Game Changers Row features the following individuals, in addition to Jones and Hill:
Jane Connolly, one of first two women to be awarded an athletic scholarship at the University of Maryland. Connolly received that scholarship prior to the 1976-77 season in women’s basketball.
The late Paula Girven, was the first Black woman to receive a scholarship at Maryland, in becoming one of the first two females to receive a scholarship, in track and field.
Robbie Rogers, who starred with Maryland men’s soccer, became the first openly gay man to compete in a major North American professional sports league when he played his first match for the LA Galaxy of Major League Soccer in 2013.
Kristi Toliver, who helped lead the Maryland’s women's basketball team to a national championship in 2006, became the fourth woman ever named to an NBA coaching staff in 2018.
The first two women’s head coaches in Maryland Athletics history, Dottie McKnight and Barb Drum. McKnight was the first varsity field hockey and women’s basketball coach at Maryland in 1971. Drum was hired as Maryland’s first head volleyball coach in 1971 and served in the position until 1988, spanning 17 years.
James ‘Jason’ Williams, who became the first Black athlete to compete in a collegiate event at the University of Maryland as he was a diver on the Terps’ swimming and diving team in 1962-63.
Elmore Hunter, who became the first Black man to compete in Track and Field in the Atlantic Coast Conference, while at Maryland during the 1964-65 academic year.
Debbie Yow, who was the first woman to be named an Athletic Director in the Atlantic Coast Conference when she was hired at the University of Maryland in August 1994.
Sandy Worth, who became the first woman to serve as the Head Athletic Trainer at an Atlantic Coast Conference school, when she was promoted to the position in 1992.
Betty Smith, who was Maryland’s first woman to serve as faculty athletic representative in the Atlantic Coast Conference and did so for 11 years.
The Texas Western University men’s basketball team, which won the 1966 NCAA Championship at Cole Field House with five Black starters, defeating Kentucky.