Northeast PA Sports Hall of Fame inducting 11 at DeNaples Center

sports
By Steve Svetovich

The Northeast Pennsylvania Sports Hall of Fame will induct 11 new members at its annual dinner Sunday, October 2, at the University of Scranton DeNaples Center.

The annual event will begin with a cocktail hour from 4:45  to 5:45 p.m. Dinner will be served at 6 p.m. The cost is $40 per ticket.

The 2016 inductees are Kevin Borrelli for cross country and track, Ryan Castellani for football, Kristen Maile for volleyball. Melissa Rose McTiernan for basketball. Jared Nepa for football, Tom Parry for basketball, Tom Rudzinski for softball, Mike Sokoloski for baseball, basketball and golf; Joe Tuzze for football and track; and the late Bill Zinsky for golf. Scott Walsh, the long time Scranton Times-Tribune sports writer, will receive the Service Award.

Bob Walsh (570-346-2228) is in charge of tickets. Tom Dougherty (570-346-9991) and Alice Foley (570-346-5796) are in charge of advertisements.

cross-country-running-clipart-1.jpgKevin Borrelli was a standout runner at Mid Valley Secondary Center where he won three district titles, three state medals and earned the title of Lackawanna County Runner of the Year in 2000 and 2001. He enjoyed an outstanding running career at Duquesne University. As a distance runner, he is a two-time winner of the Wilkes-Barre Triple Crown and won back-to-back Steamtown Marathon titles in. 2008-2009. As coach of both the men’s and women’s cross country teams for 6 years at Marywood, he was five times named Colonial States Athletic Conference coach of the year. His women’s teams won four straight CSAC Conference titles.

Ryan Castellani was an All-Regional running back and defensive back at Valley View High School. At Wagner College, he was a first-team 1AA All-American returns specialist. He is a three-time All-Northeast defensive back. He holds the all time punt return yardage record in a season with 507 yards and career average at 13.8 yards per return for both Wagner College and the Northeast Conference. He ranks sixth all-time in NCAA Division 1AA football in punt return yards (1,253).

Kristin Maile was a two-time basketball all-star and four-time all-star in volleyball at Forest City High School. She led both the basketball and volleyball teams to district titles and led the league in scoring for basketball.

vbShe was an MAC all-star in volleyball at the University of Scranton. She became the University of Scranton’s head volleyball coach and led her teams to 100 wins in five years. She was named MAC coach of the year twice. She earned 200 more coaching wins at Cedar Crest where she was athletic director and physical education director.

Melissa “Missy” Rose McTiernan led Scranton Prep to two Lackawanna League Southern Division titles. She was a three-time All-League selection and two-time All Regional pick. She averaged 19 points, eight rebounds and six assists as a senior and earned Team Player of the Year as a junior.

She was a four-year member of the University of Connecticut Lady Huskies who won four Big East regular season titles and four Big East tournaments. She was a member of the 1995 Women’s Basketball National title team. In 1997, she was named New England Scholar Athlete of the Year and was selected into the New England Hall of Fame.

Jared Nepa led Carbondale Area to the 2002 district title while passing for 1400 yards and 17 touchdown passes. He was first-team All-Conference on offense and defense and second-team All-State. He received the Bill McDonough Coaches Award. He was a first-team all-star, All Regional and third-team All-State in basketball.

While at Colgate, Nepa was named the Patriot League’s defensive player of the year. He was first-team All-Patriot League and All-Northeast linebacker of the year. He was inducted into the New York State Hall of Fame.

Tom Parry was a 1000-point scored at Lakeland High School. He led his team to the Class C district title in two seasons. In his 20 years as Lackawanna Trail basketball coach, he won over 240 games, including two District 12 titles. His Keystone States basketball team won a gold and silver medal.

Tom Rudzinski led Abington Heights, Lakeland High School and Mountain View High School all to softball championships. His combined record at the three schools was 194-55.

He officiated in four National Championship Minor Professional football games and was inducted into the Minor Professional Football Hall of Fame in 2011.

basketball.pngMike Sokoloski was Northern Division basketball leading scorer at Scott High School. He was also a two-time all-star pitcher. At East Stroudsburg University, he twice pitched complete game doubleheaders. As an amateur baseball player, he pitched 15 years and won over 200 games, including 12 in the playoffs.

He is the only member of the Stonehedge Country Club to win the Stonehedge Slam, or all six major tournaments.

Joe Tuzze is a two-time All-State selection at linebacker for Lakeland High School. He was a key member of four undefeated Lackawanna Conference championship teams. He was three-time All-League and All Regional. He averaged 4.6 yards per carry as a four-year starter at Akron University where he was an MAC Vern Smith Leadership Award nominee.

The late Bill Zinsky was a 41-year member of the Elkview Country Club. He won its golf championship in 1968, 1978 and 1998. He won senior club titles in 1989 and 1997. He won the Ed Daley Memorial Tournament title in 1986 and the Lackawanna Senior Golf title in 1992. He scored three holes in one.

Scott Walsh has been a sports reporter 30 years for the Scranton Times-Tribune. He currently covers motor sports, local colleges and high school cross country. He is a copy editor and page designer. He is an adjunct professor in the Communications department at the University of Scranton. He teaches a sports writing class.

He has earned numerous awards for sports writing and editing. He has been honored by the Atlantic Collegiate Baseball League and Minor League Football Alliance. He is a writer for New York Yankees Magazine. He previously covered the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins.

 

Commissioners’ Cross Country Invitational Race

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The annual Lackawanna County Commissioners Cross Country Invitational Race will be held on Saturday, Sept. 10, from 9 a.m. to noon at McDade Park, Scranton, featuring high school athletes from a tri-state area.  The top 25 finishers in the boys and girls junior high categories along with the girls and boys varsity divisions will also be recognized.  Winning teams in each of the race categories will also be honored.

Information on the meet is available from the County’s Parks & Recreation Department at 570-963-6764.

Shown from left: Commissioner Jerry Notarianni, Jack McAuliffe, Meet Co-Chairman; John DeNunzio, retired Parks & Recreation staff; Commissioner Laureen A. Cummings, Commissioner Patrick M. O’Malley, Dave Grecco, Meet Co-Chairman; and William Davis, the County’s Deputy Director of Parks & Recreation.

 

Just a Thought…

By Maureen Hart

I don’t know if any of you play the old children’s travel game of license plates (you count license plates to see how many states you can find during a road trip), but I do it all the time as a diversion on the interstates. I am constantly amazed at how many cross country travelers I can find on a two or three hour drive – I aim to spot at least half of them, and usually end up with about 35

635863057972668455-SC-Regular-Passenger-Ver2-with-Black-AN-for-JPEG-HiResI recently traveled to Amherst, Mass., and not only found myself noting the various states I saw, but at one point I started humming the song “Carolina in the Morning” when I saw a South Carolina plate. I guess that song (“Nothing could be finer than to be in Carolina in the morning”) could count for either North or South Carolina, but a bit later, I decided to give the song to North Carolina, and to switch South Carolina to the flapper favorite “Charleston.”

That tune stuck with me until I noticed a New York plate which brought on my hearty rendition of “New York New York” (thankfully, there was nobody else in the car with me!).

Soon, I was obsessed trying to think of a song that matched up with the other states I spotted. So, I’ve decided to share what I came up with. Maybe somebody else can fill in the voids where I could not think of an appropriate tune.

For Alabama, I thought of “Stars Fell on Alabama,” a jazz standard from the 1930s sung by Billie Holliday, Ella Fitzgerald and Frank Sinatra, with lyrics starting: “We lived our little drama/We kissed in a field of white/And stars fell on Alabama last night.”

Not all states were quite that easy. I came up blank on songs for Maine and Connecticut 0amateurradiooperatoruntil I got lucky with West Virginia –easy, John Denver’s “Country Roads”—(Country roads, take me home, To the place I belong, West Virginia, mountain momma ….) and Florida which recalls “Moon Over Miami.” Stumped with Rhode Island, I got back into the New England swing with “Moonlight in Vermont” (Pennies in a stream/Falling leaves of a sycamore, Moonlight in Vermont), which was also sung by Holliday, Fitzgerald and Sinatra. I did not, however, think of anything for New Hampshire or my destination state, Massachusetts.

I counted license plates that were easy: “Deep in the Heart of Texas” (The stars at night are big and bright…), The “Tennessee Waltz” AND “Rocky Top,” “Georgia on My Mind”, “California Dreamin’,” “Way Down Yonder in New Orleans” for Louisiana, and “St. Louis Blues” for Missouri, along with “The Missouri Waltz”.)

Oklahoma was the easiest ever (the title song to the Rodgers & Hammerstein musical), and “My Old Kentucky Home” and “Carry Me Back To Old Virginia” were also pretty simple calls.

I was stumped for a minute on Illinois until I thought of “Chicago, Chicago,” and “Back Home Again in Indiana” sufficed for that Midwestern state. I couldn’t find anything for Minnesota, although when I looked it up later I found a song called “Rock ‘n Roll Is Alive (And It Lives in Minneapolis)” by the late Prince.

license_plateNow my favorite Michigan song, ironically, is the fight song of my beloved Nittany Lions rival. the University of Michigan  (Hail! To the victors valiant, Hail! To the conqu’ring heroes, Hail! Hail! To Michigan…). Even though I’m rooting against the Wolverines, once I hear this in a stadium I can’t get the tune out of my head. However, I imagine the rest of you who are not lovers of college fight songs would probably pick something from Motown!

Similarly, the song I associate with another Big Ten university is “On, Wisconsin!”/On, Wisconsin! Plunge right through that line!/Run the ball clear down the field/A touchdown sure this time…”

Bruce Springsteen gave us a song in 1982 called simply “Nebraska,” which is helpful, and The Boss has given us tons of songs out of New Jersey, but I’m going with a very old tune called “Jersey Bounce” (They call it that Jersey bounce/A rhythm that really counts…) sung by the great Ella Fitzgerald.

John Denver also immortalized another state with his classic “Rocky Mountain High” (But the Colorado rocky mountain high/I’ve seen it rainin’ fire in the sky…). Of the farthest-flung states, it was actually easy. There is an old song called “North to Alaska,” a title song to a 4ed078b3e3cc811262011627151960 movie sung by the late Johnny Horton, and the lovely “Hawaiian Wedding Song” made so famous by Elvis Presley in the movie “Blue Hawaii.”

Believe it or not, the song with the most controversy for a state is that of generally peaceful Maryland, whose state song, “Maryland My Maryland” is sung to the tune of “O Christmas Tree” and is a Southern Civil War anthem which includes lyrics descripting a tyrant who is actually Abraham Lincoln, and referring to “Northern scum,” meaning the Union and its army. Amazingly, despite past efforts to change these lyrics, the song remains the official state song in its original form!

A state with an “unofficial” state rock song is Washington, and in an even stranger twist, it is “Louie, Louie,” a song about a Jamaican sailor which has its origins in the soggy Northwest, however, and is played at the seventh inning stretch at all Seattle Mariner games.

There are countless songs about “Mississippi,” but I’ll just pick the one by Bob Dylan. There are also lots of songs about Ohio, including one by Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young, but most people also think of “Youngstown” by Springsteen. Ohio is the only state to have an official rock song, and it is “Hang on Sloopy” a hit song for The McCoys (natives of Dayton) in 1965.

plate-pa-large.jpgAnd, finally the songs I associate the most with our own fair state are oldies like “The Pennsylvania Polka” and “Pennsylvania 6-5000” by the Glenn Miller Orchestra, but we are blessed with many others, including “Allentown” by Billy Joel; “Philadelphia Freedom” by Elton John; “Streets of Philadelphia” by Springsteen; “Pittsburgh” by “The Lemonheads” and even “Harrisburg” by Josh Ritter. For Scranton, I guess we have to go with “30,000 Pounds of Bananas,” a 1974 song by Harry Chapin about a truck accident on Moosic Street. For Dunmore, let’s just settle on the DHS alma mater!

Other states I could not identify with a song have included: Iowa, Delaware, Arkansas, Arizona, New Mexico, Wyoming, Utah, Oregon, Idaho, Nevada, Montana, Kansas, and North and South Dakota. In the absence of specific songs for these wonderful states, I’ll suggest “America the Beautiful.”