subscribesubscriber servicescontact usabout ussite mapBuy a Classified
Tue, Feb 09 2010 

Published: November 13, 2009 09:30 am    print this story  

On the Rebound: Old gyms a religious experience

By Mitch Howard
Sports Writer

It’s hard to believe someone who began covering sports in 1988, made his first trip to East Bernstadt’s gym this week. I’m willing to start the petition to never, ever tear this place down.

I walked in with the kind of swagger you have when a camera is dangling from each shoulder. I expected to take a usual spot somewhere under the goal. It would have worked fine if I were 6 inches wide. That’s about how much room you have from baseline to wall. My feet wouldn’t fit.

Standing just inside the door I had two choices. Take the stairs to the left or post up No. 23 for Jackson County. You are that close to the action in these old gyms. I wouldn’t have been able to keep the kid from scoring, so I took the stairs.

Right decision.

Two left turns and you are in a balcony above the goal. Much better seats than the upper arena at Rupp. I hung my camera through the rail and feared I was so close to the action the flash would blind a player or I would drop a camera on their heads. I’m pretty sure I could have swatted a shot from this perch.

Later, I walked along the sideline and could reach into the elevated stands and shake a hand. I passed the dance team, dressed as little angels. They talked, giggled, and swung their legs from the stands. I gave them room. I didn’t want to be kicked in the head by an angel.

Old gyms are magic.

If you have never seen the film Hoosiers, then you might not get it. There is more life in a gym that has hosted hundreds of games and thousands of players than the newest cookie cutter gym.

I have not seen the new London gym. That needs to be on the 1,000 Things to Do list. I’m pretty sure I won’t rate it ahead of the old gym to me.

I do have history at the old London gym. The first thing I recall is that nobody wore Air Jordans, or brought their equipment in a snazzy Under Armor bag. Your shorts and shirt were rolled up inside a towel and secured with a rubber band on each end. The uniform was a pair of maroon shorts and a plain white T-shirt. My shoes came from the Dollar Store and became popular because they made a louder squeak than other shoes when you cut sharply on the wooden floor. We all thought squeaky equaled faster. The shoes were orange and black. I guess color coordination never was my thing.

It wasn’t much later that I discovered the old Sue Bennett Gym. There were dead spots in the floor that would grab the ball and hold it. I thought the basement was haunted, but still stood in wonder in the locker room as if the Kentucky Wildcats may have gotten dressed there.

One day, a friend and I snuck into the gym to shoot for a while. We were the only ones there on a quiet Saturday morning until someone barged in and disrupted our fun. Earl Hayes was president of Sue Bennett College, so he had that right. Mr. Hayes was very pleasant and asked who we were and how we got in the gym. We told him the door was open. We didn’t tell him it was the basement door we jimmied. Mr. Hayes thanked us for our honesty and told us to have fun. And if we wanted to attend college, he would love to have us at Sue Bennett. I studied two years at Sue Bennett and played a lot of games there without sneaking in.

One more old cathedral comes to mind that many in London will not know. The Gatliff Gym at Cumberland College was magnificent. I remember the awe as a young reporter covering the Indians, before they were the Patriots. Randy Vernon seemed to belong on the Mt. Rushmore of coaches with Rupp, Wooden, and Knight. I set up along the sideline with a camera and realized when you go from cold external temperature to the 250 degrees that was Gatliff Gym, camera equipment is useless. I’m trying to dry the condensation off the lens with my jacket, pants legs, or whatever will work. The ground starts shaking. It did not feel like an earthquake. Maybe a stampede with really slow horses. Then you start hearing an Indians chant. Students are making a Native American conga line that would have made Custer retreat. The sounds bounced around the gym the rest of the game. It was as loud as it was hot.

I don’t remember Cumberland ever losing a game there.

Of the four gyms I mentioned, only East Bernstadt still holds games. Maybe some of the players wish they had a new gym. If so, don’t wish too hard. You are part of a classic and should be as proud of that as who you are and where you are from.

I will be back at East Bernstadt. I may go on a diet first and stand pigeon-toed behind the goal.

Mitch Howard can be reached at mhoward@sentinel-echo.com

print this story  

Photos


None/ (Click for larger image)



autoconx

Premier Guide
Premier Guide
Find a business

Walking Fingers
Maps, Menus, Store hours, Coupons, and more...
Premier Guide
Premium Jobs

CHEERLEADING INSTRUCTOR
Cheerleading Instructor needed for the London area. Must have cheerleading experience and experience working with childr...>MORE

OTR DRIVERS
Part Time or Full Time OTR drivers needed. Prefer experienced. Singles or teams. Average .40 per mile. (606)864-5797...>MORE

EXECUTIVE/BUSINESS SALES REPRENSENTATIVE
EXECUTIVE/BUSINESS SALES REPRENSENTATIVE.
55 yr. (NYSE/Fortune 500) company is expanding operations in Southeastern
...>MORE

CUSTOMER SERVICE
Full time customer service position in a fast paced office, excellent communication and interpersonal skills; possess st...>MORE

SECRETARY
Secretary Position in a fast paced environment. Good computer knowledge and skills, organizational skills and attention ...>MORE

COSMOLOGIST OR BARBER
Cosmologist Or Barber Needed!! Set Your Own Hours!! Booth Rental $65/Per week. If Interested Call 606-864-8898 OR 60...>MORE

See all ads

Premium Autos

Sell it Fast!!!
Looking to sell or buy a car? Check here first for quick results. Call our classified department for more informaiton ...>MORE

MINT 99 FIREBIRD
Mint 99 Firebird. T-Top. 88k. First $4500 Takes it. (606)878-5409....>MORE

See all ads

Premium Real Estate

100 ACRES IN 10 ACRE TRACTS
100 acres divided into 10 acre tracts. Minutes from Holly Bay Boat Ramp, Corbin, Ky. Gas, electric, water, road frontage...>MORE

Buying or Selling?
List where millions can see what you have to offer. By listing your property here, visitors to our online edition can s...>MORE

See all ads


 

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.CNHI Classified Advertising NetworkCNHI News Service
Associated Press content © 2009. All rights reserved. AP content may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Our site is powered by Zope and our Internet Yellow Pages site is powered by PremierGuide.
Some parts of our site may require you to download the Flash Player Plugin.
View our Privacy Policy
Advertiser index