Matt Doherty

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LI's Matt Doherty shares basketball and leadership lessons in new book 
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North Carolina head coach Matt Doherty signals from the sidelines against the Charleston Cougars on Dec. 30, 2000. Credit: Getty Images/Craig Jones 

By Neil BestUpdated January 22, 2021 5:08 PM

 Matt Doherty still lives in North Carolina, where he experienced his most visible successes and setbacks as a player and coach. But everything that came after was shaped in large part in Prospect Park in East Meadow.It was where he learned lasting lessons about basketball and life, so much so that in his new book, "Rebound: From Pain to Passion – Leadership Lessons Learned," a picture of the park’s entrance is captioned, "gates to heaven."Late afternoon pickup games there were so important to him he gave up his job delivering Newsday, an afternoon newspaper at the time, and switched to a morning Daily News route."It was about the ethos of Prospect Park, the meritocracy," Doherty said in an interview to promote the book.

"They didn’t care if you’re Black, didn’t care if you’re white, didn’t care if you’re Hispanic. If you can help the team win, you got on the court."He started as a tween, playing against high school and college players, learning to be a role player at first because that was the only way to justify his participation.Over time he learned the game’s nuances, how to follow instructions, how to negotiate and how to lead."You learn how to compete," he said. "You learn how to lead your peers, to communicate with your peers. A big problem in my opinion in today’s game with the younger kids especially is they don’t know how to manage each other."They don’t know how to hold each other accountable, because they’ve never done it before, because everything was organized for them."Doherty, 58, knows that sort of talk makes him sound like an "old man," but he did earn the battle scars to know of what he speaks. 

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Matt Doherty, who grew up in East Meadow, wrote a book entitled "Rebound: From Pain to Passion - Leadership Lessons Learned." After starring at Holy Trinity High School in Hicksville, he started on North Carolina’s 1981-82 NCAA championship team – his teammate, Michael Jordan, wrote the book’s foreword – and later was head coach at Notre Dame, North Carolina, Florida Atlantic and SMU.It was his three seasons at his alma mater in the early 2000s that are the emotional spine of the book, a term that ended with his departure after the 2002-03 season, two years before his recruits won an NCAA title under Roy Williams.

Doherty struggled for years to get over it. Finally, he met with Williams, his former boss at Kansas and successor at North Carolina, and got it all off his chest. (His college coach, Dean Smith, was in ill health by then.)"I was kind of embarrassed to say that as soon as I got in there I started crying, and it all came out," Doherty said. "That was therapeutic. I had the best night’s sleep I had in six years that night."

About three quarters of Doherty’s book is a basketball-oriented memoir. The final quarter offers detailed leadership advice, something that Doherty now does for a living.He conducts speaking engagements on the subject and works as an executive coach. He also hosts or co-hosts two weekly radio shows in Charlotte, one about sports and the other about news. And now he has a book."I want it to be both entertaining and give the backstory of what happened to me," he said, "what mistakes I made, why I went on a leadership journey, what I learned and what I can share to use in your leadership role."Doherty still has close ties to Long Island, with three sisters living in or near Long Beach, and a brother who lives in New Jersey and works in the city.

Being a New York-area product served him well in the rough-and-tumble world of big-time basketball.He recalled the scene at the 1983 ECAC Holiday Festival final against St. John’s at Madison Square Garden."Back then they let the fans right along the court, and the guys were on the baseline drinking beer doing what New Yorkers do," he said. "It was, ‘Hey, f-you! Hey, Doherty, I went to school with your brother!

’"Whatever it was, it was energy of the New York fans. They were the characters around the game."As for the hoops intensity of Tobacco Road, he said, "As a player, people would say, ‘What do you think about the Duke-Carolina rivalry?’ I’m like, ‘Well, in all due respect, I’ve kind of played in it. It was St. Agnes-Holy Trinity.’"Those gyms were packed. You had to get there early. There was usually a fight in the stands during the JV game. You had to fight through a crowd. It was a hostile environment. [In college], it was just more people watching."












 
 
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He mad a huge mistake right out of the gate by replacing Dean Smith's longtime secretary. It didn't sit well with a lot of people in the athletic department. In his defense, if that was non-negotiable in people's eyes, they probably should have mentioned it to him upfront.
 
Matt Doherty lives in the Lake Norman area and is periodically a guest on the local Charlotte sports talk station. Pretty entertaining to listen to. Have never heard him talk about the St. John's job but then again folks down here are mainly interested in his days at Carolina or what he thinks about crrent ACC teams. 
 
Matt is a really good man who owns up to the mistakes he made at unc.    On the heels of the crushing loss of losing a dream job in such a horrible way, he was really excited to get a fresh start here.    The way it was all handled by Harrington was really just a gut punch to a guy already down.

Still, he's a very smart guy, a great communicator, who lives by faith.  Best to him.  How many guys can say they won an NCAA championship game alongside Michael Jordan and than coached at both Notre dame and unc?
 
His sister graduated from SJU in 1979 (I think)

I belive she was later an administartor (possibly the principal) at St. John's the Baptist High School.
 
Doherty had a successful year at Notre Dame before he got the job at his alma mater. He would have been much  better off staying at N.D.
Beyond Harrington interfering with the process, and undermining the search committee, which was chaired by Doherty's friend and potentially a major donor, how could you choose Norm Roberts, with no division 1 head coaching experience over Doherty?
 
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Las Vegan" post=414426 said:
Doherty had a successful year at Notre Dame before he got the job at his alma mater. He would have been much  better off staying at N.D.
Beyond Harrington interfering with the process, and undermining the search committee, which was chaired by Doherty's friend and potentially a major donor, how could you choose Norm Roberts, with no division 1 head coaching experience over Doherty?
Roberts was so unkown, that nobody in the room probably had anything against him.  Politics played into just about everyone else not getting it (though I was never a fan of Doherty, while that was going on).
 
Las Vegan" post=414426 said:
Doherty had a successful year at Notre Dame before he got the job at his alma mater. He would have been much  better off staying at N.D.
Beyond Harrington interfering with the process, and undermining the search committee, which was chaired by Doherty's friend and potentially a major donor, how could you choose Norm Roberts, with no division 1 head coaching experience over Doherty?
It's interesting to reflect back on this now. I remember this board being so split at the time, seemed like half the board hated the Doherty pick and the other half loved it. Man I wish we could pull up the threads from back then. 
 
Room112" post=414518 said:
Las Vegan" post=414426 said:
Doherty had a successful year at Notre Dame before he got the job at his alma mater. He would have been much  better off staying at N.D.
Beyond Harrington interfering with the process, and undermining the search committee, which was chaired by Doherty's friend and potentially a major donor, how could you choose Norm Roberts, with no division 1 head coaching experience over Doherty?
It's interesting to reflect back on this now. I remember this board being so split at the time, seemed like half the board hated the Doherty pick and the other half loved it. Man I wish we could pull up the threads from back then. 
I assume I wasn't in favor of it. I probably didn't want damaged goods and thought he was a bit over the top with his emotions. In hindsight, he may have worked out. Could he have been worse than what we had?
 
He was one of the names I initially liked, a lot to do with him being local and 2 of 4 good years between ND & UNC.

However, in retrospect have no idea of he would have done well here. Seemed to have leadership deficiencies at the time. Could have gotten torn up by media. He did not turn SMU around in his six years there (plus the one year at Fl. Atlantic before he jumped ship to SMU).

As NCJ noted, he lives down near us, but I personally haven't seen him down here. Though I do get a kick out of seeing Bob McKillop at mass many weekends. Often we're in same section.

 
 
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Yes she was the Principal  at St. John The Baptist HS  in West Islip starting in 2012 until I think three years ago
 
Doherty's daughter went on to be a varsity rower at UNC.

His son played varsity lacrosse at Bellarmine University in Louisville.
 
I would recommend the book.   It's available on Amazon Kindle for $9.99 and also in paperback for $13.99.

We kind of forget that Matt is a local product, a star at Holy Trinity, East Meadow kid, a CYO product (St. Raphael's) and one who learned a lot at Gus Alfieri's summer basketball camps (who he gives a lot of credit to).   He played 2 years for McKillop at Trinity, was an assistant under McKillop at Davidson, and under Roy Williams at Kansas.    He was a big time recruiter at Kansas, which is sort of coincidental since it was on his resume (along with HC) and basically the only thing noteworthy on NR's.

Rather than read a book about leadership written by someone who will essentially tell you in autographical style what it takes to be a great leader ("Just be like me and you can be great too!"), Doherty confronts the lessons learned both through mentors and also by his very public failures.    Confronting those failures, that we all have in less public ways, not making excuses for them, and instead using them as opportunities to learn and grow make this an interesting and valuable book to read. 

 
 
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During the early to Mid 80's the South StreetSeaport  Pier was a popular gathering spot for all the Wall Steet and Insurance guys to grab a few after work . As I remember it , my Group was near the Bar with Doherty's guys . There was  some small talk but , it was obvious DOH was a bit pompous . 
 
Monte" post=415227 said:
Our very own David Russell(the writer, not the ballplayer) has an in-depth interview with Matt D, and asks him specific questions about the SJU opening and Louie, amongst other things. Great read by a great young writer

[URL]https://www.qchron.com/edition...cle_a5ef4edf-3ba2-5788-99ea-1256d916520d.html[/URL]

Thanks.  I wonder how different things would have been if we hired Doh instead of Roberts.  While we can imagine and debate the on the court results, Reilly (or was it Riley) Field House would have been a much better facilty and deserving of a BE program than what we got in Taffner.
 
 
If we allow that Doherty's version of events is essentially accurate, then you have to wonder how Harrington and the Board of Trustees could behave this way. I wasn't aware that Doherty actually met with Harrington and was offered a seven year deal, and advised not to take the James Madison job. Who or what caused Harrington to, without explanation, reverse the decision to hire Doherty. So, we ended up with a coach who had no division 1 head coaching experience and the loss of a very large pledge. Reminiscent of the fiasco surrounding the Calipari coaching candidacy.
 
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Matt had has very deep roots in this area, and growing up in East Meadow, playing at Holy Trinity, attending (SJU's) Gus Alfieri's summer camp, and competed against and was friends with a lot of guys who had gone to SJU.    He is a very bright guy, and SJU wasn't on his short list of schools to consider.   I know we played UNC in the 80's at least once and I think we beat them.    You wonder if Looie wasn't too fond of Matt.   Someone definitely killed the hire, and maybe it wasn't Harrington.

I wonder if Matt could recruit for us.  It would be an interesting proposition to consider since he spent 10 years as an assistant at Davidson and Kansas where he was deepy involved in recruiting.
 
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