Well Dun: November 2024

Longtime Dunmore volleyball coach Susan Dempsey and former Penn State and Oakland Raiders quarterback Matt McGloin headed the 40th annual induction ceremony for the Northeastern Chapter of the Pennsylvania Chapter Sports Hall of Fame last month at Fiorelli’s, Peckville.

Other inductees included Jordan Hoyt Calvey for track and field; Joseph Dente as a baseball/softball official; Elizabeth McGowan for basketball; Gina Chieffallo Moreno for softball; Steven Pratico for football and track and field; James Tomcho for basketball/coach; Rick Muntean for the service award, and Chris Imperiale for the media award.

Former WBRE Eyewitness News sports director/sportscaster Phil Schoener served as toastmaster. The affable Schoener currently works as a broadcaster for the SportsFever TV Network, a syndicator of NCAA college sports to ESPN.

Bob Walsh, Dunmore, is president of the Northeastern Chapter of the Pennsylvania Sports Hall of Fame. Mid Valley sports product Jerry Valonis is vice president. Judy Igoe Carr is secretary, and Tom “Doc” Dougherty is treasurer.

Other committee members include John Davies, Jerry Dempsey, Terry Greene, Rich Revta, and Chris Thomas.

Dunmorean reporter and sports editor Steve Svetovich is shown with newly-inducted member of the Northeast Chapter of PA Sports Hall of Fame Sue Dempsey, longtime Dunmore Volleyball coach, at her recent induction.

The U.S. Marine Corps provided the Presentation of Colors. Msgr. Patrick J. Pratico, Church of the Visitation of the Blessed Virgin Mary, provided Invocation and Benediction. The Fiorelli’s staff provided a cocktail hour and superb dinner buffet.

Sue Dempsey, Dunmore, was a volleyball standout at Cranford (NJ) High School School. She earned All-County honors in 1981 and then played at Seton Hall for one year before attending Marywood University and earning MVP honors for the Pacers in 1984.

She then became volleyball coach for Marywood and in four years (1992-96) won a PA Athletic Conference title and finished runner-up in 1992. She then headed to Abington Heights (1998-2001) and led the Lady Comets to their first District 2, Class 3A volleyball title in 2001.

She started the volleyball program at Dunmore in 2006 and guided the Lady Bucks to 10 Lackawanna League titles, two District 2 Class 1A championships and seven District 2 Class 2A runner-up finishes. The volleyball pioneer reached the 200 career-win milestone in 2018.

In her speech, she mentioned her late dad who passed away three weeks after she learned the news of her induction. She spoke of his constant words of encouragement throughout her life

“He taught me that if they say no, then you work harder until they say yes.”

Matt McGloin was a standout quarterback for West Scranton High School, where he threw for 5,485 yards and 58 touchdowns in his four years. He was a four-year starter in basketball, scoring 1,398 points. He was a three-year starter in baseball. He was named Times-Tribune Athlete of the Year in 2008.

Former Penn State and Oakland Raiders quarterback Matt McGloin is a recent inductee into the Northeast Chapter of the PA Sports Hall of Fame. Now a Lackawanna County Commissioner, he is shown with Dunmorean sports editor Steve Svetovich at the ceremony.

McGloin attended Penn State as a walk-on, making the team and eventually earning the starting quarterback job. He threw for 6,390 career yards and a school-record 48 touchdown passes.

He went on to the NFL, playing four years with the Oakland Raiders (2013-16). He played quarterback in 13 games, including seven starts in 2013. He completed 161-of-277 passes for a 58.1 completion percentage, 1,868 yards and 11 touchdown passes. He threw 11 interceptions. He passed for 1,587 yards and eight touchdown passes in only seven games in 2013.

He was also on the rosters of the Philadelphia Eagles, Houston Texans and Kansas City Chiefs.

Jordan Hoyt Calvey is a former track and field standout at Abington Heights, where she won three District 2 titles in the 200 meters, and two district crowns in the 100 meters in 2010. She was Times-Tribune co-Athlete of the Year after winning the PIAA Class 3A championship in the 200 meters and finishing as state runner-up Class 3A in the 100 meters. She went on to the University of Pittsburgh, where she ran on the 800-meter relay team that set a school record in 2011 at the Texas Relays.

Joseph Dente has been a baseball and softball umpire for 49 years. He is a high school boys and girls basketball official for 43 years. He initiated a referee mentoring program to help new officials reach the varsity level. He umpired/officiated 25 Lsckawanna League District II championship games and worked 25 PIAA tournament contests.

Elizabeth McGowan finished with 1,582 points as a girls’ basketball player at Mid Valley High School. She won the Lackawanna Northern Division scoring title and was tournament MVP in the Jaycees-Falcons Cage Classic. She was a junior college All-American at Lackawanna Junior College and played two years at Old Dominion University, where she was a part of two Colonial Athletic Association titles and made two NCAA tournaments.

Gina Chieffallo Moreno had a highly impressive career pitching record of 59-2 as a softball player for Valley View. She was a perfect 41-0 in the Lackawanna League, with two perfect games, two no-hitters, 37 shutouts, 494 strikeouts and a 0.49 ERA. She helped the Cougars win the PIAA title in 2013. She was Times-Tribune Player of the Year in 2012 and 2013.

She was on the Times-Tribune All Regional Team in 2011, 2012 and 2013. In 2013, she was the MaxPreps Softball Medium schools All-American.

At Brown University, she was a four-year varsity softball player where she had an 8-5 record and 2.73 ERA. A team captain twice, she was a two-time National Fastpitch Coaches Association All-American Scholar Athlete.

Steven Pratico was a center and defensive end on the Valley View Cougars 1992 PIAA Class 2A title team. He was captain on the state title team. He was named by Coaches’ Magazine to the All-American Team in 1992. He was a member of the track team, winning the Lackawanna Track Conference title in the shot put and discus. He played football at Rutgers University (1993-95) and Bucknell University (1995-97). He helped Bucknell to their lone 10-0 season in 1997.

James Tomcho was a first Team All-Scholastic basketball player at Mid-Valley High School. At Keystone College, he ranks ninth with 537 career rebounds and third with 103 career blocked shots. He was team captain for an 18-4 team at Keystone. He then became a basketball coach leading Penn Stats Scranton to a team record 21 wins and its first conference title. In 1992-93. He led Carbondale Sacred Heart to the Northeast Athketic Conference Division II and District 12 Class 1A titles.

Rick Muntean has over 35 years of professional baseball management experience, including 26 years as general manager at every minor league level. He was the first general manager for the Scranton Wilkes-Barre Red Barons. He received the Best Minor League Baseball Yearbook Award in 1990 and was Minor League Baseball 100th anniversary Promotion third place winner in 2001. He was Executive of the Year in the Northern League in 2004. He was voted Executive of the Year in the Future Collegiate Baseball League in 2014.

Chris Imperiale is sports editor of the Scranton Times-Tribune. He began his journalism career there in 1994 as a correspondent and was hired as a full-time sports reporter in 1997. In 2002, he was promoted to assistant sports editor and led a redesign of the sports section. In 2004, he became assistant metro editor. He became sports editor in 2009.

He led the Times-Tribune sports department to state and national acclaim, twice earning the prestigious AP Sports Editors Triple Crown as a top 10 newspaper in circulation in 2018 and 2020. He served on multiple state and national committees for sports editors and writers and was AP Sports Editors Mid-Athletic Regional Chairman from 2014 through 2016.

The 2024 inductees into the Northeast Chapter of the PA Sports Hall of Fame are shown, flanked by Chapter vice president Jerry Valonis, far left, and president Bob Walsh, far right.

NE Chapter of Sports Hall of Fame Has Inductees with Ties to Dunmore

By Steve Svetovich

Anthony Cantafio, Barry Fitzgerald and Jack Lyons, all with Dunmore ties, head this year’s group of 10 being inducted this month into the Northeastern Chapter of the Pennsylvania Sports Hall of Fame.

Barry Fitzgerald

The induction dinner will be held Sunday, October 24, at 5 p.m, at Fiorelli’s, Peckville.

Tickets for the event, including dinner, are $50 for adults and $25 for children 10 and under. For tickets, call Bob Walsh (570-346-2228) or Jerry Valonis (570-498-9461). Walsh is president of the Northeastern Chapter of the Pennsylvania Sports Hall of Fame.

Program ads run $100 for a full page, $50 for a half page. For program ads, call Tom “Doc” Doherty at 570-313-8141.

Also being inducted are Rich Beviglia, Terry Greene, Paulette Costa Karwoski, Mike Mancuso, the late George Roskos and the late Bill Terlecky who will receive the service award. 

Cantafio was an all-scholastic fullback at Dunmore, where he was honored with the Leo Hungerbuler Student Athlete Award. He was awarded a scholarship to the University of Pennsylvania where he played for four years. 

He began a 49-year football coaching career in 1968 as assistant coach for the University of Pennsylvania freshman football team. 

He was assistant coach at Mid Valley and Scranton Prep before becoming head football coach at Prep in 1993. As head coach for 14 seasons, he compiled a 77-64 record with 10 winning seasons. His teams were Big 11 champions, 2-year Eastern Conference Class AA champs, 3-year Eastern Conference semi-final runners-up, and Lackawanna Football Conference Division II champions. 

In 1982, Cantafio coached wrestling. His team won the Lackawanna League title and he was named Coach of the Year.

Barry Fitzgerald is one of the few local high school coaches to win over 600 games. In a 36-year career beginning at Mid Valley, he won two league titles and one District II championship at Bishop Hannan. His current Holy Cross teams were District II runners-up several times.

His team’s won three league and two District II championships while an assistant at Mid Valley. He coached two league championships as head softball coach at Bishop Hannan. 

The Scranton Times honored Fitzgerald by naming him All-Regional Softball Coach of the Year during his tenure at Bishop Hannan.

Jack Lyons is a graduate of Cathedral High School where he was a part of two PCIAA State basketball championships and two Lynett Tournament titles. While coaching at Bishop O’Hara, Scranton High and West Scranton, his teams made 17 state playoff appearances. His team’s won 23 preseason and Holiday championships, two Lackawanna League titles and were District II PIAA runner-up four times.

For the 2008-09 season, he was named Lackawanna League’s Coach of the Year. While at Lackawanna Junior College, coach Lyons was named Region XIX’s all-star coach and WARM radio Coach of the Year. He earned his 500th win coaching West Scranton Feb. 14, 2020. 

Paulette Costa Karwoski started her bowling career in 1972 with Gal Galdacci as her coach. She finished her competitive bowling career about 25 years later. She gathered notoriety by rolling the highest average in the Scranton Women’s Bowling Association (SWBA). She had the highest bowling average in the state for five years straight from 1978 through 1982. 

She had the highest women’s average (228) in the country from among four-million women bowlers. She was a member of the Sheraton Inn team which recorded the High Team Single game and High Team total scores. These scores are recorded in the Guinness World Book of Records.

She is a member of three Halls of Fame: the Chic Feldman, Women’s All-Star Association (WASA) and the Scranton Women’s Bowling Association.

Scranton Prep graduate Rich Beviglia was a two-time All-Lackawanna League catcher with a career batting average of .429. While playing for the Old Forge American Legion, his two-year batting average was over .400. At the same time, he was selected for both regional and state showcases for Collegiate and Major League scouts.

Beviglia was awarded a full scholarship to Duke where he was a four-year starter as a catcher. He was a two-year captain and three-season All ACC honorable mention, finishing his career with a .314 batting average.

Playing basketball at Scranton Prep, he was the second leading scorer in the Lackawanna League’s Southern Division, MVP of the Lynett Tournament, second team Lackawanna Southern Division all star in 1983 and first team all star in 1984.

He coached baseball at Scranton Prep in 2008 leading his team to the Lackawanna Division I and PIAA District 2 Class AA championships. He led Old Forge to two PIAA District 2 Class A titles. 

Terry Greene was an All-Scholastic basketball player at Scranton Tech in 1974. He averaged 22 points and six rebounds per game. He was selected to the Scranton Tribune’s Olyphant Rotary Club’s Dream Games’s South team in 1974 and 1975. 

He was an All-Scholastic basketball player at Scranton Central in 1975. He was presented the Aldwin Jones Memorial Award as the South’s team’s most outstanding player. In 1974-75, he was awarded the Theodore J. Wint Post 25 VFW Outstanding Team Player Award. 

Green was a basketball official for 36 years. The highlight of his career was officiating the 2006 PIAA State AA championship game.

Michael Mancuso earned Small School second team All-State honors playing football for Carbondale Area. As a specialist, he scored 19 touchdowns. He is one of the few athletes at Carbondale whose number is retired. 

As a track star, he was the District 2 AA 100 meter champion while finishing fourth in the 100 meter dash at the PIAA track and field championships. That earned him All-State honors. He was the District 2 champion in both the 100 and 200 meter run in 1992 and 1993. 

He was awarded a football scholarship to William and Mary, but transferred to East Stroudsburg. At ESU, he was a four-year letterman and the school’s first 1,000-yard receiver. He was a Division II first team All American and two-time Don Hansen Football Gazette All-American. He was a two-time first team All-PSAC All-Conference Eastern Division All -Star.

The late George Roskos was a graduate of the University of Scranton and member of its first wrestling team. He was head wrestling coach at West Scranton from 1973 through 1986. He posted a career record of 147-50-2. His teams were Lackawanna League champions in 1976, 1977 and 1986. He was selected Coach of the Year twice. 

He served as president of the Lackawanna Scholastic Wrestling League of which he was a co-founder. A total of 12 of his former athletes went on to coach varsity wrestling at various schools in the Lackawanna League.

The late Terlecky began his baseball front office career in 1978. He joined the staff of the Rochester Red Wings starting a 40-plus year career in baseball. He worked on the AA and AAA levels as well as Independent Leagues. He operated a Collegiate Summer Baseball League in New England. He received the International League Executive of the Year in 1991. He was the recipient of the Frank Cashen Award in 2003. The award is given to the top executive in the New York Mets organization. 

A baseball pioneer, he was named the first general manager of the Scranton/Wilkes Barre Red Barons, ushering professional baseball’s return to the area in 1989. He continued for eight successful seasons with attendance topping a half million in four of those years.

He brought the AAA All-Star game to Moosic in 1995. 

He oversaw the completion of Lackawanna County Stadium and was a fixture there during his tenure with the Red Barons. 

(Editors’s Note: Dunmorean sports editor Steve Svetovich is the 10th member of this class as the recipient of this year’s Media Award. He has been writing for The Dunmorean for close to 32 years and previously was a reporter for The Scrantonian Tribune, The Sunday Sun, Mid Valley News, The Scranton Weekly, The Pennsylvania Athlete, The Potter Enterprise in Coudersport, The Hawley News Eagle, The Scranton Times and The Baseball Bulletin. 

He received an award from United Press International (UPI) for his interview with Pete Gray, baseball’s only one armed position player ever. The story was named best sports story in the New Jersey and Pennsylvania market in 1986 and can be heard world wide on the web today through the Society for American Baseball Research. The live taped interview is in the library archives of the National Baseball Hall of Fame). 

Doin’ Dunmore: Four with Dunmore Ties to be Inducted into PA Sports Hall of Fame

By Steve Svetovich

Al Callejas, John Marichak, Kevin Walsh and Sara Harris Walsh, all with Dunmore ties, are among the nine to be inducted into the Northeast Chapter of the Pennsylvania Sports Hall of Fame, October 27, at 5 p.m. in the University of Scranton DeNaples Center.

The other inductees include Pam Kiesel, James “Red” McAndrew, Tom O’Donnell, Pete Smith and former New York Giants guard and two-time Super Bowl champion and four-time Pro Bowl selection Chris Snee, a Montrose Area graduate.

Callejas has 488 wins in a 25-year career as Bishop O’Hara and Holy Cross basketball coach. Fiery as a coach, he was twice named state coach of the year in his classification and took two of his teams to the state final. He is known as a tenacious competitor among his peers. 

Marichak, currently the superintendent at Dunmore High School, was a tough linebacker and three-sport athlete at Scranton Technical High School, where he was an excellent student in the classroom and twice an all-star on the gridiron. 

Marichak, intense on the football field, was a four-year starter at Villanova University and later head football coach at Scranton High School. His Scranton Knights twice won Lackawanna Football Conference Division I titles and a District 2 Class 4A crown in his nine years at the helm.

Kevin Walsh, MVP of both the baseball and basketball teams at Dunmore, was a 1,000-point scorer for the Bucks and MVP of the Lynett Memorial Tournament. He was a two-time District 2 champion, and in college played for two Wilkes University league championship teams.

Harris Walsh was a two-sport star in basketball and softball at Bishop O’Hara. She was a four-time Lackawanna League Southern Division all-star and three-time MVP of the Scranton Jaycees/LJC Girls’ Holiday Tournament and three-time All-Region selection.

Carly Graytock Shea will also be officially inducted. She was voted in two years ago.

Longtime sportscaster Kent Westling will receive the Northeast Chapter Sports Hall of Fame’s Media Award. Westling was the play-by-play voice of the Scranton Wilkes-Barre Red Barons for many years. 

Snee was a three-time All-Region football player and named All-State one year at Montrose. He played four years of standout football at Boston College before moving on to the New York Giants as a second round draft pick in 2004.

Smith was a highly regarded coach, official and previously standout wrestler at Abington Heights. 

Kiesel was the first woman to roll a 300 game in the Scranton Women’s Bowling Association. 

McAndrew was a stalwart basketball player and track star at Scranton Tech before a superb 35-year career as a high school basketball official.

O’Donnell was a standout two-way tackle at Scranton Prep who went on to play at West Point and was a four-year letter winner for the Army.

Graytock Shea was a 3,200 meter state champion at Forest City High School and three-time All-Patriot League cross country standout at Bucknell University. 

Tickets for this year’s event are $50 and can be obtained by calling Bob Walsh at 570-346-2228, or Jerry Valonis at 570-498-9461.