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Vetter coached Durant, Vasquez at Montrose Christian

Vetter coached Durant, Vasquez at Montrose Christian

Veteran coach won more than 800 games before joining MVP International
By David Driver, MVP Communications

Last in a four-part series

WASHINGTON – Going into the 2005-06 high school basketball season, Stu Vetter knew he had a very solid squad once again at Montrose Christian in Rockville, Maryland.

One of his returning players was Greivis Vasquez, who after two years with Vetter would become a star at the University of Maryland and play in the NBA for several teams from 2010-17.

But that Montrose squad got an unexpected boost in the summer of 2005 when Kevin Durant and his parents, from nearby Prince George’s County, Maryland, paid a visit to Vetter and the school.

“Greivis was going into his senior year and we had a pretty veteran team coming back,” Vetter recalls. “About midsummer or so Kevin had declared for Texas; he didn’t like Oak Hill and his parents brought him over to Montrose. He sat down and talked with me; I didn’t really know him but I had seen him play a little bit. I knew he was one of the top players in the country.”

Rick Barnes, at the time the coach at Texas, was familiar with Vetter going back to his days when Barnes was the head coach at George Mason University in Virginia.

“He told Kevin and Kevin’s family, if you want to play for a good program go play for coach Vetter at Montrose Christian,” Vetter recalls. So that is how two future NBA standouts played together one year in high school.

 

Future NBA all-star Kevin Durant played for Stu Vetter (right) at Montrose Christian in Rockville, Maryland before going on to play one season at the University of Texas and then stardom in the NBA.

 

“Greivis was with us two years,” Vetter noted. “He was playing in Venezuela – several college coaches had called me and said, ‘This kid is really good and he would be really good in your program.’ Mark Few from Gonzaga had recruited him very heavily. Greivis became an extremely popular player, not only at Montrose but in the whole area. He was very flamboyant.”

So it came down to Vasquez having to decide between Few at Gonzaga or Gary Williams at Maryland.

“The program at Maryland at that time needed a boost, an enthusiasm boost more than anything else,” Vetter says. “I told Gary, if you need somebody that is going to light up the program and bring you energy, it is Greivis Vasquez. I told him, ‘If you get Greivis, he will make your team better and he is going to bring an enthusiasm to the crowd that is missing.’ Gary agreed and it came down to Gonzaga and Maryland and Greivis had established a family here (in the D.C. area) and Greivis and I were very close. He decided that he wanted to stay in what he called his second home, which was Maryland.”

The jersey of Vasquez is hanging from the rafters at the University of Maryland.

Other standouts who played for Vetter at Montrose included Lithuania native Linas Kleiza, a first-round NBA draft pick of Denver out of the University of Missouri; Terrence Ross, who played in the NBA for Toronto and Orlando after he was drafted out of the University of Washington; Tony Bethel, who played at Georgetown; and Justin Anderson, who starred at the University of Virginia and a first-round pick of Dallas in the NBA in 2015.

“He came in as a junior and was an instant force,” Vetter said Kleiza. “He was one of the strongest players I had ever coached. We had a good team right away with Linas. For the two years we had him, he was a pretty dominant player and one of the best teams in the country.”

After taking a year off, Vetter became the head coach at Montrose Christian in Rockville, Maryland in time for the 1998-99 season.

He took over for Kevin Sutton, his former assistant who became an assistant coach at ODU after one year as the head coach at Montrose Christian.

“He established a good program at Montrose,” Vetter notes of Sutton.

Vetter wasn’t sure he wanted to return to coaching so quickly but he was convinced by Montrose Christian administrators, Sutton, and parents of players to take over at the Rockville school for Sutton.

That first team for Vetter at Montrose Christian included Marvin Lewis, who went on to star at Georgia Tech; Mohamed Diakite, who played for St. John’s in New York; Levi Watkins, who became a player and then assistant coach at North Carolina State; and Drew Hall, who played at Georgetown. Vetter was 321-47 as the coach at Montrose Christian from 1999 to 2013.

For his career, Vetter won more than 800 games, and coached more than 100 future Division I players – including 17 future NBA players, eight of whom went in the first round of the draft.

He was twice named the national coach of the year and he guided three teams to national high school titles.

Several of his former assistants have gone on to coach in the college ranks, including long-time assistant Sutton.

Former assistants under Vetter now at the NBA level as assistants include David Adkins (Portland), Rico Hines (Toronto), Matt Johnson (Washington), and Micah Fraction, with the Los Angeles Lakers.

With his overseas experience, including several trips to Japan, Vetter was approached by MVP International Founder and Visionary Mark Gjormand several years ago and asked to be part of the MVP family. “I thought it was a great fit,” says Vetter, who took more than 20 trips to Hawaii with his high school teams to play in the prestigious Iolani Prep Classic.

Vetter also coached Jason Conley at St. John’s and Conley became the first freshman to lead the nation in scoring at the NCAA Division I level, with VMI in Lexington, Virginia 20 years ago. Conley played for Sutton at Montrose Christian. Conley now runs the Stu Vetter basketball camps and the former VMI and Missouri standout is now part of MVP International and helped a boys’ MVP team win a title in Spain this past summer.

“In Vetter’s program, kids are prepared for college as well as any other program in the country. They learn responsibility and discipline, and they identify with team goals. And the discipline is not just on the court but off it as well. His kids are not just good players, but gentlemen,” former Duke and USA Olympic head coach Mike Krzyzewski says on Vetter’s website.

“I loved to play top teams. One of the reasons I came to Montrose is because I know Coach Vetter likes to play great teams every year,” says Durant, on the website for Vetter. For more on Vetter, go to www.stuvetter.com.

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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