Former VMI standout will guide MVP International team at Spain tournament
By David Driver, MVP Communications
WASHINGTON – About 15 years ago, Richard Little made a trip to Germany to see former VMI teammate Jason Conley play in a pro basketball league there.
Now Maryland resident Little will return to Europe to coach an MVP International 14U hoop team for a tournament in Spain.
The team from MVP – a leader in youth sports travel – will begin to play June 17 with games against Greece and France.
Assistant coaches under Little will be Conley and Radee Skipworth, who also played with them for the Keydets in Lexington, Virginia. All three men have sons on the MVP squad.
“Jason and I have talked about; I am such a coach and I like to be prepared,” said Little, the former head varsity coach at Oxon Hill. “I am not sure what we are getting it to with the competition but I think that is exciting. I just hope to boys learn something and enjoy it.”
“It is a nice little challenge, it is exciting,” Little added. “Kids will be able to adjust and adapt after that.”
Little was classmates and teammates at Oxon Hill High in Maryland with Michael Sweetney, who later played in college at Georgetown and in the NBA with the Bulls and Knicks.
Little was the point guard for VMI during the 2001-02 season when Conley, as a freshman, averaged 29.3 points per game to lead the nation. That was the first time a freshman paced the country in scoring at Division I level. Skipworth, from Hershey, Pennsylvania, averaged 14.9 points per contest for VMI that magical season.
“It wasn’t forced. He came down to VMI the summer before us actually starting; I had some shooters,” Little said. “But I had never played with a guy like Coop who I could throw alley-oops to; once they figured out I see the court well and he likes the ball in certain places, that is why we clicked so fast.”
Little averaged 4.6 assists that season as a sophomore; he averaged 7.2 assists as a junior at VMI and ended his four-year career with 608 assists.
These days he teaches physical education at a charter school in Washington, D.C., and also does personal training and fitness.
“A lot of the players were very skilled,” Little said of seeing players in Germany about 15 years ago. “College players here in the U.S. are very skilled; just a lot of quick execution, sort of like the NBA. That is what really stuck out.”
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 personnel who are based overseas.
“It is not a lot of scouting,” Little said. “We will look online to see if we can find some things about opponents, but there is not a lot of information. I am just really excited to see how we do against different talents. It will be a good learning lesson and challenge for our players as they transition to high school.”
“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.
It will be the first trip overseas for many of the players, including Little.
“I started coaching him when he was 4; that is when we really started,” Little said of his son KJ. “I coached all the way from 4 to 10 then kind of gave up and stepped back and be more of a parent. I enjoyed watching him being a parent; he loves basketball and loves to play.”
Editor’s note: David Driver is the former sports editor of papers in Arlington and Harrisonburg in Virginia and Laurel and Baltimore in Maryland. His book, “Hoop Dreams In Europe: Americans Basketball Players Building Careers Overseas,” was published in March and is available on Amazon.