MANKATO, Minn. (Myers Field House) - Bemidji State senior thrower
Sheena Devine
(North Branch, Minn.) completed a perfect indoor season with her third
consecutive NCAA Division II shot put national championship, second
indoor at Myers Field House in Mankato, Minn. Teammate
Joe Remitz (Sr., North Branch, Minn.) received All-American accolades placing second in the men’s shot put.
Devine
came into the meet after winning the shot put in each of the nine
events in which she participated and was the second-rated participant
heading into this season’s championships. Saturday she proved why
she was the defending national champion.
The
women’s shot put was a two-participant race from the start.
Missouri Southern’s Jessica Selby-Tallman started the competition
off with a throw of 50-feet (15.40 m) while Devine’s first throw
went 49-09.24 (15.17 m) to start the race. Selby-Tallman’s mark
would hold up until Devine’s last throw of the competition. For
the third consecutive season Devine would shine under the pressure as
she launched her final throw of the competition 52-02.50 (15.91m) out
distancing her nearest competitor by 1-4.00 to claim her second indoor
championship. Devine’s championship toss broke her own school
record (51-07.75) by over five inches.
“This
championship feels good, I had my doubts at first but it feels very
good,” said Devine. “Coming into my last throw I was
thinking that this is my last indoor throw ever and I want to keep my
title of being undefeated so I went in and gave it all I had.”
Devine’s
individual title is the 21st in Bemidji State history and the fourth at
the NCAA Division II level. She is one of only two BSU athletes to have
earned three or more individual national titles. She joins John Tobler
who was a three-time NAIA champion in the men’s gymnastics during
the mid 1960s.
She is now a four-time shot put All-American earning two honors in the indoor and outdoor seasons.
“Sheena’s
championship is special, she had confidence in herself and proved why
she is the defending national champion,” commented head coach Craig Hougen.
On
the men’s side of things, Remitz was also exceptional. In his
third consecutive trip to the Indoor National Championships, the senior
used a throw of 59-05.50 (18.12m) to place him in second half way
through the event. Coming into his final toss Remitz had solidified at
least a second place finish. Remitz gave it his all to try and over
take Bryan Vickers from Ashland to claim his first championship but
came up short earning a second place finish, his best finish of his
career.
The second place finish in the shot
marked the sixth time Remitz has earned All-American accolades and his
fifth All-American award in the shot put. Remitz becomes the first BSU
track and field athlete to be named an All-American in two events as he
garnered a sixth place finish in the weight throw yesterday with a
record breaking throw of 62-03.00.
“It
feels great to be in the top three, my first year throwing at Bemidji I
took third in the outdoor meet and haven’t been there since so to
finish in the top two is great,” said Remitz. “Being an
All-American in both the shot put and the weight throw means a lot to
me, I work hard to earn All-American honors and this year really paid
off for me.”
“Joe came out and was
tough right away, he nailed his final throw of the preliminaries so we
new it would be hard for someone to knock him out of second,”
commented Hougen. “That allowed Joe to be able to go and try and
win it, which was nice.”
“Joe and
Sheena have given BSU a little bit of national recognition and people
recognize Bemidji State when we walk into a national meet.”
Devine,
Remitz and the rest of the BSU track and field teams return to action
April 5 when they travel to St. Paul, Minn. to compete in the Hamline
Invitational--the first event of the 2008 outdoor season.
A
complete list of participating athletes and real time results can be
viewed at: http://www.msumavericks.com/storyindex.php?sid=49
Bemidji
State University, located in Bemidji, Minn., is an NCAA Division II
institution and a member of the Northern Sun Intercollegiate Conference
(NSIC).