Season preview: HoopsHD interviews new Georgia State coach Rob Lanier

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We continue our season preview coverage with new Georgia State coach Rob Lanier. The past 6 years have been arguably the best in Panthers’ history: an NIT appearance in 2014, a CIT appearance in 2017, and 3 trips to the NCAA tourney since 2015. Former coach Ron Hunter was hired at Tulane last March and Coach Lanier was chosen to replace him a couple of weeks later. HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel got to chat with Coach Lanier about starting a new job and having a great coaching staff.

In the 2002 NCAA tourney as head coach at Siena you beat Alcorn State before losing to eventual champion Maryland: what is your favorite memory from that postseason? It was a bit of a blur because we had to win 4 games in 4 days just to get in. I made a bet with my team that if we made it I would do a little dance at halfcourt. I hoped they had forgotten but they did not so I had a student manager go get my son so I could use him as a shield! I did my patented James Brown move and it was a fun time.

You later became an assistant to both Billy Donovan at Florida and Rick Barnes at Texas/Tennessee: what is the most important thing that you learned from either of these 2 great head coaches? After spending 10 years with Rick, 4 with Billy, as well as a few other years with a few other coaches, I just learned the importance of the grind/preparation. It was humbling to be around those guys because they kept working so hard. Every year is different so you have to constantly try to get better and grow.

You were hired as head coach of Georgia State in April: why did you take the job, and how is it going so far? It came out of nowhere. I was working for Rick at Tennessee and we lost to Purdue in Louisville in a heartbreaker. I was driving home with my family and licking my wounds when I got a call from Georgia State. I thought about saying no but felt that I owed it to both myself and my family to learn more about the place. I intended to say no…but after visiting the campus and meeting the administration I found a great level of commitment to the program and a vision for what would make it special for me. I was intrigued and by the time I got back into the car I called my wife and said that there was something special here. I knew that Atlanta was a great city but what mattered the most was the collective movement toward improving everything about the program. Football is definitely ascending here due to having the right leader in Shawn Elliott: it is no accident.

You lost each of your top-4 scorers from last year (Malik Benlevi/Devin Mitchell/D’Marcus Simonds/Jeff Thomas): how will you try to replace all of that offense? There is no plan because I never coached those guys so I am not replacing anything. I am just learning what our current group is capable of and we are trying to develop some leadership and help them rise to the standard that we have set for them. All I can do is coach the guys I have and I am enjoying the journey.

You have stated that player development will be at the core of your program: how do you develop your players on the court, and how do you develop them off the court? It is an everyday all-encompassing process that starts with the people you hire. We have 3 core values here: humility/respect/responsibility. It is not just a marketing tagline: it is really important to me to have young men who are humble or have the capacity to be humbled. Young men cannot get better if they think that they already have all the answers. Respect flows from a disposition of humility: you must apply a certain work ethic to everything you do and respect everyone on campus. Responsibility involves the tasks you must handle each day as well as taking accountability for your actions. I have some coaches who understand the game and can teach our guys the system while working on their individual skills. That is the basis for our team interactions and development will be a by-product.

1 of your returning players is SG Corey Allen, who sat out last year after transferring from Detroit where he was 2017 conference ROY: what kind of impact do you expect from him this season? He is a really hard worker who loves to compete so he has already established a level of consistency that I have embraced. Now it is just a matter of him applying his skill set to what we do. He is all about being a winning player.

You have some great assistant coaches including Jarvis Hayes/Cliff Warren: what do they bring to the table? I have known Cliff for a long time: we played against 1 another in college and I even made a shot in 1 game to beat him! Back in the day when we had fax machines I would fax the recap of that game to wherever he was working. He is the prototype for the kind of man I want our players to be around and is a head coach who happens to be 1 of our assistants. Chris Kreider has also been phenomenal: I first got to know him when he was recruiting my son so when this opportunity came up I thought about him due to his connections in Atlanta. He has made me look smart. I was a little more deliberate with how to fill the last spot but after communicating with Jarvis I was really taken by his message. The 1st 2 will be a great complement to Jarvis as he learns the profession. I feel like I have done something right here.

You have helped recruit 9 McDonald’s All-Americans during your career: what is the secret to being a great recruiter, and how will having a new arena (opening in 2021) help you out with that? The arena will definitely help. Recruiting is about building relationships: it takes time/effort and at the end of the day people have to trust you. There is no secret: you just have to work at it. You also have to be able to evaluate players with the clarity of how they will fit in both on and off the court. I have not always been right but I trust my evaluations of players, even if they are not McDonald’s All-Americans. You have to identify what is important to the coach, which is the process we are going through now. There is more to it then a player who can simply put the ball into the basket: we are developing a collective vision.

I know who the best athlete is in the family (your Hall of Fame cousin Bob), but are we going to see your/Bob’s alma mater (St. Bonaventure) on your schedule anytime soon?! I do not know. Scheduling is a tricky thing but any time you can get an A-10 team to play you that is great. If it makes sense in the future then we will explore it but it has to fit with what we want to do.

What are your goals for the upcoming season, and what are your expectations for the upcoming season? Right now we are trying to get these guys to work/compete at a certain level. My only goal is to achieve that: after that happens then we can start wondering what that will add up to but until then it is fruitless to figure out what you can achieve. We need to get in the condition it takes to compete, which involves mental toughness. The program has been so successful in the past that some players might just assume that it will continue, which would be a mistake.

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Season preview: HoopsHD interviews new Wofford coach Jay McAuley

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We continue our season preview coverage with new Wofford coach Jay McAuley. There were only 8 teams in the entire country last year who lost 5 or fewer games and 1 of those 8 was Wofford. The Terriers lost to 4 high-major teams in non-conference play last November/December, then went 18-0 in SoCon play, won 3 games in 3 days to clinch a conference tourney title, and beat Seton Hall by 16 PTS in the NCAA tourney before a 6-PT loss to Kentucky to end 1 of the greatest seasons in school history. HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel got to chat with Coach McAuley about starting a new job and celebrating his birthday.

You were co-captain as a senior at Georgia: what is the key to being a good leader? There has to be a sense of experience and you need a good blend of command with your voice while working hard and being consistent. You need the gift to motivate guys, which is what I tried to do despite not being a great player myself. I tried to lead by example and be all about the team, which has helped me since I became a coach. Everyone has mentors who help shape their path but my leadership skills started from an early age.

In the 2008 SEC tourney, your team won 4 games in 3 days (due to a tornado) to win the title despite going 4-12 in conference play and only having 8 healthy scholarship players: what are your memories of that wild weekend? It was something that was really special. Basketball is a great team sport so when things are clicking and you have momentum then you see the beauty of March. If you ask what changed I would say that I learned an important lesson: it is not about what you do but how you do the things that are necessary to win a game. We simplified the game and played really hard for each other. We were playing with house money after the tornado hit and the venue changed, which favored us. It was a pretty cool thing that we accomplished.

Last season your team won 30 games and went 18-0 in conference play: where does that season rank among the greatest in school history? It is certainly up there by statistical measurement: we were the only team in the nation to go undefeated in conference play (both regular season and conference tourney). You need good players to do that and we have surrounded ourselves with good people who sacrifice some things that our society right now is not used to doing. Our guys are really talented and believe in what we do. It was a fun ride and we can take a lot of good things to build on that. We are not satisfied with last year: we are a competitive program and have another level that we want to get to.

In the 2019 NCAA tourney you had a 16-PT win over Seton Hall and then a 6-PT loss to Kentucky: how close did you come to beating the Wildcats, and what did your team learn from that postseason run that will help them this year? Just being in the NCAA tourney was an incredible experience. We has such good momentum entering the tourney that there was a belief that we could go far. That final 4 minutes vs. Seton Hall where we were on fire and the fans going nuts was amazing. We were riding high and were super-close to beating Kentucky but were a little flat when we just needed to be ourselves. I take nothing away from the Wildcats: if you had told me that we would be right there at the end with a chance to win the game I would have taken that.

Last April your former boss Mike Young was hired as head coach at Virginia Tech: what makes him such a great coach, and are we going to see the Hokies on your schedule anytime soon? He is an awesome guy/incredible coach. People call him a “basketball genius” because he is a really good tactician but has a great feel for all of the components within a program. He allows others to showcase their skills/talents: he is not a dictator where it is all about him and I think he will continue that at Virginia Tech. I do not think that we will face them anytime soon but who knows.

You begin your 1st season as head coach this fall: why did you take the job, and how is it going so far? It has been great! I am lucky to have already been here and won multiple championships as an assistant. It has been a smooth transition because the players know me: it is not like I need to get the feel for a new situation. We feel that we can continue the winning tradition here and push the limits. It was a no-brainer for me and was a natural time for me to become a head coach and I think that I can do a pretty good job here.

You graduated your top-2 senior scorers from last season in Fletcher Magee/Cameron Jackson: how will you try to replace all of that offense/leadership? I tried to convince them to medically redshirt and hang onto them before they walked across the graduation stage but it did not work! We have developed 23 pro players over the past decade, which is an amazing stat. They left a work ethic that our younger guys have adopted and now it is time for the next group coming up. We have a lot of returning guards and just need our young big men to step up.

Your non-conference schedule includes games against Butler/Missouri/UNC/Duke: which of these games do you feel will present your biggest test? I was waiting for you to say that the Celtics/Lakers were on our schedule as well! We had the 6th-hardest non-conference schedule in the nation last year and it is getting harder to find teams who want to play us. Those games will help prepare us for both conference play as well as games that matter in March so that we do not blink against Seton Hall/Kentucky. We also play South Florida and will have our hands full but will prepare our best and expect to win.

You turned 36 last month: what did you do for the big day? I finished up 1 of our camps and went out to dinner with my daughter and then had a tea party at my house.

What are your goals for the upcoming season, and what are your expectations for the upcoming season? The expectation here is pretty simple: to win. I talk to our team about the daily process: as clichéd as it sounds we simply need to outwork our opponents in everything that we do. We put the work in to be confident: we do not listen to the outside noise and just try to be competitive.

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Season preview: HoopsHD interviews Wofford SR SG Nathan Hoover

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We continue our season preview coverage with Wofford SR SG Nathan Hoover. There were only 8 teams in the entire country last year who lost 5 or fewer games and 1 of those 8 was Wofford. The Terriers lost to 4 high-major teams in non-conference play last November/December, then went 18-0 in SoCon play, won 3 games in 3 days to clinch a conference tourney title, and beat Seton Hall by 16 PTS in the NCAA tourney before a 6-PT loss to Kentucky to end 1 of the greatest seasons in school history. HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel got to chat with Nathan about being a great shooter and having a new coach.

You grew up in Memphis: what made you choose Wofford? The previous coach came to my high school and also my house. When I came here for my visit and saw the new gym that they were building it just felt like the best fit.

You played in all 33 games as a freshman and were named to the conference All-Freshman team: how were you able to come in and contribute right from the start? I put in a lot of work during the offseason and got into the gym a lot. I started playing better and adjusting to the college game as the season progressed. Eventually I felt as comfortable as I was back in high school.

Last season your team won 30 games and went 18-0 in conference play: where does that season rank among the greatest in school history? I believe it is 1 of the top seasons ever around here. I know there were some past conference champs who should have won a game in the NCAA tourney, but our conference last year was very difficult and we won several Tier 1 games. I think we are the best.

In the 2019 NCAA tourney you scored 18 PTS in a win over Seton Hall and 19 PTS in a 6-PT loss to Kentucky: how close did you come to beating the Wildcats, and what did you learn from that postseason run that will help you this year? We were very close to beating Kentucky: it came down to a couple of possessions. I played well in our final few games so that has helped my confidence out a lot, which is the best thing to have. I am very excited to see what the future holds both for me and the team.

Last year you shot 90.6 FT% and led the conference with 46.9 3P%: what is the secret to being a great shooter? The main thing is to get up enough shots to be able to shoot well during games when you are being guarded and coming off of screens. I focus on repetition until it becomes 2nd nature.

Last April your former coach Mike Young was hired as head coach at Virginia Tech: were you surprised that he left, and how is the transition going under new coach Jay McAuley? I was not surprised that he left: I was happy for him to get a job at a big school and I wish him success. It was rough for a couple of weeks because we did not know who we were going to get to replace him but it has been great to have Coach McAuley. He has brought in some amazing assistants who have connected with us and I feel very good about our entire coaching staff.

Your non-conference schedule includes games against Butler/Missouri/UNC/Duke: which of these games do you feel will present your biggest test? I do not think that any 1 game is the hardest. We beat North Carolina at their place 2 years ago so we are prepared to play anyone at any place. We will play as hard as we can to give us the best chance to win no matter who the opponent is.

You graduated your top-2 senior scorers from last season in Fletcher Magee/Cameron Jackson: how will you try to replace all of that offense? We have great players coming back who were big keys last year so we all have a lot of confidence/trust in each other.

You are 1 of 3 seniors on the roster: how much pressure is there on you to be a leader this year? I have been leading my teams all through high school and had a pretty big role last year as well. I am very energetic and people seem to like that.

What are your goals for the upcoming season, and what are your expectations for the upcoming season? I want to carry our team as far as we can go. I would like to be nationally recognized even while playing at a mid-major school and become conference POY. Hopefully we can go even farther as a team than last year.

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The Hoops HD Report: September Session (Pay For Play)

Chad and the panel, some of whom are legal experts, take a look at the House Bill in California that will allow student-athletes to make money off of their names, images, and likenesses, and the NCAA’s objections to it.  We look at what’s going on, debate and discuss the legal ramifications of it, talk about what (if anything) the NCAA can do about it, and then talk about how much it could potentially change college athletics.

 

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

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Season preview: HoopsHD interviews Evansville coach Walter McCarty

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We continue our season preview coverage with Evansville coach Walter McCarty. It is fascinating to look back at the 1996 Kentucky Wildcat championship roster and see how many of the players on that team went to to have further success as players and/or coaches. Nazr Mohammed won the 2005 NBA title as a player for San Antonio, Derek Anderson/Antoine Walker teamed up to win the 2006 NBA title as players for Miami, Allen Edwards won the 2017 CBI as head coach at Wyoming, and Mark Pope was named head coach at BYU last April. Evansville hopes that Walter McCarty can add to that legacy: after spending close to 2 decades as an NBA player/assistant coach, the Aces hired him as head coach in 2018 and he enters this season having lost 3 of his top-5 scorers from last year. HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel got to chat with Coach McCarty about winning an NCAA title and coaching his hometown team.

In 1994 as a player at Kentucky you scored 23 PTS including a 3-PT shot with 19 seconds left to overcome a 31-PT deficit en route to a 4-PT win at LSU (which remains the biggest 2nd half rally in NCAA history), and in Game 3 of the 2002 Eastern Conference Finals as a member of the Celtics you had 4 REB as your team overcame a 21-PT 4th quarter deficit en route to a 4-PT win over New Jersey (which set a record for the biggest comeback in NBA playoff history): what is the secret to coming all the way back to win a game? You need guys who are really connected and care about each other as a team. The biggest thing is to be tough enough to come together and get the job done.

In the 1996 NCAA tourney title game you had 7 REB in a 9-PT win over Syracuse: what did it mean to you to win a title? It was awesome! We learned a lot the previous year when we thought we would win it all but fell a little short against North Carolina. It meant a lot because we worked really hard and the Kentucky fans were ready because it had been a long time since they had won a title.

You spent 10 years in the NBA: what is the biggest difference between college basketball and pro basketball? In the pros you have guys who are taller/more athletic and their response time is quicker. The pro game is faster/stronger and is the highest level of basketball: you cannot get it unless you are there in person.

After retiring you became an assistant to both Rick Pitino at Louisville as well as Brad Stevens with the Celtics: what is the most important thing that you learned from either of these 2 great head coaches? Both guys prepare better than anyone I have ever seen, which is something they have in common. I learned the importance of a good work ethic from Coach P, and Brad taught me how to keep my composure and treat my team well.

You were born in Evansville: what does it mean to you to be coaching your hometown team? It is awesome and I am thrilled/appreciative every day: each time I drive to work I see something that brings up a fond memory. It is an honor to be back here.

Last year you started 9-9 before losing 12 of your final 14 games: what happened? I love my guys and they played hard for me but we just did not have enough talent. We played hard/played together but knew that it would be a tough season.

Your 1st road game of the year is a trip to Lexington in November: will you treat it as just another game or do you think that it will be a very special moment? It is always a special moment to be in Lexington because I had the time of my life there for 4 years. It will be a businesslike approach as we try to get a win but will also be fun to see my friends.

You lost a pair of experienced assistant coaches last month in Todd Lickliter (who retired) and Matthew Graves (who became an assistant at Xavier): how comforting is it to be bringing in Bennie Seltzer (who was an assistant to Kelvin Sampson at Oklahoma and an assistant to Tom Crean at Marquette/Indiana) as 1 of your new assistants? It is very reassuring. I believe in Bennie and love what he has been able to do for this team. His basketball knowledge is on another level so I have already seen the tremendous impact that he will have.

You lost 3 of your top-5 scorers from last year (Marty Hill/Shea Feehan/Dainius Chatkevicius): how will you try to replace all of that offense? We had some guys who sat out last year so we will not have any problem scoring the basketball: I am not concerned with that at all.

What are your goals for the upcoming season, and what are your expectations for the upcoming season? Our goal is to be the most physical/connected team as well as the team that plays the hardest. If we can do that on a daily basis then we will have a fun season.

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Season preview: HoopsHD interviews James Madison assistant coach Ashley Perez

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We continue our season preview coverage with James Madison assistant coach Ashley Perez. It is hard to find a mid-major assistant coach in either the men’s or women’s game with more on-court experience than Coach Perez. She started in the Big East, scored 20 PTS in an NCAA tourney game for JMU, played pro basketball overseas, and was even part of her country’s national team. Now she is an assistant coach at her alma mater for a squad that won 29 games last season and returns each of its top-5 scorers. HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel got to chat with Coach Perez about playing in the NCAA tourney and how she likes her new job.

You began your college career at St. John’s: why did you decide to transfer, and what made you choose JMU? After a year and a half I did not feel like St. John’s was the right place for me for a number of reasons. JMU recruited me out of high school and ever since then the people here have proven to be supportive and have helped me grow tremendously.

In the 2015 NCAA tourney you scored 20 PTS/6-9 3PM in 24 minutes off the bench in a 10-PT loss to Ohio State: where does Kelsey Mitchell (who scored 23 PTS and is now the #2 scorer in NCAA history with 3402 career PTS) rank among the greatest players that you have ever faced? Playing against Kelsey was a great experience! Playing at St. John’s/JMU/internationally I have seen a lot of phenomenal players…and Kelsey Mitchell is without a doubt one of the better scorers I have ever faced.

In December of 2015 you scored a career-high 33 PTS/7-13 3PM in 34 minutes in a 7-PT loss to West Virginia: was it just 1 of those scenarios where every shot you put up seemed to go in because you were “in the zone”? I always felt like I had something to prove when playing against bigger-name teams. I was extremely focused but played really loose so that helped.

In the 2016 CAA quarterfinals you had 21 PTS/11 REB/3 STL and scored the final 7 PTS in a 3-PT win over Charleston: where does that rank among the best all-around games of your career? That game is really memorable for me but I am not sure that I would consider it to be one of my best all-around games.

You were an 83.9% career FT shooter at JMU: what is the secret to making FTs? Being extremely relaxed and trusting the countless free throws I have practiced so that I would make them when they counted.

You played pro basketball in Ireland and played for the Puerto Rican national team at the 2018 FIBA World Cup: what is the biggest difference between basketball in the US vs. basketball outside the US? There are a number of rules that I can specifically think of but the biggest differences are the physicality and the vast number of game styles. A lot of players overseas have their own style that is different from what I have seen here in America.

You graduated in 2016 and got your master’s degree in 2019: how much importance do you place on academics? I have grown to understand the importance of academics and the importance of personal growth. In order to be a well-rounded/understanding person it is necessary to be a lifelong learner.

Last June you were named an assistant at your alma mater to 1 of your own former assistant coaches (Sean O’Regan): why did you take the job, and how is it going so far? I took this job because of how important this program is to me and I think that I can help the program continue to grow. So far it has been challenging but rewarding.

You went 29-6 last year and return each of your top-5 scorers (Kamiah Smalls/Jackie Benitez/Lexie Barrier/Devon Merritt/Kayla Cooper-Williams): how crucial will all of that experience be to your team’s success this year? Those 5 seniors have worked extremely hard to be in the situation that they are currently in. They have experience in a number of situations which will help us hopefully tie it all together this year for a CAA Championship. They are all great kids who continue to work extremely hard: that is all that you can ask for.

What are your goals for the upcoming season, and what are your expectations for the upcoming season? Our goals are always to win a CAA Championship and make the NCAA Tournament while developing our girls to be their best. We want to continue to be seen and grow on a national scale and our seniors will be able to lead us toward that.

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