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The Ashtabula County Basketball Foundation
Hall of Fame Archives |
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Fred Hirsimaki |
2007 |
Family affair
By KARL PEARSON
Staff Writer
"I felt I had to work twice as hard
at it," he said. "I did it on my own so nobody could say my
brother gave it to me.
"I think that helped make me an
even better athlete. I've always worked hard at anything I did.
I think that's why I've had the success I had."
Fred Hirsimaki always knew whatever
his relationship was with his brother on the court, he could
rely on Charles Hirshey for help.
"We had a great relationship," he
said. "Our relationship was like most brothers. I could call him
up and we'd talk about anything."
Even though Charles Hirshey passed
away in 1998 at age 84, the two brothers will be linked again on
April 1 when Fred Hirsimaki joins his brother in the Ashtabula
County Basketball Foundation Hall of Fame at the annual ACBF
banquet at the Conneaut Human Resources Center. Hirshey was
inducted into that body in 2005.
Hirsimaki is definitely pleased
about that distinction.
"I was there when he was inducted,"
the 82-year-old Findlay resident said. "I'm kind of surprised to
be recognized like that after all these years. I was kind of
shocked when I was told. I appreciate that I am being
remembered."
The brothers will not be the only
Rowe Vikings in the ACBF Hall of Fame after this year. Bob
Puffer, a guard on the teams that included Hirsimaki, is also a
part of the Class of 2007.
"Bob was a junior when I was a
senior," Hirsimaki said. "He was a good dribbler. He was a good
boy."
Hirsimaki's early basketball
exposure came from another of his brothers, Martin, who still
lives in Conneaut in assisted living at the Villa at the Lake.
In addition to Charles, they had five older brothers - Aarro,
Eli, John, Raymond and George - two older sisters - Sylvia and
Helen - and a younger brother, Ted. George lives in New York.
"Martin was three years older than
me," he said. "We played a lot at home."
As he went through the elementary
grades, Hirsimaki found another outlet to hone his skills in the
thriving church league basketball scene in the area.
"When I was in fourth, fifth and
sixth grade, I played for the Finnish Lutheran Church," he said.
"I was put in with the older boys."
His basketball training continued
when he reached the junior-high level at Rowe, although it was
very informal. Meanwhile, his brother had already begun working
as a history, social studies and physical education teacher and
was already establishing a basketball juggernaut that would
eventually compile a 172-38 record (.819 winning percentage) in
nine seasons, average 19 wins a year over that period and never
won less than 19 games.
Hirsimaki remembers sitting in many
of his brother's classes over the years. Hirshey also had a
reputation as a dynamic educator and took the same approach in
the classroom that he did with his basketball team or equally
excellent baseball and track squads.
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