


Andover Athletics Hall of Honor
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Andover Athletics Hall of Honor
Saturday, June 7, 2025
4 p.m.
Pan Athletic Center
Andover Athletics Hall of Honor




Welcome & Opening Remarks
James A. Dand β88, Athletics Committee Co-Chair
Class of 2025 Inductees & Introducers
Jennifer Greene β85βJames A. Dand β88, Athletics Committee Co-Chair
E. Webb Harrison Jr. β60 (d)βAshish Shetty β00, Athletics Committee Member
Nicholas V.H. Kip β60, Pβ85, β91βRichard B. Gorham β86, Assistant Wrestling Coach
Tammy M. Sanchez β91βKassie Archambault Bateman β06, Athletics Committee Member
Parker W. Sides β95βBrian M. Burke β75, Athletics Committee Co-Chair
Closing Remarks
Raynard S. Kington, MD, PhD, Pβ24, β27, Head of School
Andover Athletics Hall of Honor




President George H.W. Bush β42
Becky Dowling Calder β94
H. Richard Duden β43
Fred H. Harrison β38
Frank Hinkey, Class of 1891
Sarah E. Mleczko Kasten β76
Aisha Jorge Massengill β88
John L. Morrison β63
Richard J. Phelps β46
Shirley J. Ritchie, faculty emerita
Natalie Ware Ryherd β63
1948 Swim Team
Daniel G. Bolduc β72
Frank F. DiClemente, coach
Martha Hill Gaskill β78
William C. Matthews, Class of 1901
John P. McBride β56
James P. McLane Jr. β49
C. Anthony Pittman β90
Robert W. Sides β34
Stephen S. Sorota, coach
Eleanor Tydings Gollob β86
1952 Football Team
John F. Bronk, athletic trainer
William H. Brown β34
Archibald M. Bush, Class of 1867
Joseph V. Cavanagh Jr. β67
Ashley A. Harmeling β00
Gerard E. Jones β55
Harvey M. Kelsey Jr. β41
Carter Marsh Abbott β93
Arthur K. Moher β45
William S. Belichick β71
Arthur R.T. Hillebrand, Class of 1896
Thomas J. Hudner Jr. β43
Meredith Hudson Johnston β01
Paul Kalkstein β61
Raymond A. Lamontagne β53
Thomas E. Pollock III β61
William S. Smoyer β63
James H.H. Carrington β42
John G. Clayton β47
Thomas F. Fleming β72
Henry G. Higdon II β59
Edward W. Mahan, Class of 1912
Michael A. Moonves β62
Julia Trotman Brady β85
Joseph B. Wennik β52
Randolph B. Wood β82
Lee S. Apgar β78
Judy Morton Bramhall β78
Laurie N. Coffey β95
Richard J. Collins β49
Zackary R. DeOssie β03
Thomas H. Harvey Jr. β54
Robert P. Hulburd, coach
Macauley L. Smith β23
Jonathan A. Stableford β63
Gilbert R. Bamford β58
Douglas W. Brown β64
J. Dana Eastham β49
Jeanne E. Ficociello β96
Henry G. Higdon III β94
Dianne P. Hurley β80
Kenneth W. Keuffel β42
Alan G. Schwartz β48
David B. Smoyer β59
Aimionoizomo O. Akade β00
Hee-Jin Chang β05
Ford M. Fraker β67
Todd A. Harris β95
Edwin G. Quattlebaum β60
Cory F. Schneider β04
Theodore B. Thorndike β70
Charles E. Borah, Class of 1925
Christopher J. Gurry β66
James F. Herberich β81
Mary W. Hulbert β81
Titus L. Ivory β96
John H. Turco β66
Samuel C. Butler β72
John R. Kilpatrick, Class of 1907
Caroline M. Lind β02
John G. Noll β66
William E. Stevenson, Class of 1918
Jonathon J. Coleman β93
Heather E. Gotha β98
Bruce G. Hearey β68
William B. Kaplan β73
Alison Wheeler Kennedy β93
Barbara W. Trafton β78
Walter J. Whitehouse β58
Michael H. Bassett β59
Richard L. Gelb β41
Catharine von Klemperer Utzschneider β73
Julie H. Wadland β06
1948 Football Team
Alison Coughlin Averill β95
Hope Barnes β76
John G. Clark β69
Christopher J. Kreider β10
Charles R.H. Miers β75
James L. Shea β70
1965 Lacrosse Team
Lewis Brown Jr. β99
Elizabeth C. Kent β73
Kristin Kinney McDonald β77
Kanu M. Okike β97
Hunter D. Washburn β00
Eliza A. Deery β79
Taek-Geun Kwon β92
Leon A. Modeste III, coach
Rush H. Taylor β96
Edward H. Bailey Jr. β58
Richard M. Cashin Jr. β71
Alexandra Bell Farr β13
Jeehae Lee β02
J. Richard Lux, coach
Lisa Mancke Montague β90
Nnamdi D. Okike β98
Marla B. Milkowski Anderson β89
Kathryn A. Birecki, athletic trainer
Jane Cashin Demers β73
Randall F. Koch β74
Allison Jennings McCance β60

Arriving as an upper midway through winter term, Jennifer Greene made an immediate impact on the diving team. With remarkable talent and determination, she adjusted quickly to the competitive league and went on to set numerous records. As an upper, Greene shattered the New England diving record with a victory at the NEPSAC interscholastic meet. Her senior year included an undefeated season, a second interscholastic title, and being named runner-up for Athlete of the Term by The Phillipian. At Harvard, Greene set four university diving records and still holds several university and pool records. She was a First-Team All-Ivy performer in 1986 (3m), 1987 (3m), and 1988 (1m), and Second-Team All-Ivy in 1988 (3m). She earned First-Team All-American honors in 1988 (1m), was named First-Team All-East in 1988, and was selected for the U.S. Diving National Team that same year.
Greene transferred to the University of Texas for her final season of eligibility, earning First-Team All-American honors in 1989 (1m) and helping the team finish as NCAA runner-up. She returned to Harvard to complete her degree.
During Greeneβs years at Harvard, the team captured Ivy League titles each season (1986β1989). She was inducted into the Harvard Varsity Club Hall of Fame in 2012.
Greene went on to earn an MBA in finance from Wharton and is currently a consultant to financial services and fintech companies. She remains deeply engaged in the diving community as a board member and CFO of Dive Lab, a Bay Area nonprofit supporting competitive divers, and coaches at Redwood and Archie Williams high schools. Greene also serves on the Grants Committee for the To Celebrate Life breast cancer foundation and volunteers regularly at the San Francisco-Marin Food Bank.


Webb Harrison arrived at Andover as a lower and quickly distinguished himself as a three-sport varsity athlete in football, hockey, and baseball, earning nine varsity letters. As a senior, he played a pivotal role on the undefeated 1959 football team and was named first-string on the All-New England prep school team. In hockey, he served as co-captain, and in baseball, he anchored the infield as the teamβs shortstop, contributing to an outstanding 11β1 season. At Commencement, Harrison was awarded the Yale Bowl for excellence in both academics and athletics.
Prior to Andover, Harrison attended Princeton Day School; he was posthumously inducted into the day schoolβs Athletic Hall of Fame in 2000.
After graduating from Andover, Harrison served as a Winant Volunteer, one of just six PA students chosen for the prestigious program. He spent the summer in London helping to rehabilitate war-torn areas of the city and working with children in needβa
role requiring both exceptional character and dedication.
At Princeton University, Harrison transitioned from the three sports he had played at Andover and went on to excel in soccer and lacrosse. He earned varsity letters for three years in both sports, establishing himself as a standout collegiate athlete. As the varsity lacrosse goalie, he earned All-Ivy and All-American honors his senior year.
After graduating from Princeton, Harrison continued his commitment to service by joining the Peace Corps from 1964 to 1966, teaching high school in Nigeria. This transformative experience inspired a newfound passion for medicine. Though he had not pursued a premed path as an undergraduate, he took on double premed courses simultaneously at Cornell and Columbia, putting enormous pressure on himself. Harrison went on to earn an MD from Columbia and completed a residency in psychiatry at Rockland State Hospital in Orange, New York. Tragically, he passed away at the age of 33.


As an Andover student, Nick Kip excelled on the varsity wrestling and sailing teams, receiving the βAβ award his senior year. One of his most memorable moments in wrestling came when he faced off against an undefeated Exeter junior named John Irving. More than 60 years later, Kip can still recount every move of their intense back-and-forth match, which ultimately ended in a tieβa moment immortalized in Irvingβs novel The World According to Garp. In June of his senior year, Kip skippered the Andover sailing team to two consecutive victories in Division B of the Interscholastic Regatta on Manhasset Bay. He continued his athletic career at Princeton University, where he competed in both wrestling and sailing. After graduating from Princeton, Kip began his professional career teaching Latin and coaching wrestling at St. Paulβs School in Concord, New Hampshire. After four years, he returned to Andover, where he became a cornerstone of the Classics Department and, upon his retirement in 2022,
set a record for the longest teaching tenure in the schoolβs historyβ54 years.
Kip began coaching varsity wrestling in 1968, often getting on the mat to demonstrate a particular move. As one student recalls, he kept himself βlean, tough, and very in shape for a faculty member.β In 1993, Kip stepped down from coaching due to repeated knee injuries. During his 25-year leadership, Kip coached four Prep Nationals All-Americans, five New England Prep Champions, and 35 Class A Champions, and the team earned 10 Top 3 Finishes at the Class A Championships. Kipβs dedication to his students, wrestlers, and the school community has had an unparalleled impact on Andover athletics and academics. βYou encouraged me in ways that ultimately led to me loving the sport and excelling in it,β said former wrestler Josh Hubbard β83. βThe level of commitment to and joy for the sport you shared with us was tremendous and had a deep impact on the 14-year-old version of me.β


Tammy Sanchez came to Andover as a postgraduate from Santa Fe, New Mexico, and earned varsity letters in volleyball, basketball, and softball. On the volleyball court, she dominated from the start and was named Phillipian Athlete of the Term. Reflecting on her competitive spirit, Coach Hagin shared, βTammy is a fierce competitor. You could see it in her face after a successful attack.β
When winter arrived, Sanchez transitioned to basketball, playing a pivotal role in one of the most remarkable turnarounds in Andover history. After a winless season the prior year, the team claimed the 1991 New England Championship. Sanchez was named MVP of the NEPSAC Girlsβ Basketball Tournament, finishing as the teamβs second-leading scorer while leading in steals and ranking second in rebounds. Once again, she was honored as Athlete of the Term. Coach Kennedy praised her impact, saying, βI think Sanchez could very well be the best female basketball player to ever come to Andover
and the best point guard passer I have ever seen.β
In the spring, Sanchez took to the softball field, where she helped lead the team to a perfect 11β0 season.
Sanchez was recruited by several Ivy League programs and ultimately chose Brown University. There, she played a key role in securing Ivy League championships in her freshman, sophomore, and junior years. In 1994, she was named the teamβs Most Improved Player and earned All-Ivy Honorable Mention honors in both 1994 and 1995. Her achievements were recognized in 2006 with her induction into the New England Basketball Hall of Fame.
Sanchez has stayed connected to Andover, returning as a volunteer coach for the girlsβ basketball team. Since 2011, she has built a successful career at Merkle, a global performance marketing agency, where she recently celebrated her 14th anniversary. She is currently a senior manager, business systems analyst.


At Andover, Parker Sides distinguished himself as an athlete early on by becoming the first ninth grader to make both the varsity hockey and varsity lacrosse teams. He earned varsity letters in both sports all four years and served as captain of both teams as a senior.
Named an All-American in lacrosse senior year, he holds both the single-season (103) and all-time scoring (239) records and played in the National High School All-Star Game in Baltimore. In hockey, he tallied an impressive 110 points over his four-year career and received the Press Club Award at Commencement.
Continuing a proud legacy, Sides was the fourth member of his family to captain Andover hockey. He and his grandfather, Bob Sides β34, now make history as the first grandfathergrandson pair inducted into the Andover Athletics Hall of Honor. Paul Kalkstein β61, a 2011 Athletics Hall of Honor inductee and longtime varsity lacrosse coach, reflected on
his former player: βIn my 19 years as varsity lacrosse coach, no one did more for the team and the schoolβs lacrosse reputation than Parker Sides. He was the incendiary star of his era and, as his lacrosse coach, I was blessed to have four years of his talent and leadership.β
At Connecticut College, Sides continued to excel as a twosport athlete. He captained the lacrosse team his senior year and was named the collegeβs Top Male Student-Athlete of the Year. To this day, he remains Connecticut Collegeβs all-time leader in goals (142) and ranks third in total points (197). On the ice, Sides served as assistant captain and led the hockey team in scoring his senior season.
Sides now works as a business development consultant for Manulife John Hancock Investments. He has volunteered as a youth hockey coach and for organizations such as Cradles to Crayons and Action for Boston Community Development. He also serves on the board of the Jeff Scogland Memorial Fund.

The Andover Athletics Hall of Honor celebrates members of the Phillips Academy and Abbot Academy communities who, based on their experiences and affiliations with athletics either while at school or after graduation, have demonstrated the highest levels of sportsmanship, teamwork, and competitive excellence. Those recognized include superior athletes as well as those who took what they learned βon the fieldβ and applied it in inspirational ways to other aspects of their lives.
The Alumni Council Athletics Committee will accept nominations of individual alumni, teams, and coaches for the 2026 induction year until July 1, 2025. Please note that previously submitted nominations stand for consideration in future years. Email nominations to Mary Corcoran in the Office of Alumni Engagement at mcorcoran@andover.edu.
Anthony J.K. Aime β92, Pβ25, β28
George E. Andrews II β62
Kassie Archambault Bateman β06
Julia Trotman Brady β85, Pβ18, β20
Brian M. Burke β75, Co-Chair
Sterlind S. Burke Jr. β00
Anthony B. Crawford β94
James A. Dand β88, Co-Chair
Lauren DiStefano Dougherty β88
Hodgson G. Eckel β88
Paul D. Engelhardt β06
Kasey M. Hartung β14
Bruce G. Hearey β68, Pβ93
Alison Wheeler Kennedy β93, Pβ25, β28
Hailee G. Minor β08
Ashish Shetty β00
Leah Humes Silvey β12
Kebba Tolbert β90, Pβ26