Posts Tagged ‘Gerardo Suero’

Partin among famous, infamous America East connections to D-League Draft

Sunday, November 4th, 2012

When the fourth round of the NBA Developmental League Draft commenced, the professional career of former Boston University Guard Darryl Partin officially began.

Partin, the 2012 America East Player of the Year (as voted by the coaches), was taken by the Fort Wayne Mad Ants with the first pick of the fourth round.

Partin began his career in the Atlantic 10, playing two seasons for the La Salle Explorers before transferring to BU. In his two seasons on Commonwealth Avenue, Partin scored over 1,000 points, was twice named to the All-Conference First Team (he was selected to the One-Bid Wonders second team both seasons), and helped lead the Terriers to the America East Tournament Championship and NCAA Tournament in 2011.

During his senior year, Partin averaged 19.6 points per game, good for second in the conference and 23rd in the nation. Equal parts dominant scorer and offensive black hole, the 6’5” Partin was a shoot first, second, and third type of scoring guard, capable of shooting BU both into, and out of, games.

The D-League is branded as the official minor league of the NBA, and touts the number of alums annually called up to fill rosters in The League [87 was the count last season]. The Mad Ants are the minor league affiliate of Charlotte Bobcats, Detroit Pistons, Indiana Pacers and Milwaukee Bucks. (more…)

CIT-you later, Albany. Great Danes’ season ends with 89-79 loss to Manhattan in CollegeInsider.com Tournament.

Friday, March 16th, 2012

Jacob Iati left everything on the court, scoring a career high 23 points (Lori Van Buren / Times Union)

If a game is played in the fourth-ranked post-season tournament and no one is there to watch it, was it ever played at all?

Attendance, venue, or title didn’t matter to Albany head coach Will Brown, who announced following Albany’s semi-final loss in the America East Tournament to Stony Brook (a loss which dashed the Great Danes NCAA hopes), that the Great Danes would play anywhere in order to keep their season going.

“We’d play in a CYO League, we’ll play in an intramural tournament,” he said at the time, before adding “We’ll go play you and four other members of the media in the parking lot.”

Brown got his wish with a CIT tournament invite, and the injured Great Danes played hard, before succumbing to the trademarks of their season.

There was another America East game played Wednesday night – in addition to the Catamounts “First Four” NCAA Tournament win – although, going by attendance numbers, few fans realized it.

In front of a season-low home crowd of 458 fans, the Great Danes season came to an end in the high-scoring, zero-defense, injury-riddled fashion that defined their season. Albany fell at home 89-79 to Manhattan in the “pay-to-play” CIT.

The Great Danes did, however, show reason for fans to remain excited for next season.

“I think we will be good next year,” said Albany head coach Will Brown following the loss.

All season, the Achilles-heel of the Great Danes – a juggernaut on the offensive end – was their defense. In the last game of the season, the ‘Danes D – or lack thereof – was once again the story, as Albany allowed the Jaspers to shoot an aneurysm-inducing .625 (35-56) from the floor. Manhattan also dished out 23 assists.

Five Great Danes reached double figures. Playing in what was supposed to be the final game of his career, Jacob Iati went out guns-a-blazing, scoring a career-high 23 points on 8-14 shooting, 7-12 from downtown. Leading scorer Gerardo Suero pitched in 18 points, point guard Mike Black added 14 and forwards Jayson Gurrier and Sam Rowley chipped in 10 points apiece. Rowley pulled down a game-high 8 rebounds (more…)

Last Second Hero: Dallis Joyner sends Stony Brook on to title game with tip at the buzzer

Friday, March 9th, 2012

Dallis Joyner is mobbed following his tip-in (Photo Courtesy of America East Athletic Communications)

(West Hartford, CT) — With regulation about to draw to a close, Stony Brook sophomore guard Dave Coley faced the Albany Great Danes’ defense, searching for a point of weakness. The Chase Arena crowd was at a fever pitch after Albany’s Jacob Iati hit what threatened to be a soul-crushing 3-pointer to draw his team level with 37 seconds remaining. Even after more than 39 minutes of all-out effort, the Danes’ energy and alertness was formidable. No path to the basket emerged. Coley had to settle for a jumper, which missed. As the ball headed skyward, then downward, the audience began to exhale and prepare for overtime.

And then, in the blink of an eye, the ball rose back up and fell through the cylinder, and Albany’s season was over.

Stony Brook forward Tommy Brenton had gotten a hand to the basketball – while his tip was not enough to direct the ball in the right direction, its new trajectory brought it to the hand of another Seawolf forward, senior Dallis Joyner, who rose up among a crowd of purple and white jerseys for the tip-in as time expired, giving top-seeded Stony Brook a 57-55 victory over No. 4 Albany.

“That was a pass from me to Dallis,” Brenton deadpanned.

“Coach drew it up for Dave to get a shot up and when I tipped it I didn’t think it would count because I heard the horn go off for the shot clock. But when I went up I still saw time running off the game clock and I knew it was good,” said Joyner.

Thirty-seven seconds earlier, the Great Danes had run a picture-perfect execution of a collapsing double-screen to spring 5’8″ guard Jacob Iati for a game-tying three. (more…)

Toughing it out: Albany shows resolve in gritty quarterfinal win over New Hampshire

Sunday, March 4th, 2012

(West Hartford, CT) — As Albany head coach Will Brown approached the podium, a question rang out.

“Coach, how many points did you score in your career compared to what Suero scored tonight?” sniped one intrepid member of the media, referencing the 24 points Brown’s star wing, Gerardo Suero, dropped on the Wildcats.

“If I’d have taken as many shots as Suero, I’d be in the basketball Hall of Fame,” said Brown with a wry smile , drawing hearty laughs from Suero, as well as Albany players Mike Black and Blake Metcalf.

Getting into a verbal sparring match with the Great Danes silver-tongued coach is usually akin to bringing a knife to a gunfight, and Brown remains the quickest draw in the America East.

Brown was all smiles following a 63-45 win over New Hampshire in the quarterfinals of the America East Tournament – his first tournament victory in three years. For the first time in a long time, Brown appears to have an on the court arsenal that matches the one he brings to post-game pressers.

More importantly, the Danes finally have the heart and resolve.

“My group has turned into a very resilient group. This is not the group that we expected to have heading into the America east Conference Tournament,” said Brown. “This group has really come together and played some good basketball.”

Brown was all smiles following a 63-45 win over New Hampshire in the quarterfinals of the America East Tournament – his first tournament victory in three years.

“There is not one team in this league that is winning in this tournament without 2 of their top guys playing so for us to win and advance says a lot about the resiliency of our kids.” (more…)

OBW 2011-12 Second Team All-Conference

Thursday, March 1st, 2012

Alvin Abreu, R-Sr., G, New Hampshire (13.7 PPG, 3.6 RPG, 36.7 3FG%): Alvin Abreu has gone out the way that every since player who ever sets foot on a court should hope to conclude their careers: By leaving every last ounce of himself on the floor. A little over a month ago, when we began outlining our All-Conference Teams, Abreu was not on any of them. But Abreu – who perhaps works harder than any other player in the conference – had the February to end all Februarys, going straight BEAST MODE. The heart and soul of the Wildcats, Abreu put the team on his back and carried them from the Play-in Game to the fifth-seed.

Reason omitted from First-Team: Abreu might have been the best player in the AE during the month of February, but there are three other months, too, and those months had too many games where Abreu had more field goal attempts than points. Volume is valuable when it allows other players to thrive in lower-usage roles, but before the calendar hit February 1, the Wildcats weren’t thriving – they were diving, with the play-in game looking like a possible destination before UNH beat Hartford 52-51 in Durham to begin its race to 5th place. As spectacular as Abreu was down the stretch, his first three months of the season essentially locked him out of 1st-team contention.

Bryan Dougher, Sr., G, Stony Brook (13.4 PPG, 37.3 3FG%, 1.3 A/TO): A tireless worker, consummate leader, student-athlete, all-around good guy and flat-out winner, Dougher may be the single most important player to ever set foot at Stony Brook. Quiet and without a hint of ego or arrogance, Dougher is a silent assassin from long-range, and was the leading scorer for the regular season champion Seawolves. Although still susceptible to athletic guards off the dribble, Dougher made tremendous strides on the defensive end, and also showed off some surprising post-up moves. Dougher has started every single game of his career, and during that time has likely never taken a single player, practice, or moment off – or for granted.

Reason omitted from First-Team: Dougher can shoot the basketball, without a doubt. That, by itself, provides a lot of value – we named Four McGlynn Rookie of the Year, and McGlynn’s value is almost entirely provided by his shooting ability. But while Dougher is a great shooter, he’s not a historically great shooter, and in our eyes a top-5 player in the league has to excel in more than one area. That’s not to say Dougher is weak in every other area. He’s not. Dougher’s defensive ability has improved every season, his leadership is unquestioned, and he’s extremely durable. But it can’t be ignored that Dougher is only meaningfully better than average at one tangible aspect of the game.

D.J. Irving, Soph., G, Boston University (11.3 PPG, 5.4 APG, 2.3 A/TO, 108.7 ORtg): The fastest player in the conference, Irving was the engine that made the Terriers go, and made everyone around him much better. According to virtually every coach in the conference, not only was Irving the best Terrier, but teams would regularly structure their entire gameplan around containing him. Irving’s ability to drive the lane and dish to the open man made the Terriers offense run, and his court presence greatly contributed to the monster offensive season of teammate Darryl Partin, as BU’s point guard had a knack for getting the ball to Partin in the perfect position to score. The Terriers were clearly not the same team without Irving, as evidenced by their 0-4 spell when the guard was dealing with a concussion. Irving also excelled on the defensive end as the catalyst of the Terriers’ traps and presses, and applied constant pressure to opposing ball-handlers in the halfcourt.

Reason omitted from First-Team: Prior to Irving’s concussion, he was having a truly outstanding season and may have been the leading candidate for Player of the Year. And it’s clear that BU suffered in his absence. But after the concussion, while Irving was often good and rarely bad, there were too many games where he was essentially invisible. There’s a difference between looking to set up your teammates, which has always been a big part of Irving’s game, and doing so at the expense of your own offense. Irving reached double figures in points in nine of 11 games before the concussion, but was “held” to single-digit point totals in more than half of BU’s conference games, including three of BU’s four conference losses. Some of those low point totals were the result of teams selling out to keep Irving out of the lane, but there were more than a few occasions where we came to conclude that the biggest obstacle between Irving and the basket was himself.

Darryl Partin, R-Sr., G/F, Boston University (19.7 PPG, 160 FTA, 37.2 Shot%): Partin had an absolutely monster offensive season, finishing second in the conference in both overall scoring and scoring in conference games at 19.7 and 19.6 points per game, respectively. Partin excelled as a pick-and pop offensive player, and his lightning-quick release from anywhere on the court was deadly on catch-and-shoots running around screens. When he caught fire, no one on the league could get hotter than Partin, who could put points up by the barrelful. Although far from a good defensive player, Partin made strides on the defensive end of the ball as well.

Reason omitted from First-Team: Remember how we described Dougher as one-dimensional? Copy that for Partin. And while Partin’s ability to create his own shot may be far more robust than Dougher’s ability to do the same, nobody said anything about that created shot for self being a quality look. Partin may have invented the heat check. BU needed someone to absorb volume on offense, but that inevitably led to a predictable problem: Partin, a good shooter when spotting up or coming off screens, ended up taking a lot of contested leaners, long jumpers and 3′s off the dribble. If those sound like low-percentage looks, that’s because they were, which is why one of the most prolific scorers in the league had an effective field goal percentage of just 47.6. And when a player learns to expect that those low-percentage shots are occasionally required, it’s difficult to turn off the faucet and eschew those same types of looks earlier in the shot clock – Partin could be expected to throw up one of those shots early in the possession a few times a game. Did that make him difficult to guard? Yeah, probably, because any spot on the court could turn into a scoring opportunity. But it also meant too many empty possessions to be a first-team player on our list.

Gerardo Suero, Jr., G/F, Albany (21.7 PPG, 37.3 Poss%, 242 FTA, 107.8 ORtg): On the offensive side of the ball, Suero is not only the most physically gifted player in the league, but possibly one of the most gifted players the league has seen in a long time. Suero’s 21.7 points per game not only lead the league, but they are the highest single-season average the America East has seen since Taylor Coppenrath and Jose Juan Barea surpassed it in 2004-2005. In the past decade, only three times (Coppernath in 03-04 and 04-05, and Barea in 04-05) has an America East player scored at a higher clip. Suero’s package of size (6’4” 215), strength, athleticism, and ability and propensity to attack the hoop off the dribble are something the conference has not seen in a very, very long time. He was also a solid rebounder who got teammates involved distributing the ball.

Reason omitted from First-Team: Gerardo Suero averaged 4.2 turnovers per game. If that sounds like a lot, it’s because it is. It’s 4th in the nation. That number jumps to 4.7 in conference play. Gerardo Suero is also, by our reckoning, the worst defender among any current AE rotation player and quite possibly the worst defender we’ve ever seen in this conference. Is his scoring ability otherworldly? Yeah it is. But this is the blueprint for how a player can make more than 200 field goals and more than 200 free throws, lead the entire nation in percentage of possessions used, average almost six rebounds per game as a wing, and still miss out on 1st-team honors. Being benched after giving no effort whatsoever in a key game on national television doesn’t help either.

Big Purple Brawl: First place Stony Brook knocks out Albany in phyisical battle.

Sunday, February 5th, 2012

(Albany, NY) — When push comes to shove, the Stony Brook Seawolves are going to come out on top.

“They’re going to win most street fights in this league,” said Albany head coach Will Brown of Stony Brook.

In an incredibly hard fought and physical game, the Seawolves relied on clutch shooting, a deep bench, and a lot of contact, to emerged with a 76-69 win on the road against Albany, remaining alone atop the America East standings.

“They’re the best defensive team in the league, the best rebounding team in the league and the toughest team in the league,” said Brown. “They imposed their will on us.”

David Coley scored 17 points on 8-9 shooting, Bryan Dougher added 14, Al Rapier had a 10 point 12 rebound double-double, and Anthony Jackson scored 11 points in 10 minutes off the bench.

“A lot of guys stepped up and made big plays on the road, which isn’t easy to do in front of a sell-out crowd,” said Stony Brook head coach Steve Pikiell.

Stony Brook shot 53.1 percent from the floor (26-49) and 56.3 percent from behind the arc (9-16), and out-rebounded the Great Danes 34-32, the 13th straight game that the Seawolves have out-rebounded their opponents. Stony Brook held the Great Danes – The league’s best offensive back court – to just 5-22 from behind the arc.

Nine different players scored for Stony Brook, as the Seawolves bench outscored Albany’s 23-4.

“I like my bench, I trust them; they can really shoot the ball. They give us a different dimension coming off the bench,” said Pikiell.

Albany’s three-headed back court monster of Gerardo Suero, Mike Black and Logan Aronhalt combined for 51 points, but had to work for every single one of them.

“They out-physicaled us,” said Black.

“It was definitely the most physical game we’ve played all year,” added Aronhalt.

Playing before a sellout home crowd of 4,538, the game (Albany’s “Big Purple Growl” for winter homecoming), had a post season feel. 60 minutes before tip-off, bass blared from the overhead speakers. Both teams rocked the rims with high-flying dunks during lay-up lines, and the floorboards shook beneath the fans. The noise was deafening. (more…)

Stony Brook 76 Albany 69

Sunday, February 5th, 2012

(Albany, NY) — The first place Stony Brook Seawolves registered 76-69 road win over the Albany Great Danes to remain alone atop the America East conference standings.

“We’ve played every team in the league, and they are by far the team that I’m most impressed with,” said Albany head coach Will Brown.

Played before a raucous capacity crowd of 4,538, the game was an incredibly physical, hard fought battle.

“It’s always a war when we play them and tonight was not different,” said Stony Brook head coach Steve Pikiell. (more…)

The Will to Win: Albany star Gerardo Suero doesn’t show up, BU star D.J. Irving does, powering Terriers to big conference win.

Tuesday, January 17th, 2012

(Boston, MA)–Prior to tip-off Monday night, the question on the minds of many was: just how would the Boston University Terriers defend Albany and prolific scoring wing Gerardo Suero?

But no defense the Terriers could have drawn up would have been half as effective at stopping Suero as Suero himself: The junior college transfer played without the fire and effort to even compete, and virtually took himself out of the game.

“He just wasn’t there today, he just wasn’t in it,” said Albany head coach Will Brown of his offensive catalyst.

Point guard D.J. Irving powered the Terriers to their fourth straight win in conference play, as BU shot a season-high 51.1 percent from the floor and topped the Great Danes 70-57. The Terriers held the Great Danes, who entered the game second in the conference in scoring at nearly 75 points per game, to 18 points under their season average.

“This is the first game that we haven’t scored enough points to win, since our George Mason game,” said Brown.

The win re-established BU as one of the top contenders for the America East crown, only weeks after the Terriers looked dead in the water, losing seven straight.

“Our guys really did a great job in the game plan. I thought we played like a very good team for most of the game,” said BU head coach Joe Jones.

Irving posted team-highs of 17 points and 6 assists, tied a team-high with 3 steals, and caused general mayhem on both sides of the ball.

“D.J. Irving is their best player – he’s terrific,” said Brown. “They’re at their best when he [Irving]’s got the ball in his hands, and he’s getting guys shots.” (more…)

In other news, Gerardo Suero likes shooting free throws

Wednesday, January 4th, 2012

In case it’s not clear how absurd the rate at which Gerardo Suero draws fouls is, consider this:

Gerardo Suero has attempted 136 free throws in 14 games.

Let’s assume that he continues to draw fouls at the same rate (which, while regression may play a factor, is a reasonable assumption considering the general quality of AE defenses and the whistle-happy AE refs). Let’s also assume Suero stays healthy and his playing time remains the same. He would then play in at least 17 more games (15 AE regular-season games, the BracketBuster, and one AE tournament game).

Over a total of 31 games, that projects to 301 free throws. Let’s round down to 300 for a nice, even number. (more…)

America East Recap, 11/15/11

Wednesday, November 16th, 2011

Gerardo Suero is the real deal; the Stony Brook Seawolves (at least for now) are not.

No. 5 Syracuse 98, Albany 74
Syracuse was too big, too strong, and too athletic for the Great Danes, but that didn’t diminish the game of Gerardo Suero. Only three games in, it’s become apparent that the first-year JuCo is the real deal. Albany fell to the fifth-ranked Orange in the second round of the NIT, but Suero once again lit it up against a nationally ranked team, scoring a game high 31 points, to go with six rebounds and four assists. Suero was 9-of-16 from the floor and 11-of-12 from the line. The 6’5” wing continued to attack the hoop with reckless abandon, as the Orange could not keep him out of the paint. Through three games, two of which came against nationally ranked teams from the Big East, Suero is now averaging 25.7 points per game on an eye-popping 59 percent from the floor, while averaging 13 free throws a game. It begs the question: if Suero can do this against the Big East, how in the world is anyone in the America East going to stop him? Logan Aronhalt was solid with 20 points, and point guard Mike Black added 10.
(more…)