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2011 Golf EPCC Championships
All teams wore "EPCC SUPPORTS THE CAUSE" t-shirt's for breast cancer awareness

Lehigh Carbon Community College - 2011 Champions!

From the Philadelphia Inquirer online - Fri, Sep. 25, 2009
Darryl Dawkins: A long way from Lovetron
By Frank Fitzpatrick
Inquirer Staff Writer
SCHNECKSVILLE, Pa. - When he was a teenager in the NBA, the sole resident
of Lovetron, an imagination-rich, 6-foot-11 man-child adrift in the cliche-addled
sports world, Darryl Dawkins always seemed out of place.
But maybe never more so than now.
At 52, the once-bombastic "Chocolate Thunder" resides in a plain-vanilla suburban Lehigh Valley neighborhood with his wife
and two daughters. "Right behind the Target," he noted proudly.
A wordy wunderkind who so famously and colorfully shattered precedent
and backboards for the Dr. J-era 76ers, Dawkins is coaching a community-college
team, working diligently for local charities, attending his children's
youth-league games.
The harem-surveying, backboard-slaying, extraterrestrial-portraying young
Dawkins has been replaced by a still physically imposing middle-age version,
one who is an unlikely pillar of this community.
"
Lovetron," he explained last week, "is shut down for renovations."
Last month, two decades after his 14-year NBA career ended, Dawkins returned,
if not to the spotlight at least to a pleasant glow, when he answered
a newspaper advertisement seeking a men's basketball coach at Lehigh
Carbon Community College.
"
He called from Vegas and said he'd seen the ad and was interested in
the job," said Jocelyn Beck, LCCC's athletic director. "Frankly, at first I thought it was some kind of a joke. . . . I said, 'You're
Darryl Dawkins, why here? And he said, 'Why not?' "
The school of 7,000 students is just nine miles from Dawkins' home in
Whitehall. The big buildings on its 153-acre campus appear to be the
most modern structures in this old Lehigh County town where just 0.10
percent of the 1,989 residents are African American, according to the
Schnecksville town Web site. It is a place where the air is often redolent
of manure, and where the prime attraction is a 1,500-acre game preserve.
Dawkins had played a year with the Globetrotters, and coached a New Jersey
high school girls' team and briefly in the ABA before arriving here in
1999. He guided the now-defunct United States Basketball League's Allentown-based
Pennsylvania ValleyDawgs until 2006, winning a league title in '05.
He met a girl from Catasauqua, married, and settled down. They have two
daughters, ages 6 and 7. (He also has a 14-year-old girl from a previous
marriage.)
"
No way she was getting too far away from her mama," Dawkins said of his wife, Janice. "But the Lehigh Valley is one of the best-kept secrets around. You're close to
New York, Philly, D.C. I know people might not picture me in a place
like this, but I actually love it here. Sometimes people don't know
what they think they know."
Beck thought she knew Dawkins, and couldn't understand why he would want
a job at a relatively obscure junior college in this bucolic area north
of Allentown.
"
During the interview, I pointed out that there were job openings at big
colleges across the U.S., even in the NBA. So why did he want to come
here, especially since he'd never had the college experience himself?" Beck said.
" He said he wanted to get back into it, that he liked coaching young men,
helping them find themselves. He said he would make sure they gave
back to the community the way he has. He had all the right answers. There
were a number of applicants, but even if he weren't Darryl Dawkins,
he interviewed best."
The move already has paid off for LCCC. There were television cameras
and a gym full of people at the basketball team's open house earlier
this month. Parents of players have inquired about the program. A 27-year-old
graduate of Council Rock High has called to say he wanted to play for
Dawkins.
"
I'm going to make sure these kids know their story's not going to be
like Darryl Dawkins'," he said. "If they go to school, they'll get an education they can fall back on. I didn't
go to college. I know what's at stake. We've got too many rappers and
basketball players and not enough doctors, lawyers and engineers."
Basketball-wise, he hopes to do for these kids what the winos in Orlando,
Fla., did for him.
"
When I was growing up, I couldn't play against kids my age," he said. "I was so big and it was too easy. The only person who could give me a game was
my mama. So I'd play with the winos. Those guys would beat on me whenever
I went into the lane, thump me, let me know what it would be like playing
against older guys."
He took those lessons to the NBA, after the 76ers made the then-senior
at Orlando's Maynard Evans High a first-round hardship pick, No. 5 overall,
in the 1975 draft. That year, he and Bill Willoughby became the first
players to go directly from high school to the NBA. (Moses Malone stopped
first in the ABA.)
Though he had been touted as the next Wilt Chamberlain, Dawkins wasn't
that as a rookie, and Sixers coach Gene Shue stuck him on the bench for
most of two seasons. Eventually, Dawkins found himself and had a productive
career with the Sixers, New Jersey, Detroit and Utah, reaching the NBA
Finals three times but never getting a ring.
At first, his physique and demeanor masked the fact that he was just
a teenager trying to mesh with veterans Billy Cunningham, Fred Carter,
George McGinnis, LeRoy Ellis, and Steve Mix.
He didn't know what to do on the road, or after home games. He'd never
seen snow, let alone driven in it. He wasn't sure how to answer reporters'
questions. Consequently, an intergenerational schism developed between
him and his much-older teammates.
"
On the road, the older guys didn't want me to hang around with them when
they went out, and the younger guys were afraid that if I went along,
the girls they met might like me better," he said. "I was too young to go to bars anyway.
" So I would just hang around the room, watching TV and playing that old
video game Tetris. . . . I was homesick like a dog."
Eventually, when he turned 21 and his playing time increased, Dawkins
got a halting grasp of things, particularly interviews. He started referencing
Lovetron, his imaginary home planet, to intrigued sportswriters and naming
his powerful dunks.
One of the best remembered was the "Chocolate Thunder flyin', glass flyin', Robinzine cryin', parents cryin', babies
cryin', glass still flyin', rump roasting, bun toasting, thank you
wham ma'am I am jam."
"
I always had a wild imagination," he said. "And I grew up a big fan of Ali. All that stuff just came naturally to me."
At one point, general manager Pat Williams told him to "tone down" the talk. Teammate Caldwell Jones urged him to stop complaining about things
such as salary and playing time.
"
He said, 'You get a check on the first and fifteenth of every month like
the rest of us, right?' " Dawkins recalled. " 'Well then, shut up and don't let me read about you asking to be traded.'"
Dawkins' highest salary came a few hundred thousand short of a million
dollars, but he is proud that through coaching, working with the NBA
overseas, and various other jobs he has stayed financially sound.
"
There are guys who made a heck of a lot more than me asking if they can
borrow $2,000," he said. "It's different now. Money's crazy. One guy's making $14 million, and his boys
tell him he ought to be getting $15 million because that's what that
guy over there gets and you're better than him."
Despite his mellow suburban lifestyle, plenty of the old Dawkins is still
on display. Twin gold earrings. Patent-leather sneakers. Gaudy suits.
A knack for original phrases. Good-natured answers that ramble on and
on before veering off in head-scratching directions.
He said his players respected him, even though they occasionally saw
him "wearing Daisy Dukes," short-shorts, on ESPN Classic.
LCCC's first game will be Nov. 2 at Lackawanna Junior College. Dawkins
said he learned from all his coaches, "even [former Nets coach] Dave Wohl," whom Dawkins called a "commandant." So Dawkins said he would counsel his kids to have fun.
But win or lose, Double D's life is darn delightful.
"
I have no regrets," he said. "When I got older, I learned that if you keep your feet on the ground, you won't
have far to fall. My life is good now."
+++++
March, 2009
Two Lehigh Carbon Community College Basketball Players Succeed at
Next Level
Misevicius
Receives Mid-Atlantic All-Region Second Team Honors
Junior forward Kevin Misevicius has earned D3Hoops.com
Second Team Mid-Atlantic All-Region honors. Misevicius, a Colonial
States Athletic Conference (CSAC) First Team honoree, led Cabrini in
scoring with 19.3 points per game.
Misevicius set the Cabrini program-record for points in a single
season (580) and tallied team-highs in field goal percentage
(.510), free throw
percentage (.809), rebounding (5.5) and steals (84). He also established
the team's all-time record for points (41) and field goals made
(18) in a single game.
Misevicius, a two-time CSAC Player of the Week, eclipsed the 20-point
plateau 15 times and posted a team-high six double-doubles this
season. He lists second on the Cavaliers' single-season chart
for steals.
Tharpe Named to First-Team All-Conference
Sidney Tharpe garnered 1st Team All-CSAC
honors, becoming one of the first Marywood men's basketball players
to garner first-team All-Conference honors as the Colonial States Athletic
Conference (CSAC) announced its regular season award winners.
Tharpe, who transferred to Marywood from Lehigh Carbon Community
College, led the Pacers by establishing a new single-season scoring
record with
531 points. The junior from Victorville, California averaged a
team-best 21.2 points per game and led the team in field goals made
(184),
three-pointers made (83) and rebounds (187).
Tharpe shattered previous Marywood records of 152 field goals made
in a single season and 452 points in a single season. He is three
three-pointers away from tying that single season mark as well.
He is currently on
pace
to break the single season record of 20.6 points per game average
as well.
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