San Francisco Dons





































































San Francisco Dons
Logo
University University of San Francisco
Conference West Coast Conference
NCAA Division I
Athletic director Scott Sidwell
Location San Francisco, California
Varsity teams 14
Basketball arena The Sobrato Center
Baseball stadium Dante Benedetti Diamond at Max Ulrich Field
Soccer stadium Negoesco Stadium
Other arenas California Tennis Club
Crissy Field
Kezar Stadium
Peacock Gap Golf Club
The Olympic Club
Mascot The Don
Nickname Dons
Fight song "Victory Song"
Colors Green and Gold[1]
         
Website www.usfdons.com

The San Francisco Dons is the nickname of the athletic teams at the University of San Francisco (USF). The Dons compete in NCAA Division I of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) as members of the West Coast Conference (WCC), of which USF is a charter member.




Contents






  • 1 History


  • 2 Sports sponsored


    • 2.1 Baseball


      • 2.1.1 Dante Benedetti Diamond at Max Ulrich Field


      • 2.1.2 Dante Benedetti Classic


      • 2.1.3 Drafted players




    • 2.2 Men's basketball


      • 2.2.1 Controversies




    • 2.3 Women's basketball


    • 2.4 Football


    • 2.5 Men's golf


    • 2.6 Men's soccer


    • 2.7 Women's cross country


    • 2.8 Men's tennis


    • 2.9 Women's volleyball




  • 3 Club teams


  • 4 References


  • 5 Further reading


  • 6 External links





History





Maor Tiyouri


Athletics at USF dates back to its founding in 1855, when founder Anthony Maraschi, S.J. organized ball games as recreation for the first students. However, intercollegiate competition only dates back to 1907, when then-Saint Ignatius College began playing organized baseball, basketball, and rugby against other local colleges and high schools. Rivalries with neighboring Santa Clara University and Saint Mary's College of California have their origins in this early period.


Teams were originally known as the "Grey Fog", and red and blue were Saint Ignatius College's colors. However, as the college began to develop an identity distinct from the high school—the college became the University of San Francisco in 1930—it adopted green and gold as its colors in 1927 and chose the Don as its mascot in 1932. The old Saint Ignatius High School later became Saint Ignatius College Preparatory and retained the red and blue colors.


Three USF alumni participated in the 2016 Summer Olympics - Israeli long distance runner Maor Tiyouri, basketball player John Cox and synchronized swimmer Mariya Koroleva.[2]




Sports sponsored








































Men's sports
Women's sports
Baseball
Basketball
Basketball Beach volleyball
Cross country Cross country
Golf Golf
Soccer Soccer
Tennis Tennis
Track and field
Track and field
Volleyball

† – Track and field includes both indoor and outdoor


Baseball


2005 was a banner year for the baseball program, as the Diamond Dons finished with a 38–18 record (the best in team history), placed eight players in the all-conference team and earned Nino Giarrantano coach of the year honors. This was followed in 2006 with a 38–21 record, the WCC conference regular season championship, and a Top 25 ranking. However, USF lost in the WCC conference championship to Pepperdine but still was given an at large berth into their first ever postseason. USF did not advance in the tournament as they were beaten by the University of Miami, and Manhattan College.




Former USF pitcher, Aaron Poreda


Future major leaguer Aaron Poreda pitched for the Diamond Dons, finishing his freshman 2005 season with a 2.16 ERA, the fifth-lowest in team history and third-best in the WCC, and his hits-per-9-innings ratio of 6.48 was second-best in the conference.[3][4][5] In 2006 he posted a WCC-best 2.49 ERA.[3][5] In the NCAA regional he pitched the team to a 5–1 victory over No. 6 national seed Nebraska.[5] Poreda was drafted by the Chicago White Sox in the first round (25th overall) in the 2007 Major League Baseball Draft; at the time, he was throwing a 97 miles per hour fastball.[6][7]


Nino Giarrantano became head coach in 1998, previously serving as hitting coach at Arizona State University. Giarrantano was named 3-time JC National Coach of the Year and 2005–2006 WCC Coach of the Year. Since arriving at USF, the team has had its best four-year stretch in its program's history, 104-69 overall since 2004.














San Francisco Dons baseball

Conference Titles (2)


NCAA postseason
appearances
(2)




Dante Benedetti Diamond at Max Ulrich Field


The Dons' home field is named after Dante Benedetti, USF's head coach from 1962 to 1980. Benedetti attended then-Saint Ignatius College from 1937 to 1940, during which he lettered in Baseball, Football, and Boxing. During his tenure as head coach, he accumulated 373 career wins, and has been inducted into the university's athletic hall of fame. Also during his tenure as head coach, the university wanted to cut the program for financial reasons. However to keep the program alive Benedetti agreed to lower his salary. For the remaining 16 years of his coaching career he was paid $1 a year.


The field is also named after Max Ulrich, a benefactor of the University of San Francisco.



Dante Benedetti Classic


Since 2006, USF has played one game a season at the San Francisco Giants' Stadium, AT&T Park. The proceeds of the game go to the Dante Benedetti Foundation, a charity that helps under-privileged youth in San Francisco play and learn the game of baseball.



Drafted players


Over the years of USF's baseball tradition, a number of players have been drafted into professional baseball. Of these players, a few have had debuts in the Major Leagues:











































































































Diamond Dons in Major League Baseball
Player
Years at USF
MLB Debut

Joe Giannini
1908–1911
July 8, 1911

Clarence Fieber
1932–1932
May 18, 1932

Ernie Sulik
1929–1955
April 15, 1936

Jake Caulfield
1937–1940
April 24, 1946

Neill Sheridan
1940–1944
September 19, 1948

Con Dempsey
1942–1944
April 28, 1951

Paul Schramka
1947–1950
April 14, 1953

Stan Johnson
1956–1960
August 18, 1960

Aaron Pointer
1960–1961
September 22, 1963

Mike Buskey
1968–1971
September 5, 1977

Justin Speier
1992–1993
May 27, 1998

Jermaine Clark
1995–1997
April 3, 2001

Joe Nelson
1993–1996
June 13, 2001

Jesse Foppert
1999–2001
April 14, 2003

Jeff Harris
1995–1995
April 2, 2005

Aaron Poreda
2005–2007
June 12, 2009

Scott Cousins
2004–2006
September 3, 2010

Bradley Zimmer
2012–2014
May 16, 2017

Adam Cimber
2013-2013
March 29, 2018



Men's basketball





Former interior of War Memorial Gym


USF is best known for its basketball program. The men's basketball team have won three national titles: the 1949 NIT under Pete Newell and the 1955 and 1956 NCAA championships under Phil Woolpert. The latter two were led by future National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame and Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame members Bill Russell and K.C. Jones.


USF retained its status as a basketball powerhouse into the 1970s and early 80s, holding the distinction of being a "major" program in a "mid-major" conference (the WCC having declined somewhat in stature since the 1960s). It held the number-one spot in the polls on numerous occasions. In 1977, led by All-American center Bill Cartwright, the Dons went 29–0 and were regarded as the #1 team in the nation in both major polls before dropping their last two games.



Controversies


The Dons' prominence in the 1970s came at a price, however. The NCAA placed the Dons on probation two times in the late 1970s. Head coach Bob Gaillard was fired after the first, and an in-house inquiry after the second resulted in the firing of his successor, Dan Belluomini. It was also well known that basketball players got special treatment; many of them were marginal students at best, and at least one instance where a player threatened another student was swept under the rug by school officials.[8] It was also common for "tutors" to take tests and write papers for players.[9]


The situation came to a head in December 1981, when All-American guard Quintin Dailey assaulted a female student. During the subsequent investigation, Dailey admitted taking a no-show job at a business owned by a prominent non-sports USF donor. The donor had also paid Dailey $5,000 since 1980. Combined with other revelations, school president Rev. John Lo Schiavo announced on July 29, 1982 that he was suspending the basketball program—the first time a school had shut down a major sport under such circumstances. The move was applauded by several members of the coaching fraternity,[8] as the Dailey matter revealed a program that was, in the words of San Francisco Chronicle sportswriter Glenn Dickey, "totally out of control."[9]


LoSchiavo resurrected the program in 1985 under former star Jim Brovelli, who quickly returned the program to respectability. He was not able to reach postseason play, however, and resigned in 1995. The program has only reached the postseason twice since its revival—an NCAA berth in 1998 under Phil Mathews and a 2005 NIT berth under former coach Jessie Evans.


The program regressed the next few years, and Jessie Evans was granted a request for a 'leave of absence' on December 27, 2007. Basketball coach Eddie Sutton took over on an interim basis, needing two wins for a personal milestone of 800 career coaching victories. At the time, Bob Knight was the only other Division I men's coach to have accomplished the feat. After months of speculation, Evans was finally officially fired by USF on March 20, 2008, and a national coaching search was launched, including the use of an executive search consultant company, DHR International.


Rex Walters was named as the Dons' head coach on April 14, 2008. On March 9, 2016, after eight seasons during which the Dons were unable to do more than break even (127-127), athletic director Scott Sidwell fired Walters.[10]


On March 30, 2016, Kyle Smith was named as the new head coach. Prior to joining USF, Smith had spent the prior six years as head coach of the Columbia University basketball team. For nine years prior to that, he was assistant coach at Saint Mary's College of California, which went to the Sweet 16 in his final year.[11]



Women's basketball



Women's basketball also experienced recent successes, including appearances in the NCAA women's tournament in 1995, 1996, 1997, and 2016 and a WNIT berth in 2002. The 1996 season represented their best ever, as the women's team made it into the tournament's Sweet Sixteen. The team is presently coached by Molly Goodenbour.[12]


  • 2012–13 San Francisco Dons women's basketball team

 
























































San Francisco Dons basketball

Men's NCAA Championships (2)


NIT Championships (1)


Men's Conference Titles (17)
* WCC Tournament title


Men's NCAA Tournament
Appearances

*Final Four appearance


Women's Conference Titles (4)


Women's NCAA Tournament
appearances
(4)
*Sweet Sixteen appearance


1949 San Francisco Dons men's basketball
NIT Champions


Record


Head coach


Players


1954–55 & 1955–56 San Francisco Dons men's basketball
NCAA Champions


Record


Head coach


Players




Football


Compared to local rivals Santa Clara and Saint Mary's, USF's football teams were historically not as strong. However, the Dons ntered college football lore by going undefeated in 1951 and producing three NFL hall of famers (Gino Marchetti, Ollie Matson, and Bob St. Clair). However, they did not receive a bowl invitation, as the team turned down any suggestions that they leave their two black teammates at home at the expense of a much-needed bowl bid. Due to the associated financial burden on the school that a bowl bid would have alleviated, USF's finest football team ever was its last at the major college level (now Division I FBS). Though football made a brief comeback as a Division II sport during the 1960s and 1970s, USF has not fielded a varsity team since.


Kuharich, at times, would delegate recruiting responsibilities to his freshman coach, Brad Lynn, who had little to offer prospective players in the way of scholarship inducements beyond tuition and room and board in an old ROTC barracks. However, Lynn would take recruits to the highest hill on campus, and would gesture out towards the sweeping panorama of San Francisco saying, "THIS is your campus." Only a handful of players from that 1951 team had been considered blue-ribbon prospects in high school. Two of the team's best players, Toler and guard Louis (Red) Stephens, had not even played high school football. Future Hall of Famer Marchetti was a high school dropout who had played only sparingly when he was in school.


The 1951 Dons were honored during the Fiesta Bowl in January 2008.




Arenivar • Arnoldy • Becker • Boggan • Brown • Bruna • Carley

Chess • Colombini • Conte • Cronan • Dando • Dawson • DeBernardi

Dwyer • Giorgi • Henneberry • Hillig • Holm • Huxley • Kearney

Madden • Marchetti • Matson • McLaughlin • McMahon • Mergen • Montero

Monti • Moriarity • Peacock • Retzloff • Roland • Sachs • Sakowski
Scudero • Schaeffer • Skalla • Slajchert • Springer • St. Clair • Stephens

Thiel • Thomas • Toler • Tringali • Weibel • Welsh • Whitney • Wilwerding
























1951 San Francisco Dons football

Record


Head coach


Assistant coaches


Players


Sports information officer




Men's golf


The men's golf team has won 11 West Coast Conference championships: 1970–71, 1981–84, 1986, 1988, 1990, 2009, 2011.[13]



Men's soccer



Men's soccer is USF's most successful program, earning five national titles, including a co-championship with Penn State in 1949. The program's successes came under alumnus Stephen Negoesco, who coached from 1962 to 2000 and led the team to 540 wins and four national championships (1966, 1975, 1976, 1980). Under Negoesco's successor, alumnus Erik Visser, the men's team earned the 2004, 2005 and 2008 WCC titles.


Alejandro Toledo, the former president of Peru, played for USF on a partial scholarship.





1971 • 1973 • 1974 • 1975 • 1976 • 1978 • 1980

1981 • 1982 • 1984 • 1987 • 1988 • 1991 • 1993

1994 • 2004 • 2005 • 2008











San Francisco Dons soccer

Men's NCAA Championships (4)


Men's Conference Titles (32)




Women's cross country


The Women's cross country team won four consecutive WCC championships in 2009–2012, and in 2011 made an NCAA Championship appearance. They maintained national rankings in both 2011–2012. Israeli Olympian Maor Tiyouri competed for the team.



Men's tennis


The men's tennis team, led by Harry Likas, Harry Roche and Arthur Larsen, won the 1949 NCAA Men's Tennis Championship. Likas also won the 1948 individual men's title.














San Francisco Dons tennis

Men's NCAA Team Titles (1)


Men's NCAA Individual Titles (1)




Women's volleyball


The women's volleyball team has made two NCAA tournament appearances: in 2003, under former coach Jeff Nelson, and in 2008 under current coach Gilad Doron. The 2008 season saw the Dons finish with a Top 25 national ranking, a 22–8 record, and five all-WCC players.










San Francisco Dons volleyball

Women's NCAA
Tournament appearances
(2)




Club teams


USF participates in the following club sports: golf, fencing, boxing, rifle, tennis, karate, soccer and lacrosse. Rugby, which was one of the first varsity sports in school history, is currently a club sport. Football is played on the intramural level



References





  1. ^ "Graphics Resources". University of San Francisco Marketing Communications. Retrieved March 4, 2019..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output .citation q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-ws-icon a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/4c/Wikisource-logo.svg/12px-Wikisource-logo.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-maint{display:none;color:#33aa33;margin-left:0.3em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}


  2. ^ "Dons Represented in Rio - University of San Francisco". University of San Francisco.


  3. ^ ab "Aaron Poreda Baseball Statistics (2005–2014)". The Baseball Cube. Archived from the original on April 19, 2014. Retrieved April 19, 2014.


  4. ^ ""Quality Starting Pitching Leads Team," ''CSTV.com'', January 31, 2006, accessed August 19, 2009". Cstv.com. Retrieved March 26, 2010.


  5. ^ abc "University of San Francisco Athletics – Aaron Poreda – 2006–07 Baseball". Usfdons.com. October 1, 1986. Retrieved April 19, 2014.


  6. ^ "Aaron Poreda". Jewish Baseball News. Retrieved April 19, 2014.


  7. ^ "Draft: Aaron Poreda, lhp, White Sox". BaseballAmerica.com. June 7, 2007. Retrieved May 24, 2014.


  8. ^ ab Boyle, Robert; and Roger Jackson.Bringing Down the Curtain Archived January 2, 2013, at Archive.today. Sports Illustrated, August 9, 1982.


  9. ^ ab Dickey, Glenn. Winning the Right Way Delights USF Chancellor. San Francisco Chronicle, March 11, 1998.


  10. ^ "Rex Walters out as USF basketball coach". sfgate.com.


  11. ^ "USF hires Columbia's Kyle Smith as head basketball coach". sfgate.com.


  12. ^ "Molly Goodenbour named USF women's basketball coach". Retrieved 2016-09-29.


  13. ^ "West Coast Conference Golf" (PDF). Retrieved June 21, 2013.




Further reading



  • Alan Ziajka, Ph.D. (2005) Legacy & Promise: 150 Years of Jesuit Education at the University of San Francisco. San Francisco: USF Office of Publications

  • University of San Francisco (2005) Legends of the Hilltop

  • Beano Cook (2005) "Ten Days that Shook the Sport (from:The College Football Encyclopedia)." Copyright ESPN Books

  • Kristine Setting Clark (2002) Undefeated, Untied, and Uninvited: A Documentary of the 1951 University of San Francisco Dons Football Team. Irvine, CA: Griffin Publishing Group

  • John D. Lukacs (2003) "Waiting for the perfect ending." USA Today, Sports, June 24, 2003.

  • Steve Kroner (2006) "USF, Cal in Benedetti Classic at Giants' park." San Francisco Chronicle, Sports, April 24, 2006, pg. D7

  • USFdons Baseball

  • usatoday.com

  • baseball-almanac.com



External links



  • Official website Edit this at Wikidata









Popular posts from this blog

Y

Mount Tamalpais

Indian Forest Service