Western Australian Hall of Champions
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In 1983, the Sportswriters' Association of Western Australia proposed a Western Australian Hall of Champions to honour past athletes from the state who had made a significant impact in their sport.[1] The Government of Western Australian asked the then recently created Western Australian Institute of Sport (WAIS) to develop the concept and the Hall of Champions was inaugurated by Keith Wilson, the Minister for Sport and Recreation on 19 August 1985.[2]
Fourteen foundation inductees were made in 1985 and since then several new inductees are made each year at a dinner hosted by WAIS. The award is the highest honour that can be accorded a West Australian sportsperson.[3]
The induction criteria is:
- The person must have achieved the highest level of open competition in his/her sport;
- The person must be product of the Western Australian sporting system, or have established their reputation while living in and representing Western Australia;
- The person must been retired from open competition for at least five years.
The selection committee currently comprises: Lawrence Apps, Ken Cassellas, Liz Chetkovich, Alan East, David Hatt, Glenn Mitchell and Pam O'Connell. Former members were Wally Foreman and George Grljusich.
The award is separate from the Western Australian Sports Star of the Year which is given to currently competing sportspeople.
[edit] Inductees
[edit] References
- ^ WA Hall of Champions History. WAIS.
- ^ Western Australian Hall of Champions handbook (2006)
- ^ "WA Legend of Sport", ABC Western Australia, October 26, 2007. Retrieved on 2007-11-11.