Vermont Sports Hall of Fame

From Wikipedia - Reading time: 7 min

The Vermont Sports Hall of Fame is an athletics hall of fame in the U.S. state of Vermont.[1] Above all, induction "is for accomplishments in sports and recreation that generate a great source of pride to the state."[2] Launched as a project in 2011, the Hall of Fame inducted its inaugural class on November 17, 2012.[3] Inductees include multiple Olympic athletes and medalists, professional sports hall of fame inductees, and historical contributors from the state of Vermont or one of its colleges and universities.

Inductees

[edit]

Class of 2012

[edit]

[4]

Class of 2013

[edit]

[5]

Class of 2014

[edit]

[6]

Class of 2015

[edit]

[7]

  • Shelly Addison Smith, soccer
  • Carl Christensen, soccer
  • Bobby Dragon, stock car racing
  • Mona Garone, contributor - coach
  • Tom Lawson, contributor - coach/administrator
  • Jack Leggett, multisport athlete/contributor - coach
  • Jim McCaffrey, basketball
  • Kirk McCaskill, baseball/ice hockey
  • Bev Osterberg, contributor - coach
  • Matha Rockwell, Nordic skiing
  • Laura Wilson Todd, Nordic skiing
  • Fred Harris, historical inductee - outdoors/ski jumping

Class of 2017

[edit]

[8]

  • John H. Caldwell, Nordic skiing
  • Bernie Cieplicki Sr., basketball - athlete/coach
  • Lindy Cochran, alpine skiing
  • Tad Coffin, equestrian
  • Clarence DeMar, distance running/historical pioneer
  • Don Fillion, media - sportswriter
  • Missy Foote, field hockey/lacrosse
  • Guy Gaudreau, ice hockey/soccer
  • Ed Markey, basketball/administrator
  • Tony Robitaille, boxing
  • Martha Rockwell, Nordic skiing
  • Betsy Snite, alpine skiing

Class of 2018

[edit]

[9]

  • Tim Caldwell, Nordic skiing
  • Robbie Crouch, stock car racing
  • Hilary Engisch Klein, moguls skiing
  • Ray Frey, track & field - coach
  • Matt Johnson, basketball
  • Larry Killick, basketball
  • Melba Masse, athlete/contributor/coach
  • David Morse, contributor - Mal Boright Media inductee
  • Bobby Mitchell, football
  • Jen Niebling, basketball
  • Martin St. Louis, ice hockey

Class of 2019

[edit]

[10]

Class of 2020

[edit]

[11]

  • Tara Chaplin, track & field
  • Jim Cross, ice hockey
  • Toby Ducolon, ice hockey
  • Debbie Dunkley, gymnastics
  • Jeff Hastings, ski jumping
  • Ed Hockenbury, basketball
  • Tom Pierce, golf
  • Sarah Schreib, basketball
  • Libby Smith, golf/basketball
  • Carol Weston, hockey/soccer/track & field

Class of 2022

[edit]

The hall's 2022 inductees included:[12]

Class of 2023

[edit]

The 2023 inductees were:[13]

  • Suzy Chaffee, Olympic alpine skier
  • Kelly Clark, Olympic snowboarder
  • Lea Davison, Olympic mountain biker
  • Jake Eaton, college football standout
  • David Fredrickson, high school basketball coach
  • Jasmyn Huntington Fletcher, high school and college basketball player
  • John Koerner, high school soccer player
  • Doug Lewis, Olympic alpine skier
  • Bob Molinatti, para-athlete
  • Morgan Valley, basketball player and coach

David Hakins Memorial Inductee

[edit]

The David Hakins Memorial Inductee award is given to a person, business leader or organization that demonstrates exceptional promotion and development of sports, athletics and recreation in the state of Vermont. The award is named in memory of the late David Hakins, a Vermont businessman who was a founding member of the Vermont Sports Hall of Fame and first president of its board of directors.[14]

Mal Boright media inductee

[edit]

The Mal Boright award for excellence in sports journalism honors Boright's five decades of covering Vermont sports and his role as a founder of the Vermont Sports Hall of Fame in 2011.[17]

  • 2023: Andy Gardiner, sportswriter[13]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Vermont Sports Hall of Fame: Welcome to the Official Website of the VSHOF". www.vermontsportshall.com.
  2. ^ "Vermont Sports Hall of Fame: Mission Statement". www.vermontsportshall.com.
  3. ^ "Vermont Sports Hall of Fame: Inaugural Class: 2012". www.vermontsportshall.com.
  4. ^ "Inaugural Class: 2012". Vermont Sports Hall of Fame. Retrieved 8 August 2020.
  5. ^ "Vermont Sports Hall of Fame welcomes 11 new members". VTDigger. 9 September 2013.
  6. ^ Sep 8 2014, Press Release (8 September 2014). "A dozen legends to join Vermont Sports Hall of Fame". VTDigger.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  7. ^ "Vermont Sports Hall of Fame announces 2015 class". Burlington Free Press.
  8. ^ "VT Sports Hall of Fame announces 2017 inductees". Burlington Free Press.
  9. ^ Walsh, Lauren (7 February 2018). "Vermont Sports Hall of Fame class of 2018 announced". mychamplainvalley.com.
  10. ^ "13 standouts in Vermont Hall's 7th Class". The Brattleboro Reformer.
  11. ^ "Vermont Sports Hall of Fame unveils inductees for 2020". The Burlington Free Press.
  12. ^ "Vermont Sports HOF announces 2022 inductees". Rutland Herald.
  13. ^ a b c "Vermont Sports Hall of Fame class announced". Barre Montpelier Times Argus. Barre, VT. March 1, 2023.
  14. ^ "Vermont Sports Hall of Fame: David Hakins". www.vermontsportshall.com.
  15. ^ "Mickey and Ginny Cochran". Vermont Sports Hall of Fame. Retrieved 8 August 2020.
  16. ^ "Ted Ryan". Vermont Sports Hall of Fame. Retrieved 13 April 2022.
  17. ^ "Vermont Sports Hall of Fame: Mal Boright". Vermont Sports Hall.com. Vermont Sports Hall of Fame. 2019. Retrieved March 2, 2023.
[edit]

Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 | Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vermont_Sports_Hall_of_Fame
7 views |
Download as ZWI file
Encyclosphere.org EncycloReader is supported by the EncyclosphereKSF