Julius McCoy gave
life to all that is Farrell basketball
An Editor's Notes
By Jim Raykie
In his death, he loomed larger than life.
Such was the case with Farrell athletic legend Julius McCoy.
Julius, the most revered and beloved athlete
produced in the history of Farrell High School, died April 4 in his
Harrisburg home at 76 after a wonderful life that included exemplary
athletic achievement at the high school and college levels and a history
of caring and respecting people around him.
To realize just how much Julius shared the
national stage and the magnitude of his reputation, all one had to do
was an Internet search in the days after his death. From East Lansing,
where he starred at Michigan State, to Cheraw, S.C., a small town where
he was born, writers and colleagues shared their memories of the man
called “Hooks.”
I was talking with Dr. Brian Generalovich a
few days after Julius died. We reminisced a short while about the 1950s
era of Farrell basketball that Julius jump-started during his three
seasons that spanned from 1949 to 1952, in which he scored 1,471 points.
During our discussion, I realized how much
Julius meant to folks who had the opportunity to watch him play. I was
born in August 1952, months after Julius had played his last game at
Farrell in leading the Steelers to their first state championship.
But as a child (my first memory of Farrell
basketball was seeing the 1960 team that featured Generalovich, Willie
Somerset and Lou Mastrian) I grew up hearing about Julius and his
brother Jimmy.
Back in the day, Steeler basketball was such
an important part of family life in Farrell that it was always a topic
of intense discussion from the dinner table to other family
get-togethers. Central to those discussions, in addition to the status
of the current team’s success, were comparisons and memories of Julius,
the standard for all others wearing blue and gold.
While I never had the opportunity to watch
him play, except for later in charity events, I felt like I had. Imagine
growing up idolizing someone that you had never met, let alone never
having had a chance to watch play. Such was the mystique and lasting
influence that Julius had on so many of us.
Although he spent four years at Michigan
State, and relocated to the Harrisburg area and had a great career with
the Eastern Basketball League, the forerunner of the Continental
Basketball Association, Julius never forgot Farrell or the people who
adored him.
Until recent years, when his health was
beginning to fail, he was a regular at a handful of Farrell home games
every year with his good friend, the late Hugo Washington, especially
during the Ed McCluskey era.
When he walked in the back door of E.J.
McCluskey Gymnasium — it didn’t matter if it was 1966 or 40 years later
in 2006 — Julius was in the house he loved, and he was greeted with
well-earned respect and reverence, as always.
While Julius will be best remembered for his
feats on the hardwood at Farrell, Michigan State and other venues, he
excelled in football and track as well. Not only was he Farrell’s most
revered basketball player, he was arguably the best athlete in the
history of the school.
But whether it was Generalovich or other
colleagues quoted at length in local stories as well as in other
publications, they paid homage to Julius as a person, not only the
athlete. Comments echoed sentiments of how much respect he had for
others, how he always had time for others (especially the youth), and
his loyalty to family, friends and the Farrell and East Lansing
communities.
Jack Marin, who graduated in 1962, had a
wonderful basketball career at Farrell, and at Duke University, where he
was an All-American. He was a first-round draft choice of the Baltimore
Bullets of the NBA, and had a solid 11-year pro career during which he
scored more than 12,000 points and was a two-time All-Star. Considering
his illustrious NBA career, Marin ranks as Farrell’s most successful
athlete beyond his high school days.
But Jack, a Farrell kid at heart who
cherishes his roots despite not living in the city since he was 18 years
old, was one of the first in line to salute Julius and the path he
blazed, calling him without a doubt Farrell’s “Most Valuable Player” in
history. Through the years, I got the chance
to meet Julius many times. His strong hands and long fingers, one of the
physical attributes that enabled his magic with a basketball, provided a
handshake that you never forgot. Always filled with class and
friendliness, Julius was one of the finest people whom I have met.
A memorial service is planned for Saturday,
May 17, beneath the record seven state championship banners that grace
E.J. McCluskey Gymnasium. The first of them, which led to all the
others, will have special meaning that day.
Lifelong friend and Wheatland funeral
director Wilbert Shannon is coordinating the service, which is expected
to attract many former players and area fans wanting to pay homage to
“The Legend.”
“The McCoy family realizes its importance
and wants a memorial service in Farrell,” Shannon said. “We need to have
it, we need closure. And we need to have it in the gym. All the hard
work, all the sweat, it was there. That was where it all started for
Julius.”
Quite appropriately, at least for Farrell
folks and others wanting to pay one last tribute to the man they
cherished for more than a half a century, that’s where it will end.
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