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Tim's Take Return to TedSilary.com Home Page Timmy Vernon is a junior at Germantown Academy and the youngest of three athletic brothers. He plays football and baseball and writes for the school paper and he lit up this site during the '07 hoops season. Down the line, he wants to major in journalism and make a career of it. (Head examination not yet scheduled -- smile). Timmy may be reached at tvern09@germantownacademy.org. |
FEB. 1
INTERVIEW WITH COACH JIM FENERTY
Favorite highlight at GA? Favorite team? Favorite guys?
I think each team is really special. This is the first time that I have ever, ever, ever coached Jimmy [his son, a junior guard] in anything. I think that has been pretty interesting. I have deliberately not coached him because I think I just wanted to be a father watching him play…
I like to go back to the very first teams which is kind of why I keep the pictures up here [referring to his office, where every team photo since his first in 1989-1990 still hangs]. It was Johnny O’Connor, who is now a big time coach down at Georgia Tech, Michael Hawkes who was a P.E. teacher here and was basically a football coach, and myself; basically the three of us coached all of the teams, and it wasn’t uncommon for us to coach a freshman team in the afternoon and then coach the varsity team that night. It was interesting.
It was fun building the program. I think what has changed over the years is the expectation level. When we first got here, I remember our first year here we played Penn Charter down at PC. We frankly weren’t a very good team, we were pretty young. We had Alvin [Williams] as a freshman, Denis Kane as a freshman, and Blair Hicks as a freshman. We had Mark Nori as a sophomore; LT Talley was a junior. We went to Penn Charter and we lost the game in overtime, when a kid named Michael Downey threw in a shot from half court; we lost by one. We were down in that dungeon of a locker room, and there were GA people lining the steps to congratulate us. I thought to myself, “Where am I at? We lost this game.” But I guess we hadn’t really played well against Charter in basketball in a couple of years, and people were just excited about that. And the next year we beat them by 20. It was like Christmas day.
My truly favorite team is the next team I’m going to coach. I feel very fortunate to have been able to coach as long as I have and to coach as many really good people as I have. Some of them have been great players, but all of them have been great people in their own way, and that’s the way I like it.
How about the funnest team?
I thought coaching DJ [Johnston] and Kyle [Griffin] was a lot of fun last year. DJ just simply loved the game. My big saying - which I get busted on all the time by my team - is that I want people to play the game with a smile in their heart. And I think DJ and Kyle did just that, even when they were hurt. When the guys had every reason to pack it in, and just say “whatever” to the season, they didn’t, and I think that was a lot of fun.
It has been fun coaching the great teams, but it’s also been a lot of fun building. Some of our teams that didn’t win championships have, in my mind, been champion performers because they took basketball and made it more than just a game; they made it something that was a life lesson, and I feel like that is what we’re supposed to be about.
One of the things that really bothers me is this all-encompassing, you have to win, and it has to be a year-round thing, and you have to specialize attitude. I have never felt that is a good thing for a kid. But yet I seem to be the dinosaur. I am told by people, “Well, you really don’t know how things work.” Well, you know what, I’ve been coaching for a long time, and I know a ton of people in college basketball, and I’ve had my opportunities but I know how it works, I know how people work.
I really do think, and I tell my players this, that to really be a healthy human being, you need to do three things; three things my grandfather told me. Each day you need to smile - you need to find something to smile about each day. He used to say each day you need to cry - you need to find something in which your emotions are touched and you feel passionately about. And finally, each day you need to do something to stimulate your mind. He used to say, “You need to read something every day, you need to cry about something every day, and you need to laugh about something every day.” That’s been great advice. He’s been long gone, but it’s been good advice to me because if you do things with a passion, you may not always do it right, but you’re a better person for trying.
And if you just keep your sense of humor… My lord, at a place that is as high powered as GA, if you don’t have a sense of humor, you don’t last real long.
How about a certain favorite moment that even after you retire, you will look back on and say that kind of defines my coaching career at GA?
I think it goes back to the day that Randy Ayers was fired as the coach of the 76ers. I got a phone call from Mrs. Ayers early in the morning and she told me what had happened. I was devastated because Randy Ayers is one of the really good people who should be around coaching. And she told me they were going to keep Ryan and Cam home, and I told her absolutely, whatever you need us to do, we’ll do. Later on that day, some media types called, some TV stations, and they wanted to come and film our practice. I said no because I wasn’t going to let Ryan go through that, even though he wasn’t in school. The media claimed I was standing in the way of the press and the “freedom to know,” and I said, “No I’m not, I’m protecting my player here. I am protecting a family that I care a great deal about.”
Ryan called later on in the day, and I was actually in Mr. Connor’s office [GA’s headmaster] when he called, so they transferred the call up there. Ryan just said “Coach, I know it’s against school policy and everything, but would it be okay if I came to practice? I think I just need to be around my teammates.” I looked at Mr. Connor, and he said, “Absolutely, let him come.”
For some reason that day we were practicing in the small gym. I said to Mr. Dolan and Mr. Stipa, the two security guys, “Look, I told these people no, they couldn’t come, but that doesn’t mean the press does everything you want them to.” And sure enough, one of the local TV stations showed up, right outside the door. I had told the security guys, “Nobody gets in here today. This is a family and one of our guys is hurting, and we just need to work.” The most special moment to me was when those TV guys showed up, despite our security guys saying no. Ryan’s teammates rallied around him and they said, “Coach, nobody comes in here to mess with him.” To me, I felt like, even though that team didn’t win a championship, that team was a family, and that team was close. To me, that was a moment that I will never forget…
[At this point got a little choked up].
Then there was last year with Jimmy, with the 400. The 400 wins were not important to me. But the event was… and it was great to see him do that.
How about outlook coming in from Egan and has it changed at all from your first year to your 19th season now?
I still think back to when they called me over here to talk about being a history teacher. It was about a middle school history position, and about being a basketball coach. When I walked through this place and they were telling me how their record wasn’t very good, but I just looked around and thought, “I don’t see why this place can’t be a great academic institution and have a great athletic program.” Now I look at it every day when I come in, 19 years later, and know that not only is GA a great academic institution, but we also have some incredible student-athletes.
I think GA has always had a tendency to undersell what it does. I think we have terrific people here; terrific kids, terrific coaches, terrific teachers. I think sometimes we almost feel like we have to apologize that we have such good people. I don’t see any reason to do that. I think we are lucky.
Because I’ve coached so long, I get asked to go and speak at a lot of different places. I see schools, and it’s just a shame what’s going on there. Kids are losing their dreams because they just don’t have an opportunity to chase that dream. At GA that just doesn’t happen. We ought to say we’ve got something good here. I look back, and my favorite players of all time are the ones who came to GA, and this place changed their life in a positive way. And I hope we continue to attract those kinds of kids. I think there are kids and you just look and say, “This kid is so much better off because he came to GA.” A lot of kids can get a good education anywhere, but this young man or this young woman came to GA, and this place changed their life. That’s what I look for.
How about the game? Has it changed really?
I don’t like the direction of the game right now. I honestly think this, and I hope my players realize it, that basketball is a game. It’s a game to be played, it’s a game to be enjoyed. What I’m afraid of nowadays is that kids are using basketball as a means to an end. To me, the end of basketball should be, you know, you go out there and you compete and you find out that maybe you can go further than you thought you could go, but you have a blast doing it and you have a lot of fun playing it. Unfortunately I’m starting to see more and more guys who use basketball as training ground to get that scholarship, or training ground to go to the NBA, or training ground to get their name in the paper. All of those things are just trivial and they’re not really that important. It’s just a game. You should play the game to enjoy it, and I don’t see that happening.
It’s become way too important in some people’s lives; players, parents, coaches - to the point where its importance has been blown so far out of context that it stops being fun for a lot of kids. I really don’t like the trend. I honestly don’t. I know I’m a dinosaur, I know that there are people out there who think I shouldn’t be encouraging kids to have fun playing this game, telling me “You got to win it!” But you know, at the end of the day, we’re all going to be measured by what we brought to this life and what we did. If we can all say we made a positive difference in the life of just one person, then we’re a success. We’re not going to be judged on how many wins and losses we have…we’re not going to be judged on how much money we’ve made or anything like that. It’s going to be what did we do with the talents we had and did we make a positive difference?
In the meantime, we’ve go to look and see what’s really important. If a parent judges their child only by the number of points that they score, then that parent is missing out on a jewel. They are missing out on a great opportunity to grow with that young person and to guide that young person. If a coach just simply says, “Hey, I’m going to use this high school job because I want to get to the next level. I want to get a college job,” then that’s not fair to the kids that they’re coaching.
I’ve said the same thing to college coaches when they come in here and they want to talk about certain things. The first thing I ask them is, “How are you going to help my young student athlete fulfill the dream of getting an education, to get them to the point where they can be successful human beings?” They say, “What do you mean? Like, how many times we are going to be on television?” No! You can tell a family that you’re going to make sure that their child gets an education, but if you go out and practice 5 hours a day, you’re not helping them.
Where do you think it starts like, the game not being fun?
I think it starts when kids start playing. I’m seeing situations where parents in Lower and Middle School get their children a personal trainer.
When I was growing up we had this thing called the Father’s Club every Saturday. Everybody lined up according to height. Then they said, “How many kids we got today? Okay, we’re going to count them off and we’re going to divide them up according to height, and we’re going to play.” Somebody coached, and the coaching was just, you know, “Dribble with your left hand.” It wasn’t any of this screaming and yelling, no zones or any of that kind of stuff.
I just think everything is now measured by the score, and that’s not a good thing. I think basketball is meant to be one of those moments where, like my grandfather said, you smile. And you know what, in basketball games there have been times where you feel like you’re ready to cry, times that you feel like you’re ready to smile, and times where you should learn something. You should learn to deal with people and the dynamic of a group. You should learn how to deal with somebody saying that you can’t do something. Well hey, maybe you should prove to them that you can. You deal with victory, you deal with defeat. You deal with all things that are going to happen to you in your life, whether we want them to or not. You’re going to have good moments, and you’re going to have bad moments, and you should be able to use athletics to help you learn how to deal with that.
I’m afraid that we’re putting the cart before the horse. Because we’ve been so successful, people look to send their kids to GA, and one of the questions they ask me is, “How many kids have you gotten Division 1 scholarships?” The answer I always give them is none. And they look at me and say, “Well, that’s not true.” And I say, yeah, it is true. You asked, “How many kids have I gotten a Division 1 scholarship for,” and the answer is none. I’m hoping that I’ve given the kids an opportunity to go play a game that they love, and go play a game that they have fun with. And I’m hoping that maybe that has helped them somewhere along the way. But if a kid gets a scholarship, he got the scholarship. It’s not Jim Fenerty, it’s the kid! And you know what, I’m happy for them.
How about this team?
One of the difficult parts of coaching, especially in a sport like basketball, is trying to get all 13 guys on the same page. And I know this team’s going to get there, or I’m going to probably die trying. They’ve shown spurts.
One of the hardest things to do in today’s society is to willingly become part of something bigger than yourself. To have a successful season, everybody’s got to do that. And it can’t be 5 out of 13, or 10 out of 13. It’s got to be all 13. They’ve all got to buy into the idea and put their egos aside, and for this 2 hour period of practice, or game, or whatever it might be, be big enough men to subjugate their egos and become part of something greater. That’s a hard thing in this society for people to accept. And it’s a hard thing to teach.
I’ve seen us lose but play together, and I’ve seen us win but play separate. I don’t always measure wins and losses by what’s on the scoreboard. I’m looking to see what we can do.
I think we have great young men on this team. I think there are great role models among the seniors. I think Joe Hill plays as hard as anybody we’ve ever had. I think Tim McCarty has taken whatever God-given ability he has and has simply worked his tail off to be better. I see him doing the same thing in the classroom. I think Alan Tate has taken a really bad situation, I mean the kid has had no luck health-wise in basketball, and he’s handled the situation with a great deal of dignity. I think Nicky Gill might be one of my favorite players of all time. He just simply goes out there and he works every day. Nicky’s just a wonderful young man. And Vik Bala, I mean, if there’s a good story on this team…Vik Bala was here as a freshman and he made the third team. As a sophomore, he made the third team. A lot of guys would have packed it in and said, “Well, I’m going to go somewhere else.” At the end of his sophomore year he came to me and said, “I want to play basketball at GA. What do I need to do?” We told him, and what do you know, he did everything we told him to do. And then last year as a junior, he becomes one of the best guys on the JV team. And this year he’s just a delight to have on this varsity team. It’s the power of perseverance.
I think those 5 guys are terrific role models for any of the other kids in our program. If things work out right, at the end of this year they’re going to call themselves champions. But even if the record doesn’t turn out that way, I think they still have that championship mentality. I’m real proud of them.
Let me just say this. After every game I call my parents and I thank them for paying all of that money for tuition to let me get a Masters degree, and part of that Masters degree is in psychology. And I had no idea I was going to be a coach. I thought I was going to be a lawyer. I did an internship in my junior year at LaSalle with a law firm and said, “No way in the world do I want to be a lawyer.” And the good Lord directed me in the right way to coaching and teaching. And I use that Masters degree in Human Services psychology every day. That’s part of being a coach. Anybody can pick up the X’s and O’s of the game. But trying to deal with people is the most important part of it.
Any advice for young coaches?
Yeah, there are a few things.
The first is, if you’re a young coach, understand that there are people out there who have done what you want to do. You need to swallow your pride and bleed them dry of all of their experience and information. One of the best things I ever did coaching-wise was when I just started at Egan. I was a young coach, and I ran into Pat Knapp; he had just left McDevitt to take an assistant job at Notre Dame for women. I was talking with him because we had been friends for a long time, and he said, “Why don’t you come out and work Notre Dame’s camp?” I did that for 10 summers, and I met some of the finest basketball coaches, but also some of the finest people, that I’m ever going to come across. Guys like Pete Gillen, who was the coach at Virginia. Guys like Jimmy Baron, who’s coaching up at Rhode Island. Guys like Digger Phelps. And I learned. I learned from every single one of them. You develop a sense of humility when you’re around really great coaches - I’ve always believed that.
The second thing is don’t take yourself so seriously. One of the things that bothers me the most is when a team performs well, I see these coaches suffer a dislocated shoulder because they are so enthusiastically patting themselves on the back. The kids won the game. Your job is to put them in situations where they can be successful. Then I see other situations where you lose a game, and all the coach does is blame his players. The bottom line is when you lose games, generally, it’s because the other team is better. But there are times where, as a coach, you just didn’t do a good enough job putting your kids in a situation to win.
Finally, always remember that when you are coaching young people, they all want to succeed, and they’re all trying to do the right thing out there. When they make a mistake, it’s not because they’re deliberately trying to make a mistake. It’s just simply because they made a mistake. My philosophy has always been - and I still say it today – that when you make a mistake, know what you did wrong, then move on to the next play. Coaches shouldn’t stand there embarrassing the kid by yelling and screaming. We all scream and yell at games, it’s just the emotion of the game. But don’t take the joy out of the game for a young man or a young woman. Just remember that it’s a game. When you lose your temper or you lose your emotion and you lose control of yourself, be big enough to, when you finally settle down, say “I’m sorry. That was really stupid.” Let the kids know that your primary interest is not the score. Your primary interests are the young people that you are coaching.
Clearly I feel very deeply about the philosophy of the game and the philosophy of coaching. I just think sometimes people don’t really know who I am.
JAN. 11 & 18
INTER-AC LEAGUE
GA 59, CHA 54
GA 59, Episcopal 38
And the good times just keep on rolling. The Patriots have now won 7 straight, 8 of their last 9, and sit atop the Inter-Ac standings at 4-0 with decisive victories over “powerhouse” Chestnut Hill and, most recently, Episcopal.
First came CHA, with perennial league MVP jr. Gary Lawrence and company playing in front of the self-proclaimed greatest high school student section, the “Kingsley Krazies.”
Lawrence set the tone early, driving past the legend himself, Tim McCarty, leaping over Jeff Holton and converting a smooth finger-roll to give the Blue Devils a 2-0 lead. Unfortunately, CHA coach Bill Dooley benched Lawrence from there on out. Either that or G-Law disappeared down the stretch and could only manage 1 bucket in the remaining 31 minutes of the contest. Tim-Tim and Eric Yuschak would argue the latter.
The game remained in question throughout the second and third quarters, as neither team could find enough offensive consistency to take a permanent advantage. CHA sophomores Pat Connaghan and Todd Cramer (combined 17 points) helped fill the void left by Lawrence. St. A’s product Jack McDonnell continued his refusal to miss, totaling 8 points consisting of 2 treys.
Former Patriot turned Blue Devil guard Mike Rhoads, now a “junior” at CHA, showed the fans why, without Lawrence, his team remains a title contender. The smooth-shooting southpaw dropped 21 on his former teammates, also leading the team in assists as he did everything in his power to earn his new team the W. His high basketball IQ, along with the aforementioned incredibly fluid lefty J, reminded JV coach Craig Conlin and the most loyal Patriot fans of JV Hall of Famer Sean Grieve. Coincidentally, Grieve and Rhoads played travel ball together throughout their careers as grade-school classmates. Grieve is now a senior in college.
In all seriousness, Rhoads played a relentless, leave-it-all-on-the-court game. But his GA counterparts, Joe Hill and Cam Ayers, were too much in crunch time (35 points combined). Hill established himself as GA’s primetime performer, as a steal from the artist formerly known as Gary Lawrence and a jump shot with 1:10 left iced the win for the Patriots.
In the postgame interview with our friends over at Varsity365.com, Ayers described what won the game for his Patriots. The eloquent sophomore told the millions tuning in that his team “came together as a family.” To get the point across, Ayers repeated the line four or five times. Apparently, the GA basketball team is now a family.
The team entered Friday night’s game
at home to take on a young Episcopal
squad. Mike Doty showed all
the fans how the game would play out
with a strong drive to the hole to
give the Patriots an early lead.
Ayers and Hill once again led the
team in scoring, combining for 24
points in limited playing time, as
the squad cruised to a convincing
20+ point league victory.
The Take: Ayers has
been incredible over the Academy’s
long break and exam period,
averaging 11 points over the team’s
7 game win streak. GA plays Tuesday
at Malvern, Friday night at home
against the Fords, and Saturday
night at Valley Forge, where the
Patriots could extend their streak
to double-digits.
http://blip.tv/file/597050 ------- GA-CHA highlights from Varsity365.com
http://blip.tv/file/597119
------- Hill/Ayers post-game
(Note: You must copy and paste
those links)
JAN. 5
INTER-AC TIPOFF
GA 36, Malvern 35
After going just one game over
.500 in non-league play – a down year
for Coach Jim Fenerty – the
Patriots are now undefeated in the
Inter-Ac. 1 and 0.
In a sloppy, low-scoring, poor-shooting Inter-Ac opener, GA, in the final minutes, was able to top a fired up Malvern team.
Ryan Nassib set the tone early for Malvern, both athletically and physically, grabbing several of his 9 total rebounds over taller GA opponents. The high-flying quarter ended tied at 9, as GA guards were never able to find their touch from mid-range. Cam Ayers, who has shot somewhere between 50 and 95% from inside the arc all year, struggled all game, shooting only 1-7 from the field.
The second quarter featured much of the same, as lead changes and GA substitutions were too numerous to count. In fact, ten Patriot players saw significant action all game, Fenerty giving each the chance to prove himself against a talented Malvern offense. In GA’s three Florida wins, they held their opponents to an average of 13 first half points. The nearly impenetrable GA defense continued in the Keystone state, holding Malvern to only 15 points at the half. By subbing all ten quick, athletic Patriots interchangeably, Fenerty allowed his boys to play aggressive, on-the-ball defense without ever tiring.
In the third the Friars exhibited what seemed to be a shade of greatness. The senior trio of Nassib, Chris Cowell, and Kevin Corbett dominated underneath as fellow senior Matt McManus shored up the backcourt. After every bucket made, rebound grabbed, or charge taken, the Malvern bench went nuts, transforming that energy into a five point lead entering the final period of play.
The team concept Fenerty had been shooting for came together for the Patriots in the fourth. Guards Jimmy Fenerty and Austin Curry contained McManus. Mike Doty, Eric Yuschak, Dean Melchionni and Tim-Tim McCarty provided help down low on the Malvern seniors. Ayers and Joe Hill finally pierced Malvern’s tight matchup zone, feeding the rock to the hungry Jeff Holton (high-scorer with 12) in his first game back from a foot injury. Holton cut the lead to one on a smooth finger roll within three minutes. The scoring stalled until Hill, after turning the ball over in the Patriot halfcourt set, returned the favor, picking off an outlet pass at the circle and driving in for the eventual game-winning lay-up. Despite Nassib’s valiant efforts trying to put back a Corbett miss in the final seconds, the Friars came up short as Yuschak spiked the ball into the floor as the buzzer sounded.
Ignoring an unspeakable
assist-to-turnover ratio and a lack of
boxing out, an ugly win is still a win
for the scrappy Patriots squad. Every
win is important in the apparent
four-way Inter-Ac race (CHA, PC, Malvern
and GA).
GA follows up the win with two road league games: At Haverford
Tuesday, at CHA Friday.
The Take: GA still
needs to rebound better. The return of
Holton helped, who along with Tim-Tim
led the Patriots on the boards with 5
each. But an undersized Friar
frontcourt almost pulled out the win, as
Corbett, Nassib, and Cowell combined for
22 points and 20 rebounds. GA players
admitted postgame that boxing out is a
necessity – an aspect of their game they
must improve.
UPDATE
Dec. 15-22
First
came La Salle. In front of a huge GA
crowd in the finale of the Make-A-Wish
Tournament, the Patriots served up a
clunker. They got physically dominated
on the glass; outrebounded 32-19 by
Explorers not all that much more gifted
size-wise or talent-wise than the
Patriots forwards. Yet the trio of GA
bigs (Jeff Holton, Dean Melchionni,
and Eric Yuschak) were outscored by
that of La Salle (Matt Crozier, C.J.
Aiken, and Jaylen Bond) 41-8.
Guards Cameron Ayers and Joe
Hill did all they could to help the
Academy (11 points each), yet came up
short in the end, falling 52-43.
The skid continued against the post-grad laden Hun team, with the
18-point loss some expected but nobody
accepted. Vanderbilt signee Lance
Goulbourne dropped 19 on the
Holton-less Patriots (foot injury). The
only possible bright spot from the past
two games was the play of GA senior
captain - and Ted Silary favorite
– Tim McCarty. Off the bench,
the Johns Hopkins-bound McCarty averaged
12 points; a much needed spark to an
otherwise seemingly lackadaisical
Patriots squad. Entering a Thursday
afternoon game against a beatable CB
East team, GA looked to capitalize on
the energy brought by certain players.
They didn’t. Since I was not in attendance, I’ll let the game summary
from the GA website, written by the
coaches themselves, do the talking: “It
was not a good night for team defense as
the Patriots allowed the spirited squad
from Central Bucks East to penetrate the
lane at will. Outrebounded and
Outhustled, GA lost its 6th game of the
season by a 56-53 score.”
Attempting to build on this laudatory praise, the Patriots went into a
packed Hatboro-Horsham house to play a
talented, lanky Hatters team.
And what do ya’ know, GA played its best game of the year. I swear it
wasn’t the same team from the past week;
there’s no way. The Patriots had three
guys in double figures – captain Joe
Hill (14 points), sophomore
Cameron Ayers (11 points, 8
rebounds, 5 assists), and my fellow St.
Alphonsus product Jack McDonnell,
who went 4-5 from long range, finishing
with 14 points off the bench.
GA finally displayed the depth we all expected in the 57-51 win. The
Patriot bench outscored the Hatters’
21-0. Dean Melchionni also
established himself underneath in
Holton’s absence, finishing with 9
boards and 3 blocks.
The Patriots now enter a much needed “break” – one including a trip to
Naples for the Florida Holiday Classic,
where they’ll play four games in five
days. The Classic will hopefully give
this athletic group the chance to gel
even more before returning for Inter-Ac
play, starting with Malvern Prep on the
5th day of the New Year.
Merry Christmas, Happy Holidays, and a joyous New Year to all.
DEC. 8
PHILA. UNIVERSITY INVITATIONAL
Roman Catholic 66, GA 64
Now this is the GA team we expected to see entering the year.
Forget the loss, Roman’s Maalik Wayns
(23 points, 9 assists) is an incredible
prospect and almost impossible to stop at
the point. An early season loss against a
powerhouse non-league opponent? GA played
well; the coaches will take that
performance.
The noticeable difference came from the play of the Patriot backcourt.
Guards Joe Hill and Cam Ayers
combined for 30 points, 12 assists and 8
boards, after scoring just 7 each and
struggling to get the offense going on
Friday night.
Jr. forward Jeff Holton, who I said was the key to the GA season, showed off what many saw last year as an incredible amount of potential. Holton hit two treys early, then established a presence in the middle, finishing with 22 points and 10 rebounds.
Holton and company surprised the packed gym as the GA team came out playing hard, inspired ball, going toe-to-toe with Wayns and the rest of the Roman team, GA finishing the quarter up one. The second period was a different story; as Wayns and fellow guard Rakeem Brookins swarmed the GA offense, creating enough fastbreak points to put Roman up 10 at the half.
The Patriot defense, led by jr. Dean Melchionni (8 rebounds, 2 blocks) and Ayers (3 steals), kept it close throughout the third, trialing by 8 entering the final 8 minutes.
I’ll probably harp on this at least 10 ten times this season, but teams are defined by their play in the fourth quarter. And judging by this game, the rest of year looks bright for GA. Before Roman could hit one shot, the Patriots had given themselves a 7 point lead; on a 15-0 run to start the quarter. It was the single best I’d seen this group play in their careers together.
But sometimes the ball doesn’t bounce your way, and with one minute left that was the case for this team. Roman went to the line for 2. After hitting the first, a long rebound went back to the Roman shooter, who drove right to the hole, and converted after being fouled. Another miss on the and-1, another tapped long board, and Roman’s Courtney Stanley found himself sitting beyond the arc, wide open. In only ten seconds Roman had changed the outcome of the game, converting the never before seen 6-point play.
After a last-ditch attempt by GA, including a 3 by Erick Yuschak (6 points, 7 rebounds), Roman finished on top. While there’s no such thing as a “moral victory,” the Patriots proved to themselves that they can stay with the best.
Next weekend will be the annual
Make-A-Wish Tournament, hosted by GA. A
great event, a great cause, hopefully we’ll
see some great games.
The Take: After watching part
of the Roman-PC game, it looks to be one of
the best years for one of the oldest
rivalries in the country. GA and PC match
up incredibly well, especially the bigs
(Holton and Melchionni against Kurz
and Renfrow). The one to watch,
though, would be whoever for GA, whether it
be Hill or Yuschak, draws the assignment to
cover PC phenom-athlete Travis Robinson.
DEC. 7
PHILA. UNIV. INVITATIONAL
St. Joe’s Prep 52, GA 41
DEC. 7
Germantown Academy Preview
Projected Starting 5
*Captain
Cameron Ayers, so. – Cameron will get
his shot early to live up to the family name, as
he’ll start with Joe Hill in the backcourt, most
likely at the point. He’s a smooth, fundamental
player with a dead-on mid-range jumper.
*Joe Hill, sr. – Has got to fill the
shoes of the departed Kyle Griffin for this
team to succeed. Joe will be the number one guy all
year, and needs to be able to come through in the
clutch if GA wants to be any type of contender. What
“coming through” means for Hill will be discussed
later.
Eric Yuschak, jr. – Proved himself as
a sophomore, earning a spot in last year’s starting
lineup. The shutdown defender will benefit from
Hill’s court vision as Eric is nearly automatic when
left uncovered; the wing player that fits perfectly
with the other pieces of GA’s starting lineup.
Dean Melchionni, jr. – Look for Dean
to step out of his sophomore year role player-type
(although on that team, with Griffin, DJ Johnston,
and Holton he filled very well). Dean’s a unique,
smart, unselfish player who could have a blow up
year if Holton draws double-teams. Dean’s an
inside-out player, who at 6’5 weighs in at a solid
135 and is wiry strong. Some call his shot
unorthodox; I call it beautiful. Expect a
double-double average from Melchionni, especially in
league games.
Jeff Holton, jr. – After Hill, Holton
will be GA’s second option. Jeff’s an immensely
talented player with a great outside shot for a kid
of his size, but he needs to establish an inside
presence early and often in every game. GA has
enough wing players who can shoot; it’s more
important that Holton gets 15 boards a game rather
than 15 points. When Holton is dominate this team
will be nearly unstoppable.
Projected Bench
*Tim McCarty, sr. – A fan (and coach’s) favorite. Tim-Tim is the
classic, now overused cliché “gym-rat.” He’ll play
in-your-face defense, the kind that will piss off
any prima-donna Inter-Ac self-proclaimed stud who’ll
end up getting T-ed up after complaining to the refs
that Tim-Tim’s fouling him. Unfortunately, son, what
the refs don’t call ain’t a foul.
Vik Bala, sr. – A solid, athletic big
who can step in for Holton or Melchionni at any
point and not miss a beat. This depth is what, if
used correctly, can run other teams playing only
seven into the ground.
Nick Gill, sr. – The brother of Penn
guard and ’04 grad Joe Gill will be expected
to come in and drill the occasional three; another
straight-shooting wing for Fenerty who will provide
fresh legs and a high basketball IQ.
Jack McDonnell, jr. – Jack will add
both depth and a “play to the whistle” attitude for
the Patriots this year. The lanky guard models his
game (on the ball D and an uncanny ability to create
open shots for other people) after ’05 grad Kirk
Jones, now playing at Washington & Lee in Virginia.
Pete Haines, jr. – The field general
of the fall looks to become the court general of the
winter. Pete will bring a spark off the bench;
expect most assists to Doty.
Mike Doty, jr. – My pick for breakout
player of the year. Mike arguably has the most raw
talent on the team, to go along with the Doty family
relentlessly aggressive mentality. I loved that
attitude on the football field and its something the
basketball team needs.
Jimmy Fenerty, jr. – Germantown
Academy’s favorite son will show his trey in Poppa
Fen’s milestone win was no fluke. Jimmy knows the
offense, and can execute it, as well as anyone (he’s
been around it since he was four).
Austin Curry, so. – The young, true
point guard looks to gain experience after seeing
some Varsity minutes his freshman year. Ayers and
Curry will form a formidable backcourt for years to
come.
Injured Reserve
*Allen Tate, sr.
To put it almost too simply, for Coach Fenerty to win his 11th
Inter-Ac League title, he must get standout play and
constant leadership from two of his stars.
Why do I say this? Look at any successful team, at any level of
basketball. Almost always are there two
prominent, leading contributors, whether it be
scoring, assists, rebounds or defense.
Jordan-Pippen, Ellington-Henderson, Shaq-Kobe,
Nelson-West, and the most recent edition,
Griffin-Johnston.
So, who for GA will be able to fill the hole left by the ’07 grads (guard
Kyle Griffin and forward DJ Johnston)? As of
now, you’ve got to say it’ll be Joe Hill and Jeff
Holton. You know what to expect from the
Yuschak-Melchionni type. Both play tough
defense and will help on the boards, near
double-double guys night in and night out. But
with a bigger body than either, Holton has the
highest ceiling; probably higher than Johnston,
included.
For Hill, it’s simple. With the amount of talent surrounding him,
Joe doesn’t need to drop 25 a night like Griffin
did. What he needs to do, though, is
distribute the ball, limit turnovers, and on the
defensive side create as many fastbreak
opportunities as possible (which he was incredible
at last season).
But who will be the prototypical “go-to-guy” when there are 20 seconds
left and GA’s down 2? Everyone in the gym last
year knew Kyle Griffin was taking that shot, yet
somehow he was still able to do it. An even
better example came from rival Penn Charter.
Sammy Zeglinski knew he was taking the last shot, as
did every opposing defender. The single most
clutch high school basketball player I’ve ever seen
(granted, this is only in my three years of real
experience).
This year, it will have to be Holton. The skilled big should be
able to size up with any Inter-Ac opponent, and if
he can’t he’s most likely quicker. With
Griffin and Zeglinski, there was only one shot, one
opportunity. In Holton’s 6’7, 230lb frame lies
the advantage, where a miss for him could result in
only another dash in the rebound column, as
put-backs should be common for him. If Holton
can do an accurate Sammy Z impression, this GA team
may be unstoppable in the Inter-Ac.
This being said, the rest of the GA squad must do its job: tenacious D,
undying energy, and a sound halfcourt offense
(turnovers kill no matter how good you are in the
low post). With 13 legitimate Varsity players,
fatigue should never be a factor for the Patriots.
If I were the coach, I’d press every minute of every game until you’re up
by 20. But I’m not a coach, and there’s a
simple explanation as to why not. The game
isn’t as simple as it looks. Assuming the
Inter-Ac gives out title rings, there’s a reason
Fenerty has one on every finger.
This year, Hill, Holton, Melchionni and crew look to give him one too
many.