When Andy Glockner picked the MAAC as in the nation during preseason, I was quite surprised. Yes, the league has depth, but that’s a pretty lofty projection. While one of the conference favorites, Manhattan, has struggled without George Beamon, six of the MAAC’s 10 members were in action yesterday and they were all victorious. Continue reading “MAAC Big Winner on Mid-Major Saturday”
Category: Marist
Stony Brook squeezes out 60-57 win at Marist
Stony Brook led by as many as 12 in the first half but Marist fought back, giving themselves a chance to tie with 6.9 seconds left down three.
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Everything You Need to Know: Stony Brook at Marist
Marist head coach Chuck Martin had been looking for one final home game on his schedule since August and found a match in the Stony Brook Seawolves for their season opener in an unusual way. Continue reading “Everything You Need to Know: Stony Brook at Marist”
Marist’s Khallid Hart on Injury, Lost Season
Last Thursday, Marist freshman Khallid Hart was ruled out for the season due to cartilage damage in his right knee.
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Marist’s Khallid Hart Out for the Season with Knee Injury
Marist has ruled out freshman Khallid Hart for the season with cartilage damage in his right knee.
Hart, who had surgery Thursday on the damaged right knee, will rehab and recover and is expected to be ready for next season. Marist plans to redshirt Hart for the 2012-13 season.
Head coach Chuck Martin said that they first learned of Hart’s injury two weeks ago and that he was unsure when Hart injured his right knee.
“We just kind of went to the doctor just to check it out and see what’s going on,” Martin said. “When we went to the doctor we realized maybe it was a little more serious and then we just moved quickly at that point.”
Hart had surgery to clean the damage to the cartilage in his right knee on Thursday.
The newcomer Hart was named the 2012 Delaware Player of the Year and led all players with 23.4 points per game playing for the US Virgin Islands team during the summer at the five-day FIBA Americas Under-18 Championship.
Martin was expecting to have Hart on the floor during his freshman year but now will have to wait one more season before using him in the rotation.
“We were expecting a lot from him,” Martin said. “He would have been a really nice addition to what we got already, which I think would have made us better. The silver lining for us is all starting five guys are back and healthy.”
Martin said that his roster will stay where it’s at right now, with a starting five that returns from last season and that guards T.J. Curry and Devin Price will likely see slightly more time due to Hart’s injury.
“We kind of stay where we’re at,” Martin said. “We certainly have enough guys in the rotation on the team that can step up and make up for the loss.”
The Red Foxes open up the season on November 9th when they host Stony Brook at the McCann Arena.
Returning Possession Minutes and the MAAC
The MAAC is preparing for a wild 2012-13 season. After sending two teams to the NCAA tournament last season the conference is in flux.
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Q&A with Marist Head Coach Chuck Martin
Big Apple Buckets had a chance to catch up with Marist Head Coach Chuck Martin and talk about how he expects some of his players develop as well as his expectations for the coming season.
Big Apple Buckets: What parts of Adam Kemp’s game do you think he needs to improve at to help this team take that next step?
Chuck Martin: I think he’s got to rebound the ball a little bit better. Not that he did a poor job, he averaged close to 8 rebounds a night and he’s the second returning rebounder in the MAAC. So it’s not like he was awful but for him to become an elite player and for us to get to the top of the league he’s got to rebound, he’s got to go get 10 rebounds a night which he’s capable of doing. He’s at 7.8, close to 8 a night so he’s got to figure out a way to get two more rebounds. If he can do that, I think that his offense has come a long way but I think that if he can rebound the ball a little bit better and establish himself in the low post more consistently, I think he’s a heck of a talent. I think all the coaches in the league would agree, that they would love to have him. He has developed into one of the best centers if not top two in the MAAC.
Big Apple Buckets: Isaiah Morton was impressive in his first season stepping into the starting lineup, where do you see him improving as a sophomore?
Chuck Martin: He was tremendous, man. To ask a freshman to come in and start from day one is tough enough let alone come in and start at that position, the point guard position. Everything was new to him, offensive sets, spacing philosophy, defensive schemes so every day when he got on the court was a learning experience. I think that the game will slow down for him more as a sophomore. He’ll be familiar with our offense and with our defensive schemes but he is very, very, very talented.
He’s great in transition, he understands he has to get better with his decision making and he has to get better defensively. Those are the two areas where he’s got to improve: decision making and defense. But he’s a tremendous talent, he’s really really good.
Big Apple Buckets: As your tenure at Marist has continued, we have seen your team push the ball more in transition, do you anticipate playing even more transition basketball this season?
Chuck Martin: Absolutely. We get bigger, longer, more athletic kids. We’re going to push harder, we’re going to run harder. But the one thing that I like is on the nights where we couldn’t run we became a better half court offensive team which was really exciting for me. You want to get out in transition but if you can’t for whatever reason if it’s one of those nights, can you play half court basketball and we were able to do that. It was fun to watch our guys grow in the month of February and really execute in the half court as well.
Big Apple Buckets: People in the MAAC took notice when Marist went 6-3 in February and won a game in the MAAC Tournament after struggling in January, what do you think was the key to that turnaround?
Chuck Martin: I just think they were young, they were freshman. I think people remember the 7 out of 9 wins last year, they remember the month of January where we lost 8 in a row but they forgot about the six wins in December. We were .500 in December. We have not lost a game in the month of December at home. So we did some good things before February, the month of December was good to us, especially at home. January was not as good and February was tremendous. And I just think when you start two freshmen and two sophomores you just ran into a wall. You just ran into a wall in January and it took them three to four weeks to make the adjustment of college basketball which they did in February and really took off.
I think we were pretty good in December, I thought the schedule became a little bit tougher in league play because people know you they know your tendencies, they know what you want to run. Our young guys did not understand how to make adjustments when other teams made adjustments quick enough or fast enough so it took us three weeks to educate these guys on this is what happens know. People know you’re a driver, they’re going to play in the lane. People know you’re a shooter, they’re going to close you out hard and now you’ve got to make an adjustment to their adjustment, and it took us a little bit longer than we wanted to get these guys to learn that but thank God that they did, they learned it at the end of January and then took off in February.
Big Apple Buckets: What are you looking forward to most when you get to have your first official fall practice?
Chuck Martin: I think I’m most excited about what this team is going to look like defensively, that first official practice. What we’re going to look like defensively and how we’ll be able to generate offense through our defense. That’s the one thing that really excites me. When we have our first practice, having all 13 scholarship players on the floor and physically looking at how much bigger, stronger and quicker we’ve gotten in recruiting. And really seeing we’re going to be a really good defensive team and we’re going to turn our defense into offense that’s what I’m looking forward to.
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?
Chuck Martin: I think we have to eliminate distractions, I think that’s one of the most important things in any really good program at any level in any league. The teams that eliminate distractions are the teams that are most focused on the task at hand and those distractions can be academic issues, off the court issues, in the locker room: I think distractions is number one. You have to have energy every day, you have to bring unbelievable energy and enthusiasm to your team. I think understanding our roles, guys buying into their roles, really buying into their roles and understanding who they are. I’ll give you another one the last thing is really have no fear; have no fear of the challenge ahead of us have no fear of opposing teams and then just going out there and let it all hang it out on the court and see what happens.
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.
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Marist’s non-conference slate not yet full
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.”