April 2011 | Page 17 of 23 | Zagsblog
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Adam Zagoria covers basketball at all levels. He is the author of two books and an award-winning journalist whose articles have appeared in ESPN The Magazine, SLAM, Sheridan Hoops, Sports Illustrated, Basketball Times and in newspapers nationwide.
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Sunday / December 22.
  • Chris Chevannes is a humble and soft-spoken man who is still coming to grips with the fact that he is succeeding a larger-than-life personality as head coach of the No. 2 boys basketball team in the nation.

    Chevannes, the Vice Principal at Elizabeth (N.J.) St. Patrick, learned on Thursday that he had become the interim coach at St. Patrick after Kevin Boyle announced he was moving on to Montverde (Fla.) Academy outside Orlando.

    “We’ve been very good friends and he brought me here,” Chevannes, speaking to SNY.tv in his first interview since taking over, said of Boyle. “I’ve basically been under his tutelage for all these years. Without question, how could you not be [honored and humbled] with the success that he’s had here and the development that he’s done over the years here?”

    By ALEX KLINE

    John Calipari always has a nitch for finding some of the best young talent. The Kentucky head coach did it again Thursday when he found his latest two recruits.

    2013 6-foot-10 center Nerlens Noel (pictured courtesy Boston Herald) and 2014 6-foot-4 small forward Wayne Selden are both teammates at Tilton, a small private school in New Hampshire. With a team that features more than seven or eight potential high major players, Calipari has his work cut out for him as he went to watch workouts.

    A day after Tyshawn Taylor and Thomas Robinson announced they would return to Kansas, twins Marcus and Markieff Morris announced they will declare for the NBA Draft and sign with agent Tony Dutt.

    “I am proud of Marcus and Markieff for the development and improvement they made, not only off the court, but on the court in their three years here,” Kansas coach Bill Self said.

    “They have been an absolute joy to coach and performed at a level to give them the opportunity to leave and enter the NBA draft after three years. We not only wish them the best moving forward but also 100 percent support this decision for them to enter.”

    Kevin Boyle, the fiery Irishman who over the course of more than 20 years turned Elizabeth (N.J.) St. Patrick into a perennial national powerhouse and produced numerous high-Division 1 standouts and several NBA players, is leaving to become head coach at Montverde (Fla.) Academy.

    “It’s a beautiful, beautiful campus,” Boyle told The Daily News. “Montverde Academy strives to be the best in whatever it does and that’s the same for the basketball program. I’m looking forward to the challenge but at the same time, leaving St. Patrick with a heavy heart. I’ve made a lot of good friends along the way.”

    The job includes a $130,000 annual salary plus a car and a four-bedroom home, multiple sources said. Florida has no state income tax and the cost of living is cheaper than in New Jersey.

    Boyle’s 15-year-old son, Brendan, will also enroll in the school and play for his father.

    Maurice Aniefiok, a 6-foot-5, 205-pound combo guard originally from Nigeria, has begun a series of visits and hopes to decide on April 25.

    Aniefiok leaves today for an official visit to James Madison that runs through Saturday. After that he will take officials to Ole Miss (April 14) and Duquesne (April 21).

    Indiana has also offered and Rutgers just did as well.

    One guy who helped himself Wednesday at the Portsmouth Invitational was West Virginia’s Casey Mitchell.

    “Casey shot it very well and if he continues he will help himself,” said one veteran NBA scout who was in attendance.

    “I played pretty well,” the 6-foot-4, 220-pound Mitchell said by phone. “I talked to three people that worked on NBA staffs, the Rockets, Celtics and Thunder. They all gave me good feedback, told me to keep working hard. Just keep going and finishing out strong.

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