Springfield News-Sun

Springfiel­d grad was trailblaze­r in basketball, education

Crystal ‘Boo’ Ellis was a member of Springfiel­d’s 1950 state championsh­ip basketball team

- By David Jablonski Contact this reporter at 937244-7400 or email david. jablonski@coxinc.com.

Crystal ‘Boo’ Ellis, a member of Springfiel­d High School’s 1950 state championsh­ip basketball team, died on Monday at 91 in Toledo.

Ellis was the first Black man to play basketball at Bowling Green State University and the first Black superinten­dent for Toledo Public Schools. Earlier this year, the school district dedicated the first Friday in February as Crystal Ellis Day.

Romules Durant, superinten­dent of Toledo Public

Schools, released a statement Tuesday on the passing of Ellis, praising him for setting high standards and expectatio­ns for students and staff members.

“He was a mentor and a friend to many,” Durant said. “Dr. Ellis saw the potential in every student and worked to help them become someone others liked and respected. He will be truly missed, but his legend will live on across our district as he was loved and revered by all who knew him. Our hearts and prayers are with his family.”

Ellis was born on Feb 5, 1933. He was a junior in 1950 when Springfiel­d beat Akron South 53-48 to win the Class A state championsh­ip at Fairground­s Coliseum in Columbus. Ellis led the Wildcats with 19 points. He had 13 points in the first half. He was named to the all-tournament team along with teammate Bill Goettman.

“They’re the finest bunch of boys any coach could hope to work with,” coach Elwood Pitzer said after the game. “Sure I was worried about the outcome of the game — who wouldn’t be under those conditions? But that team spirit and determinat­ion to win carried us through. As far as individual players are concerned, every man played as hard as he could and did a fine job. But I’ll go on record as saying that the rebound work of Boo Ellis tonight was just exactly sensationa­l. I think Ellis played as fine a game as you could ever expect of any player.”

Ellis played for Bowling Green for two seasons (1951-53) but then left school and returned to Springfiel­d when his stepfather suffered a stroke.

“He was the man who fueled the fire I had when I went to Bowling Green,” Ellis said in a story that ran on Bowling Green’s website in 2021. “I felt like I needed to go home and take care of my mother and the only father I had ever known.”

Ellis spent time in the U.S. Army before returning to Bowling Green in 1955. He averaged 14.3 points as a junior and 9.1 points as a senior when he was named team MVP. He was a team captain as a senior in 1957, the year he graduated. He scored 896 points in four seasons.

In 1971, Ellis was inducted into Bowling Green’s Hall of Fame. In 2010, Andy Ouriel, of the BG News, asked Ellis what it meant to him to be the university’s first Black basketball player.

“Nothing,” Ellis said. “I was a member of the team. What I wanted to do is be the kind of person to be grateful for the opportunit­y that I had been given by Harold Anderson. That is what it meant to me because that wasn’t happening. In Toledo, they had a few (Black) basketball players, but that was a big city. In the smaller universiti­es, (putting Black players on teams) wasn’t happening. It wasn’t happening in Dayton or Ohio U. It just wasn’t happening. And I wanted to make sure that what I did and how I did it and how I represente­d Bowling Green State University was appropriat­e.”

Ellis earned a master’s degree from Bowling Green in 1975 and an honorary doctorate in 1994. He worked as the director of a YMCA in Toledo for more than a decade and started working in the Toledo school district in 1969. He worked as a principal at six different schools. He was named superinten­dent of schools in 1991 and held the position until 1996.

Bowling Green President Rodney K. Rogers released a statement Tuesday on X (Twitter) about the passing of Ellis.

“Dr. Ellis was a pioneer in his life and career,” Rogers said, “and as a leader in K-12 education, he created immeasurab­le public good. He leaves a lasting legacy at BGSU and in all the communitie­s he served.”

 ?? ?? Crystal “Boo” Ellis (back row, fifth from left) is pictured with Springfiel­d High School’s 1950 state championsh­ip basketball team. Team member Earl Fritts provided this photo. Front row from left are the late Jack Sallee (deceased), Bill Mckaig and Lamar Kilgore. Second row: Bill Goettman and Joe Cahoon. Back row: Manager Dick Parsell (deceased), Bob Bronston, Earl Fritts, Roger Crabtree (deceased), Crystal “Boo” Ellis, Nate Murphy, Coach Elwood Pitzer (deceased), Don Dejong and Bob Hutchins. Not pictured: Dick Dillahunt.
Crystal “Boo” Ellis (back row, fifth from left) is pictured with Springfiel­d High School’s 1950 state championsh­ip basketball team. Team member Earl Fritts provided this photo. Front row from left are the late Jack Sallee (deceased), Bill Mckaig and Lamar Kilgore. Second row: Bill Goettman and Joe Cahoon. Back row: Manager Dick Parsell (deceased), Bob Bronston, Earl Fritts, Roger Crabtree (deceased), Crystal “Boo” Ellis, Nate Murphy, Coach Elwood Pitzer (deceased), Don Dejong and Bob Hutchins. Not pictured: Dick Dillahunt.
 ?? STAFF FILE ?? Surviving members of the 1950 Springfiel­d High School state championsh­ip boys basketball team were honored in 2008 at the South Hall of Fame induction ceremony. From left, Richard Freed, Bill Mckaig, Bob Hutchins, Bill Goettman, Earl Fritts, Crystal “Boo” Ellis, Robert Bronston, and Joe Cahoon.
STAFF FILE Surviving members of the 1950 Springfiel­d High School state championsh­ip boys basketball team were honored in 2008 at the South Hall of Fame induction ceremony. From left, Richard Freed, Bill Mckaig, Bob Hutchins, Bill Goettman, Earl Fritts, Crystal “Boo” Ellis, Robert Bronston, and Joe Cahoon.

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