Penn State Sports Magazine
Issue link: https://comanpub.uberflip.com/i/306201
enn State lost one of its most sig- nificant basketball players recently. Jack Sherry was the captain of the school's only Final Four team in 1953-54. But he wasn't a pure basketball player in the modern sense. Jack and several of his teammates, including the greatest bas- ketball player in Penn State history, Jesse Arnelle, were actually football players. Football scholarships paid their way through college, and basketball always came second in their athletic priorities. Even their style of play on the court re- flected their football birthright. "We banged people," Jack once told me with one of his typical hardy laughs. "Nobody played the game the way we did. We weren't particularly quick and we weren't big, but we were a very physical team." Penn State basketball in that post- World War II era was still a stepchild within the athletic department. Al- though basketball was the school's fourth varsity sport in 1897, it lagged far behind football, track, wrestling and boxing in popularity. When basketball began to attract sports fans nationwide in the postwar era, Penn State still struggled, primarily because it and most of the other varsity sports received limited financial support from the ad- ministration. Football was king. When Penn State restored athletic scholarships in 1949 after a 20-year drought, all two dozen or so went to football recruits. However, in a rule-bending, behind-the-scenes maneuver to help basketball coach Elmer Gross, a small group of alumni convinced athletic department officials to pay the tuition of one basketball re- cruit. The alumni would take care of room and board. In the fall of 1949, Herm Sledzik, a standout at tiny Elders Ridge High School in Indiana County who had full scholarship offers from Duquesne and St. Francis, enrolled at Penn State's DuBois campus while the first group of football recruits went to what was then California State Teachers College. The temporary out-of-town residency was necessary because housing was at a pre- mium on the main campus, and fresh- men were ineligible. By the time Sherry was a sophomore in the fall of 1951, the exporting of freshmen was no longer necessary and they also were eligible to play on the varsity. Sherry and Sledzik developed a friendship that would last the rest of Sherry's life, and I eventfully became good friends with both of them. But that season I was just a ninth-grader living not far from Sledzik's home. I didn't follow Penn State, and it wasn't until years later that I learned Sledzik and Arnelle had led the team to the NCAA regional playoffs during the 1951-52 season, only to fall to South- eastern Conference champion Kentucky in the first round, 82-54. That '51-52 team finished with a 20-6 record, the Lions' best mark in 10 years, and Sherry was good enough to become a starter. The next year, when Sledzik was the captain, they had another good season (15-9) but just missed the NCAA tournament. Arnelle averaged 17 points per game to lead the team, with Sledzik second (14.6) and Sherry third (10.3). However, Sherry's forte was football. He had been a standout two-sport ath- lete in suburban Philadelphia, but he never intended on playing basketball at Penn State. He often told the story of shooting baskets at Rec Hall one day with some other students when Gross asked him to come out for the team. The Lions' varsity coach primarily needed bodies but also thought Sherry could help the team. Gross's amiable personality masked the gutty attitude of a World War II vet- eran who had won a Bronze Star and Purple Heart on the beach at Normandy. Before the war, Gross had played bas- ketball for Penn State, and he had be- come a full-time faculty member in physical education and basketball coach in the fall of 1949, succeeding his men- tor, John Lawther. When Gross was a senior co-captain in 1942, Lawther's 17- 2 Nittany Lions were invited to the NCAA tournament for the first time. They lost to Dartmouth, 44-39, at the Eastern Regional in New Orleans. Sherry, who made friends easily, be- came devoted to Gross. Through Jack, I learned how hard a frustrated Gross fought to make Penn State a success in basketball, only to be continually re- buffed by the athletic administration. That was why Gross quit coaching after the great 1954 Final Four season but continued teaching until his retirement. In later years, Sherry made it a point to periodically visit Gross at his retirement home in Arizona. Football made Sherry a Penn State household name before his ultimate success on the hardwood. In his sophomore season, he and jun- ior defensive back Don Eyer set a school record with eight interceptions each. The record lasted 16 years until it was broken by All-American Neal Smith with 10 in 1969. Sherry never bragged about that record, although he liked to tell anyone who would listen that two of his inter- ceptions set up touchdowns in a 17-0 victory over Pitt. Sherry also would re- mind friends and acquaintances that he played when passing was usually a sec- ond thought to running. Sherry didn't catch many passes compared to the Penn State receivers of the past 30 years. Yet as a 6-foot-2 185-pound end in an era when all players played offense Sherry helped PSU basketball reach an all-time high P