By MIKE POTTER, The Herald-Sun
N.C. Central opened men's basketball practice Monday night at McLendon-McDougald Gym, and Coach Henry Dickerson's Eagles are going to have to learn quickly.
NCCU's move up to the Division I level has made fund-raising a major consideration, and men's basketball is one of few sports that can get much done in that department. So Dickerson's team will play a tougher schedule than any other team at the school.
The Eagles open the season at Duke on Nov. 9, and after going to Rutgers on Nov. 12, they visit two-time reigning national champion Florida on Nov. 14.
That's the toughest part of a slate that doesn't let up much until after Christmas -- 15 of the Eagles' first 16 games are on the road, broken only by the home opener against Tennessee Tech on Nov. 21.
NCCU has just seven home games, although the Eagles will play seven other games around North Carolina including visits to N.C. State, Wake Forest and Davidson. Along the way, they'll play games in 12 other states, with Nebraska the biggest out-of-state name on the schedule after the Gators.
Dickerson (39-45) has been through a little of this before, going on the road against big-time powers several times a season when he was head coach at Chattanooga (72-73 in five seasons). But he never had to play 22 road games and never had to do it with a team boasting a total of 37 minutes experience in an official game against a Division I opponent.
Bryan Ayala played 36 minutes and Joshua Worthy one in last year's 68-47 defeat at East Carolina. Last season's losses at Duke and Wake Forest were exhibition games.
The best news Dickerson got this spring is that forward Charles Futrell, who missed last season with a shoulder injury from football, is back for a senior season after attending a pair of NFL preseason camps. Futrell averaged 10 points and 6.4 rebounds two seasons ago.
The only other NCCU player who has proven himself in four-year college ball is Ayala, who averaged 9.9 points and 4.0 rebounds last season.
Worthy, junior guard J'Mell Walters and sophomore forward Tremain Holloway have worn the Eagles' uniform before, but everyone else is new. Freshman Marius Vaskys (6-9, 220), a Lithuanian who finished his high school career at Cape Fear Christian, is the biggest recruit.
"We've got seven home games, and if we win more than seven games it's going to be a pretty good accomplishment," Dickerson said. "We've got a lot of guys who are going to be playing who have never been in a college basketball game, and they won't know what to expect. Maybe we can turn that into a positive.
"One thing we've done is recruit good people. I don't want our fans cheering for somebody just because he's wearing the school colors. I want them to be cheering for young men they might hire in a few years."
Ayala couldn't help but smile when he talked about the challenge of the schedule.
"Who wouldn't want to play teams like Duke and Florida?" he said. "If you don't want to play games like that, I don't know why you'd want to play basketball."
Added Worthy: "Of course we're excited. We want people to see how hard we play every game. I know we're going to be in condition."
NOTES -- NCCU's early season visits to Rutgers, Florida and North Dakota State (Nov. 17) plus the home game with Tennessee Tech are a part of the Blue Ribbon Classic. ... ECU is the only opponent returning from last season's schedule.
N.C. Central opened men's basketball practice Monday night at McLendon-McDougald Gym, and Coach Henry Dickerson's Eagles are going to have to learn quickly.
NCCU's move up to the Division I level has made fund-raising a major consideration, and men's basketball is one of few sports that can get much done in that department. So Dickerson's team will play a tougher schedule than any other team at the school.
The Eagles open the season at Duke on Nov. 9, and after going to Rutgers on Nov. 12, they visit two-time reigning national champion Florida on Nov. 14.
That's the toughest part of a slate that doesn't let up much until after Christmas -- 15 of the Eagles' first 16 games are on the road, broken only by the home opener against Tennessee Tech on Nov. 21.
NCCU has just seven home games, although the Eagles will play seven other games around North Carolina including visits to N.C. State, Wake Forest and Davidson. Along the way, they'll play games in 12 other states, with Nebraska the biggest out-of-state name on the schedule after the Gators.
Dickerson (39-45) has been through a little of this before, going on the road against big-time powers several times a season when he was head coach at Chattanooga (72-73 in five seasons). But he never had to play 22 road games and never had to do it with a team boasting a total of 37 minutes experience in an official game against a Division I opponent.
Bryan Ayala played 36 minutes and Joshua Worthy one in last year's 68-47 defeat at East Carolina. Last season's losses at Duke and Wake Forest were exhibition games.
The best news Dickerson got this spring is that forward Charles Futrell, who missed last season with a shoulder injury from football, is back for a senior season after attending a pair of NFL preseason camps. Futrell averaged 10 points and 6.4 rebounds two seasons ago.
The only other NCCU player who has proven himself in four-year college ball is Ayala, who averaged 9.9 points and 4.0 rebounds last season.
Worthy, junior guard J'Mell Walters and sophomore forward Tremain Holloway have worn the Eagles' uniform before, but everyone else is new. Freshman Marius Vaskys (6-9, 220), a Lithuanian who finished his high school career at Cape Fear Christian, is the biggest recruit.
"We've got seven home games, and if we win more than seven games it's going to be a pretty good accomplishment," Dickerson said. "We've got a lot of guys who are going to be playing who have never been in a college basketball game, and they won't know what to expect. Maybe we can turn that into a positive.
"One thing we've done is recruit good people. I don't want our fans cheering for somebody just because he's wearing the school colors. I want them to be cheering for young men they might hire in a few years."
Ayala couldn't help but smile when he talked about the challenge of the schedule.
"Who wouldn't want to play teams like Duke and Florida?" he said. "If you don't want to play games like that, I don't know why you'd want to play basketball."
Added Worthy: "Of course we're excited. We want people to see how hard we play every game. I know we're going to be in condition."
NOTES -- NCCU's early season visits to Rutgers, Florida and North Dakota State (Nov. 17) plus the home game with Tennessee Tech are a part of the Blue Ribbon Classic. ... ECU is the only opponent returning from last season's schedule.
No comments:
Post a Comment