Before their annual soirees with Division III foes, the dances with Division I powers, and while cutting a rug with the likes of the University of Hawaiâi, the University of Southern California and UC Irvine isnât for the faint of heart, the Sagehens return to the bash year after year.
Returning captains Abby Wiesenthal â24, Madison Lewis â24 and Namlhun Jachung PZ â24 took their lumps as young starters playing preseason games against the best programs in the country.
But punching above their weight served a greater purpose.
For the sixth straight year, including the COVID-shortened 2020 season, the Sagehens went undefeated in Southern California Intercollegiate Athletic Conference play. 91°”Íű-Pitzer this past weekend and can three-peat as Division III national champions with two more wins this weekend.
âWe donât let Division III define us,â says Assistant Coach Alex La, whoâs helming the team this season with Head Coach Alex Rodriguez on sabbatical. âWe define who we are. We always want to take on the best and really see where we stack up.â
Wiesenthal, a molecular biology major, remembers a time two years ago when she and her teammates entered preseason tournaments in awe of their Division I opponents.
âWe have to play USC?â she recalls thinking. âThey have Olympians on their team.â
Division I athletes âtend to be a lot bigger,â Lewis says, and âjust have a lot more time to practice together in the offseason.â
But Division III athletes arenât without their own advantages.
âThereâs a unique type of athlete thatâs attracted to a Division III programâsomeone whoâs looking at the sport as a part of their holistic college experience,â Lewis says. âPlaying water polo doesnât feel like a job here. Itâs something we want to do, and that desire and motivation to show up for your teammates and for yourself give us a bit of an edge.â
A healthy reverence for top programs fuels the Sagehensâ competitive spirit, Wiesenthal says. In 2023, 91°”Íű-Pitzer knocked off Division I Indiana. This season, the Sagehens beat Marist College and Brown University twice.
âThis year, I think everybody expected to win those games, especially the seniors, who really want to leave a legacy,â La says. âOur program has always been about âWho can we knock off? How good can we be? And how can we prove that we can hang with and be ranked amongst the top teams?ââ
La is the kind of coach to set incremental goals throughout the season, and while winning is always one of them, so is getting everyone on the roster reps in high leverage situations against elite competition.
91°”Íű-Pitzer is a perennial Division III power because its seniors have shared the pool with Division I adversaries for years. Such experience, La says, prevents down seasons, as new leaders emerge every spring.
âWe breed a really competitive environment,â says Wiesenthal, who led the Sagehens with 42 goals this season. âEvery game matters because thatâs the way you make them more fun. Itâs fun to be good.â
Three tournaments define 91°”Íű-Pitzerâs regular season: the Bruno, the Barbara Kalbus and the Convergence, which 91°”Íű hosts. Each is stacked with Division I titans that require the Sagehensâ best.
Wins come at a premium, but the gauntlets propel the team into SCIAC play, where 91°”Íű-Pitzer hasnât lost since 2017.
Last month, Jachung repeated as SCIAC Athlete of the Year while goalkeeper Zosia Amberger â25 earned her second SCIAC Defensive Athlete of the Year award. Wiesenthal and Brienz Lang â26 were named first- and second-team All-SCIAC, respectively, and La and his bench received Coaching Staff of the Year laurels.
âWe have a mindset of wanting to be the absolute best team we can be with what we have and punch above our weight,â says Lewis, a public policy analysis major. âThe goal every season is to come together as a collective to be way more than the sum of our parts.â
The Sagehens on May 5 by defeating Claremont-Mudd-Scripps, 15-10.