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PLU Athletic Hall of Fame
2001 Inductees
(Inducted Oct. 12, 2001)
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RICK JOHNSON
(Football, 1967-69)
Rick Johnson combined size (at 6’4"
and 265 pounds), strength and speed to become a dominant offensive
and defensive lineman for the Pacific Lutheran Knights during
the late 1960s. Johnson received numerous accolades for his
efforts during the 1968 and 1969 seasons. A three-year starter
and letter winner, Johnson earned all-conference first team
honors and United Press International (UPI) All-Coast second
team recognition in both 1968 and 1969. In addition, Johnson
earned Associated Press (AP) honorable mention All-American
and Lutheran College Team All-American recognition twice as
a collegian. Johnson received numerous other awards, including
Northwest Conference Offensive Lineman of the Year in 1969.
It was during that season that the team established what were
then school records for rushing yards in a game and total
offense in a season, those due in large part to Johnson’s
line play. The Dallas Cowboys of the National Football League
eventually drafted Johnson, who first came to Pacific Lutheran
as a walk on.
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WENDY
JOHNSON
(Women's Soccer, 1988-91)
Using her outstanding skill and speed, Wendy
Johnson tormented opposing defenses during a stellar four-year
career at Pacific Lutheran. She ranks first in career assists
with 50, third in goals with 63 and third in points with 176.
During the four years that Johnson played forward for PLU,
the Lutes won NAIA national championships in 1988, 1989 and
1991 and finished as national runner-up in 1990. Johnson compiled
16 goals and 12 assists to help the Lutes to their second
consecutive national title in 1989. She was the national tournament
MVP, the Intercollegiate Soccer Association of America (ISAA)
Offensive Player of the Year and a first team All-American
as a sophomore. In 1990, Johnson had her best statistical
year with 52 points on 18 goals and 16 assists, the latter
number tying her for first on the PLU single-season list.
Again, she was named to the national all-tournament team and
earned first team All-America accolades. During her senior
season, Johnson scored 15 goals and nine assists as the Lutes
regained the national title. For her work, Johnson earned
national all-tournament and All-America recognition. Besides
the national accord, Johnson received numerous all-conference
and all-region honors during her PLU soccer career.
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JIM KITTILSBY
(Administrator, 1970-86)
He was a light-hitting outfielder and a baseball
coach with an undistinguished record, but Jim Kittilsby had
an undeniably huge impact on Pacific Lutheran athletics. He
left behind 11 years of professional baseball administration
to return to his alma mater in 1970 as sports information
director, assistant athletic director and head baseball coach.
The face of PLU athletics transformed in the next 16 years,
including Kittilsby’s significant role in changing the
school’s nickname from Knights to Lutes, and his management
of the athletic program’s primary fund-raising arm,
Lute Club. Among the most popular and eagerly anticipated
of Kittilsby’s projects were the annual “Old Time
Prices Night” promotion at basketball games, and the
All-Sports Banquet featuring the humorous PLUTO (PLU Traumatic
Occurrences) Awards. Kittilsby worked hard to return PLU football
and men’s basketball to the radio, and he also handled
radio play-by-play duties for Lute baseball from 1983-85.
As sports information director, Kittilsby won three “best
in nation” awards for his recruiting books and media
guides. He was named PLU Distinguished Alumnus in Sports in
1980 and was named by the Tacoma News Tribune as Puget Sound
Athletic Administrator of the Year in 1978.
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MARCUS
LeMASTER
(Men's Swimming, 1988-91)
Marcus LeMaster is arguably the greatest male
freestyle swimmer in Pacific Lutheran swimming history. More
than 10 years after he last competed for the Lutes, LeMaster
still holds school records in the 50, 100, 200 and 500 freestyle
races. LeMaster set the 50-yard freestyle record of 21.46
in 1990, and he holds three of the 10 fastest times in PLU
history in the event. LeMaster has PLU’s 10 fastest
times in the 100-yard freestyle, including the school record
of 46.50 set in 1990. He has the top four times in the 200-yard
freestyle and holds the record of 1:42.14, also set in 1990.
LeMaster set the 500-yard freestyle school record of 4:39.62
in 1991. LeMaster won the 50-, 100- and 200-yard freestyle
titles at the 1990 conference meet and was a two-time conference
champ in each of those events while at Pacific Lutheran. LeMaster
finished second in the 200-yard freestyle and fourth in the
100-yard freestyle at the 1990 national meet. He was a five-time
All-American in his three-year PLU swimming career. |
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SHARI RIDER
(Women's Soccer, 1988-91)
Shari Rider combined great athleticism with
an innate understanding of the game to help guide the Lutes
to four consecutive NAIA championship match appearances, with
PLU taking crowns in 1988, 1989 and 1991. She was named to
the all-tournament team each of those four years, and was
the national tournament’s Most Valuable Player in both
1990 and 1991. A skillful midfielder, Rider wrote her name
throughout the PLU career records list. She ranks fifth in
points with 114, fifth in goals with 45 and eighth in assists
with 24. Rider earned all-conference and all-district honors
four straight years and had her best statistical campaigns
as a junior and senior, receiving first team All-America recognition
both seasons. In 1990, she earned Intercollegiate Soccer Association
of America (ISAA) Offensive Player of the Year honors after
scoring a career-high 42 points on 17 goals and eight assists.
In 1991, Rider compiled 36 points on 16 goals and four assists.
In addition to her offensive prowess, Rider ranked among the
top five in the team’s “defensive leader”
category all four of her seasons at Pacific Lutheran. During
that span, Rider helped the Lutes compile an astounding 81-9-7
overall record. |
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CHRIS
WOLFE
(Wrestling, 1983-86)
Chris Wolfe earned All-America honors in wrestling
twice in three national meet appearances during his Pacific
Lutheran career. Wolfe, who wrestled at 142 pounds, placed
third in the 1985 national meet and fourth at nationals the
following season. His 44-7 record in 1986 ranks him second
on Pacific Lutheran’s all-time single-season victory
list and third on the single-season winning percentage list
(.863). That same year, Wolfe recorded nine pins, tying him
for seventh for most falls in a season by a PLU wrestler.
He was named Pacific Lutheran’s “Outstanding Wrestler”
following the 1986 season. Despite competing for Pacific Lutheran
only three years, Wolfe ranks fifth in career victories with
103, and his average of 34.3 wins per season puts him first
on that list. Following his career on the mat, Wolfe made
the transition to PLU assistant coach and eventually to head
coach. He directed the Pacific Lutheran program from 1988
until 1995, and coached the only individual national champion
in the school’s history. |
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