Year Inducted: 1992
Home Town: Hungary
More about Miklos (Nick) Springer:
A native Hungarian, Miklos (Nick) Springer's arrival in Oshawa in 1958 marked the beginning of a most dynamic soccer career as a leader, a coach, and a builder of the Oshawa Turul Youth Soccer Club.
His skills as a leader of youth are unquestionable. Many of his very competitive teams won sportsmanship awards and became famous for their fine play from Brazil, Latin America, United States to Europe. They were sportsmen par excellence and Goodwill Ambassadors for soccer in Canada.
A highlight of his coaching career occurred in Brazil in 1985 when the Oshawa Turul under 19 team won the Sao Paulo Cup defeating the favoured French team in the final 3-1. The 1978 under 12 and the 1989 under 17 teams brought National Cups back to Oshawa.
Among many National, Provincial and Tournament Championships, very notable is the winning of the Robbie International Tournament. He was recognized with the 1987 Olympic Celebration Medal as a coach.
As a builder, (Nick) was the founder of the Oshawa Turul Club and has made the organization famous in the International Soccer community. Ontario has recognized his organizational abilities and granted him three outstanding National Achievement Awards.
Year Inducted: 1986
Home Town: Oshawa
More about Nancy Lorraine Higgins Jones:
At the age of 22, Nancy helped Canada's Women's Eights crew to a fourth place finish in rowing competition at the 1976 Olympic Games in Montreal. A year later, Higgins was a member of the Coxed Eights crew which won bronze medals at the 1977 World Championships in Amsterdam, Holland. Nancy had a fine year in 1975, finishing second in the Ontario championships, third at the Canadian finals and helping the University of Western Ontario win the Ontario Universities Women's Eights title. With Nancy playing a big part, Western repeated its QUAA Women's Eights success in 1976 and 1977. Higgins, born in Oshawa, graduated to the coaching ranks and became the first female to coach a Henley Regatta champion when she accomplished the feat in 1984.
Year Inducted: 1986
More about Nancy Murrall MacKay:
Born in Smethwick, England, Nancy arrived in Oshawa in 1926 at the age of four. Nancy represented Canada at the 1948 Olympics in London, England and helped the women's 400-metre relay team to a bronze medal performance, the only track and field medal-winning effort by Canadian athletes at the XIV Olympiad. From 1936-41, Nancy won six gold medals, and one silver at the Canadian track championships. She helped set two Canadian relay records. Nancy also set a record for the intermediate (ages 16-17) 75-yard dash with a time of 8.8 seconds at a meet in 1939. At the provincial level, Nancy was three times a gold medalist, won three silver medals and captured one bronze. Again, she was a member of two record-setting relay quartets. Nancy also won three gold medals, one silver and one bronze at the United States Track and Field Championships from 1944-47.
Year Inducted: 2024
Home Town: Oshawa
More about Nick Kolodzie:
Lifelong Oshawa resident Nick Kolodzie is a local high teacher and decorated triathlete. Nick has represented Canada eight times at the age group world triathlon championships, beginning in 2006 in Switzerland and most recently twice in 2023 — in the sprint distance in Germany and the Olympic distance in Spain. He has won two national age group championships in the Olympic distance, which involves a 1,500-metre swim, 40-kilometre bike ride and 10-K run and was named the 2015 Triathlon Ontario masters short course triathlete of the year. At the 2023 world championships in Spain, Nick was the top Canadian and placed 10th overall in the 50-54 age group in the Olympic distance. As a teacher at Notre Dame Catholic Secondary School in Ajax for 22 years, Nick has also coached over 50 LOSSA championship teams in cross country, Nordic skiing and track and field, and helped many athletes earn scholarships. He served as a convener for LOSSA cross country for 15 years and was a member of the OFSAA track and field organizing committee when the event was held in Oshawa in 2013. For his many successes, Nick Kolodzie is a most worthy addition to the Oshawa Sports Hall of Fame.
Year Inducted: 2015
Home Town: Sault Ste. Marie
More about Norm Schmidt:
Born in Sault Ste. Marie, Norm played hockey from the time he could walk, with the hope of one day playing alongside the all-stars he watched while growing up in his hometown. In his early years he was also involved in soccer and baseball. He soon realized however, that hockey was his passion.As he continued to play hockey, he graduated through the elite levels of the hockey system from Pee Wee to the time he played as an under age defenceman with the Soo Grayhounds. He was drafted by the Oshawa Generals in 1980 from the NOHA championship team, the Soo Thunderbirds. Norm played a total of three years with the Generals during which time he won the Mothersill award as most valuable defenceman in 1981-1982. In 1983 he was named to the OHL 2nd Team All Stars. Norm was a very valuable member of the Oshawa Generals in their journey to the Memorial Cup Finals in Portland in 1983.Norm was drafted by the Pittsburgh Penguins in 1981 and was a member of the team from 1984 - 1988. In his pro career he played 125 games with the Penguins scoring 23 goals and 56 points. Norm was forced into early retirement due to a serious back injury in 1987 which ended a very promising career.Norm returned to live in Oshawa in 1988 and he became very involved in the community teaching hockey skills to young players in Oshawa and the Durham Region. In 2010 and 2011, he assisted in the coaching of the Whitby Girls' Bantam AA Wolves to the Provincial Championships winning Gold in 2010.Dave Molinari, a writer for Hockey Life News, gave Norm a well-deserved compliment as he left the NHL in February of 1988. He commented on Norm's career and praised his skill and spirit as a hockey player and an excellent role model for young players.
Year Inducted: 1986
Home Town: Oshawa
More about Normie Bagnell:
One of the finest softball / fastball pitchers Canada has ever seen, Normie Bagnell was the most valuable player at the 1958 International Softball Congress World Championships in New Bedford, Illionois while playing for Oshawa Tony's. Earlier, he averaged 20 strikeouts a game for Oshawa Pedlars when he was thought to be at the peak of his fine career. He played in three world championships in a 32-year career, and beat the famous three-man touring team, Eddie Feigner's "King and His Court", 3 - 1. Feigner later called Bagnell the finest Canadian pitcher he had ever encountered, and the only one to beat him. In his career, Bagnell compiled over 1,000 victories, 6,000 strikeouts, 235 shutouts, 54 no-hitters, and 26 perfect games. He carried a .300 lifetime batting average, once struck out 32 batters in one game, and once held the opposition scoreless for a 39-inning stretch. He is a member of the Canadian Softball Hall of Fame.
Year Inducted: 2014
Birth Date: May 27, 1961
Home Town: Oshawa
More about Northern Dancer:
Born on May 27, 1961 at Windfields Farm, Oshawa, Northern Dancer (by Neartic - Natalma by Native Dancer) ran his way into the hearts of Canadians with his prowess on the racetrack and then took the world of thoroughbred horse racing by storm with his unmatched success as a sire. Northern Dancer had distinguished himself on the racetracks of North America winning such prestigious graded stakes races as the Flamingo, The Florida Derby, The Bluegrass Stakes, The Kentucky Derby, The Preakness, and The Queen\'s Plate. Owned by E.P. Taylor\'s Windfields Farm and trained by Horatio Luro, he was voted both Best Three Year Old of the Year and Horse of the Year in 1964.Following his retirement from racing, Northern Dancer went on to a stud career first back in Windfields, Oshawa and then Windfields Farm, Maryland. And, it is as a stallion that his international fame and place in history were established. Siring 635 foals, a full 80% (or 511) per cent became racehorses themselves - and winners of races. Of that number, 146 were stakes winners and a further 26 became champions in Great Britain, Ireland, France, Italy and North America. The list of Northern Dancer Champions includes names revered in racing history, names such as Nijinsky II, The Minstrel, El Gran Senior, Secreto, Stormbird, Nureyev, Try My Best and Sadlers Wells. By the turn of the twenty first century, Northern Dancer\'s bloodlines accounted for roughly 70% of the world\'s thoroughbreds.Northern Dancer died at the Maryland Farm on November 16, 1990. His body was vanned back \"home\" to Windfields, Oshawa where he now rests.
Year Inducted: 2003
Home Town: Parry Sound
More about Oscar Parker:
Oscar Parker moved to Oshawa from Parry Sound at age 14, some 79 years ago. He owned and operated Parker Electric, a successful contracting company.
Oscar joined the Oshawa Curling Club as a young man, and has since become a legendary member. He was a competitive curler and played on a Governor General's Provincial Team in 1955. Oscar served as club president and director for several years and continues in an active executive position and planning capacity to this day. Oscar has led and funded numerous major projects involving clubhouse expansion, roof and structural upgrades, piping system replacement, new concrete ice floor, and curling stone inserts. He recognized the sporting and recreational contribution of curling to the civic culture and his goal was to maintain a modern and appealing facility, accessible and affordable to citizens of all ages.
Oscar has been formally honoured by the Ontario and Toronto Curling Associations and the Oshawa Curling Club. His vision, devotion and philanthropy make him a distinguished sportsman and an outstanding Builder of his Sport in Oshawa.
Year Inducted: 1986
Home Town: Oshawa
More about Oshawa Collegiate and Vocational Institute Schoolboy Curling Team:
Canadian and Ontario Schoolboy Curling Champions in 1953, the rink of skip Bob Walker, third Dunc Brodie, second Clare Peacock and lead George MacGregor returned from Saskatoon, Saskatchewan to a heroes' welcome. Upset in semi-final play at the 1956 Ontario Championships, the O.C.V.I. rink won the 1953 provincial title at the Oshawa Curling Club by dethroning the defending champions. At the Canadian Championships, Ontario's representatives and a rink from Regina, Saskatchewan finished tied after round robin play, each with 10-1 records. A playoff was required, and it was tied 7-7 after 10 ends. An extra end was played before the 3,500-strong crowd, and skip Bob Walker drew to the four-foot circle with his last rock to win the title and bring the Canadian Schoolboy Curling Championship to Eastern Canada for the first time.
Year Inducted: 1999
Home Town: Oshawa
More about Oshawa Connaught Park Softball Team:
Players aged 13 to 18, from the area bounded by the Oshawa Creek, Ritson Road, Rossland Road and King Street brought distinction to the City of Oshawa beginning in 1949 by winning four consecutive All Ontario Championships.
In the 1953 season, the team was undefeated in winning a fifth Southern Ontario Championship but lost two one-run games to Kirkland Lake in a best of three series All Ontario Finals.
Five Inductees played all five years.
The five-year record of games played was:
1949 Bantam A won - 41 lost - 21950 Midget A won - 28 lost - 41951 Midget A won - 35 lost - 01952 Juvenile A won - 35 lost - 2
Bantam A 1949 Ontario ChampionsTom Thompson, Brent Oldfield, Don Peel, Norm Attersley (Manager), Fred Knapp, Bill Smith (Coach), Pete Anderson, Garnet Chesebrough, Erv Hunter, Bill Gray, George Ulrich, Gord Nicol, John Humphreys, Tim Nelson, Jim Leslie, Jack Young, Dave Donald
Midget A 1950 Ontario ChampionsDon MacGregor (Manager), Don Hobbs, Ron Swartz, Al Attersley, Jim Cornish, Brent Oldfield, Bill Smith (Coach), Don Peel, Tom Thompson, Dave Donald, Fred Knapp, Pete Anderson, George Ulrich, Keith Sutherland
Midget A 1951 Ontario ChampionsNorm Attersley (Manager), Erv Hunter, Pete Anderson, Bob McHugh, Tim Nelson, Brent Oldfield, Don Laing, Rich Wilson, Gord Nichol, Garnet Coulter (Coach), George Ulrich, Tom Thompson, Dave Donald, Fred Knapp, Jack Young, Don Peel, Garth Douglas
Juvenile A 1952 Ontario ChampionsKeith Sutherland, Don Peel, Neil Bramley, Rich Wilson, Al Attersley, Brent Hutchins, Jim Cornish, Bob Walker, Gord Nichol, Don Hobbs, George Ulrich, Brent Oldfield, Norm Attersley (Manager), Les Atkinson (Coach), Fred Knapp, Tim Nelson
Juvenile A 1953 Ontario FinalistsAl Garrard, George Ulrich, Don Peel, Rich Wilson, Brent Oldfield, Gord Nichol, Clair Peacock, Bill Puchalski, Pete Anderson, Ron Elliott, Tim Nelson, Wes Keeler (Coach), Fred Knapp, Jim Sharples, Don Grant
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