When Steve McKee came to Allentown College of St. Francis deSalesĀ in 1970, it was, in his words, āan almost brand new school out inĀ the middle of the cornfields. Our team had nobody on scholarshipĀ until my senior year, and before that it was the old-fashioned, āWho wants toĀ be on the basketball team? Raise your hand.ā
At 6ā 8ā, Steve played basketball, finishing his career with 621 points and 236Ā rebounds; he led the team in scoring in his senior year. Those were the yearsĀ when every season set a new record for wins. Those were the years when CoachĀ John Compardo, the schoolās first Athletic Director, was that larger-than-lifeĀ figure who stays with you for the rest of your life.
Following graduation, McKee joined the Jesuit Volunteer Corps in St. Maryās,Ā in southwest Alaska, where he and his wife Noreen taught at an Eskimo-IndianĀ boarding school for two years. Afterwards, he returned to school to studyĀ journalism at the University of Alaska-Fairbanks.
Steve and Noreen moved to New York City to begin work on his first of threeĀ books. He spent 1983 roaming the country in an ugly brown van, attendingĀ as many sporting events as possible in one year and then writing about it. HeĀ wrote about his adventures from the Super Bowl to the National TiddlywinksĀ Championship and fifty events in between. The result was The Call of theĀ Game, published by McGraw Hill.
A few years later he wrote Coach, an oral history of the sideline profession.Ā In 2008, he published, My Fatherās Heart: A Sonās Journey, a memoir of hisĀ father who died of a heart attack in 1969 when Steve was just 16 years old. MyĀ Fatherās Heart was based on a pair of articles written by McKee for the WallĀ Street Journal where he had worked for 14 years. He covered four Olympics forĀ the Journal: Nagano, Salt Lake, Athens and Torino. At the time of his death heĀ was working on a one-man play based on My Fatherās Heart.Ā
In 2012, McKee established a āmemory blogā called āCentaur Seasons,ā whichĀ tells the story of his years playing basketball at Allentown College of St. FrancisĀ de Sales. The brand-new school in Center Valley, Pennsylvania, ran a team ontoĀ the court for the first time in the 1968-69 season and McKee showed up twoĀ years later and played through the 1973-74 season. He recounted in his blogĀ the stories of the new school and the Centaurs, as the Bulldogs were calledĀ back then; the faith required of its students, faculty, and staff that the schoolĀ could prevail, the basketball team succeed; how āby believing in it we couldĀ make it come to be.ā
He recounted showing up for practice after Christmas in his freshman year,Ā when the team slept in a classroom in the back of Billera Hall, āeach of us givenĀ a cot, a pillow and a scratchy woolen blanket.ā And stories about the schoolāsĀ first team traveling to play in Cape May, New Jersey, in an old yellow schoolĀ bus painted blue and red, forĀ an away game against Shelton College. Along theĀ way they had to push the bus twice around a Jersey trafficĀ circle to jumpstartĀ the engine (with everyone then running to get on board). Everything then wasĀ promise and potential. And heart.
āCentaur Seasonsā ran for two years, three times a week, until McKee sufferedĀ an aortic aneurysm in 2013. He continued to post regularly about memoriesĀ and stories of the Allentown College basketball team and other sportsĀ in theĀ late ā60ās and early 70ās. He died, at age 61, in March, 2014.