Jason Conley, who led the nation in scoring at VMI, will take the MVP team overseas
By David Driver, MVP Communications
Jason Conley played professional basketball for teams in Germany, Austria, Finland, and Romania.
The top scorer in the nation 20 years ago, Conley is eager to pass along those overseas memories when he takes a team of talented young basketball players to Spain this summer with MVP International, a leader in overseas sports travel.
Conley, a former standout at VMI in Lexington, Virginia, is excited to share his experiences with the boys on the MVP team who will be rising eighth and ninth-graders in the fall. “It is one of those things that it gives you a new outlook on life and how Americans view it,” Conley said of living in Europe. “They work hard; they are content with having what they need. I really value that. That kind of opens up my eyes to what we have in the States.” Among staff also going on the trip is Matt Wojceichowski, an Enrollment Coordinator for MVP International who is also a baseball coach at South Lakes High in Reston, Virginia. The MVP team will face squads from other countries while in Spain, which has one of the top men’s pro leagues in Europe.
“I was approached by MVP about three years ago, then COVID hit,” Wojceichowski notes. “We resumed our plans and I’ve been working to put together a basketball team. I am really excited about taking a team to Spain for 10 days from June 13 to 22. It will be great for these young men to represent the USA in international competition.”
At least one parent of every member of the team will also head to Spain on the tour. “Matt and Eli will make sure everything is run right,” noted Conley, mentioning the efforts of Eli Facenda, the Chief Enrollment Officer for MVP International. Facenda played baseball at Lehigh, had a minor in Spanish and spent a semester abroad in Barcelona.
Conley traveled all around Europe while he played, both as a tourist and as a player. “It was a great run and I wouldn’t change it in a heartbeat,” Conley said of his time overseas. “Out of my 13 years as a pro I have been everywhere.
If I had a free weekend I would go somewhere.” His travels also took him to The Netherlands, Belgium, Italy, Greece, Spain, Croatia, Ukraine, Russia, and the Czech Republic.
The MVP trip will take the team to Barcelona, Spain, and Conley wants his young team to know that it was there in the 1992 Olympics that the American Dream Team of basketball helped speed up the development of basketball around the world.
That gold medal USA squad includes stars such as Magic Johnson, Larry Bird, and Michael Jordan. Those three are featured in a mural at one of the most popular art museums in Madrid.
Other stops in Spain will include Tarragona and Costa Brava for the 13U and 14U squad from MVP.
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; Kyle Davis and Aiden Riley Friend of Washington, D.C.; Xavier Skipworth of Pennsylvania; and Noah Westberg of California.
Liso Conley is the son of Jason while Little and Skipworth are the sons of former VMI players who were teammates with Jason Conley at the Virginia school.
“Without those two guys, I wouldn’t have led the nation in scoring,” Conley notes.
Rich Little was teammates at Oxon Hill High in Maryland with Michael Sweetney, who played several years in the NBA.
Bowman is the son of NaVorro Bowman, who played football in college at Penn State and in the NFL with San Francisco and Oakland.
Conley grew up in San Antonio and was 15 when he moved to Maryland as his mother took a job as a lobbyist. His father is an attorney.
He attended Bethesda-Chevy Chase High as a sophomore and then played at St. John’s Prospect Hall in Frederick, Maryland.
Conley saw limited playing time as a junior on a team that was considered the national prep champions that season.
“I sat the bench the whole year,” Conley said. “At first I didn’t like it, but I realized every day in practice I was going against the No. 1 team in the country. Every day, I was getting better. I knew eventually my time would come.”
His coach at St. John’s Prospect Hall was Stu Vetter, a coaching legend in the mid-Atlantic region and part of the MVP International family.
As a senior, Conley transferred to Montrose Christian in Rockville, Maryland and played for Kevin Sutton, a guard in college at JMU who has been a college assistant for several years. Sutton was an assistant this past season at Florida Gulf Coast.
As a freshman at VMI in 2001-02, Conley led the country with an average of 29.3 points per contest.
He gives a lot of credit to teammates Richard Little – who was among national leaders – and Radee Skipworth, who tallied 1.4 assists per outing.
Little was from Fort Washington, Maryland, and went to Oxon Hill High and was teammates there with Michael Sweetney, who played in college at Georgetown and in the NBA with the Knicks and Bulls.
Conley averaged 22.2 points per contest as a sophomore for VMI and then spent his last two seasons playing for the University of Missouri, where he averaged 10.2 points per contest as a senior before heading overseas.
Conley is now an assistant basketball coach at The Bullis School in Maryland under Catholic University graduate Bruce Kelly, a former Division I assistant at American University in Washington, D.C.
And now he will pass on those experiences with the MVP team headed to Spain in June.