IN Keystone Oaks Fall 2017 | Page 13

It’s a Ringer Dormont Horseshoe Club continues to draw members and looks toward the future. By Paul Glasser “I made a lot of friends there with guys I normally wouldn’t hang out with. It’s a great way for people to get together for some nice wholesome fun.” N ostalgia and an infusion of new members could help keep the Dormont Horseshoe Club alive for decades. “As long as the pits are there, there will be people who throw shoes,” says David Hamilton, the club’s treasurer. The club was founded in the 1950s and several members have gone on to become state and world horseshoe champions, including, most recently, Cindy Hoffman. The club meets at 6:30 p.m. every Thursday at the horseshoe pits on Banksville Road from May to September. The weekly fees are $5 and every third week the club offers free hot dogs. On September 11, the club will host a single-elimination tournament for individual players. Attendance has increased in recent years to about 25 or 30 players each week. Hamilton joined five years ago because he was curious after driving by the pits for years. As a child, he also remembered his father playing horseshoes and wanted to carry on the tradition. At first he was intimidated because he thought the club was full of experienced players, but found out that the members had many different skill levels. Players are part of a team at the Thursday night meetings and switch partners frequently. “It’s a great way to meet people,” Hamilton notes. “I made a lot of friends there with guys I normally wouldn’t hang out with. It’s a great way for people to get together for some nice wholesome fun.” The club is very welcoming and its motto is, “Our shoes fit everyone.” Hamilton says players of any skill level are encouraged to participate. The standard throwing distance is 60 feet, but younger or older players can throw from 40 feet. “Anyone can do it,” he adds. “We had a guy last year who would go up and back with his walker.” The club recently recruited a teenager, and Hamilton hopes nostalgia will fuel revived interest in the game. “It’s cool to play again, just like Pabst Blue Ribbon is popular to drink again,” he laughs. The club provides shoes and maintains the pits, although members can buy their own shoes to use in tournaments. There are a number of different pitching styles— some players flip the shoes end-over-end while others prefer to throw sidearm or at an angle. “It just depends on what’s comfortable for you,” Hamilton explains. Members travel throughout the state and across the country to play in tournaments, including as far away as Utah. The best players, who hit the peg 80 percent of the time or better, are known as “ringers” and they can win trophies and cash prizes. More experienced players serve as mentors to less experienced members. “The only skill required is being able to throw a shoe,” Hamilton says. n For more information, visit http://www.wphpa.com/dormont.html. Keystone Oaks | Fall 2017 | icmags.com 11