Del Pratt had a great rookie campaign in 1912, where the then St. Louis Brown had 172 Hits and a .302 Batting Average. The Second Baseman continued to do well, recording at least 159 Hits with 26 Stolen Bases and finishing first in Runs Batted In (103) in 1916. That was a good initial run, but all was not well in the city of St. Louis.
Bill White began his career with the New York Giants in 1956m, but it was not until he made it to St. Louis in 1959 where his career began to take off.
George Mullin played the first eleven years and change of his career with the Detroit Tigers, and while he is not one of the most known hurlers in Major League history, he was a massive cog in the machine that was the Detroit Tigers in the late 1900s.
Regular visitors of Notinhalloffame.com know that we are slowly working on the top 50 of every major team in the NHL, NBA, NFL and MLB. Once that is done, we intend to look at how each team honor their past players, coaches and executives. Eventually, we are going to get to that of the Division I schools, and conferences. As such, it is news the University Of Maine has announced seven new individuals and one team to their Hall of Fame, comprising the Class of 2021.
This brings the total to 213 members. The ceremony will take place on September 17.
Brittney Cheney, Softball: Cheney is a three-time All-Conference Selection, and led the Black Bears to an America East Regular Season Title in 2004, and a spot in the National Tournament. She has a career Batting Average of .329 with 18 Home Runs.
Jack Cosgrove, Football Coach: Cosgrove coached Maine for 23 years, winning 123 Games and winning three conference titles.
Aaron Dashiell, Football: Dashiell was a two-time All-American at Defensive Back and was named the team MVP in 1998.
Rick Lashua, Baseball: Lashua helped Maine reach the College World Series four years in a row (1981-84) and was a two-time Regional All-Tournament Selection. He batted .352 as a Black Bear.
Riley Masters, Track & Field: Masters was a two-time All-American in the Mile.
Gustav Nyquist, Hockey: Nyquist played 113 Games and scored 144 Points and was a two-time Finalist for the Hobey Baker Award.
Raffi Wolf, Women’s Hockey: Wolff scored 93 Points and was a two-time Olympian for Germany.
1998-99 Women’s Basketball Team: The Black Bears had a 24-7 record and became the first Maine squad to win a game in the NCAA Tournament.
We would like to congratulate the newest members of the University of Maine Sports Hall of Fame.