When Chuck Martin reached Marist in April 2008 to take on his first job as head coach, adversity confronted him straight in the face.
Continue reading “Marist’s Martin Hardened by Adversity, Ready to Compete”
When Chuck Martin reached Marist in April 2008 to take on his first job as head coach, adversity confronted him straight in the face.
Continue reading “Marist’s Martin Hardened by Adversity, Ready to Compete”
Big Apple Buckets had a chance to catch up with Rider Head Coach Kevin Baggett and talk about his expectations for this season as he enters his first season as a Division I head coach.
Big Apple Buckets: You told me that you would like to have five consistent double-digit scorers, who would you like to step into those roles?
Kevin Baggett: I’d like to say Jon Thompson, Nurideen Lindsey the transfer from St. John’s whenever he becomes eligible whether it be early or late, Anthony Myles, Daniel Stewart, Junior Fortunat our center I really need him to take another step forward. He missed the first 10 games of the year just trying to get cleared with his eligibility but I need him to be more consistent and take [the] next step forward. And some of our freshmen are going to have to contribute as well. We’ve had the luxury of being able to work these guys out this summer, which in the past we haven’t been able to so it was a little bit of a learning curve early for those guys especially coming in. We’ve tried to close that gap a little bit with this summer so I’m going to lean on those guys to help contribute somewhat as well.
Big Apple Buckets: Daniel Stewart won MAAC Rookie of the Year as a Freshman and improved his game as a sophomore. What do you expect from his Junior season?
Kevin Baggett: I need to see him take the next step being able to play out on the perimeter more. I didn’t think he had a great sophomore year. I thought he got off to a good start, his sophomore year in the beginning and then I thought he tailed off. I thought he was worn down a little bit asking him to do a lot of things. The next progression for Daniel would be to be able to play more on the perimeter, be able to make perimeter shots both to his scoring and I saw something not long ago where he was up pretty high in the country in terms of his shooting or his field goal percentage. Well most of those baskets are around the basket and I need him to be able to step out a little further, to be able to put the ball on the floor a little more because a lot of times the four man are defending him I need him with his quickness and his athleticism to be able to beat those guys a little more being out on the perimeter so that’s the next progression for him. And then getting back, he was a very good defensive player his freshman year, I thought he took a step back defensively this past year as well so I’m hoping that he’ll along with the team will focus on that end and be a better defensive player for us too.
Big Apple Buckets: What do you expect out of a full season of Junior Fortunat?
Kevin Baggett: In order for us to be good and I’ve said this to everybody, you know that center position, there’s some good centers in our league O.D. Anosike really comes to mind when I think about centers in our league. I need him to be good, if we’re going to be good I need Junior to average a double-double. I need him to average a double in points, a double in rebounds and just stay out of foul trouble a little bit. Last year was a learning curve and missing those 10 games kind of put him behind the 8-ball a little bit but he’s done great this summer he’s been on campus this entire time working on his body, working on his game. He’s a young man that’s really focused and really wants it and I want it for him. So for him if he can average a double-double that would be significant for us because we have to be able to count on that position and count on him to be able to man the middle.
Big Apple Buckets: How do you see your lineup and rotation shaping up this season?
Kevin Baggett: I don’t want to say that because I want our guys to come in and earn it. I know you’d rather have me answer that but my whole thing with our guys is that everything will be earned. I know I talked about those guys and they are our leaders yet to me everything that will be earned will be earned in practice. I’m not playing any favoritisms, I need guys to step up and find leaders and the experienced guys I need them to show it on the court in practice and earn that. These guys are going to earn whatever minutes they get that’s from top to bottom and I just think that’s the right way to go. I think guys get too comfortable when they think that they’re just going to come in and they’ve been the starter. I don’t think that’s fair to the other guys who have been working their ass off to try and cut in to those minutes.
Big Apple Buckets: What are your expectations for the five freshmen that you have coming in this year?
Kevin Baggett: Just to come in and be sponges, learn be ready when their number is called. Not to have the answers but again I do want to play some of those guys and I need those guys to be ready. I need them to listen. I need their ears to be wide open and their eyes to be wide open and just get off to a good start in the classroom because that’s the big part too. A lot of these guys don’t understand that with the freedom that they have now that it’s not really as much to do as they think it is. If they say ‘oh I only have one or two classes today so I got time’ no you don’t have time because your day is structured more on the collegiate level than it is on the high school level. Just letting them understand that I’m going to need to call on them sooner than later because I only have six returning guys from last years team.
Big Apple Buckets: You had a chance to see these freshmen over the summer session, what did you work with them on and who has a leg up on being able to play?
Kevin Baggett: You know what, I don’t know yet because until we get into the confines of really practicing and getting up and down. We did more individual work, just trying to get these guys to break some of the bad habits these guys had in high school and develop some better workout habits and things. We really focused on that more than just team things. It’s too early for me to be able to say. I think they all bring different things to the table, I think they’re all talented in their own way. Now it’s just a matter of seeing how these pieces fit into the broader scheme of things.
Big Apple Buckets: What are you looking forward to in the first fall practice?
Kevin Baggett: Just getting after it, really getting after it getting our guys focused. Making them understand the sense of urgency, making them understand that we’ve got a long way to go. Some of the predictions that I’ve seen early on, they kinda have us at the bottom, and rightfully so coming off the year we just had and getting our guys focused on the task at hand. Just talking about getting better every day, I’m a big John Wooden fan. John Wooden very rarely talked about championships and all of that over stuff you haveto build up to. He talked more about getting better every day, and that’s the way I want to talk to our guys. Getting better every day in the classroom, on the court as people and if we do that and we get better every day then hopefully that will put us in position to be successful in the end.
Big Apple Buckets: What are the three keys to this season, the three things that will be the difference for your team to have a successful season?
Kevin Baggett: I would say one, first and foremost defensively. If we’re in the upper half of our league defensively I think we’ll have a chance to be in the upper half of the league. Secondly just the scoring part of it, if we’re a balanced scoring team then I think again this will be a good team and a good collective team. Thirdly just the start to the season. People stress the league and those three games in March but just getting off to a good start and having an opportunity to have confidence and build on that early on because again the schedule is tough. We got off to that 1-10 start and that dug really a deep hole for us so if we can stay out of digging ourselves a deep hole I think that will be an indication of where we’ll be in March as well.
LaSalle transfer Devon White, who is recovering from an Achilles injury, will not be expected to start the season with the Niagara Purple Eagles.
“It’s hard to even guess as to when he’d be back,” Niagara coach Joe Mihalach said. “I don’t think he’ll be ready at the beginning of the season.”
Mihalach said Friday that he has not seen White since the summer session ended. Players began to return to campus over labor day weekend for the fall semester.
White, when he’s ready to play, is expected to fill the center spot and bolster the frontcourt for a team that finished 14-19 last season.
“Hoping he can help plug the middle up there for us,” Mihalach said of what he expects from White. “We felt like it was one of the areas last year where we just needed to be better at because we’re so excited about the other four spots but that middle is just a position that we need to get a little more production out of it.”
White started six of 32 games last season for the Explorers, averaging 5.8 points per game, graduated from LaSalle in May and will use his final year of eligibility at Niagara. However it appears he will have to wait until he recovers from the injury to play in his final season.
“I think it’s pretty fair to say that I don’t think he will be playing at the beginning of the season,” Mihalach said.
Niagara begins their season with the 2K Sports Classic where they will travel to Oregon State on Nov. 9th. After that, they will host a sub-regional of the 2K Sports Classic which will include home games against Bucknell and New Mexico State. Niagara’s non-conference schedule includes road trips to play NCAA Tournament teams Notre Dame, St. Bonavenutre as well a home game against defending America East champion Vermont.
Mihalach said their non-conference schedule will help sharpen them for conference play.
“We try to serve a lot of masters with that non-confernece schedule,” Mihalach said. “We want to play some really good teams, we want to play some teams that are going to be like the teams in our league, we want to get on the road a little bit, we want to try to play in a tournament if we can. It can always be a little better but I think we’re trying to accomplish those [goals].”
As Rider coach Kevin Baggett gets set to coach his first game, the only uncertainty surrounding the program is when he will have highly touted transfer Nurideen Lindsey.
Lindsey transferred from St. John’s, eventually reaching Rider in January after reconsidering transferring to Arkansas. He currently is in the process of applying for a waiver to play immediately, which will be reviewed by the NCAA.
Rider Head Coach Kevin Baggett said that, “everything has been submitted to the NCAA” and they are awaiting word as to whether they will have Lindsey at the start of the season or at the beginning of the second semester.
“Dealing with all the young man has gone through, having lost two of his brothers; I hope the NCAA takes that very serious,” Baggett said.
“But I can’t control that decision so I just have to focus on when I hear whether we’re going to have him or not and just try and go from there with it.”
Lindsey averaged 12.4 points per game in nine games with St. John’s during the 2011-12 season. He will be eligible to play one more year after this season.
“I want to play him at the point, he has experience,” Baggett said. “His first semester there at St. John’s he did a good job of producing for those guys.”
Rider did not have to look far after their previous boss left for a new job, but that didn’t make life uneasy after Tommy Dempsey announced he would be leaving for Binghamton.
Associate Head Coach Kevin Baggett was quickly put into an awkward situation, hearing from parents of Rider’s recruits while wondering about his own status as he began to pitch his idea for Rider basketball’s future.
“I had parents calling me but at that time I just told them, ‘Hey, just sit tight, let’s see what happens,’” the six-year Broncs assistant said. “It was a tough process because you’re kind of in the middle of this whole thing hoping that you get it but there’s no guarantees… I had [the parents’] support though which was great. I had the players support, which was awesome.”
The Rider administration opened an internal interviewing process which allowed Baggett to meet with Athletic Director Don Harnum to discuss the basketball program.
“We sat down and met for about four hours and talked about a lot of different things that he’d like to see and a lot of things he liked and a lot of things he wanted to address differently,” Baggett said. “By the end of the meeting we parted ways for a couple of days and then he came back he said, ‘Hey I made my decision and we’re going to promote you and keep this thing moving.’ So it was a good time for me then.”
The transformation from assistant to head coach complete, Baggett said he would like to bring more of a focus on team basketball.
“I want to preach team more than what we’ve done in the past,” Baggett said. “Instead of having one or two guys lead our team in scoring, to me I’d like to have five guys in double digits because to me that exemplifies more of a team than just a couple of individuals leading our team.”
The Broncs ranked ninth in conference play in defensive turnover percentage (18.1%) last season and are planning on looking to press more often this season. This should lead to more opportunities to test the depth of Baggett’s bench.
“We pressed some when Coach [Dempsey] was here, I want to do that more,” Baggett said. “If I’m asking them to press and put all their energy into pressing and getting up and down the court in transition, then I’m certainly going to need to rely on more than maybe seven or eight guys. I’m hoping to get somewhere around 10, I don’t know the amount of minutes at this point but that’s kind of the direction I want to go.”
Rider struggled defensively last season, allowing opponents to shoot 48.5% from two-point range which ranked 200th in the country. However the Broncs struggles were worse on three pointers, opponents shot just under 40% of their field goals from behind the arc against them making 35.8% (241st).
On the offensive end, Baggett credits Dempsey with coaching a great scoring offense, but feels that if they can improve on defense that will help make them less dependent on a few scoring options.
“I just think that we need to get better on the defensive end because at times when we suddenly struggled offensively, we couldn’t hang our hats on the defense,” Baggett said. “I want to balance that a little more when we struggle offensively we want to be able to know that we can get stops, that we can get defend guys and give ourselves a chance to be in the game.”
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The seamless transition from Associate Head Coach to Head Coach helped Baggett keep a recruiting class that includes five players and St. John’s transfer Nurideen Lindsey who is appealing to the NCAA to play at the start of this season.
Meanwhile one new NCAA rule that has helped Baggett in his transition is being able to work out the incoming class of freshmen during the summer session.
“We’ve had the luxury of being able to work these guys out this summer, which in the past we haven’t been able to so it was a little bit of a learning curve early for those guys especially coming in,” Baggett said. “We’ve tried to close that gap a little bit with this summer so I’m going to lean on those guys to help contribute somewhat as well.”
The new rule allows for incoming freshmen to enroll in summer school courses and participate in team activities, such as workouts and conditioning, for up to eight weeks and for a maximum of eight hours per week. This new rule allowed the Rider staff to work with each player individually as they consider where each player fits on the roster.
“We did more individual work, just trying to get these guys to break some of the bad habits these guys had in high school and develop some better workout habits,” Baggett said. “I think they all bring different things to the table, I think they’re all talented in their own way. Now it’s just a matter of seeing how these pieces fit into the broader scheme of things.”
Rider will need to count on the freshman class to help add depth to a lineup that returns just six players from last year’s team.
“I do want to play some of those guys and I need those guys to be ready,” Baggett said. “I need their ears to be wide open and their eyes to be wide open and just get off to a good start in the classroom because that’s the big part too. A lot of these guys don’t understand that with the freedom that they have now that it’s not really as much to do as they think it is. If they say ‘Oh I only have one or two classes today so I got time,’ no you don’t have time because your day is structured more on the collegiate level than it is on the high school level. Just letting them understand that I’m going to need to call on them sooner than later because I only have six returning guys from last year’s team.”
Despite a change in job title, the most important thing for Baggett is making sure he maintains strong relationships with his players.
“Something that will be important for me is just knowing our players, I think that’s so important,” Baggett said. “I care for these guys. I genuinely care and love our players and in order to get the best out of them I think kids have to understand that you genuinely care for them and when you’re getting on them it’s not personal, it’s just to try and motivate them and maximize their abilities.”
“I don’t think our relationships have changed, obviously my title has changed and my responsibilities somewhat, but I still want to have an open door policy. I still want these guys to be able to talk to me because at the end of the day, I want these guys to be comfortable and I want to know when there’s something on their mind.”
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After 16 years of being an assistant and watching Rider as an assistant for six seasons, it’s Baggett’s turn to be the head man on the sidelines.
“You know as an assistant, you hope this day comes but it’s never a given,” Baggett said. “So I’m looking forward to it, there’s always the uncertainties the things that you don’t know and as an assistant you can always make the suggestions that’s 7-8 inches away from the head coach’s seat but it all falls on me now.”
Rider will host Robert Morris on Nov. 9 in their season opener. Baggett will be looking for the Broncs to get off to a better start than 2011-12. Rider opened at Robert Morris last season, falling 83-57. The Broncs then stumbled out of the gate, starting 1-10 in their first 11 games. Baggett said the key to starting off strong will be to reinforce the message of learning from last year’s slow start.
“Just really talking about them from our experience last year having gone through it,” Baggett said. “We lost a couple ones in overtime, a buzzer beater here and there, that could have changed the complexion of our year.”
The Broncs 1-10 start included two home losses in overtime to Ivy League opponents Penn and Princeton. They rebounded to finish 10-8 in the MAAC and clinch the fifth seed in the conference tournament.
“I know that towards the second half of the year we played well but we were already reeling and we were already trying to catch up,” Baggett said. “Reminding these guys of the experience we’ve already been through and how precious, it’s still in a lot of our guys minds and we need to get off to that because a lot of these same teams we lost to early on last year we’re playing again early on this year.”
Rider will face Robert Morris, Stony Brook, Princeton, Drexel and LaSalle returning games from last season. Rider will also travel to South Carolina and Southern Methodist as part of the Hoops for Hope Classic before playing two games Mexico.
When his team steps out on the floor for their first practice of the season Baggett wants to make sure his team is improving every day.
“I’m a big John Wooden fan,” Baggett said. “John Wooden very rarely talked about championships and all of that other stuff you have to build up to. He talked more about getting better every day, and that’s the way I want to talk to our guys. Getting better every day in the classroom, on the court as people and if we do that and we get better every day then hopefully that will put us in position to be successful in the end.”
Marist will be among the many northeast schools set to prove themselves in the non-conference schedule on the road and neutral sites this season.
Going into his fifth season at Marist, head coach Chuck Martin said his team will have a challenging non-conference schedule with seven road and neutral site games.
“We’ve got a bunch of road games,” Martin said. “So I think that’s the next step for our program being able to go on the road and win some of those games.”
The freshman and sophomore heavy Red Foxes struggled on the road last season, going 4-14 in road/neutral games, but return a very young, athletic team led by last year’s MAAC All-Rookie selection Chavaughn Lewis, who led Marist with 14.4 points per game, as well as third-team All-MAAC selection senior Devin Price (13.6 ppg).
Marist is set to appear in the Old Spice Classic during Thanksgiving week on the ESPN family of networks. Their first game will be against West Virginia on Thanksgiving on ESPN2 at noon. That game will be followed by a game Friday against either Vanderbilt or Davidson, and Sunday by a game against either UTEP, Oklahoma, Clemson or Gonzaga.
“It’s a tremendous field,” Martin said. “So being able to compete at that level on national TV during Thanksgiving, that’s a tall order for a young team but hopefully we’ll be ready and excited and prepared for those challenges.”
The Red Foxes will round out their road schedule with trips to play Columbia, Army, Colgate and Bucknell. However, Marist is still looking to fill in one home game in its non-conference schedule.
Martin said that in the past schools would be more willing to take on Marist at home or on the road, but as the Red Foxes have improved more teams are unwilling to face them.
Marist, which won seven of its final 10 games last season and improved by eight wins from 2011 to 2012 at 14-18, returns all of its key players and appears ready to improve upon an eighth place finish last season.
Marist will host College of Charleston, Maine as well as a BracketBuster opponent yet to be determined in February but is still looking to fill that elusive final home game. Playing in a newly renovated McCann Arena last season, Marist won six of their first seven home games and finished 10-4.
“You want to get a good home game,” Martin said. “We’re just making phone calls every day, we’re reaching out to people, we’re texting, we’re tweeting, we’re doing all the things that we can do to reach out to other programs to see if they would be willing to come here and play us at home. Thus far we have not had luck with that one game remaining vacant. So we’re just going to continue to call and reach out to people and see if we can convince someone to come play us here.”
Almost everyone returns from Steve Masiello’s first season in Riverdale and that appears to have given the young coach some confidence. The Jaspers will be preparing to battle Loyola (MD) and the rest of the MAAC with a very difficult non-conference slate. One that if navigated correctly, could be a boost come March.
Continue reading “Manhattan’s reveals ambitious non-conference schedule”
Conference realignment has officially reached the point where it is impacting the mid-major schools on the east coast and the main driver seems to be the Patriot League. Yes, the league better known for its academic and the excellent John Feinstein book “The Last Amateurs” is making waves with expansion.
Continue reading “Loyola (MD) spins the realignment wheel again”
Former St. John’s recruit Norvel Pelle has signed with Iona according to Jon Rothstein. This is a huge signing for the Gaels, and not just because Pelle is 6’11”. He was ranked 51st in the RSCI Top 100 for 2011 as part of Steve Lavin’s impressive class. Pelle is super skilled and his brother has compared him to Kevin Durant.
A few weeks ago we looked at the Top 10 players in the NEC, now I want to do the same exercise with the MAAC. This league is a lot tougher because of all the turnover and transfers coming in. There is no dominant team, so six of the 10 teams probably think they have a legitimate shot at winning the title. There’s also the pesky problem of transfers that aren’t eligible immediately or might not be eligible at all this season. I’m leaving those players off my Top 10 for now, but I’d certainly be willing to consider them in the future.