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The Ashtabula County Basketball Foundation
Hall of Fame Archives |
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Jon Hall, Sr. |
2003 |
JON HALL SR.
(right) and Jon Jr. spent the 2001-02 season together at Berkshire
High School.
Seventh
of a Series...
Hall headed
to the Hall
One of area's
most-respected
coaches part
of ACBF's first
class of inductees
By CHRIS LARICK
Staff Writer
In some
respects, Jon Hall's basketball coaching resume reads like a road map
of Ohio.
From Chesterville (Morrow County) to Conneaut to Kenston to New
Philadelphia to Kent Roosevelt to Solon to Edgewood. Then, quick trips
to Fairport, SS. John and Paul, back to Edgewood, then to and
Berkshire with a couple of stops as an assistant with the Conneaut
girls. As a head coach, he finished (if he is indeed finished) with an
overall 333-214 (.609) won-loss record.
"Each time I left it was always for a bigger position," Hall, who will
join 10 others as the first inductees into the Ashtabula County
Basketball Foundation Hall of Fame on April 6, said.
"It would seem like I would get an itch and had something else to
prove. I always tried to make sure I would take over a program that
wasn't winning. It was a great challenge but it kept me young, kept me
abreast of (the players).
"Sometimes it was difficult on my family. But I never went anywhere
without their say-so. My wife, June, always supported me and I never
left a place because I had to."
Hall took up the game at Kent State High School in Kent, playing tough
defense as a guard and leading his team in assists. When he graduated
in 1954, he went to Elon College (now Elon University) in Elon
College, N.C., where he had hopes of making the basketball team.
"They had an excellent team there," Hall said. "They went to the NAIA
tournament two of the four years I was there.
"I became close friends with the basketball coach, Doc Mathis, (and)
worked with him a lot in physical education classes and with
basketball. He was a great fella, did a lot for me then."
Hall's connections, which also included Bill Sudeck and Frank
Spechalski, the head coaches at Case and Western Reserve respectively,
provided him great aid in his career, including recommendations for
jobs.
"They were big influences in my life," Hall said. "They took care of
me in the fifth grade.
"Frank was one of the organizers of the U.S. Sports Academy in Mobile,
Ala., where my son, Jon, and Jay Corlew got their master's degrees.
Frank was the big man on campus. He was able to influence (schools)."
Thanks to his good recommendations, Hall was able to get a high school
head coaching job right out of college, taking the reins at
Chesterville High School in Morrow County, not far from Mount Gilead.
"We won the league championship one of my two years there," Hall said.
"Then I went to Conneaut and served under Andy Garcia for three years
as assistant football and assistant basketball coach."
The Spartans had a couple of good teams while Hall was there,
including a couple of the best guards he ever had ("next to my son")
Hall emphasizes, Bob Naylor (a junior) and Tom Ritari (a sophomore).
"We also had some really good shooters, one of the best pure shooters
I've been associated with, Tom Naylor. Garcia was a great experimenter
and we got along well. It was like being a co-coach. He was willing to
listen any time.
"We spent a lot of time together. I did most of the scouting and he
sent me to clinics."
After three years at Conneaut, Hall landed the head coaching job at
Kenston, where he would spend one of his longest coaching stints, nine
years.
"They hadn't had a winning season for years," Hall said. "I had some
exciting teams there. We went to districts at least three or four
times. My goal was to have a good defense. I played all man-to-man
then and had some good ballplayers there, too."
Hall's team was Chagrin Valley Conference champion in 1970 and 1972
and made it to the regionals in 1972 where it lost to Poland, 82-54.
That was the last time Kenston won the CVC, according to Jon Hall, Jr.
The Bombers had seasons of 19-4 and 18-3 during Hall's tenure.
In 1972, New Philadelphia, a Division I school with a perennial losing
record, lured Hall away from Kenston.
"I was at New Philadelphia for two years and we went to districts both
years and won the Cardinal Conference championship while I worked on
my master's at the University of Dayton," Hall said. In his two years
at New Philly, Hall went 17-5 and 17-4 and recorded its first winning
season in 19 years.
In 1975, Kent Roosevelt called Hall. That job was attractive because
he was returning to his hometown, Kent, where he was supposed to be
reunited with an old friend, Harold Andreas. But Andreas retired from
high school coaching and took a job with Bobby Knight, as his
assistant at Indiana.
"He was an excellent basketball man," Hall said of Andreas. He was
Bobby Knight's assistant at Cuyahoga Falls, where Knight coached
before he went to Army.
"I never had a problem getting jobs," Hall said. "I always had good
tutelage."
"That program was a shambles," Jon Hall, Jr. said. "When Dad got it,
they went 3-16, 8-13 and 10-11 and won their first sectional in abut
eight years. They lost to Central-Hower in the district semis."
Kent Roosevelt had been suffering with losing seasons, too. Ritari,
who had accompanied Hall to Kenston and would again to Solon, was his
assistant from 1975-78. At Solon for the 1978-79 season, Ritari and
another assistant got riffed after the basketball team went 11-8.
"I didn't think I wanted to stay there," Hall said. It was clearly a
loyalty issue with him.
Meanwhile, in 1979 Hall ran into Ed Batanian, athletic director at
Edgewood and another who will be inducted into the Hall of Fame on
Apr. 6.
"He was talking to me to come to Ashtabula," Hall said. "He talked me
into coming to Ashtabula, where I've been ever since."
The Warriors went 20-3 Hall's first year, led by his son, Jon Jr. at
point guard and center Jeff Cicon, then 13-8, 8-13 and 6-15.
"That was probably the best group of individuals I've had," Hall said
of his first team at Edgewood, "probably the best I've seen as a team.
They had great leadership with my son Jon and the big guy, Jeff. Jon
played point guard and those two guys got along with each other. Jeff
did the scoring and the inside play and Jon was the leader. If they
had the three-pointer than, Jimmy Welty would have been a prolific
scorer.
"They hadn't won in a number of years and wanted to win. I was lucky
enough to have Mark McKinney and Bart Kanicki, plus one of the great
sixth men, Greg Kolasinski. Bob Frey and Jay Corlew came off the
bench. It was a great bunch."
Hall went into administration after the 1982-83 season, first at
Braden, then at Edgewood High School. Al Goodwin took over the
Warriors and did a good job. Then, Edgewood hired Dick Heath to
replace him. Heath had a good year his first season, taking the
Warriors to the regionals in 1990-91, went 18-4 in 1991-92 and won a
second straight sectional championship, then went winless (0-21) in
1992-93. Hall returned to coach the team again between 1993 and 1995,
going 12-10 and 14-9 and notching two sectional championships.
"The first year, they were coming off an 0-21 year," Hall said. "I had
a great ballplayer, Ryan Ball. He was one of the greatest scorers I'd
had, really blossomed and was willing to be coached."
Hall also coached Fairport one season, going 11-11 in 1995-96, and had
one season at SS. John and Paul (4-17), but doesn't really like to
talk about those seasons.
"That was different," he said. "That was just something to do to fill
time."
But he classifies his one-year stint at Berkshire in the 2001-02
season differently.
"Last year, Berkshire called in October, saying their coach had
resigned and asking me to go there. I took Jon along as my assistant.
It was a great year. (Jon) is one of the most knowledgeable basketball
people I know. The people of Berkshire were fantastic.
"But I couldn't take the drive. I had forgotten what energy it took to
be a head coach. They were really good to us and I wish Jon had
continued."
Between his one-year stints at those smaller area schools, Hall became
Ritari's assistant with the Conneaut girls team. Though it was a role
reversal for him, since Ritari had always been his assistant, Hall has
found he likes coaching girls.
"They wanted to have fun, but they're people who pay attention; they
think I'm the grandfather.
"I've been fortunate to have people like Tom as assistants. I've had
Al Goodwin and Joe Prugar my last two years at Edgewood. They're three
of the best assistants I've had because they're loyal and they willing
to work hard.
"I would never have been so successful without the great help, the
people around me, going back to Andy Garcia. You have to be loyal to
people, then they in turn will be loyal to you. When I came here (to
Edgewood), they wanted me to do some coaching, then said if an
administration job came up, they'd be willing to look at me. Jerry
Peterson and I have been good friends ever since. Then one of the best
superintendents I've worked for is Rich Markwardt at Berkshire.
" I can't remember a kid I didn't care for. I couldn't have done it
without my wife. My son, Jeff, is one of the best defensive players
I've ever had."
When Jon Hall Jr. isn't teaching fifth grade at Kenston Middle School,
he's doing radio broadcasts of high school games on WFUN.
"Jon has said there's too many politics in coaching and he loved doing
the radio work," Hall said. "He found another way he can be around
(high school basketball). I would have really liked it if Jon and Jeff
could have coached together."
Jeff currently works for Metropolitan Bank, soon to be Sky Bank. He
keeps in high school basketball by officiating boys games.
Hall's one daughter, Jodie, was a cheerleader, first at Edgewood and
later at Bowling Green State University. She's now a second-grade
teacher at Chestnut Elementary School in Conneaut and is married to
Spartans football coach Ken Parise.
But Hall gives the biggest share of the credit to his wife, June.
"Now and then, I have
to tell her she's not the coach," Hall joked. "After 45 years, she's
learned a little bit about the game, too. She's become a basketball
junkie, too.
"Basketball's kept me young. Every year I got older, but the kids were
the same age."
Of his selection to the Hall of Fame, Hall said, "I'm quite surprised
and honored to be named. I think it's a good step for basketball. The
Foundation should certainly be commended for doing it."
File
JON HALL (right) and Al Goodwin pose in this photo, taken on
Nov. 20, 1979, at Edgewood High School
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