The "Waltons" family of basketball
SAN FRANCISC0 –
Memorial Gymnasium on the hilltop campus of the University of San
Francisco has been witness to some of the greatest teams and players in
basketball history.
Bill Russell. K.C. Jones. Bill Cartwright. You know them.
You know their achievements.
On Tuesday night, Dec. 4, Memorial Gym was host to one of the
greatest families in the history of hoops. They are the Walton Family of
Basketball and we’re not talking about Bill and Luke et al. You’d considered
yourself lucky to know them.
The Lavins come from core values of hard work, team work and
generosity, the same depicted in the TV Walton family from the hit CBS show in
the 70s. They came to Memorial Gym to
line up behind the St. John’s University bench, behind the youngest Lavin,
Steve, now the 48-year-old head coach of the incredibly young Red Storm, on a
night that his 82-year-old father, Albert “Cappy” Lavin, was honored at USF.
“I’m pleased that he was honored when all his children were
here. It’s been 25 or 30 years since all six children have been in one place at
the same time,” Steve said afterward. “I’ve been away at Purdue and UCLA and
ESPN. The last time we were all together might have been at a Thanksgiving or
Christmas.”
Cap is the patriarch of a family he built to be
basketball-sized and Steve, the last of the bunch, was his sixth man off the
bench so to speak, a role he played through back-to-back state championship
teams at Sir Francis Drake High School.
Cap and Mary had six kids and basketball has connected their 60-year
marriage like baskets at both ends of the floor. Cap funded their honeymoon by
winning a free throw shooting contest in San Francisco where he was a dribbling
legend, a three-time all-city player alongside the likes of his boyfriend
buddy, the late George Moscone, former Mayor of San Francisco. The day Moscone
was elected in 1975, they passed time by playing pick-up basketball.
Cap was the captain of the first greatest team in USF
history, the 1949 National Invitational Tournament championship team, which in
that era trumped the NCAA champion in significance. He was so good playing
first for Pete Newell and then Phil Woolpert
-- a pair of Naismith Hall of Fame coaches -- that, in 1997, Cap was
inducted into the USF Hall of Fame.
That season Steve was in his first full season as a head
coach of any kind and it was as a head coach of the most fabled college
basketball program of all time – UCLA.
The Bruins came from one win from getting to the Final Four. Imagine
that. If his coaching career was baptism by fire, Steve was on planet Mercury.
If was during that time that Cap guided Steve through
terrific and tumultuous times, coaching against the legacy of John Wooden. He
balanced a sense of purpose with a sense of humor. Yet Cap didn’t advise and
comfort his son with the wisdom he learned as a basketball player but with the
knowledge he gained as an English teacher, where Cap really made his mark and
earned his reputation. He has surrounded himself and his life and his home
figuratively and quite literally with literature.
That’s a good thing. There has been more Shakespeare in
Steve’s coaching career than unbridled success. Ask them their greatest
achievement to date it might be the books they have read or the prostate cancer
they have both beaten.
Now Steve has come full circle. His bench coach and
consultant at St. John’s is 76-year-old Gene Keady, who gave Steve his first
big break in coaching as a graduate assistant at Purdue. Steve may still be young by coaching
standards, but he remains forever possessor of an old soul.
So after the halftime ceremony where Mary sat next to Mary
II – Steve’s wife/actress Mary Ann Jarou -- Cap, assisted by two of his daughter
Rachel’s daughters, was led onto the court to receive a standing ovation, it
was only fitting that when Steve returned from his halftime pep talk that, as
he hugged his brother John, he passed his dad on a baseline, a metaphor for the
foundation of the family and their friendship.
Cap didn’t have a basketball in his hands. He had a book. He
was smiling.
“There’s been so much focus on his health that today it
probably hit him,” Steve said. “There are so many intersecting lines that he
could appreciate in terms of family and basketball.”
Some place between a
Thanksgiving and a Christmas that Cap will never forget.
1 Comments:
Just plain excellent.
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