Hall of Fame Class of 2003

Induction Ceremony — April 5, 2003


MATT ARMSTRONG | Men’s Golf (1994-1995)

Matt Armstrong
He wasn’t the first RLC golfer to qualify for the NJCAA Division II Championships . . . Four individual Warriors preceded him. But there is no doubt the team’s fortunes took a dramatic upswing with the arrival of the sophomore transfer from Florida Southern.
 
⭐ The Massac County H.S. grad was medalist in four of eight fall events, then helped Coach Dave Smith’s squad to its first of eight straight Region XXIV titles to qualify for the 1995 Finals.
 
⭐ His fast start enabled the national newcomers to lead after each of the first two rounds before settling for second behind defending champ Tyler (TX) Jr. College. RLC shot 308-291-312-295–1,206, nine strokes behind Tyler and 10 better than third-place Temple (TX).
 
⭐ First athlete in college history to rate First-Team All-America honors placed fourth individually, one shot out of third, thanks to his 76-68-78-73–295 over the par-72 Bryan Park Golf Course in Greensboro, NC.
 
⭐ Captured the 18-team Highland “36” Invitational opening weekend of fall campaign by six strokes (73-74–147) and followed with wins in 54-hole John Wood
Invite, Rock Valley Invite (72-71–143) and rain-shortened RLC Invite (76-37–113) after a delayed playoff. One of four All-Region XXIV performers (76-72–148, tied for ninth). 
 
⭐ Played his last two seasons for University of Mississippi, then professionally on a limited basis.
 

JAYMIE COWELL | Softball (1995-97)

Jaymie Cowell

First-Team NJCAA All-America selection as a freshman after leading 46-21 Lady Warriors to-ever appearance in Women’s National Fast-Pitch Softball Tournament; Second-Team All-America pick as sophomore. Infielder/Outfielder from Brazil, IN, went 9-for-11 in three games at Nationals, with three home runs and two doubles. N Great Rivers Athletic Conference “MVP” and leading vote-getter on All-Region XXIV team as a freshman. Repeated All-GRAC and All-Region honors the following spring.
 
⭐ Set team records as a freshman for hits (95), doubles (24) and home runs (17). A year later, she added to hit mark (112) and doubles (31) and established records for runs scored (87) and bases on balls (39) while finishing second all-time to herself in home runs (12) and to Hall of Famer April Long in triples (13) and RBIs (68).
 
⭐ Career leader in hits (207), runs (155), doubles (55), home runs (29) and walks (63), second in triples (20) and RBIs (123). Batted .426 for teams that were 107-42-1. Slugging percentages were .875 and .801, respectively; on-base averages .473 and .529.
 
⭐ Chosen for NJCAA entry in 1996 Canada Cup International Tourney.
 
⭐ Before coming to RLC, she helped Northview High finish second in the state as a senior and played for ASA National Champs. Capped career at SIUC by being voted Second-Team All-Conference.

NJCAA DIVISION II NATIONAL RUNNER-UP MEN’S GOLF TEAM (1994-1995)

MEN’S GOLF TEAM (1994-1995)  
 
PICTURED (L-R): Coach Dave Smith; Region XXIV runner-up Scott Johnson (Alton Marquette), who qualified as an individual the previous year and was second individually at Rock Valley; Sophomore Bryan Drew (Benton), beaten in a playoff after tying for RLC Invite honors; First-Team NJCAA All-America honoree Matt Armstrong (Massac County), a sophomore transfer who was a four-time medalist in the fall, twice in the spring and and fourth overall in the NJCAA Championships; Jeremy May (Staunton), Brandon Auld (Nashville) and Assistant Coach Dale Brock. Auld was runner-up at the Highland “36” Invitational, while Drew and May were third at Lincoln and Rock Valley, respectively.
 
No Warrior team in any sport had ever advanced to the national finals until the 1994-95 golf squad did. Eight years later, at the time of their Hall of Fame  induction, no other Rend Lake College representatives had ever led the NJCAA Division II Golf Championships as this group had the first two rounds and no other RLC contingent had been able to duplicate or beat their second-place finish despite seven more qualifying trips in a row, including five more Top Six showings.
 
⭐ Coach Dave Smith’s sixth team was his first to be ranked No. 1 in the country and his first Region XXIV winner . . . the first of eight (to date) to earn him  “Coach of the Year” distinction and qualify for the D-II Finals.
 
⭐ RLC led by four after Day One and by two after 36 holes. But the composite Warrior scorecard of 308-291-312-295–1,206 was nine strokes behind defending champion Tyler (TX) Jr. College and 10 better than third-place Temple (TX).
 
⭐ The balanced Warriors won the 20-team Rock Valley Invitational in Rockford by 14 shots before returning home to claim its first RLC Invitational and then Region XXIV honors with four All-Region performers.
 
⭐ Support for Johnson (144) in the Region XXIV Tourney at Jackson County Country Club came from Auld, 8th at 147, and Armstrong and Drew, tied for ninth at 148.
 
⭐ A second-round 68 at Bryan Park Golf Course in Greensboro, NC, helped Armstrong to a four-day total of 295 in the NJCAA Championships, nine shots behind the winner but just one away from third. Freshmen Auld and May were 17th (305) and 20th (306), respectively. (May earned Second-Team All-America status the following spring – 11th overall – when RLC finished third.) Both Johnson and Drew had scores count three of the four rounds en route to a 308 and 315,  respectively. Other contributors to the squad included Jerry Hale (Mt. Vernon) and Chris Hart (McLeansboro).
 

Induction Ceremony — October 18, 2003
 

JACE BUGG | Men’s Golf (1995-1997)

Jace Bugg  

The best golfer in Warrior history. The facts support the claim . . . 1) Third in the nation individually as a sophomore, a First-Team NJCAA Division II All-America honoree who led his team to a fifth-place showing; 2) Six-time medalist during his Juco career, including three of first four Midwest tournaments as a freshman; 3) Captured NJCAA “Long-Drive Contest” as freshman with 313-yard effort, then helped squad finish third; 4) A month after Juco career concluded, he put RLC on national map by advancing to quarterfinals of U.S. Amateur Championships; 5) Earned professional wins on Canadian Tour and Buy.com Tour, one notch below the PGA Tour.
 
⭐ Henderson, KY, native arrived as two-time H.S. All-Stater and was ninth in 1995 Kentucky State Amateur.
 
⭐ Won scorecard playoff in collegiate debut to claim 24-team Highland 36 Invitational. Followed with individual crown at John Wood and one-under par 141 for Rock Valley title. Runner-up at four-year Western Illinois U. Beu Classic. Team won seven of nine Fall events.
 
⭐ Borrowed clubs to win DuPage Classic the next fall as team won first six events. Followed with 68-69–137 triumph at Lincoln Invite, later shot opening 69 en route to medalist honors at RLC Invite. Tied for second when RLC won third of eight straight Region XXIV titles.
 
⭐ Stroke average both seasons – 74.0.
 
Jace Bugg dies at age 27 
By Gleaner staff / Henderson, KY – December 5, 2003 
 
Professional golfer Jace Bugg of Henderson died Thursday evening at St. Mary’s Medical Center in Evansville after a 13-month battle with leukemia.
 
Bugg, 27, was diagnosed with acute myelogenous leukemia on November 1, 2002. After being hospitalized in Las Vegas and Nashville, Bugg underwent a bone marrow transplant on May 12 of this year at the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston. Following the transplant, Bugg returned home to recover but suffered a relapse in October.
 
Bugg had been in contention for a spot on the PGA Tour before his diagnosis. He earned his membership on the Buy.com Tour with his victory at the 2002 Arkansas Classic after earning a spot in the tournament as a Monday qualifier. Bugg spent much of the season in the top 10, coming close to earning his PGA Tour card until missing the last part of the season with a wrist injury prior to his diagnosis. He ended up 29th on the season’s money list.
 
Bugg played on the Canadian Tour for three years. He won the South Carolina Challenge in 2001 and finished fourth on the Tour’s money list for the year.

CHERYL WEIS | Women’s Basketball (1987-1989) 

Cheryl Weis

The 6-2 center from Mooresville, IN, stands tall in Lady Warrior basketball annals. Fourteen years after her career ended, she remains alone at the top in number of games played (64) and No. 2 to Hall-of-Famer Susie Woodward in total points (1,175) and single-season points and average (730 and 22.8 as a sophomore).
 
⭐ She was a perfect complement to a veteran team her freshman season which finished 25-8, second-best in team history. That quintet started 14-0 and 18-1, claimed four-team tourney championships at Danville Area (behind MVP Weis) and Lewis and Clark and finished with records for points (2,600 in 32 games), scoring average (81.3), FG (1,101) and FG% (.509), with a record 46 FG vs. Shawnee. She netted double-figures in 24 of 32 games, averaged 13.9 ppg on 60.7% accuracy and a team-high 7.9 rebounds.
 
⭐ Sophomore figures were even more dominant for a 19-14 squad – 22.8 ppg, 8.3 rpg, 1.1 apg, leading scorer 25 times and top rebounder in 19 games. She tallied 20 or more in 19 games, as many as 30 six times with a high of 33 vs. Shawnee; 30 points and 17 rebounds vs. Wabash Valley. RLC repeated as champion of two tournaments.
 
⭐ Career stats for two-time All-Region XXIV and All-GRAC pick – 18.4 ppg, 59.5% FG (537-902), 67.8% FT (101-149), 8.1 rpg (516), 1.6 recoveries, .8 assists.
 
⭐ Played last two seasons at SIUC.
 
 
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