
CSR 176 Anna Wilgenbusch

CSR 175 Tracy Guerrette

CSR 174 Nicole Skoch

CSR 173 Craig Stammen

CSR 172 Fr Chase Hilgenbrinck

CSR 171 Mike Flood

She was the University of Dallas’ first NCAA cross country two-time All-American. She holds the five thousand meter and ten thousand meter school records at the University of Dallas for track and field and the 5K and 6K school records for cross country. She was the only female NCAA Division III cross country All-American in the state of Texas in 2019 and 2021. She is headed to the University of St. Thomas in Minnesota to study for her master’s degree in Theology, and she writes and authors Catholic children’s books.
Notable guest quotes:
“I attended Holy Trinity Catholic elementary and middle school in Tallahassee, Florida. They had just a wonderful Life Teen program, so, I was really involved in my youth group.”
“I went to Covecrest Catholic camps in the summer and really encountered the Lord there.”
“I went to a Catholic high school… and really discovered the beauty of the tradition of the faith.”
“I do try (to) reverence the day of rest, really, as a day where I can take a day off from training, if I am training, even at the university level sometimes I would cross train on Sundays, but usually I would really take that to be a very intentional day of rest.”
“Even in the repetition that we find so meditative in the rosary, I think that kind of translates into running a little bit of just your footfalls, step after step, mile after mile, kind of forming into this very meditative process of prayer.”
“My prayer before every race is just let this race be a prayer and just consciously uniting whatever suffering comes out of that experience with the cross, and that’s something that I find immensely fulfilling about running.”
“My team… went and volunteered at the convent of the Sacred Heart in Bloomington, Minnesota, where the Sisters of Pro Ecclesia Sancta live.”
“I have discerned for many years, and I’ve stayed in a convent in Peru, in Spain, and also in Florence, Italy.”
“Really, a heart of discernment is, getting to know the heart of Jesus.”
“I also taught catechesis with the program Totus Tuus in the summer of 2019… through the southern part of Minnesota… at different parishes. It was a wonderful experience.”
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It’s amazing to hear what she almost did, given that she is an elite marathon runner, having competed in the Boston Marathon, the U.S. Track and Field Marathon championships in California, and winning the 2017 Maine Marathon, which qualified her for the 2020 Olympic Marathon Trials. She currently coaches cross country and outdoor track at a Catholic high school in Maine. She was also the head women’s basketball coach at an NCAA Division III school for four years. This all followed a career as a student-athlete that culminated with her having played college basketball for four years at the University of Maine, serving as a captain in both her junior and senior seasons after the team had made the NCAA tournament in her freshman and sophomore years. In high school she had been Female Athlete of the Year and earned MVP honors in three sports.
Notable guest quotes:
“The Catholic faith is very, very prevalent. It’s the center of what we do. Growing up in small town called St. Agatha, everything revolved around the church and the liturgical year.”
“The best gift my parents gave me was my Catholic faith.”
“I had phenomenal coaches who, again, the faith was like the center point of what they were doing, to have these beautiful Catholic coaches. And so yeah, I was really, really well coached, both on the basketball court but also in the faith.”
“I had practice that night and I was getting ready to take a nap in my dorm room and there was a knock on my door… And I attribute that to the Lord knocking on the door of my heart throughout my life, just really pursuing me in such a way throughout my life. And that day I let Him in.”
“We were a very talented team… but, we would meet with the collegiate team prior to the game. We would eat their pregame meal with them. We would share a witness talk. We would share the gospel… and then during either halftime or after the game we would… share a gospel message with the crowd.”
“Athletics is such a great platform to share the gospel.”
“More than the opportunity to play and travel to these different countries, the thing that was such the greatest gift to me was to be able to share Christ.”
“I visited Medjugorje as an eight-year old. We took a family pilgrimage there, and the graces I received in Medjugorje are still being unpacked to this day.”
“I was a head Division III coach and Sports Information Director, but I was secretly… visiting convents.”
“I remember thinking, ‘Lord, I love athletics so much, like, it’s such a gift, but I love you more and I’m willing to lay down this gift in order to pursue you most fully and give my life to you’.”
“The gift of sport from the divine giver allows us to more fully commune with that giver.”
She has had an extensive career in volleyball. The sport has seen her in roles from head volleyball coach at Shawnee Mission East, a high school in Prairie Village, Kansas, to being a volunteer coach at the college level with the Kansas Jayhawks, and even coaching a club team, plus, having been a student-athlete at the University of Texas where she played for four years and was a member of the 2012 NCAA National Championship team. Prior to her time with the Longhorns, she played on the U.S. Girls’ Youth National Team that competed at the 2011 International Volleyball Federation Girls’ Youth World Championship. She led her high school to two Colorado 5A State Championships and was a two-time Gatorade Player of the Year.
Notable guest quotes:
“Every Sunday night started Lent…five years back, I want to say… we would meet for Sunday night calls… we now do video Zoom calls… So, it’s a great way for us to gather and praise Jesus that way.”
“I’m very, very, very thankful for my parents… to ask about… how I can continue my faith journey and be involved in Bible study and continue to flourish in that.”
“This is why they want me, to play volleyball… that was my identity then and a few years down the road I figured out that’s not where my identity can lie.”
“She gave me a journal that night that I still have that she wrote Bible quotes throughout it.”
“That’s when the whole identity thing, like, this was taken away from me and now I have this feeling, this hole in my heart that’s always been there but it’s now even more radiating that only Jesus could fill.”
“That’s how Jesus just flourished in my heart, and I started wanting to lead Bible study and learn more.”
“That is a big part of my reversion story of allowing Jesus to be, yes, that number one priority in my life, and that was through spending time in Adoration and entering fully into the Mass and knowing Jesus in the Eucharist.”
“I’ll just forever be grateful for the Eucharist and Jesus revealing himself to us in such an intimate way through that.”
“It changed how I lived day to day and balance in keeping Jesus first rather than finding my worth in volleyball and this sport that is one day going to end.”
“Finding true joy in choosing to trust Him daily is what kept me going and what keeps me going today.”
“The Litany of Trust by the Sisters of Life is truly amazing… Sometimes I do it daily… but whenever I’m feeling anxiety… I love pulling out this prayer.”
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Nicole’s Prints & Praise Instagram account
He is a veteran Major League Baseball pitcher. He has appeared in over 540 games and pitched close to 860 innings and is in his 13th season of MLB, with 2022 being his sixth season with San Diego, making him the second-longest tenured Padre. He spent seven years with the Washington Nationals, who had selected him in the 2005 MLB Amateur Draft out of the University of Dayton, where he made 60 pitching appearances after also having pitched for his high school baseball team as well.
Notable guest quotes:
“We immersed in the faith from day one. The Catholic church there is St. Louis parish and the whole town pretty much goes to that church… Where I even went to public high school, ya’ know, 99 percent of the kids are Catholic and have that kind of faith life. So, I’m very privileged and blessed to be able to grow up in that type of community, with the type of family that put Jesus at the forefront.”
“Football, basketball, and baseball is what I played in high school… It’s a good thing that I was a sports lover and was able to play ‘em all.”
“Obviously the draw of (the University of Dayton) being a Catholic school and faith being a part of its community did draw me towards that.”
“I felt like my faith was strong enough to go (to college) about anywhere, but the University of Dayton was the exact right spot for me at the right time.”
“I had a great foundation from my mom and dad, both strong in their faith, and taught me from an early age who Jesus was and how that was supposed to emulate how we live the rest of our lives.”
“When I got drafted (into MLB) I was very thankful, and I knew it was part of God’s control and part of His plan for me that that was going to happen.”
“That was probably the turning point… as far as when things kind of clicked and understood that faith and sports can work together, and sports is just an extension of my faith.”
“(2 Timothy 1:7) is a verse I use when I’m on the pitching mound, actually… And it just reminds me on the mound to not be fearful. And, that I’ve been put on the mound that day for a reason, and that’s to glorify Him.”
“I think it’s an important idea in my own head to be a man after God’s own heart and to pray for that and to try to execute that on a daily basis.”
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To serve Jesus he walked away from being a pro soccer player, having been with both the Colorado Rapids and then the New England Revolution of Major League Soccer. That followed four years of having played soccer in South America for teams in Chile. In two of his four years there he was selected the league’s Most Valuable Player at the fullback position. As a student-athlete he had made the United States Under-17 National Team and was a High School All-American before going on to Clemson University. In college he was a four-year starter and helped the Tigers to an ACC Championship and four NCAA tournament berths, including two Elite Eight appearances. He is the Vocations Director for the Catholic Diocese of Peoria in Illinois. Next week will mark eight years since he was ordained to the priesthood.
Notable guest quotes:
“We were altar servers at our parish, growing up, and certainly sports was at the center of our household, as my parents were both athletes and my brother and I both played college soccer.”
“My parents were big into teaching us virtue and what we were supposed to be about and that comes from… Catholic teaching that they were passionate about.”
“I think a lot of people think all this faith is fantasy stuff. It’s stuff that pious people make up and they want to believe to make themselves feel good. Well, I had to ask all those questions too about sports and about faith. I had to say, I want to be logical, I want to be real. If God is true, then He created truth and we have to follow this.”
“We were sometimes late for games. We sometimes missed meals with other families on Saturday nights, ya’ know, when all the traveling soccer teams go out to all the restaurants and all that and you have time with your friends. We missed a lot of those things because we were at Mass… And I complained about that. I was embarrassed often of my parents and of our faith because I said, ‘This is crazy and it’s not popular. Nobody else is doing this’.”
“In my freshman year of college, I made my first lifetime commitment and I tell people today it’s the most important commitment I’ve ever made in my life and it’s more than being priest. And that freshman year of college at Clemson I made the decision to be a practicing Catholic for the rest of my life.”
“There was no pre-signed contract. I bought a one way ticket and told my parents I wasn’t coming home.”
“I realized that the Lord was going to bless me. I had so much confidence in Jesus Christ and in his promises. I always read Philippians 4:13 before I played (a soccer match). I wrote PHIL 4:13 on my shin guard. That was the last thing I put on before I stepped onto the field.”
“(Being) a priest… is not an easy ministry. It’s not always a comfortable ministry, but it’s the most rewarding and certainly a ministry that’s leading people to Jesus Christ and his heart.”
“It was me trying to figure out how to navigate God’s Will for my life as I was living out my will.”
(In Chile) “I started finding myself after (soccer) practice walking into Catholic churches.”
“I have to come before the Lord… and say… soccer was the way that I would’ve written my book. The priesthood is the way that You would write this book.”
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He is the Vice President of Community Outreach for the NFL’s Seattle Seahawks, having now worked for the team for 25 years. He had served in the U.S. Coast Guard for 22 years, retiring as a Commander in 1997. He played football, basketball and baseball through his high school years and during his 22 years in the Coast Guard. He also coached basketball in military and youth leagues, and officiated basketball for 20 years. He serves on the boards of the King County Municipal League, Camp Patriot, and Empower Youth Network.
Notable guest quotes:
“I went to Catholic school from first grade through my junior year (of high school).”
“We went to church every Sunday, at least, and I was an altar boy. Every day during Lent I’d go to church. And… every Friday night we got the rosary out and knelt down at the living room couch and said the rosary.”
“I played varsity basketball and baseball in Virginia, and I played football, basketball, and baseball at Blanchet High School, a Catholic high school in Seattle.”
“Another thing that competition taught me is it’s not just in sports that you compete. It’s in how you talk to people. Can you reach people better if you understand them more and are really careful about what you say to them?”
“The plane rolled over to the left about 90 degrees, and I looked down at the ground and I thought, ‘I’m gonna die today’.”
“I’ve gotten to affect thousands of people’s lives through my job (with the Seahawks).”
“It led me to the statement for myself, to seek wisdom, act with confidence and compassion.”
“The way you converge the values that we get out of sports and our Catholic faith, our Christian faith, is really at the heart of a lot of things that the (Seahawks are) trying to do with people.”
“The things that people learn through sports don’t always translate into success in life and a smooth life. But, every team, no matter whether it’s the Seahawks or the youth that we work with, everybody’s trying to get people to learn something beyond winning and losing in their experience with sports.”
“I read Richard Rohr almost every day, Father Richard Rohr, and he talks about how when we connect with each other based on each other’s true selves, we’re at a deeper level where love, compassion, wisdom, and beauty live.”
“Even the people that seem to be a pain in the neck, you can find something in common and respect them and respect the opportunity that you’ve got to make a difference for them and whoever they’re working with.”
“I got the Bible out… and I started reading Proverbs 8 and it just struck me… And so, I give it to other people. If I think they really care, I print that out and give it to ‘em.”
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He is the head women’s basketball coach at Indiana University of Pennsylvania, with next month marking the nine-year anniversary since he was introduced there to that position. Just over three years ago — during his sixth season — he became the program’s all-time winningest coach. Under his guidance the Crimson Hawks have won two PSAC tournament titles, and back-to-back Atlantic Region crowns and Elite Eight national semifinal berths. He had come to IUP with more than 25 years of coaching, game management and player development knowledge learned after spending time on the coaching staffs of six colleges. At one point during his professional career, he was the Director of Youth and Campus Ministry for the Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown. In addition, he founded and directed The Word and the Rock Basketball Camp and was the Director of Camp Zacchaeus. As a student-athlete he had played basketball at two different colleges.
Notable guest quotes:
“I am the oldest of eight. We grew up in Pittsburgh, and, Catholic all our lives. We went to Our Lady of Loretto grade school in the Pittsburgh area and then onto Seton LaSalle High School. When I was there it was South Hills Catholic High School. So, it’s just been a big part of our family and (I) just really feel fortunate to have those twelve years of Catholic education.”
“I saw the ability to teach and to motivate, inspire, more than Xs and Os, but just to really impact young people through sports.”
“I was very blessed to have opportunities to go to Marquette University in Milwaukee, then on to University of Dayton, and then eventually as the head coach for seven years at St. Francis in Loretto, Pennsylvania. And I just loved being in that (Catholic) environment.”
“It was probably not until I went to St. Francis and really got close with a lot of the friars there that my faith really began to grow. And it was at that time that I knew that the more that God was working in my life, that I needed to now incorporate my faith into my coaching.”
“As my faith began to grow… I saw what God was doing in my life and I wanted to be able to share this with other players and coaches and so we started The Word and the Rock Basketball Camp.”
“Each morning and each afternoon we set aside time and we had sessions where we now talked about our faith and how to bring that into the sports world.”
“I was getting way, way more out of it than they were because I just saw what God was teaching and doing in my life and able to take those values, those principles, those gospel lessons and bring them into sports and everyday life.”
“When you look back on it you could really see God’s hand at work. I thought I was going to St. Francis to try to win a conference championship and find a good place for my family to live and to raise them, and God put us in a neighborhood with some amazing faith-filled people who were very devoted.”
“Me, him, and two other guys went to Medjugorje for ten days and it was just so impactful. And from that time on – and so moving – I just have tried to really incorporate into my life the five stones of the Medjugorje message of prayer, fasting, the Mass, the Bible, and frequent confession.”
“I just would encourage more Catholics to know the true role that Mary plays in our lives and how she just is a mother to us and just brings us to her son and he refuses her nothing, as we know.”
Related link:
Tom’s bio on IUP Athletics website