Tuesday, January 12, 2010

PSAL boys basketball rankings

Cardozo takes over top spot from Lincoln and Curtis replaces Robeson

Cardozo put Brooklyn on notice Sunday night with its impressive 57-49 victory: the road to Madison Square Garden isn’t all about East New York, Coney Island and Bed Stuy. We were in attendance, and took note as well: the win enabled the Judges to vault over Lincoln and preside atop The Post’s PSAL boys basketball rankings for the first time. They could hold onto that spot for a while.

Elsewhere, Robeson’s loss to Curtis knocked the Eagles out while enabling Curtis to return and Wings Academy, winners of five straight, to move up, too. Yes, the first week back after the holidays was full of action.

1. Cardozo (9-2) (Last week: 2)

On paper, the Judges are the best team in the city. They are big, deep and talented. Cardozo nearly beat Catholic powers Bishop Loughlin and Christ the King, losing by a combined four points, and knocked off Boys & Girls Sunday night by eight. That wasn’t even the Bayside school’s ‘A’ game. The rest of our top 10 – and everyone else, in fact – should be on notice: Ron Naclerio’s kids are for real.

Next: @ St. Benedict’s Prep (N.J.) (Jan. 12, 6 p.m.)

2. Lincoln (9-5) (1)

The Railsplitters followed up their best win of the year – at Thomas Jefferson last Tuesday – by losing at South Shore, easily their worst defeat at this point, on Thursday. The Vikings are young, albeit talented, but that’s a game Lincoln has to win, especially since it was up 15 at the half.

Next: Grady (Jan. 12, 5 p.m.)

3. Thomas Jefferson (11-5) (3)

If the Orange Wave is going to be a serious player come March, they will have to learn how to close out games. Last Tuesday’s loss at home to Lincoln was a perfect example. Jefferson led throughout, by as many as 12, only to fall apart in the fourth quarter, basically giving away the precious showdown. It was eerily similar to an overtime loss earlier in the year to Bishop Loughlin. There is no doubt the East New York school misses sharp-shooting guard Thaddeus Hall, who is academically ineligible, but there is more than enough talent there to get to the Garden.

Next: @ Robeson (Jan. 12, 5 p.m.)

4. Boys & Girls (10-4) (4)

Boys & Girls is still searching for that trademark victory. The High doesn’t have to look any further than Thursday’s trip into East New York when it visits Jefferson. A win there isn’t only important as a confidence booster, but it would elevate the Kangaroos past the Orange Wave in Brooklyn AA. Boys & Girls better not look ahead, not with Transit Tech coming to Bed Stuy Tuesday. The Express has already knocked off Jefferson and is only gaining steam recently.

5. Wadleigh (10-3) (5)

If the nearly three-week layoff between games bothered Malik Thomas, he had a funny way of showing it. The Boston University-bound forward has come out for the second half red-hot, averaging 23 points and 15 rebounds in easy victories over Thurgood Marshall Academy and James Monroe.

Next: West 50th Street Campus (Jan. 12, 5 p.m.)

6. Transit Tech (11-4) (7)

The Express is playing as good as anyone in the PSAL these days: winners of six straight and eight of nine. Defensive-minded and patient, Transit Tech has knocked off Jefferson and Robeson in that stretch, the only loss an eight-point setback to Lincoln. Junior Anthony Prescott has emerged, finding an even balance between scoring and point guard duties.

Next: @ No. 4 Boys & Girls (Jan. 12, 5 p.m.)

7. Wings Academy (10-3) (9)

The Wings have shown slow but steady progress. There have been disappointing losses, but inspiring victories have followed the setbacks, none more so than last Tuesday’s 69-61 win over Kennedy. Even if Naquan Pierce, the Knights’ all-everything point guard, was missing, it was yet another step in the right direction for Wings, who have won five in a row.

Next: @ Truman (Jan. 12, 5 p.m.)

8. John F. Kennedy (10-2) (6)

Jeffrey Short, you’re work load has just increased – exponentially. For, as long as point guard Naquan Pierce is academically ineligible, Short won’t just have to be Kennedy’s leading scorer, but its top playmaker, too. Oh, and with forward Muhammed Ahmed also on the sideline because of poor grades, the 6-foot-4 wing has to grab even more rebounds and make his presence felt in the paint. There’s no truth to the rumor he will also sweep the floors and clean the bathrooms – not yet at least.

Next: Lehman (Jan. 12, 5 p.m.)

9. McKee/Staten Island Tech (14-4) (10)

The perimeter-oriented Sea Gulls are tough to figure out. One week, they knock off Curtis, and days later fall to St. Peter's. MSIT has played a tough schedule, which thus far has included Robeson, Wadleigh and John F. Kennedy.

Next: CSI/McCown (Jan. 14, 6 p.m.)

10. Curtis (16-2) (NR)

The Warriors are defined by the wave of big men they can throw at the opposition, each one more skilled and mobile than the next. Yet, it’s a 5-foot-10 guard – senior Jonathan Annan – that is tied to their success. He is a distributor first, but can also light it up when needed. Robeson learned that the hard way, as he produced one big basket after another in Curtis’ 58-54 victory on Sunday.

Next: @ New Dorp Jan. 13, 6 p.m.

New: Curtis (16-2)

Dropped out: Robeson (12-5)

On the bubble: Bedford Academy (11-4), Eagle Academy (7-3), FDR (15-3), Forest Hills (8-6), Francis Lewis (14-2), Gompers (9-6), Robeson (12-5) South Bronx (15-1), and Thomas Edison (8-7)

Statement sent as Cardozo bests Boys & Girls

Judges tops one of Brooklyn's best in impressive Mid-Winter Classic performance The city championship may not go through Brooklyn this year.

At least that was the message Queens powerhouse Cardozo sent Sunday evening in a battle of division leaders.

The Judges dispatched Boys & Girls, 57-49, in the PSAL Mid-Winter Classic at LIU. When the Brooklyn foe punched, Cardozo punched back, beating the Kangaroos in their own backyard.

“This tells the rest of the city we’re good – be scared of us,” forward Ryan Rhoomes said. “We think nobody can stop us.”

Senior Reynaldo (Junior) Walters led Cardozo with 19 points and four assists. Rhoomes, who was a focal point in the paint, had 11 points, 11 rebounds and three blocked shots, Chris Gayot, Walters’ backcourt mate, had 10 points and five assists, and Malcolm Brooks also had 10.

Mike Taylor paced Boys & Girls (10-4) with 16 points and Leroy Isler had 14.

Cardozo (9-2) raced out to a 13-3 lead, behind six points from Walters. After the Kangaroos, who have reached the city semifinals the last three years, briefly went ahead with a 9-0 run to start the third quarter, the Judges finished the stanza with a 12-3 run to regain control. Walters was in the middle of the spurt, drilling a deep 3-pointer and a driving layup in traffic.

“That was a momentum change to get my team back where it needed to be,” Walters said.

Boys & Girls got within five early in the fourth quarter, but Rhoomes answered with consecutive baskets with offensive rebounds and follows.

The Kangaroos didn’t help their own cause, missing 16 free throws altogether, including four in a row at one point in the fourth quarter. Cardozo was whistled for two technical fouls – one on assistant coach Bruno Comatuccio and another for having six players on the court – but Boys & Girls couldn’t convert any of those blunders into points, either.

“It was a combination of turnovers, poor free throw shooting and missed shots that cost us,” Boys & Girls coach Ruth Lovelace said.

The larger Judges – notably Rhoomes, Brunson and Marquis Barnett, a trio of 6-foot-7 or bigger forwards – owned the paint, scoring on put backs, getting second and third-chance opportunities, blocking shots (12, four by Barnett) and controlling the glass, to the tune of 41-28. They held the foul-plagued Taylor under wraps, doubling-teaming the highly-recruited sharp-shooter frequently, handled the Brooklyn’s school’s renowned press with aplomb and answered every run with an even bigger one.

“We have as much talent as any team Cardozo has had, from one through 12,” Cardozo coach Ron Naclerio said.

The Judges didn’t even play their ‘A’ game. Brooks and junior Shelton Mickell, their two sharp-shooters, repeatedly misfired from the perimeter. Dwayne Brunson, an explosive forward, managed just three points, two on an emphatic tip dunk. They were again inconsistent from the free throw line, missing eight in the fourth quarter and going 18-for-39 in all.

“This team is growing, but we got to keep getting better,” Naclerio said. “I think they know they’re pretty good, but they got to want to be great.”

It was quite the weekend for Cardozo. The Bayside school held off Forest Hills in overtime on Friday, exacting revenge against the team that took the Queens crown from them last year. And on Sunday, against Boys & Girls in Brooklyn, the Judges proved they just might have what it takes to be the last team standing come March.

Said Rhoomes: “We’re not gonna stop, we’re not satisfied. We want to do way more.


Damion Reid
Cardozo coach Ron Naclerio instructs his team.



Damion Reid
Cardozo point guard Chris Gayot flies in for a layup


Finally, a favorable verdict for Judges

Cardozo snaps recent late-game woes with 73-67 overtime win over Forest Hills

Dating back to last February, Cardozo had been involved in five games decided by single digits. The Judges had lost them all, finding different and unique ways to snag defeat from the jaws of victory.

That unimpressive streak seemed to be well on its way to six Friday night when Forest Hills forced overtime after trailing by five late in regulation.

“I don’t know what would’ve happened if we lost tonight,” Cardozo coach Ron Naclerio said.

He’ll never find out. The Judges rebounded from the sloppy final minutes of the fourth quarter with a crisp four-minute extra period. As a result, they knocked off the Rangers, 73-67, extending their division lead in Queens AA to two full games.

“We talk about finding a way to win, but we didn’t know how to do it,” said junior point guard Chris Gayot, who scored nine of his 11 points in the fourth quarter and overtime, and added six assists. “Today we found a way. It was our will. Our seniors didn’t want to lose.”

One of them, forward Ryan Rhoomes, led Cardozo (8-2, 8-0 Queens AA) with 21 points – 11 in a monster third quarter – 14 rebounds and six blocked shots. Dwayne Brunson followed with 14 points, 12 rebounds and four blocks, Reynaldo (Junior) Walters had 11 points and eight assists and Malcolm Brooks had 10.

Maurice Harkless led Forest Hills (8-6, 6-2) with 15 points, 11 rebounds, four assists and four blocked shots, Rudy Collins and Nick Padgett each had 14 and Denzil Dulin had 12.

“Even though the score might not have been what some of the guys on the team might have wanted it to be, we still got the thrill of victory,” Naclerio said.

The victory was particularly significant for this group considering its recent late-game failures. The Judges blew leads in last year’s Queens borough final to Forest Hills and the second-round playoff loss to McKee/Staten Island Tech and failed to execute down the stretch in non-league showdowns against Christ the King and Bishop Loughlin.

History was starting to repeat itself when Walters, Shelton Mickell and Gayot combined to miss five-of-six free throws down the stretch, blowing a five-point lead with 42.0 seconds remaining. Collins hit two free throws for Forest Hills with seven seconds in regulation and Rhoomes missed a short bank shot to force overtime.

In the extra session, however, Rhoomes and Gayot left little to chance. The big man started the period with a blocked shot and added a free throw. Gayot hit two at the line himself, finished off a drive with a pretty left-handed scoop and Rhoomes also scored inside.

“We refused to lose this game,” Gayot said. “My coach was saying attack, because they were backing up.”

Said Naclerio: "You could see Chris say I'm not losing, Reynaldo say I'm not losing. They knew what would happen if they didn't reach down, that pain of Christ the King, Bishop Loughlin, last year, was coming back. They wanted to push that pain away."

The Judges also tightened up defensively in the final four minutes. Harkless, the UConn-bound forward, barely got any touches. And in overtime, unlike the preceding four quarters, his supporting cast – Collins, Dulin and Padgett – were unable to make Cardozo pay. The Bayside school celebrated the final horn emphatically. Brunson lifted Walters above his shoulders and the players posed for team pictures.

“This was a big game because of last year,” Rhoomes said. “We were sick losing to them twice at the end of the year. … This is a big accomplishment. We’re No. 1 in Queens. I think we should be No. 1 in the city.”

Sunday, July 6, 2008

2008 Benjamin Cardozo HS Reunion another success

June 24, 2008 Benjamin Cardozo HS Basketball Reunion was a great time. Friends, Basketball and food, what more can you ask for. Coach Naclerio worked hard to make the reunion better than last year. T-shirts were sold with every player who played on a Varsity basketball team. Nice touch. Can't wait til next year. June 20th is the date.







Wednesday, May 14, 2008

Cardozo Wins Queens Bourough Championship 2008

Congratulations to Naclerio, Mike and the boys. Great job!

Thursday, May 1, 2008

Benjamin Cardozo HS Basketball Reunion 2008

The Annual Benjamin Cardozo HS Basketball Reunion is taking place again this Summer. June 21, 2008 is the date and P.S. 46 Park is the place. Its going to bigger and better this year. All are welcome to spend a good time with the past and present ball players. For more information email Ron Naclario at naclerioron@yahoo.com or call (502) 500-3804.

Monday, January 14, 2008

Ron Naclerio Interview with Inside Hoops

InsideHoops [HIGH SCHOOL]

Ron Naclerio Interview
By InsideHoops.com

Ron Naclerio is as established a high school coach and all-levels basketball teacher as there is. When you see the likes of Elton Brand, Lamar Odom, Ron Artest and Rafer Alston succeed in the NBA, you're seeing bits and pieces of the result of time spent being taught basketball by Naclerio. When you see Julius Hodge destroy competition in college hoops, part of what you're seeing is the effect Naclerio has when applying personal instruction to basketball players at any level of the game. He's the long-time head coach of Cardozo high school in New York, and is so famous a teacher that players who have nothing to do with the school seek Neclario to work out with and get better. InsideHoops.com sat down with Naclerio in the beautiful Sports Club | LA in Manhattan to talk about his life in sports and what the future holds.

Editor's note: We know Naclerio. This guy definitely belongs in the NBA or with a good NCAA program.

InsideHoops.com: Talk about some of the specifics with working out some of the known players you've helped.

Ron Naclerio: Mike Dunleavy Jr., the biggest thing he wanted to do was learn to create space off the dribble, and I showed him two drills that I do, and he really liked it, and what's funny is being in Sports Club | LA where I was working him out, one day I came in not knowing he was in the gym and I saw him doing the drills, so that made me feel real good. And there was a time Elton Brand, he felt he was having a little trouble with his post-up game - this was about three years ago in the summer - and I was actually at a benefit basketball game and he wanted me to show him the series that I showed him way back in high school, and I went through the series, and it was funny because the people thought I was just a guy yelling at him, and it ended up being Elton knowing what I did, and the moves, and fans are like, gee, he's actually listening to this guy and learning, and the people didn't really know who I was. And there was another time when Duane Causwell was with the Heat, before the game him and Alonzo Mourning were doing this one-on-one series, and I started yelling at Duane, and when the fans were allowed out there I walked down there, so after a while Mourning started getting a little mad, and Duane started laughing, so I started yelling at Mourning, "the Heat gave you $100 million and you only have one move, gee, I could show you another move and have you get $200 million." Duane started laughing, and I got under Mourning's skin, and then Mourning was told by Duane that that's my high school coach and he really knows what he's doing. So, that's just a few stories off the bat.

Oh, another story, it was last year, Ron Artest, who I worked out, he's probably as hard a worker as I've ever worked out, had a shooting slump and called me at one in the morning, and he forgot that other people have lives, and he just said, "Coach, I'm going to fly you out here to work with me for three or four days," and I said "what are you talking about, tomorrow's my first game, I can't get out there," and he said, "Oh." And he hung up.

InsideHoops.com: How do you figure out exactly what each player needs to work on? You have to see a guy a lot... or I guess certain aspects of the game are easier to decipher than others...

Ron Naclerio: First of all, what I do is I write a lot of notes down, and that's why I'm a little disappointed because with the Nets, I wrote Byron Scott and Rod Thorn some of the things a player was doing wrong, and how things could be corrected, and I ended up mailing it to someone, who didn't get it until a later date, and he mailed me back a nice letter, saying "Ron, it just came on my desk..." I got complimented, and he would have gotten me an interview with Byron Scott, so it was that he thought that much of me, but I was diappointed that somehow it didn't get to his desk until a later date. But, after a while, your reputation comes from the players, and players' word of mouth and the fact that I'll just grab a guy and show him something or I'll try a drill, show him a drill that he's never seen before, and I'll say to try it, and they'll look at me like a middle-aged guy that can't play, so I'll do an And 1 mixtape move, and they'll be shocked and tell me to do it again, and I'll do it again, and they try and they can't do it, and that's when I have them.

InsideHoops.com: At this point is it second nature for you to look at players and tell pretty quickly what mechanics and things they're doing need fixing?

Ron Naclerio: When I deal with shooters, I first have to line their shot. I mean, I know way back Tricky Dick Barnett had everything as unorthodox as can be, and you know what? It went in, so you get to learn the guy, and there are very few times you have to make major, major adjustments, sometimes it's just minor adjustments and sometimes it's just confidence. It might be a couple of little things that they're doing wrong with their wrist, or their elbow, or sometimes it's with their bodies, and they don't even realize certain drills I do, as they're doing the drills, and they realize, let's say it's a hand thing, an elbow thing, a leg thing, and they start learning it, as they shoot through the drills that we do, certain longevity shooting, their brains tell their body the correction they have to make, that's when the shooters become better.

InsideHoops.com: How do you come up with the actual drills that fix things and improve the players?

Ron Naclerio: From being a player and watching some of the Pistol Pete Maravich tapes, and developing Skip to my Lou with the hotdog stuff when he was in 6th, 7th and 8th grade, I started realizing so many other ways of teaching that a lot of modern basketball coaches would look at me like I was crazy, and a lot of the old school were like, "Hey, you're destroying the game." But you know what? The players have a lot of confidence in me, and once I show them a couple of things... Let's face it, all great players are great because they want to be better, so if you show guys something that they've never seen before, or stuff that they believe will make them better, and what I did was five or six years ago I started realizing that maybe one day my chance will come. Unfortunately, it hasn't come yet, and I wanted to be prepared. What I did was, I started writing every drill down. I'm really lucky now, because I have hundreds of pages of drills, whether it's individual, one-on-one stuff, two-on-two stuff, total team stuff, that Pete Vecsey even said I should take it and made it a book.

InsideHoops.com: So what does the future hold for you? What should it hold?

Ron Naclerio: Everyone's dream is to move up. I'm realizing that I might have more fun in the NBA. Hoops Weiss, one of the top writers in the Daily News, he even said, "Ron, don't take this the wrong way, but the way recruiting is and the way politics are, I think your calling is to get to the NBA and work with these guys," and you know what? Whether they're 25 and in the NBA, or 19 and college freshmen, or 15 and high school freshmen... I wish I had the same gift in picking stocks on Wall Street and making money, but everybody's got their positives, and my positives are basketball X's and O's, skill development drills, and hopefully, I've been talking to the Knicks, talking to the Nets, and I really don't want to leave New York, I don't want to leave my mom ever since my brother passed away last July 20th, 2002, but if it was for the right job... I just wrote Stan Van Gundy in Miami. Hopefully, they or someone will give me that call.