Retherford, a finance major with a 3.73 grade-point average, won his third straight NCAA individual title at 149 pounds in March, downing Lock Haven’s Ronnie Perry in the finals. Retherford ended his season with a 31-0 mark and posted a 126-3 career record. He finished his Penn State career riding a 94-match win streak dating to his true freshman year. His 19 career NCAA tournament wins are second on Penn State’s all-time list (Ed Ruth had 21). He is a four-time All-American, Penn State’s second three-time NCAA champion (joining Ruth) and helped the Nittany Lions capture the last three NCAA team titles. Retherford also sits at seventh on Penn State’s all-time wins list.
From Benton, Pennsylvania, Retherford’s honors are numerous: two-time Hodge Trophy winner, three-time NCAA champion, three-time Big Ten champion, three-time first team All-Big Ten, three-time NCAA Most Dominant Wrestler, four-time All-American, NCAA Championship Outstanding Wrestler (2017), Penn State’s 10th four-time All-American, Penn State’s second three-time NCAA champion, 53 career falls are tied for tops in Penn State history, 2017 U.S. World Team Trial champion, member of U.S. World Team, 2017 CoSIDA First Team Academic All-American, 2016 CoSIDA Second Team Academic All-American, two-time NWCA First Team National All-Academic Team, 2016-17 Penn State Male Student-Athlete of the Year, and three-time Academic All-Big Ten.
Haleigh Washington
Washington, a senior captain of the 2017 Big Ten champion and NCAA semifinalist women’s volleyball team, graduated last December with a 3.79 GPA in philosophy. A three-time First Team AVCA All-American, she earned Big Ten Defensive Player of the Year honors in 2017 and was a four-time All-Big Ten honoree. Washington helped Penn State to a 33-2 record and an NCAA semifinal appearance in her senior campaign. Over her four-year career, she helped the Nittany Lions to a 121-21 record, and the 2014 NCAA championship.
From Colorado Springs, Colorado, Washington is a three-time CoSIDA Academic All-American, earning second-team honors in 2015 and 2017, and third-team honors in 2016. She also earned Academic All-Big Ten honors in her sophomore, junior and senior seasons. She was a member of the Parmi Nous Honor Society, the Spiritus Leonitus Honor Society, and the Lion’s Paw Honor Society, along with being the recipient of Penn State’s Dotterer Philosophy Award. Washington was the 2017 Senior CLASS Award winner for NCAA Division I women’s volleyball and a nominee for the Class of 2018 Honda Sport Award for Volleyball.
Since her graduation last December, Washington has pursued her dream of playing professional volleyball, recently completing her first season as a starting middle blocker for Olimpia Teodora Ravenna in the A2 Italian Women's Volleyball Championship League.
Led by Director of Athletics Sandy Barbour, Penn State has one of the nation’s most comprehensive and successful athletic programs, featuring 800 student-athletes across 31 varsity programs (16 men’s, 15 women’s). Penn State student-athletes have an NCAA Graduation Success Rate (GSR) of 90 percent, which ties the Nittany Lions’ all-time high. Nine teams earned a 100 percent GSR in the NCAA’s November 2017 report.
A school-record 26 teams and 520 Nittany Lion student-athletes earned at least a 3.0 grade-point average during the 2017 fall semester, including a record 253 who earned Dean's List recognition for having a 3.5 GPA. Penn State ranks No. 4 among all Division I schools with 200 CoSIDA Academic All-Americans all-time, including Emily Ogle (women’s soccer) and Washington during the 2017 fall semester.
Penn State’s 50 NCAA championships all-time (78 national championships overall) rank No. 5 among all NCAA Division I programs and are the highest total of any college or university east of the Mississippi River. Penn State’s 31 NCAA titles since 1992-93 lead all Big Ten Conference institutions, including the 2018 NCAA Wrestling Championship. The Nittany Lions have won 107 Big Ten championships or tournament titles since capturing their first crown in 1992-93, including conference titles in women’s soccer, women’s volleyball and wrestling in 2017-18.