WORCESTER, Mass. - March 6, 2007 - Worcester Polytechnic
Institute (WPI) senior Ryan P. Cain, a record-setting guard on the
university's men's basketball team, has received the 2007 Jostens
Trophy, awarded to the year's most outstanding male and female
Division III basketball student-athletes. Recipients are honored
for their basketball ability, academic prowess, and community
service.
The Jostens Trophy is a national award established 10 years ago
by the Rotary Club of Salem, Va. (site of the Division III Final
Four), which also presents each winner's college or university with
the Wooldridge Scholarship. Cain and Lisa Winkle of Calvin College
in Grand Rapids, Mich., who won the women's trophy, will receive
their awards during the Final Four at the Salem Civic Center on
March 15.
"I could never have imagined winning this award," Cain said. "It is
really an honor and something special that I will cherish forever.
There are many great people around me I would like to thank. I
especially appreciate all the support I've received from the WPI
community."
Cain, of Webster, Mass., played a pivotal role in transforming
WPI's men's basketball team into a regional and national
powerhouse. Over the past four years, the team has had an
impressive 89-20 record, has won four straight NEWMAC (New England
Women's and Men's Athletic Conference) regular season championships
and two NEWMAC tournament titles, and appeared in the last three
NCAA Division III championships. Cain, who was recently named
NEWMAC Player of the Year, became WPI's all-time leading scorer
during the regular season finale on Feb. 17, surpassing the
1,757-point mark set by Orville Bailey '85. Averaging nearly 20
points per game while shooting over 50 percent from the field
(despite facing constant double teams and special defenses), he
finished his WPI career with 1,813 points.
This year, Cain became the first student-athlete during WPI Head
Coach Christopher Bartley's six years at WPI to be named a
preseason All-American by D3Hoops.com. He earned NEWMAC Rookie of
the Year accolades as a freshman, was chosen NEWMAC Player of the
Year as a sophomore, and was named an All-New England by
D3Hoops.com and the ECAC as a junior.
Bartley attributes the success of the 6'1", 170-pound guard to his
remarkable drive to succeed. "He has the best work ethic of any
player I have ever seen in any team sport at any level," Bartley
says. "He has such an enthusiasm for improvement and willingness to
sacrifice his body for the sport he loves so much. He is a true
overachiever and self-made player with the discipline of a great
champion."
Off the court, Cain, a civil and environmental engineering major,
has excelled in the classroom and made an impressive mark in the
community. For his required science, technology and society
project, he completed a study of green engineering in the
automotive industry. For his major project, he worked with a team
of students to design affordable manufactured single-family homes
for low-income families. The homes can also be used to provide
ready, low-cost housing for families displaced by natural disasters
like Hurricane Katrina.
Cain has been active in a number of community service activities,
most notably the Big Brothers Big Sisters Organization of Central
Massachusetts. The men's team became involved in the program in
Cain's freshman year. For four years, Cain has put in countless
hours as a Big Brother to a student at Elm Park Community School,
often going out of his way to put in extra time with his Little
Brother outside of his regular program responsibilities.
"At WPI, we place as much emphasis on our students' character as on
their intellect, and by either of these measures, Ryan shines," WPI
President Dennis Berkey noted in a letter nominating Cain for the
Jostens Trophy. "Whether in the classroom, in competition, or in
service to the greater Worcester community, Ryan represents both
the highest ideals of the student-athlete and the very heart of a
WPI education, which prepares our students for leadership in the
real world."