[il-talk] 'A legend of Mount Prospect': Blind roller derby champion Sammy Skobel dies at 92

Deborah Kent Stein dkent5817 at att.net
Wed Jun 13 22:17:57 UTC 2018



Thank you for sharing this. I had heard of him before, but was not familiar
with his story.

Debbie



-----Original Message-----
From: IL-Talk [mailto:il-talk-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of Leslie Hamric
via IL-Talk
Sent: Wednesday, June 13, 2018 10:38 AM
To: Iltalk <il-talk at nfbnet.org>
Cc: Leslie Hamric <lhamric930 at comcast.net>
Subject: [il-talk] 'A legend of Mount Prospect': Blind roller derby champion
Sammy Skobel dies at 92


http://www.dailyherald.com/news/20180611/a-legend-of-mount-prospect-blind-ro
ller-derby-champion-sammy-skobel-dies-at-92

'A legend of Mount Prospect': Blind roller derby champion Sammy Skobel dies
at 92 Chacour Koop Sammy Skobel lost his eyesight in the beginning of his
life. At the end, it was his memory.

Yet neither setback stopped him from seizing on a life of love and family,
roller derby and hot dogs, beating the odds and empowering the blind.

Skobel, known to Northwest suburban residents as the founder of the now
closed Hot Dogs Plus in downtown Mount Prospect, died Saturday nearly five
years after doctors diagnosed him with Alzheimer's disease. He was 92.

"He was a firm believer that one's limitations should never dictate their
outcome in life," said his son, Stephen Skobel.

When he was 5 years old, scarlet fever caused Skobel to become legally
blind. He was entirely blind by the end of his life. Still, he enjoyed
athletics growing up on Maxwell Street in Chicago, just blocks from the
Chicago Coliseum.

It was at the coliseum that he first watched the roller derby as a teenager,
a sport he would master later in life. In high school, however, he was a
track star, earning scholarship offers from three colleges. But when the
coaches learned that Skobel was blind, each offer was rescinded.

"Nowadays, they would probably give him a better scholarship," Stephen
Skobel said.

Breaking into the professional roller derby would prove difficult, too.

As the story goes, Skobel had earned a spot on a roller derby team and was
using a magnifying glass to read the final paperwork in a telephone booth
when an executive of the team saw him struggling to see. It was the first of
several teams that would deny him a spot because of his vision.

Eventually, he earned a spot on team in Chattanooga, Tennessee, but only
after he first served as an equipment manager, cleaning the skates for team
members. The coaches saw him skating before and after practice and decided
to give him a shot, Stephen Skobel said.

He turned the opportunity into a 20-year career in a sport where athletes
were treated as celebrities. Skobel would go onto win world championships
and most-valuable-player awards, and set a world record for the fastest mile
on roller skates. He met singer Tony Bennett, actress Debbie Reynolds and
President Jimmy Carter, to name a few.

And he met his future wife, Acrivie, at a dance. She remembers that Skobel
was tired and sat down throughout the night, until he asked her to dance
during the final song. They married three months later in 1952. The couple
had two sons: Sam Jr. and Stephen.

After retiring from roller derby, Skobel opened Hot Dogs Plus in 1967. The
restaurant provided first jobs for many local high school students. He sold
the restaurant in 1987.

In 1970, the Skobels established the American Blind Skiing Foundation, which
helped hundreds of blind skiers learn independence. Skobel also talked to
children at local schools about the power of believing in their dreams.

"Because of his own personal story, he focused on physical disabilities, but
he would also speak with minorities and girls," Stephen Skobel said.

On Monday, Acrivie Skobel reminisced on their 66-year marriage. Their first
date immediately after the dance, when he ate oatmeal and applesauce at the
coffee shop. The times he called her at work and sang songs over the phone.
The final months, when his memory faded and she played music on the radio.

She remembers one day in particular when she started music for Skobel and
walked into the kitchen. From the other room, she could hear her husband
singing along to Billy Eckstine's version of "I Apologize," a hit song when
the couple first met.

"He was an amazing man," she said. "He was a legend of Mount Prospect."

Friends are invited to celebrate Skobel's life from noon to 3 p.m. Saturday
at Mount Prospect's Brick City Tavern, 34 S. Main St. -- the site of the
original Sammy Skobel's Hot Dogs Plus.



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