With
the recent news, according to the Roanoke Times’ Doug Doughty, that assistant
coach Eric Skeeters had resigned to take an assistant coach position at Towson
under new coach Pat Kennedy, it left Ryan Odom as the sole remaining assistant
under head coach Seth Greenberg who hadn’t left or almost left to pursue other
opportunities.
When the announcement came down earlier that Brad Greenberg was departing
Blacksburg to be closer to his family in Florida, then followed by the news that
he would remain a part of his brother’s staff, that could be chalked up to
family issues. And brother Brad gets a pass on leaving the staff, since it is
well documented that he has been an NBA guy and that could still be a direction
that he turns to in the future.
But, Eric Skeeters leaving after only one year? To be an assistant coach,
albeit it the number one assistant, at Towson? Last time I checked, Towson was
not anywhere close to being in a conference like the ACC. In fact, Towson has
been recently seen coming into the Cassell and being drubbed by the Hokies.
Sure, Pat Kennedy was a well known coach at one time who headed up a Florida
State program, but where has he been recently? Don’t tell me he has been in a
witness location program somewhere, please don’t tell me that. Nope, Pat has
been rustling cattle or something out in Montana. Bet that slipped past many of
you. Montana is a rugged, beautiful part of the country, and everyone owes it to
themselves to at least visit there once in their life, but a mecca of college
basketball it is not.
On the surface, the decision of Skeeters seems a rather odd and curious one.
Yes, he is a Baltimore guy, and that is his home turf. But, the Colonial
conference ain’t even remotely close to the ACC, and in a business where you
find young assistants constantly looking to move up the ladder and position
themselves for better opportunities in more prestigious conferences, Skeeters
leaving the Virginia Tech program after a single year to take a position at
Towson just doesn’t seem to make a whole lot of sense. Maybe there are
incriminating pictures of Skeeters in compromising positions and this is
Godfather Greenberg shipping Skeeters to his form of Siberia. After all, it is
slightly colder in the Baltimore area than Blacksburg.
At least Skeeters won’t be deep-sixed and found at the bottom of some
ravine in Ellett Valley, although the same can’t necessarily be said for
Skeeter’s career after this change of address. This isn’t even close to
being a lateral move, but rather a clear step down for Skeeters. The best he can
hope for is to be a part of the turnaround with Kennedy at Towson, getting to
make that upward mobility that all young assistants strive for. Of course, there
is great work to be done at Towson. Not only is the Colonial a mid-major
conference, but Towson isn’t even excelling in that conference, but
languishing at the bottom.
Perhaps Skeeters can use his local connections to increase the talent pool
for Kennedy and the program can start making some inroads on UNC-Wilmington, Old
Dominion, George Mason and VCU in that conference. Perhaps Skeeters can be a
part of a first division program in the Colonial, establishing some cachet that
will make him more attractive to an Atlantic-10 conference. Maybe, just maybe,
if Towson is able to reverse the losing trend that has engulfed the school for
the recent past, Skeeters can be a “hot” assistant on the rise and programs
from larger conferences such as Conference-USA will consider him in the future.
If everything plays out perfectly, and somehow that doesn’t seem to happen as
often as we would all like, the big conferences just might come calling, such as
the Big East or maybe even the ACC down the road, if everything goes really,
really well.
Getting to a power conference is usually most every assistant’s goal, and
Skeeters surely desires that. Perhaps this Towson job will help him realize that
goal of getting to the high profile conferences, thus getting maximum exposure.
But didn’t Eric Skeeters just have that? Yes, I believe that he did, so this
decision only seems to raise questions, and something seems slightly askew here,
or maybe not. Maybe the overwhelming desire to coach in his home area was too
great a temptation. Being the number one assistant might be the ego boost that
Skeeters needs at this point in his career. Or, it could be something else that
we don’t know about, and might never know. It could be that it is a money
issue and Skeeters will be making more there than he was making at Virginia
Tech. That wouldn’t seem totally preposterous, but it might answer some
questions while raising others in Blacksburg, if so. Such as, how would Towson
be able to more adequately compensate an assistant coach than an ACC school?
In any event, Skeeters moving on doesn’t seem to be a logical move, and
just begs you to consider that there could be more to this than meets the eye.
Eric Skeeters could have been part of the success at Virginia Tech, and last
year’s season was a fine start. Being a part of a program’s success after
being a conference doormat in the Big East for several years would sure look
good on a resume, especially if you are a young assistant looking to get that
first head coaching job. Eric Skeeters seemed poised at Virginia Tech to make
the kind of impression necessary to position himself for that opportunity, or to
get an even higher profile assistant position, just by continuing and building
on what the entire staff started last season.
It also begs the question: has anyone seen VT assistant coach Ryan Odom
around town lately? Does anyone know where Ryan Odom can be located?
Recruiting Ready To Kick Off
Seth Greenberg is looking to complete his staff after the loss of Skeeters,
and hoping to do that as soon as possible with the critical recruiting month of
July upon us. In college basketball that means three things: recruiting,
recruiting and recruiting. This is that oh-so-critical time when coaches scour
the country and find future Hokies, so getting that final assistant in place
before travel plans are made is vitally important. July is the month when all
possible targets are evaluated, discarded and some semblance of order and
priority is attached. It also is a month when potential prospects emerge at the
various summer events and force their way onto your recruiting list. The names
are many right now, but after July that list will likely take a much slimmer
appearance.
At this time, it appears that Virginia Tech could have as many as four
available scholarships to use next season. That could, and very well might,
change soon as recruiting for the 2004-05 season is not completed. According to
Doug Doughty, Virginia Tech will have an official visit soon from a prospect
from Holland, presumably a front court prospect. And furthermore, if rumors
emanating from Blacksburg are true, this prospect is in the 6-10 range, and that
has to come as very welcome news to the coaching staff, players and just about
anyone that follows the program. It is well known that the greatest need to be
addressed on next season’s team is the addition, any addition actually, of
front court size. Adding someone in the vicinity of 6-10 is exactly the kind of
tonic prescribed. Of course, that is predicated on this prospect actually being
6-10 in basketball shoes, and not the wooden clogs that the Dutch are so fond
of.
While this late recruiting affects how many scholarships will be available in
next season’s recruiting class, it does appear that the Jerome Johnson
saga has probably taken its last breath. No announcement has been made
concerning Johnson, but it doesn’t appear that Virginia Tech will be his
destination.
Barring any late additions this year, Virginia Tech will probably look to add
as many as three post prospects next year. They would prefer to pick off one of
those here in the next couple of weeks, since the 2005 class doesn’t seem to
be as bountiful or deep nationwide, according to recruiting experts, as recent
classes. And, adding a late frontcourt prospect this year, to earlier signees
Deron Washington, Wynton Witherspoon and Marquie Cooke, can help next year’s
team at a position of need.
In next week’s space we will look at some of the names of upcoming senior
high school prospects that have been mentioned with Virginia Tech, or been
linked to Virginia Tech, by various media reports or recruiting websites.