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Vetter Had Early Contact With Legends

Vetter Had Early Contact With Legends

MVP International men’s basketball director started at Flint Hill in Virginia
By David Driver, MVP Communications

First in a series

WASHINGTON – Several decades ago, in the mid-1970s, a young high school basketball coach named Stu Vetter arrived at work at a private school in Oakton, Virginia.

 

Veteran coach Stu Vetter (center) had Kevin Durant (left) at Monstrose Christian and Dennis Scott (right) was one of his players at Flint Hill. Durant has been an NBA all-star while Childress played several years overseas after a short stint in the NBA.
Photo courtesy of Stu Vetter

 

He was to return the calls of some of the top college hoop coaches in the USA.

“I come to my desk and I have all of these messages,” recalls Vetter, men’s basketball director for MVP International. “Keep in mind, I am 23 years old at that time.”

Vetter had messages to call Denny Crum, then the coach at Louisville; Dean Smith, the legend from the University of North Carolina; Digger Phelps, who was at Notre Dame; and Jim Boheim, then just getting started as the basketball coach at Syracuse.

The reason for all of those calls from hoops royalty was due to Mike Pepper, then a senior under Vetter at Flint Hill who the previous night played the game of his life in the preliminary contest to the nationally-known McDonald’s Capital Classic in suburban Washington.

“He played one of the best games of his life,” Vetter recalls. “Going into that game he had absolutely no Division I offers.

The closest one came from Bobby Cremins, who was at Appalachian State at the time.”

That was about to change.

“Immediately after the game, Crum came into the locker room and offered Mike a scholarship,” Vetter notes.

And Pepper became the first of many players under the direction of Vetter to play at the highest level of college basketball.

“That is what kind of spearheaded things – soon after that coach Smith offered Pepper a scholarship to North Carolina,” says Vetter, a long-time resident of Northern Virginia.

Smith once visited Flint Hill to check in on Pepper.

Pepper played for Smith at UNC from 1978-81 and averaged 3.9 points in 86 games for the Tar Heels.

Vetter was in Philadelphia in April of 1981 when UNC lost 63-50 to Indiana in the national title games.

“That was the day that President Reagan was shot,” Vetter recalls.

Pepper was drafted in the sixth round by the Los Angeles Clippers in 1981; he went on to be successful in the real estate field in Northern Virginia.

Among those players that came after Pepper to play for Vetter at Flint Hill included Dennis Scott, a native of Maryland who grew up in Virginia.

“He came in as a freshman and he could really shoot the ball,” Vetter says. “Each year we were ranked in USA Today; we were undefeated his junior year and we were undefeated and we were the national champions when he was the national player of the year as a senior” during the 1986-87 season.

“Everyone knew he was going to be great,” Vetter said of Scott. “He was a terrific athlete; he got better and better conditioning-wise; he was a highlight reel his senior year. He could dunk with anybody, he was a great passer and he could play all five positions and every shot he took was a 3-point shot but we only got two for it since the 3-point shot wasn’t around yet.”

After starring at Georgia Tech, Scott was the fourth overall pick in the 1990 NBA draft by the Orlando Magic.

He averaged nearly 13 points per contest in his NBA career that spanned 10 seasons.

Other players who starred at Flint Hill under Vetter were George Lynch, Randolph Childress, and Arron Bain.

Lynch was from Roanoke, Virginia and Childress came from nearby Prince George’s County in Maryland.

As college stars, Scott had his number retired at Georgia Tech, Lynch enjoyed the same honor at North Carolina and Childress followed suit at Wake Forest.

After college, Childress was drafted in the first round by Detroit in 1995 and he played two seasons in the NBA.

Lynch was a first-round pick of the Lakers in 1993 and played in the NBA until 2005.

Bain played several years of pro hoops overseas.

Another Flint Hill player for Vetter was Corey Alexander, who eventually starred at the University of Virginia and was a first-round pick of San Antonio in 1995.

He played several years in the NBA and in Italy and has been a college basketball broadcaster in recent years.

Other Flint Hill players under Vetter included Kevin Sutton, David Adkins, and Carlos Yates.

Sutton was a guard at James Madison University and has been a long-time college assistant coach and is now at Kansas State. Yates was a star at nearby George Mason University.

Adkins, a graduate of Radford in Virginia, is the director of player development with Portland of the NBA. Vetter took his Flint Hill teams to big-time tourneys in Hawaii and Arkansas during his stint there from 1975-1990 as he posted an impressive mark of 377-53.

Next: Vetter at Harker Prep

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.

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