LORETTO — St. Francis has interviewed at least three candidates to replace Bobby Jones, who resigned as men’s basketball coach after last season.
The university has interviewed Mark Bass, who is entering his ninth year as an assistant at St. Joseph’s University; Matthew Driscoll, in his fifth year as an assistant at Baylor; and Don Friday, in his fourth year as head coach at Lycoming College.
Bass led St. Joseph’s to the NIT finals as a senior in 1995-96 with school records for 3-pointers and attempts. In 2001, he was inducted into the St. Joseph’s basketball hall of fame. Bass played professionally for a year in China before becoming a high school assistant at Maine Central Institute, which won consecutive New England Prep School championships during his tenure, one off a 35-0 season in 1997-98.
He joined the staff at St. Joseph’s for the 1999-2000 season. Since then, the Hawks have made the playoffs six straight times, and won five regular-season Atlantic 10 titles.
Driscoll is a 1992 Slippery Rock graduate who was head coach at LaRoche from 1993 to 1997, moving to Wyoming as an assistant for the 1997-98 season. He spent five years as an assistant at Clemson before going to Baylor. After a 20-win season in 1998-99, he helped the Tigers reach the NIT championship, which they lost by a point to California.
Friday began his head coaching stint at Lycoming with a conference championship and a berth in the NCAA playoffs. He is a graduate of Lebanon Valley College, where he opened his coaching career, helping the Dutchmen record their first winning season in 18 years. He later moved to Bucknell, where he spent nine seasons as an assistant. He left that job for Lycoming, where he led the Warriors to a Freedom Conference crown in 2005 and earned a share of the MAC Coach of the Year Award.
Published reports have said that Penn State assistant Kurt Kanaskie also has inquired about the St. Francis vacancy.
Kanaskie is a LaSalle graduate who started coaching as an assistant at the University of South Carolina, where he remained for five seasons before moving to Lock Haven.
There, he earned two PSAC coach of the year awards. After three seasons at Lock Haven, he took over the IUP program, leading the Redhawks to a No. 1 national ranking and their first appearance in the NCAA tournament. During eight seasons at IUP, he was named PSAC coach of the year twice more.
Kanaskie left IUP to take over as head coach at Drake. After seven seasons there, he became an assistant with the Nittany Lions.
College
St. Francis bringing in candidates
- College
-
-
College basketball in brief
A closer look at Thursday night's men's and women's college basketball games:
-
Penn State men absorb fifth straight loss
Penn State refused to be routed the first time No. 11 Michigan State had a chance to pull away for an easy victory.
The Nittany Lions, though, couldn’t stay consistent enough to keep their comeback hopes alive. -
South Florida rebounds with win over Pitt
South Florida’s Hugh Robertson combined a perfect night offensively with a stellar defensive performance that helped the Bulls rebound from their worst-ever Big East loss.
Robertson had a season-high 18 points and helped USF
(14-10, 7-4) hold Pittsburgh star Ashton Gibbs to a season-low four points in a 63-51 victory over the Panthers on Wednesday night. Augustus Gilchrist added 10 points for the Bulls, who lost by 30 points at Georgetown last weekend. - Local sports in brief 2-9-2012
-
Michigan board gives go-ahead on Winter Classic
The University of Michigan Board of Regents on Wednesday authorized athletic director Dave Brandon to seek a contract with the NHL that would allow the league to hold next year’s Winter Classic at Michigan Stadium.
-
Pitt-Johnstown wrestlers dominate Seton Hill
Pat Pecora picked up his NCAA Division II record 498th career victory on Tuesday night, but just like almost every other one, he saw some things that his Pitt-Johnstown wrestling team could improve upon.
-
Happy Valley readies itself for a new brand of football under Bill O’Brien
White placards with a set of rules were affixed to the glass doors of the players’ entrance at the Penn State football building about the time Bill O’Brien agreed to become the school’s next football coach.
-
Panthers win fourth consecutive game
Pittsburgh senior Ashton Gibbs is a happy man now that his backcourt mate, junior Tray Woodall, is back and healthy in the starting lineup. He’s almost as happy as Woodall, who recovered from a groin/abdominal strain to turn in one of his best performances of the season.
-
Panthers looking to extend winning streak
Even as the losses piled up, Pitt’s men’s basketball coach Jamie Dixon said his players never abandoned hope. That can be tough in the face of an eight-game losing streak stretching from December into January.
-
Nittany Lions drop 4th in a row
Bryce Cartwright has been in and out of Iowa’s starting lineup all season. Now the senior looks like he’s there to stay.
Cartwright, bothered with concussion-like symptoms earlier this season, scored 17 points to lead the Hawkeyes to a 77-64 victory over Penn State on Saturday. - More College Headlines
-
College basketball in brief








