Friday, April 22, 2022

For three decades, Jay did it his way, the Wright way

Jack Styczynski (left) interviews Jay Wright at Madison Square Garden in Big East Tournament. (Photo by Marc Ernay/1010 WINS, via Jack Styczynski)

By Jack Styczynski (@hoopsvista)
Special To Daly Dose Of Hoops

I'll never forget the first time I met him.

Jay Wright was entering his fourth of seven seasons as Hofstra's head basketball coach, and was holding a preseason practice. An alumnus of the school, I was on hand to write a story on his sophomore sensation Speedy Claxton for a new and relatively unknown web site.

Before things got started, Wright asked me my name and affiliation, and after the team broke its huddle, he called me over and said to the players, "This is Jack Styczynski with College Hoops Insider, and I want you guys to help him out today." 

When the day was over and I had everything I needed, Wright told me his sister was in the media business, he understood the profession, and he would always treat its members right. I had no idea where his career would ultimately go, but I was impressed. And I never saw him deviate from his promise.

A few years later when I was running the Hofstra site at Rivals.com, I got an even closer look at his program as he allowed me to spend an entire game day with the team. By that time, he had already led the school to its first NCAA Tournament berth in 23 years and I had a better idea he was headed for bigger things — and soon — but still had no clue I was hanging with a future Hall of Famer.

After leading the Flying Dutchmen to a second straight Big Dance, Villanova came calling. Wright had always followed the program, married a Villanova cheerleader, and eventually became an assistant coach there under Rollie Massimino. It was obviously a perfect fit. He had told me during that game day at Hofstra that Massimino had taught him about creating a family atmosphere and not to "mess with happy." He would achieve both as head coach on the Main Line, making it his ultimate stop.

Although I never covered his Villanova teams the way I did for his last two seasons at Hofstra, I did get his cooperation many more times for various stories on his squad or more general college basketball topics. He was a great quote and the only coach who ever asked me to e-mail him my work after it was written. I got a little bit of a laugh out of the fact that he always referred to me as "buddy" in person (as he did with a lot of the media), even though we had corresponded electronically many times and he introduced me to his players by name the first day we met.

Wright's 21 years as the head man at Villanova were not all smooth. The Wildcats fell short of the NCAA Tournament his first three, and after he got the ball rolling and they made the Final Four in 2009, things got rough again with a pair of late-season flameouts and a losing campaign between 2010 and 2012. By this time, I was a full-blown fan, so I was obviously thrilled when he turned things around once more, thanks largely to a point guard named Ryan Arcidiacono and a Big East Conference that was reconfigured in 2013 such that his program became the new king. By 2016, Arch was passing the ball to Kris Jenkins and "bang," Wright was a national champion.

Two years later, he had a juggernaut. The 2018 Wildcats ran through the NCAA Tournament with six double-digit victories and a squad featuring five future NBA players (not to mention Phil Booth). Now, Wright had two national titles and was clearly among the greatest ever college basketball coaches. The previous year, a panel of journalists had already ranked him the second best currently in the game, behind only Duke's Mike Krzyzewski.

In 2021, Wright was inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame. Last month, he led his fourth team to the Final Four. And this past Wednesday, he retired from coaching at the relatively young age of 60 the same way he does everything, with class.

The Wright way.

What a ride.
Jay Wright patrols Villanova sideline against Seton Hall, with then-assistant Kyle Neptune (seated, first from Wright’s left) looking on. Neptune will succeed Wright as Wildcats’ head coach after one season at Fordham. (Photo by Bob Dea/Daly Dose Of Hoops)

Wednesday, April 20, 2022

Rick Pitino’s remarks advocate more for stronger MAAC, not for potential A-10 move

Rick Pitino addressed Iona’s offseason and non-conference schedule in Zoom call Tuesday, which also included push for MAAC to fortify its own standing. (Photo by Bob Dea/Daly Dose Of Hoops)

Rick Pitino took to the (virtual) airwaves Tuesday, conducting a Zoom call with members of the Iona media to reference the Gaels’ incoming six-man recruiting class and non-conference schedule for the 2022-23 season in the wake of winning 25 games, a regular season Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference championship, and appearing in the National Invitation Tournament.

After Pitino gave a primer on each new addition, highlighting that he recruited freshmen more heavily this season because — in his own words — “I didn’t want to lose sight of building a program,” he laid out the non-league gauntlet for Iona, which includes a home game against Saint Louis, trips to Hofstra and New Mexico, a meeting with Seton Hall at Madison Square Garden whose date still needs to be finalized, and appearances at Mohegan Sun Arena and Barclays Center against yet-unnamed opponents. Upon taking questions from the media, a particular quote about realignment made the rounds on social media and was quickly consumed and, to an extent, misinterpreted. Highlighting the Atlantic 10 Conference, Pitino had this to say:

“If Richmond didn’t upset Davidson, they would have only had, out of 14 teams, one team in the NCAA this year. But I believe, with Loyola Chicago coming in, with Archie Miller going to Rhode Island and Frank Martin going to UMass, the Atlantic 10 is going to take off, because they just hired awesome coaches.”

“So we need to get into a multi-bid league. Can the MAAC develop into something like that? I don’t know, it depends on who they’re bringing in. I don’t know what’s happening with that.”

At first blush, with no context and not reading between the lines, it is easy to misconstrue that as Pitino perhaps positioning Iona for a move to the Atlantic 10, which has NOT — repeat, NOT — been discussed in any serious capacity. However, this latest round of Pitino being brutally honest with regard to his program’s standing reads more as a plea for the MAAC to be more like the A-10 in how it projects itself as a basketball conference. “We need to get into a multi-bid league” should be taken more as an inadvertent slip of the tongue and read as “we need to BECOME a multi-bid league,” especially with the following quote about MAAC expansion, which has been rumored to include Mount St. Mary’s from the Northeast Conference, but nothing etched in stone:

“What bothers me more than anything about the MAAC is that they don’t bring the coaches or athletic directors in on who they’re trying to expand with,” Pitino said, citing the meetings with university and college presidents in regard to prospective new members. “We have no clue to who they’re expanding with. They don’t bring any of us in on that.”

Pitino is many things, most notably a Hall of Fame coach and two-time national champion who will forget more basketball than the majority of us will ever learn. And at the end of the day, his remarks should be taken as a passionate defense for his conference to think forwardly as opposed to simply maintaining the status quo, rather than as someone looking to take the first boat out of the harbor.

Sunday, April 17, 2022

A reaffirmed love of the game made this year a lucky No. 13

Shaheen Holloway and Saint Peter’s address fans during Jersey City parade for Peacocks, which ended this site’s 13th year of coverage. (Photo by Jaden Daly/Daly Dose Of Hoops)

Triskaidekaphobia.

Webster’s dictionary defines it as fear of the number thirteen. If you were a fan of any team that played Seton Hall in recent years, chances are you may have experienced it when having to go up against Myles Powell. Personally, idolizing Dan Marino as a little boy made me embrace No. 13 in all its forms, so I never had to worry about that superstition.

What I did fear, though, especially when covering this now-concluded season, was that I would lose my passion and the desire to share my experiences with all of you. After a year of watching games on a living room television, you would think that to be impossible considering fans were back in the stands and media was back courtside, right? Well, easier said than done.

When I created this outlet on this day in 2009, I wanted to pour the love and energy I had for broadcasting college basketball into my writing, and would only stop if it got to be a chore and the passion some of you have complimented me on started to fade away. I also try to be as transparent and straightforward with you as possible, because without your readership and support, I would have no reason to do what I do, so I’ll break the fourth wall again and tell you that there was a stretch midway through the year — when the travel started to become too much, the frustration over what I felt was underachieving based on total page views — that I asked myself if it was really worth it. Only two other people, my mother and Josh Adams of our sister site, College Hoops Digest, knew that I was thinking about calling it quits after the last note of One Shining Moment.

Then, March validated my purpose, my commitment, my reason for more often than not being the only one on press row in MAAC gyms. One of those familiar haunts was my office on the first day of the month everyone in this game lives for. Fittingly, two innocuous postgame quotes — one from each coach I covered that night — ended up being the ignition for a magic carpet ride none of us will soon forget.

“I always know what we’re capable of, know what we can do, know how to put the recipe together.”

Steve Masiello said those exact words to me on March 1 after his Manhattan team was routed off its own floor. I’ll get to the winner of that game soon, but the aforementioned quote came after I had asked the longtime Jasper coach how strong his confidence was in his players delivering in a must-win situation entering the MAAC tournament. I was admittedly more critical of Masiello this season than I ever have been in his 11-year tenure, a run I’ve seen probably closer than any of my print or broadcast contemporaries. And while it hurt me in a way to doubt someone I hold in very high regard, it was business at the end of the day. The hardest column I’ve ever had to write was the one in 2015 that said Fordham would be better off moving on from Tom Pecora. That, too, was business. And although he didn’t know it at the time, Masiello’s words in the wake of a 22-point loss proved to be prophetic in that I, too, would find a way to rise to the occasion when the chips were down. I just wasn’t sure how I’d get there.

“You know what, J? We understand this time of year, what it’s about. We’re not worried about seeds, we’re just worried about playing well.”

Across the Draddy Gymnasium concourse and down a slight ramp leading to the visitors’ locker room, Shaheen Holloway attributed Saint Peter’s stifling 73-51 victory over Manhattan to a businesslike tenor set by a blue-collar outfit that, as the world would soon find out, embodied his own personality on and off the floor. Don’t get too high, don’t get too low, Sha often reminds everyone. It’s not about style points, but rather, about simply showing up and tackling that which lies in front of you.

And so that was the mindset in the most arduous stretch of college basketball travel on my schedule since the Providence-Brooklyn up-and-back NCAA Tournament trips in 2016. Washington, D.C., Atlantic City via Philadelphia, Brooklyn, Manhattan, back to Brooklyn, and then back down to Atlantic City with a Philadelphia detour before touching down at home, all in the span of seven days. For those who have followed my exploits long enough, you know I don’t drive, and therefore make my way around from one gym to the next by means of mass transit and car services. The logistics are never an issue. The fatigue that mounted more than ever this year, knowing that the mileage on my soon-to-be 36-year-old tires was far greater than it was in my prime, made me more sleep-deprived. But excuses, as Rick Pitino so often says, are a sign of weakness. This is business, and I systematically handled all of it. 

Speaking of Pitino, his Iona team’s loss to Rider in the MAAC tournament quarterfinals was the opening of the floodgates, so to speak. It had been seven years since someone not wearing maroon and gold had accepted a trophy from Rich Ensor. The concept of fresh blood on a championship stage became a reality after Dwight Murray’s runner in the lane splashed through the net and left Kevin Baggett vindicated after a decade of not reaching the semifinals. And after interludes with Mike Krzyzewski — for the last time — and Jim Boeheim, followed by a St. John’s meltdown, Seton Hall no-show and North Carolina cold spell, I had the opening to find myself again.

“In a New York minute, everything can change.” — Don Henley

Saint Peter’s and Monmouth tip off MAAC championship game that was somewhat unexpected after Iona was upset by Rider in quarterfinals. (Photo by Bob Dea/Daly Dose Of Hoops)

The MAAC championship game between Saint Peter’s and Monmouth was living proof. Either Saint Peter’s, a MAAC program with no consistent media coverage outside of this site and its own athletic department, would break through and allow me to share a story very few outside of New Jersey had or wanted access to; or Monmouth, on the doorstep three times before, would finally break through and afford a great program with an awesome group of people in and around it the chance to get the March payoff that not only eluded the Hawks, but was cruelly snatched so the NCAA could make money off Syracuse instead. No, I’m not bitter, not in the least. And neither are the Monmouth fans who I’m proud to call my favorite community in all my years doing this. I’ll miss those guys in the MAAC, but we’ll enjoy the CAA together.

As for the conference title game, Saint Peter’s suffocated the life out of Monmouth and Doug Edert baptized himself to the nation on a smaller scale than his eventual breakout five days later. But the biggest and most resonant nerve was struck in how the Peacocks’ leader ignored the skeptics and marched to the beat of his own drummer, did what he felt was right four years ago, two decades ago as a player, every day of his life.

“Sometimes you gotta believe in yourself, bet on yourself. And that’s what I did. Every place I’ve been, that’s what I did.”

As Saint Peter’s was headed dancing, I was seeing a vision myself in Shaheen Holloway and the path he carved out. Looking back, I had written for and been recruited by other outlets, only to remain steadfast in my conviction that I could build my own brand from nothing, which became more of an undertaking when I committed more of an effort into writing after the broadcast work seemed to fall off. Even though I cover the Big East and the high-major teams in New York and New Jersey, I’m generally known as the MAAC guy, and I embrace that. It didn’t matter that Saint Peter’s was given zero chance against Kentucky in Indianapolis, the Peacocks proved that nothing is impossible when Edert, Daryl Banks III and KC Ndefo spearheaded the epic overtime upset of John Calipari and the Wildcats. The systematic takedown of Murray State that followed only confirmed that we would all get the payoff some people spend a lifetime trying to achieve.

When I saw the East Regional bracket announced on Selection Sunday, I never expected it to play out the way it did, so the payoff of Saint Peter’s taking its Cinderella status to Philadelphia was an added benefit. Lo and behold, it didn’t end there. I had the payoff, and then I rediscovered my purpose, with an assist from the team that won my then-six-year-old heart almost three decades ago.

Hubert Davis vindicated himself and silenced critics, myself included, who thought he wouldn’t be able to maintain Roy Williams’ standards at North Carolina. (Photo by Bob Dea/Daly Dose Of Hoops)

Unless you don’t pay attention to my inane ramblings and passionate inflections, you probably know that even in a media capacity, I still bleed Carolina blue and it’s sometimes impossible to separate the two. Six years ago, the North Carolina team with Marcus Paige and Brice Johnson arrived in Philadelphia as the top seed in the East Regional, and proceeded to run through Indiana and Notre Dame on the way to reaching the Final Four. End of that conversation. There’s no need to talk about what happened after that, and when the Tar Heels cut down the nets that weekend with me in the building, it was one of the greatest nights of my career at that point. Did I expect the same thing in the same place six years later, knowing UNC had to go through a tough Marquette team and then reigning national champion Baylor? Absolutely not. Why would I think that, especially when Hubert Davis had done nothing in my eyes to validate himself as Roy Williams’ worthy successor? Losing at home to one of the worst power conference teams this past season in the Pitt Panthers didn’t help either, but UNC ran Marquette out of Fort Worth and built a 25-point lead erased by an officiating debacle, then needed overtime to upset Baylor to turn what looked like a go-through-the-motions weekend into a dream setup from a coverage standpoint by giving me Carolina and Saint Peter’s. Apparently, Jon Rothstein is right about college basketball being the catalyst for the unexpected becoming the ordinary. And if Jon’s sleeping in May, he’s doing something far more efficiently than I am, because I can’t sleep well at any point during the year.

Then Davis won me over in his pregame press conference with his reverence for his position and an unselfish love — an unconditional love, if you will — for his players and to want them to succeed and get every drop out of the experience he himself enjoyed three decades prior. Much like Shaheen Holloway’s and Steve Masiello’s words before him, Davis struck a chord on the dais in the bowels of the Wells Fargo Center.

“For me, this is not a job. This is missionary work. It really is. It’s put me in a position where I can help and serve. To be in that position is very humbling. I’m very thankful and appreciative, and it’s a great place to be, but I don’t want it to stop there. I want them to have more.”

Throughout each of my 13 years cultivating this space, it has always been about you, the readers. I’m here for you just as much as I am with you, and it’s my mission to help you understand and consume, to the best of my ability, this game we all love. It is always my hope that you get the full experience when you read or follow me, because if I don’t make you feel like you’re there alongside me, it means I’ve failed. While it usually ends in a loss on paper, but sometimes, it ends in a win emotionally. For me, and I apologize for the lengthy and circuitous path I traveled to say this, it certainly did this year, even if North Carolina’s 20-point win over Saint Peter’s didn’t seem like it. The team that baptized me to the sport reached its pinnacle yet again, and the team from the conference I’ve come to love and defend like it were my own son or daughter I don’t yet have advanced its brand into previously uncharted territory. How could it get better than that, you ask? Here’s how the last week of the season played out:

Matthew Lee celebrates as Saint Peter’s knocked off Purdue to reach Elite 8. (Photo by Bob Dea/Daly Dose Of Hoops)

Saint Peter’s knocked off Purdue to reach a stage no previous No. 15 seed had gone before, doing so in its usual workmanlike fashion and providing a forever moment when the Peacocks mobbed Holloway during his postgame interview on CBS. North Carolina fended off UCLA in one of the better games of the tournament to set up the aforementioned regional final. Longtime friend Tony Bozzella led Seton Hall to the WNIT championship game, winning a thriller on the road against Columbia in the process. North Carolina, who spoiled Mike Krzyzewski’s final home game, ended his career in the Final Four before coming up just short in the national championship game against Kansas. And Saint Peter’s was honored for its accomplishments with a parade down Kennedy Boulevard in Jersey City just over two weeks ago, which was where I ended my media coverage for 2021-22.

North Carolina claimed East Regional championship en route to unlikely national championship game appearance. (Photo by Bob Dea/Daly Dose Of Hoops)

But enough about me. Now let’s reach the part of the program where we thank some of the fine people who made all this possible. I’ll start by mentioning the teams, coaches, players and administrators within the site’s coverage radius for allowing me to share their stories. My staff has also committed itself to upholding the same standards year after year, and I couldn’t be more proud to count all of them among the masthead. Jason Guerette is the best wing man I could ever hope to have at Seton Hall games. Hopefully next season doesn’t conflict too much with his broadcasting commitments, because he was greatly missed more often than not this year. Jason Dimaio stepped up in his first true professional writing experience and became a young talent I’m proud and honored to help mold. Who else can say their first day on the job included a Rick Pitino press conference and the Hall of Famer answering one of their questions after a game? Jason is going places in this business, and his work on Hofstra games this year is only the starting point. If Vinny Simone comes back next year, a strong stable only gets deeper and better. Then there’s Bob Dea. I took Bob on a few years ago when Blackbirds Hoops Journal shut down, with the intent of showcasing his exceptional talent on bigger stages. Not only do I consider him the best photographer in the business, as biased as it may be, but his work all year after not shooting since March 2020 — culminating in the East Regional semifinals and final — proved there’s nobody better at capturing the moment in a timeless snapshot. And to everyone else who contributes, you’re just as much a part of the family as anyone else. If you’re looking to join, just reach out.

To the people I reconnected with after almost two years away and those I finally met this season, please know that our interactions with one another were the highlights of a difficult, but rewarding, five months. To those who inspire me every day to be as great as they are, like my mother, Julie, the best role model, influence, fan, and friend I’ll ever have; Josh Adams at College Hoops Digest for being a sounding board through a stretch where I thought I reached the end of my rope; Sam Federman, one of the next big stars in the business, for having the vision and passion at 17 that exceeds mine at almost 36; Erika Fernandez, whose own podcast was the push I needed to start one of my own, for being like a sister to this only child and one of my bigger supporters; Joe Jarzynka, my long-lost twin (we share an August 22 birthday, only nine years apart), for upholding and reestablishing the WSJU tradition and pipeline, and then using it to shape his own successful endeavors; Ray Floriani, for his versatility in writing various columns that showcase five decades in this business like no one else; Brian Wilmer, also of College Hoops Digest, for being my muse and friendly competitor the past two weeks while we worked on our own separate epilogues; and last, but not least, you, my readers, for choosing me to be the narrator of your journeys. I cannot put into words how truly irreplaceable you all are to me. Your support warms my heart, and to say I love and appreciate it is an understatement.

So on we go, and forward we march, with what I hope will be a different shift in how coverage presents itself next year and beyond. I want to do so much more with the podcast and a little less writing, so I’ll speak that into existence now and manifest it in the coming weeks and months. I want to do pregame and postgame Twitter spaces, and the only reason I didn’t was because I have an almost four-year-old phone that I’ve used for everything because I’ve been too lazy to get my computer fixed or buy a new one. Hey, full disclosure. Let’s try to do some of those soon, too.

“He reminds me of me, so maybe that’s why we’re kind of meant for each other. Two crazies love crazy.”

That was how Steve Masiello responded when I asked if he saw himself in Jose Perez’s demeanor, and honestly, it’s how I would respond if someone asked me about seeing some of myself in all of you. We bleed the same color blood, we get worked up over the same emotions, bad officiating, and various other anachronisms in this game, and I wouldn’t trade any of that for anything. So with that being said, may the road rise up to meet you, may the wind be always at your back, may the sun shine warm upon your face, the rain fall soft upon your fields. And until we meet again, much sooner than you think, may God hold you in the palm of His hand.

That fear of the number thirteen that I spoke of in the beginning was never there to begin with. The one thing I did fear, though, was the emptiness that would have come if thirteen was indeed the last number for this site like I contemplated it would be back in January. Thankfully, I don’t have to think about that, and neither do you. I’m not going anywhere anytime soon. After what last month proved, they’re going to need a f****** wrecking ball to take me out of here.


Thank you again, for everything. The kind words, the positivity, the trust you place in me to bring you closer to the action. There’s nothing I’d rather do more. And if the elevator tries to bring you down, go crazy. Punch a higher floor.

God bless you, my friends.

Jaden Daly
Founder and Managing Editor

Monday, April 11, 2022

Saint Peter’s turns to Bashir Mason as next head coach

Bashir Mason, a Jersey City native, returns home as Wagner head coach will replace Shaheen Holloway at Saint Peter’s. (Photo by Bob Dea/Daly Dose Of Hoops)

Bashir Mason got his first head coaching experience a decade ago when replacing a rising star. Ten years later, he will do it again.

Mason, who was the youngest head coach in the nation when he replaced Dan Hurley at Wagner in 2012, is set to cross the Hudson River, leaving Staten Island for his native Jersey City and NCAA Tournament darling Saint Peter’s, per multiple reports Tuesday.

Now a veteran in the coaching ranks despite his relative youth at 38, Mason comes home in the wake of Shaheen Holloway leaving the Peacocks after guiding them to the Elite Eight — the first No. 15 seed in NCAA Tournament history to reach a regional final — to take over at his alma mater, Seton Hall. A press conference to introduce Mason is scheduled for 11 a.m. Wednesday on the Saint Peter’s campus.

Mason, the popular choice to replace Hurley after the current UConn head coach left Wagner for Rhode Island, compiled a 165-130 record in ten seasons as his successor. During his time on the bench, Mason guided the Seahawks to three Northeast Conference regular season championships and three trips to the postseason championship game, as well as a victory over St. Bonaventure in the 2016 National Invitation Tournament. Under his tutelage, Wagner guard Alex Morales became the first NEC player to win consecutive Player of the Year awards in almost a quarter-century, and also captured Defensive Player of the Year honors. Known for his defensive mindset himself as both a coach and a player during his time at Drexel and before that at St. Anthony, where he honed his skills under Hall of Fame coach Bob Hurley, Mason is also a three-time NEC Coach of the Year recipient, earning the recognition in 2016, 2018 and 2021 after guiding Wagner to conference championships each season.

Mason will need to retool his new roster, as five Saint Peter’s players are presently in the transfer portal following Holloway’s exodus. One of those five, Doug Edert, committed to Bryant and head coach Jared Grasso — Mason’s now-former adversary — on Saturday following his breakout March, where he hit clutch shots against Monmouth in the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference championship game and in the Peacocks’ NCAA Tournament upset of Kentucky.

More information will be posted as it becomes available.

Thursday, April 7, 2022

2021-22 MBWA awards ballot

After one of the more successful local college basketball campaigns has come to a close, the transition process from March Madness to the offseason begins as it usually does around these parts, with the announcement of the annual Metropolitan Basketball Writers’ Association awards.

The honors will be passed out at the Westchester Marriott on April 25, the first in-person gathering since 2019, and it was my pleasure and privilege to once again cast a vote for this year’s recipients, which will be broken down in the traditional manner of six on the first team and five apiece on the second and third teams once again, returning to normal after last year’s streamlined, two-team format with seven players each. This year marked a milestone for me in doing so, as I was proud to submit my tenth ballot in contributing to the cause.

As I always do and will again, I will reveal my ballot both in the space below and on Twitter so that you can all see and interact with it. Without any further ado:

Lt. Frank J. Haggerty Award: Aaron Estrada, Hofstra (18.5 PPG, 5.7 RPG, 5.0 APG, 1.5 SPG) (Photo by Bob Dea/Daly Dose Of Hoops)
Each of the three high-major teams in the area had a player step up at various points this season, a fact that will not go unnoticed on the ballots of most of my colleagues. None, however, left as strong an impression as consistently as Estrada in his first year on Long Island. The former MAAC Rookie of the Year blossomed in Speedy Claxton’s offense, taking the reins and easing the pressure on senior Jalen Ray while developing a near-automatic mid-range jumper to go with his already lethal 3-point shot, while also navigating a backcourt that saw Zach Cooks limited at multiple points during the season due to injury and raising his game with an average of 22.2 points per game in CAA action. Deservedly the Colonial Athletic Association Player of the Year, Estrada was most valuable to Hofstra as the Pride won 21 games this season, and arguably the most vital to his team’s success. Should he win the Haggerty Award, the junior would be Hofstra’s first recipient since Charles Jenkins won the last of his three straight in 2011, and the first mid-major winner since Momo Jones brought the honor of best player in the area back to Iona in 2013.

Also considered: Ron Harper, Jr., Rutgers; Julian Champagnie, St. John’s

Rest of All-Met first team, in alphabetical order:
Julian Champagnie, St. John’s
Ron Harper, Jr., Rutgers
KC Ndefo, Saint Peter’s
Jose Perez, Manhattan
Jared Rhoden, Seton Hall

All-Met second team, in alphabetical order:
Posh Alexander, St. John’s
Geo Baker, Rutgers
Tyson Jolly, Iona
Nelly Junior Joseph, Iona
Alex Morales, Wagner

All-Met third team, in alphabetical order:
Daryl Banks III, Saint Peter’s
Ty Flowers, LIU
Chuba Ohams, Fordham
Cliff Omoruyi, Rutgers
George Papas, Monmouth

Honorable mentions, in alphabetical order:
Elijah Joiner, Iona
Walker Miller, Monmouth
Dwight Murray, Jr., Rider
Eral Penn, LIU
Dimencio Vaughn, Rider

Rookie of the Year: Jao Ituka, Marist (15.3 PPG, 3.1 RPG, 1.6 APG) (Photo by Bob Dea/Daly Dose Of Hoops)
Ituka had the most productive freshman season in the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference since Jalen Pickett landed first team all-MAAC plaudits in 2018-19. A nine-time rookie of the week and second team all-conference selection, Ituka was the driving force behind the Red Foxes surging in the middle of the league season to win six straight games and contend for a second straight top-five finish in the MAAC before being swept in the season-ending road trip to Canisius and Niagara. Ituka entered the transfer portal following the MAAC tournament, but will be an asset to whomever is fortunate to land his services and skill set.

Also considered: Walter Clayton, Jr., Iona; Anquan Hill, FDU 

Peter A. Carlesimo Coach of the Year Award: Shaheen Holloway, Saint Peter’s (Photo by Bob Dea/Daly Dose Of Hoops)
The historic run on which Holloway guided Saint Peter’s merely confirmed what those in the area already knew long before the Peacocks became the first No. 15 seed to reach a regional final in the NCAA Tournament, that his ability to adjust on the fly in game situations and connect to his players in such a way that there is little to no dropoff in the team’s energy level is unparalleled. Holloway now sets his sights on upholding the standard cultivated at Seton Hall as he replaces Kevin Willard at his alma mater, but not before racking up one more accolade from a truly elite body of work.

Also considered: Steve Pikiell, Rutgers; Kevin Willard, Seton Hall

Friday, April 1, 2022

Xavier gives NIT a fitting sendoff in MSG swan song

Xavier raises NIT championship as tournament departs Madison Square Garden. (Photo by Bob Dea/Daly Dose Of Hoops)

By Ray Floriani (@rfloriani)

NEW YORK — The awards had been distributed, nets cut down, postgame press conferences finished and recorded. 

In the media room, writers and photographers put the finishing touches on their work before exiting. Walking through the hallways everything was quiet. Fans had long since exited. A few employees were finishing their rounds, interrupting by saying, “take care, have a good night.” A glimpse at the court saw the teardown process had begun. 

In a way, it was sad. The NIT week had been one of mixed emotions, excitement over having the tournament back at the World’s Most Famous Arena for the first time since 2019, sadness knowing it will not be here for the next two years, and as some speculate, maybe never again.

The NCAA, who owns the NIT, decided to move the tournament Final Four to other cities. The next two years are up for grabs, with St. Louis rumored to be the front runner for 2023. The Garden? A future possibility, not probability. Exiting the Garden was a feeling of nostalgia regarding the history of this tournament. Certainly sadness, as you were saying goodbye to a close friend who was leaving for another location and might not make a return visit.

The NIT was founded by the Metropolitan Basketball Writers’ Association. Temple emerged victorious in the first tournament that included a field of six teams. The tournament administration was transferred to the Metropolitan Intercollegiate Basketball Association in 1940. Over the years, the field of six expanded: To 12 in 1949, 14 in 1965, 16 in 1968, 24 in 1979, 32 in 1980 and 40 from 2002 through 2006. In 2007, the field went back to the 32-team field. The exception was 2021, when the number was trimmed to 16 due to the pandemic.

The tournament had been completely contested at Madison Square Garden for years. Wanting to inject new life in the nation’s oldest postseason tournament, executive director Peter A. Carlesimo called for the contesting of the first round on campus in 1977. The following year, all rounds leading up to the semifinals would be held at campus sites. At first, the move was not too popular, especially with coaches having to take their teams on the road to a challenging venue. In time, the move was accepted as the tournament gained more interest. Getting to New York and the Final Four was the highly cherished prize everyone sought as play began. The only alteration in format was 2021, when the NIT was staged in bubble conditions in Denton and Frisco, Texas.

In 2005, the MIBA initiated an antitrust suit against the NCAA. The claim was forcing teams to accept an NCAA bid, even if they preferred one from the NIT, was an illegal use of NCAA powers. Back in 1970, Al McGuire of Marquette was upset over the region his Marquette team was being sent to in the NCAA Tournament. McGuire spurned the NCAA bid, took an NIT invite and won the tournament. From that time, the NCAA deemed a team must accept its bid. The suit went to trial before the NCAA decided to purchase the NIT for $56.5 million. The NIT has been conducted under the auspices of the NCAA since that time.

In early years, the NIT was THE tournament. In recent decades, the NCAA has fully surpassed it in that regard. Some say the betting scandals of the 1950s hastened the decline in status. Other basketball historians point to Bill Russell and the University of San Francisco’s NCAA titles as a factor, the hypothesis being USF’s championships gave the NCAA an identity as a truly national tournament.

The NIT, though losing its prestige in the eyes of some, never lost the importance. In recent years, it was a proving ground and opportunity for tournament experience for teams a year away from making an NCAA run. It also was a second chance for some. Teams upset over being snubbed Selection Sunday were warned. Those sulking over not being on the board Sunday, were soon eliminated by someone in search of recognition and the hope of getting to the Garden. The NIT gave many teams a second chance.

Xavier epitomized the concept of second chance in this year’s NIT. The Musketeers had been nationally ranked early in the season. Heading into February, they appeared headed to the Big Dance, but stumbled down the stretch. Hoping to get a few wins in the Big East tournament to get back in the NCAA Tournament picture, Xavier lasted one round, an overtime loss to Butler due to poor free throw shooting in the stretch. Xavier accepted the NIT bid.

Following a first-round win over Cleveland State, head coach Travis Steele was let go. Assistant Jonas Hayes took over as an interim head coach. The Musketeers defeated Florida in the next round, but not without a price, losing point guard Paul Scruggs to an ACL injury. They defeated Vanderbilt in the quarterfinals to get to New York, where they outlasted a St. Bonaventure team that had been playing very well. In the championship game, Xavier trailed Texas A&M by eight at halftime. Buzz Williams’ Aggies had the momentum and appeared ready to break the game open. Once again, Xavier fought through the adversity.

In a game featuring 17 ties and 10 lead changes, Xavier took a lead when Jack Nunge banked in a shot inside the paint off an inbounds play with three seconds remaining. Following a timeout, the Aggies pushed the ball upcourt. A last-second, long-range shot by Tyrece Radford circled the rim and popped out, handing Xavier a championship.

“The last two weeks has been the epitome of fighting through adversity,” Hayes said. “Keep fighting forward, keep putting one foot in front of the other. We won the championship. You will never, ever diminish the fact we won a championship.”

Buzz Williams of Texas A&M commended Xavier and Hayes basically summing it all up by adding, “what has happened in their program over the past two weeks is historical and any AD that has a job opening should hire the undefeated head coach at Xavier.”

The historical reference per Williams was so appropriate on this night. History, so much a part of this outstanding tournament. The attendance was listed as 3,551, unfortunate in that many missed an excellent game, an extremely competitive one worthy of a championship game and definitely worthy as a sendoff game for the NIT’s eight-plus-decade residence at MSG.

The NIT moves on. History and tradition do not factor into everyone’s equation these days. Exiting the quiet of Madison Square Garden, there were thoughts of the great games, teams and individuals who graced the Garden floor. Thoughts that the tournament moves on, but not before giving us another classic edition with a multitude of stories to recount. Thoughts that the NIT will remain part of the college landscape. And hopefully, get back to the World’s Most Famous Arena.