|
BASKETBALL |
|
Pirates overtake UNCW |
|
GREENVILLE �
East Carolina trailed UNC-Wilmington
38-27 after a dunk by Chris
Flemmings of the Seahawks with 2:37
left in the first half, but the
Pirates came back for a 78-73 win
Wednesday night in Williams Arena at
Minges Coliseum. B.J. Tyson scored a
game-high 21 points for ECU (7-4)
and Caleb White added 20 points.
...
More... |
|
|
|
Next:
ECU at JMU | Sunday, 2 pm |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
FOOTBALL |
|
Montgomery taking the helm |
|
East Carolina's
nine-day search for a football coach officially came to an end on Sunday
with an announcement from ECU athletic director Jeff Compher that Duke
offensive coordinator Scottie Montgomery will assume command of the the
Pirates effective Jan. 1.
...
More... |
|
|
|
|
|
BASKETBALL |
|
Pirates top N.C. A&T |
|
GREENVILLE �
B.J. Tyson scored 21 points as East
Carolina returned from an exam break
to defeat North Carolina A&T 71-60
on Sunday afternoon before a crowd
of 4,151 in Williams Arena at Minges
Coliseum. The Aggies (4-8) came in
with a four-game winning streak
...
More... |
|
|
|
|
|
FOOTBALL |
|
Montgomery emerges at 11th hour |
|
Multiple reports
indicate that East Carolina's search
for a football coach has concluded
with an offer to Duke offensive
coordinator and quarterbacks coach
Scott Montgomery. ECU's board of
trustees has scheduled an unusual
Sunday afternoon meeting, which will
presumably consider approving terms
of employment. ...
More... |
|
|
|
|
|
FOOTBALL |
|
Ruff lands in
Charlottesville |
|
Little
more than a week after his stunning
ouster as East Carolina's head
football coach, Ruffin McNeill has
found his next calling. McNeill
headed a list of eight assistants
added to the staff of newly-named
Virginia head coach Bronco
Mendenhall on Saturday.
McNeill
will
serve as assistant head coach and
inside linebackers coach
...
More... |
|
|
|
|
|
FOOTBALL |
|
Has Pirates' ship sailed? |
|
It's
been a week since Ruffin McNeill was
fired as football coach at East
Carolina. Athletic director Jeff
Compher said he made the decision
days before the announcement was
publicized so he actually had some
lead time to do preparation for
finding a replacement. ...
More from Al Myatt... |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
By
Brett Friedlander
�2015 Bonesville.net
All rights reserved.
VIEW MOBILE ALPHA VERSION OF THIS PAGE
We�ll probably never
know whether East Carolina athletic director Jeff Compher is the
smartest guy in the room or simply the luckiest.
At this point, it
doesn�t really matter.
Because just 10 days
after his
unexpected decision to fire popular football coach
Ruffin McNeill, seemingly without a specific plan
to upgrade the position, Compher may just have come up with the home run
hire a nervous Pirate Nation feared wouldn�t happen.
Scottie Montgomery
doesn�t have the name recognition or head coaching experience of the two
other identified finalists for the job � former Michigan coach Brady
Hoke and James Madison�s Everett Withers. He doesn�t have the national
championship cache of North Carolina defensive coordinator Gene Chizik,
the candidate many at ECU coveted most.
What the 37-year-old
Duke offensive coordinator does possess is a solid football foundation,
formed by a successful playing career as an NFL wide receiver and
groomed by some of the best coaches at both the college and pro levels.
He�s an impressive
young man with a clear vision of what he wants to accomplish and
the kind of energy and enthusiasm
it takes to turn that vision into results.
�He talked about
winning championships and about how winning is an everyday thing,� the
AD said of his new coach. �He has the balance of what it means to be a
student-athlete and what it means to play at the highest level. We
connected quite a bit and that meant a lot to me.�
It took less 72 hours
from the time Montgomery was identified as a candidate last Thursday to
win Compher over. The clincher came on Saturday with a face-to-face
interview that can best be described as a game-winning touchdown.
Montgomery will
undoubtedly have to work harder to have a similar effect on a group of
returning players and a fan base still divided � and in come cases,
disillusioned � over McNeill�s dismissal and the hiring of a
lesser-known replacement with no head coaching experience.
But that, beyond his
pedigree and potential from a football perspective, is precisely why
Montgomery has the look of the right man at just the right time for the
Pirates.
Not only is he young
and brimming with infectious enthusiasm, but as a native North
Carolinian who went to school at Duke and has seen the passion
associated with ECU football first-hand from having played at
Dowdy-Ficklen Stadium, he is much more in tune with the challenge ahead
of him than an outsider such as Hoke or Withers.
His understanding of
the situation and the sensitivity it commands shined through at his
introductory press conference on Monday. Instead of shying away from the
800-pound elephant in the room � or in this case, the larger-than-life
coach he replaced � Montgomery confronted it head-on with a message
aimed directly at the Pirate Nation.
�I know there�s been
some rough waters, but guess what? It�s starting to settle,� he said.
�Right now the ship is docked and I want to make sure everybody
understands one thing. We�re going to start moving. We�re going to start
rowing and every man is going to row, and I�m going to be one of the
ones rowing as well.
�We�re going to work
as hard as we possibly can so when we walk out on the field next fall,
we�re going to put the best product on the field that we possibly can.�
In order to do that,
Montgomery will need the backing of his players, many of whom changed
their screen names on Twitter to �Ruffin McNeill� as a show of support
for their now-former coach. The new coach promised to �recruit them like
they�ve never been recruited before� over the next 2-3 weeks to get them
to buy into the new direction their program has taken.
One thing he has
going for him in that pursuit is his youth.
He�s not another
graying 50-something the players don�t know or don't trust being brought
in to replace a beloved father figure, as Hoke or Withers would have
been. Instead, he�s more of an overachieving big brother whose example
they want to follow.
What wide receiver
wouldn�t want to play for a coach that has already worked with the likes
of NFL stars Antonio Brown, Hines Ward and Emmanuel Sanders?
And when it comes to
lending a sympathetic ear to a group of youngsters going through the
most traumatic set of circumstances imaginable, Montgomery is equipped
to do that too, having dealt with the firing of his own coach at Duke,
Fred Goldsmith, just prior to his senior season.
It�s an experience
Compher said �can really help the team� both in the long and short
terms.
And yet, no matter
how well Montgomery handles the difficult transition to come, the only
true measure for which he�ll judged is the number of games he wins. And
the bar has been set high, both by his predecessor and his AD � who in
dismissing McNeill, proclaimed that nothing short of a championship will
be acceptable.
While there�s always
risk involved in turning a solid program over to a first-time head coach
with limited leadership experience � as ECU found out with John Thompson
in 2003-04 � in this case the gamble is a little like going all in with
a pair of jacks in the hole.
Scottie Montgomery
might not be a home run hire yet. But he�s been groomed for just this
moment and is coming to bat with the bases loaded.
You have to like his
chances.