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Tomo Nakanishi

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    www.westoverschool.org/home/quad/news?&global.now=09-01 - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 3/16/2007    Last Visited: 9/16/2008  

    Tomo Nakanishi, a member of Westover School's Class of 1996 who helped lead the Varsity Volleyball team to back-to-back New England championships while a student at Westover, has been featured on a website celebrating Ivy League sports stars over the past 50 years.To view the article, click on the link below.

    After graduating from Westover, Tomo attended Brown University, where she became a four-time First Team All-Ivy selection during her career as a member of Brown's Volleyball team.She was inducted last May into the Brown Athletic Hall of Fame (in the photo above, Tomo, second from left, is shown at the Hall of Fame induction ceremony with (from left) former Westover Headmaster Joseph L. Molder, faculty member and Tomo's former volleyball coach Thomas Hungerford, Barbara Hungerford '00, and Westover Head of School Ann S. Pollina).Tomo holds the Brown career kills record with 1,716, was named Ivy League Rookie of the Year in 1996, and was Ivy League Player of the Year in 1998.Brown won the Ivy League Volleyball Championship in both of those years, including an undefeated Ivy League season in 1998, the first in school history.

    Before attending Westover, Tomo was the captain of Japan's Junior Olympic Gold Medal Volleyball team.

    Tomo currently resides in Nara, Japan, where she works in business.

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    www.westoverschool.org/home/quad/news?&global.now=03-01 - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 3/16/2007    Last Visited: 9/14/2007  

    Tomo Nakanishi, a member of Westover School's Class of 1996 who helped lead the Varsity Volleyball team to back-to-back New England championships while a student at Westover, has been featured on a website celebrating Ivy League sports stars over the past 50 years.To view the article, click on the link below.

    After graduating from Westover, Tomo attended Brown University, where she became a four-time First Team All-Ivy selection during her career as a member of Brown's Volleyball team.She was inducted last May into the Brown Athletic Hall of Fame (in the photo above, Tomo, second from left, is shown at the Hall of Fame induction ceremony with (from left) former Westover Headmaster Joseph L. Molder, faculty member and Tomo's former volleyball coach Thomas Hungerford, Barbara Hungerford '00, and Westover Head of School Ann S. Pollina).Tomo holds the Brown career kills record with 1,716, was named Ivy League Rookie of the Year in 1996, and was Ivy League Player of the Year in 1998.Brown won the Ivy League Volleyball Championship in both of those years, including an undefeated Ivy League season in 1998, the first in school history.

    Before attending Westover, Tomo was the captain of Japan's Junior Olympic Gold Medal Volleyball team.

    Tomo currently resides in Nara, Japan, where she works in business. LinkTomo Nakanishi web article View All News

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    www.westoverschool.org/home/quad/news?&global.now=05-01 - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 5/8/2006    Last Visited: 4/5/2007  

    Tomo Nakanishi, Westover Class of 1996, joined several other Brown University alumni who were honored in May for their accomplishments as athletes during their years at the Ivy League school.
    ...
    A four-time First Team All-Ivy selection, Tomo holds the Brown career kills record with 1,716.She was named the Ivy League Rookie of the Year in 1996 and was the Ivy League Player of the Year in 1998.The Bears won the Ivy League Championship both of those years, including an undefeated Ivy League season in 1998, the first in school history.

    While Tomo was a member of Westover's Varsity Volleyball team, it won back-to-back New England championships.

    This thirty-fourth class of inductees was inducted on Saturday, May 6, 2006 with a ceremony at the Westin Providence Hotel.

  • View Online Source
    Ivy@50 - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 1/1/2007    Last Visited: 10/13/2008  

    Tomo NakanishiShe first made a name for herself in volleyball as a pre-teen in Japan.Tomo Nakanishi wound up earning first-team All-Ivy status four times and turned Brown into a League power.

    For most athletes, the recruiting process begins some point in high school.If they are high school standouts, coaches may start contacting them as underclassmen.

    Brown's Tomo Nakanishi, however, was first recruited at age 11, to play volleyball for a prestigious junior high school in Osaka, Japan.

    The Nara, Japan, native had just been playing volleyball for about a year when she started in Osaka, but was immediately a standout for her talented team.She was named a captain on the team that won the Junior Olympic Cup.

    But concentrating almost solely on volleyball for three years took its toll on Nakanishi and she needed a change.

    "I felt that I had so much of volleyball already that I wanted to try something new," Nakanishi said."Upon graduation from junior high school, I decided to attend high school in Connecticut."

    Nakanishi attended Westover School, a small private girls' school in Middlebury, Conn.There she worked on her English and reenergized her attitude toward volleyball.

    "At first English was definitely my struggle, but volleyball helped me make friends and overcome my time away from home," Nakanishi said."When I played volleyball again in high school I realized how much I love the sport.The environment had changed and I realized that volleyball is something that I can be proud of and something I can represent myself with."

    Nakanishi represented herself well with her volleyball skills at Westover and was recruited by many Division I schools.Her ultimate decision came down to where she could play competitive volleyball, but also concentrate on obtaining a quality education.

    "As much as I wanted to play Division I volleyball, I also wanted to study at a prestigious college," Nakanishi said.
    ...
    Laden with injuries, the Bears struggled to a 2-5 League record in the 1997 season, but Nakanishi still earned first-team accolades for her play.But it was the 1998 season where the Bears and Nakanishi really made their mark.

    Brown cruised through the League season undefeated for the first time in the school's history, taking the Ivy title, finishing with a 23-9 overall record and earning a trip to the NCAA tournament.The Bears were defeated by Hawaii, but had made their mark as a formidable force in the League.

    While Nakanishi helped bring her team some national success, it was the competitiveness within the League that stood out most.

    "I felt competitive playing against any of the Ivy League schools," Nakanishi said."Players in the Ivy League were in the same position as I was... we all played volleyball for love of the sport and outside of volleyball we had to study hard as well."

    And Nakanishi did study hard.As a Business Economics major, in 1999 she was named Academic All-Ivy, was awarded the USAA All-American Scholar Award and was an Arthur Ashe Jr. Sports Scholar.

    While the Bears didn't repeat the success of the 1998 season, Nakanishi continued her dominance in her junior and senior seasons.The Ivy Player of the Year as a junior, she earned two more first-team All-Ivy honors, making her one of just four Ivy League athletes to have been named first-team all four years.

    Nakanishi's impressive tenure with the Bears lives on today.She still holds the records for career kills (1,716) and digs (1,762) and in 2006 was inducted into the Brown Athletic Hall of Fame.

    Since graduating in 2000, Nakanishi has returned to Japan, putting many of the skills she learned on the volleyball court to use in her professional life.She spent two years working for Denso Corporation â€" a Toyota group company, and one of the best automotive parts manufacturers in the world.Following that she returned to Nara to work for Yamato Trading Corp.She now exports Japanese construction machines throughout the world, using Japanese, English and sometimes Chinese in her work interactions.

    "I can use my business negotiation skills to pursue customers," Nakanishi said.

  • View Online Source
    Westover School : News - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 5/8/2006    Last Visited: 5/30/2008  

    Tomo Nakanishi, Westover Class of 1996, joined several other Brown University alumni who were honored in May for their accomplishments as athletes during their years at the Ivy League school.
    ...
    A four-time First Team All-Ivy selection, Tomo holds the Brown career kills record with 1,716.She was named the Ivy League Rookie of the Year in 1996 and was the Ivy League Player of the Year in 1998.The Bears won the Ivy League Championship both of those years, including an undefeated Ivy League season in 1998, the first in school history.

    While Tomo was a member of Westover's Varsity Volleyball team, it won back-to-back New England championships.

    This thirty-fourth class of inductees was inducted on Saturday, May 6, 2006 with a ceremony at the Westin Providence Hotel.

  • View Online Source
    Westover School : News - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 5/8/2006    Last Visited: 11/3/2006  

    Tomo Nakanishi '96 in Brown University's Athletic Hall of FameWestover School : News
    ...
    Tomo Nakanishi '96 in Brown University's Athletic Hall of Fame
    ...
    Tomo Nakanishi, Westover Class of 1996, joined several other Brown University alumni who were honored in May for their accomplishments as athletes during their years at the Ivy League school.
    ...
    A four-time First Team All-Ivy selection, Tomo holds the Brown career kills record with 1,716.She was named the Ivy League Rookie of the Year in 1996 and was the Ivy League Player of the Year in 1998.The Bears won the Ivy League Championship both of those years, including an undefeated Ivy League season in 1998, the first in school history.

    While Tomo was a member of Westover's Varsity Volleyball team, it won back-to-back New England championships.

    This thirty-fourth class of inductees was inducted on Saturday, May 6, 2006 with a ceremony at the Westin Providence Hotel.

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