Bobcats have 141 named to PBC Presidential Honor Roll
Bobcats have 141 named to PBC Presidential Honor Roll
AUGUSTA, Ga. | Georgia College & State University had 141 student-athletes named to the 2023-24 Peach Belt Conference's Presidential Honor Roll.
The PBC announced that 1,763 student-athletes were named to the Presidential Honor Roll and gives the Peach Belt 1,500 or more honorees for the fourth year in a row and the 14th consecutive year over 1,000. Each student-athlete will receive a certificate from the conference office.
The Presidential Honor Roll recognizes all student-athletes at the 10 PBC core and eight associate member institutions in the league's 16 NCAA championship sports who had a grade point average of 3.0 or higher for the academic year. The honor roll has been divided into four groups: Presidential Scholars, Bronze Scholars, Silver Scholars and Gold Scholars. All student-athletes with a GPA from 3.0 to 3.24 are Presidential Scholars while Bronze Scholars are 3.25 to 3.49, Silver Scholars are 3.50 to 3.74 and Gold Scholars are those with a 3.75 to 4.00. GCSU had 50 student-athletes named as Gold Scholars to go along with the 26 Silver Scholars, 33 Bronze Scholars and 32 Presidential Scholars.
The women's soccer team led the way for the Bobcats with 26 student-athletes being named to the honor roll, edging out softball with 24 and baseball with 22. Women's basketball had 12 named to the Presidential Honor Roll with men's basketball (11) and women's volleyball (10) right behind. Men's golf had nine named to the honor roll, while men's tennis had eight and men's cross country added seven more. Women's cross country and women's tennis each finished with six.
Below are the members of the PBC Presidential Honor Roll from Georgia College:
Gold Scholars: Carter Barnes (baseball), TJ Kloiber (baseball), AJ Mathis (baseball), Aidan Kudlas (men's basketball), Oscar Lynch (men's basketball), Tucker Balch (men's cross country), Spencer Schoenberg (men's cross country), William Wright (men's cross country), Chase Blanton (men's golf), Gabe Cizek (men's tennis), Riley Barsby (softball), Divina Checo (softball), Karlie Gutierrez (softball), Emily Hutcheson (softball), Jana Shellhorse (softball), Maddie Todd (softball), Kacie Wiggins (softball), Natalia Bolden (women's basketball), Hannah Cail (women's basketball), Alexis Figures (women's basketball), Alexa Geary (women's basketball), Myra Strickland (women's basketball), Jada Warren (women's basketball), Amelia Wylly (women's basketball), Anna Agi (women's cross country), Lorena Cazora (women's cross country), Brooke Mooney (women's cross country), Maddie Reese Smith (women's cross country), Emily Wright (women's cross country), Emily Agi (women's soccer), Sydney Charles (women's soccer), Sarah Charney (women's soccer), Mackenzly Cheely (women's soccer), Katherine Crouse (women's soccer), Carter Drake (women's soccer), Aralyn Everett (women's soccer), Amanda Ewers (women's soccer), Natalie Eydam (women's soccer), Arin Goriscak (women's soccer), Bridget Johnson (women's soccer), Sarah King (women's soccer), Lily Markey (women's soccer), Taylor Salvaggio (women's soccer), Laura Almagro (women's tennis), Shradha Chhabra (women's tennis), Ashton Morrison (women's tennis), Chiara Santoro (women's tennis), Abby Infante (women's volleyball), Rachel Machovec(women's volleyball) and Lilly Swanson (women's volleyball)
Silver Scholars: Rand Bestermann (baseball), Evan Cowan (baseball), Owen Thomas (baseball), Gabriel Wuerth (baseball), Devin McClain (men's basketball), Reid Bissell (men's tennis), Rodrigo Pérez Crespo (men's tennis), Braxton Wright (men's tennis), Blane Davis (men's golf), Pierce Garland (men's golf), Addison Black (softball), Reina Checo (softball), Stephanie Condland (softball), Eliza Kuhne (softball), Jessica Owens (softball), Caroline Pollock (softball), Isabella Theus (softball), Nylah Nuri (women's basketball), Morgan Amrozowicz (women's soccer), Lauren Dozier (women's soccer), Ellie Fuller (women's soccer), Chloe Markey (women's soccer), Sarah Mason (women's soccer), Mia Palumbo (women's soccer), Grace Phillips (women's soccer) and Hayley Shepherd (women's volleyball)
Bronze Scholars: Landon Armstrong (baseball), Keagan Baxter (baseball), Christian Donaldson (baseball), Holden LaCour (baseball), Tyler Smith (baseball), Bradley Wilson (baseball), Najhae Colón (men's basketball), Richard Crawford III (men's basketball), Jake Mooney (men's basketball), Brendan Rigsbee (men's basketball), Evan Rehrauer (men's cross country), Brendan Rice (men's cross country), Luka Sauer Jimenez (men's tennis), Enzo Sergi (men's tennis), Noé Villen (men's tennis), Kaitlyn Anders (softball), Emily Hobbs (softball), Mackenzie Martin (softball), Kelsey Parlor (softball), Lauren Rule (softball), Samantha Wilson (softball), Shea Zweifel (softball), Miracle Parker (women's basketball), Bailey Vick (women's basketball), Jenny Goodwin (women's cross country), Adriana Duque (women's soccer), Ava Martin (women's soccer), Jada Young (women's tennis), Kyeli Hazzard (women's volleyball), Riese Johnson (women's volleyball), Callie Miller (women's volleyball), Brooke Roberts (women's volleyball) and Cadence Spilotros (women's volleyball)
Presidential Scholars: Jake Beaver (baseball), Mason Brown (baseball), William Joyner (baseball) Lex Kenny (baseball), Aidan McConnell (baseball), Hank Noonan (baseball), John Raines (baseball), Will Sims (baseball), Luke Chism (men's basketball), Adrian Cohen (men's basketball), Ian Davis (men's basketball), Austin Sloan (men's basketball), Daniel Laird (men's cross country), Joshua Sipes (men's cross country), Browning Benton (men's golf), Ty Darsey (men's golf), Jackson Ellerbee (men's golf), Austin Quillian (men's golf), Matthew Rogers (men's golf), Max Sheppard (men's golf), Jorge Robinson (men's tennis), Kam Caldwell (softball), Sydney Lancaster (softball), Golden Thrower (softball), Jaleah Storr (women's basketball), Ashyia Willis (women's basketball), Zelia Griffith (women's soccer), Anna Claire Smith (women's soccer), Katelyn Smith (women's soccer), Ashley Bentz (women's tennis) and Mary Kate Kotzin (women's volleyball)