| Friendly Competition Kellogg Has Built SPU’s Intramural Program Into 
            One of the Nation’s Largest
   YOU MIGHT GUESS 
              that Falcon athletes constitute only a small minority of Seattle 
              Pacific University students. And you’d be simultaneously right and 
              wrong. One hundred and seventy-two athletes play varsity sports 
              at SPU. That’s roughly 5 percent of the student body. 
            But many more students participate in intramural sports — an informal 
            but highly organized program that promotes friendly competition between 
            individuals, small teams or entire residence floors. Seattle Pacific’s 
            intramural program is one of the largest among small private universities, 
            and student involvement hovers between 70 and 80 percent — one of 
            the highest rates in the nation. Intramural and club sports are a longstanding tradition at SPU, going 
            back almost to day one. The program’s enormous success, however, is 
            a more recent phenomenon.
 “When I came in 1977, there weren’t many activities,” recalls Director 
              of Intramural and Club Sports Howie Kellogg. “Just basketball, softball 
              and football, and there were only five events in the entire Autumn 
              Quarter. There was even talk of taking the program away from the 
              Athletic Department.” But by offering more activities, Kellogg was 
              able to raise interest and involvement almost immediately. Aside 
              from the three years he spent in graduate school at the University 
              of Minnesota, he’s been at SPU ever since.
 “Howie is one of the most underrated people at SPU,” says Jared 
              Skeith ’98, who worked with Kellogg for three years as student commissioner 
              of officials. “He has such a positive effect on hundreds of students. 
              And he’s so dedicated. There were times I had to kick him out of 
              the gym: ‘Howie, go home, I’ll take care of this.’”
 
 Students are drawn to intramurals for a variety of reasons. Some 
              played football or baseball in high school — sports that aren’t 
              part of SPU’s varsity program. Some, like Cyrena “CyCy” Bell ’02, 
              participated in intramurals to “release energy, have fun, and relieve 
              some of the pressure that builds up when you’re studying.”
 
 Intramurals may be fun, but Kellogg takes his job seriously. His 
              program operates as a fully functioning league, replete with tournaments, 
              rankings, officials and gift certificates as prizes. Teams and players 
              register through a Web site that also displays scores, schedules 
              and standings. There are at least 35 sports, with multiple activities 
              nearly every week. And to raise funds, he also opens Seattle Pacific 
              facilities to church leagues and alumni teams: “I have softball 
              teams who graduated a long time ago that still play together in 
              the summer. For some of them, it’s the only time they see each other.”
 
 Along with the usual activities, like basketball, softball, volleyball 
              and football, Kellogg offers some more obscure choices: badminton, 
              bowling, chess, floor hocke y and pickleball (which drew record 
              64 teams last year). In fact, one obscure sport led to the SPU intramural 
              program’s own 15 minutes of fame. The year was 1986, and the sport 
              was Lazer Tag, a sort of high-tech paintball game. The Seattle Pacific 
              team won second place in a nationwide tournament, garnering international 
              media coverage — which, Kellogg chuckles, was the envy of his colleagues 
              in the varsity sports programs. The team’s $4,000 prize went back 
              into the intramural budget: Kellogg used it to buy floor hockey 
              equipment.
 
 Never complacent, Kellogg constantly tries new approaches. One major 
              change came about 10 years back, when he noticed that attitude problems 
              were getting out of hand among some players. After comparing notes, 
              Kellogg and other intramural directors devised a 10-point sportsmanship 
              rating system. Now officials grade teams on their behavior during 
              games, and teams have to maintain a rating of 7.0 to participate 
              in tournaments. “We had a floor hockey team one time that was undefeated 
              but didn’t make the playoffs,” he says.
 
 Aside from physical fitness benefits and practical lessons in teamwork 
              and sportsmanship, Kellogg says his program helps SPU retain students, 
              because those who are involved and enjoying themselves are more 
              likely to stay. Finally, he adds, intramurals break down social 
              barriers and help students build friendships: “It doesn’t matter 
              if they walk away winning or losing; they walk away together.”
 
       
             — BY MARTIN STILLION— PHOTO BY JOHN KEATLEY
 
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