| 1937 Melrose Shamrocks: The Championship Season | ||
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Before
the 1937 season, the ten Melrose basketball players were so unknown that
newspapers covering the tournament didn’t spell their names correctly,
radio announcers pronounced “Hlubek” four different ways, and the
Melrose team was one of only three teams that didn’t have its picture in
the State Tournament Program. After
the tournament, the team was invited to numerous banquets and parties.
Just a few years later, Walt O’Connor was named the
Outstanding Iowa Amateur Athlete for 1940, Jim Thynne was playing for
Creighton University, and Coach Ad Hlubek was a coach in high demand.
Things sure had changed....... Coach Ad Hlubek
– Melrose was coached by Adolf (“Ad”) Hlubek (pronounced “Loo-beck”).
He claimed to be only a student of the game of basketball, and said
that he learned all that he knew about basketball from a rulebook that
“only cost 10¢.” If you
asked him where else he got his ideas, he would tell you his tip-off plays
were from Michigan, his set offense was from Wisconsin, and his sliding
zone defense was from a friend in Kansas.
Hlubek
was both the basketball coach and the Superintendent of Schools at
Melrose. The Official Program
for the 1937 State Tournament referred to him as “Klubek.”
Ad Hlubek came from Fort Atkinson.
He went to Columbia College in Dubuque.
He coached at Fort Atkinson and Exline before Melrose.
Melrose was the first basketball team he coached past the Sectional
Tournament. Hlubek started
coaching basketball at Melrose in 1933.
Hlubek was colorful and got excited easily.
After one game during the regular season, he said to the crowd,
“Let’s give three cheers for the referee.”
After the final game of the 1937 State Tournament, he said that he
“felt faint,” and quoted a popular radio show of the time, proclaiming
“Hello Ma, hello Pa!” After Melrose won the championship, he also said that the
Marshalltown team was the “finest team in Iowa.” He often paced the sidelines with a stopwatch, because he
didn’t trust the official timekeeper. Walt
O’Connor made the news again on St. Patrick’s Day in 1997.
O’Connor was driving his car in Des Moines when his heart
stopped. Ironically, a
basketball coach and a restaurant employee who knew cardiopulmonary
resuscitation, or “CPR,” resuscitated him.
The newspaper story at the time noted that while at Mercy Hospital,
O’Connor was retelling the tale of his at-bat against Warren Spahn when
his nurse rushed into the room. She
was trying to find out what he was doing.
When she found out that he was reminiscing, she ordered him to stop
by telling him, “it’s making your heart race on the monitors out
there.” Ray Parks –
Ray Parks played guard on offense and forward on defense.
He was a 16-year-old junior during the championship season.
His best play of the season came during the State Tournament.
Parks made the game-winning shot against Geneseo and scored seven
of Melrose’s 20 points against Newton.
Against Marshalltown in the final game, he scored eight points for
a tournament total of 31 points. He
was on the all-tournament team in 1937, and also was named to the third
team of The Des Moines Register’s all-state teams in both 1937
and 1938. During the 1938
season, Ray Parks was the Melrose captain and the star of the team. Jim
Carr – Jim “Ladd” Carr, a 17-year-old junior for
the championship team, was a defensive standout for the Shamrocks.
Carr alternated between forward and guard, depending on the
circumstances, but played the entire championship game at guard.
One of his primary duties for the team was to stay back on defense
and stop the fast break. He also started for the team in 1938, which was knocked out
of the State Tournament in the first round.
Jim Carr is my grandfather and I am proud of his accomplishments
both on and off the basketball floor. Mike Kasper –
Mike Kasper, ironically, was nicknamed “Irish Man,” even though he was
the only Slavic member of the team. During the championship run, he was a 17-year-old sophomore.
Kasper transferred to Melrose from Bucknell for the 1937 season,
and played forward. While at
Bucknell, his team played Melrose and lost horribly. Mike
Kasper came in to replace Ed Callahan after his injury in the second-round
game against Newton, and played extensively in the last two games of the
State Tournament. Ed Callahan –
Ed Callahan was originally a forward in his freshman year, but played at
guard frequently in 1937, as a 16-year-old sophomore.
He was often a starter during the 1937 season.
Callahan sprained his ankle in the second round of the State
Tournament, against Newton, and had to sit out the last two games of the
tournament. In 1938 and 1939,
he was the star “floorman” for Melrose, because of his ability to run
up and down the floor. Ray Navin – Ray
Navin was backup center behind Jim Thynne for two years.
He also played forward sometimes.
Navin was an 18-year-old senior during the 1937 State Tournament.
He played in the first-round cliffhanger against Geneseo, and in
the semifinals against Rolfe, to rest the starters before the finals that
same evening. George Pavlik
– George Pavlik, a small, but capable, player was a reserve guard.
He was an 18-year-old senior who saw some action in the regular
season, but did not appear in the State Tournament. Robert Parks –
Robert “Red Bob” Parks was a reserve forward at Melrose for two years.
He was a 17-year-old senior when Melrose won the state
championship. His only
tournament action was against Rolfe, in the semifinals, when he and Ray
Navin saw action in order to rest some of the starters before the
championship game that night. During
the regular season, he was a proficient scorer.
Robert Parks was Ray Parks’ older cousin. Bernard Lee –
Bernard Lee, a 15-year-old, was the only freshman to make the varsity
squad for Melrose during the 1937 season. He joined the team midway through the season, when Dan Ryan
quit the team to fulfill duties at home.
Although Lee did not see action during the State Tournament and
rarely played during the regular season “unless someone fouled out,”
he showed promise as a guard. His
father, Bob Lee, was nearly as infamous as his son for his actions during
and after the final State Tournament game.
In jubilation after the clock ran out for Marshalltown, Bob Lee
threw his hat into the air, never to see it again.
The next day, a bareheaded Bob Lee held the flag and led the parade
that greeted the team on its return to Melrose. Even though only about half of the
players are still living, the story of the 1937 Melrose team keeps being
retold. Every few years, an
Iowa newspaper runs a story about the team. Some coaches also tell their players about the giant killers
from Melrose. However, the
real excitement of the 1937 championship is in the stories that get passed
down to the children and grandchildren of the players. |
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