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Five For Sports Hall of Fame
Four alumni athletes and a former coach were inducted into the Duke
Sports Hall of Fame on September 21 at a ceremony in Cameron Indoor
Stadium. Named for 2001 were Tommy Amaker '87, M.B.A. '89; Roy Hord
Jr. '57; Mike Jeffries B.S.E. '84; Chris Moreland Culbertson '88;
and Al Buehler, longtime track and field coach. The induction brings
the Hall of Fame to 107 members.
Amaker was a four-year starter and point guard under coach Mike
Krzyzewski. During that time, he helped lead the Blue Devils to
a 108-30 record, four NCAA tournaments, and an appearance in the
1986 Final Four. In the 1986-87 season, he garnered All-America
honors and was named National Defensive Player of the Year. His
259 career steals and 708 assists rank second all-time at Duke.
Amaker joined Coach K's coaching staff as a graduate assistant in
1988 and, over the next nine years, helped Duke capture two national
championships, three Final Four appearances, and a 230-80 record
overall. He joined Seton Hall University as its head basketball
coach in 1996, but left to become head coach at the University of
Michigan in May.
Hord is one of the most decorated Blue Devil linemen in the program's
history. In his three years with the Blue Devils (1954-57), he helped
win one ACC championship, appeared in two Orange Bowls, and was
part of three teams that went a combined 19-9-4 (12-2-1 in the ACC).
Hord, who played both tackle and guard, is one of twenty-five Duke
football players to be named first-team All-America. He was also
named All-ACC and earned a trip to the Hula Bowl. He was selected
in the 1957 NFL draft by the Los Angeles Rams in the eighth round.
During his pro stint, he played for the Rams, the Philadelphia Eagles,
and the New York Jets.
Jeffries is only the third soccer player admitted to Duke's Sports
Hall of Fame. He helped lead Duke to the NCAA title game in 1982,
four NCAA Tournament appearances, and a 71-11-7 record overall.
Beginning as a forward and moving to sweeper, he earned All-ACC
honors for his defensive prowess in 1982 and 1983. Besides being
named first team All-America in 1983, he captured the Hermann Award
as National Player of the Year. He began a pro career with the Major
Indoor Soccer League, playing for both the Minnesota Strikers and
the Dallas Sidekicks. He is in his first year as head coach for
the MSL's Dallas Burn.
Considered the greatest woman on the basketball court in Blue
Devil history, Moreland is the first women's basketball player to
be elected to Duke's Hall of Fame. She is the career leader in scoring,
with 2,232 points, and the program's all-time leading rebounder
with 1,229 boards in her four years. In 1988, she was named first
team All-America, the first women's basketball player at Duke to
receive that honor. She was named All-ACC four times, ACC Rookie
of the Year in 1985, and ACC Player of the Year in 1987.
Buehler, who coached in Duke's track and field program for forty-five
years, retired last year after hosting the 2000 NCAA Track and Field
Championships at Wallace Wade Stadium. After a stellar undergraduate
track career at the University of Maryland, he came to Duke as head
cross-country coach, and was promoted in 1964 from assistant to
head coach of the track and field team. A past chair of the physical
education department, he coached several All-Americans, seven Penn
Relay champions, six ACC cross-country teams, and five Olympians--among
them, two who won medals. Buehler was team manager for the U.S.
Olympic Track and Field Team in Munich in 1972, Los Angeles in 1984,
and Seoul in 1988. In 2001, he was head manager for the U.S. contingent
at the World Indoor Track Championships in Lisbon, Portugal.
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