One of the most outstanding performers on the uneven bars in school history, Anne Sugden Wolff '92 was inducted into the Towson Hall of Fame in 2002.
She helped the Tigers win four consecutive ECAC championships. While earning All-ECAC honors four years in a row, she was the ECAC bars champion in 1988 and 1990. She also won the ECAC beam title in 1991.
With 1,487.800 points, Sugden Wolff finished her career as the third-leading scorer in Towson history. She graduated as the Towson record holder on bars with a 9.80 score. She also set the school record for seasonal average on bars (9.61). During her career, Sugden Wolff helped the Tigers compile a 90-9 record.
An outstanding scholar-athlete, she was honored as the ECAC Scholar-Athlete of the Year as a senior. Sugden Wolff graduated summa cum laude from Towson with a double major in mathematics and computer science.
She was honored as the winner of the Towson Scholar-Athlete in 1991. She also received the Joyce C. Neubert Award for Distinguished Achievement from Towson’s Department of Natural and Mathematical Science in 1990. In 1992, Sugden Wolff won the Mary Hudson Scarborough Award for Excellence in Mathematic Sciences from Towson.
A four-time win of the National Association of Collegiate Gymnastics Coaches for Women Scholar-Athlete Award, she was also named as a third team GTE Academic All-American in 1991.
After graduating from Towson, she worked as a computer scientist. From 1992-99 she tested and evaluated software for NASA at the Goddard Space Flight Center. In 1994 she was honored as the NASA Network Control Center’s DATUM Award winner as Employee of the Year. In 1996 she earned NASA’s Silver Snoopy award. After leaving NASA, Sugden Wolff began working for the Department of Defense.
She and her husband Tom have two sons, Jacob and Alexander.