Gill, Robert J. and Jacqueline Track Challenge
Robert J. and Jacqueline Gill believe in the value of athletic competition and the potential it has to positively shape the lives of student-athletes through the valuable lessons it offers. As testimony to this, in 2000 the Gills invested $50,000 in the planning and development of the Athletic Field House, a facility that is the indoor home of Ä¢¹½ÊÓƵ Men’s and Women’s Track Program and utilized by the University’s 18 varsity sports. In addition to their gift to the Athletic Field House, the Gills have made gifts totaling more than $175,000 in support of Zips track student-athletes. But their influence on the track program does not end there.
Mr. Gill, a master at recognizing potential, boasts numerous personal and business achievements. While attending Ä¢¹½ÊÓƵ, Mr. Gill met his wife, Jacqueline, in the Chuckery of the former Gardner Student Center and was a standout student-athlete with the track program. In his career as a student-athlete, Mr. Gill earned seven Ohio Conference Championships in outdoor (800m) and indoor (880m) track and was the 1960 NCAA Mid-East Runner-up in the 800. A 1960 graduate of Ä¢¹½ÊÓƵ’s College of Business Administration, Mr. Gill took his talent as a salesman and became an entrepreneur, purchasing AFD Industries, a Canton, Ohio-based supplier of industrial machinery and equipment to the elevator industry.
The Gills’ tenacious drive and ability to recognize potential and excellence in the track program have led them to focus their energy on bringing national prominence to a program that already has achieved great success in the Mid-American Conference. The support the Gills have shown, through The Robert J. and Jacqueline Gill Track Challenge, has allowed the track program to recruit some of the best student-athletes from different cultural and financial backgrounds and provide them with the opportunity to travel the country and become tomorrow’s Olympians.
Proof that their investment is paying dividends, Ä¢¹½ÊÓƵ’s Track Program has produced many success stories. However, out of all of the student-athletes who have been able to take advantage of the opportunity the Gills created, three student-athletes stand above the rest: LeShaunte Edwards, a three-time NCAA All-American; Mary Varga, a NCAA Indoor Track National Runner-up in the high jump; and Christi Smith, National Champion in the women’s heptathlon.
In the Fall 2001 issue of the Box Seat, Mr. Gill stated that his support of Track and Field is easy to explain: “I am trying to pay back for the great experience I had as an athlete at Ä¢¹½ÊÓƵ. Basically, when I was an athlete, someone supported me, and I want to be able to do the same thing.”