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The Ashtabula County Basketball Foundation
Hall of Fame |
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Donna Gregg |
2010 |
Gregg was next for Falcons
Someone had
to take challenge of following Shellie Crandall on the long list of
great players at Jefferson & Donna Gregg did just that
By KARL PEARSON
Staff Writer
Eighth of a series...
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It's
one thing to be part of a dynamic duo. It's quite another to have to
go it on your own.
So you think that's a reference to Batman and Robin, who made quite
a crime fighting pair. But when Batman eventually went out on his
own, the productivity didn't drop off.
In the early years of girls basketball, Jefferson coach Larry Meloro
had just such a terrific one-two combo in Shellie Crandall doing her
magic from the outside and Donna Gregg working on the inside. They
were good enough to lead the Falcons (15-6) to a Grand River
Conference championship during the 1981-82 season.
When the 1982-83 season rolled around, though, Crandall had
graduated and Gregg was on her own. Jefferson didn't enjoy the same
level of success as a team (9-11) in Meloro's last season as the
coach before he made the transition to administration, but Gregg
certainly flourished individually. She set standards for the Falcons
that even Crandall hadn't registered, at least for a single season,
to that point.
She scored 400 points, averaging 20.0 per game, grabbed the most
rebounds (290) and had the highest rebounding average (14.5), made
the most field goals (162), had the most free-throw attempts (126)
and the most made free throws (76). That big season made Gregg, at
the time, Jefferson's second-leading career scorer with 852 points
for a 14.2 average rung up in 60 games over three varsity seasons,
numbers second only to Crandall.
She was the career rebounding leader with 711, an average of 12.0.
She was second only to Crandall at that time in career field goals
made (346), field goals attempted (801), free throws made (155),
free throws attempted (255), steals (240) and steals per game (4.0).
In her junior and senior seasons, she was a first-team Star Beacon
All-Ashtabula County and Coaches' All-GRC selection.
Meloro admired Gregg for her adaptability, finding ways to blend
well with her teammates when she had capable people to help carry
the load, yet having the willingness to shoulder it herself when
circumstances called for it.
Most of all, he appreciated the 5-foot-10 Gregg for her unstinting
desire to succeed.
"I remember Donna's tenacity," Meloro, now the principal at Rock
Creek Elementary, said. "She wanted to win so badly.
"She was a great team player. She was one of the best in terms of
the total package. She was a great defensive player. We usually had
her guard the other team's best player. Donna was a pleasure to
coach."
Gregg functioned well as a complement to Crandall and in her role as
the team's go-to player in her senior season.
"Donna and Shellie were good friends," Meloro said. "I wish they'd
had the 3-point line back then. Shellie definitely could have shot
the three and I think Donna could have, too, if she'd worked at it
and I'd have let her shoot it. And in her senior year, we kind of
developed the whole offense around Donna."
Crandall came to a deep appreciation of Gregg's gifts almost from
the beginning when they first crossed paths in Crandall's sophomore
year and Gregg's freshman season.
"Donna always played with a sense of joy," Crandall said from her
home in Texas. "She was always a great team player. She did whatever
it took to make our team better.
"She was a fun person to be around. She always had a smile on her
face. I think we had a bond because we both had a passion for the
sport and we played off of each other."
Gregg and Crandall certainly made life miserable for opposing
coaches when they played together. It didn't get much better when
Gregg was going it alone.
"You put those two together and Jefferson had a good outside-inside
game with Shellie and Donna," retired Edgewood coach Bob Callahan
said. "It gave them a 1-2 punch that was hard to stop. If you tried
to stop Shellie, Donna hurt you inside, and we had nobody that could
stop her inside.
"In her senior year, she was their go-to person. She handled that
pretty well, too. She was very smooth. I think she was as agile as
(Geneva's Ashtabula County Basketball Foundation Hall of Famer
Anita) Tersigni (a playing contemporary)."
Harbor's ACBF Hall of Fame coach Frank Roskovics agrees with
Callahan's assessment. He also had a pretty powerful inside-outside
punch at that time, too, with Hall of Famers Roberta Cevera and
Chris Fitting.
"Jefferson had a good inside-outside combo with Shellie and Donna,"
he said. "Donna always gave 100 percent. I remember she carried the
team her senior year, too."
There was another side to Gregg that opposing coaches appreciated
off the court.
"She was a really nice young lady," Roskovics said.
"Donna was a very nice young woman," Callahan said. "She was just a
good person."
Serving as the go-to player didn't stop for Gregg when she left
Jefferson in 1983. It just was put on hold for a while when she set
basketball aside to get her degree in sports administration from
Bowling Green. She finished in just three years, graduating in 1986.
Once she got her degree, though, she started working in businesses
that really tapped into her ability to be that go-to person. For
nearly two decades now, she has been just that for Jeff Jacobs, son
of the late Dick Jacobs, former Cleveland Indians owner, as his
properties manager and the general manager of the Nautica
entertainment complex in downtown Cleveland.
Today, as Donna Votaw, she has also become the go-to person for a
family of four that resides in Westlake. She has been married for 14
years to Todd Votaw, brother of former Ladies Professional Golf
Association commissioner Ty Votaw. She spends a good portion of her
time providing for the needs of 10-year-old Abby, a fourth grader,
and 7-year-old Bailey, a first grader, both of whom attend Dover
Elementary School in Westlake.
Basketball had pretty much faded into the background of her
existence until she was informed of her induction into the ACBF Hall
of Fame, which will take place March 28. It was a bit of a stunning
development to her.
"I'm very surprised," the 44-year-old Votaw said. "I didn't even
know such a thing existed. It's certainly a great honor."
Her new distinction is just starting to sink in with Votaw and
several of her loved ones.
"My daughters are just starting to learn about my athletic career,"
she said. "They're very excited and very proud."
But it really has hit home with her family back in Jefferson,
especially her parents, Don and Marilyn, who still reside in the
home she grew up in on Eagleville Road.
"My parents are very excited," Votaw said. "I'm sure they're just
beaming. I don't think they could be happier."
Joining her old partner in crime, or fellow crime stopper, Crandall,
depending on one's point of view, does resonate with Votaw.
"Shellie Crandall was always my idol," she said. "I'm very honored
to be joining her. I never thought I'd be considered in the same
class with her."
Crandall doesn't hesitate to return the compliment.
"I believed in Donna and trusted her," she said. "I played on the
outside and she played on the inside and Coach Meloro brought it all
together. She was a great player."
Those who worked with her or opposed her believe Votaw is worthy of
her own degree of adulation.
"She's very deserving," Meloro said.
"Donna absolutely is worthy," Callahan said.
The early years
The first sport that really made an impact with young Donna Gregg
was, of all things, baseball. The Greggs' youngest of their four
children, following sister Jana and brothers Bob and Tom, admits she
was a bit of a tomboy.
"My first love was boys baseball," she said. "I always wanted to be
one of the boys. My brother, Tom, got cancer when he was real young
(and eventually was claimed by the disease in 1991), played when he
was able. And I still played even when he wasn't able to because
softball was too boring."
The first girl to play Little League baseball in Jefferson, she even
hit a home run by a girl in the league — off Star Beacon Sports
Editor Don McCormack in a game between her Dodgers and his Tigers at
Proctor Field.
Gregg only played basketball in the driveway in those days
"I liked basketball because of the contact and the competition," she
said. "I'd play with Tom or we'd go play with Karl Kolehmainen, who
lived across the street and had a driveway where we could play."
Gregg actually immersed herself in a lot of different sports. It
even gave her a connection with one of her fellow Hall of Fame
inductees this year, fellow Jefferson graduate Phil Miller.
"I used to go over to his house and swim in his pool all the time,"
she said.
Her formal introduction to basketball came in the ninth grade.
"I remember ninth-grade tryouts in the multipurpose room," Gregg
said. "I remember watching Cheryl Hawk, who was an older player, and
Shellie. I remember thinking, ‘Holy cow. These guys are good.'"
Crandall found Gregg a kindred spirit and started working with her
on her game.
"Shellie kind of took me under her wing," she said. "I really liked
basketball, and I wanted to play, so she worked with me a lot."
"It was pretty evident that Donna had a lot of gifts, but she needed
to develop a level of confidence in her ability," Crandall said. "We
became friends right off the bat. It didn't take her long to develop
that level of confidence, either. I came to believe and trust in
her."
Gregg was bitten by the basketball bug, splitting time her freshman
season between the JV and varsity squads.
"By the end of ninth grade, I couldn't get enough of it," Gregg
said. "Hanging around with Shellie was pretty special, too. How cool
was that!"
On the varsity
Her work ethic and lots of work with Crandall molded Gregg into a
player that became useful to Meloro at the varsity level for her
sophomore season.
"I loved playing for him," she said. "I always felt I performed well
for him. He was a great help to me because he came out and played
with us all the time."
There were times when Gregg and Meloro served as foils for each
other.
"He picked on me once," she said. "I had been running around the gym
in a pretty crazy manner and he stopped things and showed me what I
was doing. It was pretty funny."
She got him back, though, unintentionally.
"I embarrassed him once in a while," Gregg said. "I remember we were
playing once against Harbor and I mistook an official for one of my
teammates and threw the ball out of bounds. He left the floor and
went up and sat in the stands for a while.
"I think we frustrated him sometimes, but then I think he realized
he was working with a bunch of girls. I think his wife kept him in
tow. He treated us all as equals. I just loved to play ball and
win."
The Falcons did just that, going 11-8 in the 1980-81 season.
Gregg continued to work hard on her game. She was ready to be a big
contributor for her junior year.
"Shellie was the point guard," she said. "I was the forward-center.
The big thing I was told to do was hit the boards."
That definition of roles worked in style as the Falcons fought their
way to the GRC title.
"I always remember wanting to beat Southington," she said. "I always
loved to play against PV, too."
Crandall and Gregg worked a lot on making their respective skills
mesh and click.
"I remember we specifically worked on passing," Crandall said. "We
worked on trying to anticipate where the pass was coming from or
where it was going to."
The focus turned to Gregg for her senior year. She, in turn, served
as a mentor to another player, much as Crandall had done with her.
"In my senior year, Diana Grose took Shellie's spot at point guard,"
Gregg said. "I actually had to convince her to play and she finally
did. I think if she'd had confidence, she'd really have been good."
Gregg did all she could to prepare herself for her new leadership
role, actually going to summer camp in an era when that wasn't all
that common for area players.
"I went to the Ohio State basketball camp that summer," she said. "I
also went to camps at Geneva and Grand Valley."
She also tried to test herself against other competition.
"I used to love to practice with the boys," Gregg said. "I always
kept playing with the guys."
Crandall wasn't surprised at all at how well Gregg assimilated her
new responsibilities.
"You could see Donna blossoming and maturing as a leader as she went
along," she said. "I knew she would do a great job."
Other key players for the Falcons in the 1982-83 season were Darlene
Covell and Annie Lehnert. But Gregg was the undisputed leader.
"I was very confident," she said. "I loved to shoot outside and I
loved to steal the ball. Coach Meloro always used to tell me to
watch their eyes to try and steal the ball, so I did and I think I
did have a lot of steals."
Unlike a lot of her contemporaries who complain about the
limitations of their game, operating with no three-point shot and
being forced to play with the larger boys ball, Gregg didn't seem to
mind those restrictions.
"I don't like the girls ball they play with today," she said. "I
didn't mind the boys ball at all. I don't think I'd have shot many
3-pointers."
Callahan not only admired Gregg for her competitive spirit, but her
friendly attitude off the court.
"Donna was always such a nice girl," he said. "I remember she used
to work at the Dairy Queen in Jefferson and they used to have a
certain flavor of ice cream they served at the time. After a while,
they stopped serving it, but I stopped one day and asked for that
flavor of ice cream.
"Donna came outside and put a piece of tape over that flavor on the
board, so I didn't get the ice cream I was looking for, but it gave
me quite a laugh. She was just a delightful person."
She always knew she had a faithful band of fans to support her
athletic pursuits. Apparently, she was an inspirational figure to at
least some of that contingent.
"My mom and dad were always so supportive," she said. "My mom never
missed a basketball game. They always brought (her niece) Laurie
(who became a key player for Rod Holmes' fine Jefferson teams of the
mid-1990s) and her sister, Amber, along to the games."
Gregg's basketball career ended with her high school days, although
some opportunities were available. Her performance did get some
attention from smaller schools closer to home, but she had her mind
pretty well set on other goals.
"I had offers from schools like Slippery Rock, but I visited Bowling
Green and I fell in love with it when I saw it," she said. "I tried
to walk on with the basketball team out there, but they had a female
coach and I didn't care for her style.
"Plus, the first day I was out there, I saw all the other talent and
I just went, ‘Whoa!' "
Bowling Green isn't the biggest city in the world, but Gregg
admitted it was a lot bigger atmosphere than that to which she was
accustomed.
"It was a bit of a culture shock going from a small community like
Jefferson to a school that size," she said. "I have to admit, I
enjoyed being coddled back in Jefferson. I just decided to
concentrate on my studies."
So she threw herself into a feverish academic pace at Bowling Green
and, by attending summer school, blazed her way to her degree in
sports administration in just three years.
"My idea was to work for a pro team in some way," she said.
After basketball
At least initially, that's the career path she took. She started
with an internship for the National Association of Collegiate
Directors of Athletics.
"They had me write stories for the magazine they put out," Gregg
said. "I liked it because I was still around sports."
That gave her connections to the next step in sports, working as the
assistant sports information director at Cleveland State University
for the late Merle Levin. She started there in 1987 and worked there
for two years.
"I got to travel with a lot of the women's teams and I'd get to
practice with them a bit," Gregg said. "I think I held my own. I
really liked it, but I needed to make more money."
In 1989, she started working with Total Events Services, a company
that was charged with the operations of a number of big events at
big venues in Cleveland.
"I actually got to run things like the National Rib Cookoff because
we did all the operations for it," she said. "I also helped set up a
lot of the big concerts at the old Cleveland Stadium. I did that
until 1991."
While involved in that enterprise, she made her first connection
with Jeff Jacobs. It started with work on a lot of the concerts
conducted on the Nautica stage and gradually evolved into managing
the properties of the Jacobs family in the Flats and other areas
throughout downtown Cleveland. She worked for him ever since
"My office is down in the Flats," she said. "It's about a 20-mile
drive right off of Interstate 90 for me."
Working for Jacobs turned out to have another side benefit for
Gregg. It's how she met Todd Votaw.
"I started shopping at his hardware store (Sutton Hardware, located
in downtown Cleveland)," she said. "It's like a mini-Home Depot,
only it's more personalized.
"He used to cut all my keys. He told me later that he'd miscut my
keys all the time so I'd have to keep coming back."
They have been married for 14 years. Westlake is the home of many
Cleveland professional athletes, although Donna said she hasn't had
much contact with them.
"I did see (Cavaliers coach) Mike Brown in the store one time," she
said.
Votaw isn't around sports much anymore, something she misses. She's
hoping at least one of her daughters is bitten by the bug, although
it isn't looking like it will be basketball.
"Both of my daughters are dancers," she said. "(Bailey) seems to
like volleyball."
She does admit her daughters have been duly impressed by their
mother's new distinction.
"They're learning about my athletic career," Votaw said. "They're
very excited and proud."
The skills she learned on the court have served Votaw well in the
business world.
"Basketball was very good for me because of the discipline and the
focus I learned," she said. "It taught me to get the job done right
the first time.
"Certainly, the teamwork was important. I probably oversee 25
people. You have to treat them all differently to get the most out
of them."
The same truths hold true with her family.
"I try to do the same thing with my family," she said
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