
Berkeley Independent
First, there’s the whole summer workout thing, and don’t forget a dozen or so football games yet to be played in the fall before coach Charlie Harrison can assemble his basketball team and see how Fate will play all this out.
The Stags have played well at camps so far this summer, beating some big name opponents in the state, posting a 7-1 record against teams like Northwestern, who played in the Christmas in the Corner tournament.
“We’re playing well,” Harrison said. “We hope to carry the momentum over into the fall. If we can stay healthy, we have a chance to be pretty good.”
Harrison’s primary job will be to keep his team grounded amidst the potential recruiting frenzy that stands poised to descend on this remote corner of Berkeley County. Moncks Corner has suddenly become a well-known spot on the college basketball map as college coaches flock here by the dozen.
They all want to see Stags point guard Bruce Ellington.
“I’ve been on the phone for five hours yesterday,” Harrison said. “I had Darrin Horn sitting in my living room last night.
“Horn, South Carolina’s basketball coach, was in my living room last night and he’ll be back again before this is all over.”
Ellington exploded on the national basketball scene this spring after playing in AAU tournaments across the country after having missed most of the 2008-2009 season with a hand injury. He is ranked as one of the top college prospects in the state and one of the top point guards in the country.
“Bruce has two decisions on his hands, who to play for and what sport will he play, football or basketball,” Harrison said. “While there is significant interest in Bruce as a football player, it seems every major college basketball program in the country wants a shot at him.”
It’s not just the media circus that has Harrison shaking his head these days, there is also the cautious revelation slowly dawning on his Stags basketball program that as bad as things were last year, they could be good this year.
Very good.
While all the attention has been focused on the Stags’ three-sport star, this Berkeley basketball team is quickly rattling off some wins in summer league play.
“We’re not just Bruce,” he said. “We have everybody back and they all have a year of experience under their belts.”
Calling the 2008-2009 basketball season an experience is like saying a Mustang is just another Ford.
The Stags suffered through an excruciating 17-game losing streak that began in December when Ellington went down with the hand injury and spanned all of January into February. Upon Ellington’s return late in the season, Berkeley closed out the season with four straight wins.
“The really tough part about last season is that we never really played terrible basketball,” Harrison said. “We were in every ball game.”
Harrison added that a bad two or three minute span, or a crucial turnover, missed bucket or bad call is what cost his Stags a win: “We came very close several times during that streak and that made it even more frustrating.”
The 17-game losing streak is a distant memory and a reminder to this year’s club which returns five seniors from last year’s team, all of whom started at some point in the 2008-2009 season.
Along with Ellington, seniors D.J. Harrison, Marcus Wiggs, R.J. Robinson and Victor Williams return to give Berkeley a solid front five with strengths both inside the paint and beyond the arc.
“Bruce is a dynamic player no doubt,” Harrison said. “With him at point guard it takes the pressure of handling the ball off the other guys. Now they can assume their roles either playing the inside game or the perimeter.”
Harrison cites a monster dunk by Marcus Wiggs off a driving feed from Ellington as one of the big differences between this year and last.
“Bruce drives the lane and everybody collapses on Bruce, and then he feeds a nice pass to Marcus on the baseline and he slammed home this monster dunk,” he said. “We couldn’t do that last year.”
Berkeleyind.com is pleased to offer readers the enhanced ability to comment on stories. We expect our readers to engage in lively, yet civil discourse. Berkeleyind.com does not edit user submitted statements and we cannot promise that readers will not occasionally find offensive or inaccurate comments posted in the comments area. Responsibility for the statements posted lies with the person submitting the comment, not Berkeleyind.com. If you find a comment that is objectionable, please click "report abuse" and we will review it for possible removal. Please be reminded, however, that in accordance with our Terms of Use and federal law, we are under no obligation to remove any third party comments posted on our website.
Users can now build user-to-user connections, follow friends' recent posts, add an avatar that fits their personality, and more. If you have posted here before you'll need to sign up again, or if you've never posted before, start now by reading our terms and conditions, and then signing up below!
that's a lie bruce make berkeley basketball what they is
Posted by:
- Most Viewed
- Most Commented
- 2-year-old SC boy burned, father arrested
- SC brother, sister awarded $4M in defamation suit
- Hillerby guilty
- Legislation could allow golf carts SC highways
- SC council discusses county business by e-mail
- SC lawmakers discuss filing fee for terrorists
- SC bill would end voter notices in local papers
- Citadel hosts forum on Southern politics
- SC police arrest 2 NC men, seize 200 pounds of pot
- Baby plucked from river
- 2-year-old SC boy burned, father arrested (1)
- SC bill would end voter notices in local papers (1)
- Legislation could allow golf carts SC highways (1)
- Timberland High student dies (0)
- New facility could bring hundreds of jobs (0)
- SC prisons department breaks ground on new chapel (0)
- 2 Marine fighter pilots rescued; SC crash probed (0)
- SC court orders review of nuclear landfill license (0)
- SC legislators to discuss driver vision tests (0)
- Panel: Firefighting equipment at SRS is too old (0)

- Heart attack warning ad helps save radio listener
- SC legislators to use bailout cash to fix budget
- Coast Guard rescues 4 from boat off SC
- SC prisons department breaks ground on new chapel
- 2 Marine fighter pilots rescued; SC crash probed
- SC court orders review of nuclear landfill license
- SC legislators to discuss driver vision tests
- Panel: Firefighting equipment at SRS is too old
- Man gets life in prison for killing three in SC
- Shooting kills SC man, deputy injured
- EPA seeks applications for environmental community grants
- Green Products That Save You Green
- Switch to energy efficient appliances pays off for St. George resident
- 8 Green Ways to Winterize
- Taking a Proactive Approach to Being Earth-Friendly
- New Year's Resolutions Can Benefit the Environment
- Easy Ways to Improve Air Quality
- HMS students compete in national environmental challenge
