by SteveVictory » Tue Mar 18, 2025 10:05 pm
Meeting the team later that afternoon didn’t go nearly as well as Patrick had anticipated.
At St. Thomas Academy, he had been a rock star to his players. His reception as he walked into the Stonehill auxiliary gym proved lukewarm at best. A few of the guys, like freshman guards Charlie King and Gene Flannery, were downright hostile. Was it his age? His lack of experience? The fact that the head coach who wooed many of them to campus had been let go in an unceremonious fashion?
It’s not like Callahan was taking over an all-star team. He had watched a lot of film from the 2022-23 season the night before. It was a mixed bag at best. There were flashes of greatness and the occasional Sports Center highlight. But a lack of cohesion as well. And dumb turnovers and mistakes. His St. Thomas players had seemed more disciplined, and some more athletic.
Callahan had tried to model his high school coaching style after UNC great Roy Williams. He loved to go up-tempo, crash the boards, play through the bigs, bury opponents with scoring runs.
The new coach was shocked that no one on his roster had much familiarity with a simple motion offense. The previous staff had been a proponent of freelance hoops – sometimes some Five Out, with some Flex and Triangle thrown in.
Patrick faced his first decision: adapt to his personnel, at least for this first season, or bite the bullet and force-feed his new players a heavy dose of motion even if it meant going 0-30?
As he walked out of the practice gym following the 90-minute meeting, Patrick wondered for the first time if he had bitten off too much? Would he have been better off sticking with Home Depot morning shifts and finishing his Master’s?
He was just about to get into his rental car when three of the Stonehill players came jogging up behind him.
“Coach Callahan?”
“Yeah.”
“We got your back, sir. We’re ready to work for you and lift this program.”
Callahan nodded at the trio standing in front of him. Relief swept over him. Screw lawn and garden. And Master’s degrees. He may have been a long way from home – and way out of his depth – but he was going to be a college basketball coach. He was going to make this work. He was all-in.
He also made a mental note: senior Anton Monroe and juniors Will Lucas and Byron Washburn would be his team captains when practice began a few months later.
Let’s go!