Category: Athletics

‘Buddy’ And Kings Eliminated From Nba Playoffs Contention

Tuesday, August 11, 2020

photo

Buddy Hield

#By RENALDO DORSETT

#Tribune Sports Reporter

#rdorsett@tribunemedia.net

#THE Sacramento Kings have been eliminated from playoff contention for the 14th consecutive season.

#Buddy Hield had his best shooting performance of the NBA seeding games thus far with 16 points on 6-11 shooting (4-9 from three), but the Kings lost 129-112 to the Houston Rockets Sunday night in Orlando, Florida.

#Sacramento fell to just 1-5 in the bubble and were officially eliminated from the postseason by halftime of their game once the Portland Trail Blazers beat the Philadelphia 76ers.

#The Kings are the third team to be eliminated from playoff contention in Orlando thus far, joining the New Orleans Pelicans and Washington Wizards.

#The Kings’ postseason drought is second only to the Los Angeles Clippers who missed the playoffs for 15 consecutive years.

#Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Kings went on a surprising 13-7 win streak to work their way back into the playoff picture that was followed by a series of underwhelming performances in Orlando.

#“We have to understand and change our mindset as far as what it takes to win,” said Kings head coach Luke Walton.

#“We have a very good group of guys and the main thing I hope we take from this whole bubble experience is learning that lesson firsthand.”

#The Kings conclude their 2019-20 season against the New Orleans Pelicans (August 11), and Los Angeles Lakers (August 13).

#“I fully expect our main guys to play and to play at a hard level,” Walton said. “These are two more great opportunities for us. We have to be ready to go and take advantage of this opportunity.”

Six Straight: Ayton And Suns In Win Column Again

Oklahoma City Thunder’s Chris Paul (3) is pressured by Phoenix Suns’ Deandre Ayton during the third quarter in Lake Buena Vista, Florida.

(Mike Ehrmann/Pool Photo via AP)

Oklahoma City Thunder’s Chris Paul (3) is pressured by Phoenix Suns’ Deandre Ayton during the third quarter in Lake Buena Vista, Florida. (Mike Ehrmann/Pool Photo via AP)

Tuesday, August 11, 2020

#By RENALDO DORSETT

#Tribune Sports Reporter

#rdorsett@tribunemedia.net

#The Phoenix Suns had some nervous moments early on with Deandre Ayton on the sidelines but were able to right the ship and keep their undefeated streak alive in the NBA bubble.

#Ayton came off the bench to finish with 10 points and six rebounds in just 17 minutes to help the Suns improve to 6-0 with a 128-101 win over the Oklahoma City Thunder yesterday at the ESPN Wide World of Sports Complex in Orlando, Florida.

#The second year centre missed his COVID-19 testing window on Sunday but was able to rejoin the team after he returned a negative test yesterday afternoon.

#Suns head coach Monty Williams told reporters Ayton made an “innocent mistake” by missing his testing window.

#“You get confused by it (getting tested every day). You have to give people grace,” he said. “He’s not the only one who’s done that since we’ve been here.”

#Ayton arrived at the arena with the game in progress and watched the entire first quarter from the sidelines, periodically on a stationary bike while the Suns fell behind by as much as 15 points.

#He entered the game in the second quarter, scored four points on a Phoenix run that cut the lead to four (49-45 ) on a Cameron Johnson four-point play.

#Once the Suns returned to full strength with Ayton in the lineup, they dominated the remainder of the game and outscored the shorthanded Thunder 42-27 in the second, 33-17 in the third and 30-20 in the fourth.

#The only undefeated team in Orlando, the Suns have two seeding games left in the regular season.

#They complete a back-to-back today against the Philadelphia 76ers and close out against the Dallas Mavericks for a second time on August 13.

#At 32-39, Phoenix is now one game behind the Memphis Grizzlies (33-38) for the No.8 seed in the Western Conference playoffs. They are also just 0.5 game behind the Portland Trail Blazers (33-39) for the No. 9 spot.

#The remaining schedule for the Grizzlies includes matchups against the Boston Celtics and Milwaukee Bucks while the Trail Blazers will face the Mavericks and Brooklyn Nets.

Ayton Posts Double Double, Suns Win 5th Straight In Nba Bubble

Heat’s Bam Adebayo (13) is fouled by Suns’ Deandre Ayton during the second half on Saturday night in Lake Buena Vista, Florida.

(AP Photo/Ashley Landis)

Heat’s Bam Adebayo (13) is fouled by Suns’ Deandre Ayton during the second half on Saturday night in Lake Buena Vista, Florida. (AP Photo/Ashley Landis)

As of Monday, August 10, 2020

#By RENALDO DORSETT

#Tribune Sports Reporter

#rdorsett@tribunemedia.net

#THE Phoenix Suns are the lone undefeated team at the NBA restart in Orlando, Florida.

#The Suns improved to 5-0 at the ESPN Wide World of Sports Complex with a 119-112 win over the Miami Heat Saturday night.

#Deandre Ayton posted his third double double in thefive-game stretch – 18 points and 12 rebounds.

#“Coach Monty [Williams] built a culture in us in this bubble and throughout the whole quarantine,” Ayton said on ESPN’s The Jump.

#“Just instilling sharing the ball playing for each other and playing as a unit when stuff don’t go our way.”

#Phoenix began the restart to the regular season last among qualifiers in the Western Conference at No.13 and the second worst record among all teams invited to Orlando.

#At 31-39, Phoenix is now two games behind the Memphis Grizzlies for the No.8 seed in the Western Conference playoffs. They are also just 0.5 game behind the Portland Trail Blazers for the No. 9 spot.

#If the No.9 seed is more than four games behind the No.8 seed, No. 8 will make the playoffs. If they are fewer than four games behind, the teams will compete in a play-in tournament for the final spot.

#“I just think we had a group who wanted to come here and prove they were worthy of being here,” Suns coach Monty Williams said. “They heard a lot of stuff that was being said.”

#The bubble has also represented an historic stretch for the team who is in the midst of its first five-game winning streak since 2014.

#The Suns have scored wins over the Washington Wizards, Dallas Mavericks, the Los Angeles Clippers, and Indiana Pacers before beating Miami.

#The remainder of the seeding schedule for the Suns includes matchups against the Oklahoma City Thunder (August 10), Philadelphia 76ers (August 11), and the Mavericks for a second time (August 13).

#Suns General Manager James Jones discussed the development of Ayton on Arizona Sports’ Bickley and Marotta Show.

#“He’s bouncing back from play to play. You can see he has some tough stretches and he bounces back. He had some great defensive possessions and he turns that into a great offensive possession. He’s building on the, I say, basketball instances. A read or a coverage, he’s quarterbacking the backside of the defence,” Jones said.

#“We always want more. People always want more because you see his ceiling, you see his potential. If you take the long approach, every day, every game, every practice, getting him to be consistent, it’ll take care of itself.

#“He’s learning how to pick his spots offensively and defensively. That’s something tough for big guys, because we ask the big guys to do the dirty work. We ask them to screen, we ask them to roll, we ask them to collapse the paint. We ask them to sacrifice and not touch the ball.”

‘I Will Be De-Committing From Indiana University’

Thursday, November 8, 2018

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BAHAMIAN high school gridiron star Michael Cartwright.

#By RENALDO DORSETT

#Tribune Sports Reporter

#rdorsett@tribunemedia.net

#BAHAMIAN high school gridiron star Michael Cartwright re-entered the recruitment cycle and is once again one of the most highly sought after offensive lineman prospects in the state of Florida.

#Cartwright de-committed from the University of Indiana Hoosiers and during his final season for the Champagnat Lions in Hialeah, Florida, is once again eligible to join one of the many NCAA Division I football programmes seeking his services.

#“I would like to thank Indiana for recruiting me during my recruitment process and the entire Indiana coaching staff for making me feel like family the whole time,” he announced via social media. “But today I will be de-committing from Indiana University and reopening my recruitment for me to re-evaluate everything and to make the best decision for me as a person, player and most importantly a student.”

#Cartwright announced his commitment to join the Hoosiers last July.

#In the month of May alone, the 6’7″, 300-pound lineman received a new slate of eight offers from the Western Kentucky Hilltoppers, Kent State Golden Flash, UCF Golden Knights, UAB Blazers, Georgia State Panthers, Temple Owls, UMass Minutemen and Nebraska Cornhuskers.

#He previously received offers from the Tulane Green Wave, FIU Golden Panthers, Indiana Hoosiers, Marshall Thundering Herd, FAU Owls, Southern Mississippi Eagles, Arkansas Pine Bluff Golden Lions and the Pittsburgh Panthers.

#The Lions are currently 5-5 and will face Miami Christian tonight in the Florida High School Athletic Association Class 2A Tournament.

#Last season, the Lions won their second Class A Florida High School state title 24-7 over eight-time state champion Jacksonville University Christian.

#Cartwright, a former student at Aquinas College, has also blossomed into a three-sport star for the Lions. On the basketball court he averaged 12.6 points and 15 rebounds per game and in athletics, he became the school’s first multiple district champion in the shot put.

#Cartwright was also a member of the Bahamas’ 2016 Caribbean Basketball Confederation under-16 team that won gold in the British Virgin Islands.

Cartwright Named To All-Dade Class 5a Independent Football First Team

Friday, January 25, 2019

#By RENALDO DORSETT

#Tribune Sports Reporter

#rdorsett@tribunemedia.net

#IN the midst of his recruitment process, Michael Cartwright continues to receive accolades for a stellar senior season.

#The senior offensive lineman for the Champagnat Lions was named to the Miami Herald’s All-Dade Class 5A Independent Football First Team.

#The 6’6”, 293-pound offensive lineman recorded 65 pancake blocks on the season, most among any lineman selected to the first team. This week, he also picked up another offer from the North Carolina Central University Eagles.

#Champagnat finished as runners-up after a 28-20 loss to the North Florida Christian Eagles in the Florida High School Athletic Association State Championships Class 2A State Championship game.

#The Lions concluded the season with four consecutive wins to earn a trip to the state title game.

#Prior to the season, Cartwright, re-entered the recruitment cycle when he de-committed from the University of Indiana Hoosiers.

#He originally announced his commitment to join the Hoosiers last July but according to Cartwright, the second chance at recruitment gives him an opportunity to “re-evaluate everything and to make the best decision for me as a person, player and most importantly a student.”

#In the month of May alone, he received a new slate of eight offers from the Western Kentucky Hilltoppers, Kent State Golden Flash, UCF Golden Knights, UAB Blazers, Georgia State Panthers, Temple Owls, UMass Minutemen and Nebraska Cornhuskers. He previously received offers from the Tulane Green Wave, FIU Golden Panthers, Indiana Hoosiers, Marshall Thundering Herd, FAU Owls, Southern Mississippi Eagles, Arkansas Pine Bluff Golden Lions and the Pittsburgh Panthers.

#Last season, the Lions won their second Class 2A FHSSA state title 24-7 over eight-time state champion Jacksonville University Christian.

#Cartwright, a former student at Aquinas College, has also blossomed into a three-sport star for the Lions. On the basketball court he averaged 12.6 points and 15 rebounds per game and in athletics, and he became the school’s first multiple district champion in the shot put.

#Cartwright was also a member of the Bahamas’ 2016 Caribbean Basketball Confederation Under-16 team that won gold in the British Virgin Islands.

Michael Cartwright Commits To The Eagles

Thursday, January 31, 2019

photo

Michael Cartwright

#By RENALDO DORSETT

#Tribune Sports Reporter

#rdorsett@tribunemedia.net

#MICHAEL Cartwright officially brought his recruitment process to an end when he announced the NCAA programme he will join this fall.

#The senior at Champagnat Catholic High School in Hialeah, Florida, took to various social media outlets yesterday to announce his commitment to the North Carolina Central Eagles.

#“First of all I just want to Thank God for everything he has done for me in my life.

#“I want to thank all of my family members that have helped me and have been there through it all.

#“I want to thank Miss A for making me a part of the Champagnat Catholic School Family for the three years I’ve been a part of this great institution. I also would want to thank my coaches for not giving up on me and helping me be the best football player and student I wanted to be. Last but not least I want to thank the Lions football team for always pushing me in practice/games and for all the great memories we had together over the last three years,” he said.

#“It’s been a long and stressful recruiting process and I want to thank all the schools that have recruited me during the process, but today, January 20th 2019, I’m truly blessed to say I’m committed to North Carolina Central University.”

#Cartwright will be a member of the first recruiting class for new Eagles head coach Trei Oliver. Oliver was announced as NCCU’s 24th head football coach last December. In 2018, the Eagles finished 5-6 overall, 3-4 in the Mid Eastern Athletic Conference.

#He becomes the second Bahamian player to matriculate from the Bahamas to Champagnat, to NCCU.

#Jamal Symotte was a member of the Eagles programme from 2012-2016. In his senior season, he was named a member of the All-Academic Team and All-MEAC Second Team after posting the team’s second-highest grade of 89 per cent on blocking assignments with 27 pancake blocks.

#Prior to his announcement, Cartwright was recently named to the Miami Herald’s All-Dade Class 5A Independent Football First Team..

#The 6’6”, 293-pound offensive lineman recorded 65 pancake blocks on the season, most among any lineman selected to the first team.

#Champagnat finished as runners-up after a 28-20 loss to the North Florida Christian Eagles in the Florida High School Athletic Association State Championships Class 2A State Championship game.

#The Lions concluded the season with four consecutive wins to earn a trip to the state title game.

#Prior to the season, Cartwright re-entered the recruitment cycle when he de-committed from the University of Indiana Hoosiers in December. He originally announced his commitment to join the Hoosiers last July but according to Cartwright, the second chance at recruitment gave him an opportunity to “re-evaluate everything and to make the best decision for me as a person, player and most importantly a student.”

#In the month of May alone, Cartwright received eight offers from the Western Kentucky Hilltoppers, Kent State Golden Flash, UCF Golden Knights, UAB Blazers, Georgia State Panthers, Temple Owls, UMass Minutemen and Nebraska Cornhuskers.

#He previously received offers from the Tulane Green Wave, FIU Golden Panthers, Indiana Hoosiers, Marshall Thundering Herd, FAU Owls, Southern Mississippi Eagles, Arkansas Pine Bluff Golden Lions and the Pittsburgh Panthers.

#Last season, the Lions won their second Class 2A FHSSA state title 24-7 over eight-time state champion Jacksonville University Christian.

#Cartwright, a former student at Aquinas College, has also blossomed into a three-sport star for the Lions.

#On the basketball court he averaged 12.6 points and 15 rebounds per game and in athletics, he became the school’s first multiple district champion in the shot put.

#Cartwright was also a member of the Bahamas’ 2016 Caribbean Basketball Confederation under-16 team that won gold in the British Virgin Islands

Cartwright And Lions Finish As Runners-Up

Tuesday, December 11, 2018

#By RENALDO DORSETT

#Tribune Sports Reporter

#rdorsett@tribunemedia.net

#HIS senior season ended just short of the ultimate team goal, but Michael Cartwright is already looking ahead to the complement of his recruitment process and NCAA decision.

#Cartwright and the Champagnat Lions finished as runners-up after a 28-20 loss to the North Florida Christian Eagles in the Florida High School Athletic Association State Championships Class 2A State Championship game.

#“Not the ending I wanted but I just want to say thanks to my teammates for a great season. Through all the adversity we’ve faced as a unit but we never gave in,” he posted to Facebook.

#“Thank you for the experience. But now it’s on the next step in my life. University of … Here I come.”

#The Lions, the defending 2A state champions, had nearly a complete roster overhaul headed into this season and reverted to the role of underdogs in the division for much of the season. They concluded the season with four consecutive wins to earn a trip to the state title game.

#Prior to the season, Cartwright, the 6’ 7” 300 pound offensive lineman, re-entered the recruitment cycle when he de-committed from the University of Indiana Hoosiers.

#“I would like to thank Indiana for recruiting me during my recruitment process and the entire Indiana coaching staff for making me feel like family the whole time,” he announced via social media.

#He originally announced his commitment to join the Hoosiers last July but according to Cartwright, the second chance at recruitment gives him an opportunity to “re-evaluate everything and to make the best decision for me as a person, player and most importantly a student.”

#In the month of May alone, he received a new slate of eight offers from the Western Kentucky Hilltoppers, Kent State Golden Flash, UCF Golden Knights, UAB Blazers, Georgia State Panthers, Temple Owls, UMass Minutemen and Nebraska Cornhuskers.

#He previously received offers from the Tulane Green Wave, FIU Golden Panthers, Indiana Hoosiers, Marshall Thundering Herd, FAU Owls, Southern Mississippi Eagles, Arkansas Pine Bluff Golden Lions and the Pittsburgh Panthers.

#Last season, the Lions won their second Class 2A FHSSA state title 24-7 over eight-time state champion Jacksonville University Christian.

#Cartwright, a former student at Aquinas College, has also blossomed into a three-sport star for the Lions. On the basketball court he averaged 12.6 points and 15 rebounds per game and in athletics, he became the school’s first multiple district champion in the shot put.

#Cartwright was also a member of the Bahamas’ 2016 Caribbean Basketball Confederation under-16 team that won gold in the British Virgin Islands.

Quincy Poitier To Join Concord University Mountain Lions

QUINCY POITIER is expected to join the Concord University Mountain Lions as one of five members of the incoming recruiting class for the 2016 season.

QUINCY POITIER is expected to join the Concord University Mountain Lions as one of five members of the incoming recruiting class for the 2016 season.

Friday, August 26, 2016

#By RENALDO DORSETT

#Sports Reporter

#rdorsett@tribunemedia.net

#ONE local basketball player will see his game make the transition to another level in the collegiate ranks this fall.

#Quincy Poitier will join the Concord University Mountain Lions as one of five members of the incoming recruiting class for the 2016 season.

#Concord University is an NCAA Division II school, and a member of the Mountain East Conference.

#Poitier, a 6’2 combo guard, spent last season with Roane State Community College and averaged 12.9 points and 3.2 rebounds per game.

#He started 19 of his 26 appearances which included a season high 24 points in a 98-92 loss at Walters State,  20 points in a 73-65 win over Cleveland State, and his lone double double of the year – 15 points and 10 rebounds in a 67-53 win over Bryan College JV.

#Poitier spent his true freshman season with Davis College, where he averaged 9.8 points and 4.8 rebounds per game.

#Originally from San Salvador, he played locally at the high school level under Kevin Johnson for the CI Gibson Rattlers.

#Poitier joins a Concord class which includes Patrick Eugene, Troy Gibson, Augustine Mathias and Pierce Mowery.

#Mountain Lions head coach Todd May said he was optimistic about the new additions to his roster and what they can bring the programme.

#“With this recruiting class our hope was to add length and athleticism, and to fill some holes with our graduation losses which will allow us to continue to compete at the top of the Mountain East Conference,” May said.

#“I feel each of these young men will impact our programme in a positive manner, not only on the court but off, as they are all great students and great young men.

#It is the first class for May who was hired as the 15th coach in school history, following the departure of former coach Kent McBride.

#May spent the last four seasons as the assistant coach on McBride’s staff at Concord as the Mountain Lions piled up a mark of 66-51 over that span with 42 of those wins coming the last two seasons.

#May played a vital part in Concord winning the 2016 MEC Tournament Championship and appearing in the NCAA Division II Atlantic Regional Tournament. It was for the first time for both feats since 1997.

Coach ‘Drips’ Poitier To Adopt New Role At Florida State College

Edric C ‘Drips’ Poitier

Edric C ‘Drips’ Poitier

Friday, March 15, 2019

#By BRENT STUBBS

#Senior Sports Reporter

#bstubbs@tribunemedia.net

#ON April 1, coach Edric C ‘Drips’ Poitier is expected to take on a new role at Florida State College at Jacksonville where he coaches their Blue Waves women’s volleyball and reconstructs their beach volleyball programme after a three-year coaching sting at Savannah State University.

#“I’m confident coach Poitier will continue to grow on the success of FSCJ Volleyball,” said FSC Athletic Director Ginny Alexander.

#“He has a commitment to building programmes that are strong and connections to recruiting high calibre players that can lead our programme to the next level.”

#In response, Poitier thanked Alexander and the volleyball search committee for selecting him and having the confidence in him to take over and lead this programme. “I’m very excited about the opportunity to continue to build on the success that FSCJ Volleyball has had in the past and look forward to the opportunity to take them to the next level,” he said. “My goal is to establish FSCJ as a national powerhouse in NJCAA volleyball.”

#Poitier, 56, will be moving from the NCAA Division I to the Division II level where he has garnered three Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association Coach of the Year awards, four consecutive CIAA Championship and three NCAA Division II Atlantic Regional appearances in his 14-year coaching experience.

#“I love it because it’s a whole lot more responsibility because the university is getting ready to build a seven-court facility and they told me the reason they want me is so that I can manage the facility and produce some national and international tournaments there,” he said.

#“They are building six courts and one stadium court in the facility because there is no where in the Jacksonville area that has more than two courts. They wanted someone who have some experience in beach volleyball as well to manage the facility and coach their indoor volleyball team.”

#While his coaching responsibility will only be limited to the indoor volleyball team, Poitier said he will be seeking persons to coach the beach volleyball team as they attempt to bring the team up to par with hard court volleyball.

#“It’s more responsibilities, especially for recruiting. You don’t have to worry about the NCAA stipulations. It’s a junior college,” Poitier pointed out.

#“A lot of people may look at it as a demotion from a division one to a junior college, but if you are coaching at one of the major division one schools, you don’t have the opportunities for huge success.

#At the junior college level, Poitier said there is much more opportunities for him to succeed.

#“They are still paying me very well and I have an opportunity to do a lot of recruiting, especially with kids from the Bahamas and the Caribbean,” he revealed.

#“If they don’t qualify for NCAA schools due to our educational system, they don’t get to make it. But if they don’t meet the NCAA stipulations, I can recruit them for Florida State College.

#Prior to Savannah State University, Poitier was at Bluefield State College rebuilding a program that had gone 6-113 in the five seasons to a 21-7 record by 2015. Poitier also spent three seasons at Winston-Salem State University from 2010-12 and posted a 43-51 record.

#He is known for rebuilding programs as he started his head coach career with St. Augustine’s College (now St. Augustine University) and went 113-34 in five seasons at the helm. In his first season, he went 14-13 overall, including going 14-6 in conference play.

#The next four seasons, Poitier record 20-plus win and a conference championship in each season. In year two, Poitier went 23-6, including a 19-2 mark in conference play and won the conference and was named the CIAA Coach of the Year and followed up with a 22-7 overall record, including a perfect 21-0 conference record and won the CIAA Championship for the second consecutive season and lost in the first round of the NCAA Regionals.

#Poitier went 29-3 overall and 21-0 in conference play and won the CIAA Championship for the third consecutive season and advanced the second round of the NCAA Regionals and went 25-5 overall and 21-0 in league play with a conference championship and was named Coach of the Year in his final season.

#He is still the only CIAA coach to ever win an NCAA Tournament First Round match. St. Augustine’s went on a 77-game conference win streak over the last four-plus seasons.

#“I’ve coached at Division II and I did division one, but if you are not at oner of the big schools, it’s difficult to win because their recruiting budget is so great,” he further pointed out.

#“You just can’t compete with them. But at the JUCO level, you can compete with anybody.”

#He noted that Florida State College was the only team to beat Miami Dade, who was on a 69-game winning streak before they upset them last year. They eventually lost their title to Idaho.

#“That’s one of the things that motivated me in going to Florida State College,” Poitier declared. “I know I can do a lot with the programme there.”

#Before leaving the Bahamas, Poitier coached the Bahamas national women’s team for nine years from 1992-99 and led the team to two gold medals and three silver medals at the Regional Caribbean Volleyball Championships and was the assistant coach from 1989-92.

#Poitier also played on the Bahamas men’s national team as a setter for 13 years from 1979-92 and won the bronze medal at Commonwealth Volleyball Championship in London in 1981. Poitier took a break in 2004 and left St. Augustine to work in his homeland in the Bahamas as a police officer while coaching two club teams in five years before returning to coach college in 2010.

#Poitier graduated from St. Augustine’s College in 2003 with a Bachelor of Science degree in criminal justice.

#During his coaching tenure, Poitier has compiled a 194-160 win-loss record.

Edric C ‘Drips’ Poitier

Edric C ‘Drips’ Poitier

As of Friday, March 15, 2019

#By BRENT STUBBS

#Senior Sports Reporter

#bstubbs@tribunemedia.net

#ON April 1, coach Edric C ‘Drips’ Poitier is expected to take on a new role at Florida State College at Jacksonville where he coaches their Blue Waves women’s volleyball and reconstructs their beach volleyball programme after a three-year coaching sting at Savannah State University.

#“I’m confident coach Poitier will continue to grow on the success of FSCJ Volleyball,” said FSC Athletic Director Ginny Alexander.

#“He has a commitment to building programmes that are strong and connections to recruiting high calibre players that can lead our programme to the next level.”

#In response, Poitier thanked Alexander and the volleyball search committee for selecting him and having the confidence in him to take over and lead this programme. “I’m very excited about the opportunity to continue to build on the success that FSCJ Volleyball has had in the past and look forward to the opportunity to take them to the next level,” he said. “My goal is to establish FSCJ as a national powerhouse in NJCAA volleyball.”

#Poitier, 56, will be moving from the NCAA Division I to the Division II level where he has garnered three Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association Coach of the Year awards, four consecutive CIAA Championship and three NCAA Division II Atlantic Regional appearances in his 14-year coaching experience.

#“I love it because it’s a whole lot more responsibility because the university is getting ready to build a seven-court facility and they told me the reason they want me is so that I can manage the facility and produce some national and international tournaments there,” he said.

#“They are building six courts and one stadium court in the facility because there is no where in the Jacksonville area that has more than two courts. They wanted someone who have some experience in beach volleyball as well to manage the facility and coach their indoor volleyball team.”

#While his coaching responsibility will only be limited to the indoor volleyball team, Poitier said he will be seeking persons to coach the beach volleyball team as they attempt to bring the team up to par with hard court volleyball.

#“It’s more responsibilities, especially for recruiting. You don’t have to worry about the NCAA stipulations. It’s a junior college,” Poitier pointed out.

#“A lot of people may look at it as a demotion from a division one to a junior college, but if you are coaching at one of the major division one schools, you don’t have the opportunities for huge success.

#At the junior college level, Poitier said there is much more opportunities for him to succeed.

#“They are still paying me very well and I have an opportunity to do a lot of recruiting, especially with kids from the Bahamas and the Caribbean,” he revealed.

#“If they don’t qualify for NCAA schools due to our educational system, they don’t get to make it. But if they don’t meet the NCAA stipulations, I can recruit them for Florida State College.

#Prior to Savannah State University, Poitier was at Bluefield State College rebuilding a program that had gone 6-113 in the five seasons to a 21-7 record by 2015. Poitier also spent three seasons at Winston-Salem State University from 2010-12 and posted a 43-51 record.

#He is known for rebuilding programs as he started his head coach career with St. Augustine’s College (now St. Augustine University) and went 113-34 in five seasons at the helm. In his first season, he went 14-13 overall, including going 14-6 in conference play.

#The next four seasons, Poitier record 20-plus win and a conference championship in each season. In year two, Poitier went 23-6, including a 19-2 mark in conference play and won the conference and was named the CIAA Coach of the Year and followed up with a 22-7 overall record, including a perfect 21-0 conference record and won the CIAA Championship for the second consecutive season and lost in the first round of the NCAA Regionals.

#Poitier went 29-3 overall and 21-0 in conference play and won the CIAA Championship for the third consecutive season and advanced the second round of the NCAA Regionals and went 25-5 overall and 21-0 in league play with a conference championship and was named Coach of the Year in his final season.

#He is still the only CIAA coach to ever win an NCAA Tournament First Round match. St. Augustine’s went on a 77-game conference win streak over the last four-plus seasons.

#“I’ve coached at Division II and I did division one, but if you are not at oner of the big schools, it’s difficult to win because their recruiting budget is so great,” he further pointed out.

#“You just can’t compete with them. But at the JUCO level, you can compete with anybody.”

#He noted that Florida State College was the only team to beat Miami Dade, who was on a 69-game winning streak before they upset them last year. They eventually lost their title to Idaho.

#“That’s one of the things that motivated me in going to Florida State College,” Poitier declared. “I know I can do a lot with the programme there.”

#Before leaving the Bahamas, Poitier coached the Bahamas national women’s team for nine years from 1992-99 and led the team to two gold medals and three silver medals at the Regional Caribbean Volleyball Championships and was the assistant coach from 1989-92.

#Poitier also played on the Bahamas men’s national team as a setter for 13 years from 1979-92 and won the bronze medal at Commonwealth Volleyball Championship in London in 1981. Poitier took a break in 2004 and left St. Augustine to work in his homeland in the Bahamas as a police officer while coaching two club teams in five years before returning to coach college in 2010.

#Poitier graduated from St. Augustine’s College in 2003 with a Bachelor of Science degree in criminal justice.

#During his coaching tenure, Poitier has compiled a 194-160 win-loss record.