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Vetter Builds Program in Frederick, Maryland

Vetter Builds Program in Frederick, Maryland

After Harker Prep, veteran coach moved to St. John’s at Prospect Hall
By David Driver, MVP Communications

Third in a series

WASHINGTON – On a Monday evening in the spring of 1993, legendary basketball coach Dean Smith won his second national title as he led the University of North Carolina to the crown over Michigan.

That team of Tar Heels included George Lynch, who had played for Stu Vetter in high school at Flint Hill in Northern Virginia. Just a few days after that national title in New Orleans, Smith was sitting in a restaurant eating lunch with Vetter in Frederick, Maryland.

“I remember one afternoon I was with coach Smith and coach Bill Guthridge. They won the title on a Monday and that Friday, coach Smith and coach Guthridge and I walked into the Ruby Tuesday,” recalls Vetter, who was winding up his first season as the coach at St John’s at Prospect Hall in Frederick. “The manager of the restaurant came up to me said everybody wanted to get coach Smith’s autograph. I said, ‘Let him get his lunch and relax a little bit.’ Lo and behold, as we are headed out the door, the whole restaurant staff and customers wanted autographs. It was a great day, and great fun and coach Smith took it really well.”

Smith, who died in 2015, wasn’t the only famous college basketball coach that Vetter entertained in Frederick.

That was because Vetter coached Division I caliber players at his four high schools and was regularly hosting some of the top college coaches in the country who were on recruiting visits.

“I remember one day after practice I took Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski to the Ledo’s Pizza in Frederick,” Vetter recalled.

Vetter, after two seasons at Harker Prep, began coaching in Frederick at St. John’s at Prospect Hall in 1992.

He brought with him some of the top high school hoopsters in the mid-Atlantic region.

“This was all new to the Frederick area and this brought a lot of publicity and we were drawing great crowds,” Vetter notes.

Vetter was approached by the then-headmaster of the school in Frederick.

“He was excited about us coming over” to Frederick from Harker Prep, Vetter says. “He liked that we came every day with coat and ties on game days. He came to me and asked if I was willing to come to Frederick. I had lived in this area all of my life and I had never been to Frederick. We were No. 1 in the area in The Washington Post when we left Harker. And the top 25 in the country in USA Today, which was the measuring stick for high school teams back then.”

Along with assistant coach Kevin Sutton, Vetter visited the school in Frederick.

“We went up and visited; we went to the school and saw a gym that was built in the 1940s. But I liked the feel of the place, I liked the potential there. We decided to make the move to Frederick; we literally had no varsity players coming back. At the time it was at Prospect Hall, a beautiful building in Frederick,” Vetter says.

Among some of the future Division I players that Vetter coached in Frederick were Cameron Dollar (UCLA), Kevin Ward (George Mason), Tim Basham (East Carolina), Ya-Ya Dia (Georgetown), Curtis Staples (Virginia), Tarik Turner (St. John’s), Jason Capel (North Carolina), Tony Christie (Clemson), Andrius Jurkunas (Clemson), Mohamed Woni (Clemson), Raul DePablo (Towson), Antxon Iturbe (George Washington), Damien Wilkins (North Carolina State and Georgia) and Nate James, who went on to star at Duke and was later an assistant coach there under Krzyzewski.

Jurkunas was from Lithuania, Woni came from the Ivory Coast and DePablo and Iturbe are from Spain.

Dollar eventually was part of a national-title team at UCLA after starring in high school.

“He had a great passion for the game and he was a great leader,” Vetter notes.

Dia was recommended to Vetter by Ronnie Thompson, who had played for Vetter at Flint Hill and is the son of the late Hall of Fame Georgetown coach John Thompson.

Staples was from southwest Virginia. “Curtis was a terrific player and became one of the great 3-point shooters in the history of the NCAA,” Vetter says.

But the player that got the Frederick school off the ground was Nate James, who came from a military family with D.C. roots.

“The key player was Nate James, who was part of the program for four years. He was going to go to Harker but he came with us to Frederick,” notes Vetter. “He was the backbone and a leader of the program as a freshman; Nate was one of the more mature 14-year-olds I had ever been around. He was a leader from day one. He and Dollar were leaders on that first team; it was amazing how quickly we put it together.”

James was part of several title teams at Duke and is now the head coach at Austin Peay in Tennessee.

Capel’s father, Jeff, was a veteran college coach before his passing in 2017 and Jason’s brother brother, Jeff Capel III, was a star at Duke and is the head coach at the University of Pittsburgh.

“His dad was the coach at ODU and he came into my office one day in Frederick. He said, ‘I am here because I want you to coach my son.’ I had never seen Jason play. That is how I ended up with Jason, who led us to two terrific years and the USA Today national championship in 1998. We beat Oak Hill in the last game in North Carolina for the title in 1998 at the Smith Center,” Vetter notes.

Another son of a coach that Vetter had in Frederick was Jon Larranaga, whose father was the head coach at George Mason University at the time and is now the head coach at Division I Miami.

Vetter was named the national high school coach of the year by USA Today – with Flint Hill in 1986 and with St. John’s in 1998.

He was 136-10 while at St. John’s from 1992-98. St. John’s left Prospect Hall in 2013 and is now called St. John’s Catholic Prep and is in Frederick County, Maryland.

Next: Moving on to Montrose Christian in Rockville, Maryland.

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 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.

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