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Schwab: Museum seeks to bring hoops history to life

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Bruce Firchau is immersing himself in a yet-to-open museum honoring basketball history in the state of Illinois, so he wanted to do his homework on what makes for a successful museum in a broader sense.

He scoped out a wide variety – even a museum dealing with shipwrecks – as he sought innovative ways to bring history alive.

“The one thing [the successful ones] all had in common was they all had great oral histories,” Firchau said. “And I thought the window of opportunity was closing.”

Firchau, an Elburn resident and longtime high school basketball coach in Illinois, spent much of 2012 combing all regions of the state in pursuit of colorful recollections of Illinois basketball lore, with an emphasis on the high school level.

He thinks he hit the jackpot.

Firchau unearthed enough gripping stories to fill a museum, and that’s exactly what he intends to do. The Illinois Basketball Hall of Fame Museum is scheduled to open in Danville late in 2013, though Firchau cautioned that funding challenges might push back the launch of the shrine to Illinois hoops of all levels.

Among the anecdotes that wowed Firchau from his numerous, face-to-face meetings with basketball luminaries across the state, many now in their golden years (hence the sense of urgency):

• Point shaving controversies dogged basketball in the mid-20th century, and even the high school game wasn’t immune from whispers about impropriety.

Likely out of jealousy, opposing fans of now defunct Stephen Decatur High School used to throw Monopoly money on the floor at the downstate school’s players.

“Back in those days, the fans could really be pretty hostile, and that was I guess one of their ways to show hostility to Stephen Decatur, who was a basketball power,” Firchau said.

• Violet Fletcher, the widow of former Collinsville High School coaching legend Vergil Fletcher, was eager to fill in some gaps on the coaching career of her late husband, who won more than 700 games and a pair of state titles for the Kahoks before he died in 2009.

Firchau’s interview with the spunky Violet Fletcher produced more than Firchau bargained for.

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