Northwest Notes: Sept. 1, 2022
Coeur d'Alene Press | UPDATED 2 years, 4 months AGO
McDonald to be inducted
into Vandal Wall of Honor
University of Idaho President Scott Green and athletic director Terry Gawlik announced that Ray McDonald will be inducted into the Vandal Athletics Wall of Honor on Saturday, Sept. 17 when the Vandals open their home football schedule against Drake University. A banner with McDonald's name and number 32 jersey will be officially unveiled in a ceremony during the game, joining five other Vandal greats high along the west wall of the Kibbie Dome.
"We are thrilled to induct Ray McDonald into the Vandal Wall of Honor," said Gawlik. "When you look at what he was able to do at Idaho, both in football and track & field, it is clear that he was one of the most outstanding athletes in our celebrated history. Then, when you talk to our alumni who were fortunate enough to know him or watch him play, there is a reverence and a pride amongst Vandals for not just what he accomplished, but who he was. We cannot wait to properly recognize him and enshrine his name and number in the Kibbie Dome forever."
Inducted into the Vandal Athletics Hall of Fame in 2008, "Thunder Ray" stormed through opposing defenses for three seasons on the gridiron for Idaho. A terrific combination of size (6-4, 240 pounds) and speed (9.9 second 100-yard dash), McDonald was bigger than most linemen he faced and faster than most defensive backs. McDonald was a two-time All American (1965 and 1966) at Idaho, rushing for 2,916 yards and 39 touchdowns in his career, which includes an NCAA-best 1,329 yards in 1966. His 132.9 yards per game average in 1966 is an Idaho school record that has yet to be threatened.
"I remember the big picture of Ray hanging in the entrance of Memorial Gym when I was a kid following my grandfather around campus during his time as athletic director. Ray seemed larger than life," said U of I President Scott Green. "I can't think of anyone more deserving of having his number forever memorialized at our university."
McDonald remains the highest-drafted Idaho player ever and was the first Vandal to ever be picked in the first round of the NFL Draft, as the Washington Redskins took him 13th overall in 1967.