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RELEASED:
Thursday, September 21, 2006
Eight to be
Inducted into Blugold Hall of Fame
Eau
Claire, Wis.--The sports of basketball, football, track and wrestling
will be represented when UW-Eau Claire inducts eight individuals into
its Blugold Hall of Fame September 30.
The 2006 class, which will recognized
at halftime of the UW-Whitewater football game and enshrined in ceremonies
after the game, includes basketball coach Lisa Stone, basketball-track
athlete Arlene Meinholz Beardsley, basketball player Tim Blair and his
brother Mike Blair, a basketball-football athlete; track and football
athlete Eric Burrell, wrestler Tony Algiers, football player Jerry Gendron
and football player Roger Vann who will be inducted posthumously
.
This will be the 30th class of men's inductees and the 17th class of women's
inductees and brings to 149 the number of athletes, coaches and administrators
who have been honored.
The Blugold Hall of Fame was established
in 1973 to pay tribute, to give deserved recognition and to enhance school
tradition by honoring former athletic letterwinners or coaches who showed
distinctive, unique or exceptional ability while on the campus at Eau
Claire and have distinguished themselves in their profession or personally
since leaving the institution.
For women athletes, there must
be a lapse of 10 years before they can be considered and for men 15 years.
The inductions will take place
September 30 at a banquet at The Plaza Hotel (1202 W. Clairemont Ave.)
following the football game. The banquet will begin with a social hour
at 5:30 p.m., followed by a dinner at 6:30 p.m. and a program at 7:30
p.m. Local television sports directors Bob Bradovich (WQOW TV 18) and
Bob Gallaher (WEAU TV 13) will serve as presenters for the Hall of Fame
with Director of Athletics Scott Kilgallon handling the official induction
of the class. The banquet will also include recognition of the Blugold
Super Six Salute Award winners. Sports Information Director Tim Petermann
will present those six athletes.
Reservations for the banquet can
be made by calling the UW-Eau Claire Alumni Association at 715 836-3266.
Tickets are $20 per person.
Lisa Stone
Currently the head coach at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, Stone
had a brilliant 12-year tenure as the Blugold women's basketball coach
during which she produced a 277-59 record (.824 winning percentage) and
took 11 teams to the NCAA Division III playoffs.
Only one of her Blugold teams did
not win at least 21 games and in her final campaign (1999-00), the team
finished with a 28-1 record, losing its final game of the season to eventual
national champion Washington University of St. Louis. Her 1996-97 team
finished runner-up in the NCAA Division III tournament, losing the championship
game to New York University by two points on a last-second shot. For her
efforts in leading the 1997 team, Stone was named both the WIAC coach
of the year and the Division III national coach of the year.
In Stone's 12 years at Eau Claire,
the Blugolds won three outright WWIAC/WIAC championships and shared three
other conference titles. Only once did the team finish lower than second
in the league standings. Stone was selected the conference Coach of the
Year five times.
Five times, the Blugolds were eliminated
from NCAA play by the eventual national champion. In addition to 1997,
the Blugolds also reached the Final Four of the 1994 tournament which
they hosted in Zorn Arena on campus. That year, they claimed third place
after losing their championship semifinal game in overtime.
Stone came to Eau Claire after
a three-year stint at Cornell College in Iowa. That followed an outstanding
collegiate career in which she played for one of the country's outstanding
coaches in C. Vivian Stringer at the University of Iowa. There she (known
then as Lisa Anderson) was named the Big Ten's Medal of Honor winner in
1984 as the conference's top student-athlete. She was a Hawkeye captain
and twice the team MVP. When she graduated, she was the No. 2 all-time
leading scorer, the No. 6 career rebounder, the school record holder in
assists and the school single game, season and career leader in steals.
Stone left UW-Eau Claire in the
spring of 2000 to take the head coaching job at Divison I Drake University
and led the Bulldogs to the NCAA Sweet 16 in 2002. In her first season
at Drake, she became the first first-year coach ever named Missouri Valley
Coach of the Year. She is now in her fourth year as the head coach of
the Badger women's program.
Stone and her husband Ed, a certified
public accountant, have two children: Allison, age 14, and Tyler, age
11.
Roger Vann
Roger Vann is one of only two Blugold football players to have their number
retired, the other being Hall of Famer Jim Van Gorden. That came as a
result of his stellar 1981 season in which No. 36 ran for 1,575 yards
to lead the NAIA in rushing and scored 17 touchdowns. He was MVP of the
Wisconsin State University Conference that year and also an NAIA First
Team All-American as the Blugolds rolled to a 9-1 record and an 8-0 conference
mark. The Blugolds missed the eight-team NAIA playoffs that season when
they were ranked No. 9 in the final poll.
Vann was the fourth leading rusher
in all of college football in 1981, placing behind Southern Cal's Marcus
Allen, Georgia's Herschel Walker and Richmond's Barry Redden. He was the
NAIA national player of the week with a school-record 239 yards and five
TDs against the University of Evansville.
A strong and durable runner, Vann
still holds the school record for carries in a season, toting the ball
343 times in 1981 while losing just two fumbles. The previous year, he
had gained 1,168 yards on 203 carries. During those two seasons, he topped
the 200-yard mark four times and those efforts still rank among the top
10 single game totals in school history. He went over 100 yards in 16
of 20 games. His 3,076 career yards still rank fourth in school history
and his single season total of 1,575 stood for 19 seasons until being
eclipsed by Darrell Souhrada in 2000 when Souhrada gained 1,588 yards.
After being named a Kodak All-American
and AP College Division Second Team All-American in 1981, Vann signed
as a free agent with the Dallas Cowboys and was one of the last players
cut during their preseason camp in 1982. At that time, the Cowboys' running
backs included Tony Doresett, James Jones, Ron Springs, Robert Newhouse
and Timmy Newsome. Vann graduated that year from UWEC with a major in
commercial art and advertising.
Vann was teaching in Australia
and doing commercial art for the government at the time of his death in
December, 2004. He had moved to Australia in 1996 after spending time
in the Twin Cities where he was involved in sales with West Publishing
Company and as an insurance adjuster with State Farm Insurance.
A talented individual, Vann held
a black belt in the martial arts, played an instrument in a blues band,
was a professional model and acted in some films.
Vann is survived by his wife Joanne
Chiver and children Mikeala and Justice. He also is survived by three
children from a previous marriage: Caleea, Andrew and Allannah.
Jerry Gendron
Gendron, known as "Jugger", ranks among UWEC's all-time pass
receiving leaders. During a career that stretched from 1962 through 1965
and included the conference championship years of 1963 and 1964, Gendron
caught 109 passes for 1,565 yards and 12 touchdowns. All of those totals
still rank among the top nine in each category. His premier season was
1964 when he hauled in 44 passes for 655 yards. He and Jim Van Gorden
set a school record when they collaborated on an 82-yard pass against
Stevens Point that year. That record stood for 11 years.
Gendron was All-Conference in 1963,
1964 and 1965, NAIA All-State twice and the team MVP his senior year.
After his eligibility had expired, Gendron received tryouts with the the
Miami Dolphins, Detroit Lions and New Orleans Saints and was a member
of the Saints' farm team for three years.
A native of Appleton, Gendron graduated
with a degree in psychology and sociology and then obtained his master's
from Virginia Commonwealth and was a doctoral candidate at William and
Mary although he did not complete that degree. After working from 1968
to 1978 as a special educator in the Virginia schools, he created his
own management company known as Gendron Management, Inc. As such, he has
been the Tour Accountant with Luis Miguel, Lenny Kravitz, Beastie Boys,
Madonna, Shania Twain, Billy Joel/Elton John, Jimmy Buffett and Faith
Hill/Tim McGraw among others. He will be flying in to Eau Claire from
Philadelphia where he is on tour with Barbra Streisand.
He has earned a reputation for
"training" members of various bands and crews when on tour.
He has been written up in Redbook Magazine and other publications for
providing that service for Amy Grant, Rick Springfield and other artists.
Gendron has three grown children:
Laura Elizabeth, Gerald Paul and Jessica Louise. He and his wife Laura
Marie live in the Missouri country outside of Kansas City.
Tony Algiers
Algiers was a two-time conference champion and two-time NAIA All-American
for veteran Blugold coach Don Parker. He is one of only five Blugold wrestlers
who have won more than one conference title, taking the 134-pound championship
in both 1981 and 1982. He finished eighth in the '81 NAIA Nationals and
fourth the following year. He produced a 29-5 record his junior year but
an injury curtailed part of his senior season when he finished 16-9 and
placed second in the conference. He finished with a 74-36 career record
as a Blugold.
Following his graduation as a biology
major in 1985, the Hartford native earned a Pulp and Paper degree from
the University of Minnesota in 1985 and his MBA from the University of
West Florida in 1989. He also has an EMT Certification from Pensacola
Junior College.
Algiers has been a Sales Representative
for Buckman Laboratories, Inc. (paper chemicals) in Appleton since 2004.
Prior to that he spent 19 years with International Paper (former Champion
International Corporation) in Pensacola in various positions within the
paper mill ranging from process engineer to lab and paper machine supervisor.
He and his wife Karen (Moore),
also a UWEC alum and a registered nurse, have two children: Jackson, 9,
and Annabelle, 6.
Michael Blair
Mike had an outstanding four-year basketball career as a Blugold from
1983-87, then played one stellar season of football after his basketball
eligibility was complete in the fall of 1987.
Mike played in 109 career basketball
games as a Blugold but enjoyed his best season as a senior when he started
all 30 games and shared team MVP honors with Chuckie Graves. That year,
the Blugolds won the Wisconsin State University Conference championship
and advanced to the NAIA National Tournament in Kansas City, finishing
with a 26-4 record.
The 1986-87 season was the first
for the three-point field goal and Mike once hit five straight treys in
a game, a percentage record that still stands. He averaged 12.3 points
a game from his guard position and also averaged 3.8 assists and 2.3 rebounds
per game. During his four seasons with the Blugolds, the team compiled
a 99-21 overall record.
A three-year team captain, Mike
was All-Conference, NAIA All-District 14 and NAIA All-American Honorable
Mention his senior year.
As a football player, he led the
'87 Blugolds in pass receiving with 42 catches for 778 yards and seven
touchdowns. The yardage is still the seventh best in school history and
the TD total is the sixth best. In a game against La Crosse, he had 184
receiving yards, also the sixth best in school history.
Mike earned a degree in Communication
Arts from UWEC in 1988 and his education degree in Speech and English
in 1991. He received his master's in Athletic Administration in 2004 and
is currently the Dean of Athletics at Eau Claire Memorial High School
following a seven-year term as the Athletic Director at Chippewa Falls
High School.
Mike's career also included a year
as the Blugold assistant men's coach (1989-90), a year as the Blugold
assistant women's coach (1990-91) with Lisa Stone, a year as head boys'
golf coach at Wausau East High School (1992-93), four years as the head
basketball coach at Durand High School (1993-97) and two years as a teacher
at Chi-Hi (1997-99) when he also was an assistant boys' basketball coach
and head boys' golf coach.
A Certified Athletic Administrator,
Blair is a member of the Wisconsin Athletic Directors Association Scholarship
Committee. He initiated "Project Redbird" which was a community
service program for athletics at Chi-Hi and is continuing that program
at Memorial as "Project Eagle."
Mike and his wife Cari have three
children: Madison, 9; Drew, 6; and Nolan, 5.
Tim Blair
Tim was the glue that held the UW-Eau Claire men's basketball team together
in 1989 and 1990 when the Blugolds advanced to the Final Four of the 32-team
NAIA National Tournament in Kansas City.
He was named the national tournament's
Charles Stevenson Hustle Award winner and was an All-Tournament pick in
1990 when the Blugolds lost to Birmingham-Southern, 88-80, in the NAIA
championship game on national TV. He was selected to the NAIA All-American
third team as a senior.
Tim did not join the Blugolds until
the 10th game of the 1987-88 season after transferring from UW-Stevens
Point. During the 89 games he played at Eau Claire in a little more than
2 ½ seasons, he scored 1,015 points (11.4 avg), dished off for
452 assists (5.0 avg) and grabbed 267 rebounds (3.0) from his guard position
and the Blugolds compiled a 75-14 overall record. He set single season
assist records in 1989 (173) and 1990 (190), the latter of which still
stands today. He still is the Blugolds' career record holder for three-point
field goal percentage at .476. He also shares the school records for single
game field goal and free throw percentage, once hitting all six of his
field goal tries and another time all 10 of his free throw attempts.
Tim was a two-time team MVP, two-time
All-Conference and two-time NAIA All-District 14 selection. His head coach
Ken Anderson once said of him, "He always did what he had to for
the Blugolds to be successful. Tim is the type of player that brings out
the best in his teammates. He was one of the most unselfish players ever
to don a blue and gold uniform." The Blugolds were 17-3 in post-season
games with Blair directing the team.
Tim was a Super Six award winner
after his junior year and following his senior season was invited to the
Milwaukee Bucks' rookie camp.
Tim is a Mayville native who graduated
in December, 1990 with a comprehensive Business Finance major. He has
been employed in various financial capacities in Florida since 1992. In
2000, he passed his CPA examination and has been an accountant with Raymond
James Financial in St. Petersburg since 2002. This is his second stint
with the company, having also worked there in 1992-94.
Tim is planning to be married in
November. His fiancé, Jeana Rago, is a stay at home mom with three
boys.
Eric Burrell
Burrell rates as perhaps the greatest track athlete ever to wear a Blugold
uniform. He won the NCAA Division III outdoor 400-meter championship in
1990, the same year he anchored the 400-meter relay to a national championship.
He was a nine-time NAIA and NCAA All-American, five times in individual
events and four times in relays. He was a seven-time Wisconsin State University
Conference individual track champion and eight-time WSUC relay winner.
His name still appears with eight school indoor and outdoor records.
Burrell's effort in the 1990 NCAA
nationals helped the Blugolds achieve their highest team finish ever,
a fourth place. In addition to his gold medals that year, he also anchored
the Blugold 1600-meter relay team to a second-place finish.
Burrell's individual national finishes
included fifth twice in the indoor 55-meter dash, a fifth in the indoor
60-yard dash and a sixth in the outdoor 100-meter dash. His national relay
finishes included one first, two seconds and a third. His teammates on
the All-American relay squads included Andy Eslinger, Tony Sarnowski,
Ty Prosa, Dan Kelner and Pete Balistrieri.
Burrell was a two-time conference
indoor champ in both the 55-mter dash and the 300-meter dash. Outdoors,
he won the 100, 200 and 400-meter dashes. He anchored the 1600-meter relay
team to five conference golds, the 800-meter relay to two firsts and the
400-meter relay to one victory.
He still holds the school indoor
records at 55 and 300 meters and the outdoor 400-meter dash. His name
is linked to the indoor 800-meter and 1600-meter records and the outdoor
400, 800 and 1600-meter relays. He was the conference record holder in
the 300-meter dash when that event was discontinued.
Burrell transferred to UWEC after
winning the 100 and 200-meter dash and setting school records in those
events at Minnesota-Morris as a freshman in 1986-87.
Burrell also anchored the Blugold
800-meter relay to a first place at the Drake Relays in 1990. In that
same meet, he also helped the Blugolds to a third in the 1600-meter relay
and a fourth in the 400-meter relay, allowing the Blugolds to become one
of the few College Division schools ever to place in all three events
at the prestigious Drake Relays
He lettered in football during
the 1987 and 1988 seasons as a wide receiver before hanging up the pads
to concentrate on his sprinting.
Burrell received his UWEC degree
in Marketing. He worked at the Eau Claire Academy as a residential assistant
and core staff from 1990-98. He has been employed with UPS in Eau Claire
as a loader and driver since 1990. He received an Employee of the Month
award at the EC Academy and has received a 6-year safe driving award from
UPS.
He and his wife Lisa, who is a
seminar planner for Lorman Education Services in Eau Claire, have three
children: Jordan, 13; Maya, 4; and Candace, 2.
Arlene Meinholz Beardsley
Arlene Meinholz Beardsley was a national champion high jumper for the
Blugolds and a Kodak All-American basketball player.
Beardsley was an impact player
for head coach Lisa Stone already her freshman season, averaging 10.8
points and 5.2 rebounds per game despite not starting any games. The 6-foot
center started the final 84 games of her 112-game career and scored what
is still a school record 1,834 points while pulling 758 rebounds. She
shot 56.9 percent from the field and 72.7 percent from the free throw
line. She went to the charity stripe a school-record 492 times and made
a school record 358 points there. She still ranks fifth in career rebounds
and is 173 points ahead of anyone else in scoring. She set the school
record for blocked shots in a season with 73 as a junior and holds the
school career mark of 213. Twice, Beardsley scored 35 points in a game,
which at the time was a school record, but has since been broken by a
single point. She once hit all 13 of her field goal tries in a game which
rates as the school record for percentage.
Beardsley was a Kodak All-American
first team selection as a senior and a three-time All-Conference player.
As a senior, she was named both the conference Player of the Year and
the league's Scholar-Athlete winner.
During her career, the Blugolds
compiled a 92-20 record. She played in 14 NCAA post-season games as the
Blugolds reached the Final Four in 1994 and the Elite Eight in 1995. She
played on three conference championship teams and one runner-up squad.
Beardsley won the NCAA outdoor
high jump championship in 1995 and the NCAA indoor high jump title in
1996. She placed three other times in that event to become a five-time
All-American in track. She was a four-time conference high jump champ.
She still holds the school indoor (5-7.25) and outdoor (5-8) high jump
records as well as the Ade Olson fieldhouse record and the Simpson Field
record. She is still the school record holder in the pentathlon (3,295
points).
She was a two-time CoSIDA Academic
All-American, earning third team honors in basketball in '94-95 and second
team at large honors for track in '95-96. She was the state of Wisconsin's
NCAA Woman of the Year in 1995.
After graduating in 1996 with a
degree in Math Education, Beardsley taught at Johnson Creek High School
for one year (1996-97) and at Wautoma High School for three years (1997-2000).
She was the head girls' basketball coach at both schools and an assistant
track coach at Wautoma. Since 2000, she has been a math teacher, freshman
basketball coach and assistant track coach at DeForest High School, her
alma mater. She has been a member of the coaching staffs for three conference
championship track teams at DeForest as well as five conference championship
basketball teams and three state qualifying basketball teams.
Her husband Brian is currently
taking classes at the UW-Madison and volunteering at the university's
orthopedic clinic. He is looking to get into the UW Physician's Assistant
program. He also coaches the parent-run swim club at DeForest.
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