Foreign.
Speaker BThe Hoop Heads podcast is brought to you by Head Start Basketball Fork Union opened up in 2021 I jumped all over that.
Speaker BI really was looking to do something different.
Speaker BI had already rebuilt programs at Glenville and West Virginia Tech.
Speaker BI didn't really want a small college rebuild again.
Speaker BI either wanted to be a Division 1 assistant or Division 1 advisor.
Speaker BSo when Fork Union opened up, I said, wow, that's something that I think I would like something different.
Speaker CBob Williams is the head coach of Fork Union Military Academy's postgraduate boys basketball program.
Speaker CUnder Williams leadership, Fork Union has achieved an impressive 102:44 record over four seasons.
Speaker CWilliams brought 24 years of collegiate head coaching experience to Fork Union, including a successful tenure at West Virginia Tech University from 2002 to 2019.
Speaker CAt West Virginia Tech, he led the Golden Bears to the NAI national tournament in 2015, 2017, 2018 and 2019.
Speaker CWilliams accomplishments at West Virginia Tech include being named Coach of the Year three times, recording his 403rd career win, producing 14 All Americans, and securing three conference championships.
Speaker CPrior to West Virginia Tech, Williams was the head coach at Glenville State College from 1997 to 2002 and the head coach at Jefferson Community College from 1995 to 1997.
Speaker CWilliams has also served as the associate Head coach at Jefferson and assistant coach at NCAA Division 3 Potsdam State and as the head coach at Indian River High School in New York.
Speaker CHis coaching journey began as a student assistant coach at Ithaca College.
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Speaker ABasketball coach at Gettysburg College and you're listening to the Hoop Heads Podcast.
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Speaker CDownload Gamechanger now on iOS or Android and take your coaching to the next level with Film room on gamechanger, Game Changer Stream Score Connect Grab your notebook and pen before you listen to this episode with Bob Williams, head coach of Fork Union Military Academy's postgraduate boys basketball program.
Speaker AHello and welcome to the Hoop Heads podcast.
Speaker AIt's Mike Clemsing here without my co host Jason Sunkel tonight, but I am pleased to be joined by Bob Williams, the head postgraduate coach at Fork Union Military Academy.
Speaker ABob, welcome to the Hoopetz Pod.
Speaker BThank you for having me on Mike.
Speaker AExcited to have you on.
Speaker ALooking forward to diving into all of the diverse things that you've been able to do in your career at various levels.
Speaker ALet's start by going back in time to when you were a kid.
Speaker ATell me about your childhood growing up with the game of basketball.
Speaker AWhat made you fall in love with it?
Speaker BWell, my father was a longtime basketball coach, college coach, junior college level and high school level in, in New York State where I'm from, upstate New York.
Speaker BAnd so I became a gym rat, you know, at a young age and tag along and was the ball boy at his for Jefferson Community College where I later played and coached and with my two brothers and we had the number 1, 2 and 3 on our shirts for ball boy 1, 2 and 3.
Speaker BAnd we sat on the bench and it was quite an education really to see back in those days in the, in the early 70s and late 70s 80s junior college basketball was really good in New York State and one of the best areas in the country at the time.
Speaker BSo I got, got a good, got to see a lot of good basketball be around my father who later went on to be a Hall of Fame coach in New York State and learn the game and, and just my father, he tells the story that when I was about 13, I was watching probably Notre Dame and UCLA play and Game of the Week and, and was recognizing what defenses were being played and stuff like that.
Speaker BSo I think at a young age I, I decided I, that's probably what was in my blood and I wanted to go into coaching eventually.
Speaker AContrast for me the way that you grew up in the game as a player and obviously with your dad being a coach had a big influence on you.
Speaker ABut when you think about the way that the players that you coach today, how they grow up in the game and just how the, the environment around basketball has changed From a youth, grassroots, obviously, a lot of pickup basketball back in the day when you and I are growing up, versus the way that it is today.
Speaker ABut just give me your thoughts and just compare and contrast how you grew up in the game versus how your guys that you're coaching today grow up in it.
Speaker BYeah, when, when you and I grew up, Mike, it was your parents sent you outside to play all day.
Speaker BIf it was summertime, you went out in the morning, you probably played pick up baseball and then pick up basketball.
Speaker BIf it was in the fall, maybe some football in the backyard or you went down to the schoolyard and you played baseball or basketball.
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BAnd so we would be out there all day until dinner time, you know, and then after dinner maybe go out back and turn the lights on to shoot outside or play two on two or whatever.
Speaker BAnd so, yeah, I played a crazy amount of pickup basketball growing up in high school and college, and I was fortunate enough to play four years of high school basketball and three years of college basketball and.
Speaker BBut always was looking for a place.
Speaker BI was, I was what, that, that guy in, in our town, Watertown, New York, where I'm from.
Speaker BA city, small city, about 30,000.
Speaker BBut I was the guy who called and arranged the pickup games and left voice messages on for every player and said, hey, we're playing at 6:00 at Wiley tonight, or we're playing at 6:00 at the Salvation army or at such and such school and.
Speaker BOr outdoors, courts, fairgrounds.
Speaker BAnd then you call, try to call 15 players and hoping that 10 would show up.
Speaker BAnd they usually did.
Speaker BAnd we had good runs and it was great childhood and great memories and, you know, compared to now, you know, my son just finished his college career and, and I probably can count on, on one hand how many times he's played outsides, you know, pick up.
Speaker BKids are afraid to play outside because they think they might get hurt nowadays.
Speaker BBut it's a different world.
Speaker BEverything's changed and, and everything's got to be organized, you know.
Speaker BSee, I don't think kids play a lot of pickup anymore.
Speaker BWhere they organize, it has to be organized for them on teams or summer leagues or for coaches.
Speaker BGot to bring them in and kind of make them do it.
Speaker BBut it's definitely different nowadays.
Speaker BAnd kids seem, I think kids, back when I was growing up, you know, I played so much, probably too much.
Speaker BI still worked on my ball handling and shooting on my own.
Speaker BBut kids nowadays, they all have trainers and they work on their skill development constantly or strength training or, you Know, and those types of things.
Speaker BAnd we didn't have this.
Speaker BThe trainers back then or the.
Speaker BThe strength training techniques that they have today.
Speaker BAnd so they have some advantages, but I think maybe they work on skill too much.
Speaker BAnd back then, we probably played too much because we just enjoyed playing.
Speaker AYeah, that's a very good description of the way that the game has changed.
Speaker AI think certainly one of the things that I've talked to several coaches about is just the fact that when you look at, let's just say, the average high school team, and you think about the guy who was maybe the 10th or 11th man on your high school team, probably was a kid who maybe wasn't very skilled, maybe was a big football guy that just set some screens and bang people around.
Speaker AAnd now you look at the 10th or 11th kid on a lot of high school teams, and they're very, very, very skilled, and the shooting and the ball handling and those kinds of things that you develop by working with the trainer, I think are off the charts in terms of that skill development.
Speaker AAnd yet, at the same time, I think you talked about it in terms of playing a lot of pickup ball.
Speaker AI think that there was a higher, just in general, a basketball IQ or maybe an understanding of some things, maybe the tricks of the trade that you or I developed by playing with guys who were older than us or bigger than us and pushed us around.
Speaker AAnd so I think there's.
Speaker AThere's positives to both.
Speaker AI always say that I'm.
Speaker AI'm glad I grew up in the era that I did, not that I wouldn't have enjoyed the era of being able to go and play AAU and play in nice gyms and not have to be running up and down on the asphalt all day and putting the shoe goo on the bottom of my shoes to keep those things going so I can continue to play.
Speaker ABut it's definitely a different atmosphere, certainly today for kids growing up in the game that it was back when.
Speaker AWhen you were playing and when I was growing up, too.
Speaker ATell me about the influence of your dad on you as a coach.
Speaker AWhen you think about growing up watching him and the way that he went about his business, what's one or two things that you still carry with you today that you feel like are a part of you as a coach that you got from him?
Speaker BI think he's.
Speaker BHe was somewhat of a player's coach in that he, He.
Speaker BHe believed in players and he gave them the green light, and he was more of an offensive coach.
Speaker BI'm probably more of A defensive guy myself in my career, but he was a very good bench coach and I, so I got a great seat watching him work the officials and communicate with the players and communicate in huddles and change defenses and, and change strategies.
Speaker BAnd back in those days watching him coach, you know, there was no shot clock or three point shot until later in his career.
Speaker BBut so when I was a kid there was no shot clock.
Speaker BSo you would see sometimes they would go to four corners, stall, you know, and so you'd see these different types of strategies, especially back in those days.
Speaker BAnd, and, and so I think that, you know, bench coaching, I think he was his strength in game adjustments and in game coaching and, and he coached for 27 years at Jefferson Community College and the all time wins leader there in the New York State hall of Fame.
Speaker BAnd he coached four years before that in high school and he was a junior college all American at Broome Community College, first team.
Speaker BThen he played at Lamar University in Texas.
Speaker BAnd so he had a great playing career and great coaching career as well.
Speaker BAnd so I, I learned that I think.
Speaker BAnd he was, he was a very good shooting coach.
Speaker BHe always had good shooting teams and they, they did a lot, they focused a lot on shooting in practice and it carried over into the games and, but he had some really good teams and good players over the years combined from recruiting in New York State, downstate, in New York City, Long island and then in the cities Syracuse and Binghamton and Buffalo and Rochester and Albany and upstate New York.
Speaker BAnd it was a joy to be around.
Speaker BMy father's still living and it retired and with my mom down in Florida.
Speaker BAnd so it, you know, a lot of things rubbed off just from tagging along to the gym, you know, and being in the gym all day Saturday and staying up late and then when they had road games, running into, knocking on his bedroom door to see if they won the night before, you know, so that's kind of how I grew up.
Speaker BAnd I grew up in a snow, Snowtown area, Watertown, New York and where a lot of my friends were on the ski slopes and, but I was in the gym all the time and, and couldn't, couldn't have been happier.
Speaker AWhen you started your coaching career, how often did you talk to your dad to bounce things off of him?
Speaker BI think he was more of a dad that encouraged me.
Speaker BYou know, we, we talked strategy a little bit, but not a ton.
Speaker BWhen, when I was a young coach, he retired in, in 1995 and then he was the athletic director and so he hired Me as his successor.
Speaker BSo 95, 96, and 96, 97.
Speaker BIt was the two years that I coached, right after he coached 27 years and we had some success, and he.
Speaker BSo he got to see this, see me coach that first year.
Speaker BAnd then the next year he moved to Florida and retired and.
Speaker BBut, you know, I know he watches all the games.
Speaker BHe still watches my games now here at Fork Union and watches my son's games.
Speaker BAnd, you know, it's always tough when you.
Speaker BIt's like, I, I think it was harder for me when I watched my son's games or my dad's games.
Speaker BIt was harder on me than my own games, you know, And I think it's the same for, for my father.
Speaker BNo stress when he was coaching, but when he was watching my team play, a lot of stress.
Speaker BAnd same when he came to see me play in high school and stuff.
Speaker BAnd it's funny how that works.
Speaker AYou want to have a little bit of control, right.
Speaker AWhen you're just sitting there in the stands and you're watching somebody else do it.
Speaker ANo control over what's going to happen.
Speaker AAnd when, at least when you're coaching or when you were playing, you feel like you had some control over the outcome.
Speaker AWhen you're just sitting in the stands, just an observer during that time, for sure.
Speaker BAbsolutely.
Speaker BAnd you, you know, you want your loved ones to do well.
Speaker AWhen you went to school, did you.
Speaker AWere you thinking that because of your dad's experience at the college level that you knew you wanted to coach college basketball?
Speaker AWere you at all thinking ever about, hey, maybe I'm going to teach and coach at the high school level, or maybe you weren't even thinking necessarily that coaching was going to be your main profession.
Speaker AJust what was your mindset as you entered college?
Speaker BI knew I wanted to coach college basketball as I entered college, and I knew I.
Speaker BI had to get a degree, a bachelor's degree to make that happen?
Speaker BI wasn't the most stellar student, and I had to work especially at the maths and sciences because I was in physical education.
Speaker BAnd so I had my ups and downs academically and then.
Speaker BAnd I wasn't the most mature student in college.
Speaker BYou know, I was more of a social guy and didn't miss many social activities at Ithaca College, where I went, where I graduated from.
Speaker BBut, yeah, I knew I wanted to.
Speaker BTo be a college basketball coach.
Speaker BAnd I, I actually played three years, played two years for my dad at Jefferson Community College, and then one year at Ithaca College, and then I became a student coach.
Speaker BFor my last two years at Ithaca College.
Speaker BSo that, that kind of helped me be get the fir.
Speaker BMy first job was the head coach at head boys basketball coach at Indian River High School in Northern New York State.
Speaker BAnd I did that for two years.
Speaker BAnd so that was my first job.
Speaker BAnd after that I, we weren't very good and, and I said I need to be able to get to a place where I can recruit my players and pick my players.
Speaker BSo I, I went to the college level.
Speaker BI went to Potsdam State College in upstate New York and worked for a Hall of Fame coach there and Jerry Welch and I, I stayed there for four years and that was, that was a great learning experience as well.
Speaker ASo tell me a little bit.
Speaker ALet's go back to the student.
Speaker AYou know, the student coaching.
Speaker AWhen you're at Ithaca those last two years, what does that look like for you, going to school and being a part of the coaching staff?
Speaker AHow integrated were you into what the staff was doing?
Speaker AWere you, would you have considered yourself completely immersed in the coaching staff or were you still kind of looked at as being a guy who was sort of on the side?
Speaker AJust what was that experience like for you in terms of how immersed you were, what you were able to see, what you were able to learn during those two years?
Speaker BYeah, Tom Baker was the head coach at Ithaca when I went to school there and, and I learned a lot from him.
Speaker BHe was very organized.
Speaker BHis practices were very organized and detail oriented.
Speaker BAnd I played one year and I didn't get to play that much.
Speaker BI was like third string point guard.
Speaker BSo I, I just, I, I decided I would go to coach and say can I be a student coach in the program?
Speaker BMaybe I can help the program better that way and then prepare me for my coaching career.
Speaker BAnd it was, ended up being a good decision.
Speaker BI, I was the varsity student assistant coach and I didn't have a ton of input because they had a full time assistant and two graduate assistants ahead of me.
Speaker BBut it was still good to be around all of those good people that were very good coaches and then, and also helped coach the JV basketball team.
Speaker BSo that really helped probably more than being the varsity student coach because I got to be able to be on the court and teach and, and, and things like that.
Speaker BSo that was, it was.
Speaker BAll in all it was a great experience and a, it helped me for the next step.
Speaker AWhat part of coaching do you feel like you took to the most?
Speaker ANaturally, that came to you pretty easily.
Speaker AWhether you want to talk about just relationships with players you want to talk about player development, you want to talk about X's and O's, you want to talk about something else.
Speaker AWhat, what did you feel like just clicked for you right away.
Speaker BThat's hard to pinpoint, but I would say just.
Speaker BI've always prided myself being a good professional coach.
Speaker BAnd as far as being able to communicate with people all, you know, recruits, coaches, whoever, administrators, decision makers and.
Speaker BAnd everybody that you met along the way, whether you're, wherever you've gone and wherever the basketball is, has allowed you to travel to.
Speaker BAnd it's take can take you to amazing places and meet amazing people.
Speaker BBut I think just maintaining professionalism is one thing that I've probably prided myself in.
Speaker BAnd treating people the right way, always treating everybody with a respect, probably just from being around good people and having great parents, you know, that has.
Speaker BHas allowed me to.
Speaker BAnd I think people, you know, there's an old saying, people won't remember what you said to them, but they'll always remember how you made them feel.
Speaker BAnd I think it's just kind of the way I've lived my life.
Speaker BA good Catholic boy from northern New York State and good, you know, Christian.
Speaker ALifestyle, knowing that you wanted to coach at the college level when you graduate and you get that job at Indian river, just tell me about the process of how that came to pass and what your impressions were of coaching at the high school level maybe compared to what you thought.
Speaker AAnd obviously you're a pretty young guy at that point as a head coach.
Speaker ASo what do you remember about that experience?
Speaker BWell, I.
Speaker BI vividly remember sitting in my apartment bedroom typing a letter to the principal at Indian river and on an old typewriter in 1988, in the spring of 1988, and mailing that letter, applying for the vacant position of head boys basketball coach at Indian River High School.
Speaker BAnd the guy that I mailed the letter to turned out to be one of my great mentors, Steve Van Dusen.
Speaker BSteve was a longtime family friend and also a successful high school coach in that area.
Speaker BAnd then he moved into administration.
Speaker BHe was the principal now at Indian River.
Speaker BAnd Steve tried to talk me out of the varsity job.
Speaker BHe knew I wasn't ready.
Speaker BI, of course, I'm 23.
Speaker BI thought I was ready for the job and in no way shape or form really was I.
Speaker BBut, you know, you couldn't tell me that I couldn't be the head coach, the varsity team.
Speaker BAnd he tried to get me to take the JV job to start out with.
Speaker BI said no.
Speaker BSo he Ended up letting me be the varsity coach, and I replaced a very successful individual there.
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BAnd there wasn't much left in the cupboard when he retired.
Speaker BAnd so, needless to say, it was.
Speaker BIt was a little frustrating not winning.
Speaker BAnd, you know, when you're 23 and you think you got everything figured out and you got all the answers and you, you know, you can coach anybody under the table and.
Speaker BAnd then you find out you're not as good as you thought because you're not winning, you know, and, you know, it was my.
Speaker BI would complain to my mom.
Speaker BI hate losing mom.
Speaker BAnd she would be like, rob, you can't make chicken salad out of chicken.
Speaker BYou know what?
Speaker BRight?
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BBut it was still, all in all, as I look back at it, as a blessing, everything was a blessing.
Speaker BAnd Hubie Brown, the great Hubie Brown, he said many times, I've heard him at coaches clinics, and he said, I hope you lose early in your career so you will learn how to win.
Speaker BAnd instead of getting spoiled and with winning early on.
Speaker BAnd there's.
Speaker BThere's something to be said for that.
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BBut yeah, it was two good years there of cutting my teeth and then learning about life and basketball.
Speaker AHow does the opportunity then at Potsdam come to you?
Speaker BAnd so when I left Indian river, you know, I was looking to get to the college level, and I was look.
Speaker BLooking around in Potsdam States.
Speaker BThe second assistant there had just left and went to another school.
Speaker BAnd so I applied at Potsdam.
Speaker BJerry Welsh was the head coach there at the time.
Speaker BJerry had won two national championships in Division 3 at Potsdam, including an 85, 86 team that went undefeated, I think 33.
Speaker BAnd, oh, their team was amazing.
Speaker BSo he had great teams and five Final Fours.
Speaker BAnd so he brought me up, I interviewed, and I had been working.
Speaker BI know you worked camps, and I was working camps at that time, too.
Speaker BIn the summer, you know, you're working as many weeks as you can.
Speaker BI was working at Villanova, worked Rolly Massimino's camps, and Jay Wright was the third assistant and was running the camps at the time.
Speaker BAnd I asked Jay if he would make a phone call to Jerry Welsh for me.
Speaker BAnd he brought me in his office, and he was nice enough to call and recommended me for that job.
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BAnd it was Jay.
Speaker BJay.
Speaker BI don't know if he's from.
Speaker BHe used to Coach in Division 3.
Speaker BStarted out Division 3 up in New York State, I think at University of Rochester, maybe.
Speaker BAnd so Jay called and I ended up interviewing and getting the job.
Speaker BAnd, you know, it was one of those jobs.
Speaker BIt was $2,500, or maybe not even that was $2,000.
Speaker BA dorm room at age 25 and no meal plan.
Speaker BAnd you're expected to be in the office at 9am and don't be late.
Speaker BAnd, and then head coach of the JV basketball team and varsity assistant.
Speaker BAnd Bill Mitchell was the top assistant then.
Speaker BAnd, and we had great staff.
Speaker BWe probably had four or five assistant coaches and a great facilities.
Speaker B5,000 students at the school, maybe a little more good college town.
Speaker BClarkson University there also in the same town.
Speaker BAnd St.
Speaker BLawrence University's down the road and learned a ton of basketball from Jerry Welch.
Speaker BJerry's still living and Jerry's in the New York State hall of Fame also.
Speaker BAnd, and I didn't mention that I played for a great high school coach, Lou Kibling at Watertown High School, and he's in the New York State hall of Fame.
Speaker BCoach Kimling passed away a couple years ago and Jerry Welsh is still living and retired in Raleigh, North Carolina.
Speaker BHe, he went on to scout in the NBA, but after the first year at Potsdam State, Jerry was.
Speaker BWas offered and took the Iona College job.
Speaker BAnd kind of a risk for him to take over a struggling Mac job like that, but he took it.
Speaker BAnd I remember, I remember him telling the story of the ad says, why would we take a chance on you, a Division 3 coach, to come here to Iona?
Speaker BAnd Jerry Welch looked at him and said, I'm the one taking the chance here.
Speaker BI have a very strong program here.
Speaker BYou know, he's got two national titles and.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker BAnd five Final Fours and countless All Americans and pros and, and so he really was the one taking a chance.
Speaker BAnd, and he went to Iona and I stayed at Potsdam and Bill Mitchell was elevated to head coach and I stayed three more years and worked under Bill Mitchell there and became the top assistant and the recruiting coordinator.
Speaker BAnd so in Division 3.
Speaker BThing about Division 3 is you're recruiting every single day.
Speaker BWe had a sign in our office from the Long Island Profile Recruiting Service that said recruit daily or parish.
Speaker BAnd it's pretty accurate because that's why Division Threes, I mean, they get good players, they recruit all year round, whereas Division Twos will wait so kind of right now, this time of year.
Speaker BAnd, and Division Ones now with roster management, they have to go year round too.
Speaker BBut so it was a great experience just from learning how to recruit and going on the road for days and weeks, weeks at a time around New York State.
Speaker BAnd, and it was a great experience and coached the JV team for two years.
Speaker BSo while I was learning how to be a recruiter, I also was able to hone my skills as a head coach for two years.
Speaker AI think those reps, right.
Speaker AAs a head coach are really valuable.
Speaker AAnd sometimes I know that from my own experience when I was the varsity assistant coach, that there was one year out of the stretch of whatever, 13 or 14 years that I was the assistant varsity coach where I coached the JV team because our JV coach had taken another position and I was completely rusty at making in game decisions.
Speaker AYou talked about how one of the strengths of your dad was being a great in game coach.
Speaker AAnd I know that year I was not a great in game coach.
Speaker AAnd it definitely took me a little while to be able to sort of remember that, hey, I got to be the guy that makes the decision about when to call a timeout or I've got to be the guy that makes the decision about who's summoned in the game or I've got to make a decision about are we going to change what we're doing here in reaction to what our opponent's trying to do.
Speaker AAnd I think sometimes when you're an assistant and you don't ever really get those opportunities to make those decisions, those skills can get rusty pretty fast.
Speaker AAnd I definitely found that for myself that even though I was coaching, I was in it every single day as an assistant.
Speaker AIt's completely different once you sort of slide over and everybody knows that.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ABut when you're even talking about just taking over, in your case a college JV program, or for me, taking over a high school JV program for a year.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AYou get those reps that I think ultimately become much more valuable as you move on in your career.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd just moving one seat over to the hot seat can, can mean all the difference.
Speaker BAnd, and we've seen over the years many, many coaches that have at the college level aim in high school too, where a coach has sat next to a great coach for years and then when they get their chance, they haven't been as successful.
Speaker BBut, you know, not, I'm not saying everybody, but that has happened and now talking about honing your skills.
Speaker BSo one of the ways I think really benefited me to become a head coach was working basketball camps.
Speaker BAnd so you're in, you're teaching in stations, you know, in an intense environment.
Speaker BYou're, you're working with kids and trying to teach them the fundamentals of, of whether it's blocking out or how to V cut and get Open and getting triple threat or how to defend a screen or shell drill and then.
Speaker BAnd then coaching a team.
Speaker BAnd while you're at it, you know, while you're 21, 22, 23, 25 years old or whatever.
Speaker BAnd so I think that's a great way just in camps where coaches can hone their skills and without even being a head coach, maybe you're getting that head coaching type of experience of teaching and coaching a team.
Speaker AWhat was your favorite camp you worked at?
Speaker BI enjoyed Villanova.
Speaker BI think I worked like three weeks each summer.
Speaker BAnd in between the weeks, we would, some of us coaching buddies, we would go rent a house down at the Jersey shore, you know, or something like that.
Speaker BAnd so that, that was probably the most fun I've had.
Speaker BAnd Roll used to every night Rollie would, Massimino would.
Speaker BHe had hundreds of coaches, big camps.
Speaker BThese were back in the days where individual camps were huge.
Speaker BAnd so he, every night he would take care of the coaches and he would have a keg of beer and.
Speaker BAnd then he'd bring in, you know, tons of pizzas.
Speaker BAnd then whoever was speaking the next day, say it was Chuck Daly was speaking to the camp the next day.
Speaker BHe would come in the night before, spend time with Rollie and then.
Speaker BAnd, and speak to the coaches, you know, in a coaches type clinic setting.
Speaker BThat was really neat.
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BAnd also Rollie Massimino, he didn't use Villanova's food.
Speaker BHe brought his own food service in.
Speaker BSo they brought their own truck in and they had lobster and steak.
Speaker BAnd for the campers, I mean, it was amazing and it was really good.
Speaker BSo there was some fringe benefits there and.
Speaker BBut that was always fun.
Speaker BAnd one of my favorite camps though is the five star camp.
Speaker BI didn't work the camp.
Speaker BI had a couple assistant coaches of mine worked the camp.
Speaker BBut they, I would love, I'd love to go to Honesdale in New York or in Pennsylvania, Honesdale, and the outdoor cabins and outdoor courts and watch people like Rashid Wallace and those guys play and, and then.
Speaker BOr go to Pitt Pittsburgh and see pit three at five star, which was a big time week.
Speaker BThose, those were fun to go recruit at and then socialize, meet people and network and.
Speaker BAnd so I enjoyed those camps for sure.
Speaker AFunny when I think back to the top of our conversation, right, about just the different way that players grow up in the game today versus the way that players grew up in the game when you and I were kids.
Speaker AAnd to me there's no better example of that than five star Right.
Speaker AYou show up at either one of those locations.
Speaker AI, I went.
Speaker AWhen I was a player, I went to.
Speaker AI went.
Speaker AI was lucky enough to go one year to Robert Morris.
Speaker AAnd you show up and you're playing on converted tennis courts.
Speaker AIt's 95 degrees, there's no air conditioning in the dorms.
Speaker AYou're sitting there after lunch, and you're listening to whoever the clinician that comes in to give the speech.
Speaker AAnd the week I was there, the.
Speaker AThe guy who was the.
Speaker AThe player, the big name, the week I was there was Billy Owens.
Speaker AAnd so Billy Owens is in the cafeteria, you know, and he's helping to serve and all those different things to be able to get his camp tuition paid for or whatever the deal was back in the day that Garf had going with all the.
Speaker AWith all the main guys.
Speaker AAnd you just think about the way that a player today who is a top five, top ten player in the country, if you were to try to really explain to them or just drop them back in 1986 and say, okay, here's what you're going to do.
Speaker AYou're going to show up and you're going to play on these converted tennis courts outside in the sun, it's 95 degrees, and you're gonna have to pour milk and clean the tables and do all this stuff.
Speaker AAnd these guys would be looking at you like, you have, like, seven heads.
Speaker ABut it was just, as you said, it was a different era.
Speaker AAnd, yeah, my.
Speaker AThe week that I was there as a player was probably one of my favorite weeks of camp.
Speaker AAnd just as an experience to be there with so many great players, but also just great coaches that were there working with you in all those different ways.
Speaker AYeah, Five Star was a totally, totally different animal than anything that we see today, that's for sure.
Speaker BAnd Station 13 and, and that.
Speaker BThat's awesome, though.
Speaker BYou must have been a pretty good player, Mike, to be at Five Star with all.
Speaker BWith Billy Owens and all those guys.
Speaker BI, I grew up the Syracuse fan.
Speaker BEverybody from my hometown were an hour outside of Syracuse, so everybody was huge Syracuse fans.
Speaker BAnd Syracuse, of course, had an amazing program back in the 70s, 70s, 80s and 90s.
Speaker BAnd Billy Owens, of course, I believe, from Carlisle, Pennsylvania.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BYeah, it was a great player.
Speaker BThat's a great story, though, that he had to work.
Speaker BWork his.
Speaker BHis fees off.
Speaker AAnd I remember, I remember Garf during one of the times when the whole camp was together at that time.
Speaker AHe always called him the Baryshnikov of basketball.
Speaker ASo he's like, Billy Owens, Carlisle, Pennsylvania, the Baryshnikov of basketball.
Speaker AAnd I'll never, I'll.
Speaker AI'll just never forget that.
Speaker AHim.
Speaker AHim saying that just walking around.
Speaker AAnd that was a time where the guy used to read the blue ribbon college basketball yearbook that had all the, whatever, top 50 or top 75 high school players.
Speaker ASo, like, I knew all those guys, not.
Speaker ANot knew him, but, you know, I mean, you knew their picture, knew their stats, knew where they were from.
Speaker AI'm like, oh, man.
Speaker ALike there's, you know, that's, there's.
Speaker AThere's Billy Owens right there.
Speaker AAnd I've been looking at his picture for the last two or three years as, you know, this guy.
Speaker ASo it was, it was definitely, it was definitely an experience to be able to, to be able to be a part of that.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker AAll right, jumping back to, Jumping back to your career, you get an opportunity at three different spots to be a head collegiate coach.
Speaker AAnd as you go through those varying experiences, obviously you spent the longest time at West Virginia University Tech, but you're also at Glenville and you were also, as you said, at Jefferson, where your dad had coached.
Speaker ASo tell me a little bit about those experiences.
Speaker AI know we could just go chronologically, but start with Jefferson and kind of what you learned being a head coach at the college level for the first time.
Speaker BYeah, I was young in my.
Speaker BIn my 20s at Jefferson, and I felt like I was ready and we were able to.
Speaker BI really recruited hard out of New York City and Long island and, and brought some good, talented players to Jefferson, which is not easy to do because it's five, five and a half hours from New York City, you know, and up in the middle of nowhere for those kids and.
Speaker BBut we had two really good teams.
Speaker BWe went to Final Four both years and Junior College Division three, and had a couple All Americans and went to.
Speaker BWon the regional state championship the second year, went to the nationals both years and national championship game in 97, lost to Heartbreaker in the waning seconds.
Speaker BAnd that, that ate at me for several years, losing that game.
Speaker BIn 1997, we were down to Eastfield Texas, Eastfield College out of Texas.
Speaker BThey had a good team and we kind of made a run and we really shouldn't have gone as far as we did on paper, but we did.
Speaker BIt wasn't nearly as talent.
Speaker BWell, it was a good team, but it wasn't as deep and talented as the year before.
Speaker BBut anyways, everything just clicked and we won the regional state championship and then made a run to the finals and we Were down, I want to say 16 with eight minutes to go, made a big run back.
Speaker BThe game was in New York State, so we had a big crowd there and then we lost and it was tied with a minute to go.
Speaker BAnd then they, I think they scored the last four points of the game to win.
Speaker BAnd that was heartbreaking.
Speaker BJust walking into the locker room after the game and seeing, you know, 18, 19 year old kids weeping the way they were weeping.
Speaker BI've never seen athletes weep that openly loud before where they were wailing, you know, in so much pain from that loss.
Speaker BAnd, and that man, that's, I don't, I couldn't sleep I don't think for three days after that.
Speaker BIt hurts so bad.
Speaker BAnd then, and, and then it just took a while to get over that.
Speaker BAnd it probably took me several years to get over that.
Speaker BBut now I look back at it, it's fine, you know, it's just, it's all a blessing.
Speaker BBut that took some time as a young coach and then to get that close to a national title and then come up short.
Speaker BBut, and so then after that year I started looking around and I had interviewed for, yeah, so I, I, when I was at Potsdam and Jefferson I was interviewing for some D1 assistant jobs and then, and, and, and all other jobs too.
Speaker BD3 Head, head coaching jobs and what have you.
Speaker BAnd then so I, I was, threw my name in.
Speaker BI'm just based on success.
Speaker BI only knew one person in West Virginia and it was a kid that played on our team at Jefferson and I didn't know anybody else from West Virginia.
Speaker BAnd I, I applied at Glenville State and they, I was the last one of five to interview.
Speaker BIt was on a Friday in August of 97.
Speaker BAnd, and as soon as I got back to the hotel in Glenville they, they called me up and offered me the job even before I left town.
Speaker BAnd I, I, the following Monday I had a Division 1 interview at Fairley Dickinson scheduled and which was a lower paying job just outside of New York.
Speaker BAnd so I don't know if I could afford to do that.
Speaker BSo I, I told Glenville yes and I canceled the interview with Fairleigh Dickinson for Monday.
Speaker BAnd Glenville was impressed with the team.
Speaker BThey were based, it was just based on, we had success at Jefferson.
Speaker BAnd then you know, they want to know if I could bring some players with me.
Speaker BSo I did.
Speaker BI brought two players with me and one was the first team all American and, and both of them ended up being starters for us at Glenville and Glenville was A rebuilding situation.
Speaker BI, you know, both Glenville and West Virginia Tech were down when I took those programs.
Speaker BGlenville was in last place I think or second to last place in a 15 team NCAA D2 conference.
Speaker BAnd in a very remote area of West Virginia, 20 miles off the beaten path through winding roads.
Speaker BWonderful community.
Speaker BI really enjoyed my 5 years at Glenville State rebuilding that program.
Speaker BFirst year I think we were 7 and 20 and it was just so rewarding and we overachieved and then we started knocking off some of the top teams.
Speaker BAnd then the last two years I was at Glenville we, we won more games than anybody in the, in the conference.
Speaker BNow this tells you how good that league was.
Speaker BThe West Virginia Conference back then, it's.
Speaker BThey since changed the name to the Mountain East Conference.
Speaker BBut the West Virginia Conference in 97, 98 had five teams ranked in the top 25 in one poll.
Speaker BSo that in one Division 2 poll.
Speaker BSo you knew that was a really good league and in fun league to coach in.
Speaker BGreat coaches, great players and great communities.
Speaker BSmall colleges and.
Speaker BBut Glenville was a small town and you know, really good football there and, and now since they've grown, expanded a little bit, they got a nice big arena now, but we had a small gym back then.
Speaker BIt was a home court advantage and, and you know the gym was packed and the community loved the team.
Speaker BThe community was terrific and they supported the team and they still do.
Speaker BAnd it was great experience.
Speaker BMy five years there.
Speaker BMade a lot of friends at Glenville and then a lot of coaching friends along the way and players, you know that became lifelong friends that played for us there.
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Speaker AWhat's the adjustment like when you go from one geographical area to another, when you've been recruiting primarily in one area?
Speaker ASo you spent a lot of your career in New York.
Speaker ANow all of a sudden, as you said, you only know one person in West Virginia.
Speaker AYou show up.
Speaker AAnd again, at that time, a lot of your relationships had to be with high school coaches and getting to know people so that they would clue you in as to, hey, here's some guys that you should be looking at.
Speaker AWhat was that process like for you as you transitioned just in terms of the recruiting and, and building those relationships that you need in order to be a good recruiter?
Speaker BThat's a great question, Mike, because a lot of people get passed up on jobs because they don't have recruiting experience in certain geographic areas.
Speaker BSo really I only knew New York State, you know, when I went to.
Speaker BAnd all of a sudden I'm in a D2 league in West Virginia.
Speaker BSo, you know, I always prided myself in recruiting local.
Speaker BAnd we started recruiting some local kids and then we recruited good local players in West Virginia and.
Speaker BWhich brought more fans and more media attention to the team.
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BBut I had to quickly learn about, learn the state of West Virginia.
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BAnd then I ended up living in West Virginia for 24 years, 26 years before I moved here, but coached for 24 years and raised my family there.
Speaker BAnd, and it's kind of, it's really home now.
Speaker BAnd, but we had to learn not just West Virginia, but you had to try to get into the Cincinnati area and Columbus and Cleveland and D.C.
Speaker Band Baltimore and, and then recruit nationally, too, because you're.
Speaker BYou're going to look at junior colleges, players from around the country.
Speaker BYou're going to the national tournament in Illinois and Kansas and in different places.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker BAnd then utilizing two contacts that you've already had throughout the years.
Speaker AWhat attracted you to the job at West Virginia Tech?
Speaker BWell, West Virginia Tech was.
Speaker BAnd we were, we kind of beat up on West Virginia Tech.
Speaker BBut when I left Glenville, you know, I knew West Virginia Tech.
Speaker BI could have success there just because I already knew the conference.
Speaker BYou know, they were in the West Virginia Conference at the time, and it ended up being a great move.
Speaker BAnd I thought, well, maybe I'll just go there for a few years.
Speaker BAnd then I ended up staying 17 years.
Speaker BFunny how Things work out, but especially when you start raising children, you know, it's harder to move around once your kids are starting to grow up.
Speaker BBut West Virginia Tech had a great basketball tradition.
Speaker BMaybe better than Glenville in the.
Speaker BIn, you know, tradition wise and West Virginia Tech.
Speaker BSiddell 3 was the all time leading scorer there.
Speaker BSiddell 3 played in the NBA for 12 seasons.
Speaker BYou probably remember him, he replaced Magic Johnson.
Speaker AI played against the Dell 3 a couple times up here up here in Cleveland and some pickup games around nice back.
Speaker ABack when that used to be.
Speaker ABack when that used to be a thing like we talked about.
Speaker BBut yeah, that's great.
Speaker BSo you played against a lot of good players.
Speaker BBut so you know, Sadel was a cat quick athletic guard, scoring guard and Sadell wants.
Speaker BThat's not to get off on a tangent but saddle three once scored 55 points against the Knicks in the Garden and so the.
Speaker BHe was just one of many, many really good players in the West Virginia conference over the years.
Speaker BAnd that was when they were NAI and then soon then later went to D2.
Speaker BBut so a lot of great players have gone to a lot of those small colleges in West Virginia and.
Speaker BAnd one of the coaches there before me, Tom Sutherland was a great coach at West Virginia Tech.
Speaker BHe had a pipeline going from Atlanta and then.
Speaker BBut we had to put our own niche and then coach Neil Bicey, the building I coached in.
Speaker BCoach Neil Bicey was a legendary coach and did clinics with Rob and Auerbach and those guys and he's.
Speaker BHe wrote a book on full court zone press and it was one of the first college team to score to average 100 points a game in three straight years.
Speaker BBut he was also one of some years he would slow it down and run four corners and.
Speaker BBut what a great coach he was and great man and.
Speaker BBut I was fortunate to.
Speaker BTo try to rebuild that program.
Speaker BWe were able to do it.
Speaker BIt took a few years to do that.
Speaker BWest Virginia Tech was having some troubles with administration and changing conferences, going through a number of presidents, athletic directors, football coaches.
Speaker BAnd I kind of outlasted a lot of people and I stayed there and.
Speaker BAnd then finally we.
Speaker BAnd we went from changed affiliations.
Speaker BWe left the West Virginia Conference, went back to the NAIA.
Speaker BThen we were NAI Division 1 for a while and we were in a Kentucky league and then NAI Division 2 independent and now NAI has gone back to one division but the West Virginia Tech and also the school moved from Beckley or from Montgomery, West Virginia where I coached for 15 years to Beckley West Virginia, where it's located now.
Speaker BNot many colleges move locations.
Speaker BThey move 45 minutes to a bigger city.
Speaker BAnd I did coach at and Beckley, WVU Tech in Beckley for the last two years I was there, enjoyed both, both places and coached a lot of great players, turned the program around and won a few championships, went to national tournaments.
Speaker BFor the last five years we were there, switched from a man to man rotational system in 2014 to pack line defense.
Speaker BAnd so right after that we, we, the story goes, Mike, we could, we were two years in a row.
Speaker BWe were very close to getting to Kansas City to the NAI nationals and we lost two heartbreaking games in regional finals.
Speaker BAnd so I started looking around, what can we do differently to get up, put our program over the hump?
Speaker BAnd so we looked around.
Speaker BOne thing we looked at was the pack line.
Speaker BAnd we were 20 years.
Speaker BWe were rotational man to man system.
Speaker BAnd so I went down and visited with Tony Bennett and his staff and we watched him practice one day and lo and behold, the father of the pack line just happened to walk in with golf clubs off the golf course.
Speaker BTony's dad, Dick Bennett, who gets credit for inventing the pacline.
Speaker BAnd we met him and talked to him and they shared things with us and they shared video clips.
Speaker BThey were nice enough to do that.
Speaker BAnd, and then we talked to people like Jim Boone, who's one of the best Pacline people now, teachers of the pack line and different people around the country.
Speaker BAnd we studied it all summer and, and then we implemented it and we got better at it as we went along.
Speaker BWe enjoyed teaching the pack line and our, your team defense usually gets better throughout the season.
Speaker BAnd it, it helped us maybe win close games.
Speaker BI don't know, maybe we had better talent.
Speaker BThat's how we got to four national tournaments the next five years.
Speaker BOr was it the pack line or both?
Speaker AYou know, so probably, probably, probably a combination.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BBut that's, that was our pack line story.
Speaker BAnd then, and then when I came to fork Union, of course I brought the pack line with me because I like the pack line.
Speaker BSo I brought that for me.
Speaker ASo here's a question for you.
Speaker ASo when you change from something that you've done and obviously felt comfortable with and obviously taught for a long time, right?
Speaker AYou're.
Speaker AYou're teaching rotational man to man.
Speaker AYou've done that.
Speaker AYou know what you want to do, you know how you want to teach it, you know the drills that you want to use for that.
Speaker AHow long does it take?
Speaker AYou obviously you go down and you know, you're watching camp and you're, you're learning from the Bennett's and you're watching film and all those kinds of things.
Speaker AHow long does it take before you feel you have the grasp on it, that you need to be able to teach it to the same degree of detail that you had previously with your other system?
Speaker AHow long does it take you to feel comfortable?
Speaker AWhat's the process for making sure you feel comfortable teaching?
Speaker AIt's one thing to say, hey, I like this, I want to be able to do it.
Speaker AIt's another thing to be able to take that out onto the floor and actually teach your players what they need to know in order to be able to execute it.
Speaker ASo what was that process like?
Speaker BWell, you know, studying it all off season and then, then implementing it when practice started and, and you know, I, I, my assistant coaches were involved in that too.
Speaker BSo they were studying also and talking to people as well as I was talking to people and in learning it.
Speaker BAnd then, you know, there's, there's the ultimate pack line guide.
Speaker BI don't know how many pages it is, the 50 to 100 pages of notes and clinics and on Pacline and people that have taught it.
Speaker BAnd I think Pacline people over the years don't really like to tell people that it's really successful for them.
Speaker BThey kind of kept that a secret.
Speaker BAnd there's a lot of people that say their pack line that just means they're in the gaps.
Speaker BI don't know if they're really committed, but we really committed 100% to the pack line and all the exact principles of the way it was taught by Dick Bennett.
Speaker BAnd you know, we've had to tweak some things.
Speaker BYou know, we've, we've tweaked a little like ball coverage, things that we kind of prefer that really weren't with the pack line people.
Speaker BBut, but we are true pack line and, and we're proud of it.
Speaker BAnd, and it's really helped us, you know, this, for example, this year we, we held our opponents to 38% from the floor.
Speaker BAnd it's hard to, in our philosophy is we want to build a wall around the paint, keep you out of the paint and we want to force you into contested jump shots, as many as possible.
Speaker BSo if we're playing a 40 minute game, you know, we may force a team into 10 more threes than they normally take.
Speaker BThey might make a few more, but over the course of 40 minutes, their percentage usually isn't that high, I think we held people to 28% from three this year, I believe.
Speaker BAnd so, which is good.
Speaker BAnd, and, and, you know, it's been good for us, you know, it's been good to us.
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BBut that first year, you know, it took a while because it was new, you know, so we, you know, after the first year we really, it, it became easier to teach.
Speaker BBut in the, you know, at the beginning we, we kind of made, we had to make sure we're using the right terminology and teaching the right things.
Speaker BAs the season went on, we got better at it and our team got better at it.
Speaker BAnd that first year we went, we broke through and got to the national tournament in Kansas City.
Speaker BAnd we had an experienced team too, and a good team.
Speaker BAnd, but, but that helped us.
Speaker BIt helps us win close games.
Speaker BThey say pack line helps you win games on the road.
Speaker BAnd you're building that wall around the paint because people aren't getting in the paint as much.
Speaker BYou're forcing the next pass on the perimeter.
Speaker BYou got to be great in the gaps.
Speaker BAnd we constantly preach, do your job in the gaps, force the next pass, force next pass.
Speaker BEverything's a closeout.
Speaker BGreat closeouts.
Speaker BDon't overrun the closeouts.
Speaker BKeep everything in front of you.
Speaker BAnd because we're keeping the ball in the perimeter more, the ball doesn't come in the paint as much.
Speaker BSo therefore we don't foul as much.
Speaker BI mean, there was countless games this year where we still had, you know, files to give at the end of the game, you know, or the end of the half because we don't follow as much.
Speaker BAnd if you don't follow as much, they don't go to the free throw line as much.
Speaker BSo you're trying to take away layups and free throws.
Speaker BWe might give up a few more threes.
Speaker BWe always tell our team we can persevere, those things.
Speaker BA lot of college coaches are so scared to death to give up a three point shot that they just try to run people off the three because they're running them off.
Speaker BThey now all of a sudden they're in scramble mode and they're going five against four and people are getting layups or foul, there's fouls.
Speaker BAnd so we just are complete opposite.
Speaker BWe just, you know, we want to contest threes and not give up rhythm threes and keep people on the perimeter as much as we can.
Speaker BAnd then, you know, you're forcing long shots, they're going to equate to long rebounds and you've got to go get Those there's so many things.
Speaker AIt's amazing how whatever strategic decision you make, whether it's something defensively like the pack line or just how you decide to design your offense.
Speaker AAnd then I love that detail that you just mentioned, right, where okay, so we're forcing teams to take more long jump shots.
Speaker AWell, that's going to create more opportunities for long rebounds.
Speaker AThen we have to talk to our team and teach them, well, okay, what does that look like?
Speaker AHow might that be different if we're allowing teams to get into the paint and get shots where the rebounds maybe not coming off as far.
Speaker AAnd so there's all these just subtle details, right, that play off of one decision and then there's more things that sort of pile onto that that you have to be able to then teach your team.
Speaker AAnd as you said, as you get into that more and you go through a season with it, you get a handle on, hey, what are the auxiliary things that then go along with this?
Speaker AAnd we're doing the main things right?
Speaker AThen what are the secondary little things that we need to do in order to be able to really maximize?
Speaker AWhether it's the pack line or whatever other strategy that might want to employ.
Speaker AI think those, the beauty of basketball is in that major decision then sort of has a trickle down effect of what are the next things, what are the small fundamentals, what are the small details that we have to teach in order to really maximize what it is that we're trying to do.
Speaker AAnd I'm sure that's what you found over the course of your career.
Speaker BAnd you know, I'm not saying pack lines is the best thing to do.
Speaker BAnd it's got to be something that you believe in.
Speaker BAnd you as a coach, you gotta do what you feel is best for your program and what's, and what's best for you suited for you and how you like to play.
Speaker BAnd there, you know, there's a lot of different ways to get to success.
Speaker BYou know, whether it's pressing, matchup zone, traditional man, denial, man, you know, people don't, you don't see people denying as much as they used to, but there's still teams that do it and then, or pack line, you know, there's a lot of different ways defensively and then there's a lot of different ways offensively as well.
Speaker AHow much did you know about Fork Union before you went there?
Speaker BOh, I knew a lot about Fork Union because when I was at West Virginia Tech in Glenville, you know, I tried to recruit Fork Union players and the the great Fletcher Eric was the coach at Fork Union Military academy for almost 50 years.
Speaker BAnd coach Eric became a friend of mine and he was friends with every college coach and he was from West Virginia and West Virginia Tech was located in Fayette county, and that's where Fletcher Eric was from Fayette County.
Speaker BAnd he brought a lot of West Virginia boys down to Fork Union, Virginia over the years and, and sent them to places like, you know, West Virginia and Marshall and a lot of great players throughout the years from West Virginia that went to Fork Union because of Fletcher Errett.
Speaker BSo I, I always admired Fletcher Errat and talked to him a lot on the phone.
Speaker BHe would call me up and say, bob, it's Fletch down at Fork Union.
Speaker BAnd we talk about players and he's, you know, he's telling me about players and, and great man to know.
Speaker BI'm still good friends with his brother John Eric and Fletcher's.
Speaker BHis nephew Frank Aaron is, is our post grad football coach here and Frank is from Fayetteville, West Virginia.
Speaker BSo there's a lot of West Virginia ties to.
Speaker BAnd there's more than that.
Speaker BThere's a lot of West Virginia ties to Fork Union.
Speaker BNow in.
Speaker BI kind of surprisingly semi retired in, in 2019.
Speaker BOur.
Speaker BOur last West Virginia Tech team was 30 and five and we had two all Americans on the team.
Speaker BWe were ranked number three in the, in the nation in the NAI and, and we went to nationals.
Speaker BWe got upset in the Sweet 16.
Speaker BA team, a local team out there, we were out in South Dakota and a team from one of the neighboring states hit or Iowa.
Speaker BIowa hit 23s on our pack line defense and just got caught on fire.
Speaker BIt didn't matter how deep they were, you had a hand in their face.
Speaker BIt was going in one of those nights and, and then the next year the NAI was going to.
Speaker BWe were Division 2 and I, and the NAI was going back to one division and I was like, oh, this might be the last chance I had the legitimate national title at West Virginia Tech.
Speaker BAnd you know, I was going through a divorce at the time and, and I just go out and just thinking about life in general.
Speaker BI had been there for 17 years and the school just moved two years earlier.
Speaker BAnd I was commuting from Charleston, West Virginia over an hour each day and I just said, I think I'm gonna, I'm gonna retire from Tech.
Speaker BAnd you know, people are very surprised and my family tried to talk me out of it and the athletic director, Kenny Howell, did as well and great people at West Virginia Tech but you know, I'm indebted to them and I loved coaching there every minute of it and we had a lot of success and made a lot of friends and, and it coached a lot of great players and had a lot of assistant coaches that were great there and a lot of them are moved out and to Division 1 ranks now.
Speaker BAnd it's amazing once you get older then you start getting coaches in your family tree that, your coaching tree that move on and make you proud and you follow them and, and as we were, as we're taping this tonight, I had one eye on the, the Navy basketball game against the championship game against American tonight and Jared Marino played for me at West Virginia Tech and he's, he's an assistant coach at Navy now.
Speaker BHe's like a son to me and very close with him and you know, when he's, he comes to me with, and asks me for advice on things and some of your former players that go into coaching, they'll do that or your former assistants and he's got a great career and he ended up, he was a three year starter and started out as a walk on at West Virginia Tech and ended up scoring a thousand points, was two year captain and led us to our first NAI national tournament and, and he was an engineer at West Virginia Tech.
Speaker BAnd then his last year when he graduated he, he decided to help us as a student assistant and he just fell in love with the game and said the heck with engineering, I'm going into coaching.
Speaker BAnd, and he's been at Radford and Lewisburg College and Navy and it has done a great job and he's got a real good future and will probably be a future Division 1 head coach.
Speaker BAnd so people like that, you know, you start as you get older, you start mentoring others and I didn't really see that coming.
Speaker BYou know, you never thought about when you were younger, starting out that eventually you're going to be a mentor of people.
Speaker BAnd I was sports players blessed to have great mentors that were coaches in my career and help shape my philosophies and, and people I could lean on for advice and, and so I, I got out of the game in 2019 and I said well you know, maybe I'll, I'll do something different.
Speaker BMaybe I'll go into athletic administration, I'll take a little time off.
Speaker BBut in 2019 was like we called it the Summer of Bob.
Speaker BAnd the Summer of Bob was just traveling around, hanging out with friends and, and being Happy, go lucky.
Speaker BNot worrying about the next season.
Speaker BYou know, it was really different and not having a team and, and I enjoyed it and, and then as time went on, so I started to miss it.
Speaker BYou know, once basketball season came, I was like, wow, I don't have a team, this is weird.
Speaker BAnd so I started to miss it and I said, well, I got two kids, one in high school and one in college.
Speaker BI gotta really go back to work.
Speaker BSo, you know, I was about to go back to work and then working for the state parks in West Virginia and then, then Covid hit, you know, so that job, no, I never even worked today because Covid hit right when I was about to work for the state park system.
Speaker BAnd, and then so I ended up being two years out from basketball and that's when I had interviewed at Ithaca for the head coaching or I was involved with the Ithaca job and then interviewed for a couple other jobs.
Speaker BAnd you know, now I'm, I'm in my 50s, you know, and not, not as appealing as, as a coach to probably some administrations of small colleges.
Speaker BSo anyways, the Fork Union opened up in 2021.
Speaker BI jumped all over that.
Speaker BI said that because I really was looking for, to do something different.
Speaker BI had already rebuilt programs at Glenville and West Virginia Tech and I didn't really want a small college rebuild again.
Speaker BI either wanted to be a Division 1 assistant or Division 1 advisor or I mean in all those two years I was out, I still trained kids on the side.
Speaker BSo I stayed fresh teaching and training kids and then, and then going to games and my son was at Marshall one of those years as a walk on.
Speaker BSo I would go over and watch Marshall practice and play and, and go to different games and.
Speaker BAnyways, and then so when Fork Union opened up, I said, wow, that's something.
Speaker BI think I would like something different.
Speaker BYou know, where you have this one team for a year and you, you have to recruit and you have scholarships and you have to place them.
Speaker BAnd so I said, well, I could utilize my contacts in college coaching to help these kids.
Speaker BAnd, and I, and I really fell in love with it.
Speaker BAnd I, I've just finished my fourth season at Fork Union and, and I was blessed to come here and thank the good Lord for sending me to Fork Union and, and, and being able to get back into coaching again, which I love.
Speaker BAnd, and it kind of rejuvenated me and it took after two years off of having a team, I was a little rusty.
Speaker BIt was, you know, coaching at first and I would forget Some terminology and then now I got it all back, back down.
Speaker BBut.
Speaker BAnd I've enjoyed it.
Speaker BI've enjoyed.
Speaker BI love the player development side of basketball.
Speaker BSo it was a good fit for me where you know, we really push our guys hard in the weight room and and then we, we try to teach them how to play the right way playing off two feet and we try to play as a team and we try to look like a college team.
Speaker BWe run our program, our practices the same way we ran them at West Virginia Tech and a lot of the same drills we brought the pack line with us.
Speaker BThat's helped us be successful.
Speaker BIn our.
Speaker BOur first year at Fork Union we won 27 games and we were number.
Speaker BRanked as high as number three in the country and went to the nationals and beats some really good teams like Brewster Academy and IMG and Hargrave and St.
Speaker BThomas Moore and had some great wins that first year and Word of God.
Speaker BAnd then now it put me in a different circle of people meeting different coaches and I've had to.
Speaker BI had to learn how does this prep school thing work and how does the recruiting work and how does it work with promoting players and all that.
Speaker BSo I've had to get better at that after the first year and, and then we've had some players now right now we have 13 players for CUNY has 13 players in.
Speaker BIn division one right now rosters and and we.
Speaker BWe've the last two years we.
Speaker BOr yeah the last two seasons we put eight guys in division one and then in countless.
Speaker BIn division two and three and NAI in junior college and, and it's been very rewarding.
Speaker BFork Union has a great tradition.
Speaker BFletcher Eric, you know he coached guys that went to Kentucky and North Carolina and great play Florida and Virginia.
Speaker BVirginia attack him.
Speaker BYeah just great players.
Speaker BYou know back in the 90s and early 2000s and it's a little harder for us to get that caliber of player now because there's so many just Christian schools popped up and so many basketball academies everywhere and, and plus everybody's qualified with Don't.
Speaker BThey don't have to have the test score now.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker BBut.
Speaker BBut we're still getting good play, very good players.
Speaker BYou know we're.
Speaker BWe get kids here that I, I couldn't have got at West Virginia Tech.
Speaker BFreshmen.
Speaker BYou know this good.
Speaker BAnd then for Union's tradition is unbelievable.
Speaker BOver 400 to Division 1 and, and 13 have gone out to the NBA and from.
Speaker BFrom our program over the years and even more impressive in football, 130 to the NFL and two Heisman Trophy winners went to school here and Kevin Plank, the founder of Under Armour, went to school here.
Speaker BAnd you know, some Supreme Court justices, sons have gone here and Secret Service and President Bush's chief of staff son and just, it's an impressive place to be from and you know, for Cunion is highly respected.
Speaker AWhat do you think is the key?
Speaker ABecause obviously for you being on the college head coach side of the recruiting process, you're looking at it in one way.
Speaker ANow, as the coach at Fork Union, you're on the other side of it, trying to help your players find the right fit for them at the college level.
Speaker AWhat's the most important part or what's the key thing that you have to do in your role as the head coach at Fork Union to help your players to be able to get those opportunities at the next level?
Speaker BWell, we do tell our players this, that even though they were all stars at their high schools and so these are post grads that we're coaching guys that maybe were, aren't satisfied with their offers or they need to get stronger for a year, or they were, for whatever reason they wanted to do a prep year to get more exposure in a different area.
Speaker BAnd, and so we, we really try to convince them that let's play team basketball.
Speaker BI know you're here really for an individual reason because you're trying to move on to and showcase your skills to get to the next level.
Speaker BBut college coaches don't ever call me up and say, how much, how many points a game is this guy average?
Speaker BYou know, they might call me up and say, what's his three point shooting percentage?
Speaker BOr how many rebounds is he getting?
Speaker BNo one ever asked what's he scoring?
Speaker BBecause everybody at this level can play.
Speaker BSo they're going to see that everybody can play because colleges will come and watch us practice in September.
Speaker BThen they'll be following our, our team and our league, the elite Prep League, which is an outstanding league in its third year.
Speaker BAnd so our guys are going to gain exposure.
Speaker BAnd just the name Fork Union helps our players gain exposure.
Speaker BBut we try to convince them that it, the more you win, the more phone calls we're going to get.
Speaker BAnd it's, it's factual.
Speaker BWe've found that to be true in that when our team is successful.
Speaker BSo we struggled a little bit this year early on and then started hitting our stride and played really well.
Speaker BWe end up winning 25 games this year.
Speaker BIt was a decent season.
Speaker BYou know, we didn't get to the nationals, but it's probably because we didn't play well in November up in New England and.
Speaker BBut we got better and we beat Perky Omen who went to the nationals, and we beat Hargrave who went to the nationals.
Speaker BWe beat Massanutton who went to the nationals, and we beat some good teams in January and February and, and really improved.
Speaker BAnd that's nice to see players improve.
Speaker BIndividually, I enjoy that.
Speaker BAnd it's nice.
Speaker BAnd obviously our team improved.
Speaker BAnd so when we were going through that stretch of winning some games in January and February, you know, people started taking notice.
Speaker BCollege coaches and, and, and you know, the whole recruiting world is, is way different than it used to be, Mike.
Speaker BYou know that and.
Speaker AAbsolutely.
Speaker BSo, like division twos are just blowing me up right now because they're just kind of starting out recruiting and division ones, of course they have roster management now between now and time their season starts.
Speaker BAnd so it seems like it's gone later and later.
Speaker BLike we've always fork unions players have always got late offers.
Speaker BTraditionally we had one Division 1 offer on our team in the fall and then we, we thought, well, maybe three or four guys can get Division 1 in the end and the rest can go D2 or 3.
Speaker BAnd it's gone even later.
Speaker BIt seems like this year because.
Speaker BAnd you're seeing it if you just.
Speaker BIf you keep an eye on Internet, you see people, everybody's jumping in the portals when their season ends.
Speaker BAlmost, you know, a third of the team or half of a team, college team, D2 and D1 jumps in the portal now.
Speaker BAnd so they have holes to fill.
Speaker BThe good thing for our players is our guys have been seen in New England.
Speaker BThey've been seen down in Florida at IMG event.
Speaker BThey've been seen in, in the Carolinas, they've been seen in Maryland.
Speaker BThey've been seen in all the elite prep league stops in our, in our league footprint in January and February.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker BAnd then they get tons of exposure on the Internet and they get great film too.
Speaker BYou know, with almost 40 games they get.
Speaker BThey do get great film.
Speaker BAnd then.
Speaker BAnd so now, you know, people have heard of our players and our, obviously our program.
Speaker BAnd so now they're looking around the country and seeing who's available and seeing what they got to fill and who's.
Speaker BAnd more.
Speaker BFirst they got to find out who's leaving their program.
Speaker BAnd so it's just upside down, you know, the way everything is with the portal and, and kids and pay for play now too.
Speaker BSo, you know, we have some players that you know, and we've had success too, so it's helped us.
Speaker BLast year we had a really good team.
Speaker BWe were 31 and 7 in 2324 and was ranked as high as fourth in the country.
Speaker BWent to the national tournament and our, our point guard, Jaden Johnson is the starting point guard at Old Dominion this year and it hardly came off the court as a freshman.
Speaker BAnd then we had another freshman, went to Navy, we had a freshman at Montevallo in North Greenville doing very well and then a freshman at IU Indy, DeSean Good, 68 and DeShawn Good's got a great story because he came in 68205 with two D2 offers.
Speaker BWhen he left Fork Union it was 68223 D1 offers.
Speaker BAnd now he's 68230 and I don't know if he's going back to IU Indy, you know, or if he's moving on, but.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker BHe's got a great future and a chance to make some money playing the game while he's in college, you know, and just it's a different world now and then.
Speaker BWe've also had some players like Carmelo Pacheco, surprisingly didn't get division one two years ago, goes to UVA wise, averages double figures and shoots 40 something percent from three the year later.
Speaker BEverybody's blowing him up and wants him.
Speaker BHe's got like 10 D1 offers but no D1 offers.
Speaker BEight months earlier and now he's starting two guard at Mount St.
Speaker BMary's and they're having a heck of a season under Donnie Lynn is in his first year and so it's, it's pretty neat though to see the guys once they get into college.
Speaker BYou know, we told our team when we lost our last game last week and we've, we've got, I got some really good assistants.
Speaker BBobby Lakes, a long time high school coach in the DMV area and he helps me out and does a great job.
Speaker BHe's my recruiting coordinator, especially in the dmv.
Speaker BAnd then, and Gary Hines is a, is a legendary Fork Union guy.
Speaker BPlayed at Fork Union for Fletcher Aaron and played at Marshall and he told the team after the last game that, you know, one of the great things for being a coach at Fortuna is to follow you guys now, follow your career and be fans of you guys.
Speaker BYou know, we enjoyed coaching you guys and then now we will enjoy following your college careers and your lives and, and we're here to assist you in any way you, you need assistance and, and so that that's been enjoyable and rewarding for me.
Speaker BRecruiting, you know, we've been recruiting very hard for next year's team already and we're also working very hard to get these guys placed and talking to college coaches all day long to try to get them to the next level.
Speaker BAnd on top of that, Mike, I'm the director of financial aid at fork union military academy.
Speaker BThat's my other job.
Speaker BSo this is a busy time.
Speaker BSo it's been really busy lately.
Speaker BAnd they keep you busy at these military academies, that's for sure.
Speaker AThere's no doubt about that.
Speaker AAnd for sure that the way the recruiting and the way the landscape of college basketball has changed, everybody on both sides of the equation has had to adjust.
Speaker ACollege coaches obviously have had to make a huge adjustment in how they go about building their rosters.
Speaker AAnd guys like you with the prep school level and certainly high school coaches have had to adapt and adjust the way that they approach the recruiting with their players and trying to help those guys get an opportunity at the next level because clearly the landscape is completely different from from what it used to be.
Speaker ABefore we get out, Bob, I want to give you a chance to share.
Speaker AHow can people find out more about your program, connect with you, whether you want to share, Email, social media, website, whatever you feel comfortable with.
Speaker AAnd then after you do that, I'll jump back in and wrap things up.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BFor union.com our website, forcunion.com to learn about our school.
Speaker BIt's an outstanding website.
Speaker BIt's an outstanding school.
Speaker BBoys military Christian boarding school for grades 7 through 12.
Speaker BAnd then plus post grad sports and all the regular high school sports.
Speaker BAnd then I'm on X the former Twitter.
Speaker BI think it's coach Bob will at Coach Bob will.
Speaker BCoach Bob will and w I o l and I'm on there all the time.
Speaker BSomebody wants to reach me and send me a message and a follow and love to help anybody out that I can in coaching or looking at players and helping players as well.
Speaker BBut I appreciate you having me on here, Mike.
Speaker BI've enjoyed our conversation.
Speaker AWe enjoyed it.
Speaker ABob, I'm so appreciative that you took the time out of your schedule tonight to join us.
Speaker AAnd to everyone out there, thanks for listening and we will catch you on our next episode.
Speaker AThanks.
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Speaker BThanks for listening to the Hoop Heads Podcast presented by Head Start Basketball.