Saturday, August 30, 2014


Happy birthday today (Aug. 30) to Beth Pritchard Brooks, wife of the nomad Rick Brooks. Nene, Class of 1978, who lives on Harter Hill in Worthington when she isn’t joining Rick in one of his months-long projects installing and working on conveyor systems in Distribution Centers. Rick grew up in Mannington and is a son of Lester Eugene and Helen Gaylene Brooks

And happy birthday today to Dave Harbert, even though he’s a Farmington High grad, because he lives in Idamay. He thinks he might be cousins to the Monongah High Harberts, as most Harberts in Marion County are even if their predecessors didn’t live in Worthington.

The September babies coming up include Mary Louise Baker Orsini, who started with the Class of 1948 in Monongah before going to Westinghouse to make money and winding up with Tony Orsini, Class of 1946, who previously had dated Betty Hensley Lowther, Class of 1948, of Pompano Beach, Florida. Tony, Larry, Jimmy (Cocoa), Junior, Tom and Bill were the famous Orsini brothers of Worthington and Monongah. Tony and Mary Louise live on Swisher Hill.

And, of course, I can’t forget – nor dare I forget – Jackie Olesky Straight, Class of 1955, who had to endure in their Church Street home an older brother named John Olesky, Jr. Life’s not always fair. Jackie is a widow living in Rivesville with three daughters in Marion and Harrison counties, and grandchildren from two of them.


If your name is not on this list, email John Olesky at jo4wvu@neo.rr.com  with your full name, including maiden name, your birthday date, your graduation year and your current hometown.


September


6 – Dave Domico of Monongah, Fairmont West grad married to Andrea Justice Domico
7 – Mary Louise Baker Orsini, Class of 1948 (honorary)
7 – Phillis Tarley, North Marion grad from Idamay living in Fairmont
8 – Fred Moorehead, Class of 1964  
8 – Jackie Olesky Straight, Class of 1955
13 – Karen Manzo, Class of 1974
14 – Suzanne Barr Loss, Class of 1948
14 – Jim Shaver, Class of 1954
15 – Bettie Hensley Lowther, Class of 1948
17 – Patti DeMary Evans, Class of 1972
20 – Greg Patrick, Class of 1970
24 – Joe Fazio, Class of 1974
25 – Marylee Hertzog Gwinn, Class of 1948
25 – Jim Davis, Class of 1964
26 – Nathaleen Cameon Oliverio, Class of 1948
27 -- Bonita Lavencheck Waybright, Class of 1968
29 – Dietta Harden Goush, Class of 1959

October

7 – Sherry McIntire, Class of 1975
8 – Valerie Vandetta Aldridge, Class of 1973
9 – Mary Frances Miller Myers, Class of 1951
11 – Jay Holman, Class of 1971
12 – Brenda Manzo, wife of Danny Manzo, Class of 1957
20 – Leona “Duckles” Davis Schooley, Class of 1953
21 – Dorman Keith Beckner, Class of 1942
21 – Ken Slovekosky, Gilmer County High Class of 1976.
26 – Lori Hawkins Ice, Fairmont East graduate.
29 – Robert Boydoh, Class of 1956
31 – Patty Steele McCombs, Fairmont East graduate.

 

November

1 – Tom Dean, Class of 1949
5 – John Olesky, Class of 1950
10 – Tony Orsini, Class of 1946
14 – Ann Marie Mascak Davis, Class of 1955
19 – Jim Weaver, Class of 1948
20—Hellen Snider Carpenter, Class of 1950                
20 – Kathryn Toothman Crim, Class of 1950
23 -- Antheai Justice Turner, North Marion 1982
25 – Gerald Nelson Hartley, Class of 1955

December

2 – Adam Michna, 1980 North Marion graduate
4 – Ronald Pearse, Classs of 1961
5 – Duane Harbert, Class of 1951
8 – Brenda Urban, Class of 1971
13 – Otis “Sarge” Shaver, Class of 1948
22 – Frances Wimer Miller, Class of 1951

January

6 – Jeanette Barr Baczuk, Class of 1940
13 – Beatrice Salisbury Mills, Class of 1951
17 – Susan Colaneri Monell, Class of 1949
18 – Arlene Marteney Decker Edgell, Class of 1951
?? – Marie Bee Zwiegel, Class of 1951
18 – Bertha Pazdric Sullivan, Class of 1954
18 – Greg Vandetta, Monongah mayor, husband of Debbie Manzo Vandetta, Class of 1973
19 – Joe Martin, Class of 1957
19 – Joann Thompson, Class of 1962  
22 – Jo-Jo DeMary of Monongah, who lives in Chattanooga, Tennessee and is married to Yvonne King DeMary
24 – Marcia Michalski Westfall, Class of 1974
29 – Kitty Ahouse Morrison, Class of 1968

February

1 – Debra Manzo Vandetta, Class of 1973
2 – Sylvia Edwards, Monongah grad living in Idamay
3 – Debbie Weaver Hurley, Monongah grad living in Monongah with husband Milton Hurley
3 – Rebecca Urish Anderson, Class of 1971
8 – Tom Fleming, Monongah grad living in Bridgeport
9 – Bob Nichols, Class of 1964
10 – Bonnie Nicholson Moats, Class of 1960
11—Linda Renay Hess Postlethwait, Class of 1968
15 – Jerry Koloskie, Class of 1975
17 – Larry “Danny” Eates, Class of 1970
18 – Mark Tarley, North Marion grad
20 – Harold Dean Kniceley, Class of 1960
21 – Eva Huey Jarvis, Class of 1975
24 – Mary Kelly, Monongah & North Marion
29 – Betty Sikinow Cunningham, Class of 1954

 

March

5 – Phil Colanero, Jr., Class of 1963
5 -- Doris Carpenter Rogers, Class of 1971
6 – Karen Fitzwater Pausch, Class of 1961
9 – Richie Basagic, Class of 1975 
9 – Brian Evans, Monongah graduate married to Patty DeMary Evans
11 – Benny C. Morgan, Class of 1948
15 – Donna Colvert Davis, Class of 1961, married to 1958 MHS grad Bill Davis
21 – Denver Browning, MHS grad, brother of Dorothy Browning Woods, Class of 1955
22 – David Haines, Class of 1964
25 – Sandy Cook, Class of 1959
25 – Richard Fitzwater, Monongah graduate

 

April

4 – Charlotte Walker Cahill, Class of 1954
9 – Paula “P.J.” Hickman, North Marion 1983
11 – Leo Kubiet, Class of 1942
12 – Linda Sawyer Duckworth, Class of 1966
14 – Lyla Cosner Howell, Class of 1958
16 – Becky Shelosky Carvillano, Class of 1961  
30 – Shirley Knight Ritterhouse, Class of 1954

May

4 – Freddie Jane Colosino Villers, Class of 1964
5 – Frank Franze, Class of 1950
6 – Jerry Loss, Class of 1956
12 – Arlene Kitchin, main squeeze of Joe Martin, Class of 1957
14 – Donna Post Swiger, Class of 1955
14 – Mike Jurasko, Class of 1957
14 – Virginia Belle Littleton Curtis, Class of 1957
17 – Colette Stanley Melton, Class of 1970
20 – Linda Tomlinson Stevenski, Class of 1955
21 – June Paxton Rogers, Class of 1948
27 – Ed Graffius, Class of 1971
28 – Terri Orsini Saye, Class of 1972

June

1 – Parma Kay Fetty, Class of 1973
3 – Jim Birdsell, North Marion grad from Monongah; married to Angela
7 – Kenneth Kincaid, Class of 1968
8 – John Koloskie, Jr., Class of 1944
8 – Pat Slovekosky Morris, Class of 1970
13 – C.L. “Roy” Parker II, North Marion Class of 1982
13 – Rick Morrison, son of Kitty Ahouse Morrison, Class of 1968  
14 – Pamela Bombardiere, Monongah grad
14 – Regina McCoy Murphy, Class of 1973
17 – Delmas Gene Hartley, Class of 1979
17 – Dennis Jones, Class of 1954
23 – Ramona Fullen Michalski, Class of 1949
23 – Kathryn Manuel Marshall, Class of 1960
23 – Ron Manzo, Monongah grad
23 – Frankie Vandetta, North Marion grad


July

3 – Susan Ahouse Schrader, Class of 1971
4 – Bob Fox, Class of 1948
4 – Barbara Fleming Marsh, Class of 1947
5 – David Gowers, Class of 1971
5 – Bill Meredith, Class of 1957
7 – Alex Fazio Huff, North Marion 2005 grad
14 – Ted Nagel, Class of 1954
14 – Bentley Evans, Class of 1978
21 – Robin Huffman Satterfield, Class of 1973  
16 – Jean Nagel Viglianco, Class of 1949
19 – Jane Pritchard Moore, Class of 1975
29 – Pete Basagic, Class of 1972

August

1 – Kim DeMary Clowers, Class of 1979
3 – (Agnes) Jean Larry DiLaura, Class of 1950
5 – Penny Delovich, Monongah graduate
7 – Dorie Mike Whetsell, Monongah graduate
9 – Paula Kerns Fazio, Class of 1979
12 – Angelo Catania, Class of 1943
16 – Debby Morrison Harden, Class of 1966
18 – Jim McDaniel, Class of 1960
18 – John Fazio, Class of 1970
19 – Greg Postlethwait, Class of 1964
19 – Barbra Eller-Hanning, Monongah grad
20 – Irene Fazio Preolitti, Class of 1966
20 – Connie Warash, Monongah grad
29– Pat Meredith Wills, Class of 1950
30 – Beth Pritchard Brooks, Class of 1978
30 – David Harbert of Idamay, Farmington grad


Friday, August 29, 2014


Kerry was running back on the 1968 Monongah High state football champs, with Brother (Nick Saban) the quarterback, and, after Brother moved on to Kent State University, Kerry helped Monongah win the 1969 state title. 

It was the only back-to-back state football championships for Monongah. 

The Lions won in 1952 and 1955 with Jim Feltz coaching and Earl Keener (the 1968 and 1969 head coach) as Jim's assistant and in 1973 with Jim's son, Jay Feltz, as the quarterback for the state champ Lions.
Brother Faces Boyhood Team, WVU

By JOHN RABY and JOHN ZENOR
AP Sports Writers

Growing up in West Virginia, Nick Saban would peek through the rails at the old WVU Fieldhouse as Jerry West played basketball far below.
Watching West Virginia play football, meanwhile, "was like the highlight of my year," Saban said.
When Saban leads No. 2 Alabama against the Mountaineers in Atlanta's Georgia Dome, his priority as always on fall Saturdays will be to win a football game — even against his home state program.
He seemed to enjoy waxing nostalgic this week about his favorite boyhood team in memories that include the heartache of listening to his transistor radio when West and the Mountaineers fell 71-70 — yes, Saban remembers the score — to California in the 1959 national championship game.
"You don't forget stuff like that," Saban said, "but now I'm Alabama's coach. I'm an Alabama fan. We don't really have to be concerned about any of that. We want to do what's best for our team and the relationships that we have here.
"But we also respect their traditions and the relationships that we've developed through the years in West Virginia."
Those ties will be evidenced by friends and family traveling to Atlanta for the game, people who say they saw Saban's potential way back when.
That group includes U.S. Sen. Joe Manchin, a former West Virginia governor, who grew up less than 10 miles away from the Sabans and still calls him "one of my best friends in the whole world."
Manchin played on youth sports teams coached by Saban's father, Nick Sr., who also operated a service station while running an ice cream shop/restaurant with his wife in front of their modest home just outside Monongah.
Nick Sr., Manchin said, "was a builder of men" and his son was always there soaking it in when he wasn't helping out by washing cars or pumping gas.
"He had all the genes for it and he had the tutelage of his father, who was very rigid and stoic about how he did things," Manchin recalled. "You just saw the success come. He saw it by hard work, sacrificing, planning. He knew what it took to succeed, and Nick took it to the next level.
"I always thought he would be the greatest football coach, I believe, in the country today and will go down in history as one of the greatest. And it's all because of that coal-mining town."
Nick Sr. died of a heart attack in 1973 when the undersized Saban, spurned by the Mountaineers, was playing baseball and football at Kent State.
Both Manchin and Saban played quarterback in high school. Manchin graduated from Farmington High in 1965, Saban from Monongah High in 1969.
"The biggest mistake WVU ever made was not offering young Nick Saban a scholarship," said Manchin, whose West Virginia career was ended early by a knee injury. "He was one of the best athletes to ever come out of the area. His size gave them pause to ever offer him a scholarship."
Sharing childhood memories wasn't the only time Saban showed a lighter side leading up to this game. He also challenged Manchin and others, including Florida coach Will Muschamp, to participate in the ice bucket challenge that's gone viral in efforts to raise funds to fight Lou Gehrig's disease.
Manchin's wife, Gayle, dumped the senator with ice water.
Manchin said this game is one instance where he'll be rooting against Saban.
Not so for Saban's sister, Dianna “Dene” Thompson, who lives in the Marion County community of Worthington and has had three kids graduate from West Virginia.
"That's a no brainer: Roll Tide," Thompson said. She has to pull for the man she's always called "Brother."
"When West Virginia's playing anybody else, we cheer for West Virginia," she said. "But we can't cheer against Brother."
If Saban had his way as a teenager, Saturday's game wouldn't just be against his old favorite team. He'd be facing his alma mater.

"He really wanted to go to WVU but they wouldn't give him a scholarship," Thompson said. "They told him he could walk on but he got a scholarship to Kent State, so he went to Kent State. He would have gone to WVU if he had been offered a scholarship there."
Sports & Yokays are synonymous

John Yokay III is a Barrackville High and WVU grad who lives in Sacramento, but he has the same passion for high school football as his father, also a John Yokay, who played for the 1952 state champ Monongah High football team. 

John Yokay III
Dad, Class of 1953, who once worked at St. John’s School of Boys in Deep River, Connecticut, lives in Mount Airy, Maryland.

John III wrote from California: “1st game of the season. Start referring a new season of high school football tonight. Christian Brothers vs. River City.” Both are Sacramento high schools.

John III also takes in San Francisco Giants baseball, zip-lining in Wyoming, caving, golfing and wine-tasting.

Two weeks ago John III went to New York City to take daughter Petrina to Podiatry School.

Don’t be alarmed because WVU grad John III is wearing an Auburn cap (he also has Auburn hoodies and sweatshirts). That’s because daughter Petrina was an outstanding gymnast at the Alabama college.


John III’s father, John Yokay, is a brother of Leatrice Yokay Greaser, Class of 1950, who lives in Fairmont, and Pat Yokay Maddox, Class of 1948, who lives in Bentons Ferry. 
Parking changes for WVU football

By Krista Baker, WBOY-TV Monongalia and Preston County Reporter/Weekend Anchor

The WVU students are officially settled in at the university. That means one thing, Football season is upon us. If you're planning on heading out to Milan Puskar Stadium to watch the Mountaineers, there are a few things you need to know about parking.
"Especially in the Blue Lot," said Matt Wells, from WVU Athletics. "Fans know the Blue Lot as the lot directly in between the WVU hospital and the stadium. There are some changes there."
Ruby Memorial is currently going through a multimillion dollar construction plan. The ongoing upgrades did force WVU Athletics to reconfigure game day parking.
Some changes include access to the blue lot. Med Center Drive, the road that was in front of the hospital, no longer exists.
"The roads actually been rerouted and will run much closer to the stadium, which will change the entrance and exit points for fans who are attending the game with Blue Lot passes," said Wells. "If you don't have a Blue Lot pass you can no longer cut through. You have to have a Blue Lot pass to access the front of the hospital."
Newer, and clearer, signs have been added to the parking lot.
"I think our facilities crew does an excellent job of signage," Albert Wright, the President and CEO of WVU Hospitals, said. "I will just ask people to be patient with us through this time of growth. I promise when all is said and done we will have a facility and physical plant and clinical capabilities that is something they'll be very proud of."
People that arrive closer to game time will also no longer be able to pick their parking spot.
"The first game is a perfect example," Well said. "The lots open at 7 a.m.. Between 7 a.m. and noon, fans can come into the stadium lot and pick the best available parking spot. Starting at 12:01 p.m., fans will be directed or flagged into the next open spot."
The WVU Game Day App, available on iPhone and Android, has everything you need to know about parking, and the game day experience.
The first home game is Saturday, September 6, against Towson.
Betty LaRosa (left), Diana Pishner Walker
Mange! Clarksburg’s at it again

Author Diana Pishner Walker (“I Don’t Want to Sit in the Front Row Any More”), a 1977 graduate of Clarksburg Notre Dame High School who works for the Marion County Board of Education, will be riding in Saturday’s (Aug. 30) West Virginia Italian Heritage Festival parade with author Betty Larosa (The “Creighton” family saga novels).

The 36th Italian festival in the most Italian city in West Virginia runs from Friday (Aug. 29) through Sunday (Aug. 31). It has been labeled among the "Top 100 Events in North America" by the ABA, a "Top 20 Event by the Southeast Tourism Society" & one of the "Top 4 Italian Festivals" in the nation by the National Sons of Italy.

Mama mia, that’s some spicy rankings!

Since its beginning in 1979, the 3-day street festival’s attendance has grown to 100,000 annually.

Regina Maria XXXVI (Regina meaning "Queen" and Maria the name of the first queen of Italy) this year is Kasandra Theresa Ruscitto of Vienna, West Virginia.

In previous years such celebrities as Tony Danza, Kathy Mattea, Jo Dee Messina, Steve Augeri, Joey Dee and the Starliters and Frankie Avalon performed.

Honored this year:

Italian Man of the Year, Anthony Bellotte
Italian Woman of the Year, Angela Bellotte
Honorary Italian Man of the Year, Dr. Joseph Momen
Honorary Italian Woman of the Year, Sarah Carr Parsons
Excellence in Education, Mary Randolph
Mother of the Year, Lucie Romano


Events – with nearly every name participating ending in a vowel – include the Festival Chorus, Authors Forum, 5K Race, golf tournament, pasta cookoff, car and bike show, home-made wine contest and – naturally – a bocce tournament (that brings visions of the voices and laughter under the lights at the bocce court next to Monzo’s Grocery in Monongah, across the street from P.P. Shenasky Grocery). 

This brings back memories of my trip to Mione, Italy where my Nona was born and Pellizzano, Italy where my mother, aunt, uncle and grandfather were born.

I can still see the Alps in the distance and Lake Cumo in my mind. Italy and West Virginia have been entertwined inextricably since the 1907 Monongah mines explosions when there were more Italians than any other nationality among the 362 (official Consol count) to 500+ (Father Briggs and gravediggers count) dead miners. 


Thursday, August 28, 2014

Winding West Virginia path leads Saban to success
Tommy Deas
TideSports.com  
IDAMAY, W.Va. | There are no straight roads in this part of northern West Virginia, nor any flat ones.

They wind over hills and curve around mountainsides; sometimes they are carved out of the hard earth. A 100-yard horizontal straightaway is uncommon, and there are more signs warning of falling rocks than stop signs.
First Street in this unincorporated town along Route 218 is typical: It rolls over one hill and then curves up another, past a church that used to be a schoolhouse to a field that used to be a pasture owned by a lady with one cow.

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Spend any time around here and you'll learn that "used to be" is a common reference point when giving directions. Idamay used to be a bustling mining town, where coal was dug and families prospered. Those dozen brick buildings behind the barbed-wire fence in the center of town used to be the mine's headquarters. The houses along either side of the deteriorating, fenced-off structures used to be owned by Bethlehem Mines Corp., and before the mine closed, everyone who resided here made their living by working in the mines or from selling things to people who did.

That field at the end of First Street has a name: Nick Saban Memorial Field. It is where the University of Alabama's head football coach learned to play the game, and it is named after his late father.

A couple of miles away, at the other end of Route 218 - where it dead ends at U.S. Highway 19 at the bottom of what the locals call Swisher Hill - is the house where Saban grew up. It is behind the gas station his father owned, which is across the highway from the building where his mother ran an ice cream shop and restaurant.

This is where Saban began his own winding, rocky path toward becoming the most successful coach in college football. This is where he learned the values and nurtured the drive that have taken him to four national championships - three at Alabama - and where he first forged a reputation as a leader, a winner and a fierce competitor.

When Alabama plays West Virginia at 3:30 p.m. Saturday on ABC-TV in the Georgia Dome in Atlanta to open the 2014 season, Saban's present and past brush together. Perhaps it is fitting that the game is being played at a neutral site rather than at WVU, a 40-minute drive from Saban's childhood home, because the 62-year-old coach has learned that you really can't ever go home, because home is no longer the place it used to be.

"It's a different place now with the mines all closed," Saban said. "It was kind of a thriving community. There's not much up there now."
Black Diamonds

There is a kind of coal, anthracite, that contains more fixed carbon and less volatile matter than any other type. It burns with a pale blue flame and emits little smoke. Once lit, it stays combustible with less effort than other coal products. It is rare, making up less than 2 percent of all coal reserves in the country, according to Encyclopedia Britannica.

Anthracite is known as black diamond, and it inspired the name of the youth football team that Nick Saban Sr. founded in the early 1960s.
Saban and longtime friend Bill Criado, who was postmaster of Idamay and nearby Farmington, started a Pop Warner program that drew players from the surrounding mining towns. Saban was going to be commissioner, with Criado acting as secretary. They enlisted a couple of college kids to coach.

"We decided to go take a look at how things were going," recalled Criado, now 87. "When we got there it was a bunch of kids with their parents, but no coach had showed up."

That's how Nick Saban Sr. became a coach. Not long after, he visited Criado at the post office and declared that the team would need a name. Criado suggested the Sabans, an idea the coach immediately shot down.

"We kicked around a few names," Criado said. "I came up with the Black Diamonds, because it's associated with coal."

In their first season, the Idamay Black Diamonds got left in the coal dust.

"We didn't win a game," said Tom Hulderman, now 63, a charter member who scored the team's first touchdown. "Matter of fact, we didn't come close to winning a game."

Something was missing. Perhaps it was a scrappy little kid, the coach's son, who wasn't yet old enough to play.

Nick Saban, the Alabama coach, is still known in these parts as Brother: "His parents had a daughter, and they would say, 'When your brother comes,'" Criado said. "It started like that." Brother Saban wasn't the kind of kid whom others easily forgot.

"First time I ever saw Brother, he'd just got a bicycle," Hulderman said. "It was burgundy and he had the handlebars on backwards. He had his tongue sticking out, pumping that thing as hard as he could.

"I was jealous as hell."

When Brother Saban joined the Black Diamonds in the program's second year, the flame was lit, and it kept burning.

"We might have went 5-5 or 6-4 that year," Hulderman said. "After that, nobody could score on us."

Nick's kids

The team had more than a playbook. It had a mentor and father figure.

Nick Saban Sr. bought an old school bus and ran a daily route from one little mining community to another to pick kids up and take them to practice.

"He didn't want the kids to walk the roads," Criado said.

He often took the players to his wife's shop for ice cream after practice, but Saban's philanthropy went far beyond treats and bus rides. He bought football shoes for kids from families that couldn't afford them. When new players wanted to join the Black Diamonds, Nick Sr. would have them write an essay explaining why they wanted to play. When one boy who had flunked out of school turned in a well-written essay, it was Saban who intervened with the principal and tutored the student to get him back in school.

"He did things that nobody knows," Criado said.

The son witnessed his father's kindness.
"I remember poor, poor kids coming in and having a worn-out basketball and wanting to put air in the ball at the gas station, and saw my dad take them to the sports store and buy them a new basketball, stuff like that," Saban said. "That's what he was all about."

The bus was about more than transportation.
"That bus had sayings in magic marker all around it that were all things not to win a game, but to be a better person and the choices and decisions that you made," Saban said. "It goes far beyond just being the coach of the team."

When Nick Saban, the son, got in position to help others, he and wife Terry started a charity called the Nick's Kids Fund. Since 2007, it has distributed more than $4.6 million to local and state organizations.

"Nick's Kids is really all about my dad Nick, not me Nick," Saban said. "It was because of all the things that he did to try to create a situation where these kids had an opportunity to play, which they never would have had."

Living memory

Nick Saban Memorial Field is not unlike the surrounding terrain. Its 100 yards are straight, but two opposite end zone corners rise upward to a point where a receiver might be standing more than a foot higher than a defender trying to cover him.

Beyond the field is a steep incline, with trees on top. Players ran conditioning drills on that hill.
"We would practice so long when my dad was the coach that when conditioning came it was usually dark," Saban recalled, "so we had to actually bring back a leaf from the trees at the top to prove that we made it up.

"We didn't do it once, we did it many times. I'm talking about up and back, up-back, up-back." On a recent weekday afternoon, dozens of kids in helmets and shoulder pads were gathered in different spots on that field, practicing for the upcoming season. The Idamay Black Diamonds have 126 players this year in three age divisions.

The field is unique to the league.
"Everywhere else we play is on a high school field or middle school field," said Jeremy White, 35, who manages a carpet outlet in Fairmont and acts as the organization's president. "We're the only ones who have our own field.

"It's Nick Saban's field, and we take a lot of pride in that. The fact that his father started it, I think that keeps the community involved. Everywhere we go, people come up and ask us about Nick Saban."

Every year, Saban sends $5,000 to support the Black Diamonds. This year's check came with a signed football, hat and photo for auction to raise more money.

The Black Diamonds charge players and cheerleaders just $10 for the season.

"We provide about everything but the cheerleaders' socks and the cleats," White said. "This is a poor part of the county."

Down the road a little way, the station that Saban's father once owned sells tires but no longer has gas pumps. The building that was once his mother's ice cream shop is now a bar that caters to less wholesome clients than it did in the 1960s: "Welcome Bikers Friday Night Bike Night," declares a prominent sign greeting customers.

On a wall inside the bar is an autographed Saban photo. A signed Alabama jersey can be found in Prunty's Pub on the main drag a couple of miles away in Monongah, where Saban played in high school.

Monongah High School no longer exists. After the mines closed and the population began to shrink - Marion County had more than 71,000 residents in 1950, the year before Saban was born, and today is home to 56,678, according to the latest U.S. Census figures - the traditional town high schools consolidated. The schoolhouse is now the town's middle school. It has a display case that contains a shrine to Alabama's coach, with a crimson and white shaker and other Saban memorabilia. "There are a lot of Alabama fans around here," said Steve Malnick, the principal. "I wanted to do this to kind of recognize the history behind Nick Saban and Monongah athletics."

Championship season

Saban, playing quarterback and safety, won a Class A state championship as a high school senior in 1968. Monongah went undefeated, outscoring opponents 46.4 to 5.3 in the regular season, and didn't score fewer than 39 points until the state championship game, which the Lions won 21-12. Marbury and Hulderman, his old Black Diamond teammates, provided athleticism and speed. Saban called the plays and brought the intangibles.

"Even though he didn't have the raw speed," Hulderman said, "he knew you can get there with your brain, too. Even if he wasn't in the right place, he could get there by studying and knowing." What was Saban like in the huddle?
"I'll put it this way, he expected your attention and then there were times he demanded it immediately, 'We've got to do it now, on this play.' But also, he would crack jokes in the huddle sometimes to break the tension," Hulderman said. "Relating to the guys, if he needed to get a point across he'd get it across.
"He knew the ones he could just jump on their butts, but just by the look in his eyes or a pat on the shoulder he would give credit when it was due."
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Saban made All-State in baseball as an infielder and in basketball as a guard. He could have been West Virginia's first three-sport All-State athlete had he played football more selfishly.

Criado remembers overhearing a conversation between Saban, when he was in high school, and his father.

"He was scoring a lot," Criado said, "and his dad told him, 'Don't be calling quarterback draws or things like that because these other guys aren't going to like it too much.' " The message: Let the other guys score.

Discussing his legacy of winning from youth league to high school to coaching, Saban still deflects the glory.

"We had a very, very good team and I was fortunate," he said. "It was the same thing when we played Pop Warner for my dad, we had a very good team.

"I just happened to be the quarterback on a very good team."

Cradle of champions

Monongah is best known for a 1907 disaster that claimed the lives of 361 coal miners, many of them children. A plaque in front of town hall recognizes the victims, who "perished under these hills in the worst mining disaster of our nation."

The area is also known for producing an uncommon number of top coaches and athletes: Sam Huff, the Hall of Fame linebacker for the New York Giants and Washington Redskins in the 1950s and '60s, is from Edna Gas, which is now part of Farmington, just 7 miles away; Fielding Yost, who coached Nebraska, Stanford, Kansas and Michigan in the late 1800s and early 1900s, was from Fairview, 13 miles away; Arizona coach Rich Rodriguez, also known for his stints at West Virginia and Michigan, is from Grant Town, 20 miles away; late Southern Cal coach John McKay was from 30 miles away in Everettesville.

Is there something in the coal-enriched soil that has produced so many football standouts from such a small and isolated area located 90 miles south of Pittsburgh? Or can the answer be found in the social fabric?

"Sports was the only thing we had that connected us all together," Criado said. "Each little town had their own high school football team. Everybody was proud of their high school."
Living was hard in the mining towns, even when they were booming. Saban is one generation removed from the mines: his grandfather's home was in nearby Carolina, right across the street from the mine's headquarters.

"It was hard for us to get places," Saban said. "We didn't have transportation. The way I got around when I was that age is we hitchhiked everywhere. You know, if you were in Carolina or Idamay and the shift didn't change, there wasn't much traffic."

Kids congregated at the ballfields.

"To be quite honest, there wasn't a whole heck of a lot else to do," Saban said. "I think when you're a competitor and you like to compete, football, basketball and baseball were the sports we were exposed to growing up, and we played something year-round.

"Where I grew up and spent a lot of time with my grandmother in Carolina, we either went to the church and we played basketball or we went to the ball diamond and played baseball, and in football season we played football."

Competitive drive

In Saban, something more was at work. He was driven to win, a quality passed down from his father. Criado remembers playing the card game pinochle at the Saban house many nights. "We had some tough games, I tell you," he said.

As charitable as Nick Sr. was, he could also be a hard man.

"It was either his way or hit the road," Criado said. "That's how it was. Brother is a little bit like his dad that way."

Hulderman learned it back in high school. He used to stay after practice for up to an hour with his quarterback, working on timing. One day he lit a cigarette as he walked off the field. "You shouldn't be doing that," Saban told him. "You're captain of the team."

Hulderman told him what he could do with his opinion. He turned to walk away and was bonked in the head by a football thrown by Saban.

"Next time," the future college coach said, "I'll knock your head off."

Saban's demand that others play up to his standards is a hallmark of his coaching. "How competitive is he?" Hulderman asks. "How deep is the ocean? I don't think there's a scale.

"He kind of reminds me of Michael Jordan. He may be quiet, he doesn't say much, but when he lets you think you're going to win he's going to cut your heart out."

Saban credits his upbringing.

"I was always fortunate to be around people - I mean my high school coach, my dad who was my coach - who were really tough, but in a good way," he said. "The only time that I struggled was when I first went to Kent State (to play in college), we weren't really successful until Don James became the head coach, and then we were successful.

"To have those kind of mentors and those kind of people to teach you the values it took to be successful, they had a huge impact on me."

Losing a father

Saban played in the defensive backfield at Kent State, three hours away in Ohio, finishing his career in 1972. He stayed on as a graduate assistant to start his coaching career.

The next year, his father suffered a heart attack while jogging home on Route 218, a few dozen yards short of making it to the house. He was rushed to Fairmont General Hospital and pronounced dead.

Saban wanted to quit and return home to run the gas station and restaurant. His mother said no. "She just said your dad wouldn't want you to do that, he wanted you to do what you are doing," Saban said. "That's why we worked so hard to send you to college and all that.
"I was there at the hospital when his mother got a call," Criado said. "It was Brother. He had heard."

"It was very, very difficult because my dad was really the patriarch of our family. He was the whole deal. It was difficult for my mom, my sister, our entire family. I was away. It was tough, the toughest thing I ever had to go through."

A special place

West Virginia will always be special to Saban. He came up in the shadow of WVU's athletic department in a time of black-and-white television and three networks, with only a couple of games aired each week.

"I grew up a Mountaineer fan like most of the kids we grew up with," he said. "When I grew up you weren't exposed to all the teams all over the country like you are now.

"It was the highlight of my life when my dad took me to a game. My memories of being a little kid sitting in Mountaineer Field House watching Jerry West play, I mean that doesn't ever go away." When Saban's father died, West Virginia reached out to him. Bobby Bowden, WVU's head coach at the time, had coached with James, Saban's coach at Kent State, when the two were assistants at Florida State in the 1960s. They arranged to offer the young coach a chance to move closer to home.

"I didn't know Coach Bowden that well," Saban said. "He actually called me when I was a graduate assistant at Kent State and said, 'If you need to come home you can be a graduate assistant here.' I never, ever forgot that."

Saban chose to stay at Kent State, becoming a full-time assistant, and later spent two seasons on the staff at West Virginia under Frank Cignetti Sr. after Bowden had moved on to become head coach at FSU.

To this day, Saban still peruses results from West Virginia and Kent State athletic contests. "It doesn't really make any difference if it's a football game or a basketball game or whatever it is," he said. "Way back, someplace you're still a bit of a fan because that sort of never leaves you."

Back in Idamay and Monongah and those other old mining communities, they feel the same way about the guy they still call Brother.

"I don't think he had any idea that he would ever become what he has," Criado said, "but I can tell you people around here are mighty proud of him."