We understand that this is a difficult time for many individuals and organizations in our membership but wanted to give an update concerning the 50th ISHA Conference, scheduled for October 21-23, 2020, at the International Tennis Hall of Fame in Newport, RI. The Conference Committee has been meeting diligently and is still planning and preparing for the conference on that date. However, in light of the COVID-19 pandemic and the ensuing economic impact on many of our organizations, we are also aware that hosting our conference as we have historically done might not be a possibility this year.

A determination on whether or not the 50th ISHA Conference will take place in Newport in October 2020 will be made by the ISHA Board of Directors no later than August 15, 2020. Until that determination is made, the Conference Committee will continue to work as normal to host the Conference during the regularly scheduled time.

If we cannot host the 50th ISHA Conference as scheduled, provisions will be made for a “virtual conference” this year.

Regardless of how it happens, the ISHA Conference Committee is determined to provide the membership with the best possible continuing education experience that we can. We continue to monitor the Covid-19 situation and remain hopeful that we will all be able to get together in Newport while also preparing for virtual education sessions. If you have any questions, comments, or concerns, about this year’s 50th ISHA Conference, please don’t hesitate to call or email anytime.

The International Sports Heritage Association recognizes this is a trying time for the world. The Covid-19 virus has interrupted our normal daily activities, which includes the closing of most of our cultural institutions. We encourage sports museums to adhere to state and federal guidelines regarding the virus as we all must do our part to slow its spread. The health and safety of guests and staff is of utmost importance. Each ISHA member institution will make its own determination on what is best based on local recommendations. The status of many sports museums is listed below, but please know that these are subject to change on short notice as the situation remains quite fluid. If you are sports museum visitor, please check an institution’s website to confirm its status before visiting. This list is compiled as of Monday, March 16 though some status reports are from Friday, March 13. So again, please check websites for up-to-the-minute information.

Below is also a link for member institutions to reference in terms of expectations:

https://www.colleendilen.com/2020/03/16/special-how-covid-19-is-impacting-intentions-to-visit-cultural-entities-data/

Australian Sports Museum (East Melbourne) — Closed

University of Iowa Athletic Hall of Fame (Iowa City, IA) — Closed

National Sprint Car Hall of Fame (Knoxville, IA) – Open (no events)

The American Sport Art Museum and Archives (Daphne, AL) – Closed

The British Columbia Sports Hall of Fame (Vancouver, BC) – Closed

The Canadian Horse Racing Hall of Fame (Woodbine, ON) — Closed

The Sports Museum (Boston, MA) – Closed

NCAA Hall of Champions (Indianapolis, IN) – Closed

Georgia Sports Hall of Fame (Macon, GA) – Closed

Olympic Museum (Lausanne, Switzerland) – Closed

Negro League Baseball Museum (Kansas City, MO) – Closed

Canada’s Sports Hall of Fame (Calgary, AB) – Closed

Pro Football Hall of Fame (Canton, OH) – Closed

Kansas Sports Hall of Fame (Wichita, KS) – Closed

Patriots Hall of Fame presented by Raytheon (Foxborough, MA) – Closed

49ers Museum (Santa Clara, CA) – Closed

Packers Hall of Fame (Green Bay, WI) – Closed

Vikings Museum (Eagan, MN) – Closed

Hockey Hall of Fame (Toronto, ON) – Closed

USGA Museum (Liberty Corner, NJ) – Closed

Penn State All Sports Museum (University Park, PA) – Open (fluid)

British Golf Museum (St. Andrews) – Closed

National Wrestling Hall of Fame and Museum (Stillwater, OK) – Closed

Texas Sports Hall of Fame (Waco, TX) – Closed

St. Louis Cardinals Hall of Fame and Museum (St. Louis, MO) – Open (No stadium tours)

College Football Hall of Fame (Atlanta, GA) – Closed

Tennessee Sports Hall of Fame (Nashville, TN) – Closed

Alberta Sports Hall of Fame (Red Deer, AB) – Open

Colorado Sports Hall of Fame (Denver, CO) – Closed

Babe Ruth Birthplace Museum (Baltimore, MD) – Closed

Saskatchewan Sports Hall of Fame/Museum (Regina, SK) – Closed for renovations

Canadian Golf Hall of Fame (Oakville, ON) – Closed

World of Little League Museum (Williamsport, PA) – Closed

Oklahoma Sports Museum  (Guthrie, OK) – Closed

Bear Bryant Museum (Tuscaloosa, AL) – Closed

Oregon Sports Hall of Fame (Beavertown, OR) – Open (fluid)

Braves Museum and Hall of Fame (Atlanta, GA) – Closed

Baseball Heritage Museum (Cleveland, OH) – Closed

Mississippi Sports Hall of Fame (Jackson, MS) – Closed

Nova Scotia Sports Hall of Fame (Halifax, NS) – Closed

Pro Rodeo Hall of Fame (Colorado Springs, CO) – Closed

Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame (Knoxville, TN) – Closed

Basketball Hall of Fame (Springfield, MA) – Closed for renovations (5/1)

Cincinnati Reds Hall of Fame and Museum (Cincinnati, OH) – Closed

NASCAR Hall of Fame (Charlotte, NC) – Closed

Bobby Orr Hall of Fame (Parry Sound, ON) – Closed

Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum (Cooperstown, NY) – Closed

World Golf Hall of Fame (St. Augustine, FL) – Closed

New Brunswick Sports Hall of Fame (Fredericton, NB) – All tours cancelled

Racine Heritage Museum (Racine, WI) – Closed

Seeking Conference Proposals

The 50th anniversary of the ISHA annual conference is seeking proposals for conference sessions.

Do you have a project, story or educational topic that you think would be great for the conference? If so, click here to submit your proposal today.

December 11, 2019

Janice L. Ogurcak
Secretary, ISHA Board of Directors
Chair, ISHA Grant Committee

Dear Janice,

Thank you for selecting our organization to receive a registration grant for the
2019 ISHA conference in Wichita. As per all of the ISHA conferences we have
attended over the years, these are days we look forward to as staff with Curling
Canada.

Our organization does not have a bricks & mortar Hall of Fame or Museum, nor
is there any potential in the future. But we have moved our strategic planning
forward to ultimately create a mobile, digital and augmented reality experience
for our fan base and new fans at our events. And we have gotten to this point
because of our attendance at the ISHA conference and the things we have
learned from the sessions and the networking with vendors and other museums.
The ISHA conference has offered invaluable information and contacts about the
digital world and its place in the Hall of Fame or Museum industry.

In particular:
• SESSION 2: Oh, What a World!: gave us valuable insight as to the
preservation of our collection which we are very guilty of not doing!

• SESSION 3: Wizard of Ease: we are currently investigating the experience
of personal information tools via mini speakers and/or augmented reality via
mobile phones.

• SESSION 4: If We Only Had a Library: our takeaway was to look at how we
get writers, story-tellers, historians access to our small collection of books.

• SESSION 5: A Roadmap to Oz: this information was passed on to our own
Foundation including booking a session this winter with Golf Canada to listen
to their successes.

• SESSION 6: From Now On: we have recently licensed a new merchandiser.
This session gave us perspective on what we need to do.

• SESSION 8: I’ll Get You, My Pretty: We are working hard in this area in our
demographic issues so the information and the role playing we did at the
conference were indeed valuable.

This winter, a group of Curling Canada staff will be in charge of implementation
of a new, updated plan mainly because of the resources we accessed via ISHA.

Sincerely, and thank you again,

Danny Lamoureux

Curling Canada
Director, Curling Club Development & Championship Services
-2-

The Selection Committee of the Colorado Sports Hall of Fame voted six individuals — including Lindsey Vonn, Bob Gebhard and Alonzo Babers  — to be inducted at the 56th annual banquet, set for April 23 at the Hilton Denver City Center (1701 California St.).

 Joining four-time overall World Cup skiing champion Vonn, former Colorado Rockies general manager Gebhard and two-time Olympic gold medalist Babers as April inductees were former University of Denver hockey coach George Gwozdecky, 1977 Heisman Trophy voting runner-up Terry Miller, and impending U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Hall of Famer Erin Popovich when the Class of 2020 was selected today. The Selection Committee will pick the 2019 Athletes of the Year at a January 2020 meeting as the Colorado Sports Hall of Fame recognizes collegiate, high school and Olympic/Pro athletes at the Hilton Denver City Center banquet.

Lindsey Vonn of Vail is the winningest women’s World Cup skier of all time, having claimed 82 titles, just four shy of Ingemar Stenmark’s record regardless of gender. Vonn retired in February due to the cumulative effect of injuries after earning a bronze medal in the downhill at the World Championships. In 2012, she earned her fourth World Cup overall title, joining Annemarie Moser-Proell as the only women to accomplish that feat. Vonn was also a season-long champion in the World Cup downhill a record eight times to go along with five in the super-G and three in the combined. Her 20 World Cup globes are the most by any skier, woman or man.

 Vonn is one of just six women to have won World Cup races in all five disciplines of alpine skiing — downhill, super-G, giant slalom, slalom and super combined. 

 Vonn won an Olympic gold medal on the downhill in the 2010 Winter Games, becoming the first American woman to land that title. That year, she was named the Laureus Sportswoman of the Year. In all, Vonn competed in four Olympics (2002, ’06, ’10 and ’18), winning three medals. At world championships, she claimed eight medals, including two golds in 2009 — one each in downhill and super-G. Vonn, who will turn 35 years old on Friday, was the Colorado Sports Hall of Fame’s 2009 Athlete of the Year.

 Bob Gebhard was the first GM of the Rockies as he was hired in 1992, the year before the franchise started Major League play. He continued in that role until his resignation in 1999. Under Gebhard’s watch, the Rockies went to the playoffs in their third season, earning a spot in 1995 as a National League wild-card team. At the time, that made them the first MLB expansion team to reach the postseason prior to its eighth season of competition. That year began a three-year run of the Rockies finishing with winning records.

Gebhard led the way in building the team’s farm system, hiring Don Baylor as the franchise’s first manager, and overseeing the expansion draft.

The Rockies were also very successful at the gate, setting a Major League attendance record by drawing 4,483,350 fans to Mile High Stadium in 1993. Every year during the Gebhard years, the Rockies attracted at least 3.2 million fans, with the team having moved into Coors Field in 1995.

Gebhard pitched in the Major Leagues with Minnesota and Montreal from 1971-74, finishing with 41 innings on the mound and a 1-3 record in the Bigs. He began his front-office career in 1976 with the Expos as field director of minor league operations.

Alonzo Babers, who ran track and played one season of football at the Air Force Academy, made a splash at the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles by winning gold medals in both the 400-meter run and the 4X400-meter relay. Babers made a quick rise to the highest level of track. In 1984, a year after graduating from the Academy with a degree in aerospace engineering, he ran a personal-best 44.86 in the 400 to qualify for the U.S. Olympic team. 

In the 400 final at the Olympics, Babers posted a time of 44.27 to earn the gold medal. And in the relay final, Babers ran the third leg as the American team claimed gold easily with a clocking of 2:57.91.

Babers was a Lieutenant in the Air Force while training for and competing in the Olympics. He started his flight training just a month after the Olympics, and he was active duty in the Air Force from 1983 to ’91. He went on to become a pilot for United Airlines.

George Gwozdecky coached the DU hockey team for 19 seasons (1994-2013), guiding the Pioneers to NCAA titles in 2004 and ’05. In his final dozen years at the DU helm, the team never failed to win at least 20 games. Overall, Gwozdecky accumulated a 443-267-64 record as coach of the Pioneers. Under Gwozdecky, DU won three regular-season titles in the Western Collegiate Hockey Association and four WCHA playoff crowns.

 

Gwozdecky won NCAA titles as a player (at Wisconsin in 1977), an assistant coach (at Michigan State in 1986) and a head coach (at DU in 2004 and ’05), becoming the first person to accomplish that feat. Twice he was named NCAA national coach of the year, in 1993 and 2005. He came to DU from Miami (Ohio), where he was head coach for five years. Gwozdecky was previously a head coach at the University of Wisconsin-River Falls, where the team won an NAIA national title in 1983.

After working as an assistant coach with the NHL’s Tampa Bay Lightning, Gwozdecky became head coach at Valor Christian High School in Highlands Ranch in 2015.

Terry Miller is considered one of the top running backs Colorado high school football has produced. As a senior at Mitchell in Colorado Springs, he rushed for 2,785 yards as the Marauders finished runner-up in the 1973 AAA state playoffs. He was subsequently named the Colorado Sports Hall of Fame’s High School Athlete of the Year for ’73. Miller also played point guard on a Mitchell basketball team that won the state title in ’73, and he ran high school track.

Miller went on to star in football at Oklahoma State, where he finished second in the Heisman Trophy voting in 1977 to Texas’ Earl Campbell, and fourth in 1976. He led the Big Eight Conference in rushing in both 1976 and ’77 and was named Big Eight Player of the Year both years. From 1974 to ’77, Miller rushed for 4,754 yards and 49 touchdowns at Oklahoma State, where he went into the athletics Hall of Honor in 2006.

Miller was the fifth pick overall in the 1978 NFL draft, going to the Buffalo Bills, where he rushed for 1,060 yards as a rookie. In 48 NFL games from 1978 through ’81, Miller rushed for 1,583 yards and eight TDs and caught 35 passes for 382 yards.

Erin Popovich, a 2007 graduate of Colorado State University, is believed to be the first Paralympian voted into the Colorado Sports Hall of Fame. She won 14 gold medals — and 19 medals overall — in swimming over the course of three Paralympic Games. That includes an extraordinary performance in the 2004 Paralympic Games in Athens, where she claimed seven titles in seven events.

Twice for her achievements, Popovich has been named winner of the ESPY Award for Best Female Athlete with a Disability.

On Nov. 1, Popovich will be inducted into the U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Hall of Fame, joining such Colorado Sports Hall of Famers as Babe Zaharias, Peggy Fleming, Bill Toomey, Connie Carpenter-Phinney and fellow former CSU swimmer Amy Van Dyken. 

Popovich retired from competitive swimming in 2008 and accepted a job at the Colorado Springs-based U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee, where she’s Associate Director of Paralympic Swimming.

Tickets for the Colorado Sports Hall of Fame Banquet are $200 each and Sponsor tables start at $2,500. For additional ticket and table information, please phone the Colorado Sports Hall of Fame (www.coloradosports.org, 720-258-3535). The Colorado Sports Hall of Fame & Museum is located at Gate 1 on the west side of Empower Field at Mile High at 1701 Bryant Street in Denver.

Since its inception in 1965, the Colorado Sports Hall of Fame has inducted 264 individuals prior to Tuesday’s selection meeting. The first class of inductees featured Earl “Dutch” Clark, Jack Dempsey and former Supreme Court Justice Byron “Whizzer” White. Missy Franklin, Daniel Graham, Todd Lodwick, Tom Southall, Bob Smith and Marv Kay were inducted into the Colorado Sports Hall of Fame this past April.

The inaugural Order of Sport Award was presented to the Canada’s Sports Hall of Fame Class of 2019 Inductees on October 23rd during the 64th Induction Festival. The  Order of Sport is a National Level Award established by Canada’s Sports Hall of Fame and a symbol of the organization’s purpose: to build Canada through sport. The fully accredited museum and not-for-profit organization is committed to improving the opportunity for sport to represent Canada’s shared values to Canadians and the world, preserving and promoting the past, present and future of Canadian sport.

The Order of Sport is Canada’s highest sporting honour. Individuals inducted annually into Canada’s Sports Hall of Fame (Hall of Famers) receive the Order of Sport in recognition of their continuing role in building Canada through sport and the value of the return and impact they have on their communities.

What distinguishes Canada’s Sports Hall of Fame’s recognition program from other sport awards or hall of fame organizations is its consideration of any person’s significant contributions to sport in Canada irrespective of the type of sport or game, with whom the sport or game is accredited, or with whom or how it is organized within Canada or internationally.

For more information about the Class of 2019 inductees or how to submit a nomination for an athlete or sport builder, please visit sportshall.ca. Nominations are due by January 15, 2020.

 

Photo – Canada’s Sports Hall of Fame Class of 2019 Inductees (L-R): Waneek Horn-Miller (Water Polo), Colette Bourgonje (Para Nordic Skiing & Wheelchair Racing), Jayna Hefford (Ice Hockey), Doug Mitchell (Builder, Multisport), Guylaine Bernier (Builder, Rowing), Vicki Keith (Swimming), Alexandre Bilodeau (Freestyle Skiing) and Martin Brodeur (Ice Hockey)

 

Annual Induction Ceremony and 2020 Olympics Exhibits Keep Oregon Sports Hall of Fame Busy in September and October

On September 24, the Oregon Sports Hall of Fame and Museum held its 39th annual induction ceremony at the Multnomah Athletic Club in Portland. We inducted Mark Radford and Ray Blume, Oregon State basketball stars from the late 70s; Molly McConnell, National Golden Gloves and world champion welterweight boxer; Dr. Bob Gill, outstanding high school and college football player, and all around sports enthusiast and organizational leader; 1975 Portland Timbers (NASL Champions); and Kenny Moore, All American and Olympics distance runner and long time track and field writer for Sports Illustrated.

In October, we mounted a special, “Countdown to Tokyo 2020” pre-Olympics exhibit in the lobby of KGW CH8, Portland’s NBC affiliate, who share offices with NBC Sports Northwest, and will broadcast the 2020 Olympics.  Photos and bios of 30 Oregon Olympians are on display.

In addition, a special section features artifacts worn by 2 world famous Oregon Olympians: Steve Prefontaine’s Oregon letterman’s jacket, a running singlet and a Nike waffle trainer shoe, with Prefontaine photos and bio; and Don Schollander, Olympic swimming medalist, parade jacket,  and Saturday Evening Post cover photo of Schollander festooned with his medals.

Finally, the Oregon Sports Hall of Fame will loan the new USA Olympic and Paralympic Museum, in Colorado Springs, a pair of Prefontaine Nike waffle trainer shoes to exhibit prior to and through the 2020 Tokyo Games.

It’s been a busy few months with no letup in sight…..planning is already underway for celebrating our 40th anniversary in 2020. Stay tuned for special events…..to follow, soon.

On Friday, November 15, the Nova Scotia Sport Hall of Fame inducted seven new honoured members at a ceremony in the Halifax Convention Centre. These inductees included arguably Nova Scotia’s greatest female basketball and soccer players, the most beloved player ever to compete with the Halifax Mooseheads, the province’s biggest rugby star, two incredibly dedicated builders and promoters of local sport, and our first ever Special Olympics athlete. A force to be reckoned with in the sport of power lifting, highly decorated Special Olympics athlete Jackie Barret made history joining the Hall of Fame this year.

Barrett was inducted with the all-time leading scorer for Canadian women’s university basketball, Justine Colley-Leger; varsity and national team soccer superstar Suzanne Muir; Mooseheads legend and NHL player Jody Shelley; and, the record-holder for the most caps as a Canadian rugby scrum half, Morgan Williams. In the builder category, long-time Little League coach, baseball manager and community hero Henry Boutilier, along with international basketball official and mentor Roger Caulfield, were also inducted on November 15. The event was broadcast live by Eastlink Community TV.

Photo credit: Nick Pearce. (Left to Right: (back row) Suzanne Muir, Jackie Barrett, Jody Shelley, Morgan Williams, (front row) Henry Boutilier, Justine Colley-Leger, and Roger Caulfield.