Southern New Hampshire: 'Julie Kraus Named IWLCA Division II Scholar-Athlete of the Year'
Information Provided By Southern New Hampshire Sports
Information
MANCHESTER, N.H. – The accolades continue to pile up for
recently graduated Southern New Hampshire University women’s
lacrosse player Julie Kraus (Derry, N.H.). On Monday, she was named
the Intercollegiate Women’s Lacrosse Coaches’
Association (IWLCA) Division II Scholar-Athlete of the Year. The
IWLCA chooses one student-athlete in Divisions I, II and III
annually for its Scholar-Athlete of the Year award.
Kraus, who graduated from SNHU with a 3.992 grade-point average
last month with a degree in Business Administration, has garnered a
host of accolades both for her play and her academic work. This
year, she received ESPN the Magazine/CoSIDA Academic All-District
First Team honors for the second time in her career, and last
season she was an ESPN the Magazine Academic All-America Second
Team selection. That team for this season will be announced on
Thursday. A two-time Northeast-10 All-Academic Team member, Kraus
has also received SNHU’s Female Scholar-Athlete of the Year
award in each of the last three years and was nominated for the
Northeast-10 Female Outstanding Scholar-Athlete award.
On the field, Kraus, who served as a tri-captain this season for
the Penmen, garnered IWLCA/US Lacrosse Second Team All-America
honors for the second time in her career this season. She also
garnered womenslacrosse.com All-America honors for the second time
in her career in 2009, while Kraus was named Northeast-10
All-Conference for the third time in her career and to the First
Team for the Second Time. She was also the NE-10’s Defensive
Player of the Year in 2008. A two-time IWLCA All-Region First Team
selection, Kraus graduated from SNHU as the program leader in
ground balls, caused turnovers and draw controls.
Over her four seasons, Kraus led the Penmen to a 43-20 record,
including a 25-11 mark over her junior and senior seasons. Southern
New Hampshire made four trips to the Northeast-10 Conference
semifinals over her career, while it reached the NE-10 championship
game in both 2008 and 2009.



























