Difference between revisions of "1968 - 1972 Alan Osur"

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(Short Biography)
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Alan was admired by all for his passion for the game.  He would continue to play when he could, well into his 60s.  In the spring of 77 when Alan took the field with his old team, the Denver Barbos, against the cadets, instead of tackling him, they held him up and promptly took him to the biggest mud puddle on the pitch where he got a thorough dunking.
 
Alan was admired by all for his passion for the game.  He would continue to play when he could, well into his 60s.  In the spring of 77 when Alan took the field with his old team, the Denver Barbos, against the cadets, instead of tackling him, they held him up and promptly took him to the biggest mud puddle on the pitch where he got a thorough dunking.
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THIS IS NOT ALAN"S BUT IS A WORK IN PROGRESS
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==Short Biography==
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'''Alan Osur, Maj (ret),
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Tenured Associate Professor and Deputy Department Head, USAF Academy Department of History'''
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'''Alan was the force behind getting rugby as a club at the Air Force Academy and served as their first coach.  He was also the force behind getting women's rugby started at the Academy and became their first coach.  He is the most successful women’s coach since the beginning of the Air Force Academy intercollegiate rugby programs.'''
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************************************
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He began his love of the sport playing intramural rugby for three years at the Academy and continued his career playing the position of hooker up to age 54 on several teams.
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Vern’s first operational assignment was at McConnell AFB, Wichita, Kansas where he served as Missile Combat Crew Commander with the 533rd Strategic Missile Squadron.  During this time he was the founder, first Coach, first President, first Captain, and first Honorary Lifetime Member of the Wichita Rugby Football Club where three of his teammates were chosen to the USA National Rugby team.  He was inducted into the Wichita Rugby Hall of Fame in 2013.
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Vern was then sponsored by the USAFA Dept. of Management to earn his MBA at the University of Colorado and returned to the Academy in 1977.
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Vern continued his coaching career in the fall of 1977 under another of our most successful coaches and teams’ founder, Alan Osur.  Vern was the assistant coach of both the men’s and women’s teams during the academic years of 1978 – 1980.  Before transferring out in 1980, Vern was part of the coaching team that led the team to a second in the nation finish, losing to Cal Berkeley in the finals. 
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After spending three years earning his PhD at UCLA, Vern returned to the Academy in the fall of 1983, again in the management department.    He immediately rejoined as the men’s team as assistant coach under Squadron Leader Bill Mulvenney then stepped into the head coaching role in the fall of 1985 that began a seven year stint as head coach and set a standard for coaches to come:
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- Twice National Champions in 1989 and 1990
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- Second place National Champions 1987 (one point loss in the finals)
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- Three times Third in the nation 1986, 1988 and 1992
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And after his retirement in 1992 and leaving the Academy, the underclass years he coached and mentored went on to continued national success:
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- Twice Runners up National Champions, 1993, 1995
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- Third in the nation, 1994
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During this time and after Vern also significantly contributed to the Armed Forces Rugby initiatives:
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- Assistant Coach, Combined Services Juniors, 1985-86
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- Head Coach, Combined Services Juniors, 1986-1992
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- Head Coach USAF Selects tour to Japan, 1989 (winning 4 of 5 matches)
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Prior to his military retirement, Vern was Chairman of the USA Rugby Collegiate Committee and was on the USA Rugby Board of Directors from ’89-’93.
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Uncle Vern also had a positive and lasting impact on our cadet players.  Many a time have we have heard, “if it were not for Vern and rugby, I never would have made it through the Academy”… words said by young individuals whom we now know as Colonels, Generals, CEOs, physicians and so on, a tribute to the man whose dedication to our game and to the Academy cannot be overstated. 
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He and his wife, Laura, currently reside in Irving Texas.
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  '''Grads and Guests in attendance at the official naming of the Alan Osur Perpetual Fund For Women's Rugby'''
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[[File:Coach_Francis_2016_0228_Ceremony.jpg | x500px]]
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Left to Right: Tru Eyre (79), , Skip Shackelford (prior coach), Alan Osur,

Revision as of 01:52, 15 September 2016

Coaching History

Assistant Coach

Head Coach

Short Biography

Alan was admired by all for his passion for the game. He would continue to play when he could, well into his 60s. In the spring of 77 when Alan took the field with his old team, the Denver Barbos, against the cadets, instead of tackling him, they held him up and promptly took him to the biggest mud puddle on the pitch where he got a thorough dunking.


THIS IS NOT ALAN"S BUT IS A WORK IN PROGRESS

Short Biography

Alan Osur, Maj (ret), Tenured Associate Professor and Deputy Department Head, USAF Academy Department of History


Alan was the force behind getting rugby as a club at the Air Force Academy and served as their first coach. He was also the force behind getting women's rugby started at the Academy and became their first coach. He is the most successful women’s coach since the beginning of the Air Force Academy intercollegiate rugby programs.

He began his love of the sport playing intramural rugby for three years at the Academy and continued his career playing the position of hooker up to age 54 on several teams.

Vern’s first operational assignment was at McConnell AFB, Wichita, Kansas where he served as Missile Combat Crew Commander with the 533rd Strategic Missile Squadron. During this time he was the founder, first Coach, first President, first Captain, and first Honorary Lifetime Member of the Wichita Rugby Football Club where three of his teammates were chosen to the USA National Rugby team. He was inducted into the Wichita Rugby Hall of Fame in 2013.

Vern was then sponsored by the USAFA Dept. of Management to earn his MBA at the University of Colorado and returned to the Academy in 1977.

Vern continued his coaching career in the fall of 1977 under another of our most successful coaches and teams’ founder, Alan Osur. Vern was the assistant coach of both the men’s and women’s teams during the academic years of 1978 – 1980. Before transferring out in 1980, Vern was part of the coaching team that led the team to a second in the nation finish, losing to Cal Berkeley in the finals.

After spending three years earning his PhD at UCLA, Vern returned to the Academy in the fall of 1983, again in the management department. He immediately rejoined as the men’s team as assistant coach under Squadron Leader Bill Mulvenney then stepped into the head coaching role in the fall of 1985 that began a seven year stint as head coach and set a standard for coaches to come:

- Twice National Champions in 1989 and 1990

- Second place National Champions 1987 (one point loss in the finals)

- Three times Third in the nation 1986, 1988 and 1992

And after his retirement in 1992 and leaving the Academy, the underclass years he coached and mentored went on to continued national success:

- Twice Runners up National Champions, 1993, 1995

- Third in the nation, 1994


During this time and after Vern also significantly contributed to the Armed Forces Rugby initiatives:

- Assistant Coach, Combined Services Juniors, 1985-86

- Head Coach, Combined Services Juniors, 1986-1992

- Head Coach USAF Selects tour to Japan, 1989 (winning 4 of 5 matches)

Prior to his military retirement, Vern was Chairman of the USA Rugby Collegiate Committee and was on the USA Rugby Board of Directors from ’89-’93.

Uncle Vern also had a positive and lasting impact on our cadet players. Many a time have we have heard, “if it were not for Vern and rugby, I never would have made it through the Academy”… words said by young individuals whom we now know as Colonels, Generals, CEOs, physicians and so on, a tribute to the man whose dedication to our game and to the Academy cannot be overstated.

He and his wife, Laura, currently reside in Irving Texas.


  Grads and Guests in attendance at the official naming of the Alan Osur Perpetual Fund For Women's Rugby


Coach Francis 2016 0228 Ceremony.jpg


Left to Right: Tru Eyre (79), , Skip Shackelford (prior coach), Alan Osur,