RHODES' GONDA; OGLETHORPE'S CHURCHWELL; SEWANEE'S HARRIGAN
HIGHLIGHT SOUTHERN COLLEGIATE ATHLETIC CONFERENCE'S
15TH ANNIVERSARY MEN'S BASKETBALL TEAM
SUWANEE, Ga. - Rhodes College guard Mike
Gonda, Oglethorpe University forward Russ
Churchwell and Sewanee-University of the South center
Ryan Harrigan highlight an impressive list of past
standouts named to the Southern Collegiate Athletic Conference's
15th Anniversary men's basketball team.
Gonda is one of just four players in SCAC history
to earn First Team All-SCAC honors three times. He was the league's
first Player-of-the-Year in 1991-92 as a sophomore and in three
years in the SCAC, scored 1,258 points. Gonda averaged 17.00 points
per game over that span - the eighth-highest career scoring average
in league history. He also ranks sixth all-time in total assists
(385) and his 5.20 assists per game career average is the best in
SCAC history.
Oglethorpe's Churchwell is the league's all-time
leading scorer (1,894) and rebounder (849), a three-time All-SCAC
performer and two-time All-America selection. The 2000-01
First-Year Player-of-the-Year, Churchwell is the only player in
league history to lead the league in both scoring and rebounding
two different seasons (2001-02 and 2003-04). All told, he led the
league in scoring three of his four years and was the SCAC's
leading rebounder for two seasons.
Harrigan, the league's only two-time
Player-of-the-Year (1996-97, 1997-98), was the SCAC's all-time
leading scorer when he graduated in 1998 (he is now second). He led
Sewanee to the 1996-97 SCAC title and back-to-back NCAA tournament
appearances his junior and senior seasons. Harrigan, a consensus
First Team All-American in 1998, is also sixth on the league's
all-time rebounding list (646).
Joining Gonda on the team as guards are
Aaron Bowser of Southwestern University,
David DeMarcus of Centre College, Quintin
Mason of Trinity University and Dan
Waguespack of Millsaps College.
Southwestern's Bowser is the only active player to
earn a spot on the all-anniversary team. The 2004-05 SCAC
Player-of-the-Year, Bowser became the program's first All-America
selection last season. He surpassed the 1,000-points scored plateau
earlier this season and his career point total stands at 1,267
(29th all-time) as of this release.
DeMarcus earned SCAC Player-of-the-Year honors in
1992-93 when his Centre team tied for the league title. In just
three years in the SCAC, DeMarcus scored 1,236 points (32nd
all-time) and his 17.17 points per game in that three-year span
ranks seventh in SCAC history. He earned All-SCAC honors all three
seasons and his teams won conference championships twice.
Mason, the 1999-2000 SCAC Player-of-the-Year,
ended his career at Trinity with 1,442 points - which at the time
he graduated was the fifth most points scored in league history. He
now stands 12th all-time. Mason is one of just four players in SCAC
history to earn First Team All-SCAC honors three times. He was a
member of two SCAC championship teams, including the 1997-98 team
that earned the program its first NCAA tournament berth and
postseason win.
Waguespack is the only player in SCAC history to
earn First or Second Team honors all four years in the league. The
2001-02 SCAC Defensive Player-of-the-Year finished his career at
Millsaps as the league's all-time steals leader with 264.
Waguespack also ranks fourth in points (1,626) and ninth in
rebounds (609) on the SCAC's all-time lists. He was a member of the
Majors' 2000-01 SCAC title-winning team that earned the program its
third NCAA tournament appearance.
In addition to Churchwell, other forwards selected
to the all-anniversary team include: Joe Nixon of
DePauw University, Neal Power of Rhodes,
Jason Rhodes of Hendrix College and
Phillip Robinson of Millsaps.
When DePauw's Nixon finished his career, he had
accumulated the fourth-highest point total in league history (1,546
- now good for fifth). He finished third in the league's
Player-of-the-Year voting as a sophomore and second as both a
junior and senior. Nixon capped his career when his Tiger team won
the 2001-02 SCAC title and advanced all the way to the sectional
finals (the deepest a SCAC men's team had ever advanced in the NCAA
Tournament) before losing to eventual national champion
Otterbein.
Power of Rhodes remains the only player in SCAC
history to earn the league's POTY honor (2000-01) while playing for
a team with a losing record. He was also recognized as an
All-American that season. Power, who led the league in scoring in
consecutive seasons in 1999-2000 and 2000-01, finished his career
as the SCAC's third all-time leading scorer (1,647 points) and
seventh all-time leading rebounder (628).
Rhodes was named the 1995-96 SCAC
Player-of-the-Year after leading his Hendrix team to back-to-back
NCAA Tournament appearances in 1995 and 1996. He finished his
career with 1,340 points and 599 rebounds (tied for 11th all-time
in the SCAC) and earned All-America honors his senior season. After
working several years as an assistant, Rhodes served as head coach
at his alma mater for the 2003-04 season.
Millsaps' Robinson earned 1994-95 SCAC
Player-of-the-Year honors his senior season as his Majors won the
1995 conference championship and became the first men's team in
SCAC history to advance to the Sweet Sixteen of the NCAA
Tournament. He finished his career with 1,370 points (17th all-time
in SCAC) and his 18.03 points per game average is the third-best in
league history.
Sean Devins of Trinity and Joe
Ringger of DePauw join Harrigan as the
centers named to the all-anniversary team.
Devins was the enforcer in the middle for
Trinity's three consecutive SCAC championship teams. The three-time
SCAC Defensive Player-of-the-Year is the league's all-time leading
shot blocker (329 - seventh all-time in DIII history) and finished
his career with 1,113 points and 599 rebounds. Devins was the MVP
of the both the 2004 and 2005 SCAC Basketball Tournament. He is the
only player on the all-anniversary squad to have participated in
three NCAA tournaments (2003-2005), culminating with a trip to the
sectional finals his senior season.
DePauw's Ringger, the 2002-03 SCAC
Player-of-the-Year, is currently sixth on the league's all-time
scoring list with 1,533 points and second in rebounds with 761 (he
was the league's all-time leader when he graduated). Ringger was a
junior on the DePauw team that advanced to the NCAA Sectional
final. He ranks in the top five in school history for points,
rebounds and blocks.
The Southern Collegiate Athletic Conference will be announcing 15th
Anniversary teams in all 18 sports during the 2005-06 academic
year. The SCAC was formed in 1991 after a reorganization of its
predecessor, the College Athletic Conference (CAC). The CAC dates
to 1962 with four charter members: Centre College, Southwestern @
Memphis (now Rhodes College), Sewanee-The University of the South,
and Washington & Lee (Va.) University. Washington (Mo.)
University joined the CAC later that same year.
The SCAC was formed to provide an association through which the
member institutions may encourage organized competition in
intercollegiate sports among teams representative of their
respective student bodies. Members of this conference share a
commitment to priority of the overall quality of academic standards
and quality educational experiences.
The SCAC's 15th Anniversary teams were selected in each sport
through balloting by present coaches and administrators. Athletes
who participated in conference competition between the fall of 1991
through the spring of 2005 and had been named to at least two
All-SCAC teams were eligible for selection.
|
15th Anniversary Team |
All-SCAC Selections | ||||||||||||||
| Pos. | Name, School | 91 92 |
92 93 |
93 94 |
94 95 |
95 96 |
96 97 |
97 98 |
98 99 |
99 00 |
00 01 |
01 02 |
02 03 |
03 04 |
04 05 |
| G | Aaron Bowser, Southwestern | x | x# | ||||||||||||
| G | David DeMarcus, Centre | + | x# | x | |||||||||||
| G | Mike Gonda, Rhodes | x# | x | x | |||||||||||
| G | Quintin Mason, Trinity | x | x# | x | |||||||||||
| G | Dan Waguespack, Millsaps | + | + | x | x% | ||||||||||
| F | Russ Churchwell, Oglethorpe | & | + | x | x | ||||||||||
| F | Joe Nixon, DePauw | x | x | x | |||||||||||
| F | Neal Power, Rhodes | x | x | x# | |||||||||||
| F | Jason Rhodes, Hendrix | x | x# | ||||||||||||
| F | Phillip Robinson, Millsaps | x | + | x# | |||||||||||
| C | Sean Devins, Trinity | +% | +% | x% | |||||||||||
| C | Ryan Harrigan, Sewanee | + | x# | x# | |||||||||||
| C | Joe Ringger, DePauw | + | x | x# | |||||||||||
x First Team All-SCAC
+ Second Team All-SCAC
# Player-of-the-Year
% Defensive Player-of-the-Year
& Newcomer-of-the-Year
(the SCAC began naming a Newcomer-of-the-Year in 1999-2000 and a
Defensive Player-of-the-Year in 2001-02)