Six inductees to be enshrined in USBC Hall of Fame Class of 2026
August 15, 2025

ARLINGTON, Texas – The United States Bowling Congress Hall of Fame will welcome six new members when the 2026 class is inducted April 29 during the USBC Convention in Reno, Nevada.
The USBC Board of Directors elected Michelle Feldman of Auburn, New York, in the Superior Performance category; Marliss Tapp of Portage, Michigan, and Bob Larson of Kenosha, Wisconsin, in the Outstanding USBC Performance category; and Jo Dimond of Columbus, Ohio, Mark Martin of Waterford, Michigan, and Rod Ross of Pocatello, Idaho, in the Meritorious Service category.
The USBC Board of Directors directly elected the class of 2026 as USBC will transition to a new Hall of Fame Committee structure that will determine elections for 2027 and beyond. The new structure creates Hall of Fame Subcommittees with subject matter experts on performance and meritorious service separately.
Here is the Class of 2026:
Superior Performance – Michelle Feldman
Feldman, 49, amassed 12 professional women’s titles in the span of just nine years (1995-2003) on the Ladies Professional Bowlers Tour (now the Professional Women’s Bowling Association) before the LPBT was forced to shut down after the 2003 season.
She continued to compete in the USBC Women’s Championships and the Professional Bowlers Association’s Women’s Series before injuries prevented her from continuing to bowl competitively. Due to those injuries, Feldman was granted a medical exemption in lieu of completing the participation requirement for the USBC Hall of Fame.
Feldman, a right-hander, earned her first title at the 1996 Columbia 300 Delaware Open and also won titles in 1997 and 1998. She collected multiple titles in 2000 (3), 2001 (2) and 2002 (3) when she also garnered Player of the Year honors. Her 12th and final title came in 2003 at the Dallas Open.
During her win in the 1997 Southern Virginia Open, Feldman, then 21, became the first woman to roll a televised 300 game in women’s professional competition.
In addition to her 12 women’s tour titles, Feldman earned two titles on the PBA Women’s Series (2008) and won the Women’s Series Showdown (2010).
Her record in Women’s Championships competition was sterling as well. Feldman collected five wins at the Women’s Championships, beginning with a Classic Team title in 1998. She won two championships in 2003 (Classic Singles and Classic All-Events) and added another Classic Singles title in 2009 when she shot a then-record 816 series. Her final Women’s Championships victory came in 2011 in Scratch Doubles with Aleta Sill.
Feldman’s combination of power, competitive spirit and a knack for rising to the occasion during big moments helped propel her to a hall of fame career.
Outstanding USBC Performance – Bob Larson
Larson, 85, competed in 42 consecutive USBC Open Championships from 1969-2010 and collected four Eagles along the way.
Larson, a right-hander, was part of three Team All-Events champions and also collected a Regular Doubles title.
Two of Larson’s Team All-Events titles came in back-to-back years as part of the Kendor Corp. No. 1 team out of Milwaukee in 1982 and 1983. The 1982 event was held in Baltimore, and the team successfully defended its title the following year in Niagara Falls, New York.
Larson earned his last two Eagles at the 1986 event in Las Vegas. One of those championships came in the form of yet another Team All-Events title as part of the Faball Enterprises No. 1 team from Milwaukee. His other Eagle was a Regular Doubles title with partner Don Cook.
Larson has three other top-five finishes at the Open Championships as he was part of the fifth-place team in Regular Team (1982) and also had a pair of third-place finishes in Regular Team (1985) and Regular Doubles (1996). He finished with a career average just shy of 200 (198.6) at the Open Championships.
Larson adds this honor to previous inductions into both the Kenosha USBC (1976) and Wisconsin State USBC (2003) Halls of Fame.
Outstanding USBC Performance – Marliss Tapp
Tapp, 73, was part of four Women’s Championships winning teams in the span of just eight years (1997-2004).
All of Tapp’s championships came in the Classic Team division with the first of the four coming at the 1997 event in Reno, Nevada, as part of the Contour Power Grips team.
The next three championships would come as part of the vaunted High Roller team that collected titles in 2000 (Reno, Nevada), 2002 (Milwaukee) and 2004 (Wichita, Kansas).
Each of the four winning team totals was more than 3,000, with a high of 3,327 at the 2002 event and a low of 3,017 in 1997. The winning team total in 2000 was 3,234 and 3,320 in 2004.
Tapp, a right-hander, was part of a pair of record-setting teams as the 3,234 total in 2000 marked the first time the 3,200 mark was reached in the Classic Team division. That total stood as the record for just two years until Tapp’s 2002 team became the first to break the 3,300 barrier with a then-record 3,327 total. Tapp’s 2004 team came up just shy of the record, finishing just seven pins short with 3,320. The record was broken in 2006 when the Together Once Again team from North Richland Hills, Texas, rolled 3,350.
Tapp would compete in 30 Women’s Championships in her career and adds this hall of fame honor to her previous inductions into the Michigan State USBC and the Greater Kalamazoo Bowling Association Halls of Fame.
Meritorious Service – Jo Dimond
Dimond’s work and efforts to serve and promote the sport of bowling at all levels, including the national level, have left a lasting impression on those in the bowling industry and inspired others to work for the good of the sport.
Dimond, 77, served three terms on the USBC Board, starting with the 2011-2012 season. Prior to that, she served as a director for the Women’s International Bowling Congress from 2002-2005.
Shortly after the merger of the WIBC and American Bowling Congress to create the USBC, Dimond served on the USBC Restructuring Task Force (2008-2009). Her national service includes time spent on the Nominating Committees for WIBC and USBC and as an original member of the Membership Development and Local Delivery System teams for Bowling Headquarters in the early 1990s.
She has served on the Legal and Legislative, National Policy Manual and USBC Hall of Fame Committees and as chair of the Awards and Recognition committee. Additionally, Dimond served on the Performance Standards Task Force and the Membership Task Force. Simply put, there seemingly isn’t an area of national service that Dimond hasn’t touched.
Dimond has also championed charitable causes and worked on fundraising campaigns for national organizations such as Special Olympics (where she learned sign language to better communicate with the bowlers) and the Bowlers to Veterans Link.
Her service to the sport continues as she currently serves as the Association Manager for the Central Ohio USBC, a position she has held since 2005. She also is the conference coordinator for 63 high schools in central Ohio and is the Ohio High School Athletic Association Central District tournament manager.
Her numerous bowling accolades include the 1997 WIBC Helen Baker Award, the 1996 Ohio Association Manager’s Club Gene Myers Award and the 1995 Buckeye Bowling Writers Mary Jannetto Award.
Dimond adds this induction to her previous honors in the Ohio State and Central Ohio USBC Halls of Fame and the Bowling Centers Association of Ohio Hall of Fame.
Meritorious Service – Mark Martin
Martin’s national service in the sport of bowling dates all the way back to the days of the American Bowling Congress and continued through the decades as he participated in a multitude of committees and task forces, chairing many of them.
Martin, 71, started as an ABC Jurisdictional Associate (1998-2002) and then served as an ABC Director (2002-2005). During the conversion of the ABC to the USBC, Martin served on the all-important ABC (2004-2005)/USBC (2006-2007) Strategic Planning Committees.
In the time frame from 2010-2019, he would serve on, and chair, the following USBC committees: Legal and Legislative, National Policy and USBC Hall of Fame. During that same time frame, Martin also served on the Equipment Specifications and Finance Committees. His expertise in all areas of bowling helped bring an experienced and leading voice to each of these areas and committees.
His national service is rooted in a commitment to the sport on the local and state level. Martin was a director for the Greater Detroit Bowling Association for 10 years (1986-1996) before serving as Executive Director/Association Manager (1996-2022). He was Zone Director for the Michigan State USBC from 1998-2018 and has chaired the Detroit Hall of Fame Board since 2018.
In the state of Michigan, Martin might be best known in bowling circles as creator and operator of the Michigan State Masters and Senior Masters tournaments (2007-2018). He also served as chairman of the Masters Committee since its inception in 2007 through 2018 and as chairman of the Michigan State USBC Hall of Fame Committee (2010-2018).
Martin also served bowling through the media. He was host and/or executive producer of a couple of local television shows that featured and promoted bowling – the Michigan Kingpins/Bowling Showcase (2013-2024) and the Greater Detroit Bowling Bonanza (2002-2004). He’s been an award-winning bowling writer for the Oakland Press (1999-2013), a columnist for the Bowlers Digest (1996-2016) and editor of a monthly bowling newspaper – the Bowling Showcase News (2016-2020).
Martin received the Director of the Year Award from the Michigan State Men’s Bowling Association in 2003. He was inducted into the Detroit Bowling Hall of Fame in 2003 and the Michigan State USBC Hall of Fame in 2016.
Meritorious Service – Rod Ross
Ross, 69, has coached numerous professional and world-renowned amateur bowlers and has helped revolutionize coaching in the sport by developing cutting-edge computer and video training technology that have become industry standards, but it’s his work on the national level with Team USA and Junior Team USA that helps set him apart from most coaches.
Ross’ coaching with the national teams started as an assistant coach with Junior Team USA (2002-2004) and then as Junior Team USA’s Head Coach (2004-2017). He was an assistant coach for Team USA (2007-2010) before assuming the mantle as Team USA Head Coach from 2010-2020.
Under Ross’ leadership as coach of Junior Team USA and Team USA, the teams amassed more than 300 medals (with more than 150 gold) in the following tournaments: Men's and Women's World Championships, World Bowling Youth Championships, World Bowling Junior Championships, Pan American Games, PANAM Elite Championships, World Cup, World Games and PANAM Champion of Champions.
Included in the hundreds of medals in international competition during Ross’ tenure were more than 25 world championships at the adult level, seven gold medals at the Pan American Games and three QubicaAMF Bowling World Cup titles.
From 2010-2012, the Junior Team USA girls, Junior Team USA boys, Team USA women and Team USA men all were the reigning world champions under Ross' guidance.
Prior to his tenure with Team USA, Ross put in the work to become a USBC Bronze-level coach (1991), then Silver (1993) and finally Gold (2000). He also was the coach at the International Training and Research Center during his time as Team USA Head
Coach (2010-2020).
Ross has served on the International Bowling Pro Shop and Instructors Association Board of Directors and has been a presenter at the World Bowling Coaching Conference, iCoach in Finland and at USBC coaching conferences. He’s been a member of the International Bowling Federation-Global Coach Education Working Group and served as chair of the World Bowling Coaching Committee.
He received the Friends of IBPSIA Award in 2017 and received the 2005 United States Olympic Committee’s "Doc" Counsilman Science Award for his work in bowling. The award recognizes a coach who utilizes scientific techniques and equipment as an integral part of their coaching methods or has created innovative ways to use sport science.
Ross adds this hall of fame honor to his previous selections as USOC National Coach of the Year for Bowling (2004, 2010, 2012, 2015, 2019).
Revised USBC Hall of Fame Committee Structure
The new USBC Hall of Fame Committee includes six members, two of whom are Actively Engaged Athletes in order to meet with United States Olympic and Paralympic Committee compliance standards.
Underneath the Hall of Fame Committee are Subcommittees for Performance and Meritorious Service. Each Subcommittee has five members. Members of the Hall of Fame Committee are eligible to chair and/or serve on the Subcommittees based on their subject matter expertise.
Listed below are the newly appointed members of the USBC Hall of Fame Committee and Subcommittees as approved by the USBC Board of Directors:
USBC Hall of Fame Committee
Anthony Colangelo - Chair
Glenda Beckett
Stephanie Dyson
David Haynes
Shannon Pluhowsky
Marci Williams
USBC Hall of Fame Subcommittee – Performance
Johnny Campos - Chair
Mike Aulby (USBC Hall of Fame member, Class of 2001)
Cindy Coburn Carroll (USBC Hall of Fame member, Class of 1998)
Anthony Colangelo (Ex-Officio Guest)
Anne Marie Duggan (USBC Hall of Fame member, Class of 2005)
Dave Husted (USBC Hall of Fame member, Class of 2012)
USBC Hall of Fame Subcommittee – Meritorious Service
Andrew Cain – Chair (USBC Hall of Fame member, Class of 2020)
Darlene Baker (USBC Hall of Fame member, Class of 2024)
Anthony Colangelo (Ex-Officio Guest)
Jo Dimond (USBC Hall of Fame member, Class of 2026)
Mark Martin (USBC Hall of Fame member, Class of 2026)
Jim Zebehazy (USBC Hall of Fame member, Class of 2020)
In 2026, the subcommittees will begin their work advising the main committee on inductee selections moving forward, starting with the Class of 2027.
Including the 2026 class, there are 471 members of the USBC Hall of Fame – 237 in Superior Performance, 132 in Meritorious Service, 55 in Veterans, 25 in Outstanding USBC Performance and 22 in Pioneer. The Veterans and Pioneer categories are no longer active categories.
The USBC Hall of Fame was created in 2005 by merging the former American Bowling Congress and Women’s International Bowling Congress Halls of Fame.
Visit BOWL.com/HallofFame for more information on the USBC Hall of Fame.
The USBC Board of Directors elected Michelle Feldman of Auburn, New York, in the Superior Performance category; Marliss Tapp of Portage, Michigan, and Bob Larson of Kenosha, Wisconsin, in the Outstanding USBC Performance category; and Jo Dimond of Columbus, Ohio, Mark Martin of Waterford, Michigan, and Rod Ross of Pocatello, Idaho, in the Meritorious Service category.
The USBC Board of Directors directly elected the class of 2026 as USBC will transition to a new Hall of Fame Committee structure that will determine elections for 2027 and beyond. The new structure creates Hall of Fame Subcommittees with subject matter experts on performance and meritorious service separately.
Here is the Class of 2026:
Superior Performance – Michelle Feldman
Feldman, 49, amassed 12 professional women’s titles in the span of just nine years (1995-2003) on the Ladies Professional Bowlers Tour (now the Professional Women’s Bowling Association) before the LPBT was forced to shut down after the 2003 season.
She continued to compete in the USBC Women’s Championships and the Professional Bowlers Association’s Women’s Series before injuries prevented her from continuing to bowl competitively. Due to those injuries, Feldman was granted a medical exemption in lieu of completing the participation requirement for the USBC Hall of Fame.
Feldman, a right-hander, earned her first title at the 1996 Columbia 300 Delaware Open and also won titles in 1997 and 1998. She collected multiple titles in 2000 (3), 2001 (2) and 2002 (3) when she also garnered Player of the Year honors. Her 12th and final title came in 2003 at the Dallas Open.
During her win in the 1997 Southern Virginia Open, Feldman, then 21, became the first woman to roll a televised 300 game in women’s professional competition.
In addition to her 12 women’s tour titles, Feldman earned two titles on the PBA Women’s Series (2008) and won the Women’s Series Showdown (2010).
Her record in Women’s Championships competition was sterling as well. Feldman collected five wins at the Women’s Championships, beginning with a Classic Team title in 1998. She won two championships in 2003 (Classic Singles and Classic All-Events) and added another Classic Singles title in 2009 when she shot a then-record 816 series. Her final Women’s Championships victory came in 2011 in Scratch Doubles with Aleta Sill.
Feldman’s combination of power, competitive spirit and a knack for rising to the occasion during big moments helped propel her to a hall of fame career.
Outstanding USBC Performance – Bob Larson
Larson, 85, competed in 42 consecutive USBC Open Championships from 1969-2010 and collected four Eagles along the way.
Larson, a right-hander, was part of three Team All-Events champions and also collected a Regular Doubles title.
Two of Larson’s Team All-Events titles came in back-to-back years as part of the Kendor Corp. No. 1 team out of Milwaukee in 1982 and 1983. The 1982 event was held in Baltimore, and the team successfully defended its title the following year in Niagara Falls, New York.
Larson earned his last two Eagles at the 1986 event in Las Vegas. One of those championships came in the form of yet another Team All-Events title as part of the Faball Enterprises No. 1 team from Milwaukee. His other Eagle was a Regular Doubles title with partner Don Cook.
Larson has three other top-five finishes at the Open Championships as he was part of the fifth-place team in Regular Team (1982) and also had a pair of third-place finishes in Regular Team (1985) and Regular Doubles (1996). He finished with a career average just shy of 200 (198.6) at the Open Championships.
Larson adds this honor to previous inductions into both the Kenosha USBC (1976) and Wisconsin State USBC (2003) Halls of Fame.
Outstanding USBC Performance – Marliss Tapp
Tapp, 73, was part of four Women’s Championships winning teams in the span of just eight years (1997-2004).
All of Tapp’s championships came in the Classic Team division with the first of the four coming at the 1997 event in Reno, Nevada, as part of the Contour Power Grips team.
The next three championships would come as part of the vaunted High Roller team that collected titles in 2000 (Reno, Nevada), 2002 (Milwaukee) and 2004 (Wichita, Kansas).
Each of the four winning team totals was more than 3,000, with a high of 3,327 at the 2002 event and a low of 3,017 in 1997. The winning team total in 2000 was 3,234 and 3,320 in 2004.
Tapp, a right-hander, was part of a pair of record-setting teams as the 3,234 total in 2000 marked the first time the 3,200 mark was reached in the Classic Team division. That total stood as the record for just two years until Tapp’s 2002 team became the first to break the 3,300 barrier with a then-record 3,327 total. Tapp’s 2004 team came up just shy of the record, finishing just seven pins short with 3,320. The record was broken in 2006 when the Together Once Again team from North Richland Hills, Texas, rolled 3,350.
Tapp would compete in 30 Women’s Championships in her career and adds this hall of fame honor to her previous inductions into the Michigan State USBC and the Greater Kalamazoo Bowling Association Halls of Fame.
Meritorious Service – Jo Dimond
Dimond’s work and efforts to serve and promote the sport of bowling at all levels, including the national level, have left a lasting impression on those in the bowling industry and inspired others to work for the good of the sport.
Dimond, 77, served three terms on the USBC Board, starting with the 2011-2012 season. Prior to that, she served as a director for the Women’s International Bowling Congress from 2002-2005.
Shortly after the merger of the WIBC and American Bowling Congress to create the USBC, Dimond served on the USBC Restructuring Task Force (2008-2009). Her national service includes time spent on the Nominating Committees for WIBC and USBC and as an original member of the Membership Development and Local Delivery System teams for Bowling Headquarters in the early 1990s.
She has served on the Legal and Legislative, National Policy Manual and USBC Hall of Fame Committees and as chair of the Awards and Recognition committee. Additionally, Dimond served on the Performance Standards Task Force and the Membership Task Force. Simply put, there seemingly isn’t an area of national service that Dimond hasn’t touched.
Dimond has also championed charitable causes and worked on fundraising campaigns for national organizations such as Special Olympics (where she learned sign language to better communicate with the bowlers) and the Bowlers to Veterans Link.
Her service to the sport continues as she currently serves as the Association Manager for the Central Ohio USBC, a position she has held since 2005. She also is the conference coordinator for 63 high schools in central Ohio and is the Ohio High School Athletic Association Central District tournament manager.
Her numerous bowling accolades include the 1997 WIBC Helen Baker Award, the 1996 Ohio Association Manager’s Club Gene Myers Award and the 1995 Buckeye Bowling Writers Mary Jannetto Award.
Dimond adds this induction to her previous honors in the Ohio State and Central Ohio USBC Halls of Fame and the Bowling Centers Association of Ohio Hall of Fame.
Meritorious Service – Mark Martin
Martin’s national service in the sport of bowling dates all the way back to the days of the American Bowling Congress and continued through the decades as he participated in a multitude of committees and task forces, chairing many of them.
Martin, 71, started as an ABC Jurisdictional Associate (1998-2002) and then served as an ABC Director (2002-2005). During the conversion of the ABC to the USBC, Martin served on the all-important ABC (2004-2005)/USBC (2006-2007) Strategic Planning Committees.
In the time frame from 2010-2019, he would serve on, and chair, the following USBC committees: Legal and Legislative, National Policy and USBC Hall of Fame. During that same time frame, Martin also served on the Equipment Specifications and Finance Committees. His expertise in all areas of bowling helped bring an experienced and leading voice to each of these areas and committees.
His national service is rooted in a commitment to the sport on the local and state level. Martin was a director for the Greater Detroit Bowling Association for 10 years (1986-1996) before serving as Executive Director/Association Manager (1996-2022). He was Zone Director for the Michigan State USBC from 1998-2018 and has chaired the Detroit Hall of Fame Board since 2018.
In the state of Michigan, Martin might be best known in bowling circles as creator and operator of the Michigan State Masters and Senior Masters tournaments (2007-2018). He also served as chairman of the Masters Committee since its inception in 2007 through 2018 and as chairman of the Michigan State USBC Hall of Fame Committee (2010-2018).
Martin also served bowling through the media. He was host and/or executive producer of a couple of local television shows that featured and promoted bowling – the Michigan Kingpins/Bowling Showcase (2013-2024) and the Greater Detroit Bowling Bonanza (2002-2004). He’s been an award-winning bowling writer for the Oakland Press (1999-2013), a columnist for the Bowlers Digest (1996-2016) and editor of a monthly bowling newspaper – the Bowling Showcase News (2016-2020).
Martin received the Director of the Year Award from the Michigan State Men’s Bowling Association in 2003. He was inducted into the Detroit Bowling Hall of Fame in 2003 and the Michigan State USBC Hall of Fame in 2016.
Meritorious Service – Rod Ross
Ross, 69, has coached numerous professional and world-renowned amateur bowlers and has helped revolutionize coaching in the sport by developing cutting-edge computer and video training technology that have become industry standards, but it’s his work on the national level with Team USA and Junior Team USA that helps set him apart from most coaches.
Ross’ coaching with the national teams started as an assistant coach with Junior Team USA (2002-2004) and then as Junior Team USA’s Head Coach (2004-2017). He was an assistant coach for Team USA (2007-2010) before assuming the mantle as Team USA Head Coach from 2010-2020.
Under Ross’ leadership as coach of Junior Team USA and Team USA, the teams amassed more than 300 medals (with more than 150 gold) in the following tournaments: Men's and Women's World Championships, World Bowling Youth Championships, World Bowling Junior Championships, Pan American Games, PANAM Elite Championships, World Cup, World Games and PANAM Champion of Champions.
Included in the hundreds of medals in international competition during Ross’ tenure were more than 25 world championships at the adult level, seven gold medals at the Pan American Games and three QubicaAMF Bowling World Cup titles.
From 2010-2012, the Junior Team USA girls, Junior Team USA boys, Team USA women and Team USA men all were the reigning world champions under Ross' guidance.
Prior to his tenure with Team USA, Ross put in the work to become a USBC Bronze-level coach (1991), then Silver (1993) and finally Gold (2000). He also was the coach at the International Training and Research Center during his time as Team USA Head
Coach (2010-2020).
Ross has served on the International Bowling Pro Shop and Instructors Association Board of Directors and has been a presenter at the World Bowling Coaching Conference, iCoach in Finland and at USBC coaching conferences. He’s been a member of the International Bowling Federation-Global Coach Education Working Group and served as chair of the World Bowling Coaching Committee.
He received the Friends of IBPSIA Award in 2017 and received the 2005 United States Olympic Committee’s "Doc" Counsilman Science Award for his work in bowling. The award recognizes a coach who utilizes scientific techniques and equipment as an integral part of their coaching methods or has created innovative ways to use sport science.
Ross adds this hall of fame honor to his previous selections as USOC National Coach of the Year for Bowling (2004, 2010, 2012, 2015, 2019).
Revised USBC Hall of Fame Committee Structure
The new USBC Hall of Fame Committee includes six members, two of whom are Actively Engaged Athletes in order to meet with United States Olympic and Paralympic Committee compliance standards.
Underneath the Hall of Fame Committee are Subcommittees for Performance and Meritorious Service. Each Subcommittee has five members. Members of the Hall of Fame Committee are eligible to chair and/or serve on the Subcommittees based on their subject matter expertise.
Listed below are the newly appointed members of the USBC Hall of Fame Committee and Subcommittees as approved by the USBC Board of Directors:
USBC Hall of Fame Committee
Anthony Colangelo - Chair
Glenda Beckett
Stephanie Dyson
David Haynes
Shannon Pluhowsky
Marci Williams
USBC Hall of Fame Subcommittee – Performance
Johnny Campos - Chair
Mike Aulby (USBC Hall of Fame member, Class of 2001)
Cindy Coburn Carroll (USBC Hall of Fame member, Class of 1998)
Anthony Colangelo (Ex-Officio Guest)
Anne Marie Duggan (USBC Hall of Fame member, Class of 2005)
Dave Husted (USBC Hall of Fame member, Class of 2012)
USBC Hall of Fame Subcommittee – Meritorious Service
Andrew Cain – Chair (USBC Hall of Fame member, Class of 2020)
Darlene Baker (USBC Hall of Fame member, Class of 2024)
Anthony Colangelo (Ex-Officio Guest)
Jo Dimond (USBC Hall of Fame member, Class of 2026)
Mark Martin (USBC Hall of Fame member, Class of 2026)
Jim Zebehazy (USBC Hall of Fame member, Class of 2020)
In 2026, the subcommittees will begin their work advising the main committee on inductee selections moving forward, starting with the Class of 2027.
Including the 2026 class, there are 471 members of the USBC Hall of Fame – 237 in Superior Performance, 132 in Meritorious Service, 55 in Veterans, 25 in Outstanding USBC Performance and 22 in Pioneer. The Veterans and Pioneer categories are no longer active categories.
The USBC Hall of Fame was created in 2005 by merging the former American Bowling Congress and Women’s International Bowling Congress Halls of Fame.
Visit BOWL.com/HallofFame for more information on the USBC Hall of Fame.