Blog
Different Route, Same Result – Penn State Champions Again in 2010
By Pete LaFleur (editor@CollegeFencing360.com)
(mixture of recap and historical perspective included below ... plenty more coverage, video interviews to be posted throughout the week)
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (3/28/10) – Penn State head fencing coach Emmanuil Kaidonov claimed his team was not the favorite heading into the 2010 NCAA Combined Men's and Women's Championship, held March 25-28 at Harvard's Gordon Indoor Track facility. And while the Nittany Lions truly were not ranked #1 in the polls (that distinction belonged to Notre Dame) – nor did they "sleep on the lead" during any of the tournament's first three days (that role was held by St. John's) – at the end of the day (actually day-4), it was Penn State once again occupying the top step of the team medal stand.
Penn State entered Sunday's final day of bouting as the middle entry in a three-team logjam atop the standings. St. John's was clinging to a narrow lead, after totaling 152 wins through the first three days (women on March 25-26, men on the 27th), followed by Penn State (150) and Notre Dame. The narrow four-point difference tied for the closest three-team battle entering the final day, since the six-weapon format began in 2000.
The Nittany Lion men roared out of the gate on Sunday and kept the pedal down, winning 41 of their 54 final-round bouts to finish with a nine-point cushion over runner-up St. John's (191-182). Notre Dame (180) ended up third, followed by Ohio State (180), the host team Harvard (139), Princeton (137), Clumbai (135), Penn (98), Stanford (81) and Duke (70).
It marked the 12th time that the Nittany Lions have claimed the NCAA combined team title, in the 21 years since the current 23-bout, round-robin format made its debut in 1990. Some of Kaidonov's underdog claims (which may have given his squad exact boost) are justified, simply by the fact that the team's 12-fencer configuration this year was significantly different from a year ago (when the Nittany Lions also took home the top trophy).
First-semester women's epeeist Marg Guzzi was Penn State's only individual champion, one year after the Nittany Lions had claimed an unprecedented four weapon crowns in 2009. The first five champions crowned at the 2010 NCAAs – Harvard sophomore women's sabreist Carolina Vloka, Columbia junior women's foilist Nicole Ross, Guzzi, St. John's sophomore men's sabreist Daryl Homer and Notre Dame sophomore men's foilist Gerek Meinhardt – all come from different schools, with that trend finally ending when St. John's newcomer Marat Israelian held off Air Force four-year All-American Peter French, 14-10, in the men's epee final.
Vloka edged defending champion and 2008 Olympic bronze medalist Becca Ward (Duke) in a thrilling 15-13 women's sabre final, avenging her loss to Ward in the 2009 NCAA final. Also of note, Wayne State senior men's epeeist Slava Zingerman ended a few spots shy of reaching the medal round (7th place; 14-9) – preventing him the shot of becoming only the second men's fencer ever to win four NCAA titles (also does once by a women's fencer).
The 12 Penn State fencers who comprised the 2009 NCAA title-winning squad included only two – epeeist Jimmy Moody (6th at '09 NCAAs) and fellow All-American, women's foilist Allison Glasser (7th in '09) – who were going to be lost due to graduation. But 12 months later, the Nittany Lions were heading back to the NCAAs with only half of their lineup intact from the previous championship winning squad, due to the following:
• Sophomore sabreist Monica Aksamit (who nearly reached the '09 NCAA four-fencer medal round, finishing 6th) did not fence in any bouts with PSU this spring, but she remains on the roster and conceivably could be back in the mix for 2011.
• Epeeist Nina Westman – a member of the Swedish junior national team and a near-All-American at the '09 NCAAs (13th) – opted to return to her home country, despite turning in a solid debut season in college fencing.
• Senior Nick Chinman won the 2009 NCAA men's foil title and then months later was shifted to epee. The Colorado native had plenty of past experience fencing both foil and epee, in addition to possessing the mental focus needed to excel in epee (see below to see how the weapon shift worked out for all concerned).
• The Penn State coaches opted to bring epeeist Brian Heflich to the NCAAs, rather than fellow senior Max Dettlinger (both PSU fencers fell within the regional qualifying standard). Dettlinger had fenced in the 2009 NCAAs and placed 15th, contributing 11 wins to the team's total a year ago.
With Westman, Aksamit and Dettlinger not part of the 12-fencer contingent, along with Chinman's weapon shift (plus the two key graduation losses), it became evident that some "NCAA newcomers" would be on the spot to perform – while the team's veterans would need to put up high win totals.
Mission accomplished in terms of both goals spelled out above. Freshman David Willette slid into Chinman's vacated foil spot and responded by posting the most wins (20) in the NCAA men's foil round-robin ... Italian newcomer Guzzi (who joined the program between semesters) did Willette one better, winning the women's epee crown in a 15-10 bout vs. Harvard sophomore Noam Mills (NCAA runner-up each of the past two years). ... Women's foilist Olga Ostatnigrosh, who also joined the PSU program over the semester break, chipped in with eight wins, while sophomore women's sabreist Olivia Benedek's 12 wins left her one victory shy of All-America status.
On the veteran front, three battle-tested PSU women were among the leaders in their respective weapons. Senior Doris Willette (who has an extra year of eligibility remaining) preceded her brother in reaching a foil title bout, but she ended up a few points shy of claiming a rare third individual NCAA title (9-15 vs. Columbia's Ross). Willette's 19 round-robin wins were third-most in the field, while Guzzi (15) and senior teammate Nastia Ferdman (18) both reached the semifinal/medal round in women's epee. Ferdman was the defending NCAA champion and capped her career by finishing in the top-6 all four years (also 4th in '07, 6th in '08), with her final bout being a 7-8 standoff vs.fellow Israeli Mills of Harvard during Friday semifinals (one of several 2010 rematches of 2009 title-bout matchups).
The Penn State women's sabre duo also featured a veteran fencer leading the way, as 5th-year senior Caity Thompson likewise became a four-time All-American with her 6th-place finish (16 wins; also was 4th in '06, runner-up in '07 and 11th in '09).
On the men's side, Chinman made a run at winning back-to-back NCAA titles in different weapons. The Colorado native impressively finished with the second-best record in the epee round-round phase (16-7/+23 indicators), but he fell in a 15-4 semifinal vs. the veteran French. Chinman was bidding to become the first men's fencer since Columbia's Ben Atkins (foil '91; epee '93) to win NCAA titles in different weapons. Stanford's Felicia Zimmerman also completed that rare feat by winning the 1998 women's foil title and then claiming the top epee spot in '93.
Penn State's spirited and ultra-competitive men's sabre duo – senior Daniel Bak and sophomore Aleksander Ochocki – matched the PSU women's epeeists by each reaching the medal round. Bak's 22 round-robin wins were the most in the field, but he lost to Homer in the 15-10 title bout (Homer also handed Bak his only round-robin defeat). Bak defeated Ochocki in a 15-12 semifinal, reversing the result from their 2009 semifinal matchup (when Ochocki went on to beat Homer for the title). Bak reached the medal round three times in his career, also placing third in 2008.
Willette's freshman season included winning the Mid-Atlantic/South Regional men's foil title a couple weeks earlier and he nearly matched his sister by winning the NCAA championship as a freshman, but the 2008 U.S. Olympian Meinhardt posting a 15-9 win in the final (Chinman beat Meinhardt in the '09 NCAA title bout). PSU sophomore Miles Chamley-Watson made a return to the medal round, as did ND sophomore Enzo Castellani (who lost to Willette while Meinhardt beat Chamley-Waton, with both semifinals decided by 15-11 scores).
Penn State also has claimed NCAA combined team titles in 1990, '91, six straight from 1995-2000, '02, '07 and '09. The Nittany Lions now have been the champions three of the past four years, after a four-year "drought" of not winning the title from 2003-06. During the past 21 years, only five other teams have won the NCAA team title: three by Notre Dame ('94, '03, '05), two each for Columbia ('92, '93) and Ohio State ('04, '08), and one each for St. John's ('01) and Harvard ('06).
"Sleeping on the Lead" (historical trends)
CONTACT: Pete LaFleur (editor@collegefencing360.com)
Some interesting trends regarding teams fencing with the lead are included below, along with some recent history in terms of margin entering final day of bouting. All research provided courtesy of CollegeFencing360.com (please credit accordingly for any reference to or re-publication of this data).
"Sleeping on the Lead" (six-weapon era; since 2000 ... 2-day format in 2003)
• Led After Day-1 – gone on to win title 4-of-9 times (excludes '03; 2-day format)
• Led After Day-2 – gone on to win title 4-of-9 times
• Led After Day-3 – gone on to win title 8-of-9 times
2000 – 9 points ... Penn State 143, St. John's 134 (PSU won: 175, ND/SJU 171)
2001 – 8 points ... St. John's 180, Penn State 172 (SJU won: 180, PSU 172)
2003 – N.A. (2-day format)
2004 – 27 points ... Ohio State 159, Notre Dame 132 (OSU won: 194, PSU 160, ND 153)
2005 – 8 points ... Ohio State 142, St. John's 134 (ND won: 173, OSU 171, SJU 162)
2006 – 3 points ... Harvard 131, Penn State 128 (HARV won: 165, PSU 159)
2007 – 8 points ... Penn State 150, St. John's 142 (PSU won: 194, SJU 176)
2010 – 2 points ... St. John's 150, Penn State 148
2010 (4 pts) – St. John's 152 .... Penn State 150 ... Notre Dame 148
2006 (4 pts) – Harvard 131 ... Penn State 128 ... Notre Dame 127 (Harvard went on to win with 165 pts, followed by PSU 159, Ohio St. 155 and ND 152)
2002 (7 pts) – Penn State 155 ... St. John's 153 ... Notre Dame 148 (PSU went on to win with 195 pts, followed by SJU 190 and ND 186)
note: the avg. gap between the top-3 after day-3 has been 14.0 pts (from '00-'02; '04-'10) ... in 2002, the top-4 teams entering day-4 were separated by only 11 pts (PSU 143, SJU 134, ND 132 and Stanford 132)
2000 (at Stanford; women's competition first)
Day 1 – Penn State 60 ... St. John's 49 ... Notre Dame 46
Day 2 – Penn State 101 ... St. John's 78 ... Princeton 77 ... Notre Dame 75
Day 3 – Penn State 143 ... St. John's 134 ... Notre Dame 132 ... Stanford 132
Day 4/Final – Penn State 175 ... Notre Dame 171 ... St. John's 171
2001 (at Wisconsin-Parkside; men's competition first)
Day 1 – St. John's 65 ... Notre Dame 53 ... Penn State 48 ... Stanford 43 ... Princeton 41
Day 2 – St. John's 106 ... Notre Dame 92 ... Penn State 86 ... Stanford 67
Day 3 – St. John's 147 ... Penn State 139 ... Notre Dame 131 ... Stanford 114
Day 4/Final – St. John's 180 ... Penn State 172 ... Notre Dame 153 ... Stanford 139
2002 (at Drew/Madison, N.J.; women's competition first)
Day 1 – Notre Dame 61 ... St. John's 57 ... Ohio State 49 ... Penn State 53 ... Yale 37
Day 2 – St. John's 100 ... Notre Dame 97 ... Penn State 94 ... Ohio State 79 ... Yale 65
Day 3 – Penn State 155 ... St. John's 153 ... Notre Dame 148
Day 4/Final – Penn State 195 ... St. John's 190 ... Notre Dame 186
2003 (at Air Force; condensed/weather ... all fencers 14 bouts day-1, 9 day-2)
Day 1 – Notre Dame 108 ... St. John's 105 ... Penn State 103 ...Ohio State 102
Day 2/Final – Notre Dame 182 ... Penn State 179 ... St. John's 171 ... Ohio State 167 ... Columbia 113 ... Princeton 107
2004 (at Brandeis/Waltham, Mass.; men's competition first)
Day 1 – Notre Dame 63 ... Ohio State 59 ... Penn State 48 ... Penn 43
Day 2 – Ohio State 97 ... Notre Dame 96 ... Penn State 84
Day 3 – Ohio State 159 ... Notre Dame 132 ... Penn State 127
Day 4/Final – Ohio State 194 ... Penn State 160 ... Notre Dame 153 ... St. John's 149
2005 (at Houston Convention Center; women's competition first)
Day 1 – Ohio State 57 ... St. John's 50 ... Penn State 47 ... Notre Dame 43
Day 2 – Ohio State 94 ... St. John's 84 ... Penn State 77 ... Notre Dame 70
Day 3 – Ohio State 142 ... St. John's 134 ... Notre Dame 129 ... Penn State 119
Day 4/Final – Notre Dame 173 ... Ohio State 171 ... St. John's 162 ... Penn State 145 ... Columbia 137 ... Harvard 134
2006 (at Houston Marriot; men's competition first)
Day 1 – Penn State 59 ... Columbia 52 ... Notre Dame 50 ... St. John's 48 ... Harvard 47
Day 2 – Penn State 93 ... Notre Dame 83 ... Harvard 82 ... Columbia 80 ... St. John's 79
Day 3 – Harvard 131 ... Penn State 128 ... Notre Dame 127 ... Columbia 119 ... St. John's 114 ... Ohio State 111
Day 4/Final – Harvard 165 ... Penn State 165 ... Ohio State 155 ... Notre Dame 152
2007 (at Drew/Madison, NJ; women's competition first)
Day 1 – Columbia 56 ... St. John's 54 ... Notre Dame 52 ... Penn State 52 ... Ohio State 48
... Penn 38 ... Harvard 36
Day 2 – Columbia 93 ... Penn State 89 ... Notre Dame 85
Day 3 – Penn State 150 ... St. John's 142 ... Columbia 137 ... Notre Dame 130
Day 4/Final – Penn State 194 ... St. John's 176 ... Columbia 169 ... Notre Dame 160
2008 (at Ohio State; men's competition first)
Day 1 – Ohio State 62 ... Notre Dame 60 ... Columbia 49 ... St. John's 45 ... Penn State 43
Day 2 – Penn State 101 ... Notre Dame 98 ... Columbia 82 ... St. John's 75 ... Penn State 68
Day 3 – Ohio State 149 ... Notre Dame 147 ... Columbia 128 ... Penn State 123 ... St. John's 118 ... Harvard 85
Day 4/Final – Ohio State 185 ... Notre Dame 176 ... Columbia 158 ... Penn State 155 ... St. John's 145
2009 (at Penn State; women's competition first)
Day 1 – Penn State 61 ... Ohio State 56 ... Notre Dame 47 ... Columbia 40 ... Penn 38
Day 2 – Penn State 98 ... Ohio State 93 ... Notre Dame 84
Day 3 – Penn State 156 ... Notre Dame 140 ... Ohio State 139
Day 4/Final – Penn State 195 ... Notre Dame 182 ... Ohio State 166 ... Columbia 151 ... Harvard 116
2010 (at Harvard; men's competition first)
Day 1 – St. John's 58 ... Notre Dame 57 ... Penn State 154 ... Princeton 47 ... Harvard 46 ... Ohio State 40 ... Columbia 37
Day 2 – St. John's 92 ... Notre Dame 91 ... Penn State 90 ... Princeton 76 ... Harvard 75 ... Columbia 68 ... Ohio State 64
Day 3 – St. John's 52 ... Penn State 150 ... Notre Dame 148 ... Harvard 113 ... Princeton 108 ... Ohio State 102 ... Columbia 86
Day 4/Final – ????
Final Standings – NCAA Women's Foil (2010)
contact: Pete LaFLeur (editor@collegefencing360.com)
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (3/26/100 – Here's an updated (after day-2) overview showcasing the 24 women's foil entrants in the 2010 NCAA Fencing Championships. CF360 still hopes to fill in some gaps, for final archival purposes (some data, even lack of headshots, is limited based on what is available on the various school's website; also may add scorea from key round-robn bouts). Similar pages will be completed for the other weapons at the 2010 NCAAs.
1 – NICOLE ROSS (Columbia-Barnard ... Jr.) ... 21-2/+68 ... 1st after day-1 (13-1 / +39)
#1 seed in DE – def. Evgeniya Kirpicheva/SJ (15-8) & Doris Willette/PS (15-2)
(New York, NY ... Columbia Prep/NY Fencers Club) * 3-Time All-American *
• champion at the 2010 NCAA Northeast Regional
• was seeded 1st entering the 2010 NCAA West Regional
• placed 5th at the 2009 NCAAs and 3rd in 2008
• compiled a 44-14 regular-season record in 2009-10
2 – DORIS WILLETTE (Penn St. ... Sr.) ... 19-4/+64 ... 4th after day-1 (11-3 / +39)
NCAA Fencing Historical List #1 (updated thru 2010)
Contact: Pete LaFleur (editor@collegefencing360.com)
(Over the next few days, the CF360 blog again will be passing along a series of interesting lists and factoids – relating to the 2010 NCAA field and the history of the NCAA Fencing Championship. We kindly ask that any media, SIDs or internet posters who reference such information please credit CollegeFencing360.com with the research and include a link to this post).
The 2000 NCAA Fencing Championships – held that year at Stanford – marked the first season that women's sabre was an officially-contested weapon in NCAA fencing. Thus, the 2010 NCAAs commemorate the 11th year of the six-weapon NCAA Championships format, with schools that sponsor both men's and women's varsity teams having the chance to send a maximum of 12 fencers to the NCAAs.
Nine teams – led by a core group of Notre Dame, Penn State, St. John's, Columbia and Ohio State – have combined to have the most total NCAA Fencing Championship entrants during the six-weapon era (the others include Princeton, Penn, Harvard and Stanford). Here's a breakdown of which teams have sent the most fencers to the NCAAs over the past 11 seasons (2000-2010):
NCAA Championship Field Breakdown
Most Entrants (144 total ... from 27 different schools)
12 – Harvard
12 – Notre Dame
12 – Penn State
12 – Princeton
12 – St. John's
11 – Ohio State (1 in women's epee)
8 – Columbia (2 men/6 women ... 0 in men's foil, 1 in epee & sabre)
8 – Pennsylvania (4 men/4 women ... 2 in MF & WS, 1 in ME, MS, WF & WE)
6 – Stanford (4 men/2 women ... 2 in ME & MS, 1 in WF &WE)
6 – Yale (3 men/3 women ... 2 in MF, 1 in MS, WF, WE & WS)
5 – Air Force (3 men/2 women ... 2 in men's epee, 1 in MF, WE & WS)
5 – Duke (3 men/2 women ... 1 in MF, ME, MS, WE & WS)
5 – Northwestern (women's team ... 2 in WF & WE, 1 in WS)
4 – Temple (women's team ... 2 in WF, 1 in WE & WS)
3 – Cornell (women's team ... 2 in WF, 1 in WS)
3 – UC San Diego (1 men/2 women ... 1 in MF, WF & WS)
3 – NYU (3 men/0 women ... 1 in MF, ME & MS)
3 – North Carolina (3 men/0 women ... 1 in MF, ME & MS)
3 – Wayne State (2 men/1 women ... 1 in ME, MS & WF)
2 – Boston College (1 men/1 women ... MS & WF)
2 – Brown (1 men/1 women ... MF & WS)
2 – Sacred Heart (2 men/0 women ... ME & MS)
1 – Brandeis (ME)
1 – Cal Tech (WS)
1 – Cleveland State (MF)
1 – Haverford (MF)
1 – Vassar ( MS)
Women's Sabre – 2010 NCAA Entrants (analysis later tonight)
| Heather Nelson | Air Force |
| Caitlin Taylor | Brown |
| Laura Decker | Cal Tech |
| Jackie Jacobson | Columbia |
| Sammy Roberts | Columbia |
| Beverly Yang | Cornell |
| Becca Ward | Duke |
| Elena Helgiu | Harvard |
| Caroline Vloka | Harvard |
| Sarah Borrmann | Notre Dame |
| Eileen Hassett | Notre Dame |
| Alicia Gurrieri | Northwestern |
| Allison Miller | Ohio State |
| Margarita Tschomokova | Ohio State |
| Dominika Franciskowicz | Penn |
| Danielle Kamis | Penn |
| Joanna Chicomski | Princeton |
| Eliza Stone | Princeton |
| Olivia Benedek | Penn State |
| Caity Thompson | Penn State |
| Martyna Wieczorek | St. John's |
| Dagmara Wozniak | St. John's |
| Kamali Thompson | Temple |
| Madeline Oliver | Yale |
Women's Epee – 2010 NCAA Entrants (analysis later tonight)
| Simone Barrette | Air Force |
| Neely Brandfield-Harvey | Columbia |
| Lydia Kopecky | Columbia |
| Adelaide McDonnell | Cornell |
| Katherine Thompson | Cornell |
| Emily D'Agostino | Duke |
| Noam Mills | Harvard |
| Felicia Sun | Harvard |
| Courtney Hurley | Notre Dame |
| Kelley Hurley | Notre Dame |
| Christa French | Northwestern |
| Kayley French | Northwestern |
| Julia Tikhonova | Ohio State |
| Stephanie Wheeler | Penn |
| Phoebe Caldwell | Princeton |
| Susannah Scanlan | Princeton |
| Anastasia Ferdman | Penn State |
| Marg Guzzi | Penn State |
| Sanne Gars | St. John's |
| Tetyana Novakovska | St. John's |
| Francesca Bassa | Stanford |
| Kristin Howell | Temple |
| Victoria Mo | UC San Diego |
| Madeline Buxton | Yale |
Women's Foil – 2010 NCAA Entrants (analysis later tonight)
| Jennifer Collacino | Boston College |
| D'Meca Homer | Columbia |
| Nicole Ross | Columbia |
| Misha Goldfeder | Harvard |
| Shelby MacLeod | Harvard |
| Darsie Malynn | Notre Dame |
| Hayley Reese | Notre Dame |
| Devynn Patterson | Northwestern |
| Dayana Sarkisova | Northwestern |
| Oksana Dmytruk | Ohio State |
| Allison Henvick | Ohio State |
| Aida Abdikulova | Penn |
| Brianna Martin | Princeton |
| Rocky Rothenberg | Princeton |
| Olga Ostatnigrosh | Penn State |
| Doris Willette | Penn State |
| Evgeniya Kirpicheva | St. John's |
| Irina Koroleva | St. John's |
| Jessica Wacker | Stanford |
| Melissa Parker | Temple |
| Mikayla Varadi | Temple |
| Pilar Alicea | UC San Diego |
| Olivia Dobbs | Wayne State |
| Katherine Pitt | Yale |
Men's Sabre – 2010 NCAA Entrants (analysis later tonight)
| Peter Souders | Boston College |
| Jeff Spear | Columbia |
| Anthony Lin | Duke |
| Valentin Staller | Harvard |
| Michael Tom | Harvard |
| Barron Nydam | Notre Dame |
| Avery Zuck | Notre Dame |
| Sam Roukas | NYU |
| Bryan Cheney | Ohio State |
| Max Stearns | Ohio State |
| Evan Prochinak | Penn |
| Thomas Abend | Princeton |
| John Stogin | Princeton |
| Daniel Bak | Penn State |
| Aleksander Ochocki | Penn State |
| Marty Williams | Sacred Heart |
| Sean Buckley | St. John's |
| Daryl Homer | St. John's |
| Lucas Jansen | Stanford |
| Max Murphy | Stanford |
| Kevin Zeichmann | North Carolina |
| Andrew Fischl | Vassar |
| Jakub Gibczynski | Wayne State |
| Colon Mills | Yale |
Men's Epee – 2010 NCAA Entrants (analysis later tonight)
| Peter French | Air Force |
| Daniel Trapani | Air Force |
| William Bedor | Brandeis |
| Dwight Smith | Columbia |
| Tristan Jones | Duke |
| Karl Harmenberg | Harvard |
| James Hawrot | Harvard |
| James Kaull | Notre Dame |
| Greg Schoolcraft | Notre Dame |
| Byron Neslund | NYU |
| Marco Canevari | Ohio State |
| Igor Tolkachev | Ohio State |
| Jacob Wischnia Graham Wicas | Penn Princeton |
| Jonathan Yergler | Princeton |
| Nick Chinman | Penn State |
| Brian Heflich | Penn State |
| Justin Dion | Sacred Heart |
| Marat Israelian | St. John's |
| Nicholas Vomero | St. John's |
| Kian Ameli | Stanford |
| Kevin Mo | Stanford |
| Eric Hsieh | North Carolina |
| Slava Zingerman | Wayne State |
Men's Foil – 2010 NCAA Entrants (analysis later tonight)
| Nick Stockdale | Air Force |
| Adam Pantel | Brown |
| Liran Gross | Cleveland State |
| Dorian Cohen | Duke |
| Tommaso DiRobilant | Harvard |
| Hao Meng | Harvard |
| Ben Van Son | Haverford |
| Enzo Castellani | Notre Dame |
| Gerek Meinhardt | Notre Dame |
| Phil Jamesson | NYU |
| Ben Parkins | Ohio State |
| Colin Sutter | Ohio State |
| Vidur Kapur | Penn |
| Alex Simmons | Penn |
| David Mandle | Princeton |
| Alex Mills | Princeton |
| Miles Chamley-Watson | Penn State |
| David Willette | Penn State |
| Alexis Landreville | St. John's |
| Adam Watson | St. John's |
| Michael Fong | UC San Diego |
| Kevin Nadeau | North Carolina |
| Nathaniel Botwinick | Yale |
| John Gurrieri | Yale |
Northeast Regional – Men's Results (quick rundown, more to come)
Note – The NCAA selection formula is comprised of two primary elements: the "Fencer Seeding Factor" (40%) entering the Regional, and the final placement at the Regional (60%) ... final placement and pre-Regional seeds are posted below:
MEN'S FOIL SEEDINGS – 2010 NCAA NORTHEAST REGIONAL
(Sunday, March 14 ... at Brown University ... 8 automatic qualifiers to NCAAs)
1 – Nathaniel Botwinick (Yale) ... #4 seed
2 – Tommaso Dirobilant (Harvard) ... #7 seed
3 – Hao Meng (Harvard) ... #12 seed
4 – Jonathan Holbrook (Yale) ... #15 seed
5 – Philip Jameson (NYU) ... #5 seed
6 – John Gurrieri (Yale) ... #2 seed
7 – Adam Watson (St. John's) ... #9 seed
8 – Adam Pantel (Brown) ... #3 seed
9 – Alexis Landreville (St. John's) ... #1 seed
10 – Jared Reboer (Sacred Heart) ... #6 seed
11 – Jonathan Yu (Brown) ... #11 seed
12 – Sean Norton (Brandeis) ... #29 seed
13 – Stuart Holmes (Sacred Heart) ... #22 seed
14 – Shiv Kachru (Yale) ... #8 seed
15 – Jose Samora (Hunter) ... #18 seed
16 – Richard Lagrandier (MIT) ... #33 seed
17 – Andrew Pintea (Brown) ... #25 seed
18 – Sjur Hoftun (Boston College) ... #17 seed
19 – Scott Phillips (Brown) ... #10 seed
20 – Philip Butler (St. John's) ... #16 seed
21 – Long Ouyang (Harvard) ... #24 seed
22 – Andrew Holbrook (Yale) ... #23 seed
23 – Andrew Shirman (Boston College) ... #32 seed
24 – James Golin (Brown) ... #28 seed
25 – Ken Sin (NYU) ... #30 seed
26 – Nick Kazimiroff (Boston College) ... #27 seed
27 – Ethan Patterson (Sacred Heart) ... #14 seed
28 – Daniel Levine (MIT) ... #21 seed
29 – Jesse Besignano (Vassar) ... #20 seed
30 – Oung-Jo Yuh (NYU) ... #26 seed
31 – Tavish Pegram (Vassar) ... #13 seed
32 – Michael D'urso (Vassar) ... #31 seed
33 – Barret Elward (NYU) ... #34 seed
34 – Connor Sumner (Boston College) ... #35 seed

