A week from Monday marks the first anniversary of Donnie Jones’ official introduction as Marshall’s men’s basketball coach.
In his first season, all Jones did was coach the Thundering Herd to a 16-14 record — its first winning mark in seven years — and have them on the cusp of a first-round bye in the Conference USA tournament.
Did things work out as Jones expected when he took over last April?
“I really didn’t know what my expectations were,” Jones said recently. “I didn’t know what to expect from the guys going in. Then we got hit with all the injuries.”
Indeed. Marshall’s locker room was like the proverbial M*A*S*H unit. From the stress fracture in Markel Humphrey’s foot to Taurean Marshall’s torn ACL, Jones was faced in his first year with the task of finding enough bodies to conduct an effective practice, much less compete 40 minutes a night, two nights a week.
Find a way he did, and Marshall wound up 13-4 at home. Road woes continued, however — the Herd was just 3-10 away from Huntington.
Gone next year will be guards Marshall, Mark Dorris and Pierre-Marie Altidor Cespedes and forward Jean Francois Bro Grebe. Robbie Jackson and Jesse Oglesby, both forwards, have decided to transfer.
Humphrey, a two-time third-team selection by the league, will return for his senior year. Tyler Wilkerson emerged as potentially one of C-USA’s top post players.
Also back will be true freshmen Tirrell Baines, one of the Herd’s leading rebounders, and Matt Walls, the three-point shooter who missed much of the second half of the season with a broken hand.
They will be joined by players who come in with lofty expectations.
Three of them joined Jones on the bench as redshirts. They are guards Chris Lutz (a Purdue transfer) and Brandon Powell (Florida) and forward Tay Spann (Georgetown).
Meanwhile, point guard Damier Pitts is a good bet to start as a true freshman. He helped lead Hargrave to the prep school national championship earlier this month.
“Next year’s team will have a whole new look,” Jones said.
Yes, 2008 was a successful debut for Jones. But expect an exciting ’09 as well.
— E-mail: gfauber@
register-herald.com
Sports
What will Marshall do for an encore in 2009?
- Sports
-
-
Woodrow holds off Huntington
It took Woodrow Wilson’s boys basketball team nearly three quarters to figure out that the backside lob was open in Huntington High’s zone.
-
MSU hosts Rio Grande
For the first time since 1995, Mountain State stands a little past the half-way point at the season with five losses.
-
OFFICIAL PRESS RELEASE - WVU to join Big 12 Conference
The Big 12 Conference Board of Directors have voted unanimously to accept West Virginia University as a full conference member effective July 1, 2012. The Mountaineers will begin competing in the Big 12 beginning with the 2012-13 athletic season.
-
Friday update: Big East notified WVU leaving for Big 12
The Big East says it has been notified that West Virginia is leaving the conference and joining the Big 12.
-
Cardinals force Game 7 in World Series
After one of the greatest games in baseball history, a 10-9, 11-inning victory over Texas in Game 6 in which the Cardinals were twice within one strike of elimination.
-
Schiano sings WVU’s praises
It hasn’t been the year that Rutgers coach Greg Schiano envisioned.
Not close. -
BNI will usher in mat season
This time around, the Beckley Newspapers Invitational will have a decidedly more local flavor.
-
Huggs likes looks of young Noreen
Perhaps it was the season. Whatever it was, West Virginia coach Bob Huggins went straight to the pie.
Well, the figurative pie.
Huggins had just watched his team beat Virginia Military Institute 82-66 in front of 12,367 fans at the Charleston Civic Center Saturday. -
Oak Hill places 3 on AA
Whether it was opposing defenses or illness, nothing stopped Charleston Catholic’s Tom Trupo for long.
-
Spartans open with victory
Turnovers produce points and the Greenbrier East girls basketball team collected plenty of each en route to an 81-43 season-opening victory against Bluefield on Tuesday night.
- More Sports Headlines
-
Woodrow holds off Huntington







