Event class: team, ncaa, game, led, season, championship, played, record, state, points
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Events with high posterior probability
Philip Rivers | As a freshman, Rivers led NC State to a 8 -- 4 record, including a win against Minnesota in the Tangerine Bowl. |
Craig Lefferts | Craig graduated from the University of Arizona and was the winning pitcher in the 1980 College World Series title game, defeating the University of Hawaii 5-3 at Rosenblatt Stadium in Omaha, Neb. |
Jan Stenerud | He joined the football team and in 1965 kicked a 59-yard field goal, then a college football record, against the rival Montana Grizzlies. |
Jacory Harris | As a senior in 2007, under his leadership, the team went on to another undefeated season and state title, as well as the high school football national championship. |
Amos Magee | Playing up front with his wing-man Vezir'' Fitzwilly'' Ajro, the Cardinal 1-2 punch dominated NESCAC soccer in that era, and Magee is the Cardinals all-time leading scorer (35 goals and 85 points), was a NCAA D III All-American in 1992 and is now a member of the Wesleyan University Hall of Fame. |
Stark Ritchie | As a senior, he scored both of Michigan's touchdowns, including a 41-yard run, in the final four minutes of a 13 -- 12 victory over the University of Chicago on November 6, 1937. |
Damien Anderson | His running exploits helped the Wildcats capture a share of the 2000 Big Ten title, their third conference crown in a six-year period. |
Eagle Day | He was the MVP of the 1956 Cotton Bowl Classic after leading Ole Miss to a 14 -- 13 upset victory over Texas Christian in the Rebels first major bowl game. |
Rob Scuderi | He played his final game in the 2001 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament championship game, which BC won over defending champion North Dakota, 3 -- 2, in overtime. |
John Douglas (basketball) | His 46 points on the road against Iowa State in 1978 broke the legendary Wilt Chamberlain's record for most points scored by a visiting player in the Big Eight Conference. |
Shea McClellin | In his final game of his college career, McClellin recorded 3 tackles for losses in the victory against the Arizona State Sun Devils in the 2011 Maaco Bowl Las Vegas. |
Gerry McNamara | McNamara left Syracuse as one of the most beloved players in Orange basketball history ; his final regular-season game at the Carrier Dome on March 5, 2006, was the arena's first-ever advance sellout for a basketball game. |
Matthew Bryan-Amaning | At the 2011 Pacific-10 Conference Men's Basketball Tournament Bryan-Amaning helped the Huskies to their third Pac-12 tournament championship. |
Terence Morris | Morris helped play Maryland to the first Final Four in school history during the 2001 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament to cap his senior season. |
Keith Clearwater | In 1981, his junior year, he helped lead BYU to the 1981 NCAA Championship, and was named as a first team All-American. |
Cade McNown | In his senior season in 1998, McNown led UCLA to a 10 -- 2 record, including a Rose Bowl appearance as the sole Pac-10 champion. |
John Gilchrist (basketball) | In the tournament final against Duke -- a team bound for the 2004 Final Four and loaded with six future NBA players -- Gilchrist led the Terps back from a 12-point deficit with less than five minutes left in the game. |
Nell Fortner | In addition to playing basketball for the Longhorns, she also played for the Texas volleyball team, where, as a middle hitter, she helped lead the Texas volleyball team to the 1981 AIAW National Championship. |
Miles Aiken | He averaged more than 20 points a game on the school's freshman squad in 1960 -- 61. |
Peter Christofilakos | In 2003, he was a member of the University of Illinois soccer team and led the American Midwest Conference in scoring with 23 goals. |
Bo McMillin | He played college football at Centre College in Danville, Kentucky, where was a three-time All-America at quarterback, and led the Centre Praying Colonels to a historic upset victory over Harvard in 1921. |
Stan Cofall | In 1914, Cofall's first year with the Irish, he scored 9 touchdown s, and led the team with 82 points. |
Otto Pommerening | During the 1928 season, Pommerening became the first player in the history of the Big Ten Conference to play every minute of every game for his team. |
Bruce Bennett (Canadian football) | As a junior in 1960, he led the Wildcats to a 20 -- 14 victory over Avondale High School in the Georgia state championship game. |
Michael Roth (baseball) | Roth led all starting pitcher s in NCAA's Division I in ERA in 2011, finishing second in the nation behind Cody Martin of Gonzaga University. |
Travis Bader | Through December 29, 2013 Bold italics indicates led NCAA Division I Bold italics ♦ indicates tied for NCAA Division I lead Bader's sister Christine is the women's tennis head coach at Ball State University. |
Bill Muckalt | Muckalt played four years for the Wolverines and was named to the CCHA and NCAA West First All-Star Teams in his senior year in 1998. |
Darrin Hancock | There he was the starting small forward on the Kansas Jayhawks' Final Four - bound squad in the 1993 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament. |
Deng Gai | Gai was the 2005 NCAA Division I men's basketball season blocks leader. |
Howard Yerges | Yerges played his final game in a Michigan uniform in the 1948 Rose Bowl, a 49 to 0 win over the University of Southern California. |
Vince Ferragamo | Ferragamo's Nebraska was ranked No. 1 in 1976 but managed only to tie LSU, 6-6, in a game in Tiger Stadium on September 11. |
Corey Fisher | During the 2010 NCAA Tournament, Fisher scored 9 points in the Wildcats' second-round game in which they were upset by St. Mary's College of California. |
Seamus Kelly (rugby) | In 2013, Kelly captained Cal to a CRC championship win, earning tournament MVP honors. |
Shan Foster | Foster, with the help of freshman phenom Andrew Ogilvy, led the Commodores to their best start in school history at 16-0 before falling to the Kentucky Wildcats in double overtime at Rupp Arena on January 12, 2008. |
Frank Williams (basketball) | While at Illinois, Williams was re-united with high school teammates Marcus Griffin and Sergio McClain, (a. k. a.'' The Peoria 3'') where they earned a number one seed and eventually went to the Elite 8 in 2001. |
Barron Miles | One of the top cornerbacks and special teams players in school history at the University of Nebraska, Barron Miles helped Nebraska win the 1994 NCAA college football national championship, and deliver Tom Osborne's first national title. |
Paul Mainieri | After one year he transferred to the University of New Orleans where he played for two years and helped the team win two Sun Belt Conference titles and earn an appearance in the 1979 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. |
William Wilson Talcott | As a sophomore, Talcott was the starting quarterback in six of ten games for the undefeated 1898 Michigan football team that won the school's first Western Conference (as the Big Ten was then known) championship and prompted Louis Elbel to compose Michigan's fight song,'' The Victors.'' |
Tony Miller (basketball) | Miller was the starting point guard for all four seasons in basketball and led them to a state championship as a senior in 1991 -- 92. |
Timothy O'Neill (soccer) | In 2003, O'Neill and his team mates fell to the Indiana Hoosiers in the final of the 2003 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Championship. |
Rolla Bigelow | Bigelow was a reserve tackle on the 1902 Michigan Wolverines football team that finished with an 11 -- 0 record, outscored its opponents by a combined score of 644 to 12, and has been recognized as national champions. |
Matt Hunwick | As a sophomore in the 2004 -- 05 season he scored his first career hat-trick, in a 8 -- 3 victory over Bowling Green State on December 10, and was honored as the NCAA National Offensive player of the week. |
Morris Finley | He is mostly remembered for hitting the game winning shot against the No. 1 overall seed Kentucky in the Second Round of the 2004 NCAA Tournament. |
Rashad McCants | He led New Hampton to the 2002 New England Prep School Class A championship and was named MVP of the title game. |
Darren Brooks | In a first round match-up of the 2002 NCAA Tournament he scored 16 points as # 11 SIU upset # 6 Texas Tech, 76 -- 68. |
Rex Bumgardner | He played on a basketball team at Victory that won the state scholastic championship in 1941 under head coach Howard'' Doc'' Hutson. |
Kim McCullough | On December 10, 2000, she scored the game-winning goal at only 2:12 into the first period as the Big Green swept the Minnesota Golden Gophers women's ice hockey program. |
Brandt Jobe | He attended UCLA where he was a member of the 1988 NCAA Division I Men's Championship winning team. |
Gilbert Brown (basketball) | 7 points per game during his junior season, which culminated with a 71 -- 68 loss to Xavier in the second round of the 2010 NCAA Tournament. |
Park Jae-Hong (baseball) | As a senior in, Park helped Yonsei University win the 1995 National College Championship (Spring Season) and was named MVP with Home Run, RBI and Stolen Bases titles. |
Dave D'Errico | He was a First-Team All-American in 1973, the year that Hartwick went to the NCAA tournament quarterfinals before losing to Brown University in double overtime. |
Nerlens Noel | On January 12, 2013, although Kentucky lost the game against Texas A&M, Noel recorded 15 points, 11 rebounds, 7 blocks, 6 assists, and 4 steals. |
Hyun-jin Ryu | In 2005, he led his team to the Blue Dragon Open National High School Championship, pitching 22 consecutive scoreless innings as the team's ace and batting. |
Frank Ramsey (basketball) | Playing under legendary coach Adolph Rupp, Ramsey, as a sophomore in 1951, helped Kentucky win the NCAA Championship with a 68-58 victory over Kansas State. |
Nick Collison | In 2003, his Jayhawks lost to the Carmelo Anthony led Syracuse University Orangemen in the National Championship game, 81 -- 78. |
Alma Ziegler | In 1939 she helped her team win another Southern California Championship. |
Ryan Kesler | At the 2003 CCHA Tournament, Kesler scored two goals as the Buckeye's finished in fourth place, losing to Northern Michigan 4 -- 1 in the third place game. |
Desmond Bishop | In 2003 Bishop was on the team that won the national championship game that went 13-0. |
Chua Tze Jean | In 2009, she helped her college to gain victory in the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) Championship -- Team Champion / Individual 5th. |
Franklin Morse | The 1893 Princeton team was known as the'' perfect team'' and filled five of eleven spots on the 1893 All-American team -- Morse at halfback, Philip King at quarterback, Art'' Beef'' Wheeler at guard, Langdon'' Biffy'' Lea at tackle, and Thomas'' Doggie'' Trenchard at end. |
Nik Stauskas | com named Michigan with Stauskas first among tournament teams in terms of having the most future NBA talent on its roster (in the absence of Kentucky who was relegated to the 2013 National Invitation Tournament). |
Jocelyne Larocque | On March 22, 2010, Larocque had an assist in the 2010 NCAA Frozen Four championship game. |
James E. Duffy (American football) | With Duffy as captain in 1888, the team won its first four games, including two wins over Notre Dame, by a combined score of 126 to 20. |
Stephen Schilling | On September 4, 2004, as a junior, he helped Bellevue end the high school football record 151-game winning streak by De La Salle High School in front of 24,987 at the second annual Emerald City Kickoff Classic at Qwest Field by a 39 -- 20 score. |
Milt Mead | He was the second leading scorer on the 1951 -- 52 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, scoring 238 points (10. |
Austin Rivers | On March 16, 2012, Austin's college career ended in the'' Round of 64'' of the NCAA tournament, when Duke lost to Lehigh University. |
Alex Albright | He also was a starter on the school's basketball team that advanced to the 2005 Division I state championship game. |
Robbie Hummel | He tied his former assistant coach, Cuonzo Martin's single game school record of 8 three point-field goals made in a losing effort against an Evan Turner - led Ohio State team on January 12, 2010, in which he also scored a career high 35 points and received a dislocated pinky finger. |
Nicolle Payne | Payne finished her career at UCLA with her third national championship in 1998, with 13 saves in the final game. |
Patrick O'Bryant | O'Bryant attended Bradley University for two years and led the Braves to the Sweet Sixteen of the 2006 NCAA Tournament before losing to University of Memphis. |
Stephen Strasburg | Four of his thirteen starts in 2008 were complete game s, two of which were shutout s. On April 11 of that year, he struck out a Mountain West Conference record 23 batters in a game versus the University of Utah. |
Christopher Gibson | In Gibson's first year at Notre Dame College, the Notre Dame Hounds (Midget AAA) won the Telus Cup national championship (2009). |
Dana Jones | He was name first team all-conference for the third consecutive year and led the Waves back to their third NCAA appearance in his four years as he averaged 22 points and 10 rebounds in the 1994 WCC tournament and was named tournament most valuable player. |
Steve Kerr | He helped the Wildcats reach the Final Four of the NCAA Division I basketball tournament in 1988, along with future NBA teammate Sean Elliott, future NBA journeyman Tom Tolbert, and future MLB All-Star Kenny Lofton. |
Brian Brohm | In the 2007 Orange Bowl, Brohm earned MVP honors by leading Louisville to its first-ever BCS victory, 24-13 over Wake Forest. |
Tito Steiner | In 1977, while competing for Brigham Young University he earned All-American honors and the NCAA title with a score of 7,659 points. |
Tony Angell | His ability was such that he won the All City Los Angeles Championships in the shot put in 1958 and was selected to be on the All Conference First Team as a center in football. |
Bob Mann (American football) | As a senior in 1947, Mann starred on Crisler's undefeated national championship team. |
Ignace Moleka | In 1996, he was selected as a First Team All American while the Golden Panthers finished runner-up in the NCAA Men's Division I Soccer Championship. |
God Shammgod | As a sophomore, Shammgod teamed with future NBA player Austin Croshere in leading the Friars to the 1997 Elite Eight, where they lost to eventual NCAA champion Arizona in overtime. |
Brian Benedict | The Blue Devils won the NCAA Men's Soccer Championship in 1986, his freshman season. |
Jerry Harkness | At Loyola, he served as captain of the team that upset the University of Cincinnati to win the 1963 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championship. |
A. J. Slaughter | In Slaughter's collegiate debut, he registered 20 minutes and scored a year-high 18 points in a 96-55 defeat of Kennesaw State on November 11, 2006. |
A. J. Bramlett | He also helped Arizona win the NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championship in 1997. |
Jahlil Okafor | IHSA playoffs Cliff Alexander in the March 7, 2013 IHSA playoffs In the first two rounds of the Chicago Public High School League playoffs, Young scored 100 points, defeating Harper High School 100 -- 45 on February 5 and Marshall High School 100 -- 75 on February 7. |
Terry Porter | As a junior he was named the NAIA'' Player of the Year'', and in the 1984 NAIA tournament, he was named the tournament's Most Valuable Player even though the Pointers lost the national championship to Fort Hays State. |
Ty Lawson | During the 2009 NCAA championship game, he also set a record with 8 steals against Michigan State, giving him the most steals of any player in an NCAA championship game and helping lead the Tar Heels to a national title. |
Tim Krumrie | He was also named defensive MVP of the Badgers 1982 Independence Bowl win over Kansas State. |
Viktors Pupols | He first played in a Washington State Championship tournament in 1954. |
Harold Ballin | As captain of the 1914 team, Ballin played every minute of every game for Princeton. |
Talor Battle | In his second season at Penn State Battle posted one of the most outstanding seasons in Penn State history setting a school record with 189 assists and racking up 635 points (fifth best ever) while leading the Nittany Lions to a school-record 27 wins and the programs first-ever national tournament title in the 2009 NIT. |
Travis Thomas | He also played outside linebacker in 2002 and made 137 tackles, which helped bring his team to a 15-0 season and a Pennsylvania Class AA state title. |
Jim Donnan | During his playing days as a quarterback at North Carolina State University, Donnan defeated his future team, Georgia, 14 -- 7, in the 1967 Liberty Bowl. |
Kemba Walker | With the Huskies basketball team at the University of Connecticut, Walker was the 2nd leading college basketball scorer in the United States and helped his team win the 2011 NCAA tournament. |
Lorri Bauman | At the time of her graduation, Bauman was also the leading scorer in NCAA women's basketball history with 3,115 points in 1984. |
Jessica Wong | In 2010, Wong scored the winning goal for the Minnesota-Duluth Bulldogs in the NCAA Division I Women's Championship. |
Heather Zurich | In the 2005 Group 2 state championship (Zurich's senior year) she made 9 of her 11 shots in the second half, nailed all 10 of her free throw attempts, scored 25 of her team's 36 second half points and reached a new career high for points in a game. |
Star Lotulelei | Playing defensive lineman at 240 pounds, he helped the team to a 14 -- 0 record and a state title in 2006. |
Niko Dimitrakos | Dimitrakos played his college hockey for the University of Maine Black Bears, helping the team win the 1999 NCAA Championship, and making the 1999 NCAA Championship All-Tournament Team. |
Kai Forbath | On November 6, 2010, Forbath kicked a game winning 51-yard field goal in the last second of the game to give the Bruins a 17 -- 14 win over Oregon State, and he was named Pac-10 Conference Special Team Player-of-the-Week. |