That Harry is one Harry Keough, legend of the American game and a teammate of Eppy’s in that outstanding Kutis team of 1957. Such was the quality of soccer coming out of Saint Louis at the time, five members of the Starting XI of the USA’s 1950 World Cup team – the one that famously beat the English – came from their local league. The likes of hero goalkeeper Frank Borghi, Captain Harry Keough, enforcer Charlie ‘Gloves’ Columbo, Gino Pariani and Frank ‘Pee-Wee’ Wallace all hailed from Saint Louis.
“Back then we played with four attacking players and we had some really good forwards,” Eppy remembers, not laboring much on the celebrations and the lifting of the Cup or the one-sided 6-1 scoreline in the 1957 Final. “Harry [Keough] ran the whole show and we had it set up so that we scored a lot of goals.”
A man of precious little ego, humble and quiet, Eppy prefers to rattle off the names of his teammates. “Ruben Mendoza, he was some player. We had “Butch” Cook. God knows what his real first name was. And there was Harry of course and Looby and Herman Weckie,” he pondered the names from the old days, his voice drifting back. “I don’t remember lifting the trophy, but I can bet you it’s back there in Kutis’ funeral parlor with all the rest.”
“My dad isn’t the kind of guy who talks too much about his achievements,” said 57-year-old Joe Eppy, one of Bill’s six kids and, just for good measure, an Open Cup Champion with Kutis in 1986.
“He [Bill Eppy] was there at the Saint Louis Soccer Park [the venue hosted six straight Open Cup Final Fours from 1984 to 1989] when we won it in 86 and he came down on the field after it was over,” said Joe Eppy, who followed in his father’s footsteps capturing elusive Open Cup glories. “He didn’t say much except to congratulate me and say we had a good team and that we did a fine job. But thinking back, it was a pretty amazing thing to climb the same mountain he did.”