Simon Fraser Wins First Official RMAC Women’s Wrestling Championship

Red Leafs win with 309.5 points

2/1/2026 1:25:16 PM

By: Nash Loibl, Advanced Graduate Assistant / Strategic Communications

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. – Simon Fraser University claimed victory in the 2026 Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference Women’s Wrestling Championship, earning its first official team title in the conference championship event.

The Red Leafs captured the conference championship trophy with a dominant 309.5 points, fueled by six first-place finishes and six additional medal performances. The title capped off a perfect conference season for Simon Fraser, which also secured its third consecutive regular-season championship and the RMAC Preseason No. 1 title.

Defending RMAC champion Colorado Mesa University finished second with 247 points, followed by Adams State in third with 147. Texas Woman’s University claimed fourth place with 131 points, narrowly edging Chadron State, which rounded out the standings with 130.

Simon Fraser redshirt sophomore Lene McCrackin was named the RMAC Women’s Wrestler of the Championship following a vote by the league’s head coaches. McCrackin dominated the 160-pound bracket, cruising past Faith Perez (Texas Woman’s), Valerie Glenn (Colorado Mesa), and Celina Cooke (Colorado Mesa). She secured the prestigious honor by pinning Cooke in 2:20 to claim the championship title.

Brianna Vollendroff (Chadron State) captured the 103-pound championship, while Adrianna Gomez (Colorado Mesa) claimed the 110-pound title. Sophia Cornish (Colorado Mesa) earned the championship at 117 pounds, and Laura Alcantar (Simon Fraser) secured the 124-pound crown.

Agnia Krakovska won the 131-pound weight class, followed by Simon Fraser’s Marley Jackson at 138 pounds and Liv Weiber at 145 pounds. Lene McCrackin claimed the 160-pound championship, Rupinder Johal (Simon Fraser) captured the 180-pound title, and Jayleen Sekona (Colorado Mesa) rounded out the champions with the 207-pound crown.

With several teams still slated to compete in regular-season duals, the work is far from finished. However, attention is already beginning to shift toward the NCAA Regionals, scheduled for February 21-22.

The ultimate goal remains unchanged, as the RMAC’s five women’s wrestling programs set their sights on closing out the 2025–26 season at the inaugural NCAA Division II Women’s Wrestling Championships in Coralville, Iowa. The national championship, hosted in Coralville, is set for March 7-8.

About the RMAC
The Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference, headquartered in Colorado Springs, is a premier NCAA Division II conference with 15 institutions located in Colorado, Nebraska, New Mexico, South Dakota, and Utah. The RMAC currently competes in 22 NCAA Division II sports and has earned 67 national championships and 53 national runners-up since 1992. Founded in 1909, the RMAC is the most historic athletic conference in the western United States and Division II.

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