SOL LIPKIN
1st
INDUCTEE
as a
"PROMOTER OF THE GAME"!!
May 1996!!!
SOL LIPKIN was inducted to the
National Shuffleboard Hall of Fame (NSHF) on his
90th birthday!! The following Sol Lipkin history
and pictures were published in "The Board
Talk," Volume 13, No. 7, July 1996 and it
is quite some story with lots of shuffleboard
history!! Sol was with the American Shuffleboard
Company (later American International
Shuffleboard Corporation) for several decades
and was still involved in the business at the
age of 90 when he was inducted into the NSHF in
May 1996!!
"In May 1996, Sol
Lipkin became the first person inducted into the
National Shuffleboard Hall of Fame as a
"promoter" of the game. The news was
announced at a special celebration of Sol's 90th
birthday. Family, friends, and associates from The
World of Shuffleboard were on hand to honor Sol
and celebrate his long and successful career.
The
petition for Sol's induction was submitted to the
NSHF Board of Directors by Phil Skover and John
McDermott of The Shuffleboard Federation, Inc.,
and was supported by many fans and business
associates from companies such as Triple Crown,
Playfair, Gametime, Sun Glo, RePlay, Play Meter,
Dave and Busters', and The Board Talk.
According
to his son Bruce and others who knew Sol, his
primary motivation has always been love of the
game of shuffleboard. The financial compensation
was not large and the personal hardships he
endured being on the road so much of the time is
evidence that Sol truly cared about the sport.
In the
'30s, he started his long career in shuffleboard
as a salesperson for the National Shuffleboard
Company, then became a representative for the
American Shuffleboard Company. Competition between
the shuffleboard manufacturers (National,
American, Modern, Rockola, Vallley, etc.) was
intense then and many believe Sol established
American Boards as the industry standard.
He was
first introduced to table shuffleboard in a church
basement. "There was a time," he said,
"when churches and exclusive hotels that
catered to the rich were the only places that
offered shuffleboard. It wasn't until the early
'30s when taverns were dying despite 5-cent beer
and free food, that boards were purchased with a
small down payment and smaller weekly payments, to
attract customers during the Depression." Sol
admits to eating his share of the free food as he
set up those deals!
During
the '50s, Sol traveled the country selling boards,
running tournaments, and setting up
distributorships. In 1950, he staged a tournament
in Illinois involving 574 teams from 14 states. He
placed 12 boards in a rented, newly-built armory
and used the services of an American Bowling
Congress official to run the tournament. Why
bowling? "We knew in order for it to click,
we'd have to run it on frames -- 10 frames, five
on each end," Sol said. And click it did. The
single elimination, best 4 out of 7 tournament,
started on a Friday and ended by 4 p.m. on Sunday.
Illinois
Gov. Adlai Stevenson (later a presidential
contender) wrote a letter to Sol expressing his
regrets that gubernatorial duties prevented him
from attending this big tournament.
The
pot for this big event was $2,500 to be split
among the top eight teams, with $750 for first
place, plus a new shuffleboard for the tavern
owner who sponsored the winning team. It took
tight organization to make this event involving
574 teams happen, including hiring young people
for $1.50/hour to post scores, verified by judges,
on large scoreboards at the end of each board. Sol
appointed a five-member grievance committee made
up of well-known, highly respected people in
Illinois shuffleboard circles, but, he remembers,
"We never had a dispute."
It
wasn't just taverns where Sol promoted the sport
and American shuffleboards. Churches, Salvation
Army centers, the military, senior citizens,
colleges, boys' clubs -- were on the American
customer lists.
During
World War II, WACS, WAVES, and others in the armed
services learned to love shuffleboard thanks, in
large, to Sol's efforts.
A
special challenge faced by Sol and other ASC staff
during the '60s was installing a shuffleboard in
Polaris submarine "down the hatch on a
torpedo rack." During the long periods
underwater, the sport of shuffleboard helped ease
the stress of servicement and provided exciting
tournament play. The event could well be recorded
as the first underwater shuffleboard tournament in
history! ASC also placed shuffleboards in the
recreation cetner at the Pentagon in Washington,
D.C.
Sol
has always been actively involved in shuffleboard
league organization and support and was
instrumental in writing of the American
Shuffleboard Rule Book, one of the most
widely-referenced rule books even today. Although
he was the architect of the book, he realized it
was out of date by the time the sport was
undergoing a "revival" in the '80s and
'90s. Despite refusal of his employers to allow
The Shuffleboard Federation to update the book,
Sol went ahead and gave permission and took
personal responsibility for doing so.
Sol
has always been generous with his knowledge,
expertise, and resources with others in The World
of Shuffleboard. Two new entities born in the '80s
-- The Board Talk and The Shuffleboard Federation,
Inc., credit Sol's unwavering support with their
"survival," sometimes against what
seemed insurmountable odds.
In
1987, Sol was presented with a "Pioneer
Award" from Bill Moore of Texas, and in 1992,
he received a "Lifetime Achievement
Award" from The Shuffleboard Federation. The
Federation also established a "Sol Lipkin
Award" (Click Here to read about SOL
LIPKIN AWARDs) presented to
individuals as a symbol of utmost respect for
"extraordinary contributions to the
advancement of shuffleboard."
Just
because Sol has reached his 90-year landmark
doesn't mean he's ready to put the "gone
fishing" sign on his New Jersey door. His
most recent achievement was the successful
negotiation and placement of shuffleboard tables
in "Dave and Buster's," a national chain
of huge entertainment complexes for the entire
family in various metropolitan areas around the
country. The average location has five boards and
attracts about 1 million customers a year. The
placement of boards in these places is a big step
in bringing exposure and recognition to
shuffleboard to an entirely new and very large
audience.
He's
also still involved in community service and
recently sold the most American Legion poppies in
his area -- 543 at $1 a pop! Widowed for a number
of years now, he reports that he's
"looking" (a healthy attitude for a
90-year-old).
As
Sol told John McDermott: "Johnny (Sol's the
only person who dares to call him that), attitude
is everything!!" (The Board Talk, Vol. 13,
No. 7, July 1996)
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