BPSN’s 12 Days of Christmas: Day 7
This is Day 7 of BPSN’s 12 Days of Christmas, a look back at some of our favourite stories from 2017. We hope you enjoy revisiting some of our top stories since our inception in September.
Joe Raso hit the ground running June 28 when he was named the new head coach and general manager of the Niagara River Lions.
The former McMaster Marauders head coach already had an intimate knowledge of the roster when he assumed his new role. Since March, the former advance scout for three NBA teams had been an independent consultant with the National Basketball League of Canada franchise in St. Catharines.
“I went there as a consultant with no intention of coaching,” said the former head scout and assistant coach with Canada’s men’s team.
All that changed as he became familiar with the team’s ownership and fan base.
“I became more fond of the idea. Even though the team hadn’t made the playoffs, I love the way the owners are doing it, I love the arena and the support the people gave to a team that had a very minor chance to make the playoffs.”
His first order of business was to look at last year’s roster and decide what direction to take the R-Lions.
“I’m going to treat the whole product with the intent of minimizing transactions and trying to build a team that is going to get better as the season goes along.”
He felt last year’s squad had plenty of talent.
“It takes experience to realize that talent alone doesn’t make a team,” Raso said. “The roles had to be more defined but there was tons of potential on that roster.”
He believes inexperienced coaches fall in love with talent.
“Jack Donahue told me to not fall in love with talent when I was recruiting. I took those words to heart because you have to fall in love with winners first.”
TEAM-FIRST APPROACH
Last year’s River Lions had good stats and experience in the league but they weren’t an united team.
“I felt they were in the forming stage a lot last year,” he said.
Raso knows it will be crucial for players to buy into his way of doing things.
“People overuse the term culture but I think the defining part of culture is finding guys who want to win,” he said. “If someone wants to win, they will do everything it takes to win.”
Understanding that, Raso had to decide which guys on last year’s team were in that boat and go forward.
“And sometimes you have to take a step backwards in talent to move forward as a team,” he said.
VETERAN/YOUTH MIX
His 2017-18 team will be a mixture of young players and veterans who want to play his way.
“You are trying not to be married to a specific style of play but you have one in mind,” he said. “My plan on the offensive end will always be to use the pass as a weapon. We are going to create situations because we pass the ball so well.”
That style will utilize everyone on his 12-man roster.
“If you pass the ball with 12 guys, you are really going to play a 48-minute game,” he said. “Defensively, we will be a good team-oriented squad and that goes back to me being a teacher. We will teach defence. It will not be a second thought on this team and we will score off of defence.”
The River Lions’ training camp will be about teaching and players will be measured on their ability to play and aptitude for learning.
Raso’s plan is to bring 15 players into camp and chop down to a roster of 12. League rules have changed this year requiring teams to increase the number of Canadians on the active roster to five from four.
RASO EYES CANADIANS
Raso’s strategy is to sign five excellent Canadians.
“Some guys are going to attack this by getting the Americans first and then settling on Canadians. I’m being proactive because I want good Canadians,” he said. “I don’t want five Canadians who are going to ride the bench. I want five Canadians who can compete for a starting job and we’re getting there.”
The team has signed two Canadians this fall: Dwayne Smith, a 6-foot-6 forward who was on Canada’s winning team at the Jones Cup; and, former Carleton guard Joe Rocca, a 6-foot-4 shooting guard who had a short stint with Niagara at the end of last season.
In recent weeks, the team has signed American guards Adam Klie and Nate Frye, who averaged 10.6 points a game with the University of New Orleans this past season.
Klie was named the NCAA Division 2 California Collegiate Athletic Association player of the year while suiting up with the University of California at San Diego. Raso found Klie on a 10-day scouting trip this summer to pro camps in Las Vegas. His friend Scott Morrison, an assistant coach with the Boston Celtics, worked out Klie with Celtic Gordon Hayward and was extremely impressed.
“He told me that this guy can play and that’s kind of what I saw.”
Raso was worried he might lose Klie to a medical school or graduate school application.
“This guy is a total student, a great citizen and exactly what I want.”