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Larry Baker and Donald "Bo" Yingling, parishioners of St. John, Westminster, organized an intramural basketball league there that is in its 40th season. (Clare Becker/Special to the Review)

Westminster parish marks 40 years of basketball, thanks to veteran volunteers

January 26, 2012
By George P. Matysek Jr.
Filed Under: Local News, News, Sports

 

WESTMINSTER – Sitting in the bleachers as the repeated booming echoes of bouncing basketballs filled St. John’s gymnasium, Larry Baker and Donald “Bo” Yingling seemed like proud fathers.

Forty years ago, the pair co-founded St. John’s Basketball League – watching it grow from 39 children to a peak of 525 participants and 100 coaches in 42 intramural and five travel teams.

Surveying dozens of boys practice their dribbling and passing skills prior to a late-December game, the familiar spectators smiled as the youngsters succeeded in making shots or stealing the ball. It was yet another generation of intramural players nurtured by Baker and Yingling.

“We don’t want any parent or grandparent or friend to come into the gym and see their kids not involved in the game,” said Baker, a 77-year-old St. John parishioner.

Baker’s cohort chimed in quickly, completing the thought of his longtime friend and fellow parishioner.

“One of the reasons we’re so popular is they are guaranteed to play a certain amount of time,” said Yingling, 75. “It’s not like they sit on the bench looking for 30 seconds of playing time. We get everyone involved.”

Baker noted that the program lowers the basket to eight feet for younger players. Three foul lines loop the ends of the courts – another way to make the game more accessible for smaller children. Accommodations are made for those with special needs.

“We’ve had handicapped children who couldn’t play anywhere else,” Baker said. “We always tell our coaches that this program is not for them. It’s for the kids and their job is to teach them the rules and the fundamentals of the game – and, above all, good sportsmanship. It’s worked out really well.”

‘Unbelievable’

Monsignor James Farmer, St. John’s pastor, said what Baker and Yingling have accomplished in the past four decades is “unbelievable.” They can be found unlocking the doors to the gym, sweeping floors, arranging schedules, refereeing, organizing volunteers, coaching and more. Gyms at seven different area schools are used for the program, which is open to boys of all ages throughout the community.

“They put in thousands of hours of service a year to this program – and they do it as volunteers,” Monsignor Farmer said. “We estimate that approximately 20,000 children have gone through their program. It’s a massive undertaking.”

Monsignor Farmer called Baker and Yingling “good, holy men,” who have taught generations of children responsibility, self-respect and a sense of fair play.

“The amount of good that these men have done,” he said, “only God alone knows.”

Baker and Yingling began working together in 1971 after Baker moved to Westminster from Baltimore. Baker got the idea for an intramural league from a similar program he helped run at St. Joseph’s Passionist Monastery in Irvington.

The children of both leaders played in the league and later assisted as coaches and volunteers. Their wives have also assisted.

“We were the first ones in Carroll County to have an intramural program,” Baker said, noting that there are approximately 425 boys in today’s program. “If you don’t have an intramural program, look at how many kids wouldn’t be playing.”

Long reach

Yingling said the program wouldn’t be possible without the support of parents and volunteers. Each year, a banquet is held where trophies and team pictures are given out. Scholarships are also awarded in Baker and Yingling’s names, with more than $40,000 disbursed since 2002.

“It’s really heart-warming when people come up to you who don’t know you and shake your hand and thank you for being here for the kids,” Yingling said.

Baker noted that the program relies on excellent coaches.

“We’ve had a public school that won the state championship four years ago and they defeated a four-time defending state champion,” he said. “All the kids came from our program. You get a lot of self-satisfaction.”

One of Baker’s favorite memories was seeing his grandson – who is now 36 – make his first basket when he was 5.

“He’s going down giving high fives to both benches,” Baker recalled with a laugh.

Colton Peters, a 13-year-old from Glenville, Pa., said he was proud to wear a uniform patch in honor of the 40th anniversary of St. John’s program. Pausing during a practice, the point guard said he has participated “since I was a little guy.”

“It’s a lot of fun meeting new friends and all that,” he said. “I’m glad they started the league. They teach you nice, fundamental basketball.”

Tom Eckard, a parent of a player, remembers what it was like to play on some of the first teams in the league 40 years ago.

“I still have those friends today,” he said. “That’s the beautiful part of it.”

Eckard recalled that unlike today, dark socks were not in vogue when he was playing.

“I can remember showing up with dark socks after school and sitting on the stage or doing a couple extra laps because you forgot your white socks,” he said with a laugh.

Baker and Yingling plan to keep going with the program as long as they can. It keeps them young, they said.

“We just feel like we’re doing something right the way the program is going,” Baker said. “It’s working.”

Email George Matysek at gmatysek@CatholicReview.org. 

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George P. Matysek Jr.

George Matysek, a member of the Catholic Review staff since 1997, has served as managing editor since September 2021. He previously served as a writer, senior correspondent, assistant managing editor and digital editor of the Catholic Review and the Archdiocese of Baltimore.

In his current role, he oversees news coverage of the Archdiocese of Baltimore and is a host of Catholic Review Radio.

George has won more than 100 national and regional journalism and broadcasting awards from the Maryland-Delaware-DC Press Association, the Catholic Press Association, the Associated Church Press and National Right to Life. He has reported from Guyana, Guatemala, Italy, the Czech Republic, Hungary and Poland.

A native Baltimorean, George is a proud graduate of Our Lady of Mount Carmel High School in Essex. He holds a bachelor's degree from Loyola University Maryland in Baltimore and a master's degree from UMBC.

George, his wife and five children live in Rodgers Forge. He is a parishioner of the Cathedral of Mary Our Queen in Homeland.

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