John Erickson Obituary
He was not on the list.
John Erickson 1927—2020
JOHN ELMER ERICKSON
John E. Erickson went to be with our Lord and Savior on
March 18, 2020 at the age of 92.
John was born June 19, 1927 in Rockford, Illinois to Elmer
and Laura (Kelley) Erickson. He was preceded in death by his wife of 61 years,
Polly Erickson.
From an early age Johnny loved sports. After graduating from
Rockford East High School, Erickson attended Beloit College, where he became
the first basketball player to score more than 1,000 points in a career and
competed in three NCAA tennis tournaments. While at Beloit he served as
President of the Beta Theta Pi fraternity and earned a BA degree.
Erickson began coaching high school basketball in Wisconsin,
at Beloit High School and Stevens Point High School, and then was drafted in
1952 and served two years in the United States Army. From 1955 to 1958, he was
the head basketball coach at Lake Forest College where he met his future wife,
Polly Martin, who was the Women's Physical Education Director and a
championship golfer. Their first date was a challenge on the golf course. They
married on August 31, 1956.
John and Polly moved to Madison, Wisconsin where John was an
assistant basketball coach at the University of Wisconsin during the 1958-59
season before taking over for Bud Foster as head coach. In 1962, he coached the
Wisconsin Badgers to an 86-67 upset victory over number one ranked Ohio State
breaking the Buckeyes' historic regular season winning streak. Erickson's team
finished second in the Big Ten Conference and he was named Midwest College
Coach of the Year.
It was while in Madison that John and Polly's faith became
the center of their lives. John heard All American and St. Louis Hawks NBA
player, Bob Pettit speak at a Fellowship of Christian Athletes (FCA) Conference
at Lake Geneva. The Gospel presentation that week changed his life. From that
point on John began sharing his faith and became active in the ministry of FCA.
In 1968, he became the first general manager of the NBA
expansion Milwaukee Bucks. With the flip of a coin, the Bucks won the right to
select UCLA's Lew Alcindor (later Kareem Abdul-Jabbar) the first player taken
in the 1969 player draft. Successfully building a team which included the
signing of Oscar Robertson, the Bucks won the NBA championship in 1971.
After John resigned as the Buck's GM, he ran for the United
States Senate seat in Wisconsin as a Republican, but lost to incumbent Senator
William Proxmire in the general election.
In 1972, coach of the Dallas Cowboys and friend, Tom Landry,
reached out to John to join the Fellowship of Christian Athletes as its
National President. Noted for his leadership, Erickson restructured the Board
of Trustees, established FCA's first golf camps, women's ministry and junior
high and inner-city programs and spearheaded the construction of the national
headquarters in Kansas City, which was dedicated in 1979.
Following his 16 years at FCA, Erickson became the Director
of Basketball Operations and later the Assistant Commissioner for the Big Eight
Conference.
John was a gifted speaker and storyteller. He was able to uniquely
pour into people's lives by sharing his faith while speaking about sports. One
of these occasions was when at 86 years of age, he received the NABC Guardian
of the Game Award for Leadership at the NCAA Final Four, and accepting the
award in front of his fellow coaches he shared how basketball changed his life,
but Jesus gave him life. (Romans 12: 1-2). John has been honored for his
achievements by many organizations, including Beloit College, the NAIA, Lake
Forest College and the Fellowship of Christian Athletes.
In Kansas City, John and Polly were active members of
Hillcrest Covenant Church for 40 years. He and Polly were involved in countless
ministries, including House of Hope and Salvation Army, but John especially
enjoyed his involvement with Team Focus – a ministry founded by Coach Mike and
Mickey Gottfried in 2000.
Wednesday mornings were particularly important. John was one
of hand full of men that have taught a weekly men's Bible study for nearly 50
years which meets at Village Presbyterian Church. The men in the group were one
of the greatest blessings in his life.
Besides faith and basketball, the Erickson family loves
golf. Beginning in 2001, John and Polly spent time at the Erickson Golf House
on Pine Needles Golf Course in Southern Pines, NC. John loved sharing time with
family and friends here, talking to every player that came down the fairway.
In April 2016, John and Polly moved to Tulsa, Oklahoma to be
closer to their three daughters. A special thank you to the congregation of
Redeemer Covenant Church in Tulsa for faithfully visiting John and listening to
his life stories. He looked forward to weekly visits from Terry, Glenn and Jim.
You truly showed Christ's love. We are grateful to the staff at Legend at Tulsa
Hills and caregiver Kelli.
No matter how you knew John, whether through Bible study,
sports or business, the one thing that you knew was he was devoted to his
family. He was the best provider, protector and encourager that any daughter
could have. Until the day he died he was always caring for them. He prayed
daily for each of them, loved holding their hand, hearing their voice or seeing
their face.
He is survived by his three daughters Lew Ellen Erickson of
Tulsa, OK, Kelly (Joe) Armes of Dallas, TX, Kim (David) Abbott of Columbia, SC;
grandchildren Bryan and Morgan Abbott of Lexington, SC, Scotty and Mary Ellen
Abbott Grigsby of Columbia, SC, Zach and Annie Armes Wood of Dallas, TX, and
John Erickson Armes (fiancé Mary Bryton Slover) of Dallas, TX; Sister Carolyn
Erickson Plummer of Rockford, IL; nieces and nephews Joseph and Nancy Plummer
Drago of Naperville, IL, Jeff Plummer of Rockford, IL, Bill and Maggie Martin
Giesenhagen of Denver, CO.
In light of these unusual times, a family burial was held at
Johnson County Memorial Gardens Cemetery in Overland Park, Kansas.
In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made to The John and Polly Erickson scholarship fund at The Fellowship of Christian Athletes, 8701 Leeds Road KC MO 64129. Arrangements, Porter Funeral Home, 8535 Monrovia, Lenexa, KS 66215
No comments:
Post a Comment