Account Email:    Password:  
 
   
***** BOARDMAN NEWS WISHES EVERYONE A BLESSED EASTER SEASON ****  
 Thursday April 3, 2025
    Boardman Weather
    
    
    % humidity
Buy Boardman News Photos
View Current News
View / Purchase Ads and Announcements
 
 
  Legendary YSU Sports Icon Jim Morrison Will Be Inducted Into Curbstone Coaches HOF  
  Ceremonies Set For Sun., May 4 At Mr. Anthony’s Banquet Center:   April 3, 2025 Edition  
     BY GREG GULAS
      Boardman News Sports
      bnews@zoominternet.net
      The 56th Curbstone Coaches Hall of Fame banquet, sponsored by Briarfield Health Care Centers and Ed and Diane Reese, is scheduled for Sunday, May 4 with 12 new members set for enshrinement during ceremonies at Mr. Anthony’s Banquet Center in Boardman.
      Former Cleveland Browns-Oakland Raiders and Oklahoma Sooners running back Greg Pruitt will serve as guest speaker.
      The 2025 class includes John Butera (sports media), Tony Congemi (football), Roland Commings (boxing), Tim Gleason (contribution to sports), Brian Gorby (track and field-cross country), Bob Jenkins (track and field), Doug Kuberski (bowling), Steve Leslie (contribution to sports), James W. Morrison (contribution to sports), Mike Pavlansky (football), Robb Schmidt (sports media) and Jim Vivo (football).
      Born July 1, 1941, Morrison is one of three contributors in this year’s class, joining Tim Gleason and Steve Leslie.
      A 1959 graduate of New Wilmington High School, he is a 1965 graduate – he earned his undergraduate degree in business – of then Youngstown University, starting his professional career at YU upon graduation then moving over to athletics in 1967 when he became athletics business manager, a post that he held until his retirement in 1996.
      He still serves as assistant director of the Penguin Club, the school’s tertiary support group of Penguin athletics and including his student time, he has spent seven decades as either an undergraduate or employee at his alma mater.
      He began as a student assistant in the University business office, that coming in the summer of 1962, a post that he held until he graduated in 1965.
      When he started his professional career, he was an administrative assistant in the YSU business office – they became a state school in 1967 – providing financial aid for students before taking over as the athletic department’s first ever business manager in 1968.
      His first office in athletics was located in Kilcawley Center while the coaches offices were housed in Tod Hall. Those early years did not feature as many sports programs as the University offers today and he didn’t have the luxury of a computer, the internet, a cell phone or even a GPS.
      Most notably, the teams had no home venue they could call their own with football relying on playing their home games at The Rayen School, Campbell Memorial High School or Austintown Fitch High School, and basketball relying on the South High School, Struthers H.S. and Austintown Fitch High School field houses.
      Baseball played at either Evans Field, Pemberton Park or occasionally at Oakland Field while women’s sports were overseen by the AIAW (Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women) and still eight years away from being sanctioned by the NCAA at the time of his hiring.
      When YSU had to rent portable lighting for games, it was Jim Morrison coordinating that effort and when snow became a challenge on game day, the entire Morrison family helped with the shoveling to clear seats for fans wishing to attend the game.
      He coordinated road trips and fundraising events and was a huge part of the University’s effort to gain entrance into first, the Mid-Continent Conference and then the Ohio Valley Conference for its men‘s and women’s teams to participate.
      Additionally, his expertise with numbers was called upon time and again as YSU built its very first ever home basketball arena, Beeghly Center, which was christened on December 2, 1972, in a game versus the Ohio University Bobcats then on September 4, 1982, Stambaugh Stadium became a reality and housed the Penguin football team when they played host to the Akron Zips on Dwight “Dike” Beede Field.
      The ”Ice Castle,” as it has become known to opponents, has provided a home field advantage for the Penguins’ football teams and played host to some of the very best Division I-AA and FCS play-off teams.
      In 1979, he served as President of CABMA (College Athletic Business Managers Association) and on two other occasions his services were summoned by the NCAA as he was chosen to serve on its Division I-AA football selection committee.
      He played a key role in the development of the Penguin Club, which was started in 1974 and today, as its associate director, oversees its funding of scholarships and operating budgets for all athletics programs within the department.
      He has worked under every YSU president and all six of its athletic directors, beginning with Willard Webster then with Paul Amodio, Bill Narduzzi, Joe Malmisur, Jim Tressel and current AD Ron Strollo.
      He has done everything from budgets, to travel, to ordering food, busing and scheduling, also taking care of housing for athletes as well as making sure cheerleaders and the band were taken care of at both home and away games.
      He retired in from YSU in 1996 and has worked with the Penguin Club ever since his retirement.
      He and his wife, the former Catherine Jean Gosnell, are the proud parents of two sons, Greg and Doug.
      They have five grandchildren and reside in Poland.
      Doors open at 4 p.m., dinner will be served at 5 p.m. with the program set to commence at 6 p.m.
      Individual tickets are available at $60 each, tables of eight are $480.
      Further information can be obtained by calling 330-506-6774 or by visiting the Curbstone organization’s website at www.thecurbstonecoaches.org.
 
FEATURED    |    SUBSCRIBE    |    ADS    |    NEWS    |    COMMUNITY    |    SPORTS    |    ARCHIVE    |    PHOTOS    |    CONTACT
Boardman News 2025©
Contact Boardman News Boardman News Archive Sports in Boardman The Boardman Community Advertisements Subscribe to the Boardman News Boardman News Home and Features
Boardman News on Facebook Boardman News on Twitter