Memories shared of the unforgettable ‘Oly’

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“We became very close friends,” Wulkow said. “He was a defensive tackle. He played right tackle, so he could strong-arm to the outside to his good side. Despite this childhood affliction, he still had the courage and strength to play college football.”

Like everyone else, Wulkow said he has “a zillion Curt Olson stories.” This one, in particular, he’ll never forget:

“We were playing at William Penn, down in Mount Pleasant,” Wulkow said. “It was a wet night, and coach was substituting for Oly, so he comes running off the field. They had a snowfence behind the bench, to keep spectators away. Curt’s dragging that leg, going full speed for him, and when he tried to stop, his feet went out from under him. He went sliding and took out about 10 yards of that fence!”

The work ethic Olson developed on the farm carried over to campus life. He took on several jobs, despite his busy load in athletics and attending classes.

“The guy would get up at 5 a.m. and deliver newspapers, then work for the maintenance department and be out scooping snow before class,” Wulkow said. “He was always doing additional work, to get himself through school.”

Education career

After starting his career in Pomeroy, Curt moved to Charter Oak-Ute in 1968. As head football coach there, his team once had a winning streak in excess of 30 games. This was before the state playoffs began in 1972.

He began his career as an athletic director there, and did the same at Maple Valley in Mapleton until moving to Creston in 1982. He became assistant principal and succeeded Bill Nielsen as athletic director.

Ron Levine, now 85, was CHS principal then and knew Olson from way back. Levine was principal in Schleswig, which was an arch rival of Charter Oak-Ute, when Olson was there.

Levine was a quiet, but firm leader with high standards. Olson shared many of the same philosophies — except the quiet part.

“He called a spade a spade, and he enjoyed the attention,” Levine said. “You couldn’t miss him.”

KSIB’s Gary Bucklin and I arrived here about the same time in the mid-1980s and we’ve both known Oly for roughly 30 years. Bucklin made an astute comparison, likening him to legendary baseball broadcaster Harry Caray.

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