Teacher, Coach, and Counselor Herb Banet: The Chalkboard Champion Who Was Also A Football and Basketball Star

$RVIAKQAWhen we think of chalkboard champions, let’s not forget all of our nation’s talented coaches. These dedicated professionals work many long hours with our young people, teaching them the value of self-discipline, healthy competition, fair play, and teamwork, and helping them to choose a healthy, active lifestyle. One such chalkboard champion in Herb Bane, a high school teacher, basketball coach, and guidance counselor from Fort Wayne, Indiana.
Herb was born in 1913 in Fort Wayne. As a high school student, he was a gifted athlete. At 6’2″ and 200 pounds, he earned All-City Honors in both football and basketball. After his graduation from Fort Wayne South High School in 1933, he attended Manchester University in North Manchester, Indiana, where he played collegiate football. While at Manchester, Herb played All-Conference Football and All-State Football in 1934, 1935, and 1936. During the 1937 season, Herb played in the National Football League with the Green Bay Packers. He was also a war hero. When World War II broke out, Herb served his country in the U.S. Navy.
These experience served him well during his eighteen-year career as a coach at Central High School in Fort Wayne. While coaching there, his team made one trip to the Final Four in 1960, where they were defeated by just one point by East Chicago Washington. Later in Herb’s career he served as a guidance counselor at Northrup High School. This talented educator retired in 1979. In recognition of his illustrious career as an athlete, he was inducted into the Indiana Basketball Hall of Fame in 2000.

Herb Banet passed away in 2003 at the age of 89 and is buried at Falls Memorial Gardens in Wabash, Indiana. It is certain that his efforts as a gifted teacher, coach, and counselor will always be well-remembered.

Martin Badoian: A Mathematical Chalkboard Champion

g12c0000000000000004932ee718209527610ca4038e42bf2e30a89b686[1][1]One absolutely amazing chalkboard champion is Martin Badoian. He is currently a math teacher at Canton High School in Canton, Massachusetts. Born in 1928, Martin attended Brown University, where he graduated in 1952. During his college years, he excelled in athletics, particularly in baseball, basketball, and golf. He was named Outstanding Tri-Captain Athlete at Brown University, and has also garnered awards at the state and regional level for his athletic accomplishments.

Martin’s career as a professional educator has spanned 54 years. Currently, he teaches math at Canton High School in Canton, Massachusetts, where he has worked for 45 years. Prior to that, he spent several years as an educator at Milford Prep in Connecticut, and Brockton High School.  At Canton High, Martin founded and currenlty serves as the coach of the Canton High School math team, a group that can boast an outstanding record, capturing at least nineteen New England championships and 14 state championships. This is especially impressive since the school’s enrollment is less than 1,000; the school is considerably smaller than many of its competitors. Martin serves as the director of New England Math Meet, the New England Mathematics League, and the Greater Boston Mathematics League. Also, he is a co-founder and the current vice-president of the American Regions Mathematiccs League.

Martin has earned a great deal of recognition in the educational field. He was named Massachusetts Teacher of the Year in 1977, the Presidential Award for Excellence in Mathematics and Science Teacher, and he has been named a national Tandy Scholar.

Martin Badoian, a true chalkboard champion.

George Sonny Franck: A Genuine Chalkboard Champion

bilde[1][1]George Franck, who was popularly called Sonny, was a high school teacher and football coach, first in Oklahoma City and then at Rock Island High School in Illinois, retiring after twenty-five years as a professional educator in 1978. He earned his bachelor’s degree from the University of Minnesota and his master’s degree from the University of Oklahoma.

But before he became a chalkboard champion, Sonny was a halfback in the National Football League, playing for the New York Giants. It was a success story that surprised the humble Iowa boy, who had a reputation in high school for being scrawny but tough. Sonny became an all-state end for his alma mater, Davenport High School, and led the school to a state track title, anchoring an 880-relay unit that set a state record. After graduation, he was recruited to play football and run track at the University of Minnesota, where he became a starting halfback in 1938 and led the Golden Gophers to a national championship in 1940, his senior year. That season, Sonny was named an All-American, All-Big Ten, and the Most Valuable Player of the College All-Star Game. Academically, he earned the Big Ten Medal for scholarship and athletics. In the Heisman Trophy voting that year, Sonny placed third, and then he was drafted into the NFL in the first round in 1941. That’s when he went to play for the Giants.

Sonny was also a WWII veteran. Following the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, he served his country in the US Marines, joining as an infantry officer and completing a tour of duty on Iwo Jima. While there, he saw Jack Chevigny, a football star for Notre Dame, killed in action. Sonny eventually became certified as a fighter pilot and served aboard the USS Hornet. A recipient of nine battle stars, he narrowly escaped death when his plane was shot down in the South Pacific in 1945. When the war was over, Sonny resumed his professional football career, playing for the Giants in their 1946, 1947, and 1948 seasons.

George Sonny Franck passed away from acute leukemia in January, 2011, at the age of 92. He was a genuine chalkboard champion.

Chalkboard Champion Pro Baseball Pitcher Steven Delabar: The Remarkable Substitute Teacher and Coach

delabarpic_large_medium[1][1]When we think about chalkboard champions, let’s not forget our nation’s cadre of amazing substitute teachers. Here’s an uplifting story of one such sub. His name is Steven Delabar, and he just happens to be a major league relief pitcher for the Toronto Blue Jays.

Steven, a native of Kentucky, attended Central Hardin High School and Volunteer State Community College. He was drafted by the Anaheim Angels in 2002, and was signed by the San Diego Padres in 2003, making his professional debut in 2004. He spent several years in the minor leagues.

Unfortunately, before he could work his way into big league play, Steven suffered a severe elbow injury in 2009 that appeared to end his career. Undaunted, he rolled up his shirtsleeves and started working on his teaching credential. He became a substitute teacher in the same school district where his wife was an educator, and accepted a position as an assistant baseball coach at John Hardin High School in Elizabethtown, Kentucky. While there, Steven helped implement a recently-developed velocity-improvement program for his student athletes. To test the program’s efficiency, he completed the exercises himself, and before long, Steven discovered that he could pitch as well or better than before his injury. When a scout from the Seattle Mariners watched the twenty-eight-year-old coach pitch in 2011, Steven found himself back in professional baseball as a minor league player. His potential was quickly realized, though, and that same season saw his major league debut. The next year, Steven became a Toronto Blue Jay. Steven Delabar is one of the few major league baseball players who have struck out four opponents in a single inning, and he also went to the 2013 All-Star game, striking out Buster Posey in only five pitches, an impressive feat.

Hopefully, Steven Delabar will enjoy a long and successful career as a professional baseball player, but it would not be a surprise if some day he takes his considerable talents and dedication to students back to the classroom as a full-fledged teacher and coach!

Cory Schlesinger: The "Sledge" that Became a Chalkboard Champion

$R36E4DGCory Schlesinger teaches computer-aided design, drafting, and vocational education classes at Allen Park High School in Allen Park, Michigan. But every one of the 120 students in his classes is well aware that Cory is a retired NFL fullback who played twelve seasons with the Detroit Lions. His nickname then was the “Sledge,” a player who blocked his opponents and brought them down like a sledge hammer. In fact, Cory was famous for destroying his face masks—sometimes as many as twenty in a season— in the game’s violent contact.

Despite this reputation, this mild-mannered hammer has a great heart, caring for his two young daughters, patiently instructing his students, conducting a school-wide strength and conditioning program for both boys and girls, and donating his time to charitable events organized by the Lions. “Cory’s such a generous, kind and wonderful person,” described Janet Wasko, principal of Allen Park High, in an article by columnist Mike O’Hara published on the Detroit Lions website January 11, 2013. “He doesn’t stand on ceremony, but everyone knows who he is. He cares about the whole student body. It’s not just about football,” she said.

Cory Schlesinger: the sledge hammer that became a true chalkboard champion.