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VCU Battling Ghosts From Years Past

A funny thing happens when a head coach leaves, his legacy left implanted into the university, the program and every single one of his players. In college basketball, where head coaches matter more for long-term success than do the players, a shockwave ripples through when such a shift occurs. Since his hire by VCU in spring 2009, Shaka Smart poured his heart and soul into the program, taking the reins from predecessor Anthony Grant and capitalizing on the team’s streak of consecutive 20-win seasons. Smart then led VCU — through injuries, roster turnover and conference realignment — to five NCAA Tournament appearances over five seasons, including a 2011 run to the Final Four. Last March, on an otherwise uneventful day in Richmond, the man who had turned VCU basketball into a hot name in college basketball, bolted. The head coaching position offered by Texas, a major state school with a seemingly endless supply of resources, proved too lucrative and rife with possibilities to turn down. But while Smart packed his bags and headed west, the heart and soul of the storied program remained in place.

Shaka Smart’s imprint on the VCU program will be forever entrenched – but Will Wade is off to a solid start. (AP)

Newly minted head coach Will Wade, Smart’s first hire at VCU, returned to the school, carrying with him a keen sense of familiarity with Smart’s patented HAVOC system. So, while the program suffered quite a bit of turmoil amid lost recruits, graduating seniors and a new conductor on the sidelines, the system that spawned all of that success remained the same.

Friday night provided what would be the ultimate test of the system’s durability: a clash with defending National Champion Duke. While a win was the optimal outcome, the bigger achievement here was the Ram’s overwhelming sense of renewed hope. HAVOC tempered the uptempo, highly efficient Duke offense and enabled VCU to play the role of the aggressor throughout much of the game (despite a size difference at every position). Coach K agreed with this sentiment after his team turned the ball over 14 times. “Those kids were strong, it was tough to run an offense against them. […] Every time you get the ball, there’s something they put on you.” Offensively, the Rams found driving lanes, cutters and open shots almost at will, as evidenced by their 46 percent shooting for the game. Maybe on paper Wade’s team had failed by conventional win-loss metrics; but by any other standard, the loss was a significant measure of success. “We didn’t just beat a team, we beat a program. They have a program at VCU,” Krzyzewski stated assuredly after his team’s win.

It’s almost comical how carefully crafted VCU’s lineups and recruiting classes are to fit their system. Every player, regardless of position, size or ability arrives with an unrelenting motor, eager to jump passing lanes or collapse on driving guards. When Briante Weber suffered a season-ending knee injury last season, JeQuan Lewis capably filled in as the team’s facilitator and defensive orchestrator. Replacing leading scorer Treveon Graham this season is Melvin Johnson, a similarly molded hybrid shooter/slasher. At this point, the VCU legacy has permeated college basketball so strongly that new recruits are committing to a philosophy and a mindset rather than any particular coach. Recruits enter the machine that is VCU’s player development system as raw but gifted athletes and they emerge as a cog in a cohesive unit where the sum of the parts is greater than the whole. That is what will keep the program afloat while working through the aftermath of the Smart era, and THAT is what will trump any doubts that the program left with him.

Justin Kundrat (175 Posts)

Villanova grad, patiently waiting another 10 years for season tickets. Follow Justin on twitter @JustinKundrat or email him at justin.kundrat@gmail.com


Justin Kundrat: Villanova grad, patiently waiting another 10 years for season tickets. Follow Justin on twitter @JustinKundrat or email him at justin.kundrat@gmail.com

View Comments (1)

  • Nice job Justin. Credit Will Wade who has recruited among JUCOs, (fifth year senior) transfers and high schoolers to put a solid and deep squad on the court in this season of transition from the Smart Era to the Wade Era. HAVOC still reigns (a 25.5 defensive turnover rate is no accident). Wade has figured out how to get Mo Ali-Cox into the defensive flow (bonus) with Justin Tillman and Ahmed Hamdy Mohamed emerging as legitimate front court options. My question going into this season is whether Wade had a legitimate fourth scoring option, and it appears that Korey Billbury will fill that need this season.

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