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JIM GALLO
Jim Gallo was the quintessential athlete in the early years of the Rockland County Public School Athletic League (RCPSAL). A 1938 graduate of Haverstraw High School, Gallo earned a total of 14 varsity letters in his celebrated schoolboy career.

A three-time All-County football selection, Jimmy was a two-way performer, playing end, quarterback and linebacker over his four varsity seasons. He scored the first touchdown in the history of Markham Field in H a v e r s t r a w, and played a notable role in bringing the 1936 RCPSAL football championship to H a v e r s t r a w. Contemporaries recall the 6-foot-3, 200-pound Gallo as an athlete of outstanding physical condition. Fleet-footed, he was a quality runner, a crisp blocker and arguably the most renowned tackler in the county.

He earned All-County basketball honors three times. Gallo was a tenacious defender and a strong rebounder. He served as captain and led his team in scoring in his senior season. Jim was a key contributor to the Haverstraw High School's dominance of RCPSAL basketball over an eight-year span that saw the Red Raiders win seven league titles. Gallo also was a member of the storied Letchworth Village Big '5' basketball team.

As a four-time All-RCPSAL baseball player, Jim played a different position in each of his four years. He was seen as a teamÕs strength in any position he played. He topped the Haverstraw nine in 1938 with a .409 batting average. Jimmy also participated in track & field with marks in the high jump, discus and shot put that would be considered competitive when compared to the schoolboy standards of today. Gallo received an athletic scholarship to Colgate University, where he played offensive and defensive end in football, and was a forward on the basketball team. Jim graduated from Colgate in 1942 with a B.S. in education. Like most young men and women of his era he joined the military at a time of war. A Marine, Gallo served in the Pacific Theater as a second lieutenant during the island sieges of Guadalcanal, Iwo Jima, Guam, and Bougainville. The Haverstraw native also served in the combat areas of Korea and Vietnam. Jim's 31-year career in the United States Marine Corps ended with his retirement as a full colonel in 1973. He was the recipient of four Campaign Ribbons, Silver Star, Purple Heart, Legion of Merit, White Rose of Finland, Navy Cross, and the Vietnam Medal. He was additionally awarded Presidential and Navy Unit Citations.

Following his discharge, Jim continued serving his country with honor. He was appointed to the nation's diplomatic staff as Naval Attache to Finland, and later to the diplomatic staff to Lebanon.

Gallo has taught military science at East Carolina University and the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. From his early days as a student and athlete at Saint Peter's Elementary School in Haverstraw, Gallo was highly respected. He possessed a unique ability to get his team to play at a high level. Not the most boisterous of leaders, he would rather fire up his teammates by setting an example. On the court or field he would sink an outside shot against the opponent's best defender, or force the right-handed guard to use his left hand. Jim taught his teammates to stick to the team's goals, even in tough times.

He will be remembered as a player who enjoyed the camaraderie and competition that enriches the experience of playing scholastic sports. He is a charter member of the North Rockland Sports Hall of Fame.

It can be said that James Gallo is the cornerstone of North Rockland High School's Tradition of Excellence as well as one of the premier athletes enshrined in the Rockland County Sports Hall of Fame.

Jim now resides in Scottsdale, Ariz., with his wife, Jean. He has three daughters: Cristine lives in San Francisco, Gail lives in Nanuet, and Wendy is from Lake Tahoe.


DOMINIC “BABE” GAMBOLI
Elected in 1991 ... 1935 Haverstraw H.S. graduate ... “Mr. Little League” ... involved in Little League Baseball in Rockland for more than 40 years ... one of the founders of the Haverstraw Little League in 1952, and the District 18 (Rockland) Little League administrator for close to 20 years ... he conceived the two-inning rule, which requires that all players must play at least two innings each game ... has represented Rockland at all national Little League conventions ... under Gamboli, the Haverstraw Little League, with its strong organization, well-groomed field and successful teams, became a model through-out the area ... Gamboli has been a catalyst in the running of the Rockland Journal-News Little League Tournament of Champions (played for the benefit of Jawonio) since its inception in 1960 ... Gamboli managed the Haverstraw Red Sox to league titles in 1953 and ‘54 ... the ‘53 team lost the state title to Schenectady, the eventual national champion ... Gamboli was president of the Haverstraw LL from 1956 to ‘65 and again in 1968-69 ... as an athlete, he lettered in football, baseball and basketball at Haverstraw, and played in the Rockland County Baseball League for the Knights of Columbus team and other semipro teams ... in bowling, he won the first E.J. Maurer Golden Pins Tour-nament, and anchored the six-man Gamboli Brothers team to 20 victories in 21 American Bowling Congress tournaments in New York and New Jersey ... Gamboli’s brother, Nick, was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1977, and his nephew, Tony Jr., was elected in 1982.

NICK GAMBOLI
Inducted in 1977 ... graduate of Haverstraw H.S. ... born in 1898, the eldest of 12 sons of a Haverstraw brickyard foreman ... was a nationally recognized boxing official for 44 years ... a New York State boxing judge starting in 1933, he judged more than 2,000 fights in every club and arena from New York City to Syracuse ... at one time was said to be the oldest active profess-ional boxing judge in the world ... judged the fights of such greats as Joe Frazier, Floyd Patterson, Emile Griffith, Archie Moore, Willie Pep, Ezzard Charles, Jim Braddock and Tony Canzoneri ... also promoted professional wrestling exhibitions with stars like Bruno Sammartino and Antonino Rocca ... a onetime fight manager who served as ring announcer and timekeeper of boxing bouts, and also promoted amateur boxing ...in 1925, he organized and was elected the first president of the Rockland County Baseball Umpires Association ... in 1952 was one of the main organizers of the Haverstraw Little# League ... was the play-by-play voice of The Journal-News Little League Tournament of Champions ... umpired high school games in Rockland and Bergen counties, as well as Little League ... was elected to the executive committee of the New York State Bowling Congress in 1937, and was captain of the six-man Gamboli Brothers bowling team that took part in the national championships in New York City ... died in 1982.

TONY GAMBOLI JR.
Elected in 1982 ... Spring Valley H.S. Class of 1956 ... only pitcher in Rockland scholastic history to pitch back-to-back no-hitters, turning the trick on April 24 and 28 ... set several other county pitching records, either still standing or since broken, including: most no-hitters, career, 3; most strikeouts in a season, 136; tied for most strikeouts in a seven-inning game, 19; most strikeouts in two consecutive games, 38; most consecutive no-hit innings, 18 1/3; most strikeouts in a relief appearance, 13 (consecutively); lowest ERA in a season, 0.38; tied for the highest winning percentage (10-0, 1.000); most one-hitters, career, 3 ... averaged better than .400 at the plate over three years ... played four years of baseball and basketball at New Paltz Teachers College, 1956-60 ... set school records for lowest ERA in a season (0.72) and career (1.12), and most strikeouts in a seven-inning game (19) ... won the league batting title twice, hitting .438 and .436 ... set the New Paltz record for hits in a game with six ... during the summers of 1956-60, played semipro in the New York-New Jersey League ... led the league in hitting twice, at .465 and .475 ... signed by the New York Yankees in 1961 to Florida League farm club, where he played with future Yankees Roy White and Mel Stottlemyre ... severely beaned in 1961 season, never recovered, and retired in 1962 ... as a high school coach in Sayville, L.I., his golf teams won eight league titles in eight years, and his basket-ball team won the Suffolk County title in 1970.

GEORGE GARRECHT
Installed in 1996 ... 1942 Haverstraw H.S. alumnus ... born and raised in Tappan ... basketball and baseball player for Haverstraw High, and later a softball, sailing, bowling and golf standout ... inducted into Rockland Soft-ball Hall of Fame, 1984 ... pitched no-hitter for Haverstraw versus Pearl River in 1942 ... taught himself to pitch softball windmill-style during World War II duty in the Navy ... was a superb pitcher in the County Baseball League for eight years with teams such as the Tappan Blue Devils, the Nanuet AC and the Tappan Colonials ... pitched for County Baseball League champion-ship teams in 1949 (Nanuet AC), 1951 (Tappan Colonials, Division II champs), and 1952 and ‘53, (Colonials) ... pitched for Tappan-based teams in the County Softball League until 1961 ... his softball teams won county titles in 1954, ‘56 through ‘59, and ‘61 ... Garrecht’s record in those years was 54-8 with four no-hitters ... in sailing, Garrecht raced a Lightning Class sail-boat from 1954 to ‘64, and crewed a Lightning boat that won a world champion-ship regatta in Canada ... in bowling, he rolled a 755 series in the Nyack Classic League in 1951, and was a member of championship teams in the Nyack Classic and Kingpin Booster leagues six times ... in golf, he won the senior championship at Rockland County Club in 1983, ‘85, ‘89 and ‘93, and won the Ken Venturi Classic gross championship in 1985, ‘89 and ‘95.

TONY GEMMA
Inducted in 1985 ... came to Rockland, to the Clarkstown School District, in 1954 as varsity baseball coach and physical education teacher ... in 20 years as head coach for Clarkstown and Clarkstown North, Gemma posted 176 wins and 97 losses, despite a mark of 8-26 during the first three building years ... Gemma’s teams won or shared the Rockland PSAL championship nine times ... from 1958 to 1970, his Clarkstown teams never finished lower than second ... Gemma was Rockland Coach of the Year five times ... in his final year, 1975, Clarkstown won the Rockland County, Section 9 and regional championships ... at Dobbs Ferry High in Westchester, Gemma earned 12 varsity letters in football, basketball and baseball, and was an All-League pick in basketball and baseball in his junior and senior years ... he spurned a scholarship offer to Fordham to pursue a pro baseball career, which lasted briefly as a pitcher in the New York Giants organization ... in the Navy, played on a team managed by Hall of Famer Bob Feller ... at Ithaca College, he was a prominent pitcher under Bucky Freeman, and also played football and basketball.

TOD GILES
In the sport of wrestling, a sport of patience and perseverance and tolerance of pain, Tod Giles has persevered more than just about any wrestler in Rockland County history. Although he did not reach the pinnacle of amateur sport, the Olympic Games - Charles Strack of Nyack, a 1928 Olympian, is the only Rockland wrestler to climb that peak - Giles can be justifiably proud of his enduring body of work while striving to attain the Olympic ideal.
The 1980 Ramapo High School graduate parlayed the lessons learned under Coach Tom Canty into a sterling two-decade portfolio of success at every level. Twice he was in contention for an Olympic berth and twice he came tantalizingly close to his goal.
In the 1996 U.S. Greco-Roman Olympic Trials, competing at 180.5 pounds, Giles finished third, which means he was second alternate to the Olympic team. And eight years earlier, in the 1988 Greco-Roman Olympic Trials, competing at 198 pounds, he finished fourth (despite wrestling with a dislocated collarbone), thus becoming the third alternate to the Olympic team. That same year, he defeated two-time world champion Vladimir Popov of the Soviet Union en route to winning the Haparanda Cup in Sweden.
The life of an elite wrestler is one of physical hardship and health maintenance; injuries are an almost inevitable byproduct of such rigorous one-on-one contact. Like other grapplers, Giles has had his share - bulging neck disk, broken foot, dislocated collarbone, other ailments - but each time he was able to overcome the setback and re-establish his presence on the national level.
Three times Giles finished second in the U.S. Greco-Roman National Championships, competing at 198 pounds in 1988 and 1989, and at 187 pounds in 1997. All told, he is a nine-time place-winner at the World Championship team trials and a seven-time place-winner at the GrecoÂRoman National Championships. Furthermore, he's a five-year Team USA member; four-time member of the U.S. Marine Corps All-Marine wrestling team; and the 1988 World Military Games freestyle champion.
At Ramapo, wrestling at 177 pounds, Giles was a two-time New York State place-winner - third his senior year and sixth his junior year; a two-time Section 9 (Rockland, Orange, Ulster, Sullivan counties) and two-time Rockland County champion; and a two-time runner-up in the Empire State Games scholastic division. He also was a second-team All-County running back in football twice for the Gryphons and competed in track as well. At Boston University (he wrestled his freshman year at Rhode Island), Giles became the school's first All-America wrestler, achieving the feat in his senior year, 1984, at 190 pounds. He was a four-time New England Conference tournament titlist and four-time NCAA qualifier, and also won an Empire State Games gold medal in the open division while a student at BU.
Giles felt an obligation early in his career to give back to the sport that has given him so much. In 1985-86, as a 23-year-old, he was head coach of the combined Spring ValleyjRamapo (East Ramapo) wrestling team. He follow that up with stints as assistant coach at BU, Georgia State, East Ramapo again and Army, followed by a two-year head-coaching assignment at Army. As a U.S. Marine, he earned a National Defense medal for his involvement in Operation Desert Storm. Giles, who is 39, and his wife, Leonie, reside in Harriman in Orange County. They are expecting their first child in July.

JOE GOLDSMITH
Elected in 1994 ... Ramapo H.S. Class of 1972 ... in Rockland wrestling annals, one of the all-time greats ... was second scholastic wrestler from Rockland County to win two New York State championships ... earned All-America status in both high school and college ... as a junior, won state title as a 105-pounder ... as a senior, won the 112-lb. crown, pinning three of his four opponents ... in two trips to state tournament, he had five pins, two superior decisions and one decision ... finished with a high school career record of 69-1-1, his only loss coming in the Section 9 final when he was a sophomore ... two-time Section 9 champion ... three-time Rockland County PSAL champion ... could bench press 255 lbs. ... won numerous tournaments and Most Outstanding Wrestler awards ... as a sophomore, he finished third at 105 lbs. in the National AAU Junior Olympics in Evanston, Ill. ... as a junior, he placed second in the National (high school) Wrestling Federation Tourna-ment at Iowa University ... at the end of his senior year he attempted to make the 1972 Olympic team and came in second in Northeastern regional trials in Springfield, Mass. ... he earned a wrestling scholarship to the Univer-sity of Southern Illinois ... four times he was Illinois state collegiate champion, at either 118 or 123 lbs. ... Goldsmith won the Western U.S. Open Tournament, and placed sixth in the NCAA Division I Championships his senior year ... was coached at Ramapo by fellow Hall of Famer Tom Canty ... Gold-smith was assistant coach at Eastern Michigan for one year.

ED GREENE
Enshrined in 1977 ... 1931 Suffern H.S. graduate ... exceptional athlete, winning coach, dedicated and pioneering athletic director at Suffern High and Rockland Community College ... at Suffern, he was All-County two years each in football, basketball and baseball, and lettered in track as well ... he led the Mounties to the 1930 Rockland PSAL football title, and his dramatic three-run homer lifted Suffern to a 9-7 victory over Nyack to clinch the county baseball title ... at Springfield College, he played four years of football, basketball and baseball, and made second-team All-New England in basketball in ‘34 ... as a coach at Suffern, he led the football team to four straight undefeated seasons from 1938 to ‘41 ... Greene also piloted the Mounties to the county basketball title in 1946, the baseball championship in 1939, ‘40 and ‘41, and the county track meet crown in 1937 ... in 1959, Greene became Rockland Community College’s first athletic director ... he started a basket-ball team at RCC, then introduced baseball, soccer and wrestling to the pro-gram ... he coached baseball and basketball at RCC from 1959 to ‘65, was athletic director until 1970, and set up a scholarship fund at the college to help students who were interested in a career in physical education ... Greene also played semipro basketball from 1935 to ‘42 for such teams as the Nyack Arrows, Spring Valley Bengals, St. Ann’s of Nyack and the Hillburn Fire Department.

DEBBIE GRANT
From Ramapo High School to Villanova University to national and international fame, Debbie Grant has represented Rockland County better than any female track and field athlete ever has.
In fact, based on the quality and longevity of her 22-year athletic career, the graceful, quietly confident Grant has put together one of the greatest records of achievement in Rockland County, in any sport. To reduce her career to a set of numbers would not do justice to the impact the 1983 Ramapo graduate has had on the track and field landscape. But since the facts and figures best illuminate her greatness, they bear retelling here:
. Only three Rocklanders have ever competed in the Olympic Games. Grant came within four ... . one-hundredths of a second of being the fourth overall and first for track and field. In the 1988 U.S. Olympic Trials, she placed fourth in the 800-meter (half-mile) run in 1 minute, 59.97 seconds. The third-place finisher ran 1:59.93 in a photo finish. The top three finishers qualify for the Olympic Games. No Rockland track athlete has come closer to making the Olympics.
. In the 1992 U.S. Olympic Trials - the trials are held every four years - Grant finished fifth in the 800 meters, missing an Olympic berth by two places. And just last year, in the 2000 Olympic Trials, she placed sixth in the 1,500 meters (the metric mile). In all, she has competed in five U.S. Olympic Trials (1984, 1988, 1992, 1996, 2000), more than any other Rockland track athlete.
. At Ramapo, Grant won the U.S. Junior National (under age 20) championship - Rockland County's first - in the 400-meter hurdles, and thus earned high school All-America status. Her time, 59.83, is sixth-fastest ever in New York State. She was a five-time New York State champion; three-time Rockland County Track and Field Athlete of the Year; County record-holder in the 400-meter hurdles and 400-meter relay, and the indoor 600-yard run (1:22.61); and holder of numerous school records.
. At Ramapo, under the direction of Coach Jim Pollard and his staff, Grant helped lead the Gryphons' small but talented squad to four straight Rockland County team championships and four consecutive Section 9 (Rockland, Orange, Ulster, Sullivan counties) team titles.
. At Villanova, she was a seven-time collegiate All-America; 14-time Big East Conference champion; member of the fastest collegiate 4x800-meter relay team in history; Villanova women's record-holder for the 800-meter run (2:00.47); and a member of the Villanova University Hall of Fame. . In her post-collegiate career, aside from her Olympic Trials performances, Grant was 1988 U.S. Olympic Festival champion in the 800 meters; 11 times she has been ranked in the top 10 in the U.S., primarily in the 800; 14 times she has been a U.S. Championships finalist at 800, 1,500 or 3,000 meters; and twice she competed in the U.S. versus Great Britain Dual Meet. She also registered several high finishes in track meets on the competitive European circuit.
Today, at age 35, Grant, who is a native of Kingston, Jamaica, continues to compete in track and field, and is still one of America's better 800- and 1,500-meter female runners. After earning her bachelor's and masterÕs degrees in civil engineering from Villanova, she embarked on a career in that profession. Currently she is a facilities engineer for North Brunswick, N.J.-based Equiva Technical Services, a company that manages maintenance and construction for Shell and Texaco gas stations. She has two children, Kyle, 10, and Myles, 3.

JOE GRASSO
Joseph Holland Lifetime Acheivement Award was presented to Joe Grasso in 2003. He was a founding member of the Rockland County Sports Hall of Fame for his 60 plus years of service to the athletic community of Rockland.

BOB GROSSMAN
1979 inductee ... greatest race car driver in Rockland history ... lived in Upper Grand View ... three times Grossman was national champion, accumulating the most points on the U.S. circuit of sports cars ... the 24-hour endurance race at LeMans, France, is the most prestigious international sports car en-durance race, covering more than 1,200 miles ... Grossman finished the race seven times in 11 tries, and won it twice in the Grand Touring Class, in 1960 in a Corvette and in 1971 in a Ferrari ... he was the first American driver to finish LeMans three straight years ... he also was the first driver , American or otherwise, to finish the race six consecutive years ... usually about 70 cars start at LeMans; Grossman finished in the top 10 seven times ... in the National Grand Prix at Daytona, Fla., another major 24-hour endurance test, Grossman had one victory, and one finish each of second, third, fourth and fifth in 10 tries ... in the Grand Nationals in Nassau, the Bahamasóa two-hour sprint raceóhe entered 10 times and won five ... Grossman compet-ed in the 12-hour endurance races at Sebring, Fla., 18 times, won five and finished in the top 10 eight times ... other significant victories he registered were at Cumberland, Bridgehamton, Lime Rock, Montgomery, Marlboro, Watkins Glen, Roosevelt Raceway and Vineland.

GUY GUCCIONE
Elected in 1990 ... came to Suffern H.S. as wrestling coach in 1962 after outstanding mat careers in high school and college ... in eight years as head coach, Guccione led the Mounties to six Rockland County tournament champion-shipsóthree outright titles and three co-titles ... they also won four Section 9 crowns and a host of other tournament baubles ... Guccione kept alive a 15-year county tournament victory streak (1951-65) by Suffern, the first 12 years of which were coached by George Fuge ... Guccione developed many outstanding wrestlers at Suffern, including Rockland’s first state champion (Eric Watts), and the first wrestler to win state titles in two weight classes (Lee Klepper) ... as a schoolboy wrestler at Bay Shore High on Long Island, Guccione won 74 matches and lost only two from 1953 to ‘56 ... he was undefeated in Suffolk County competition all four years and won 59 straight matches, which remained the longest winning streak in Long Island wrestling for 20 years ... was Long Island champion three straight years, Metropolitan champion in 1956 ... earned full scholarship to Penn State, where he was an NCAA Tournament semifinalist in 1960 and a three-time place-winner in the Eastern Championships ... Guccione posted a 20-6 coaching mark at Bellefonte (Pa.) Area H.S. before coming to Suffern.
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