Bob Walters didn’t do it. Nor did Gene Gephart, Ramon Pete, Big Jim Hood, Tom Hill, David Benton nor Deora Marsh.
In fact, none of the many great players in the storied boys basketball history at Ashtabula High School managed to do it.
But Emilio Parks has — and he entered an exclusive club that includes only former Harbor High School standouts John Coleman, Andy Juhola, Joe Rich, Fred Scruggs, Jemal Harris and Todd Estok.
Emilio and the six Mariners (sounds like a rock band, huh?) are the only boys basketball players in the history of Ashtabula Area City Schools to become Grand Players by reaching the 1,000 mark for career points, Parks having walked through that door in Lakeside’s Premier Athletic Conference victory against visiting South last night at Lakeside Gymnasium.
When one stops and considers that both Ashtabula and Harbor played boys hoops from basically 1900 through the 1999-2000 season and were consolidated into Lakeside for the start of the 2000-01 season and only six guys had done what Parks did last night, one realizes the rarefied air which he breathes.
Comparatively speaking, four Ashtabula girls players — Diane Davis, Eleanor Young, Angela Miller and Jessica Cancel — and three Harbor girls — Roberta Cevera, Chris Fitting and Tonya Tallbacka — are all Grand Players.
The greatest scorer in the nine-year history of Lakeside basketball is Darrah Smith, a 2008 LHS graduate, who poured in 1,224 points in a four-season career that began as a freshman for coach Mike Hassett and finished with three seasons for current Lakeside coach Rob Livingston.
All of which only magnifies the level of excellence Emilio Parks reached last night.
He is the 35th boys player in Ashtabula County history to become a Grand Player and the 58th boys or girls player in county history to do so.
Mighty Mike
Speaking of Hassett, who is still the best official of junior-varsity basketball these eyes have seen, his smiling face hasn’t been seen in area gymnasiums the past several weeks.
Turns out, he had knee surgery back on Jan. 15 and what began as a simple procedure turned into a bit more than that when two bone fragments — not to mention a torn medial cruciate ligament — were found.
Which has Hassett, one of the most affable guys around, a tad bit discouraged.
“I’m not event allowed to go up and down stairs yet,” he admitted. “I have a greater appreciation for any athlete who’s had knee surgery.
“I do not know how anyone could come back from a torn ACL!”
Get well soon, Mike.
Put on your favorite ballad by Kiss and think positive thoughts.
The game needs you.
McCormack is the sports editor of the Star Beacon. Reach him at donmac@suite224.net.
Sports
A Don McCormack column: Parks’ place on exclusive boardwalk
- Sports
-
-
Comforts of home
A trip home led to a meteoric improvement for Ohio State Buckeye Mallory Kreider, who destroyed her personal best in the 5,000 meters (3.1 miles) by 52 seconds Friday night during the Spire Division I Indoor Track and Field Invitational.
-
Look out for Lakeside
Lakeside coach Rob Pisano has been waiting for this moment. And waiting. And waiting.
-
Falcons fall
As the Jefferson Falcons’ rise to respectability under first-year coach Jeremy Huber continues, they have continuously improved on certain aspects of their game.
-
A case for the offense
Forget offense versus defense. When Edgewood hosted Conneaut on Friday night, It was offense versus offense. And the Warriors won, 69-59.
-
Familiar refrain for Torok & Co.
Geneva boys basketball coach Scott Torok is no Bill Murray. However, he may feel like a character in the actor’s movie “Groundhog Day.”
-
Perry raids Harvey
The Perry boys can celebrate the fact they have now won twice in a row, and they deserve to do that. But along with Friday’s 66-54 win against visiting Harvey came a sight that nobody ever wants to see.
-
Scholastic Statistics:
BOYS BASKETBALL
PREMIER
Lakeside 89, Madison 76
at Madison -
Scholastic Schedule:
SATURDAY, FEB. 11
Girls Basketball
n Madison at Chardon (1)
n Lakeview at Edgewood (1)
n Conneaut at Jefferson (6)
n Lakeside at Riverside (1)
n SJP at Badger (2, varsity only) -
Riverside sneaks past Edgewood
Riverside wrestling coach Scott Blank learned a good deal of what he knows from Edgewood coach Greg Stolfer as a former Warrior great. Thursday, he used a bit of that knowledge to get the better of his old coach as the Beavers bested the Warriors, 31-28, at Edgewood.
-
Madison rolls past Geneva
Madison recovered from coming out on the short end of a pin in the first match of the night by taking six of the next seven matches against Geneva and capped the night with pins from their last pair of grapplers in dismantling the Eagles, 49-17.
- More Sports Headlines
-





