Public vs. Catholic Roundball Catholic

Skill Building Program

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We customize instruction for your individual needs. Improve your speed, agility, explosiveness, core strength. We create sport specific programs that will increase your play on the basketball court while building team camaraderie. Basketball X-Perts believe that hard work pays off. Basketball X-Pert instructors focus on teaching skill specific aspects of the game to improve players overall basketball efficiency. Our basketball training will improve player basketball skills, athleticism, and attitude. The Elite Package, Next Level Package and Future Stars Package offerings will include a personalized work-out evaluation.

Elite Package: The Elite Package is for the elite athlete. We will work hard on speed, agility, weights and conditioning. This is the ultimate package for someone that wants to get ready for a training camp or to step up their game for the next season. The Elite Package is a week to week program. What the athlete is training for will determine the time period of the program. The payments for this package are due at the beginning of each week of the session. The Elite Package meets 3 times per week. The cost of this package is $250.00 the first week and $150.00 each additional week.

Next Level Package: The Next Level Package is for the athlete that is trying to get to the next level. This package is designed for the high school athlete that wants to impress their high school varsity coach or the college scouts with their new found speed, strength, quickness, conditioning, athleticism, mental toughness and decision making. The Next Level Package meets 2 times per week. The cost of this package is $175.00 the first week and $125.00 each additional week.

Future Stars Package: The Future Stars Package is specially designed for our future stars. This package is for the 13 and under athlete. This package is made for the proper development of our young athletes. In the Future Stars Package we focus on conditioning, speed, agility and coordination. The cost of the Future Stars Package is $100.00 the first week and $85.00 each additional week, that includes training once per week.

Team Package: The Team Package will be determined by the size of the athletic team.

Skill Building Work-Out: This is and hourly work-out to build skill specific aspects of your game.

Middle School athlete work-out - $60.00 per hour
High School athlete work-out - $85.00 per hour
College/Pro athlete work-out - $175.00 per hour

ALL PAYMENTS ARE DUE AT THE BEGINNING OF THE SESSION!!! THERE ARE NO MAKE UP SESSIONS, UNLESS THE MISSED SESSION IS THE FAULT OF BASKETBALL XPERTS!!!

Thursday, May 5, 2011

Catching Up With Will Blalock

by. Ryan Kilian
newenglandprepstars.com

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Photo credit: Darrell Walker/ Icon SMI

Will Blalock is one of the most talented and exciting point guards ever to come out of Boston. Blalock, starred for East Boston High School, graduated from Notre Dame Prep in Fitchburg and honed his game on the summer circuit with BABC. After high school Blalock attended Iowa State University. He played for the Cyclones in the Big 12 from 2003 to 2006 before declaring for the NBA Draft after his junior year.

Blalock was selected by the Detroit Pistons in the second round of the 2006 NBA Draft. Blalock played the entire 2006-2007 season before beginning his recent basketball journey that has taken him all over Europe, the NBDL and most recently to Australia.

We caught up with Blalock this week as the former New England Prep Star discussed high school hoops and his current journey.

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Q: How is everything going for you both personally and professionally?

WB: Things are going pretty well for me both on and off the court. I have been to different countries over the last four years and seen how the great game of basketball is much different in many parts of the world.

For example, you are honored in the NBA for being the guy who can score 30 points and in Europe if you score 10 points and your team still wins you are put on the same platform because it is very team oriented in Europe.

Personally, after going through a stroke in 2008 that had me really not knowing where my career was going next or if I would even have a career again, I was a bit disjointed. After being healthy and fully recovered now and doing the things that got me drafted in 2006 again, I feel like the sky is the limit if I get the right opportunity to showcase my abilities.

Q: How has your season gone in Australia? How is the competition and what are the differences between the states and “Down Under”?

WB: My Season in Australia was very solid. My team finished in second place during the regular season but unfortunately we lost in the final 4 in the playoffs. The league as a whole is very balanced. Each team has one or more Australian National team players on it as well as two American Imports.

Q: What were your fondest memories of playing high school, summer and prep school basketball?

WB: My most memorable image that still sticks with me from high school and AAU is when I played with BABC and we won the AAU nationals in Detroit MI. We pretty much beat everyone by 20 points or more all the way through the final four.

Q: Looking back at your high school experience can you talk about your recruiting process? How did you decide on Iowa State and who were your finalists?

WB: I attended Notre Dame Prep in Fitchburg my senior year and that experience was a lot different. Being away from home was the best decision for me to get mentally prepared for college life especially if I wanted to go somewhere far away. This was the main reason I wanted to attend Iowa State University. Also, Wayne Morgan was the assistant coach at the time and once he was selected as the head coach it was a done deal because of the relationship we built throughout the recruiting process. I also had offers from UConn, Pittsburgh, East Carolina and Memphis among others.

Q: What piece of advice could you give a high school player going through the recruiting process and deciding to choose a school?

WB: My advice for student athletes going through the process is to simply find a school you like basketball and education wise and figure out what school fits your abilities. If you are an athlete who likes to play up tempo you might not want to go to a school where the coach wants to use up the whole 35 second shot clock.

Q: What other advice could you lend a high school student in terms of schooling? School choices? Academics etc?

Once you are on campus you have to really be head strong on and off the court. You will be around thousands of students but not all of them are easily recognizable like ball players. You will always have eyes on you so it is very important to act accordingly when you are around campus because not only do you represent your family and yourself but you represent that particular university that pays for your education.

Being a student athlete is like having a tough full time job. At times it can be very stressful but keep in mind that the main goal is education first then Basketball because if you cannot compete in the class room it does not matter if you are the next LeBron James you CAN'T PLAY!!

Q: What are your plans for the summer and for the upcoming future.

WB: I come home on Friday (May 6th). I will be home enjoying family and preparing myself for the next step in my journey. I am never too sure on where I will end up next until I get a call from my agent and then I usually have options. I will sit down with my family and choose the next opportunity accordingly. It does not come without me preparing so I will be home all summer getting ready and working out my little brother, Shabazz Napier, who just won a National Championship with UConn.

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photo credit: Scott Mussell - Icon SMI

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

New Mission rallies to catch East Boston By: Danny Ventura (Boston Herald)

New Mission coach Cory McCarthy admittedly prefers to let his team work through tough stretches on the floor.

But when East Boston bumped the lead to 44-30 midway through the third quarter in yesterday’s Black History Month Classic, McCarthy knew it was time to regroup.

The fifth-ranked Titans (16-3) responded after the timeout, going on a 10-0 run to get back into the game. From there, it was Darius Davis and Samir McDaniels who took over in the fourth quarter, combining for 18 points as New Mission prevailed, 65-58, at Emmanuel College.

“I usually don’t call timeouts when the other team is on a run, but I think that timeout was critical,” McCarthy said. “I told the guys they had nothing but heart left, no excuses. I expected us to make a run, we knew it was going to be a close game - it’s New Mission and East Boston.”

These same two teams will meet again on Thursday in the semifinals of the Boston City League championship at Madison Park. McCarthy decided to have a little fun at East Boston’s expense, throwing a few wrinkles out there.

“I mean we played zone, when have we ever played zone?” McCarthy said with a laugh. “Let’s give them something else to worry about.”

East Boston (14-4) led throughout most of the first three quarters, getting quality play from point guard Walter Lewis (18 points), Kenny Ramos (10 points, six rebounds) and Jeff Amazan (13 points). Lewis’ layup keyed a 15-2 run to give the Jets their biggest lead at 44-30 with 3:44 remaining in the third quarter.

New Mission chipped away at the lead and took the lead at 53-52 with 2:44 left on a floater by Darius (13 points, all coming in the second half). Davis then added a pair of short jumpers in the lane to help open up some daylight in the final two minutes.

“I don’t care about the McDonald’s All-American nominees and all the stuff like that. I love the other two guys (McDaniels and Kachi Nzerem), but Darius has been our steadiest basketball player all year,” said McCarthy. “When Darius is on, we execute so well.”

Mission rallies past Eastie, ready for...Eastie By Brendan Hall (ESPN Boston)





BOSTON -- With the Boston City League semifinals three days away, and his New Mission Titans set to face East Boston yet again in the nightcap at Madison Park High School, head coach Cory McCarthy played today's matchup with the Jets close to the vest -- not unlike the way, say, a professional sports team would handle an exhibition game against a divisional opponent.

Why else would the Titans, revered so much for their aggressive man-to-man defense, go to a zone?

"Do you ever see us play zone?" McCarthy asked reporters rhetorically, with a stern pause and a chuckle, following the Titans' 65-58 win over Eastie in the Black History Month Classic at Emmanuel College's Yawkey Center. "Why not? Can't show all your cards, you know? [Eastie head coach] Malcolm [Smith] is a smart guy. I have all the respect in the world for that guy, he's the best coach in the city of Boston.

"So I've got to beat that guy, you know? So I've got to throw a wrinkle, because I want to win City's."

Perhaps, then, that can be partially to blame for the Titans' lethargy through the first 20 minutes of action in this one. Sitting back in a 2-3 zone, it took the Titans (15-3) some getting used to the different ball instincts such a look requires. McCarthy and his assistants found themselves constantly yelling at their players to collapse to the middle, and force the Jets shooters to knock down outside shots.

Ahead 27-25 at the half, Eastie (16-4) opened up the third quarter on a 17-5 run, with a handful of points in transition from Walter Lewis (18 points) and Kenny Ramos (10). The Jets were not only outmuscling their way to rebounds, but getting up and down the court at will. They took their largest lead, 44-30, on a layup with 3:44 to go, and that prompted McCarthy to immediately call a timeout, stressing a need to get back to the basics.

"I usually don't call timeouts when teams go on runs on us," McCarthy said. "But that timeout was critical, where we decided that, you know, we've got nothing but heart left. Sometimes when you don't have anything, you've got to show resolve. We've been doing that all year. There's no excuse. We battle adversity all the time, so I expected us to make a run."

Mission outscored Eastie 35-18 over the final 11 minutes, taking the lead for good with four baskets from senior guard Darius Davis (13 points) in the final three minutes. First, the 6-foot-3 Davis came up with a steal on the perimeter, and pulled up for a 15-footer to cut Eastie's lead to 52-51.

The next trip down, Davis' runner in the lane put the Titans ahead 53-52; he then pulled the same move a minute later for a 55-55 score, before finishing it off with a jumper to make it 59-55 with 1:20 to go.

"We knew with our history, we could make a run," Davis said. "We knew we had to stay calm, Cory told us 'Don't panic, stay with the team, concentrate and don't try to do too much'."

On the ensuing possession, Eastie's Jeff Amazon (13 points) charged through the lane, but senior Samir McDaniels (19 points, eight rebounds) met him right in front of the basket, getting a no-call but getting sent to the line at the other end. He made both free throws, to make it 61-55 with 58.8 seconds left. McDaniels finished the afternoon nearly perfect from the charity stripe, going 11 for 12.

Thursday, February 17, 2011

BLACK HISTORY MONTH CLASSIC 2/21 @ EMMANUEL COLLEGE

Public School Event I (Emmanuel College)

12:30pm - New Mission HS vs. East Boston HS
2:00pm - Everett HS vs. Lowell HS

Independant School Event II (Emmanuel College)

3:30pm - Lee Academy (ME) vs. NIA Prep National Team (NJ)

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Wednesday, January 26, 2011