Twin sisters Jenna and Amanda Duke figured to be big scorers for the Mansfield field hockey team and they are doing their job well. The sisters are from Stroudsburg and Stroudsburg High graduates.
Jenna, a redshirt freshman, leads the Mounties with 26 points on 11 goals and four assists. She had three goals against Roberts Wesleyan and two goals against both D’Youville and Frostburg State. Jenna has taken just 30 shots on goal for a .789 average.
Sophomore Amanda is third on the team with five goals and two assists for 12 points. She had three goals and an assist against Roberts Wesleyan and has taken just nine shots on goal.
The twins have been coming up with big scores as well. Jenna has three game winners and Amanda two.
Mansfield, ranked ninth in Division II, is 10-6 overall and 4-3 in PSAC play after a 1-0 loss at No. 6 West Chester last Saturday.
Logan Clouser – Duke field hockey (The Hill School)
The 5-foot-4 senior from Bethlehem is a key performer for the 10th-ranked Blue Devils who are 11-4 overall and second in the Atlantic Coast Conference after a 1-0 conference victory over No. 9 Boston College last Friday in Durham, N.C. Clouser picked up the assist after her shot was reflected to a teammate. She has two goals with three assists this season and had a goal and an assist in a 3-0 victory at No. 20 California on Oct. 4.
Sone Ntoh – Monmouth (N.J.) football (Emmaus)
The 5-foot-11, 235-pound graduate student leads the Football Champion Subdivision in touchdowns with 18. He’s fifth in all of college football. Ntoh had five touchdowns and rushed for 136 yards in a 63-21 victory over Fordham on Sept. 28. The touchdowns are a career best and ties a program record. He had four scores in a 55-17 triumph over Bryant on Oct. 16. He has carried the ball 73 times for 364 yards for the Hawks who are 4-4 overall and 2-2 in the Coastal Athletic Association.
Rayne Wright – Maryland field hockey (Liberty)
The fifth-year student was one of seven honored on Senior Day last Sunday and the 6th-ranked Terps responded with a 3-0 non-conference victory over Richmond. It was the team’s fifth shutout of the season. Wright has started 15 games and has played all 60 minutes four times. The team has given up just 13 goals. Maryland is 11-5 overall and 5-2 and second in the Big Ten Conference. Wright was an All-Big Ten first team choice and a National Field Hockey Coaches Association Mid-Atlantic Team pick last season.
Jared Richardson – Penn football (Bethlehem Catholic)
The 6-foot-2, 215-pound wide receiver leads the Quakers in catches with 23. He has 342 yards with three touchdowns. He opened the season with five catches for 98 yards and a touchdown in a 29-22 loss to Delaware on Sept. 18 and came back with six catches for 96 yards and a score in a 27-17 victory over Colgate on Sept. 28. Richardson earned All-Ivy League first team honors last year after having 67 receptions for 788 yards with eight touchdowns. Penn is 2-4 overall and 0-3 in Ivy games.
Brady Rimple – Bloomsburg men’s soccer (Northampton)
The graduate student is having a solid season as goalkeeper for the Huskies who are 12-2-1 overall and have clinched a PSAC playoff spot with a 7-1-1 record. Rimple has given up nine goals (0.65 goals against average) with 38 saves and eight shutouts. He didn’t have to make a save in Bloomsburg’s 6-0 victory over Shippensburg last Saturday and the Huskies’ offense was outstanding. Senior Patrick Walsh (Emmaus) led the way with two goals while graduate student Alex Wilsterman (Parkland) had two assists.
Alexander Kane – Dickinson men’s cross country (Southern Lehigh)
The junior will be out to finish strong starting with the Centennial Conference Championship this Saturday in Newville. Kane prepped for the race by finishing 31st out of 512 runners at the Mike Woods Invitational on Oct. 19 in Geneseo, N.Y. He had an 8,000-meter time of 25:13.5. That improved his time of 26:33.0 that he ran when he finished ninth in last year’s championship. Kane went on to finish 8th in the Mideast Regionals and 90th in the Division III NCAA Championship.
Kaden Moore – Virginia Tech football (Freedom)
The 6-foot-3, 310-pound redshirt senior is starting at offensive guard for the Hokies who are 5-3 overall and 3-1 in the Atlantic Coast Conference after 21-6 victory over Georgia Tech last Saturday in Blacksburg. The team had 233 yards in total offense. On the season Virginia Tech has accumulated 2,856 in total yards which averages out at 357.3 per contest. Moore has made 45 starts either at center or guard in 45 career games.
Christina Clymer – Slippery Rock field hockey (Easton)
The junior is tied for eighth in Division II with six defensive saves. The 6-foot midfielder/back has started all 14 games for The Rock. The team is 3-11 overall and 0-8 in PSAC play after a tough 2-1 loss to second-ranked Kutztown last Friday. Seven of the losses have come against nationally ranked teams. Clymer is a strategic Communications and Media major. She spent three years at Division I Ball State where she saw limited action.
Elaina Fragassi – Shippensburg field hockey (Parkland)
The 5-foot-6 freshman midfielder has come off the bench in every game for the unbeaten Raiders who are 15-0 overall and 8-0 in PSAC play and are ranked first in the Division II poll. Fragassi has played in all 15 games and has a goal and two assists. She scored her first collegiate goal in a 9-0 victory non-conference victory over New Haven on Sept. 13. She also helps on the defensive side, with the team limiting foes to eight goals (0.53 goals against average) with nine shutouts.
Casey Malone – College of Charleston women’s soccer (Pennridge)
The 5-foot-6 freshman defender has played in 17 games with 14 starts for the Cougars who are 11-3-5 overall and 4-2-4 in the Coastal Athletic Association after a 4-0 league victory over Campbell on Sunday. Malone has been on the pitch for 1,089 minutes and has played all 90 minutes in four games, helping the team hold foes to 15 goals (0.86 goals against average) with 11 shutouts. She scored her first collegiate goal in a 3-0 non-league victory over West Georgia on Sept. 15.