Like Bosko, like son

More news about: Carthage | William Smith

In some ways, playing basketball can be a way to relieve the stress of academics or a nice outlet to work oneself into shape. Watching the game with family members may help open the lines of communication or form a bond as many people come together to cheer on a favorite team.

When students move away from home to go to college, families spend less time watching or playing those games. However, that mostly applies to people who do not play basketball at Carthage. Like freshman Scott Gillespie, who averages 21.8 points per game for his father, Ron, at Ripon, freshman guard Steve Djurickovic recognized the rare opportunity facing him and accepted the challenge to play for his father, Bosko, at Carthage.

“I remember watching when they went to the Final Four in 2002,” Steve said. “That was really when I wanted to play for Carthage. This is the first time he’s coached me probably since middle school and that was like summer league basketball.

Steve Djurikovic “The atmosphere’s way different. It’s harder playing for him now than it was then, but it’s a lot of fun,” added Steve. “I can’t exactly talk back to him. I might say a few things at home that I can get away with, but I can’t do that during practice or during a game.”

Steve’s decision to attend Carthage not only gave the Red Men a prolific scorer, it afforded Bosko the chance to see his son become a college basketball player. If Steve had chosen a different path out of high school, the elder Djurickovic would not have seen him, unless they met as opponents on the court.

“It’s really been terrific,” Djurickovic said. “I’ve got three kids. Of the three, I think that Steve is the only one that we could have done this with.

“My daughter’s (Amanda) very sensitive,” he added. “My younger son (Pete) is too much like me and we would have fought. Steve is such a laid back guy that it’s worked out very well to this point. I talked to some people before he came about what they thought about it. Had he not come to Carthage, I never would have seen him play, so we couldn’t be happier.”

Bosko's wife, Becky Djurickovic, coached women's basketball at North Park for six years and coached girls' basketball at a local high school in Kenosha for three seasons. Before coming to Carthage, Djurickovic coached at North Park as well, his alma mater. During the time he led his alma mater, he took the Vikings to a pair of NCAA championships after the program won three when he was an assistant.

“Sometimes, you’ve been some place long enough that everybody’s happy when you make that decision,” Djurickovic said. “I was coaching there for 20 years.

“I needed a new challenge and Carthage was nice enough to provide that,” he added. “We’ve been here 12 years now. I coached ten years as a head coach at North Park and we were fortunate enough to win two national championships and now, I’ve coached more games here at Carthage than I did at North Park.”

Since the move, Carthage has seen its program win three CCIW championships, make three NCAA Tournaments and advance to the 2002 Final Four, where the Red Men placed third in the country.

All of the accolades on Djurickovic’s resume have laid the groundwork for recruiting in and around the Kenosha area.

“He knows what to do and I think that his experience should help,” Steve said. “He’s been through all the ups and downs.”

As a freshman, Steve is averaging 22.3 points per game, while shooting at 50 percent from the floor. In 13 games, he has 13 starts and plays over 35 minutes each night. He has been the leading scorer in eight contests and twice topped the charts in rebounding.

“I’ve always thought that his greatest asset as a basketball player is the fact that he’s a really exceptional ball-handler,” Djurickovic said of his son. “He’s a 6-3 kid, so he causes some mismatches with smaller players. His ball-handling ability lets him to get to wherever he wants with the basketball.

“I’m a little bit surprised that he’s scoring so many points,” Djurickovic added. “I’m not surprised that he came in and was an effective player. He’s a very mature basketball player who can play at all three levels. He’s a good-enough shooter that he has to be guarded. He’s a wonderful player off the dribble and he has a very strong post-up game.”

Steve, a former high school quarterback, would be the prototype for Gene Hackman’s character in Hoosiers. He likes to “Keep the strength in the dribble.”

“My first mentality is to get to the basket and try to draw contact and get to the free throw line,” Steve said. “That’s what I think I do best at this point and it helps out a lot when you have shooters on your team. When those guys can shoot it, the defenders can’t leave them or else, they’re going to stand there and shoot threes.”

Hoopsville, with Dave McHugh

On Sunday, No. 1 Rochester takes on No. 2 Brandeis. There are many reasons this game is huge: conference battle, top teams in the nation, a mid-season preview of NCAA Tournament caliber basketball, and its only the second time in D3hoops.com history that No. 1 has taken on No. 2 (Feb. 24, 2006 - Wooster vs. Wittenberg.

And while we can't truly predict the outcome, I can predict one thing ... the game will only add to the chaos that has been the Top 25 this year. It seems NO team can keep moving up or stay put in the Top 25 without eventually taking a fall. And no matter what happens Sunday, Rochester or Brandeis is going to take the fall - or at least slip.

You see, both teams have been No. 1 and No. 2 ever since Rochester claimed the top spot in the Week 3 Poll. And beelow them, no team has been able to keep their positions that long. Stevens Point fell from No. 3 to No. 14 in Week 6; Williams fell from No. 4 to No. 8 in Week 7 poll; and while Mary Hardin-Baylor has risen to No. 4 in the last poll, they took a dive in Week 4 to No. 9.

And below all of this ... even more moving around. The WIAC and CCIW are beating each other up, Wooster isn't nearly as tough as they usually are, the ODAC is proving to be a very tough test for Guilford, high hopes for Lewis & Clark, Brockport State, Aurora, Calvin, and others - gone, and teams who have never received a vote in the Top 25, have this season (i.e. Coast Guard and Middlebury).

More proof? Looking back at the Preseason Top 25 ... 17 teams have fallen from their ranking and only 8 have moved up. Eight of the Top 10 in the preseason fell, and seven programs have completely fallen out the Top 25. And sure, the preseason poll always has some shake-up ... but all of that means the voters have been rewriting their Top 25s more times then those trying to write a Mideast Peace Accord!

So what does it all mean? There are a lot of very good teams this year, but not a lot of great teams. Last Sunday on Hoopsville, Bob Quillman made the point that this is fun for fans, and he's right. And come tournament time, we may see some of the most exciting run to Salem in recent memory. BUT, before that, March 2 could be very disappointing. There are so many good teams this season, many may end up being left out of this year's tournament. There just won't be enough room to fit all the teams, especially in the CCIW, UAA, WIAC, or even the ODAC, that may deserve to be in the tournament.

Be ready now ... because on Monday, March 3rd we will be talking about the teams that deserved to be, but were left out. And I suspect we may see more teams in the Top 25 on the outside looking in than we are used to.

Oh, if you are looking for a more stable Top 25? The Women's poll may be your cup of tea!

With the correct pieces to the puzzle, Djurickovic knows he could take Carthage back to the NCAA Tournament.

“Those were special teams,” Djurickovic said of his national championship years at North Park. “We had a great run at Carthage from 1999 through 2004. We won, I think it was 116 games in five years.

“If we can surround him with good players, it can help us get to that level,” he added about Steve. “Our problem right now is we’re so darn small.  I’m 6-1 and I’ve got too many 6-1 guys running around. I need some more 6-6s and 6-7s. We have to upgrade our inside game.”

-- Matthew Florjancic

Worth watching again

It was three years ago when we last checked in on William Smith, the women's team that got to the Sweet 16 under one-year coach (and WNBA standout) Olympia Scott-Richardson before falling to Bowdoin, and given that the Herons have several quality victories this season, it’s about time we paid them some attention again. Hence the D3hoops.com “media tour” with appearances on Hoopsville and in this space, within the last week, and for good reason.

“I think this is a stronger team than one that went to the Sweet 16,” said coach Lindsay Drury. “We still have a lot of work to do, but we’ve played about as tough a regional schedule as we could. It will be interesting to see if we can take it to the next level.”

The No. 23 Herons were unranked until this past week, with voters perhaps playing a wait-and-see game, but no longer.

It’s rare to find a team with three non-home wins against Top 25 foes (at Medaille and Cortland State, and vs. George Fox at the Cal Lutheran Tournament), so that puts William Smith in pretty good company. It helps to start four seniors, three of whom (Stephanie Czajkowski, Marisa Vespa and Paula Foote) were key contributors, first as freshman on a team that went to the Sweet 16, then as sophomores on a squad that lost to Baldwin-Wallace in the second round. It helped to have them hungry too, which happened when the Herons didn’t make NCAA’s last season, settling for an ECAC Upstate New York title.

“Our upperclassmen were disappointed that we only made ECACs,” Drury said. “They understood it could help us down the road. It was a motivator in the offseason. They worked hard, and came back in far better shape than anticipated.”

They also asked for the challenge of a tougher schedule, which would ready them for the Liberty League, which sent Hamilton and St. Lawrence to NCAAs last season in William Smith’s place. Scheduling the locals wasn’t hard, since William Smith had played most of them before, but facing George Fox was an added bonus to a trip to California.

They’ve risen to the challenge so far. Vespa, a crafty ballhandler, has 63 points and 26 assists in the four games against ranked teams. Czajkowski, a 1,000-point scorer, had a rough game against Rochester (1-for-8 from the field) but has bounced back since, and had 17 in the win against Cortland State. Foote has battled back from injuries in each of her three seasons and is presently averaging 8.6 points and 4.2 rebounds.

“It wasn’t a situation where I thought I would regret it,” Drury said of the scheduling. “Last year, we talked about having higher expectations for the program, and about pushing each other. The Liberty League is tough. The only way to get prepared is to play tough teams. We could play lots of non top-25s and be fine, but it’s important to us to challenge our kids and show them what it takes to get to that level.”

-- Mark Simon

Worth watching

Here's a look at the games of the weekend, and there are many worth watching, or listening to.

Jan. 18
Men’s

No. 2 Brandeis at No. 24 Carnegie Mellon: It’s far from a cinch that Brandeis will enter Sunday’s matchup at Rochester unbeaten, because it first has to get through the 24th-ranked Tartans, who have already scored an upset win at Capital this season. CMU is winning again, trying to match the efforts of its NCAA Tournament team from 2005-06, after finishing below .500 last season. The Tartans are playing at a slower pace than that squad, averaging 72.1 points (the 2005-06 team, which averaged 83.7), paced by the 16.1 effort from 6-5 junior forward Ryan Einwag.

Oglethorpe at No. 23 Millsaps: The fourth of five consecutive road games for the Petrels, who passed a significant road test by beating DePauw, than edging Sewanee in their travels last weekend to get to 3-1 in the SCAC and within striking distance of the top teams.

Final Four

Quick thoughts on news and notes from around Division III.

1. A few seasons ago, we dubbed Rochester women’s All-America selection Erika Smith “The Best Little Player in America” and it took awhile for us to find someone else who could live up to that billing. We think we found it on Tuesday with Elms men’s sophomore guard Juan Galdon, who measures in at 5-4. Galdon, who scored 15 points in Elms’ narrow loss to Amherst, has the capability to drive (with an explosive first step) and the ability to shoot the three-pointer (he’s made 29 at a 44.6 percent clip). He’s averaging 20.6 points for the Blazers, three-time defending NAC champs, who will be a dangerous opponent if they can make NCAAs this season, having taken No. 2 Brandeis and No. 3 Amherst to the wire. One final note on Galdon, as shared by Elms coach Ed Silva. When Galdon was in seventh grade, he attended a basketball camp at which Silva instructed and told the coach “You’re gonna be recruiting me somday.” Silva didn’t know what to think. “You can imagine how small he was then.” Silva said with a laugh. Little did he imagine, that he’d have a star player on his team a few years down the road.

2. The big story in the NFL this season has been the Patriots' perfection pursuit. Division III basketball has something similar. Central’s Keith Pedersen went 9-for-9 from the field in Wednesday’s win over Coe. That’s his second such game this season, as he went 13-for-13 in an earlier win over William Woods. Not surprisingly, Pedersen leads D-III in shooting, at 76 percent.

3. Kudos to Caltech for staying within six points of Occidental at halftime before falling 92-49 on Wednesday night, but even bigger kudos to senior guard Paxon Frady, who gutted it out through 21 scoreless minutes. Frady is trying to finish his senior season playing through a torn ACL. Amazingly, this is the third straight season that Frady has suffered through torn knee ligaments. He’s currently averaging 3.2 points.

4. Neglected to mention an attention-grabber from last week: Elmhurst’s women’s basketball team snapped an 18-year, 35-game losing streak against Wheaton (Ill.) with a 60-58 win on Jan. 8. The Bluejays followed that up with a last-second win at North Central before losing a close game to Carthage, 72-69 on Tuesday. Elmhurst, at 6-7, 2-1, can surpass last season’s win total both overall and in the CCIW with a home win over North Park on Friday.

Women’s
No. 22 Amherst at No. 14 Tufts: Someone here has to fall from the unbeaten ranks as the NESCAC season-opener has an unexpected bit of pizzazz, with Amherst’s school-record 14-0 start under first-year coach G.P. Gromacki. The winner becomes the first team in a long time other than Bowdoin to call itself NESCAC favorites, though Bates may muddle that picture, as it hosts Amherst on Saturday.

Jan. 19
Men’s
Wooster at Wittenberg: Wasn’t sure a few weeks ago if this game had legs, with Wittenberg struggling at 1-5, but now both these teams are 5-0 in the NCAC. It’s the start of a stretch in which the opponents get a little tougher for the Tigers. Gregg Hill, the lone returning starter from Wittenberg’s 22-win team of a season ago, has shone recently, averaging better than 22 points in his last four games.

DeSales at Elizabethtown: Despite the lack of national rankings, this is a big one for both teams, who enter a combined 25-2.  With a win someone will bolster an already impressive regional record and a resume that could land the top seed in the first regional rankings come February.  The Bulldogs are led by point guard Eddie Ohlson whose 113 assists ranked third in Division III coming into this week. D3hoops.com will broadcast this one.

Whitworth at No. 7 Puget Sound: The key for Whitworth in trying to pick up a rare win at Puget Sound will be its defense against the crazy pace. Whitworth has only allowed 77 points in its last two games, but may yield that by pretty early in the second half if its not careful against a Loggers team that has topped 120 points on three occasions this season.

Women’s
No. 11 Kean at No. 7 Messiah: D3hoops will be on hand to check this one out as well. Keys for Messiah in trying to win at home, something it couldn’t do against Kean in last year’s NCAA Tournament: Prevent Kean center Chari’ Cooper from crashing the offensive glass (110 offensive rebounds in 15 games), defend Kean’s transition game, and stop sharpshooter Melissa Beyruti from getting open looks from three-point range. Easier said than done.

Jan. 20
Men’s

No. 2 Brandeis at No. 1 Rochester: This game marks the second meeting of No. 1 vs No. 2 in the D3hoops.com Top 25 era (the first was an 86-77 win for No. 2 Wooster at No. 1 Wittenberg on Feb. 4, 2006). The key question: which will neutralize the other- Brandeis’ speed or Rochester’s size? The Yellowjackets ability to keep their turnovers down and get good production from scorers Rob Dominiak (48 3-pointers at a 53.9 percent clip) and Michael Chmielowiec (shooting 50 percent in his first three games back from injury) also will be very significant.


Ryan Scot

Ryan Scott serves as the lead columnist for D3hoops.com and previously wrote the Mid-Atlantic Around the Region column in 2015 and 2016. He's a long-time D-III basketball supporter and former player currently residing in Middletown, Del., where he serves as a work-at-home dad, doing freelance writing and editing projects. He has written for multiple publications across a wide spectrum of topics. Ryan is a graduate of Eastern Nazarene College.
Previous columnists:
2014-16: Rob Knox
2010-13: Brian Falzarano
2010: Marcus Fitzsimmons
2008-2010: Evans Clinchy
Before 2008: Mark Simon