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Profile: Stan Romanoski
By John Antonik
Stan
Romanoski knew all about improvising as West Virginia University’s
track and field coach from 1957-81. He had to because there was
simply not enough money for him to do otherwise.
In the winter when his teams trained for indoor track season they
either toughed it out on the 1/5th-mile outdoor cinder track that
encircled old Mountaineer Field. Or when the weather was just too
bad he took the boys inside and they ran down a 200-yard stretch of
concrete floor underneath the seats of the stadium.
“The big problem was depending upon which direction you ran after
about 100 yards you either had to go uphill or downhill,” said cross
country All-American Carl Hatfield, whom Romanoski fondly referred
to as his ‘diamond in the rough’ when Hatfield was a freshman in
1965. “This was concrete – not soft asphalt. It’s a wonder we never
got injured.”
Romanoski also had the athletic department buy his team long
sheets of plywood to place down on the track so his team could run
over the snow and mud. And when the snow covered the plywood he
handed out brooms and shovels and told his athletes to get to work.
“That’s your warm-up,” he said.
Always looking for small ways to improve his program, Romanoski
found an even better venue for his team to train when the
MountainLair parking garage was built in the late 1960s.
“When the professors left around 4 o’clock we would jog over from
the stadium and get a workout inside the parking garage,” said
Hatfield. “We could run in a flat circle and we didn’t have to watch
out for the traffic because it was gone by 4.”
Stan Romanoski died Saturday morning, June 26, 2004, at his home
in Morgantown at 85 after a brief illness. His 24 years spent at WVU
has left a lasting impression on those fortunate enough to know him.
Romanoski, of Lithuanian descent, grew up in Wheeling with his
mother; his father died at a young age. Longtime friend Sam Pinion,
also a Wheeling native and one of the stars on West Virginia’s 1937
Sun Bowl team, says Romanoski used to run from his home to
Triadelphia High School every day and that’s how he got interested
in track.
Romanoski played football, basketball and track in high school
and was a two-time state champion in the 880-yard run. After
attending Belmont (Ohio) College for a year, he enrolled at WVU
where he was a member of the mile relay team that finished fourth at
Penn Relays, setting a school record that lasted until 1964.
After graduating from WVU in 1942, Romanoski took the head
coaching position at Anstead High School (now Midland Trail) but
left school after just six months to enlist in the Navy during World
War II. At the completion of the war, Romanoski returned to Anstead
where he coached football, basketball and established the school’s
first track program.
From there he moved to Dunbar High School near Charleston where
he also served as athletic director and coached the football,
basketball and track teams. He led Dunbar to a 9-0 record in
football in 1956 and won the state track championship in 1957 before
replacing longtime track coach Art Smith at his alma mater.
By 1962, his cross country team claimed the first of three
Southern Conference titles and his track team took the 1964 Southern
Conference crown. Martin Pushkin, who ran for Romanoski in the early
1960s and later followed him as the school’s track and cross country
coach, says a lack of resources made Romanoski’s job a difficult
one.
“Back in those days there were no assistants,” said Pushkin. “You
just did it all yourself and did the best that you could. You wrote
up the workouts and put them up on the wall and then you tried to
move around from group to group to cover everybody when you were out
there. Sometimes you did and sometimes you didn’t.”
Pushkin came to school as a walk-on like many of the athletes
Romanoski coached at WVU.
“I was down at the old Field House one afternoon shortly after I
got back from the service,” Pushkin remembered. “There was an old
football coach by the name of Russ Crane who was volunteering for
the track team and was working with the throwers. I asked him if I
could try and I ended up throwing it further than his guys and he
said, ‘Why don’t you come out for the team?’ Then I met Coach
Romanoski and he remembered me from high school and that’s how I
made the team.”
Without question Romanoski’s best walk-on was Matewan’s Carl
Hatfield, who didn’t even know what cross country was when he
arrived on campus in 1965.
“My senior year they started a track team in high school and I
ran that one season,” Hatfield laughed. “I got in shape by bicycle
riding.”
But Romanoski saw a distance running star in Hatfield and soon
began politicking to get him in the nation’s best races. Romanoski
had a national caliber pole vaulter in Jack Carter, who cleared
15-feet-8-inches at the NCAA meet his junior year in 1966 to earn
All-America honors. Romanoski was getting invitations for Carter to
appear at all of the nation’s top meets and would only send him if
Hatfield was included.
“He would send in the invitation for Carter provided they would
take me as a filler in the two-mile run,” said Hatfield.
Mike Mosser, the school’s first national champion in 1972 and
perhaps Romanoski’s most decorated runner, says that was typical of
the way he operated.
“Coach gave you the opportunity to get into these big meets,”
said Mosser. “When I was in school we traveled to meets in these old
Dodge station wagons and although you were only allowed to put six
people in them we’d pile eight and 10 guys in there because he
wanted to get as many people as he could to the meets.”
Mosser says many times Romanoski was forced to take his
thriftiness to extremes. “We’d go to Philadelphia and stay in YMCAs
so we didn’t have to pay for lodging. When we’d go to VMI we stayed
in the barracks there. He got as much exposure on as little budget
as you could get.”
Hatfield remembers the first two times he qualified for nationals
he was sent to the race by himself. “Coach would take care of all of
the arrangements with the Navy coach and I would meet him and his
team at the airport when I arrived,” said Hatfield. “The athletic
department couldn’t afford to pay for both of us to go so that’s how
I traveled. It wasn’t until my senior year that he was able to
travel with me to nationals.”
Mosser admitted that by the early 1970s Romanoski was getting
increasingly frustrated with the penny pinching. “Coach Romo would
just nip at the administration’s heels when he didn’t get another
scholarship or something like that,” he said. “He was always biting
at (Athletic Director) Red Brown’s heels.”
In order to field a complete roster Romanoski also unabashedly
recruited football players from Jim Carlen and Bobby Bowden’s teams.
“He had Jimmy Braxton, Artie Owens, Danny Buggs, Harry Blake,
Kerry Marbury, and Garnett Edwards. He talked them into coming out
for the team to better their sprinting skills,” said Mosser.
In fact, Romanoski had no idea Buggs was on campus when he found
out about him running unattached at an indoor meet at Pitt to stay
in shape for football. A couple of coaching colleagues came up to
Romanoski after Buggs won his heat of the 100-yard dash and
commented on what a fabulous runner he had.
“I had absolutely no idea whatsoever who he was,” Romanoski
recalled a few years ago. “Here he was on campus for more than a
year and this was how I found out about him.”
Buggs teamed with Mosser, Harry “Snake” Blake and Tim Kelley to
make up the school’s fantastic sprint medley relay team that won
Penn Relays and set a meet record that still exists today. Mosser
ran the 880 leg of the race.
“Danny and Tim ran the 220 leg, Snake ran the 440 and I was the
anchor,” said Mosser. “I was talking to Snake about it the other day
and he told me he still has the watch and the gold medal from that
race.”
According to Mosser, Romanoski’s list of standout athletes
encompassed the entire roster. “He had people who succeeded in all
facets of track,” he said. “Garnett Edwards was an All-American
hurdler, Jack Carter was an All-American in the pole vault, Carl
Hatfield, Alex Kasich and Don Sauer were All-American distance
runners and I was an All-American in the middle distance.”
And while Hatfield later won an AAU national title in 1978 and
was a nationally known road racer, Mosser’s WVU accomplishments were
unparalleled until James Jett came on the scene in the early 1990s.
Mosser captured the indoor 1,000-yard run at Cobo Arena in
Detroit in 1972 and ran in the famous Martin Luther King “Dream
Mile” that featured the return of Olympian Jim Ryun to take on the
world’s No. 1 ranked runner Marty Liquori.
“It was the top race of the year and it was nationally
televised,” said Mosser. “Marty won the race but I led through the
half mile and everybody was trying to figure out how this West
Virginia hillbilly got into the race. It was Coach Romanoski. He
lobbied and coerced and who knows what else to get me into the race,
which turned out to be another stepping stone for me.”
Mosser spent three seasons on the ITA professional tour before it
folded.
Hatfield believes Romanoski’s greatest legacy was his driving
force in helping establish cross country in high schools throughout
West Virginia. If you ran high school cross country in the Mountain
State in the last 30 years you probably have Stan Romanoski to
thank.
“He promoted the sport and he encouraged coaches from around the
state to have cross country teams,” Hatfield remembered. “He had
what was called the West Virginia University Invitational in
September and originally when he started it there were mostly
Pennsylvania schools in it. Then West Virginia schools started
having cross country and it grew by leaps and bounds.”
“You can compare Coach Romanoski 30 years ago to what Craig
Turnbull has done in this state for wrestling or what Nikki Izzo-Brown
is doing for girl’s soccer,” said Mosser. “When he brought the meets
here he would have us mingle with the kids and I’d say a great
majority of the good West Virginia runners wound up coming here
afterward.”
Despite all of his accomplishments, Romanoski was never able to
get the university support he felt his program and athletes
deserved. To help compensate for the disappointment he took up golf
and soon became a scratch golfer.
Everyone who knows Stan has a golfing story.
“The year he went with me to nationals in Tennessee he took his
golf clubs with him,” laughed Hatfield. “We arrived on a Wednesday
and he gave me some money and wrote out my workout for the day and
told me he’d see me later in the evening. He was out getting a round
of golf in.”
Hatfield’s personal favorite golf story revolves around
Romanoski’s cross country workouts. The coach had the team dress at
old Mountaineer Field and for a warm-up he instructed them to make
the three-mile run directly up Falling Run Road to Morgantown’s old
country club where the football field is today.
“There was one tee that is actually just about where the press
box is now and there was also a green near there,” said Hatfield.
“When we came out through the bushes to meet him at the golf course
he was waiting for us with irons and a putter in hand. He would give
us a workout and we would always start and finish at the one green.”
“When we got there he seldom had his stopwatch out or gave us our
times,” laughed Mosser. “He was too busy putting and chipping on the
green.”
“He’d say, ‘I want you boys to run 880 yards and go around the
number nine green – stay off the green – and finish right here.’ No
matter what, he always told us to stay off the green,” said
Hatfield.
“Even up to this year he was still playing golf and shooting his
age,” said Mosser. “He said he wanted to shoot his age this year."
Romanoski didn't smoke or drink and kept himself in remarkable
shape. Even at 85, his death came as a shock to those who were close
to him.
Romanoski and his late wife Hildred were particularly close to
former WVU football coach Gene Corum and his wife Lucille. The
Romanoskis were also frequent dinner guests of the Pinions.
“Stan and his wife just got along wonderfully with everybody,”
said Pinion.
“Stan was a real good guy; he was just a down-to-earth kind of
guy,” said friend and longtime West Virginia sports writer Mickey
Furfari.
“He was very fair,” added Martin Pushkin. “He was not a
complicated kind of guy. He was a lot like that old saying ‘what you
see is what you get.’”
“The people who flourished for him weren’t necessarily nationally
ranked when they came here,” said Mosser. “He developed a work ethic
and a technique and we took it from there. He wasn’t going to baby
sit us and yet he wasn't going to let us think that our talent was
going to override practice and hard work.”
“He was like a father figure to me,” said Hatfield. “He was just
a wonderful person.”
Romanoski is survived by three sons – Charles, Stanley and Thomas
as well as several grandchildren.
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