HAVERFORD, Pa. - The Haverford College baseball team was once again well represented on the College Sports Communicators (CSC) Academic All-District Team, with five student-athletes earning recognition for their combined accomplishments on the field and in the classroom. Sam Cohen and Luke Treese earned repeat recognition for the Fords, joining first-time honorees Mauro DeCillis, Alex Jenkinson and Miles Prusek.
Cohen added to an impressive postseason resume after earning Centennial Conference Pitcher of the Year honors and All-Centennial Conference First Team recognition following a dominant senior season. Cohen posted a 5-3 record across 10 starts with a 4.45 ERA and 1.43 WHIP while striking out a conference-best 65 batters in 54 2/3 innings pitched. Cohen led the Centennial Conference in both strikeouts and strikeouts looking with 24 while ranking sixth in innings pitched and eighth in ERA.
The Ellicott City, Maryland, native closed his season with a complete-game shutout against Dickinson on April 26, allowing just five hits while striking out a season-high 10 batters over nine innings. He also limited opponents to four hits or fewer in multiple conference outings, including six scoreless innings against Ursinus on April 17.
Treese, of Highstown, N.J. started all 36 games during his junior season, batting .280 with 37 hits, 30 runs scored, seven doubles, two triples, six home runs, 22 RBIs and nine stolen bases. He posted a .407 on-base percentage and a .500 slugging percentage, ranking fourth on the team in slugging percentage while finishing third in home runs. Treese also ranked fourth in runs scored and second in walks with 25.
One of four Haverford players to score at least 30 runs during the season, Treese collected 15 extra-base hits and finished third on the team with 66 total bases. He recorded 12 multi-hit games, including three-hit performances against TCNJ on March 26 and Muhlenberg on April 7. Treese hit two home runs against Dickinson on April 26 and stole two bases against Johns Hopkins on April 11. Defensively, he finished third on the team with 97 putouts.
Senior first baseman Mauro DeCillis earned All-Centennial honorable mention recognition following a record-setting season at the plate. DeCillis matched Prusek with a .379 batting average while leading the Fords with a .562 on-base percentage, which ranked second in the Centennial Conference and 15th nationally.
DeCillis totaled 39 hits, 28 walks and 15 hit-by-pitches while adding four home runs and 20 RBIs across more than 35 games. He also led the Centennial Conference and tied for second nationally with 42 stolen bases, setting Haverford's single-season stolen base record.
The Bronxville, New York, native also tied for the team lead and ranked third in the conference with seven sacrifice bunts. He delivered a standout performance against Muhlenberg on April 7, finishing 2-for-4 with two runs scored, before posting a historic doubleheader against Dickinson on April 26. In that twin bill, DeCillis went 4-for-8 with four runs scored, three RBIs, two home runs and four stolen bases to break the program's stolen base record.
Prusek emerged as one of the region's top all-around offensive players during the 2026 season. He led Haverford in hits with 53 and tied for the team lead with 36 runs scored while pacing the Fords with 14 doubles. Prusek also finished second on the roster in home runs with eight, RBIs with 39, batting average at .379 and OPS at 1.158.
Among Centennial Conference hitters, Prusek ranked ninth in both slugging percentage (.679) and doubles.
The Richmond, Virginia, native delivered several standout performances throughout the season, including a five-RBI outing against Dickinson on April 26. He also recorded five three-hit games, highlighted by a three-hit, four-RBI effort against Washington College on April 18. Defensively, Prusek posted a .928 fielding percentage at third base.
Jenkinson made 11 appearances, including seven starts, during his junior campaign. He threw 46 innings, ranking second on the pitching staff, while recording 35 strikeouts, also second on the team.
Jenkinson, a Doylestown, Pa. product posted three outings with at least five strikeouts, including a season-high six strikeouts in a victory over Alfred State on March 14. He delivered six strong innings against nationally ranked Salisbury on March 21, allowing just two earned runs while striking out three. Jenkinson also tossed a season-high seven innings against Franklin & Marshall on April 3, allowing two runs and striking out five.
To qualify for CSC Academic All-District honors, student-athletes must hold a cumulative grade-point average of 3.50 or higher, be at least a sophomore academically and meet specific competition thresholds. Position players must compete in at least 90 percent of the team's games or start at least 66 percent, while pitchers must either appear in 17 games or throw at least 35 innings.
The College Sports Communicators organization, formerly known as the College Sports Information Directors of America, recognizes the nation's top student-athletes for their combined achievements in athletics and academics. Academic All-America teams will be announced in late June.