INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. — Penn State Harrisburg alumna and former women's basketball standout Kendis Butler has been named a Top 30 Finalist for the NCAA Woman of the Year Award. She is the first Penn State Harrisburg student-athlete to be selected as a Top 30 honoree for the prestigious award.-
"Being named a Top 30 Finalist for the NCAA Woman of the Year Award hasn't sunk in yet, and I don't know if it ever will," Butler said. "The magnitude of it all is what really leaves me speechless. To be selected out of hundreds of deserving nominees and be in the company of these amazing women is surreal."
Butler was chosen from 619 nominees submitted by member schools — a group that was then narrowed to 164 nominees at the conference level. The Top 30 honorees include 10 women from each of the three NCAA divisions. Butler and the other Top 30 finalists will be celebrated in January at the NCAA Convention in Phoenix, Arizona, where the NCAA Woman of the Year will be revealed.
"I'm incredibly excited but in all honesty, I feel as though I've already won in so many ways," Butler said. "I got to live out my dream of playing college basketball and I never could have imagined my time here [at Penn State Harrisburg] would be as fulfilling as it was."
The most-decorated player in program history, Butler completed her career as the NCAA Division III active leader in 3-point field goals. The recent graduate ranked 19th across all three NCAA divisions with 295 career triples and her 3-point total ranks her 26th all-time in Division III history.
A York native, Butler was the first player in school history to be named a Jostens Trophy finalist for national player of the year. She was a two-time City of Basketball Love All-Area selection and she became the first player in program history to earn all-conference accolades on three occasions, securing a pair of United East All-Conference First-Team honors to go along with a second-team moniker. During her final season, Butler became Penn State Harrisburg's all-time leading scorer, and she holds numerous program records, including career field goals, career 3-point field goals, points in a single season, points in a single game and 3-pointers in a single contest.
"I appreciate what Kendis Butler has meant to our women's basketball program and campus community," said Ross Patrick, women's basketball head coach. "Kendis has been a tremendous, tremendous part of the student-athlete fabric of Penn State Harrisburg athletics. Her impact on and off the court will be talked about for years to come."