just wasnā€™t an ounce left for them to give.ā€ 

He believes the success of the womenā€™s team was a motivating factor for his players. ā€œIt was great to see that our guys were the loudest supporters of the womenā€™s team on the sideline. It also created a bit of an expectationā€”ā€˜well, the women beat New Hampshire, so I guess we need to go down there and win too.ā€™ā€   

Other teams and student-athletes were finding new levels of success during the fall semester as well. The womenā€™s field hockey team reached the 10-win mark for the first time in program history, and the Catamounts notched their 10th victory over Maine, a team ranked nationally in the top 25. 

Hoop Dreams and Gut Packing

Men's hockey protects a goal (left), women's hockey players pose for a shot (right)

Despite missing several student-athletes representing their home countries during the Beijing Winter Olympics, the ¶¶ŅõĢ½Ģ½ womenā€™s hockey team never had back-to-back losses after November. Four ¶¶ŅõĢ½Ģ½ women skaters took a late-season sabbatical to Beijing to follow their Olympic dreams including NatĆ”lie MlynkovĆ” ā€™24, Tynka PĆ”tkovĆ” ā€™23, and Blanka Å kodovĆ” ā€™22. The trio joined alumna Sammy Kolowratā€Æ'19 on the Czech Republic team. Sini Karjalainen '22ā€Æcompeted for Finland, making her Olympic debut against the U.S. team. She brought her bronze medal home to Burlington following Finlandā€™s 4-0 victory over Switzerland. In addition, incoming first-year student Sofie Skott skated for Denmark. 

Hockey East Player of the Year Theresa Schafzahl '22, who broke ¶¶ŅõĢ½Ģ½ records for most goals and total points in a season, acknowledged that the loss of so many key players at once required adjustments. ā€œIn the grand scheme of things, I think it really made us better because it opened up opportunities for younger players who didnā€™t have as much ice time,ā€ she said. 

Reinforced by the returning Olympians, the ¶¶ŅõĢ½Ģ½ women finished at 22-11-3, garnering the most wins in program history. They beat Providence 4-1 in the Hockey East quarterfinals before falling in the semifinals. At seasonā€™s end, Schafzahl andā€ÆMaude Poulin-Labelleā€Æā€™22 became the first women in program history to be named Division I CCM/AHCA All-Americans. 

Meanwhile the menā€™s team showed marked improvement as head hockey coach Todd Woodcroft continued to reshape the ¶¶ŅõĢ½Ģ½ roster. Last year the Catamounts integrated 14 new players, and many more talented recruits are on their way to the Gut. ¶¶ŅõĢ½Ģ½ lost a total of 12 games by just one goal, suggesting that the team is just a step or two away from being a contender again. 

While the menā€™s basketball team was establishing itself as the clear favorite in the America East, the ¶¶ŅõĢ½Ģ½ women were also putting together a memorable year. ¶¶ŅõĢ½Ģ½ posted their first 20-win season since 2010. Led by guard Emma Utterbeck  ā€™22 (13.5 points per game) and Anna Olson ā€™24 (12.3 points a game and a team best 40 blocks,) ¶¶ŅõĢ½Ģ½ entered the America East tournament as the three-seed. In their first home playoff game in 21 years, the Catamounts came back from a six-point fourth-quarter deficit to beat Binghamton 65-60. Their season came to an end in the semifinals at UAlbany, the eventual America East Champions. 

Mayer Women's Basketball Coach Alisa Kresge believes the success and work ethic of the Vermont men rubbed off on her own players. ā€œThis year more than ever Iā€™d walk into the gym and 24/7 Iā€™d see either one of our players or one of the menā€™s players working. Thatā€™s the culture Iā€™ve seen from the menā€™s team, and now itā€™s part of our program. Credit to our playersā€”they want to be good,ā€ she said. 

A student mid-stroke in the water

The Catamounts were also winners in the swimming pool, finishing with a meet record of 4-3. The team finished third overall at the America East Swimming and Diving Championships. The following week Jackie House ā€™25ā€Æandā€ÆKira Parker ā€™22ā€Æearned All-ECAC honors at the three-day ECAC Swimming and Diving Championships at the Naval Academy in Annapolis. ¶¶ŅõĢ½Ģ½ placed 10th out of 25 women's teams. 

Titles Kept Coming in the Spring

Before the hockey and basketball seasons wound down the ¶¶ŅõĢ½Ģ½ lacrosse teams were already in action, and early signs pointed to a stellar season for both the menā€™s and womenā€™s squads.  

Under sixth-year coach Chris Feifs, the men opened the year with a very competitive effort against Duke, ranked third in the nation at the time. Ten days later the Catamounts defeated Penn State 16-10ā€”it was the programā€™s first victory against a current member of the Big Ten since 1986. The Cats rolled to a perfect 6-0 conference record and won their second straight America East title before a home crowd at Virtue Field with a 13-11 victory over UMBC. In the NCAA Tournament, the Catamounts hosted their first-ever NCAA tournament game and dominated against Manhattan 15-3 before falling to the eventual national champion, top-ranked Maryland.  

Men's lacross player tosses a ball (left), women's lacross players celebrate a win (right)

Meanwhile the womenā€™s lax squad sprinted off to an 8-1 start en-route to a 14-5 campaign. Highlights included a 16-10 victory over Boston University, ¶¶ŅõĢ½Ģ½ā€™s first win against the Terriers since 1996. After falling to Binghamton earlier in the season, the Cats defeated the Bearcats in the semifinals of the America East Tournament 13-12, then followed it up with another thrilling 12-11 win over top-ranked Albany in the championship game. The Cats trailed late by five goals but outscored the Danes 5-2 in the final quarter. Grace Giancola ā€™22, named outstanding player of the tournament, scored the tiebreaker to ice the game in the closing minutes. It marked the first America East championship in program history, and the first time an America East school won both the womenā€™s and menā€™s conference championships in the same season.   

Milford, Mass., native Ava Vasile ā€™23, named to the America East All-Conference First Team in lacrosse in 2021 and 2022, chose ¶¶ŅõĢ½Ģ½ among other suitors because of the team culture. ā€œFrom the first moment I visited the locker room I could really get that sense of family, just the way people interacted with each other.ā€ 

That culture was abruptly challenged when COVID-19 made large group practices unsafe. Team members made the best of it, practicing in small group ā€œpodsā€ and holding periodic online check-ins called ā€œCat Fams.ā€ Vasile said the athletes looked forward to games, if only because it was the only time they didnā€™t have to wear masks.  

ā€œSticking together required mental toughness,ā€ Vasile said. She credits her coaches and the athletic training staff for working closely with each athlete to maintain fitness. 

ā€œBecca (performance coach Rebekkah Bond) really shaped us into almost a new team. She's just such an amazing strength coach and she just pushes us to be the best we can be,ā€ she said. ā€œAnd Sarah (Head Coach Sarah Dalton Graddock) is such a great coach and such a good person outside of lacrosse. The coaching staff is a big reason why I came to Vermont.ā€ 

A student jumps over a hurdle on the track

In the midst of the historic lacrosse double the Catamounts also hosted the America East Outdoor Track & Field Championships for the third time in program history at the Frank H. Livak Track & Field Facility. The two-day event was highlighted by junior Lauren Triarsi becoming the first Catamount since 2015 to be crowned champion in the heptathlon, which recognizes the best all-around athlete competing in seven distinct disciplines.  

¶¶ŅõĢ½Ģ½ Director of Athletics Jeff Schulman credits student-athletes, coaches, and athletic training staff for maintaining a sense of joint purpose and teamwork during the bleakest days of  
COVID-19 restrictions.  

ā€œIā€™m incredibly proud of the way everyone in the ¶¶ŅõĢ½Ģ½ Athletics community and our entire campus responded to the extraordinary challenges presented by the pandemic,ā€ he said. ā€œLast year was record-setting in all respects. The success is a powerful testament to the amazing group of student-athletes, coaches, and staff who are such a source of pride for Catamount Country. Our athletic medicine team deserves special recognition for the remarkable effort that was put in helping our department navigate through the pandemic and positioning us for such a successful 21-22 season.ā€