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Men's Basketball Team Inducted: 2007 - Graduated: 1962
How did they pull it off? How did the 1962 boys’ basketball team win the first Sectional championship in school history, in only its third season of existence? After all, they were knocked out in the opening round the previous year and had finished just 9-9 during the ’62 regular season, good for a fourth-place finish in the Rockland County Public School Athletic League (RCPSAL). Spud Van de Water recalls the Golden Knights coming together at just the right time, playing their best basketball when it counted most. “I remember we got stronger and stronger as the season went along,” says Spud, a star guard/forward and key member of the team.“We peaked for the Sectionals but I don’t remember even thinking about the Sectionals until the end of the regular season.” Nanuet rattled off three consecutive victories in the postseason, culminating with a convincing 63-52 victory overWallkill in the Section 9 Class C championship game. Mickey Wittman, the Knights’ incomparable big man, rang up 25 points whileVan deWater supported him with 15 and guard Frank Pizzica added 9. Guard/forward Vito Sabbatino, forward Lew Kiesler, guard Jimmy Stewart and forward Bill Pickard were other primary contributors to the Knights’ championship season. Vito and Spud were versatile enough to see action in both the backcourt and frontcourt, while Jimmy and Bill would rotate in and out at the discretion of Coach CharlieWalsh. “As a team we progressed from sophomores on the JV team to seniors on the varsity,” Vito Sabbatino says. “We had played together for three years and developed, especially Mickey.We were not high scoring but more of a defensive, controlling-the-game team.” Nanuet was well prepared byWalsh, who was in his first season as head coach. “He worked us pretty hard and taught us a lot of basketball,” Spud Van deWater says.Walsh inherited a solid nucleus from Mike Achille, the program’s first head coach when it launched as a JV team in 1959-60 and moved up to the varsity level in 1960-61. Achille, a 2005 NHS Hall of Fame inductee, was an assistant toWalsh in ’62. The unquestioned leader of the team was MickeyWittman, the 6-foot-7 pivotman who twice made first-team All- County and led the RCPSAL in rebounding, paced Nanuet in scoring and rebounding, and was chosen to two high school All-America teams. “This wasWitt’s team,” says Spud Van deWater. “He was our headliner and ‘go to’ guy. At the same time, the team had been together for several years and we were a very close group both on and off the court. Winning the Sectionals was a great way for the school’s first group of seniors to finish their high school basketball careers.” The gymnasium at then-new Nanuet Junior-Senior High School played host to many exciting games contested in a loud, festive atmosphere. The team received plenty of support from the students, cheerleaders, faculty and Nanuet community. “It was great playing in a new school building and gym,” says Vito Sabbatino. “Home games were always well attended with great crowd support.We the team were concentrating on the game but at times you would take a look around and feel the excitement.” Several members of the championship team went on to play in college, and many distinguished themselves in professional pursuits. Mickey Wittman enjoyed a stellar career at the University of Miami, becoming the third-leading scorer and second-leading rebounder in school history and recently earning election to the University of Miami Hall of Fame (with a February 2008 induction planned). He was drafted by the NBA’s St. Louis Hawks in 1966, surviving until the final cut, and earned an invitation to the 1968 Olympic basketball team trials. He went on to a successful 30-year career as coordinator of the Goodyear Blimp’s television coverage, and now resides in St. Joseph, Mich., with his wife, Susan, and two daughters. Spud Van de Water moved to Colorado in 1981, settling in Centennial. He works for a national nonprofit education policy organization. Previously he worked in Trenton, N.J., for the state Department of Higher Education, creating student financial aid programs. He has two children and three grandchildren. The Van de Water family’s main priority now is supporting Spud’s wife of 41 years, who recently was diagnosed with breast cancer. Frank Pizzica owns the largest custom home-building company in Central Florida, based in Orlando. He’s won many local and national design awards for his homes. Previously he was the leading home builder in Central New York, completing more than 2,500 homes in 17 years. Frank and his wife of 38 years, Linda, live in Lake Mary, Fla., and Norfolk, Conn., and have two daughters. Vito Sabbatino works as a supervisor in the building services division of a New York City-based nonprofit organization, currently assigned to the U.S. Federal Court building in Brooklyn. He spent 17 years working in marketing for a major flavor and fragrance company, then 15 years in the dry cleaning industry, first as an owner-partner and then as a manager. He and his wife live in Staten Island after 25 years residing in Long Island. They have two sons. Lew Kiesler has spent a rewarding 42 years in the resort management business. He has managed resorts in the U.S. Virgin Islands, Stowe, Vt., and Lenox, Mass., and owned inns in New Hampshire and Martha’s Vineyard on Cape Cod, Mass. Currently he is president and general manager of Cranwell Resort, Spa & Golf Club in the Berkshires region of Massachusetts. Lew has two daughters and he and his wife, Arlene, live in Otis, Mass. Steve O’Keefe, who was a sophomore on the ’62 team, made second team All-County as a senior in ’64. He served four years in the U.S. Marine Corps, eight years as an air traffic controller in Hawaii, and the past 22 years as a union organizer in California. He resides in Marin County, Calif., with his wife, Sara. Steve has six stepchildren, eight grandchildren and three great-grandchildren, and says he can still be found practicing baseline jump shots at the Santa Rosa YMCA two or three times a week. Other members of that history-making 1962 championship basketball team included Laurence Segall,William Conner, Ronald Weisberg and Richard Tunks. |