The Athletic Hall of Fame honors those who have attained distinction at Kalamazoo College as athletes, coaches, or individuals closely associated with athletics. Inductees must have been students in good standing while at the College. Candidates who were students are first eligible 5 years after graduation or departure from the College for other reasons. Candidates who were coaches or associates in other capacities are first eligible 5 years after retirement or departure from the athletic program. Past inductees can be viewed alphabetically, by sport, induction year, or by team. Nominate someone today!
Athletic Hall of Fame Awards
2024 Inductees – Individuals
Brant
Haverdink ’02
Football
Christopher
Manning ’12
Men’s Swimming and Diving
Jillian
McLaughlin ’10
Women’s Cross Country
Stacey Nastase
Lambert ’02
Women’s Soccer
Beau
Wangtrakuldee ’10
Women’s Tennis
2024 Inductees – Teams
1995, 1996 and 1998
Men’s Tennis Teams
1898, 1916 and 1939
Historic Football Teams
2024 Inductees – Individuals
2023 Individual Hall of Fame Inductees
Brandon Metzler ’17, Ryan Orr ’18,
Kelsey Hassevoort ’12 and Colleen Orwin ’17
Photo taken on October 6, 2023
Read about Kelsey Hassevoort
The University of Aberdeen (Scotland) has one turf tennis court. During her study abroad there Kelsey Hassevoort and (then-boyfriend, now-husband) Alex Dombos ’12 found it and practiced as often as they could until the days grew so short the sun had set by the time classes dismissed.
“We both wanted to stay in shape for our upcoming tennis seasons,” Kelsey says. Darkness didn’t defeat her dedication. Practice moved to the local tennis center even though getting there required a 45-minute commute by foot and multiple buses. That determination explains, in part, Kelsey’s hall-of-fame tennis career.
She was twice named to the All-MIAA first team, and three times recognized as an Intercollegiate Tennis Association Scholar-Athlete. She played number one singles her junior and senior seasons as well as number one doubles her senior season. She earned the MIAA Most Valuable Player award her final season, the same year she won the MIAA Karen Caine Scholar-Athlete Award and was named to the CoSIDA/Capital One Academic All-District 6 At-Large Team and the CoSIDA/Capital One Academic All-American At-Large First Team.
Note the frequency of “academic” and “scholar” in the titles of all those athletic honors. Let’s talk about that. Kelsey made the MIAA Academic Honor Roll all four years. She majored in biology and took a full slate of pre-med courses at K. For her Senior Individualized Project she studied the functional connectivity of the human cerebellum, working in the Neuromotor Behavior Laboratory at the University of Michigan. She earned a Ph.D. in neuroscience (University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign), focusing her research on the relationships between physical activity, nutrition, and memory performance in children.
So, one might think that tennis and academics were the sole driving factors behind her decision to come to K. In fact, though, the most influential factor may have been the College’s commitment to the liberal arts and the accompanying opportunities for students to explore their interests in a variety of disciplines. One example that stands out to Kelsey: “I loved the ecology courses I took with Professor Binney Girdler, and while I didn’t end up pursuing ecology research as a career, the summer I spent doing field research with her and a team of fellow K students on Beaver Island was a formative experience that set the stage for my future research pursuits.”
“The liberal arts tradition,” she adds, “continues to inform my mindset and approach to my personal and professional endeavors. K taught me to be curious and flexible in applying my talents, and my experience as a student-athlete taught me the importance of balance and making time for physical activity. Connecting with others around fitness has become a real passion of mine.”
After four years working at the University of Illinois’s Interdisciplinary Health Sciences Institute, Kelsey now serves as a managing director at the Washington, D.C.-based federal grants and government relations consulting firm, McAllister & Quinn. She provides capacity-building, strategic guidance, and grant consulting support services to research universities and other higher education institutions.
Hornet Super Fan
Marigene Arnold
Marigene Arnold’s Biography
Great fans are caretakers of caring who inspire others to share their caring about K athletes and contests. When one sees Marigene Arnold in the football bleachers, wearing her “Arnold, 1” Hornet jersey, one feels a family tie with everyone there. Acquaintance or stranger, we’re fans, and thus a family, of sorts, caring together for a few hours.
Courtside, poolside, on the pitch, or in the stands, Arnold’s ubiquitous presence represents the essence and importance of being a fan—what the late New Yorker editor and baseball writer, Roger Angell, described as “the business of caring—caring deeply and passionately, really caring—which is a capacity or an emotion that has almost gone out of our lives.”
Nearly every year Arnold worked at K, and for many years after her retirement, she attended at least one contest (and often more) in every Hornet sport, women’s teams, and men’s teams. She became so synonymous with K’s gridiron grindings that a Hornet football award carries her name. That’s especially fitting because fall-sport athletes arrive pre-term on a much lonelier campus, where a superfan “family” presence can make the place feel more like home and, well, family. Arnold was the first woman to serve on the College’s Faculty Advisory Committee for Athletics, and she was a member of the MIAA Women’s Sports Committee for many years.
Born in Georgia and reared in Florida, Arnold graduated from Miami Norland High School and earned her Ph.D. in anthropology from the University of Florida. She loved the study abroad program at K—its incredible potential to expand and deepen students’ perspectives—and she visited study abroad sites in France, Sierra Leone, Liberia, Senegal, Chile, and Costa Rica.
Her favorite course to teach: “Women in Cross-Cultural Perspective,” and Arnold is as deeply committed to women’s studies as she is to athletics. In 1973, she taught the first women-centered course at K, and she was the College’s first Great Lakes Colleges Association (GLCA) Women’s Studies representative. She lived in women’s residence halls on two occasions—Trowbridge (1974-75) and DeWaters (1975-76)—part of a K program called Faculty Member in Residence.
Among her favorite K memories: the exam-week, faculty-served, midnight breakfasts for students; and, perhaps above all, the year her beloved football Hornets ended a long drought of losses to the Hope Flying Dutchmen. Sweeeeeet!
Roger Angell’s essay is titled “Walk Off” and celebrates a World Series Game Six walk-off homer in Fenway Park by Boston Red Sox catcher Carlton Fisk. The Cincinnati Reds would go on to win Game Seven and thereby the 1975 World Series. But all that’s secondary. The essay is more so about the primary importance of fans, making it less Carlton Fisk and more Marigene Arnold—what she, and other tenders and savers of caring, mean to sports, and to one another. Perhaps, concludes Angell, “we have come to a time when it no longer matters so much what the caring is about, how frail and foolish is the object of that concern, as long as the feeling itself can be saved.”
Women’s Tennis
Kelsey Hassevoort ’12
Read about Kelsey Hassevoort
The University of Aberdeen (Scotland) has one turf tennis court. During her study abroad there Kelsey Hassevoort and (then-boyfriend, now-husband) Alex Dombos ’12 found it and practiced as often as they could until the days grew so short the sun had set by the time classes dismissed.
“We both wanted to stay in shape for our upcoming tennis seasons,” Kelsey says. Darkness didn’t defeat her dedication. Practice moved to the local tennis center even though getting there required a 45-minute commute by foot and multiple buses. That determination explains, in part, Kelsey’s hall-of-fame tennis career.
She was twice named to the All-MIAA first team, and three times recognized as an Intercollegiate Tennis Association Scholar-Athlete. She played number one singles her junior and senior seasons as well as number one doubles her senior season. She earned the MIAA Most Valuable Player award her final season, the same year she won the MIAA Karen Caine Scholar-Athlete Award and was named to the CoSIDA/Capital One Academic All-District 6 At-Large Team and the CoSIDA/Capital One Academic All-American At-Large First Team.
Note the frequency of “academic” and “scholar” in the titles of all those athletic honors. Let’s talk about that. Kelsey made the MIAA Academic Honor Roll all four years. She majored in biology and took a full slate of pre-med courses at K. For her Senior Individualized Project she studied the functional connectivity of the human cerebellum, working in the Neuromotor Behavior Laboratory at the University of Michigan. She earned a Ph.D. in neuroscience (University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign), focusing her research on the relationships between physical activity, nutrition, and memory performance in children.
So, one might think that tennis and academics were the sole driving factors behind her decision to come to K. In fact, though, the most influential factor may have been the College’s commitment to the liberal arts and the accompanying opportunities for students to explore their interests in a variety of disciplines. One example that stands out to Kelsey: “I loved the ecology courses I took with Professor Binney Girdler, and while I didn’t end up pursuing ecology research as a career, the summer I spent doing field research with her and a team of fellow K students on Beaver Island was a formative experience that set the stage for my future research pursuits.”
“The liberal arts tradition,” she adds, “continues to inform my mindset and approach to my personal and professional endeavors. K taught me to be curious and flexible in applying my talents, and my experience as a student-athlete taught me the importance of balance and making time for physical activity. Connecting with others around fitness has become a real passion of mine.”
After four years working at the University of Illinois’s Interdisciplinary Health Sciences Institute, Kelsey now serves as a managing director at the Washington, D.C.-based federal grants and government relations consulting firm, McAllister & Quinn. She provides capacity-building, strategic guidance, and grant consulting support services to research universities and other higher education institutions.
Men’s Tennis
Branden Metzler ’17
Read about Branden Metzler
At K it’s uncommon that an athletic performance cancels some classes. There’s no stat for that. But if there was, then Branden Metzler just might be the only Hornet to have it.
His spring 2016 run to the Division III men’s tennis National Championship singles final electrified Kalamazoo College (yes, that year the championships took place at Stowe Stadium). As Branden advanced match by match, professors cancelled classes, students skipped them, crowds grew, the stadium brimmed, then seemed to overflow. Branden lost in the final match while never disappointing. Not so much your classical long-and-lean tennis body with phlegmatic disposition, Brandon’s more “body-by-linebacker” with a heavy measure of indomitable-will thrown in. For those few days, his fierceness lit up the campus.
“That run and the support I received from the K community is my fondest memory of college,” says Branden, “and is still one of my top memories in my life.”
He chose K “for its rich academic program and historic tennis team.” And then he promptly started to add to the College’s tennis legacy. Four times he made all-conference first team, and four times he was named the MIAA most valuable player. He claimed the national championship runner-up in 2016 and then the following year made it to the national championship semifinals. Thus, in his junior and senior seasons he finished in the top four of the country’s Division III singles players. He was an Intercollegiate Tennis Association Scholar-Athlete (as well as a MIAA Academic Honor Roll honoree), the ITA Central Region Player to Watch (2016), and the ITA Central Region Senior Player of the Year (2017).
Branden earned two majors at K, in chemistry and in economics. “My favorite teacher was Professor Stull,” he says. “His class inspired my Senior Individualized Project, which was about the tennis industry.” He also was a fixture in the athletic training room, “to the point I think that most of the trainers were sick of seeing my face.
“The lessons I learned at K on and off the court—particularly in the areas of time management skills and self-discipline—have helped me in my professional career,” he adds. “The professors were always willing to help. And the friends I met made my K experience invaluable.”
Branden works as a quality engineer for the aerospace company, Woodward INC. He continues to play tennis and gives private lessons to children and adults. For three years he coached tennis at Rockford (Ill.) Boylan High School, leading the Lady Titans to the sectional title in 2021, their first in 10 years.
Baseball
Ryan Orr ’18
Read about Ryan Orr
How’s this for a curve: study abroad as three seasons of summer baseball in Kenosha (two) and Cape Cod (one). It’s a hell of a liberal arts pitch from the greatest Hornet pitcher of all time.
(One outcome: a somewhat baseball-related trivia question in the category of Kalamazoo College history—Question: What do the careers of Ryan Orr and K President Jorge Gonzalez have in common? Answer: Study abroad in Wisconsin.)
Ryan Orr liked the size of K’s campus, he liked the College’s high academic standards, and he chose K because of its “up-and-coming baseball program.” After which he did a great deal to increase the angle of that program’s rise. Ryan majored in business with a focus on marketing. His favorite teachers in the department were Professor Hultberg and Professor Wielopolski. The summer seasons composed “my version of study abroad,” Ryan says. And his Senior Individualized Project on Major League Baseball (why the best teams seldom win the World Series) is great “Fall Classic” reading.
His accomplishments on the ball field are unmatched. Ryan was the team’s pitcher of the year (four times) and Most Valuable Player (two times). In the conference he was MIAA Pitcher of the Week (five times), All-MIAA (four years), Conference MVP (once). He holds the conference record for most innings pitched in a career, and he was named All-Region and All-American. His Hornet baseball records include: most wins, innings pitched, complete games, shut-outs, no-hitters, and saves, as well as the lowest earned run average.
He also could hit (leading the team in batting average his senior season) and run (finishing second and third on the team in stolen bases his junior and senior seasons, respectively). His best baseball memory? “Our MIAA tournament win at Adrian in 2016,” he says.
After graduating from K Ryan played two seasons of professional baseball for the Frontier League River City Rascals. Today he works as a Territory Sales Manager for the fundraising company, Vertical Raise. He recently completed his first season as head baseball coach at Williamston High School. His team finished as conference co-champion and won a district title.
“At K I met my wife, Danielle Simon ’18” says Ryan, “and we were married last October. In addition to that, the most significant impact of K on my life has been its people—the great coaches, professors, mentors, and the lifelong friends I encountered there.”
One example: “I’ll always remember Professor Wielopolski writing each of her students a personalized thank-you card at the end of the term. She made clear how much she cared about us as people. Just like that quote, ‘Players don’t care how much you know until they know how much you care,’ which is something I hope to pass on.”
Now there’s a baseball bender with a liberal arts arc—great teachers are great coaches, and vice versa. And pitchers are among the most liberal-arts-ish of athletes because success requires the ability to move the ball in multiple ways.
Women’s Swimming and Diving
Colleen Orwin ’17
Read about Colleen Orwin
The odds mounted against a successful K campus visit for Colleen Orwin in October 2012. First, the day was a downpour. Second, K’s campus was just 10 minutes away from Colleen’s home, and the Portage Northern (and Kalamazoo Area Mathematics and Science Center) graduate did not see herself going to college in the state of Michigan, let alone the city of Kalamazoo. Third, the visit’s dinner occurred at a restaurant frequented by the Orwin family. No new fun there. Fourth, the television in the host’s dorm room was tuned to a series Colleen did not like. Zero-for-four. And yet, against those odds, Colleen chose Kalamazoo College.
“I could feel the swim team’s sense of family throughout my 24 hours on campus,” says Colleen. The computer science major (she also holds minors in mathematics and studio art) went on to become one of the Hornet swim team family’s most distinguished members ever. Perhaps such a future was foretold when she was named MIAA Swimming/Diving Athlete of the Week after her very first collegiate competition! And a first-year season shortened by a broken wrist could not do much to slow her amazing career in the pool.
Colleen set numerous school, conference, and MIAA pool records during her four seasons. She was all-conference all four seasons and earned All-American and Honorable Mention All-American honors in each of her final three seasons. She was invited to swim in the Division III national championships her sophomore, junior, and senior years, and three times she was named a Scholar All-American by the College Swimming and Diving Coaches Association of America. Her junior season she was the team’s MVP, and she was named the MIAA Most Valuable Swimmer (one of only two Hornets so honored in K women’s swimming history). She co-captained the team her senior year, a year that saw her honored with the Senior Leadership Award, the Knoechel Family Award recognizing athletic and academic performance, and the Tish Loveless Award for the outstanding senior female athlete of Kalamazoo College.
Colleen is tied for second in Hornet women’s swimming history for most All-American and Honorable Mention All-American finishes. Her K resumé includes study abroad (Strasbourg, France), an internship focused on software testing, and a Swim for Success app she developed for her Senior Individualized Project. In true liberal arts family fashion, one of her favorite professors is in the art department—Professor of Studio Art Tom Rice, from whom Colleen took six classes. She works as a Senior Project Manager at Exelon, the nation’s largest utility company. And she’s in her third season as a volunteer assistant coach with the Hornet swim team.
“The K experience encouraged me to try new things; it gave me the confidence to step out of my comfort zone,” says Colleen, “From the day of that long-ago recruiting trip, the K community has been a positive impact on my life.”
2024 Inductees – Team
2023 Team Hall of Fame Inductees
1994 Men’s Tennis Team
Photo taken on October 6, 2023
Read about Kelsey Hassevoort
The University of Aberdeen (Scotland) has one turf tennis court. During her study abroad there Kelsey Hassevoort and (then-boyfriend, now-husband) Alex Dombos ’12 found it and practiced as often as they could until the days grew so short the sun had set by the time classes dismissed.
“We both wanted to stay in shape for our upcoming tennis seasons,” Kelsey says. Darkness didn’t defeat her dedication. Practice moved to the local tennis center even though getting there required a 45-minute commute by foot and multiple buses. That determination explains, in part, Kelsey’s hall-of-fame tennis career.
She was twice named to the All-MIAA first team, and three times recognized as an Intercollegiate Tennis Association Scholar-Athlete. She played number one singles her junior and senior seasons as well as number one doubles her senior season. She earned the MIAA Most Valuable Player award her final season, the same year she won the MIAA Karen Caine Scholar-Athlete Award and was named to the CoSIDA/Capital One Academic All-District 6 At-Large Team and the CoSIDA/Capital One Academic All-American At-Large First Team.
Note the frequency of “academic” and “scholar” in the titles of all those athletic honors. Let’s talk about that. Kelsey made the MIAA Academic Honor Roll all four years. She majored in biology and took a full slate of pre-med courses at K. For her Senior Individualized Project she studied the functional connectivity of the human cerebellum, working in the Neuromotor Behavior Laboratory at the University of Michigan. She earned a Ph.D. in neuroscience (University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign), focusing her research on the relationships between physical activity, nutrition, and memory performance in children.
So, one might think that tennis and academics were the sole driving factors behind her decision to come to K. In fact, though, the most influential factor may have been the College’s commitment to the liberal arts and the accompanying opportunities for students to explore their interests in a variety of disciplines. One example that stands out to Kelsey: “I loved the ecology courses I took with Professor Binney Girdler, and while I didn’t end up pursuing ecology research as a career, the summer I spent doing field research with her and a team of fellow K students on Beaver Island was a formative experience that set the stage for my future research pursuits.”
“The liberal arts tradition,” she adds, “continues to inform my mindset and approach to my personal and professional endeavors. K taught me to be curious and flexible in applying my talents, and my experience as a student-athlete taught me the importance of balance and making time for physical activity. Connecting with others around fitness has become a real passion of mine.”
After four years working at the University of Illinois’s Interdisciplinary Health Sciences Institute, Kelsey now serves as a managing director at the Washington, D.C.-based federal grants and government relations consulting firm, McAllister & Quinn. She provides capacity-building, strategic guidance, and grant consulting support services to research universities and other higher education institutions.
1994 Men’s Tennis Team
Read about the 1994 Men’s Tennis Team
The 1994 Men’s Tennis Team had one of the deepest and most talented rosters in school history, according to first-year Head Coach Timon Corwin. Loaded with talent from top to bottom, the team was poised to make a serious run at a four-peat after winning the national championship the previous three seasons.
After opening the season 3-2 against Division I opponents, the Hornets proceeded to win 21 straight matches and finished with an overall record of 25-3. The third-highest win total in school history included victories over Division I opponents such as Toledo, Bowling Green, Georgia State, Presbyterian, Eastern Michigan and Western Michigan. Of the three losses, only one was against a Division III opponent.
The Hornets won the GLCA Tournament before continuing their dominance in the MIAA with the 56th consecutive MIAA championship. Kalamazoo won the MIAA Tournament before making its 19th straight trip to the NCAA III Tournament.
“The leadership and strength of the upperclassmen was sensational,” said Corwin. “We were led at the top of the lineup by #1 Seth Denawetz (NCAA singles champion) and #2 Andy Alaimo. Juniors Ryan Kaltenbach, Paul Bozyk and Jason McKinney, along with All-American freshman Pat Noud, completed the top six. Junior Ted Gaty was inserted into the singles lineup at #6 heading into the MIAA Tournament and remained there through the NCAA’s.
“We had outstanding doubles as well. Ryan and Adam Afridi were ranked #1 in the country heading into the final month of the season. Seth and Pat were unbeatable at #2, and Paul and Jason were rock solid at #3.
“A season-ending injury to one of our players right before NCAA’s was a devastating blow to a team favored to win the team title. Without the #1 doubles player in the nation and lockdown #3 singles player, this team still took third place at the NCAA’s. Seth won the national singles title, and Pat made the quarterfinals to earn All-American honors. It was an amazing finish to the year!”
Kalamazoo defeated tournament host Redlands before falling to Claremont-Mudd-Scripps in the semifinals. The Hornets defeated UC-Santa Cruz in the third-place match to take home the bronze.
“What I remember most about this team was the way they loved each other,” Corwin said. “Twenty-nine years later, they are still the best of friends.”
Team members include: Adam Afridi ’95, Andrew Alaimo ’94, Andreas Boquist ’96, Paul Bozyk ’95, Pat Carroll ’95, James Collins ’95, Seth Denawetz ’94, Chad Fix ’96, Chris Fowler ’94, Rich Gasiorski ’97, Kevin Holmes ’96, Ted Gaty ’95, Ryan Kaltenbach ’95, Chris Kennelly, Guillermo Leon ’97, Jason McKinney ’95, Pat Noud ’97, Bret Orr ’97, Blake Peters ’96, Cheo Ramsey ’96, Marc Reeves ’95 and Head Coach Timon Corwin ’86.
1976-1977 Women’s Swimming and Diving Team
More about the 1976-1977 Swimming and Diving Team
The 1976-77 women’s swimming and diving team came into the season with high hopes, hoping to surpass the success of the previous year’s team. The outlook was bright with an outstanding group of first year student/athletes to bolster the returning group. The team was young as there were eight first-year athletes, four sophomores, one junior, and one senior. Coach Maurer had every expectation that the 1976-77 team would be contenders in the WMIAA relays scheduled to take place at K.
The team was undefeated in conference dual meets making them champions of the WMIAA. The team was successful in winning the relays in 11 of 12 events at the league meet. The results of the league meet were as follows: Kalamazoo-140, Calvin-76, Albion-74, Alma-28, Adrian-10, and Hope-8.
Kalamazoo participated at the Eastern Michigan Invitational. The Hornets ended up in sixth place competing against Ball State, Bowling Green, Central Michigan University, Eastern Michigan University, Indiana State, Michigan State University, Oakland University, Virginia and Western Michigan University. In comparison to their larger-school competition, the Hornets held their own and competed well.
Highlights of the season from various team members include “driving across Michigan during a snowstorm in those vans- at night – a little scary and coming out of practice in the winter and having one’s hair freeze”. Other recollections include the need to get used to each other which made things interesting and forced a switch up of who swam what event because new faces were circling in and out of the team. Ultimately, this may have made us a better team through the years. Team members were flexible as they ended up swimming things they did not want to swim, but did it without complaint. This “forced” flexibility ended up being a good K value to carry with us at K and in our lives after Kalamazoo College!
Team honors went to Cathie Kroeschell as Most Valuable and Jane Woodworth as Most Improved. Team captains were Kroeschell and Heather Gilchrist. Julie Chappell and Kroeschell both qualified for the AIAW national tournament.
The 1976-77 women’s swimming and diving team ended their season with a record of seven wins and four defeats and enjoyed being the WMIAA league champions!
Team members include: Sally Baker, Chris Bodurow, Julie Candoli, Lisa Carnall, Julie Chappell, Mary DeYoung, Cindy Donovan, Carol Franke, Laura Franseen, Sue Getz, Heather Gilchrist, Sue Hegel, Kelly Kent, Cathie Kroeschell, Barb Kurth, Jill Latta, Charlotte Nelis, Ann Oswald, Cindy Ratliffe, Donna Schimmel, Stacy Semenczuk, Colleen Sherburne, Ann Stevens, Cheryl Sulisz, Leslie Touma, Kathy VerDuin, Jane Woodworth, Patty Wotila, Team Manager, Barb DeRose and Head Coach Lyn Maurer
Note: The Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women (AIAW), founded in 1971, was establishd to govern collegiate women’s athletics in the United States and to administer national championships.
1977-1978 Women’s Swimming and Diving Team
More about the 1977-1978 Swimming and Diving Team
The 1977-78 Women’s Swimming and Diving Team was small in numbers yet their potential was enormous. Coach Lyn Maurer was confident about her team’s performance. A quote from Coach Maurer in the December 1, 1977 The Index said, “Even though the WMIAA schools will be improved from last year, more than half of the team records will be broken this season.”
In the previous 1976-77 season, the women were undefeated in conference action and took first place in the WMIAA relays. Coach Maurer was quoted saying, “Although our team is smaller than we have been in the past, we should be at least as strong as in any previous years.” Despite those small numbers of participants on the swim team, fifteen in total, Coach Maurer built a competitive women’s program. As the season evolved, Maurer’s expectations for a successful season came true with victories in the first five competitions, which included winning the WMIAA relays.
The Hornets hosted the WMIAA meet favored to come out with the 1978 championship. Winning the league meet combined with finishing the dual meet competition undefeated would make the league championship a reality. The K tankers finished the regular season in style by scoring 100 points to take the league title. The league meet was the first all-conference competition in the history of the WMIAA women’s swimming program. K swimmers took first place in seven of the 14 possible events. Conference standing ended with the Hornets in first, followed by Albion, Calvin, Alma, Adrian and Hope finished last.
The Hornets faced tough non-league competition in meets against Eastern Michigan, Western Michigan, Northern Michigan and Valparaiso. While being defeated by WMU, Julie Redner placed first in the 100-yard breaststroke, which made her eligible for national competition. The disappointment of losses to WMU and EMU were softened by victories over Northern Michigan (74-56) and Valparaiso (71-60). During the Valparaiso meet, the 200-yard freestyle relay team of Julie Chappell, Patty Wotila, Redner and Corinne Lewis qualified for national competition.
The team ended the season with a 9-2 record. Team honors for the season went to Corinne Lewis as Most Valuable and Cindy Ackerman as Most Improved. Team captains were Julie Candoli and Wotila.
Team members include: Cindy Ackerman, Anne Campbell, Julie Candoli, Julie Chappell, Laura Franseen, Martha Fulford, Pam Hamp, Barb Kurth, Corinne Lewis, Kay Lincoln, Francie Noland, Julie Redner, Cheryl Sulisz, Martha Talbott, Patty Wotila and Head Coach Lyn Maurer
1978-1979 Women’s Swimming and Diving Team
More about the 1978-1979 Swimming and Diving Team
1978-79 Women’s Swimming and Diving Team, as defending MIAA champions, began its season facing its stiffest league competition ever. Coach Lyn Maurer believed that the excellent group of freshmen and a large number of returning swimmers would again be strong contenders in the MIAA league.
In the January 18, 1979 The w article, Maurer said of her team of twenty, only two of whom have no previous competitive swimming experience, “They are a very nice group of young women, and fun to work with. All six sophomores on the team have previous swimming experience. Two, Corrine Lewis and Julie Redner, competed in the national meet last year as freshmen. Seniors Heather Gilchrist and Jane Woodworth, and junior Julie Chappell are returning for their third season. Chappell also went to nationals last year. Freshman Sue Herriman is adding her diving experience to the team.” In light of her team’s depth, Maurer says, “They look strong in most every stroke. The team should break more than half of the existing records.”
An excerpt from the 1978-79 Hornets Winter Sports Prospectus: “The women’s swim team, defending MIAA league and relay champions, has the makings of a top-rated squad … Coach Maurer expects this year’s squad to break twelve out of the eighteen existing team records.”
The Hornet’s league contest again Albion College was quite memorable as the meet ended with five school records broken and K victorious by a score of 78-52. The two teams were tied at 35-35 with half of the events completed; however, the K tankers consistently out-muscled the Albion Brits for the remainder of the meet. School records set included:
- 200-yard medley relay (Renee Rutz, Julie Redner, Sandy Hoisington and Karen Hink)
- 50-yard backstroke – Rutz
- 100-yard backstroke – Rutz
- 100-yard individual medley – Hoisington
- 400-yard freestyle relay – Chappell, Hoisington, Lewis and Abby Frame
In non-league competitions, the Hornets came out on the short end of a 72-59 decision against Western Michigan. The K tankers won their closest victory of the season by defeating Northern Michigan 65-63. The Hornets lost to a powerful Oakland University team by a score of 79-52.
At the end of the season, the Kalamazoo College Women’s Swim Team became the MIAA Conference Champions for the second consecutive year. The following MIAA records were set this season:
- 200 Freestyle – Sandy Hoisington
- 500 Freestyle – Sandy Hoisington
- 100 Butterfly – Sandy Hoisington
- 200 Individual Medley – Karen Hink
- 3-Meter Dive – Sue Herriman
- 800 Freestyle Relay – Renee Rutz, Karen Hink, Corinne Lewis, and Sandy Hoisington
- 400 Medley Relay – Julie Chappell, Sandy Hoisington, Corinne Lewis and Abby Frame
The K women tankers ended the season with a 10 and 2 record. Team honors went to Sandy Hoisington as Most Valuable and Abby Frame as Most Improved. Team captains were Heather Gilchrist, Corinne Lewis, and Jane Woodworth.
Team members include: Cindy Ackerman, Mary Adams, Anne Campbell, Julie Chappell, Cindy Donovan, Abby Frame, Carol Franke, Heather Gilchrist, Julie, Halstead, Sue Hegel, Sue Herriman, Karen Hink, Sandy Hoisington, Lori Kahle, Corinne Lewis, Debbie Medkeff, Jennifer Mills, Dawn Moilanen, Francie Noland, Kathy Plaisier, Julie Redner, Renee Rutz, Kay Spring, Cheryl Sulisz, Amy VanDomelen, Mary VonEhr, Jane Woodworth, Team Manager Pam Hamp and Head Coach Lyn Maurer.
1985 Men’s Soccer Team
More about the 1985 Men’s Soccer Team
The 1985 Kalamazoo Men’s Soccer Team is one of three of the most successful teams in the history of the sport at the College. Coach Hardy Fuchs thinks all three teams suffered from a disorder: they were “loss-averse”. Because of this eccentric condition, Coach Fuchs suggests that they should not be inducted into the Hall of Fame but rather, “indicted”. All three squads put together seasons without a loss. The team of 1985 ended up with 17 wins, no losses, and two ties (MIAA record: 11-0-1). The Hornets also qualified for the NCAA national tournament but did not make it past the first round.
That season also included a game with the highest score in men’s soccer history at K. Kalamazoo won, 20-0, on Parents Day, with the game being played on Angell Field because of the special occasion and made possible by the generosity of the football program. Coach Fuchs and the players did not feel comfortable with the outcome as the score looked more like an American football result. At halftime, the K coaching staff offered to play with fewer men on the field, but that offer was not considered a good solution by the opponents. One of the Hornets, sophomore Marc Tirikian, ended up scoring ten goals and received some exposure in the People in the Crowd section of Sports Illustrated, including a head/shoulder shot. Coach Fuchs, in contrast, got some flak from colleagues.
Several individuals from this glorious season received high honors individually. Tirikian earned the Team MVP award for the Hornets as well as First-Team All-MIAA recognition; Jon Beaubien was the Team’s Most Improved Player, and with Ralf Schreiber also earned All-MIAA First team honors. Michael Greening and Kevin Kitka were members of the All-MIAA Second Team.
It should also be noted that four players on this team — Dan Coats, Chris Dukes, Brian Libby and John Nanos (seniors on the 1988 Hall of Fame team) are receiving the hall of fame honor for the second time! Speaking of seniors: The 1985 Hornets, THIS team, did not include a single senior among its nineteen members!
Team members include Jon Beaubien, Tom Beaubien, David Beebe, Adam Cermak, Dan Coats, Chris Drabik, Chris Dukes, Michael Greening, Ernie Johnson, John Kennedy, Kevin Kitka, Brian Libby, Mirko Mikelic, John Nanos, Brian Paul, Paul Regelbrugge, Ralf Schreiber, Ali Shabangu, Marc Tirikian and Head Coach Hardy Fuchs.
The 1985 men’s soccer team was indeed an extraordinary squad and unreservedly deserves the exceptional honor of being introduced to the institution’s Hall of Fame. Congratulations, men!