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The Ashtabula County Basketball Foundation
Hall of Fame Archives |
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Al Goodwin |
2008 |
Goodwin
did it all
Seventh of a series...
By CHRIS LARICK
Staff Writer
In
his early years in athletics it could be said that Al Goodwin didn't
build programs so much as polish them.
The 1967
Harbor graduate, who will be inducted into the Ashtabula County
Basketball Foundation's Hall of Fame on April 6, moved from
assistant duties to Edgewood High School's head boys basketball
coach in 1983. Following Jon Hall, a previous inductee into the ACBF
Hall of Fame, he served just three years in that capacity before
moving on to greater responsibilities.
But Goodwin
accomplished much in those three years, including a 47-18 record
(.723 winning percentage), a Northeastern Conference championship
(1983-84) and a selection as the Star Beacon Ashtabula County Coach
of the Year for the 1984-85 season, a year in which Edgewood also
claimed a sectional championship. His Warrior teams went 15-7 (9-5
in the NEC), 18-4 (12-2) and 14-7 (12-2). He deflects much of the
credit for his success to Hall, who preceded him and still, along
with Goodwin, works with the Edgewood basketball program.
"Jon Hall
is the guru of basketball to me," he said. "He taught me how
important the fundamentals are. I learned that we were gonna drill
and do the little things correctly and build on them. He taught me
how to break the game down."
While
serving as head coach, Goodwin kept teaching at Braden Junior High
School, down Route 20 from the high school. He admits not having
contact with the kids at the high school was "hard." In 1986, that
changed when Don Gill retired as Edgewood's athletic director and
Goodwin was asked to replace him.
"I never
looked at taking over that position as particularly difficult,"
Goodwin has said. "I knew I was following two great athletic
directors in Ed Batanian and Don Gill. I knew if I had a problem, I
could always rely on them for advice."
Goodwin
remained as athletic director for 15 years, until he "retired" in
2001. To this day, he keeps active as an educator and coach at
Edgewood, if in differing capacities.
One of the
most important tasks Goodwin took over while athletic director and
maintained beyond that time, was as director of the girls
sectional-district basketball tournament held at Edgewood for 19
years, until the Ohio High School Athletic Association pulled the
tourney from the school two years ago.
"Ed
Batanian (then on the OHSAA's board of directors) asked me to do
it," Goodwin said. "I had great help from Frank Roskovics, Bob
Callahan and Dik Pavolino. We did it for a long time. People enjoyed
it and it helped girls in the area."
The tourney
was recently pulled from Edgewood because the OHSAA deemed teams
could not play tournament games on their home floor.
"The boys
were never allowed to play on their own court," Goodwin said. "But
it was all right. After 19 years I had had enough. It takes its
toll, though I had a lot of good help."
Goodwin
remains active in basketball, serving as a volunteer varsity
assistant. Overall, he has been involved with the sport nearly 50
years, dating back to before his years as a point guard at Harbor,
coached by Ed Armstrong, who will accompany Goodwin into the ACBF
Hall of Fame this year.
"Ed did a
lot to point me in the right direction," Goodwin said of Armstrong.
"He wasn't just my basketball coach. He, Jon Hall, Ed Batanian and
Don Gill — those were special people."
There is a
mutual admiration society between the player and his old coach.
"I was so
blessed to work with a player like Al," Armstrong, who will join
Goodwin in this year's ACBF Hall of Fame class, said. "Over the
years, he was the best point guard I ever had at Harbor. He was like
a coach on the floor for me. I really felt like he was an extension
of what I was thinking."
He gave
plenty of headaches to the opponent.
"Al was the
point guard at Harbor, and I was glad I didn't have to guard him,"
Denny Berrier, one of Goodwin's contemporaries while playing at St.
John, said. "He was their floor general and a very smart player. He
always seemed to find the open man."
Goodwin ran
cross country and played basketball and baseball at Harbor. On the
basketball team, he was joined on the starting team by Mark Andrews,
Dave Dixon, Doug Kalil and John Seferian.
"Seferian
was our post player, about 6-5," Goodwin said. "Dave Dixon was a
pretty good scorer, along with Doug Kalil, Basically, we were four
guards and a post man. We had a couple seniors coming off the bench.
We ran the Auburn shuffle, a four-man rotation. I was a pretty good
ballhandler and a pretty good defensive player."
The
Mariners, who went 7-12 overall when Goodwin was a senior, were led
in scoring by Kalil with 13.5 points a game. Dixon added 9.6 and
Seferian 8.6. Goodwin, who averaged 6.9 points himself, can take
quite a bit of credit for the others' scoring, though, since he
averaged a sterling 7.7 assists per game.
For his
contributions in the three sports he played, Goodwin was named the
recipient of the Johnson-Kinnunen Award as the school's outstanding
athlete, the first non-football player to be so honored.
After
graduating from Harbor, Goodwin planned to attend the main campus of
Kent State University, but had to put those plans on hold when his
mother broke her hip. Instead, he enrolled at Kent State
University-Ashtabula campus, where he played basketball for Don Gill
and Dave Emery. As a junior, he transferred to the main campus, but
has pleasant memories of his two-year stay at the Ashtabula campus.
"It had a
tremendous impact on me," he said. "The people there knew you. There
are a lot of misconceptions about KSU-Ashtabula. It was a good
experience for me."
Goodwin
joined Ron Richards (who will also be inducted into the ACBF's Hall
of Fame on April 6), Riverside brothers Dan and Darrell Dunlap,
Billy Johnson (now Ashtabula County's sheriff), Bob Niemi, Sid
McPaul and others on KSU-Ashtabula's basketball team.
"We had a
pretty difficult league," Goodwin recalls. "Ed Armstrong coached
there. It's a shame they don't have basketball anymore. All the
branches had teams; it was very competitive. We had good basketball
players from all the (area) teams. The Dunlaps and (Ron) Richards
were top players from their schools."
Richards
counts himself fortunate to have been the recipient of a lot of
Goodwin's precision passes.
"Al was all
(Richards' Conneaut teams) could handle when he was at Harbor," he
said. "It seemed like he could run forever.
"Al was
definitely a fantastic ballhandler. He always seemed to be able to
get me the ball. I scored a lot of points at the branch because of
Al."
The summer
after graduating from Kent, 1971, Goodwin married Kathy, whom he had
known since before they were in high school. They have been married
36 years.
"Kathy has
been an unbelievable source of support for me over the years,"
Goodwin said.
Goodwin was
fortunate enough to find quick employment for the 1971-72 school
year, as a sixth-grade teacher at Ridgeview Elementary, where he
stayed 11 years.
"I was a
kid coming out of college and a good opportunity came along," he
said. "In 1971, there were a few more jobs available."
After
serving for a few years as an assistant football coach, Goodwin was
asked by Gill to join his basketball staff in 1974. By the early
'80s he was working with the basketball team under Hall, where he
stayed those three years before becoming athletic director.
In his
years as Edgewood's athletic director, Goodwin established a new
means of working with Armstrong in his capacity as the AD at Harbor.
"Al and I
did were always in communication with each other when we were
athletic directors," Armstrong said. "I think we had a great working
relationship with each other. Al has always been a class individual
and I enjoyed working with him as a part of the City Series and the
Northeastern Conference."
Goodwin has
always been willing to lend a helping hand. His old teammate
Richards can attest to that.
"When I
became head track coach at PV, Al was always around to help with the
big track meets we held there like the Laker Invitational, the
Ashtabula County meet and the (Division II) district meet," Richards
said. "He's always been a tremendous help.
"Al Goodwin
is just a top-shelf guy. He's a very unselfish person. I consider
him a lifelong friend."
Even
in "retirement" Goodwin stays busy. As State Teaching Retirement
System requires, he stayed out 60 days, then became a proficiency
tutor for five years. Then he began working with students who need
to pass the Ohio Graduation Test. He gets paid by the hour and can
continue to accrue retirement benefits.
Kathy
joined Al in retirement from her job with J.C. Penney's recently. Al
enjoys fishing with Terry Melaragno out of Conneaut, mostly for
perch, but sometimes for walleye. Al and Kathy also enjoy camping.
"We've been
camping for 20 years," Goodwin said. "We started with a tent, then
went to a pop-up camper, then to a full travel trailer."
Al has also
taken up a new hobby since retirement, one that allows him to
continue to build and polish. Impressed with one of industrial arts
teacher Greg Stolfer's woodworking creations, Kathy inquired about
it, and Stolfer told her that he'd teach Al how to fashion something
like it.
"I've made
five tables or cabinets," Goodwin said. "I make them for the kids. I
just like to do it. I have a decent shop now and I can do about
anything. Greg Stolfer has taught me a tremendous amount. I never
did any woodworking at all before now."
The "kids"
Goodwin referred to are his and Kathy's two daughters, Kimberly and
Kristi. Kim is married to Kevin Cox and teaches kindergarten at
Rootsville, while Kevin practices law in Canton. The couple live in
Louisville, about halfway between each of their jobs. They have two
sons, Liam, 5, and Ethan, 2.
Kristi
married Aaron Feather and the couple has a son, Mason, who will be 2
in May. They live in North Kingsville, with Kristi teaching
kindergarten at Ridgeview Elementary, where Al got his teaching
start, and Aaron working for Great Lakes Motors.
Larick is a freelance writer from
Geneva.
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