Rockland County Track & Field Hall of Fame
  • Home Page
  • Make Dinner Reservations
  • 2023 Inductees
    • Steven Alston
    • Sumandor DeFreese
    • Tom Doherty
    • Tara Bach Mapes
    • John McNulty
    • Tommy Thothongkum
    • Mark Overbey
    • Willie Taylor
    • 1995 Ramapo Boys' 1600-Meter Relay
    • 1981-83 Ramapo Girls' Sprint Relays
    • 1954 Tappan Zee Boys' Cross Country Team
  • 2022 Inductees
    • Sidney Allen
    • Yvana Hepburn Bailey
    • Lee Brentnall
    • Scott Clarke
    • Henry Cook
    • John Hickey
    • David Lake
    • Rebecca Quimby Liberman
    • Cathy McErlean-Goddard
    • Bob Murphy
    • Nanuet 1975 Boys Spring Track & Field Team
    • Nyack 1977 Boys 880-Yard Relay
    • Suffern 1981 Girls Sprint Relays
  • 2019 Inductees
    • Joe Biddy
    • Erin Demchko
    • Brendan Fennell
    • Ray Kondracki
    • John Martinez
    • Roudy Monrose
    • Clarkstown 1970 Sprint Medley Relay
    • Albertus Magnus 1974 Cross Country Team
    • Suffern 2001-03 Girls' 4 X 200-Meter Relay
  • 2017 Inductees
    • Erin Haugh Colleran
    • Sheri Felenstein Dempsey
    • Joe D'Innocenzo
    • Betsy Evans
    • Ricky Gross
    • Drew Hirshfeld
    • Tony Klebetz
    • Stanley Lagrenade
    • Jim Pollard
  • 2015 Inductees
    • Darryl Brown
    • Taneisha Cantave
    • Gene Dall
    • Paul Joyce
    • Rob Ossman
    • William J. Miller
    • Misty Scott
    • Charles Serra
  • 2013 Inductees
    • Chinela Davis
    • Maria Gordon Farrell
    • Ira Howard
    • Chris Lolagne
    • Joe McDowell
    • Muriel Piluso Nestoros
    • Jim Pugh
    • Justin Romaniuk
    • Robert White
  • 2012 Inductees
    • Calvin Crosslin
    • Cliff Faist
    • Meghan Howell
    • Travis Jackson
    • Joe St. Lawrence
    • Jodi Schlesinger Salsberg
    • Mike Schroer
    • Thad Wilson
  • 2011 Inductees
    • Fred Adler
    • Juliet Brown Demeritte
    • Michael Colangelo
    • Dana Dougan Hollar
    • Dave McGovern
    • Marvin Miller
    • Preston Pulis
  • 2010 Inductees
    • Jerry Blow
    • Mark Connors
    • Louise Formon D'Agosta
    • Eileen Shiel Herman
    • Ervan Levine
    • Dennis Martin
    • Dave Mumme
    • Otto Pearson
  • 2009 Inductees
    • Ron Barrera
    • Don Clancy
    • Jack Dailey
    • Ryan Dall
    • Ron Edwards
    • Dave Hanson
    • Lisette Hautau
    • Stanley Thomas
  • 2008 Inductees
    • Andy Kohlbrenner
    • Mike Manno
    • Mike Rogan
    • Dick Teetsel
    • Quana Phillips Torres
    • Bret Watzka
    • Sharline White-Hernandez
  • 2007 Inductees
    • Howard d'Olivier Allen
    • Lance Arietta
    • Don Berich
    • Dawn Royster Geronimo
    • Abigail Hunte
    • Dwight Olivier
    • Andrew Silberstein
    • H. Parker Talman
  • 2006 Inductees
    • Marvin Branche
    • Larry Gardner
    • Todd Sinclair
    • Lonnie Smith
    • John Stephens
    • Brenda Saunders Stukey
    • Linda Newsom Troche
  • 2005 Inductees
    • Dave Billings
    • Phil Caraher
    • Steve Hostomsky
    • Gene Martin
    • Sherry Murphy-McGill
    • Paul Nowicki
    • Sherwin Sterling
    • Deirdre Collier Webb
  • 2004 Inductees
    • Jim Ashcroft
    • Rick Carey
    • Pat Reynar Farmer
    • Debbie Grant
    • Tony Harlin
    • Mike Hagon
    • Harry Jackson
    • Nancy Rosenfeld Lewis
    • Kim McDole
    • Howie McNiff
    • Lintz Rivera
    • Tim St. Lawrence
    • Jeff Van Wie
    • Shulton Whitley
  • Eligibility Requirements
  • Nomination Form
  • Board of Directors

John Stephens - North Rockland 1989

John Stephens
If it weren’t for Bob Murphy, John Stephens might never have laid eyes on a shot-put circle, let along become one of the greatest practitioners of that event in Rockland history. As a ninth grader at North Rockland, John had visions of going out for football in the fall – which he did – as well as wrestling in the winter, and lacrosse in the spring. But during a fall athletic fair for the school’s freshmen, Murphy, the North Rockland weights coach in track, asked John if he’d like to try the shot put.

“I looked at him like he had four heads,” John remembers. “I had no idea who he was. North Rockland lives and breathes football, and he played up the idea of staying in shape for football, lifting weights, doing plyometrics. Once I tried it, I loved track from the get-go. [Murphy] is the whole reason I went to track.”

When you’re 6-foot-4, 265 pounds and live in the North Rockland school district, it’s a pretty safe bet you’ll be playing football in the autumn. John certainly made the most of his gridiron opportunities, becoming a first-team All-State defensive tackle and anchoring the line for one of the best teams in school history. But the lion’s share of his individual glory came from hoisting a 12-pound sphere farther than the competition, over and over again.

John won four – count ‘em, four – New York State shot-put titles, indoors and outdoors his junior and senior years. It’s hard enough to win one state championship, never mind four. After the third of those, the 1989 indoor States at Cornell, John traveled overnight by bus to Annapolis, Md., to compete in the National Scholastic championships the following afternoon. He seemed none the worse for the wear, however, winning the national title with a throw of 61 feet 2 inches, not far off his indoor personal best of 61-9.

“That one was the toughest,” John says. “Just the look on my dad’s face and Bob Murphy’s face when I won … it was the culmination of a lot of things.” Besides the state and national crowns, John is justifiably proud of his back-to-back Penn Relays championships – a feat unmatched in that event until 2009.

By the time he was a senior, John’s victories seemed like a foregone conclusion. It was only a major story if he lost, but he didn’t lose the entire winter and spring. He repeated as Loucks Games champion in the shot and discus, and won Empire State Games gold medals in the shot two straight years, in the summers before his junior and senior years. Among his other accolades were being named New York State Sophomore Field Athlete of the Year; Bank of New York Winter Athlete of the Season; Journal-News Scholar-Athlete of the Season; and MSG Scholar-Athlete of the Week.

John ranks fourth on the all-time Rockland lists in the shot outdoors (61-10 ½) and indoors (61-9) and in the discus (171-4). His highest placing in the latter event was a runner-up finish at the State meet his junior year.

North Rockland’s sovereignty in the weight events already was firmly entrenched when John arrived on the scene, but he certainly gilded the Raiders’ reputation as a throwers mecca, along with standouts like Andrew Silberstein, Phil Caraher and Mike Manno. “John was a great kid to work with,” Murphy says. “He listened and he knew how to listen. He appreciated everything you did for him. I’ve been blessed with [athletes] like that.”

John, in turn, credits Murphy with finding a way to unlock each athlete’s potential differently. “He approached each person individually. He knew some needed a kick in the [butt] and others needed finesse. I needed to hear things straightforward – ‘This is what you’re doing wrong.’ I respect his knowledge and experience, not only as a coach but as a teacher and person. He brings out the best in you.”

John was an honors student at North Rockland, carrying a 93 academic average. He earned a full scholarship – half academic, half athletic – to Syracuse University, where he majored in biology. He chose Syracuse over North Carolina because of the Orangemen’s highly respected weights coach, Sandy Burke, who had a good working relationship with Murphy. Early in John’s freshman year, however, Burke left Syracuse to become women’s throws coach at the University of Florida.

The coaching change stung John. But he responded in typical fashion, challenging himself in the weight room and in practice, and feeding off the intra-squad competition from such talented teammates as Tony Washington (1999 world discus champion), Steve Dering and Chris Hall. John’s highlights included Big East Conference titles indoors and outdoors his senior year, and a third-place finish in the IC4As (Easterns) outdoors. His personal best with the 16-pound shot was 57 feet.

John wanted to remain in the Syracuse area after graduating in 1993, so he took a test for the Onondaga County Sheriff’s Department in 1994 and was hired in September 1995. Two years ago (2004) he was promoted to Deputy Sheriff Sergeant, which he calls “the greatest job in the world.” John, who is 35, lives in the Syracuse suburb of Cicero with his wife, Vicki, a newly appointed court officer for Onondaga County, and their 8-month-old daughter, Audrey.

John was inducted into the North Rockland Sports Hall of Fame two years ago. “The tradition at North Rockland is tremendous and I’m proud to be a part of it,” he says. “To see the plaques on the wall, and be mentioned with people like Phil [Caraher]. Andy [Silberstein] and others, it still gives me goose bumps.”