Postcode NP15 1LE - police 339639
Gedeon, 32, is a senior vice president for Bain Capital Private Equity, where he focuses on healthcare investments. He and Allison moved from Boston back to Northeast Ohio in July and live in Chagrin Falls. They had their second child, Levi, about a month ago.
“Our kids get to know their grandparents,” Gedeon said, “and being ingrained back into the community, that meant a ton to us.”
At Hudson, Gedeon became a school record holder in all-purpose yards (3,934) and touchdowns (35). He starred as a linebacker and quarterback his senior season and earned an All-Ohio selection on defense. He was the Akron Touchdown Club Player of the Year.
Alex Gedeon's wife, Allison, told the couple's 3-year-old son, Mason, they would attend the Summit County Sports Hall of Fame induction ceremony and banquet to celebrate his father excelling in football once upon a time.
“I was telling Ben and Sam there's few things that we can compete at athletically anymore,” Gedeon said, “so I got them for at least the time being on this one.”
“In terms of his character, in terms of his work ethic, in terms of his personality, all the intangible things, there was no doubt ever that he was going to be successful,” Kurtz said. “The fact that he was able to ramp it up physically on the football field at that level and play with a high level of intensity and integrity, that was never in doubt.”
Sam is a Special Forces operator in the Navy who's based in Virginia. Ben is working in business development at a startup in New York called Candy Digital, a Fanatics Inc. spin-off. Sister Gabrielle, the youngest of the four Gedeon children, has a job at a digital marketing startup and traveled from her home in Hawaii to attend the SCSHOF ceremony.
“When I first called him to tell him that I had nominated him and he'd been selected, he said, 'Are you sure you want to put me in ahead of Ben?'” said SCSHOF president Jeff Kurtz, who has known the Gedeon family for many years. “I said, 'You are the oldest, so let's go the seniority route.'”
In Gedeon's final collegiate game, Gedeon had nine tackles and returned an interception 32 yards for a touchdown en route to a 45-7 win over Yale.
Gedeon parlayed his captaincy in football and basketball at Hudson into another leadership role at Harvard. He was voted the 138th captain in the history of Crimson football and all-Ivy League twice. As a senior in 2011, he led Harvard with 92 tackles, forced five turnovers and helped the program capture its second league title during his tenure.
Gedeon accurately recalled Ben bench pressing 225 pounds 27 times, placing first among all linebackers at the 2017 combine in Indianapolis. The Minnesota Vikings drafted Ben in the fourth round (No. 120 overall) out of the University of Michigan. He played three seasons in the NFL before retiring in 2020.
The SCSHOF requires a minimum of five years to elapse between the end of a candidate’s participation in his or her sport and induction. Ben won't be eligible for induction for a few more years, so Kurtz assured Gedeon there's nothing wrong with the oldest brother gaining temporary bragging rights when he can.

“Ever since [Ben] got me by one rep at the [NFL Scouting] Combine on bench press, he's had something to hang over my head,” Gedeon said with a laugh during an interview with the Beacon Journal.
No, Gedeon didn't play in the NFL like his youngest brother, Ben, but he still has a lasting gridiron legacy of his own at Hudson High School and Harvard University. A 2008 Hudson graduate, Gedeon is among the eight individuals who were recently inducted into the SCSHOF.
“To illustrate that I'm the least accomplished athlete in our family, Mason said, 'Oh, like Uncle Ben,'” Gedeon told the crowd during his induction speech Oct. 4 at Annunciation Greek Orthodox Church in Akron.
“Alex Gedeon, one of the really all-time great linebackers, all-time great captains we've ever had," Harvard football coach Tim Murphy said. "He was one of those kids that everything seemed to be easy for him. Now, please don't get the wrong impression. He was one of the hardest workers we ever had, but he was really gifted ― gifted as a leader, gifted as a player ― and I knew whatever he put his mind to when he left Harvard, he was going to be extraordinarily successful at it.”
Kurtz served as the athletic director at Hudson Middle School and the assistant athletic director at Hudson High School when Gedeon and his siblings were students. Tom Narducci and Joe Caniglia are other Gedeon coaches and mentors who attended his induction.

“To be able to lead the guys that I came in with there and go undefeated in the Ivy League and beat Yale and end my playing career that way was pretty special,” Gedeon said.
More local athletes honored:Siri Terjesen, Melissa Bickett represent Revere High School in Summit County Sports Hall of Fame
More on the new APS Hall of Fame:Antoine Winfield Sr. honored in Akron and will be back home again to watch son face the Cleveland Browns
“[My brothers] would always call me the corporate sellout. [The hall of fame induction is] a little bit of revenge,” Gedeon quipped.
“Having Mason, our 3-year-old, come back and meet my high school football coach [Narducci] is a pretty cool moment and kind of brought it full circle,” Gedeon said.
Neil
Neil