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Class of 2011

Pittsburg State University

Intercollegiate Athletics Hall of Fame

Justin Annin (1999-2000)
Springfield, Missouri
Baseball Athlete
Justin Annin was selected the first-team NCAA Division II All-America catcher by the American Baseball Coaches Association as a senior in 2000.  Annin set PSU single-season records with a .463 batting average and 17 home runs during his senior campaign.  He twice earned first-team All-Central Region honors and he was the 1999 Central Region Player of the Year.  For his career, Annin batted .403 with 30 home runs and 126 RBIs in 98 games.  He set the school record in career home runs and ranked third all-time in career batting average and RBIs.

Chuck Broyles (1990-2009)
Mulberry, Kansas
Football Coach
Chuck Broyles led the Pitt State football program to the 1991 NCAA Division II National Championship and 198 victories during a decorated 20-year tenure as the Gorillas head football coach (1990-2009).  Broyles earned Division II National Coach of the Year honors three times (1991, 2004, 2008). He led the Gorillas to four appearances in the NCAA-II National Championship Game, nine MIAA titles and 15 trips to the NCAA-II playoffs.  Additionally, Broyles served as athletics director for 14 years (1996-2000).  As a four-year football letterman (1965-68), he earned honorable mention NAIA All-America and first-team All-CIC honors as a senior in 1968. Broyles was selected to PSU’s 100th Anniversary Football Team in 2003.

Frank C. German
Pittsburg, Kansas
Meritorious Achievement Legacy
Frank German was a professor of mathematics at Pittsburg State University who served for more than three decades as a key member of the Gorillas’ Athletic Council in a tenure at the school that spanned from 1924-63.  German served as a volunteer timekeeper and scorekeeper for Pitt State basketball, football and track & field contests.  He also helped tutor PSU student-athletes.  German was highly involved in Pittsburg community youth sports.  He helped organize the Pittsburg Little League, which was named the Frank German Division in his honor.

Oscar Gonzalez (1996-99)
Madrid, Spain
Basketball Athlete
Oscar Gonzalez twice earned NCAA Division II All-America honors while helping the Pitt State basketball program reach new heights during the late 1990s.  Gonzalez started all 119 career games at point guard, scoring 1,482 points and setting the school record with 592 career assists.  He was voted the MIAA Most Valuable Player as a senior in 1999, helping Pitt State to its first conference title in a quarter century as well as the No. 1 ranking in Division II that season.  Gonzalez earned All-MIAA honors all four seasons for the Gorillas, guiding PSU to NCAA postseason appearances from 1997-99. Upon graduation, he played professional basketball in Spain for 12 seasons.

Leslie (Dudley) Morrow (1997-2000)
Leavenworth, Kansas
Basketball Athlete
Leslie (Dudley) Morrow earned NCAA Division II All-America honors in each of the final three seasons of her decorated career.  Dudley set the school’s all-time scoring record with 2,046 points in 112 career games (18.3 ppg).  She also compiled 534 career rebounds, 500 career assists, 338 career steals and 123 career 3-point field goals.  Dudley garnered first-team All-MIAA and honorable mention Division II All-America recognition in each of her final three seasons and she was named the 1997 MIAA Freshman of the Year.  In the classroom, she was a GTE Academic All-America selection as well as the 2000 MIAA Ken B. Jones Award Winner.

Albert Schmidt (1968-71)
Caldwell, Kansas
Football Athlete
Albert Schmidt earned honorable mention All-America running back honors on the A.P. Little All-America Team as a senior in 1971.  Schmidt carried the ball 442 times for 2,152 career yards, finishing as the school’s third-leading rusher following his playing days.  He also earned first-team All-NAIA District X honors his senior season; and he rushed for 920 yards and eight TDs while helping the Gorillas to an RMAC Championships in 1970.  Schmidt was selected by the Los Angeles Rams of the National Football League in the 1972 NFL Draft.

Floyd Leroy Scott (1918-21)
Greenleaf, Kansas
Football/Track & Field Legacy Athlete
Leroy Scott earned All-Kansas Intercollegiate Athletic Conference honors in each of his four seasons as quarterback for the Gorillas from 1918-21 – the first Pitt State football player to earn All-Conference honors four times.  He earned first-team All-KIAC recognition from 1920-21, after earning honorable mention All-KIAC his first two seasons (1918-19).  Scott also garnered All-KIAC honors five times in track & field, capturing the KIAC shot put title in 1921.