SAN JOSE SPORTS HALL OF FAME WELCOMES FOUR SOUTH BAY LEGENDS IN 28th ANNUAL CEREMONY
SAN JOSE, CA – On November 8th, the San Jose Sports Authority celebrated the Class of 2023 at the annual 28th annual San Jose Sports Hall of Fame induction ceremony, continuing the hall’s legacy of celebrating the legends who played in our own backyard. The inductees hail from the upper echelon of collegiate, professional, Olympic and international competitions. Although from different sports in different eras, they have made a lasting impact both on and off the field of play.
The San Jose Sports Hall of Fame Class of 2023 inductees are Lorrie Fair, Patrick Marleau, Dave Stieb, and Chris Wondolowski.
The San Jose Sports Hall of Fame Class of 2023 honorees are McKenna Woliczko and Danny Scudero Jr. (High School Athletes of the Year), Rose Zhang and Tommy Troy (Amateur Athletes of the Year), and Mathew Francavilla (Special Olympics Athlete of the Year)
Thank you to all sponsors who helped make this year’s event possible:
Presenting Sponsor: Heritage Bank of Commerce
VIP Reception Sponsor: Ponderosa Homes
Red Carpet Sponsors: The Olander Company, March Development Company, Steve Hallgrimson Family Foundation
Champion Sponsors: Ring Family Foundation, SCS Development, Small World Foundation, Visit San Jose, San Jose Earthquakes, Sharks Sports & Entertainment, Jay Paul Company, Terrence J. Rose, Inc., Berliner Cohen LLP, Hugh Stuart Center Charitable Trust
Platinum Sponsors: Aramark, Advantage Homes, BPM, Brandenburg Family Foundation, Campo di Bocce, Hoge Fenton, Johanson & Yau, Bay Area News Group, Redwood Electric Group, SAP Center, Kate Gibson, the Gundersen Family, Purple Onion Cafe, Skyline Sports Medicine, Resilience Orthopedics, San Jose Arena Authority, Sharks Ice San Jose, Westwood Company, Toeniskoetter Development & Construction
Gold Sponsors: Capital Group, Native American Bear Foundation, Santa Clara University Athletics
Silver Sponsors: City of San Jose, Bay Area Sports Organizing Committee, Acrisure, San Jose State University, Archbishop Mitty High School, Quakes Foundation
LINKS TO NEWS STORIES, VIDEOS AND ARTICLES
San Jose Mercury News – Photos: San Jose Sports Hall of Fame 2023 inducts four South Bay legends
San Jose Sharks – Patrick Marleau Inducted into San Jose Sports Hall of Fame
Lorrie Fair Induction Video
Patrick Marleau Induction Video
Dave Stieb Induction Video
Chris Wondolowski Induction Video
McKenna Woliczko Honoree Video
Danny Scudero Jr. Honoree Video
Rose Zhang Honoree Video
Tommy Troy Honoree Video
Mathew Francavilla Honoree Video
Black and Blue in the @sjshof95!
— San Jose Earthquakes (@SJEarthquakes) November 9, 2023
Last night, Quakes legend, @ChrisWondo was inducted into the San Jose Sports Hall of Fame’s Class of 2023 at @SAPCenter. Well deserved, Wondo 👏.
📷: Terrell Lloyd
Mr. Shark 🤝 @sjshof95
— San Jose Sharks (@SanJoseSharks) November 9, 2023
Last night, Patrick Marleau was inducted into the San Jose Sports Hall of Fame’s Class of 2023 at @SAPCenter. Congratulations Patty!
📷: Terrell Lloyd pic.twitter.com/TRnZKqtPs7
Congratulations to the great Dave Stieb on his induction into the San Jose Sports Hall of Fame! pic.twitter.com/4aNmf7V5De
— Toronto Blue Jays (@BlueJays) November 13, 2023
Getting a chance to attend the San Jose Sports Hall of Fame induction ceremony tonight. Dave Stieb, Lorrie Fair, Chris Wondolowski and of course, Patrick Marleau are being honored. pic.twitter.com/h7IHb8Sjo7
— Curtis Pashelka (@CurtisPashelka) November 9, 2023
Congratulations to the 2023 San Jose Sports Hall Of Fame inductees Lorrie Fair, Patrick Marleau, Dave Stieb, and Chris Wondolowski! Each inductee will be honored with a bronze plaque of his/her likeness permanently installed on the concourse at the SAP Center at San Jose... pic.twitter.com/Y61xgc9lOB
— Councilmember David Cohen (@D4SanJose) November 10, 2023
Congrats to Monarch McKenna Woliczko on being honored as San Jose Sports Hall of Fame 2023 High School Athlete of the Year! @mitty_wbb @MittySoftball #goMonarchs 🦁👑🏀🥎 pic.twitter.com/THTG0plfs0
— Mitty WBB (@mitty_wbb) November 9, 2023
1/2: November 8, 2023 (or, Yesterday in Dave Stieb History).
— Today In Dave Stieb History (@DaveStiebToday) November 10, 2023
A picture's worth a thousand-and-thirty-seven words. pic.twitter.com/dVn0bqYogH
Congratulations to #SJSharks Legend Patrick Marleau on being inducted into the San Jose Sports Hall of Fame. 🦈🎉 pic.twitter.com/HXz3lyFW6Q
— SHARK CITY HOCKEY (@SharkCityHockey) November 9, 2023
SJSHOF Class of 2023 / Detailed Bios
Lorrie Fair
The Los Altos High School star and two-time High School Parade All American helped lead her Sunnyvale Roadrunners club team to the U.S. Youth Soccer U16 National title in 1994 and that was just the start of an amazing soccer career. At 15 years old, she was selected for the US Under 20 National team in ’94 and competed in the Nordic Cup and the US Olympic Festival. By the time she was 17, she was on the full National Team, completing her last semester of high school while training for the 1996 Olympics. Fair became a two-time NSCAA All-American at the University of North Carolina leading the Tar Heels to three NCAA soccer titles. She was the Honda Sports Award Women’s Soccer Player of the Year in ‘99. Over a ten-year span, she was a member of the USA Women’s National Team that included ‘99 FIFA Women’s World Cup champions and two Olympic teams. She played professionally for the Philadelphia Charge, Olympique Lyonnais in France, and Chelsea FC in the UK. Fair retired from the USWNT in 2005 with 120 caps and retired from professional soccer in 2009. She has been a Sport Envoy for the U.S. State Department since 2008 and has travelled to 13 countries to support U.S. diplomatic missions abroad, including women’s access to sport and education, conflict resolution, and counter violent-extremism. In 2020, she became one of the founding investors of NWSL’s Angel City Football Club.
Patrick Marleau
Marleau’s remarkable 23-season NHL career, culminating on April 19, 2021 when he became the NHL’s all-time regular season games played leader, eclipsing hockey icon Gordie Howe’s longstanding record. Marleau finished his career with 1,779 regular season games and sits amongst the game’s top offensive players with 566 goals (23rd all-time), 631 assists (83rd), 1,197 points (52nd), 172 power-play goals (34th) and 109 game-winning goals (tied-seventh). His 195 Stanley Cup Playoff games are the 24th most in NHL history, and he recorded 127 playoff points (72 goals, 55 assists). He ranks first in nearly every offensive category in Sharks franchise history, including games played (1,607), goals (522), points (1,111), power-play goals (163), shorthanded goals (17), game-winning goals (101), multi-goal games (67) and shots (3,953). He also ranks second in assists (589), eighth in penalty minutes (481), and eighth in points-per-game (0.69 – min. 200 games). Marleau became the first person in franchise history to have his number permanently retired. Internationally, Marleau captured gold medals with Team Canada in the 2010 and 2014 Winter Olympics, 2014 World Cup and 2003 World Championships.
Dave Stieb
Dave Stieb starred as an outfielder at Oak Grove High School and San Jose City College, but the Toronto Blue Jays later decided to make better use of that powerful right arm. Stieb promptly blossomed as one of the best pitchers of the 1980s and still holds Toronto franchise records for complete games and innings pitched. Stieb finished in the top 10 for Cy Young voting four times, and modern metrics indicate he was actually the best pitcher in the AL for three straight seasons – 1982-84. Baseball writer Joe Posnanski once called Stieb “a master at being underrated and underappreciated.” During a 16-year career that began in 1979, the right-hander went 176-137 with a 3.44 ERA and threw the only no-hitter in Blue Jays history (while flirting with several others). Stieb won 140 games in the 1980s, the second-highest total by a pitcher in that decade, behind only his rival, Jack Morris.
Chris Wondolowski
“Wondo”, made his mark at the youth level at De La Salle High School, Diablo Valley Soccer Club and Danville Mustang Soccer. He enjoyed a standout college soccer career at Chico State. As a 2005 draft pick of the San Jose Earthquakes, he went to become the all-time leading goal scorer in Major League Soccer history. The two-time MLS Cup Champion earned the MLS Most Valuable Player award in 2012 and three consecutive MLS Best XI awards, along with two MLS scoring titles. He rewrote the MLS record books during his illustrious career finishing with a record 171 regular season goals, and also holds the MLS records for game-winning goals, goals for one club and goals in 1-0 victories, while ranking second in multi-goal games and hat-tricks. He played in 413 career MLS games. For his career, he won two MLS Cups (2006 and 2007 with the Houston Dynamo) and two Supporters’ Shields (2005 and 2012 with San Jose). He had a career season in 2012, tying the MLS record with 27 goals and earning the MLS MVP award, while leading San Jose to its best regular season in club history. Internationally, he made 35 appearances and scored 11 goals for the United States. He became the first Native American to play for the U.S. at the 2014 FIFA World Cup. He also represented the U.S. at three CONCACAF Gold Cups, helping the U.S. win the tournament in 2013 while earning the Golden Boot.
About the San Jose Sports Authority
The San Jose Sports Authority is a non-profit organization whose mission is to increase the City of San Jose’s economic development, visibility, and civic pride through sports. Serving as the City’s sports commission since its inception in 1991, the Sports Authority has provided leadership and support to attract and host hundreds of sporting events in San Jose and the South Bay. The Sports Authority also supports and operates community, youth and amateur sports programs, including the San Jose Sports Hall of Fame and the REACH Youth Scholarship Program. To learn more, visit www.sjsa.org.