BY MIKE SABINI
On Friday, Nov.
1, I was at Hendrick Hudson High School for the Yorktown News, covering the
Yorktown volleyball squad as it beat John Jay-Cross River for the Section 1
Class A title.
It was great to
be back at Hen Hud, I covered its teams there from the mid-1990s to two years
ago for various publications.
One of those
people at Hen Hud I wrote about was a wonderful woman and coach who coach’s its
volleyball squad, Diane Swertfager, who has enjoyed a legendary career at the
Montrose-based school.
Swertfager and
her Sailors (see team pix above) added to that legacy as they won their 12th
sectional title in 14 years, this one amazingly as a 10th seed, when
they ended No. 1 Ardsley’s season on Nov. 2 at John Jay-CR for the Class B
crown.
Since I was caught
up in the euphoria of covering Yorktown’s championship at Hen Hud, it took a
couple of days but then it finally hit me, that there was someone’s name missing
on that court and that name is Swertfager.
It is my opinion
that the court at Hen Hud should be named after her.
That is an
opinion that I don’t toss around lightly, believe me.
I know through
personal experience bestowing that honor on someone should be taken very seriously.
I have been the
public address announcer at Peekskill High School, my alma mater, since the
2000-01 school year where the court is named after Peekskill boys basketball
coach Lou Panzanaro, a member of the New York State Basketball Hall of Fame.
I have known
Panzanaro since I played Little League baseball for him. I’ve been close to him
ever since, he’s practically like an uncle to me.
I obviously felt
very strongly that the court at the John Devins Gymnasium should be named after
him and in ‘08 it
was.
I now feel just
as strongly that the court at Hen Hud should be named after Swertfager.
Obviously, one
reason why is that she has racked up an historic list of numbers.
According to an
online petition (http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/swertfagercourt) requesting
the court be named after her, these are the mind-blowing numbers that she has
accumulated through ‘08, so many of these numbers have increased since then:
Over 400
victories
• 14 League Championships, 12 undefeated
• 9 Consecutive Sectional Championships
• 6 Consecutive Regional Championships
• 5 Consecutive New York State Championship Finals
• 3 Consecutive New York State Championships
• 5 New York State Team Scholar Athlete Awards
• 2 Consecutive High School All-American
• 1 NYS Gatorade Player of the Year Finalist
• 8 Section 1 players of the year, 4 Consecutively
• 42 All-Section selections
• 25 All-State Selections
• 11 Con Ed Scholar Athletes of the Week
• 2 Con Ed Sports Athletic Awardees
• 12 Coach of the year honors
• Numerous proclamations and citations from local, regional and state governmental officials and municipalities.
• 14 League Championships, 12 undefeated
• 9 Consecutive Sectional Championships
• 6 Consecutive Regional Championships
• 5 Consecutive New York State Championship Finals
• 3 Consecutive New York State Championships
• 5 New York State Team Scholar Athlete Awards
• 2 Consecutive High School All-American
• 1 NYS Gatorade Player of the Year Finalist
• 8 Section 1 players of the year, 4 Consecutively
• 42 All-Section selections
• 25 All-State Selections
• 11 Con Ed Scholar Athletes of the Week
• 2 Con Ed Sports Athletic Awardees
• 12 Coach of the year honors
• Numerous proclamations and citations from local, regional and state governmental officials and municipalities.
Besides the
numbers, Swertfager has been heavily involved in the Hen Hud community, as per
that petition, she among other things has led the charge for Katrina Relief
efforts, Breast Cancer Awareness and the Red Cross.
What
she and her kids have done for Breast Cancer Awareness, I saw myself, covering
a game Hen Hud had against Croton-Harmon in ‘09 where both teams wore pink in
what was a just a festive and electric atmosphere, similar to a Friday-night
boys basketball game.
One
parent who can attest to the Sailors giving back under Swertfager is Kurt
Pelaccio, whose has three daughters who either played (Kristina and Jessica) or
are currently playing (Lindsay) for Swertfager.
“We raise money each
year through car washes, our home tournament, our yearly volleyball booklet as
well as other fund raisers to donate to various cancer causes,” Pelaccio
said. “She also runs many free volleyball clinics to all three local
elementary schools that the varsity and JV girls run. Diane
has enforced many values that my wife Jackie and I stress to the
girls each day.”
Of
course if the above numbers, what she has done for the community and the word
of a veteran sports journalist who covered her teams aren’t enough, take the
word of the people who played for her.
One
of those players is Niki Tamburri, a ’08 Hen Hud graduate, who was named
All-American her senior year and led the Sailors to state championships in ’06
and ’07.
Tamburri
went on to play four years of volleyball at Iona College. She says she owes her
entire volleyball career to Swertfager.
Besides
that, off the court Swertfager has been an invaluable mentor to her as well.
“I
can pretty much handle any task I have right now outside of sports with school,
I am still in nursing school (Concordia College),” Tamburri said. “That came
from her because my leadership grew in high school and when I came to college
it was already instilled in me so much by her. It was very easy for me to take
anything that came at me in college, not just sports but outside of sports,
because I knew how to handle situations because of what she taught us.”
Kristina
Pelaccio, who just finished her college playing career at Oneonta, her freshman
sister Jackie is also on the team, said that without Swertfager’s help, there
is no way she would’ve been prepared to play in college where she tallied more
than 1,000 digs.
“She made myself and
other players like over prepared,” Kristina Pelaccio said. “Since elementary
school I remember her coming in and helping us. She is passionate about the
sport and it shows. I know I would not be nearly as good if I didn’t have Diane
as a coach, not even close to being as good. I don’t even know if I would play
in college.”
Swertfager’s girls
also go on and excel after college.
One shining example of
this is one of Westchester’s most beautiful and brightest, Caitlin Krueger, a ‘00
Hen Hud graduate, who I had the pleasure of doing a question and answer in June
‘12 for Peekskill-Cortlandt Patch.
Last year Krueger was named
to The Business Council
of Westchester’s “40 Under 40” Rising Stars List and in ‘11 one of Westchester’s
Wunderkinds by Westchester Magazine.
She is currently
Director of Special Events and Major Gifts Officer for Mercy College in Dobbs
Ferry, where she graduated from. Eventually, she no doubt will be running her
own Fortune 500 company.
As for the last word,
I will give it to one of the greatest athletes in Section 1 history, Tamburri,
who was also a star pitcher on the softball field for the Sailors.
As
you could imagine, Tamburri is strongly in favor of naming the court at Hen Hud
after Swertfager.
“What
she has done for the school, for the program, for her co-workers, for everyone,
in the entire district it would show her the same respect if we would do
something like that for her,” Tamburri said.
