INDUCTEES
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

STEVE WANAMAKER
Gained a berth in the Hall in 1997 ... 1973 Nyack H.S. alumus ... intimidating, 6-foot-3, 225-pound middle linebacker described by his coach, Paul Lankau, as “the best to ever play linebacker in Rockland County” ... also starred on the Indians’ baseball team ... in football, he made Honorable Mention All-County as a sophomore, first-team All-County and second-team All-State as a junior, and first-team All-County and first-team All-State as a senior ... he also was chosen to two high school All-America teams that season ... during his junior and senior years he averaged 16 unassisted tackles a game ... for three years he also was the starting tight end on offense, was a second-team All-County offensive end as a senior, and punted for a 40.8 yard average as a junior and senior ... four-year varsity baseball player ... his sophomore year, he pitched a no-hitter against Albertus Magnus, batted .396 and was chosen as an All-Rockland outfielder ... that same year, he helped lead Nyack to its first outright Rockland County PSAL championship since the 1949 Nyack team, for which Steve’s father, Homer, played ... as a junior, Wanamaker led the Rockland PSAL in hits with 25 and in batting average at .446, and made first-team All-County ... he also posted an 8-3 pitching record and struck out 17 batters in one game ... his senior year, he walked 35 times as opposing teams pitched around him ... he batted .314 and made second-team All-County ... he also started on the varsity basketball team his junior year ... as a scholarship player for Joe Paterno’s nationally ranked Penn State football team, Wanamaker overcame three knee operations to earn two varsity letters and played in all 12 games as a junior, his only complete season ... he played against Alabama in the 1976 Sugar Bowl, when the Nittany Lions were ranked fifth in the country ... Wanamaker was voted Nyack’s top male athlete ever in a Rockland Journal-News reader survey conducted in 1988.

WALT WEISS
There was nothing magical about Walt Weiss’s rise to professional baseball stardom. It was all about striving with the sweat of honest toil to grab hold of a dream. But because of that exemplary dedication, hard work and hometown pride, many young Rocklanders can now dream of being the next Walt Weiss.

Weiss, a 1982 Suffern High School graduate, never forgot his roots. Although he now makes his home in Castle Rock, Colo., Weiss honed his diamond craft on the ballfields of Suffern’s youth leagues and schools. He absorbed the lessons well enough to become the most successful major league baseball player ever to come out of Rockland County.

When Weiss made his major league debut with the Oakland Athletics in 1987, he became the first native Rocklander in 35 years to wear a big-league uniform, and only the eighth overall at that time. But he didn’t just wear the uniform; he honored it with his blue-ribbon defense and timely hitting.

The 6-foot, 185-pound switch-hitting shortstop was the 1988 American League Rookie of the Year; played in four World Series, including the 1989 Series in which his A’s defeated the San Francisco Giants for the championship; and was the starting shortstop for the 1998 National League All-Star team, becoming the oldest player (35) ever to be voted a starter in his first All-Star appearance.

He played 13 years in the majors—five with Oakland, one with the fledgling Florida Marlins (he was a charter member of the franchise in 1993 and drove in the first run in team history), four with the Colorado Rockies and three with the Atlanta Braves—and was the starting shortstop each year. His teams reached the playoffs eight of those 13 years, including World Series appearances in 1988, 1989 and 1990 with Oakland and 1999 with Atlanta.

Weiss wound up with a career batting average of .258 and a nifty .971 fielding percentage. His best year offensively was 1996 with Colorado, when he batted .282 with 8 home runs, 48 RBI, 146 hits and 89 runs. His most durable year was 1993 with Florida, when he played in 158 of the Marlins’ 162 games.

Weiss showed glimpses of his future greatness while honing his skills at Suffern High School. A talented all-round athlete, he was twice an All-Rockland shortstop and earned Rockland Player-of-the-Year accolades in 1982, batting a robust .495. He also played two years of varsity football for the Mounties, as a wide receiver his junior year and quarterback his senior year, and ran indoor track his senior year, contributing to the Mounties’ county champion 4x400-meter relay.

After being chosen by the Baltimore Orioles in the 10th round of the 1982 major league draft, Weiss opted instead for more seasoning in college ball. He was awarded a baseball scholarship to the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where he refined his left-handed batting stroke (having been a natural righty) and matured physically and mentally. Weiss was the first-team All-Atlantic Coast Conference shortstop all three years he attended the school.

After his junior year, in 1985, Weiss again entered the major league draft and this time Oakland chose him in the first round as the 11th player selected overall. He methodically ascended the minor-league ladder, from the Rookie League in Pocatello, Idaho, to Class A Madison (Wis.), to Class AA Huntsville (Ala.). He made his major-league debut on July 12, 1987, was sent down to Class AAA Tacoma (Wash.) after a very brief stint, then was recalled by the A’s in September and got into a total of 16 games before establishing himself fully in 1988.

Weiss overcame serious knee and ankle injuries early in his career to perform with distinction, while taking leadership roles later in his career. He served several times as teammate-elected player representative to the Major League Baseball Players’ Association.

Weiss rarely missed an opportunity to keep in touch with his Rockland roots. During the 1988 World Series, for example, he wrote a game-by-game diary for readers of The Journal-News as the Athletics battled the Los Angeles Dodgers. He also has been a major benefactor to the Suffern High School athletic program.

Weiss’s home community has reciprocated that friendship. In 1989 hundreds of fans lined Lafayette Avenue in Suffern to pay homage to their native son with a parade and ceremonies during Walt Weiss Day. In 1999, Suffern High School renamed its baseball diamond Walt Weiss Field in recognition of his professional success and the support he has provided the program. The school also retired his uniform number, 22.

Weiss and his wife, Terri, run the SIDS Foundation in Denver, in memory of Walt’s brother, who died of sudden infant death syndrome. He has also built four Little League fields for Denver’s inner-city children.

The Weisses have three children—Blake, 14; Brody, 7; and Bo, 5—and a fourth boy is due in June.


BILL WHITE
There are certain athletic programs in Rockland County that have developed reputaÂtions as consistently successful, state-caliber systems, year in and year out. The common denominator among those programs is stabiliÂty derived from an established coaching staff. Oftentimes the greater the continuity of the coaching staff, the higher the likelihood of success in the program.
Such is the case with Suffern High School wrestling. In the past half-century, you can count on one hand the number of head coaches who have guided the Mounties' fortunes. Current Suffern coach Mickey DeSimone has inherited a legacy of prosperity begun by George Fuge and continued by Guy Guccione. A pivotal link in that chain is Guccione's sucÂcessor and DeSimone's predecessor, Bill White.
Bill White and wrestling are the perfect fit: a stoic man for an austere sport. It's been said that effort is making someone do what they don't want to do. Bill White made high school wrestlers do what they didn't want to do, and that act of persuasion - with a little hands-on help from "Whitey" -led to a Mountie victory monopoly on the wrestling mats.
During his 18-year reign as Suffern head coach, 1970-1988, White won eight Rockland County Public School Athletic League championships; five sectional titles, three in Section 9 (Rockland, Orange, Ulster, Sullivan counties) through 1983 and two in Section 1 (Rockland, Westchester, Putnam, Dutchess counties) from 1984-88; and coached 29 individual sectional titleholders and seven state place-winners.
White compiled a career dual-meet record of 179 wins, 54 losses and 3 ties for a .727 winning percentage. His total of 179 wins stood as the Rockland County record for scholastic wrestling coaching victories until Rich Conklin of Nanuet - who's also a Rockland Hall of Famer - Âsurpassed it in 2000.
Like Fuge, Guccione and DeSimone, White always sought out the best competition he could find to forge a hardened, battle-tested Mountie unit ready to withstand the rigors of postseason competition. His 1979, 1980 and 1981 clubs put together a 39-match winning streak, second longest in county history to Suffern's 84-meet win skein under Fuge in the 1950s. WhiteÕs teams also attained several top-10 state rankings, with a high of No.4 in his final year of coaching, 1987-88.
And how's this for single-match supremacy: in the 1980 Rockland County Tournament White rates the 1979-80 Mountie team as one of his two best, along with the 1972-73 edition Suffern placed 12 wrestlers in the 13 championship finals; 11 of them won. White was no slouch as an athlete himself. In wrestling, the 1958 Suffern High School graduate won four Rockland County championships and four Section 9 titles as well. He also was the starting varsity quarterback for the Suffern football team in his junior and senior years.
After graduating from Penn State University (where he was a wrestling teammate of Guccione), White spent three years as a teacher and coach at Newburgh Free Academy. At Newburgh, he produced several Orange County champions, four Section 9 titlists and one New York State champ. White then returned to Suffern and spent three years as assistant varsity wrestling coach to Guccione, also a Rockland Hall of Famer.
White was inducted into the New York State Wrestling Hall of Fame in 1993, and he currently serves as president of that organization. Since 1990, White has enjoyed a second successful coaching career, in skiing. His Suffern skiing teams have won numerous league and county titles in both boys and girls competition, and both programs are closing in on 100 wins under his tutelage.
White, who is 60 and lives in Sloatsburg, was a longtime physical education instructor at Suffern High School. In 1999 he completed a 10-year tenure as the school's director of physical education. His philosophy as a physical educator carried over to his work in wrestling.
"I considered [wrestling] an extension of the educational situation," says White, who has been married for 41 years to wife Carol and has four grown children. "I wanted it to be a positive experience for every kid. I may have sacrificed some individual (success) for the good of the team, but I'm a team person and that's how it's been done at Suffern."

DAN WHITE
Dan White is the third recipient of the Joseph R. Holland Lifetime Achievement Award, and is most deserving. Dan was a proud member of Nyack High School’s championship basketball and tennis teams. The basketball team was three points shy of being undefeated in Rockland County and Dan was undefeated in his senior year in tennis at the first doubles slot.

After graduating from Nyack High School, Dan enrolled at Rutgers University as an English major. Dan earned his varsity letter at Rutgers on the tennis team, competing in the third doubles position. During his stay at Rutgers, Dan was the head manager of the basketball team and the sports editor of the daily college newspaper in his senior year.

Upon completing his degree at Rutgers, He served his country in the Army Signal Corps, attaining the rank of captain. Dan then left the service and returned to his hometown of Nyack, where he embarked upon a business career. Dan worked for the Rockland Refrigeration Company, an air conditioning and refrigeration contractor with a retail appliance store, and served as the president of that company for many years. Always one to give back to his community, Dan was a member of the Rotary Club of Nyack for 25 years, chairing several charity projects. For 26 years, Dan was on the Board of Trustees of the Nyack Free Library, serving five terms as president and 15 years as treasurer.

The main reason Dan is being honored is for his many years of dedication and hard work to the Rockland County Sports Hall of Fame. He became a member of the executive committee in 1992, and in his first year, Dan successfully sponsored his first candidate. Four years later, another of his prospective candidates was selected for induction into the Hall of Fame. Since 1996 13 more inductees sponsored by Dan were chosen by the executive committee for induction into the Rockland County Sports Hall of Fame. He was very meticulous in his research for the pertinent facts of an athlete, primarily using the microfilm of The Journal News in the Nyack Library.

Beginning in 1995 Dan became heavily involved with the sale of tickets for the annual dinner to honor the inductees and continued to do so for 11 years. Along with coordinating ticket sales, Dan ran six successful dinners, three of which averaged an attendance of 300 people. Dan has served on the selection committee for seven years and has sold advertising in the program for many years.

In 2000 Dan was asked by Chairman Peter Scheibner to be the master of ceremonies for the dinner, a duty he performed admirably for six years. Dan still is an active member of the executive committee of the Hall of Fame. He resides in his hometown of Nyack with his wife Lila. The Whites have two daughters, Pam and Jennifer.


Sarah Will
Where there's a Will, there's a way. When Sarah Will's world came crashing down around her Dec. 15, 1988 on a ski slope in colorado, she could have succumbed to self-pity. Skiing over a maintenance road, she ot her ski stuck in fresh snow, flipped backward and landed on her shoulder. She had broken her spine and lost feeling below her waist.

When you feel suffer catastrophic injury, the temptation to feel sorry for yourself is sometimes overwhleming. But it did not overwhelm Sarah Will. this was Will's answer to the creul fate that had bequeathed her: 'It feels safe in the rehab room, but you have to take a chance and go past your comfort zone. Don't settle for what's been handed to you. Instead, have an open mind."

Where there's a Will, there's a way. Once Sarah opened her mind to life's possibilites, fresh vistas spread before her. Adversity was transifgured into opportunity. today she is an eight-time gold medalist in teh Paralympics making her one of the most highly decorated American skiers ever. She is regarded as the world's finest female practitioner of a sport called mono-skiing.

 
EMIL WILLIS
Enshrined in 1980 ... 1932 Spring Valley H.S. graduate ... record-setting football player and champion track runner ... his freshman year, he was a unanimous first-team All-Rockland selection as an offensive end, and helped Spring Valley capture the county championship ... he repeated as first-team All-County end his sophomore year ... was considered the PSAL’s premier punter and best handler of forward passes, as well as an outstanding defensive end ... he also excelled in varsity track and field, winning the County championship in the 440- and 880-yard runs his sophomore year, 1930, after finishing second in both events as a freshman ... during the Great Depression, Willis dropped out of high school after sophomore year to work with his father as a building custodian at the high school ... he did, however, continue his football exploits as a star player for the Spring Valley Alumni football team ... he led the 1930 alumni squad to a 7-0 mark ... that teamscored a record 170 points and allowed only 6 points ... Willis scored three touchdowns in a game three times that season, and had the league’s best punt-ing average, topping 35 yards per punt ... he also returned a punt a record 80 yards ... in 1931, he set a league record for receiving yards in a season with 208 ... that year, he helped lead the Spring Valley alumni to an 8-0-1 record, he scored in seven of the nine games, and led the league in punting with an average exceeding 40 yards per punt ... alumni teams for which he played compiled a six-year record of 38 wins, 5 losses and 9 ties, including a four-year stretch with only two losses ... he led the circuit in punting each year and was the outstanding player in the league for five straight years ... his nickname was “The Devastating Duke.”

BLAISE WINTER
Inducted in 1998...1980 graduate of TZ H.S...enjoyed an 11-year career as a defensive lineman in the NFL with the Indianaplois Colts, San Diego Chargers, and Green Bay Packers...made the NFL's All-Rookie team with Indianapolis in 1984...spent two-plus seasons with the Colts...then plyed for San Diego for almost two seasons...joined the rebuilding Packers in 1988 and spent three years there before injuries sidelined him in 1991...he returned to the Chargers in 1992 and played well for four more years....at Tappan Zee he earned All-County recognition his senior year...he captained the 1983 Syracuse University team and was MV, and gained All-East honors. He now makes his home in Appleton, Wisc and works as a motivational speaker and radio and TV broadcaster for the Packers.

MICKEY WITTMAN
Elected in 1980 ... graduated from Nanuet H.S. in 1963 ... three-sport star at Nanuet — football, basketball, baseball — but basketball was his sport ... stands 6-foot-7 ... made All-County in 1962 and 1963 ... was selected to two high school All-America teams ... set what was then the Rockland PSAL record for free throws in a season with 82 in 14 games in 1962 ... attended Los Angeles State, where he averaged more than 30 points a game, then transferred to the University of Miami, where he became the third-leading scorer and second-leading rebounder in school history ... averaged 21.8 points per game as a junior and 22.3 points per game as a senior ... he ranked 18th nationwide in scoring, and had a 45-point game against Oklahoma City ... played against future stars such as Wes Unseld, Elvin Hayes and Sonny Dove ... led the team in rebounding his senior year ... scored more than 30 points three times and surpassed 20 points 16 times ... only two other Miami players — Rick Barry (whom he roomed with for two years) and Dick Hickox — ever exceeded those totals ... wad drafted in the third round by the St. Louis Hawks, but cut at the end of preseason ... played for Phillips Oil Company in the U.S. Industrial League ... playing for Goodyear, he was an Amateur Athletic Union All-America player and earned invitation to the 1968 Olympic trials, but a broken arm and broken thumb ruined his Olympic dream.

BOB WOLFF
Inducted in 1989 ... South Nyack resident since 1976 ... sports broadcaster since 1946, continues to ply his trade with distinction ... a member of the Major League Baseball Hall of Fame, broadcasters’ wing ... exceptionally versatile announcer ... has been at the play-by-play microphone for every major pro championship in the U.S.: World Series, Super Bowl, Stanley Cup finals and NBA playoffs ... broadcast Don Larsen’s perfect game in 1956 World Series, one of three World Series he covered ... also broadcast the 1958 NFL championship game between the Baltimore Colts and New York Giants, the first overtime pro football title game ... he was the TV voice of the New York Knicks’ NBA championship seasons in 1969-70 and 1972-73 ... a Phi Beta Kappa graduate of Duke University, Wolff also has broadcast major college games including the Rose Bowl, Sugar Bowl and Gator Bowl, the NIT championship and Holiday Basketball Festival, and championships in soccer and gymnastics ... he has handled a variety of assignments for the Madison Square Garden Network, including the Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show, National Horse Show, Millrose Games track and field, and Virginia Slims tennis ... he’s also broadcast bowling, boxing and golf ... he did play-by-play for more than 30 years of Knicks and MSG college basketball, and spent many years as the New York Rangers’ telecaster ... for many seasons, besides games at the Garden, he concurrently was TV announcer for the Washington Senators, Baltimore Colts, and college football and basketball games — some 250 play-by-play assignments a year... Wolff telecast pro football for CBS-TV, and was on the radio for NBC, ABC and Mutual ... he was a studio sports host on ABC, along with field assignments for Wide World of Sports ... he also did NBC Game of the Week baseball telecasts for three years ... five years ago Wolff was honored by the Smithsonian Institution as part of a baseball broadcasting legend series.

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