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Chicago 16"
Hall of Fame
Class of 2009

Howie Fagan -
Richard M. Daley Award
Howie Fagan has had a tremendous impact on the Hall
of Fame from its inception. In fact, one could argue that it was
his generosity that led to the first public display of softball
memorabilia. Italian Sports Hall of Fame director, George Randazzo,
suggested that Howie and Al Maag meet. From that first meeting,
Howie understood the vision for the Hall of Fame and indicated his
willingness to be involved. He hosted the meeting that organized
the Hall of Fame at Hawthorne. Since then, Hawthorne has hosted
the inductee dinners, dinners that draw over 500 people each year.
He also allowed a display of softball memorabilia to be setup in
the building. He has influenced many of the HOF programs and his
marketing experience has been vital in getting the Hall of Fame
off the ground.
He grew up on the South side of Chicago near Rainbow Beach. He decided
to attend Mount Carmel High School, a decision he calls one of the
greatest he ever made.
He was a basketball and baseball star there (and is a member of
their Hall of Fame) and then played football at Northern Illinois
University from 1957 to 1959. He had never played football, so when
he tried-out, Coach Howard Fletcher tested him in practice by running
plays directly at him. He made every tackle, made the team and was
soon paired with Alan Eck in catching passes from Lew "Golden
Arm" Flynn and later from Tom Beck and George Bork. Fagan and
Eck were ranked nationally as 1st and 2nd in pass reception. In
1960 Howie coached the ends for the Mt. Carmel team that beat Taft
in the Prep Bowl.
He once had a speeding ticket in Wheaton on the day of a NIU football
game. The judge put him in jail because he couldn't pay the fine
until legendary athletic director Chick Evans (not the golfer) showed
up and convinced the judge to let him go. They raced back to DeKalb
and Howie was able to play the second half.
He had a baseball tryout in St. Charles but was only given two at-bats.
He pleaded for a third swing and hit a homerun, so he was invited
to a rookie camp in St. Louis with the Browns. He went 6-for-12
with three homeruns in Sportsman's Park and was given a contract.
He played in the minors for a while but couldn't hit a curve ball,
so he returned home. Besides baseball, he also played 16-inch softball.
Fagan is marketing director at Hawthorne Race Course. He and his
wife, Nancy, live in the Western suburbs. They have two children,
Matt and Sean.
Fagan had heart surgery six weeks ago
passed along advice from his doctor who told him to tell all his
friends and he made it clear that the people from the Chicago sixteen
inch community were all his friends that if you are forty-five years
old you need to have an annually stress test. Fagan said, "It's
not enough for the doctor to say your EKG is fine. You should have
a stress test from age forty-five and every year there after. I
had no symptoms. I got on the stress teat at my annual physical.
They kept me all night and operated at 6:30 the next morning and
told me that if I had taken a thousand more steps I probably would
have been dead. So I feel an obligation to you to tell you this.
Thanks to the hall."

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