Dayton Daily News

One more time: Centervill­e again runs up against rival Pick Central

- By Jeff Gilbert

Centervill­e vs. Pickeringt­on Central. There’s definitely statewide interest in this one.

Last year in the Division I final at UD Arena, Central was the better team in the final minutes and denied Centervill­e a second straight state title, 55-48, and ended a 45-game winning streak.

In December, Centervill­e was the better team and won the rematch in double overtime, 60-54, at Nationwide Arena.

Saturday at 5:15 in the first Division I semifinal, the Elks and Tigers meet again.

The intriguing subplot is Mr. Basketball 2022 Gabe Cupps of Centervill­e vs. Mr. Basketball 2023 Devin Royal of Pick Central. Royal, bound for Ohio State, scored 20 points, and Cupps, bound for Indiana, scored 14 in the state final last year. Royal scored 27 and Cupps all of his 12 in the second half in December.

Both teams had to integrate new players and roles, then play well this past month to make it back to UD.

“Based on the films that we’ve watched, they’re much better now than they were in December,” Centervill­e coach Brook Cupps said. “They’ve settled into their roles. The guys that are alongside Royal are now more confident in what they need to do and what they are capable of doing. That makes them a lot more dangerous. In December, we sure didn’t know who we were, and I don’t think they did either.”

D-II: Chaminade Julienne vs. Rocky River Lutheran West

The Eagles made a surprising run to state two years ago. This year with the Ohio Gatorade Player of Year George Washington III moving to town, the Eagles were favored to get to back to UD.

Washington, who has signed with Michigan, brought his brother, B.B. Washington, with him and joined senior Evan Dickey, a starter on the previous state team. The matchup of guards is similar.

“They don’t have a player as good as George,” Eagles coach

because she would run into three or four people she knew,” Szabo said. “She just had a gift, and everybody loves my mom. She was kind.”

The Eagles, Ann’s favorite team, are back in the Division II state tournament this week, and the memories are flooding the thoughts of her son. His team, the one he once played for, plays a state semifinal at 10:45 a.m. today at UD Arena against Rocky River Lutheran West. The date is March 17, and that is a significan­t reminder for the Szabo family.

On March 17, 2021, three days before the Eagles played in the state semifinals, Ann Szabo, after not feeling quite herself for about two weeks, called Chuck and told him she was going to the doctor. When Chuck got home he knew something was wrong with the woman whose memory for people and events was impeccable.

“She was sitting on a couch and she said, ‘Chuck, what day is this?’ ” he said. “And I said, ‘St. Patrick’s Day.’ It was her favorite day of the year — she’s pure Irish. And she said, ‘I don’t know what day it is.’ I said, ‘March 17.’ She said, ‘What day of the week?’ I said ‘Wednesday.’ She said, ‘What year?’ And I said, ‘What year do you think it is?’ She said, ‘2013.’ And I said, ‘No Ann, it’s 2021. Come on, let’s go to the doctor.’ ”

That evening Chuck Szabo didn’t have all the answers, but he texted Charlie and asked him to call. The news hit Charlie hard.

That evening Ann was admitted to Miami Valley Hospital. She had a brain tumor, which a biopsy eventually revealed was cancerous. Charlie found his way to her room that night afterhours and again early Saturday morning before the game.

“She had to tell me how proud she was and how sorry she was she couldn’t be there,” Charlie said.

Chuck, a 1972 Chaminade grad, had been married to Ann for 44 years and he didn’t want to leave her side. But another son, John, came with a laptop computer to watch the livestream of the game with her. So Chuck went to UD Arena to do what he does during every CJ game: keep the team’s scorebook. The Eagles lost to Columbus St. Francis DeSales, and afterward all the family in town for the game visited Ann. Charlie, who had seen her every day since the diagnosis, let the others have their turn.

Surgery was not possible because of the proximity of the tumor to areas of her brain that controlled motor skills. Ann maintained optimism and the first round of chemothera­py and radiation yielded positive results. Then she caught pneumonia. The breathing issues that ensued never allowed her to fully recover, and the treatments stopped. The tumor didn’t cause her pain or affect her long-term memory, only short-term, but eventually she asked for hospice home care.

“That was devastatin­g to us because even through everything you still hold up hope that she can’t die,” Chuck said.

The night before Ann died she began to feel pain. Chuck called Charlie at 4 a.m.

“I said, ‘Charlie, I can’t do this anymore. Mom’s in pain. We have to take her to hospice,’ ” Chuck said. “So Charlie ran over. We both took turns holding her hand and telling her it was going to be OK because she was starting to really moan, and I couldn’t stand it. I would leave the room and Charlie would stay with her.”

Hospice came and took her, and she died at 10 a.m.

The funeral director said he had never seen a crowd like the one for Ann’s viewing. For over four hours they stood in line to greet the family. She coached many of them in several sports in the CYO program, she knew them through her siblings, some of which were much older, and she knew them through her beloved school.

“I can’t tell you how many kids, not just from CJ now, but ones that have graduated, came up and told me a story about what she did for them that I never knew about,” Chuck said. “A lot of them said, I don’t think I would have went through school if it wasn’t for her. And what I did after school was because she told me I could do it. She gave me the confidence.”

Charlie said his mom would love this year’s team, from the ones she knew in CYO to the new ones like the Washington brothers who moved to Dayton in June. Last year’s team presented him with a plaque with her picture on it and the words “Mrs. Ann Szabo Biggest Fan Award.” He said he selfishly wishes she was sitting and cheering in the front row at UD today right behind him.

“I just keep thinking to myself how much she’d love to be here,” Charlie said. “The Alter game to get here, it’s the highest stakes game we’ve ever played against them, and she would have loved it. It’s just everything about this year.

“I wish she was here to enjoy it with me because I know she’s watching.”

 ?? JEFF GILBERT / CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Centervill­e’s
Kyle Kenney goes up for one of the two 3-pointers he made in the first half of the Elks’ double-overtime victory over Pickeringt­on Central in December.
JEFF GILBERT / CONTRIBUTE­D Centervill­e’s Kyle Kenney goes up for one of the two 3-pointers he made in the first half of the Elks’ double-overtime victory over Pickeringt­on Central in December.

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