Dr. Don Shondell, Volleyball Pioneer, Hall of Fame Coach, and Founder of Ball State Men’s Program, Passes Away

Dr. Don Shondell (center) cuts the ribbon to the 19,000-square-foot Dr. Don Shondell Practice Center on the Ball State University campus on July 18, 2018. Joining Dr. Shondell are family members, Ball State President Geoffrey S. Mearns, athletics director Beth Goetz, members of the Ball State Board of Trustees, current Ball State women’s volleyball head coach Kelli Miller Phillips, and former Ball State men’s volleyball coach Joel Walton. Photo provided by Ball State University.Dr. Don Shondell (center) cuts the ribbon to the 19,000-square-foot Dr. Don Shondell Practice Center on the Ball State University campus on July 18, 2018. Joining Dr. Shondell are family members, Ball State President Geoffrey S. Mearns, athletics director Beth Goetz, members of the Ball State Board of Trustees, current Ball State women’s volleyball head coach Kelli Miller Phillips, and former Ball State men’s volleyball coach Joel Walton. Photo provided by Ball State University.

By Ball State Marketing & Communications—

MUNCIE, Ind. – Dr. Don Shondell, an iconic figure in the sport of volleyball who founded the men’s program at Ball State University, passed away Tuesday night. He was 92.

“Don Shondell was a friend to Ball State, an icon in our Muncie community, and a pioneer in the sport of volleyball,” Ball State University President Geoffrey S. Mearns said. “Through his extraordinary contributions to our university and the sport, his unmatched legacy lives on in so many of our current and past student athletes. We are deeply indebted to Dr. Shondell for the impact he made on so many lives – as a coach, teacher, and friend to us all.”

Dr. Shondell, a 1952 and 1956 Ball State graduate, had an illustrious career that was long and varied as a coach, professor, and author. He formed the first men’s club volleyball team at Ball State in 1960, and would spend the next four years working tirelessly to make men’s volleyball a varsity sport. The team earned varsity status in 1964, and over his 34 seasons at the helm of the program, Dr. Shondell accumulated a career record of 769-280-6 (.732), affording him the second-most wins by a head coach in NCAA men’s volleyball history. His 769 career wins are the most by a Ball State coach in any sport.

From 1964 through 1998, Dr. Shondell received Coach of the Year honors eight times from the Midwest Intercollegiate Volleyball Association (MIVA), the conference of which he was a co-founder and first president. Dr. Shondell led Ball State to 19 regular season MIVA titles, 12 MIVA Tournament championships, and 13 NCAA Men’s Volleyball Championship tournament berths.

Dr. Shondell served as the president of the United States Volleyball Association (USVBA) from 1979-80, was inducted into the Ball State Athletics Hall of Fame in 1983, and was the first recipient of the Mikasa Lifetime Achievement Award in 1989. The USVBA awarded Shondell with the William G. Morgan Award in 1989 and the Dr. Harold T. Friermood Award in 1992. In 1996, Dr. Shondell was inducted into the International Volleyball Hall of Fame.

On July 20, 2018, Ball State officially opened the Dr. Don Shondell Practice Center—a practice gymnasium containing two regulation-size courts designed specifically for the volleyball and basketball programs, in addition to a training room for taping and treatment, two team meeting rooms, and a video room.

“Dr. Shondell’s impact on the Ball State Athletics Department was transformational in every role he served,” said Beth Goetz, director of athletics at Ball State University. “His amazing legacy will never be forgotten, and we are forever grateful that current student-athletes, alumni, and future Cardinals will experience that impact every time they walk into the Dr. Don Shondell Practice Center for generations to come.”

Dr. Shondell is survived by his three sons and one daughter: Steve, a former women’s volleyball coach at Ball State and girl’s volleyball coach at Burris Laboratory School; Dave, the head women’s volleyball head coach at Purdue University; John, who is Dave’s assistant at Purdue; and Kim.