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Rachael Frazier

Rachael Frazier

Explore CDSWOY All-Time Roster Members

Rachael Frazier

Member of the CDSWOY Class of 2023
  • Class

    2023

  • Sport(s)

    Scholastic

  • Induction

    2023

Written by Kyle Adams, The Daily Gazette

Rachael Frazier first learned about the Capital District Sports Women of the Year organization last year when her cousin, Rebecca Hall, was selected as a nominee.

She never imagined that a year later, she’d be granted the same honor as well.

“It kind of took me by surprise,” Frazier said of being nominated and selected. “I was like, ‘me, of all people.’ It was really cool, just to be shown that all my hard work has paid off.”

Frazier, who played three years of varsity basketball and soccer, along with two years of varsity track and field, is a recent graduate of Maple Hill High School.

“What truly sets Rachael apart is her natural ability to lead by example,” Maple Hill girls’ soccer and track coach Sheila Golden wrote in her recommendation letter for Frazier.

“She upholds the values of fair play, respect and teamwork, consistently setting a positive example for her teammates and peers,” Golden continued. “Her ability to motivate and inspire those around her has been a significant factor in the team’s success and cohesiveness.”

“I have the same soccer and track coach,” Frazier said of Golden, “and she’s really pushed me to be better. She really brought me out of my shell.”

Frazier will attend SUNY Adirondack next fall, where she will major in childhood education and continue to play soccer.

Her choice of childhood education stems from experience working at summer camps and volunteering.
“I’ve been able to work at summer camps and the kids are just a lot of fun to be around,” Frazier said. “I’ve alway loved working with kids.”

On top of a GPA over 95%, Frazier volunteers for Quilts for Kids, which she’s done since she was six years old. She has also volunteered with the Maple Hill Booster Club, helping out with the concession stands and with events since she entered sixth grade.”

“Rachael displayed exceptional leadership and positivity throughout both basketball seasons she was with me,” Maple Hills girls’ basketball coach Michael Oliver wrote in his recommendation letter for Frazier. “As a team captain, Rachael took on the role of communicating important information, allowing her teammates ranging from grades 7-12 to receive the best experience.”

Frazier, who has won numerous athletic awards as well, attributed her competitiveness to growing up with a twin brother, Colby, who will play baseball in college.

“As a three-sport athlete, Rachael has consistently gone above and beyond in her efforts, both in practice and during competitive events,” Golden wrote. “She is always the first to arrive and the last to leave, and her determination to improve and excel is truly inspiring.”

She also gave a lot of credit to her mom.

“My mom has been my top inspiration in life,” Frazier said. “She has always been my biggest supporter and fan through sports and school. I wouldn’t be who I am today without her.”

“When they explained it,” Frazier said of the CDSWOY honor, “they said that there’s 99 schools that can nominate and only 10 girls get picked. Especially being from a small school, I didn’t even know that many people knew who I was. To get picked for this, it’s amazing.”

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Isabella Franchi

Isabella Franchi

Explore CDSWOY All-Time Roster Members

Isabella Franchi

Member of the CDSWOY Class of 2023
  • Class

    2023

  • Sport(s)

    Scholastic

  • Induction

    2023

Written by Kyle Adams, The Daily Gazette

When you find something you love doing, it’s easy to want to share that with others.

Not only did Isabella Franchi’s love of basketball lead to her commitment to play at Saint Michael’s College next season, but to her involvement with Unified Basketball, as well as a youth basketball coach.

“I had no idea I was being considered for this,” Franchi, a recent graduate of Colonie High School, said of being named one of this year’s Capital District Sports Women of the Year scholastic honorees. “I was called into the office and on a Zoom were my parents, which was a little scary, and the founder [Eric McDowell]. He told me a little about it and that I was nominated for it.

“Hearing all the support and all the work that went into entering me for this, it just means so much,” added Franchi, who also played varsity soccer.

“During her career at Colonie, Isabella proved time and again to be one of the hardest workers on the basketball team,” Colonie girls’ basketball coach Heather DiBiase wrote in her recommendation letter. “Her relentless work ethic and determination are two of the reasons why her teammates and coaches selected her to represent them as captain her senior year.”

While Franchi’s success on the court, and her involvement in the basketball community when she wasn’t playing herself, is what stood out, she never expected to be given an award for it.

“I coach for the same basketball program that I played in, when I fell in love with the game,” she said. “Those were some of the best basketball moments I’ve ever had. Being able to be a part of that, seeing the kids have fun, learn those life lessons and be there for them, it’s great to be able to help show them the way.”

Being part of the Unified Basketball program offered a similar experience for Franchi.

“One of the years I did it, during COVID, just seeing how happy the kids were with what we could give them — which wasn’t much — it was amazing,” Franchi said. “Over the years, seeing the kids keep that same energy, knowing you’re giving them as much as you can, it’s a great feeling.”

Giving back as a youth coach paid off for Franchi, as she gained some additional supporters at Colonie’s varsity games.

“As you get older, sometimes people forget the fun part of it,” Franchi said. “Getting to joke around with the kids, seeing them come to my games and cheer me on, it’s just a really fun program to be a part of.”

Franchi’s athletic success and community involvement, while still maintaining a high academic standing left DiBiase in awe.

“She was a coach for the Capital District Girls Basketball League for four years,” DiBiase wrote of Franchi. “She organized a student/staff charity basketball game at Colonie High School. She is an ICare member and Treasurer and a member of the Youth Advisory Board. Her amazing ability to balance her schoolwork and extracurricular activities is outstanding.”

“She is the epitome of what any coach would want their players to be,” added girls’ soccer coach Ryan Edson. “Not only has she been a source of inspiration for her teammates, but also the coaches in the program as well.”

At the end of the day, the one goal has always remained the same – just to be able to continue playing.

“Ever since I was little,” Franchi said, “I’ve loved playing basketball and eventually I realized what the main goal was, which is to just keep playing.”

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Isabella Mancini

Morgan Burchhardt

Explore CDSWOY All-Time Roster Members

Isabella Mancini

Member of the CDSWOY Class of 2021
  • Class

    2021

  • Sport(s)

    Scholastic

  • Induction

    2021

Written by Michael Kelly, The Daily Gazette Sports Editor

Above all else, Izzy Mancini loved being on the team.

“My favorite part of my years at Galway High School was playing on the sports teams,” Mancini said. “I love the sport dynamic so much — being able to compete is the main thing, but all the sports I played were in a team setting.”

And the 17-year-old who competed in basketball, softball and soccer led those teams during a high school career filled with accomplishments in competition, the classroom and in the community.

“Izzy Mancini is the athlete that every coach wishes they had 20 clones of to form their team,” Galway athletic director Elise Britt said. “Izzy is the whole package and will continue to excel far past her high school career in athletics, academics and citizenship.”

The valedictorian this year at Galway, Mancini is one of 10 high school honorees for the second-annual Capital District Sports Women of the Year awards. The 17-year-old said she was “extremely shocked” to earn such an honor, and it was one that had special meaning to her since one of her best friends, Rachel Wnuk, was one of the student-athletes recognized during the inaugural CDSWOY awards.

“To be able to get the same award, the year after, was incredible because I look up to her,” Mancini said.

At Galway, her teammates often looked up to her. A four-year varsity athlete in basketball and soccer, and a three-year varsity competitor in softball, Mancini was a top player in the Western Athletic Conference. More than that, she was a leader on her sports teams.

“From Day 1, she has been a mentor for the younger players,” said Phillip Meashaw, who coached Mancini in basketball. “She will frequently take time to check in with them and is a role model for them by the way she conducts herself at practice and games.”

“Izzy is a positive role model with all of her teammates,” said Mike Smith, who coached Mancini in softball. “Izzy is a tough competitor who gives 110% in all that she does. It’s a pleasure to know Izzy, and even a bigger thrill to coach her and watch her play.”

During her years at Galway High School, Mancini earned a variety of academic, athletic and community honors. She also was active in clubs, such as the science club and Leo’s club, and served as class treasurer.

Mancini will attend Albany College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences and plans to pursue becoming a pharmacist.
As valedictorian, she addressed her senior class during graduation, and commended all her peers for how they handled a senior year amid the novel coronavirus pandemic. Rather than focusing on “what COVID did to us,” Mancini said her Galway classmates became four-sport athletes, watched after younger siblings and took up part-time jobs while finishing up their high-school careers.

“You can push through it,” Mancini said, “and my class did that.”

So, too, did Mancini.

“Izzy is the type of athlete that brings positivity, confidence and unity to her teams and community at large,” Britt said. “Izzy has many academic accolades, even more athletic accomplishments, and creates a culture of unity and progress.”

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Phoebe Fox

Phoebe Fox

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Phoebe Fox

Member of the CDSWOY Class of 2021
  • Class

    2021

  • Sport(s)

    Scholastic

  • Induction

    2021

Written by Stan Hudy, The Daily Gazette Sports Writer

Glens Falls graduate Phoebe Fox never stops moving or caring.

Fox, who will attend Bryant University, spent her high school career as a three-sport athlete — girls’ soccer, Alpine skiing and girls’ lacrosse.

When not on the pitch, slopes or field, she dedicated her time to helping others as a volunteer with the Salvation Army as a bell ringer during the holidays and participating in the local Operation Santa Claus fund drive to purchase toys for local children.”

The winter weather didn’t bother Fox, smiling while ringing for the Salvation Army.

“It was something that I looked forward to because you are helping people,” said Fox, one of 10 high school honorees for the second-annual Capital District Sports Women of the Year awards. “You are with your friends; you get to meet new people and know that you are helping out.”

Within the Glens Falls City Schools, Fox was part of the yearbook committee and selected to the National Honor Society during her junior year.

With soccer in the Foothills Council shifted to the “Fall II” season in March and April that was created to house competitions for school sports teams unable to compete last fall because of concerns related to the novel coronavirus pandemic, Fox’s fall became open for an additional sport — tennis.

“I had never picked up a tennis racket before, but my best friend played and convinced me to do it,” Fox said. “Now I play all the time.”

Tennis provided a new set of challenges for Fox.

“It was different because it’s not so much of a team sport, but it was pretty easy to pick up,” Fox said. “My serve was good early on, but I was really bad at backhands. It was totally going over the fence.”

This spring, Fox returned to the soccer field for her fourth varsity year.

“Phoebe showed dedication and commitment as she was the first player to arrive at practice and the last to leave,” Glens Falls girls’ soccer coach Thomas Barrows said. “As the captain of the team, she led by example through her positive attitude and strong work ethic.”

The Glens Falls girls’ lacrosse captain and leading scorer the past four years shined.

“Phoebe’s lacrosse knowledge and heads-up game play are unmatched,” Glens Falls girls’ lacrosse coach Elyse Hagy said of Fox, who will play lacrosse at Division I Bryant.

Glens Falls athletic director Arthur Corlew said Fox was an all-around star during her years at Glens Falls High School.

“Her academic record attests to her hard work, commitment and dedication to be the best student she can be,” Corlew said. “In my 29 years in education, she ranks in the top 5% of student-athletes.

“Phoebe is well-respected by her peers. Her hard work serves as a positive role model to all that come in contact with her,” Corlew said. “Phoebe, as a leader, sets high standards for herself, and all of her coaches have said that Phoebe is a coach and a leader on and off the field.”

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Michelina Lombardi

Morgan Burchhardt

Explore CDSWOY All-Time Roster Members

Michelina Lombardi

2022 Grand Scholastic Woman of the Year
  • Class

    2022

  • Sport(s)

    Scholastic

  • Induction

    2022

Written by Michael Kelly, The Daily Gazette

During her years at Averill Park High School, Michelina Lombardi reached impressive heights and helped lift those around her, too. A standout student, a top athlete and a frequent volunteer, Lombardi packed an incredible amount of achievement and memories into her high school career.

“She is punctual, diligent and genuine. She is willing to put her own interests aside to help her fellow peers and teammates,” said Sean Organ, whose varsity basketball team won a state championship in 2022 with Lombardi helping to lead the way. “Michelina is the kind of student-athlete teachers and coaches hope to work with on a daily basis. She demonstrates a tremendous work ethic in her quest to succeed academically and athletically.”

“At all times, I have found Michelina to be self-motivated, reliable, hard-working, dedicated and courteous,” said Nathan Luskin, who coached Lombardi in soccer and track and field. “She consistently acts as a role model for younger teammates and classmates, and has been a tremendous asset to our school community.”

One of 10 high school honorees for the third-annual Capital District Sports Women of the Year awards, Lombardi ranked eighth in her graduating class, accumulated a 4.0 GPA, received numerous academic honors and was a member of the New Visions Scientific Research and World Health Program her senior year. Actively involved in several clubs, Lombardi was also a class president throughout her years at Averill Park.

Lombardi credited her teachers with making it possible for her to have such a rich academic experience.

“They are all there for one goal, and that’s to help the students,” Lombardi said. “They look at us as a whole, but they really strive to help each of us individually.”

In her community, Lombardi developed a significant presence, particularly through her work volunteering with Young’s Pharmacy to help conduct COVID-19 vaccine clinics and with St. Jude the Apostle Church.

The Wynantskill resident volunteered to check-in people at area vaccine clinics, helping to keep the clinics organized and on schedule.

“I was very humbled to be asked to volunteer and help serve the community,” Lombardi said. “That was so important to me.”

So, too, was her volunteering with St. Jude the Apostle. Through her church, Lombardi said she “realized how important volunteering is,” and applied that lesson. She spent countless hours helping seniors, coaching youth basketball players, and preparing food baskets for those in need, among a variety of other volunteer activities, as part of her work through the church.

“St. Jude’s is a community that I’m very fond of,” said Lombardi, who attended the church’s school through sixth grade. “They’ve done a lot for me over the years, and it’s been really great to give back to that community, and those students since I was one of them.”

Athletically, Lombardi was an all-star level performer in soccer and track and field, as well as one of the top standouts on this year’s basketball team that won a state championship. A four-year varsity starter on the basketball court, Lombardi’s team had its postseasons shortened in 2020 and 2021 due to restrictions related to the novel coronavirus pandemic, and the goal to make the most of 2022’s full postseason helped drive her to be her best.

“All I wanted to do was win a state championship,” said Lombardi, who scored 11 points in Averill Park’s 54-48 Class A championship win against Tappan Zee.

For Lombardi, attending medical school and becoming a doctor are future goals. Later this year, Lombardi will attend Le Moyne College. She will play basketball while she majors in biology and minors in Spanish at the college.

“I’m just really thankful to Averill Park for everything they’ve given me and how they’ve prepared me for Le Moyne,” Lombardi said. “These last four years have been nothing short of amazing.”

Her high school will certainly miss her presence.

“Michelina is one of, if not the best, leaders that I’ve come across during my 13 years in athletic administration,” Averill Park athletic director Mark Bubniak said. “She is a great student, talented athlete, and serves her school and community in a variety of ways.”

“Her community looks up to her,” Organ said.

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Megan Flynn

Megan Flynn

Explore CDSWOY All-Time Roster Members

Megan Flynn

Member of the CDSWOY Class of 2020
  • Class

    2020

  • Sport(s)

    Collegiate

  • Induction

    2020

Written by Ken Schott, The Daily Gazette Associate Sports Writer

As Megan Flynn was preparing for her freshman season with the Sage women’s basketball team in 2016-17, she was feeling some discomfort in her right foot.

It turned out that the Hoosick Falls High School graduate had broken it. 

That could have set her college playing career back.

Probably should’ve.

It didn’t.

Instead, Flynn produced a stellar career, one that now includes being honored as one of the three college nominees for the inaugural Capital District Sports Women of the Year, for which 10 high school athletes are also being recognized.

Flynn is appreciative of being a recipient.

“It’s an indescribable feeling,” Flynn said. “I knew that the award had started last year. I heard about it mid-season, not that I was in the running or being considered. I thought, ‘Wow, this is really awesome.’ My coach called me with the news, and my jaw kind of dropped because it’s something you don’t think of yourself as a contender for.”

Flynn, though, developed into a double-digit scorer during her college career, and always excelled away from it. Flynn has been active in community service, including Chomper’s Reading Program, Humane Society, Halloween 5K, Centennial 5K, Sage Engaged, Sage SAAC Toys for Tots, Thanksgiving food drives, Make-a-Wish Santa Letters, MS Walk and the Breast Cancer Walk.

Academically, she had a 3.99 grade-point average as an undergraduate majoring in business administration. She completed her undergraduate degree early. She currently has a 4.0 GPA as she pursues a masters’ degree in business administration. She’s a seven-time member of Sage’s Dean’s List, and was recently named to the CoSIDA Academic All-District First Team and the Academic All-America NCAA Division III Team.

On the basketball court, Flynn missed most of her freshman season after having surgery to repair the break.

“I did summer league with the team,” Flynn said. “I was really excited. Coach [Allison Coleman] was excited about me. She had high expectations, as I did myself. She told me I had a lot of potential. I was super excited to come into the season and prove myself.

“It was before the season, and I was having pain in my foot. Turns out I broke it. .?.?. I eventually needed surgery. I missed three-quarters of my freshman season. I ended up coming back in the second semester. It was kind of on and off because I wasn’t completely healed.”

But after averaging 7.8 points per game her sophomore year, Flynn’s game took off. She averaged 12.5 ppg her junior season, and then had a team-leading 13.6 ppg this past season.

“Our team usually, after the season, does pick-up [basketball], and then we do it in the summertime, too, in a local league,” Flynn said. “I think once I was able to play my team during the summer in pick-up leading into next season, I felt really comfortable. I was getting back to where I was before the injury had happened, and I knew I could still make an impact and play my game.”

This article appeared in the 2020 CDSWOY Awards Program on August 18, 2020.

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Olivia Lomascolo

Morgan Burchhardt

Explore CDSWOY All-Time Roster Members

Olivia Lomascolo

Member of the CDSWOY Class of 2023
  • Class

    2023

  • Sport(s)

    Collegiate

  • Induction

    2023

Written by Mike MacAdam, The Daily Gazette

Olivia Lomascolo knows all about endorphins, both as an athlete and in her profession.

As a cross country and track star for five years at Siena College, she has experienced the so-called “runner’s high,” the feeling of euphoria brought on by the intensity of distance training and competition.

She gets that at work, too, as a registered nurse in Albany Medical Center’s post-anesthesia care unit (PACU), where patients are treated and managed immediately following surgery.

Based on results from Lomascolo’s fifth year at Siena, the Shenendehowa High School graduate finished her college running career in a state of euphoria, becoming the first-ever Saint to win the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference women’s cross country championship in the fall, and finishing third in the 10,000 meters at Penn Relays in April, among many other highlights.

“This year, winning cross country MAACs was just one of the most special things in my career,” she said. “When I was a freshman, coach John [Kenworthy] basically sat me down and said this is something at some point that you can accomplish. So that had been my goal throughout my career, winning a cross country MAAC title.

“To do it on our home course made it all the more special. My parents come to every meet. I had family members that didn’t get to travel and were able to come to this one. I knew the course like the back of my hand, so that made it that much more special for me. And to be the first one to do it for Siena was awesome.”

Lomascolo had such an outstanding fifth-year senior season that she was named 2022-23 Siena Female Student Athlete of the Year.

She’s the school record holder in women’s cross country at four distances, and also was part of school-record performances in the 3,200 relay and distance medley relay. She won the 3,000 meters at the MAAC indoor championship meet and the 5,000 at the outdoor championship meet.

After running 34:10.12 at Penn Relays, she became the first Siena woman to qualify for the NCAA Outdoor East Regionals.

“I can honestly say that she has left no stone unturned and there is not a day that goes by where I doubt that she has gotten the most out of herself,” Kenworthy said. “I’m proud to be a part of her team and I believe that in many ways she is the best representation of what we aspire to as a collegiate cross country and track program.”

Lomascolo was certified as a registered nurse in 2022, before she graduated with a nursing bachelor’s degree in 2023 and has been working for the Albany Med PACU for over a year. She was able to carve out a stellar career as a distance runner while working part-time at Albany Med and became a full-time nurse there in June of 2023.
Lomascolo has also found time for community service, with the Regional Food Bank, Christmas gifts through Siena Giving Tree and clothing donations to the Schenectady City Mission.

“There are hard days, and you see some hard things,” she said of her profession. “People are sick, so that’s not always the place they want to be. But there’s also really good days where you have awesome patients who don’t stop thanking you for what you do.

“It’s like with running, there’s such a high you get from it, with the natural endorphins. Taking care of people makes you feel so good. It can be hard, and you can get tired, but I just love it.”

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Morgan Fish

Morgan Fish

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Morgan Fish

Member of the CDSWOY Class of 2020
  • Class

    2020

  • Sport(s)

    Scholastic

  • Induction

    2020

Written by Adam Shinder, The Daily Gazette Staff Writer

Morgan Fish grew up idolizing the girls’ basketball players at Fort Edward High School who got to celebrate Section II Class D championships at Hudson Valley Community College.

The Flying Forts were a dominant force in Section II small-school girls’ basketball during Fish’s younger years, winning area crowns five times from 2011 to 2016. Back in March, Fish got to join that legacy as a team captain when Fort Edward topped Whitehall to capture the Class D title, ending a four-year drought.

“Finally getting that chance to run out on the court at the end of the game was a huge highlight for me,” Fish said.

A four-year varsity athlete in both basketball and volleyball who is the valedictorian of Fort Edward’s Class of 2020, Fish is one of 10 high school honorees for the inaugural Capital District Sports Women of the Year awards, which also sees three college athletes recognized.

She carries a 99 average in the classroom and served as a team captain in both volleyball and basketball, all while balancing that with rigorous coursework as part of the New Visions medical program, part of her pathway to a planned career in medicine.

Finding a balance between every aspect of her life required a lot of work.

“It was tough. A lot of late nights,” Fish said. “I stay after with teachers and I talk with them about things and get things off my chest. I tell them what’s bothering me — especially my New Visions teacher, Dr. Julie Ross, she would always listen and make sure I was doing all right — [and] just talking through things with my coaches, too. Being able to let everything go, get everything out there [helped me].”

In the athletic world, Fish not only won the Section II Class D championship on the basketball court as a senior but was also a key part of a Fort Edward volleyball team that also advanced to the area final.

“I’m definitely proud of my teams,” she said. “You can’t do anything without your team. You build such a strong relationship with every single one of them, and that means more to me than any of it.”

A member of the National Honor Society, Fish has spent her senior year immersed in the New Visions Health Careers program through Capital Region BOCES.

The program involves two days a week of classroom work “learning about the basics” of medical ethics, medical terminology, anatomy and physiology, plus three days of the week taking part in clinical rotations and getting immersed in various aspects of the medical profession.

“I saw a spinal surgery, I rode in an ambulance with EMTs, I saw cardiac catheterizations in the hospital,” Fish said.

That experience has helped Fish understand her career ambitions.

“Not just learning about them in the classroom, but actually getting to see them is such a great experience — especially for kids our age,” she said.

Fish fills up her breaks from school with community service, largely through the Upward Bound program at SUNY Adirondack, through which she’s an annual volunteer at the Double H Ranch in Lake Luzerne, which provides programs and year-round support for children and their families dealing with life-threatening illnesses.

She’s also a dedicated fundraiser for Fort Edward volleyball’s Side Out Foundation to support breast cancer research, and has worked with the Regional Food Bank of Northeastern New York, both helping to prepare food for distribution and working at the Patroon

Land Farm in Voorheesville that supplies the Food Bank.

“We planted almost 3,000 plants for them,” she said.

This article appeared in the 2020 CDSWOY Awards Program on August 18, 2020.

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Katie Falotico

Rylee Dunbar

Explore CDSWOY All-Time Roster Members

Katie Falotico

Member of the CDSWOY Class of 2022
  • Class

    2022

  • Sport(s)

    Collegiate

  • Induction

    2022

Written by Adam Shinder, The Daily Gazette

Katie Falotico tends to take a lot on her plate — but that’s intentional.

And, even when it seems overwhelming, she feels confident she can conquer any workload.

“If there’s something that I want to be involved in, I can do it, I just have to have a plan in place,” Falotico said. “That’s kind of how it went for me throughout the years, making adjustments if I was struggling in one area, and kind of finding time being able to put as much effort, and time and attention, into everything I wanted to participate in as possible.”

That’s how Falotico — who is one of three college honorees for the third-annual Capital District Sports Women of the Year awards — managed to succeed in every facet of her five years at UAlbany — in the classroom, on the softball field and in the community.

Falotico was a three-time All-America East Conference first team selection — in 2019, 2021 and 2022 — on the softball diamond, and led the conference in both doubles and triples during her final season with the Great Danes.

Academically, she finished an undergraduate degree in business administration with a 3.92 grade point average in 2021, then completed a master’s in organizational communication with a 4.0 GPA this past May while earning a spot on the UAlbany Dean’s List on seven occasions and being named to the America East All-Academic Team four times.

In the community, she was a member of UAlbany’s Student-Athletic Advisory Committee, including three years as that organization’s community engagement chair, helping to organize community events both among UAlbany student-athletes and in the broader America east.

“Katie Falotico has spent her collegiate career rising above and has truly demonstrated what it means to be a Great Dane,” UAlbany athletic director Mark Benson said.

As the SAAC’s community engagement chair, Falotico’s initiatives included UAlbany’s annual Food Frenzy canned food drive, helping to launch the America East’s Better Together games to raise mental health awareness and volunteering at local homeless shelters.

Her favorite work in the community, however, was getting the chance to read to local students in elementary schools. She also helped take that initiative online when the COVID-19 pandemic stopped in-school visits.

“The kids loved to see us, and they got really excited for Read Across America and stuff like that,” she said.

On the diamond, Falotico said she learned immensely from UAlbany’s 2021 season, when the team had to play under stringent COVID-19 guidelines.

“The season coming back from COVID, it was definitely different,” Falotico said. “We were kind of limited in the things that we were doing. We were submitting saliva samples every week. It was a stressful time.”
It helped, she said, being naturally organized.

“I think being a Division I student-athlete, time-management and prioritization is very important,” she said. “And I think I kind of had that instilled in me before I even got to school. But that kind of gets put to the test once you get going with sports and school, and you kind of figure it out as you go. But, for me, I knew that there were a lot of things that I wanted to participate in, and I wanted to have a hand in.”

Falotico also interned in the UAlbany athletic department in both marketing and promotions, and a rotating internship that saw her work with the athletic business office, student-athlete academic services and athletic compliance.

“Katie saw the value in gaining a holistic experience,” UAlbany associate athletic director for compliance Melissa Peach said. “She took it upon herself to set that up and made it happen. Katie is ambitious, well-rounded and always has a positive attitude. She sees the glass half full, and her positive energy is contagious.”

“She was doing this internship each day with the different areas while juggling the time demands that come with being a Division I student-athlete with classes, practice and a rigorous travel schedule for competition,” UAlbany athletic business manager Matthew Fischer said.

Falotico — who was honored this year with the America East Elite 18 Award, given to the student-athlete with the highest GPA competing in the conference championship of their respective sport — has taken the lessons learned in every aspect of her college career into the professional realm.

Even after finishing her master’s degree at UAlbany, Falotico is staying engaged in the sports world. After graduation, she started a position with the NFL’s New York Giants as an intern with the team’s player engagement department, with her first duties including helping the team’s rookies prepare for the rigors of life while playing pro football.

“We kind of take a holistic approach,” she said, “and look at all the players and help them with things on and off the field.”

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Zoey Lints

Morgan Burchhardt

Explore CDSWOY All-Time Roster Members

Zoey Lints

Member of the CDSWOY Class of 2023
  • Class

    2023

  • Sport(s)

    Scholastic

  • Induction

    2023

Written by Mike MacAdam, The Daily Gazette

Zoey Lints is an astute technical wrestler who sees a series of steps ahead of a scoring shot, instead of merely reacting to the circumstances of a match.

She sees female participation in her sport gradually increasing, and one of the steps toward that end is to get young girls interested in being more than just spectators. With that in mind, the Schoharie High School graduate has complemented her success on the wrestling mats — Lints won the 138-pound weight class at the inaugural New York girls’ state championships in 2023 for the combined Duanesburg/Schoharie program — with youth coaching that focuses on getting more girls competing in wrestling.

“Usually there’s way more males than females in a room, and especially for the younger girls that may confuse them and make them feel like they don’t belong,” she said. “But if I’m there, I feel like I can help them with that.”

One thing that helps that effort is the fact that Lints’ wrestling resume commands respect.

She has been ranked as high as No. 13 in the country at 138 by USA Wrestling, and won championships on the girls’ circuit at the Niskayuna Girls Invitational and Shaker’s Queen Bison Invitational.

At the state championships in Syracuse, Lints got through the first three rounds on pins totaling just 1:25 of mat time before winning the final, 7-3.

“I’ve been trying to work to go to boys’ states, and when I found out there was an opportunity to go to girls’ states, it was so exciting,” she said.

“When I got there I felt like I had way more experience than most of the other girls, because I had been training with boys all my life.

“Before my finals match, I’m really into manifesting and thinking about what you want, so I just kept saying to myself I was going to win. I was telling everyone. Then when I got out there, I knew that I could win. Every point I scored, I held on to. Every point I gave up, I made sure I didn’t give up another point.”

Lints began wrestling when she was in second grade, following in the footsteps of two older brothers.

She first competed for the Duanesburg/Schoharie boys’ varsity as an eighth-grader and compiled a 12-5 record against boys during the 2022-23 season, with nine pins.

At the 2023 Eastern States Classic, Lints finished second to 2022 Fargo 16U bronze medalist Maddie Westerberg, ranked No. 7 in the U.S. at 144, and was the only opponent Westerberg did not pin.

“Zoey is a student-athlete who is the epitome of the phrase, ‘actions speak louder than words,’” Schoharie athletic director David Russell said. “Zoey is a dedicated athlete and dedicated team member. I recall multiple times where Zoey would be moving up or down a weight class to benefit her team and give them the best chance for success.”

As a girl competing in a male-dominated sport, Lints, who will attend Elmira College in the fall, has faced prejudice and dismissive attitudes.

She said English was her favorite class at Schoharie, and someday she’d like to write a book compiling poems expressing her various feelings. In the meantime, she tries to serve as an inspiration to young girls through her actions.

“There’s a few girls in my club that are the managers, and they’re all younger than me and they always try to hang out with me and ask me about wrestling and stuff,” Lints said. “Most of them are going to wrestle this year, and I tell them I’m going to come back and watch them.”

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