By LINDA BOUVET, LSSU Sports Information
Director
From the Fall of 1978 through the spring of 1993, at least one
member of the Shaheen family played volleyball or softball at Lake
Superior State University. The Shaheens were part of the Flint-Holy
Rosary and Flint-Kearsley High School recruiting pipeline that led
to great success for former Laker coach Deb McPherson.
Teresa, Colleen, Maureen and Barb Shaheen, who also have four
brothers, were inspired by parents and a high school coach who
fought for the opportunities afforded by Title IX. Their children
reap the rewards of the trail they helped blaze.
Katie Fitzpatrick, who is a junior setter/back-row specialist on
the current LSSU volleyball team, is the second generation of the
Shaheen family to play for the Lakers. She is the daughter of
Maureen '89. Katie was three-sport athlete at Sault Area High
School, as his her sister, Kylee, a high school senior.
“It's awesome that I get to do what my mom and aunts
did,” Fitzpatrick said. “All of my aunts played here.
Whenever I can, if it comes up, I tell people I'm proud to
play where they played. It's kind of cool.”
(Above: Katie Fitzpatrick and Maureen Shaheen
Fitzpatrick)
Leah Jensen, daughter of Theresa '82, started playing
competitive hockey when she was in the sixth grade and won a state
title as a teenager. Her brother, Nick, plays hockey for St. Cloud
State University and was drafted by the Detroit Red Wings. Colleen
Cooper's son, Kenny, excelled in football, basketball and
track and Midland-Dow High School.
Barb Storey '92, has a 10-year-old son, Jimmy, and an
eight-year-old daughter, Elizabeth, and she has already
noticed the competitive juices continuing through the
bloodline.
“I am just starting to get a taste of how my parents felt
watching their children play sports,” said Barb, who watched
her third-grade daughter place second behind an athletic
fifth-grade boy in a field day race and fight to learn how to hit a
softball off a pitching machine so she wouldn't have to hit
off the tee. “It is one of the greatest things imaginable,
and I know it will get even better because I feel that same joy
watching my nieces and nephews play. Because our family is so
spread out I never had the opportunity to watch many of my nieces
and nephews play on a regular basis, but I have been able to watch
Katie and Kylee quite a bit, and it's so exciting!”
“I wasn't really taught to be competitive. I just
grew up playing games as a kid,” noted Katie, whose mom still
holds her own with players half her age. “That's what
we did for fun, wanting to beat my family, even in simple card
games, wanting to compete in everything I did.”
“God has certainly given our family an unbelievable
journey through life,” Barb continued. “Mom, who just
turned 80, still gets from place to place and watches a few games
of her grandchildren. You can tell it still excites her. I
can't even imagine how proud and excited our dad would be if
he were here to see the way his grandchildren have and are
excelling in both academics and athletics.”
Don and Pat Shaheen witnessed first-hand the evolution in girls
sports from the time Title IX became law in 1972 until Barb
graduated from LSSU in 1993. Thanks to hall of fame high school
coach Jo Lake (Spada), whose daughter, Shaun, also played at LSSU,
the Shaheen sisters enjoyed a high school experience that was ahead
of its time. Lake led Holy Rosary to a Class C-D state
championship in 1976 and Kearsley to Class A state titles in 1978
and '84.
“Let's not forget Danielle Teachout '92 (who grew up
in the Shaheen home, and Don and Pat became her
legal guardian), Tracy Randolph '92 and (LSSU all-time
kills leader) Dee Fisher '90,” noted McPherson of the
many LSSU recruits who came from Lake's programs.
“Besides recruiting in Canada, which had comparable programs
to Southern Michigan in the 1970s, Flint had a leader in Jo Lake
who was recognized as a tenacious coach who developed and produced
players with outstanding skills, technique, a mental connect with
volleyball strategy and a drive to win. Jo had many players come
through her program who went on to Division I programs. The likes
of Teresa Shaheen and Dee Fisher were also recruited at that level.
We both recognized which players would be a fit for LSSC/LSSU and
those who would not. Jo also recognized and promoted a sense of
family.”
(Above: The 1981 LSSU volleyball team that finished
42-9. Top row, from left: Coach Deb McPherson, Teresa Shaheen,
Debbie Soule, Helen Vukovich, Jean Carbeno, Betty Davis, Marci
Iatarola and manager Rose McWilliams. Kneeling, from left: Jill
Pederson, Colleen Shaheen, Chris Woodruff, Carla Stangetta and Jane
Tatu.)
Of the Shaheen siblings, McPherson described Teresa as
“the natural,” who knew how to win. Colleen was more
reserved, but had an intense work ethic and was an outstanding
setter for her older sister. Maureen was an
“in-your-face” versatile athlete. Maureen and Barb were
also setters, but “Moe” dove for softballs on the
cement floor during indoor practices in the ice arena as fearlessly
as she would on a dirt infield. McPherson said that Barb was
“the last of the legacy and had something to prove…a
motivator and a leader.”
“The girls took after their dad and were good at
sports,” Pat Shaheen said. “It wasn't hard for
them to get on a team. For Jo, it was probably a little harder,
getting things going. But for the girls, the opportunity was
there.”
“Every sister had 'a culture of winning,'”
McPherson said. “They came to LSSC/LSSU bringing a love of
the game, dedication, integrity, extra effort, leadership skills
and a will to win…Sometimes a diving save, an ace serve or a
kill was approached in such a nonchalant manner as if to say
'Hey, that's what it's all about. That's
what I'm here for.' They didn't need accolades or
praise for every feat.”
McPherson coached LSSU volleyball from 1976 through 1992. She
led the Lakers through four straight winning seasons from 1978-81,
including a 42-9 finish in 1981 and a Great Lakes Intercollegiate
Athletic Conference title in 1978.
It's funny now, but it wasn't
then
To protest the cancelation of a girls' softball game in
order to accommodate a boys' make-up game, Pat Shaheen parked
the family car on the infield, refusing to let anyone play. She had
just finished chalking the infield when a school associate informed
her of the schedule change.
“At some point I got kind of upset,” Pat recalled
with a soft-spoken, but conniving laugh. “I got in the car
and drove it out on the field. The boys were not playing. The
director kept begging me to move it. They finally called my husband
at work. Don said 'I think you made your point, so why
don't you move the car.'”
“I love that story too…now, but not at the time
when I was a middle-schooler ducking in the back seat with my
brother and Barbie as we were parked on the pitcher's
mound,” Maureen said. “We felt silly, but it was pretty
cool later when Mom made the paper as 'Madam
X.'”
(Above: Maureen Shaheen
Fitzpatrick)
Don and Pat were both athletes. Don was considered one of
Flint's best athletes during the 1940s and was asked to try
out for the Chicago Bears. They both coached their childrens'
teams.
“Mom was limited because they offered so little, but
nonetheless they were athletes,” said Teresa, who along with
Jo Lake's daughter, Shaun, is a LSSU Sports Hall of Fame
inductee. On top of that, they were both devoted to their children.
Any of us with children who are athletes understand the commitment
and sacrifices, and they had eight! As a family we spent a great
deal of time competing in our own yard – boys and girls alike
– playing baseball, football, volleyball, swimming, etc. It
was the neighborhood hangout. It was definitely in our
blood…It did help to attend a school with devoted coach and
programs for female athletes. That is important, even
today.”
As enforcement of Title IX legislation slowly trickled down to
colleges and high schools during the 1970s and '80s, female
athletes battled for equal practice times and facilities, and
quality uniforms and equipment. Teresa and Colleen '83
competed during that era, while higher standards were in place by
the time Barb entered the arena.
“I think some of that is still in play today, but
definitely not as bad as in the past,” Teresa said.
“They (male athletes) still get more money, more media, more
fans/attendance, etc. I was fortunate to be coached by Jo Lake, so
more opportunities were available to me that may not have existed
for other females during that time.”
“Joe Lake and Tom Lake were both the most dedicated
coaches I know of, and I am very fortunate to have had the
opportunity to play for them,” Colleen said. “They put
more time and effort into coaching than most.”
“She was feisty,” Teresa added. “She
wouldn't be defeated. It wasn't in her nature, both
professionally and personally. She fought for what she believed was
right and fair for her teams, and I was fortunate to be a part of
that. She was very devoted to the cause, being who she was and what
she was trying to do. It took a great deal of her time, day and
night. I'm sure her family sacrificed at times for the good
of all female athletes. And we owe her a great deal.”
“She was a very well-educated, successful woman, and she
knew all the legal aspect of 'the game' to use if
things were not fair,” Maureen added.
“She had a way with her teams,” Barb said.
“She did not put up with half-hearted performance. She pushed
her girls. She taught her girls and she motivated and encouraged
her girls. She helped build their confidence and self-esteem. Her
teams were always close with each other. She made the team feel
like family. She encouraged dinners, team parties, team movies,
etc. These are the things I can remember of her and her teams,
looking out of the eyes of a 7 or 8-year-old girl. I knew I wanted
to be a part of that someday!”
What the future holds
After graduating from LSSU, Barb went on to coach varsity
volleyball at a small high school in Michigan's eastern Upper
Peninsula. She learned quickly that not all areas of Michigan have
the same definition of “equality.” Maureen was coaching
in the midst of the Michigan High School Athletic
Association's legal battle that led to a change in seasons
for volleyball and girls basketball.
“By the time I was in high school in Flint (1985-89),
gym/practice time and most other aspects of equality for the girls
was already in place,” said Barb, who remains active in
sports as a volleyball official in upper Michigan. “The girls
programs (basketball, volleyball and softball) were built into
solid and excellent programs from the Jo Lake days. Our teams were
always at the top of the league or at least to the regionals and
sometimes the state tournament. So, honestly, I did not see much of
a difference that way while played high school or college sports.
However, I do believe that a major change has occurred over the
years."
(Above: Barb Shaheen Storey)
Barb notices that technology has helped even the playing field
for girls, who are taking advantage of what's available for
training, competing and recruiting on a state-wide and sometimes
national scale.
“Girls sports are being taken more seriously,” she
said. “More high school programs are not only practicing
skills, but providing strength building and training for girls,
just as they have always done for the boys. Going back to the
smaller communities, I believe girls' sports are now viewed
as more than just a 'recreational sport.' The
communities are supporting the girls more than they have in the
past, but there is still much more support for the boys
sports.”
“It's good for girls to do what they want to do as
far as sports are concerned,” said Pat, who is admittedly a
bit more relaxed when watching the grandchildren compete compared
to her the years when her own children played. “This
generation has pretty much got it now, and that's
good.”