Long-time
Pearl River College head men’s basketball coach Richard Mathis sums up
Conlee Verdun’s Wildcat career simply: “an outstanding player who played
big in big games.”
Verdun was inducted into
PRCC’s Sports Hall of Fame Oct. 20 during the college’s 2001 Homecoming
celebration.
After helping lead the Wildcats
to their first state championship in some 30 years in 1995 and earning
All-State and All-Region XXIII honors, Verdun headed for the Uni-versity
of Southwest Louisiana (now Louisiana-Lafayette) in Lafayette and starred
for the Ragin’ Cajuns for two seasons before hooking up with the world-renowned
Harlem Globetrotters.
“Being with the Globetrotters
since 1997 has been quite an experience...an
experience of a lifetime,”
Verdun said. “I’ve travelled to every state in the country and all over
the world.”
Currently, Verdun’s basketball
career is in limbo. Since the recent terrorist acts in the country, the
Globetrotters, who have never lost since Verdun arrived on the scene, have
scaled back.
“I was on one of three Globetrotter
teams, but right now they’ve scaled things back to only one team since
the terrorist situation arose. I’ve got a few options on the table, but
my basketball situation, particularly with the Globetrotters, is in limbo
right now,” he said.
With the Globetrotters, Verdun
has hit the hardcourt in virtually every European country.
During his two-year stint
at The River in 1993-94 and 1994-95, the Franklin, La., native was an impact
player from the outset.
“From his very first day
here, Conlee was a big-time shooter. He just has that God-given talent.
He impacted our team even as a 150-pound freshman,” said Mathis. “But it
was his weight room work that made him into the complete basketball player
he is today.”
Verdun, a 5-foot-10 point
and off guard, was dedicated to the weights. In one year, he beefed himself
up to a solid 180 pounds and the rest is history.
“Conlee’s the guy that sold
me on the weights,” Mathis said. “It use to be that most coaches, my self
included, thought too much weight lifting hurt rather than helped. Conlee
proved me wrong. I’m a weight room disciple now.”
Verdun’s freshman season
saw him av-erage 17 points and six rebounds a game, while dishing out an
average of five assists a game during both of his PRCC seasons. As a sophomore,
he boosted his point av-erage to 24 a game.
PRCC’s 1995 championship
season is one of the biggest highlights of Verdun’s basketball career.
“We (team) were very close
and had one mindset...to win the state title,” he said. “We accomplished
our ultimate goal.”
That Wildcat squad could’ve
likely tak-en that season’s Region XXIII title and earned a trip to the
national tournament if Verdun hadn’t broken his thumb in the opening-round
game of the tournament played at Mississippi College.
Said Mathis, “Conlee was
our main guy. He was the guy that made things click, but after he broke
his thumb in the first half of our first regional game, we wound up blowing
a 20-point lead and lost by 20 or so after he hit the bench.
“It was a sad way for such
a great player to end a community college career, but there were lots of
fond memories also.”
One in particular was a week
earlier when the Wildcats rallied to trim touted Northeast in the semi-finals
of the state tournament. The Tigers, along with stellar forward Dante Jones
who went on to star at Mississippi State and played in the NBA, had the
Wildcats down by seven with a minute left.
“We were fighting back and
then Con-lee hit a trey from deep in the corner to tie it up and send the
game into overtime,” Mathis recalled. “We wound up beating them in OT and
went on to beat Co-Lin in the championship game.
“We beat Northeast all three
times we played them that year...here, at Booneville, and at the state
tournament. That was quite an accomplishment,” said Mathis, who coached
Northeast’s Tiger team in the early 1980s. “Conlee was the kind of guy
that played big when it counted.”
“He’s a true champion player
and he is very deserving of induction. Conlee came in here and was a big-time
player for two seasons. This honor should make he and his family proud.”
Verdun says Mathis was an
integral part of his basketball growth.