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John Panaro Inducted: 2003 - Graduated: 1978
A freeze frame from the John Panaro highlight baseball reel: A hot smash deep into the shortstop hole. John races to his right, gloves the ball backhanded on the edge of the outfield grass, whirls in midair and fires a perfect throw to second base to get the forceout. That’s just one snapshot in a collector’s album of gems in John’s athletic career at Nanuet. A three-year starter, he was a two-time, first-teamAll-County shortstop,made secondteam All-County as a sophomore, and culminated his career by earning a unanimous selection from the Rockland County coaches as Rockland Player of the Year in 1978. That year, John batted .526 with 30 hits in 57 at bats; committed only two errors; and anchored the Nanuet infield with 39 putouts and 43 assists. He was a New York Daily News first- team All-Star and led Nanuet to a share of the only Rockland County championship in program history. The Golden Knights, Clarkstown South andRamapo each had 15-5 records. In 1977, his junior year, John batted .361, drove in 21 runs and made only one error all season for an uncanny fielding percentage of .991. The Journal-News called that feat “great for a major-league shortstop, unheard of for a high school shortstop,” and said of the lone miscue, “that was on a ball most shortstops would not have reached.” John also reached base at least 50 percent of the time in each of his three years on varsity. He helped lead Nanuet to the Section 9 Class B crown in both 1976 and 1977—the school’s first two sectional baseball championships. Teammates, coaches and opponents all held John in the highest esteem: • Several of his teammates asked Nanuet coach Rich Loughlin to retire his uniform No. 15. • One coach raved, “He’s a hell of a prospect. He’s a real blue-chipper. He can hit, he’s got speed, great hands and he makes the double play.” • Loughlin, Nanuet’s head coach from 1969 to 1981, offered this glowing testimonial after John’s milestone 1978 season: “We have some fine prospects coming up, but let’s be honest – there will never be another John Panaro at Nanuet High School.” Loughlin is no less effusive today in praise of his former star: “John was among the best shortstops to ever play in Rockland County. He was just a great athlete. If he had played tennis or golf or some other sport, he could have been great at it.” Baseball was not John’s only sport. He excelled in football, too. He was the starting quarterback in 1976 and ’77 and also started at cornerback in 1976 and safety in ’77. John led the ’77 team to a record of 6 wins, 2 losses and 1 tie, the bestmark in the program’s history to that point.His athletic exploits earned him a Jerry Leo Scholarship in 1978. John went on to play at Eckerd College, an NCAA Division II school in St. Petersburg, Fla. A right-handed thrower and left-handed batter, he severely injured his throwing arm during freshman year but persevered and became utility first baseman his sophomore year. He became the starting shortstop midway through his junior season, remained a starter through his senior year and batted better than .300 both years. The team was ranked No. 1 in the nation in NCAA Division II his junior year. After his collegiate career, John fulfilled an ambition by playing professional baseball in Italy, the native country of his father, Donato. Those two years were chock full of memories and achievements, including a bid that fell just shy of making the Italian Olympic team. “It was a great way to see my heritage and get paid while I was doing it,” John said of his ball-playing odyssey in Italy. “It was amazing visiting my father’s hometown [Bella] and seeing the house where he was born. In fact, after my dad came to America as a kid, he had never been back to Italy and I remember talking to him on the phone, trying to explain what everything looked like almost 50 years later. As it turns out, my father and I returned to his hometown a few years after I was done playing ball in Italy and it was one of the most gratifying experiences of my life – seeing my father back in the ‘old country’with his family and friends.” After completing his two-year playing stint in Italy, John launched his own tour-merchandising company, which enabled him to travel on world tours with the Irish rock group U2 and with Amnesty International. Among the historical sites that John’s tours afforded him a bird’s-eye view of were Robben Island, the isolated outpost in South Africa where Nelson Mandela was imprisoned for 18 years for his political beliefs; and Sarajevo, the former capital of Yugoslavia, which was still beset by ethnic strife several years after war in the Bosnian region. “Seeing places like [these] makes me appreciate what we have here inAmerica and I’mproud to consider theNanuet area my home,” says John, who moved to Nanuet from WashingtonHeights inNewYorkCitywhen hewas an 8-yearold entering third grade at George W. Miller Elementary School. He also cherishes the neighborhood friendships he hasmade inNanuet, citing ongoing “best-friend” relationships with three classmates from grade school onward—John Tarasco, Jim Gilheany and Gary Bonomolo. He also says he feels fortunate that his three siblings (Mary, Danny and Terri) and father still live within 10 minutes of each other. “It’s a comfort knowing family and friends are nearby. That’s what Nanuet is all about—family and friends.” John, who is 43, now makes his home not far fromNanuet, in the village of New Hempstead, town of Ramapo. He met his wife Suzanne in college and they’ve been married for 15 years. The Panaros have three children: Annabella, 11; Luke, 8; and Suzannah, 6. John is currently the director of operations at the PNCBankArtsCenter inHolmdel,N.J. |