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The Ashtabula County Basketball Foundation
Hall of Fame |
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Russell Bethel |
2010 |
Love... And basketball
Russell
Bethel and his wife, Grace, shared a passion for sports and for one
another
By KARL PEARSON
Staff Writer
Seventh of a series...
One
of the best things an educational administrator can have on their
resume is that they have had a wide range of experience in various
aspects of the business. It's never a bad thing that they have a
background in sports.
By those standards, Russell Bethel was well equipped for the roles
he took on during a career that spanned nearly 40 years in a variety
of school systems. As a teenager, he was a fine all-around athlete
at Kingsville High School, particularly in basketball, before his
graduation in 1936.
He went on to Kent State University and graduated in 1940 fully
intending to begin his teaching career, but instead ended up in a
job in retail job until World War II intervened. It was not until he
returned from service in what was then known as the Army Air Corps
in 1946 that Bethel was really able to begin his teaching career.
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Along
with immersing himself in teaching, Bethel's abiding love of sports
quickly led him into the coaching realm to New Lyme Deming School.
In that setting, he was the coach, working not only with the
basketball squad, but the baseball and track teams.
In each instance, he made his school into the scourge of the old
Buckeye League that involved the small high schools in the county
like Rock Creek, Dorset, Williamsfield, Rowe, Orwell and Spencer. He
was part of a run of seven Buckeye League basketball championships
in eight seasons, with his part starting in 1947.
With the small size of the high school classes at New Lyme Deming,
Bethel quickly rose through the ranks to not only shoulder teaching
duties, but serve as the school's superintendent. After several
seasons as the coach of those sports, the weight of his duties
became so demanding that he had to set coaching aside, stopping as
the basketball coach after the 1951 season.
It was a profoundly sorrowful occasion when Bethel had to walk away
from coaching, according to his youngest child, Sally Bethel Murphy,
who still lives in the Akron area.
"My dad won awards in all the sports," she said. "He really enjoyed
coaching. He always said that was one of the really happy times of
his life."
But he got one last shot at the coaching ring, at least for
basketball, quite by accident. It turned out to be a bolt from the
blue for Bethel and the Rangers, who literally blazed a path through
small-school basketball in the area in the 1953-54 season, paced in
particular by two players, Richard Scribben and Frank Zeman, whose
legends almost disappeared into history before it was brought to
light by some of their old teammates and the investigative work of
Star Beacon Sports Editor Don McCormack. Bethel's knowledge and his
flexibility in adapting to the fast-paced style of play Zeman
dubbed, "fire-engine basketball," helped that team produce perhaps
its greatest season.
Most of that team only knew Bethel as a teacher and authority
figure. They appreciated that he didn't try to reinvent the wheel
when he took over as their coach. They actually found a somewhat
lighter side to him.
"I know he liked coaching," Scribben, now 74, said. "He was an
honest person and well-liked. He was a very fair-minded person."
"I only knew Bethel for one year," Zeman, who transferred to Deming
from Jefferson for his sophomore season and only played for Bethel
as a senior, said. "He was an easy-going guy. We were all like a
family and were all pretty close. He tried to do the same things
with us that the coach before him (Ray Rathbun) tried to do with
us."
Alex Olah was another key player for that team, and several other
Deming teams during his high school years and probably had a much
closer relationship with Bethel than most of his teammates, for a
variety of reasons.
"I had Mr. Bethel all my years in school," he said. "He was like a
father to us. He wasn't rough on us, but you didn't have to push us.
"He was a well-liked man all over Ashtabula County. He was easy to
get along with. You couldn't have met a better man."
As much as Bethel's skill as a player and a coach might have been
admired, those who observed him probably appreciated him for his
work as a humanitarian, especially for the underprivileged families
in his school district, even more.
"I know the Olah boys and my sister had free lunches at school when
Mr. Bethel was there," Alex Olah said. "He was a good Christian
man."
"Times were hard back then," Scribben said. "Mr. Bethel was a
church-going person and he would often get donations from different
people to help other families. A lot of people don't realize how he
helped the less fortunate with things like heat or food."
Basketball was the sport that truly resonated with Bethel, despite
his love for the others.
"The only sport he ever really talked about was basketball," Sally
Murphy said.
As it turned out, the 1953-54 season was Bethel's last season in
coaching. That, along with a gradual move into higher levels of
administration that took him away from students and into situations
with adults that he found far less satisfying, was something that
ate at him in nagging little ways for years afterward until he
retired in 1979 from his position as the superintendent of the Canal
Fulton Northwest school system.
"The farther my father got away from working with kids, the less he
liked education," Murphy said.
Just because he was away from coaching, though, didn't detract from
the interest Bethel and his wife of 60 years, Grace Day Bethel,
maintained in sports, particularly in basketball. In fact, when she
played at Kingsville High School, Grace Day was as much admired for
her basketball skills as her future husband in the days before the
Ohio High School Athletic Association suspended girls atheltics.
"I think the day they put sports on television was one of the
happiest days of their lives," Sally Murphy said. "Every Sunday
after dinner was a sports day."
When Russell Bethel died just one day after Memorial Day, 2001 at
age 83, LeBron James was still a high school player at Akron St.
Vincent-St. Mary High School, but living in that area, Bethel was
aware of the young man's skills. Grace Bethel lived until 2007 and
got to see James become the star he is for the Cleveland Cavaliers.
"My dad would have loved LeBron," Sally Murphy said firmly. "I know
my mom loved to watch LeBron."
Were he to have the time to check out Bethel's accomplishments, and
being the basketball historian he is, James might well have
appreciated what Bethel gave to the game and his community. His
achievements were enough to earn Bethel admission into the Class of
2010 of the Ashtabula County Basketball Foundation Hall of Fame on
March 28.
"I think Mr. Bethel definitely deserves it," Olah said. "He was a
great coach and a great man."
Being the low-key person he was, his daughter believes her father
would have enjoyed his recognition, but wouldn't have made a big
display of it. He would have enjoyed the chance to get together with
his old players and rivals, especially the latter, because he
enjoyed the collegiality of the coaching profession so much.
"(Coaching) was just a real fun time in his life," Sally said. "He
would have been happy to just be a coach his whole life, but he knew
he wouldn't have been able to support his family that way."
Growing up
Russell Bethel was born Dec. 3, 1917, just months after the United
States entered World War I, in Greenville, now a community of a
little more than 13,000 residents located about 35 miles north of
Dayton. It is the county seat of Darke County and is the site of the
Treaty of Greeneville in 1795, which opened up settlement of the
Northwest Territory, from which Ohio came.
The Bethel family moved to Kingsville in 1929. Bethel's father was
the Baptist minister in Kingsville.
"My grandfather and great-grandfather were ordained ministers in
Kingsville," Sally Murphy said. "My great-grandfather, my mother's
grandfather, James Gray, was a circuit rider in Ashtabula County."
Bethel grew up just a short way down the street from Kingsville High
School. Just a little farther up the street lived Grace Day. She
lived with her grandparents, James and Susan Gray.
"When my dad moved into the parsonage, he used to run out of the
house and go and pull her hair when she'd walk by on her way to
school," Sally Murphy said with a laugh. "My mother took piano
lessons from my father's sister. She called (Bethel) a real pest."
Grace Day was no pushover, so she must have enjoyed the attentions
of her future husband, even when she was younger. She would go on to
become equally adept as a player as Russell Bethel in the days when
the OHSAA still allowed girls to play interscholastic sports. In
fact, she earned second-team Star Beacon All-Ashtabula County honors
in her senior season of 1935, three years before the OHSAA shut down
girls sports and was not to permit them again until 1975. In the
same season, Bethel earned first-team all-county honors.
"My mother would say, ‘We played our games before the boys, and we
drew as many as they did,'" Sally Murphy said.
Her mother never lost her competitive fire, although the avenues for
female athletes closed shortly after she left high school and
eventually her attention turned to becoming a wife, mother and
teacher. Grace Bethel was a far more outspoken person than her
husband, according to her daughter.
"She was very competitive," Sally Murphy said. "My dad didn't talk
much about his playing and coaching. Mom was much more verbal. Dad
would say that he always came to see her play."
Russell Bethel was no slouch as a player. Among the many items his
wife saved from their exploits was a picture of him with
Kingsville's league champions in 1933, his freshman year. That squad
went 12-6 and won the Ashtabula County league and county tournament
titles for coach Charles Fish Jr. Bethel scored 102 points that year
to rank third on the team behind Gordon Brocklehurst and captain
Raymond Pickens.
"Mom used to keep all of their playing stuff and Dad's coaching
memorabilia in her cedar chest," Sally said.
After Kingsville
When his career at Kingsville ended, Bethel followed Grace to Kent
State University. Little more than six months apart in age, her
birthday had fallen within the parameters that put her in the Class
of 1935, while his put him in the Class of 1936.
Grace got a two-year degree at Kent, which was all that was required
to teach elementary school in that era. Russell went the full four
years at KSU, earning a degree in education.
With her degree, Grace actually began her teaching career in the
Warrensville Heights school system. It was Russell's intent to
follow suit once he finished in 1940, but he ended up working at a
Woolworth's store until they were married on April 15, 1941, then
taught at Deming for a brief time that year. When the U.S. entered
World War II on Dec. 8, Russell went soon after into what was then
known as the Army Air Corps before it became the Air Force, actually
joining up in 1942.
Eventually, Russell headed off to the Pacific theater, while Grace
moved back to Kingsville with their relatives. Bethel ended up in
the Philippines in 1943, using the training he had received at Kent
State in physical education to work in the physical training of the
troops there. He achieved the rank of staff sergeant and was even
awarded a Bronze Star for meritorious service.
Bethel did come back to the U.S. while the war was still raging and
eventually to Kingsville for brief periods. Their first child,
Susan, who now lives in Washington, D.C., was born in 1943.
He was released from the service and came back to Kingsville in
January 1946. Soon, the Bethels set up a home in Cherry Valley,
where their second daughter, Julie, who now resides in Durham, N.C.,
was born.
With the Rangers
Russell Bethel went back to work in the Deming system when he
returned, teaching science. He got into coaching almost immediately
and had the Rangers operating at a tremendous clip in all sports
despite working with teams that included not much more than 10
players at any point. Years later, most of the students there became
part of the Pymatuning Valley school district in the early 1960s.
The Bethels lived in Cherry Valley for a while, then moved to New
Lyme to a home near the school and what was then the Presbyterian
church, of which they were members, near the intersection of Route
46 and Dodgeville Road. In fact, Russell Bethel taught Sunday school
there, with boys like Olah among his students, while his family
lived in the community.
The Bethel family continued to grow. In 1951, a son, Russell Jr.
arrived, but he died in infancy. Sally was born in 1952, followed by
Robert. Tragically, Robert was killed in a car crash when he was
only 9.
It didn't take long for those in the know to recognize Bethel's
skills not only as a teacher and a coach, but also his
organizational gifts, and he quickly rose to the position of
principal and superintendent of the little school. It became
apparent that something was going to have to give, and coaching was
the matter that was set aside after the 1951 season, with the
Rangers still operating at a locomotive's pace.
Somehow, despite all his duties, Bethel found time to return to Kent
State to earn his master's degree, which he finished in 1949. He did
so when he was advised that he need the degree to move forward in
educational administration.
Susan Learmonth followed her parents in their love of education. She
works as a special educator for infants and toddlers. She presented
her parents with two grandsons and a granddaughter.
She remembers accompanying her father to some games, particularly
those played on the weekends, although at her relatively tender age,
she recalls little of watching Russell Bethel working with his
teams.
"I remember going to some of the games with him and a little about
the gyms we were in," she said. "I used to sit across from him with
my friends.
"I just know he was very close to his kids. In fact, he used to have
the kids over to our house. My dad was very fond of the boys."
She actually recalls some adventures after games with her father.
"I remember going with him to take the money they collected at the
gate to the bank that night," Learmonth said. "Many times, he'd pick
up hitchhikers along the way. Looking back on it, that was probably
pretty dangerous. You probably wouldn't do that now."
The coaching reins were handed off to Rathbun, who came to the area
from Rhode Island. Bethel's Rangers had played basketball at quite a
rapid pace, but Rathbun cranked them up to a racehorse style.
The new coach presented quite a different approach to the Rangers.
"Rathbun brought the kind of basketball they played on the East
Coast, which meant really pushing the ball and playing fast,"
Scribben said. "He was the kind of guy who liked to rant and rave a
lot, too."
That definitely resonated with the Rangers. They picked up with
Rathbun where Bethel had stopped. But the new coach's run only
lasted for the 1951-52 and 1952-53 seasons before he encountered
some off-the-court issues that forced him to resign. Sally was born
in 1952 while Bethel was out of coaching.
That special season
It had to be like manna from heaven for Bethel, though, who stepped
up and took the job for the 1953-54 season. It turned out to be his
best as the Rangers recorded 22 wins, including 18 straight at one
point, built around the scoring punch of Scribben and Zeman. That
squad also included brothers Bill and Glenn Fisher, Chuck Schultz,
Olah, Larry Carr, Clark Sherman and John Lobdell.
Bethel didn't try to rein in the Rangers much. Because he didn't the
Rangers often topped the 100-point mark, ringing up scores like
115-52 against Rock Creek and 111-78 against Williamsfield.
With games played at that pace, Zeman and Scribben, who are now
members of the ACBF Hall of Fame, also became the first Grand
Players, or 1,000-point career scorers in Ashtabula County. To this
day, Zeman still ranks fifth of all boys scorers in the county with
1,338 points and stands 12th of any player of either gender.
Scribben's 1,208 points still has him 12th off all male players and
27th overall.
Actually, Bethel approached the frenetic pace with a sense of humor.
"I remember he asked Frank and Richie one time if they were ever
going to run a play," Olah said with a laugh.
He may have let the Rangers run, but he refused to run up the score.
That still doesn't necessarily sit particularly well with at least
his two stars.
"We averaged 88 points a game that year," Zeman said. "We tried to
do the same things we had with Coach Rathbun, but Mr. Bethel never
let us play the whole game. We'd get up by 20 or 30 points and he'd
take us out of the game. That was the only thing I didn't like about
him. But I think he wanted to let the other kids play, too."
"Mr. Bethel didn't like to run up the score on anybody," Scribben
said. "He didn't think that was really fair. He didn't want to
humiliate the other team or show them up. He was a fair-minded
person.
"He really believed in fair play. He didn't want you to be a
showoff."
The players found Bethel's calmer approach a pleasure.
"He was a lot quieter than Coach Rathbun," Scribben said.
"Occasionally, he'd get a little hot under the collar and his face
would get red, but that was about it."
The luck of Bethel's special team ran out in the county Class B
championship when it dropped an 85-71 decision, ironically enough,
to his alma mater, Kingsville, at what was then known as Edgewood
High School and is now Braden Junior High. The Kings were coached by
Ed Batanian, another ACBF Hall of Famer, who was in just his third
season as a coach and led them to a 22-5 season behind Ron Hanson,
the Kingsville Hawk, who is also in the ACBF Hall of Fame. As a true
sportsman, Bethel is shown in a Star Beacon photo smiling and
shaking hands with Batanian despite the loss.
Scribben went on to earn third-team Class B All-Ohio honors from
United Press International, while Hanson was an honorable-mention
selection.
On to other matters
That special season turned out to be Bethel's coaching valedictory.
By the time the 1954-55 season came, the Bethels had moved out of
the community after he took the job as superintendent of Beach City
schools, which is now part of the Navarre school system and calls
Fairless its high school.
The family home was in Jackson Township, near Massillon. Susan and
Julie are Jackson High School graduates. Julie, now Julie Purcell,
went to Duke University and still lives in Durham, N.C. and
presented the Bethels with two grandsons. She also followed the path
of her parents, actually in two aspects. She is an ordained
Methodist minister, specializing in family therapy and pastoral
counseling.
Bethel became a hot property in the world of educational
administration. After several years at Beach City, he was tapped as
the first supervisor of instruction for all of Stark County's
schools, a position he held until 1968. From there, he changed his
focus back to managing just one school system, taking over as the
superintendent of Canal Fulton schools, with its high school of
Northwest, until he retired in 1979.
Sally Murphy is a graduate of Northwest. She, too, followed the
educational path, serving now as a teacher at Woodridge Intermediate
School in Peninsula. Sally and her husband, Mike, are the parents of
a son, Ryan. There are also two step-children among their brood.
Actually, Grace Bethel got back into education once her children
were old enough to function without her at home and retired after
her husband in 1986. She taught kindergarten until she was 69.
"She used to say when she walked into the school building, it was
like home," Sally said.
One of Grace's students, Joe Concheck, was of particular interest
when he became a member of Eldon Miller's basketball team at Ohio
State. She must have made a distinct impression on Concheck.
"They had a special recognition one night at Ohio State and he
brought my mother down on the court and introduced her to everybody
as his kindergarten teacher," Sally said. "That was really special.
My mom and dad were always huge Ohio State fans."
Russell never lost his love of competition. Early in his
administrative career, he was advised by a colleague that to be
effective in his field, he needed to take up golf. He did so with
fervor, learning the game on his own and eventually recording a
hole-in-one in his later years that Mike Murphy witnessed.
"He didn't see it go in, but I did and I told him it had," Murphy
said. "I don't think he believed me until we walked up on the green.
He looked around for it and finally found it in the hole."
Golf became a passion for Bethel and his grandson.
"He used to love to play golf with Ryan," Sally said. "He would have
loved to have a son to play with. I think in a way my son became his
son. He and my mother were so happy when Ryan told them he was going
to Ohio State."
Along with the Buckeyes, the Bethels loved all the Cleveland teams.
It never wavered for Grace after Russell died in 2001.
"My parents used to go to League Park (long-time home for the
Indians) on dates," Sally said. "Mom used to watch sports all the
time even after Dad died. Once Oprah (Winfrey) was over, it was
sports, 24-7.
"Mom loved (Indians center fielder) Grady Sizemore because she
thought he looked like Ryan. She always followed Russell Branyan
because of his first name."
The difference in the Bethels' personalities shone through even
while watching sports on TV.
"Dad never got upset about anything," Sally said. "I never saw him
lose his temper. Mom would yell at the TV all the time."
The Bethels maintained their love of Ashtabula County, too, and made
it their final resting place. They are buried in the cemetery at
Lulu Falls off Route 193 in Kingsville.
"I used to drive them up to their class reunions in Kingsville when
they couldn't anymore," Sally said. "Mom came up with me even after
Dad died. And they and Alex Olah kept in touch."
There is a part of Sally Murphy that wishes her parents could
actually be on hand for her father's induction. But she has the
sense Russell and Grace will be smiling from their lofty perch, each
from a different perspective.
"My mother would be the one who was really happy about it," she
said. "Dad would have been happy to see other people, his old
players and coaching friends.
"But he was very low-key about those things. He just loved
basketball and coaching."
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