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The Ashtabula County Basketball Foundation
Hall of Fame Archives |
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Tonya Tallbacka |
2006 |
She
stood tall
By KARL PEARSON
Staff Writer
Tonya Eippert has seen this drill before. "My dad has already bought both of the kids a ball," she said.
"Madelyn
dribbles the ball pretty good." Getting the ball in the hands of 4-year-old Madelyn and her
1-year-old
brother, Jackson, as soon as possible is the same regimen Dave
Tallbacka put
Tonya and older brother Tim through when they were the same age at
their
home in Ashtabula's Harbor district. It seems like a pretty good plan, too, considering what it led to
for both of the Tallbacka siblings.
That early training with a ball and a hoop led Tim Tallbacka to
productive
careers at Harbor for Andrew Isco and at Hiram College for retiring
Geneva
boys coach Brad Ellis. It also led him into the coaching realm,
first with
the Mariners, then as the first boys basketball coach at Lakeside
and now to
Brookfield. Tonya Tallbacka also benefited from those days spent playing on the
court in
their driveway. It helped her become one of the few Ashtabula County
players
that can say they scored more than 1,000 points (1,249) and grabbed
more
than 1,000 rebounds (1,168) during their career, in this case from
1998-91
for Mike Hassett's Harbor teams. Basketball opened the door for Dave and Tina Tallbacka's daughter to
travel
extensively for the first time. It paved the way to a brief career
at
Division I Morehead State University in Kentucky before legs that
just
refused to resist injury curtailed her participation in that sport
and
brought her back to Hiram, where she finished her undergraduate
degree and
got back into competitive swimming. It helped her to get pointed toward a legal degree from Cleveland
State
University's John Marshall College of Law. The discipline learned in
basketball was carried forth into a productive career in the
Cleveland law
firm of Thompson, Hine and Flory and in-house legal work with
British
Petroleum-Amoco. Now, she finds those disciplines have applications
in her
life as a stay-at-home mother who still helps keep an eye on her
husband
Tim's ever-expanding MC Sign business, which is scattered throughout
northeastern Ohio.
Those lessons learned three decades ago now have led to an
additional distinction < Ashtabula County Basketball Foundation Hall
of Fame member. At just 33, she will be the
second-youngest person to be inducted into that organization at the
ACBF's
annual banquet April 2 at 6 p.m. at the Conneaut Human Resources
Center. She
trails only Jefferson's Anita Jurcenko Moore, against whom Eippert
played
several times during their high school careers.
It's all rather amazing to Eippert.
"I was shocked and very honored when I was told," she said. "It's
very
surprising to be chosen and really quite wonderful.
"It's nice to be remembered. It makes it even more special to be
inducted at
this time in my life."
When she watches her preschooler Madelyn, who is also into swimming,
gymnastics, cheerleading and dance, working with the basketball
outside
their home bordering the Little Mountain Golf Course in Concord
Township,
the memories come flooding back.
"I was probably about 2 when my dad got the ball and turned me loose
on
Tim," Eippert said. "I remember always wanting to dribble the ball."
Joining the Ashtabula YMCA swimming team when she was 6 was her
first
organized athletic pursuit, but basketball was always there on the
fringes.
"I probably really got started with basketball in fifth or sixth
grade at
Thomas Jefferson Elementary," Eippert said. "Will Petric had a
program after
school. I really enjoyed that.
"I think it was a combination of the influence of my dad and my
brother. My
dad always had me out shooting foul shots and doing all kinds of
jumping
drills. I loved that."
Swimming was forsaken for basketball at Columbus Junior High.
"Basketball took over from swimming in seventh or eighth grade,"
Eippert
said. "Byron Sargent was my junior high coach. He was great."
Volleyball entered the picture when she got to Harbor, playing for
Janna
Oppenheimer and John Roskovics. But basketball was firmly in command
by that
time under the direction of Hassett, now the offensive coordinator
for the
Lakeside football team and an up-and-coming basketball official.
"My freshman year was probably when I first began to realize I could
do
something with basketball," he said. "I had great teammates like
Julie
Pavolino, Diane Acierno and LaToya Scruggs. I really enjoyed the
camaraderie
and learning about teamwork.
"I used to love the Saturday-morning practices (Hassett) used to
have. It
may seem kind of demanding, but we always did something fun
afterward."
Hassett eagerly received Eippert into his program.
"Tonya is by far the best basketball player I ever coached," he
said. "I was
very fortunate she came along when I was still a young coach (in his
fourth
year at age 26).
"Tonya was not a flashy player. She didn't have outstanding speed or
leaping
ability, but she was so fundamentally sound. She was a 6-footer, but
she
could play inside and out."
Although she doesn't remember much of her high school career, one
occasion
early in it stands out that has continued to resonate.
"I remember we beat Jefferson either my freshman or sophomore year
when they
had Ronda Carter," she said.
Rod Holmes, still the girls coach at Jefferson, remembers those
confrontations with Eippert's Mariners.
"I'm glad she's not playing anymore," he said. "Probably the biggest
thing I
remember about her was the time Harbor was playing at Jefferson. We
thought
we had the game under control when all of a sudden, she stepped out
and
starting hitting a bunch of threes. We won the game, but she sure
gave us a
scare. Tonya always seemed to find a way to help keep Harbor close."
Eippert engaged in some wars with Bob Callahan's Edgewood teams.
Though
retired, he still remembers the battle between his Warriors and her
Mariners.
"She was a real strong inside player," he said. "She played with a
group of
girls who played together their whole high school career.
"Tonya was very active around the basket. She could shoot
effectively out to
15 feet from the high, medium or low post. We had Stephanie Ward and
Jenny
Hall playing against her. She had a real nice touch and rebounded
well, too.
She had good hands and could catch the ball well."
Throughout her career, Eippert had to play in pain. She was
constantly
plagued with shin splints, but Hassett and opponents came to admire
how she
played through pain uncomplainingly.
"She played hurt all the time," Hassett said. "I don't know how she
did it
most of the time. She wore braces on her legs all day long by the
time she
was a senior.
" I think they drove her nuts, but she put up with it because she
wanted to
play so much. I put in the top three athletes I've ever coached,
male or
female, in terms of toughness."
Holmes admired her grit, too.
"It always seemed like she played with pain, but you never saw any
quit in
Tonya," he said. "She was a great kid. I knew she always came to
play and
she was always a class act on the floor. She played hard, but there
were no
cheap shots. She was a class player."
Callahan respected her, too.
"She got a lot out of her ability considering her bad wheels," he
said.
Her love for the game and her work ethic were exceptional.
"I remember playing at Madison and we got beat," Hassett said. "When
I got
on the bus, she was crying. I asked her if she gave it everything
she had,
and she said Oyes.' I told her OThen that's all you can do.' I
remember that
more than any winning shot she hit.'"
Hassett used her as example for the rest of his days as the girls
coach at
Harbor and when he continued as the coach at Lakeside.
"I always used to use Tonya as an example," he said. "I used to film
practices back then so I could show films of how she played the
game. I
tried to have the girls emulate her all the time. And she was the
first
Division I-A scholarship player I ever had.
"I'm very proud of what Tonya has accomplished. She's one of the
main
reasons I'ev stayed in coaching. What she's done with her life makes
me so
proud."
Word of her exploits got out quickly, especially after she set a
school
scoring record. By her junior year, she was on the recruiting trail
with her
parents.
"It was all a little overwhelming," Eippert said. "I remember flying
out to
Colorado for one visit.
"But I always dreamed of playing Division I ball. When we went to
Morehead
and I saw the campus, I fell in love with it. It was only seven
hours away
from home, so that was good, too."
Things started out well enough, but problems with shin splints she
had
encountered even in high school became progressively worse.
"They had even taken bone out of my hip before my freshman year,
which did
help," Eippert said. "But I got kicked in the shin in a pickup game
with
some guys after the season and it snapped my shin. I was told I
shouldn't
play basketball after that."
She turned back to swimming, finishing her sophomore year at
Morehead on
their team. She transferred to Hiram before her junior year and
spent her
last two seasons on the swimming team there.
"That turned out pretty good," Eippert said. "I just missed making
the
Division III nationals my senior year by one-100th of a second."
Always an excellent student, she received the Helen Petrosky Award
as
Hiram's top female scholar-athlete. Armed with a degree in
management, she
went to Cleveland State and earned her juris doctorate, graduating
in 1998.
She was in private practice for two years and with BP-Amoco for
another. All
the discipline she had learned in basketball helped guide her
through the
demands of the legal profession, as well as marriage. She and Tim
have been
married for 10 years.
Those disciplines still have applications on the homefront with two
little
children.
"I always thought I'd be a stay-at-home mom," Eippert said. "It's
great. It
definitely keeps me busy."
She's contemplating taking on even more.
"I try to stay up-to-date with legal matters," she said. "I also
usually
look over the contracts that Tim brings home from his business. I'm
still
looking at doing some volunteer work."
There's a pretty good chance she'll eventually be working with her
daughter
and son in their varied activities.
"Basketball taught me how to work together with people to achieve a
goal,"
Eippert said. "It taught me a lot in college just scheduling my
studies and
playing a sport.
"Now, I'm dealing with the schedules of three or four people. The
kids are
involved in a lot of activities, and I want it that way."
Basketball has undoubtedly meant a lot to Eippert and will continue
to do
so.
"I still may not totally realize the impact basketball has had on my
life,
but I'm thankful for what it has given me," she said.
File
TONYA TALLBACKA grabs a rebound for Harbor during a Northeastern
Conference
game against visiting Riverside in Fawcett Gymnasium during the
1990-91
season.
Submitted
photo
TIM AND TONYA EIPPERT pose with their children, Jackson and Madelyn.
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