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Pat Richter

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Pat Richter
Date of birth: September 9 1941 (1941-09-09) (age 66)
Place of birth: Flag of the United States Madison, Wisconsin
Position(s): Wide receiver, Punter
Jersey #: N/A
College: Wisconsin
NFL Draft: 1963 / Round: 1 / Pick 7
Team(s) as player
1963-1970 Washington Redskins
Stats at DatabaseFootball.com
College Football Hall of Fame

Hugh Vernon Richter (born September 9, 1941 in Madison, Wisconsin) is the former University of Wisconsin-Madison athletic director and American football player. He was responsible for hiring Barry Alvarez from Notre Dame in 1990 as head football coach, restoring the Badgers football program to national prominence. Richter was one of Wisconsin's most-storied student-athletes. He was a nine-time letterwinner (the last person to earn such a distinction in school history), lettering three times each in football, basketball and baseball. He was also an All-American tight end twice. Richter set a Rose Bowl record with 11 catches for 163 yards in the 1963 game vs. No. 1-rated USC Trojans. He was a first round draft pick of the Washington Redskins in the 1963 NFL Draft and went on to play eight seasons in Washington. Richter returned to the University of Wisconsin-Madison as athletic director in 1989 after 17 years service as Vice President of Personnel at Oscar Mayer Foods Corp., recruited by then-chancellor Donna Shalala. He inherited a program in disarray, with outmoded facilities, struggling teams, and a deficit of $2.1 million. He made a priority of modernizing the University's sports facilities, including construction of the Kohl Center and renovations to Camp Randall Stadium. He reversed the financial fortunes of the department, erasing the deficit and building a budget reserve of $6.4 million. When he stepped down as athletic director on 1 April 2004, he was the longest-tenured director of athletics in the Big Ten Conference with 14-plus years. He was succeeded by Alvarez. Richter is a member of the College Football Hall of Fame, the Academic All-America Hall of Fame, the Rose Bowl Hall of Fame and the Wisconsin Athletic Hall of Fame. He was named to Sports Illustrated's NCAA Football All-Century Team.[1] The University of Wisconsin-Madison twice honored Richter during the 2006 football season. On 4 November, his number 88 was retired in a ceremony during that day's football game. On 17 November a bronze statue of Richter was unveiled in the Kellner Hall plaza immediately outside Camp Randall Stadium. [2]

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Pat Richter from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

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