Season preview: HoopsHD interviews Delaware F Jyare Davis

We are still a month away from the tip-off of the college basketball season this fall, which means that we have plenty of time to start preparing for the action ahead. We will do so via a series of season previews featuring the best players/coaches in the country. HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel continues our coverage with Delaware F Jyare Davis, who talked about making the NCAA tourney last March and his expectations for this season.

In 2018 you teamed up with Dudley Blackwell/Patrick McCaffery/Carson McCorkle to win the USA Basketball 3×3 U18 National Championship: could you have ever imagined that 4 years later you/Patrick had made the NCAA tourney while Dudley/Carson were playing at big-time schools like Iowa State/Virginia? For sure! We were all highly-recruited guys and had a lot of fun playing together. It is cool to see all of us living out our dreams now at the college level.

You began playing on the varsity at the Sanford School as an 8th grader and became the 1st player in Delaware high school history to be named 1st-team All-State 4 times: how were you able to dominate throughout your high school career, and what made you choose Providence? I enjoyed my time at Sanford. I had always played up against better/older competition and it was pretty cool to make some history . I thought that Providence would be a great fit for me.

After suffering a concussion you never played for the Friars: how serious was your injury, and why did you decide to transfer to Delaware? It was pretty serious and I was out for a while. If I did not have the concussion then I probably would not be at Delaware, but coming here was the best decision that I have ever made.

You play for Coach Martin Ingelsby: what makes him such a good coach, and what is the most important thing that you have learned from him so far? He believes in his players: you can feel when your staff has confidence in you and we feel comfortable out on the court.

Last year you were #6 in the conference with 60.1 FG% en route to being named conference ROY: what did it mean to you to receive such an outstanding honor? Going into every season you always have personal/team goals. My personal goal was to be ROY and our team goal was to make the NCAA tourney so it was great to achieve both of those things.

Take me through the 2022 postseason:
In the CAA tourney title game you scored 18 PTS in a 4-PT win over UNCW en route to being named tourney MVP: how were you able to play your best when it mattered the most, and what was the feeling like in your locker room afterward? I put a lot of work in and believed in myself. Whatever is going to happen will happen so I just tried to take a step back and not get too emotionally-involved. To celebrate in the locker room was a lot of fun.

In the NCAA tourney you scored 17 PTS/7-10 FG in a loss to Villanova: what did you learn from that loss that will help you this year? It showed me that we can play with anybody. We had a couple of mishaps here and there but it increased my belief in myself and my teammates.

You lost several starters from last year including Ryan Allen/Kevin Anderson/Andrew Carr/Dylan Painter: how will you try to replace all of that offense/experience? Those are all my guys and it will be different without them but I believe in the guys we have now.

1 of your new additions is grad transfer LJ Owens, who has 115 games under his belt as a player at William & Mary/UMBC: what does he bring to the table? He is fitting in well and will be a great scoring option because he can really shoot it and get to the basket. He is a complete guard and will have a big impact for us throughout the season.

Your non-conference schedule includes a game at Duke in November: is it just another game on your schedule or are you excited about the chance to face 1 of the best teams in the nation? Anybody who says it is just another game is kidding themselves! However, every game is an opportunity for us to get better as a team because it is a long season.

What are your goals for this season, and what are your expectations for this season? I want to repeat as CAA champs and get back to the NCAA tourney and then win some games this time around.

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Name, Image, and Lots of money: HoopsHD interviews Steve Cicciarelli of the Home of the Brave NIL collective

The marketplace for college athletes to engage in Name/Image/Likeness (NIL) deals was created last year after the NCAA v. Alston case and now it seems like every college is ready to start spreading the wealth. There are already more than 100 “collectives” either in operation or being formed. They allow alumni/fans/whoever to donate money to assist a specific school in creating opportunities for student-athletes to make some money off of their celebrity. We have reached out to many collectives and will try to interview representatives from as many of them as possible to see how each of them operates. HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel continues our coverage with Steve Cicciarelli of the Home of the Brave NIL collective, who discussed what his group is about and what it has accomplished so far.

You are 1 of the co-founders of an NIL collective called “Home of the Brave” that was formed last June: how complicated was it to create (if at all), and why did you do it? It was not so much “complicated” but did involve a fair amount of work. Bradley basketball is part of the social fabric of the city where I live (Peoria, IL). I am a Notre Dame alum so I joined an NIL collective called Irish Players Club, and later realized that there were plenty of people in Peoria who wanted to keep Bradley relevant in the MVC.

Your entire focus is on basketball: how/why would you decide to open it up to other sports? We picked the men’s basketball program because that is what is important to Peoria. We will consider helping other sports but our group was formed solely for basketball: we want to crawl before we walk and then jog/run. We did not want to bite off too big a piece of the apple, but if we gain more traction and there is not another NIL formed to help athletes in other sports then we will consider doing that in a couple of years.

What kind of connection does your group have with former players like Hersey Hawkins/current Coach Brian Wardle/Athletic Director Chris Reynolds (chairman of the D-1 Men’s Basketball Committee for the 2022-23 season)? We have contacts with all of them. I have known Coach Wardle since he came to town and remember watching Chris back when he was playing high school basketball! We have 50 influential donors and reached out to legends like Hersey/Jim Les because we wanted their support and to use their information to draw interest.

What kind of deals have you been able to work out so far? We brought in people from auto dealerships/construction companies and had the basketball players sign annual contracts. They also participate in several events/year such as a golf tourney and a chance for donors to attend practice.

People are obviously free to do whatever they want with their hard-earned money…but do you ever have any second thoughts about whether you should be encouraging your donors to do something else like fight cancer/reduce homelessness? Part of our program is to have events where half of the money goes to non-profit organizations. Participation in our NIL will not affect people’s donations to other causes.

Do you think the NIL model will be as effective at an MVC school, and what is the biggest difference between your collective and those at high-major schools (if any)? The biggest difference is the size of the money. The Irish Players Club is a Notre Dame NIL that supports only the football program by doing things such as selling leprechaun NFTs! The MVC is not a Power 5 football conference and we will never be able to compete at that level, but we feel that we have enough support to do what we need to do to keep Bradley relevant.

Your website appears to allow NIL deals with every member of the basketball team: why did you choose to focus on the entire team rather than just 1-2 high-profile student-athletes? Our intention is to do it the right way: we are not allowed to use it to recruit people. The key to a mid-major is to keep players at your program by giving them some money when they are freshmen, so if another school later offers them $25,000 and they are already getting $18,000 from us we think they will stick around due to the connections that we have made. However, if another school offers them $500,000 then that is another story! We have to “play old” with juniors and seniors.

You also have an FAQ regarding athletes who leave the program: how can you compete with other schools who might offer deals that are less limited in time/scope? We had a player last year named Terry Roberts who led our team in scoring before transferring to Georgia: if we had an NIL then he probably would have stayed here. If we have a player who is being offered more money by another school then we can do a “capital call” and try to raise some money to close the gap: we just hope it does not spiral out of control.

Last month former top high school prospect Emoni Bates was arrested after sheriff’s deputies found a gun in a car he was driving: how concerned are you about entering contractual relationships with teenagers who might end up behaving badly? There is a concern but it is no different than the concern of a coach when recruiting players. We tend to recruit high-quality kids so it has not been a problem so far.

You are not accepting 1-time donations but only annual donations: why did you decide to do things that way, and what kind of “priority access” will members receive? We do annual donations with a payment at the beginning of the year. We had or 1st meeting and limited it to 50 people…and it sold out the very 1st night! Going forward, we will develop our membership to include corporate donors to help expand the money base.

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Season preview: HoopsHD interviews new Sacramento State coach David Patrick

We are still a couple of months away from the tip-off of the college basketball season this fall, which means that we have plenty of time to start preparing for the action ahead. We will do so via a series of season previews featuring the best players/coaches in the country. HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel continues our coverage with new Sacramento State coach David Patrick, who talked about his famous godson and his expectations for this season.

You were born in Bermuda/raised in Australia: how did you 1st get into basketball? We did not play basketball in Bermuda and after moving to Australia I started playing Australian Rules Football. There was a basketball court near my house and I ended up falling in love with the sport.

You began your college career at Syracuse where you made the 1996 NCAA title game before a 9-PT loss to Kentucky: how close did you come to winning it all, and where does that Wildcat team (featuring 9 future NBA players!) rank among the greatest that you have ever seen? I tell the young kids now about guys like Ron Mercer/Walter McCarty but they do not know them. I think that Wildcat team was 1 of the best ever. Players do not stay in college that long any more so being in the Big East and going against future Hall of Famers like Ray Allen/Allen Iverson was a phenomenal era. Playing for Jim Boeheim then helped me as a coach now.

In 2015 you got to coach your godson Ben Simmons as an assistant at LSU: how much did you enjoy spending that year together, and how do you think he will do in Brooklyn this season? It was phenomenal to spend time with him because we are like family. It was the last time that he was not under the professional microscope and was able to just be a kid/be innocent. It was awesome to be part of his journey: he has a lot of critics but he finally has a fresh start in Brooklyn. Remember: the last time he was out for 18 months he came back as NBA ROY. Patty Mills will be a mentor to him and help him moving forward.

You won the 2017 NIT as an assistant to Jamie Dixon at TCU: what did it mean to you to win a title? We took over a team at TCU that had only won one Big 12 game the previous year so to win the NIT was huge. The team bought into what Jamie was preaching and we taught them how to win. We had guys like Desmond Bane who was not a 5-star like Ben but still made it to the NBA.

In your 1st year as head coach at UC Riverside your team’s 37.9 3P% was top-30 in the nation, and in your 2nd year your team was #8 in the nation with 60.6 PPG allowed: do you feel like you are a better offensive or defensive coach, or do you take more pride in succeeding at 1 end of the court than the other? In our heads we all think we are offensive coaches when we design plays, but everyone who has played/worked for me would call me a defensive coach. I had a lot of great mentors including Jamie/Randy Bennett: if you can defend/rebound then it is a separator.

Last April you were hired as head coach at Sacramento State: why did you take the job, and how is it going so far? This is my 2nd time around as a head coach so I do not take the opportunity lightly. There is an alignment with our president/athletic director: they understand how to build a program and will give me the resources to do so. To be in northern California near my daughters and in the great city of Sacramento: I could not be happier.

You play your home games at The Nest, which is 1 of the smallest gyms in the nation (seating capacity: 1,012): does it feel weird after starting your college career at the largest gym in the nation (Carrier Dome seating capacity: 35,642)? It is a little different! I have been in some big environments…as well as some big gyms where nobody shows up. I have been here as an opposing coach and it got loud so I hope that we have the best home-court advantage in the conference. The size does not matter: just the wins that come behind it.

Your roster is about 50% from California and 50% from foreign countries: what sort of recruiting philosophy do you have? You want to build any program from the inside out. We want to keep the best players in Sacramento here but if they leave and later enter the transfer portal then we will try to get them back. After that, via my connections in Australia, I think this is a great landing spot for foreign players. It is the closest coast to that side of the world and the weather is pretty similar to Australia. We have a history of developing players and treating them the right way.

You have previously worked with the Australian national team: do you think the team is capable of competing for an Olympic medal in 2024 with guys like Josh Giddey/Joe Ingles/Patty Mills? I think we can compete. We won the bronze in Tokyo but I tore my Achilles 2 days before we were scheduled to leave. If you look at our young talent we have guys like Jock Landale/Dyson Daniels, and if Ben joins the other veteran guys then I think we can challenge for a gold medal.

What are your goals for this season, and what are your expectations for this season? I have high expectations. I look at what Coach Tommy Lloyd did at Arizona in his 1st year by winning the Pac-12 and being ranked among the best in the nation. It takes time but we have the pieces in place. I want us to be dominant at rebounding/defense and move the needle by getting a bye in the conference tourney, because then anything can happen. We have some grad transfers/seniors so at this level you want them to win at a high level both on and off the floor.

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Name, Image, and Lots of money: HoopsHD interviews Stephen Ford of the Country Roads Trust NIL collective

The marketplace for college athletes to engage in Name/Image/Likeness (NIL) deals was created last year after the NCAA v. Alston case and now it seems like every college is ready to start spreading the wealth. There are already more than 100 “collectives” either in operation or being formed. They allow alumni/fans/whoever to donate money to assist a specific school in creating opportunities for student-athletes to make some money off of their celebrity. We have reached out to many collectives and will try to interview representatives from as many of them as possible to see how each of them operates. HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel continues our coverage with Stephen Ford of the Country Roads Trust NIL collective, who discussed what his group is about and what it has accomplished so far.

Former West Virginia athletic director Oliver Luck and Arizona Diamondbacks general managing partner Ken Kendrick co-founded an NIL collective called “Country Roads Trust” last January: how complicated was it to create (if at all), and why did they do it? It is a start-up so we had to get everything from an LLC to a website to a trademark. I had to finish the process while getting athletes on-boarded and raising money from donors. It was a pretty crazy process: we were building the plane while we were flying it!

You are the general manager/COO: what sort of responsibilities do you have? I manage a staff of 3 others. I work with brands on sponsor relationships and work with individuals on the donor side (anywhere from $5000 to 6 figures). I wear 100 different hats but so does everyone else in our office: accounting, putting together deals, etc. Our goal is to get every 1 of our student-athletes an NIL opportunity.

How much of your focus is on basketball compared to football? We focus just as much on basketball as football. We are lucky to have 2 storied programs here including a head coach in Bob Huggins who is top-5 in career wins. They are both huge sports in our state so we are lucky.

What kind of connection (if any) will your group have with former players like Jerry West or people like Coach Huggins/Athletic Director Shane Lyons? We have a good relationship with Bob and his current staff and Jerry is part of our athlete advisory committee.

What kind of deals have you been able to work out so far? We have an insurance deal and a big banking deal: they are both longtime supporters of WVU athletics. We do appearances at tailgates and community events at Ronald McDonald House.

People are obviously free to do whatever they want with their hard-earned money…but do you ever have any second thoughts about whether you should be encouraging your donors to do something else like fight cancer/reduce homelessness? My concern is with Country Roads Trust and helping our current student-athletes. Our donors support Children’s Hospital right across the street from us, but from a philanthropic standpoint when they donate to the basketball program it is to help our community efforts.

You are working with more than 100 student-athletes: why did you decide to “spread the wealth” rather than focus on helping 1-2 high-profile student-athletes? There are no other big-time/pro schools in West Virginia: we are the #1 focus for sports in the state. We have the #1 rifle program and a great women’s soccer program and a university fundraising team that allows donors to support non-revenue programs.

In June you hosted football camps for elementary/middle school students: how do you balance giving money to student-athletes with scheduling events that are open to the public? When we do these kinds of camps we have a company that sponsors it and provides an opportunity to market to the community and show some goodwill. We are providing camps to kids from 7 different states and having the sponsors underwrite all of the money for our student-athletes. We did a needs analysis of what is important: we will do camps for all kinds of sports and our student-athletes love that!

What kind of cool stuff do people get if they became 1 of your top donors? It depends: we want to give them access to our student-athletes that they might not otherwise get. We have signed memorabilia, exclusive content, pregame tailgates, suite invites, golf tournaments, etc.

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Name, Image, and Lots of money: HoopsHD interviews Thomas Dieters of the This is Sparta! NIL collective

The marketplace for college athletes to engage in Name/Image/Likeness (NIL) deals was created last year after the NCAA v. Alston case and now it seems like every college is ready to start spreading the wealth. There are already more than 100 “collectives” either in operation or being formed. They allow alumni/fans/whoever to donate money to assist a specific school in creating opportunities for student-athletes to make some money off of their celebrity. We have reached out to many collectives and will try to interview representatives from as many of them as possible to see how each of them operates. HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel continues our coverage with Tom Dieters of the This is Sparta! NIL collective, who discussed what his group is about and what it has accomplished so far.

 

Your organization (Charitable Gift America) founded an NIL collective called “This is Sparta!” last January: how complicated was it to create (if at all), and why did you do it? It was very simple to create. I started Charitable Gift America about a decade ago and we are a really sophisticated gift-giving organization. I played baseball at Michigan State and heard about a charity that was getting set up for the University of Texas, so I figured that I would just create 1 myself for the Spartans.

How much of your focus is on basketball compared to football/other sports? When we started it I assumed that football would be the big driver, which it is. What I was surprised to find is that people who were contacting me also wanted to help other programs because they thought that football already had the money that they needed. After that we looked into sports like gymnastics/softball and found that there are people who want to donate money to cover the entire roster rather than just the star PG/QB. We actually spent more time working on gymnastics than on football.

What kind of connection (if any) will your group have with people like Coach Tom Izzo/Athletic Director Alan Haller? I met with Alan recently but we are limited as to how much we can discuss. They have both been extremely cooperative to the point that they can be but would never tell me to do an NIL contract with a specific player. We are trying to amend the current NIL laws to create more transparency and want to make sure that we are going in the same direction as the athletic department.

What kind of deals have you been able to work out so far? The biggest thing we did was for the women’s gymnastics team, which was not even my radar when we began. It was borne out of some conversations I had with administrators and I realized that the biggest impact we could make on a single program was in gymnastics. We gave each of the 19 gymnasts a $5000 contract: we want to build teams more than individuals.

People are obviously free to do whatever they want with their hard-earned money…but do you ever have any second thoughts about whether you should be encouraging your donors to do something else like fight cancer/reduce homelessness? That is exactly what Charitable Gift America is built on: it is completely donor-driven. We do thousands of gifts each year for hospitals/sports programs/etc. If someone wants to give our fund money for a golf/tennis player then that is where it will go. I think it is wonderful that people can designate their money for any charity they want: we never tell donors where to give their money.

How does your own experience in gift planning give you an advantage over other NIL collectives (if at all)? We think that it is a huge advantage. You can start a charity for NIL purposes but it might be hard to maintain your status. The biggest difference is our ability to bring in assets including cash/stocks/real estate/cryptocurrency. Our sophisticated model helps donors with complicated issues that are philanthropic.

Most people assume that collectives will just be giving cash to student-athletes: how does the “life income plan” that you are offering compare to that? Life income plans are our wheelhouse. If a 75-year old donor wants to give us $100,000 while also receiving income for the rest of his life, we can do that, but can also grant the gift value to a charity/NIL designee immediately. The student-athletes receive the money but all our NIL contracts contain a component requiring them to give 5% to charity, which has created a ripple effect around the world. We had 1 young lady who gave money to an elephant preserve in Brazil and another who donated money to a foster home that her little sister lived in before being adopted!

Your goal is to offer student-athletes an “exclusive NIL contract valued at $50,000”: how did you come up with that number, and how many contracts will you be able to offer this fall? I came up with that amount after listening to a sports talk show that mentioned $50,000 was the amount being given to offensive linemen at Texas! Through conversations with leadership at Michigan State we learned they prefer that we do deals for an entire roster rather than just 1-2 profile athletes.

Earlier this month former top high school prospect Emoni Bates (who committed to Michigan State in 2020 before decommitting in 2021) was arrested after sheriff’s deputies found a gun in a car he was driving: how concerned are you about entering contractual relationships with teenagers who might end up behaving badly? It is a concern that we have talked about but there is not a whole lot that we can do about it. Some of our women golfers might qualify for Q School and have to leave their college team we are still obligated to pay them. We are unsure if we can include a morals clause and I do not know if we could even use that to get out of the payments. We certainly do not want to be tied to any criminal activity.

What kind of cool stuff do people get if they became 1 of your top donors? We are not transactional and do not want to be. I did have 1 person who donated his 2 seats to a football game and then we did a drawing for the tickets. I have not had any conversations about “What do I get if I give?” besides getting a charitable deduction.

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The Hoops HD Report: Examining New Transfer Rules

A full Hoops HD panel examines the new transfer rules, particularly the new transfer portal, and the new rules proposals that could potentially allow a player to transfer an unlimited amount of times without having to sit out a year, and the idea that a transfer player would have to be guaranteed a scholarship and a roster spot by the school they were transferring in to.  We also discuss how many players transferred after last season, and how so many of them ended up with no D1 or D2 offers.

And for all you radio lovers, below is an audio only version of the show…

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