Matt Heldman ’98

Matt Heldman Freshman GuardMatt, Otis Heldman Had Basketball Bond

October 12, 1999|By Gary Reinmuth, Tribune Staff Writer.
CHAMPAIGN — Inseparable in life, they remained inseparable in death. Basketball or life, it was hard to tell which they loved more. The son had this passion and the father provided the pride.

His teammates on the University of Illinois’ 1997-98 Big Ten co-champion basketball team had a nickname for Matt Heldman.

They called him “Otis.”

Matt loved the name because Otis was also the first name of his grandfather and of his biggest fan and best friend–his dad. Matt had “Otis” tattooed on his arm.

“Otis” was also a great name because it fit Matt Heldman to a T. Otis isn’t a name like Reginald or Hubert. It’s a solid, blue-collar name that says “I may not be pretty but I’m proud; I may not be gifted but I’ll outwork you until you drop.”

Matt Heldman, 23, and his father were killed Sunday night when a 1986 Chevrolet Corvette driven by Heldman’s father collided with a mini-van in Libertyville. The two occupants of the mini-van were also killed. Police said none of the victims were wearing seat belts.

Before he graduated and went on to play professionally in Greece and Finland last year, Heldman was a 6-foot, 167-pound point guard who did the Illini’s heavy lifting; who had a jump shot so flat and ugly it made you cringe, but whose gumption and desire provided the inspiration that carried the Illini to a share of their first Big Ten crown since 1984.

“I may never have had a player who played as close to his potential as Matt did,” Illinois coach Lon Kruger said. “He laid it out there every day in practice. Matt always took great satisfaction in preparing and beating people who were more talented. What I’ll always remember is the passion he played with.”

Pride. When it came to Matt, Otis Heldman, a 53-year-old life-insurance salesman and former small-college basketball player, had so much of it he couldn’t hold it in.

“Otis was unyielding in his loyalty to Matt,” said Kruger. “He was just so proud of his son.”

Bad news travels fast in these parts and in the case of Matt and Otis Heldman, Monday morning was double tragic for Illinois’ extended basketball family. They remember the son who played basketball so hard it made you ache and the supportive, doting father who missed only two of the 117 Illini games in which Matt played.

The news also hit hard in Libertyville, the Heldmans’ hometown.

“There’s like a big hole in my chest right now,” said Max Sanders, who coached Heldman at Libertyville High School. “I was going to the airport last night to pick up my son and the street (Milwaukee Avenue) was closed by the railroad track. I couldn’t see what had happened but there were a lot of flares out so I guess there were investigating the accident.

“I’ve known him since grade school. When he started coming to my basketball camp he was a little skinny kid and he just kept working harder and harder and harder. He was one of those success stories you like to see.”

Illinois senior center Victor Chukwudebe first heard about it from reporters when he showed up at the Ubben Basketball Complex to work out Monday afternoon. A stunned Chukwudebe declined to talk.

Sophomore guard Cory Bradford fought back tears.

“I’m having a hard time right now,” Bradford said. “He was one of the people who really helped me out when I was a freshman (and partial qualifier). I think the thing I remember most about him was his character. He was a guy who had a lot of spirit. He’d just look at you as if to say, “Hey, it’s time to get going.’ ”

Heldman was always going. Hard.

“I haven’t had anybody who ever worked harder,” Sanders said. “Some stars, you get baggage with but not Matt. I coached him for three years and not once did he ever answer back. It was always `OK, coach.’ If you’re from Libertyville almost every time you drove down his street you would see him and his buddies playing in the driveway. It went on all hours of the day.”

For Heldman, all the practice finally paid off. In his senior year, Illinois was picked to finish seventh in the Big Ten. The star–Kiwane Garris–was gone and the Illini desperately needed a point guard to replace him.

When Bradford was declared ineligible and former Brigham Young star Robbie Reid chose Michigan over Illinois, Heldman won the job by default. Heldman had played the point for Sanders, but the critics said Heldman wasn’t a good enough penetrator, passer or floor leader to play at the major-college level. Heldman proved them all wrong.

After averaging 10.1 points and dishing out 66 assists as a junior, he contributed 10.9 points and a team-leading 131 assists as a senior. While leading the Illini into the second round of the NCAA tournament, Heldman hit double figures 20 times. He was also a model of stamina, averaging 36.5 minutes per game and starting all 33 games. His 1,203 minutes is only 12 shy of Eddie Johnson’s school record.

The Heldmans’ Corvette was southbound on Milwaukee Avenue in Libertyville when it collided with a Chrysler mini-van at 7:27 p.m. Also killed were two occupants of the mini-van: Francis Osterman, 69, and his wife, JoAnn, 61, both of Libertyville. Matt Heldman is survived by his mother, Linda, and sister, Amy.

“I just can’t believe this,” said Sanders. “They say the good die young. I guess it’s true.”

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Robert E. “Bob” Survant ’52

Robert E. “Bob” Survant '52A 1949 Elgin High School graduate, Survant was named All-State for basketball his senior season. He also participated in football and track and was considered one of the city’s best athletes during that era. In basketball, Survant was leading scorer for the Maroons in 1948, scoring 336 points for a team that finished 15-10. In 1949, when Elgin went 23-4 and lost in the Sweet Sixteen, Survant was the second-leading scorer on the team, scoring 418 points and averaging 15.8 points per game. He was considered “a great feeder for (Hall of Fame inductee) Bob Peterson” who led the team in scoring. Survant was named to the Champaign News Gazette All-State Team, then considered the premier authority in the state. He was named second team all-state on another team.  He accomplished all this while playing with a chain-harness due to an injury he suffered in football.  This limited Bob to how high he could raise his arm. He scored a team-leading 20 points in the state tournament loss and was named to the All-State Tournament Team.  After graduation from EHS, Survant attended the University of Illinois.

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Nathan Corwith ’50

Nathan Corwin ’50 passed away in March of 1989. He would have been 64 on Wednesday. Mr. Corwith was the owner of N. Corwith & Co., 175 W. Jackson Blvd. He also was an Army Air Corps veteran of World War II. Mr. Corwith is survived by his wife, Bunnie; three daughters, Dianne Hillinger, Debra Frieden and Marcia; a son, Van; his mother, Mildred; and 10 grandchildren.

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William “Bill” Erickson ’50

bill ericksonWilliam B. “Bill” Erickson ’50 (June 8, 1928 – September 21, 1987) was an NCAA All-American basketball player at the University of Illinois during a career that spanned from 1947 to 1950, and then a player in the National Professional Basketball League for the Saint Paul Lights.

Erickson chose to play basketball at Illinois after high school. He played in every single game during his four-year career and was a starter for the final three. In his junior season of 1948–49, the Fighting Illini won the Big Ten Conference title and advanced to the NCAA Tournament. Illinois would defeat Yale to earn a berth in the Final Four (only eight teams played in the tournament back then), but would lose to eventual national champion Kentucky, 76–47. They would defeat Oregon State in the third place game, however. After the season, Erickson was named to the All-Big Ten team and was dubbed a consensus Second Team All-American.

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Bruce M. Brothers ’56

Bruce BrothersBruce Brothers, 52, a teacher and coach at Maine East High School in Park Ridge, was a former Quincy High School and University of Illinois basketball star. At Quincy, he was a key figure in the famous 1952 triple-overtime finals of the Illinois state high school basketball tournament.

Services for Mr. Brothers, a resident of Mt. Prospect, will be held at 2 p.m. Wednesday in St. Mark Lutheran Church, 200 S. Wille St., in the suburb. He died Monday in Northwest Community Continuing Care Center, Arlington Heights.

Mr. Brothers, a 6-foot-5-inch center, led his high school team three times to the final Sweet 16 playoffs in the state tournament.

“In his last year there,“ his wife, Lois, said, “they made the finals. They played the tiny `Cinderella` Hebron team and lost in triple overtime. He fouled out, and there went the game.

“People still remember. When he got sick, he received hundreds of cards from the Quincy area. Several said, `You didn`t foul out.` He became close friends with Phil and Paul Judson, the twins who were stars on the Hebron team. Phil often came to visit him, especially after he became sick.“

Mr. Brothers, who was heavily recruited, went to the University of Illinois, where he played three years. Johnny Kerr, later a professional star and coach, was one of his teammates.

He was the starting forward and voted the most valuable player on a team rated No. 1 in the nation in 1956 by both the Associated Press and United Press International.

He then served in the Army as a chaplain`s assistant and a member of the 5th Army`s basketball team.

After military service, he coached first at Waukegan and then as head basketball coach at Maine East. He also was a driver`s education instructor. He quit the head coaching position in 1970, when his own son, Bruce, was playing for Mt. Prospect and he wanted to follow his son`s career. The high school asked him to come back to coaching and he did.

“When he went back to coaching, he discovered he loved it,“ his wife said. “Being an assistant provides all the fun of teaching kids basketball and none of the headaches. He thoroughly enjoyed helping kids along the way.“ Mr. Brothers was secretary-treasurer of the Illinois High School Drivers Education Association.

Survivors, besides his wife and son, include two other sons, Tom and Bill; his mother, Daisy Cox; a brother, Robert; and a sister, Patricia Schroth.

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Lt. Bruce Capel ’65

Lt. Bruce Capel '65

Birth:     Mar. 18, 1943
Evansville
Vanderburgh County
Indiana, USA
Death:     May 12, 1966
Da Nang
Da Nang Municipality, Vietnam

“Chicago Tribune (IL) – May 15, 1966
Ex-Illinois Center Dies in Vietnam.

Marine Lt. Bruce Capel, who played center on the University of Illinois football team in the 1964 Rose bowl game, has been killed in action in Vietnam. His father, Wallace D. Capel, reported yesterday the family was notified Friday by a Marine Corps officer who went to the home in Glen Ellyn. He said his son, commander of a rifle platoon, had been cut down Continue reading