When 5-foot-7 Katherine Mendenhall walks onto the track, it’s strictly business — it’s a mental game. The academic stress and personal problems take a step back for the time she’s jumping over the crossbar.

This mentality is one that helped the 23-year-old high jumper qualify for, and participate in, the NCAA East Regional Track and Field meet in Jacksonville, Florida at the end of May.
Mendenhall is not alone in her accomplishments. The BGSU track and field team’s historic season included winning the conference championship for both indoor and outdoor seasons.
“I mean it just feels unreal. It feels so special, and it feels really special to be a part of something so historic and something that’s never happened before,” Mendenhall said. “That’s really the word I can think—it’s just so unreal [and] there’s so many words to describe how it feels but that’s how I would sum it up.”

Mendenhall and five other track and field athletes represented BGSU at the University of North Florida regional event, including Kylee Cubbison, Trista Fintel, Morgan Patterson, Sabrina Imes and Bianca Staples.
Mendenhall, a graduate student set to graduate in August with a Master of Business Administration degree, currently works for the City of Dublin. Despite her high-achieving accomplishments, she said you have to leave it all behind when competing.

“Just making sure your s— is aligned, like making sure that you know while being an athlete, you’re not stressing about school at the time — you got all the things that you needed done before you compete. You kind of need to leave your s— at the door, and I think personally that’s kind of my thing. When I get out there, it’s like a switch is flipped,” Mendenhall said.
Having her priorities straight proved to work for Mendenhall. She said she remembers the moment clearly when she found out she was the very first BGSU high jumper in history to qualify for regionals.

“That was such an exciting day, and I remember jumping that mark and I sat down for like 15 minutes just with my face in my hands because I was so struck that I jumped that,” said Mendenhall. “I was so struck that I knew I was gonna go to Florida.”
She called the high jump an art, and one requiring intricate technique.
As an undergrad student, Mendenhall maintained a 4.0 GPA. She’s also received the Academic All-MAC Award and the U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association All-Academic Award.
She said being both a student and an athlete is something she’s proud of.

“Being a student-athlete, and that’s hard because a sport is a job itself, and school is — they’re both full-time jobs. So, I think being able to do those … What I’m proud of is being able to have the balance of being a student and being an athlete and being able to do both of those sufficiently,” she said.
Although her collegiate career has come to an end, Mendenhall said the realization hasn’t even set in yet.
“I don’t think it’s really hit me yet because I think this is normal — we have our winter and spring season, and then we go straight in the summer, and we don’t do track. So, I think right now, I’m not even thinking about it, but I think once the fall hits and, you know, I see everyone back at the track doing our off-season workouts, I think that’s when it will hit. And that’s when I’ll probably have like an identity crisis,” Mendenhall said with a laugh.