St. John's has scheduled a press conference for Monday at Madison Square Garden and the New York Daily News is reporting that freshman Moe Harkless is expected to announce that he will apply for the 2012 NBA Draft.
Harkless, who was the first big name recruited by head coach Steve Lavin at St. John's, paved the way for Lavin's third-ranked recruiting class last year. The Queens native was also the first blue-chip player from the New York City high school system to come to St. John's since Ron Artest over a decade ago.
The rangy 6-feet-8 Harkless was named Big East Rookie of the Year and is expected to be picked somewhere between No. 15 and No. 25.
If everything goes as is expected, the 18 year-old Harkless will end all the speculation about his future at the 2 p.m. press conference.
Harkless had an outstanding freshman year even if the Red Storm struggled at times. He averaged 15.5 points and 8.5 rebounds— sixth and second best, respectively, among freshmen nationally. Harkless' stock skyrocketed at the end of the season and, with a little added weight (he weighs 208 pounds), could flourish in the league.
If Harkless chooses not to hire an agent, he will have the option of removing his name from the draft and could return to St. John's. Once he hires an agent he is no longer considered an amateur.
The guard/forward's exit would be the latest hit for the the already thin Red Storm.
Lavin is recovering from prostate cancer surgery and has limited his time coaching on the sidelines. He has been concentrating on recruiting and watching games from a suite at Madison Square Garden on occasion.
The team itself has had trouble keeping all of the scholarship players on the roster this past season. Three players were declared academically ineligible at the beginning of the season and two others transferred.
Not to worry. St. John's already has another top point guard lined up. Jamal Branch, a transfer from Texas A&M, will join the team in the middle of next year and St. John's already has commitments from 6-8 blue chipper JaKarr Sampson and 6-3 Felix Balamou.
Lavin will attend the news conference and has publicly said that whatever Harkless decides, "we will enthusiastically support him."
Tampilkan postingan dengan label Moe Harkless. Tampilkan semua postingan
Tampilkan postingan dengan label Moe Harkless. Tampilkan semua postingan
Minggu, 18 Maret 2012
Sabtu, 25 Februari 2012
St. John's scores basket for Notre Dame; But still upsets No. 20 Fighting Irish
St. John's is starting to play its best basketball of the season and— despite scoring a basket for the visiting team— held off a frenetic come-back by Notre Dame to post its first victory over a ranked team this season.
Even if the Red Storm wasn't perfect for 40 minutes, they definitely played their best first half in 2012.
The Red Storm won their third straight game by shocking the 20th-ranked Fighting Irish, 61-58, in Madison Square Garden on Saturday afternoon.
St. John's (13-16, 6-10) had lost 10 consecutive games against ranked opponents this season when— with three minutes to go and a 56-52 lead— a missed shot by Notre Dame's Pat Connaughton was inadvertently tipped in by St. John's Sir'Dominic Pointer to close the gap to two points.
It looked like another Red Storm collapse was inevitable.
Notre Dame's Jack Cooley was credited with the score, but replays showed he never even touched the ball— it was all Pointer.
It was a bucket that the Red Storm couldn't afford to give the visiting team. St. John's went more than five minutes without scoring a field goal and were up only 57-56 with 44 seconds left after Notre Dame scored on an inbounds pass.
Notre Dame (20-9, 12-4) stormed back from a double-digit deficit and had momentum on its side. Only Amir Garret's drive through traffic in the lane with no time on the shot clock and only 8.9 seconds left saved the game for the Johnnies. Garret's runner clinched the victory and snapped the Fighting Irish's nine-game win streak.
Notre dame's Alex Dragevich missed a long three-point shot at the end of the game.
Moe Harkless— the freshman phenom— finished with 22 points and nine rebounds. D'Angelo Harrison had 15 points and Garret had 11. Cooley and Scott Martin finished with 18 apiece for the Irish.
Both coaching staffs sported blue bow ties to help raise awareness of prostate cancer. St. John's head coach Steve Lavin is still recovering from surgery for the disease.
Even if the Red Storm wasn't perfect for 40 minutes, they definitely played their best first half in 2012.
The Red Storm won their third straight game by shocking the 20th-ranked Fighting Irish, 61-58, in Madison Square Garden on Saturday afternoon.
St. John's (13-16, 6-10) had lost 10 consecutive games against ranked opponents this season when— with three minutes to go and a 56-52 lead— a missed shot by Notre Dame's Pat Connaughton was inadvertently tipped in by St. John's Sir'Dominic Pointer to close the gap to two points.
It looked like another Red Storm collapse was inevitable.
Notre Dame's Jack Cooley was credited with the score, but replays showed he never even touched the ball— it was all Pointer.
It was a bucket that the Red Storm couldn't afford to give the visiting team. St. John's went more than five minutes without scoring a field goal and were up only 57-56 with 44 seconds left after Notre Dame scored on an inbounds pass.
Notre Dame (20-9, 12-4) stormed back from a double-digit deficit and had momentum on its side. Only Amir Garret's drive through traffic in the lane with no time on the shot clock and only 8.9 seconds left saved the game for the Johnnies. Garret's runner clinched the victory and snapped the Fighting Irish's nine-game win streak.
Notre dame's Alex Dragevich missed a long three-point shot at the end of the game.
Moe Harkless— the freshman phenom— finished with 22 points and nine rebounds. D'Angelo Harrison had 15 points and Garret had 11. Cooley and Scott Martin finished with 18 apiece for the Irish.
Both coaching staffs sported blue bow ties to help raise awareness of prostate cancer. St. John's head coach Steve Lavin is still recovering from surgery for the disease.
Sabtu, 17 Desember 2011
Lavin Watches St. John's Outlast Fordham, 56-50, From Florida Gym
St. John's used only five players in the first half and added another for the second as the short-handed Red Storm defeated Fordham, 56-50, at the Holiday Festival at Madison Square Garden Saturday afternoon.
Steve Lavin missed his fifth game in a row while he recovers from prostate cancer surgery. The St. John's head coach was at a high school tournament in Florida where he is recruiting and texted to Associated Press after the win.
"Big W! For a number of reasons!" Lavin texted. "Our first Garden victory... payoff of the work put in in the past week...puts wind in the sails and bounce in the kid's steps... chance to go into Christmas on an uptick."
Speaking of wind, the St. John's (5-5) squad is lucky they didn't run out of it. It was the team's first game since Nurideen Lindsay transferred. Three academically-ineligible players leaves them with a six-man rotation. Malik Stith sat out the first half for an academics violation, but played the second half and contributed a key steal.
Freshman forward Moe Harkless had 13 points and 16 rebounds. It was his third straight double-double and it helped the Red Storm snap a three-game losing streak but not before the team huffed-and-puffed their way to victory.
"Once you get that second wind, I could keep playing for another 40 minutes, probably" joked Harkless.
Harkless was one of four Red Storm starters who did play the full 40 minutes.
Fordham (4-6) came back in the second half after St. John's appeared to take control by running off an 18-0 spurt that started in the first half and carried over to the second. The flurry of points gave them a comfortable 42-26 lead with 16:53 to play.
The Rams almost took a page from last year's comeback from a 21-point deficit to beat the Johnnies 84-81.
Fordham got to within three points, 53-50, with 1:56 to play and had a chance to tie the game after the Storm's D'Angelo Harrison blew a jumper. An 3-point air ball by the Rams' Bryan Smith sealed their fate after St. John's made 3-of-4 free-throws in the final 26 seconds.
St. John's assistant coach Mike Dunlap— who is filling in for the recuperating Lavin— knows his young team is going to need all the stamina it can muster until the rigorous Big East schedule starts and the three ineligible players can return to the roster.
"They had the momentum and they were making shots," said Dunlap. "In the first half we were fresher and able to transition and to get to their zone before they set it up, especially the last 2:30 of the first half."
Steve Lavin missed his fifth game in a row while he recovers from prostate cancer surgery. The St. John's head coach was at a high school tournament in Florida where he is recruiting and texted to Associated Press after the win.
"Big W! For a number of reasons!" Lavin texted. "Our first Garden victory... payoff of the work put in in the past week...puts wind in the sails and bounce in the kid's steps... chance to go into Christmas on an uptick."
Speaking of wind, the St. John's (5-5) squad is lucky they didn't run out of it. It was the team's first game since Nurideen Lindsay transferred. Three academically-ineligible players leaves them with a six-man rotation. Malik Stith sat out the first half for an academics violation, but played the second half and contributed a key steal.
Freshman forward Moe Harkless had 13 points and 16 rebounds. It was his third straight double-double and it helped the Red Storm snap a three-game losing streak but not before the team huffed-and-puffed their way to victory.
"Once you get that second wind, I could keep playing for another 40 minutes, probably" joked Harkless.
Harkless was one of four Red Storm starters who did play the full 40 minutes.
Fordham (4-6) came back in the second half after St. John's appeared to take control by running off an 18-0 spurt that started in the first half and carried over to the second. The flurry of points gave them a comfortable 42-26 lead with 16:53 to play.
The Rams almost took a page from last year's comeback from a 21-point deficit to beat the Johnnies 84-81.
Fordham got to within three points, 53-50, with 1:56 to play and had a chance to tie the game after the Storm's D'Angelo Harrison blew a jumper. An 3-point air ball by the Rams' Bryan Smith sealed their fate after St. John's made 3-of-4 free-throws in the final 26 seconds.
St. John's assistant coach Mike Dunlap— who is filling in for the recuperating Lavin— knows his young team is going to need all the stamina it can muster until the rigorous Big East schedule starts and the three ineligible players can return to the roster.
"They had the momentum and they were making shots," said Dunlap. "In the first half we were fresher and able to transition and to get to their zone before they set it up, especially the last 2:30 of the first half."
Rabu, 26 Oktober 2011
St. John's Young Guns Begin Era With Impressive Win
The most anticipated St. John's basketball team in over a decade took to the floor at Carnesecca Arena and brought in a new era of pride after beating C.W. Post 110-80 last night in an exhibition game. The Red Storm looked pretty impressive considering three of their 10 scholarship players weren't playing due to academic ineligibility.
The highly-rated recruiting class is filled with so much young talent, it's hard to say—after one game— who to deserves the most praise.
Every one of these players have their eyes on one day playing professionally but there is a sense that—for now— they know how to share the wealth. Six players finished the game scoring in double figures.
What the St. John's team lacks in size, they make up with incredible athletic skills. The rangy, young talent—wait until their bodies fill out—can run the floor with the best of them.
St. John's head coach Steve Lavin—who missed the game while recovering from prostate surgery—has assembled an unrelenting offensive machine. When— and if— JaKarr Sampson, Norvell Pelle and Amir Garrettt return around Christmas time, Lavin might have more gifts than he can open.
Speaking of gifts, God's Gift Achiuwa (21 points, nine rebounds) looks like a real bruiser. The muscular 6-foot-eight power-forward can run baseline to baseline like a guard and is a defensive and offensive match-up nightmare under the basket. Achiuwa looked like a man among boys and started the game with 10 points in the first seven minutes.
Swing forward Moe Harkless (14 points, 14 rebounds), the highest rated New York high school player since Ron Artest to play for St. John's, is a high-flying board hoarder, while Nurideen Lindsay (16 points, 7 assists) can take the shot as well as dish them out.
The rest of the team just put on a scoring clinic and exploded for a 36-point lead at one time in the second half.
Combo guard Phil Greene (20 points, 4-of-6 3-pointers) looked like the floor leader and was joined in the backcourt by shooting guard D'Angelo Harrison (20 points, 4 assists).
While C.W. Post is no UConn, it still took advantage of the Red Storm's deficiencies on defense. Mike Dunlap, who took over at the helm for the recovering Lavin, wasn't oblivious to the problem.
"We're a new unit and were trying to figure out who we were," said the interim coach. "We know we need to do a better job on the defensive end."
The team speed and athleticism will only go so far when St. John's starts banging bodies with the giants of the Big East. The smaller C.W. Post team battled to a 36-36 tie on the boards and that won't lead to wins in January and February.
St. John's gave up too many easy shots while C.W. Post's All-American Stefan Bonneau scored a game high 28 points and was 5-of-9 from the 3-point arc.
In their debut, St. John's fouled the Pioneers early and often and looked slow in transition during the first half. Call it opening night jitters. The inexperienced—but talented— Red Storm made it apparent that they were playing for the first time together and their game appeared skittish but effortless.
What St. John's lacked in first-half D, they made up with a second-half O. The 110 point total was the most points scored by the Red Storm since 115 vs. Niagara on Jan. 4 1999 and, as a team, finished the game shooting 65.8% (50-for-76). They also doled out 24 assists and forced 19 turnovers.
It's too early to put a label on this Red Storm team but, if last night was any indication, there are a lot of stars in the making and they are going to be a fun bunch to watch.
Last season, Lavin's first year in Queens, St. John's surprised everyone by making the NCAA tournament for the first time since the last McRib. He did it with a veteran bunch of over-achieving seniors.
This year, Lavin comes in with his team, the third-rated recruiting class in the nation and high hopes on the St. John's campus. The Big East coaches picked the Red Storm to finish 12th in the league. Last night, the young Storm looked a lot better than that.
The highly-rated recruiting class is filled with so much young talent, it's hard to say—after one game— who to deserves the most praise.
Every one of these players have their eyes on one day playing professionally but there is a sense that—for now— they know how to share the wealth. Six players finished the game scoring in double figures.
What the St. John's team lacks in size, they make up with incredible athletic skills. The rangy, young talent—wait until their bodies fill out—can run the floor with the best of them.
St. John's head coach Steve Lavin—who missed the game while recovering from prostate surgery—has assembled an unrelenting offensive machine. When— and if— JaKarr Sampson, Norvell Pelle and Amir Garrettt return around Christmas time, Lavin might have more gifts than he can open.
Speaking of gifts, God's Gift Achiuwa (21 points, nine rebounds) looks like a real bruiser. The muscular 6-foot-eight power-forward can run baseline to baseline like a guard and is a defensive and offensive match-up nightmare under the basket. Achiuwa looked like a man among boys and started the game with 10 points in the first seven minutes.
Swing forward Moe Harkless (14 points, 14 rebounds), the highest rated New York high school player since Ron Artest to play for St. John's, is a high-flying board hoarder, while Nurideen Lindsay (16 points, 7 assists) can take the shot as well as dish them out.
The rest of the team just put on a scoring clinic and exploded for a 36-point lead at one time in the second half.
Combo guard Phil Greene (20 points, 4-of-6 3-pointers) looked like the floor leader and was joined in the backcourt by shooting guard D'Angelo Harrison (20 points, 4 assists).
While C.W. Post is no UConn, it still took advantage of the Red Storm's deficiencies on defense. Mike Dunlap, who took over at the helm for the recovering Lavin, wasn't oblivious to the problem.
"We're a new unit and were trying to figure out who we were," said the interim coach. "We know we need to do a better job on the defensive end."
The team speed and athleticism will only go so far when St. John's starts banging bodies with the giants of the Big East. The smaller C.W. Post team battled to a 36-36 tie on the boards and that won't lead to wins in January and February.
St. John's gave up too many easy shots while C.W. Post's All-American Stefan Bonneau scored a game high 28 points and was 5-of-9 from the 3-point arc.
In their debut, St. John's fouled the Pioneers early and often and looked slow in transition during the first half. Call it opening night jitters. The inexperienced—but talented— Red Storm made it apparent that they were playing for the first time together and their game appeared skittish but effortless.
What St. John's lacked in first-half D, they made up with a second-half O. The 110 point total was the most points scored by the Red Storm since 115 vs. Niagara on Jan. 4 1999 and, as a team, finished the game shooting 65.8% (50-for-76). They also doled out 24 assists and forced 19 turnovers.
It's too early to put a label on this Red Storm team but, if last night was any indication, there are a lot of stars in the making and they are going to be a fun bunch to watch.
Last season, Lavin's first year in Queens, St. John's surprised everyone by making the NCAA tournament for the first time since the last McRib. He did it with a veteran bunch of over-achieving seniors.
This year, Lavin comes in with his team, the third-rated recruiting class in the nation and high hopes on the St. John's campus. The Big East coaches picked the Red Storm to finish 12th in the league. Last night, the young Storm looked a lot better than that.
Label:
Big East,
C.W. Post,
D'Angelo Harrison,
God's Gift Achiuwa,
Moe Harkless,
Nurideen Lindsey,
Phil Greene,
Red Storm,
St. John's basketball,
Steve Lavin,
UConn
Langganan:
Postingan (Atom)