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Fitzgerald touched many lives

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“He was a mentor to us all,” said local official Rich Prykop, a member of Fitzgerald’s football crew. “When he told me I did a good job, I knew he really meant it. He didn’t say that to you after every game.”

Every few feet in the 11⁄2-hour-long line there would be someone wearing an IHSA official jacket. There were a multitude of plaques representing Fitzgerald’s honors, pictures from his service in the U.S. Army in the Korean War and hundreds of family photos of Fitzgerald, his four children, 17 grandchildren and his great-grandchildren. Several of his grandsons wore White Sox T-shirts under their sportcoats at Friday’s wake.

Fitzgerald was a member of the American Legion Post 276, served 28 years on the District 155 school board, started the Cary Youth Baseball Association in 1950 and was a huge advocate for girls sports in the 1970s.

Former Crystal Lake Central football coach Bill Mack was a sixth-grader when he met Fitzgerald, a man he considered a mentor. Fitzgerald coached Mack in baseball and basketball. Mack said Fitzgerald would call his mother to make sure he was practicing baseball.

“Nobody has ever been more giving to kids of himself than Elroy,” Mack said. “He was a wonderful, wonderful man.”

Mack went to breakfast with Fitzgerald and some other friends on Christmas Eve and did not get home until after noon.

“Cheryl [Mack’s wife] said, ‘Where have you been?’ ” Mack said. “I said, ‘Basically listening to Elroy have a good time.’ ”

It wasn’t just the old-timers. Fitzgerald knew everybody.

One of those at the wake Friday was Hampshire graduate Jake Goebbert, who played outfield in Double- and Triple-A last season in the Houston Astros’ system.

“I met him at one of our preseason scrimmages at Hampshire, and he was behind the plate when I had 19 strikeouts against Johnsburg,” Goebbert said. “He would stop by our (pumpkin) farm sometimes and talk to my dad. I stayed in touch with him a little bit.

“It’s sad. He was a great guy.”

Crystal Lake Central principal Steve Olson smiled while recalling how he met Fitzgerald. Olson was a first-year teacher at Crystal Lake South and coached sophomore basketball at Cary-Grove in 1985. Fitzgerald slapped Olson with a technical foul in that game, then Olson heard about it at school the next day.

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