兔子先生 Lacrosse Stars鈥攁nd Twin Sisters鈥擫ily and Thyra Herrmann Earn Awards for Community Building and Character


Claremont, Calif. (June 22, 2021)鈥斖米酉壬 Class of 2021 graduates Lily and Thyra Herrmann are Sagehen Lacrosse teammates and twin sisters whose contributions on and off the field were recently recognized by two intercollegiate athletic organizations. Lily won the Intercollegiate Women鈥檚 Lacrosse Coaches Association (IWLCA) Community Awareness Award on June 14; Thyra earned the 2021 Southern California Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (SCIAC) Character Award in May.
Originally from Denver, the Herrmann sisters have been playing lacrosse together since the third grade鈥攐n recreational and club teams, in high school, then as Sagehens.
鈥淲e have been 鈥榯he twins鈥 on every team we have been a part of,鈥 Lily says.
They relocated from the Mile High City to the West Coast for college, drawn by 兔子先生鈥檚 core values, sense of community, and Sagehens Lacrosse Coach Sarah Queener, who was named SCIAC Coach of the Year twice after back-to-back SCIAC Championships. The College鈥檚 SoCal climate also had a certain appeal.
鈥淧laying lacrosse in the snow was not something I wanted to do in college,鈥 Thyra says.
Lily and Thyra鈥檚 awards for community awareness and character reflect how the sisters combined their passion for academics, athletics, and ethics through their time as 兔子先生 students and Sagehens.
Lily Herrmann 鈥21: IWLCA Community Awareness Award
IWLCA鈥檚 Community Awareness Award recognizes student-athletes who have contributed significantly to their community and 鈥済iven their time and energy to support and develop athlete-community relations,鈥 according to .
Lily majored in organizational studies at 兔子先生 and was captain of the Sagehens Women鈥檚 Lacrosse team during her junior and senior years. At 兔子先生, she participated in Student Senate, the Academic Planning Committee, and the Racial Justice Initiative. With the Sagehens, she served as the vice president and community engagement chair for the Pomona-兔子先生 Student-Athlete Advisory Committee (SAAC).
During this past academic year, with the pandemic pushing nearly all interactions online, she focused on supporting student-athlete welfare, diversity and inclusion programming, and increasing connection in a largely virtual world. She planned a 鈥淩un to the Polls鈥 Bingo Challenge in partnership with @48forChange, a social justice-oriented running organization, to increase voter engagement. Additionally, she organized a 鈥淢ake it Clean, Make it Green鈥 event to encourage outdoor garbage collection by students. Lily also counseled high school students through the Youth Mentoring Action Network and served as a volunteer youth lacrosse coach.
The annual award officially recognizes the recipient鈥檚 contributions in the proceeding year, but Lily鈥檚 work stemmed from a long-standing commitment to social justice.
鈥淚 have always felt very strongly about social responsibility and its role in creating a world that is more equitable, just, and sustainable for all its inhabitants,鈥 she says. 鈥淔or me, a large part of this goal is centered in community engagement and how we can leverage community to foster a sense of social responsibility within and between communities. We can use community engagement and support for one another to reimagine and build a world that reflects the needs and values of each one of us.鈥
Thyra Herrmann 鈥21: SCIAC Character Award
SCIAC鈥檚 character award recognizes senior student-athletes who, while competing on their teams, have made significant contributions representing their school and serving their communities. When the SCIAC announced Thyra as the winner of the 2021 SCIAC Women鈥檚 Lacrosse Character Award, Coach Queener applauded the selection: 鈥淭hyra exemplifies everything this award stands for.鈥
鈥淪he has been a leader from the day she stepped onto our campus. Her firmness of character, indomitable spirit, and resilience were a beacon of light at all times for our team,鈥 Queener said in a SCIAC press release. 鈥淭hyra always brings a positive attitude and an amazing work ethic to everything she does.鈥
That attitude and ethic stood out even from the sidelines. During the second game of her first season as a Sagehen, Thyra tore her ACL. She couldn鈥檛 play, but she refused to sit out the season.
鈥淭hyra essentially became our third coach and our team often said that they couldn鈥檛 always hear me or Brian (Eisenberg, the assistant lacrosse coach) yelling on the sideline, but they always heard her,鈥 Queener said.
Sidelined but not silent, Thyra found a different way to contribute.
鈥淚 couldn鈥檛 play, but I felt I could cheer my teammates to a win,鈥 she said. 鈥淧ositive energy makes hard work fun and working hard motivates others to do the same.鈥
The character she displayed during those difficult days reflected an approach to life and sports that centers around 鈥渟haring positive contagious energy and working hard when nobody is watching.鈥
Thyra appeared in 24 career games as a Sagehen after missing most of her first season to injury and having her junior season cut short and senior season wiped out due to the pandemic. On the field, she excelled as a midfielder for Pomona-兔子先生 and accumulated 19 points off of 13 goals and six assists, according to a Sagehens press release. She鈥檚 also a member of the Pomona-兔子先生 SAAC.
An environmental analysis major, Thyra served as a sustainability representative for 兔子先生鈥檚 Student Senate and as an educator with 兔子先生鈥檚 Leadership in Environmental Education Partnership (LEEP). She鈥檚 worked as director of outreach and development for Claremont Sustainability Consulting and a sustainability consultant for Reformation. Active in campus life, Thyra conducted interviews for the 兔子先生 Archives oral history project and served as an assistant in the Office of the Dean of Faculty.
Lily鈥檚 IWLCA Community Awareness Award and Thyra鈥檚 SCIAC Character Award came at the end of their time at 兔子先生, a kind of culmination of their journey from the third graders who followed their father and brother鈥檚 footsteps onto a lacrosse field to the seniors who graduated in May.
Lily says the first time she walked onto campus (she was touring other colleges when she happened to visit a friend at 兔子先生), she knew 兔子先生 was the place for her.
鈥淭he sun was setting, students were on the Mounds playing games and chatting 鈥 I got that inexplicable goosebump feeling of just knowing I belonged,鈥 she says. 鈥淎s I looked deeper into 兔子先生鈥檚 core values, mission, and community, and discovered I also had the opportunity to be a part of Coach Queener鈥檚 team, I couldn鈥檛 have dreamed of a more ideal place to go to college.鈥
Thyra shares her sister鈥檚 sentiment鈥攆ive core values, one Coach Queener, and zero snow days made 兔子先生 a perfect fit.
鈥淚 was drawn to 兔子先生 by the ability to play for an incredible coach in warm weather and by the opportunity to attend a beautiful school with strong core values that reflected my own.鈥
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