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MIAA Hall of Fame
Vernon Kennedy
Football, Track Student-Athlete
Central Missouri (1926-29)
Kennedy was a football and track standout from 1926-29. He was a
three-time All-MIAA selection in football and helped the Mules to
four straight MIAA track and field championships. He set school
records in the javelin, shot put, and discus. In 1927, he won the
decathlon at the prestigious Penn Relays.
Following his Central Missouri athletic career, Kennedy played
professional baseball for over 20 years, including 12 seasons
playing Major League Baseball. He won 21 games for the White Sox in
1936, pitched the first-ever no-hitter at Comiskey Park in 1935,
and made the American League All-Star Team in 1936 and 1938. After
leaving organized baseball, he spent a number of years scouting and
teaching at baseball camps. He then used his teaching degree for 12
years at Brookfield, Missouri High School before retiring in
1972.
An avid railroad buff his entire life, after retirement he and his
wife began to collect railroad memorabilia as well as other
antiques. This hobby gave them many years of activities and
pleasure. Also a member of the Missouri Sports Hall of Fame
(inducted in 1955), he competed in the Senior Olympics and Missouri
Show-Me State Games each summer into his mid-80's before his death
in 1993. He was the oldest participant in the Show-Me State games
at that time. He borrowed a discus, shot put and javelin from his
alma mater for practice and during the games.
The University of Central Missouri football field bears his name,
and the award for the most outstanding athlete of the year at UCM
is in his honor. He was honored as a UCM Distinguished Alumnus in
1983, and was inducted into the inaugural class of the University
of Central Missouri Athletic Hall of Fame in 1992. Also in 1992,
Kennedy received the American Legion Department of Missouri
Distinguished Service Award. Kennedy passed away in 1993 at the age
of 85.



































