Join
Peel Hawthorne '80 as she is officially inducted into the William & Mary Athletics Hall of Fame on Sept. 9, 2022. Registration for the induction ceremony is now available. Space is limited so be sure to
purchase a ticket or a table to the event.
The event will honor the W&M Hall of Fame Class elected for 2020. The ceremony will feature six inductees along with Hawthorne:
Derek Cox '08 (football),
Scott Estes '93 (tennis),
Ian Fitzgerald '09 (track, cross country),
Mindy Wolff '75 (swimming) and
Sebronzik Wright '95 (men's gymnastics).
The W&M Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony will take place in the Sadler Center on campus. It will start with a reception at 6:30 p.m. in the Tidewater Room and will be immediately followed by the dinner and formal induction ceremony in the Chesapeake Room starting at 7:15 p.m.
To the vast majority of W&M alumni, family, friends, and the national communities of field hockey and lacrosse,
Peel Hawthorne needs no introduction. She was a key member of some of the Tribe's most successful teams in both sports as an athlete, and after returning to Williamsburg in 1987, forged an unmatched legacy as coach of W&M's field hockey team before moving into athletics administration in the fall of 2013.
Hawthorne enrolled at W&M in the spring of 1976 as Tribe women's teams were taking off as national powers, especially in her chosen sports of field hockey and lacrosse. She helped W&M qualify for AIAW Championships in both, including fifth-place national finishes in both the spring of 1979 (lacrosse) and that fall (field hockey). In hockey, her teams went 54-14-9 (.763), including winning 18 games in 1979 that still stands as the program record. Hawthorne was a defender, helping the team allow less than one goal per game on average, a mark that would have led the NCAA in six of the past nine years. In lacrosse, her teams went an astonishing 34-6-3 (.826), and in 1979 won the Tribe's first state championship en route to that fifth-place finish at the national tournament.
After graduating in 1980, and after coaching stops at the University of Richmond and Williams College, Hawthorne spent four years coaching at Connecticut College, before returning to her alma mater in 1987 as assistant lacrosse and head field hockey coach. Over the next 25 hockey seasons, she went 275-234-2 (.540), including a 98-76 (.563) mark in conference play and led W&M to its first two NCAA Tournament appearances in 2000 and 2002. Hawthorne's teams won 10+ games in 18 of her seasons, and after the CAA moved to a qualifying tournament in 2000, the Tribe earned either the first or second seed five times. That included in 2003, when W&M shared the unofficial regular-season title with national powerhouse Old Dominion, and the following year, 2004, when the Tribe went undefeated in conference play for the first (and, so far, only) time. W&M was not just competitive in the conference but also nationally, reaching a best ranking of No. 9 in the 2000 season. Hawthorne was also a highly successful lacrosse coach, leading Connecticut College to a 35-15-1 record as head coach, and in 1988, her first season at W&M, she was the assistant coach as the Tribe won the South Atlantic Conference and hosted Harvard in the NCAA Quarterfinals in an 11-2 year. The only loss in the regular season was to reigning NCAA Champion Penn State, and W&M reached as high as No. 2 in the national polls that year.
At the time of her retirement from coaching ahead of the 2013 season, Hawthorne had collected a 30-year total record of 306-251-6 (.549) and was the 13th coach in NCAA Division I history to reach 300 wins. Her 563 total games coached ranked 10th in NCAA history, and her 275 wins at W&M were more than three-times as many as the next winningest coach in a program history that stretched all the way back to 1918, when the first women were admitted to W&M. Her athletes were incredibly successful as well, with seven earning All-American honors, and five earning inductions to the W&M Hall of Fame (to date.)
Hawthorne was named the CAA Coach of the Year three times, in 1995, 2001, and 2004, as well as the State Coach of the Year in 2004. In the summer of 2001, the W&M Alumni Association voted her as the Coach of the Year for the 2000-01 school year. In 2011, she received the "Judy Sweet Award" at the 25
th NCAA Women's Coaching Academy. The award recognizes a fellow class member "who leads by example with an elevated, selfless commitment to the encouragement of other's success, and an unwavering dedication to their own personal and professional achievement." In 2012 Hawthorne was inducted into the inaugural class of the St. Catherine's School Hall of Fame.