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2022 Honors Dinner

IMPRESSIVE CREDENTIALS EARN AWARDS & PRAISE AT ANNUAL HONORS BRUNCH

Celebrating our legends and creating new ones is this year’s focus of the National Football Foundation’s Joe Tiller Chapter of Northwest Indiana.

The Tiller Chapter is moving full-speed ahead with a busy slate of events and projects for 2022. The emphasis is to provide recognition for scholar-athletes and community members who support them and to raise funds for charities.

While fund-raising is an ongoing project, the NFF Honors Brunch “Celebrating Our Legends XVIII” on June 12 at the Purdue Memorial Union Ballrooms in West Lafayette was the organization’s feature event. With a sellout crowd of 353, it kicked off the busiest six-month stretch in chapter history.  

Next up is NFF Night with the Lafayette Aviators on July 13 at Loeb Stadium in Lafayette, followed by the Tyler Trent Golf Outing Sept. 9 at Coyote Crossing Golf Club and NFF Honors Reception, which will feature the induction of former Purdue quarterback Kyle Orton into the Indiana Football Hall of Fame, that evening at Bruno’s Big O Sportsroom in West Lafayette.

After that, the chapter will sponsor a bus trip/car caravan to the Indianapolis Colts-Kansas City Chiefs game, featuring first-round draft choice George Karlaftis, on Sept. 25. Depending the on popularity of that trip, the Tiller Chapter may sponsor a similar trip to a Purdue football game in November.

NFF HONORS BRUNCH

The June 12 event featured presentation of eight chapter awards to community members and recognition of 17 NFF scholar-athletes who were nominated by their schools throughout Northwest Indiana for the annual Scholar-Athlete of the Year Award and 33 Lafayette Journal & Courier student-athletes nominated by high school athletics directors in the J&C coverage area. Also recognized were 11 J&C sport-by-sport players of the year selected by the J&C sports staff and the Indiana Football Coaches Association North All-Star nominees from Regions 1 and 4. Personalized certificates were presented to the 45 prep athletes who chose to attend.

The eight community awards were the results of nominations from chapter members and various entities to recognize outstanding accomplishments in NW Indiana communities. In addition, three former or current coaches were inducted in the Indiana Football Hall of Fame during the June 12 event.

The entire list of our award honorees are as follows:

  • Gold Medallion Award – Dr. Robert Hagen (posthumously)
  • Bernie Flowers Contribution to Amateur Sports Award – Nate Barrett
  • Leroy Keyes Legends Award – Tim Newton
  • Purdue For Life Impact Award – Alan Karpick and Tom Schott
  • Arnette Tiller Service to Football Award – Sandra Dukes
  • Todd Clark Outstanding Game Official Award – Trent Johnson
  • Patrick Mackey Courage Award – Wade Peters
  • Drew Brees Mental Toughness Award – Aidan O’Connell
  • J&C Female & Male Student-Athletes of the Year – Tressa Senesac and Brady Preston
  • NFF Chapter Scholar-Athlete of the Year – Brady Preston
  • Indiana Football Hall of Fame Inductee – John Hendryx (June)
  • Indiana Football Hall of Fame Inductee – Kevin O’Shea (June)
  • Indiana Football Hall of Fame Inductee – Alex Yunevich (June - posthumously)
  • Indiana Football Hall of Fame Inductee – Kyle Orton (September)

HIGH SCHOOL HONOREES

The NFF scholar-athletes’ names and high schools, as nominated by their schools, were: Robby Ballentine (Andrean), Justin Brady (Lafayette Central Catholic), Cooper Crum (Harrison), Brendan Day (Winamac), Tate Drone (Rensselaer Central), Tanner Hampton (North Judson-San Pierre), Seth Ireland (North Miami), Kalvin Jones (Delphi), Hayden Lewter (Hammond Morton), Parker Minks (Clinton Prairie), Chris Mullen (Chesterton), Austin Pickett (Fountain Central), Brady Preston (Lafayette Jefferson), Brice Rider (West Lafayette), John Schneere (McCutcheon), Samuel Smith (Caston) and Payton Stark (Tri-County).

The Journal & Courier Female Nominees for Student-Athlete of the Year were as follows: Sydney Argo (Faith Christian), Emma Beimfohr (Harrison), Cailin and Catie Campbell (North Montgomery), Shelbey Carrico (McCutcheon), Kendall Davison (Clinton Central), Caitlin Dineen (Lafayette Central Catholic), Cayci Ehlinger (North Newton), Lynzi Heimlich (North White), Jerzi Hershberger (Fountain Central), Adelle May (Carroll), Tynlie Neal (Clinton Prairie), Michelle Rodkey (Rossville), Tressa Senesac (Benton Central), Riley Shrader (Seeger), Alli Steffey (West Lafayette), Brynn Warren (Tri-County) and Shea Williamson (Crawfordsville).

The Journal & Courier Male Nominees for Student-Athlete of the Year were as follows: Connor Barket (West Lafayette), Blake Buchanan (Benton Central), Cooper Crum (Harrison), Logan Doty (Tri-County), Will Eldridge (Carroll), Brody Fine (McCutcheon), Ian Hensley (Crawfordsville), Jakob Kirsch (North Montgomery), Carter Merryman (Fountain Central), Preston Padgett (Rossville), Kyle Pickard (Clinton Central), Brady Preston (Lafayette Jefferson), Breckon Riley (Clinton Prairie), Parker Smith (North White) and Raymond Tharp (North Newton).

The Journal & Courier Players of the Year were as follows: Clark Barrett (Central Catholic/Basketball & Football), Javan Buchanan (Lafayette Jeff/Basketball), Karsyn Cherry (Central Catholic/Soccer), Chloe Chicoine (McCutcheon/Volleyball), Jordan Cree (Rensselaer Central/Football), Teresa Maggio (McCutcheon/Basketball), Tynlie Neal (Clinton Prairie/Basketball), Hunter Newman (Harrison/Football), Mariere Omonode (West Lafayette/Football), Austin Pacheco (West Lafayette/Soccer) and Grace Roach (Central Catholic/Volleyball).

All 60 students who were selected as all-stars for the North team were invited to this Honors Brunch. That entire list can be found at www.ifca.net.

 COMMUNITY ICONS

 The community awards included a tribute to Dr. Robert Hagen, who was the Tiller Chapter’s President when he died unexpectedly in March. The NFF Chapter presented his wife, Debbie, with the chapter’s highest honor, the Gold Medallion Award, for his incredible work in the Lafayette community as a top orthopedic surgeon, supporter of multiple charities (including serving as Chairman of the United Way Campaign and President of the Tiller Chapter) and a great fan of his favorite sports teams, especially Lafayette Jefferson Bronchos, West Lafayette Red Devils, Purdue Boilermakers, Florida Gators and the Detroit Tigers.

            The other community awards went to attorney/photographer Sandra Dukes (Arnette Tiller Service to Football Award) for her generosity in pictures; to insurance provider/game official Trent Johnson (Todd Clark Outstanding Official Award); to auto sales/community servant Nate Barrett (Bernie Flowers Contribution to Amateur Sports Award); to university administrator/play-by-play announcer Tim Newton (Leroy Keyes Legends Award); toeducation/athletic/ philanthropy leaders Alan Karpick and Tom Schott (Purdue For Life Impact Award); to Carroll H.S. athlete Wade Peters, who survived a severe accident last summer (Patrick Mackey Courage Award) and to Purdue quarterback Aidan O’Connell (Drew Brees Mental Toughness Award).  

In addition, the event featured appearances and interviews with Purdue Offensive Coordinator Brian Brohm and former Major League Baseball pitcher Clayton Richard.

HALL OF FAMERS

The four IFCA Hall of Fame inductees have come to their distinction by very different paths – three as coaches and one as a star quarterback.

John Hendryx graduated from Ball State University and immediately went into teaching at Carroll High School and coaching baseball for nine years before becoming head football coach in 1994. Now, 28 years later, he has the 11th most wins among active coaches with a record of 232-97 (a .705 winning percentage) including Carroll, Northwestern, Knox and his alma mater Winamac, including an 8-1 record last fall while winning his sixth conference championship. 

Kevin O’Shea graduated from Franklin College, where he led the nation in passing after starring as an all-state quarterback at McCutcheon H.S. in 1982 when the Mavs finished as state runner-up. O’Shea’s prep coaching trail included stops at Delta, Attica, McCutcheon (where he coached Mr. Football Clayton Richard), Central Catholic (where he won five state championships and won 114 of 124 games in nine years) and now Indianapolis North Central. His 28-year record is 239-100 (.705 percentage).

Alex Yunevich graduated from Purdue University in 1932, after a stellar career as a running back at Bicknell H.S. and Purdue. He scored three touchdowns in Purdue’s first-ever win over Michigan and helped the Boilermakers to a Big Ten Championship in 1929. He went on to coach at Central State Normal College (now Central Michigan University) and Alfred University in New York, compiling a 41-year record of 187-98-13 (.649 percentage), including six undefeated seasons at Alfred. “Yunie” was selected for HOF induction in 1988, but the ceremony never happened and he died in 1992. He will be officially inducted posthumously on June 12.

Kyle Orton, who now lives in Iowa, will be inducted into the Hall of Fame in September when he returns to West Lafayette for the Tyler Trent Golf Outing during a Boilermaker football weekend. He graduated from Purdue in 2005 after compiling some of the most impressive passing statistics in Boilermaker history, including 9,337 yards passing and 63 touchdown passes in four seasons. Orton went on to spend 10 years (2005-2014) in the NFL with five different teams – Chicago Bears, Denver Broncos, Kansas City Chiefs, Dallas Cowboys and Buffalo Bills.


Andrean High School was honored for winning the IHSAA 2A football state championship in 2021


Brady Preston of Lafayette Jeff High School was named the NFF Scholar-Athlete of the Year and the J&C Male Student-Athlete of the Year.


Tressa Senesac of Benton Central High School was named the NFF Scholar-Athlete of the Year and the J&C Student-Athlete of the Year.


Purdue quarterback Aidan O'Connell received the Drew Brees Mental Toughness Award.


Wade Peters of Carroll High School received the Patrick Mackey Courage Award for overcoming a severe injury to compete in football and baseball his senior year.


Coach Kevin O'Shea was one of three inductees into the Indiana Football Hall of Fame at the 2022 Honors Brunch.


Purdue football broadcaster Tim Newton received the Leroy Keyes Legends Award after being named the 2021 Indiana Sportscaster of the Year.