Fourth of a series...
When
talking to a great athlete, especially a man, about the person who
had the greatest impact on making him into the success he became,
he'll often pinpoint his father or another significant male
relationship for getting him headed in the right direction.
To be
sure, Larry Lattimer's father, Carl, who died in 1988, had a huge
influence on his development. But when Lattimer reflects back on it,
he singles out his mother, Betty, for the credit in being the
driving force behind any athletic success he and his siblings
enjoyed.
"I
was very fortunate to have a very sports-minded mother," Lattimer
said of his 82-year-old mother, who lives nearby even today and
still remains very active. "That started out right from the crib.
"Don't get me wrong. Dad played a lot of basketball and supported
us, too, but he was so involved in farming."
Their
mother was the enabling force in their hoop dreams.
"All
three of my brothers and I were playing basketball all the time,"
Larry said. "We had a hoop up on our garage and one in the barn.
We'd play outside in good weather, then we'd move into the barn in
the winter.
"We
played so much out in the barn that we'd take my mother's table
lamps out there so we could see at night," Lattimer said. "She
didn't mind as long as we didn't break them."
Even
though athletics was pretty much a forbidden thing for girls of
Betty Lattimer's era, her son believes she would have been a very
fine player in her own right.
"Even
though she's 82, I bet she could still make foul shots better than I
could," Larry said with a chuckle.
The
license that Betty gave her sons paid off in a big way. Larry, the
oldest of the four by three years, owes a particular debt of
gratitude to his mother because the skills he has bore fruit in his
selection into the 2009 Hall of Fame class for the Ashtabula County
Basketball Foundation. His enshrinement will take place March 29 at
the Conneaut Human Resources Center.
"My
mother was the one who really supported us athletically," he said.
It
all works out to be a bit of an early celebration for Lattimer.
"I'll
be 62 on April 7," he said. "It will be a nice early birthday
present."
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Lattimer was definitely an impact player in the two seasons he
played at Pymatuning Valley High School after the family moved
to Andover from the Urbana-Bellefontaine area in Champaign and
Logan counties.
In Andover, young Lattimer encountered Joe Shantz, PV's Hall of
Fame coach who was in his final two seasons with the Lakers
before he graduated in 1965. He fit right in, starting 40 games
for the Lakers. That was particularly true during his senior
year, averaging 20.2 points over that period.
That was good enough to twice earn Class A All-Ohio recognition.
Eventually, he helped PV reach the Class A district tournament
in Canton. In his senior year, Lattimer and his teammates also
won the Great Lakes Athletic Conference championship over teams
like Grand Valley, Berkshire, Cardinal and Kirtland.
Despite his credentials, Lattimer finds it almost hard to
believe in his worthiness for induction.
"I can honestly say this is a very large honor," he said. "My
brother, Ronnie (who still lives in Ashtabula) mentioned that
Sid McPaul (one of their old PV teammates) had mentioned it to
him. I owe a big debt of gratitude to Sid.
"It's quite an honor and quite a surprise to be among so many
awesome players."
He is particularly thrilled to be joining Shantz in the Hall of
Fame and to be connected to the rich past of PV basketball with
players like Hall of Famers Bob Hitchcock and Paul Freeman. |

LARRY LATTIMER of
Pymatuning Valley
shows off the form that helped him become
a two-time All-Ohioan during his days as a Laker. |
"When
I first went out for the team, Coach Shantz always emphasized the
history and tradition of the program," Lattimer said. "The names of
those guys came up a lot. That meant a lot to me.
"I
had a lot of respect for Coach Shantz. I'd describe him as a very
quiet volcano. He always seemed like he was ready to erupt, but he
always seemed to have the right thing to say to the right player at
the right time."
All
the lessons the Lattimer brothers learned out in front of their
garage or in the barn profited the younger members of the family,
too. Lenny, three years Larry's junior, was another PV standout,
while Ronnie, who was five years younger than Larry, and Randy, who
graduated from PV in 1972, also played basketball for the Lakers.
Getting organized
The
Lattimers grew up in what is now known as the Graham school system.
If that sounds familiar, its high school is St. Paris Graham, which
recently won its ninth consecutive Division II state wrestling team
championship and set a scoring record in the process.
But,
as Lattimer points out, the Falcons are more than just about
wrestling this year.
"They're undefeated and the No. 1 (boys) basketball team in Division
III in the state," he said. "They're still alive in the tournament."
Despite all the time in their yard, the first organized basketball
Lattimer remembers playing was at Rosewood Elementary from the sixth
through eighth grades.
In
his freshman year, he entered Graham, gradually moving up the ladder
from the freshmen team to the junior varsity as a sophomore.
"The
best advice I ever got was from Don Hall, my freshman coach,"
Lattimer said. "He realized I was a pretty good outside shooter. He
told me I needed to move around the arc, so he taught me the
around-the-world drill. I think it made me an even better outside
shooter."
Moving north
But
before his junior year, the Lattimers ended up moving to Andover.
"Being a farmer, my dad got the opportunity to be a farm manager for
a man from Cleveland who owned a 500-acre farm outside Andover,"
Larry said. "I didn't even know where Andover was. I looked it up on
a map and couldn't find it. And back then, there was no real easy
way to get there."
Naturally, there were concerns when he showed up at PV High School.
Those fears were quickly put aside when he found out the students at
PV came from very similar backgrounds.
"The
most important thing was when we moved from Graham to Andover, we
never felt like we were the new kids in school," Lattimer said. "I
think they really embraced us there."
There
was plenty of other talent on Shantz's squad.
"I
played with Clint Schertzer, Bob Boggs, Moses and Al Cooper, Jerry
Hitchcock, Tom Roach, Steve Kume and Bill Dick," Lattimer said.
"They were great teammates."
That's because Shantz insisted on it.
"Coach Shantz kept pushing us in the right direction," he said. "He
totally stressed teamwork. You had to be unselfish to play for him."
The
Lakers didn't possess overwhelming size.
"Bob
Boggs was the biggest at about 6-3," Lattimer said. "Clint Schertzer
was probably 6-feet. I was only 5-10 1/2 and I still played forward.
Mo and I kept running a lot of cuts and the give-and-go."
Looking back, it probably took his junior year for the Lakers to all
get on the same page. Circumstances didn't help.
"We
only finished 8-11," he said. "We moved up from Class A to AA. We
were only three or four boys over.
"We
did pretty well against the teams that were more or less our size. I
remember we went down to McDonald my junior year when they were
ranked in the top five in the state. Their best player was
all-state, but Bob Boggs shut him down. I scored 32 and we beat them
in their house."
PV
dropped back to Class A in his senior season, according to Lattimer,
but it still took the Lakers a while to get clicking.
"We
were kind of on a rollercoaster ride early in the season," he said.
"By Christmas, we were only 4-4 and had just lost to a real good
Fairport team. We also scrimmaged Ashtabula right around then, which
was tough."
But
those experiences seemed to light a fire under the Lakers.
"We
won 10 games in a row after that and finished up the regular season
14-4," Lattimer said.
The
Lakers really picked it up over the last couple weeks of the season.
"We
broke Kirtland's 24-game winning streak," Lattimer said. "Then Grand
Valley beat them right after that."
That
set up a battle for the GLAC championship between the Mustangs and
Lakers at PV.
"We
won that game by four or six points," Lattimer said. "Moses Cooper
stole an inbounds pass, got fouled and hit two free throws in the
closing seconds to clinch it.
"I
only had 17 points. I did have six or seven assists. I made the
Plain Dealer Dream Team. I was pretty proud of that."
That
launched PV into tournament play. Just getting out of the sectional
tournament was a battle in those days.
"We
won three games in the tournament to get to the district," he said.
"We were pretty proud of that."
But
the end of the road came at the district tournament in Canton.
"We
played Kent State High School," Lattimer said. "They had at least
four players that were 6 feet or more, and we couldn't handle that
size. You always remember the last one."
Lattimer points to all kinds of opponents with whom he did battle.
"I
remember playing Tom Booth and George Duplay from Geneva," he said.
"Mickey Zigmund was a great player at Jefferson and I remember
trying to play (7-footer) Jim Gilbert at Ashtabula. He showed us how
to play above the rim. Tom Naylor was a great player at Conneaut,
too."
After PV
But
college basketball was no more than an afterthought to Lattimer.
"I
went to work with my dad on the farm," he said.
A
couple years after graduation, he received his draft notice at the
height of the Vietnam War. That prompted him to enlist in the
Marines. It still got him to Southeast Asia, but on his own terms.
"I
went to Vietnam, but at least I didn't have to be a ground pounder
(in the infantry)," Lattimer said. "I ended up being an aviation
ordinance worker, equipping the aircraft with bombs and rockets."
Lattimer stayed in the Marines through 1978, eventually getting back
to stateside. But he grew weary of the politics in the military and
went another direction.
By
that time, his parents and most of the rest of his family, with the
exception of Ronnie, moved back to their roots in Champaign and
Logan counties.
"I
came back home to Bellefontaine and went to work for Honda," he
said. "I worked there for 25 years as a production control
scheduler, which is working out things like model, type and color of
the cars they're working on at that time. I retired in 2004."
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His brothers are at various distances from Lattimer. Lenny
resides in Virginia. Randy lives in Spring Hill, about 10 miles
from Larry.
He has four children from a previous marriage. Melissa lives in
Florida, Steve is in Tennessee, Terri still resides in
Bellefontaine and Todd is a business in Kuwait.
For the past 15 years, he has been married to Joni. He has two
stepdaughters from that marriage, Casey and Cheri.
What retirement?
Just because he's
out of the business rat race, though, Lattimer isn't sitting
idle. |

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"We
raise horses," he said.
But
he's never been too far removed from sports.
"I
coached my daughters in softball and basketball when they were in
high school," he said.
It
wasn't strictly about football for Lattimer when he was at PV.
"I
played football for Ernie Simpson on the first football team there,"
he said. "It wasn't too hard. I just handed the ball off to
(Ashtabula County Football Hall of Famer) Tony Barnes."
The
day after he retired from Honda, Lattimer received a huge flashback.
"I
heard a knock on the door and opened it to find Ernie Simpson
there," Lattimer said with a laugh. "He'd been living down around
here for quite some time."
Together, they have formed a football alliance geared toward picking
up the shattered pieces of small programs in their area and trying
to restore them to health.
"We
started out at Lima Perry and were there for two years," Lattimer
said. "We went 1-9 the first year and 6-4 the second. Then we went
to Bradford last year and went 1-9, but it didn't go very well
there."
So
they packed their bags and headed to Ridgemont High School in Mount
Victory, a Division VI school, to begin the 2009 season. They are
hoping to turn the Golden Gophers around. So far, Simpson and
Lattimer believe they have a receptive audience.
"They
have 66 boys in the high school," Lattimer said. "We had 41 kids at
our first meeting. We're hoping to have at least 30 players so we
can have a reserve team, too. That would be about half of the male
student body, and that would be pretty good.
"I'm
the assistant head coach and defensive coordinator. Counting Ernie
and me, we have four guys on the staff."
While
he's wrapped up in football these days, his thoughts never stray far
from his basketball memories.
"I
think basketball and sports in general have given me a good respect
for the individual," Lattimer said. "I've learned you have to have
help and support.
"I
think back (to PV) and think that I had to trust the guy that was
running down the floor with me to succeed. When I got to the
Marines, I had to trust the guy who ended up in the foxhole next to
me."
The
issue of trust kept coming up after he got back to the U.S., too.
"At
Honda, the whole concept was about teamwork. If someone is sick,
someone else has to be willing to help out and pick up the slack.
"It
works that way with my family, too. If I can't clean out the horse
stalls, my wife or one of my stepdaughters has to. We all need help
and support."