Q:
During the pre-season you did not indicate to me that this team
would get to something like 19 wins. How did you do it?
A:
From the first day of practice I was obviously concerned about our
numbers. The first question I got was from senior Terry Goodwin
from Streator. He asked, "since we have so few players, does
that mean we get more meal money?" We only had 10 come out.
Fortunately all 10 could play. I was discouraged back in
September. I didn’t think we were going to have enough talent or
enough size. Then, my attitude shifted as I watched us in November
as the season began. I saw that we were going to be much more
athletic, especially at the wings. We had Lincoln High graduate
Gabe Rutledge coming back from an ACL injury; we picked up a nice
player out of Danville, Adrian Davis. Mike Shepherd from Owasso,
Mich.; Matt Clark from Evansville, Ind.; and Tom Gibson from
Dee-Mack are all very athletic players at this level. Although we
weren’t very big in the post, even after we added a Millikin
transfer, Jonathan Woods out of Palmyra, our athleticism on the
wing made up for some of that. I began to think then, that maybe
we could be pretty good.
Q:
Was it the schedule, the senior leadership or the team’s
chemistry that launched this season?
A:
Primarily, our senior leadership was there in the form of work
ethic. I give Chris Foster, of East Peoria and Tyson Graber of
Montgomery, Ind., our co-captains, a lot of credit for that. They
are neither one the most gifted athlete that we’ve had here, nor
were they the most gifted athlete on this team, but they both
brought a great work ethic. From day one, they set the tone of
hard work that made us a better basketball team. The second thing
that this team had going for it was that it might have been the
most unselfish team I have ever had the privilege to coach. They
were guys who were willing to sacrifice for the sake of the team.
We didn’t have those little petty things that sometimes come up.
Who’s taking what shots, or how many shots is someone getting
during the games...we didn’t have to deal with those kind of
things. I think the work ethic and the unselfishness took this
team to a level that it probably could not have attained.
Q:
You guys had a great ride. What were some of the highlights?
A:
The first game of the year, isn’t a bad place to start. We stood
on the court at Kentucky Christian College and watched their
players receive their National Championship rings from the year
before. They returned 11 out of 13 players from that championship
team, including four starters. Stepping out on that floor and
beating them by ten is not a bad way to start your season. Over
the next month, we had wins over Philadelphia, who advanced to
Nationals this week...over Multnomah, Ore., who was picked to win
their regional. Another highlight, which also involved Kentucky,
was winning our own tournament. At that time, they were ranked 2nd
in the country. The night before, we had beaten Crown College of
Minnesota and they were ranked eighth in the country...they also
advanced to the National Tourney this week. Those are a few of the
highlights that I’ll remember from this season.
Q:
Talk a little about your personnel.
A:
Although local product Gabe Rutledge was in his second year of
school, he was only a freshman due to tearing his ACL early last
year. We received a medical red-shirt for him. Gabe had some high
points. He was the MVP of our tournament. He had 19 and 25 points
in those two games. So, he had some of those types of games, even
though he was struggling with his knee throughout the season. He
also endured an ankle sprain that cost him two or three games and
an Achilles problem that cost him some more time. So, Gabe battled
the injury bug much of the year. I would say that in our last
game, Gabe was our offensive leader once again, including hitting
a dramatic 3-point bomb with :09 seconds left tying the game and
giving us a chance for the win.
Probably
the player that most would see as our best player would be Matt
Clark. Matt’s a 5’10" sophomore guard. The coaches voted
him this week as the co-MVP of the Midwest Region. He averaged
16.5 points per game, shot 40 percent on 3's, 80 percent on free
throws and close to 50 percent from the field. Matt also had 70
steals showing that he’s not just an offensive player. Adrian
Davis is a really nice freshman. He played the post in high school
and we moved him to the 3-spot in our system. He averaged 12
points a game, which isn’t bad for a freshman.
|
Q:
What does the future hold for LCC’s team?
A:
We’ll have six players off of this team back. The good news is
that all six are very good players including Gabe, Clark, Davis,
Gibson, Shepherd and Zach Below from Evansville, Ind.. The
not-so-good news is that all six of those guys are perimeter
players. We lose all four of our post players. We may slide Gabe
to the 4-spot next year because offensively he can create a lot of
trouble for people there, but by gift he is best at the 3-spot. We’ve
got to go find three or four big kids, to be what we want to be.
Who knows who we're going to get?
Brook
Brotzman, LCC’s former soccer coach is presently in the
Dominican Republic, where he hopes to bring me Rafael Martinez. He’s
6’3" and weighs about 210. He currently plays in the super
elite league in the Dominican. He’s already had conversations
with schools like Georgetown, Ky., which is a NAIA power, and with
the University of Louisville. We may get him here for this fall.
Locally, we’re looking at Brett Williams down at Central A &
M and Ryan Widenburner at St. Joe.
Q:
Randy, I believe that this was your fifth year as LCC’s head
coach. You’ve told me about your team’s work ethic and it’s
leadership, but you haven’t told me about the coaching
adjustments that you made to be this successful. I felt you did
your best coaching job, maybe ever, this season. Please respond to
that.
A:
Well, I think you learn something every year. Every year brings it’s
own set of challenges. What a coach does--what B.J. (McCullum)
does at Lincoln College and what Neil (Alexander) does at Lincoln
High School-- is that you take the cards you’ve been dealt and
then you determine how you’re going to play that hand to
maximize your opportunities. We were dealt athleticism on the
wings, decent shooting on the perimeter. We were not as athletic
in the pos, but we had kids who would work hard in the post.
We
tried to create opportunities where our athleticism would work to
our advantage on the perimeter by pressuring the basketball,
denying in the passing lanes and by doing those things maybe
people couldn’t pass the ball into the post quite as much. We
were only 6’5" and 6’3" in the paint often going up
against 6’7" or 6’9" in the post. I thought that
this particular team did a good job of handling the basketball as
evidenced by a number of games where we had less than ten
turnovers. We had two games where we had five or less. This team
just did a good job of managing the ball. Since we weren’t very
big and weren’t going to out-rebound very many people, we had to
win the turnover battle.
Q:
Our online readers might not be familiar with the uniqueness of
LCC or its sports program. Tell us what makes your basketball
program so distinct.
A:
We can compete with most of the NCAA Division III teams in the
state, athletically. Rutledge, Davis or Clark could have played
for anybody in the SLIAC (a conference includes Greenville,
Blackburn, MacMurray, Fontebonne and others). Those three could
probably even make the team at Illinois Wesleyan. So, we do have
some athletes that can play at that level.
But
the thing that makes Lincoln Christian College unique is that we
place the emphasis on the spiritual, which they don’t get other
places; and we don’t apologize for that. We believe that if you’re
going to develop the whole person, then you need to develop the
whole person. There are some programs that focus on just the
physical. Sadly, some of them are not even concerned about the
academics. There are many more programs that focus on the physical
and the academics. But we believe that we want to create the
"whole" man. So, we pay attention to their emotional
growth as well as their mental, physical and spiritual growth.
I
believe that basketball serves as the greatest laboratory
experience on our campus in terms of developing character. We
approach the whole basketball context as a character building
experience. We learn things like team play and sacrifice and
accepting roles. We learn how to deal with adversity and success,
how to persevere through tough circumstances and we try to put
that all in a context, that’s going to carry on in their lives.
We probably emphasize those things considerably more than most
other programs.
[Jeff
Mayfield]
|