Henry Callahan (1957–1982) was a player and ambassador of Ultimate and helped bring the sport to the University of Oregon, formally establishing a team in 1978. In 1982 he was murdered during a robbery while working in Boulder, Colorado. Both the The Callahan Award, given each year to the best male and female college Ultimate players, and the Callahan Rules of Ultimate are named after him.
There is also a move named after Callahan in Ultimate (Frisbee) called a Callahan, supposedly because he was very fond of doing it. It is the act of catching a disc on an interception in the opponent's end zone by a defensive player for a point. A Callahan in Ultimate is a rare occurrence, because it requires a defender to intercept, rather than simply block, a pass within the end zone the offense is defending. Under normal circumstances, the offense does not start a possession within their own end zone, so opportunities for a Callahan are limited to situations where the offense has been forced into their own end zone (either by a good pull or defensive pressure) or backward passes near the end zone.
Henry Callahan was also a disc (frisbee) golf player and his family donated money to have a memorial disc golf course installed at Bevier Park in Waukegan, Illinois. This nine hole course was completed in 1992. In 2008 this course was expanded to 18 holes with some holes in Henry Callahan Memorial Park across the street from the original course and park under the direction of the Waukegan Park District with cooperation from Discontinuum Disc Golf Club.
External links
- Article about Henry Callahan
- Waukegan Parks hompage
- Discontinuum Disc Golf Club hompage
- Henry Callahan at Find a Grave
| This biographical article related to American sports is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)




