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The Ashtabula County Basketball Foundation
Hall of Fame Archives |
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Bob Walters |
2004 |
What about Bob?
Bob Walters was shooting
star across the basketball galaxy
By KARL PEARSON
Staff Writer
Watch Bob Walters in his prime as a basketball player and you'd
swear shooting came as naturally to him as breathing.
Eventually Walters, who will be inducted into the Ashtabula
County Basketball Foundation Hall of Fame Sunday, would become a
high school and college star with that silky-smooth delivery of
his and earn an invitation for a tryout with the New York Knicks.
But his success never came as easily as Walters made it look.
There were no midget basketball leagues in Ashtabula in his
youth and his first experience with the game came by playing
pickup games on outside basketball courts in elementary school.
Thus armed, he tried to make the basketball team in junior high
school.
"I tried out for the seventh-grade team at West Junior High and
got cut," Walters said. "I went out for the eighth-grade team
and got cut. But they told us we were allowed to practice if we
went in at 6 a.m. They'd leave balls on the floor and let us
shoot."
Ask Walters the secret of his success and he doesn't hesitate.
"I had singleness of purpose," he said.
Singleness of purpose in hand, he tried out for the team again
in the ninth grade. This time, he made it.
"I couldn't shoot a lick," he said. "I could jump and play
defense. Mr. (Bob) Ball (then Ashtabula High School coach) let
me dress for the varsity team as a sophomore. But I didn't
letter as a sophomore."
Walters found a kindred spirit in Gene Gephart, who would become
basketball coach in
"He and I played PIG and HORSE," Walters said. "We spent a lot
of time shooting and I became an adequate player in high school.
But I doubt I was near a 1,000-point scorer."
In Walters' senior year at Ashtabula, he averaged 16 points a
game, starting along with, as Walters recalls, Jeff Ball, Ozzie
Eberle, Wayne Harley and Frank Bush, with Ron Vettel (now Judge
Vettel), Joe Peterangelo (now Joe Pete, Sr.), Rick Holub, George
Keyes, Ray Henson and Bob Bruosta on the bench. Walters was a
starting guard.
"Back in those days, they didn't have a point guard and an
off-guard or shooting guard," he said. "Bob Ball's son, Jeff,
and I were the scoring threats out there in our junior and
senior years.
"Jeff was probably more the driver type. My strength was with
the jump shot."
Since there was no three-point arc in Walters' day, he tried to
shoot from no more than 15-18 feet.
"Bob Ball was a defensive coach," Walters said. "He was strict
in the way he let you play."
The Panthers won 16 games in both Walters' junior and senior
seasons, 15 in his sophomore year. "I really began playing much
better as a junior," he said. "As a senior, I was pretty
successful."
One of his proudest memories of high school was when he broke
the single team record of 29 points, set by his teammate, Jeff
Ball, earlier.
"I scored 31 points with my left arm in a cast from the elbow to
the hand," Walters said. "I always respected Mr. Ball for
leaving me in there to do that — break the record set by his
son."
Walters was recruited by Youngstown State, Kent State and
Baldwin-Wallace. There were things he didn't like about
Youngstown and he got a bit of a brushoff at Kent.
"I went on a campus visit to Kent State and the head coach was
busy playing handball," he said. "That turned me off.
"Baldwin-Wallace was a beautiful campus and treated me nicely.
It was an easy choice."
If it took a long time to establish himself as a scholastic
player, his collegiate career took off like a rocket.
"I started the fifth game of my freshman year and every game
thereafter, 105 games in a row," he said.
He established eight records for the Yellow Jackets, including
leading scorer with 1,840 points, still fourth on the list. He
held that mark for 10 years, until Dean Martin scored 2,062
between 1969 and 1973.
He also held the marks for single-game scoring (47, against St.
Vincent in 1960), most field goals in a game (21), most points
in a season (541), most field goals in a season (224) and
consecutive games started (105). Altogether, he held eight
records at one time.
"I was the ball-handler and shooting guard," he said. "The last
three years, I averaged more than 21 points a game."
Despite his accomplishments, Baldwin-Wallace was not a
successful team. The Yellow Jackets went 7-17, 11-15, 15-13 and
14-12 in his four years, a 47-57 overall mark.
"Seldom did I play with anyone on my team as a starter who was
over 6-3. We competed against Loyola of Chicago in 1962 when
they won the championship. Our tallest player was 6-3. We were
leading in the game and the next thing we knew, we were down 60.
Without a big man, you can't make a go of it."
When he graduated, the Knicks asked him to come in for a tryout
— at his own expense.
"I couldn't afford the trip, so I passed on it," he said. "But I
really enjoyed teaching and coaching. I was quite successful
playing college basketball but between 1963 and 1964 I had a
chance to play in Open Cleveland, the top league in Cleveland. I
realized I could do things well, but I didn't have the foot
speed and got over the disappointment."
Walters continued to play basketball in recreational leagues
when he came back to Ashtabula as a health and physical
education teacher in 1964.
"I played in open leagues for years, probably through the '70s
and into the '80s," he said. "They used to have leagues all
over. We'd go to tournaments. We'd like to go to Ledgemont, at
the old school with a matchbox gymnasium. Big teams would come
in. There were a lot of points scored. We had a lot of fun
running and gunning."
Among the players on Walters' team were Jerry Raffenaud and Don
Condon. He played against Al Bailey, former Spencer and Geneva
coach and a member of last year's ACBF's Hall of Fame class,
though posthumously.
"If we'd played on the same team, we'd probably have a friendly
disagreement about who would take the ball out," Walters said.
"Whoever took it out would never see it again. The two of us
would probably end up scoring 100 points. He was a heck of a
player."
Walters started teaching physical education and health at
Ashtabula in September 1964. Bob Ball, then the boys basketball
coach, told him there were two coaching positions open, that
Walters could take his choice of them and Ball would take the
other.
"It was golf or tennis," Walters said. "I like running. That's
how I got involved in tennis. Mr. Ball took golf."
Forty years later, Walters is still the tennis coach, though
it's now at Lakeside since the consolidation of Ashtabula and
Harbor. He's claimed about 370 victories and Northeastern
Conference championships in 1977 and 1978, the only years that
Geneva has not won or shared the title.
"I had never played tennis when I took the job," Walters said.
"I had to learn the sport. I never allowed players to call me
‘Coach' until about 1970. I was always Mr. Walters because I
didn't know much about it. Once I got a fairly good handle on
it, the kids could call me ‘Coach.' "
When Walters took over the basketball reins from Gephart in
1971-72, he found many of his basketball players also on his
tennis squad.
"There was a great transition from basketball to tennis then,"
he said. "I don't get basketball players playing tennis
anymore."
Walters served as freshman boys coach his first two years, then
became varsity assistant. In 1971, Gephart went into
administration, leaving the head boys basketball coach job to
Walters.
"I tried to get him to stay one more year, but he left and I
took over," Walters said.
Bob Ball and Gephart are the people who influenced him the most,
he said.
"Mr. Ball probably set the wheels in motion for me to be the
type of coach and teacher I turned out to be. That's where I
learned that discipline is extremely important. When he talked,
coaches listened and players listened.
"I didn't realize how important that was until I got away from
that environment. The type of coach and teacher I became was
probably determined then."
Walters added that his eventual coaching philosophy and style
became a combination of Ball's emphasis on defense and his own
run-and-gun game.
"I tried to blend them all together," he said.
Of Gephart, Walters said, "Being so closely related in method
and philosophy made it easy for me to work within that
framework. The beauty of having Gene Gephart in my life is that
he turned out to be a very good friend as well."
As Ashtabula High School's basketball coach, Walters took the
Panthers to NEC championships in the 1972-73, 1977-78 and
1982-83 seasons. Over a 21-year span, interrupted when John
Higgins took over the team from 1987-89, he posted a 209-221
record as coach.
The 1977-78 team was probably his best, posting a 18-3 record
and going all the way to the district finals before being
eliminated from the tournament. That squad consisted of starters
Tom Hill, David Benton, Deora Marsh, Perry Stofan and Lou
Murphy, with Stanley Ball, Scooby Brown, Robin Thomas, Hank
Barchanowicz, Jewel Hanna, Roger Ball and Tony Powell.
"Our margin of victory was about 20 points a game," Walters
said. "That was by far, without a doubt, my best team. Also, it
was the most surprising team. We were an average team the year
before.
"Those kids worked all summer and came back in the fall in great
condition. Tom Hill came up to me and said, ‘We're going to be a
very good team and win it all.' I had not seen them play during
the summer. I was amazed at their improvement. Those kids were
all athletes."
After making a shambles of the league race that season, the
1977-78 team made it to the district finals before meeting
powerful St. Joseph's, featuring Clark Kellogg.
"We had our game plan together," Walters said. "We knew we could
run with them.
"In the first half, they had Clark Kellogg playing outside. That
helped immensely. Two or three minutes into the third quarter,
David Benton sprained an ankle and was out the rest of the game.
We lost by four points.
"In the second half, Clark Kellogg had 24 points and ended up
with 27 rebounds. Deora (Marsh) had to guard him. The kids hung
in there. They had a lot of character, those kids."
That group was responsible for Walters' second championship. His
second team as head coach, the 1972-73 squad that included Mike
Osborne, Bobby Benton, Fred Bussey, Bill Miller, Mike Brown, Jim
Holley, Bill Marsh, Marvin Jones, Bill Chapman, Ed Gierth and
Kim Featsent, took his first title.
In 1982-83, the Panthers won a third championship for Walters.
That team included Terry Thompson, Terence Hanna, Kevin Hanna,
Dave Graf, Louis Taylor, Carlos Aponte, Isaac Scruggs, Gary
Chapman, John Marks, Dale Ball, Eric Orth and Terry Slay.
The 1985-86 team didn't come close to winning a championship. In
fact, that group went 2-19. But Walters still considers it one
of his favorite teams.
That squad consisted of Mark Gray, Jeff Graf, Melvin Thompson,
Chris Gray, Bob Sholtis (whose son played for Geneva the past
three years), Mike Delano, Rusty Ezell, Clarence Carlton, Ed
Parker, Corey Allgood, Adrian Mathers and Kilan Baker
"We did not have a kid 6-feet tall or over," he said. "But they
worked as hard as any team I ever coached. They worked hard
during games and at practices. It was so encouraging and
rewarding seeing kids never give up.
"They went 21 games like that. They gave everything they had,
were the best they could be. Because of their size and the fact
they couldn't shoot very well (38 percent as a team), it was a
rewarding effort to coach them. You don't have to win
championships to realize how hard kids work."
In 1980, Walters was elected to Baldwin-Wallace's Hall of Fame.
He considers himself a very fortunate man.
"I feel I was treated by my players as well as any coach or
teacher could ever hope to be treated," he said. "They showed me
such great respect and did things with such enthusiasm and
effort. I loved every member of every team and they showed love
in return. Maybe we didn't win as many games as I'd like to, but
it wasn't because of their lack of effort.
"I'm happy God put me where he did — at Ashtabula and now at
Lakeside. It's been very rewarding and a wonderful experience."
Walters retired from coaching basketball after the 1993-94
season.
"When you reach a point in time to retire from anything, you
know it," he said. "I was ready to retire from coaching. I
stayed two more years as a teacher." He continues to coach the
tennis team at Lakeside.
He feels fortunate to have had the assistant coaches he did —
Tom Carr, Tom Hill, Lynn Altonen, Jim Hood, Jerry Raffenaud and
Adam Holman.
Asked about entering the ACBF Hall of Fame, Walters said, "I see
it as not just based on whether it was as a player or coach. It
could be a combination of what I was able to accomplish as a
player, especially when I got out of high school. I had some
longevity in coaching and some very strong teams. I think they
took that into consideration in deciding that I do belong as a
member of it.
Walters' wife, Cynthia, is a teacher at Lakeside High School. He
has three children, Amanda, 32; Ryan, 29; and Amber, 28. Amanda
and her husband, Johnny, are both in education. They have two
sons, Noah, 5, and Jacob, 3.
Ryan and Celeste Walters have two boys of their own, Matthew, 6,
and Bailey, 2. Amber is single. |