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University of Rochester Athletics

UNIVERSITY OF ROCHESTER YELLOWJACKETS
Seth Hauben and Libbie Tobin
Hauben (L) and Tobin (R) are the seventh and eighth Rochester representatives in the UAA Hall of Fame.

Hauben, Tobin Selected to 2026 UAA Hall of Fame Class

4/7/2026 3:42:00 PM

Two standout student-athletes from the University of Rochester were named as inductees into the 2026 class of the Richard A. Rasmussen UAA Hall of Fame, as announced by the University Athletic Association on Wednesday afternoon.
 
Men's Basketball player Seth Hauben '05 and women's soccer and women's basketball player Libbie Tobin '94 were the two honorees in this, the second class of the UAA Hall of Fame. The pair joins six others with URochester ties that were named to the inaugural class in 2025.
 
Overall, 16 women and men were named to the 2026 class, representing the sports of men's basketball, women's cross country/track & field, softball, men's and women's swimming, men's tennis, men's track and field, and volleyball. Five of the eight current UAA institutions were represented in this year's class, along with a coach from Johns Hopkins, a former institutional member of the conference.
 
Hauben had a standout career with the men's basketball program at URochester, being a six-time All-American over two seasons in 2003-04 and 2004-05, including five being First Team honors. As a team, he aided in the Yellowjackets reaching the Division III Final Four in both 2001-02 and 2004-05 seasons, finishing as national runner-up in 2004-05. Additionally, Hauben received six All-Region honors, was named NABC East Region Player of the Year twice, ECAC Player of the Year Twice and was the DIII News Division III Player of the Year in 2004-05.
 
He earned First Team honors in the UAA three times, including being named conference Player of the Year in both his junior and senior season, while also being selected as Honorable Mention All-Association and Rookie of the Year as a first-year.
 
The power forward finished his career third all-time in scoring at the University (now fourth) with 1,713 points, while also ranking first in team history with 1,113 rebounds. He ranks highly in several other statistical categories at the URochester, including games played/started, field goals made, field goal percentage, free throws made, blocks and steals.
 
Hauben also received CoSIDA Academic All-America honors twice in his career, was a UAA All-Academic selection and Josten's Award Finalist in 2004-05. He was selected as a URochester Lysle 'Spike' Garnish Scholar-Athlete and named the Louis Alexander Alumni Award recipient as a senior at the University.
 
Tobin's exploits were mostly on the soccer pitch, as the 1994 graduate was named an NSCAA All-American for two seasons, earning Second Team honors in 1992 and Third Team accolades in 1993. She was a three-year All-State honoree and two-time All-Region selection. Statistically, she was the teams leading scorer in 1991 and 1993, despite being a defender for most of her career.
 
Within the UAA, Tobin received four All-Association honors in soccer, being a three-time First Team selection. She was UAA Player of the year in 1992 and 1993. The team also saw great success, earning four straight UAA titles from 1990 through 1993. URochester also competed in four straight NCAA Tournaments, reaching the Division III national championship in 1991 and quarterfinals in 1993.
 
On the hardwood, Tobin was First Team All-UAA in 1993-94 as a senior, aiding in the Yellowjackets earning the ECAC Upstate New York tournament title. She was a Frist Team All-State honoree, and also was on URochester's squad that competed at the New York State Tournament in 1992-93.
 
Tobin was a Lysle 'Spike' Garnish Scholar-Athlete at Rochester as a senior and was voted as the Merle Spurrier Award recipient as well, honoring the top female student-athlete at the University.
 
A committee formed with representatives from each UAA institution and the Association office nominated and selected individuals to be included in the latest class. To be eligible as a student-athlete, a person must have earned their undergraduate degree from a UAA institution, competed for at least three years in the UAA, and graduated at least 10 years ago. Coaches and administrators become eligible once they have retired from a UAA institution.