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Bruce Snyder
Football Head Coach/ 1992-2000
Head football coach at Arizona State University for nine seasons (1992-2000)...second-longest-tenured head coach in school history, behind only Frank Kush (22 seasons)...posted a 58-47 (.563) record during his time at ASU...led the Sun Devils to four bowl games, which trails only Kush's mark of seven for the most in school history...had five winning seasons and finished .500 or better in Pacific-10 Conference play seven times while at ASU...his best season came in 1996, when he coached Arizona State to an undefeated regular season, a Pac-10 championship and a spot in the Rose Bowl...ASU finished the 1996 season ranked No. 4 in the nation with an 11-1 record...he received National Coach of the Year honors from at least 12 different sources in 1996 (American Football Coaches Association, Sporting News, Walter Camp Foundation, Football News, Sportsline USA, Playboy, Paul "Bear" Bryant Coach of the Year, American Football Quarterly, Columbus Touchdown Club, Downtown Athletic Club of Glenwood, Iowa, The Maxwell Football Club, Touchdown Club of Washington, D.C.), and he is one of only three ASU coaches to win Pac-10 Coach of the Year (along with John Cooper and Dennis Erickson)...the 1996 season also featured the only win in ASU history over an Associated Press No. 1 ranked team, as the Sun Devils defeated two-time defending national champion Nebraska 19-0 on Sept. 21...in 1997, Snyder led the Sun Devils to a 9-3 finish, a victory over Iowa in the Sun Bowl and a No. 14 national ranking at the end of the season...in each of his final two seasons at Arizona State, 1999 and 2000, he coached ASU to wins over Arizona in the regular season finale to put the Sun Devils in a bowl game...coached two Pac-10 Defensive Player of the Year winners (Pat Tillman, 1997, and Adam Archuleta, 2000), one Pac-10 Offensive Player of the Year (Jake Plummer, 1996) and one Pac-10 Freshman of the Year (Terrell Suggs, 2000)...other standout players at Arizona State during Snyder's tenure included Mario Bates, Shante Carver, Erik Flowers, Todd Heap, J.R. Redmond, Derrick Rodgers, Juan Roque, Grey Ruegamer, Marvel Smith and Jeremy Staat.
Bobby Douglas
Wrestling Coach / 1974-1992
Douglas was a member of the 1964 and 1968 U.S. Olympic Wrestling Teams (as Captain in 1968). He also captained the 1969-70 World Team. In 1983, he coached the U.S. National team in the Soviet Union. In 1987, he was inducted into the National Wrestling Hall of Fame. He led ASU to NCAA Championship status and was named College Coach of the Year in 1988. He coached the U.S. team at the 1991 Pan-Am Games and was assistant coach on six Olympic teams and seven World Teams. He was a seven-time coach for the Sunkist Kids National Freestyle Championship. He was also named Pac-10 Coach of the Year eight times, and led the U.S. Freestyle Team to win six medals in the 1992 Olympics and was named the USA Coach of the Year. A noted author and national honor winner, he compiled a 226-76-8 record at ASU.
Steve Loy
Golf Coach / 1987-1992
A 2002 Arizona State Hall of distinction inductee who coached the Arizona State men's gold program for six seasons (1987-1992). Led men's program to its first national title in 1990 and also who won two Pac-10 titles (1989 and 1990) and tied for 1991 NCAA West regional title. Mentored Phil Michelson as he won 16 collegiate events, including three NCAA titles and coached 10 Sun Devils to 20 All-American honors. Won Pac-10 Coach of the Year in 1989 and 1990 and led ASU to 26 team titles wins in his tenure and had 25 medalists. Loy's teams won four straight Thunderbird Invitational titles (1989-92) in his final four years. A 1991 inductee into the Athletic Hall of Honors at Eastern New Mexico, where he graduated from in 1974, and a 1992 inductee into the National Junior College Coaches Hall of Fame. Coached at Scottsdale Community College from 1975-83 and at Arkansas from 1983-87 before coming to Arizona State.
Linda Vollstedt
Women's Golf Coach / 1980-2001
A 2002 Arizona State Hall of Distinction inductee who coached the Arizona State women's golf program for 21 seasons (1980-2001) and led ASU to six NCAA titles (1990, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1997 and 1998) and nine Pac-10 titles. A native of Portland, Ore., Vollstedt became involved with Arizona State four decades ago, earning her bachelor of arts degree in education in 1969 and her master's degree in math education in 1971. Ended her ASU coaching career as just one of 11 head coaches to mentor Sun Devil programs for more than 20 years. The 1994 National Golf Coaches Hall of Fame inductee was recognized by her colleagues with numerous honors, as she was named Golfweek's 1997 National Collegiate Coach of the Year. She also swept the 1995 awards, being named Pacific-10 Conference Coach of the Year, West Regional Coach of the Year, Golfweek National Coach of the Year and National Golf Coaches Association Co-Coach of the Year. The five-time national coach of the year coached 18 players who played on the LPGA Tour, four NCAA individual champions and four U.S. Women's Amateur champions.