Athletics » Hall of Fame

Hall of Fame

 
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Valparaiso High School enjoys a rich history of excellence in Boys, Girls, and Unified Sports programs. The Valparaiso High School Athletic Hall of Fame was established in 1989 to celebrate, recognize, and honor Athletes, Coaches, Teams, Administrators, and Contributors who have excelled in their respective sports, served as positive role models both on and off the field, and supported our programs through exceptional service. As individuals are inducted into our Hall of Fame, we hope they inspire our current and future athletes. This recognition helps to maintain the spirit, pride, and sense of community within Valparaiso Community Schools and serves as a historical account of our outstanding Athletic Traditions.

 
 
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Valparaiso High School Athletics has announced the 2024 class of inductees into the Athletics Hall of Fame. "We are thrilled to honor these remarkable individuals who have contributed so much to the rich tradition of Viking Athletics," Valparaiso High School Athletic Director Stacy Adams said. "Their achievements have inspired future generations of student-athletes. This year's Hall of Fame class represents the spirit and excellence of Valparaiso High School."

 
These 7 inductees join 102 Valparaiso High School Athletics Hall of Fame members.  They’ll be honored at halftime of the VHS vs Chesterton football game at Viking Field on Friday, September 20 as well as at a HOF Ceremony on Saturday, September 21 at Valparaiso High School.
 
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2024 Inductees
 
Maria (Astrologes) Combs - '69 - Golf
A 1969 graduate, Maria grew up in the era before Title IX and was unable to compete in high school athletics. However, she grew up in a family that loved golf and she spent a lot of time at the Valparaiso Country Club, which only had nine holes back in the 1960s. She was able to develop her skills while playing at the country club, where she was known to out-drive most of the men who played there. As she got older, she spent hours hitting golf balls and taking lessons from the pro at the time, Bill Kraft. Her short game improved, and Kraft predicted she would play in the LPGA. He was correct. Maria embarked on her golf career in college, playing at San Fernando Valley State and the University of New Mexico. As an amateur she won the Los Angeles County Women's Open. She earned a spot on the LPGA tour in 1972 and competed until 1979. By then, she was known for her length off the tee. In her second year as a pro, she ranked No. 21 on the money list and No. 20 in scoring average. Her one career victory came in May, 1975 at the Birmingham Classic, where she won in a playoff with a birdie on the first extra hole against LPGA legendary players JoAnne Carner and Judy Rankin. In major tournaments, her best finishes were a tie for 12th in the 1975 U.S. Women’s Open, and a tie for 33rd in the Women’s PGA Championship in 1976.
   
M. Robert (Bob) Cain - '49 - Golfer & Coach
Known as “The Great Philosopher” for his timeless wisdom delivered in a laid-back style, Bob Cain was also well known for his lengthy service as an art teacher and boys golf coach. He graduated from VHS in 1949, but his family history goes back to the first settlers who arrived in what is now Porter County in the 1830s. During his high school days, Bob played on the golf team coached by King Telle, who was also the principal. Induction into the U.S. Army and service in the Korean War followed. Bob attended the Chicago Academy of Fine Arts and earned his teaching degree from Indiana University.
Bob succeeded Telle as the boys golf coach in 1968 and held that position until 1987. The Vikings were always among the contenders in the Duneland Athletic Conference. His teams won eight sectional titles, the last coming in his final season. His 1982 team won the regional and tied for seventh in the state meet led by Kevin Kozlowski, who, individually, was runner-up. Bob also coached Gary Krueger, the school’s first individual state champion. As a team, the Vikings tied for fourth that season. Bob had a great memory and loved to tell stories about his family and the history of Valparaiso. He and his wife, Sue, enjoyed retirement at a cottage in Elk Rapids, Michigan. They had three
children – Polly, Tom, and Marty – as well as four grandchildren and three great grandchildren.A lifelong Valparaiso resident, Bob passed away after a short illness in June of 2022.
 
Jim Crowell - '92 - Baseball, Basketball, Cross Country
One of the most versatile athletes in school history, Crowell graduated in 1992 with nine letters in four sports over his four-year prep career.  By the time he was a senior, Crowell was a 6-foot-4 force on the basketball team and a pitching sensation for the baseball team. Yet Crowell also ran on the cross country team all four years, with two appearances in the state meet for the Vikings as a junior and senior. He scored the majority of his 386 career points for the basketball team as a senior, averaging 15 points per game for a team that finished 16-5. But baseball was his future. As a senior, the big lefty had a 10-1 pitching record for a Viking team that finished 23-7. His pitching highlight was a 2-1 victory over Chesterton in the sectional. In his final prep game, he pitched in the Indiana North-South All-Star game, striking out seven of the nine batters he faced in a 6-2 win. Crowell moved on to the University of Indianapolis, where he pitched for three years before signing with the Cleveland Indians as a free agent in 1995. That was the beginning of a 13-year professional career which included MLB stints with the Reds, Marlins and Phillies. He played in the minors with nine different organizations, pitching almost 1,000 innings with a 4.21 ERA. He played in four minor league All-Star games - Class A (1997), AA (1999) and AAA (2004 and 2005). Crowell has worked in the sales industry since retiring from baseball, and is currently with Grainger. He lives in Valparaiso with his wife, Natalie, and son Caden, also a baseball player who has committed to play at Notre Dame.
   
Dana (Drew) Shaw - '90 - Basketball
A member of the Indiana Basketball Hall of Fame, Dana (Drew) Shaw graduated from Valparaiso in 1990 after starting her career at Penn High School. She played for coach Dave Kenning on a loaded Vikings’ squad that finished 22-2 while winning the Duneland Athletic Conference, sectional and regional championships. As a Viking, she scored 350 of her 1,125 career points before starring at the University of Toledo. At Toledo, Dana was a two time Mid-American Conference Player of the Year. She graduated as the school’s all-time scoring leader with 1,919 points, a mark that still ranks fifth in school history. Her 16.3 scoring average ranks third in school history, and her career total of 659 assists ranks second. Her Rockets teams won the Mid-American Conference championship three of her four years, and she played in three NCAA Tournaments and the WNIT. She played professionally in Italy, was inducted to the Toledo Hall of Fame in 2001 and in 2012 had her jersey retired.  She was also inducted into the Mid-American Conference Hall of Fame in 2018.  Dana earned a law degree from the University of Toledo College of Law in 1998. She is married to Casey Shaw, another former Toledo standout, and they have four children (Anna, Isaiah, Caleb, and Luke). She currently serves as the Vice President of Government Relations at Grand Canyon University in Phoenix, where her husband is an assistant basketball coach on the staff of her brother, Bryce Drew (VHS Hall of Fame). She has two sons currently playing college basketball - Isaiah at Valparaiso University and Caleb at Grand Canyon University. She is the daughter of former Valparaiso University coach Homer Drew and Janet. Her brother Scott Drew (VHS Hall of Fame) is the coach at Baylor University.
  
Knoefel “Butch” Jones - '59 - Basketball, Football, Baseball, Track & Field
As one of Valparaiso's best four-sport athletes of the 1950s, Jones started his career with a bang as he is one of just a handful of freshmen to ever earn varsity playing on the basketball team. Playing for Hall of Fame coach Virgil Sweet, Jones saw action as a ninth grader at Boucher Gym and went on to score 933 career points. He's part of the class of 1959 known for turning around the fortunes of the basketball program, as Jones played with legendary teammates Dale Gott, Chuck Kriston, Cecil White and Scottie Ward. The 6-foot-4 Jones also played quarterback on the football team, was primarily a hurdler on the track team and as a junior helped restart the baseball program with another Hall of Fame coach, Bob Rhoda. During the summer, he and his teammates helped build the baseball fields behind what is now Thomas Jefferson Middle School. Jones' first college stop was at the University of Illinois, where he played baseball and basketball for two years. He then transferred back home to Valparaiso University, where he played basketball as well as baseball for another local legend, long-time VU baseball coach Emory Bauer. Following graduation, Jones coached freshman football and basketball at Griffith for two years. He then moved on to Chesterton, where he coached boys varsity basketball for six years along with teaching physical education and health. One of his highlights was defeating Valparaiso in the championship of the Chesterton Sectional in 1968, 64-60. The victory snapped Valpo's 11-year sectional winning streak that started in 1957 when Jones was a sophomore. Jones retired from teaching and coaching and eventually started his own company, Jones Construction. He built many homes in the Chesterton area. He's been retired for many years and lives in Porter Beach with his wife of 61 years, Janet. They have three children - Kelly (Eric) Schuster, Kevin (Karen) Jones and Jeff (Courtney) Jones - and seven grandchildren.
 
Scott Martin - '07 - Basketball
A three-year starter on teams that went a combined 66-9, Martin is a 2007 graduate who was a high-scoring force for the Vikings. His 1,352 points ranks sixth on Valpo’s career scoring list. He and teammate Robbie Hummel combined as one of the greatest duos in school history, winning three sectional titles. Martin averaged 20.3 points per game as a junior and was named The Times Player of the year and Duneland Athletic Conference MVP. He also earned IBCA underclassmen all state as a sophomore and junior. As a senior he averaged 22.2 points, 9.1 rebounds and 3 assists per game for a team that went 23-3 with a loss to eventual state champion East Chicago Central in the regional championship. That season he and Hummel were named co-DAC MVP’s. In 2007, he earned first-team all-state honors from the Associated Press, Indiana Basketball Coaches Association and Hoosier Basketball Magazine. Collegiately, he played one season at Purdue with Hummel and ranked fourth in scoring on a team that finished 25-8. Martin then transferred to Notre Dame, where he sat out two seasons, one due to injury, before playing three seasons from 2010 to 2013. He served as team captain his last two seasons and was the MVP in 2011-12. For his career, he averaged 9.2 points and 5.4 rebounds while starting 84 games. He played professionally in the UK and Czech Republic, followed by a coaching career which included 3 years at Notre Dame prior to joining the Vikings staff in 2023-24 under head coach Ben Lieske.

Todd Van Keppel - '81 - Football
No one has spent more time working on the art of kicking a football at Viking Field than 1981 graduate Todd Van Keppel. Since 1987, he has worked on the staff as special teams coordinator or volunteer coaching punters and kickers. More than 20 of his players went on to compete in college, including at schools such as Notre Dame, Illinois and Penn State. During his playing days, Van Keppel set the Valparaiso record for punting average at 39.33 yards which stood until 2010. He was a first-team All-Area and All-Duneland Athletic Conference Punter his senior year and was awarded a scholarship to Northern Illinois. It was there he played for two legendary coaches, Bill Mallory and Lee Corso. Van Keppel earned four letters for the Huskies, averaging 40.5 yards per punt for his career which included a long of 72 yards as a freshman. His team won the Mid-American Conference his junior season and beat Cal State-Fullerton in the California Bowl. He was an All-MAC performer as a senior and received honorable mention status as an All American. In 1985, Van Keppel had a tryout with the Dallas Cowboys. His love of kicking started as a youngster, when Todd competed in the national Punt, Pass and Kick finals at Candlestick Park in San Francisco when he was 9 years old in 1972.