Focal Point: Vincent Council
Posted by Patrick Prendergast on November 29th, 2011He’s the best point guard you may have never heard of and if Providence’s Vincent Council is not the one player above all in the Big East whom his team could not do without, he is certainly on the short list. The 6’2” junior is the best and most experienced player on a team with no seniors that is fighting to regain relevance under first-year head coach Ed Cooley after a tumultuous three years under Keno Davis. Coming off back-to-back 4-14 Big East finishes, the Friars have not done much winning in Council’s tenure, but the lack of success as a team thus far has little reflection upon Council’s contribution.
Fitting of his unassuming and determined personality, Council is quietly respected as one of the top guards in the conference. In similar under-the-radar fashion Council (affectionately known as “VC”) was unheralded coming out of the Patterson School (NC) despite playing for one of the nation’s top teams in his senior year. Upon arriving at Providence, Council was forced to grow up quickly in a league that does not take kindly to its young, appearing in all 31 of his team’s games, starting eight, and averaging 27.6 minutes per game. Council’s hard-nosed approach coupled with his speed, lighting-quick first step, and tremendous court vision endeared him to the Friar faithful early on, and he responded to the minutes and cheers with solid play as a freshman (10.3 PPG, 3.5 RPG, 4.6 APG) earning Big East All-Rookie Team honors.
Then the off-season from Hell hit Smith Hill. Two players, Johnnie Lacy and James Still, were expelled from school after brutally beating another student in a random act of violence. This was followed by the release of Jamine “Greedy” Peterson, who was to be Providence’s leading returning scorer and rebounder, for his participation in undisclosed incidents related to an on-campus party over that summer.
Despite the off-season turmoil, the Friars welcomed in a top 50 recruit in shooting guard Gerard Coleman and hoped to build momentum on the court and in Big East recruiting battles. However, the program continued to crumble behind the scenes and even with the arrival of the slashing scorer Coleman, Providence became a two-headed monster in 2010-2011 with Marshon Brooks and Vincent Council. While this resulted in an historic season for Brooks individually, and Council’s numbers increased across the board (13.7 PPG, 4.2 RPG, 5.9 APG), he did not display his full array of skills. That said, Council was an iron man, starting all thirty-two games and averaging 36.2 minutes per contest but Providence, although they continued to score at a high rate, became a stagnant team offensively as Keno Davis forced the action through Brooks and Council almost exclusively in his high-octane shoot-first, think about the shot later offense. The numbers bear this out as the Brooks/Council duo accounted for eye popping percentages of the team’s totals for the year in various offensive categories: points – 50.5%, shots – 47.9%, 3-point attempts – 49.9%, free throw attempts – 49.3%. This uneven distribution caused others on the team to become disengaged, making an already poor and unfocused defensive group even worse as the Friars gave up an astounding 75.3 points per game. The lack of wins, defense and overall control of the program ultimately led to the dismissal of Davis and the hiring of Cooley.