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Conley Shares Life Lessons

Conley Shares Life Lessons

MVP International Basketball Recruiting Coordinator played for legendary mentor Vetter

HERNDON, Va. – In just a few short years, Jason Conley went from sitting on the bench for his high school basketball team to leading the nation in scoring as a college freshman.

That is a lesson he now shares with young basketball players, including those he led this past summer on a trip with MVP International to Spain.

“I tell my kids I train now … I got one scholarship offer. Two years later I lead the country in scoring; I don’t want to hear any excuses. Work hard, make it work and things will happen,” says Conley, now the Basketball Recruiting Coordinator for MVP International.

 

 

Conley moved with his parents from Texas to Maryland when he was a teenager.

He attended Bethesda-Chevy Chase High as a sophomore then was a reserve at St. John’s Prospect Hall in Frederick, Maryland in 1997-98 under legendary prep coach Stu Vetter.

“We were the No. 1 team in the country the whole year,” says Vetter, sitting across from Conley at a restaurant in Northern Virginia in late September. “We played the last game against Oak Hill of Virginia at the Dean Dome in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. They were No. 2 and we were No. 1. We solidified the fact we were the No. 1 team in the country” with a victory.

Vetter knew Conley would be a solid college player – and one who eventually played professionally overseas after playing at Division I VMI in Virginia.

“Guys want to play in a great program, where you can become the best you want to be,” added Vetter, who has been the Men’s Basketball Director for MVP International. “I knew Coop was going to be an outstanding college player. He had all of the qualities, he was so athletic, and he wanted to be good. I also knew he could take the discipline it took to play at VMI. I was so happy for him because I knew how much he wanted to be good.”

Conley played as a prep senior at Montrose Christian in Rockville, Maryland under coach Kevin Sutton, a guard in college at JMU who has had a long run as a Division I assistant at several stops.

After one year at a prep school in Kentucky, Conley led the nation in scoring in 2001-02 for VMI in Lexington, Virginia with 29.3 points per contest.

Two of his teammates on that squad were Richard Little and Radee Skipworth, who were also coaches with MVP International this summer for a title-winning team in Spain. All three of them had sons who made the trip to Spain this past summer with the USA team for MVP International.

VMI was the only Division I school to offer Conley a scholarship.

“I got a big trophy from the school,” Conley said after he led the nation in scoring. “I got a plaque from the NCAA and they only give out plaques for certain things. It said I led the nation in scoring. I got a note from the NCAA from the records’ keeper that said you were the first to do that.”

That season, Conley was in Sports Illustrated and the subject of a big spread in Slam magazine.

He heard constantly that season from Wade Branner, the long-time Sports Information Director at VMI who retired earlier this year after nearly four decades at the school.

With requests coming in, Conley did a lot of interviews that season – just a few years after had the patience to wait his turn on the bench in high school.

“I knew when my time came it was going to happen. The class of 1999 in this area was probably the best class. That included Keith Bogans, DerMarr Johnson. Joe Forte, Roger Mason, Rodney White,” Conley said, listing high school seniors in the Washington, D.C. area from that spring. “Those guys were all NBA draft picks. I was at the bottom; all of the schools were coming to see those guys. As soon as I got the call from VMI, I saw it as an opportunity.”

And that season as a high school reserve gave him motivation.

“I think it all started when I went to St. John’s. I was always the man, then I get to a real program where I am not the man. I am the last man (on the bench), almost. It kind of fueled me to want to prove something. I was around great players every day,” Conley noted.

“Jason was one of those guys that just wanted to be involved in a great program and at that time we had Jason Capel, we had Damian Wilkins,” Vetter said of future college stars.

Among the slew of former NBA standouts that Vetter coached in high school include Kevin Durant, who played one season of college ball at Texas before embarking on his NBA career.

Conley ended his college career at the University of Missouri and then played as a pro in several European countries.

“Guys who were going to be great college players and Jason wanted to be part of a great program,” Vetter notes. “I have always emphasized that great players rise to the occasion. I knew all along Jason was going to be an outstanding player. He was athletic; he just needed that day-to-day competition. His parents wanted to put him in a position where he could be the best he wanted to be.”

Editor’s note: David Driver is the former sports editor of papers in Arlington and Harrisonburg in Virginia and Laurel and Baltimore in Maryland. He has been to at least 18 countries in Europe and his book, “Hoop Dreams In Europe: American Basketball Players Building Careers Overseas,” is available on Amazon or at www.daytondavid.com.

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