CLEMSON FOOTBALL

Clemson Hall of Fame Inductees for 1999


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CLEMSON, S.C. -- A record nine Clemson greats will be inducted into the school's athletic Hall of Fame this September, Tiger Letterman's Association President Ray Brown announced Wednesday. The class includes former Clemson Head Football Coach Danny Ford, who guided the Tigers to the National Championship in 1981. Three former women athletes are also in the class, the largest number of female inductees in one year in the history of the Hall of Fame, which dates to 1973.

The group also includes former basketball All-American Horace Grant, still a starting forward with the Orlando Magic, and former two-position All-ACC baseball player Jimmy Key. Those two athletes have gone on to collect five world championship rings in their respective sports. Grant won three world championships with the Chicago Bulls and Key won World Series crowns with the Toronto Bluejays and the New York Yankees.

Former football players Bubba Brown, Clemson's all-time leading tackler, and John Phillips, a two-time All-America lineman, are also in the group. Mark Dickson, the national senior player of the year in college tennis in 1982, is also a member of the 1999 Clemson Hall of Fame class.

Former Lady Tigers in the group are Janet Knight Linder, Janet Ellison McDonnell and Dr. Denise Murphy Stadelmaier. Knight is still second on Clemson's all-time basketball scoring list and was an All-American as a senior. (1985). Ellison was Clemson's first female All-American in any sport. She was a five-time swimming All-American in 1978. Murphy was a two-time academic All-American in volleyball and won the Marie James Postgraduate Scholarhsip as the ACC's top female student-athlete.

The class will be honored on September 10 with a dinner followed by ceremonies at halftime of the Clemson vs. Virginia football game at Death Valley on September 11th.

Here are some short bios on the Hall of Fame Inductees for 1999:

DENISE MURPHY, Volleyball, 1983-86

  • Two-time Academic All-American, only female two-time selection in Clemson sports history.

  • First-team All-ACC in 1985 and 1986.

  • Team MVP in 1985 and 1986 when she took Tigers to a pair of 20 win seasons.

  • Set Clemson record in kills and defensive saves at the time of her graduation.

  • Won Marie James Postgraduate scholarship as the ACC's top female student-athlete.

    JANET ELLISON, Swimming, 1977-80

  • Ellison was the first female All-American in Clemson history

  • Five-time All-American in 1978

  • Ellison was an All-American in the 200 Breaststroke, 100 Breaststroke, 50 Breaststroke, 200 Medley Relay, and the 100 IM

  • In 1979, Ellison was an All-American in the 50 Breaststroke

    JANET KNIGHT, Basketball, 1982-86

  • Clemson's second all-time career scorer with 1,795.

  • Third on the Lady Tiger career list for best field goal percentage with .525.

  • Second on the Clemson career list for best free throw percentage with a .812 mark, (333-410).

  • Led Clemson in free throw percentage all four years of her career.

  • A third-team All-American in 1985

  • First-Team All-Atlantic Coast Conference in 1985, 2nd team in 1984.

    DANNY FORD, Football, 1979-89

  • Coached Clemson to the 1981 National Championship, Clemson's only National Championship in football and the first national championship in any sport in Clemson history.

  • National Coach of the Year in 1981.

  • At 33, the youngest coach in history to win the National Championship.

  • Coached in eight bowl games in his 11 years and gained six victories.

  • Had 96-29-4 record at Clemson, highest winning percentage (.760) in Clemson history given a minimum of five years as coach. Has more top 20 victories (41) than any coach in Clemson history.

  • Captured five ACC Championships as head coach.

  • Clemson finished ranked in the final AP top 20 in seven of his 11 seasons.

  • Twenty-one of his players were All-Americans and 41 went on to play in the NFL.

    JOHN PHILLIPS, Football, 1984-87

  • Two-time All-America offensive guard, first-team as a junior and second-team as a senior.

  • Two-time All-ACC performer and two-time winner of the state Jacobs Blocking Trophy.

  • Set a single season record with 103 knockdown blocks in 1987, he had 100 in 1986.

  • Concluded his career with 245 knockdown blocks.

  • Started 32 games and played in 47 in his career.

  • Co-Captain of Clemson's 10-2 1987 team that won the Citrus Bowl with 35-10 win over Penn State.

  • Named to Clemson Centennial Team in 1996

    BUBBA BROWN, Football, 1976-79

  • Clemson's all-time leading tackler with 515 stops, a record that has stood for 20 years.

  • Record has stood even though Clemson has had 11 linebackers since Brown finished playing who have gone on to the NFL.

  • Chosen as starting linebacker on Clemson's Centennial Team

  • First-team All-ACC in 1978 and 1979.

  • Played in three bowl games, he had 22 tackles against Ohio State in Clemson's Gator Bowl victory in 1978.

  • Started 42 games, a record for a Clemson linebacker, he had 24 games of double figures in tackles.

  • Top tackler on Clemson team in 1978 and 1979, he had 320 in the two seasons combined.

    MARK DICKSON, Tennis, 1979-82

  • 1982 ITCA Senior Player-of-the-Year

  • 1980 All-American, singles

  • 1981 All-American, singles and doubles

  • 1982 All-American, singles

  • Sixth on the Clemson career list for most wins in singles play with 128 victories

  • Tenth on the Clemson career list for best winning pct. in singles play with a .753 figure

  • Second on the school's record list for best set winning pct. with a .815 mark as he won 88 of 108 sets played in 1980

  • Played professionally for many years, once reached final eight of US Open.

    JIMMY KEY, Baseball, 1980-82

  • Only baseball player in Clemson history to be first-team All-ACC at two positions in the same year.

  • First-team All-ACC as pitcher and DH in 1982.

  • Established school record for doubles with ACC best 21 in 1982, he also led the team in batting with .359 average. On the mount tied for the ACC lead in wins with nine that same season. Led the team in strikeouts with 94 and ERA with a 2.79 figure.

  • Starter as freshman on Clemson's 1980 College World Series team.

  • Went on to 16-year career in the Majors.

  • Only former Clemson player to play on two World Series Championship teams, 1992 Toronto and 1996 Yankees.

  • Played in two Major League All-Star Games.

    HORACE GRANT, Basketball, 1983-87

  • First and still only Clemson player chosen ACC Basketball Player of the Year.

  • First and one of just two players in ACC history to win the statistical triple crown.

    Led the league in scoring, rebounding and field goal percentage in 1986-87 when he led Clemson to a 25-6 record, still the Clemson record for wins in a season.

  • Second-team AP and UPI All-American, the highest All-America team for a Clemson basketball player.

  • Named South Carolina's Athlete of the Year in 1987.

  • Tenth pick of the 1987 NBA draft, he has been on three NBA World Championship teams with the Chicago Bulls. Four time selection to NBA All-Defensive team.

  • Played in the 1994 NBA All-Star game.
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