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The Ashtabula County Basketball Foundation
Hall of Fame Archives |
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Joe Shantz |
2008 |
He
loved Andover
Fifth of a series...
By KARL PEARSON
Staff Writer
Joe
Shantz can definitely identify with the adage, "The grass is always
greener on the other side."
For five
seasons, Shantz was the toast of Andover and the small communities
around it that made up the consolidated Pymatuning Valley Local
School district for the things he accomplished with the Laker boys
basketball team. In that time, he took over a group of boys who were
just in the beginning stages of getting acquainted with each other
from small high schools like Williamsfield, Richmond and Pierpont
and molded them into a terrific program.
In just his
second season at PV, Shantz powered the 1961-62 Lakers to a 22-2
record and a berth in the Class B regional semifinals before they
lost to Berlin Hiland at Canton Fieldhouse. It was only the eighth
team in Ashtabula County basketball history to reach that level.
As it
turned out, only six other county boys teams have reached the
regional tournament since. No PV teams in the years after that until
this year's team, coached by Jeremy Huber, were able to top that, or
equal it, for that matter.
That wasn't
the last of the fine teams Shantz had at PV after that. In fact, he
had three quite respectable teams after that high-water mark.
But human
nature hit Shantz, at that time just 34 years old, and he decided he
wanted to test him self at bigger schools that presented more
challenges. So he moved off after the 1964-65 school year to Warren,
Pa., oddly enough to a team that those 1961-62 Lakers had beaten on
its path to glory.
He never
quite caught the magic he had at PV again. It didn't happen in his
venture into Pennsylvania basketball, nor in a later stop in the
1970s at Liberty High School in the Youngstown area. After a stint
there, he dropped out of basketball coaching and never went back.
The
77-year-old Shantz was on hand at Canton Fieldhouse during the joy
ride Huber's Lakers took the community on during its run to the
Division III regional championship game. Although he still lives on
his 10-acre lot in Farmdale, he admitted he followed PV with
interest. No doubt, as the scene unfolded again at Canton Fieldhouse,
his thoughts roamed back to those glory days in Andover.
He also
freely acknowledged, that in the clear view of hindsight, his
decision to leave PV was a very poor one.
"Oh man, I
was dumb," Shantz said emphatically. "Looking at it now, I had it
made at PV. That was a dark spot in my life."
It was a
bad decision for his entire family, including his late wife, Sylvia,
whom he lost after 46 years of marriage in 2005, and their four
children, Scott, David, Sherrie and Connie.
"We loved
it in Andover," Shantz said. "All four of our children were born
while we lived there.
"We lived
right across the street (from what is now PV Primary School). We had
a nice home, I think we were well-liked and we loved all the people.
(Leaving) was just a bad choice. I have no qualms about saying
that."
The folks
at PV have not forgotten Shantz, either. He is still considered
something of an iconic figure, especially by people like the leader
of that 1961-62 team, Bob Hitchcock, who would eventually follow him
as coach. Shantz and the members of his great team received quite a
reception on Dec. 21, 2007 with Hitchcock's 22-1 team from 1987-88
and the 2007-08 team when they were saluted in a big celebration at
the school.
"My coach
at PV my freshman and sophomore years was Glenn Niday, but when
Coach Shantz came in, we had to prove ourselves to him," Hitchcock
said. "I think there was a pretty seamless transition from Coach
Niday to Coach Shantz.
"I believe
he was a player's coach. He wanted us to be classy, disciplined and
well behaved, and I think we were. That's had even more impact on me
as the years have passed."
Now, Shantz
is being recognized on an even grander stage, joining Hitchcock and
another star player, Paul Freeman, in the Ashtabula County
Basketball Foundation Hall of Fame. That will occur April 6 at the
Conneaut Human Resources Center.
Shantz
still hasn't fully digested that distinction.
"When I
originally heard about it, I didn't believe it," he said. "Those
things were so long ago. This is such an honor."
A statement
he heard long ago has new meaning to Shantz now.
"I was
told, ‘You play real hard for 40 minutes for memories 40 years
later,'" he said. "The impact has grown with the passing years. When
I stop to think about it, they had so much trust in a pretty green
coach all those years ago, I think it's all pretty amazing."
The
early years
Shantz was
born in Pittsburgh, but he and his family moved to the Cleveland
area when he was only 2, eventually winding up in Parma. He
graduated from Parma Senior High in 1948.
"I loved
sports, but I wasn't much of an athlete," he said. "I basically sat
in basketball."
But a
summer job convinced him that was not the life, either.
"My father
got me a job in the steel mills one summer," Shantz said. "I knew
pretty quickly I didn't want to be in industry."
So he
headed off to Ohio State University, not entirely sure what he
wanted to do there, either. A couple circumstances gave him
direction.
"I had a
roommate who was an education major who talked me into trying it,"
Shantz said. "Then, when I thought about it more, I realized it
would be a way for me to get into coaching, too. That really
appealed to me.
"While I
was there, I took a football coaching class with Woody Hayes. It was
really something. I knew I wasn't going to be a football coach, but
I asked a lot of questions. He always said if you had a question,
ask it, and he'd always answer it. He was a great teacher."
In 1953,
Shantz graduated from Ohio State with a degree in elementary and
secondary physical education. He landed a job in the now-defunct
Iberia school system in the Galion and Mount Gilead area. While he
was there, he met his wife.
"She was
from Michigan, and I was actually up at Michigan State working on my
masters degree when we met," Shantz said. "She was a teacher, too,
and was studying there at the time."
Eventually,
they married and moved to an apartment near the schools where Shantz
taught. They stayed three more years, but they both grew restless.
"Sylvia had
grown up near Lake Michigan and she really loved the water," he
said. "Finally, she asked if we could find somewhere where we could
live near a lake. I looked on the Ohio map and saw there was a lake
in Trumbull County (Mosquito) and in Ashtabula County (Pymatuning).
"I
contacted George Morar, the Trumbull County superintendent, and he
got me in touch with Bill Searcy, who was the superintendent of
Ashtabula County schools. He forwarded my information to Bill
Porter, who was the superintendent at PV, and he invited me up for
an interview."
Shantz must
have made an interesting impression.
"I had a
friend who owned a junkyard and he offered to fix up a Cadillac for
me for $500, so I bought it and drove up to Andover," he said. "I
pulled into the yard at Bill Porter's house and he said, ‘I'm not
sure we can afford you because people in Ashtabula County don't
drive Cadillacs.' Of course, he was only kidding."
At PV
Andover
proved just the place for the Shantzes, who soon started building
their family. Other than being near the lake, he found the students
at PV much like his first posting at Iberia.
"I taught
phys ed and a lot of history, which was my minor in college," Shantz
said. "Eventually, I also taught a lot of driver's ed. I was also
hired to coach basketball and baseball.
"My first
year (1960-61) was Bob Hitchcock's junior year and Paul Freeman's
sophomore year. I found out I had a lot of the same type of kids I'd
had at Iberia. I had kids who lived 15 miles away in New Lyme and
sometimes I wondered how they got back and forth to practice, but
they did."
It was a
period of adjustment for the young Lakers, too, but Shantz didn't
change things too drastically from the system Niday had put in
place.
"We still
played tough man-to-man defense and we'd take the break whenever we
could get it," Hitchcock said. "The system Coach Shantz put in
worked well. I think the kids were pretty receptive to his ideas."
Shantz said
his coaching philosophy was derived from a variety of sources.
"When I was
at Michigan State studying, I took a lot from Freddy Anderson," he
said. "But I really tried to learn from everybody. I think everybody
has something they can show you.
"I believed
in pressing, man-to-man defense and running the fast break. We tried
to make the other team play too fast. Defensively, I wanted the
defender to get in the other guy's shirt and stay there."
As much of
an impression as Freeman and Bob Hitchcock made, the latter's
brother, Gordie, caught several people's eye for his leaping ability
and tough inside play.
"I remember
when we played Hiland in the regional, their superintendent came in
raving about Gordie," Shantz said. "They had a big (6-foot-5) center
named Andy Ahijevych who ended up going to Ohio State, but Gordie
played right with him."
It all made
for quite a combination with Roy Brown and Richard "Butch" Woodin,
the other starters, and key reserves like Royce Adley, Rollin
Spellman and the late Danny Paul and Jerry Horton.
The best
thing about his PV teams was the chemistry.
"They all
worked so hard," he said. "Bob was a kid who couldn't run and
couldn't jump, yet he'd end up leading the break and was our
second-leading rebounder. Paul was a great shooter."
Shantz knew
he had a special team in the 1961-62 season when the Lakers traveled
to Warren, Pa. for a game. It even surprised him a little.
"We stayed
overnight for that game, with one of our kids staying with the
family of one of their kids," he said. "We practiced over there on
Friday before the game and Bob sprained his ankle and didn't even
dress for the game the next night.
"Before the
game, I wasn't sure how we'd do, so I just told them to go out and
have fun. Those kids went out and beat Warren. After the game, they
came in razzing me about, ‘Do you think we had fun?'"
More
successful seasons followed that special one. Perhaps, Shantz
admits, it convinced him he was ready for the big time.
"I guess I
thought I was a pretty good coach," he said.
Moving
on
That led
him to accept the offer from the folks at Warren, Pa. to coach
there.
"Their
boosters came to me with an offer and they talked me into it,"
Shantz said about heading there after the 1964-65 season.
But his
teams there never caught fire. In five years at Warren, it just
didn't work.
"We didn't
win there," Shantz said. "I had an assistant coach there that kind
of had it in for me, too. And after a while, I wanted to get back to
Ohio."
George
Morar provided the opportunity at Liberty to succeed Pete Prokop, a
coach with a fine reputation at that school. It was a tough act to
follow.
"Pete had
developed quite a winning tradition there," Shantz said. "I was not
as successful. After five years, I got canned."
Shantz left
teaching briefly after that, but was soon back in education, again
thanks to Morar and Searcy.
"I managed
a gas station for a year," he said. "Then I got an offer to get back
into teaching. The state had started a program of teaching school
bus drivers. George Morar and Bill Searcy got together and set it up
so I taught drivers in a seven-county area, including Ashtabula,
Lake, Geauga and Trumbull counties. I did that for the next 12 years
until I retired in 1990."
During that
period, he and Sylvia bought their acreage in Farmdale in 1978 and
built their home there. With her passing, it has become a bit of a
lonely existence.
"We each
had a tractor and we kind of ran around the property with them,"
Shantz said. "It's not as much fun doing it alone."
All of his
children graduated from Maplewood High School. Three of them and
three grandchildren live in Florida, while one still resides in
Euclid.
The old
fires started to burn again this year when PV athletic director Ross
Boggs, whose younger brother, Bob, played for Shantz, invited him to
attend some of the PV games.
"I got a
chance to relive some old glories," Shantz said. "I really enjoyed
it."
Shantz said
basketball still contains great truths for all generations.
"Where else
can you learn teamwork and how to sacrifice?" he said. "What's
taught in basketball turns out to be a part of life. I hope the
things kids develop from athletics carry over into the lives."
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