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Messich marvels how times have changed for womenĢƵ sports

By Rob Burchianti 3 min read
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MapletownĢƵ Taylor Vanata puts up a shot during the 2017-18 girls basketball season. Longtime Maples athletic director Linda Messich recalls when girls basketball was a six-on-six game with some positions restricted to half the court.
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West Greene graduate and longtime Mapletown athletic director Linda Messich will be inducted into the Washington-Greene County Chapter of the Pennsylvania Sports Hall of Fame as part of the Class of 2025 on June 8.

Linda Messich has just about seen it all when it comes to womenĢƵ sports over the years.

Messich, who is part of the Washington-Greene County Chapter of the Pennsylvania Sports Hall of Fame Class of 2025 as an athletic administrator and coach for meritorious service at Mapletown, recalled her days at West Greene.

For one, girls basketball wasn’t quite the same then than it is now.

“Athletics were sure different when I started in this business,” said Messich, who is in her 29th year at Mapletown. “When I played basketball in high school it had just started. There were six players on a team back then, two rovers, two forwards and two guards.”

That wasn’t the only difference. Not everyone could cross midcourt back then.

“The forwards and guards only played on half the court,” Messich pointed out. “They could not go over the middle line.”

Dribbling? There was a difference in that aspect of the game as well.

“You could only dribble three times,” Messich said with a chuckle. “The year that I graduated from West Greene thatĢƵ what the rules were. We didn’t even have uniforms then. We had a one-piece thing with a numbered pinnie over it tied under your arms.

“Talk about how far we’ve come. ItĢƵ pretty neat to see the progress we’ve made. Title IX is when everything changed. I was at the beginning of all that and I’ve seen it all the way through these 50 years. You’re looking at things like Caitlin Clark now and all the big stars and see what the women are doing now. ItĢƵ really amazing.”

When Messich got her first job at Mapletown things were starting to change.

“One year after I graduated from college and I started coaching here, then they were finally using the boys rules,” she said.

Messich continues to enjoy her job as MapletownĢƵ athletic director and puts a concerted effort into helping student-athletes.

“It was easier when I was teaching and I was around them more but I still try to establish a rapport and a connection with the young kids and get acquainted with them as they’re moving up through the years.” Messich said. “I feel like they’re my kids and I share in their joy when they succeed.

“I love it when they come back to us years later. Some of them will come up to me and say thank you for what you did for me and tell me things like my life is good now or I’m successful and I’ve got a good job and a family.

“To hear that, thatĢƵ really special to me. That means the world to me. ThatĢƵ one of the main reasons I do this.”

Messich said she will attend the Hall of Fame banquet on Sunday, June 8 at the Hilton Garden Inn at Southpointe.

“I’m honored and grateful to be going in,” she said.

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