By Marty Keenan
EDITOR’S NOTE—Bob
Holt, 59, a longtime Venture Corporation employee, died March 16, 2020. Holt
was a lifetime friend of Marty Keenan.
When Bob Holt was as
young as 6 or 7, my Dad said: “That kid is the best natural athlete I ever
saw.” Bob was just better than everyone else.
He was fast, strong, coordinated. We rode bikes
and played games in the neighborhood on Apache, but basketball became Bob’s
favorite.
The oldest and coolest boy in the neighborhood, Alan
Krier, taught Bob various basketball dribbling and passing tricks.
Alan’s basketball goal was above their garage,
and Alan’s bedroom window was upstairs on the second floor above and behind the
goal.
Alan Krier taught Bob to spin the ball, to put
English on the ball, so it bounced off the asphalt shingles, and bounced into
the basket, which was mostly not visible from behind.
Bob enjoyed rare hand-to-eye coordination. There was nothing
he couldn’t do.
He could spin a basketball on his finger. He
could juggle. He was a good artist. He painted Jayhawks on the walls of his
basement. If you could draw “Spunky,” an adorable little dog, you could win a
$795 art scholarship. Bob drew “Spunky,” but I don’t think he ever heard back.
Two memories stand out.
When I was in 9th grade at Harrison Junior High, Bob was an
8th grader when something special happened.
We had two junior highs and the annual
Harrison-Roosevelt showdown at the city auditorium was always close.
But not the year Bob was leading the 8th grade Harrison
Blue Demons. The headline in the December 20, 1974 Great Bend Tribune stated
bluntly: “Holt, press, destroy Roosevelt.”
Bob scored 22 of Harrison’s 36 points.
My final text to Bob included that article. He loved
it.
When Bob got to Great Bend High, one game stood out, sort of
like the Harrison-Roosevelt game. I spent 10 hours trying to find an article,
wanting to share it with Bob, but I ran out of time.
What I remember for sure is that Bob was an underclassman when the
rival McPherson Bullpups came to town. We were down several points with maybe a
minute to go. It was right before Christmas, just like when he destroyed
Roosevelt.
McPherson was winning, and the Black Panther fans were resigned to
losing another game to the Bullpups. Bob’s performance was unremarkable, and
one of Bob’s favorite teachers, Homer Kruckenberg, diagnosed the problem—
“Those seniors weren’t giving Holt the ball.”
But when the chips were down, they gave him the ball.
He made a couple of clutch shots to win the game. The winning shot was one
where Bob drove the baseline and took an astonishing 8-foot shot. Bob was
actually positioned behind the backboard on his line of sight.
It’s the kind of shot that normally hits the side of
the backboard. But Bob had the guts of a burglar. His shot hit nothing but the
dry goods.
I was sitting in the bleachers on that end of the gym, and I
saw it up close. Alan Krier would have been proud of his child prodigy.
We won.
That night, Homer rushed the court when the final buzzer sounded.
Homer instantly tagged the sweat-drenched hero with the
moniker: “Jumpin’ Joltin’ Boltin’ Holt.”
Bob used to recall: “He introduced me to his brother,
Larry Kruckenberg, right there on the court.”
Homer later shortened Holt’s nickname to “Jump.” Homer had
nicknames for everyone.
I was going to call Mr. Kruckenberg, but I was too sad
to say the words— “Jump died last night.”
I just couldn’t do it.
Bob was a storyteller who enjoyed reliving the fun times.
His uncanny ability to mimic our gym teacher at
Harrison (Mr. Staehr) was one of the funniest things I ever saw.
The best gift Bob ever gave me was when he told my sons
stories about me.
When he was playing softball for Keenan Law Firm, he told my
sons stories about antics at St. Patrick’s grade school.
I never would have told them these things, but he did.
And Jeff and Tyler still talk about it.
When you had an adventure with Bob, it was like having
the adventure many times, because he would repeat the story dozens of times
through the years.
When he retold the story, he never said: “Remember that
time?” Instead, he would just mention a major fact in the story, such as
“Marty…the TRASH CAN at Hoisington” or “Marty… on the intercom system. MR.
BRADY…” He would laugh so hard the tears flowed. I knew each story by this
shorthand method.
He was always in such good spirits. He was always up for a
good time. He was optimistic. He was always so much fun to be around.
He never dreamed his life would be cut short, but he
lived like he knew. He worked hard and played hard.
And at crunch time, when you really needed a friend, he was
there 100%. I can’t say this strongly enough, but when my mom died, or when our
house got clipped by a micro-tornado, or when I had a difficult personal trial,
Bob showed up to help and said the right thing. Sometimes it was weird the way
he knew when you were suffering; he just seemed to appear.
The Wizard of Oz said our hearts are not measured by how
much we love but by how much others love us.
If that’s the case, Bob’s heart was giant.
Everybody loved the guy. He collected friends like raking
leaves in the Fall. His friends were legion.
Bob didn’t like talking on the phone. I don’t remember
getting a single email. He would just drop in and visit a friend. He was Old
School like that. It was always a pleasant surprise.
My heart is broken for Bob Holt’s wife, Tammy, his sons,
Allan, Brett and Brad, for his mother, Charlette, and his siblings, John, Mary,
Tom and Beth. Their pain is unquenchable.
I lived in the DU house with Bob at KU for three years, and
at KU the girls were just wild for him.
But everyone knew he would marry the girl next
door—Tammy Spray. When she moved to Great Bend in 1973, the guys just adored
her.
But Bob always got the girl.
Like his mom and dad at Fowler High, they were high
school sweethearts at Great Bend High.
In both cases, the sports star married the cheerleader.
He was so proud of his beautiful wife, and his handsome and
athletic sons. He talked about them constantly. He played no favorites.
But I distinctly remember a football game at Wichita
Southeast. I remembered Southeast to be a football powerhouse, the team that
knocked Great Bend’s spectacular 1979 team out of the state championship game.
And during the first half, one of his sons—I don't remember
which one—pulled a Bob Holt Roosevelt-McPherson thingie. He scored three
touchdowns in a few minutes. Two blocked punts for touchdowns, then he caught a
touchdown pass.
All three of his boys had that Bob Holt competitive
greatness. He loved to talk about how each of his sons had their
Roosevelt-McPherson moments. He puffed up like a blowfish when talking about
Tammy and the boys.
Cancer picked a tough opponent when it picked “Jumpin’
Joltin’, Boltin’ Holt.”
As the poet said: “Do not go gentle into that good
night, but rage, rage, against the dying of the light.”
Like he did in the Harrison-Roosevelt game, and in the
McPherson game, Bob pulled out all the stops to beat cancer.
But he had to win every day, and cancer only needed to win
one day.
It was last night, I hear. Death, be not proud.