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DICK TEETSEL
When asked several years ago to name his greatest coaching highlight, Dick Teetsel listed two: coaching his two sons, Mike and Rick, on the Albertus Magnus track team, and "being part of the transition of track & field and cross country over five decades to the point where Rockland County programs, coaches and athletes are widely known and greatly respected."

Although he is far too modest to acknowledge it, Dick Teetsel is a big reason why Rockland County programs today are so widely esteemed in the sports of track & field and cross country. No coach has facilitated the growth and development of track & field and cross country in Rockland County more than Dick Teetsel.

Over two separate head-coaching tenures at Albertus Magnus from 1965 to 1981—as well as 11 prior years in Stony Point and Haverstraw schools and later assistant-coaching posts at North Rockland and Nanuet high schools—Teetsel developed philosophies and put in place initiatives that would earn him a reputation as an innovator and trailblazer.

The word "first" keeps cropping up in conjunction with Teetsel’s name. Consider:

• Teetsel launched Rockland’s first winter track program of training and meet scheduling, at Haverstraw-Stony Point in 1963-64.

• Teetsel organized the first invitational scholastic track meet in Rockland history, the Red Raider Relays, in 1962-63.

• Teetsel co-founded (along with Nanuet’s Dave Hanson) the first large-scale spring track invitational in Rockland, the Nanuet Relays, in 1968. The meet drew teams from as far away as Philadelphia and Long Island.

• Teetsel founded the first cross country invitational in Rockland history, the Albertus Magnus Invitational, in 1969.

• Teetsel was the first track/cross country coach in the county to take his team regularly to major competitions outside Rockland, especially to New York City sites such as Van Cortlandt Park in the Bronx and the Armory Track & Field Center in Manhattan.

• Teetsel pioneered the "Big-Meet" philosophy of emphasizing the weekend invitational and championship meets over dual meets, a practice that is widely accepted today.

Teetsel’s career as an official was similarly groundbreaking. He was one of the original organizers of the New York State Track & Field Officials Association in the mid-1960s, and is a past president and secretary of that organization. He also was a founder of the Rockland County Track & Field Officials Association (1963) and the Southern Catskill Track & Field Officials Association (1972), and helped develop the written constitution for those two organizations.

Furthermore, Teetsel was the first official in Rockland and Section 9 to use an electronic photo device at the finish line, a precursor to the photo-timing system that is employed at all major competitions today. He also wrote the officials’ clinic curriculum for judging and timing, and developed an operations manual for the proper administration of dual meets.

Teetsel was a timer and meet official for more than three decades at all of the major meets at Madison Square Garden, including the Millrose Games, the USA National Indoor Championships and the U.S. Olympic Invitational, in addition to numerous other competitions such as the Empire State Games and various high school events.

Teetsel’s coaching career at Albertus was highlighted by several successful seasons. He coached the Falcons’ boys’ cross country team to a 10-0 record and the Rockland PSAL championship in 1971—the year Albertus left the Catholic High Schools Athletic Association to join the Rockland public school league. In 1970, when they were still in the CHSAA, the Teetsel-led Falcons defeated PSAL champ Clarkstown in a showdown of unbeaten teams. The crowd at Bear Mountain that day was said to be the largest ever to attend a Rockland cross country meet.

Albertus also had a 33-meet cross-country winning streak under Teetsel. On the girls’ side, Teetsel’s teams won the Rockland PSAL title in 1978 and the Section 9 Class B crowns in 1978 and 1979.

Such is the esteem in which Teetsel is held that the most prestigious award in Rockland County track & field is the Dick Teetsel Award, presented annually to a person who has rendered distinguished service in furthering the cause of track and field in Rockland County. The award is presented each year during a ceremony at the Rockland County Spring Track & Field Championships.

Teetsel is a charter member of the Albertus Magnus High School Hall of Fame. He retired as a high school coach in 1990 and as an official in 2001.

A native of Waverly, N.Y. (west of Binghamton), Teetsel, who is 77, taught physical education and driver’s education for many years. He was a longtime resident of Stony Point before moving to Narrowsburg in Sullivan County about 12 years ago.

Teetsel and his wife, Margaret, are the parents of five grown children: Mike, 43; Maureen, 41; Rick, 40; Jeanne, 39; and Margie, 36.


RON TELLEFSEN
Elected in 1994 ... graduated from Congers H.S. in 1954 ... New City native ... umpire and organizer who rose to become president and chief executive officer of the Babe Ruth League youth baseball organizaton ... began his affiliation with Babe Ruth League in 1956 as manager of Clarkstown Babe Ruth League ... he was umpire-in-chief at three Babe Ruth World Series ... in 1956, he organized the Rockland County Umpires Association ... earned high regard in the county as a baseball, soccer and basketball official ... assigned county baseball umpires and soccer officials from 1956 to ‘69 ... in 1969, he moved to Trenton, N.J., to become development director of Babe Ruth League’s senior program (ages 16 to 18) ... became field commissioner for both 13-to-15 and 16-to-18 divisions in 1971, and was named commissioner of Babe Ruth Baseball in 1973 ... in 1978 he was promoted to vice president/commissioner and became a corporate officer, and in 1980 rose to president and CEO ... Babe Ruth League is now an international program with more than 750,000 participants ... under his administration several new programs were added, including the Bambino Division (12 or younger) in 1982, girls’ softball (ages 6 to 18) in 1984, Rookie League for 7-to-9-year-olds who bat against a pitching machine, and the Prep League for 13-year-olds ... he also originated a Babe Ruth Baseball National Umpires Association, which numbers 4,000 members, and an annual baseball camp at Princeton University ... Tellefsen is an advisory member of the Major League Baseball Rules Committee and anexecutive committee member of the American Baseball Coaches Association.

BOB TIERNEY
Voted into Hall in 1984 ... Pearl River H.S., Class of 1936 ... three-sport athlete who received All-County recognition in football, basketball and baseball in both his junior and senior years ... as a tackle in football, he helped Pearl River capture the Rockland PSAL championship in 1935 ... as the center for the basketball team, he spearheaded the Pirates county championship run in the 1935-36 season ... he also was a standout center fielder in baseball ... at Princeton University, he was an imposing offensive tackle at 6-foot-4 1/2, 225 pounds ... in his senior season, 1939, Tierney captained the Princeton football team, which won seven of eight games, losing only to Ivy League champion Cornell ... he garnered All-East honors that season and was invited to play in several postseason all-star games ... he also received invitations to try out for two professional football teams, the New York Giants and the Brooklyn Dodgers ... he graduated from the Yale School of Law and worked for 33 years in the labor relations field for Texaco Corporation.

PAUL TOSCANO
Inducted in 1977 ... 1963 Clarkstown H.S. alumnus ... superb all-round athlete who made his greatest scholastic impact in basketball but really shone as a football quarterback in college at the University of Wyoming ... in 1967, was named Player of the Year in the Western Athletic Conference and finished 12th in the balloting for the Heisman Trophy ... at Clarkstown, he was a 6-foot-1, All-County center who set what was a Rockland PSAL one-game scoring record of 50 points against Suffern his senior year, 1963 ... he was county scoring leader that season with 453 points and 25.2 points per game to lead the Rams to a 13-1 record and the county title ... he was an All-Rockland center fielder in baseball who batted better than .500 his senior year ... made honorable mention All-County as a quarterback in football ... he captained all three teams his senior year ... as a junior at Wyoming, he was the football team’s most improved player and an All-Conference safety ... as senior quarterback, he completed 134 of 241 passes for a 58.1 percentage and 1,791 yards, and amassed 1,915 total yards of offense ... he led all major college quarterbacks in touchdown passes with 18, and finished third in the nation in passing and fourth in total offense ... he set 11 Western Athletic Conference records and was the All-Conference quarterback and Back of the Year ... he was voted United Press International Player of the Year in the Rocky Mountain region and finished fifth in a nationwide UPI Player of the Year poll ... he helped lead Wyoming to an undefeated regular season and No.6 ranking in one wire service poll ... he earned the Most Outstanding Back Award as a member of the North squad in the Senior Bowl in 1968 ... he also made a school-record six interceptions in one season and set seven passing records at Wyoming ... he was drafted on the seventh round by the NFL Houston Oilers ... he has coached the varsity boys’ basketball team at Clarkstown North since the 1976-77 season.

HORACE TYRUS
Elected in 1980 ... 1933 Nyack H.S. graduate ... outstanding baseball pitcher and football quarterback and halfback for Nyack ... in baseball, he helped lead the Indians to three straight Rockland PSAL championships, in 1931, 1932 and 1933 ... three-time All-County pitcher ... a right-hander who stood 5 foot-6, 154 pounds and was nicknamed “Little Tyrus ... mixed speed on his pitches and offered curveballs and screwballs in his repertoire ... his composite pitching record was 19 wins, 2 losses for a .905 winning percentage ... he threw eight shutouts, including a nine-inning perfect game against Congers in 1932 ... in 170 innings, he allowed only 32 earned runs for an earned run average of 1.69 over three years ... he accumulated 232 strikeouts, and never struck out less than six batters in a game ... he also swung a mean bat, with a scholastic career average of .415 ... walloped a grand slam in Nyack’s 26-0 rout of Haverstraw in 1932 ... he was team captain in 1932 and 1933 ... in football, he was an All-Rockland halfback in 1931, and an All-County quarterback in 1932 and 1933 ... he was a key member of Nyack’s Rockland PSAL championship gridiron teams in 1931 and 1933 ... he also played halfback on the great Nyack Alumni team that allowed only two points for an entire season ... he was joined on that team by such notables as Pete D’Auria and Peck Artopee ... after high school he also compiled an undefeated pitching record for the Rockland County All-Stars, defeating such teams as the Haverstraw Maple Leafs, Pearl River A.A. and Spring Valley ... he also pitched and played outfield for a strong New Jersey team, the Lincoln Stars of Closter ... he retired as an active player in 1937, but later managed the Englewood (N.J.) Cubs and umpired Little League baseball.

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