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Spain Basketball Trip Taking Shape

Spain Basketball Trip Taking Shape

MVP International squad molds players from five different jurisdictions

By David Driver, MVP Communications

 

WASHINGTON – There are plenty of challenges in putting together a travel basketball team that will head overseas.

And when you have players from five different jurisdictions, preparation takes on added importance.

That is the case for Jason Conley, a former hoop standout at VMI in Virginia who is comprising an MVP International 14U squad that will play in June in an international tournament in Spain.

“It is a challenge of course because people have schedules and some guys were locked in to play in certain AAU tournaments,” said Conley, who led the nation in scoring 20 years ago at VMI. “But that is the whole purpose of me trying to get in a lot of practices.”

“It is not about just playing and going to Spain. My goal is to teach these kids not just to play but to play the right way. We are firm on that,” Conley added. “I want them to walk away in a short time and learn those things.”

The MVP International held a practice on May 15 at South Lakes High School in Reston, Virginia.

Conley hopes to hold several other practices and scrimmages in the Washington, D.C. area before the team heads to Spain.

MVP International is in a bracket that will also include teams from France, Greece, England, Nigeria, Lebanon, and two teams of American players who are sons of U.S. military who are based overseas.

“I think we are guaranteed five to six games and if we make the championship game it is seven,” said Conley, who played pro basketball overseas for several years.

Conley is an assistant coach for the team and has tapped Rich Little to be the head coach.

Credits to VMI Athletics for the photo

 

“Coach Little and I come from the same type of background. We make it clear what style we are going to play,” Conley noted.

A product of Oxon Hill High in Maryland, Little was teammates at VMI with Conley. As a high school player, Little was teammates with future Georgetown and NBA player Michael Sweetney.

“Coach Little, he has done a great job of putting in the offense and we are building our defensive principles,” Conley said. “You have to understand, these kids don’t know certain things we were taught. They are used to playing AAU; AAU is good for runs and the exposure when you get to high school.”

“I trust him; he was my point guard (at VMI). He has been coaching a lot longer than I have,” Conley added. “Everything he does is exact; we both think alike. We talk daily about what we are going to do.”

The tour will last from June 13 to 22 with the tourney in Costa Brava and trips to Barcelona and Tarragona as well.

The roster of the MVP team set to play in a tournament in Spain includes Virginia residents NaVorro Bowman and Dhruv Iyer; Maryland residents KJ Little, Nigel Gbekie, Liso Conley, James Biosi, and AJ Lacey; Aiden Riley Friend of Washington, D.C.; Xavier Skipworth of Pennsylvania; and Noah Westberg of California.

“Noah can’t make any of the practices (in the DMV) but we have arranged a few practices in Spain when he shows up there,” Conley said.

Kyle Davis of Washington, D.C. had to drop out, per doctor’s orders, so he can rest his knee for two months. “Hopefully he will go on the next trip,” Conley said.

KJ Little has emerged as a top point guard for the MVP International team and Bowman could also see a lot of time at that spot.

One of the observers at MVP International practices has been Stu Vetter, a legendary high school coach in Virginia and Maryland for several decades. A resident of Vienna, Virginia, Vetter coached Conley at St. John’s Prospect Hall in Maryland, has sent several of his players to the NBA and overseas, and made many trips to Hawaii and Japan when he coached.

Vetter, the Men’s Basketball Director for MVP International, has been impressed with the team headed to Spain.

“I think they are an outstanding group of young players,” Vetter said in a telephone interview May 23. “They will represent MVP and our country well. Travel is a great educational experience and Jason will do a great job of organizing the team.”

The experience of playing overseas for Conley will assist the MVP team when it comes to how the game is played and officiated overseas.

He played in Germany, Austria, Finland, and Romania.

“They call traveling a lot more there,” Conley explained. “In Europe, your pivot foot can’t hit the floor before the ball hits the ground.”

As a first-year pro in Germany, Conley was made to stay after practice by his coach to work on putting the ball on the floor right away so he wouldn’t get whistled for walking.

Now the MVP International coach hopes to impart that wisdom of his young players before they even set foot in Spain.

Editor’s note: David Driver is the former sports editor of papers in Arlington and Harrisonburg in Virginia and Baltimore and Laurel in Maryland. He can be reached @DaytonVaDriver and www.daytondavid.com

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