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BROTHERS IN sports

B

Charles F. Beasley (Princeton/Miami-FL)
Member of the Tennis Hall of Fame
Frederick S. Biletnikoff (Florida State)
College & Pro Football Hall of Fame
D. Lee Braun (Southern Methodist)
Member of the National Trapshooting Hall of Fame
Lawrence H. “Larry” Brown (California-Los Angeles)
Former basketball player & coach – NBA Champion 2004 – NCAA Champion 1988 – Olympic Gold Medal
Mark Brunell (Washington)
Former professional football player
Charles Butler (Brown)
Olympic Bronze Medal in bobsledding

C

Charles B. Clark, Sr. (Washington College)
National Lacrosse Hall of Fame, coach at Washington College and Salisbury State University
John Clawson (Michigan)
1968 Olympic Gold Medal in basketball
Gordon “Mickey” Cochrane (Boston)
Baseball Hall of Fame – 2 time MVP – 3 time World Series champion
John Cress (Denver)
Coach of the University of Wyoming’s 1968 NCAA Champion ski team

D

Frank D’Agostino (Parsons)
Member of the College Football Hall of Fame
Averell Daniell (Pittsburgh)
Member of the College Football Hall of Fame
Phil Dalhausser (Central Florida)
Member of beach volleyball world champion team and U.S. Olympic Gold Medal recipient
Sam Darnold (Southern California)
Professional football player with the Minnesota Vikings
William K. Donley (Anderson/Georgetown)
Former head football coach at the University of St. Francis, former head coach at Georgetown College, Kentucky where team won the NAIA Division II championship in 1991; named NAIA Coach of the Year

F

Don “Doc” Fauls (Florida State)
Member of the National Athletic Trainer’s Hall of Fame
Lawrence Frank (Indiana)
President of Basketball Operations for the Los Angeles Clippers, former NBA head coach

G

Doug Gjertsen (Texas)
Former Olympic champion and world record-holder in swimming
Chester Gladchuk (Massachusetts)
Member of the College Football Hall of Fame

H

Nathaniel Hackett (California-Davis) 
Former head coach of the Denver Broncos 

C. Wiles Hallock (Denver)
1st president of the College Sports Information Directors Association, recipient of the organization’s highest award, Commissioner of the PAC-10 Conference
Frederick T. Haas Jr. (Louisiana State)
Former professional golfer
Scott Hastings (Arkansas)
Former professional basketball player
Douglas R. Heir (Alfred)
Most decorated Olympian in history with 336 gold medals in the Paralympic games
Pat Henry (New Mexico)
Men’s and women’s track & field coach at Texas A&M university, won over 30 NCAA championships

I

Henry Iba (Westminster)
Member of the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame

J

Buddy Jeanette (Washington & Jefferson)
Former professional basketball player, coach, and member of the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame
Ferguson Jenkins (Illinois State)
Member of the Baseball Hall of Fame
Cobi Jones (UCLA)
Member of the National Soccer Hall of Fame

K

Gregory Kabat (Wisconsin)
Member of the Canadian Football League Hall of Fame

L

Lawrence E. Liles (Memphis State)
Member of the Racquetball Hall of Fame

M

Gardner Malloy (Miami-FL)
Wimbledon champion and member of the International Tennis Hall of Fame
Vaughn Mancha (Alabama)
Member of the College Football Hall of Fame and University of Alabama All-Century Team
John W. “Jack” McDowell (North Carolina State)
Member of the College Football Hall of Fame
John McKinlay (Boston)
Olympic Silver Medal in rowing and member of the National Crew Hall of Fame
Abe Mickal (Louisiana State)
Member of the College Football Hall of Fame and Sports Illustrated Silver Anniversary Team
Jim Mora Jr. (Washington)
Former college and professional head football coach
John Morris (Wilfred Laurier)
Canadian Olympic Gold Medal recipient in curling
Bill Muncey (Rollins)
62 hydroplane victories and member of the Motorsports Hall of Fame

P

Joseph Philbin (Washington & Jefferson)
Former head coach of the Miami Dolphins
Rick Pitino (Massachusetts)
College basketball coach; 1996 and 2013 NCAA Champion; Member of the College Basketball Hall of Fame
Francis A. “Sonny” Pittaro (Brown)
Member of the American Baseball Coaches Hall of Fame
James J. Plumer (Colby)
Head women’s ice hockey coach at Amherst, ’09 & ’10 NCAA Champions
Arthur Poe (Princeton)
Member of the College Football Hall of Fame, played in original NFL, Helms Foundation Player of the Year in 1899

R

John Rauch (Georgia)
Former football player, coach and member of the College Football Hall of Fame
Ronald K. Ryan (Colby)
Former president of the Philadelphia Flyers

S

Ronald E. Santo (Illinois State)
Member of the Baseball Hall of Fame
Ron Sellers (Florida State)
Member of the College Football Hall of Fame and Super Bowl Champion team
Adrian Smith (Kentucky)
Olympic Gold Medal recipient in basketball and member of the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame
Donald Sutherin (Ohio State)
Member of the Canadian Football League Hall of Fame
Richard B. Sweet (California-Santa Barbara)
Member of the College Sailing Hall of Fame

T

Mike Tannenbaum (Massachusetts)
Former general manager of the New York Jets and EVP of football operations for the Miami Dolphins
Ralph Taylor (Dartmouth)
Played in the National Hockey League for the Chicago Blackhawks from 1927 to 1930 and then with the New York Rangers, also in 1930; later coached St. Louis in the American Hockey Association
Charles Thayer (Colby)
Founder and past president of the National Professional Hockey Athletic Trainers Assn.
Charles L. Trippi (Georgia)
Member of the College and Professional Football Hall of Fame – 1946 Maxwell Award recipient
Arthur Tyler (Worcester)
Olympic Bronze Medal in Bobsledding

V

John M. Valestra (Rutgers)
Member of the Lacrosse Hall of Fame

W

Billy Williams (Illinois State)
Member of the Baseball Hall of Fame

Y

Brett Yormark(Indiana)
Commissioner of the Big 12 Conference, former president/CEO of New Jersey Nets Entertainment

Z

John S. Zink(Oklahoma State)
Auto Racing Hall of Fame, owned Indy 500 winning cars in 1955 and 1956