Thursday, April 4, 2013

Catching Up With Brady



By Stephen Proffitt | The Breeze


JMU may not have upset Indiana, but Tuesday, they were able to close out the 2012-2013 campaign with a “significant” win with another on the horizon. Redshirt senior Andrey Semenov will return for a sixth season after receiving clearance from the NCAA.

Head coach Matt Brady hopes that Semenov can remain healthy and take advantage of his additional year.

“I think it’s significant,” coach Matt Brady said Wednesday afternoon. “The challenge with Andrey is to find a way to keep him healthy.”

Semenov only played in seven games this season for JMU. The Dukes were 5-2 in those games. He missed much of the early part of the season, battling a groin injury, but was able to rejoin the team in December.

As the calendar turned, so did Semenov’s ankle as he injured it against Old Dominion on January 2 — he missed the rest of the season.

“We’re still not there yet, he’s still under the care of the doctor’s with respect to his ankle,” Brady said. “If we can keep him healthy for a year, he’s obviously talented guy with a great skill at putting the ball in the basket.”

Semenov will be the only senior starter on the team next season. It’s a big victory for a lineup that will feature four sophomores.

“I would be eager to watch him take a leadership role with next year’s team,” Brady said. “He’s been in a lot of games.”

Semenov’s scoring ability, especially from the perimeter, along with his experience will be welcomed with open arms. In his seven games this season, Semenov averaged 10 points per game while shooting 46 percent from deep.

“I think he takes the scoring pressure off a very young nucleus of guys,” Brady said. “Not that Andrey Semenov’s got to be a double-digit scorer consistently, because I think we have a talented roster of guys that can all score, having a guy that can clearly put the ball in the basket is helpful.”

Semenov’s clearance is probably not the only paperwork that the JMU basketball office will be completing in the coming weeks. Brady, who was just recognized by the National Association of Basketball Coaches as the Co-Coach of the Year for District 10, will likely be signing a new, multi-year contract in the coming weeks. His five-year contract expires on April 24.

“We still have a ways to go,” Brady said. “We still have some more conversations to have.”

He’s in a good spot to lobby for a new deal after recently completing his third 20-plus win season in five years. This coupled with three postseason appearances makes Brady a hot commodity. The negotiations are moving along at a steady pace though according to Brady.

As schools continue to leave their conferences, Brady is trying to prevent the complete loss of a great rivalry with George Mason, who recently announced their departure from the Colonial Athletic Association.


“First thing’s first, we are in contact with them to keep the rivalry in tact by having the game every year,” Brady said.

The game, if scheduled, would likely happen in the early, non-conference months of the season: November or December.

“It’s unfortunate that college athletics is changing so rapidly, but it’s a fact of life,” Brady said. “Change is inevitable at the college affiliation level.”

JMU has recently been tossed around in conversations involving the Sun Belt and Mid-American conferences over the past few weeks, but a jump would not be wise, at least right now, according to Brady.

“There’s going to be fallout in league’s around us,” Brady said. “And there’s going to be opportunities. It’s kind of like investing, you think that the stock market’s dropping, you got to get out.”

With Mason out and the College of Charleston in, the CAA basketball roster will include nine schools heading into next season.

“I think it’s paramount that the CAA figures out a way to keep our league as strong as it ever was under the leadership of [commissioner] Tom Yeager,” Brady said. “I think they are hard at work keeping our league not just in tact, but growing.”

JMU has been a part of the CAA since 1979. As Brady will seemingly enter his sixth year in Harrisonburg, he remains confident on where the school stands.

“There’s great potential in the CAA,” he claimed. “I think it’s too early to turn our back on this league.”

Contact Stephen Proffitt at proffijs@dukes.jmu.edu.

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