The Tribune Democrat, Johnstown, PA

College

March 15, 2006

Ex-St. Francis coach an assistant at Army

Dave Magarity never expected to be in this situation.

In early October, the former St. Francis men’s basketball coach drove to the Military Academy at West Point to acquire football credentials for the Central Michigan-Army football game as part of his job as assistant commissioner of the Mid-American Conference. He left there many hours later with a job offer.

The script was simple: Army was seeking an assistant women’s coach for a young head coach by the name of Maggie Dixon, who is the younger sister of Jamie Dixon, head men’s coach at Pitt.

With his 23 years as a head basketball coach in Division I schools, would Magarity be interested in aiding the 28-year-old Dixon? At first, his answer was no.

“I had a great job as assistant commissioner of a big-time conference, and everything was going great,” Magarity said in a telephone interview Tuesday from his West Point office. “Maybe I missed coaching, but I had been in it for 32 years and I was 55 years old. I was looking to finish it in something else.”

Magarity was head coach of the Red Flash from 1978 until 1983, and after a few years as an assistant at Iona College (N.Y.) and one at Marist College, he was named head coach at Marist in 1986, where he served for the next 18 years before resigning in 2004.

But after he considered the situation at West Point, which is little more than a half-hour drive from his home in Wappingers Falls, N.Y., he realized that it was worth a second look.

“The MAC office was in Cleveland and my wife had a teaching job in the Hudson Valley, having about 15 years in the New York state system,” Magarity said. “I did not know Maggie Dixon, but I had met Jamie when I was coaching at Marist and we played Pitt a couple of years ago. Maggie had been an assistant coach at DePaul for the past five years. But, before going further, I knew that I had to talk at length to her.”

That evening, the two coaches talked for two to three hours, Magarity said. However, before starting that conversation, Maggie made an important phone call to her friend and confidant: Her brother, Jamie.

“She called him and said that she was meeting with this guy tonight about being an assistant coach,” Magarity said about what Maggie told him of the conversation between the siblings. “She said that I had been around the game as a head coach for 23 years. (Jamie) and I did not know each other well, but he told her that she should jump at taking (me) because of my experience. Then we talked for a long time, and after that, I realized that she was a sharp young coach. I also realized that in coaching women, it helped having two daughters who had played the game, and that was a huge factor in understanding the situation.”

Magarity left West Point that October night not realizing what was about to happen. The Army women have put together a magical season, winning the school’s first Patriot League regular-season and tournament championships, leading to their first trip to the NCAA tournament.

Not even the men’s teams coached by Bob Knight and Mike Krzyzewski in the 1960s and 1970s had advanced to the NCAA tournament.

The Black Knights finished with a 20-10 record and earned a 15th seed in the pairings, which were announced Monday night. While the players are excited to be playing in the tournament, the Army squad will face one of the toughest teams in basketball: Coach Pat Summitt’s Tennessee Lady Vols.

Summitt was insulted by the tournament committee’s decision to give the Lady Vols a No. 2 seed. Tennessee (28-4) ranked sixth in The Associated Press poll, played the toughest schedule in the country, had the second best RPI, and beat LSU to win the SEC championship.

For Army, this is a tougher matchup than the coaches and players had anticipated as a 15th seed.

“For us to do well, we are going to have to play a perfect game,” Magarity said. “I have been calling around trying to get game tapes from everyone, and we have about a dozen. But, we should not try to overload the kids. We have played Baylor and Connecticut and St. John’s this year, three top-20 teams. We have the player of the year (Cara Enright) in the Patriot League and the rookie of the year (Alex McGuire). So, we just have to go out and play our best.”

Dixon was also named as Patriot League coach of the year.

The Magarity family loves basketball. Magarity and his wife, Rita, have two children presently in the game. Their older daughter, Maureen, is an assistant coach at Fairfield (Conn.) after being a captain of a Marist team in 2004 that made its first trip to the tournament. She served as an assistant coach at Marist last year. His son, Dave Jr., was a redshirt sophomore with the Marist Red Foxes team this year. A third daughter, Katie, is a graduate of Marist.

This season is one that he could not have anticipated a year ago, but it is one that the veteran coach will cherish, regardless of the outcome of the Tennessee game.

“It has been incredible,” Magarity said. “I do not think that I’ve ever enjoyed a season like this one, and I have had some great seasons. This is just such a great group of players to be around, and they are talented. And the good news is that we have almost everything back next year.”

Magarity has been named coach of the year on 11 occasions, with his 1987 Marist team that featured Rik Smits earning him the Northeast Conference award.

Magarity graduated from St. Francis in 1974 and was an assistant coach to Pete Lonergan before being named head coach in 1978.

Text Only | Photo Reprints
College
  • Roberts, george MAC honors Roberts

    Forest Hills graduate and former Delweld MVP George Roberts was named Mid-American Conference (MAC) Player of the Year in baseball on Tuesday.

    May 22, 2012 1 Photo

  • APTOPIX Rutgers Suici_Denn.jpg Sentence given, but Rutgers webcam saga not over

    The legal saga is far from over for a former Rutgers University student sentenced to 30 days jail for using a webcam to spy on his roommate kissing another man. The cultural fallout could continue, too.

    Dharun Ravi, 20, was sentenced Monday, two months after a jury convicted him of 15 criminal counts, including invasion of privacy and bias intimidation and seven counts dealing with covering up a crime.

    May 22, 2012 1 Photo

  • joepa_A1.JPG Paterno's family to get $13.4 million pension

    Joe Paterno earned a state pension of $13.4 million for his 61-year coaching career at Penn State.

    Paterno's family said Tuesday through a spokesman that Paterno's widow, Sue, would receive an initial payment of $10.1 million by the end of May, with the rest to be paid out over the next two years.

    May 22, 2012 1 Photo

  • caravan 19 O’Brien keeps message fresh in selling Penn State

    After three weeks of crisscrossing the Northeast to rally and re-assure the Nittany Lions faithful that all will be well in Happy Valley, Bill O’Brien still had fresh material when the Penn State coaching caravan reached its 18th and final stop.

    May 19, 2012 1 Photo

  • banquet [VIDEO] Panthers eager to renew PSU rivalry

    It didn’t take Steve Pederson long to realize how important a renewal of the Pitt-Penn State football rivalry is to local fans.
    Even the invocation at the Johnstown Panther Club’s fifth annual spring event at Sunnehanna Country Club on Thursday night included a request for the teams to meet on the field again.

    May 18, 2012 1 Photo

  • caravan.JPG Penn State coach stops in Altoona

    Bill O’Brien has quickly put to rest any notion that he plans to stick around as long as the last Penn State football coach.
    Don’t expect his tenure in Happy Valley to last 46 years.

    May 14, 2012 1 Photo

  • Shepherd takes WVIAC championship

    Shepherd recorded a 10-5 victory over Alderson-Broaddus in the WVIAC baseball championship Sunday afternoon at Point Stadium, earning a spot in the NCAA tournament with the league’s automatic bid.

    May 13, 2012

  • Mount falls in title game

    Mount Aloysius’ Cinderella run through the AMCC playoffs came to an end Saturday, as the No. 6 seed Mounties fell to top-seeded La Roche 14-4 in the AMCC Championship game.

    May 12, 2012

  • Shepherd advances to title game

    Shepherd advanced to the WVIAC Championship by defeating West Virginia State on Saturday at Point Stadium.
    The conference title game will be played at 1 p.m. today at the Point.

    May 12, 2012

  • Two UPJ players earn WVIAC first-team honors

    Pitt-Johnstown sophomore catcher Kyle Morrow and sophomore second baseman Jake Warner were named first-team All-WVIAC baseball, while senior outfielder Drew Westover and sopohomore right-hander Derek Younker each earned a spot on the second-team.

    May 11, 2012

Poll

Should the speed limit on sections of the Pennsylvania Turnpike and related highways be raised to 70 mph from 65 mph.

Yes.
No.
I don't care because I never travel on those tolled roadways.
     View Results
Echoes from the Titanic

AP Video
15 Dead in Northern Italy's 5.8-magnitude Quake Angry Birds Spreading Their Wings Witness Describes Fla. Face-chewing Attack Man Falls Off Crane, Dies After Police Standoff Raw Video: Cop Shoots Man Eating Another's Face Russia Condemns Ally Syria Over Massacre of 108 Raw Video: Earthquake Shakes Evacuees in Italy Dairy Farm Uses Chiropractor to Help Cows Unexpected Smog in Pristine National Parks Air Canada Plane Makes Emergency Landing New Ticks Spread Across Southeast, Diseases Rise Bring Your Own Tech Programs Charge Up Students Pope's Butler Vows to Help Vatican Investigation Mother of Allegedly Abused Girl Denies Claims Raw Video: 19 Dead in Qatar Shopping Mall Fire Service Dogs Help Wash. Soldiers Battling PTSD Raw Video: Heckler Bursts in on Blair Testimony Japan Farmers Plant, Seek Radiation-free Rice Vatican in Chaos After Butler Arrested for Leaks
Community Calendar
Loading…
Events by eviesays.com
House Ads
Hyperlocal Search
Premier Guide
Find a business

Walking Fingers
Maps, Menus, Store hours, Coupons, and more...
Premier Guide
Popular Searches
Powered by Local.com