For my last column ever, I could spew some of my own advice, but I doubt you’d listen. I’m young and not even sure of the next step in my own life. Thankfully, I’ve been sitting on a treasure trove of advice without even knowing it.
My roommate of two years, fourth-year College student Jeremy Lambert, has a 70-year old grandfather, Bill Wall, who is a remarkable man with a remarkable story. On a visit home to South Hill, Va. a few weeks ago, Jeremy off-handedly told his grandfather that I wrote for the school paper. In classic, crotchety old-man style, Wall apparently replied, “Well, why hasn’t he interviewed me?”
What makes Wall an interesting person? For starters, Wall had friendships and business relationships with the following sports figures: Raymond Berry, a wide receiver on the Baltimore Colts during the 1950s and 1960s who went on to coach the Patriots to Super Bowl XX; Bob Cousy, a six-time NBA champion point guard on the Boston Celtics from 1951-63; Adolph Rupp, longtime coach of the Kentucky Wildcats who won four NCAA Championships and ranks third all-time in wins by an NCAA men’s coach (876); Dean Smith, longtime coach of the North Carolina Tar Heels who won two NCAA titles and ranks just ahead of Rupp with 879 wins; Terry Holland, who, among other things, was the head coach of the Virginia men’s basketball team from 1974-1990, leading the Cavaliers to two Final Four trips in 1981 and 1984; and, most impressively, John Wooden, the “Wizard of Westwood,” who coached UCLA to 10 championships in 12 years during the 1960s and 1970s.
After getting your jaw up off the floor, you probably want to know how Wall knew all of these famous sports figures. Well, it all started when Wall was a teenager and he started both a local baseball youth league and a Youth Foundation that functioned much like a YMCA. After playing two years of football at Ferrum Junior College — now Ferrum College — in Virginia, Wall returned to the area and, with money raised from the Youth Foundation, started a youth football league. One of the boys who played in the league attended the football camp of Sonny Randle, a former Virginia football coach and NFL All-Pro wide receiver. Upon returning to the area, the boy told Wall he should start his own football camp for elite prospects. Though another boy disagreed, the first said, “Mr. Wall can do anything.” Wall had loved sports all his life and didn’t want this boy laughed at, so he put his and the boy’s reputation on the line and committed to creating a football camp at the age of 25. Wall knew a few NFL players who were old friends, so he thought he had a point from which to start building his camp.
At first, registration was slow. Wall had just 10 to 15 kids signed up, and then his dad, who was helping him start the camp, died. But then Wall read about a man in Pittsburgh named Bernard “Baldy” Regan who had established a football camp so successfully that he had even gotten Johnny Unitas and Joe Namath to instruct campers. Out of the blue, Wall called up Regan to ask for advice. Wall recalled that Regan told him, “‘Don’t cancel your clinic. If you cancel your clinic, you’ll lose your money. If you build it up a little bit, you can break even in your first year which would be a pretty good thing to do in your first year. If worse comes to worst and you have to give back deposits to the campers, call your man in Pittsburgh up.’”
“I thought that was cool, that he said he was my man in Pittsburgh,” Wall added. Regan told Wall that if he couldn’t get enough campers, he would invite them to register at his Pittsburgh camp and he would give Wall $10 for every camper that registered — which was pretty good money in 1965, Wall said.
“Baldy told me to believe in yourself. If you’ve already invested your money [in something as I had], you’ve got to believe in yourself,” he said.
Wall actually lost money but ran a successful camp in that first year. He took a trip to visit Regan after it ended. “I learned more from him sitting in a coffee shop than I could’ve gotten from 50 people,” Wall said. “He told me how to handle pros. He told me how to get people like Unitas, and Wooden and Cousy, Dean Smith and Adolph Rupp. What to say to them and how to do it.”
To current students, Wall would advise them to “Try to make good choices in life with not only what you do but with who you associate with.” He himself found someone who was doing what he wanted to do better than him and sought his counsel.
After about three years, Wall was holding successful football and basketball clinics in Virginia. He even started a cheerleading camp in 1966, and just a year later, a representative of the National Cheerleader Association agreed to staff the camp but reneged when the Virginia High School League complained that Wall had “stolen” its campers. Wall told the representative he had given his word and could not back out and sure enough, the representative staffed the camp.
“Know who you are in your own skin and stand up for yourself,” Wall said. “Don’t let people run over you and take advantage of you. It’s very important for you to have high-self esteem. It’s easy for people to put you down. It will always happen. I had all kinds of people try to put me down through the years and never allowed anyone to do it.”
Prior to his second football camp, Wall, who is a Christian, knew he had to improve the overall quality of his camp so he was led to Berry, who was both a great player and a Christian. Berry participated in Wall’s 1966 and 1967 clinics and they have been good friends ever since.
Wall’s faith was very important to him and he made it a part of his camps. “The two things I did were one, provide the best instruction possible and two, the opportunity to encounter the meaning of the Christian faith,” Wall said. When Cousy asked Wall how he was able to incorporate Christianity into his camps without having lawsuits brought against him, Wall said the staff didn’t force anyone to hear the Christian message. “We just offered the opportunity. The No. 1 goal was the best clinic and the best instruction. You couldn’t beat it anywhere.”
In 1970, Wall was able to procure coaching legend Wooden’s services at his basketball camp, but it wasn’t easy. Wooden was offended by the letter that Wall sent him and said he wouldn’t entertain an offer. Wall said he doesn’t even remember what he wrote. He admitted, though, that he was probably a little cocky at the time because his camps were growing. He was persistent though and through his assistant, requested again. Wooden asked, “Why does Mr. Wall want me and why should I come?” The assistant answered by saying, “Mr. Wall wants the best camp on the East Coast and he feels that by having you, it will help him.” Wooden said that if Wall mailed him another letter, he would consider it. Wall showed persistence, another quality he holds in high regard.
Wall’s last football and basketball camps were held in 1974, but he continued the cheerleading camps until 1984. That year, he became an independent sales agent for Greyhound buses. In 1990, the drivers went on strike but the buses kept running with replacement drivers. Though the company was losing money, Wall’s station was actually making money. The CEO of Greyhound called Wall to ask why he was doing so well.
“I kept a positive attitude and applied a lot of winning habits that I had gleaned from my association with sports winners,” Wall said. “Plus [I used] the very valuable advice from my father in my young years and the advice that Baldy Regan gave me in 1965.”
Wall estimates 86,000 campers participated in his clinics, but it all started when Regan persuaded him not to give up. We can all learn from Bill Wall’s determination to follow his dream.
Mr. Wall is a really interesting man. He’s right, it’s really important to have high self esteem. I think it’s so neat the way he knows these famous people. Most of us never get the opportunity to converse with anyone famous. I’m sure Mr. Wall made a difference in a lot of young people’s lives. I like the way he made sure his Christianity played a part in his camps. Mr. Wall can be an inspiration to us all.
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It’s good people that make a difference in this world. Sounds like Mr.Wall is one.
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Bill Wall’s success in his baseball youth league, his youth foundations, as well as football and cheerleader camps were all successful due to a man with the love of sports, sheer determination, and most of all his faith and his desire to make a difference in a kids life. It was not by accident that he met and knew all these known sports figures. He had and still has what it takes to get a project off the ground. A very inspiring gentleman and is always willing to listen and help anyone when he can. I am proud to know him and to have him as a neighbor here in South Hill.
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