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Benedictine Ravens

The Benedictine Ravens are the athletic teams that represent Benedictine College, located in Atchison, Kansas, in intercollegiate sports as a member of the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA), primarily competing in the Heart of America Athletic Conference (HAAC) since the 1991–92 academic year.[2] The Ravens previously competed as an NAIA Independent from 1962–63 to 1990–91; in the Central Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (CIC) from 1937–38 to 1961–62; as an Independent from January 1929 (during the 1928–29 school year) to 1936–37; and in the Kansas Collegiate Athletic Conference (KCAC) from 1902–03 to 1927–28.

Benedictine Ravens
UniversityBenedictine College
ConferenceHeart of America Athletic Conference
NAIADivision I
Athletic directorCharles Gartenmayer
LocationAtchison, Kansas
Varsity teams20
Football stadiumO'Malley Field at Larry Wilcox Stadium
Basketball arenaRalph Nolan Gymnasium
Baseball stadiumLaughlin Field at Olsen Stadium
Softball stadiumAsher Sports Complex
Soccer stadiumJohn Casey Soccer Center
MascotRocky
NicknameRavens
Fight songRaven Fight Song
ColorsBlack, white, and red[1]
     
Websiteravenathletics.com

The men's college was known as St. Benedict's College (alongside sister institution Mount St. Scholastica College) until a merger in 1971 created co-ed Benedictine College.[3]

Benedictine won NAIA titles in men's basketball (1954, 1967) and women's lacrosse (2022). The Ravens played in the first NAIA basketball tournament in 1937 and the first football playoffs in 1958.

Varsity teams Edit

Benedictine competes in 20 intercollegiate varsity sports: Men's sports include baseball, basketball, cross country, football, lacrosse, soccer, track & field (indoor and outdoor) and wrestling; while women's sports include basketball, cross country, lacrosse, soccer, softball, track & field (indoor and outdoor) and volleyball; and co-ed sports include cheerleading, dance and spirit squad.

NAIA basketball champions Edit

The Ravens won the NAIA Tournament in Kansas City in 1954 and 1967,[4] both under NAIA Hall of Fame coach Ralph Nolan.[5]

The two champions took decidedly different routes to the title. The 1954 Ravens were regarded as underdogs throughout their run. The field included two-time defending champion Southwest Missouri State and East Texas State, the third-place finisher in 1953.

The 1967 Ravens came to Kansas City as the top seed.

In 1954, St. Benedict's College defeated Western Illinois 62-56 in the title game.

In 1967, the Ravens entered the tournament as the No. 1 seed.[6] St. Benedict's won its second title[7] with a 71–65 victory over Oklahoma Baptist.

The 1967 Ravens are one of six teams to finish the season No. 1 in the coaches poll, enter the tournament as the top seed and win the title.

In 2020, The Kansas City Star named Darryl Jones, a star of the 1967 team, and Nolan NAIA Tournament team.[8]

Benedictine has made 12 appearances in the NAIA Tournament,[9] most recently in 2021.

The Ravens qualified for the NAIA in 2014, 2015, 2017, 2019 and 2021 under coach Ryan Moody.

St. Benedict's played in the first NAIA Tournament in 1937 as one of eight teams in the field in Kansas City. The Ravens also qualified in 1953, 1958, 1965 and 1970. The 1965 Ravens advanced to the final eight of the 32-team field.

St. Benedict's also won Central Intercollegiate Conference titles in 1953, 1954 and 1958.

In 2014, Benedictine made its first appearance since 1970[10] and won its opening game over Westminster (70–65).

1954 NAIA champions
Municipal Auditorium - Kansas City, Mo.
St. Benedict's 68, East Carolina 61
St. Benedict's 74, St. Ambrose 50
St. Benedict's 62, Pasadena 61
St. Benedict's 63, Arkansas Tech 59 (semifinal)
St. Benedict's 62, Western Illinois 56 (final)
1967 NAIA champions
Municipal Auditorium - Kansas City, Mo.
St. Benedict's 80, Linfield 75
St. Benedict's 67, Southern State 56
St. Benedict's 88, St. Mary's 73
St. Benedict's 73, Morris Harvey 70 (semifinal)
St. Benedict's 71, Oklahoma Baptist 65 (final)
Men's basketball postseason appearances
Season Tournament Coach
1937 NAIA (0-1) Mullins
1949 National Catholic Invitational Tournament (2-2) Walsh
1953 NAIA (1-1) Nolan
1954 NAIA champions (5-0) Nolan
1958 NAIA (0-1) Nolan
1965 NAIA quarterfinals (2-1) Nolan
1967 NAIA champions (5-0) Nolan
1970 NAIA (0-1) Nolan
2014 NAIA (1-1) Moody
2015 NAIA (0-1) Moody
2017 NAIA (0-1) Moody
2019 NAIA (1-1) Moody
2021 NAIA (1-1) Moody
NAIA district basketball playoffs
Season Tournament Coach
1953 District 10 playoff series champions (SBC 2, Ottawa 1) Nolan
1954 District 10 playoff series champions (SBC 2, Kansas Wesleyan 0) Nolan
1958 District 10 playoff series champions (SBC 2, Ottawa 0) Nolan
1965 District 10 playoff series champions (SBC 2, Bethany 0) Nolan
1966 District 10 playoffs (1-1, 3rd) Nolan
1967 District 10 playoffs champions (2-0) Nolan
1968 District 10 playoffs (1-1, 2nd) Nolan
1969 District 10 playoffs (0-1) Nolan
1970 District 10 playoffs champions (2-0) Nolan
1971 District 10 playoffs (0-1)) Colwell
1972 District 10 playoffs (0-1) Colwell
1977 District 10 playoffs (1-1) Jones
1981 District 10 playoffs (1-1) Judge
1982 District 10 playoffs (0-1) Judge
1987 District 10 playoffs (0-1) Morley
1988 District 10 playoffs (0-1) Morley
1990 District 10 playoffs (0-1) Sickafoose
1991 District 10 playoffs (0-1) Sickafoose
1992 District 16 playoffs (1-1) Sickafoose
1993 District 16 playoffs (0-1) Sickafoose

Football's rise, fall and return Edit

The story of football at Benedictine College is written by coach Larry Wilcox, who played for the Ravens and took over as coach at age 28. He coached for 42 seasons before retiring in 2020. Along the way, he played a major role in the college's financial health and enrollment, built a football stadium, offices and weight room, won 300-plus games and mentored many lives.

He also has his own bobblehead.

Wilcox and his long-time assistants, for generations of football players, are as much a part of the Benedictine experience as the Abbey, the Raven Walk, the Raven fight song and homecoming bed races.

While Wilcox, as a player, coach and athletic director, built the current edition of Ravens football, he isn't the only successful part of football at the college.

The Ravens own 16 NAIA playoff appearances, including a runner-up finish in 2018 and trips to the semifinals in 1992 and 2001. They made eight appearances in nine seasons between 1995 and 2003.

As St. Benedict's, the Ravens made their first appearance in 1958 as one of four NAIA playoff teams.

The 2018 Ravens went 13–2 to set a school record for season victories. They won the Heart of America Athletic Conference North Division title. In the NAIA playoffs, they defeated Cumberlands (48–41), Concordia (54–38) and Kansas Wesleyan (43–21) to advance to the NAIA title game. Top-ranked Morningside defeated Benedictine 35–28 in Daytona Beach, Fla.

More than 3,000 Benedictine fans traveled to the game.

St. Benedict's started football in 1920 and the program enjoyed several high points in its early years. The school dropped football after the 1962 season. Varsity football returned in 1973.

Wilcox came to St. Benedict's in 1969 and joined the football club upon its revival in 1970 on its way to varsity status.

Wilcox, after serving as assistant coach, took over the program in 1979 and presided over its transformation into a consistent winner and regular NAIA playoff qualifier. The Ravens play in Larry Wilcox Stadium, opened in 1998, on campus. In 1990, the Ravens moved into the Amino Center locker room, offices and weight room. Benedictine expanded the facility in 2004 and 2007.

Wilcox, a 1972 graduate, was inducted into the NAIA Hall of Fame in 2017. He coached the Ravens to 14 of their 15 NAIA playoff appearances.

Football postseason appearances
Season Bowl/playoff Coach
1956 Mineral Water Bowl - St. Benedict's 14, Northeastern Oklahoma 13 Schottel
1958 NAIA Western Playoff (0-1) Schottel
1976 Boot Hill Bowl - BC 29, Washburn 14 Tardiff
1977 Boot Hill Bowl - Missouri Western 35, BC 30 May
1985 NAIA playoffs (0-1) Wilcox
1986 Sunflower Bowl - Tarleton State 40, BC 38 Wilcox
1991 Steamboat Bowl - BC 18, Friends 13 Wilcox
1992 NAIA semifinal (2-1) Wilcox
1995 NAIA playoffs (0-1) Wilcox
1996 NAIA playoffs (0-1) Wilcox
1997 NAIA playoffs (0-1) Wilcox
1998 NAIA playoffs (0-1) Wilcox
2000 NAIA playoffs (0-1) Wilcox
2001 NAIA semifinal (2-1) Wilcox
2002 NAIA playoffs (0-1) Wilcox
2003 NAIA playoffs (0-1) Wilcox
2011 NAIA playoffs (0-1) Wilcox
2013 NAIA playoffs (0-1) Wilcox
2017 NAIA playoffs (0-1) Wilcox
2018 NAIA runner-up (3-1) Wilcox
2022 NAIA playoffs (1-1) Osborn


In 2004, Wilcox donated his salary to help complete expansion of the Amino Center.[11]

St. Benedict's played in its first bowl game in 1956 under coach Ivan Schottel. The Ravens defeated Northeastern Oklahoma State 14–13[12] in the Mineral Water Bowl in Excelsior Springs, Mo. Since resuming football, the Ravens won the 1976 Boot Hill Bowl and the 1991 Steamboat Bowl. They lost in the 1977 Boot Hill Bowl and the 1986 Sunflower Bowl.

St. Benedict's won its first conference title in 1940 under coach Marty Peters. The Ravens went 4–0 in the Central Intercollegiate Conference with wins over Fort Hays State, Pittsburg State, Southwestern and Emporia State. Schottel became coach in 1953 and won or shared CIC titles in 1953, 1956, 1958, 1959 and 1960.

The 1958 Ravens went 10–1 and rose to No. 5 in the NAIA rankings before losing to Northeastern Oklahoma in the NAIA Western Playoff. The Ravens won the CIC title and grabbed 10 of the 11 spots on the first-team all-conference team. Quarterback Mark Flynn was named CIC Back of the Year and George Worley was the CIC Lineman of the Year. Worley was also named NAIA Lineman of the Year.

St. Benedict's also enjoyed a notable run of success in the 1930s under coach Moon Mullins. He coached five seasons and went 37–5-1, capped by an 8–0 season in 1936.

Benedictine played as an independent after resuming football in 1973. It rekindled CIC rivalries against schools such as Washburn and Emporia State at times, and also regularly played Missouri Western. After years of lobbying (and a short run in the Tri-State Conference), Benedictine joined the Heart of America in 1992 and shared the conference title with Baker.

The Ravens went 9–0 in the Heart in 1995 to win its second title. It also won Heart titles in 1997, 1998, 2000 and 2013. It claimed Heart North Division titles in 2017 and 2018.

Unbeaten regular seasons
Season Record Coach
1925 6-0-1 Quigley
1936 8-0 Mullins
1958 10-0 (10-1 final record) Schottel
1985 10-0 (10-1 final record Wilcox
1995 9-0 (9-1 final record) Wilcox
2000 10-0 (10-1 final record) Wilcox

"A strangle hold on the honor and glory that goes with crushing Rockhurst" Edit

For 60-plus years, the Ravens and Rockhurst College faced off in a rivalry as intense as any in small-college athletics. The Catholic colleges are separated by 56 miles and their meetings, especially in basketball, defined seasons and packed gymnasiums for decades.

Fans rode trains to Kansas City for games and students dribbled a basketball from the Atchison campus to Kansas City in a show of spirit. In the 1960s and 1970s, the meetings in Kansas City often drew crowds of 5-10,000 to Municipal Auditorium. In Atchison, the gym would be packed with 3,000 fans at 1:30 for a 3 p.m. game. "Rockhurst Weekend" became the social and party event of the school year in Atchison, regardless of the outcome of the game. It traditionally started with beer and Wheaties breakfast at The Wharf and included a rivalry t-shirt mocking the Hawks before an afternoon game.

Students stole NAIA championship banners from each campus, lobbed stink bombs into open dorm windows and distributed leaflets with insults - Rockhurst mocked St. Benedict's students as "Hayseeds." Rockhurst students enjoyed visiting Atchison to rearrange a rock formation spelling "St. Benedict's" by changing the "B" to "R" and painting it blue. Several times, Rockhurst fans attempted to invade the Snakepit seating area in the Benedictine gym and had to be forcibly removed. Benedictine students planned for weeks a strategy to sneak chickens, sometimes painted blue, into the game. Hanging insulting banners from the rafters was another popular prank.

In 1970, St. Benedict's students celebrated a seven-game basketball win streak over the Hawks by taking out an advertisement in the Kansas City Times. The copy recounted St. Benedict's two NAIA titles and taunted "The Raven Sports Arena Awaits You Hawks."

In 1990, Benedictine students kidnapped the Hawks mascot costume,[13] performed during a soccer game and returned to Atchison with the prize.

While basketball grabbed most of the attention, football and soccer games also fueled the rivalry.

The Ravens dominated the football series by winning 16 of the 23 meetings between 1921-1949. Rockhurst dropped the sport in 1949. St. Benedict's won the first meeting 35-0 and shut out the Hawks six times. The Ravens won 12 straight meetings from 1932-1946 and won the final meeting 27-13 in 1949.

In 1936, The Kansas City Times reported a crowd of 5,000 watched a 32-6 win by St. Benedict's in Kansas City. "The Ravens, on the loose all season, flew up and down Bourke field yesterday and in fewer than twenty minutes after the start had a strangle hold on the honor and glory that goes with crushing Rockhurst college's Hawks, their traditional rivals."

In soccer, Rockhurst dominated the Missouri NAIA district as the Ravens did Kansas. The Hawks regularly tormented Benedictine by knocking it out of NAIA Tournament contention in the Area Playoffs. The Ravens defeated Rockhurst in 1974 and 1983 to advance to the national tournament.

The basketball series peaked in the 1960s, when Rockhurst won the NAIA title in 1964 and the Ravens in 1967. St. Benedict's, which also won in 1954 and returned to the NAIA in 1958, advanced to Kansas City in 1965 and 1970. Rockhurst qualified in 1963, 1966 and 1967.

Rockhurst won the first meeting 36-33 in 1921, and four of the first five. In 1935, the Ravens started a streak of six wins and 12 in 13 meetings. The Ravens won 16 straight from 1946-54. A 10-game win streak carried the Ravens from 1966-1971. Rockhurst dominated the 1980s by winning 20 in a row. Late in the 1980s, Benedictine's program improved under coaches Del Morley and Mike Sickafoose and the rivalry became competitive again.

The series started to fade in the mid-1990s. Benedictine joined the Heart of America Athletic Conference in 1992, which made playing Rockhurst twice on its traditional Saturday spots impossible because of conference scheduling requirements. In 1998, Rockhurst joined NCAA Division II. The teams played occasionally in recent seasons, sometimes as an exhibition game.

Highlights of the basketball rivalry with Rockhurst Edit

1939-40

Ravens 50, Hawks 18 in Atchison – The Ravens handed Rockhurst the “worst basketball licking” of the series. Jack Andrews and Ed Farrell both scored eight points for St. Benedict’s. Farrell “plunked in three extra long swishers in succession.”

1946-47

Ravens 45, Hawks 43 in Atchison“St. Benedict’s college defeated Rockhurst college, 45 to 43, last night in one of those all-out traditional battles for which the ancient foes are famous. Fans occupied every available seat and almost all of the standing room in the big Raven gymnasium to see the rivals fight it out.”

1957-58

Ravens 69, Hawks 50 in Kansas City – St. Benedict’s ended a six-game losing streak in the series with a win at Mason-Halpin Fieldhouse. Bob Veale, who would later pitch for the Pittsburgh Pirates, scored 22 points for the Ravens.

1964-65

Ravens 85, Hawks 83 at Municipal Auditorium – Darryl Jones scored 25 points, 18 in the first half, to help St. Benedict’s defeat the reigning NAIA champions.

1966-67

Ravens 92, Hawks 90 at Municipal Auditorium – Darryl Jones’ steal and dunk gave St. Benedict’s a 90-88 lead and Hawks coach Dolor Rehm had to be restrained from going after the officials. A steal by Vince DeGreeff led to clinching free throws for the Ravens. DeGreeff scored 31 points to help St. Benedict’s improve to 17-2 on their way to the NAIA title.

1968-69

Ravens 75, Hawks 69 in Atchison – Tim Moore scored 27 points to give St. Benedict's its sixth straight win over Rockhurst.

1970-71

Ravens 87, Hawks 85 in Atchison – Jay Williams followed in a missed shot by Chic Downing in the final seconds. Downing scored 21 points and Williams added 14 and 13 rebounds.

1971-72

Ravens 83, Hawks 80 in Kansas City – Chic Downing scored 21 points and Jackie Lee added 17 for the Ravens, who avenged a 60-58 overtime defeat earlier in the season. A crowd of 5,400 watched.

1987-88

Ravens 96, Hawks 76 in Kansas City – Benedictine snapped a 20-game losing streak in the series with Tony Russo scoring 22 points. Tony Tanking made four three-pointers to score 19 points and the Ravens defeated the Hawks for the first time since 1978.

1989-90

Ravens 78, Hawks 74 in Atchison – Pat Giller scored 29 points and the Ravens rallied from an 11-point deficit in the second half.

1991-92

Ravens 82, Hawks 74 in Kansas City – Technical fouls and a potential scuffle in the final seconds highlighted Benedictine’s win. Jason Wyrick scored 22 points for the Ravens

1992-93

Ravens 120, Hawks 113 (three overtimes) in Atchison – Rockhurst led 79-77 in the closing seconds of regulation, 92-89 in the final seconds of the first overtime and 103-101 late in the second overtime. Benedictine’s Jason Wyrick, fouled on a desperation shot with no time remaining, made three foul shots to tie it 92-all and force the second overtime. Wyrick, again fouled on a three-point shot, made two foul shots to give the Ravens a 112-107 lead in the final overtime. Matt Westerhaus led the Ravens with 33 points. Albert Karner added 19 points – all from the line – with 17 assists and 12 rebounds.

1993-94

Ravens 82, Hawks 74 in Atchison – Current Benedictine coach Ryan Moody scored 29 points.

NAIA basketball All-Americans Edit

Darryl Jones, a 6-foot-5 forward, and Chic Downing, a 6-foot-7 center, are the lone Ravens to earn first-team NAIA All-American honors.

Jones, from St. Louis, is the school's most-decorated basketball player. He was named NAIA All-American four times - third team in 1965 and 1966 and first in 1967 and 1968. He scored 2,014 points to rank second on the career list. He owns the program's career rebounding mark with 1,471, highlighted by an average of 15.1 a game in 1967.

Downing, from Atchison, earned first-team honors in 1972 and third team in 1970.[14] Downing is the program's career scoring leader with 2,042 points and rank second with 1,158 rebounds. He averaged a program-best 25.5 points in 1971-72, as well as 13.4 rebounds. The New York Knicks selected Downing in the 11th round of the 1972 NBA Draft.

Downing, 72, died on Feb. 22, 2020 in Atchison.[15] He won four state titles as coach at Atchison High School, as well as two as a player for the Redmen. He was an All-State selection in 1968 before attending St. Benedict's. He was named KBCA Coach of the Year in 1985 and 1988.

NAIA All-Americans
Name Team Season
Joe Stueve Third 1954
Don Listar Third 1961
Pat Hare HM 1964
Darryl Jones Third 1965
Pat Hare HM 1965
Darryl Jones Third 1966
Darryl Jones First 1967
Vince DeGreeff Third 1967
Darryl Jones First 1968
Chic Downing Third 1970
Chic Downing First 1972
Dan Van Dyke Third 2008
Quaran Johnson HM 2012
Charlie Wallrap HM 2013
Charlie Wallrap HM 2014
John Harris Jr. HM 2015
Andre Yates Second 2017
Thomas O'Connor Second 2019
Adam Kutney Second 2019
Jaiden Bristol Second 2021

Ravens win 31 games, 24-0 in conference play in 2018-19 Edit

Benedictine featured great chemistry, three-point shooting and strong defense in 2018-19 and it resulted in a remarkable season. Its 24-0 record in the Heart of America Athletic Conference play is believed to be a collegiate record for most wins in an unbeaten conference season.

The Ravens held opponents to 38.7 percent shooting to rank third nationally, second with 159 blocks, and held opponents to 67 points a game. They made 39.6 percent of their three-pointers, seventh nationally.

The 2018-19 Ravens entered the NAIA tournament with a 30–3 record.[16] They defeated Westmont (90–85)[17] before falling to Pikeville 83–79 in double overtime.[18]

The Ravens finished 31-4. They won a school-record 29 games in a row and moved to No. 1 in the NAIA national poll.[19]

Benedictine won 26 straight games against Heart schools before losing to No. 24 Peru State in the championship of the conference tournament. It defeated seven ranked Heart opponents during the regular season, highlighted by an 84-70 home win over No. 2 William Penn.

Senior guard Thomas O'Connor and center Adam Kutney earned second-team NAIA All-American honors and all-conference honors. Moody was named the NABC-NAIA Division I Men’s Basketball Coach of the Year and the Heart's Coach of the Year.

Guard Jaiden Bristol and forward Eric Krus were named to the all-conference second team, with Krus also named Freshman of the Year. Forward Colby Nickels earned honorable mention all-conference honors.

Moody's 2013-14 team returned the Ravens to the NAIA Tournament after years of irrelevance. The gap from 1970 to 2014 included only 12 winning seasons.

The Ravens won their first Heart of America Athletic Conference title that season. No. 9 Benedictine clinched the title with a 68-65 win over No. 19 Evangel at home to finish 14-4 in the conference. Benedictine finished the season 23-9.

The Ravens started the season 10-1 and that stretch included wins over the top two teams in the NAIA rankings. Benedictine won at No. 2 Oklahoma Baptist 69-64 to improve to 5-1. At home, the 13th-ranked Ravens routed No. 1 Columbia (Mo.) College 73-59 behind Charlie Wallrap's 21 points and 11 rebounds. Benedictine also won at No. 5 Evangel, 85-82, on its way to the conference title.

In 2020-21, the Ravens went 21-7 and returned to the NAIA Tournament in its new 48-team field. In Opening Round play in Wichita, Benedictine defeated Central Baptist College 71-63. No. 24 University of St. Francis defeated Benedictine 73-65 in the second round to advance to Kansas City as one of 16 teams.

The Ravens went 15-4 in conference play to finish as the second seed and first in the South Division. They finished No. 22 in the final national poll.

1949 Ravens upset Siena, Dayton at NCIT Edit

In 1948-49, St. Benedict's accepted a spot in the first National Catholic Invitational Tournament in Denver, as part of a 16-team field. The Ravens, coached by Robert Walsh, entered the tournament with an 8-13 record. They upset top-seeded Siena, which had a 22-6 record, in the opening game 61-46. St. Benedict's defeated Dayton 59-55 in the quarterfinals.

St. Francis (N.Y.) handled the Ravens 69-40 in the semifinals. St. Benedict's finished fourth after a 71-70 loss to Loyola of Baltimore in the third-place game. Ken Werba of St. Benedict's was named to the all-tournament team. He scored 19 points in the win over Siena, headlined "Unheralded Kansas Team Knocks Siena Out of Catholic Cage Tourney" in a New York newspaper.

Host Regis College won the title after finishing as the 1949 NAIA Tournament runner-up earlier that month.

The NCIT lasted for four years. In 1949, the NCAA Tournament invited eight teams and 12 went to the NIT. The NCIT was designed for Catholic colleges without a conference affiliation.

Larry Wilcox wins No. 300, later retires after 42 seasons Edit

Wilcox announced his retirement in November 2020 after 42 seasons[20] as coach at Benedictine. He finished his career with a record of 304-154 after a 19-6 loss to Baker in the final game of the fall season.

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the NAIA moved its playoffs to the spring. The Ravens, with an 8-2 record, did not earn an at-large bid to the playoffs. Joel Osborn, who replaced Wilcox in January 2021, coached the Ravens in a 48-0 win over Hastings in April, their final game of the 2020 season.

On October 10, 2020, Wilcox added another landmark to his resume.[21] The Ravens defeated Peru State 31-27 in Atchison to give Wilcox career win No. 300. According to Benedictine College, he is the 14th coach to win 300 games at a four-year school and the seventh to win all at the same school.

No football coach at a Kansas four-year college has won more games.

Wilcox's landmark wins
Significance Score Season
No. 1 BC 14, Central Methodist 0 1979
1st unbeaten regular season BC 35, William Jewell 17 1985
1st bowl win BC 18, Friends 13 1991
1st Heart of America win BC 42, William Jewell 20 1992
1st conference title BC 48, Central Methodist 10 1992
1st playoff win BC 17, Hastings 15 1992
No. 100 BC 34, Evangel 7 1995
Unbeaten regular season BC 43, Central Methodist 6 1995
Unbeaten regular season BC 27, Central Methodist 0 2000
No. 200 BC 20, Central Methodist 13 2007
1st playoff semifinal win BC 43, Kansas Wesleyan 21 2018
Scoring record BC 84, Graceland 12 2018
No. 300 BC 31, Peru State 27 2020

Joel Osborn wins first Heart title, returns BC to NAIA playoffs Edit

Benedictine replaced Wilcox with Joel Osborn, an assistant coach and former quarterback at Northwest Missouri State, on Jan. 14, 2021.

After a 7-4 debut season in 2021, Osborn coached the Ravens to a 10-1 regular-season record in 2022. Benedictine won the Heart South Division title with a 5-0 record and earned an automatic bid to the NAIA playoffs. The Ravens defeated Southwestern 35-7 at Wilcox Stadium in the opening round. BC gave away five turnovers in the quarterfinal and lost 24-13 at Indiana Wesleyan to end the season 11-2.

Osborn worked as co-offensive coordinator in 2018 and 2019 for Northwest Missouri State. He also served as running back and receivers coach. Northwest averaged 41.9 points in 2019 and 36.6 points in 2018.

Osborn's hiring means that every football season since 1950 has been coached by either an alum of Northwest Missouri State or St. Benedict's/Benedictine. Schottel is a graduate of Northwest Missouri State and coached the Ravens from 1953-62. All other coaches since 1950 (when Leo Deutsch took over) were alums of SBC/BC.

Osborn, from Harlan, Iowa, went 16-3 as starting quarterback at Northwest and started two NCAA Division II title games (losses to Valdosta State and Minnesota-Duluth). He was named 2008 MIAA Offensive Player of the Year.

Osborn won his first game under unusual circumstances. No. 18 Benedictine routed Hastings College 48-0 on April 10 at Wilcox Stadium. With the NAIA playoffs delayed until the spring because of the pandemic, Benedictine scheduled a game the day before the selection to improve their resume. The Ravens piled up 494 yards of offense in Osborn's debut, following 20 practices and a scrimmage with Doane University.

Benedictine finished the 2020 season ranked No. 16 in the NAIA poll with an 8-2 record. It was not selected for the 16-team NAIA playoff field.

The Ravens went 7-4 in 2021 under Osborn. They started the season ranked No. 17 before a 1-2 start knocked them out of the poll. Benedictine finished the season with a 70-58 win over MidAmerica Nazarene. Quarterback Garrett Kettle set a school record with six touchdown passes. He completed 17 of 33 passes for 358 yards and scoring passes of 34, 74, 13, 36, 53 and seven yards. Temple also ran for 72 yards and a touchdown.

The Ravens surrendered 659 passing yards to Pioneers quarterback Adrian Parsons, who completed 33 of 54 passes and recorded four touchdowns.

Ravens win NAIA lacrosse championship in 2022 Edit

Benedictine College won the 2022 NAIA title in women's lacrosse with a 9-8 victory over top-seeded Lawrence Tech. The fifth-ranked Ravens (16-1) defeated Cumberlands 14-11 in the NAIA quarterfinals and Savannah College of Art and Design 15-14 in the semifinal.

In the championship game, Erica Odell scored four goals. Clare Ryan's goal with 4:08 to play gave the Ravens the win.

Clare Hanson, a former Benedictine player and assistant coach, coached the Ravens to the national title in her first season as head coach. Odell was named Championship MVP.

Benedictine also qualified for the 2021 NAIA Tournament, where it lost to Lawrence Tech 20-11 in the quarterfinal. Benedictine's Natalie Wechter earned Player of the Year honors in 2021.

BC added men's and women's lacrosse in 2016 and both program excelled immediately.

The women's team won six straight KCAC regular-season titles and five tournament titles. The Ravens competed in the NAIA National Invitational Tournament in 2018 and 2019 before the NAIA adopted lacrosse as a championship sport.

The men's team won the KCAC title in 2019 and tournament titles in 2019 and 2022. It played in the NAIA Invitational in 2019, 2021 and 2022.

Benedictine moved its lacrosse programs to the Heart of America Conference in 2023. The conference added the sport in 2022.

Football All-Americans, all-conference selections from 1936-present Edit

Running back Don Brown and center Truman Ashby are Benedictine football players named first-team NAIA All-American twice. Brown gained 4,490 yards and scored 50 touchdowns in his career.

Other two-time All-Americans include defensive back/returner Shem Johnson (second team in 1997, 1998), returner and receiver Cory Schrick (first team 1999, second 2000) and offensive lineman Garrett Bader (second team 2017, first team 2018). Bader is one of three Ravens to win the Rimington Award as the NAIA's top center. He earned the honor in 2018 to join Ashby (2007) and David Stochlin (2014).

NAIA First-team All-Americans
Name Position Season
Bill Daletski E 1954
Cary Shaw K 1977
Jeff Pirog OL 1985
Larry Minner DL 1987
Marty Kobza LB 1989
Don Brown RB 1992
Don Brown RB 1993
Shawn Conner DL 1994
Dan Ruch K 1995
Mike Federico DL 1998
Shem Johnson DB 1998
Cory Schrick RS 1999
Larry Nations OL 2000
Matt Fowler WR 2001
Guido Trinidad LB 2002
Byron Mitchell-Hughley DB 2003
Truman Ashby OL 2006
Truman Ashby OL 2007
Conor Walsh WR 2008
Ron Fontenot OL 2011
Cameron Fore RB 2013
David Stochlin OL 2014
Ejay Johnson RB 2017
Garrett Bader OL 2018
Marquis Stewart RB 2019
AP Little All-Americans
Name Position Season
Leo Deutsch E 1936
Leo Danahaer HB 1937
Larry Visnic G 1942 (2nd team)
Don O'Connor FB 1942 (Collier's)
Richard Rzeszut C 1953 (Honorable mention)
Pat Carroll B 1953 (Honorable mention)
Jerry Jurczak C 1957 (2nd team)
George Worley G 1958 (3rd team)
Jamie Mueller RB 1986 (Honorable mention)
Central Intercollegiate Conference Player of the Year
Name Honor Season
HB Gerald Mohlman Back of the Year 1956
E Don Schmidt Lineman of the Year 1956
HB Gerald Mohlman Back of the Year 1957
QB Mark Flynn Back of the Year 1958
G George Worley Lineman of the Year 1958
First-team All-CIC
Name Position Season
Bill Maus C 1962
Larry Muff E 1960
Bob Frazier G 1960
Bill Maus C 1960
Bernard Figiel QB 1960
Allen Lewis HB 1960
Francis Leikam E 1958
Tom Waller E 1958
George Tardiff T 1958
Ed Oswald T 1958
George Worley G 1958
Jerry Jurczak C 1958
Mark Flynn QB 1958
Gerald Mohlman B 1958
Fred Finder B 1958
Jim Purslow B 1958
Francis Leikam E 1957
Jerry Jurczak E 1957
Gerald Mohlman B 1957
Mark Flynn QB 1957
Mark Flynn QB 1956
Mark Flynn QB 1955
George Wendell E 1942
Bill Loika T 1942
Steve Gergeni E 1940
Larry Visnic G 1940
Nick Foran T 1940
Irv Comp HB 1940
Don O'Connor FB 1940
Joe Ziemba E 1939
Nick Foran T 1939
Francis Lynch FB 1939
Heart of America Conference Player of the Year
Name Honor Season
LB Ken McGibney Defensive POY 1992
TE Dan Neil Offensive POY 1995
TE Dan Neil Offensive POY 1996
DB Shem Johnson Defensive POY 1998
LB Guido Trinidad Defensive POY 2002
RB John Willits Offensive POY 2004
DL Atonio Lolesio Defensive POY 2005
DL Jordan Ancar Defensive POY 2011
RB Cameron Fore Offensive POY 2013
QB Shaefer Schutz North Division Offensive POY 2018
RB Marquis Stewart South Division POY 2019
RB Marquis Stewart South Division Offensive POY 2019
LB Brett Shepardson South Division Defensive POY 2020
LB Brett Shepardson South Division Co-POY 2020
LB Jalen James South Division Co-Defensive POY 2021
QB Garrett Kettle South Division POY 2022
QB Garrett Kettle South Division Offensive POY 2022

Women's basketball grows into consistent winner Edit

Benedictine College started varsity women’s basketball in 1973-74 and the program muddled its way to two winning seasons over the next 21 seasons.

Then Benedictine found the right two coaches, both of whom made the Ravens consistent winners.

In 1994, Benedictine hired Steve Huber, an assistant coach at Bradley University and a man with a passion for recruiting. Huber changed the program quickly and its success continued under current coach Chad Folsom, an Atchison native who played at Maur Hill Prep.

Huber’s first team went 11-20, followed by 16-15. In 1996-97, the Ravens went 25-6 to start a string of three 25-win seasons under Huber. The Ravens won Heart of America Conference titles in 1998 and 1999 and advanced to the NAIA Division II national tournament in 1997, 1998 and 1999.

In 1998, eighth-seeded Benedictine won its first national tournament game, 68-47 over Illinois-Springfield. The 1999 Ravens made 42.6 percent of their three-point shots to lead NAIA Division II for the second time under Huber.

Women's basketball NAIA Tournament appearances
Season Tournament Coach
1997 NAIA Division II (0-1) Huber
1998 NAIA Division II (1-1) Huber
1999 NAIA Division II (0-1) Huber
2006 NAIA Division II (2-1)) Folsom
2008 NAIA Division II (1-1) Folsom
2013 NAIA Division I (1-1) Folsom
2015 NAIA Division I (1-1) Folsom
2016 NAIA Division I Final Four (3-1) Folsom
2017 NAIA Division I (0-1) Folsom
2018 NAIA Division I (1-1) Folsom
2021 NAIA Division I (0-1) Folsom
2022 NAIA Division I (1-1) Folsom
Women's basketball conference titles
Season/Conference Overall record Coach
1997-98 Heart of America 28-7 Huber
1998-99 Heart of America 26-7 Huber
2005-06 Heart of America 30-5 Folsom
2007-08 Heart of America 29-6 Folsom

Huber left Benedictine after the 1998-99 season to continue a career that included stops as an assistant at Central Missouri, Louisville, San Diego State and Creighton and the head coaching job at Drury.

In 2001, Chad Folsom left his job as men’s coach at Lamar (Colo.) Community College to come to Benedictine. He guided the Ravens to a 22-10 record in his third season (2003–04).

In 2005-06, the Ravens went 30-5 to set a program record for wins and won the conference title. They advanced to the NAIA Division II Elite Eight. BC entered the national tournament seeded second and defeated Daeman 73-60 and Doane 56-55 before losing to College of the Ozarks 73-64 in double overtime in the quarterfinals.

NAIA All-Americans
Name Position Season
Mary DeGroot (1st team) G 1997
Danielle Bagbey (3rd) F 1998
Jessi Vercande (1st) F 1999
Abby Winder (3rd) F 2008
Chayla Rutledge (2nd) F 2015
Chayla Rutledge (2nd) F 2016
Kristen Murphy (2nd) F 2017
Kristen Murphy (2nd) F 2018

In 2007-08, Benedictine won another conference title and returned to the national tournament as the No. 3 seed. It defeated Aquinas 79-57 in the opener before losing to Hastings 70-62 to finish 29-6.

In 2009, the Heart moved to NAIA Division I. Benedictine qualified for the national tournament in 2013, 2015, 2016, 2017 and 2018.

In 2016, the Ravens advanced to the NAIA Final Four before losing to conference rival Baker 50-34 in the semifinals.

Football rivalries with Pittsburg State, William Jewell and Baker Edit

Those three schools, in different eras, often marked pivotal dates on the schedule. Pittsburg State was an NAIA power in the 1950s, often battling with St. Benedict's for the CIC crown. Jewell also enjoyed great success in that time as a member of the MCAU and the schools often met in the regular-season finale.

Baker and Benedictine heated up as rivals in 1992 when the Ravens joined the Heart of America Conference. While Benedictine no longer plays Pitt State and Jewell (both are NCAA Division II schools), the series with Baker continues as a high point on the schedule.

In the 1950s, games against Pittsburg State often decided the CIC title. From 1955–61, the Ravens and Gorillas combined to win all seven championships. In 1953, the Ravens shared the CIC crown with Washburn. A year later, Fort Hays State won the title to interrupt the SBC/Pitt State dominance.

In 1957, Pitt State handed the Ravens their lone loss (17–13 in Pittsburg), and the Gorillas went 11–0 to win the NAIA title. In 1958, St. Benedict's defeated the Gorillas 26-19 on its way to the NAIA playoffs. In 1959, St. Benedict's won 13–12, Pitt State's lone CIC loss. In 1960, the Ravens won again (41-19) to hand the Gorillas their lone defeat in an 8-1 season.[22]

The Ravens did not lose a CIC game in 1958, 1959 and 1960.

William Jewell, which won seven MCAU titles from 1950 to 1960 also served as an important rival during those days. The 1958 Ravens completed an unbeaten regular season and clinched the NAIA playoff spot with a 21–20 win over Jewell. A year later, the Ravens again won the season finale over the Cardinals (25–21) to ruin Jewell's run at an unbeaten season. Again in 1960, the Ravens handed Jewell its lone defeat in the season finale, this time 34–13.

BC's move to the Heart in 1992 helped scheduling and added importance to rivalry games against Jewell and Baker.

The Ravens shared the Heart title in its first year as a member, going 7–1 in the Heart and 11-2 overall. It avenged a regular-season loss to Baker with a 21–14 win in the NAIA playoff quarterfinals at Amelia Earhart Stadium in Atchison.

The rivalry with William Jewell returned to prominence in the 1980s. The Cardinals dominated the Heart early in the decade and made NAIA playoff appearances in 1980, 1981, 1982 and 1983. They finished as NAIA runner-up in 1982.

In 1985, Jewell won the Heart title and played host to the unbeaten Ravens in the regular-season finale. Benedictine won 35–17 to improve to 10–0 and wrap up its first NAIA berth since 1958. The win snapped a five-game losing streak to Jewell and signaled a shift in the series. Benedictine went 19–6 against Jewell since that 1985 game until 2010, when Jewell left the Heart. The series ended with three straight wins by the Ravens by scores of 47–3, 24–7 and 21–0.

The rivalry with Baker continues.

Like Jewell, Baker was an NAIA power in the early 1980s and presented an obstacle as Benedictine built its program. Either Baker or Jewell (or both) won 12 of 13 Heart of America titles from 1979 to 1991. While Jewell played BC regularly, Baker and Benedictine did not become consistent opponents until the Ravens joined the Heart.

The series with Baker hit a high point early with the two meetings in 1992.

Conference affiliations Edit

St. Benedict's College joined the Central Intercollegiate Conference in 1938.[23][citation needed] It left the CIC in 1963 after dropping football in 1962. The CIC existed from 1928-68 with members such as Pittsburg State, Fort Hays State, Emporia, Omaha and Washburn.

The basketball team continued to play a round robin schedule against its former CIC rivals into the 1980s.

From 1902 to 1928, St. Benedict's was a member of the Kansas College Athletic Conference.[citation needed] In 1933, according to a Kansas City Star report, St. Benedict's and Rockhurst were informally considered for membership in the MIAA (then known as the Missouri Intercollegiate Athletic Association).

In 1988, Benedictine joined the four-team Tri-State Conference, a football-only affiliation that lasted three seasons.

For most of the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s, the Ravens competed as an independent in NAIA District 10, which provided post-season competition and individual honors.

In 1992, Benedictine joined the Heart of America Athletic Conference for all sports, a group that the school had long targeted for its geographic and institutional fit.

Men's basketball conference/district titles
Season/Conference Overall (Conference) Coach
1952-53 CIC 21-8 (7-3) Nolan
1952-53 NAIA District 10 21-8 Nolan
1953-54 CIC 24-5 (8-2) Nolan
1953-54 NAIA District 10 24-5 Nolan
1957-58 CIC 20-6 (8-2) Nolan
1957-58 NAIA District 10 20-6 Nolan
1964-65 NAIA District 10 26-3 Nolan
1966-67 NAIA District 10 27-2 Nolan
1969-70 NAIA District 10 17-9 Nolan
2013-14 Heart of America 23-9 (14-4) Moody
2018-19 Heart of America 31-4 (24-0) Moody
Football conference titles
Season/Conference Overall (Conference) Coach
1940 CIC (co-champions) 6-4 (4-0) Peters
1953 CIC (co-champions) 7-3 (4-1) Schottel
1956 CIC 7-3 (4-1) Schottel
1958 CIC 10-1 (4-0) Schottel
1959 CIC 7-3 (5-0) Schottel
1960 CIC 7-1 (5-0) Schottel
1992 Heart (co-champions) 11-2 (7-1) Wilcox
1995 Heart 9-1 (9-0) Wilcox
1997 Heart 9-2 (8-1) Wilcox
1998 Heart 9-2 (8-1) Wilcox
2000 Heart 10-1 (10-0) Wilcox
2013 Heart (tri-champions) 10-2 (8-1) Wilcox
2017 Heart (North Division co-champions) 9-3 (4-1) Wilcox
2018 Heart (North Division) 13-2 (5-0) Wilcox
2022 Heart (South Division) 10-1 (5-0) Osborn

Moon Mullins starts a connection with Notre Dame Edit

St. Benedict's College leaned on Notre Dame for several of its early athletic leaders.

In 1932, the college hired Larry "Moon" Mullins as football and basketball coach and athletic director. Mullins played fullback on two national champions under coach Knute Rockne with the Irish.

Mullins quickly turned those teams into winners. He went 37-5-1 in five seasons as football coach, with the University of Kansas responsible for two of those losses. Mullins finished his time in Atchison with strong seasons in both sports. The football team finished with an 8-0 record in 1936. The 1936-37 basketball team went 17-3 and played in the first NAIA Tournament.

Marty Peters, a football and basketball player at Notre Dame, replaced Mullins. Robert Walsh, who played offensive guard at Notre Dame, coached St. Benedict's in 1948 and 1949.

Mullins' influence continued in 1950 when St. Benedict's hired Leo Deutsch as football coach. Deustch played for Mullins at St. Benedict's and earned Associated Press Little All-America honors in 1936 at end. He served as Mullins' assistant coach at St. Ambrose (Iowa) before returning to Atchison to coach.

Sports Edit

Facilities Edit

  • The Ballpark at Benedictine: Baseball[24]
  • BC Softball Field: Softball[24]
  • The Haverty Center: Practice facilities, Cheer offices[24]
  • John Casey Soccer Center: Soccer, Lacrosse[24]
  • Laughlin Track at Larry Wilcox Stadium: Track and Field[24]
  • Mother Teresa Center: Athletic Training Facility[24]
  • O'Malley Field at Larry Wilcox Stadium: Football[24]
  • Ralph Nolan Gymnasium: Basketball and Volleyball[24]

Mascot Edit

The mascot "Rocky" is associated with St. Benedict, as legend has it a raven would bring the sixth-century saint food during his time as a hermit in the mountains near Subiaco, Italy. The legend also has the raven saving St. Benedict from eating poisoned bread.

Notable alumni Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ "Benedictine College" (PDF). Retrieved September 6, 2022.
  2. ^ "Heart of America Athletic Conference". heartofamericaconference.com.
  3. ^ "Benedictine Heritage | Benedictine College". www.benedictine.edu. 31 August 2018.
  4. ^ "The '67 Ravens - Benedictine College" – via www.youtube.com.
  5. ^ "State Records". www.kshof.org.
  6. ^ https://www.kansascity.com/article207027729.html[bare URL]
  7. ^ "Remembering a National Championship | Benedictine College". www.benedictine.edu. 31 August 2018.
  8. ^ "The Kansas City Star".
  9. ^ https://www.kansascity.com/sports/article300331/Top-75-NAIA-Tournament-moments.html[bare URL]
  10. ^ https://www.kansascity.com/article342710.html[bare URL]
  11. ^ "Larry Wilcox Honored by Benedictine (Kan.) College With Name Change to Football Stadium". NAIA. November 16, 2007.
  12. ^ "The 7th Mineral Water Bowl". www.mineralwaterbowl.net.
  13. ^ Keating, Liam (October 21, 2020). "The 30 year anniversary of the great mascot heist". bcstudentnews.com.
  14. ^ https://www.ravenathletics.com/article/1154.php
  15. ^ https://www.newspressnow.com/news/regional_news/northeast_kansas/coaching-legend-passes-away-at-72/article_f1e8f8e4-a93c-575e-8f6b-755810b016e8.html
  16. ^ JAMES HOWEY Atchison. "Benedictine preps for Westmont and hopes on long tournament run". www.atchisonglobenow.com.
  17. ^ James Howey Atchison. "Benedictine advances in NAIA Tournament behind Bristol's career night". www.newspressnow.com.
  18. ^ JAMES HOWEY Atchison. "Ravens' season ends in double overtime thriller". www.atchisonglobenow.com.
  19. ^ JAMES HOWEY Atchison. "Chemistry key to historic Ravens' campaign". www.atchisonglobenow.com.
  20. ^ "300 Career Wins for Coach Larry Wilcox". www.benedictine.edu. 24 September 2020.
  21. ^ https://www.ravenathletics.com/article/3240.php
  22. ^ https://www.morningsun.net/x984139919/The-PSU-championship-team-of-61-gathers-for-PSU-Homecoming-to-celebrate-50th-anniversary
  23. ^ "Clipped From St. Joseph News-Press". St. Joseph News-Press. September 29, 1968. p. 41 – via newspapers.com.
  24. ^ a b c d e f g h "Raven Athletic Facilities".

External links Edit

  •   Media related to Benedictine College athletics at Wikimedia Commons
  • Official website

benedictine, ravens, this, article, uses, bare, urls, which, uninformative, vulnerable, link, please, consider, converting, them, full, citations, ensure, article, remains, verifiable, maintains, consistent, citation, style, several, templates, tools, availabl. This article uses bare URLs which are uninformative and vulnerable to link rot Please consider converting them to full citations to ensure the article remains verifiable and maintains a consistent citation style Several templates and tools are available to assist in formatting such as reFill documentation and Citation bot documentation September 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Benedictine Ravens are the athletic teams that represent Benedictine College located in Atchison Kansas in intercollegiate sports as a member of the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics NAIA primarily competing in the Heart of America Athletic Conference HAAC since the 1991 92 academic year 2 The Ravens previously competed as an NAIA Independent from 1962 63 to 1990 91 in the Central Intercollegiate Athletic Conference CIC from 1937 38 to 1961 62 as an Independent from January 1929 during the 1928 29 school year to 1936 37 and in the Kansas Collegiate Athletic Conference KCAC from 1902 03 to 1927 28 Benedictine RavensUniversityBenedictine CollegeConferenceHeart of America Athletic ConferenceNAIADivision IAthletic directorCharles GartenmayerLocationAtchison KansasVarsity teams20Football stadiumO Malley Field at Larry Wilcox StadiumBasketball arenaRalph Nolan GymnasiumBaseball stadiumLaughlin Field at Olsen StadiumSoftball stadiumAsher Sports ComplexSoccer stadiumJohn Casey Soccer CenterMascotRockyNicknameRavensFight songRaven Fight SongColorsBlack white and red 1 Websiteravenathletics wbr comThe men s college was known as St Benedict s College alongside sister institution Mount St Scholastica College until a merger in 1971 created co ed Benedictine College 3 Benedictine won NAIA titles in men s basketball 1954 1967 and women s lacrosse 2022 The Ravens played in the first NAIA basketball tournament in 1937 and the first football playoffs in 1958 Contents 1 Varsity teams 2 NAIA basketball champions 3 Football s rise fall and return 4 A strangle hold on the honor and glory that goes with crushing Rockhurst 5 Highlights of the basketball rivalry with Rockhurst 6 NAIA basketball All Americans 7 Ravens win 31 games 24 0 in conference play in 2018 19 8 1949 Ravens upset Siena Dayton at NCIT 9 Larry Wilcox wins No 300 later retires after 42 seasons 10 Joel Osborn wins first Heart title returns BC to NAIA playoffs 11 Ravens win NAIA lacrosse championship in 2022 12 Football All Americans all conference selections from 1936 present 13 Women s basketball grows into consistent winner 14 Football rivalries with Pittsburg State William Jewell and Baker 15 Conference affiliations 16 Moon Mullins starts a connection with Notre Dame 17 Sports 18 Facilities 19 Mascot 20 Notable alumni 21 References 22 External linksVarsity teams EditBenedictine competes in 20 intercollegiate varsity sports Men s sports include baseball basketball cross country football lacrosse soccer track amp field indoor and outdoor and wrestling while women s sports include basketball cross country lacrosse soccer softball track amp field indoor and outdoor and volleyball and co ed sports include cheerleading dance and spirit squad NAIA basketball champions EditThe Ravens won the NAIA Tournament in Kansas City in 1954 and 1967 4 both under NAIA Hall of Fame coach Ralph Nolan 5 The two champions took decidedly different routes to the title The 1954 Ravens were regarded as underdogs throughout their run The field included two time defending champion Southwest Missouri State and East Texas State the third place finisher in 1953 The 1967 Ravens came to Kansas City as the top seed In 1954 St Benedict s College defeated Western Illinois 62 56 in the title game In 1967 the Ravens entered the tournament as the No 1 seed 6 St Benedict s won its second title 7 with a 71 65 victory over Oklahoma Baptist The 1967 Ravens are one of six teams to finish the season No 1 in the coaches poll enter the tournament as the top seed and win the title In 2020 The Kansas City Star named Darryl Jones a star of the 1967 team and Nolan NAIA Tournament team 8 Benedictine has made 12 appearances in the NAIA Tournament 9 most recently in 2021 The Ravens qualified for the NAIA in 2014 2015 2017 2019 and 2021 under coach Ryan Moody St Benedict s played in the first NAIA Tournament in 1937 as one of eight teams in the field in Kansas City The Ravens also qualified in 1953 1958 1965 and 1970 The 1965 Ravens advanced to the final eight of the 32 team field St Benedict s also won Central Intercollegiate Conference titles in 1953 1954 and 1958 In 2014 Benedictine made its first appearance since 1970 10 and won its opening game over Westminster 70 65 1954 NAIA champions Municipal Auditorium Kansas City Mo St Benedict s 68 East Carolina 61St Benedict s 74 St Ambrose 50St Benedict s 62 Pasadena 61St Benedict s 63 Arkansas Tech 59 semifinal St Benedict s 62 Western Illinois 56 final 1967 NAIA champions Municipal Auditorium Kansas City Mo St Benedict s 80 Linfield 75St Benedict s 67 Southern State 56St Benedict s 88 St Mary s 73St Benedict s 73 Morris Harvey 70 semifinal St Benedict s 71 Oklahoma Baptist 65 final Men s basketball postseason appearances Season Tournament Coach1937 NAIA 0 1 Mullins1949 National Catholic Invitational Tournament 2 2 Walsh1953 NAIA 1 1 Nolan1954 NAIA champions 5 0 Nolan1958 NAIA 0 1 Nolan1965 NAIA quarterfinals 2 1 Nolan1967 NAIA champions 5 0 Nolan1970 NAIA 0 1 Nolan2014 NAIA 1 1 Moody2015 NAIA 0 1 Moody2017 NAIA 0 1 Moody2019 NAIA 1 1 Moody2021 NAIA 1 1 MoodyNAIA district basketball playoffs Season Tournament Coach1953 District 10 playoff series champions SBC 2 Ottawa 1 Nolan1954 District 10 playoff series champions SBC 2 Kansas Wesleyan 0 Nolan1958 District 10 playoff series champions SBC 2 Ottawa 0 Nolan1965 District 10 playoff series champions SBC 2 Bethany 0 Nolan1966 District 10 playoffs 1 1 3rd Nolan1967 District 10 playoffs champions 2 0 Nolan1968 District 10 playoffs 1 1 2nd Nolan1969 District 10 playoffs 0 1 Nolan1970 District 10 playoffs champions 2 0 Nolan1971 District 10 playoffs 0 1 Colwell1972 District 10 playoffs 0 1 Colwell1977 District 10 playoffs 1 1 Jones1981 District 10 playoffs 1 1 Judge1982 District 10 playoffs 0 1 Judge1987 District 10 playoffs 0 1 Morley1988 District 10 playoffs 0 1 Morley1990 District 10 playoffs 0 1 Sickafoose1991 District 10 playoffs 0 1 Sickafoose1992 District 16 playoffs 1 1 Sickafoose1993 District 16 playoffs 0 1 SickafooseFootball s rise fall and return EditThe story of football at Benedictine College is written by coach Larry Wilcox who played for the Ravens and took over as coach at age 28 He coached for 42 seasons before retiring in 2020 Along the way he played a major role in the college s financial health and enrollment built a football stadium offices and weight room won 300 plus games and mentored many lives He also has his own bobblehead Wilcox and his long time assistants for generations of football players are as much a part of the Benedictine experience as the Abbey the Raven Walk the Raven fight song and homecoming bed races While Wilcox as a player coach and athletic director built the current edition of Ravens football he isn t the only successful part of football at the college The Ravens own 16 NAIA playoff appearances including a runner up finish in 2018 and trips to the semifinals in 1992 and 2001 They made eight appearances in nine seasons between 1995 and 2003 As St Benedict s the Ravens made their first appearance in 1958 as one of four NAIA playoff teams The 2018 Ravens went 13 2 to set a school record for season victories They won the Heart of America Athletic Conference North Division title In the NAIA playoffs they defeated Cumberlands 48 41 Concordia 54 38 and Kansas Wesleyan 43 21 to advance to the NAIA title game Top ranked Morningside defeated Benedictine 35 28 in Daytona Beach Fla More than 3 000 Benedictine fans traveled to the game St Benedict s started football in 1920 and the program enjoyed several high points in its early years The school dropped football after the 1962 season Varsity football returned in 1973 Wilcox came to St Benedict s in 1969 and joined the football club upon its revival in 1970 on its way to varsity status Wilcox after serving as assistant coach took over the program in 1979 and presided over its transformation into a consistent winner and regular NAIA playoff qualifier The Ravens play in Larry Wilcox Stadium opened in 1998 on campus In 1990 the Ravens moved into the Amino Center locker room offices and weight room Benedictine expanded the facility in 2004 and 2007 Wilcox a 1972 graduate was inducted into the NAIA Hall of Fame in 2017 He coached the Ravens to 14 of their 15 NAIA playoff appearances Football postseason appearances Season Bowl playoff Coach1956 Mineral Water Bowl St Benedict s 14 Northeastern Oklahoma 13 Schottel1958 NAIA Western Playoff 0 1 Schottel1976 Boot Hill Bowl BC 29 Washburn 14 Tardiff1977 Boot Hill Bowl Missouri Western 35 BC 30 May1985 NAIA playoffs 0 1 Wilcox1986 Sunflower Bowl Tarleton State 40 BC 38 Wilcox1991 Steamboat Bowl BC 18 Friends 13 Wilcox1992 NAIA semifinal 2 1 Wilcox1995 NAIA playoffs 0 1 Wilcox1996 NAIA playoffs 0 1 Wilcox1997 NAIA playoffs 0 1 Wilcox1998 NAIA playoffs 0 1 Wilcox2000 NAIA playoffs 0 1 Wilcox2001 NAIA semifinal 2 1 Wilcox2002 NAIA playoffs 0 1 Wilcox2003 NAIA playoffs 0 1 Wilcox2011 NAIA playoffs 0 1 Wilcox2013 NAIA playoffs 0 1 Wilcox2017 NAIA playoffs 0 1 Wilcox2018 NAIA runner up 3 1 Wilcox2022 NAIA playoffs 1 1 OsbornIn 2004 Wilcox donated his salary to help complete expansion of the Amino Center 11 St Benedict s played in its first bowl game in 1956 under coach Ivan Schottel The Ravens defeated Northeastern Oklahoma State 14 13 12 in the Mineral Water Bowl in Excelsior Springs Mo Since resuming football the Ravens won the 1976 Boot Hill Bowl and the 1991 Steamboat Bowl They lost in the 1977 Boot Hill Bowl and the 1986 Sunflower Bowl St Benedict s won its first conference title in 1940 under coach Marty Peters The Ravens went 4 0 in the Central Intercollegiate Conference with wins over Fort Hays State Pittsburg State Southwestern and Emporia State Schottel became coach in 1953 and won or shared CIC titles in 1953 1956 1958 1959 and 1960 The 1958 Ravens went 10 1 and rose to No 5 in the NAIA rankings before losing to Northeastern Oklahoma in the NAIA Western Playoff The Ravens won the CIC title and grabbed 10 of the 11 spots on the first team all conference team Quarterback Mark Flynn was named CIC Back of the Year and George Worley was the CIC Lineman of the Year Worley was also named NAIA Lineman of the Year St Benedict s also enjoyed a notable run of success in the 1930s under coach Moon Mullins He coached five seasons and went 37 5 1 capped by an 8 0 season in 1936 Benedictine played as an independent after resuming football in 1973 It rekindled CIC rivalries against schools such as Washburn and Emporia State at times and also regularly played Missouri Western After years of lobbying and a short run in the Tri State Conference Benedictine joined the Heart of America in 1992 and shared the conference title with Baker The Ravens went 9 0 in the Heart in 1995 to win its second title It also won Heart titles in 1997 1998 2000 and 2013 It claimed Heart North Division titles in 2017 and 2018 Unbeaten regular seasons Season Record Coach1925 6 0 1 Quigley1936 8 0 Mullins1958 10 0 10 1 final record Schottel1985 10 0 10 1 final record Wilcox1995 9 0 9 1 final record Wilcox2000 10 0 10 1 final record Wilcox A strangle hold on the honor and glory that goes with crushing Rockhurst EditFor 60 plus years the Ravens and Rockhurst College faced off in a rivalry as intense as any in small college athletics The Catholic colleges are separated by 56 miles and their meetings especially in basketball defined seasons and packed gymnasiums for decades Fans rode trains to Kansas City for games and students dribbled a basketball from the Atchison campus to Kansas City in a show of spirit In the 1960s and 1970s the meetings in Kansas City often drew crowds of 5 10 000 to Municipal Auditorium In Atchison the gym would be packed with 3 000 fans at 1 30 for a 3 p m game Rockhurst Weekend became the social and party event of the school year in Atchison regardless of the outcome of the game It traditionally started with beer and Wheaties breakfast at The Wharf and included a rivalry t shirt mocking the Hawks before an afternoon game Students stole NAIA championship banners from each campus lobbed stink bombs into open dorm windows and distributed leaflets with insults Rockhurst mocked St Benedict s students as Hayseeds Rockhurst students enjoyed visiting Atchison to rearrange a rock formation spelling St Benedict s by changing the B to R and painting it blue Several times Rockhurst fans attempted to invade the Snakepit seating area in the Benedictine gym and had to be forcibly removed Benedictine students planned for weeks a strategy to sneak chickens sometimes painted blue into the game Hanging insulting banners from the rafters was another popular prank In 1970 St Benedict s students celebrated a seven game basketball win streak over the Hawks by taking out an advertisement in the Kansas City Times The copy recounted St Benedict s two NAIA titles and taunted The Raven Sports Arena Awaits You Hawks In 1990 Benedictine students kidnapped the Hawks mascot costume 13 performed during a soccer game and returned to Atchison with the prize While basketball grabbed most of the attention football and soccer games also fueled the rivalry The Ravens dominated the football series by winning 16 of the 23 meetings between 1921 1949 Rockhurst dropped the sport in 1949 St Benedict s won the first meeting 35 0 and shut out the Hawks six times The Ravens won 12 straight meetings from 1932 1946 and won the final meeting 27 13 in 1949 In 1936 The Kansas City Times reported a crowd of 5 000 watched a 32 6 win by St Benedict s in Kansas City The Ravens on the loose all season flew up and down Bourke field yesterday and in fewer than twenty minutes after the start had a strangle hold on the honor and glory that goes with crushing Rockhurst college s Hawks their traditional rivals In soccer Rockhurst dominated the Missouri NAIA district as the Ravens did Kansas The Hawks regularly tormented Benedictine by knocking it out of NAIA Tournament contention in the Area Playoffs The Ravens defeated Rockhurst in 1974 and 1983 to advance to the national tournament The basketball series peaked in the 1960s when Rockhurst won the NAIA title in 1964 and the Ravens in 1967 St Benedict s which also won in 1954 and returned to the NAIA in 1958 advanced to Kansas City in 1965 and 1970 Rockhurst qualified in 1963 1966 and 1967 Rockhurst won the first meeting 36 33 in 1921 and four of the first five In 1935 the Ravens started a streak of six wins and 12 in 13 meetings The Ravens won 16 straight from 1946 54 A 10 game win streak carried the Ravens from 1966 1971 Rockhurst dominated the 1980s by winning 20 in a row Late in the 1980s Benedictine s program improved under coaches Del Morley and Mike Sickafoose and the rivalry became competitive again The series started to fade in the mid 1990s Benedictine joined the Heart of America Athletic Conference in 1992 which made playing Rockhurst twice on its traditional Saturday spots impossible because of conference scheduling requirements In 1998 Rockhurst joined NCAA Division II The teams played occasionally in recent seasons sometimes as an exhibition game Highlights of the basketball rivalry with Rockhurst Edit1939 40Ravens 50 Hawks 18 in Atchison The Ravens handed Rockhurst the worst basketball licking of the series Jack Andrews and Ed Farrell both scored eight points for St Benedict s Farrell plunked in three extra long swishers in succession 1946 47Ravens 45 Hawks 43 in Atchison St Benedict s college defeated Rockhurst college 45 to 43 last night in one of those all out traditional battles for which the ancient foes are famous Fans occupied every available seat and almost all of the standing room in the big Raven gymnasium to see the rivals fight it out 1957 58Ravens 69 Hawks 50 in Kansas City St Benedict s ended a six game losing streak in the series with a win at Mason Halpin Fieldhouse Bob Veale who would later pitch for the Pittsburgh Pirates scored 22 points for the Ravens 1964 65Ravens 85 Hawks 83 at Municipal Auditorium Darryl Jones scored 25 points 18 in the first half to help St Benedict s defeat the reigning NAIA champions 1966 67Ravens 92 Hawks 90 at Municipal Auditorium Darryl Jones steal and dunk gave St Benedict s a 90 88 lead and Hawks coach Dolor Rehm had to be restrained from going after the officials A steal by Vince DeGreeff led to clinching free throws for the Ravens DeGreeff scored 31 points to help St Benedict s improve to 17 2 on their way to the NAIA title 1968 69Ravens 75 Hawks 69 in Atchison Tim Moore scored 27 points to give St Benedict s its sixth straight win over Rockhurst 1970 71Ravens 87 Hawks 85 in Atchison Jay Williams followed in a missed shot by Chic Downing in the final seconds Downing scored 21 points and Williams added 14 and 13 rebounds 1971 72Ravens 83 Hawks 80 in Kansas City Chic Downing scored 21 points and Jackie Lee added 17 for the Ravens who avenged a 60 58 overtime defeat earlier in the season A crowd of 5 400 watched 1987 88Ravens 96 Hawks 76 in Kansas City Benedictine snapped a 20 game losing streak in the series with Tony Russo scoring 22 points Tony Tanking made four three pointers to score 19 points and the Ravens defeated the Hawks for the first time since 1978 1989 90Ravens 78 Hawks 74 in Atchison Pat Giller scored 29 points and the Ravens rallied from an 11 point deficit in the second half 1991 92Ravens 82 Hawks 74 in Kansas City Technical fouls and a potential scuffle in the final seconds highlighted Benedictine s win Jason Wyrick scored 22 points for the Ravens1992 93Ravens 120 Hawks 113 three overtimes in Atchison Rockhurst led 79 77 in the closing seconds of regulation 92 89 in the final seconds of the first overtime and 103 101 late in the second overtime Benedictine s Jason Wyrick fouled on a desperation shot with no time remaining made three foul shots to tie it 92 all and force the second overtime Wyrick again fouled on a three point shot made two foul shots to give the Ravens a 112 107 lead in the final overtime Matt Westerhaus led the Ravens with 33 points Albert Karner added 19 points all from the line with 17 assists and 12 rebounds 1993 94Ravens 82 Hawks 74 in Atchison Current Benedictine coach Ryan Moody scored 29 points NAIA basketball All Americans EditDarryl Jones a 6 foot 5 forward and Chic Downing a 6 foot 7 center are the lone Ravens to earn first team NAIA All American honors Jones from St Louis is the school s most decorated basketball player He was named NAIA All American four times third team in 1965 and 1966 and first in 1967 and 1968 He scored 2 014 points to rank second on the career list He owns the program s career rebounding mark with 1 471 highlighted by an average of 15 1 a game in 1967 Downing from Atchison earned first team honors in 1972 and third team in 1970 14 Downing is the program s career scoring leader with 2 042 points and rank second with 1 158 rebounds He averaged a program best 25 5 points in 1971 72 as well as 13 4 rebounds The New York Knicks selected Downing in the 11th round of the 1972 NBA Draft Downing 72 died on Feb 22 2020 in Atchison 15 He won four state titles as coach at Atchison High School as well as two as a player for the Redmen He was an All State selection in 1968 before attending St Benedict s He was named KBCA Coach of the Year in 1985 and 1988 NAIA All Americans Name Team SeasonJoe Stueve Third 1954Don Listar Third 1961Pat Hare HM 1964Darryl Jones Third 1965Pat Hare HM 1965Darryl Jones Third 1966Darryl Jones First 1967Vince DeGreeff Third 1967Darryl Jones First 1968Chic Downing Third 1970Chic Downing First 1972Dan Van Dyke Third 2008Quaran Johnson HM 2012Charlie Wallrap HM 2013Charlie Wallrap HM 2014John Harris Jr HM 2015Andre Yates Second 2017Thomas O Connor Second 2019Adam Kutney Second 2019Jaiden Bristol Second 2021Ravens win 31 games 24 0 in conference play in 2018 19 EditBenedictine featured great chemistry three point shooting and strong defense in 2018 19 and it resulted in a remarkable season Its 24 0 record in the Heart of America Athletic Conference play is believed to be a collegiate record for most wins in an unbeaten conference season The Ravens held opponents to 38 7 percent shooting to rank third nationally second with 159 blocks and held opponents to 67 points a game They made 39 6 percent of their three pointers seventh nationally The 2018 19 Ravens entered the NAIA tournament with a 30 3 record 16 They defeated Westmont 90 85 17 before falling to Pikeville 83 79 in double overtime 18 The Ravens finished 31 4 They won a school record 29 games in a row and moved to No 1 in the NAIA national poll 19 Benedictine won 26 straight games against Heart schools before losing to No 24 Peru State in the championship of the conference tournament It defeated seven ranked Heart opponents during the regular season highlighted by an 84 70 home win over No 2 William Penn Senior guard Thomas O Connor and center Adam Kutney earned second team NAIA All American honors and all conference honors Moody was named the NABC NAIA Division I Men s Basketball Coach of the Year and the Heart s Coach of the Year Guard Jaiden Bristol and forward Eric Krus were named to the all conference second team with Krus also named Freshman of the Year Forward Colby Nickels earned honorable mention all conference honors Moody s 2013 14 team returned the Ravens to the NAIA Tournament after years of irrelevance The gap from 1970 to 2014 included only 12 winning seasons The Ravens won their first Heart of America Athletic Conference title that season No 9 Benedictine clinched the title with a 68 65 win over No 19 Evangel at home to finish 14 4 in the conference Benedictine finished the season 23 9 The Ravens started the season 10 1 and that stretch included wins over the top two teams in the NAIA rankings Benedictine won at No 2 Oklahoma Baptist 69 64 to improve to 5 1 At home the 13th ranked Ravens routed No 1 Columbia Mo College 73 59 behind Charlie Wallrap s 21 points and 11 rebounds Benedictine also won at No 5 Evangel 85 82 on its way to the conference title In 2020 21 the Ravens went 21 7 and returned to the NAIA Tournament in its new 48 team field In Opening Round play in Wichita Benedictine defeated Central Baptist College 71 63 No 24 University of St Francis defeated Benedictine 73 65 in the second round to advance to Kansas City as one of 16 teams The Ravens went 15 4 in conference play to finish as the second seed and first in the South Division They finished No 22 in the final national poll 1949 Ravens upset Siena Dayton at NCIT EditIn 1948 49 St Benedict s accepted a spot in the first National Catholic Invitational Tournament in Denver as part of a 16 team field The Ravens coached by Robert Walsh entered the tournament with an 8 13 record They upset top seeded Siena which had a 22 6 record in the opening game 61 46 St Benedict s defeated Dayton 59 55 in the quarterfinals St Francis N Y handled the Ravens 69 40 in the semifinals St Benedict s finished fourth after a 71 70 loss to Loyola of Baltimore in the third place game Ken Werba of St Benedict s was named to the all tournament team He scored 19 points in the win over Siena headlined Unheralded Kansas Team Knocks Siena Out of Catholic Cage Tourney in a New York newspaper Host Regis College won the title after finishing as the 1949 NAIA Tournament runner up earlier that month The NCIT lasted for four years In 1949 the NCAA Tournament invited eight teams and 12 went to the NIT The NCIT was designed for Catholic colleges without a conference affiliation Larry Wilcox wins No 300 later retires after 42 seasons EditWilcox announced his retirement in November 2020 after 42 seasons 20 as coach at Benedictine He finished his career with a record of 304 154 after a 19 6 loss to Baker in the final game of the fall season Due to the COVID 19 pandemic the NAIA moved its playoffs to the spring The Ravens with an 8 2 record did not earn an at large bid to the playoffs Joel Osborn who replaced Wilcox in January 2021 coached the Ravens in a 48 0 win over Hastings in April their final game of the 2020 season On October 10 2020 Wilcox added another landmark to his resume 21 The Ravens defeated Peru State 31 27 in Atchison to give Wilcox career win No 300 According to Benedictine College he is the 14th coach to win 300 games at a four year school and the seventh to win all at the same school No football coach at a Kansas four year college has won more games Wilcox s landmark wins Significance Score SeasonNo 1 BC 14 Central Methodist 0 19791st unbeaten regular season BC 35 William Jewell 17 19851st bowl win BC 18 Friends 13 19911st Heart of America win BC 42 William Jewell 20 19921st conference title BC 48 Central Methodist 10 19921st playoff win BC 17 Hastings 15 1992No 100 BC 34 Evangel 7 1995Unbeaten regular season BC 43 Central Methodist 6 1995Unbeaten regular season BC 27 Central Methodist 0 2000No 200 BC 20 Central Methodist 13 20071st playoff semifinal win BC 43 Kansas Wesleyan 21 2018Scoring record BC 84 Graceland 12 2018No 300 BC 31 Peru State 27 2020Joel Osborn wins first Heart title returns BC to NAIA playoffs EditBenedictine replaced Wilcox with Joel Osborn an assistant coach and former quarterback at Northwest Missouri State on Jan 14 2021 After a 7 4 debut season in 2021 Osborn coached the Ravens to a 10 1 regular season record in 2022 Benedictine won the Heart South Division title with a 5 0 record and earned an automatic bid to the NAIA playoffs The Ravens defeated Southwestern 35 7 at Wilcox Stadium in the opening round BC gave away five turnovers in the quarterfinal and lost 24 13 at Indiana Wesleyan to end the season 11 2 Osborn worked as co offensive coordinator in 2018 and 2019 for Northwest Missouri State He also served as running back and receivers coach Northwest averaged 41 9 points in 2019 and 36 6 points in 2018 Osborn s hiring means that every football season since 1950 has been coached by either an alum of Northwest Missouri State or St Benedict s Benedictine Schottel is a graduate of Northwest Missouri State and coached the Ravens from 1953 62 All other coaches since 1950 when Leo Deutsch took over were alums of SBC BC Osborn from Harlan Iowa went 16 3 as starting quarterback at Northwest and started two NCAA Division II title games losses to Valdosta State and Minnesota Duluth He was named 2008 MIAA Offensive Player of the Year Osborn won his first game under unusual circumstances No 18 Benedictine routed Hastings College 48 0 on April 10 at Wilcox Stadium With the NAIA playoffs delayed until the spring because of the pandemic Benedictine scheduled a game the day before the selection to improve their resume The Ravens piled up 494 yards of offense in Osborn s debut following 20 practices and a scrimmage with Doane University Benedictine finished the 2020 season ranked No 16 in the NAIA poll with an 8 2 record It was not selected for the 16 team NAIA playoff field The Ravens went 7 4 in 2021 under Osborn They started the season ranked No 17 before a 1 2 start knocked them out of the poll Benedictine finished the season with a 70 58 win over MidAmerica Nazarene Quarterback Garrett Kettle set a school record with six touchdown passes He completed 17 of 33 passes for 358 yards and scoring passes of 34 74 13 36 53 and seven yards Temple also ran for 72 yards and a touchdown The Ravens surrendered 659 passing yards to Pioneers quarterback Adrian Parsons who completed 33 of 54 passes and recorded four touchdowns Ravens win NAIA lacrosse championship in 2022 EditBenedictine College won the 2022 NAIA title in women s lacrosse with a 9 8 victory over top seeded Lawrence Tech The fifth ranked Ravens 16 1 defeated Cumberlands 14 11 in the NAIA quarterfinals and Savannah College of Art and Design 15 14 in the semifinal In the championship game Erica Odell scored four goals Clare Ryan s goal with 4 08 to play gave the Ravens the win Clare Hanson a former Benedictine player and assistant coach coached the Ravens to the national title in her first season as head coach Odell was named Championship MVP Benedictine also qualified for the 2021 NAIA Tournament where it lost to Lawrence Tech 20 11 in the quarterfinal Benedictine s Natalie Wechter earned Player of the Year honors in 2021 BC added men s and women s lacrosse in 2016 and both program excelled immediately The women s team won six straight KCAC regular season titles and five tournament titles The Ravens competed in the NAIA National Invitational Tournament in 2018 and 2019 before the NAIA adopted lacrosse as a championship sport The men s team won the KCAC title in 2019 and tournament titles in 2019 and 2022 It played in the NAIA Invitational in 2019 2021 and 2022 Benedictine moved its lacrosse programs to the Heart of America Conference in 2023 The conference added the sport in 2022 Football All Americans all conference selections from 1936 present EditRunning back Don Brown and center Truman Ashby are Benedictine football players named first team NAIA All American twice Brown gained 4 490 yards and scored 50 touchdowns in his career Other two time All Americans include defensive back returner Shem Johnson second team in 1997 1998 returner and receiver Cory Schrick first team 1999 second 2000 and offensive lineman Garrett Bader second team 2017 first team 2018 Bader is one of three Ravens to win the Rimington Award as the NAIA s top center He earned the honor in 2018 to join Ashby 2007 and David Stochlin 2014 NAIA First team All Americans Name Position SeasonBill Daletski E 1954Cary Shaw K 1977Jeff Pirog OL 1985Larry Minner DL 1987Marty Kobza LB 1989Don Brown RB 1992Don Brown RB 1993Shawn Conner DL 1994Dan Ruch K 1995Mike Federico DL 1998Shem Johnson DB 1998Cory Schrick RS 1999Larry Nations OL 2000Matt Fowler WR 2001Guido Trinidad LB 2002Byron Mitchell Hughley DB 2003Truman Ashby OL 2006Truman Ashby OL 2007Conor Walsh WR 2008Ron Fontenot OL 2011Cameron Fore RB 2013David Stochlin OL 2014Ejay Johnson RB 2017Garrett Bader OL 2018Marquis Stewart RB 2019AP Little All Americans Name Position SeasonLeo Deutsch E 1936Leo Danahaer HB 1937Larry Visnic G 1942 2nd team Don O Connor FB 1942 Collier s Richard Rzeszut C 1953 Honorable mention Pat Carroll B 1953 Honorable mention Jerry Jurczak C 1957 2nd team George Worley G 1958 3rd team Jamie Mueller RB 1986 Honorable mention Central Intercollegiate Conference Player of the Year Name Honor SeasonHB Gerald Mohlman Back of the Year 1956E Don Schmidt Lineman of the Year 1956HB Gerald Mohlman Back of the Year 1957QB Mark Flynn Back of the Year 1958G George Worley Lineman of the Year 1958First team All CIC Name Position SeasonBill Maus C 1962Larry Muff E 1960Bob Frazier G 1960Bill Maus C 1960Bernard Figiel QB 1960Allen Lewis HB 1960Francis Leikam E 1958Tom Waller E 1958George Tardiff T 1958Ed Oswald T 1958George Worley G 1958Jerry Jurczak C 1958Mark Flynn QB 1958Gerald Mohlman B 1958Fred Finder B 1958Jim Purslow B 1958Francis Leikam E 1957Jerry Jurczak E 1957Gerald Mohlman B 1957Mark Flynn QB 1957Mark Flynn QB 1956Mark Flynn QB 1955George Wendell E 1942Bill Loika T 1942Steve Gergeni E 1940Larry Visnic G 1940Nick Foran T 1940Irv Comp HB 1940Don O Connor FB 1940Joe Ziemba E 1939Nick Foran T 1939Francis Lynch FB 1939Heart of America Conference Player of the Year Name Honor SeasonLB Ken McGibney Defensive POY 1992TE Dan Neil Offensive POY 1995TE Dan Neil Offensive POY 1996DB Shem Johnson Defensive POY 1998LB Guido Trinidad Defensive POY 2002RB John Willits Offensive POY 2004DL Atonio Lolesio Defensive POY 2005DL Jordan Ancar Defensive POY 2011RB Cameron Fore Offensive POY 2013QB Shaefer Schutz North Division Offensive POY 2018RB Marquis Stewart South Division POY 2019RB Marquis Stewart South Division Offensive POY 2019LB Brett Shepardson South Division Defensive POY 2020LB Brett Shepardson South Division Co POY 2020LB Jalen James South Division Co Defensive POY 2021QB Garrett Kettle South Division POY 2022QB Garrett Kettle South Division Offensive POY 2022Women s basketball grows into consistent winner EditBenedictine College started varsity women s basketball in 1973 74 and the program muddled its way to two winning seasons over the next 21 seasons Then Benedictine found the right two coaches both of whom made the Ravens consistent winners In 1994 Benedictine hired Steve Huber an assistant coach at Bradley University and a man with a passion for recruiting Huber changed the program quickly and its success continued under current coach Chad Folsom an Atchison native who played at Maur Hill Prep Huber s first team went 11 20 followed by 16 15 In 1996 97 the Ravens went 25 6 to start a string of three 25 win seasons under Huber The Ravens won Heart of America Conference titles in 1998 and 1999 and advanced to the NAIA Division II national tournament in 1997 1998 and 1999 In 1998 eighth seeded Benedictine won its first national tournament game 68 47 over Illinois Springfield The 1999 Ravens made 42 6 percent of their three point shots to lead NAIA Division II for the second time under Huber Women s basketball NAIA Tournament appearances Season Tournament Coach1997 NAIA Division II 0 1 Huber1998 NAIA Division II 1 1 Huber1999 NAIA Division II 0 1 Huber2006 NAIA Division II 2 1 Folsom2008 NAIA Division II 1 1 Folsom2013 NAIA Division I 1 1 Folsom2015 NAIA Division I 1 1 Folsom2016 NAIA Division I Final Four 3 1 Folsom2017 NAIA Division I 0 1 Folsom2018 NAIA Division I 1 1 Folsom2021 NAIA Division I 0 1 Folsom2022 NAIA Division I 1 1 FolsomWomen s basketball conference titles Season Conference Overall record Coach1997 98 Heart of America 28 7 Huber1998 99 Heart of America 26 7 Huber2005 06 Heart of America 30 5 Folsom2007 08 Heart of America 29 6 FolsomHuber left Benedictine after the 1998 99 season to continue a career that included stops as an assistant at Central Missouri Louisville San Diego State and Creighton and the head coaching job at Drury In 2001 Chad Folsom left his job as men s coach at Lamar Colo Community College to come to Benedictine He guided the Ravens to a 22 10 record in his third season 2003 04 In 2005 06 the Ravens went 30 5 to set a program record for wins and won the conference title They advanced to the NAIA Division II Elite Eight BC entered the national tournament seeded second and defeated Daeman 73 60 and Doane 56 55 before losing to College of the Ozarks 73 64 in double overtime in the quarterfinals NAIA All Americans Name Position SeasonMary DeGroot 1st team G 1997Danielle Bagbey 3rd F 1998Jessi Vercande 1st F 1999Abby Winder 3rd F 2008Chayla Rutledge 2nd F 2015Chayla Rutledge 2nd F 2016Kristen Murphy 2nd F 2017Kristen Murphy 2nd F 2018In 2007 08 Benedictine won another conference title and returned to the national tournament as the No 3 seed It defeated Aquinas 79 57 in the opener before losing to Hastings 70 62 to finish 29 6 In 2009 the Heart moved to NAIA Division I Benedictine qualified for the national tournament in 2013 2015 2016 2017 and 2018 In 2016 the Ravens advanced to the NAIA Final Four before losing to conference rival Baker 50 34 in the semifinals Football rivalries with Pittsburg State William Jewell and Baker EditThose three schools in different eras often marked pivotal dates on the schedule Pittsburg State was an NAIA power in the 1950s often battling with St Benedict s for the CIC crown Jewell also enjoyed great success in that time as a member of the MCAU and the schools often met in the regular season finale Baker and Benedictine heated up as rivals in 1992 when the Ravens joined the Heart of America Conference While Benedictine no longer plays Pitt State and Jewell both are NCAA Division II schools the series with Baker continues as a high point on the schedule In the 1950s games against Pittsburg State often decided the CIC title From 1955 61 the Ravens and Gorillas combined to win all seven championships In 1953 the Ravens shared the CIC crown with Washburn A year later Fort Hays State won the title to interrupt the SBC Pitt State dominance In 1957 Pitt State handed the Ravens their lone loss 17 13 in Pittsburg and the Gorillas went 11 0 to win the NAIA title In 1958 St Benedict s defeated the Gorillas 26 19 on its way to the NAIA playoffs In 1959 St Benedict s won 13 12 Pitt State s lone CIC loss In 1960 the Ravens won again 41 19 to hand the Gorillas their lone defeat in an 8 1 season 22 The Ravens did not lose a CIC game in 1958 1959 and 1960 William Jewell which won seven MCAU titles from 1950 to 1960 also served as an important rival during those days The 1958 Ravens completed an unbeaten regular season and clinched the NAIA playoff spot with a 21 20 win over Jewell A year later the Ravens again won the season finale over the Cardinals 25 21 to ruin Jewell s run at an unbeaten season Again in 1960 the Ravens handed Jewell its lone defeat in the season finale this time 34 13 BC s move to the Heart in 1992 helped scheduling and added importance to rivalry games against Jewell and Baker The Ravens shared the Heart title in its first year as a member going 7 1 in the Heart and 11 2 overall It avenged a regular season loss to Baker with a 21 14 win in the NAIA playoff quarterfinals at Amelia Earhart Stadium in Atchison The rivalry with William Jewell returned to prominence in the 1980s The Cardinals dominated the Heart early in the decade and made NAIA playoff appearances in 1980 1981 1982 and 1983 They finished as NAIA runner up in 1982 In 1985 Jewell won the Heart title and played host to the unbeaten Ravens in the regular season finale Benedictine won 35 17 to improve to 10 0 and wrap up its first NAIA berth since 1958 The win snapped a five game losing streak to Jewell and signaled a shift in the series Benedictine went 19 6 against Jewell since that 1985 game until 2010 when Jewell left the Heart The series ended with three straight wins by the Ravens by scores of 47 3 24 7 and 21 0 The rivalry with Baker continues Like Jewell Baker was an NAIA power in the early 1980s and presented an obstacle as Benedictine built its program Either Baker or Jewell or both won 12 of 13 Heart of America titles from 1979 to 1991 While Jewell played BC regularly Baker and Benedictine did not become consistent opponents until the Ravens joined the Heart The series with Baker hit a high point early with the two meetings in 1992 Conference affiliations EditSt Benedict s College joined the Central Intercollegiate Conference in 1938 23 citation needed It left the CIC in 1963 after dropping football in 1962 The CIC existed from 1928 68 with members such as Pittsburg State Fort Hays State Emporia Omaha and Washburn The basketball team continued to play a round robin schedule against its former CIC rivals into the 1980s From 1902 to 1928 St Benedict s was a member of the Kansas College Athletic Conference citation needed In 1933 according to a Kansas City Star report St Benedict s and Rockhurst were informally considered for membership in the MIAA then known as the Missouri Intercollegiate Athletic Association In 1988 Benedictine joined the four team Tri State Conference a football only affiliation that lasted three seasons For most of the 1960s 1970s and 1980s the Ravens competed as an independent in NAIA District 10 which provided post season competition and individual honors In 1992 Benedictine joined the Heart of America Athletic Conference for all sports a group that the school had long targeted for its geographic and institutional fit Men s basketball conference district titles Season Conference Overall Conference Coach1952 53 CIC 21 8 7 3 Nolan1952 53 NAIA District 10 21 8 Nolan1953 54 CIC 24 5 8 2 Nolan1953 54 NAIA District 10 24 5 Nolan1957 58 CIC 20 6 8 2 Nolan1957 58 NAIA District 10 20 6 Nolan1964 65 NAIA District 10 26 3 Nolan1966 67 NAIA District 10 27 2 Nolan1969 70 NAIA District 10 17 9 Nolan2013 14 Heart of America 23 9 14 4 Moody2018 19 Heart of America 31 4 24 0 MoodyFootball conference titles Season Conference Overall Conference Coach1940 CIC co champions 6 4 4 0 Peters1953 CIC co champions 7 3 4 1 Schottel1956 CIC 7 3 4 1 Schottel1958 CIC 10 1 4 0 Schottel1959 CIC 7 3 5 0 Schottel1960 CIC 7 1 5 0 Schottel1992 Heart co champions 11 2 7 1 Wilcox1995 Heart 9 1 9 0 Wilcox1997 Heart 9 2 8 1 Wilcox1998 Heart 9 2 8 1 Wilcox2000 Heart 10 1 10 0 Wilcox2013 Heart tri champions 10 2 8 1 Wilcox2017 Heart North Division co champions 9 3 4 1 Wilcox2018 Heart North Division 13 2 5 0 Wilcox2022 Heart South Division 10 1 5 0 OsbornMoon Mullins starts a connection with Notre Dame EditSt Benedict s College leaned on Notre Dame for several of its early athletic leaders In 1932 the college hired Larry Moon Mullins as football and basketball coach and athletic director Mullins played fullback on two national champions under coach Knute Rockne with the Irish Mullins quickly turned those teams into winners He went 37 5 1 in five seasons as football coach with the University of Kansas responsible for two of those losses Mullins finished his time in Atchison with strong seasons in both sports The football team finished with an 8 0 record in 1936 The 1936 37 basketball team went 17 3 and played in the first NAIA Tournament Marty Peters a football and basketball player at Notre Dame replaced Mullins Robert Walsh who played offensive guard at Notre Dame coached St Benedict s in 1948 and 1949 Mullins influence continued in 1950 when St Benedict s hired Leo Deutsch as football coach Deustch played for Mullins at St Benedict s and earned Associated Press Little All America honors in 1936 at end He served as Mullins assistant coach at St Ambrose Iowa before returning to Atchison to coach Sports EditMen s sports Baseball Basketball Cross country Football Soccer Field Lacrosse Track and Field Wrestling Women s sports Basketball Cheerleading Cross country Dance Team Soccer Softball Track and Field Volleyball Women s LacrosseFacilities EditThe Ballpark at Benedictine Baseball 24 BC Softball Field Softball 24 The Haverty Center Practice facilities Cheer offices 24 John Casey Soccer Center Soccer Lacrosse 24 Laughlin Track at Larry Wilcox Stadium Track and Field 24 Mother Teresa Center Athletic Training Facility 24 O Malley Field at Larry Wilcox Stadium Football 24 Ralph Nolan Gymnasium Basketball and Volleyball 24 Mascot EditThe mascot Rocky is associated with St Benedict as legend has it a raven would bring the sixth century saint food during his time as a hermit in the mountains near Subiaco Italy The legend also has the raven saving St Benedict from eating poisoned bread Notable alumni EditSee also List of Benedictine Ravens in the NFL Draft Irv Comp starting quarterback of the Green Bay Packers member of the 1944 NFL Championship team Kyle Greig professional soccer player having played in Major League Soccer and the United Soccer League played at Benedictine from 2008 through 2011 Terry Hanson athlete and coach in Ravens Hall of Fame who went on to a successful career in pro sports and the media Darryl Jones athlete led 1967 basketball team to NAIA National Championship NAIA All American and All Decade team selection drafted by NBA s San Diego Rockets prior their move to Houston Jamie Mueller professional running back for the Buffalo Bills 1987 1990 Chris Tabor Special teams coordinator for the Cleveland Browns 2011 2017 and the Chicago Bears 2018 present References Edit Benedictine College PDF Retrieved September 6 2022 Heart of America Athletic Conference heartofamericaconference com Benedictine Heritage Benedictine College www benedictine edu 31 August 2018 The 67 Ravens Benedictine College via www youtube com State Records www kshof org https www kansascity com article207027729 html bare URL Remembering a National Championship Benedictine College www benedictine edu 31 August 2018 The Kansas City Star https www kansascity com sports article300331 Top 75 NAIA Tournament moments html bare URL https www kansascity com article342710 html bare URL Larry Wilcox Honored by Benedictine Kan College With Name Change to Football Stadium NAIA November 16 2007 The 7th Mineral Water Bowl www mineralwaterbowl net Keating Liam October 21 2020 The 30 year anniversary of the great mascot heist bcstudentnews com https www ravenathletics com article 1154 php https www newspressnow com news regional news northeast kansas coaching legend passes away at 72 article f1e8f8e4 a93c 575e 8f6b 755810b016e8 html JAMES HOWEY Atchison Benedictine preps for Westmont and hopes on long tournament run www atchisonglobenow com James Howey Atchison Benedictine advances in NAIA Tournament behind Bristol s career night www newspressnow com JAMES HOWEY Atchison Ravens season ends in double overtime thriller www atchisonglobenow com JAMES HOWEY Atchison Chemistry key to historic Ravens campaign www atchisonglobenow com 300 Career Wins for Coach Larry Wilcox www benedictine edu 24 September 2020 https www ravenathletics com article 3240 php https www morningsun net x984139919 The PSU championship team of 61 gathers for PSU Homecoming to celebrate 50th anniversary Clipped From St Joseph News Press St Joseph News Press September 29 1968 p 41 via newspapers com a b c d e f g h Raven Athletic Facilities External links Edit nbsp Media related to Benedictine College athletics at Wikimedia Commons Official website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Benedictine Ravens amp oldid 1171506851, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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