BOCA RATON, Fla. (AP) -It’s a long way from Madison Square Garden to FAU Arena – and a journey Isiah Thomas and Mike Jarvis had to take.
Linked by high-profile tenures in New York – Thomas with the Knicks, Jarvis at St. John’s – the coaches eventually wound up at Florida International and Florida Atlantic, schools that lacked national recognition before either came along.
On Saturday, they were matching wits for the first time, a star-crossed coaching matchup that the Sun Belt Conference hasn’t seen before.
s.”
Despite showing signs of hope by going 3-3 since Jan. 7, Thomas’ debut season often has been rough. The Golden Panthers are 7-16 overall and 4-6 in the Sun Belt – though that’s still more wins than many people expected FIU to put together this season.
“If we shoot the ball well, we’re a pretty good basketball team,” said Thomas, who is expected to have one of the nation’s top classes of newcomers next season, the first for which he was able to fully recruit the type of player he wants.
Meanwhile, Jarvis hasn’t needed much time to get the Owls flying right. After going 6-26 last season and being picked to be near the bottom of the Sun Belt this winter, Jarvis has put together the biggest surprise in the conference.
Florida Atlantic (11-10, 7-3 entering Saturday) is tied atop the Sun Belt’s East Division and seems to have a legitimate chance of becoming the fourth school Jarvis has taken to the NCAA tournament, joining Boston University, George Washington and St. John’s.
“I’m very pleased with the team. They have given great effort, energy, enthusiasm and they all have great attitudes,” said Jarvis, who coached Patrick Ewing in high school and took St. John’s within one game of the Final Four in 1999. “Anytime you have a group that combines those four things, you’re going to be very successful.”
.
FAU first made a splashy coaching hire in 2005, bringing in Matt Doherty, who was looking to spark his career again after the former North Carolina star struggled mightily on the Tar Heels’ sideline. Doherty lasted only one season and his replacement, Rex Walters, stayed for two years before leaving for a better offer at San Francisco.
Enter Jarvis, who loves Boca Raton, even though FAU hired Doherty over him five years ago.
After that run to the NCAA’s Elite Eight in 1999, it was all downhill for Jarvis at St. John’s. Players got in trouble on and off the court and the program eventually went on probation because a member of the staff made improper payments to a player. These days, at least at FAU, that’s all forgotten.
And the league welcomed both Thomas and Jarvis with open arms.
“These are guys coming from programs that know what type of athlete you’ve got to have to compete at the highest level,” Sun Belt commissioner Wright Waters said. “And I don’t think it’s just an accident that both of those programs, FAU and FIU, are playing very well right now. … Yes, they bring notoriety with them. Yes, they bring interest with them. But they bring an awareness with them as well.”
Thomas, too, came to FIU toting plenty of questions.
nd unconscious by rescue workers after taking sleeping pills at his home in the fall of 2008.
Barring a complete and immediate turnaround, FIU is on its way to a 10th straight losing season.
But like Jarvis, Thomas is loving the game again. His team is getting better. A slew of recruits who wouldn’t have given FIU a glance before he arrived last April are on their way to the Golden Panthers’ locker room. Better days for both him and FIU are coming, he insists.
“Until I look up and see those Top 25 schools that they talk about and put on television all the time, I won’t be satisfied until we’re one of those programs,” Thomas said.
Jarvis and Thomas agree, they can get there from here.
Add A Comment