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Overland Park Just when Max Falkenstien thought he had enough sendoffs to last a lifetime, one more came his way Thursday.
On a night most dedicated to Kansas University's athletes, Falkenstien was honored again, presented with the Lifetime Service Award during the Jayhawk Senior & Scholar Athlete Banquet at the Sheraton Overland Park Convention Center.
Athletic director Lew Perkins presented Falkenstien with a crystal microphone, and a highlight reel of his career played after the night's lone standing ovation was directed toward him. Perkins also assured everyone that Falkenstien's familiar voice wasn't going away for good just yet.
"We're going to have a place for him on the football and basketball broadcasts," Perkins said.
Though Falkenstein received the loudest cheer, most of the two-hour event circled the accomplishments of KU's student-athletes. About 600 in attendance watched as cross country runner Joshy Madathil and women's basketball player Crystal Kemp received the night's biggest honor: The Robert Frederick Senior-Scholar Athlete of the Year award.
KU track and field distance runner Joshy Madathil, left, and KU basketball player Crystal Kemp congratulate each other after they received the Robert Frederick Senior-Scholar Athlete of the Year awards. The KU athletic department recognized its top senior athletes Thursday in Overland Park.
Frederick, who won an award, too, when the athletes gave him the Del Shankel Teaching Excellence Award, presented Kemp and Madathil with their honor, as associate athletic director Paul Buskirk listed the pair's accomplishments.
"They're such great kids," Buskirk said afterward. "This wasn't my decision or Lew's decision. We have an honors committee that does that. The coaches nominate their candidates, and the honors committee spent a lot of time working on this. It's always a tough choice."
The night, like any, had its light moments, too:
¢ The Prentice Gautt Big 12 Postgraduate Scholarship winners - soccer's Caroline Smith and men's basketball's Christian Moody - posed for pictures after receiving their honor. The height disparity alone caused chuckles - Smith is 5-foot-2 while Moody towers at 6-8.
¢ Emcee David Lawrence joked about the different eating habits among football players in his introduction. Among them were linebackers killing their own food and eating it raw, and cornerbacks not eating much "because it's hard to eat and talk at the same time."
¢ The best-dressed award unofficially went to football's Tim Allen, who was decked out in an all-white suit while most of his teammates stuck to shirts and ties.
But for Buskirk, the most numbing part of Thursday wasn't anything unique. It was the fact that 48 of KU's athletes were honored for having perfect 4.0 grade-point averages - about an average number for a particular year, but impressive nonetheless considering time commitments demanded of all of them.
"I still don't understand it," said Buskirk, in his 18th year as an athletic department administrator. "I hope I never understand it."
More like this
- Broadcaster Falkenstien hospitalized after surgery September 8, 2005
- Falkenstien looking forward to Basketball Hall induction September 8, 2004
- KU radio commentator will be sidelined four-to-six weeks September 8, 2005
- It's official: Perkins wins NIT award February 12, 2005
- Kansas Comet honored by Sports Commission 26 comments / June 20, 2008


Comments
kushaw (anonymous) says...
Max, we will miss you on the air, but hopefully not at the games.
May 12, 2006 at 10:24 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
ModerateOne (anonymous) says...
Apparently "Kansas Jayhawks" is old fashioned. The teams should now be reffered to as the "Johnson County Community College Jayhawks."
The idea of hosting this event at a JoCo hotel when we have the Eldridge, the Adams Center, and the Student Union here in good ol' Lawrence is baffling.
May 12, 2006 at 10:51 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
wtarush (anonymous) says...
I agree, kushaw. The chance that Max will make a cameo on the radio alone would be enough to keep me listening to the broadcast.
May 12, 2006 at 11:01 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
tis4tim (anonymous) says...
It won't be quite the same tuning in to games without Max at the broadcast helm. 60 years! Quite a feat. He is our iron man, our Cal Ripken Jr. of KU basketball...rather, Cal Ripken Jr. is the Max Falkenstein of baseball. He will be missed, no doubt. There are a legendary pair of mighty large, and mighty classy shoes that will have to be filled.
May 12, 2006 at 12:24 p.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
kraus42 (anonymous) says...
Yeah, Max should receive 10% off his meals at Long John Silver's.
May 12, 2006 at 1:43 p.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
jhawk7782 (anonymous) says...
I'm not sure about the $pecial gift$ to be honest with you. I was looking at Missouri's incoming freshman basketball class...... I was trying to anyways, I just couldn't recognize anybody's name.
Nothing like replacing Quinn $nyder with Missouri's first black head coach. I was surprised that Mike Anderson would be willing to take a lateral move. Unlike Missouri, UAB appeared to be a team going forward.
May 12, 2006 at 7:52 p.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
phag (anonymous) says...
because I'd like to give them special gifts, wink, wink.
May 13, 2006 at 1:06 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
ku_bringback_danny (anonymous) says...
Dude hay phag this is Kansas not the trailer park on Norm Stu-wort Road
May 13, 2006 at 1:23 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
KoolKeithFreeze (anonymous) says...
What do gay horses eat?
May 13, 2006 at 5:28 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
KoolKeithFreeze (anonymous) says...
Haaaayyy.
May 13, 2006 at 5:28 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )