| Pittsburg State University
Intercollegiate Athletics Hall of Fame
Class of
2005
Gerald “Nate” Beaman (1947-50)
Uniontown, Kansas
Football/Track & Field Athlete
Nate Beaman was an accomplished hurdler in track & field
and a two-time All-Conference end in football during his playing days
at Pittsburg State University. He captured the Central Intercollegiate
Conference (CIC) title in the 120-yard hurdles in 1949, winning five meet
crowns in the event that year. Beaman earned honorable mention All-CIC
honors in football in 1948, before garnering first-team All-CIC accolades
as a senior in 1949. He also earned a pair of varsity letters in basketball,
scoring 403 points in 51 games (7.9 ppg).
Lisa (Hill) Boone (1992-95)
Moore, Oklahoma
Softball Athlete
Lisa Hill completed a four-year softball career at Pittsburg
State University as a third-team NSCA All-American as a senior in 1995.
She helped the Gorillas make the program’s first three appearances
in the NCAA Division II National Tournament from 1993-95. Hill earned
All-MIAA honors each season and was voted the MIAA Most Valuable Player
as a junior in 1994 when she batted .344 with 24 RBIs. She set MIAA career
records for at-bats (612), hits (216), runs (167) and defensive assists
(534). Hill batted .351 with 71 RBIs, starting 197 of 199 games played
for her career.
Charles J. Purma (1921-25)
Wilson, Kansas
Football/Track & Field Athlete
Charles Purma completed a decorated football and track &
field career at Pittsburg State University in the Spring of 1925. In football,
Purma was widely considered the greatest PSU player of his era. He twice
earned first-team All-Kansas Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (KIAC)
honors as an end in 1923-24. Purma was named to PSU’s prestigious
11-man 50th Anniversary Team in 1953. In track & field, Purma won
KIAC shot put titles in 1923 and 1924. He medaled in the event at the
KIAC meet again in 1925, when he recorded the 13th-best mark in the world
in the shot put. Purma also was a four-year basketball letterman between
1922-25.
Edward S. “Steve” Simmons (1973-76)
Lenexa, Kansas
Football Athlete
Steve Simmons twice earned NAIA All-America honors at linebacker
for the Gorillas in the mid 1970s. He earned first-team NAIA All-America
and second-team Associated Press Little All-America honors as a senior
in 1976, recording 94 tackles (39 solo) with three interceptions. Simmons
received honorable mention NAIA All-America honors as a junior in 1975.
He finished as the team’s second-leading tackler and logged three
interceptions that year. Simmons earned first-team All-GPAC honors in
1975 and first-team All-CSIC honors in 1976.
Chuck Smith
Atchison, Kansas
Meritorious Achievement
Chuck Smith played football and baseball at Pittsburg State University
between 1970-73, before going on to enjoy a decorated career as athletic
director and head football coach at St. Mary’s-Colgan High School
in Pittsburg. Smith guided the Panthers to a Kansas state record 66 consecutive
victories on the gridiron including four straight Class 2A state titles
between 2000-03 before the streak ended in the 2004 state championship
game. Over the years, Smith has been a key “behind the scenes”
supporter of PSU Athletics. As a football student-athlete, he was an honorable
mention All-GPAC quarterback as a senior in 1973.
Lee BeBillon (1936-39)
Minneola, Kansas
Track & Field Legacy Athlete
Lee BeDillon set school records in the 880 yard dash and the
mile run which stood for 31 and 23 years respectively. He won KIAC titles
in both events as well as the mile relay, and he was a multiple-time champion
at the KU and Drake Relays. BeDillon’s time of 1:51.44 in the 880
remains among the top five all-time marks in the event for a PSU athlete.
In 1937, he finished sixth in the 880 at the U.S. National Championships
at Los Angeles, and he ranked #10 in the world in the event that year.
In 1936, BeDillon finished second to U.S. Olympian Glenn Cunningham in
the Missouri Valley AAU Olympic Tryouts.
George A. Sweatt (1919-22)
Humboldt, Kansas
Football/Track & Field Legacy Athlete
George Sweatt was a ground-breaking pioneer as Pittsburg State
University’s first African-American student-athlete to letter in
the sports of basketball, football and track & field. Sweatt earned
numerous honors in the sprints and set a school record in the shot put
in track & field for the Gorillas. He lettered in football in 1921,
missing All-KIAC honors when an injury cut short his playing season. Sweatt
also lettered in basketball in the 1920 and 1922 seasons. After college,
he embarked upon a professional baseball career and became the only regular
player to appear in each of the first four Negro League World Series with
the Kansas City Monarchs and the Chicago American Giants (1924-27).
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