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Strength And Conditioning Coach Ken White To Be Inducted Into UVM Hall Of Fame

Strength And Conditioning Coach Ken White To Be Inducted Into UVM Hall Of Fame

June 18, 2002

Burlington, Vt. - Stony Brook University head strength and conditioning coach Ken White, who remains the University of Vermont's all-time leader in assists and games played, is among 11 former Catamount student-athletes who will be inducted into UVM's Athletic Hall of Fame on Friday, Oct. 4, 2002.

White, who lettered from 1988 to 1992, was instrumental in the turnaround of the men's basketball program. White and classmate Kevin Roberson were cornerstone recruits who led to UVM's improvement from a 6-21 record in 1988-89 to a 15-13 mark as juniors and 16-13 in 1991-92. The back-to-back winning seasons were the first for UVM in 16 years. Very durable and steady, White led the conference in assist-to-turnover ratio for three straight seasons.

"Kenny White, by himself, raised the bar in our program as to how hard someone needs to work to be successful," said UVM head coach Tom Brennan. "His work ethic rubbed off on others and that turned our program around."

Never missing a game in his career, White is one of two players to start every game for four years (Hall of Famer Mike Evelti is the other). In his 114-game career, he recorded a school-record 565 assists. He also ranks among the Vermont career leaders in three-point field goals (5th - 181) and steals (4th - 146).

A high school legend from Staten Island, he set a national record with 17 three-pointers in one game (of his 75 points that night) to earn a spot in Sports Illustrated's Faces in the Crowd.

As a freshman at UVM, White earned conference All-Rookie honors, averaging 11.2 points per game to go with 123 assists.

As a sophomore, he quarterbacked the fifth-seeded Catamounts (13-17) to their only appearance in the conference title game and his 159 assists, third in the NAC, is the second most in a season at UVM.

White led Vermont to its first winning season in 10 years and a fourth-place finish in the NAC as a junior. Again, he ranked third in the conference in assists.

Despite losing three starters to graduation, White and Roberson led the Catamounts to a 16-13 record as seniors. White's 4.8 assists per game were second in the NAC as the team finished fourth in the standings and advanced to the conference semifinals for the second time in his three seasons.

A terrific student with a dual major in history and political science, White earned a spot on the conference academic honor roll three straight seasons. He won the team's academic award three times and in 1992 he won the New England Coaches Association Academic Award. He was the receipient of the Class of 1992 Outstanding Leadership Award at Commencement Ceremonies in 1992.

White, who earned his master's degree in applied physiology in 1999 from Columbia, was hired as the first-ever head coach for strength and conditioning at Stony Brook in September of 1999. Prior to Stony Brook, he served as head strength and conditioning coach at St. Bonaventure from 1997 to 1999 and also served as an assistant men's basketball coach at New York University in 1994-95.

The inductees will be honored at the 34th annual Athletic Hall of Fame Celebration and Dinner at the Radisson Hotel Burlington. The dinner will be held on Friday, Oct. 4, 2002, with a reception at 7:30 p.m. and the induction dinner beginning at 8 p.m. A portrait-hanging ceremony will be held at 6 p.m. in the Hall of Fame Room in Patrick Gymnasium.

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