John Franco
Staten Island Sports Hall of Fame
Relive It All Again
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John “The Heat” Verderosa, Rooney and Al Tobe’s P.A.L. stablemate when the three Stapleton teenagers won New York Golden Gloves titles at Madison Square Garden on the same night in 1975, was 16-2 and a three-time Gloves champion as an amateur, 28-3 and a one-time USBA Super Featherweight champion as a pro, and a promoter’s dream.
True to his nickname, the 2022 New York State Boxing Hall of Fame inductee brought the heat every night, most famously in the 1983 TKO victory that ended former Featherweight champion Sean O’Grady’s career.
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Rodney Stilwell has won all of Staten Island’s amateur golf tournaments, most of them multiple times, including five Staten Island Amateurs, six Staten Island Classics, and a combined 14 Senior Amateurs and Senior Classics. But there was a time when all that seemed impossible.
As a young boy, Stillwell was run over by a city bus, his right leg crushed, the knee ruined. In the years after college, the pain only grew worse, and by 1988, when he was unable to walk the courses, his competitive career seemed over.
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John Skronski was a High School All-American quarterback in the fall of 1978, throwing for 1,940 yards and 19 touchdowns for an undefeated Monsignor Farrell team, and one of three quarterbacks recruited by Notre Dame in its search for Joe Montana’s successor. (The other two were Dan Marino and John Elway; you might’ve heard of them.)
When Elway demurred, and Marino stayed home to play for Pitt, it seemed the job was Skronski’s, until a new coach decided he wanted an option quarterback to run his offense. He could’ve transferred, but Skronski remained loyal to his school, content to go through life as a Notre Dame man, and a Staten Island icon: the best there ever was in the old neighborhood.
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The Island has had other high school athletes who excelled in baseball and basketball, but only one, Duane Singleton, who scored 1,000 points on the hardwood, and then became a Major League centerfielder.
Drafted straight out of McKee/Staten Island Tech by the Milwaukee Brewers in the fifth round of the 1992 amateur draft, when he was 17, Singleton played 33 big-league games with the Brewers and the Detroit Tigers when he was still a teenager.
He hit .258 over parts of eight minor-league seasons, stole 30 bases five times, and went whole summers without committing an error, before finishing his career in the Independent Atlantic League, where the early promise of his speed and athleticism was still evident to anybody watching him play