
3 minute read
LOUIE'S PRIDE
from Fall 2020 UNK Today
by LoperPride
LOUIE'S PRIDE INSIDE LOPER ATHLETICS
For senior Mikayla Frei, athletics and academics made UNK ‘a special place’
Mikayla Frei was coming o one of her best performances as a Loper golfer.
The University of Nebraska at Kearney senior carded a 163 over 36 holes to tie for 21st place at the Southwest Minnesota State Spring Invite. UNK finished second in the seven-team event, posting the third-lowest 36-hole score (614) in school history and tying the fifth-best 18-hole performance (304).
“I was really excited for this spring because I thought I was going to have more opportunities to play, and I thought we were going to have a really good team,” Frei said. “I thought we were going to be able to do some pretty special things this spring, but obviously that didn’t happen.”
That tournament, played March 9-10 at The Wigwam resort in Litchfield Park, Arizona, would be the first and last of the season for the Lopers. Two days later, the NCAA announced its decision to cancel all remaining winter and spring championships because of health concerns related to the global coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic.
UNK head women’s golf coach Shawn Rodehorst called an emotional team meeting that Friday to discuss the situation.
“Obviously, it was tough,” he said. “There were tears shed by everyone, but especially the seniors.”
For Frei, one of two seniors on the UNK roster along with Brandi Lemek, it was an unexpected end to her collegiate golf career.
She was shocked, upset, sad and disappointed all at once.
“I really do think that had we had a spring season, we would have been able to do some things that UNK hasn’t been able to do before,” said Frei, a three-time Mid-America Intercollegiate Athletics Association (MIAA) Academic Honor Roll selection.
Her head coach agrees.
“We were prepared to do big things this spring, but I know all of them are also prepared to do great things moving forward in their lives,” Rodehorst said.
That’s the position Frei now finds herself in.
EDUCATIONAL OPPORTUNITIES
A native of St. George, Utah, Frei committed to UNK after visiting Kearney just once.
“When we left, I told my parents that’s where I want to go. I just fell in love with the campus,” said Frei, who received an athletic scholarship and a Blue and Gold academic scholarship, which covers the full cost of tuition for non-Nebraska residents attending UNK.
Frei, who posted an 85.44 career scoring average over 18 rounds, called the past four years “an amazing ride.”
“Golf brought me out here to UNK for me to get my education, and I don’t know that I would have gotten a better education anywhere else,” she said. “I honestly think our athletic training program is one of the best in the country.”
A double major in athletic training and psychology, Frei gained hands-on experience by working directly with other UNK student-athletes. She assisted the football, women’s basketball, track, cross country and wrestling teams, and completed internships with Kearney High School’s athletic programs and New West Sports Medicine and Orthopaedic Surgery.
Frei, who maintains a 3.62 GPA, also worked part time at Kearney Regional Medical Center.
“The last 18 months have completely opened my eyes and really broadened what I want to do with my career,” said Frei, who plans to attend graduate school after the coronavirus crisis subsides.
The UNK senior moved back to her family’s farm in southwest Utah, where she finished the semester remotely before graduating in May. Although she’s now 1,000 miles from the campus she loves, Frei is just as proud to be a Loper.
“UNK is a special place, and I’m just so grateful that I was able to come here,” she said.
LOPER PROFILE

HALEY SIMENTAL
Class: Graduate student Position: Point guard Major: Physical education with sports administration emphasis GPA: 4.0
Undergraduate degrees:
Psychology and communication Family: Parents, Tanya and David. Father played basketball at Central Wyoming College and Lewis-Clark State College in Idaho. Brother, David Joseph, is a redshirt sophomore on the men’s basketball team at Colorado State UniversityPueblo. Sister, Hannah, is a senior at Pueblo West High School who is committed to the University of Northern Colorado women’s basketball team.