December 9, 2009
Greyhound Basketball Legends Show True Meaning of Team
Todd Civin
Senior Analyst/Featured Columnist
THE BLEACHER REPORT
December 9, 2009
The Assumption College Greyhounds beat the
Southern Connecticut State University Owls last night 95-72 at
Laska Gym in Worcester.
Exciting? Sure. If you're an Assumption
student, fan, or alumnus, it's probably darn right newsworthy.
For me, however, the evening took on an added
significance that became much greater than the final score. In the
hardwood equivalent of The Field Of Dreams , I was treated to my
own personal episode of "If you build it they will come."
Only in this true to life dream, the field that
"they" came to wasn't a corn field, and it certainly wasn't in the
middle of Iowa. Instead, it was the newly remodeled and luxurious
Laska Gymnasium parked smack dab in the middle of the Assumption
College campus in Worcester, MA.
And the ghosts of baseball past weren't ghosts
at all, but the living legends of Assumption basketball past.
Though a bit older and slightly grayer than they were when they
donned the Assumption uniform, the likes of Don Lemenager (class of
'56), Jimmy Monahan ('65), Ted Paulauskas ('66), and even the
legend himself, Hall of Fame coach Andy Laska, are not ghosts at
all.
Instead, they are the living icons who hold the
history of Assumption basketball so very close to their hearts.
They have been entrusted to pass their tales of many victories and
occasional defeats on to the next generation of Greyhound
hoopsters.
Without this link to the Assumption past, the
memories, the stories, the history which is the very fibre of
Assumption College basketball becomes lost and quickly fades away
after these AC veterans move on.
As a personal thanks for helping them preserve
a story of "Assumption's grandest moment on the court," the team
was gracious enough to host me at the game. A thank you for a story
I had written several months ago about one of their heroic
teammates, Danny Gearin.
In my October 18th column, entitled The Man
with The Golden Touch, I chronicled how this special hero became an
incredible influence on my life as well as my educational and
vocational path with his magical golden touch. In 1976, Danny
Gearin selected me "randomly" out of a crowd of high school hall
dwellers and instantly changed my life forever.
Some twenty years earlier, Gearin's magic touch
and court savvy produced the same magical results and forever
changed Assumption College basketball lore.
When Gearin passed away unexpectedly at the age
of 44 in 1978, not only did I lose a mentor and a close friend, but
his Assumption basketball brothers lost an incredible teammate and
hero.
As a thank you for honoring their fallen
comrade, former Assumption student newspaper editor John DiPietro
reached out to me via phone last week and invited me to personally
meet coach Andy Laska and other former Assumption players.
DiPietro, a 1972 graduate of Assumption, is the President of ABC/D
Marketing and author of the motivational sales book You Don't Have
to Be Perfect to Be Great . DiPietro informed me that "Coach and
his players wanted to meet the guy who wrote the story about their
teammate."
Upon my arrival, I was treated to the most
amazing night of basketball camaraderie I have ever witnessed. I
was first introduced to Diane Laska-Nixon, daughter of the
legendary coach and Director of Alumni Relations at Assumption
College. She thanked me for coming out to meet the team and
welcomed me graciously.
I was then tapped on the shoulder by current
Assumption team captain, Courtland Bluford, who poked his head out
of the locker room prior to taking the court and shook my hand and
thanked me for coming. In my four years as an undergrad at
Syracuse, I can assure you that none of the players ever thanked
the fans for attending.
To me, it was the ultimate show of respect by a
current Greyhound, as he honored the legacy which was created by
his predecessors some five decades before. The gesture wasn't
staged and is a credit to Bluford, who is part of a generation that
is often accused of ignoring history and often thinks of the "me
and the now," instead of the "we and the how" approach to the
game.
DiPietro then introduced me to Lemenager, who
was Coach Laska's first captain in 1951, as well as in 1954 and
1955. He was the backcourt mate of Gearin, and led the team to
third and fourth place finishes in the '54 and '55 NAIA Regional
tournaments.
I then met, Paulauskas, who was Laska's final
captain in 1966-67 and led his Greyhound squad to a second place
finish in the NCAA Regional Tournament. Paulauskas is the current
Athletic Director at Assumption, a post he has held for the past
seven seasons.
And then just prior to tip-off of the game, the
doors opened in the far corner of the gym and the coaching legend
Laska entered the gym that bears his name. The 84-year-old coach
greeted me with a firm handshake and a smile and took a seat next
to me on the bleachers This wasn't the seat where Andy would
ultimately watch the game. That seat is on the opposite end of the
aisle, in the very corner of the gym and though not marked is
clearly reserved as "Coach Laska's seat."
Upon Laska's induction into the New England
Basketball Hall of Fame in October, 2002, his bio read as
follows:
"The man who could very well be described as
Worcester's greatest ambassador of the game, Andy Laska has left a
incredible trail of success at the high school, prep school,
collegiate and amateur levels."
"His final won loss ledger of 224-96 tells only
a part of the story of his legacy to the game in Central
Massachusetts."
"He began as one of the outstanding high school
players in the city's history averaging 20 points per game (during
a time when teams regularly averaged under 40) leading North High
to the Western Massachusetts championship and into the New England
tournament. He earned all Inter-High (1941, 42, 43) , all-Worcester
(1941, 42, 43), all-state (1941) and all New England (1943)."
"After time out for three years of military
service in the Pacific, he played collegiately at the College of
the Holy Cross. The Crusaders won the 1947 national title and
played in the N.I.T. in 1949. He co-captained the 1949 team that
set then record 26-game win streak."
"He served as basketball coach (1951-67), golf
coach (1969-86), Director of Athletics (1956-86). He also served
coach at Worcester Academy (1954-56) . . . winning the New England
Prep title in 1954."
"He organized and conducted basketball clinics
in Lebanon (1965) and served as business manager of the U.S.A.
National Team (1975). He was named the new England
Coach-of-the-Year in 1957 and 1964, was elected to the Assumption
College Athletic Hall of Fame (1967) and had the Assumption College
gymnasium dedicated and renamed in his honor (September 20,
1975)."
Included in his trail of success are the
following:
a. 1953-54, the first winning season in Hounds'
history since 1933-34;
b. 1954-55, the first N.A.I.A. tournament team
in the College's history;
c., 1956-57, team finished 21-1 led by captain
Joe O'Brien '57, declined N.A.I.A. bid to play and beat Holy Cross
(69-68) in the Pete Houston Benefit Game. Still the ONLY team in
Hounds' history to play and beat both Holy Cross and Providence in
the same season.
d. 1957-58, team won N.A.I.A. regional
tournament and advanced to its first national tournament in Kansas
City, MO.
e. the College is admitted to the National
Collegiate Athletic Association and celebrates with its first
N.C.A.A. tournament berth
f. team get second N.C.A.A. tournament berth,
the first of an N.C.A.A. Division II record 17 consecutive.
As athletics director he was involved in the
implementation of Title IX on campus including adding scholarship
aid for female athletes (1976) . . . the first institution in
Central Massachusetts to do so. He was also instrumental in the
formation of the Northeast-10 Conference, which has now grown to 15
institutions.
He coached eight all-Americans during his
tenure at the College including: Buddy Masterson '60, Fred Barakat
'61, Ed Hippert '62, John Jenkins '64, Steve Warner '64, Jim
Monahan '65, John Driscoll '66 and George Ridick '67.
COACHING RECORD AT ASSUMPTION COLLEGE
1951-52 6-10
1952-53 5-12
1953-54 11-8 first winning season at College since 1933-34
1954-55 13-5 N.A.I.A. regional
1955-56 15-7 N.A.I.A. regional
1956-57 21-1 did not accept N.A.I.A. berth to play Holy Cross in
Pete Houston Benefit (winning 69-68)
1957-58 16-4 N.A.I.A. regional CHAMPION
1958-59 13-5
1959-60 14-6 N.C.A.A. regional
1960-61 14-5
1961-62 12-5
1962-63 14-5 N.C.A.A. regional
1963-64 19-2 N.C.A.A. regional; ranked No. 2 final A.P. national
poll
1964-65 16-6 N.C.A.A. regional
1965-66 18-6 N.C.A.A. regional CHAMPION
1966-67 17-5 N.C.A.A. regional
I was admittedly nervous as I was approached by
this coaching legend, who is arguably Assumption's version of
UCLA's John Wooden. Once I heard Laska's kind and gracious voice,
however, any semblance of nerves disappeared. He, too, thanked me
for honoring Gearin and then proceeded to educate me with a course
in Assumption Basketball History 101.
We discussed everything from Gearin, who he
referred to as a "good ball handler and the smallest guy on the
floor," to the "ice water" that flowed through Gearin's veins.
He shared the most minute fact about the Gearin
story, but a fact that is a testament to how cool Gearin was.
"Just before he shot the first free throw,"
explained Laska. "A piece of paper blew onto the gym floor. Danny
bent over and picked it up before he stepped to the line and sank
the two free throws."
I had been warned by DiPietro that Coach could
tell you every word of every time out pep talk he ever had and this
seemed to lend credence to that lore.
Laska, who still attends every home game, then
showed off the newly renovated gym. Originally built and dedicated
in 1963, and then rededicated in 1975 when it was named after him,
the gym now boasts a new floor, bleachers, beautiful overhead
lighting, and comfortably cushioned seating under the baskets.
"I never expected the gym to be named after
me," laughed Laska. "And then I lived 35 more years to enjoy
it."
Laska moved to his special seat as the game
commenced, but was right back over at the end of the half. He
proceeded to point out yet another former player in Monahan. "He
was a guard," explained Laska. "In the dedication game in '63-64
against Providence he and his backcourt mate shot 18-28. That game
was one of the greatest moments of my career."
I asked Laska to share some other great moments
before the second half started.
"Oh, there were so many," explained Laska, who
likes to play golf in his post retirement days. "I'd have to say
when we beat Providence at the dedication of Alumni Gym in 1956-57
and then when we beat Holy Cross in the Pete Houston benefit
game."
Laska went on to explain that the team that
went 21-1 in '56-57 is the only Assumption team ever inducted into
the Assumption Hall of Fame as a team, and that they actually
passed up a trip to Kansas City to play in the NAIA tournament in
order to play the famed game against their cross-town rivals, Holy
Cross.
The second half began and Coach returned back
to his seat. Occasionally during a lull in the action he'd remember
another fact or anecdote he wanted to share.
When the final horn blew and another Assumption
victory was etched into the record books, I said good bye to my new
Assumption friends.
I have to believe that Danny Gearin looked down
on us all and smiled, knowing that the memories of "The Game" would
live on for another day.
Todd Civin is a freelance writer who writes
for Bleacher Report, Sports, Then and Now, and Seamheads.