Page 8 - Rochester Athletics - Summer 2014 Newsletter
P. 8
2014 Athletic Hall of Fame Induction Dinner

The 2014 University of Rochester Athletic Hall of Fame Dinner will be held at
6 p.m. on Friday, October 17, 2014.

The dinner will be held in the Leibner-Cooper Room in the Goergen Athletic Facility. The
2014 Hall of Fame inductees, their families and friends, and current Hall of Fame members

are invited to share this special evening. The 2014 Hall of Fame inductees:

Steven Callihan ’75 Amy Beth Deep ’90

Football Field Hockey

A three-year starter at split end for the football team, Steve Callihan Deep, a center forward for the field hockey team, was a three-year
was the Most Improved Offensive Player in 1973 and the Most letter winner and prolific goal scorer. She scored six goals in 1987
Valuable Offensive Player in both his junior and senior seasons. A when the team won the UAA Round-Robin Field Hockey Tournament
1974 Division III Honorable Mention All-American, Callihan set five and reached the quarterfinals of the NYS WCAA DIII Tournament.
pass receiving records at the University of Rochester: most catches in She helped lead the team to two UAA titles during her career and
an individual season, most catches in a career, most yards in a career, was named Field Hockey MVP of the UAA. She scored a team-high
most catches in a game, and most yards in a game. Off the field, 12 goals in her senior year and was named to the 1989 Sauk Valley
Callihan was a Rhodes Scholar Finalist. DIII Mid-Atlantic Second-Team, Regional All-America Team, and First
Team All-UAA. Off the field, she was a three-time Dean’s list student
Robert Cerfolio, MD, ’84, ’88M (MD) and a GTE Academic All-America Field Hockey Third Team selection.

Baseball Ken Garnes ’74

In the 1985 season, Cerfolio, a two-time captain for the baseball Basketball
team, carried a .349 average, hitting five doubles, two triples, a
team-best three home runs, and 24 RBIs, and scored 22 runs and Garnes was one of the most prolific scorers for the basketball
stole 16 bases. He was named to the 1985 First Team College Division program, at a time when freshman were ineligible to play varsity
Academic All-American Baseball Team, the first person in Rochester sports and the three-point shot had not been adopted by the NCAA.
baseball history to do so. He was also a Rhodes Scholar candidate He finished his career with 1,255 points and, at the time, was only the
and a member of Phi Beta Kappa. fourth player in Rochester basketball history to reach the 1,000-point
milestone. He currently sits ninth in career scoring through the end
David Cidale ’71 of the 2013–14 season. Garnes averaged 7.7 rebounds per game
and finished his career with a 52.1 percent field goal percentage. He
Football/Track & Field was named to the All-Tournament Team for the Rochester Classic as
a junior and senior co-captain and the tournament Sportsmanship
A multifaceted football player who played offense, defense and Winner as a sophomore.
special teams for the Yellowjackets, Cidale led the freshman team
in rushing yards as a running back. His sophomore year he was
the starting wingback and punt and kickoff returner. Junior year
he played both ways, starting at halfback and cornerback. Cidale
captained the team his senior year, playing defense and performing
special team duties. He was also a member of the track and field
team, where he threw javelin for two years. He placed first in the
javelin throw twice at the University of Buffalo Invitational Track and
Field Meet and holds the Rochester record for throwing the “old style”
javelin.
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