When Jerry Myers ’71 was a freshman at Central High School in St. Joseph, the vice principal took a group of students to a St. Joseph Junior College basketball game. Since then, Myers says, he has been a Griffon.
“From then on, there was no question that I was only going to go to the Junior College. I knew there was nowhere else I wanted to be,” Myers said.
And that is exactly what he did when he graduated from high school. He competed on the Junior College basketball and track teams, and the track team was undefeated his sophomore year. Myers returned to college when Missouri Western began offering four-year degrees and earned a bachelor’s degree in physical education in 1971.
As a high schooler at the Junior College basketball game, one of the players that Myers watched was Charlie Burri ’55, who became Missouri Western’s first athletic director in 1966. In 1973, when Burri was looking for a sports information director, the college’s first, he called Myers.
Myers took him up on the offer and remained in that position for six years.
“It was fun. A lot of it was telling people what a Griffon was,” Myers said with a laugh.
His years at Missouri Western saw the first official women’s teams, the development of more sports teams and the hiring of more coaches. Myers is credited with creating the Griffon logo in the shape of Missouri because he wanted to use it on letters to out-of-state players that the College was recruiting.
Even after he left the sports information position, he remained a fan. His two children, Jay Myers ’89 and Kelley Schenk ’92, are Missouri Western alumni.
His son played baseball as a student, and Jerry said he enjoyed going to those games and other sporting events. Even after Jay graduated, Jerry continued to attend baseball, football, volleyball and basketball games. In fact, he and his wife, Linda, often attended away games, and still do.
“We watched when Jay was playing baseball and have just continued to be Griffons,” Jerry said. “The best part is getting to know the kids.”
When Jerry left Missouri Western, Dr. Marvin Looney, who was president at the time, made him a lifetime member of the Gold Coat Club, and Jerry served as president of the athletics booster club for several years. He had been a member of the Gold Coat Board for more than 30 years, and just stepped down last year. He remains on the Hall of Fame Committee for Athletics.
In the mid-1990s, when a basketball coach told him they were having trouble finding someone to wear the mascot costume, Jerry stepped up and wore the costume for three or four years.
“I told him I would do it on the condition that nobody knew who it was. But a story in the newspaper blew my cover,” Jerry said. “It was a fun thing to do, and just a part of being a black and gold Griffon.”
Jerry said one of his greatest moments was being inducted into the Athletics Hall of Fame in 2001.
“I’ve always been a Griffon. I’m so proud.”