Courtesy of Tim Boggan
Sean O’Neill came to the Sport when he was seven—began going to a local club with his dad Pat who as a teenager played in Ohio tournaments. The O’Neill family had hosted the newly arrived Thailand Champions, Charlie Wuvanich and Chuchai Chan, and in the summer of 1975, after the Thais had decided to base themselves in Minneapolis, Sean, just turning eight, went to Charley Disney’s Magoo’s Club to be coached by them. Later, in Virginia, Chan would be a live-in coach for Sean, and a demanding one. “One time,” said Sean, who if he missed a ball had to do 10 push-ups, “I hit 2,600 consecutive forehands—it took an hour and 45 minutes—and my arm was ready to fall off. Then Chan said I had to do 1,000 backhands.”
In 1978, Sean, his arch-rival Scott Butler and teenager Mike Shapiro won the Junior Division of the U.S. Open Team Championships (that’s Scott’s dad, Dick, the boys look to be learning from). Having lost both the U.S. Open and Closed Boys U-11 to Scott, Sean, needing to do better, was off to Sweden for six weeks to train at Nisse Sandburg’s famed Angby Club. He took with him the goodwill of the Virginia State Senate—expressed in the form of 100 bags of Virginia peanuts. On coming home, Sean studied videotapes of Butler, and as a result he won the 1979 U.S. Closed Boys U-13 from him. As opponents they’d go on to exchange major titles, while together they were dominant in U-13 Doubles play. Sometimes, they were a mite tired from all their play and sought the comforts of their moms (Kathy on the left, Sue on the right.)
Being prodigies in the Sport, they naturally attracted the attention of the media. In 1980 they were flown to New York City for the ABC “Kids Are People Too” show, were put up at the (San) St. Moritz Hotel opposite Central Park, treated to dinner at the Hotel’s fancy French restaurant, and were driven by chauffer to the studio for their scripted seven-minute stint with Kathy Lee Crosby. Also while in New York they’d posed with another celebrity—which wasn’t difficult once they’d visited Marty Reisman’s Club.
Of course Sean was always intensely competitive. When a young Swedish friend who’d trained with him at Angby visited him, Sean’s mom, Kathy, put a star chart on the refrigerator door. The first boy to get 35 stars won a dollar. “Once,” said Sean, “when Lars didn’t get a star for self-control, he thought I was upstairs and he’d get ahead of me by skipping rope. But I fooled him. I hid. And then I went out and ran 4 miles. So I got 4 stars—and after that there was no way he could catch me.” When in 1980 O’Neill revisited Sweden for six weeks and stayed as a guest at Lars’ home, 12-year-old Sean said, “The most difficult part of the trip was getting my prizes, clothes, books, and 96 beer cans into my two allotted pieces of luggage.” (Beer cans? They were empty. He’d become, I believe, not a drunkard but a collector.)
By 1981, Sean had won his first National Sports Festival title—the Men’s Doubles with Randy Seemiller. And also, with his power-loop that would develop over the years, the first of his U.S. U-15 and U-17 Championships. Then, in 1982, he was back in Sweden—this time being patiently coached by Stellan Bengtsson at his “Falkenberry” club. Later, Sean, Khoa Nguyen, Brandon Olson, and the Butler brothers were off to China for coaching and sightseeing at the Ming Tombs. That year, too, O’Neill was named U.S. Amateur Athlete of the Year—an Award he would win many times.
In 1983, with dad Pat as Manager and son Sean as clean-up man, the U.S. won the Team Championship at the Apr. Cuban Invitational. Sean’s mantra? Think big! (“21—ZIP”: that was the family car’s license plate.) Having been given the “Best Technique Award” at the Cuba tournament, he now went on to win—momentarily disturbed by an adjacent player’s vomit extended onto his court—the first of his remarkable seven consecutive U.S. Olympic Festival Singles Championships. This boy, youth, man will set a record of winning 18 gold medals—that’s more than any other athlete, in any other Olympic sport, has won, ever. Justly, he’ll be given the honor of lighting the Olympic torch at the 1993 Festival.
Bummer conditions at the ’83 Pan-Am Games in Caracas brought Mixed gold for Sean, and, later, more medals in Indianapolis and Havana. From the beginning, this young man had GO FOR IT! brains, courage, heart. Since he had the ability to think critically, analytically, he would work hard at getting varied sponsors—and so begin imaginatively to create a future, a living for himself, in the Sport.
1985 was a banner year for Sean. He played in his first World Championship. Then, as an 18-year-old University student, after building up his endurance by biking and running, and studying with little sleep the videotapes and stats in his daily log of probable opponents, he came directly from his semester’s final exams to win the first of his five U.S. Men’s Singles Championships.
In 1986, Sean enrolled in the USTTA’s Colorado Springs Resident Training Program, and in his spare time would pick up courses at the University of Colorado for the Business Information Systems major he’d eventually become. Now quality coaches, like Henan Li Ai and later, Li Zhenshi, could do “intensity checks” on him—track his “physical and emotional readiness” so that he could peak for the major tournaments. Now, too, he could avail himself of the services of a nutritionist and a sports psychologist, develop a weight training program and use the most modern video equipment available that would allow him to study the world’s best players.
Table Tennis made its Olympic debut, and Sean his, in Seoul in 1988. He had prepared well. His weekly training regimen had included “over 30 hours of technique training, 4 to 8 hours of conditioning, 3 to 5 hours of vision enhancement training, and several hours of work with the Training Center’s sports psychologist.” With his dedicated focus and determination, and some key coaching from his close Thai friend Chartchai “Hank” Teekaveerakit, he qualified for these prestigious Games, the only U.S. male to do so, via a climactic 3-2 win over Canada’s Horatio Pintea. Of course Mom, Dad, and sister Molly, always supportive, were ecstatic.
Earlier, Sean’s desire to go to the Olympics, be a part of that breathtaking Opening Ceremony, had motivated him the more to be the 1987 U.S. Men’s Champion because, he said, he didn’t want to go to Seoul as just “one of the top U.S. players.” Nor at those Olympics was he only a competitor. He’d been trained by a sponsor to be talk-show oriented, confident and at ease speaking in public, and so was asked to do an NBC commentary at the Games.
Four years later, in qualifying for the Barcelona Olympics, Sean had an early 4-game loss to fellow Olympian Jim Butler, somehow dropping the 1st game from 20-14 up, then losing the 3rd at deuce, and the 4th at 19. But against all the other players, he was with his fast foot speed and opening step-around forehand that would zing in loop kills, an unbelievable 30 and 0! Against lefties particularly, Sean’s forehand serve somewhat hidden, successfully concealed his spin or no spin.
In 1988, O’Neill, along with his sponsored Brother International teammates, won the first of his U.S. Open Team Championships. Of course since he worked at it, he’d have a number of “outside-the-Sport” sponsors, and such “inside’ ones as Butterfly, Asti, Stiga, and Sitco Robots. I wasn’t the only one who marveled at his patented (sponsor-taught?) TABLE TENNIS IS FUN! wide, open-mouthed smile. Throughout the years, Sean seems to have given an endless number of coaching clinics and exhibitions— so no wonder repeatedly he’ll be deserving of the Coach of the Year award. In addition to exhibitions in such diverse places as a Washington Bullets game, a church, a racetrack, he’d offer private coaching, put out videos, do trade shows, seek consultation work, and contribute to our national magazine such instructional lessons as “How to be a Champion” and “21 Tips to Victory.” Once, visiting his friend Dr. Michael Scott, he even tried to instruct himself—on how to water ski. Disaster. He floundered like a salmon on a hook, had no chance of getting up given the speed of the boat, but with his characteristic determination half-drowned trying.
1990—and where was Sean? Traveling. “A sixteen-hour plane ride, a two-hour bus ride, a twenty-minute mini-van ride, a one hour subway ride, and finally a seven hour train ride”—this was what it took to get him to the Western Japan Open. And, no, after all that, Sean didn’t win the Singles. But he and Canada’s Joe Ng did take the Doubles. And afterwards, Sean said, I was so excited. I spent the night writing 30 postcards to friends and family telling them of our victory.
Sean’s served as a National, International, and Olympic Athlete representative, and in recent years has gone into overdrive as the USOC’s medal-winning Paralympic Lead Coach. Here are some of the players at his training camp prior to the 2006 World Championships in Switzerland—(l to r: Ed Levy, Tahl Leibovitz, Sean, Andre Scott, and Norm Bass). Also, with his computer expertise he’s created an online document for the National Coaches and National Team players, including the USA cadets and others—like U.S. World Team member and Women’s U-21 Champion Jackie Lee whom he himself coaches. Now they can all study their matches on line at any time. Of course Sean himself during his prime years was on a number of U.S. Teams to World Championships. Here he is on the 1991 Men’s Team that brought the U.S. back into the First Division.
Sean has five U.S. National Singles Championships to his credit. In winning the 1988 U.S. Closed at Caesars Palace, Sean got not the gold but the silver. Flanked by MC Bobby Riggs (left) and Caesars executive Neil Smyth, Sean was sitting pretty—on $5,000 in silver dollars. One of the National’s Sean didn’t win, in 1994, best characterizes him, his unparalleled tenacity. Down 2-0 and 20-13 match point to 5-time U.S. Champion David Zhuang, Sean wins, amazingly, 9 points in a row to force a fourth game! In addition to his Closed Singles Championships, Sean has five Mixed Doubles wins with Diana Gee, 1 with Jackie Lee, and 5 Men’s Doubles titles—two with Zhuang, and one each with Eric Boggan, Danny Seemiller, and Hank Teekaveerakit, who though living with the O’Neill family—no, he wasn’t gonna dump—had beaten Sean in their 1986 Men’s Closed final.
To go over Sean’s multi-faceted career is really a humbling experience. It’s a colossal compendium of excellence—30 years of ultra-diverse professional expertise. Sean once said, “I would like to leave a mark in table tennis where after I finish competing, people would say, ‘Have you ever heard of Sean O’Neill?’ That means something to me.” And to us too. Ladies and Gentlemen, please leave no doubt that the Sean O’Neill we honor tonight will indeed be long remembered.
Sean’s Acceptance Speech
Thank you, Tim for those very kind words and wonderful memories.
I would like to thank everyone for coming tonight — and the Hall of Fame Committee for this tremendous honor.
All table tennis players know that you are only as good as a your competition … and believe me I have had my hands full over the years; while at the same time I would say my support team was second to none.
As Tim alluded … Scott Butler was the best adversary any junior player could have. Scott always conducted himself like a champion … and dealing with his steady backhand was not much fun. No matter when we played throughout our careers, I was aware that he knew my game inside and out and I was in for a real dog-fight.
When I finally became comfortable with Scott’s game, his younger brother Jimmy stepped in (along with an even more devastating backhand) and his championship play kept the O’Neill-Butler rivalry alive for another 10 years. My last Men’s Singles title (as Tim pointed out) featured that crazy Expedite match with Jimmy — that I must say I found “quite enjoyable!”
Along with the Butlers… the Boggans and Seemiller brothers provided me with a number of trials and tribulations. I still remember explaining to a foreign player at my first Worlds — that not everyone in the US uses anti-spin rubber and I do hit a backhand on the other side of the paddle.
To me, the best part of dealing with these formidable families was playing on the same team and especially doubles with them: be it Randy, Ricky, Danny, Scott, Jimmy, Eric and especially Tim in Toronto at the CNE’s.
Doubles has always been my favorite event … and the one partner I preferred over all others was …Diana Gee. Diana allowed me to be the set-up player while she smashed everything in sight.
Our gold medal performance in Havana at the ’91 Pan Ams was such a thrill and hearing our national anthem on Cuban soil was unforgettable. Maybe someday my daughter Kaitlyn will team up with Diana’s son Aidan to keep the doubles partnership alive.
Like Diana, Chartchai “Hank” Teeakaveerakit, (who couldn’t be here tonight) was extremely instrumental in my career … as a teammate, doubles partner, coach, and more importantly as a member of our family. Hank coached me in my first Nationals Final, numerous Sports Festivals and the Olympic Trials.
Hank and I did everything together. We played for Angby in Stockholm, played with Cheng in Detroit, played for Team USA at the Worlds and ultimately competed head-to-head in the finals of the Nationals (which he won)! Believe me, nothing is more frustrating and motivating than being #2 in the country and #2 in your household! Never once did he make a big deal over the title as he was the perfect brother to me. I look forward to Hank standing where I am tonight — as his results and titles are surely worthy of the Hall’s future consideration.
Both off and on the table I have been blessed to have some of the best coaches and friends around. Charlie, Chan, Sears, Monty, my Angby Family, Bill, Jeff, Bobby, Waqidi, Yvonne, Mark, Henan, Larry, my ping-pong.com associates, and all of the US National and Olympic Coaches who have taught me how rewarding it is to help others strive for success.
I have always been a student of the game and now working with the Paralympic team, STIGA players, Olympic hopefuls keeps me active in the sport that I love so much and my competitive juices flowing.
Of course the two most important people in my table tennis career were clearly my Mom and Dad. Having a father that was nationally ranked as a junior and who respected the sport made all the difference in the world in how I approached the game from day one. At the same time, my mom probably coached me in more matches than anyone. Her advice was pretty simple– “stay up to the table” and “please loop more!”
Their foresight of the value of travel and coaching at such a young age helped me develop as a player, a person and I know will serve me well as a parent.
I would also like to thank my sister, Molly as she graciously dealt with so many table tennis guests in our home as well as holidays that often sent our family to Miami, Detroit or Vegas. I will say she did get a sweet trip to Sweden for the Worlds, thanks to table tennis!
And most especially, my wonderful wife, Elizabeth (who couldn’t be here tonight because of work responsibilities). For the past 20 plus years, she has supported my dreams as a player and now as a coach. And I also thank her for patiently putting up with Tahl who frequently forgets the East/West time difference and calls at odd hours and is always happy to open our house to my table tennis friends just as my parents did.
I know I could list virtually everyone in this room — as most all of you have helped me in various ways over the past 30 years. I’ll do my best to thank you all individually this week.
I really hope you enjoyed watching me play over the years as much as I enjoyed competing. Many have said my greatest strength as a player was my preparation or the mental side of the game. That might be true.
But the real secret to my success was before each match, (no matter the scope)… I just told myself to go out and have fun. I reminded myself that this is what I had trained for and there is no disgrace in losing — as long as you give it everything you got.
Once again thank you for this fantastic honor. I hope you enjoy your evening.