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Sugar Bowl

Jimmy Collins Awards

While there are many different categories of awards presented by the Greater New Orleans Sports Awards Committee, some years the committee finds that there are people deserving of recognition who do not necessarily fit into one specific category. For that reason, the Committee presents the Jimmy Collins Awards to outstanding individuals and organizations. Collins was a leader of the local Veterans of Foreign Wars post and a hard-working community contributor, who is credited with creating the Greater New Orleans Sports Awards and forming the awards committee in 1958.
 

2023 Lisa Stockton Tulane Women's Basketball
Tulane Football NCAA
2022 Loyola Basketball NAIA
St. Charles Catholic Athletics LHSAA
2021 Dr. Greg Stewart Tulane University
2020  Demario Davis  New Orleans Saints
 Eastbank Little League  Little League
 2019  Conner Killian  Louisiana Tech
 Joe Scheuermann  Delgado Baseball
 2018  Joe Este  Bonnabel High School
 Brittany Grunberg  50 Legs Foundation
 2017  Miracle League of New Orleans  New Orleans
 2016  Princeton Carter  Isidore Newman School
 Gabrielle Jennings  First Baptist Christian School
 2015  Manny Barocco  Jefferson Parish Athletics
 Jim Ravannack  Louisiana wrestling
 2014  Rob Bernardi  Nicholls State Athletics
 Paul Hoolahan  Allstate Sugar Bowl
 Ragin’ Cajun Athletics  UL-Lafayette
 Mark Slessinger  UNO Basketball
 2013  Team Gleason  Team Gleason
 Robin and Sally-Anne Roberts  New Orleans
 2012  J.T. Curtis  John Curtis School
 Bo McCalebb  O.P. Walker HS/UNO Basketball
 2011  Tyler Dutruch  Pope John Paul II
 Lurlyn Fitzpatrick  Tulane University
 2010  Sandra Bullock  Warren Easton HS
 Kelly Gibson  New Orleans golf
 New Orleans Boosters  AAABA Baseball
 Harold Shelly  New Orleans
 2009  Jim Headrick  First Tee of New Orleans
 2008  Dolphin Baseball  Delgado Community College
 Privateer Baseball  UNO
2004 Churchill Downs Fair Grounds Race Course
2003 Mewelde Moore Tulane Football
LSU Football Team SEC & BCS
Southern University Football SWAC & NCAA
 2002  George Shinn & Ray Woolridge  New Orleans Hornets
 2001  Super Bowl XXXVI Host Committee
 Tommy Henry  LHSAA
2000  Randy Mueller  New Orleans Saints
1999  Brother Martin Wrestling  LHSAA
 New Orleans Times-Picayune
 1990  Alvin Gauthier  Cohen High School basketball
 New Orleans Sports Foundation
 1988  Risen Star  Horse Racing
 1986  Louis “Red” Slade  New Orleans
 1985  Tom Benson  New Orleans Saints
 Lou Messina
 1984  Carl Maddox  National Sports Festival
 1983  Joe Delaney  Kansas City Chiefs
 Dave Dixon  New Orleans/Superdome
 1981  Firmin E. Simms  NORD/Biddy Basketball
 Brother Melchior Polowy  Holy Cross Wrestling
 1980  Brother Martin Hernandez
 1979  Joseph Dorignac, Jr.  Fairgrounds Racing
 B.E. Lumzy  Carter Woodson Junior High
 Ben Weiner  Tulane University
 1978  Commercial Athletic Association
 Joe’s Jungle Marching Club
 Sports Acrobatic School
1975  Art Burke  New Orleans States-Item
1974  Jim Hall  Louisiana Weekly
1973  John North  New Orleans Saints
1972  Herbert J. Hauck  Amateur Golf
1971  Dave Dixon  Superdome
1970  Lester Lautenschlaeger  New Orleans Recreation Dept.
 Hoss Memtsas  West Jefferson Football
1969  Doug Atkins  New Orleans Saints
 Jack Van Berg  Thoroughbred Horse Racing
1968  John Letellier  Fairgrounds Racing
1967  John W. Mecom, Jr.  New Orleans Saints
1966  Dave Dixon  New Orleans Pro Football
1965  Jim Corbett  LSU
1964  William H. Bishop  Thoroughbred Horse Racing
1963  Jackie Higgins  New Orleans

This year, the committee has designated two worthy recipients of Collins Awards. Both achieved historic success in the athletic area while representing Tulane University – the Green Wave football team enjoyed one of the greatest seasons in program history in 2022, while Tulane women’s basketball coach Lisa Stockton became the winningest women’s basketball coach in Louisiana history.
 
Tulane’s football team enjoyed one of the greatest seasons in program history in 2022. The Green Wave posted a fantastic 12-2 record and won its first American Athletic Conference title while shocking the nation with a thrilling Cotton Bowl victory over USC. In the Cotton Bowl, the underdog Greenies trailed the blueblood Trojans 45-30 with 4:30 to go. However, Tyjae Spears scored on a four-yard TD run, the Wave added two points on a safety and then Michael Pratt found Alex Bauman for a six-yard touchdown with nine seconds to go. Valentino Ambrosio’s extra point gave Tulane its first lead of the game and the improbable victory.

“It's a huge win for the program,” said head coach Willie Fritz following the Cotton Bowl. “Huge win for the university. Huge win for the city. We represent New Orleans. We represent Tulane University. We represent our football program. And I think we've seen this year what a great football season and competing at a high level can do for an institution. So I'm just very proud to be a part of it.”

The Cotton Bowl was Tulane’s first appearance in a major bowl game since 1940 when it lost to Texas A&M in the Sugar Bowl. The Wave’s 12 wins matched the school record and the seven league victories were its most since 1934; the win in the AAC Championship was the school’s first conference championship game victory. In order to reach the conference championship game, the Wave defeated No. 23 Cincinnati on the road – it was the first Tulane win over a ranked opponent since 1984 and the first time the Green Wave won a ranked-against-ranked match-up since 1956. Tulane closed the year at No. 9 in the final Associated Press Top 25 and AFCA USA Today Coaches Polls.

Lisa Stockton became the winningest coach in the history of women’s college basketball in Louisiana on Feb. 18. Her 65-45 victory that evening in Cincinnati lifted her past former Louisiana Tech coach Leon Barmore, a member of the Naismith Hall of Fame, who led the Techsters to the 1988 NCAA Championship. Stockton, who has averaged 20 wins per year over 29 seasons, has an all-time record of 579-324 at Tulane (Barmore had 576 wins) – she also coached at Greensboro for four years and has 642 overall career wins (69th all-time among college women’s basketball coaches).
 
“I think it's really special because I think Leon Barmore, with what he's meant to women's basketball, is amazing,” Stockton said. “To be mentioned in the same sentence as him is pretty incredible. I think, for my team, they're so excited. I think they're so much more excited than I am, and I love to see them have these types of moments that they can celebrate.”
 
Stockton has taken the Green Wave to the postseason 22 times (including 11 trips to the NCAA Tournament) and won five conference tournament titles and four regular-season conference titles. She has earned conference Coach of the Year honors three times (Metro in 1995, C-USA in 2007 and 2010).
              
The Greater New Orleans Sports Awards Committee came together when James Collins spearheaded a group of sports journalists to form a sports awards committee to immortalize local sports history. For 13 years, the committee honored local athletes each month and a variety of annual award winners. In 1970, the Sugar Bowl stepped in to sponsor and revitalize the committee, leading to the creation of the Greater New Orleans Sports Hall of Fame in 1971, honoring 10 legends from the Crescent City in its first induction class. While adding the responsibility of selecting Hall of Famers, the committee has continued to recognize the top amateur athlete in the Greater New Orleans area each month as well as a range of annual awards – the honors enter their 67th year in 2023.
 
The Allstate Sugar Bowl has established itself as one of the premier college football bowl games, having hosted 28 national champions, 102 Hall of Fame players, 52 Hall of Fame coaches and 21 Heisman Trophy winners in its 89-year history. The 90th Allstate Sugar Bowl Football Classic, which will double as a College Football Playoff Semifinal, is scheduled to be played on January 1, 2024. In addition to football, the Sugar Bowl Committee annually invests over $1 million into the community through the hosting and sponsorship of sporting events, awards, scholarships and clinics. Through these efforts, the organization supports and honors thousands of student-athletes each year, while injecting nearly $2.4 billion into the local economy in the last decade.