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UVA Track & Field | Seeland Making Seamless Transition at UVA

UVA Track & Field | Seeland Making Seamless Transition at UVA

By Jeff White (jwhite@virginia.edu)
VirginiaSports.com

CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. — She could have stayed in her hometown and attended Penn State, as many of her classmates at State College Area High School did, but Esther Seeland wanted to get away and try something different. She chose Messiah University, a much smaller school in Mechanicsburg, Pa., where she planned to study biomedical engineering and play a varsity sport.

That sport was not the one in which Seeland now stars at the University of Virginia, where she’s pursuing a master’s degree in exercise physiology.

“I actually went to Messiah to play soccer in the first place and wasn’t going to run at all,” Seeland said. “It was a last-minute decision to add the running in, and then by the end the running had kind of taken over.”

Seeland remained on the women’s soccer team at Messiah and started 51 games on defense during her career with the Falcons, who won the NCAA Division III national championship in 2019. (The COVID-19 pandemic forced the cancellation of Messiah’s 2020 season.) Track & field, though, was where she shined brightest.

By the time she graduated from Messiah last spring, Seeland had captured three Division III national titles: one apiece in the 800 meters indoors, the 800m outdoors and the 1500m outdoors. Moreover, she’d set D-III records in the 800m and 600m indoors. And so when, with eligibility remaining because of the pandemic, she entered the transfer portal last year, UVA’s coaches were interested and were confident Seeland would thrive in Division I.

“She is a talented and competitive athlete, so I had no concerns,” said Vin Lananna, who directs Virginia’s track & field and cross country programs. “I followed her progress as a soccer star and track star last year, and we are thrilled that she has joined us.”

During her time at Messiah, Seeland said, she ran in meets “against D-I athletes and even pro athletes,” and she even raced at UVA’s Lannigan Field. The thought of competing full time in Division I was a little unnerving, Seeland said, “because you feel like you’re in a different world [in D-III], but I know that I’ve competed with these girls before, and track is a sport where there’s a number to it. It doesn’t really matter how you feel, because it’s kind of objective in that way.”

She enrolled in a two-year master’s program at Virginia, where she arrived last summer with two seasons of eligibility remaining…

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