Box named RLC 2023 Alumnus of the Year

    Posted by Megan McKinley on Nov 15, 2023 10:09:23 AM

    In Alumni, Foundation, MyJourney

     INA, Ill. (Nov. 15, 2023) — Glenn Box is a Warrior. He’s a workhorse competitor — a committed professional who aims to one-up himself every day and motivates others to charge in with him. And he’s not afraid to take risks. Hands down one of the smartest risks he took was deciding to pick up the phone and call Tim Wills at Rend Lake College. The college is honored to name Box its 2023 Alumnus of the Year.
     
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    Box’s journey to head of Lady Redhawks basketball at University of Miami (OH) has passed through every level. In the usual manner, his coaching journey started out as a player. But it wasn’t at RLC.      

    He started on scholarship with one of the Warriors’ conference opponents, but eventually stepped away. He was working and still going to school, but only played when he could find free time.

    “I knew I should be playing. I needed to play,” Box said.

    He decided to contact Coach Wills at RLC.

    Wills was in his third year as the head coach at RLC and hadn’t had a winning season yet. He was on the recruiting trail and looking for players who could help change that. “To be honest, I didn’t recruit Box,” said Wills, RLC Athletic Director and its 1996 Alumnus of the Year. “He called to ask if he could come to RLC to play on the basketball team … as a walk-on.”

    “Rend Lake was my lifeline,” Box said. “If Coach Wills didn’t answer the phone … I never would have played basketball, probably never would have continued my college career. It would have been very difficult for me to achieve much, had he simply not picked up the phone when I called.”

    Box said he had an instant connection with Wills. Two days after meeting, Box was set on transferring, he said. He had saved up just enough to pay for one semester. After a few months, Wills awarded him a scholarship. The next season, Wills and the Warriors logged one of the best years in program history.

    “It became evident early on that he had talent,” Wills said. “He became our starting point guard on one of the most successful teams in the history of Rend Lake College’s Men’s Basketball. He was an integral part of a team that won 20 games and was ranked as high as #5 nationally.”

    “It was one of those situations where I just had to keep moving forward,” Box said. He always believed he was destined to accomplish great things, and he pushed himself to achieving those dreams through taking risks and overcoming fears that otherwise might have held him back.

    The impact RLC left on Box’s life was a positive one. It gave him the tools he needed to shape his future and a sense of community being on a team again during a difficult time in his life. On the student athlete questionnaire Box filled out more than 28 years ago, he wrote that he believed one of his greatest strengths was his leadership skills and that a goal for himself was, “To win a national title and finally gain respect that I feel I deserve as a ballplayer.”

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    Box had plenty of confidence and drive. What he needed was a shot. After graduating from RLC in 1996, he went on to earn a bachelor's degree in criminal justice from Southeast Missouri State in 1998. After SEMO, Box headed back to Cairo and started coaching at his old high school. He returned to RLC in 2002 as an assistant to Wills.

    As an assistant coach, Wills said he saw in him the natural talent, desire, and determination to become an outstanding basketball coach. “Since that time, he has continually moved his way up within the college coaching ranks and has been a major part of many successful teams and programs,” he added. “As great a coach he is, he is truly an even better human being. He was one of the most well-liked and respected people on our campus during his tenure as a player, coach, and employee of RLC.”

    In 2005, Box made the switch to coaching women’s basketball. He took over the head coaching position for the Lady Warriors and it’s no secret why he was gone after just three seasons. He had 19 wins in his first year and RLC suddenly caught the attention of programs across the country. A 24-8 campaign the next year carried the Lady Warriors to their first Region XXIV Finals, where they came one possession short of a national tournament berth. Ranked Preseason No. 20 in 2007-08 — what would be his final season coaching at RLC — they lived up to the ranking. Rend Lake started out 16-3, but season-ending injuries and the loss of its leading scorer resulted in a 21-11 mark. Nevertheless, Box’s meteoric debut had him rising toward the top of coaching recruiting lists.

    He joined Western Michigan in 2008 where he was an assistant for two years before heading to Saint Louis University from 2010-2012, and then Akron for two seasons where the Zips played in the 2014 NCAA Tournament. He returned to SLU for two more years and then spent seven seasons at Indiana — the last four as associate head coach. During his tenure at IU, the Hoosiers made the NCAA tourney five times with two Sweet-16 appearances and one Elite Eight finish (2020-21). Finishing 28-4 this past season, the Hoosiers won the Big Ten for the first time in four decades and were a No. 1 seed in the NCAA Tournament, losing by a bucket to University of Miami (FL) in the second round. Box was named Miami-Ohio’s 10th head coach on May 8.

    He says it is a rewarding career just as much as it is challenging, and he continues to learn more about himself as a person and a coach with every team he joins. “You’re a psychologist. You wash clothes. You mop the floors. You do scheduling. You’re their academic advisor. You do everything for your students. You accrue a lot of experience in a lot of different areas. And it has been great.”

    He understands the responsibility of being a coach for student athletes. He knows he is not just their coach, but their mentor, just as Wills was to him. Box will continue to call Wills when he is in search of professional advice, he said.

    When he was approached by the University of Miami (OH) to be the head coach for the women’s basketball team, he was extremely surprised, he said, adding that it was an honor, but also extremely emotional. It gave him the opportunity to reflect on everything he and his family had been through to get to this point.

    “Box continues to represent the best of Rend Lake College, and we are honored by his accomplishments as a proud alumnus of our institution,” said RLC President Terry Wilkerson.

    “Glenn Box is a standout Alumni of Rend Lake College,” said Amy Newell, Assistant Director of Development for the Rend Lake College Foundation. “What impresses me about Box is he has taken his passion, skills, and life lessons he learned at RLC and used them find success and make a positive impact on others. We are honored to add him to the list of accomplished RLC Alumnus of the Year and to celebrate his accomplishments at the 44th RLC Foundation Annual Dinner.”

    “The RLC Foundation could not have chosen a better individual to be the 2023 Alumnus of the Year than Glenn Box,” said Wills. “I am proud of his accomplishments and proud to call him a great friend!”

    Whether it’s at his first gig back home in Cairo or his new role at Miami-Ohio, Box will always be a Warrior, warning the world not to sell him short.

    If he could talk to his younger self — that kid who was so hungry to make a name for himself — Box said he would tell him “keep moving forward. There’s more than where we came from. There’s more than Southern Illinois. The whole world is yours. You just have to keep going.”

    Box will be recognized as 2023 Alumnus of the Year at the 44th Annual RLCF Dinner on December 7th at 6:00 p.m. It will take place at the Event Center on RLC campus in Ina. The Annual Dinner is one of the many ways the Foundation raises money for the school and student scholarships.

    Tickets to the RLCF Annual Dinner cost $60 per person or $480 for a table of eight and must be purchased by November 17th. To purchase tickets, contact the RLC Foundation at 618-437-5321, Ext. 1324 or foundation@rlc.edu.

     


     

    Alumnus of the Year

    2022 — DEAN MERDER ('84), Santa Clause, Indiana
    President & CEO at TrueScripts Management Services

    2021 — CLINT McDONNOUGH ('73), Pinckneyville
    Retired Managing Partner, Ernst & Young, LLP

    2019 — CHAD W. KERN ('91), Whittington
    President & CEO, Schirm USA

    2018 — CURTIS SMITH ('82), Benton
    (Awarded posthumously)
    RLC Basketball legend and local coach, Correctional Officer - IL Dept. of Corrections

    2017 — BOB KELLEY ('69), Mt. Vernon
    Retired Director of Marketing & Public Information, Rend Lake College

    2016 — RODNEY CABANESS ('90), Sesser
    Co-Owner, Black Diamond Harley-Davidson

    2015 — DR. BRIAN KERN ('94), Ewing
    Orthopedic Surgeon, Orthopedic Institute of Western Kentucky

    2014 — JAMES "JIM" MOUNIER ('72), Caledonia
    Senior Vice President & Wealth Management Advisor, Merrill Lynch

    2013 – TRISH REED (’87), Scheller
    President, GM, UpTime Parts LLC

    2012 – PETER JOHNSON (’85), Mt. Vernon
    Instrumentation Engineer, NASA

    2011 – RON SMITH (’74), Benton
    Assistant Basketball Coach, SIUC; Entrepreneur

    2010 – HON. MIKE D. McHANEY (’77), Salem
    Judge, Fourth Judicial Circuit of Illinois

    2009 – JIM MUIR (’97), Sesser
    Publisher, Southern Illinois Sports Connection, Marion Living & Saluki Illustrated; Radio Broadcaster

    2008 – RANDY RUBENACKER (’78), Dahlgren
    Co-Owner, Rubenacker Farms/4R Equipment, McLeansboro

    2007 – BRAD GESELL (’80), Benton
    Co-Owner, Gesell’s Pump Sales & Service Inc., Whittington

    2006 – CHRISTOPHER JOHNSON (’98), Valier
    Distribution Center Manager, Walgreens, Mt. Vernon

    2005 – BILL SHIELDS (MVCC ’58), Mt. Vernon
    Assistant Professor/Workforce Ed Coordinator, Southern Illinois University – Carbondale

    2004 – LINDA L. SANDERS (’82), Mt. Vernon
    Warden, Federal Correctional Complex, Forrest City, AR 

    2003 – DONALD H. DAME (’72 / ’76), Sesser
    Vice President/Human Resources & Government Relations, Freeman unity Coal Mining Company

    2002 – ROSE M. MYLES (’68), Mt. Vernon
    Manager / Network Services, AT&T

    2001 – CARL ROWLEY (’77), Sesser
    Team Leader / Building Management Systems, Panduit Corporation

    2000 – HOLLY McCANN (’76), Benton
    Acting National Director, Internal Revenue Service Office of Interest and Penalty Administration

    1999 – LAIRD D. WISELY (’71), Benton/Mt. Vernon
    (Awarded posthumously)
    Owner, Therapy Resource Associates & Physical Rehab Works

    1998 – MARK MICHALIC (’78), West Frankfort
    1999 ICCTA CO-“ALUMNUS OF THE YEAR”
    Special Agent, U.S. Department of the Treasury/Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms

    1997 – JOHNATHAN W. THOMAS (’71), Sesser
    CEO (Executive Dean), Ivy Tech State College, Madison/Lawrenceburg, IN

    1996 – TIM WILLS (’84), Benton
    Associate Professor of Health/A.D./Coach, RLC

    1995 – COURTNEY COX (’72), Benton
    Partner, Hart and Hart Attorneys-At-Law, Benton

    1994 – FLO DUDLEY (’76), Bonnie
    Retired elementary school teacher
    Mt. Vernon City Schools District 80

    1993 – SEN. J. BRADLEY BURZYNSKI (’79), Benton
    Illinois State Senator / 35th District, Sycamore

    1992 – CINDA CHULLEN (’79), Benton
    Technical Manager, NASA’s Johnson Space Center, Houston, TX

    1991 – CRAIG M. SINCLAIR (’74), Mt. Vernon
    Vice President of Advertising, The Walgreen Company

    1990 – GLORIA J. SLOAN-REEL (’74), McLeansboro
    Product Brand Manager, Phone-Poulenc Ag Company, Research Triangle Park, NC

    1989 – KEVIN DAVIS (’72), Mt. Vernon 
    Comptroller/Treasurer, Rend Lake Conservancy District

    1988 – CAROL DILLEY-JAUDES (’75)
    Stage actress, St. Louis, and New York

    1987 – DR. MARY KAY WITGES BENGTSON (’71), Scheller
    Staff/Athletic Physician, N. Carolina State U.

    1986 – DR. GARY R. SWEETEN (MVCC ’60), Ina
    Minister of Christian Growth, College Hill Presbyterian Church, Cincinnati

    1985 – DR. HALE E. RYDER JR. (MVCC ’58), Mt. Vernon
    Professor of Economics/Director of Graduate Studies, Brown University

    1984 – DR. LESLIE JOHNSON (’74), Thompsonville
    Family Practitioner, Mt. Vernon (now in Peoria)

    1983 – ROBERT L. BROWN (MVCC ’66), Mt. Vernon
    Guidance Counselor, Mt. Vernon Township H.S./Part-time Rend Lake College GED Instructor

    1982 – DAVID N. JUNKINS (’71), Mt. Vernon
    Social Worker, Illinois Dept. of Children & Family Services