Maryland College Sports Hall of Fame on Saturday.
Corrado, who graduated from the Westminster, Maryland, school in 1950, may recognised internationlly for toppling bowling pins but in the late 1940s he was known as Mr. Inside for his powerful running as halfback/fullback for the Green Terrors.
Corrado, who attended WMC after serving in the US Army through the Second World War, later settled in Bermuda, involving himself in many of the Island's civic, religious and sports activities, especially bowling.
He represented Bermuda at the World Cup Championships in 1972 and 1974 as well as the as the American Zone Championships in 1970, 1973 and 1976.
With the five new inductees, who comprise the 20th class to be enshrined since 1978, the Hall membership increases to 120.
ROAD RUNNING RUN The race course for Sunday's Island Press Half Marathon has been announced. Starting at 9.00 a.m. from the Royal Artillery Association, runners will pass through St George's before approaching Kindley Field Road via the Swing Bridge. They will continue on to the Causeway, up Blue Hole Hill and along North Shore Road until Blackwatch Pass. Turns onto Cedar Avenue and Brunswick Street lead to Elliott Street and the finish at the Island Press.
Prizes of $1,000 are available to any male runner who can beat Kavin Smith's time of 1:09.10 or any female runner who can break Anna Eatherley's mark of 1:21.07. SAILING SLG Westerly winds that built to 30 knots and short steep waves produced wet, demanding conditions for Bermuda's young Optimist dinghy sailors in the Fall Series on the weekend. A total of ten lightweight yellow fleet sailors (10 and 11-year-olds) ventured out, but quickly returned to shore because of conditions. The exception was Stephen McGuinness who hung in with the advanced fleet for two races. Over two hours, the advanced fleet itself was whittled down to five sailors in the fifth and final race. Giles Spurling won the day with three first place finsishes over 14-year-olds Alex Lines and Zan Kirkland.
TENNIS TEN Wendy Gelhay and Coleridge Place pulled off the first major upset of the Coral Beach Invitational when they ousted third seeds Kelly Holland and Mike Gorton Jr. yesterday in mixed doubles. They took the first set 6-1 and led 3-0 in the second only to be pegged back to 3-3. But they broke again in the 11th game before Gelhay served out the match 7-5. In men's singles, Mike Curry won 6-2, 0-6, 6-3 over Briton Chris Brown while third-seed Greg Frigerio beat Eldon Daniels 6-0, 6-1.
