Little East Conference announces inaugural Hall of Fame
John Clark, Adam DeChristopher represent Panthers
NORTH DARTMOUTH, Mass. – The Little East Conference
announced the members of the inaugural class of the Little East
Hall of Fame this afternoon. The 11-member class is comprised of
five athletic administrators, four former student-athletes, and two
coaches. The inductees will be honored during a ceremony at the
Providence Marriot Hotel on Saturday, October 27.
The five athletic administers include: Al Bean of
University of Southern Maine, John P. Clark of
Plymouth State University, Richard Costello of the
University of Southern Maine, Dr. William Moore,
and Charlie Titus of the University of
Massachusetts Boston. Bean, Costello and Moore each served as
Commissioner of the Little East Conference, while Clark and Titus
played an integral role in the formation of the conference.
The four former student-athletes include: Alex
Butler (1993-1997) of Rhode Island College,
Allison Coleman (2000-2004) of Eastern Connecticut
State University, Adam DeChristopher (1995-1999)
of Plymouth State University, and Ashley Marble
(2003-2007) of the University of Southern Maine.
Brian Baptise of the University of Massachusetts
Dartmouth and Gary Fifield of the University of
Southern Maine will be inducted as the two coaches that helped
position the Little East as a regional and national power in the
sport of basketball.
Brian Baptiste,
University of Massachusetts Dartmouth
In his 29 years on the bench, Brian Baptiste has established the
University of Massachusetts Dartmouth men’s basketball
program as a perennial power in Division III. Baptiste has compiled
a career record of 546-251, which ranks among the top-15 on the
Division III men’s basketball all-time wins list. He has led
the Corsairs to 19 postseason appearances, including 13 berths into
the NCAA Division III tournament. In 1993, UMass Dartmouth reached
the NCAA Division III national semifinals finals in Buffalo, N.Y.
The Corsairs were edged by Ohio Northern, and completed the
program’s most successful campaign ranked fourth. Baptise
guided UMass Dartmouth to the top of the Little East regular season
standings 13 times, while capturing 11 conference championship
titles. He was selected by his peers as the prestigious National
Association of Basketball Coaches (NABC) Division III Northeast
Region Coach of the Year four times, while earning the Little East
Coach of the Year honor seven times.
Al Bean Jr,
University of Southern Maine
The third commissioner in the history of the Little East
Conference, Al Bean guided the conference through its largest
sports sponsorship expansion between 1995 and 2000. Under his
watchful eye, the Little East increased its sports sponsorship to
17 athletic programs with the addition of baseball (1997), field
hockey (1998), men’s and women’s indoor track and field
(1999), women’s swimming and diving (2000), men’s and
women’s outdoor track and field (1998), and volleyball
(1995). Prior to his appointment as commissioner, Bean served as
the conference’s first publicist under the leadership of
Richard Costello. He has also helped shape the direction of the
Little East Conference through his four-decade long relationship
with the University of Southern Maine as a student-athlete,
assistant coach, sports information director, assistant athletic
director, and athletic director.
Alex Butler,
Rhode Island College
One of the most dominant men’s basketball players in New
England during the 1990’s, Alex Butler represented Rhode
Island College on the All-America teams in 1996 and 1997. He became
the first Little East men’s basketball player to earn three
conference-sponsored major awards during his career, receiving the
Player of the Year Award (1996, 1997) and Rookie of the Year Award
in 1994. The three-time first-team All-Little East selection is
just one of three Anchormen to produce 2,000-career points, ranking
second in program history with 2,398. Highly decorated, Butler
earned the Eastern College Athletic Conference (ECAC) Robbins
Scholar-Athlete honors in 1996 and 1997, while also accepting the
John E. Hetherman Award, signifying him as Rhode Island
College’s top male senior athlete, in 1998. In 2011, he was
the top-vote getter among the Little East Men’s Basketball
25th Anniversary Team members.
John P. Clark, Plymouth State University
One of the founding fathers of the Little East Conference, John P.
Clark was a driving force behind the birth of the conference in the
mid 1980s. Clark hosted the second organized meeting at Plymouth
State on March 18, 1985 to determine if enough interest existed to
form a men’s and women’s basketball conference. The
meeting sparked the third and final organizational meeting at the
Eastern College Athletic Conference (ECAC) fall meeting in
September 30, 1985, where six institutions—Eastern
Connecticut State University, University of Massachusetts Boston,
Plymouth State College, Rhode Island College, University of
Massachusetts Dartmouth (formerly Southeastern
Massachusetts), and the University of Southern Maine—accepted
an invitation to join the league. During his 17-year tenure as the
Director of Athletics at Plymouth State, Clark has continued to
shape the conference through the creation of the schedules for the
19-sponsored sports. He has also developed opportunities for
student-athletes to participate in intercollegiate athletics
through the establishment of numerous sponsored-sports on the
Panther campus. Clark is currently the President of the Little East
Athletic Directors Council.
Allison
Coleman, Eastern Connecticut State University
The most decorated women’s basketball player
in NCAA Division III history when she graduated, Allison Coleman
became the first four-time Women’s Basketball Coaches
Association (WBCA) Division III All-American. The 2004 State
Farm/WBCA National Player of the Year led Eastern Connecticut State
University to a 101-17 record (.856 winning percentage) and four
postseason appearances. Coleman was the catalyst for the Warrior
squad that reached the 2003 NCAA Division III National Championship
Game. The only four-time Little East Player of the Year in the
conference history guided Eastern Connecticut to a share of two
regular-season conference championships. Coleman is the only
student-athlete in program history to record 1,000 career points
(1,191) and rebounds (1,134). She is also the program leader in
assists (579), and steals (369). Coleman was recently selected to
the Little East Women’s Basketball 25th Anniversary Team in
2011.
Richard
“Doc” Costello, University of Southern
Maine
Richard “Doc” Costello was appointed the first
commissioner of the Little East Conference in 1986, serving as the
executive director for the newly formed Division III men’s
and women’s basketball conference. Under his four-year
tenure, the Little East Conference expanded its sponsorship to
seven sports with the addition of men’s and women’s
cross country (1988), men’s soccer (1989), men’s tennis
(1989), and women’s soccer (1990). Costello was also
instrumental in helping the Little East Conference earn an
automatic berth into the men’s and women’s national
tournament field in 1989, providing the conference champion the
opportunity to compete for a Division III championship. Doc
enjoyed a five-decade long relationship with the University of
Southern Maine as an assistant coach, head coach, and athletic
director. Under his guidance, the Huskies became an active member
of the NCAA and Eastern College Athletic Conference (ECAC) in 1985.
A tremendous motivator, Costello retired from basketball with the
distinction of being the only coach in NCAA history to win at least
200 games on both the men’s and women’s side of the
court. Among his numerous awards, he has been enshrined in the NAIA
Hall of Fame, the Southern Maine Hall of Fame, and the Maine Sports
Hall of Fame.
Adam DeChristopher, Plymouth State
University
A member of the Little East’s Men’s Basketball 25th
Anniversary Team, DeChristopher was a standout point guard for
Plymouth State between 1995 to 1999. He is just one of three
Panther men’s basketball players to eclipse the 2,000-point
barrier (2,090), while also setting the program’s standard
for career three-point field goals made (278). DeChristopher
piloted Plymouth State to a combined record of 77-35 during his
four years as a Panther, including a then-school record 22-8 mark
in 1999. The floor general led Plymouth State to four postseason
appearances, including a berth in the 1996 NCAA Division III
tournament. DeChristopher capped off his brilliant career as the
Northeast Region Player of the Year and a first-team member of the
National Association of Basketball Coaches All-America team.
Gary Fifield,
University of Southern Maine
The architect of one of the most storied program’s in
Division III women’s basketball, Gary Fifield is just one of
a handful of coaches that have reached the 600-win plateau. He has
guided the University of Southern Maine to 24 NCAA Division III
tournament appearances, including five trips to the national
semifinals, and three appearances in the championship game. Fifield
received the highest honor of his profession when he was named the
2005 Russell Athletic/Women’s Basketball Coaches Association
(WBCA) Division III Coach of the Year after leading the Huskies to
a school record 31-3 mark. Fifield has established Southern Maine
as a dominant force in the Little East Conference, compiling a
conference record of 273-31 (.898 winning percentage), 20 shared of
outright regular season titles, and 19 Little East conference
tournament championships. He earned his 600th victory against
the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth on February 18, 2012.
Fifield has been selected as the WBCA District I Coach of the Year
five times, while earning the Little East Coach of the Year Award
an unprecedented 13 times.
Ashley Marble,
University of Southern Maine
A two-time Women’s Basketball Coaches Association
All-American, Ashley Marble was the cornerstone of the Southern
Maine teams between 2004 and 2007. In her four years in a Huskies
uniform, Marble led Southern Maine to an impressive 119-10 record,
including a 67-1 mark within the conference circuit. The three-time
Little East Player of the Year helped the Huskies capture four
consecutive conference regular season and tournament championships
to earn the automatic berth into the NCAA Division III tournament.
Southern Maine reached the national semifinals twice during her
career, finishing third in 2005 and as the national runner-up in
2006. She is the program’s all-time leader in rebounding
(1,157), while ranking second in points (1,981). Marble also owns
the single-season record for points (693) and scoring average (23.1
points per game). She personified the definition of a
student-athlete in 2007, when Marble received the prestigious
ESPN the Magazine Academic All-American of the Year
Award.
Dr.
William M. Moore, Little East Conference
The first independent commissioner of the Little East Conference,
Bill Moore oversaw the operation of the conference office between
2000 and 2008. He served as the chief administrative officer for
the Little East, directing the league’s 19 championship
sports. Prior to his appointment at the Little East, Moore was the
Commissioner of the Division II New England Collegiate Conference
after a 10-year stint as the director of physical education,
athletics and recreation at the University of Albany. Moore began
his 57-year career in athletic administration at Central
Connecticut State University, where he served as the director of
athletics, health, and physical education for 21 years. Moore was
also involved in numerous athletic committees, including the NCAA
Postseason Football Committee and the NCAA Legislative Committee.
He also held the position of president of the Eastern College
Basketball Association from 1979-1981 and the president of the
Eastern College Athletic Conference (ECAC) in 1985-86. In 1993,
Moore was awarded the Josten’s Distinguished Service
Award.
Charlie Titus,
University of Massachusetts Boston
One of the founding fathers of the Little East Conference, Charlie
Titus commissioned the first organizational meeting to begin the
process of establishing the Little East Conference at UMass Boston
in September of 1984. He is the only person to lead the University
of Massachusetts Boston athletics department. In 2004, he was
promoted to Vice Chancellor for Athletics and Recreation, Special
Projects, and Intramurals. In addition to his executive
responsibilities, Titus is the only men’s basketball coach
the Beacons’ program has ever known. He has led UMass Boston
to two NCAA Division III tournament appearances, three Eastern
College Athletic Conference Division III Northeast tournaments, and
the 2006 Little East Tournament Championship. Titus was chosen as
the National Association of Basketball Coaches Division III
Northeast Coach of the Year in 2006, while receiving the
conference’s top award in 1997 and 2006.
Formed in 1986, the Little East serves as New England's premier
athletic conference for public institutions in NCAA Division
III. Featuring 19 championship sports, the Little East
sponsors quality competition in every season for our student
athletes. Our eight state colleges and universities dedicate
themselves to an ongoing fulfillment of the Division III mission of
passion, responsibility, sportsmanship, and citizenship.
(Courtesy of the Little East Conference)
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