HUNTSVILLE – The Huntsville-Madison County Athletic Hall of Fame will be honoring its
Class of 2023 at its annual banquet next month.
The event, presented by TOC, is April 10 at the Von Braun Center’s South Hall. Tickets for the banquet are on sale here. Tickets are $44 and must be purchased through the website. No tickets will be sold at the door.
The members of the Class of 2023 are Adam Bass (baseball), Darrell Blackburn (football), David Cain (coaching/track and field), Kenyon Hambrick (football), Margaret Hoelzer (swimming), Turner Jackson (wrestling), Holly Richards (volleyball/coaching), Jared Ross (ice hockey), Marvin Stone (basketball), Dr. Warren Strickland (outdoors), Jon Sumrall (football) and Gary Wagner (football).
The Special Achievement Award will be presented to Danny Treadwell. He played just one season at Butler High School but led the Rebels to the state championship. During the game, he endured the taunts of fans as the lone Black player on the floor at Tuscaloosa’s Foster Auditorium.
The inductees are:
- Adam Bass played for Madison Academy and UAH before pitching five years in the minors in the Arizona and San Diego systems, ending his career in Japan.
- Darrell Blackburn, a Butler graduate, started at linebacker at Alabama as a freshman. However, his promising career was cut short by a degenerative kidney disease that ultimately necessitated a transplant.
- David Cain, who participated in track and field and cross country at Grissom High and
Mississippi State, has been the track and field and cross country coach, for both men’s and women’s teams, at the University of Alabama in Huntsville since 1998, He is an eight-time Gulf South Conference Coach of the Year and his teams have won 15 GSC team titles, including the men’s track and field championship in 2022. - Kenyon Hambrick, a J.O. Johnson graduate, played wide receiver for Alabama A&M, where he caught 102 passes and scored 14 touchdowns in two seasons. He was signed by the Baltimore Ravens and spent two years on their practice squad, and one season in Frankfurt in NFL Europe before returning home and starring for the Tennessee Valley Vipers.
- Margaret Hoelzer, a Huntsville High and Auburn graduate, won three medals in the 2008
Summer Olympics at Beijing, and was also on the U.S. team in 2004. She set a world record in the 200-meter backstroke during the 2008 Olympic trials. She was a 22-time All-American and won six national titles at Auburn. - Turner Jackson, a two-time state champion at Butler High, was a two-time NCAA Division II champion at UT-Chattanooga, winning 55 consecutive matches during his final two years. He was named Tennessee’s 1976 Amateur Athlete of the Year and is in UTC’s Hall of Fame.
- Holly Richards was a star volleyball player at Westminster Christian Academy and went on to become a second-team All-SEC choice at Alabama. She has coached for a quarter-century with club, college and high school teams, winning a state title at McGill-Toolen in 2004 and has won back-to-back titles in 2021 and 2022 at Westminster.
- Jared Ross, the son of the late UAH hockey coach Doug Ross, a 2008 Hall of Fame inductee, was signed by the Philadelphia Flyers after his UAH career and in 2008 became the first Alabama-born and raised player to appear in an NHL game. He wrapped up his pro career with five seasons in Germany.
- Marvin Stone was a high school All-American at Grissom, which he led to the 1999 state
championship. He signed with the University of Kentucky, then transferred to Louisville after 2½ years with the Wildcats, scoring 10.3 points per game for the Cardinals as a senior. - Dr. Warren Strickland, a widely respected cardiologist, has been a nationally renowned
bowhunter and archer, producing a plethora of hunting-related videos and programs. He is also an active conservationist, with more than a dozen years as a member of the Alabama Conservation Advisory Board. - Jon Sumrall was a two-time All-State football selection at Grissom and lettered three years as a linebacker at the University of Kentucky. After serving as assistant coach at a number of schools, including Kentucky, Ole Miss, Tulane and San Diego, he was named head coach at Troy University in December 2021. He led the Trojans to an 11-2 season and a Cure Bowl bid.
- Gary Wagner was an All-State football player at Grissom and state wrestling championship finalist. He spent his freshman year in college at Wake Forest before transferring to Jacksonville State, where he was named All-Gulf South Conference and Little All-American.
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