She Took The Lead
1981 women's field hockey team
In the 1920鈥21 season, coached by Bill Cornelisse, Calvin鈥檚 first women鈥檚 basketball team鈥攖he Rivalettes鈥攖ook the court, won every game, and ushered in a new era of Calvin women鈥檚 athletics.
But seven seasons later, the team still struggled to build community support. A mid-season Chimes opinion piece about the 1927鈥28 team documented how the players were denied admission to a local Grand Rapids City League by the Calvin faculty and administration, struggled for practice time in the new on-campus gymnasium, and received little fan support from the student body.
Over the next 30 years, women鈥檚 basketball continued to be the primary offering for female student-athletes. Not until the 1950s did sports like tennis, team archery, and softball join the fray.
The Rise of a Legacy
New Jersey native Doris Zuidema 鈥62 stood out as a star student- athlete during that era. Zuidema played four years of women鈥檚 basketball while also competing in team archery and tennis. Her athleticism and commitment to women鈥檚 athletics as an undergraduate set the stage for a notable coaching and administrative career.
Zuidema returned to Calvin in 1964 and served for the next 32 years as a professor, coach, and athletics administrator. For 13 years, she led women鈥檚 basketball while also coaching archery, tennis, field hockey, and golf.
鈥淲e had some wonderful athletes,鈥 Zuidema said. 鈥淲e didn鈥檛 always have prime access to facilities or the means of travel like the men鈥檚 teams did. We had to fight for everything we had, but we continued to grow and expand.鈥
Serving as Calvin鈥檚 first women鈥檚 athletic director, Zuidema broke barriers and opened new doors for female college athletes. She played a key role in the Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (AIAW) and guided Calvin women鈥檚 athletics into the Women鈥檚 Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic Association (WMIAA).
In 1978, the WMIAA merged with the MIAA to form a unified, single-league structure. Zuidema proceeded to help open five more sports to Calvin鈥檚 female student-athletes: swimming and diving, track and field, cross country, golf, and soccer.
Champions in the Making
By the early 1980s, women鈥檚 athletics teams began to make their mark on a regular basis. The softball team, led by pitching stalwarts such as Sharon Boeve DeKleine 鈥85 and Laura Vroon Knapp 鈥84, advanced to the AIAW Division III World Series, hosting the event at the nearby Christian Reformed Recreation Center. Led by head coach Karla Wolters, Calvin advanced to its first NCAA III World Series in 1984.
Wolters also coached the Calvin women鈥檚 volleyball team, which placed fourth in the nation in 1984. In 1986, a senior-laden team led by All-Americans Julie Scholten Dykstra ex鈥87, Leah Calsbeek Schipper 鈥87, and Roxane Helmus Steenhuysen 鈥87 advanced to the national semifinals. Playing in front of a standing-room only crowd of nearly 4,000 fans, the Knights took two of the first three sets only to lose the match in a five-set heartbreaker.
Current Calvin head women鈥檚 volleyball coach and associate director of athletics Amber Blankespoor Warners 鈥90 was a starting freshman setter on the team and remembers the community impact of the event, despite the heartbreak.
鈥淭he crowd was electric,鈥 Warners recalled. 鈥淥ne of the things that I took with me after that weekend were the comments from people who were amazed at the excitement of a women鈥檚 collegiate athletic event. It rallied our community in a way that had not happened before. The community was accustomed to being rallied by its male athletes, so this was a first.鈥
A National Championship Team Breaks Away
In 1993, Renea Bluekamp Walkotten 鈥95 led Calvin to its first women鈥檚 national championship, by winning the individual cross country title. It marked the start of a Calvin women鈥檚 cross country surge led by head coach Nancy Meyer 鈥78.
Meyer flourished as a student-athlete in the 1970s, playing varsity volleyball and softball. She returned to Calvin as a professor and coach in 1979. She coached several sports over the years but left her strongest mark on women鈥檚 cross country.
In 1998, she led Calvin to its first women鈥檚 team national championship, marking a historic milestone. Meyer鈥檚 Knights repeated the feat in 1999.
Women's Volleyball Serves History
Meyer, who was appointed women鈥檚 athletic director in 1996, supported the Calvin women鈥檚 volleyball team on its run to its first national title in 2010. The Knights again claimed women鈥檚 volleyball national crowns in 2013 and 2016.
By that time, women鈥檚 volleyball had established a strong fan following. In 2012 and 2013, Calvin competed in the national finals at Hope鈥檚 DeVos Fieldhouse, losing in five sets in the final in 2012 and winning in five sets the following year. Both years featured sellout crowds of 3,600, filled with the Calvin faithful.
Still Setting the Standard
Generations of Calvin鈥檚 female student-athletes have blazed new trails and redefined excellence. Calvin has produced multiple individual event national champions in track and field and swimming and diving. Multi-sport athletes Lisa Winkle Hammer 鈥07 and Carissa Verkaik Ratliff 鈥13 both earned the prestigious Josten鈥檚 Trophy in women鈥檚 basketball.
With Calvin in its sesquicentennial year as an institution, director of athletics, Jim Timmer, sums it up best. 鈥溓炎邮悠 has been blessed by its women鈥檚 athletes, coaches, and teams. Their struggles, hard work, and achievements are woven into Calvin鈥檚 legacy.鈥