fbpx
The next stop for Vetter was Harker Prep

The next stop for Vetter was Harker Prep

MVP International men’s basketball director kept on winning
By David Driver, MVP Communications

Second in a series

WASHINGTON – Stu Vetter posted a mark of 377-53 as the basketball coach at Flint Hill in Oakton, Virginia from 1975-90.

He took several teams to tournaments in Hawaii and his experience overseas eventually attracted him to Pudge Gjormand, the Founder & Visionary of MVP International.

After a change in the direction of Flint Hill, Vetter made his second stop as a head prep coach at Harker Prep in Potomac, Maryland in time for the 1990-91 season.

 

Photo Courtesy of Stu Vetter

 

And he kept on winning while continuing to have nationally-ranked teams and Division I prospects.

“At Flint Hill, we had established ourselves as one of the best basketball programs in the country,” recalls Vetter, who helped MVP International gain traction in hoops. “We were ranked in the USA Today poll through the 1980s. The school was sold to John (Til) Hazel and he did not want the school to be known (just) for basketball.”

So in 1990, Vetter was approached by Chris Kieffer, the Headmaster at Harker Prep.

“We were looking for other schools that would take our team. Harker Prep was a small school of about 22 acres in the middle of Potomac,” Vetter notes.

Kieffer entrusted Vetter with a three-year contract while admitting he wasn’t sure if the school would be around that long.

Among the players who made the move with Vetter to the new school in the Maryland suburbs were Serge Zwikker and Jeremy Dean.

After Harker Prep, Zwikker played for Hall of Fame coach Dean Smith at the University of North Carolina and Dean played in 27 games for William & Mary from 1992-97.

“We had good players coming back. We made the decision to go to Harker and transfer the Flint Hill program to Harker Prep,” Vetter says.

One of the key players was Zwikker, one of the first top international players coached by Vetter.

“It was an interesting story with Serge; he came over from The Netherlands to play at a high school in New York,” Vetter recalls. “One day I got a call from Bill Guthridge, who was the assistant coach for Smith and a friend of mine from North Carolina. He said Serge wasn’t happy where he was in New York. And they had seen our program at Flint Hill since they were recruiting George Lynch and they had Mike Pepper,” both of whom had played for Vetter at Flint Hill.

Guthridge told Vetter that the 7-foot-3 Zwikker had the potential to be a very good player – so the European product enrolled at Flint Hill and then made the move to Harker Prep as well.

“He was very awkward and very shy about being that tall,” Vetter notes. “My assistant coach, Kevin Sutton, took Serge under his wing. Every day at Harker we had a one-hour lunch break and it doesn’t take kids one hour to eat lunch. So Kevin would work with him every day at lunch. As a senior at Harker Prep, he became a McDonald’s All-American and he started at North Carolina for Smith and Guthridge. They were getting the most out of their players.”

Zwikker was taken as the 29th pick in the 1997 NBA draft by Houston and played several years overseas before entering the business world. According to published sources, he has two daughters who played college volleyball.

Among the newcomers that first season at Flint Hill was Exree Hipp, who was from the D.C. area and had planned to enroll at Flint Hill. But he transferred to Harker Prep to play under Vetter.

“He came over with a great attitude and worked his tail off,” Vetter said of Hipp. “We had to remake his shot; he was a great athlete and we worked on his form.”

Hipp went on to play four years for the Terps in College Park, Maryland, and averaged 11.3 points per game in his career.

He started at least 27 games in each season and averaged a career-high 13.6 points per game as a junior. After his college career, Hipp played for the famed Harlem Globetrotters.

Kevin Ward, another former Harker Prep standout, played three years at George Mason in Virginia and appeared in 56 games with 18 starts for the Patriots.

Vetter was 44-3 in two seasons at Harker Prep. But there was more winning and lengthy tenure at two other schools to come.

Next: Vetter moves to St. John’s Prospect Hall in Frederick, Maryland.

Editor’s note: David Driver is the former sports editor of papers in Arlington and Harrisonburg in Virginia and worked for papers in Burke and Springfield; he was in Ireland in March and interviewed American basketball players. His book “Hoop Dreams In Europe: Americans Building Basketball Careers In Europe,” was published in March and is available on Amazon and at his website – www.daytondavid.com.

Recent Posts