playstation
Selfless Service
By Scott Bordow
East Valley Tribune
April 29, 2005
Jerseys line a wall of the basketball practice facility at the University of Memphis.
They’re mementos of some of the best players John Calipari has ever coached.
Marcus Camby and Sam Cassell. Allen Iverson and Kerry Kittles. Keith Van Horn. Dajuan Wagner.
Amaré Stoudemire’s jersey has some hang time, too, but why?
Calipari coached at Massachusetts, was the head coach of the New Jersey Nets and an assistant with the Philadelphia 76ers before becoming Memphis’ coach in 2000.
So how does he connect the dots with Stoudemire?
"I tell people I had him for a month," Calipari said, laughing.
Stoudemire is the big one that got away for Calipari and Memphis, and his return here as one of the NBA’s most dominant players causes heads to shake and sentences to begin with, "Can you imagine ..."
"I’m sure John is still crying in his beer over Amaré," Suns coach Mike D’Antoni said.
Calipari can’t remember the first time he saw Stoudemire play. But he’ll never forget the feeling he had in the spring of 2002 when Stoudemire told him he was coming to Memphis.
"I stuttered," Calipari said. "I was overwhelmed."
Stoudemire thought Memphis was the ideal place to continue his basketball career. His recruiting trip, hosted by guard Scooter McFadden, went well, and he loved Beale Street, the heartbeat of Memphis’ downtown.
He also was impressed by Calipari.
"I had watched his teams at UMass and read up on him," Stoudemire said. "I thought he was a pretty good coach."
Calipari wasn’t sure what to make of Stoudemire on his initial visit. He knew the back story, that Stoudemire had grown up in an unstable environment and attended six different high schools.
Calipari decided to test Stoudemire, to see if he was the kind of kid who would welcome structure or run from it.
For more coverage of Phoenix sports,
be sure to visit eastvalleytribune.com
"I was really hard on him," Calipari said. "I went crazy. I said, ‘This is going to be the hardest place you’re ever going to go to. You’re going to go to every class and you’re going to go to every study hall.’
"I told him, ‘If you want to be in the NBA, you’re going to have to train and get in great shape. There aren’t going to be any shortcuts here.’ "
Stoudemire listened, nodded his head but didn’t make a commitment. Calipari wasn’t sure what to think.
A few weeks later, Stoudemire walked into Calipari’s office and said, "I want to come to Memphis."
Visions of Final Four appearances danced in Calipari’s head. Wagner was just concluding his freshman year, and Memphis now had verbal commitments from Stoudemire and 6-foot-9 forward Qyntel Woods from Northeast Mississippi Junior College.
"We would have won a couple of national championships," Stoudemire said.
Calipari couldn’t contain his enthusiasm. He flew into Philadelphia for a high school all-star game and told Detroit Pistons coach Larry Brown, "You’ve got to watch this kid who committed to us. He’s unbelievable. He’s going to help me get Memphis to where I had UMass."
The first time Stoudemire got the ball, he fooled his defender with a crossover dribble and, as Calipari recalled, "dunked the ball on everybody."
The next time down the floor Stoudemire faked the crossover and hit a jumper from the foul line. Then he got out on the fast break for a dunk.
Brown turned to Calipari and said, "John, you’re not getting this kid. He’s better than Alonzo Mourning right now."
"I still think we can get him," Calipari responded.
"John," Brown said, "go recruit somebody else."
As it turned out, it wasn’t Stoudemire’s play that had Memphis singing the blues but Wagner’s decision to jump to the NBA after his freshman year.
"That’s when I went ahead and said, ‘Well, I’m going to make that jump,’ " Stoudemire said.
Before Stoudemire was drafted, he and Calipari got together one last time.
The two men hugged and Calipari said, "I hate to say this, but you did the right thing."
For which the Suns are forever grateful.
----------------------------------
thank you dajuan!
East Valley Tribune
April 29, 2005
Jerseys line a wall of the basketball practice facility at the University of Memphis.
They’re mementos of some of the best players John Calipari has ever coached.
Marcus Camby and Sam Cassell. Allen Iverson and Kerry Kittles. Keith Van Horn. Dajuan Wagner.
Amaré Stoudemire’s jersey has some hang time, too, but why?
Calipari coached at Massachusetts, was the head coach of the New Jersey Nets and an assistant with the Philadelphia 76ers before becoming Memphis’ coach in 2000.
So how does he connect the dots with Stoudemire?
"I tell people I had him for a month," Calipari said, laughing.
Stoudemire is the big one that got away for Calipari and Memphis, and his return here as one of the NBA’s most dominant players causes heads to shake and sentences to begin with, "Can you imagine ..."
"I’m sure John is still crying in his beer over Amaré," Suns coach Mike D’Antoni said.
Calipari can’t remember the first time he saw Stoudemire play. But he’ll never forget the feeling he had in the spring of 2002 when Stoudemire told him he was coming to Memphis.
"I stuttered," Calipari said. "I was overwhelmed."
Stoudemire thought Memphis was the ideal place to continue his basketball career. His recruiting trip, hosted by guard Scooter McFadden, went well, and he loved Beale Street, the heartbeat of Memphis’ downtown.
He also was impressed by Calipari.
"I had watched his teams at UMass and read up on him," Stoudemire said. "I thought he was a pretty good coach."
Calipari wasn’t sure what to make of Stoudemire on his initial visit. He knew the back story, that Stoudemire had grown up in an unstable environment and attended six different high schools.
Calipari decided to test Stoudemire, to see if he was the kind of kid who would welcome structure or run from it.
For more coverage of Phoenix sports,
be sure to visit eastvalleytribune.com
"I was really hard on him," Calipari said. "I went crazy. I said, ‘This is going to be the hardest place you’re ever going to go to. You’re going to go to every class and you’re going to go to every study hall.’
"I told him, ‘If you want to be in the NBA, you’re going to have to train and get in great shape. There aren’t going to be any shortcuts here.’ "
Stoudemire listened, nodded his head but didn’t make a commitment. Calipari wasn’t sure what to think.
A few weeks later, Stoudemire walked into Calipari’s office and said, "I want to come to Memphis."
Visions of Final Four appearances danced in Calipari’s head. Wagner was just concluding his freshman year, and Memphis now had verbal commitments from Stoudemire and 6-foot-9 forward Qyntel Woods from Northeast Mississippi Junior College.
"We would have won a couple of national championships," Stoudemire said.
Calipari couldn’t contain his enthusiasm. He flew into Philadelphia for a high school all-star game and told Detroit Pistons coach Larry Brown, "You’ve got to watch this kid who committed to us. He’s unbelievable. He’s going to help me get Memphis to where I had UMass."
The first time Stoudemire got the ball, he fooled his defender with a crossover dribble and, as Calipari recalled, "dunked the ball on everybody."
The next time down the floor Stoudemire faked the crossover and hit a jumper from the foul line. Then he got out on the fast break for a dunk.
Brown turned to Calipari and said, "John, you’re not getting this kid. He’s better than Alonzo Mourning right now."
"I still think we can get him," Calipari responded.
"John," Brown said, "go recruit somebody else."
As it turned out, it wasn’t Stoudemire’s play that had Memphis singing the blues but Wagner’s decision to jump to the NBA after his freshman year.
"That’s when I went ahead and said, ‘Well, I’m going to make that jump,’ " Stoudemire said.
Before Stoudemire was drafted, he and Calipari got together one last time.
The two men hugged and Calipari said, "I hate to say this, but you did the right thing."
For which the Suns are forever grateful.
----------------------------------
thank you dajuan!