My pitch for Chris Mullin as Coach

beast of the east

Active member
Everyone knows everyone about Chris Mullin's basketball experience so I'm not going to convince anyone based on what he's done on the court at SJU, in the NBA, or as an NBA executive. That's in black and white to be decided on its own merits, subjectively for his qualification as coach.

My pitch has to do with Mullin the guy. Not, the player, not the man, and more appropriately da guy.

Mullin came to SJU as I was leaving as a new graduate still working on campus. He came in heralded of course, and we were all curious. One day in mid September, I saw this tall milk white kid outside outside of Alumni Hall. I guessed it might be him, so I went up to him. I introduced myself and welcomed him to St. John's. I'd told him that I was really excited to see him play, and wished him the best. There's something about chatting with Mullin. He never puts himself above you, and is always willing to chat.

After Mullin took the court, he shined like no freshman we'd ever seen at SJU. He was heads and tails the best player on the court, but more importantly, he made everyone else better too. My friends and I sat directly below his mom and dad, and aunts who are nuns. Nice people. I don't remember if it was the end of freshmen or sophomore year when the team was eliminated from the NCAA's. My friends traveled to a ton of away games and we were at the regionals. Milling around in the rotunda after the game, Mullin, who didn't know any of us personally, spotted us and came over. "I just wanted to tell you guys that I've seen you at so many of our away games, and I really appreciate how you supported the team." This was a kid, 19 or 20, with the goodness and kindness to approach fans just to thank them. Big plus.

When he was a junior, I ran into him around Union turnpike in the spring after basketball was over, and stopped him. I asked him if he knew anything he could share about Walter Berry coming here. As always, friendly and candid, he said he hadn't heard anything new, but sure hoped he was coming. No attitude - just two guys talking SJU hoops.

I remember just before the NBA draft, how a good friend of mine who hung around the SJU bars told me that he hoped Mullin would end up somewhere else. I asked him why, and he said he'd see Mullin in the bars all the time, destroying himself. He said he had to get the hell out of New York, or he'd end up dead. To Mullin's credit, he fought demons like a man, attained sobriety, something I believe he maintains today. He whipped himself into the shape of a marine, still looks the part, and his NBA career skyrocketed.

Funny story. My cousin worked in customs at JFK. It's now known that Chris' dad, a great man himself fought alcohol and attained sobriety. Rod was his supervisor. He had the respect of everyone, but my cousin laughed when he said that it was easy to work for him before he got sober but cracked the whip after. I have some friends who have 30, 40 years of sobriety attained one day at a time. To me, anyone who has been sober for so long has become rock solid in ways beyond keeping alcohol at bay. They are better men than had they never touched a drop. Rod is one, and Chris is another.

From the time my son was 8 till he was 17, I wrote to coaches and athletes and asked them to send him a birthday card I enclosed. Mullin was one of the guys who responded, and he sent a warm note in the card.

Now most recently, when he was inducted, there was something I noticed that was different about Mullin. Same old guy for sure. I brought my wife to the induction breakfast. In those days, she came to every single game, and sitting behind the SJU basket at the garden and behind the bench at Alumni Hall, we were often on TV, a testimony more to her looks certainly than mine. So when I asked her if she wanted to go to the breakfast, she didn't hesitate.

At the breakfast,before inductions, Mullin and Coach C. withdrew from their table, and sat together on a window sill with a cup of coffee for 15 minutes or so, undisturbed, just chatting. It was Chris' day, but there was something so comfortable about it, so much of him belonging here and not jsut for a day. After the induction, I asked my wife if she wanted to go up and chat with him, and maybe get a photo with him. She was more than happy to, and grabbed a pen for Chris to autograph her program.

Mullin when we approached him was so gracious and familiar. Before we could really speak he introduced us to an older brother who had played at Siena (I always confuse which borther played at Siena and which at Bridgeport). We told Chris that we sat right beneath his parents, and he joked, "Yup. One loud one, one quiet one." We chatted about his brother Terrence coaching at St. Francis de Sales CYO and that he is often a row behind us at CA. He was really patient as someone struggled with my camera to get a shot. After 4-5 tries it worked, and Chris, patient the whole time, smiled and said "Persistence!"

The whole point is, that if we are to return to prominence, and the kind of prominence that endures, if we are to recapture what was magical about St. John's, not just in 2011, or 2000, but back in the 50s, 60s, 70s, and 80s - the whole era, for my two cents having a guy on the bench who not only was the best who ever played here, but a guy who is from the city and is one of us, and is red and white through and through, is exactly what we need.

For the doubters about a heralded player becoming a great coach, only one player is inducted into the Hall of Fame as player and coach. He was the best player in college basketball, and then went on to become arguably the greatest coach. His name - John Wooden, and as anyone who knows would tell you, was a far greater man than coach. Not a bad guy for Mullin to emulate, even it it's aiming for the stars. Then again, hasn't Mullin always done that?
 
This was a great read. I agree wholeheartedly. This is a great post and so is marillacs on another thread talking about bringing the fan base together.

Mullin can and will get a staff around him that is top notch. On top of that anyone that has seen him play (I had to watch YouTube clips lol) knows he is one of the smartest guys to ever play on the court. Real heady player. I'm sure it will translate to coaching, especially with experienced assistants helping him.

Who better to bring SJU back to greatness? This would be perfect. He'd work his ass off and he would get recruits from all over the country. He was on the freaking dream team! Kids would want to be a part of this program. Hire Mullin
 
Everyone knows everyone about Chris Mullin's basketball experience so I'm not going to convince anyone based on what he's done on the court at SJU, in the NBA, or as an NBA executive. That's in black and white to be decided on its own merits, subjectively for his qualification as coach.

My pitch has to do with Mullin the guy. Not, the player, not the man, and more appropriately da guy.

Mullin came to SJU as I was leaving as a new graduate still working on campus. He came in heralded of course, and we were all curious. One day in mid September, I saw this tall milk white kid outside outside of Alumni Hall. I guessed it might be him, so I went up to him. I introduced myself and welcomed him to St. John's. I'd told him that I was really excited to see him play, and wished him the best. There's something about chatting with Mullin. He never puts himself above you, and is always willing to chat.

After Mullin took the court, he shined like no freshman we'd ever seen at SJU. He was heads and tails the best player on the court, but more importantly, he made everyone else better too. My friends and I sat directly below his mom and dad, and aunts who were nuns. Nice people. I don't remember if it was the end of freshmen or sophomore year when the team was eliminated from the NCAA's. My friends traveled to a ton of away games and we were at the regionals. Milling around in the rotunda after the game, Mullin, who didn't know any of us personally, spotted us and came over. "I just wanted to tell you guys that I've seen you at so many of our away games, and I really appreciate how you supported the team." This was a kid, 19 or 20, with the goodness and kindness to approach fans just to thank them. Big plus.

When he was a junior, I ran into him around Union turnpike in the spring after basketball was over, and stopped him. I asked him if he knew anything he could share about Walter Berry coming here. As always, friendly and candid, he said he hadn't heard anything new, but sure hoped he was coming. No attitude - just two guys talking SJU hoops.

I remember just before the NBA draft, how a good friend of mine who hung around the SJU bars told me that he hoped Mullin would end up somewhere else. I asked him why, and he said he'd see Mullin in the bars all the time, destroying himself. He said he had to get the hell out of New York, or he'd end up dead. To Mullin's credit, he fought demons like a man, attained sobriety, something I believe he maintains today. He whipped himself into the shape of a marine, still looks the part, and his NBA career skyrocketed.

Funny story. My cousin worked in customs at JFK. It's now known that Chris' dad, a great man himself fought alcohol and attained sobriety. Rod was his supervisor. He had the respect of everyone, but my cousin laughed when he said that it was easy to work for him before he got sober but cracked the whip after. I have some friends who have 30, 40 years of sobriety attained one day at a time. To me, anyone who has been sober for so long has become rock solid in ways beyond keeping alcohol at bay. They are better men than had they never touched a drop. Rod is one, and Chris is another.

From the time my son was 8 till he was 17, I wrote to coaches and athletes and asked them to send him a birthday card I enclosed. Mullin was one of the guys who responded, and he sent a warm note in the card.

Now most recently, when he was inducted, there was something I noticed that was different about Mullin. Same old guy for sure. I brought my wife to the induction breakfast. In those days, she came to every single game, and sitting behind the SJU basket at the garden and behind the bench at Alumni Hall, we were often on TV, a testimony more to her looks certainly than mine. So when I asked her if she wanted to go to the breakfast, she didn't hesitate.

At the breakfast,before inductions, Mullin and Coach C. withdrew from their table, and sat together on a window sill with a cup of coffee for 15 minutes or so, undisturbed, just chatting. It was Chris' day, but there was something so comfortable about it, so much of him belonging here and not jsut for a day. After the induction, I asked my wife if she wanted to go up and chat with him, and maybe get a photo with him. She was more than happy to, and grabbed a pen for Chris to autograph her program.

Mullin when we approached him was so gracious and familiar. Before we could really speak he introduced us to an older brother who had played at Siena (I always confuse which borther played at Siena and which at Bridgeport). We told Chris that we sat right beneath his parents, and he joked, "Yup. One loud one, one quiet one." We chatted about his brother Terrence coaching at St. Francis de Sales CYO and that he is often a row behind us at CA. He was really patient as someone struggled with my camera to get a shot. After 4-5 tries it worked, and Chris, patient the whole time, smiled and said "Persistence!"

The whole point is, that if we are to return to prominence, and the kid of prominence that endures, if we are to recapture what was magical about St. John's, not just in 2011, or 2000, but back in the 50s, 60s, 70s, and 80s - the whole era, for my two cents having a guy on the bench who not only was the best who ever played here, but a guy who is from the city and is one of us, and is red and white through and through.

For the doubters about a heralded player becoming a great coach, only one player is inducted into the Hall of Fame as player and coach. He was the best player in college basketball, and then went on to become arguably the greatest coach. His name - John Wooden, and as anyone who knows would tell you, was a far greater man than coach. Not a bad guy for Mullin to emulate, even it it's aiming for the stars. Then again, hasn't Mullin always done that?
Nicely done.
 
Everyone knows everyone about Chris Mullin's basketball experience so I'm not going to convince anyone based on what he's done on the court at SJU, in the NBA, or as an NBA executive. That's in black and white to be decided on its own merits, subjectively for his qualification as coach.

My pitch has to do with Mullin the guy. Not, the player, not the man, and more appropriately da guy.

Mullin came to SJU as I was leaving as a new graduate still working on campus. He came in heralded of course, and we were all curious. One day in mid September, I saw this tall milk white kid outside outside of Alumni Hall. I guessed it might be him, so I went up to him. I introduced myself and welcomed him to St. John's. I'd told him that I was really excited to see him play, and wished him the best. There's something about chatting with Mullin. He never puts himself above you, and is always willing to chat.

After Mullin took the court, he shined like no freshman we'd ever seen at SJU. He was heads and tails the best player on the court, but more importantly, he made everyone else better too. My friends and I sat directly below his mom and dad, and aunts who were nuns. Nice people. I don't remember if it was the end of freshmen or sophomore year when the team was eliminated from the NCAA's. My friends traveled to a ton of away games and we were at the regionals. Milling around in the rotunda after the game, Mullin, who didn't know any of us personally, spotted us and came over. "I just wanted to tell you guys that I've seen you at so many of our away games, and I really appreciate how you supported the team." This was a kid, 19 or 20, with the goodness and kindness to approach fans just to thank them. Big plus.

When he was a junior, I ran into him around Union turnpike in the spring after basketball was over, and stopped him. I asked him if he knew anything he could share about Walter Berry coming here. As always, friendly and candid, he said he hadn't heard anything new, but sure hoped he was coming. No attitude - just two guys talking SJU hoops.

I remember just before the NBA draft, how a good friend of mine who hung around the SJU bars told me that he hoped Mullin would end up somewhere else. I asked him why, and he said he'd see Mullin in the bars all the time, destroying himself. He said he had to get the hell out of New York, or he'd end up dead. To Mullin's credit, he fought demons like a man, attained sobriety, something I believe he maintains today. He whipped himself into the shape of a marine, still looks the part, and his NBA career skyrocketed.

Funny story. My cousin worked in customs at JFK. It's now known that Chris' dad, a great man himself fought alcohol and attained sobriety. Rod was his supervisor. He had the respect of everyone, but my cousin laughed when he said that it was easy to work for him before he got sober but cracked the whip after. I have some friends who have 30, 40 years of sobriety attained one day at a time. To me, anyone who has been sober for so long has become rock solid in ways beyond keeping alcohol at bay. They are better men than had they never touched a drop. Rod is one, and Chris is another.

From the time my son was 8 till he was 17, I wrote to coaches and athletes and asked them to send him a birthday card I enclosed. Mullin was one of the guys who responded, and he sent a warm note in the card.

Now most recently, when he was inducted, there was something I noticed that was different about Mullin. Same old guy for sure. I brought my wife to the induction breakfast. In those days, she came to every single game, and sitting behind the SJU basket at the garden and behind the bench at Alumni Hall, we were often on TV, a testimony more to her looks certainly than mine. So when I asked her if she wanted to go to the breakfast, she didn't hesitate.

At the breakfast,before inductions, Mullin and Coach C. withdrew from their table, and sat together on a window sill with a cup of coffee for 15 minutes or so, undisturbed, just chatting. It was Chris' day, but there was something so comfortable about it, so much of him belonging here and not jsut for a day. After the induction, I asked my wife if she wanted to go up and chat with him, and maybe get a photo with him. She was more than happy to, and grabbed a pen for Chris to autograph her program.

Mullin when we approached him was so gracious and familiar. Before we could really speak he introduced us to an older brother who had played at Siena (I always confuse which borther played at Siena and which at Bridgeport). We told Chris that we sat right beneath his parents, and he joked, "Yup. One loud one, one quiet one." We chatted about his brother Terrence coaching at St. Francis de Sales CYO and that he is often a row behind us at CA. He was really patient as someone struggled with my camera to get a shot. After 4-5 tries it worked, and Chris, patient the whole time, smiled and said "Persistence!"

The whole point is, that if we are to return to prominence, and the kid of prominence that endures, if we are to recapture what was magical about St. John's, not just in 2011, or 2000, but back in the 50s, 60s, 70s, and 80s - the whole era, for my two cents having a guy on the bench who not only was the best who ever played here, but a guy who is from the city and is one of us, and is red and white through and through.

For the doubters about a heralded player becoming a great coach, only one player is inducted into the Hall of Fame as player and coach. He was the best player in college basketball, and then went on to become arguably the greatest coach. His name - John Wooden, and as anyone who knows would tell you, was a far greater man than coach. Not a bad guy for Mullin to emulate, even it it's aiming for the stars. Then again, hasn't Mullin always done that?

I am St. John's fan for over thirty five years mainly due to idolizing Chris. I would welcome him as coach.
 


I came across this a couple years ago.. Always loved watching it for some reason.. I truly believe if he were coach he would push kids beyond what they thought they were capable of.

Thank you for sharing your story Beast
 
Love Mullin. I understand he is a man of great character. I, too, idolized him and would say he essentially IS St. John's. I never met him, but I am reading such nice things about him. However, these personal accounts and memories of his playing days are coming straight from the heart. A basketball coach should not be chosen with one's heart.

We have been waiting over 10 years for a true basketball coach to fill this position. Let's go get Miller or Hurley. They have a proven ability to both recruit and coach. That is exactly what we have been clamoring for! Why role the dice?

Great player, great guy........never coached, never recruited. Rolling the dice.
 
Love Mullin. I understand he is a man of great character. I, too, idolized him and would say he essentially IS St. John's. I never met him, but I am reading such nice things about him. But, these personal accounts and memories of his playing days are coming straight from the heart. A basketball coach should not be chosen with one's heart.

We have been waiting over 10 years for a basketball coach to fill the position of head basketball coach. Let's go get Miller or Hurley. They have a proven ability to both recruit and coach. That is exactly what we have been clamoring for! Why role the dice?

Taking heart out of it, he's a respected basketball mind who has people in nba organizations that like him and want to coach. He is a recognizable face that would have such an easy time recruiting. He has a lot of connections that would help him assemble a killer staff. He is a guy that the whole city will get behind. Hurley is a hot head, wouldn't mind him as coach but give me mullin
 
Everyone knows everyone about Chris Mullin's basketball experience so I'm not going to convince anyone based on what he's done on the court at SJU, in the NBA, or as an NBA executive. That's in black and white to be decided on its own merits, subjectively for his qualification as coach.

My pitch has to do with Mullin the guy. Not, the player, not the man, and more appropriately da guy.

Mullin came to SJU as I was leaving as a new graduate still working on campus. He came in heralded of course, and we were all curious. One day in mid September, I saw this tall milk white kid outside outside of Alumni Hall. I guessed it might be him, so I went up to him. I introduced myself and welcomed him to St. John's. I'd told him that I was really excited to see him play, and wished him the best. There's something about chatting with Mullin. He never puts himself above you, and is always willing to chat.

After Mullin took the court, he shined like no freshman we'd ever seen at SJU. He was heads and tails the best player on the court, but more importantly, he made everyone else better too. My friends and I sat directly below his mom and dad, and aunts who were nuns. Nice people. I don't remember if it was the end of freshmen or sophomore year when the team was eliminated from the NCAA's. My friends traveled to a ton of away games and we were at the regionals. Milling around in the rotunda after the game, Mullin, who didn't know any of us personally, spotted us and came over. "I just wanted to tell you guys that I've seen you at so many of our away games, and I really appreciate how you supported the team." This was a kid, 19 or 20, with the goodness and kindness to approach fans just to thank them. Big plus.

When he was a junior, I ran into him around Union turnpike in the spring after basketball was over, and stopped him. I asked him if he knew anything he could share about Walter Berry coming here. As always, friendly and candid, he said he hadn't heard anything new, but sure hoped he was coming. No attitude - just two guys talking SJU hoops.

I remember just before the NBA draft, how a good friend of mine who hung around the SJU bars told me that he hoped Mullin would end up somewhere else. I asked him why, and he said he'd see Mullin in the bars all the time, destroying himself. He said he had to get the hell out of New York, or he'd end up dead. To Mullin's credit, he fought demons like a man, attained sobriety, something I believe he maintains today. He whipped himself into the shape of a marine, still looks the part, and his NBA career skyrocketed.

Funny story. My cousin worked in customs at JFK. It's now known that Chris' dad, a great man himself fought alcohol and attained sobriety. Rod was his supervisor. He had the respect of everyone, but my cousin laughed when he said that it was easy to work for him before he got sober but cracked the whip after. I have some friends who have 30, 40 years of sobriety attained one day at a time. To me, anyone who has been sober for so long has become rock solid in ways beyond keeping alcohol at bay. They are better men than had they never touched a drop. Rod is one, and Chris is another.

From the time my son was 8 till he was 17, I wrote to coaches and athletes and asked them to send him a birthday card I enclosed. Mullin was one of the guys who responded, and he sent a warm note in the card.

Now most recently, when he was inducted, there was something I noticed that was different about Mullin. Same old guy for sure. I brought my wife to the induction breakfast. In those days, she came to every single game, and sitting behind the SJU basket at the garden and behind the bench at Alumni Hall, we were often on TV, a testimony more to her looks certainly than mine. So when I asked her if she wanted to go to the breakfast, she didn't hesitate.

At the breakfast,before inductions, Mullin and Coach C. withdrew from their table, and sat together on a window sill with a cup of coffee for 15 minutes or so, undisturbed, just chatting. It was Chris' day, but there was something so comfortable about it, so much of him belonging here and not jsut for a day. After the induction, I asked my wife if she wanted to go up and chat with him, and maybe get a photo with him. She was more than happy to, and grabbed a pen for Chris to autograph her program.

Mullin when we approached him was so gracious and familiar. Before we could really speak he introduced us to an older brother who had played at Siena (I always confuse which borther played at Siena and which at Bridgeport). We told Chris that we sat right beneath his parents, and he joked, "Yup. One loud one, one quiet one." We chatted about his brother Terrence coaching at St. Francis de Sales CYO and that he is often a row behind us at CA. He was really patient as someone struggled with my camera to get a shot. After 4-5 tries it worked, and Chris, patient the whole time, smiled and said "Persistence!"

The whole point is, that if we are to return to prominence, and the kid of prominence that endures, if we are to recapture what was magical about St. John's, not just in 2011, or 2000, but back in the 50s, 60s, 70s, and 80s - the whole era, for my two cents having a guy on the bench who not only was the best who ever played here, but a guy who is from the city and is one of us, and is red and white through and through.

For the doubters about a heralded player becoming a great coach, only one player is inducted into the Hall of Fame as player and coach. He was the best player in college basketball, and then went on to become arguably the greatest coach. His name - John Wooden, and as anyone who knows would tell you, was a far greater man than coach. Not a bad guy for Mullin to emulate, even it it's aiming for the stars. Then again, hasn't Mullin always done that?
I think you could give Boras some tips on how to sell someone :)
 
Everyone knows everyone about Chris Mullin's basketball experience so I'm not going to convince anyone based on what he's done on the court at SJU, in the NBA, or as an NBA executive. That's in black and white to be decided on its own merits, subjectively for his qualification as coach.

My pitch has to do with Mullin the guy. Not, the player, not the man, and more appropriately da guy.

Mullin came to SJU as I was leaving as a new graduate still working on campus. He came in heralded of course, and we were all curious. One day in mid September, I saw this tall milk white kid outside outside of Alumni Hall. I guessed it might be him, so I went up to him. I introduced myself and welcomed him to St. John's. I'd told him that I was really excited to see him play, and wished him the best. There's something about chatting with Mullin. He never puts himself above you, and is always willing to chat.

After Mullin took the court, he shined like no freshman we'd ever seen at SJU. He was heads and tails the best player on the court, but more importantly, he made everyone else better too. My friends and I sat directly below his mom and dad, and aunts who were nuns. Nice people. I don't remember if it was the end of freshmen or sophomore year when the team was eliminated from the NCAA's. My friends traveled to a ton of away games and we were at the regionals. Milling around in the rotunda after the game, Mullin, who didn't know any of us personally, spotted us and came over. "I just wanted to tell you guys that I've seen you at so many of our away games, and I really appreciate how you supported the team." This was a kid, 19 or 20, with the goodness and kindness to approach fans just to thank them. Big plus.

When he was a junior, I ran into him around Union turnpike in the spring after basketball was over, and stopped him. I asked him if he knew anything he could share about Walter Berry coming here. As always, friendly and candid, he said he hadn't heard anything new, but sure hoped he was coming. No attitude - just two guys talking SJU hoops.

I remember just before the NBA draft, how a good friend of mine who hung around the SJU bars told me that he hoped Mullin would end up somewhere else. I asked him why, and he said he'd see Mullin in the bars all the time, destroying himself. He said he had to get the hell out of New York, or he'd end up dead. To Mullin's credit, he fought demons like a man, attained sobriety, something I believe he maintains today. He whipped himself into the shape of a marine, still looks the part, and his NBA career skyrocketed.

Funny story. My cousin worked in customs at JFK. It's now known that Chris' dad, a great man himself fought alcohol and attained sobriety. Rod was his supervisor. He had the respect of everyone, but my cousin laughed when he said that it was easy to work for him before he got sober but cracked the whip after. I have some friends who have 30, 40 years of sobriety attained one day at a time. To me, anyone who has been sober for so long has become rock solid in ways beyond keeping alcohol at bay. They are better men than had they never touched a drop. Rod is one, and Chris is another.

From the time my son was 8 till he was 17, I wrote to coaches and athletes and asked them to send him a birthday card I enclosed. Mullin was one of the guys who responded, and he sent a warm note in the card.

Now most recently, when he was inducted, there was something I noticed that was different about Mullin. Same old guy for sure. I brought my wife to the induction breakfast. In those days, she came to every single game, and sitting behind the SJU basket at the garden and behind the bench at Alumni Hall, we were often on TV, a testimony more to her looks certainly than mine. So when I asked her if she wanted to go to the breakfast, she didn't hesitate.

At the breakfast,before inductions, Mullin and Coach C. withdrew from their table, and sat together on a window sill with a cup of coffee for 15 minutes or so, undisturbed, just chatting. It was Chris' day, but there was something so comfortable about it, so much of him belonging here and not jsut for a day. After the induction, I asked my wife if she wanted to go up and chat with him, and maybe get a photo with him. She was more than happy to, and grabbed a pen for Chris to autograph her program.

Mullin when we approached him was so gracious and familiar. Before we could really speak he introduced us to an older brother who had played at Siena (I always confuse which borther played at Siena and which at Bridgeport). We told Chris that we sat right beneath his parents, and he joked, "Yup. One loud one, one quiet one." We chatted about his brother Terrence coaching at St. Francis de Sales CYO and that he is often a row behind us at CA. He was really patient as someone struggled with my camera to get a shot. After 4-5 tries it worked, and Chris, patient the whole time, smiled and said "Persistence!"

The whole point is, that if we are to return to prominence, and the kid of prominence that endures, if we are to recapture what was magical about St. John's, not just in 2011, or 2000, but back in the 50s, 60s, 70s, and 80s - the whole era, for my two cents having a guy on the bench who not only was the best who ever played here, but a guy who is from the city and is one of us, and is red and white through and through.

For the doubters about a heralded player becoming a great coach, only one player is inducted into the Hall of Fame as player and coach. He was the best player in college basketball, and then went on to become arguably the greatest coach. His name - John Wooden, and as anyone who knows would tell you, was a far greater man than coach. Not a bad guy for Mullin to emulate, even it it's aiming for the stars. Then again, hasn't Mullin always done that?

I am St. John's fan for over thirty five years mainly due to idolizing Chris. I would welcome him as coach.

Living in the past will not do the basketball program any good. Mullin has never coached, he wont be shooting any basketballs, and he wont be passing to the open man. He will be on the bench and will have to outsmart very experienced coaches. For the St Johns program to pick him leads me to believe they are only interested in plugging the dam with their finger as they hope the Mullin name will put people in the seats and will draw our attention away from the state of the program. The program is falling apart as the school plays musical chairs with coaching changes
 
I went to SJU during that teams run, and I remember just the passion he played the game with and the smarts. Does he have past experience, no. But id take my chances and like my odds with mullin anyday. Nice thoughtful post also.
 
Love Mullin. I understand he is a man of great character. I, too, idolized him and would say he essentially IS St. John's. I never met him, but I am reading such nice things about him. But, these personal accounts and memories of his playing days are coming straight from the heart. A basketball coach should not be chosen with one's heart.

We have been waiting over 10 years for a basketball coach to fill the position of head basketball coach. Let's go get Miller or Hurley. They have a proven ability to both recruit and coach. That is exactly what we have been clamoring for! Why role the dice?

Taking heart out of it, he's a respected basketball mind who has people in nba organizations that like him and want to coach. He is a recognizable face that would have such an easy time recruiting. He has a lot of connections that would help him assemble a killer staff. He is a guy that the whole city will get behind. Hurley is a hot head, wouldn't mind him as coach but give me mullin

With the exception of Cal, I don't think anyone has an easy time recruiting.
 
I would like to see threads from a cyclone board before they hired hoiberg. Think they had the same complaints? Think they still have those complaints?
 
Everyone knows everyone about Chris Mullin's basketball experience so I'm not going to convince anyone based on what he's done on the court at SJU, in the NBA, or as an NBA executive. That's in black and white to be decided on its own merits, subjectively for his qualification as coach.

My pitch has to do with Mullin the guy. Not, the player, not the man, and more appropriately da guy.

Mullin came to SJU as I was leaving as a new graduate still working on campus. He came in heralded of course, and we were all curious. One day in mid September, I saw this tall milk white kid outside outside of Alumni Hall. I guessed it might be him, so I went up to him. I introduced myself and welcomed him to St. John's. I'd told him that I was really excited to see him play, and wished him the best. There's something about chatting with Mullin. He never puts himself above you, and is always willing to chat.

After Mullin took the court, he shined like no freshman we'd ever seen at SJU. He was heads and tails the best player on the court, but more importantly, he made everyone else better too. My friends and I sat directly below his mom and dad, and aunts who were nuns. Nice people. I don't remember if it was the end of freshmen or sophomore year when the team was eliminated from the NCAA's. My friends traveled to a ton of away games and we were at the regionals. Milling around in the rotunda after the game, Mullin, who didn't know any of us personally, spotted us and came over. "I just wanted to tell you guys that I've seen you at so many of our away games, and I really appreciate how you supported the team." This was a kid, 19 or 20, with the goodness and kindness to approach fans just to thank them. Big plus.

When he was a junior, I ran into him around Union turnpike in the spring after basketball was over, and stopped him. I asked him if he knew anything he could share about Walter Berry coming here. As always, friendly and candid, he said he hadn't heard anything new, but sure hoped he was coming. No attitude - just two guys talking SJU hoops.

I remember just before the NBA draft, how a good friend of mine who hung around the SJU bars told me that he hoped Mullin would end up somewhere else. I asked him why, and he said he'd see Mullin in the bars all the time, destroying himself. He said he had to get the hell out of New York, or he'd end up dead. To Mullin's credit, he fought demons like a man, attained sobriety, something I believe he maintains today. He whipped himself into the shape of a marine, still looks the part, and his NBA career skyrocketed.

Funny story. My cousin worked in customs at JFK. It's now known that Chris' dad, a great man himself fought alcohol and attained sobriety. Rod was his supervisor. He had the respect of everyone, but my cousin laughed when he said that it was easy to work for him before he got sober but cracked the whip after. I have some friends who have 30, 40 years of sobriety attained one day at a time. To me, anyone who has been sober for so long has become rock solid in ways beyond keeping alcohol at bay. They are better men than had they never touched a drop. Rod is one, and Chris is another.

From the time my son was 8 till he was 17, I wrote to coaches and athletes and asked them to send him a birthday card I enclosed. Mullin was one of the guys who responded, and he sent a warm note in the card.

Now most recently, when he was inducted, there was something I noticed that was different about Mullin. Same old guy for sure. I brought my wife to the induction breakfast. In those days, she came to every single game, and sitting behind the SJU basket at the garden and behind the bench at Alumni Hall, we were often on TV, a testimony more to her looks certainly than mine. So when I asked her if she wanted to go to the breakfast, she didn't hesitate.

At the breakfast,before inductions, Mullin and Coach C. withdrew from their table, and sat together on a window sill with a cup of coffee for 15 minutes or so, undisturbed, just chatting. It was Chris' day, but there was something so comfortable about it, so much of him belonging here and not jsut for a day. After the induction, I asked my wife if she wanted to go up and chat with him, and maybe get a photo with him. She was more than happy to, and grabbed a pen for Chris to autograph her program.

Mullin when we approached him was so gracious and familiar. Before we could really speak he introduced us to an older brother who had played at Siena (I always confuse which borther played at Siena and which at Bridgeport). We told Chris that we sat right beneath his parents, and he joked, "Yup. One loud one, one quiet one." We chatted about his brother Terrence coaching at St. Francis de Sales CYO and that he is often a row behind us at CA. He was really patient as someone struggled with my camera to get a shot. After 4-5 tries it worked, and Chris, patient the whole time, smiled and said "Persistence!"

The whole point is, that if we are to return to prominence, and the kid of prominence that endures, if we are to recapture what was magical about St. John's, not just in 2011, or 2000, but back in the 50s, 60s, 70s, and 80s - the whole era, for my two cents having a guy on the bench who not only was the best who ever played here, but a guy who is from the city and is one of us, and is red and white through and through.

For the doubters about a heralded player becoming a great coach, only one player is inducted into the Hall of Fame as player and coach. He was the best player in college basketball, and then went on to become arguably the greatest coach. His name - John Wooden, and as anyone who knows would tell you, was a far greater man than coach. Not a bad guy for Mullin to emulate, even it it's aiming for the stars. Then again, hasn't Mullin always done that?

Where do I sign?
 
Love Mullin. I understand he is a man of great character. I, too, idolized him and would say he essentially IS St. John's. I never met him, but I am reading such nice things about him. But, these personal accounts and memories of his playing days are coming straight from the heart. A basketball coach should not be chosen with one's heart.

We have been waiting over 10 years for a basketball coach to fill the position of head basketball coach. Let's go get Miller or Hurley. They have a proven ability to both recruit and coach. That is exactly what we have been clamoring for! Why role the dice?

Taking heart out of it, he's a respected basketball mind who has people in nba organizations that like him and want to coach. He is a recognizable face that would have such an easy time recruiting. He has a lot of connections that would help him assemble a killer staff. He is a guy that the whole city will get behind. Hurley is a hot head, wouldn't mind him as coach but give me mullin

With the exception of Cal, I don't think anyone has an easy time recruiting.

Obviously he would have to work hard and it's not easy but you know what I mean. He's so recognizable I feel like with hard work he'd get so many kids. As beast noted, so easy to talk to as well.
 
Love Mullin. I understand he is a man of great character. I, too, idolized him and would say he essentially IS St. John's. I never met him, but I am reading such nice things about him. But, these personal accounts and memories of his playing days are coming straight from the heart. A basketball coach should not be chosen with one's heart.

We have been waiting over 10 years for a basketball coach to fill the position of head basketball coach. Let's go get Miller or Hurley. They have a proven ability to both recruit and coach. That is exactly what we have been clamoring for! Why role the dice?

Taking heart out of it, he's a respected basketball mind who has people in nba organizations that like him and want to coach. He is a recognizable face that would have such an easy time recruiting. He has a lot of connections that would help him assemble a killer staff. He is a guy that the whole city will get behind. Hurley is a hot head, wouldn't mind him as coach but give me mullin

With the exception of Cal, I don't think anyone has an easy time recruiting.

Obviously he would have to work hard and it's not easy but you know what I mean. He's so recognizable I feel like with hard work he'd get so many kids. As beast noted, so easy to talk to as well.

Fair enough.
 
I would like to see threads from a cyclone board before they hired hoiberg. Think they had the same complaints? Think they still have those complaints?

Hoiberg is a gem. But there are more examples like Clyde Drexler (Houston).
 
Great read Beast! I feel the same way! This guy has excelled at everything he has attempted. I get the feeling that he may be interested. Let's keep our fingers crossed!
 
Everyone knows everyone about Chris Mullin's basketball experience so I'm not going to convince anyone based on what he's done on the court at SJU, in the NBA, or as an NBA executive. That's in black and white to be decided on its own merits, subjectively for his qualification as coach.

My pitch has to do with Mullin the guy. Not, the player, not the man, and more appropriately da guy.

Mullin came to SJU as I was leaving as a new graduate still working on campus. He came in heralded of course, and we were all curious. One day in mid September, I saw this tall milk white kid outside outside of Alumni Hall. I guessed it might be him, so I went up to him. I introduced myself and welcomed him to St. John's. I'd told him that I was really excited to see him play, and wished him the best. There's something about chatting with Mullin. He never puts himself above you, and is always willing to chat.

After Mullin took the court, he shined like no freshman we'd ever seen at SJU. He was heads and tails the best player on the court, but more importantly, he made everyone else better too. My friends and I sat directly below his mom and dad, and aunts who were nuns. Nice people. I don't remember if it was the end of freshmen or sophomore year when the team was eliminated from the NCAA's. My friends traveled to a ton of away games and we were at the regionals. Milling around in the rotunda after the game, Mullin, who didn't know any of us personally, spotted us and came over. "I just wanted to tell you guys that I've seen you at so many of our away games, and I really appreciate how you supported the team." This was a kid, 19 or 20, with the goodness and kindness to approach fans just to thank them. Big plus.

When he was a junior, I ran into him around Union turnpike in the spring after basketball was over, and stopped him. I asked him if he knew anything he could share about Walter Berry coming here. As always, friendly and candid, he said he hadn't heard anything new, but sure hoped he was coming. No attitude - just two guys talking SJU hoops.

I remember just before the NBA draft, how a good friend of mine who hung around the SJU bars told me that he hoped Mullin would end up somewhere else. I asked him why, and he said he'd see Mullin in the bars all the time, destroying himself. He said he had to get the hell out of New York, or he'd end up dead. To Mullin's credit, he fought demons like a man, attained sobriety, something I believe he maintains today. He whipped himself into the shape of a marine, still looks the part, and his NBA career skyrocketed.

Funny story. My cousin worked in customs at JFK. It's now known that Chris' dad, a great man himself fought alcohol and attained sobriety. Rod was his supervisor. He had the respect of everyone, but my cousin laughed when he said that it was easy to work for him before he got sober but cracked the whip after. I have some friends who have 30, 40 years of sobriety attained one day at a time. To me, anyone who has been sober for so long has become rock solid in ways beyond keeping alcohol at bay. They are better men than had they never touched a drop. Rod is one, and Chris is another.

From the time my son was 8 till he was 17, I wrote to coaches and athletes and asked them to send him a birthday card I enclosed. Mullin was one of the guys who responded, and he sent a warm note in the card.

Now most recently, when he was inducted, there was something I noticed that was different about Mullin. Same old guy for sure. I brought my wife to the induction breakfast. In those days, she came to every single game, and sitting behind the SJU basket at the garden and behind the bench at Alumni Hall, we were often on TV, a testimony more to her looks certainly than mine. So when I asked her if she wanted to go to the breakfast, she didn't hesitate.

At the breakfast,before inductions, Mullin and Coach C. withdrew from their table, and sat together on a window sill with a cup of coffee for 15 minutes or so, undisturbed, just chatting. It was Chris' day, but there was something so comfortable about it, so much of him belonging here and not jsut for a day. After the induction, I asked my wife if she wanted to go up and chat with him, and maybe get a photo with him. She was more than happy to, and grabbed a pen for Chris to autograph her program.

Mullin when we approached him was so gracious and familiar. Before we could really speak he introduced us to an older brother who had played at Siena (I always confuse which borther played at Siena and which at Bridgeport). We told Chris that we sat right beneath his parents, and he joked, "Yup. One loud one, one quiet one." We chatted about his brother Terrence coaching at St. Francis de Sales CYO and that he is often a row behind us at CA. He was really patient as someone struggled with my camera to get a shot. After 4-5 tries it worked, and Chris, patient the whole time, smiled and said "Persistence!"

The whole point is, that if we are to return to prominence, and the kid of prominence that endures, if we are to recapture what was magical about St. John's, not just in 2011, or 2000, but back in the 50s, 60s, 70s, and 80s - the whole era, for my two cents having a guy on the bench who not only was the best who ever played here, but a guy who is from the city and is one of us, and is red and white through and through.

For the doubters about a heralded player becoming a great coach, only one player is inducted into the Hall of Fame as player and coach. He was the best player in college basketball, and then went on to become arguably the greatest coach. His name - John Wooden, and as anyone who knows would tell you, was a far greater man than coach. Not a bad guy for Mullin to emulate, even it it's aiming for the stars. Then again, hasn't Mullin always done that?

Great read beast, thanks for sharing. Clearly Chris is a class act who would be a great front man for the program, and mentor to the players. As much as I love Chris, I'm still concerned about his lack of head coaching experience, his willingness to deal with all the recruiting crap and characters, his patience with today's kids, the long hours, etc. I would not be unhappy if he was hired, but I'd still prefer someone with head coaching experience.
 
Mullin was gone from SJU before my parents even met and he retired from the NBA when I was in 5th grade so I really don't have much to go on as far aside from stories and film. Really appreciate the insight Beast. I just hope he can maintain a desire to recruit but the guy has been proving doubters wrong his whole life it seems, so who knows. I just want to win, but it would be pretty special to win with our own at the helm.
 
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