HOF Class of 2019 - Updated

BU Athletics Announces 2019 Hall of Fame Class

June 26, 2019

BOSTON - The Boston University Athletic Hall of Fame will hold its 53rd induction banquet in October, honoring a Class of 2019 comprised of six standout Terriers, as announced today by assistant vice president and director of athletics Drew Marrochello.

Following a vote from select members of the Hall of Fame and department staff, Abigail Clark '00 (swimming), Patrick Duthie '90 (wrestling), Jeanne Friedman '75 (rowing), Kevin Murphy '98 (track & field), Victor Paguia '05 (diving) and Gary Plummer '84 (basketball) make up the Class of 2019 and will officially be inducted on Oct. 26, 2019, in the Francis Burke Club Room at Agganis Arena.

The banquet is open to the public at a cost of $50 per person and will take place at 11:30 a.m. For tickets and more information, visit GoTerriers.com/HOF. 

"We are proud to welcome these six well-deserving Terriers into our Athletics Hall of Fame," said Marrochello. "They emerged from an impressive collection of candidates and truly embody what our athletic department stands for. We look forward to celebrating their BU careers on campus this fall."
 
Other awards, whose winners will be announced at a later date, to be presented at the Hall of Fame Banquet are the William French Award for a current or former Boston University coach or graduate of Boston University who has distinguished himself or herself in the coaching profession in the past year; the Murray Kramer Memorial Award for an individual or organization in recognition of outstanding media coverage or publicity of intercollegiate sports; and the Roger "Moose" Washburn Award for a graduate of Boston University who has given continuous unselfish support to the Terriers' athletic program.
 
Michael Laviano of the men's lacrosse team and Lauren Spearman of the women's basketball team were announced as the recipients of the Aldo "Buff" Donelli Memorial Leadership Award at the Student-Athlete Awards Reception in April and will be formally recognized at the Hall of Fame banquet. The honors are given to current senior student-athletes who have demonstrated outstanding leadership both on and off of the field. 
 
The Boston University Athletic Hall of Fame, which held its first induction ceremony in 1959, currently has 255 members, including Terrier greats such as Harry Agganis, Tunji Awojobi, Bill Brooks, Jim Craig, Chris Drury, Mike Eruzione, Terry Geldart, Jim Hayes, Drederick Irving, John Kelley, Jack O'Callahan, Debra Miller Palmore, Jack Parker, Lesley Sheehan, Dave Silk, John Simpson and Steve Wright.
 

BU Athletic Hall of Fame Class of 2019

Abigail Clark
Just one of three swimmers to win the Mildred Barnes Award as the top BU female athlete, Clark ('00) excelled in the breaststroke, capturing three in the 100-yard breast at the America East Championships. Clark set the America East scene on fire her freshman season, posting the conference record in the 100 breast while aiding the 200 and 400 medley relays to conference record-breaking marks as well. The Baltimore, Maryland, native continued to bring BU to the forefront of the America East, guiding the Terriers to a runner-up finish at the conference championships the following three seasons.
 
Overall, Clark accumulated 40 individual victories while competing with 42 winning relay teams. A four-time America East All-Conference selection and four-time team MVP, she took second in the 50-yard freestyle and fourth in the 100 free her final year. At the 2000 ECAC Championships, she won the 100 breast, while also placing third in the 50 free and fourth in the 100 free. She also participated in the 2000 U.S. Olympic trials in the 100 breast.

Pat Duthie
A three-time NCAA qualifier, Duthie ('90) is one of the top wrestlers to ever wear a BU singlet. He was ranked as high as fifth in the nation during his BU career, which was capped by being named the recipient of the E. Ray Speare Award, given annually to the top male scholar-athlete in the senior class. Duthie earned CoSIDA Academic All-American honors as a junior in 1988 after capturing his first of two New England titles and scoring a pair of wins at the NCAA tournament.

Duthie served as a team captain for three seasons and was a Scarlet Key recipient as a senior. He got off to a strong start as a freshman, posting a record of 24-5 en route to a spot in the NCAA Championships before adding 21 more wins the following year as a sophomore. The Ithaca, New York, native went on to earn 31 victories and a top-12 finish at the 1988 NCAAs before redshirting the 1988-99 season. As a senior, he went undefeated in dual meets (18-0-1) before finishing the year with an incredible 43 wins to finish his collegiate career with 119 victories.

Jeanne Friedman
A champion for equal rights for female athletes as both a student-athlete and coach, Friedman ('75) was a founding member of the women's rowing program in 1973 and helped it become a varsity sport at BU. The Philadelphia native captured a pair of gold medals at the National Women's Rowing Association National Championships with the Terriers. She first captured top honors in the lightweight fours division in 1974 and then repeated the feat in the lightweight eights division a year later.
 
Following graduation, Friedman went on to claim seven medals at the United States Rowing Association Masters National Regatta. In 1985, she picked up a gold medal in the open eights division. She followed that performance with a gold medal in the lightweight fours division a year later and added a third gold medal in the singles division in 1987. Inducted into the Philadelphia Jewish Sports Hall of Fame in 2009, Freidman spent 22 seasons as head coach of the women's rowing program at Mount Holyoke, leading the Lyons to three NEWMAC Championships and numerous medals at both ECAC and New England Regional Championships.

Kevin Murphy
One of the finest middle-distance runners in BU history, Murphy was a three-time All-American at 800 meters. He set the indoor school record in that race with a time of 1:47.65 in 1997, a mark that still stands today. A seven-time conference champion, Murphy still holds the indoor record at the America East Championships thanks to his time of 1:48.37 in 1998.
 
Murphy immediately found success on the conference stage as a freshman in 1995, winning the first of three outdoor titles in the 800m run. He followed that up the next year with victories in the 400m and 800m races en route to being named Most Outstanding Performer at the outdoor championships. Murphy capped his sensational sophomore campaign with an All-American performance in the 800m run. After winning the 1,000m indoor title in 1997 and earning indoor All-America honors in the 800m run, Murphy finished his decorated collegiate career with an outstanding senior season in 1998. He was the Most Outstanding Performer at the indoor conference meet and secured a second straight All-America selection in the 800m run before winning the outdoor title in that same race.

Victor Paguia
The first male or female diver to be inducted into the BU Athletic Hall of Fame, Victor Paguia ('05) is one of two student-athletes in conference history to claim all four America East Most Outstanding Diver (2002-05) awards. In total, the Lake Forest, Illinois native won the one-meter title four times and the three-meter event three times. On the team front as a freshman, he also helped the Terriers win their first AE championship since 1994.
 
Besides excelling at the conference level, Paguia was named the ECAC Most Outstanding Diver in each of his final three seasons, and finished as high as eighth in the one-meter and 10th in the three-meter dives at the NCAA Diving Zones in 2003. Following graduation, Paguia went on to compete for the Philippine National Diving Team at the 2005 XI FINA World Championships in Montreal and at the Asian Cup. Transferring his athletic abilities in his professional career, Paguia currently works as a stunt coordinator in Hollywood, having worked on films such as The Dark Knight Rises.

Gary Plummer
A 6-foot-9 center from Detroit, Michigan, Plummer ('84) didn't start playing basketball until his sophomore year of high school but would go on to become a two-time team captain and the highest NBA Draft selection in program history. Recruited by then head coach Rick Pitino to BU in 1980, Plummer flourished his final two years, posting a total of 900 points (16.7 ppg) and 495 rebounds (9.2 rpg). As a junior, he helped the Terriers win the ECAC North title and reach the NCAAs for the first time since 1959.
 
As a senior playing for future NBA head coach John Kuester, Plummer claimed All-Conference First Team honors while averaging a double-double (17.0 ppg, 10.4 rpg) along with 1.2 blocks, 1.0 steals per game and 50.0 FG%. Recording 30 or more points on three occasions, he graduated ranked eighth all-time in scoring (1,129 points) and second in blocks (70) with 603 rebounds. He would later be drafted 45th overall (2nd round) by the Golden State Warriors and appeared in 66 games for the Warriors during the 1984-85 season. A 2013 New England Basketball Hall of Fame inductee, Plummer also spent several years in Europe and competed with the Denver Nuggets in 1992-93.
 
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