VMI Keydets basketball

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VMI Keydets
2015–16 VMI Keydets basketball team
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University Virginia Military Institute
First season 1908–09
All-time record 859–1,430 (.375)
Conference Southern
Location Lexington, VA
Head coach Dan Earl (1st year)
Arena Cameron Hall
(Capacity: 5,800)
Nickname Keydets
Colors Red and yellow
              
Uniforms
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Home jersey
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Team colours
Home
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Away jersey
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Team colours
Away
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Alternate jersey
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Team colours
Alternate
NCAA Tournament Elite Eight
1976
NCAA Tournament Sweet Sixteen
1977
NCAA Tournament appearances
1964, 1976, 1977
Conference tournament champions
1964, 1976, 1977

The VMI Keydets basketball team represents the Virginia Military Institute in Lexington, Virginia. They compete in the Southern Conference of the NCAA Division I. They have played their home games in Cameron Hall since 1981.[1] VMI has played basketball since 1908, and had played in the Southern Conference (SoCon) until 2003, when they moved to the Big South. VMI will rejoin the SoCon effective July 1, 2014.[2] They are coached by Dan Earl.

History

Early Years

The VMI basketball program began in 1908 under head coach Pete Krebs, and team went 3–3 in their inaugural season. VMI enjoyed mild success within the first several years of its existence, achieving twelve winning seasons in seventeen years as an independent between 1908 and 1925, including records of 11–1 and 16–1 1920 and 1921, respectively.[3] Pinky Spruhan, who coached the Keydets from 1919 to 1922, had a 38–9 coaching record which still stands as the highest winning percentage of any VMI head basketball coach (.809).

Southern Conference

VMI joined the Southern Conference in 1925 at which time they were led by 4th-year head coach W. C. Raftery. After a 7–8 overall mark and 3–5 conference record in their opening season in the SoCon, VMI finished in 20th place or lower in the conference four of the next six seasons. Raftery departed in 1934 with a 68–112 record; the 68 wins are the 4th-most in VMI history.

Throughout the next 30 years, VMI never placed better than 5th in the conference. This stretch included one winless season and two winless conference marks.[3] From 1943 to 1953, VMI failed to win more than five games in any season. The Keydets saw 13 different head coaches, five of which were only tenured for one year.

Louis Miller era

Hired in 1958, Louis "Weenie" Miller became the first coach to lead VMI to an NCAA tournament appearance. After seasons of 5–13, 4–16 and 5–17, the Keydets managed to go 9–11 and 6–8 in SoCon play in the 1961–62 season. The nine wins were the most for the program since 1953–54, and they made their first Southern Conference tournament semifinal appearance since 1941.

Two seasons later, VMI went 12–12 and 7–7 in the conference which was their first non-losing season since 1942–43. Despite being the 4th seed, VMI narrowly ran their way through the SoCon tournament defeating Furman, Davidson, and George Washington in succession. The three wins came by a combined 10 points. In the NCAA tournament, VMI fell to Princeton 86–60. Miller left VMI following the season's end.

Bill Blair & Charlie Schmaus era

VMI returned to mediocrity and losing seasons following their Southern Conference title. Gary McPherson replaced Miller from 1964 to 1969, followed by Mike Schuler, who was tenured until 1972. The Keydets more than nine games in a season in that stretch, including a 1–25 campaign in 1970–71, which is tied for the most losses in a single season in VMI basketball history.[3]

Bill Blair, who also played for VMI, led the Keydets to their first of what would be two consecutive NCAA tournament appearances. In 1975–76, the Keydets went 22–10 which including a 9–3 Socon record; it was the school's first winning record in conference play since 1968, and only their second since 1943. After winning the SoCon tournament, VMI defeated Tennessee 81–75 and DePaul, 71–66 in overtime, before falling to Rutgers by a score of 91–75. The team was led by Ron Carter, who went on to be the 26th overall pick selected by the Los Angeles Lakers in the 1978 NBA Draft. The following year, VMI went 26–4, 8–2 SoCon under first-year head coach Charlie Schmaus. After defeating Duquesne 73–66, they fell in the Sweet Sixteen to Kentucky 93–78.

Despite going 21–7 the following year, VMI lost in the Southern Conference tournament semifinals to Marshall. After a dismal 1–25 season two years later, Schmaus departed VMI. Blair went on to become the coach of the NBA's Minnesota Timberwolves and Brooklyn Nets.

Big South Conference

VMI became a member of the Big South Conference in 2003. The first team in VMI's Big South tenure went 6–22 and 4–12 in the conference under Bart Bellairs, who had been the coach since 1994. After a 3–13 conference campaign the following year, Bellairs was fired on February 28, 2005.[4]

Duggar Baucom era

Between 1978 and 2005, VMI had just three winning seasons between head coaches Marty Fletcher, Joe Cantafio, and Bart Bellairs. During that time the Keydets made only two tournament final appearances in 1985 and 1988. Following the firing of Bellairs in 2005, VMI hired Duggar Baucom, a former Tusculum College head coach and North Carolina state trooper.

Baucom's first season as coached saw continued failure with a 7–20 record. However, the next season in 2006–07, VMI reached the Big South Championship game for the first time, despite a 12–18 regular season and 6th seed in the conference. They ultimately fell to Winthrop 84–81.[3] That season was the first in which Baucom implemented a high-scoring, run-and-gun offense which garnered a considerable amount of notability.[5] VMI averaged 100.9 points per game as well as 14.9 steals per game and 442 total three-pointers made, all of which led the NCAA that year.[6]

In 2008–09, VMI reached the championship again, but fell to Radford 108–94. The loss ended the Keydets' season at 24–8, which was tied for the second-highest single-season win total in VMI history. It was highlighted by a season-opening upset win over Kentucky in Rupp Arena, 111–103. Senior twins Chavis and Travis Holmes led the team with 22 and 19.1 points per game, respectively, and ultimately became the highest-scoring twins in NCAA history.

The Keydets reached the Big South final once again in 2012, despite being the 7th seed, but fell to UNC Asheville 80–64. It was the first season since the 2006–07 campaign that VMI did not lead the nation in scoring, ending a streak of five consecutive years. VMI returned to their usual high-scoring pace in 2013–14, leading the nation in scoring averaging 88.3 points. Most notably, the Keydets made their first post-season tournament in 37 years as they accepted an invitation to the CollegeInsider.com Postseason Tournament. VMI cruised through the first two rounds, defeating Canisius 111–100 and IPFW 106–95. In the quarterfinals they erased a 17-point deficit to defeat Ohio, but fell at home to Yale in the semifinals, 75–62.[7] The loss ended VMI's year at 22–13, which was only the fifth 20-win season in the program's history. On March 30, 2015, Baucom accepted the Head Coaching position at The Citadel.[8]

Postseason results

NCAA Tournament results

The Keydets have participated in three NCAA Tournaments. Their combined record is 3–3.

Year Round Opponent Result/Score
1964 First Round Princeton L 60–86
1976 First Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Tennessee
DePaul
Rutgers
W 81–75
W 71–66
L 75–91
1977 First Round
Sweet Sixteen
Duquesne
Kentucky
W 73–66
L 78–93

CIT results

The Keydets have appeared in one CollegeInsider.com Postseason Tournament (CIT). Their record is 3–1.

Year Round Opponent Result/Score
2014 First Round
Second Round
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Canisius
IPFW
Ohio
Yale
W 111–100
W 106–95
W 92–90
L 62–75

Facilities

Cormack Field House, nicknamed "The Pit", served as the home of VMI basketball from the 1930s through 1980. There were many notable performances in its time, including a trio of SoCon championships and Elite 8 and Sweet Sixteen VMI squads.

The 5,030-seat Cameron Hall has housed VMI basketball since 1981, and does so today. It replaced aging Cormack Field House, which is now used for indoor track and field.

Players

Retired Jerseys

VMI Keydets basketball retired jerseys
No. Player Pos. Career
13 Ron Carter SG 1975–78
33 Gay Elmore SF 1983–87
55 Reggie Williams SF 2004–08

[9]

Other Notable Players

Name Years Notes
Lewis Preston 1990–93 2nd all-time in shot blocks
Jason Conley 2001–02 Only freshman to lead NCAA in scoring (29.3 PPG)
Chavis Holmes 2005–09 5th all-time points leader, 2nd all-time steals leader, 3rd all-time most three pointers made
Travis Holmes 2005–09 8th all-time points leader, leading all-time steals leader, 8th all-time assists leader
Stan Okoye 2009–13 4th all-time points leader, 2nd all-time rebounds leader, 4th all-time most FG made, 5th all-time blocks leader
D. J. Covington 2010–14 All-time shot blocks leader, 2nd all-time FG percentage

Individual Career Records

Points

  1. Reggie Williams - 2,556
  2. Gay Elmore - 2,422
  3. Ron Carter - 2,228
  4. Stan Okoye - 2,146
  5. Chavis Holmes - 2,065
  6. Keith Gabriel - 1,925
  7. Austin Kenon - 1,767
  8. Travis Holmes - 1,733
  9. Ramon Williams - 1,630
  10. Damon Williams - 1,622

Rebounds

  1. Dave Montgomery - 1,068
  2. Stan Okoye - 962
  3. Bill Ralph - 919
  4. Eric Mann - 841
  5. Reggie Williams - 820
  6. Ron Carter - 809
  7. Karl Klinar - 760
  8. Charlie Schmaus - 715
  9. Steve Powers - 675
  10. Chuck Cotton - 661

Assists

  1. Richard Little - 608
  2. Mike Huffman - 480
  3. Bobby Prince - 452
  4. Percy Covington - 432
  5. Kelly Lombard - 383
  6. Ron Burks - 382
  7. Reggie Williams - 368
  8. Travis Holmes - 360
  9. Darryl Faulkner - 333
  10. Rodney Glasgow - 325

Steals

  1. Travis Holmes - 309
  2. Chavis Holmes - 304
  3. Jason Bell - 240
  4. Keith Gabriel - 212
  5. Percy Covington - 196
  6. Aaron Demory - 180
  7. Reggie Williams - 175
  8. Ron Burks - 170
  9. Willie Bell - 169
  10. Richard Little - 168

Blocked Shots

  1. Lewis Preston - 202
  2. Eric Mann - 184
  3. D. J. Covington - 166
  4. Tim Allmond - 110
  5. Mike Herndon - 103
  6. Stan Okoye - 103
  7. Keith Gabriel - 99
  8. Matt Murrer - 89
  9. Stephen Sargent - 64
  10. Zach Batte - 62

[3]

Coaches

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Head Coach Years Win–Loss Pct.
Pete Krebs 1908–09 3–3 .500
F.J. Pratt 1909–10 2–5 .286
J. Mitchell 1910–11 3–5 .375
Alpha Brummage 1911–13 14–9 .609
W. C. Raferty 1913–14, 1922–34 68–112 .378
Frank Gorton 1914–17 26–10 .722
Earl Abell 1917–1919 14–12 .538
Pinky Spruhan 1919–22 38–9 .809
Frank Summers 1934–36, 1947–49 12–61 .164
Allison Hubert 1936–37, 1942–43 14–19 .424
J. Elmore 1937–38 4–11 .267
Jimmy Walker 1938–42 27–39 .409
Joe Daher 1943–45 2–24 .077
Jay McWilliams 1945–46 1–10 .091
Lloyd Roberts 1946–47 4–15 .211
Bill O'Hara 1949–52 10–56 .152
Chuck Noe 1952–55 24–46 .343
Jack Null 1955–58 12–58 .171
L.F. Miller 1958–64 41–83 .331
Gary McPherson 1964–69 32–77 .294
Mike Schuler 1969–72 13–63 .171
Bill Blair 1972–76 48–60 .444
Charlie Schmaus 1976–82 75–90 .455
Marty Fletcher 1982–86 37–75 .330
Joe Cantafio 1986–94 79–147 .350
Bart Bellairs 1994–05 116–191 .378
Duggar Baucom 2005–15 151–159 .487
Dan Earl 2015–present

[3]

References

External links