NEWS . Sports

Super 'Nova

The expanded scope of Villanova's recruiting is the key to its success.

Published: Feb 3, 2010

In fall 2005, Gerald Henderson Jr., now a Charlotte Bobcat, then a star guard at Episcopal Academy, was deciding which college he should attend. A two-time Gatorade Pennsylvania player of the year who was named a second-team All-American by Parade magazine, played in the McDonald's All-American Game and was listed as the ninth-most sought-after recruit in the nation by the PrepStars recruiting handbook, Henderson had options. One of those options, Villanova University, was just six miles down the road from his high school. Henderson knew the school well. His sister had graduated from 'Nova. Jay Wright, the team's head coach, had three children who attended Episcopal with Henderson. And Dan Dougherty, his coach at EA, was a former 'Nova assistant. Henderson's father, also named Gerald, was friendly with Wright, and the 'Nova head coach had been recruiting the son of the former 76er since the time he first met Henderson at age 9.

Henderson choose Duke.

"We're a national school, our school plucks good people in different parts of the country," Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski explained afterward, "I guess that's how the pluck occurred."

Coach K's statement rang a little too true. In Philly, the national title is almost assuredly coming from 'Nova or not coming at all. If the team couldn't keep the city's best players, like Coach K said, it really didn't seem like that chip was coming at all. And they couldn't. If that were to keep up, Villanova would remain a second-tier program, albeit one on a nice run. Historically, second-tier programs don't win championships — the last half-dozen title winners all have multiple championships, and the top four winningest programs have 40 percent of all NCAA championships. National championships go to national schools, and Villanova, which when Henderson committed had no players in its regular rotation from farther away than Maryland, seemed pretty local.

Fast-forward five years, and Villanova is the No. 2 team in the nation. It isn't a fluke, either; the Wildcats haven't fallen out of the top 10 all year, and are one of a small handful of teams that have a reasonable chance at winning it all this April in Indianapolis. They're better than Duke, the team they handily dispatched from the Big Dance last year. Jay Wright has assembled a team that can reasonably claim the best one through 11 in the history of the Big 5. If they don't make it back to the Final Four, it will be an upset.

Part of that success has been Wright's particularly strong pipelines in and around Washington, D.C., where Dante Cunningham and Dwayne Anderson have turned into Scottie Reynolds and Isaiah Armwood; and the New York/New Jersey area, where Allen Ray, Mike Nardi and Randy Foye have become Corey Fisher, Dom Cheek and Antonio Pena.

ADVERTISEMENT

But 'Nova has been firmly entrenched in those areas for years, and they haven't ever been 19-1. So what changed?

For one thing, when Roman Catholic grad Maalik Wayns signed on to run the show for 'Nova, the 'Cats did bring in the area's best high school senior. For another, 'Nova has expanded its base. The team boasts players not only repping Northeast corridor railway stops, but also contributors from Virginia to West Africa, and next year their influence will expand again: James Bell, their top signed recruit, hails from Florida; Jayvaughn Pinkston is headed to 'Nova after de-committing from Tennessee; and they remain in the mix for Cory Joseph, a Canadian playing in Nevada. Suddenly those "Nova Nation" T-shirts that fill Radnor aren't so ironic.

Still, the player who might have been the sweetest get for Philadelphians may not be Wayns or Mouph Yarou, the African big man who shows the program's reach, or even Reynolds, who might end up the national player of the year. It may well be Taylor King, a 6-foot-6-inch transfer forward, originally from California.

King, like Henderson, was also named his state's player of the year, tabbed a second team All-American by Parade magazine and played in the McDonald's game. Like Henderson, King also opted for Duke. Unlike Henderson, King decided that national program just couldn't highlight his talents as well as another national program 400 miles north. I guess that's how the pluck occurred.

E. James Beale was tabbed a second-team All-American by this newspaper. E-mail him at e.james.beale@citypaper.net.

Comments

Be the first to comment on this article.


All reader comments are subject to our Terms of Use. By clicking Post Comment, you acknowledge that you have reviewed and agree to these Terms.

Name
please enter your name
Email (will not be published)
please enter a valid email
URL
please enter a valid url
Comment
please enter a comment
Enter the security code on the right in the textbox below.
Security Code
please enter the code
Join the City Paper Mailing List
 

Also In This Week's News Section

A Million Stories
Man Overboard!:
Uh-oh
by Isaiah Thompson

The Bell Curve
  • A Million Stories
  • Uh-oh
  • The Bell Curve
Recent Comments
Web Exclusives
Daedelus
Mon., Feb. 22, 8 p.m., $10, with Nosaj Thing and Jogger, Kung Fu Necktie, 1250 N. Front St., 215-291-4919, kungfunecktie.com.
Fever Pitch
One Philly dance troupe lets imagination carry it to the farthest corners of reality.
Advertisements
 


search restaurants by name
search by neighborhood
Search
search by cuisine
title
theater

Search
search for:
within:   of  
more jobs
(use zip or city, state)
Search
"Great vision without great people is irrelevant."
—Jim Collins, Author,
"Good to Great"
In Partnership with JobCircle
start date / /  select date
end date / /  select date
category
keyword
Search Buy Concert Tickets
Category:
Keywords: Search

Search Real Estate

ALL | MON | TUE | WED | THU | FRI | SAT | SUN

or

LOCATION:

ADVERTISEMENT
JH on
The Fall Guy
`Wow - what a bunch of racist district administrators. Can someone forward this to the White House, this needs national attention or else it’ll be swept ` »
JH on
Update: School District clears S. Philly High student Hao Luu
`Wow - what a bunch of racist district administrators. Can someone forward this to the White House, this needs national attention or else it'll be swept ` »
Brandon Wagner on
MUSIC MADNESS: Win The Runaways soundtrack
`1. Jodie Foster and Scott Baio in Bugsy Malone (1976) 2. Writer/Director Floria Sigismondi directed two of David Bowie's music videos: "Little Wonder" ` »
Rick Wiese on
The Ghost Writer
`First, Ewan McGregor did not play a journalist in this film. In fact, at one point, his character specifically says he is not a journalist. He plays a ` »
Asian American on
The Fall Guy
`What we have here is truly sad but real. I was born and raised in South Philly for 21 years. The schools I went to were diverse and to think that its ` »
Charles T. Graham on
The Fall Guy
`Once again, until the press exposed the lies and deception of the School District and Legreta Brown's incompetent administration of South Philadelphia ` »
HG on
Update: School District clears S. Philly High student Hao Luu
`Thanks for your great work on this story. I have no doubt that the strength of the story had a lot to do with pushing the District to take action after ` »
Perca Set on
Cooperage up for early April
`I agree with the Daytime Drinker about the dull menu great for breakfast maybe but dinner noway. You want whiskey go to the Village Whiskey (Jose Garces) ` »
charlie on
CONCERT REVIEW: Janelle Monáe @ Johnny Brendas, 3/19
`I still have a serious case of afterglow from that show. The fact that we got that for only $12 still feels like some incredibly kind cosmic mistake.` »
Ed Simko on
Chima Brazilian Steakhouse
`Please a Coupon please for a party of 4?` »