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Six Legends Inducted into ABAC Athletics Hall of Fame
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 Six legends from the
athletics field at ABAC were the first inductees in the first ever ABAC
Athletics Hall of Fame on Feb. 21, 2008 during the Centennial Celebration
Week. The event took place between
games of the ABAC-South Georgia Tech basketball games that evening in
Gressette Gym.
The first members of the Hall of Fame included Orion Mitchell, Bruce
Gressette, Thomas Cheney, Philip Simpson, Norman Hill, and Milena
Stanoytcheva. Mitchell, Gressette,
Cheney, and Stanoytcheva were honored posthumously. A reception and dinner
involving family and friends of the recipients was held at 4 p.m. on Feb. 21
in the Donaldson Dining Hall. Alumni
Director Nancy Coleman coordinated the reception and dinner.
Athletics Director Alan Kramer addressed the group on the purpose of
the Hall of Fame. Public Relations
Director Mike Chason came up with the idea for the Hall of Fame.
Chason and Public Relations Assistant Ashley Williamson coordinated
the presentation. |
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ORION MITCHELL:The
best coaches know how to be flexible and mold their athletes into successful
teams. No one could do that
better than Coach Orion Mitchell.
Not only did he coach the Rams of the Georgia State College for Men
when it was a four-year school, he coached the team when it became a
two-year school called Abraham Baldwin Agricultural
College. Mitchell
coached football, basketball, and baseball at the Georgia State College For
Men and at ABAC from 1931-45.
ABAC played intercollegiate football through 1937.
Mitchell had many great wins but his 1931 team really attracted some
attention by defeating the
University
of Miami 13-12.
An Associated Press story about the game ran in the October 17 edition of
the Tifton Gazette. According
to that account, Miami went in front on a touchdown run in the
second quarter. Down 6-0, the
Rams took the lead when Mike Donehon intercepted a pass and ran 70 yards for
a touchdown.
Sherman
England
blocked a punt in the second quarter and recovered it in the end zone for
another touchdown. Other teams
on the schedule that year included Oglethorpe
College and Fort Benning. Mitchell’s
1937 and 1943 basketball teams were the
Georgia
junior college state champions. Mitchell Hall, a former residence hall on
the campus, was named for him.
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BRUCE V. GRESSETTE:
ABAC alumni still talk
about the coaching exploits of Coach Bruce Gressette but many also rave
about his ability as a mathematics faculty member on the campus.
Whether it was coaching a basketball team or standing in front of a
math class, Gressette excelled in both venues. Gressette coached basketball,
baseball, and track and field at ABAC from 1945-63. His teams won Georgia junior
college basketball titles in 1946, 1947, and 1949. The 1949 and 1952 teams
won National Junior College Athletic Association Region championships.
Gressette’s track and field teams
won state championships in 1961 and 1962. His cross country team won the
state title in 1961. During his time
on the ABAC campus, he also served as athletics director from 1945-63 and
was an NJCAA vice president in 1948-49.
A former president of the Tifton Kiwanis Club, Gressette was also
selected as a Lieutenant Governor for the Georgia District of Kiwanis
International. He was also a
Sunday School teacher at Tifton’s
First Baptist Church.Gressette
received his undergraduate and master’s degrees from the University of South Carolina.
Gressette Gym on the ABAC campus is named for him.
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THOMAS
E. CHENEY:
From 1951-53 Thomas Cheney was a standout player for the ABAC
baseball team. The 1952 team rolled up a 7-1 record in league play and won
the 1952 state title. Major league
baseball took note of the righthander from
Morgan,
Ga., and
he was signed by the St. Louis Cardinals.
In 1957 the Cardinals called him up the big leagues where he made his
debut
on April 21, 1957. He pitched
in four games during his first year and started three of them.
He then served one year in the military in 1958.
Cheney returned to the Cardinals in 1959 but was traded in the off season to
the Pittsburgh Pirates. He had
a 2-2 record with the Pirates in
1960, a year in which Pittsburgh
advanced to the World Series against the New York Yankees.
Cheney served as relief pitcher in the Series, giving up four hits
and two earned runs while walking only one batter and striking out six. The
Pirates beat the Yankees for the crown in dramatic fashion when Bill
Mazeroski hit a walk off homer in the ninth inning of the seventh game.
Cheney was traded to the Washington Senators on June 29, 1961.
His day in history was just ahead. On Sept. 12, 1962, Cheney set the
record for striking out the highest number of batters in a single game
when he fanned 21 batters in a
16-inning 2-1 Washington Senators’ victory over the Baltimore Orioles.
He had 13 strikeouts through nine
innings and told Senators’ Manager Mickey Vernon he didn’t want to come out.
Near the end of the game, Cheney threw eight straight hitless innings.
On his 228th pitch, pinch hitter Dick Williams watched a
called third strike, and Cheney’s marathon day was over. Cheney might have
had his best year of his eight-year career in 1963 with a 2.71 ERA, seven
complete games and four shutouts.
He had an 8-9 record when he suffered an elbow injury that limited
his ability for the rest of his career.
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PHILLIP SIMPSON:
From the tiny town of Dixie, Ga., Phillip
Simpson took the college basketball world by storm both at ABAC and at the University of Georgia.
A 1956 graduate of
Dixie
High School, he played at
ABAC during the 1956-57 and 1957-58 seasons. Nicknamed
“Goose,” Simpson averaged 26 points per game as a freshman at ABAC when he
was named to the Georgia Junior College All-State team.
During his sophomore season, he
averaged 24 points a game for the Stallions and was recognized for being the
ninth highest scoring player in the nation. Simpson was selected for
All-America status and was chosen as the most valuable player in the state
tournament where ABAC finished second. ABAC
retired his jersey on the night of his last game as a Stallion.
Simpson finished his college career as a two-year starter for the University
of Georgia where legendary Kentucky Coach Adolph Rupp called him “:the best
rebounder in the SEC” in 1960. Simpson
played for Georgia Coach Red Lawson and was named Most Valuable Player for
Bulldogs during his junior season when he led UGA in total field goals,
total free throws, rebounds, total points and a 14.1 scoring average.
Simpson was named captain of the UGA team during his senior season.
He was a second team All-SEC selection for the 1960-61 season.
He received the Joe Jordan Memorial Trophy for his outstanding play
that year.
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NORMAN “RED” HILL:
Through the men’s tennis program at ABAC, the world came to
Tifton,
Ga.
And Norman
“Red” Hill opened the door.
Starting from scratch and developing a list
of contacts across the globe, Hill helped to put ABAC
on the international map with a tennis program which recorded an incredible
34 consecutive national tournament appearances. His Stallions won two
national championships, one in 1984 and the other on the final point of his
last match at ABAC in 1 999
before he retired. During his time at ABAC from 1965-99, Hill’s teams won 29
region titles, defeating many four-year colleges as tuneups along the way.
On three different occasions, Hill was named the National Coach of
the Year. At the time of his retirement, Hill had won more men’s college
tennis matches than any other coach in
America
with an unbelievable record of 848-183. Hill coached many outstanding
players including Jean Lagloire, who in 1989 and 1990 became the only player
in National Junior College Athletic Association history to win back to back
national titles at the number one singles slot. A native of Talbotton,
Hill played basketball at Brewton Parker and Georgia Southwestern. He
spent his final two years of eligibility on the court for the University of
Georgia Bulldogs. He also ran track in Athens under the direction of
legendary Coach Spec towns. The Red Hill Athletic Center on the campus
is named after him.
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MILENA STANOYTCHEVA:
The terms scholar and athlete often times seem to have no connection.
With Milena Stanoytcheva, they were a perfect fit.
Stanoytcheva, a native of
Sofia Bulgaria, became the only two-time, back-to-back number one women’s
singles tennis champion in the history of the National Junior College
Athletic Association when she played for ABAC in1999 and 2000.
She was also a Dean’s List student with a cumulative grade point
average of 3.48 on a 4.0 scale.
Stanoytcheva graduated from ABAC with a degree in business
administration.Bolstered by the outstanding play of this beautiful
Bulgarian, the Fillies finished second in the national tournament in 1999.
Stanoytcheva transferred her tennis and academic skills to Clemson University where she was a first team
All-ACC selection in 2002
She went undefeated in conference play.
She was also named to the ACC Academic Honor Roll when she was at
Clemson. She passed away in an airplane crash in 2004.
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