Former Bucs’ coach Tony Dungy gets state Hall of Fame recognition

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Former Tampa Bay Bucs coach Tony Dungy, long considered the architect of the some of the best seasons in franchise history, is one of nine new members of the Florida sports Hall of Fame.

Dungy won his Super Bowl with the Indianapolis Colts. He was fired from the Bucs the season before Tampa Bay won its Super Bowl and replaced by Jon Gruden.

Dungy is now an analyst on NBC.

Other members of the Hall of Fame class include former Dolphin Zach Thomas, former Panther John Vanbiesbrouck, former Marlin Jeff Conine and former University of Miami player Bennie Blades. Also selected was former Miami diving coach Randy Ableman and former Miami broadcaster Sonny Hirsch. Jai Alai champion Joey Corblitt and bowler Paula Carter complete the class.

The bios of the inductees:

Randy Ableman (Diving Coach)

Ableman, the head diving coach at the University of Miami since 1989, has won the NCAA’s Diving Coach of the Year nine times, including a stretch from 1995-2000 when he won the award each year. At Miami he has coached 24 national champions, 26 individual All-Americans, at least one every year he’s been at UM, and 11 Olympians representing seven countries. Ableman coached 12 years in a row (1991-2002) with at least one national champion in each of those years. In 1995, Ableman coached five All-Americans, an NCAA first. He was also selected as a member of the U.S. Olympic Diving Team coaching staff for three Olympics (1996, 2000 and 2004). In 2008 he was the head diving coach for the Republic of South Africa in Beijing. In 2002, Ableman was awarded U.S. Diving’s highest honor, the Phil Boggs Award. A four-time All-American diver at the University of Iowa, he won the 1981 NCAA 1-meter springboard championship and was named to the 1980 Olympic team, which did not compete due to the boycott of the Moscow games. He is a member of the University of Iowa and University of Miami Athletic Halls of Fame.

Bennie Blades (Miami football)

A native of Fort Lauderdale, Blades went on to the University of Miami, where he was co-winner of the Jim Thorpe Award in 1987, given to the outstanding defensive back in the country. He was a consensus all-America at safety in 1986-87 and ended his UM career as the school’s all-time leader in interceptions (19) and interception return yardage. He also set school records for consecutive games with an interception (5) and total tackles by a safety. He spent 10 years in the NFL, including nine with the Lions, who picked him third overall in the 1988 NFL draft. Bennie finished his career as the second leading tackler in Lions history. He played in the 1991 Pro Bowl and twice was named the Lions Defensive MVP.

Paula Carter (Bowling)

Carter, a Miami native, was the 1971 National Bowler of the Year. She won the U.S. Open twice and also finished first and second twice each at the Women’s International Bowling Congress National singles championships. She is a member of the Florida and Miami Bowling Halls of Fame and the WIBC National Hall of Fame.

Jeff Conine (Baseball)

Conine is known as Mr. Marlin, and is the only player to have appeared in the Marlins inaugural game in 1993 and both World Series victories, 1997 and 2003. Conine played for six major league teams in 17 years, half of those for the Marlins. He hit .290 for the Marlins (.285 overall) with 120 home runs (214 overall) and 553 RBI  (1,071 overall). On the Marlins inaugural opening day he went 4-4, ending the season having played all 162 games and finishing third in the Rookie of the Year voting after a .292, 12 home-run, 79 RBI season. The next two years he was named to the All-Star team, earning the game’s MVP honors in 1995. In 32 post-season games in 1997 and 2003, Conine hit .304 with one home run, 8 RBI and 15 runs scored. He is currently a special assistant to Marlins team president David Samson.

Joey Cornblit (Jai-Alai)

Cornblit, whose professional name was simply Joey, led the American team to a bronze medal at the World Amateur championship when he was 15. The Miami native turned pro at 16, playing for Miami Jai-Alai. He was the first American-born player to become a world champion; he won 23 championships. He holds the record at Dania for the most wins, with 186 games during the 1988-89 winter season. He retired in 1995, ending a 24-year career. His number 37 is the only Jai Alai jersey to be retired.

Tony Dungy (Football Coach)

Dungy coached the Tampa Bay Buccaneers from 1996-2001, and led the Bucs to four straight playoff appearances (1998-2001), including a loss to the Rams in the 1979 NFC Championship game. He moved on to Indianapolis and led the Colts to six straight playoff appearances (10 straight counting TB) and the Super Bowl XLI win over the Bears following the 2006 season. In all, he won 68 percent of his games, 139 in all. He retired after the 2008 season.

Sonny Hirsch (Sportscasting)

Hirsch was the voice of the Miami Hurricanes for 28 years. He handled play-by-play for football and basketball from 1958-71 and returned to those two sports plus baseball from 1983-97. He also served as GM of the Miami Marlins of the Florida State League for 10 years. He received a special honor in 1998 from the UM Sports Hall of Fame and is a member of the City of Miami Hall of Champions. He died in 1999.

Zach Thomas (Football)

Thomas had a 14-year NFL career, 12 of those seasons with the Dolphins (one with Dallas, one with KC). During his illustrious career he was named to seven Pro Bowls, was named first team All-Pro five times and was named to the NFL’s All decade team of the 2000s. Thomas has more tackles (almost 1,800) than any linebacker currently in the Pro Football Hall of Fame, and ranks fourth all-time in tackles among linebackers. He is one of only three players in NFL history to record 100-plus tackles in each of his first 10 seasons.  He also intercepted 17 passes and recorded 20 sacks during his career.

John Vanbiesbrouck (Hockey)

A native of the Detroit area, Vanbiesbrouck played for five NHL teams: the Rangers, Panthers, Flyers, Islanders and Devils. He gained most of his fame during the five years he played for the Florida Panthers, being named an all-star three times (MVP of the 1994 game) and leading the Panthers to the Stanley Cup finals in 1996. He is the winningest American-born goalie in history, and 13th overall in NHL history. In addition to his career with the expansion Panthers, he won the Vezina Trophy as top goalie in the NHL in 1985-86 and was named a first team all-star post-season.

Gary Shelton is one of the most recognized and honored sportswriters in the history of the state. He has won the APSE's national columnist of the year twice and finished in the top 10 eight times. He was named the Florida Sportswriter of the Year six times. Gary joined SaintPetersBlog in the spring, helping to bring a sports presence to the website. Over his time in sports writing, Gary has covered 29 Super Bowls, 10 Olympics, Final Fours, Masters, Wimbledons and college national championships. He was there when the Bucs won a Super Bowl, when the Lightning won a Stanley Cup and when the Rays went to a World Series. He has seen Florida, FSU and Miami all win national championships, and he covered Bear Bryant, Bobby Bowden and Don Shula along the way. He and his wife Janet have four children: Eric, Kevin, K.C. and Tori. To contact, visit [email protected].