The legendary Lengthy Island wrestling coach immortalized in an iconic “Seinfeld” scene has died — and everybody from celeb former college students to athletes recalled Tuesday how he went to the mat for them.
“They’re telling me I solely have 2 to 2 to three minutes to provide a eulogy,” mentioned Christopher Bevilacqua, the son of beloved late 85-year-old coach and mentor Al Bevilacqua, to The Publish.
“I don’t know how one can describe his life in 2 or 3 minutes.”
Al Bevilacqua, who handed away Sunday, received his quarter-hour of TV fame when famous person funnyman Jerry Seinfeld famously name-dropped his former instructor in an episode of his wildly widespread sequence — although Al by no means actually watched the “present about nothing,” his household mentioned.
“He would go, ‘Seinfeld?’ What’s that? A comedy?’ ” mentioned the previous coach’s son Michael.
However Al didn’t want the additional highlight.
He was a coach overseeing the mats on the city’s highschool for practically 15 years for the reason that early Nineteen Sixties and later at close by Hofstra College within the late Seventies.
The Massapequa man was additionally a 2012 inductee to the Nationwide Wrestling Corridor of Fame, garnering its highest honor, the Order of Advantage.
And all of his sports activities accomplishments had been simply a part of the story.
“Wrestling was actually his vessel for who he was as an individual,” Christopher mentioned.
“He considered himself first as an educator who was educating youngsters and youth with reference to life. … He had humanity about him, and his soul was all about, ‘How do I create higher individuals?’ “
Al, who introduced the Massapequa Chiefs their first-ever county title within the Seventies, left an enduring influence on among the faculty’s most notable alumni.
Hollywood in Massapequa
He taught driver’s ed to Seinfeld, based on household.
Seinfeld name-dropped his former instructor in a 1994 episode of his present referred to as “The Race,’‘ as Jerry’s character readied to re-do a controversial high-school run during which he, admittedly, received a head begin.
“Mr. Bevilacqua” was referred to as in to officiate a rematch of the race.
Al’s son Michael recalled, “I used to be a contractor one time, I used to be in my mattress with plans open, and ‘Seinfeld’ on within the again, and I’m going, ‘Did they simply say Bevilacqua?’
“Then, my telephone simply began ringing.”
Al Bevilacqua considered Jerry as “a pleasant child,” Michael mentioned.
Then there was Al’s former wrestler the “Born on the Fourth of July” creator Ron Kovic.
“He taught about by no means quitting. … He was the perfect motivator,” mentioned Kovic, who wrestled for Bevilacqua earlier than turning into paralyzed within the Vietnam Conflict and turning into the topic of the Academy Award-winning film by the identical title.
After Kovic tragically misplaced use of his legs, he crossed paths together with his former coach on Hofstra’s campus, the place Al Bevilacqua as soon as once more did what he was belovedly identified for.
“It was fairly emotional. He stored saying encouraging issues to me that day, he confirmed it on his face that he was actually unhappy that one among his boys had been harm,” recalled Kovic, who wrote about Bevilacqua in his e book.
“I’m nonetheless right here as a result of he taught me to by no means hand over, and I believe that was instilled in me and instilled in all of the boys he coached…I’m positive when he did go away, he was combating till the tip.”
When the movie’s director Oliver Stone and star Tom Cruise got here to the Bevilacqua residence to do analysis for his or her movie adaptation of “Born on the Fourth of July,” Al wasn’t afraid to go a number of weight lessons above his belt, both.
“My dad goes to Stone, ‘Let me ask you a query: ‘Why do you hate this nation a lot?’ ” Christopher mentioned of the controversial director, including that Bevilacqua rejected the concept of being portrayed within the movie as a violent-minded coach.
“He’s going to inform you what he thinks of what he believes — and I assumed that was a reasonably highly effective testimony,” the son mentioned of his dad.
Al Bevilacqua additionally left a deeply resounding impression on actor and former wrestler Billy Baldwin, who described the coach as “undoubtedly a second father to me.”
The Baldwin brothers, together with actor Alec, had been pricey household associates who lived close to the Bevilacquas, and their dad, Al Baldwin, labored with Bevilacqua at Massapequa Excessive.
Billy Baldwin described Al as “the one” nice inspiration outdoors of his family who steered him by the world.
“We might have conversations that may result in philosophical exchanges … and that may assist to information me,” Baldwin mentioned of the religious Yankee fan who forgave him and Christopher for by chance shopping for practically $100 in scalped tickets for a sport from the night time earlier than after they had been little.
“He was the one for me, and he was the one for hundreds of others.”
Going to the mat
Fame meant nothing to get into Al Bevilacqua’s good graces.
After the tragic lack of his father, Al introduced Jim O’Rourke, Massapequa class of 1977, below his wing throughout his faculty days on the mats.
“He was an incredible character,” O’Rourke recalled.
“He has essentially the most implausible legacy.”
Al’s daughter, Nora, mentioned her dad’s crowning achievement was launching Beat The Streets Wrestling, a program that introduced the game into the internal metropolis and revolutionized their applications with assets and training.
“It exhibits you the facility of 1 individual after which in the end one individual doing what they imagine in can obtain nice issues,” she mentioned.
“I believe my father handed that on to every of us.”