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Dick Walls

2026 Inductee

2026

Dick Walls

Dick Walls established himself as one of Miami University's most dominant players during his three-year career from 1951-53, earning the rare honor of having his #84 jersey retired in 1995. The 6-foot-7", 260-pound center's impact was immediate and sustained, leading the RedHawks in both scoring and rebounding all three seasons while helping guide Miami to conference championships his final two years.

Walls' statistical accomplishments remain impressive decades later. A first-team All-Mid-American Conference selection in both 1951 and 1953, he led the conference in rebounding (14.3) as a sophomore and swept both scoring (21.1) and rebounding (14.4) honors as a senior. He currently ranks 28th in career scoring at Miami with 1,124 points and holds the second-best career rebounding average in school history at 14.0 per game.

His dominance on the boards is further evidenced by owning three of the top seven single-season rebound totals in Miami history, including 333 in 1952—fourth all-time. Walls also posted the second-highest single-game scoring performance in school history with 44 points against Western Reserve in 1952.

Following graduation, Walls continued his basketball career with the Goodyear Wingfoots in the National Industrial Basketball League before embarking on a successful executive career with Goodyear. His athletic excellence was recognized posthumously when Fort Recovery inducted him into its Athletic Hall of Fame as part of the 2007 Charter Class.

Dick Walls passed away on December 18, 2005.

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