The Toledo Blade Online
The Toledo Blade OnlineThe Toledo Blade Green Edition
Click here to subscribe or renew!
Temp: 27°
Humidity: 92%
Tuesday, 02/09/10
Click Here Click Here Click Here Click Here Click Here
Home »   Sports »   BGSU Athletics » 


Click to Receive RSS Feeds!EmailPrint IndexHelp FacebookTwitterDiggDel.icio.usFark

Article published December 13, 2007
BGSU assistant Stone gets around
Most Michigan coaches readily recognize Falcons' recruiter



BOWLING GREEN - Bowling Green State University junior Darryl Clements was participating in team drills prior to Rogers Academy's state championship game in 2005 when he was distracted by a curious onlooker.

A short, dark man with a broad smile kept staring at Clements.

"I had to ask my coach who he was," Clements said.

His coach knew. Just about every high school basketball coach in Michigan knows LaMonta Stone.

Stone, a fourth-year assistant at Bowling Green State University, played and coached high school ball near Detroit. Now he recruits in the Detroit area - and Stone is quite successful at it. Four of BG's players hail from Michigan as do two high school seniors who will become Falcons next year.

"I have some relationships in Michigan, but LaMonta, there's not too many people he doesn't know," BG coach Louis Orr said.

Relationships are important in coaching. They can help determine your next job, or your next recruit. Stone, 41, has forged many friendships up north beginning during his high school days at River Rouge, a suburb of Detroit. Stone later guided his alma mater to consecutive Class B state championships in 1998-99 before accepting a position at Eastern Michigan where he spent two seasons prior to leaving for Ohio State.

Stone's impact on BG's program is evident simply by glancing at the roster. Stone recruited juniors Clements (Detroit) and Brian Moten (Saginaw), and sophomores Otis Polk (Detroit) and Marc Larson (Mattawan).

Future Falcons Austin Calhoun (Southfield) and Dee Brown (Detroit) are also products of Stone's formidable reputation in the Wolverine state. Stone knows Brown's coach, Kurt Keener, from when River Rouge battled Keener's legendary Country Day teams. Similarly, Stone is friends with Calhoun's high school and AAU coaches.

"Going back to Michigan is easy for me because I was a very successful high school coach, so when I go back, those high school coaches see themselves in me," Stone said. "I was one of those guys not too long ago. It's not a point of me selling anything. They already have trust in me. We already have relationships."

But for a brief period earlier this year, Stone did not have a job. Stone's boss, Dan Dakich, left the program after last season and was joined in exile by all of his assistants except for Stone. Stone admits he wanted to fill the head coaching vacancy, but even more so, he wanted to stay at Bowling Green. And Orr, who was hired in April, liked that idea as well.

"One of the sidebars is he had a relationship and recruited a lot of the guys," Orr said. "So that's an added benefit, but that wasn't the reason. It can be an asset but other things - the quality of the person, the chemistry - are more important."

It's difficult to say whether Stone was seriously considered for the job. Assistant coaches are often linked closely to the previous regime, and BG's recent struggles certainly weren't a ringing endorsement for Stone. But Stone stuck around, providing stability for the players during a time of uncertainty.

"I really didn't politic for the job," Stone said. "My thing was, stay here and see what happens. I recruited a lot of these student-athletes so I wanted to see those guys make it through. In the process, if I was named the head coach that would have been wonderful. If not, I wanted to stay here under the right circumstances."

Stone now has increased responsibilities, particularly pertaining to BG's new up-tempo offense, which is similar to the style Ohio State played while Stone was with the Buckeyes. Stone said he learned Dakich's motion offense "on the fly" but is now more comfortable in an element more suited to his background.

"Last year coach Stone was more laid-back and kept his thoughts to himself," Clements said. "This year the coaches have more freedom. What they need to say they say it out loud."

Stone isn't the type to yell. He's calm and reserved, not one interested in self promotion. But his resume as a recruiter screams from here to Michigan. And high school coaches are receiving the message.

"If you talk to any basketball elites in Michigan, I want people to say LaMonta Stone is a good guy, he can coach any one of my guys at any school he's at," Stone said. "At the end of the day that makes me feel good."

Contact Ryan Autullo at:
rautullo@theblade.com.


Permanent Link
Click to order!

 RECENT RELATED ARTICLES

Dressler giving UT a real post presence | 02/09/2010
Falcons focused on finish | 02/09/2010
Turner, OSU handle Iowa Buckeyes keep themselves in midst of tight Big Ten race | 02/08/2010
Rockets' Lo watches, plays waiting game | 02/08/2010
College basketball previews: 2-6 | 02/06/2010
Rockets rally to force OT, fall short | 02/05/2010
Falcons fall to Ball State on road | 02/05/2010
Turner scores 27 for OSU in win | 02/04/2010
College basketball previews: 2-4 | 02/04/2010
Crawford, Shurna lead Northwestern past Michigan | 02/03/2010
Rockets hurting with shortage of post players | 02/02/2010
Bowling Green Falcons get win over rival Rockets | 02/02/2010
Falcons freshman forward suspended | 02/02/2010
If Thomas can play like this, BG can soar | 02/02/2010
Buckeyes fans honor their 1960 champs | 02/01/2010

More related articles »


BGSU Athletics
Updated: 8:07 am
Falcons focused on finish >>
UT Athletics
Updated: 8:06 am
Dressler giving UT a real post presence >>
High School Sports
Updated: 8:50 am
Blade Basketball Poll: 2-9 >>
High School Sports
Updated: 8:22 am
Swanton girls get by Cardinal Stritch >>
Amateur/Olympics
Updated: 8:18 am
Everything but weather cooperating in Vancouver >>
Pro Sports
Updated: 8:11 am
New Orleans celebrates champs, rebirth >>
More news stories



click here!
Click here to view our special section.

ADVERTISING SECTIONS
Click to visit us!
Steve Pollick
Updated: 8:23 am
Proposal aimed at cutting local deer herd >>

Dave Hackenberg
Updated: 7:22 am
Friendship deciding factor for ex-Aint  >>

More columnist stories

Golf Guide

Search by course:

MOST READ STORIES
1.  High school sports events postponed; library branches closed; colleges, universities closings
2.  Toledo officials given raises up to 26.9%
3.  Officer says 33 dogs seized from suspected puppy mill
4.  U.S. 24 traffic rerouted, I-75 backed up
5.  Northview principal gets words of support
6.  Introducing the new Sports Illustrated cover model, Brooklyn Decker
7.  Movie Gallery chain to shut 7 area stores
8.  Weather check, radar and roads
9.  Knights' Cromwell steps down
10.  Swiergosz sentenced over police standoff
MOST E-MAILED STORIES
1.  Tennis champ accused of phone harassment
2.  Toledo strip club puts cover charge into quake relief
3.  Mental health agency looks to pare $3.5M from services
4.  Homelessness board votes for outside audit; advocate Ken Leslie safe for now
5.  Sylvania lawyer charged in thefts from 2 clients
6.  'Stagecoach Mary' broke barriers of race, gender
7.  MAC basketball struggles with fall from elite
8.  Clyde plans to generate electricity from trash
9.  Equine devotee faces 42 counts of animal abuse
10.  Students, staff navigate Perrysburg High School halls in wheelchairs


AP  News Headlines



AP  Business Headlines



AP  Sports Headlines


AP  Features Headlines
Copyright 2010 The Blade. By using this service, you accept the terms of our privacy statement and our visitor agreement. Please read them.
The Toledo Blade Company, 541 N. Superior St., Toledo, OH 43660, (419) 724-6000
To contact a specific
department or an individual person, click here.
The Toledo Times ®