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HOF Class 2025

Athletics Athletic Communications

Class of 2025 Inducted Into Athletic Hall of Fame

Three individuals and two teams were inducted into the Colorado College Athletic Hall of Fame Saturday night at Ed Robson Arena.
 
Ted Castaneda (cross country and track & field head coach), Shawn Reid '94 (hockey), Amy Smith Hall '88 (volleyball), the 1976-77 women's basketball team and the 2004-05 hockey team were enshrined as the Class of 2025. The signature event was a part of Colorado College's 150th Anniversary celebration.
 
In addition to the five inductees, Bob Manning was the recipient of the Tiger Medal, presented to an individual or organization who has made extraordinary contributions in support of Colorado College Athletics. The award exemplifies the values of a liberal arts education while recognizing outstanding service, commitment and accomplishment at the community, national or global level. Manning, who served on CC's Board of Trustees from 2005-17 and has been a voice on the Colorado College Athletics Board for decades, will receive his award at the induction ceremony.
 
For just the third time, the athletic department's signature event was held at Robson Arena, with 275 people attending at the school's state of the art multi-purpose building.
 
Castaneda, who became head coach of the men's cross country team at CC in 1981, assumed head coaching duties for women's cross country in 1993 and track and field in 1994. He retired in December of 2020. During Castaneda's tenure at Colorado College, the men's cross country team captured seven Southern Collegiate Athletic Conference championships, while his women's teams won four.
 
In addition, 23 cross country and track athletes earned All-America honors, including 1998 NCAA heptathlete champion Heather O'Brien and five-time recipient Julian Boggs (three times in cross country and twice in track and field). Castaneda was inducted into the Colorado Running Hall of Fame in 2007, the CU Athletic Hall of Fame in 2016 and the Colorado Springs Sports Hall of Fame in 2022.

Reid was an integral part of the CC hockey program's resurgence to the national prominence in the 1990s. He served as team captain his senior season in 1993-94 and led the Tigers to the 1994 WCHA title, CC's first league championships in 37 years. Reid was named the WCHA Defensive Player of the Year and a first-team All-American in 1994 and finished his career with 93 points.    
 
Smith Hall is one of only 17 athletes in Colorado College history to earn at least three All-America honors. Smith, who is still No. 5 on CC's career list with 2,219 assists and No. 8 with 136 aces, helped the Tigers to three straight NCAA Tournament Appearances, which aligned with her All-America accolades in 1985, '86 and '87). 
 
The 1976-77 women's basketball team finished with a 20-4 record in the program's second season. The Tigers, coached by Laura Golden, won the regional tournament and advanced to the AIAW Division II National Tournament that season. The team was led by freshman Lorna Kollmeyer, who averaged team-highs of 26 points and 13 rebounds per game. She is still the program's career leading scorer with 2,109 points and No. 2 with 1,099 rebounds.    

The 2004-05 hockey team, led by team captain Mark Stuart, posted a 31-9-3 record, the second-most wins in school history. The Tigers were WCHA Co-regular season champions and advanced to the Frozen Four (national semifinals). Marty Sertich won CC's second Hobey Baker Award as the National Player of the Year and led the nation in scoring with 64 points, followed by teammate Brett Sterling with 63. The Tigers had four NCAA Division I All-Americans on the team. 
 

 
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