Manchester Magazine Fall 2016 | Page 43

MU| S p o r t s Profile Garry Hamilton ’85 Turning challenges into opportunities G arry Hamilton chooses his words like a picky eater, as befits a man for whom diplomacy is a core value. As head of the Fort Wayne Police Department’s community relations division, there is no more useful tool than the well-considered word. for the Spartans were not covered in glory. He did not star, and the team did not prosper. In four seasons, the Spartans won just six games. Little wonder that when you ask him about playing football at Manchester back in the early 1980s, there is first an interval of silence, and then a brief chuckle. So what did the 1985 graduate get out of it? “Oh, my,” he says. “Football at Manchester …” And then, after another considered pause or two: “The career wasn’t as stellar as high 43 | school. But it was fun.” Which is Hamilton’s gentle way of saying that his four autumns as a running back “It was challenging to play there at Manchester (because) your team was not always used to winning at the end of the game,” Hamilton says, again gently. “Just meeting other athletes from around the country,” Hamilton says when asked about the best part of football at MU. “A lot of people had their beliefs about a certain race of people, but you were able to get together and form friendships with some of the athletes who didn’t look like you.” It was that possibility – or at least that challenge – that brought Hamilton to Manchester from Northrop High School in Fort Wayne. “I saw it as a challenge to me to take me out of my comfort zone,” says Hamilton, who was Fort Wayne’s police chief from 2014 until August of this year. “I thought Manchester would be a challenging thing because there wasn’t a large AfricanAmerican population there at the time.” Along the way, he absorbed Manchester’s unique culture of service to community, an impulse that guides him to this day in his work as a police officer and bridge-builder. “I remember taking a class with (Professor of Sociology, Social Work and Criminal Justice) Brad Yoder, and one of the things was problem solving,” Hamilton says. “I think it helped me in my job now, because my job now is problem solving.” By Benjamin Smith Director of Development Shannon Griffith, who was head football coach when the sensors were introduced. “It would have a time stamp on it, and we could go back to the point of time on video and evaluate how he hurt himself. So maybe you go back and look at technical issues, maybe the technique is wrong.” By Benjamin Smith Vince Cashdollar (left), assistant football coach, and Nate Jensen, head football coach, examine a helmet liner with sensors designed to prevent concussions. Manchester | 43