Friday, October 4, 2024

Dylan Harper arrives at long last to further family and Rutgers legacies in what could be a season to remember

Dylan Harper now follows in older brother’s footsteps at Rutgers, hoping to bring Scarlet Knights to similar heights Ron Harper, Jr. did over his four years on the banks. (Photo by Rutgers Men’s Basketball)

PISCATAWAY, N.J. — He has only been on campus for roughly four months, but elicits the same reaction as John, Paul, George or Ringo would have in 1960s Liverpool, or New York for their first appearance on American soil.

Dylan Harper is not a Beatle, of course, but with his New Jersey roots and famous — at least on this campus — last name, may as well be. And that could have been said long before he rose to the third-ranked freshman in the nation.

Harper literally could have gone anywhere coming out of Don Bosco Prep, where his brother, Ron, Jr., starred for four years before signing with Steve Pikiell and Rutgers in 2018. A half-dozen years later, Dylan spurned suitors the likes of Indiana, Duke and Kansas to continue the family legacy on the banks. While Ron gave valuable advice regarding Pikiell and the support he and his staff would give his younger brother, the decision to come to Piscataway was basketball-motivated, says Dylan.

For me, it was never really about basketball,” he reiterated. “It was about where I could go and where I could become a better man, and I think Pike and the rest of the staff are going to help me do that. I think for us, my family, we’ve all kind of been trailblazers. We’ve always worked to get what we’ve got. Seeing what Ron had to go through here his four years, they were obviously not very good when he got here, and then you look at them now, they were a March Madness team. I’m just trying to bring that culture back. I watched him go through the journey, all the ups and downs. Me and him were in the gym every day, basically, before he left. So him knowing I’m gonna take it where he left off, I’m gonna keep going with it.”

“(Ron told me) just to take everything in, always have open ears, always listen. The coaches know what’s best for you on and off the court, so just listen and not take anything for granted. He said, ‘you’re gonna get a great coach, a great coaching staff that’s gonna love you, care for you on and off the court.’”

Harper’s development may be more accelerated than what Pikiell is accustomed to, by virtue of his sheer talent. In his 19-year head coaching career, the former Jim Calhoun assistant has still yet to hear one of his players’ names called at the NBA Draft, but his newest phenom — and by extension, fellow freshman Ace Bailey, the second-ranked freshman in this year’s class — have gone a long way toward not only changing that, but also improving the games of their teammates as well.

“Dylan sees the floor like no one I’ve had at that point guard position,” Pikiell proclaimed. “He’s 6-foot-7 too, throwing passes. Last year, we had the smallest backcourt in the Big Ten, and now we probably have the biggest backcourt in the Big Ten. He’s 
the No. 1 point guard in the country, so giving him the basketball is an easy decision. He’s a late-game guy, he’s a winner and he’s not afraid of the moment. I can move him around, too, that’s what I like. His size gives you some tremendous versatility and we could post him up as a big guard, we could move him off the ball, we can do a lot of things with him.”

His likely backcourt partner, who has already been the recipient of numerous passes that will surely wow NBA scouts during the season, concurred.

“It complements me a lot,” said Jeremiah Williams, who will play more off the ball as he blends his fifth-year senior experience with Harper’s precocious on-ball game. “I like to think I’m a good off-ball cutter, I could attack closeouts, catch and shoot threes. I think it’ll help me a lot, open up a lot of opportunities for myself.”

“He’s a very high IQ player, so he sees everything,” Bailey added. “The lobs, back doors, coming off curls, things like that.”

And in typical point guard fashion, Harper is already quick to deflect the attention to those around him. Bailey, his classmate with whom he had been connected through assistant coach Brandin Knight, has already left an impression on his likely fellow lottery pick.

“He knows my game, I know his game,” Harper said. “He’ll go back door, I’m gonna throw it up. I’ll go back door, he’s gonna pass it. We just know. The camaraderie we both have together is just special. Honestly, he’s just a pro. The way he gets off his shot, you just see flashes of Paul George, Kevin Durant, people like that. Just knowing I’ve got someone like that on my team, it’s just like you know what you’re gonna get from him every night.”

“I tell the guys: When I’ve got the ball, I’m gonna find you regardless. I might be a scorer, but I’m gonna find you guys all the time.”

The effect of Harper, as well as Bailey, signing with the Scarlet Knights propelled several experienced transfers to Rutgers through the portal, each of whom having waited for someone of this magnitude to perform with. Now, all 12 scholarship players are ready to let it out and let it in. And upon his arrival on the heels of a 15-17 campaign last season, the movement Rutgers needs is on Harper’s young shoulders as he leads the effort to take a sad song and make it better.

“It’s surreal,” Harper said of the moment now meeting his fate. “The guys that came before us, that team — Ron, Geo Baker, Caleb McConnell, Cliff (Omoruyi), Mawot (Mag), people like that — just watching them play, I always had that look in my eye like, I want to be here one day. I want to play on this court one day. Now, having the opportunity to play and just knowing that I can make something happen here, something great for Rutgers Nation, it’s just special.”

Wednesday, October 2, 2024

Two seniors, from two different worlds, unite to lead Rutgers in what could be a special season

Jeremiah Williams enters his final college season as Rutgers’ most experienced leader, and is appreciative of blessings that status brings. (Photo by Rutgers Men’s Basketball)

PISCATAWAY, N.J. — Steve Pikiell has had a different offseason than he normally would this summer with Rutgers.

Forget for a second that Pikiell secured the commitments of two of the nation’s best incoming freshmen, Ace Bailey and Dylan Harper. Even without the two wunderkinds, the coach tinkered with his normal June and July approach this year as the Scarlet Knights began what hopes to be a fruitful and fabled journey on the banks of the old Raritan. With precious limited hours for summer workouts, Pikiell raved about allocating all his time to team activity, citing its necessity with nine newcomers to the fold and just three incumbent players from last season’s retooling campaign.

From that process, though, came a pair of fifth-year leaders, one who gets to cap his collegiate career on his terms, the other a fresh face in his new locker room despite being familiar with the terrain in his home state.

Jeremiah Williams was limited to just 12 games last season as he spent most of the year waiting for a ruling on his eligibility as a two-time transfer. Once the Iowa State expatriate did get the green light to suit up, however, a noticeable impact was felt between he and his teammates as Rutgers attempted to salvage its efforts.

The Chicagoan quickly made up for lost time, finishing his truncated stretch as the Scarlet Knights’ leading scorer with an average of over 12 points per game, chipping in three-plus rebounds and nearly three assists per contest to help his cause. Now months removed from his late insertion into the lineup, Williams does not view this coda to his circuitous path as a saga with an unwritten conclusion, but one of appreciation to end it by giving all of himself, all the way.

“I wouldn’t say unfinished business, but I’m just grateful to be able to play the full season,” he conceded. “Start to finish, it’s a blessing, especially from the different situations and positions I’ve been in. It’s a sense of excitement, and I’m just gearing myself up.”

“It was awesome. Just coming from the position I was coming from and the role I stepped into here was close to a dream come true, I’d say. I didn’t know how I’d be on the basketball court after being out that long, so it was a refreshing experience. I’m very appreciative for that moment.”

The humility and opportunity was felt similarly by another veteran, a half-hour up the road in Warren Township, New Jersey.

Zach Martini was already a known commodity in the Garden State, the de facto center on a Princeton team that reached the Sweet 16 two seasons ago behind the dynamic guard play of Xaivian Lee, Caden Pierce and Matt Allocco. A big man who could stretch the floor and knock down a 3-pointer at any time, Martini faced Rutgers last November in the season opener for both the Scarlet Knights and his Tigers, giving his new coaching staff the chance to get more intimately acquainted with someone they had followed since his high school career at Gill St. Bernard’s, where he shared the floor with another familiar name.

Zach Martini remained in New Jersey, transferring from Princeton to Rutgers, where his versatile game will aid Scarlet Knight front line. (Photo by Rutgers Men’s Basketball)

“When I entered the portal, Pikiell was the first person to call me, within an hour of me entering the portal,” Martini recalled. “That just spoke volumes to me. It showed me that I wasn’t just a name in the portal. He knew my game going back to high school, playing with Paul Mulcahy. It was a no-brainer. I love New Jersey, I’ll rep New Jersey until the day I die, so to come back here and play in a gym like this, in front of fans like this, I committed within a week. It was a quick decision, and I’m excited just to be a vocal leader and play hard. I like to do all the dirty work and bring the intangibles.”

Martini stressed the importance of knowing just how much to bring to the table, something made easy for him with Princeton’s star power in front of him. The unselfishness blends in with the working-man, blue-collar mentality Pikiell’s teams have always projected, and the big man shares the mindset of such a trait being an asset in his new locker room.

“There’s a sense of maturity to know that I’m not the star of the team, but I can be a star in other facets of the game,” he opined. “I take pride in being someone who these young guys look up upon to help lead us throughout the Big Ten season. That’s sexy to me.”

Martini and Williams have already been designated co-captains before the season has even begun, a nod to Pikiell’s confidence in his two elder statesmen. The coach lauded Williams’ demonstrative nature of getting the team together in the offseason for various activities, and while Martini recognized the significance of his plaudits, he acknowledged that a leadership-by-committee style has pervaded the program.

“It means a lot to me,” Martini said of the captaincy. “It’s obviously a great honor, and while there’s two captains — Jeremiah and myself — this team feels comfortable having everyone lead. When we break it down before practice, J-Will will say, ‘hey, it’s Bryce Dortch’s turn today,’ and he’ll relay his message to the team. It’s an ongoing process and we’re all working together to lead. There’s not just two leaders, and I think Jeremiah and myself make that clear.”

“It’s been great,” freshman phenom Ace Bailey said of having Williams and Martini as mentors. “This is my 
first year playing and they’ve been experienced. They’ve been playing longer than me, so them telling me ways I can do things, having them as leaders, is just good.”

Martini has never been the alpha type, but a lunchpail, by-example leader who can be vocal when necessary. The mentality has meshed well thus far, and with his experience, the forward believes he can use that as a teaching tool as Rutgers hopes to take flight in March to a place he has already visited.

“I came from a program where the standard was winning the Ivy League championship,” he said. “That’s hard to do three years in a row, and I’m never gonna compare the Ivy League to the Big Ten, but I know what it takes to win, the sacrifices that have to come along the way. I think a big thing that we’ll realize going into this season is that roles are important. One thing we knew at Princeton was just what role each person had on the team. One thing I want to tell everyone is do what you do well, and bring that strength to the team. From there, the sky’s the limit.”

Tuesday, October 1, 2024

Its whirlwind offseason now wrapped up, Rutgers embraces buzz with anticipation of its own

With two of nation’s top five freshmen in tow, expectations may have gone up outside Rutgers, but it has been business as usual for Steve Pikiell this offseason. (Photo by Bob Dea/Daly Dose Of Hoops)

PISCATAWAY, N.J. — With its most prolific recruiting class now on campus and just over five weeks away from officially christening its scarlet-tinged tenure, Rutgers has attracted all kinds of attention this offseason, and a wide range of preseason prognostications.

After landing two of the top five freshmen in the nation when Ace Bailey and Dylan Harper officially signed with the Scarlet Knights, Rutgers has been literally all over the map when it comes to Big Ten projections, from the top five to as low as 15th in the juggernaut conference that now boasts 18 members. But while the numbers next to the name have taken shape outside the banks of the old Raritan, a quiet confidence has emerged inside the locker room, with those involved dismissing the chatter and simply eager to put their brand on display.

“We’re here to play ball,” the 6-foot-10 Bailey, who can play all five positions but will most likely secure the four spot for Rutgers, said. “We’re gonna do our best to take the team as far as we can. We’re gonna try to win the Big Ten and take us to March Madness. We’re just here to play ball, for real.”

“I think all 13 of us could play,” Harper, a native son who will primarily handle the point guard duties, countered. “I think we’re gonna come out here and show what we’re capable of doing. Every day, we all come out here with the same common goal, so one through 13, starters, we all contribute. We’re gonna come out here and show the world what we’ve got.”

Head coach Steve Pikiell admittedly went about this offseason in a different light, and not because he has a pair of highly-touted freshmen for the first time in his career. With the majority of last year’s roster having transferred or graduated, the architect of Rutgers’ resurgence eschewed individual workouts this summer as he begins his ninth season at the helm, emphasizing a need to instill team chemistry.

“It’s always a challenge,” Pikiell said of building a roster and having it come together. “I think it’s what you’ve gotta get used to now. College has changed, you’ve gotta build a team every year now. These guys are good learners and we’ve got a nice blend. We’ve got some older fifth-year guys from winning programs and the five freshmen that are talented and long, and athletic, but it’s a huge challenge. You’ve gotta do it in a hurry and you’ve only got 20 hours a week for the next four weeks, then you’re playing Alabama, Houston and Seton Hall. You’ve gotta do it pretty quickly.”

Pikiell purposely stressed team-related skill work this summer, particularly on the defensive end, as is his trademark. In the process, two of his fifth-year seniors, incumbent Jeremiah Williams and Princeton transfer Zach Martini, separated themselves from their veteran brethren to be the Scarlet Knights’ most vocal leaders.

“We changed how we approached it,” Pikiell reiterated with regard to his offseason approach. “We did everything team-related, we didn’t do any individual (work). All four hours (every week of the summer) were team, I’ve never done in the past. Every time we were together, it was all of us. Hopefully that’ll pay off, hopefully we stole some hours that way. We put some more stuff in than I ever have at this point in time, and we’ll get better at it later. I don’t want to be two weeks from the opener saying, ‘I don’t have this press offense in or this zone defense in.’ I’ve stuffed a lot in because we did more team stuff, so I’m hoping that comes back to help us.”

“Jeremiah, since the season’s been over, he’s been the guy in the gym all the time, getting Emmanuel (Ogbole) into the weight room, and (Jamichael Davis) and all those guys, he really started that journey. You saw in the last eight or nine games of the season last year what he meant. He was our voice in the locker room and he was the voice in the huddles. And then once our new guys came in, he was the guy (that said), ‘come to my house, we’re meeting at this time, we’re playing pickup at this time.’ He acted like a captain, then went about doing the things that make you a captain. And then through our eight, nine weeks (this offseason), Zach kind of earned that respect of everybody through his work. Not many players in America wrote a book where part of it was about leadership coming out of Princeton, and he talked about it on his recruiting trips, too.”

Still, even with an experienced core that includes Williams, Martini, Emmanuel Ogbole, Jamichael Davis, and transfers Tyson Acuff (Eastern Michigan), Jordan Derkack (Merrimack) and PJ Hayes (San Diego), it all comes back to Bailey and Harper, who headline a freshman quintet that also includes Bryce Dortch, Dylan Grant and Lathan Sommerville. Pikiell acknowledged as much, but made sure to make time for his supporting cast as well, highlighting some of the most abundant depth he has brought to the Garden State since arriving in 2016, even with Acuff currently rehabbing a broken foot.

“(Bailey and Harper) can play multiple positions, and our veteran guys (can) too,” the coach remarked. Zach Martini’s an excellent cutter, he’s a good screener, he does some things that can really help Ace and Dylan. PJ Hayes shoots the ball at a high level and he’s learning our defense. I think if we surround those guys and give them some room to do what they can do, they show me something new every day. We keep adding more to our system as we keep seeing them, but they’re exciting problems to have.”

“When we get Tyson back, we could play 12 guys. They’re all talented, they all do something different. You need to have depth in a league like this, and I’m looking forward to playing these guys. We could go with a lot of different lineups, we want to play fast, probably more so than any team I’ve had here.”

Hayes, the third fifth-year senior in the rotation, has already turned heads with his knockdown shooting ability after a year under Steve Lavin at San Diego, where he transferred following three years in Division II. The last player to sign with Rutgers before offseason workouts began, the Minnesota native has quickly made a name for himself as a rotation piece who may very well become a third captain alongside Williams and Martini before the year is over.

“He’s very competitive, first and foremost,” Pikiell said of Hayes. “His story’s kind of unique. People didn’t believe in him early on in his career, and he just continues to get better. He’s in fantastic shape, he can pass the ball, he’s become a good team defender, he’s very coachable. He’s got as quick a release as any player that we’ve had here, and he makes shots. We’ve had shot takers in the past, but he’s a shot maker.”

Shot making was at a premium last season as Rutgers struggled following the loss of Caleb McConnell and Paul Mulcahy, also losing a step on the defensive end and on the glass, two areas that have been essential to success under Pikiell. While each team in the country remains a work in progress at this time, the coach is confident that his team-centric build to the season opener on November 6 against Wagner will yield more profits than losses.

“It’s always the hardest thing, especially (with) five freshmen coming out of high school,” Pikiell said of teaching team defense. “You don’t spend a lot of time on that end of the floor and they get recruited to put the ball in the basket, but they’ve made strides. We only had four hours a week and I haven’t had them for that long of a time, but they’re getting better. We have tremendous length, we’re as big as we’ve been physically at every position. I think Emmanuel has made huge strides, he’s good, he’s physical, he’s long and I like where he is. J-Mike can guard anybody, he’s really a good defender, Jeremiah can guard anybody. We’re getting better, we’re figuring it out.”

Bringing the expectations full circle, Pikiell initially demurred from saying the stakes have been raised on the banks this season, then doubled down on the familiar objective he has had since replacing Eddie Jordan, to make a run through March that has not been seen in this particular part of New Jersey since 1976.

“We didn’t expect big things before?” Pikiell shot back when answering a question about expectations. “From day one, the first year I got here, we’ve tried to win a national championship, so expectations? Bring them on. I love that part of it. Our expectations haven’t changed. Some people picked us 15th (in the Big Ten), so they don’t have expectations for us, but we do. We’ve always had high expectations, and just because you get Ace and Dylan doesn’t mean they go any higher. We’re trying to get where everyone’s trying to get, to the NCAA Tournament, to a Final Four, and we’d be doing that with those guys or without them, but having those two guys certainly has been a blessing. They could have went anywhere and they picked Rutgers, and I’m real proud that they decided this would be a great place for them. We expect to be really good this year.”

One of his marquee newcomers, who lauded his coach and new teammates for the loyalty exhibited toward him in the recruiting process, concurred.

“I love it, man,” Bailey gushed. “We all share the ball, we’re all energetic, we’ve got length, we could do everything, we communicate well as a team. I love this team. We ain’t worried about anybody else’s decisions. We’re going to work as a team. We know what we’ve got, what we’re capable of.”

Wednesday, September 18, 2024

Inside Ed Kull’s strategy and mindset as he looks to lead St. John’s athletic resurgence

Ed Kull is all smiles as he returns to St. John’s Tuesday, officially introduced as Red Storm athletic director. (Photo by Jaden Daly/Daly Dose Of Hoops)

NEW YORK — Ed Kull walked into a department with an antiquated school of thought four years ago when he returned to the world of college athletics as the athletic director at Fordham, a university heralded for its national reputation and New York location, but seemingly unable to get out of its own way administratively.

In four short years, Kull did Herculean work at Rose Hill, revolutionizing the long-moribund Fordham athletic program with a fresh, modern thought process and commitment to overcome a handicap. His hires of Kyle Neptune and Keith Urgo, the latter of whom guided the Rams to their first 20-win season in over three decades, and tireless fundraising — Kull generated $7.6 million in the previous fiscal year alone — brought Fordham back into conversations it would traditionally be laughed out of.

Kull is now tasked with doing something similar on the other side of the Whitestone Bridge, introduced Tuesday as the next athletic director at St. John’s, where his career began in 2003 as a graduate assistant, resumed once more in 2011 after a detour outside the industry, and now begins anew in a time where the landscape of college athletics is as fluid as ever before.

As for the man who awakened the proverbial sleeping giant when he replaced David Roach at Fordham in 2020? That experience gives him a unique perspective as he embarks upon his newest challenge.

“It definitely opened my eyes in terms of strategy, approach, and the ability of what’s possible,” Kull said of his tenure in the Bronx. “There was always this feeling that it could not be done at Fordham, right? They’re not serious about basketball, they can’t win there, the gym question came up frequently in terms of us playing in that facility. It just makes me bullish on this stock and bullish on this opportunity, in terms of what these basketball programs can mean to this university. And that’s not lip service. That’s truly a strategy and approach, and a direct commitment that needs to take place here.”

Perhaps it is fitting that St. John’s, in some instances, is essentially a larger version of the canvas on which Fordham operates. On the big-picture level, both are Catholic institutions with similar faith-rooted ideologies and mindsets. But a look under the microscope reveals St. John’s has the same issues of facility criticisms — the state of Carnesecca Arena is a frequent concern among fans and boosters — and particularly, a dormant alumni base stuck in the past with no desire to adapt to the current state of affairs. Hiring Kull, a reputed people person with a knack for engaging anyone and everyone with his affability and devotion to getting things done, will help on that front. And in light of the recent House settlement on NIL and whatever guidelines may soon ensue with regard to student-athlete compensation, the need to become more profitable becomes even more urgent.

“There’s no way around it,” Kull conceded, not avoiding the elephant in the room. “The statement has always been, ‘we need to raise more money, we need to sell more tickets.’ We need to do more fundraising, more than ever. With the House settlement, the revenue sharing, that investment in athletics is going to grow more and more, no matter what level it ends up being, no matter what the judge ends up ruling on. Revenue generation’s going to be everything, and how do we be creative in terms of additional sponsorships, branding opportunities? I don’t see NIL going away, even with the House settlement.”

And in setting up a point of attack, the first thing that is needed is a realistic plan to combat the deficits St. John’s currently faces. Kull’s addition to a leadership front that already has Rev. Brian Shanley’s commitment and Rick Pitino’s motivation to win big one more time at the highest level driving it checks another box, but the need to think outside of the norm becomes a requirement across the board.

“People will give and donate to something they believe in,” Kull discussed. “They’ll see a return on investment with people that they can trust and have passion for. That’s the alignment here, top to bottom. St. John’s is serious, they’re committed, and that’s going to generate more interest with donors.”

“I think the non-traditional approach and the business mindset is everything right now in terms of opportunities, whether that be NIL, selling sponsorships, branding opportunities, licensing, social media use or different things digitally. We’ve gotta be as creative and outside the box as possible, and I think that’s not just a St. John’s thing, that’s the entire NCAA and all colleges right now in terms of how they prepare for the future. Are they in, or are they going to be out?”

Kull spoke openly of how much St. John’s paved the road for his career, and his longstanding connections to university powerbrokers will help him, in his own words, hit the ground running. If his experience at Fordham could be summarized in a single bullet on his resume, it would be refueling the flame to do spearhead a similar transformation in Queens.

“Anybody who’s either been an alum or a fan of St. John’s, or worked here, there’s always been this feeling of unfulfilled potential,” Kull proposed. “The time is right. I couldn’t be more inspired and motivated to come back to my alma mater and help lead through the challenges of what the future of the NCAA’s going to be. Now is the time, and now we make sure we’re maximizing and bringing St. John’s to its full potential.”

Wednesday, September 11, 2024

Ed Kull’s return further signifies St. John’s renewed commitment to athletic success

Ed Kull, twice a former St. John’s employee both in and out of athletics, has returned a third time, replacing Mike Cragg as Red Storm’s athletic director. (Photo by Fordham University Athletics)

When St. John’s announced its need for an athletic director after sacking Mike Cragg three months ago, one name stood head and shoulders above the candidate pool.

Ed Kull had the inside track from his two previous stints at St. John’s, one in the athletic marketing office before returning years later to work in institutional advancement, but the Middle Village native’s candidacy was bolstered more by the actions on his resume than the names of his employers. A natural fundraiser with an unparalleled sense of business savvy and exceptional people skills, Kull’s impending hire was seen more as a question of when it would be consummated, rather than the if that has seemed to plague the corner of Union and Utopia in recent decades.

Wednesday marked a second homecoming for Kull, who was reported by ESPN’s Pete Thamel to have accepted St. John’s offer to make him the Red Storm’s next athletic director. The hire reaffirms the university’s long-dormant competitive fire and commitment to winning on and off the playing surface, a flame stoked and rekindled three years ago when Rev. Brian Shanley was hired as president, bringing with him a reputation of not only caring about college athletics, but ensuring its prominence on campus and devoting whatever resources were necessary for success.

Shanley’s first major act came 18 months ago, when he acted almost unilaterally to hire Rick Pitino as men’s basketball coach after Mike Anderson was fired. His second comes this week with the hire of Kull, whose four-year tenure at Fordham transcended expectations and instilled belief in a moribund department. Kull will now look to do the same in a landscape where his institutional knowledge will be key to helping an operation long viewed as a mom-and-pop store finally get with the times and take its rightful place at an ever-changing table.

At only 43 years old, Kull brings an infusion of youth to a staid outfit that had been complacent on several fronts, and with it the requirement of thinking outside the box to get things done. He also brings an enthusiasm to grow his new department and not look at it as a stepping stone to something greater. His ubiquitous presence at athletic events and on social media will also bolster a department that has struggled with its branding and promotion in recent years.

At Fordham, Kull spearheaded fundraising in excess of $10 million for student-athletes, a figure that becomes bolder when one remembers Fordham had never invested that heavily in athletics under either of his predecessors, Dave Roach or Frank McLaughlin. Perhaps Kull’s most revered skill is his knack for negotiating corporate sponsorships, an asset honed when working under Mike Repole — more on him later — at Vitamin Water after he left St. John’s for the first time in the late 2000s. It was Kull who was responsible for the marketing of Vitamin Water and Powerade before his return to the university spectrum, where he then inked St. John’s contract with Under Armour and orchestrated a similar agreement between Fordham and Nike three years ago. And as a former student-athlete himself, a catcher on Stony Brook’s baseball team two decades ago, Kull better than anyone knows the pressure and tight balancing act that comes with managing sports and the classroom, and will work to make sure academic advisement and whatever other necessary amenities the players he now oversees need will be tended to in short order.

Finally, there is his relationship with Mike Repole, the primary benefactor among St. John’s booster base, the thoroughbred owner who essentially bankrolls the university’s NIL war chest, which Kull himself will also enhance through his own connections and willingness to engage powerbrokers and lead by example where others in his position appeared in over their heads. Kull and Repole have a longstanding personal and professional relationship, so the famous scorched earth interview the latter gave to Mike Francesa in 2019, where Repole expressed his distaste for what his alma mater had become, will likely not be revisited. However, one comment Repole made in that WFAN back-and-forth does bear repeating.

“At the end of the day,” Repole told Francesa five years ago when referencing the men’s basketball program, “this sport is the front porch of your house. We have a pretty ugly front porch right now. The inside of the house probably looks like crap.”

Since then, the remodeling and renovations have been extensive. Shanley was the first major improvement, and his take-charge leadership essentially boxed out incompetent gladhanders like general counsel Joe Oliva, whose power base within the athletic department was always mystifying to fans given his numerous failures. Pitino taking over the position once held by Lou Carnesecca inspired fans young and old to once again dream big with a program that once stood toe to toe with the titans of the sport. Today, Ed Kull’s tenure as athletic director will take the dinosaurs still stuck in 1985 and bring them back to life, with the confidence and swagger to be steadfast in their convictions and the expectation of being victorious in each of their endeavors.

Ironically, “expect to win” had been a slogan of the Mike Cragg era, sometimes mocked and largely dismissed. At St. John’s today, it now becomes a way of life.

Wednesday, August 14, 2024

Clarence Rupert intent on continuing winning ways in his MAAC encore after transferring to Iona

Clarence Rupert scores over Purdue’s Zach Edey as Saint Peter’s went on to upset Boilermakers in 2022 Sweet 16. Now a senior, Rupert is back in MAAC for final college chapter after transferring to Iona. (Photo by Bob Dea/Daly Dose Of Hoops)

NEW ROCHELLE, N.Y. — To the more informed and avid fans of the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference, the sight of Clarence Rupert’s name in the transfer portal this offseason garnered more than just a passing glance.

Rupert, if you recall, was the starting power forward two years ago as Saint Peter’s shocked the world and made history as the first No. 15 seed to reach an NCAA Tournament regional final. A freshman then, Rupert — as most others would later do — departed Jersey City in the wake of head coach Shaheen Holloway’s move to Seton Hall, landing at Southern Illinois.

Now after two years in Carbondale, where he helped guide the Salukis to 42 wins and the top half of the Missouri Valley Conference, the Philadelphian has returned to his former haunt, resurfacing at Iona for his final year of eligibility and hoping to bring the Gaels back into familiar territory after last year’s foundational campaign in Tobin Anderson’s maiden voyage through New Rochelle.

“It’s good to be back in the MAAC,” Rupert gushed after Iona’s open practice last week. “People think like the MAAC is some lower conference. There’s so many good teams in the MAAC. Iona’s been winning the MAAC year after year, Saint Peter’s has been winning the MAAC. I don’t know why people think the MAAC is some light run, or people can just come beat people in the MAAC. Every game is hard, nobody’s coming here to beat people by 20-plus or 30-plus. Every game’s gonna be contentious, hard, every night.”

Rupert’s knowledge of the conference, plus a familiarity with Anderson from watching the latter’s own March Madness success at FDU, made the recruiting process much easier and more cordial. The fact that both parties shared the common denominator of knocking off Purdue in the big dance — Rupert in the Sweet 16 at Saint Peter’s, Anderson as a 16 seed at FDU — did not hurt either.

“We’ve told a few stories about that,” Anderson quipped. “That’s definitely been talked about a little bit. We’re the only two guys in the gym who have beaten Purdue.”

“It’s so crazy,” Rupert added, crediting former Southern Illinois assistant coach Brendan Mullins for bringing he and Anderson together. “I was actually watching (FDU) when Tobin and them were in the (NCAA Tournament), and the camera kept going to him constantly, how hard he coaches, how he always wanted to play aggressive, stuff like that. I was looking like, ‘Damn! I need a coach like that!’ And then once he came to Iona, I had to do one more year at Southern Illinois, then when the portal opened, the first person to hit me up was Tobin. He was like, ‘look, me and you are both winners. We both beat Purdue, how you feeling?’ And I told him, ‘Man, I’m feeling good! I already know who you are, you don’t have to say your name.’ I already knew who Tobin was and how he coached, so I already knew what it was.”

The knowledge of what he was getting himself into in his return to the Northeast has been mutually beneficial to both Rupert as well as his teammates, all of whom already regard him as a vocal leader both on and off the floor after just two months of summer workouts and practices. And for the elder statesman of the group, the experience of being trusted to handle pressure early in his career as a starter at Saint Peter’s, where he was shepherded along by veterans the likes of Daryl Banks III and KC Ndefo, played a major role in the fabric of what he has become as a senior.

“It shaped me well because Sha believed in me,” Rupert shared, praising Holloway for his trust in him despite his youth. “As soon as I got there, he started me and when we had three or four seniors who could start over me, he believed in me for real. Sha really molded me into the guy I am right now.”

It takes a certain toughness and fearlessness to play and thrive under a coach like Holloway, which has made Rupert’s arrival at Iona all the more significant, because his experience will help the Gaels bridge gaps in size, defense and rebounding that were major obstacles toward progressing further in Anderson’s first season at the helm. And after 11 weeks together, the fusion has mirrored that of a veteran team that one would assume has already been through the proverbial wars.

“Tobin told me when I came in that I would have to be a leader,” Rupert recalled, also citing that he felt as though he had been a leader throughout his well-traveled career. “There’s a whole bunch of young guys and only three seniors on the team, me, (Jalen Barr) and (Dejour Reaves). So he told me for real, ‘Clarence, you gotta come in here and be a leader. People are gonna look up to you. You’re a winner, show them how to have a winning experience.’ And it means a lot. The guys look up to me, I come in every day and I practice hard, and now they’re in line. Everybody just falls in line, honestly. We got here June 1 and we learned the system probably by June 20. Tobin just emphasized to us that we’re gonna press, play half-court defense hard, everything. So we had a players-only meeting one day and we were like, ‘yo, this is what we gotta do. If we don’t, we’re gonna lose.’”

“I wouldn’t say this is a new team. Honestly, I feel like I’ve known these guys for two or three years. We all hang out with each other every day, we come in here 20-30 minutes before practice, laugh with each other, joke with each other, be in the locker room until about 10:00 at night. I don’t feel like this is a whole new team, I feel like I’ve been on this team for all four years of my college life, honestly. I feel like this new team gelled together well. We all bonded together. I feel like we’ll go into the MAAC and really cause some trouble.”

After last season’s inconsistency, among the priorities for Anderson and his staff when navigating the offseason and the portal this year were establishing a more physical and veteran presence, especially up front, where Iona was often overmatched and dwarfed by taller big men. That was also part of what led the coach to Rupert, who still looks to build upon his winning ways and become a complete forward who affects the game with or without the basketball in his hands.

“It goes both ways,” Anderson said of the marriage between Rupert and the Gaels. “We knew that he’s a guy that’s had success and knows what it takes to win at this level and has experience. And then I think he knows he could have great success here, too. He’s won a bunch of games, but I’d like to see Clarence try to become an all-conference player. He hasn’t done yet, and we’ve talked about that. Part of that is understanding staying healthy and staying out of foul trouble, things like that, but I think for him, personally, coming to the MAAC is a great thing, and for us as a team, he brings a lot.”

“When you talk about Clarence going to the NCAA Tournament, winning games, here’s a guy who went to the Elite 8. There’s no questions being asked about that, there’s no, ‘what have you done?’ He’s done it before. He’s played a big role in doing it, and he wants to get back to it. He knows how important it is to win, and that carries over.”

It has translated already, as Rupert — intimately acquainted with Iona’s history from his firsthand look at it two years ago plus his knowledge as a student of the game — knows what the expectations are. He has made short work of not only resetting the bar in his new locale, but subsequently raising it.

“You already know the culture here,” he said. “Look at the banners. The culture here is winning, so we’re trying to bring that winning back. Last year didn’t go as well, so we’re trying to come in here and bring that winning culture back.”

Thursday, August 8, 2024

Last year’s overhaul gives Tobin Anderson more confidence as he prepares for another reboot at Iona

Tobin Anderson replaced entire roster again this offseason, but believes his Iona team can be a factor in wide open MAAC this coming year. (Photo by Bob Dea/Daly Dose Of Hoops)

NEW ROCHELLE, N.Y. — For three consecutive years now, the whirlwind has yet to stop for Tobin Anderson.

The architect of a perennial Division II powerhouse at St. Thomas Aquinas, Anderson received his first Division I break two years ago at FDU, and led the Knights to an historic upset of Purdue in the NCAA Tournament despite a truncated offseason due to his not being hired until early May. Last season, he parlayed his Cinderella stroke into a step up at Iona, but had to recruit an entire roster save for Osborn Shema, the lone holdover from Anderson’s predecessor, Rick Pitino.

This year, Anderson has had to reconstruct the Iona program yet again, literally from scratch. When Jean Aranguren became the last of the Gaels to enter the transfer portal, the coach had nothing incumbent other than his staff and the walls of the Hynes Athletics Center. Still, he maintained an upbeat outlook through a process that has now become de rigueur in college basketball, especially among mid-major programs, and conceded that the mass exodus was not the most demoralizing point of the past five months.

What was demoralizing was getting beat by Manhattan (on March 7, a 77-60 loss to the rival Jaspers),” Anderson recalled. “The lowest point of last year, for a long time for me, was leaving Manhattan’s gym not competing, not being in the game, getting our ass kicked. That was the lowest point, so whatever had to happen happened. Changes had to be made with how we did things, how we approached things. I was not demoralized when guys were leaving. If you don’t want to be here and do what we have to do to be successful, then we’re better off going someplace else.”

“I think anytime with a new job, it’s gonna take some time to build things up a little bit. Everything’s changed with recruiting and how you build rosters and build a team, so things have changed a lot and I think we’ve learned a lot. I know personally, I learned a ton about how to, in this day and age, construct a better roster, find more guys who fit what we’re looking for, how to recruit in a short period of time, so I think last year definitely gave us an advantage going into this year. We saw the mistakes we made and we tried to correct them, and I think we have.”

Anderson and his staff made short work of recruiting 14 players and bringing them together for 38 summer workouts since reconvening as a unit in June. And where some programs have navigated the transfer portal by following the siren songs of neon lights and marquee value, what the haul Iona has lured to New Rochelle lacks in notoriety, it more than makes up for in potential and intangibles.

“First of all, you’re not building an all-star roster,” Anderson reiterated. “You’re building a team. We have guys on this year’s team who do things that are specific to helping us win. Kernan Bundy and Jalen Barr probably didn’t average 10 points a game for their college teams — one was at a JUCO and one was Division II — but they’re winners. We didn’t try to build an all-star roster, we did a better job building a team and finding guys who could help us win in a lot of different ways.”

“We kind of went back to our roots as far as defensive guys, speed, quickness, toughness, guys who could play our tempo, play our pace. We went back to what we call the Iona DNA. It came from STAC, it went to FDU. We love gym rats, we love guys who have a chip on their shoulder. The guys who are here want to win, want to do big things. They’re winners. Guys that come from winning programs have habits that help you win. The guys we’ve got here are guys from great programs, and I think that’s gonna be a big asset to us as we go through a whole season.”

In an open practice this past Tuesday, Anderson highlighted senior forward Clarence Rupert — a Southern Illinois transfer that die-hard Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference fans will remember from his freshman year at Saint Peter’s, where he helped lead the Peacocks to the Elite 8 as a No. 15 seed — for his leadership and toughness. The coach is hopeful that some of his other upperclassman arrivals, such as Dejour Reaves (Northern Colorado), Jalen Barr (Division II Flagler College), James “Biggie” Patterson (who Anderson recruited at St. Thomas Aquinas but never got to coach, having left for FDU) and Luke Jungers (Nebraska-Omaha), will shore up the gaps in rebounding and defense that plagued last year’s iteration of the Gaels.

“Clarence Rupert’s been great, obviously,” Anderson said as he ran through the list of elder statesmen under his aegis. “He knows what it takes to win, he’s been through a summer before, he knows what it’s like. Dejour Reaves, same thing, he’s a guy who’s had success at this level, had a chance to win. The guys that have been impressive, like a Jalen Barr who comes from a Division II school and was a two-time defensive player of the year, just knows how to make things happen. And our freshmen are good. Adam Njie’s gonna be a real good freshman point guard for us, Jojo Wallace can score. If (Wallace) was playing against me and my staff 3-on-3, he would score, if he plays against you guys in practice, he would score, if you put ten NBA guys out there, he’d score as well.”

“And our front line, I think we’re bigger, we’re stronger, we’re more physical with Yaphet (Moundi), Rupert, Luke Jungers has had a great summer. Obviously you get caught up sometimes in wanting to be overly optimistic, but I feel like I have a pretty good feel. I like these guys. They give me energy. These guys are fun to be around.”

Patterson, a 6-foot-7 swingman who averaged nearly 24 points and nine rebounds per game at STAC this past season, will be an impactful player almost from the opening tip at Princeton on November 4. Anderson mentioned he could see time alongside both Rupert and junior college import Yaphet Moundi, giving Iona a physically imposing look down low.

“We brought four guys to FDU, but I probably should have brought five,” Anderson said of Patterson, who stayed in Rockland County and helped uphold STAC’s dominance. “Matt Capell, his head coach, is a pretty good friend of mine, so we rented him out for two years to him and Matt did a great job. (Patterson) just knows how to win now, he shoots the ball much better, he’s been a focal point of the scouting report so he knows what it’s like to get a lot of attention, and he just brings a good pedigree of success both personally and as part of a good team. And he knows our system. We have no one here who knows our system like he knows it. He kind of teaches the other guys well, so that helps.”

“We have a good group of guys up front who are physical. We won’t get bullied. The bullying time up front is over. Yaphet and Rupert, they’re not only physical, they want to inflict harm. They want to hit people. They’re like defensive linemen, and then a guy like Luke Jungers, a 6-foot-9 guy who can shoot the ball, is a change of speed, change of pace guy who can play with those guys, so I’m really excited about our front line.”

As the Gaels — like most teams of their ilk — now acclimate themselves to an almost consistent annual turnover, Anderson cited the need to build team chemistry expeditiously, something he initially cultivated by making sure he personally saw every player he ultimately signed and met with them and their families to establish relationships early.

“Every one of these guys on the roster, I flew out to and I’ve seen them in person,” Anderson proclaimed. “(I’ve had) face-to-face contact, met them, met their families, spent time with them, and you have to do that. If you don’t do that, you don’t get a chance to know them as well. You have to build those bonds quicker. We’ve spent so much time together just because you have to. Two months has to feel like two years sometimes.”

“It’s just reality. You have to manage it, you have to accept it. It used to be (where) you’d plan things two or three or four years in advance, but it’s not the same anymore. You have to adjust, and we constantly talk more about the options that are out there recruiting-wise. A big thing is getting guys who come here to stay, and I think getting them to stay is having a lot of success. Iona’s had a lot of success traditionally, so if we could win and make it a great experience, it only helps to make them feel more at home and keep them here.”

Iona still has three months before it opens the season, but early returns suggest the Gaels could be forwardly placed in a MAAC that could be more parity-laden and unpredictable than last season, no small feat considering the largely unknown makeups of half the conference’s rosters. Anderson cited the patience in layering his style and desired pace, but was also effusive in his praise of how the group has coagulated to date.

“We spent much more time as a staff with how we’re gonna teach things, being more patient, simplifying things,” he shared. “I want them to be instinctive. I want them to play with reckless abandon, and to do that, you’ve gotta feel comfortable. We’ve definitely changed our implementation of things. We didn’t put the press in until about two weeks ago. We may be behind team concept-wise, but we’re way ahead as far as competitiveness, camaraderie, playing together, playing for each other. That part’s more important than anything else.”

“You’ve gotta build a culture and all that stuff, and we didn’t have that last year, so we had to get to that. I think we’ve done a good job, but time will tell, obviously. You can talk all you want to in August, but what happens in the winter will make the difference. We had to get to that point and build this culture. These guys all want to be here, they all want to compete, they’re all here for the right reasons, and I feel really good about that.”

Thursday, August 1, 2024

Paul Hoffman, St. Bonaventure legend, dead at 74

By Ray Floriani (@rfloriani)

No matter the circumstance, the news always hits hard.

The word came out in late July that Paul Hoffman passed away at the age of 74. His health had not been optimum in recent years. Still, he seemed to battle every setback until the tragic end.

His exploits on the hardwood included scoring 2,209 points, second at the time in Pennsylvania state history to one Wilt Chamberlain. During his career at St. Gabriel’s in Hazleton, his team won state championships in Hoffman’s sophomore and junior years (1966 and 1967), with only a late-season injury in his senior year preventing a three-peat.

Wearing his seemingly signature eyeglasses throughout his basketball career, the 6’2” Hoffman could play any position at St. Gabriel’s. Whether it was shooting and ball handling at the guard spot, rebounding, strength and jumping ability for the three through five positions, whatever the team needed, Hoffman could fill the bill with excellence.

In his excellent book, Trumpet Call to Victory, Joe Farley, a teammate of Hoffman’s at St. Gabriel’s, chronicled the school’s final years before closing in 1970. Farley told the story of St. Gabriel’s playing for what would be its final game and state championship in March of 1970. On the afternoon of their game, the G-Men gathered in their hotel and watched Hoffman and the Bonnies defeat Villanova to advance to the Final Four. As inspiration from one of their own, St. Gabriel’s went out to score an upset victory and claim the title.

Widely recruited, Hoffman chose St. Bonaventure. Farley believes his catholic school background played a big part in the decision.

Hoffman starred for the Bonnies from 1970 through 1972. Back then, freshmen were not eligible to play varsity basketball, limiting Hoffman to just three seasons in Olean. During his three-year career, he scored 1,103 points. The true measure of who he was went beyond the numbers in the scorebook.

Going into my freshman year at St. Bonaventure, late summer of 1970, arriving on campus, a number of fellow classmates felt Hoffman would be big man on campus. After all, he was a starting guard as a sophomore on a Final Four team, a team Hoffman always believed would have won the national championship had Bob Lanier not been hurt in the East Regionals.

Hoffman was perceived as a prototypical BMOC until you met him, a relentless competitor on the court, yet soft spoken, very humble and friendly.

In the fall, I was about a week into a dream job as a basketball manager. On a Saturday morning, I was having brunch in the dining hall sitting alone. A few minutes later while being served, Hoffman saw I was alone and then joined me. That simple gesture spoke volumes about the type of person he was.
During that 1970-71 campaign, Fordham was enjoying an outstanding season, cracking the national rankings. Frequently, Hoffman would remind us after practice that Digger Phelps, the Ram mentor, was his high school coach. Yes, the venerable Phelps coached at St. Gabriel's and won a state championship during Hoffman’s sophomore year before moving on and joining the college ranks.

The 1970-71 season stands out prominently, and in respects, painfully, in the memories of Bona faithful. The team earned a bid in the then-16-team National Invitation Tournament. Purdue and Hawaii were dispatched in the early rounds, then came a Georgia Tech team the Bonnies edged to win the Gator Bowl Tournament in December. The game at a packed Madison Square Garden was close and intense.
Tie score, last play of the first overtime, Hoffman was fouled going to the basket. Two free throw attempts to send the Bonnies to the final against North Carolina.

Shooting in front of a hushed Bona crowd, Hoffman missed both. In the second overtime, Georgia Tech pulled away to seal the 76-71 victory. Postgame, when the locker room was opened to the media, reporters besieged Hoffman for interviews. He answered every question patiently, thoroughly and respectfully. Two days later, there was another game. The Bonnies scored an overtime victory over Duke to capture third place in the NIT. For years, Hoffman would say, “I finished 1-0 in my career against Duke.”

Fast forward five decades later, and Kyle Lofton missed two free throws for the Bonnies in the last second of an Atlantic 10 tournament quarterfinal against Saint Louis. Lofton, like Hoffman in his day, was a key backcourt standout. In a USA Today article by Erik Brady, Hoffman thoroughly reflected on his situation and how he got another chance, another game, and hoped Lofton would get the same. Lofton got that chance, ironically in the NIT. He helped lead the Bonnies to the NIT Final Four back at Madison Square Garden.

The Final Four NCAA appearance can be considered the pinnacle of one’s college career. Interestingly, Hoffman enjoyed the NIT experience, playing at Madison Square Garden. In his senior year of 1971-72, the Bonnies narrowly missed out on a bid. It was a major disappointment, especially for Hoffman, who respected the prestige and experience afforded playing in the nation’s oldest post season tournament as a junior.

Hoffman was drafted following college, but a pro basketball career was not in the offing. Instead, he moved on to a long teaching and coaching career in the Genesee Valley (NY) school system. He taught social studies and coached boys and girls basketball, boys’ soccer and girls’ volleyball. Over the years during and just after his teaching career, Hoffman often frequented Reilly Center to take in a Bonaventure game.

Hoffman played when St. Bonaventure was known as the Brown Indians, complete with a student dressing up as an Indian mascot. Through the years, in his heart, the nickname of his alma mater was the Brown Indians. It’s cruel, but common in our sporting world.

For all the great things he did in a Bona uniform, the mention of Hoffman’s name invariably brings a memory of that last Thursday evening in March of 1971. Not to be forgotten is the fact he was an outstanding player for three years, and a well-deserved selection for the St. Bonaventure Hall of Fame in 1999. He was not only a great player but a great teammate as well.

A leader by example, Hoffie could be vocal if need be. In January of 1972, his senior year, the team was in a slump and hosting rival Niagara. Before coach Larry Weise came in to address the team, there was complete silence in the locker room. Hoffman broke the silence by standing up and giving his own pregame talk. He felt Niagara might be coming in complacent and the Bonnies had to defend their home court, get out there and show what the team was made of. In a hotly contested game, the Bonnies rallied late to secure a 76-73 victory. To little surprise, it was Hoffman who sealed that verdict by dribbling and eluding Niagara defenders over the last thirty seconds to run out the clock. That was Paul Hoffman, the competitor, doing whatever it took to help the team and win. If you had a team of your own, you would be fortunate and blessed to send five Paul Hoffmans on the floor.

Despite latter year illnesses, the ending for Hoffman and his friends and family seemed so sudden. The saying goes, tomorrow is promised to no one. What we do maintain is the memories.

Paul Hoffman was simply one who was respected, revered and fondly remembered by all who were fortunate to know him. One who made an indelible mark on and off the floor, No. 20 will always have a place in our hearts.

Monday, June 10, 2024

Turning down Lakers reaffirms Hurley’s commitment to UConn and confidence in making history

Dan Hurley holds net aloft after UConn repeated as national champions this past April. Hurley and Huskies will now shoot for third straight title together after the coach turned down Los Angeles Lakers’ offer to remain in Storrs. (Photo by Jaden Daly/Daly Dose Of Hoops)

Throughout this past season, Dan Hurley spoke of the University of Connecticut in reverent tones as he and the Huskies completed a journey to a successful national championship defense, the first in college basketball in 17 years.

Hurley has frequently referred to Storrs as the basketball capital of the world, using the program’s off-the-beaten-path geographic location as a way to feed the competitive fire he and his players share in an environment void of tabloid distractions and professional sports sensationalism. He has often said other programs want what his currently owns, which is more trophies in its case this century than any other Division I school. And at the center of this relentless pursuit of perfection, much like the tag lines of the old Lexus commercials, lies a man driving a luxury car of a basketball power while vehemently not content with just being the best.

That, more than anything, is why Hurley spurned the Los Angeles Lakers and a lucrative $70 million payday to stay in his own slice of paradise, tucked inside the northeast corner of Connecticut. Even though he harbors a dream of eventually moving on and coaching in the NBA, his current undertaking remains unfinished. Immediately after UConn defeated Purdue to win its second straight national title, the first thing on Hurley’s mind — and the minds of his players as well — was using the recently concluded dominant run as a foundation for a potential three-peat. It was somewhat ironic that he was nearly wooed to Los Angeles to begin what would be the next phase of his Hall of Fame career when he is looking to become the first coach to win three championships in a row since the late Wizard of Westwood, John Wooden.

But there is always a method to Hurley’s madness. A creature of habit, bordering on maniacal at times, he simply cannot walk away until satisfied. And the satisfaction has never lasted long enough to justify moving on to something new. The determination is so evident that two trips to the top of the mountain have not fazed Hurley in the grand scheme of things, their luster wearing off after a fleeting moment like chewing gum losing its flavor, replaced by the process of retooling and doing it again.

Hurley was confident in this coming season and the group he brings into it, the ability to cut down the nets in April for a third straight year. It is also why Alex Karaban returned, why he plucked Aidan Mahaney and Tarris Reed out of the transfer portal to help fill the voids left by Stephon Castle, Donovan Clingan, Tristen Newton and Cam Spencer, why five-star recruit Liam McNeeley flipped his commitment from Indiana to UConn.

“When you win a national championship,” Hurley posited at Big East media day last October before the Huskies did the same thing six months later, “you know your way works.”

The familiarity with what Hurley knows prevailed over the great unknown. Comfort with what he has on the court compared to the rest of the Big East, and to a greater extent, the country. An intimacy of having his family in close proximity as opposed to being 3,000 miles away with nothing or no one to turn to for guidance in situations he would normally find a voice, a warm body. A general contentment with what he has created, not wanting to sacrifice it or leave it in the hands of someone else to finish a mission he almost took personally two months ago.

Why mess with happy?

Thursday, May 2, 2024

Quinnipiac assistant coach Tahar Sutton leaves program after two seasons

Quinnipiac retained most of its roster this offseason, but now needs an assistant coach after Tahar Sutton’s departure. (Photo by Ethan Hurwitz/Quinnipiac Chronicle)

 

By Ethan Hurwitz (@HurwitzSports)


Quinnipiac assistant coach Tahar Sutton is leaving the program after two seasons, according to a team source.

 

Sutton — the former associate head coach at Pennsylvania’s Imhotep Charter High School — was with the Bobcats for two seasons, helping them win 44 games and win the program’s first-ever MAAC regular season title in 2023-24. He was also the head coach during the high school tenures of two past Bobcats, forwards JJ Riggins (2019-2024) and Elijah Taylor (2022-23).

 

“I’m just a basketball junkie,” Sutton said on December 10, 2022. “A coach at heart, always have been. Even when I didn’t know I was a coach, I was a coach.”

 

The Philadelphia native helped guide the Imhotep Charter Panthers to seven Philadelphia Public League Championship titles, including an 88-9 record over a three-year stretch, as well as heading the coaching staff for the Nike Elite Youth Basketball League’s Team Final 15U – 17U team.

 

With the loss of Sutton, Quinnipiac’s staff currently consists of head coach Tom Pecora, associate head coach Shaun Morris, assistant Bradley Jacks, director of basketball operations Jeff Robinson, director of player development Aaron Robinson and graduate assistant Nolan Meehan. The latter Robinson is still the only coach on staff who was hired after Pecora took over on April 13, 2023. 

 

The Bobcats have yet to announce a potential replacement or coaching search.

Wednesday, May 1, 2024

An epilogue to the epilogue: Some things I wanted to mention more, but didn’t until it was too late

Two weeks ago, I recapped a 17th season — 15th for this particular outlet — in the college basketball media that was one part love of the game, one part somewhat defiant last stand in that I covered 110 games in what will likely be the last grueling travel I put myself through over a five-month period, and one part sweet vindication after getting to cover the Final Four and national championship for the first time.

But immediately after I wrapped up the introspective and detailed look back at 2023-24, writing a record 12,647 words while doing so, I noticed there were some things that were left on the cutting room floor, some pieces within my travels that I wanted to profile a little deeper. Two more happenings also occurred after that behemoth went to press, so I wanted to take the time to address both here. This won’t be anywhere near as comprehensive or all-encompassing as what I presented to you on April 17, but still remains something that needed to be said, a story that needed to be told and shared.

Why wait two weeks, you might say? Well, for starters, I usually go off the grid for prolonged periods immediately after the offseason and whatever flurry of activity ensues after One Shining Moment. Whether it’s the portal, coaching changes, or other miscellany, I don’t normally get to enjoy myself again until late April or early May. This year, I wanted to take a break after filing my annual retrospective and start enjoying my life again, a little at a time. I don’t have many regrets over the duration of my existence — I wish I didn’t have any, but I’m not perfect — and I’d like to keep it that way, but one thing I’ve learned from doing this as long as I have as hard as I have is that you need to take some time for yourself. I mentioned burnout two weeks ago, and there was once a time when that — coupled with depression and toxic work environments in the day job — sent me into a dark place. I’m far removed from that now and my mental health is much stronger than it was a few years ago, but I always try to activate the safeguards I set up in my lower points to make sure shit like that (and I’m leaving the expletive unedited, because I want to be real with everyone) never happens again. So here is my addendum to what I left out of the look back, albeit on May 1.

Consider this an epilogue to the epilogue, if you will.

I’ll start the postscript in January, with UConn’s visit to UBS Arena to take on St. John’s in what traditionally is the largest crowd of the year for the Johnnies on the women’s side, usually due to the thousand or so Husky fans who find a way to conquer the Merritt and the Thruway to get down here. Geno Auriemma’s ladies dominated, as they usually do most afternoons and nights, but what I forgot to mention in my January blurb was that it was the first time I got to cover the legend more commonly known as Paige Bueckers.

Paige Bueckers, woman of the people. (Photo by Jaden Daly/Daly Dose Of Hoops)

For whatever reason, be it injuries or the COVID year that relegated me to the home office all season, I had never had the chance to cover Paige in her UConn career until this past January. And after not having the chance to see Diana Taurasi or Breanna Stewart in person, plus only getting one firsthand look at Maya Moore, I made it my business to cover the next Husky legend. And in a season where I had two chances to see Caitlin Clark and didn’t take advantage of either one (I didn’t realize Iowa was at Rutgers until it was too late, and she ended up recording a triple-double; while the NCAA Tournament game against LSU would have been impossible to fit into my schedule between work, sleeping and packing for the Final Four), getting to see Bueckers live and in living color was certainly a highlight. Her 22 points may have been standard practice in a 43-point victory, but what really struck me was her willingness to acknowledge the crowd after the game, posing for selfies, signing autographs, and using her platform to further expand a game that needs more love than it already gets.

I also outlined Marquette’s return to the Big East tournament championship game against eventual national champion UConn, but what I didn’t mention was the pavement on the road it took to get there. VCU’s introduction to the Atlantic 10 afforded me the chance many years ago to see how Shaka Smart built his program, a formula with which I’m still enamored today. And whenever Marquette is in the area, I always find the Golden Eagles’ arrival to be a story that needs capturing. I spoke briefly last year about how Marquette Twitter somehow embraced me and my work, and I try to return the favor with some kind of MU-related content whenever they get Seton Hall or St. John’s, or in this case, a championship matchup with UConn. This advance from the middle of the night before the title game, on how Smart’s culture-centric build has brought Marquette to previously unreached heights with a second straight tournament championship appearance, was the latest attempt that I forgot to link.

When I went to press on April 17, Mount St. Mary’s was still in need of a head coach after Dan Engelstad had left The Mount for a well-deserved raise and high-major gig as an assistant at Syracuse. Therefore, I needed to eventually get to his successor in a future byline on this outlet whenever one was named. Engelstad’s replacement turned out to be someone with whom the site is very familiar, and someone long overdue for the blessing of running his own shop, so to speak.

It’s almost serendipitous that I get to this section after referencing VCU and Shaka’s culture, because Donny Lind — who was hired to replace Engelstad at Mount St. Mary’s — is a living embodiment of that. Donny also spent time in Emmitsburg with Jamion Christian, who brought him from Richmond when he got the job in 2012, so he definitely knows the lay of his new land. Moreover, his ability to get the best out of everyone he comes into contact with and get them to believe in themselves is second to none. It’s a quality that will thrive in a league like the MAAC, which has always been friendly to young coaches looking to make a name for themselves, and when I spoke to Donny shortly after his introductory press conference, he praised Smart for his knack of building relationships and how it helped rear him as a coach in his own right. Once he gets more acclimated and intimately acquainted with what he takes over, I’ll have a much more detailed look at the future on The Mount. I just had to mention him properly with the space he deserves. Mike Jones’ loss is certainly the MAAC’s gain.

The same weekend Donny Lind was hired, as we celebrated the good fortune of someone who we’ve considered our own for quite some time, we also had to bid farewell to one of our own.

Almost everyone in the business knew Howie Schwab in some capacity. If you were blessed to have worked alongside him at ESPN, you definitely knew him and loved him. If you, like me and many other children of our generation, watched him on Stump the Schwab in the mid-2000s, you learned a lot from his encyclopedic memory of all things sports. If you were like me, you probably could have taken him if given the opportunity, too. And if you were involved with St. John’s in any way, you certainly saw him at a game or on campus when he still lived on Long Island, before he eventually moved to Florida to live out what would be the final years of his life.

Howie passed away on April 20, and a part of our youth succumbed along with him. For me, personally, he represented more than most people realize. Howie Schwab, once upon a time way back when, was my first live on-air interview back in 2008, when he emceed St. John’s annual basketball tipoff event the year I was crazy enough to co-host a remote broadcast of it on WSJU. His liner that he closed that interview with that day can probably still be heard on my former station if the file is still on the computer in the studio. But where I really got to know and love Howie and his gregarious nature was through the Red Storm’s oft-overlooked, but uber-successful women’s basketball program.

He would come to every game when Kim Barnes Arico, and later, Joe Tartamella, patrolled the sidelines. And being in the early years of my own career, still doing women’s basketball play-by-play, I saw him all the time and really got to appreciate just how awesome a dude he truly was. It sucks that he’s not with us anymore, but it gives me great closure and makes me smile to realize that he and the late great Marcus Henry, who covered those St. John’s women’s teams for Newsday, are reunited and having an endless conversation about not just the ladies on the court, but sports and life. Rest in power, good sir.

Finally, Seton Hall won the NIT, and even though I wrote an impromptu column from my hotel in Arizona the night the Pirates scored the last nine points against Indiana State, I still feel like that story remained incomplete in a sense. The difference now with the time that has elapsed since is that the NIT run now becomes an epitaph for a team whose starting five has now entirely departed. Al-Amir Dawes and Jaden Bediako, two fifth-year seniors who were the heart and soul of what Shaheen Holloway ran on the floor and preached in practice, graduate later this month. Kadary Richmond, Dre Davis and Dylan Addae-Wusu have all entered the transfer portal, as have Elijah Hutchins-Everett, Jaquan Sanders, Malachi Brown, Arda Ozdogan and Sada Nganga.

While college basketball’s new landscape has made continuity almost improbable, a lesson was still learned with how Sha steered Seton Hall ahead of expectations into a team that should have made the NCAA Tournament and then made the best of its hand when it did not. Holloway’s message of playing to a new audience seemed to resonate with a group of veterans who did not want the ball taken out of their hands without having something to say about it first. It was almost as if Seton Hall was reinvigorated by the perceived snub, playing some of its best basketball in a tournament that mattered to the players on the floor even if the NIT isn’t as valued by the casual fan. Some of the high-majors that passed on the nation’s oldest postseason tournament (looking at you, Oklahoma and Pittsburgh) can learn that the ending you want can still be written on an alternate stage.

In a way, that’s also kind of how my own career has gone. I’ve been fortunate to finish on my own terms every season even if the end goal hadn’t been reached until last month. Maybe that’s why I took more of an interest in covering Seton Hall through that run, and followed as closely as possible from a distance. Sometimes we gain a greater appreciation of what we see when we’re the ones going through, or having gone through, something similar. I hope you can find the time to do that in life, and appreciate the blessings you all have in front of you before someone tries to rip them away from you. Life is a gift, and it’s meant to be enjoyed before it gets wasted.

Until next season, my friends.

Jaden Daly
Founder and Managing Editor