Nomination Form
Please refer to the Selection Process (below) before submitting a nomination form. Once you make a nomination, a representative from the Hall of Fame will contact you to confirm receipt of your submission.
Nomination submissions MUST include your name and contact information. Upon receipt, you will be contacted to confirm receipt. The submission will then be processed and reviewed by the nomination committee.
Selection Process
All nominees must have the qualities of integrity, sportsmanship and of good character. Nominee categories and minimum qualifications are described here.
How does it work?
The Induction Nominating Committee, selected from members of the Board of Directors, then researches and documents the qualifications of each nominated candidate, and will recommend a list of candidates for induction on a yearly basis. The final list of candidates to be inducted will then be forwarded to the Board of Directors for approval.
The yearly list of inductees is limited to ten (10) individuals. This shall include no more than one individual included in the Special Category, selected no more than every two (2) years, and one individual included in the Coach or Administrative Category, selected each year. In addition, the list of approved inductees may include one candidate from the Team Category.
Hall of Fame Facts
Softball is the most played sport by the inducted women, with 10 athletes. Basketball and soccer both have 8 athletes each, followed by volleyball with 7, then with track & field, tennis, and gymnastics, each with 2 athletes.
News
Latest News + Inductees
The arena never mattered to Daniel Klotz, who said, “I was very competitive to be on top, whatever pond I was put into.” Most times, his times were the best.
When Berlin High School baseball coach Leo Veleas was looking for an assistant coach in 1990, Frank Naples just showed up. “I didn’t know he wanted to be a coach,“ Veleas said. “I just knew him as an athlete.”
Jim Barnes had just retired from his position with an insurance corporation in 2009 during his daughter Erica’s senior season with the Berlin High School girls golf team.
A driving range, which was located less than a mile from Julia Kemmling’s home, is an abandoned grassy field adjoining an industrial park on the Berlin Turnpike today. Though the range has vanished, memories remain.