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Pitino ‘kidding’ about nepotistic St. John’s plan of succession

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Jan 1, 2003
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By Zach Braziller

MILWAUKEE — Rick Pitino wanted to set the record straight about his son, Richard, and the succession plan he talked about after Tuesday’s win over DePaul.

“I was kidding,” he said.

Asked about the DePaul opening and rumors that Richard, currently the head coach of No. 25 New Mexico, could be in line for the job, Pitino said he wanted him to stay with the Lobos and eventually take over for him at St. John’s. But it was all in jest.

“I’m on a [text message group chat] with my whole family and two other people, and they were all kidding about that,” Pitino said.

The 41-year-old Richard is having a big year at New Mexico.

The Lobos are a projected NCAA Tournament team.

New Mexico won 22 games and reached the NIT last year in Richard’s third season as its head coach.

Previously, he was the head coach at Minnesota for eight seasons and worked under his father at Louisville from 2007-09 and 2011-12.

“Richard is one of the bright minds in the game today. He’s a great coach, he’s a great communicator,” the elder Pitino said.

Pitino wants to make one change starting Saturday: fewer minutes for Chris Ledlum and more for Zuby Ejiofor.

Pitino feels that Ledlum is tiring out late in games and wants to get him down to 25 minutes.

He’s averaging 28.9 on the season and has logged at least 30 in six of the team’s 11 Big East contests. That means more minutes for RJ Luis and Drissa Traore.

As for Ejiofor, Joel Soriano’s backup, his play has improved as the year has gone on, particularly on the defensive end.

“We’ve got to get Zuby to play anywhere from 12 to 16 minutes per game, especially since Joel has not played as dominant as he was in the beginning of the year,” Pitino said. “It’s time to do that.”

The plan is to make Ejiofor into a big man who can play both the center and power forward spots in the offseason.

But his ball handling, overall offensive skill set and comfort level at the four aren’t to the point where he can do it yet, which is why Pitino hasn’t tried to play him and Soriano together at all.
 

St. John’s controls NCAA Tournament destiny but needs to thrive in key stretch​

By Zach Braziller

MILWAUKEE — You can twist yourself into a pretzel agonizing over the close losses.

Wondering what might have been had St. John’s found a way to steal one of those close games against No. 1 Connecticut, No. 7 Marquette and No. 19 Creighton, defeats by a combined six points.

You can drive yourself crazy following all the Bracketologists and tracking the NCAA Tournament bubble, trying to figure out what it will take for the Johnnies to return to March Madness and how every result directly impacts their path.

St. John’s fans are wired to expect the worst, understandable considering the last two-plus decades of mostly irrelevance. They make Mets and Jets fans look like eternal optimists.

So it shouldn’t be a surprise to hear the recent negativity surrounding this team, which had lost five of its last six games prior to Tuesday’s 28-point thumping of perennial Big East cellar-dweller DePaul.

Despite those frustrating close losses, despite the skid, despite St. John’s now finding itself squarely on the bubble for the time being, everything remains in play for coach Rick Pitino’s team in his first season.

A top-five finish in the Big East. A return to the main draw of the tournament for the first time since 2015. All the Johnnies’ realistic preseason goals are well within reach. They control their own destiny.

The key stretch begins in earnest Saturday at Marquette, followed by another vital road game against on-the-bubble Providence, which is 48-5 at Amica Mutual Pavilion in its last 53 games. There is another trip to Butler and home games against Creighton and Seton Hall.

St. John’s (14-9, 6-6) has already beaten Butler and Providence and lost by one point apiece to Creighton and Marquette. If it can’t win, at minimum, two of those games, and take care of the three remaining contests against DePaul and Georgetown, it doesn’t belong in the tournament. Simple as that.

“We want to definitely get one for sure,” point guard Daniss Jenkins said, referring to the upcoming two-game road trip. “We want to win both, obviously, but we know we need one.”

Following the win over DePaul, an optimistic Pitino pointed to the losses to UConn, Marquette and Creighton, saying St. John’s was only a handful of points away from being ranked. That is true. But it’s also been a frustrating trademark of this team, being unable to finish out games. It goes beyond those three.

There was the loss at Xavier when the Johnnies were outscored 13-2 over the final 2:43. There were the setbacks to Boston College and No. 18 Dayton, games in which Pitino’s team was close in the final five minutes. Overall, St. John’s is 5-5 in contests decided by single digits and 3-6 when the margin is six points or fewer with less than five minutes remaining.

“It’s just about us doing the things we haven’t been good at in tough games,” Jenkins said. “Until we do it, until we get over the hump of winning a tough game like that and doing the little things differently, it’s going to be the same thing.

“We don’t need to do [anything] totally different. When I go back and look at these games, we had these games won. We had a win but there was just something, a [bad] possession, a rebound, something little like that, that may have gone the other way.”

Those shortcomings in the clutch have prevented St. John’s from taking off, leading to this recent stretch in which it has lost far more than it has won. Pitino’s first season is so far without a signature moment. There have, of course, been strong performances, one-sided wins over Utah, Butler, Xavier and Villanova twice. But that big victory has eluded the Johnnies, creating a thin tournament resume.

Pitino was asked if he believes this is an NCAA Tournament team, and he didn’t hesitate at all.

“Yes, without question,” he said, and added: “We’ve got to get to 11 or 12 [league] wins, whatever it takes to get there. I try to tell them to play every game as if it’s the last game you are going to play at this time of year in February.”

Pitino went on to call every game this month “gigantic” for everyone with March dreams. That rings true particularly for St. John’s. All their goals remain possible despite a shaky January, but it’s going to take the Johnnies’ best basketball to attain them.
 
A lot of Johnie’s coverage today by Zach. Let’s see what they do in Milwaukee.
 
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