30 SPORTS ILLUSTRATED | AUGUS T 26 – SEP TEMBER 2, 2019
FACES IN THE CROWD
SHA’CARRI
RICHARDSON
Track and Field
Dallas
Richardson, who
recently turned pro,
set the Division I
and world junior
under-20 100-meter
record at the NCA A
championships as
an LSU freshman,
crossing the line in
10.75 seconds. She
also finished second
in the 200 (22.17) and
4 ... 100 relay (42.29).
MICHAEL DOOLIN
Baseball
Schererville, Ind.
Michael, a recently
graduated righthander
from Andrean High, set
a Class 3A record by
striking out 15 batters
in a complete-game,
2–1 victory over
Edgewood in the state
final, helping the 59ers
repeat. The Vanderbilt
signee finished his
senior season 14–0
with an 0.45 ERA and
131 K’s in 77 innings.
DAVID KORNACK
Track and Field
Edgar, Wis.
Kornack, a recent
grad of Wisconsin–
Eau Claire, won the
Division III shot put title
(63' 4^3 ⁄ 4 ") and finished
third in the discus
(166' 6"), helping the
Blugolds win their first
outdoor championship.
His shot put of 65'^3 ⁄ 4 "
at the indoor title last
March was the farthest
indoor D-III toss in
36 years.
CONNOR BORKERT
Powerlif ting
Doylestown, Pa.
Borkert, a recent
graduate of Penn,
earned three gold
medals in the 93-kg
junior division at
the World Classic
championships in
Sweden, taking first
in squat (297^1 ⁄ 2 kg),
bench press (195)
and total (785). He
also threw the javelin
for two seasons for
the Quakers.
JUAN NAMNUN
Baseball
Delran, N.J.
Namnun, 41, a
physical education
teacher and head
coach at Frankford
High in Philadelphia,
led the Pioneers to
a 6–1 win over Onley
in the Public League
final, becoming the
first coach in league
history to earn two
three-peats. It was his
league-record seventh
title in 12 years.
UPDATE
Gold Medal Hunter
When he appeared in Faces in the crowd in the Sept. 12–19, 2016, issue,
double-amputee Hunter Woodhall, who was born with a congenital defect that
prevented his fibulae from forming, had just won a state title in the 400 meters
against able-bodied runners as a senior at Syracuse (Utah) High. The same
week he appeared in the magazine, he took silver in the 200 meters and bronze
in the 400 at the Paralympics in Rio. He then became the first double-amputee
to earn a track and field Division I scholarship. As an Arkansas freshman
in 2018, he was part of the SEC bronze-medal-winning 4 × 400 relay team,
earning All-America honors; as a sophomore he ran a personal best in the
400 (46.22), taking fourth in the conference championships. Now the 20-year-
old Woodhall’s eyes are on a bigger prize. “My goal is gold in 2020 [at the
Paralympics],” he says. —Torrey Hart
SCORECARD
WH
ITN
EY
WIL
LIS
TO
N/L
SU
(^) AT
HLE
TIC
S (^) (R
ICH
AR
DSO
N);
(^) LE
NA
(^) NA
MN
UN
(^) (N
AM
NU
N);
(^) NE
IL (^) B
OR
KER
T (^) (B
OR
KER
T);
(^) UW
EC
PH
OTO
(^) (K
OR
NAC
K);
(^) TH
ERE
SA
(^) DO
OLI
N (^) (
DO
OLI
N);
(^) ST
EVE
(^) NO
WL
AN
D/N
CAA
(^) PH
OT
OS/
GET
TY
IMA
GES
(^) (U
PD
ATE
)
NOMINATE NOW
To submit a candidate for Faces in the
Crowd, email [email protected]
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athletes, follow @SI_Faces on Twitter.
Edited by JEREMY FUCHS