Rick Pitino opens up about his plans to rejuvenate St. John’s: ‘Needs a new brand’
New St. John’s coach and New York City native Rick Pitino takes a timeout during March Madness for some Q&A with Post columnist Steve Serby.
nypost.com
By Steve Serby
New St. John’s coach and New York City native Rick Pitino — who also has coached the Knicks and Celtics in the NBA, won NCAA titles and led Iona to the Big Dance this season — takes a timeout during March Madness for some Q&A with Post columnist Steve Serby.
Q: What is it about Rick Pitino that makes him made for New York?
A: You grow up on 26th Street, you lived after that in Queens, you lived after that on Long Island, you’re the Knicks coach and the assistant coach of the Knicks. Also, I go back to idolizing Mickey Mantle in center field, Roger Maris, Elston Howard, [Tony] Kubek, [Bobby] Richardson, Moose Skowron, Whitey Ford, Yogi Berra, Cletus Boyer. I grew up just an amazing Yankee fan — I collected every card and everything. And I know the Knicks from winning the two championships. Football I’m a big fan of the Giants, and I was with [Joe] Namath and the Jets. I’m just all-in on New York, it’s always been that way with me. I kept my apartment since the New York Knick days as the head coach in midtown. So I never really moved out of New York, even though I moved to Kentucky.
Q: What are your favorite New York things?
A: The pulse of Manhattan is probably my favorite. Christmastime in Manhattan is one of my favorites. Sometimes I could just visualize sitting there with a bag of popcorn, and listening to New Yawkas converse. New Yawkas are a special breed. They’re hysterical, they got a great sense of humor. They blend sarcasm with laughter.
Q: The most electric you’ve seen or felt Madison Square Garden?
A: Probably the [1989] playoffs against the Chicago Bulls for me. That [regular season] we swept the Pistons, the Bad Boys, who wound up winning it, we were 4-0 against them, I thought we could potentially win the championship.
Q: Do you fantasize about that kind of environment for St. John’s basketball?
A: Take this year for instance, they played Connecticut at the Garden, and it was 80 percent Connecticut [fans]. I want to get it to the point where it’s 80 percent St. John’s. The one thing you have to understand about St. John’s, as you know as well as anybody, is their subway alumni. A lot of their fans did not go to St. John’s. It’s just they’re college basketball fans, this is the local team they’re gonna root for.
Q: Do you visualize cutting down the nets?
A: Not yet. I think that living in the future’s a bad thing. Planning for the future’s a great thing. I think right now you just gotta live where we are today, try to make every day constructive to make St. John’s better. St. John’s needs a new brand. It needs branding. We all can cherish Looie [Carnesecca]. We all love him, we cherish him, everything about him, but the kids today, they know of the legacy of Looie, but they don’t remember those days. They don’t remember Walter Berry and Mark Jackson, Bill Wennington. They don’t remember those days, so we’ve got to rebrand and let them understand what St. John’s is all about from a style-of-play standpoint, what St. John’s is all about from getting players drafted. All the things that go into making a big-time program.
Q: What do you want St. John’s fans to say when they watch your team play?
A: I want relentless passion. I want the fans to say, “I can’t believe how hard those guys are playing.”
Q: Do you plan on making St. John’s the hardest-playing, best-conditioned team in basketball?
A: I just want them to live up to my standards of all my teams. All my teams have been in great shape, all my teams play really, really hard. It’s a subjective thing. … There’s no ranking for that. I just want them to live up to my standards.
Q: What won’t you tolerate?
A: A lack of work ethic … lateness … inability to be passionate … [a lack of] appreciation for where you are and what you’re all about. Those are things that go into the making of a program. St. John’s right now has to go through a period of … you just gotta understand what work is all about, you have to understand how to be a pro, how to act like a professional. Oftentimes, they did not act like professionals, and they have to learn how to act like a professional, no different than I had with the Knicks with Mark Jackson or Patrick Ewing — they acted like professionals. And they gotta learn that. Because the stories I’ve heard, it was anything but acted like professionals.