| Legends
            of the Falcons 
 Five More
SPU Giants
Inducted
Into the
Hall of Fame
 
   GIANTS OF SEATTLE Pacific University’s rich athletic
              past and present returned to the campus on Friday, January 23,
              when the Falcon Legends Athletic Hall of Fame inducted its second
              charter class.
              Former KOMO TV sports director Bruce King served
                as master of ceremonies and SPU President Philip Eaton bestowed
                the awards at the packed luncheon event held during Homecoming
                Week.
 In all, one coach and four athletes were inducted into
              the 2004 class: basketball coaching great Les Habegger, soccer
              scoring sensation Ken Covell ’75, record-setting track and field
                sprinter Roy Duncan ’58, gymnastics champion Debbie Halle Jackson ’77
                and tennis ace Bob Thompson ’69. In addition, the late Jack MacDonald ’50,
                a Falcon Legend cofounder, longtime booster and former basketball
                letterman, was given the first Lifetime Achievement Award posthumously.
 
 Habegger has been gone from the campus for nearly 30 years, coaching
              in the NBA and then in Europe, but he says he left his heart
              at SPU. “I’m elated, excited and very thankful for this honor,” explains
                the hugely successful Seattle Pacific basketball coach from 1957–75. “This
                is very meaningful to me. My time at Seattle Pacific was special.
                I experienced some wonderful things after I left for the Sonics,
                but I left part of my heart at this place, and it will never
                leave.”
 
 Now retired and living in Phoenix, Habegger reversed
              the Falcons’ fortunes shortly after taking over as head coach
                in 1958. It took two years to crack .500 and three more to make
                the NCAA tournament. By 1965, SPC won the West Regional and advanced
                to the Elite Eight. The next campaign commenced with an upset
                of then-Division I Seattle University. In all, his teams won
                267 games in 17 seasons and went to the NCAA tournament six times.
                The four other Hall of Fame inductees were all students during
                Habegger’s 20-year run as athletic director.
 
 The accomplishments
              of Duncan have become more and more impressive over time. He
              remains the greatest sprinter to ever wear an SPU singlet, not
              just because he was the most decorated (a three-time All-American
              in the 100- and 220-yard dashes), but because his school records
              have gone untouched for 45 years. Originally from Wenatchee,
              Duncan now lives in Anacortes.
 
 Thompson set the standard for
              all tennis players at Seattle Pacific. In his senior season,
              Thompson reached the quarterfinal round of the NCAA Championships
              in both singles and doubles (with partner Wilbert Look). The
              native of Vancouver, Washington, and current resident of Salem,
              Oregon, finished with a career record of 66-20 in singles and
              56-23 in doubles — the most of any player.
 
 Covell’s arrival at
                Seattle Pacific coincided with a reversal of fortune in Coach
                Cliff McCrath’s fledgling soccer program. The team went from
                winless before Covell to four consecutive trips to the playoffs,
                including a 1974 NCAA championship game appearance. A two-time
                all-region selection, Covell held every major scoring record
                upon graduation. He resides in Denver, where he graduated from
                Lincoln High School.
 
 Jackson was a member of the original gymnastics
              team that placed fifth in the national (all-division) championship,
              and she punctuated that first season by winning the school’s
                first national title, on the uneven bars. She graduated with
                each of the five school records and was a seven-time All-American.
                Married to Western Washington basketball coach Brad Jackson,
                she lives in Bellingham.
 
 MacDonald was a member of the Falcon
              basketball teams in 1945 and 1946, but his demonstrated allegiance
              to his alma mater lasted well over 50 years and touched nearly
              every sport. He later became longtime president of the Falcon
              Club booster group and was the spearhead for creating the Falcon
              Legends Hall of Fame. He died November 28, 2002 — two months
                before the first class was inducted.
 
 The list of presenting speakers
              for this year’s Falcon Legends luncheon was also a who’s who
                of Falcon athletics. Joining longtime soccer coach Cliff McCrath
                were former tennis coach, NCAA faculty representative and professor
                emeritus Wes Lingren; gymnast Jill Johnson Welker; basketball
                letterman Bob Hathaway; and former SPU Board of Trustees Chair
                Bud McDole.
 
 Hall of Fame classes are limited to five inductees
              each year and must have no more than one non-athlete represented.
              Nominations for the induction Class of 2005 are now being accepted.
              To make your nomination, call 206/281-2085.
 
 — BY
                                                                          CLINT KELLY
 — PHOTO
                                                                          BY
                                                                        JOHN
                                                                        KEATLEY
 
 
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