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The Ashtabula County Basketball Foundation
Hall of Fame Archives |
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Paul Freeman |
2007 |
Paul stood tall
By KARL PEARSON
Staff Writer
"I'm from New England originally," the
62-year-old Freeman said, with a hint of that New England accent
still in his voice. "Our family moved to Richmond when I was in the
fifth grade.
"When I
first got there, baseball was more my game, but I quickly found out
if you didn't play basketball, you didn't fit in. We played
basketball before school, at recess and after school. I found out I
really liked basketball."
The love of
the game was fostered by Richmond principal E.J. Kinleyside, himself
a prominent figure in Ashtabula County basketball for four decades.
"It wasn't
so much about the mechanics of the game as the love of it that he
taught us," Freeman said.
It all
molded an extremely cohesive group by the time they got to high
school and made for great achievements. That group is beginning to
come together again, with Freeman joining Bob Hitchcock this year as
a member of the Ashtabula County Basketball Foundation Hall of Fame.
He will be inducted Sunday at the annual ACBF awards banquet at 6
p.m. at the Conneaut Human Resources Center.
Freeman
expressed shock at his selection, although he really shouldn't have
been surprised.
"It would
be an understatement to say that I was caught off guard," he said.
"I had never given thought to the possibility of going into the Hall
of Fame. Obviously, this is a very much unexpected honor. I'm
honored to be in pretty exclusive company."
His
contributions to Ashtabula County basketball go beyond playing for
those fine PV teams. When he returned to the county from his college
studies, he got into teaching and coaching at Conneaut High School,
learning from ACBF Hall of Famer Andy Garcia at the end of his
coaching career, then assisting Harry Fails, another ACBF Hall of
Famer, with his fine Conneaut teams. When Fails left Conneaut,
Freeman succeeded him as the Spartans' coach for three seasons.
Even though
he moved rather quickly into administration, Freeman also kept his
hand in the coaching realm at the junior high level. That gave him
the opportunity to work with his youngest child, Renee, molding her
into one of the finest girls basketball players PV has ever produced
and sending her on to an equally productive career at Geneva College
in Beaver Falls, Pa., where she is now an assistant coach.
Two county
schools also owe a date of gratitude to Freeman and his wife,
Evelyn, for providing them with four fine athletes and for their
support to those programs. They will celebrate their 43rd
anniversary Wednesday.
Oldest
child Brent was a fine player at Conneaut for Tom Ritari before his
graduation in 1983. Brent and his wife, Tina, who are residents of
Andover, may be sending more fine athletes through the PV system
with sons Adam, 10, and Jared, 7.
Second son
Sean, a 1990 PV graduate, was one of the Lakers' greatest all-around
athletes. He was an outstanding quarterback for Ken Parise and a
member of Bob Hitchcock's 22-1 team in 1988-89 that reached the
district finals and a 1,000-point career scorer. He really found his
niche in baseball, playing high levels of minor league baseball
before illness and injury sidetracked him. He lives in Dorset with
his wife, Laura.
Third son
Kerry was also a fine all-around athlete for PV before his
graduation in 1994 and still lives in Andover. Youngest child Renee,
married to Jason Drake, had the distinction of scoring 1,000 points
at PV before her graduation in 1999 and repeated that in college,
while also being a standout softball player at both schools.
Sports was
always a big thing for Paul Freeman, one of three sons and six
children of the late Ozzie and Charlotte Freeman. He also maintained
his passion for baseball, ran cross country and was good enough in
track to qualify for the state meet in the discus and hold the PV
record in that event for more than a decade.
His five
siblings took various paths. Older brother Dexter was a baseball
player. Dawn, the youngest child, played basketball for ACBF Hall of
Famer Beth Helfer at PV, then took her talents as an outstanding
distance runner to Kent State University. Older sisters Charlotte
and Joyce and younger brother Keith were not athletes.
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