Stonehill Scouting Report | The Boneyard

Stonehill Scouting Report

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Scouting Reports are back!

This is my first scouting report for a team making its D1 debut, so thanks to Rob Dauster and The Almanac for sourcing a vast majority of the info on the report. I posted a less UConn-centric preview on my blog today, so I fleshed it out a bit for the Boneyard.

Enjoy!

Like Bryant University in 2008, UMass-Lowell in 2013, Merrimack and LIU in 2018, Stonehill becomes the fifth school in the last fifteen years from the Northeast-10 Conference to join the Division 1 ranks, joining Merrimack and LIU in the Northeast Conference.

Entering his tenth season as head coach, Chris Kraus led the Skyhawks to a 15-12 overall record and 10-9 in conference play, making it unlikely that Stonehill will make the same immediate impact as Merrimack did winning the NEC regular season title in 2020.

Nonetheless, Stonehill is a unique matchup due to their positionless motion offense that is predicated on high skill and IQ that forces defenses to stretch their defenders to the perimeter, providing their shooters space.

A Look at the Roster

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The best returning player is stat-stuffing fifth year forward Andrew Sims. Playing most of last season at the 4, Kraus expects the 6’6 200 Sims to play more on the perimeter this season, which allows more time sharing the floor with incoming D2 grad transfers Max Zegarowski (Franklin Pierce) and Cole Bergan (Northern State).

Like his older brother and former Crieighton great Marcus Zegarowski, Max is a lights out shooter, making 2.4 threes per game last season at an incredible 43.0%. While Cole Bergan isn’t as talented of a shooter, he brings a more versatile offensive game, dishing out 3.7 assists per game last season.

The Skyhawks best returning guard is Isaiah Burnett. Starting his basketball career at Navy, Burnett is a three-level, two-way combo guard who can do a little bit of everything on the court. Josh Mack is the team’s most aggressive defender who limits mistakes on the offensive end.

At the backup guard spots, Nathan McGill and Emmanuel Bonsu are two guards more known for their defense. Bonsu, in particular, guarded four positions last season and will look to do the same in the guard-heavy NEC.

At the wing spots, Christopher Melis played close to starter minutes as a freshman thanks to his physicality and willingness to play bigger than his size while William & Mary transfer Thatcher Stone has yet to showcase the shooting potential he showed in high school, earning him offers from BU, Bucknell and Brown.

While Stonehill’s lack of size will not help prepare the Huskies for the Kalkbrenners, Nunges and Dixons and Castletons of their schedule, future opponents like Marquette, Oklahoma State and Xavier, like Stonehill, use space and open up the floor. Stonehill’s heady ball-movement could even help replicate the type of looks they’ll see from Villanova.
 
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Thanks for this breakdown. I'd love to see them have a pesky first year and maybe even better.
 

Horatio

Cohesion is the Key
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Stonehill’s Shamir Johnson is the son of former Danbury High School stand out Vonsell Johnson. He was part of that great Anthony “Snake” Harris team and went on to play at University of Hartford and SCSU. That’s all I got.
 

gtcam

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Thanks so much HA for your time and effort on providing these inside glimpses of opponents - awesome report and great info - as usual
 
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The thing that scares me about Stone Hill is their name. Stones are very hard. And hills are difficult to climb. It's a terrifying name.

Also, I used to own a Buick Skyhawk and that thing could really go.
 
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The thing that scares me about Stone Hill is their name. Stones are very hard. And hills are difficult to climb. It's a terrifying name.

Also, I used to own a Buick Skyhawk and that thing could really go.
Maybe a Buick Skylark? A Skyhawk is a plane, never too old for me to learn something new - yet.
 

Waquoit

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I find it interesting that Stonehill thinks the time is right to go D-1 while UHar decided the exact opposite.
 
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I find it interesting that Stonehill thinks the time is right to go D-1 while UHar decided the exact opposite.

Usually these decisions boil down to money. Hartford should never have gone Div. 1, it had a very successful Div. 2 program, was looking for more $$.
 

Chin Diesel

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Great to see these posts.

I for one had no idea Stonehill was a university or a college. Seems like the name of a school from a 1980's sitcom or something.
 
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Great to see these posts.

I for one had no idea Stonehill was a university or a college. Seems like the name of a school from a 1980's sitcom or something.
I didn't believe it existed until I drove to Gillette for a Rammstein concert and saw Stonehill College signs along the way.
 

Husky25

Dink & Dunk beat the Greatest Show on Turf.
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Great to see these posts.

I for one had no idea Stonehill was a university or a college. Seems like the name of a school from a 1980's sitcom or something.
Stonehill "College (back then)" was my second choice in 1994/5 before I chose UConn and a guy on my floor Sophomore year transferred from Stonehill. It's tiny (Under 2,000 undergrad at the time), but really nice campus and had an interesting internship program at that point.

Ultimately, I didn't want to go back to high school for college, which ruled out Stonehill (class size), and UMass Amherst (about 40% of my graduating class went to UMass.).

Be that as it may, not a day goes by when I'm not ecstatic that I chose UConn.
 

shizzle787

King Shizzle DCCLXXXVII of the Cesspool
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Usually these decisions boil down to money. Hartford should never have gone Div. 1, it had a very successful Div. 2 program, was looking for more $$.
Hartford originally moved up about 40 years ago. Today, Division 2 is an awkward middle ground. As a school you have to be able to afford to give scholarships, but you don’t get the marketing advantage of being Division 1. So I do get why Hartford moved down to Division 3.
 

shizzle787

King Shizzle DCCLXXXVII of the Cesspool
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I find it interesting that Stonehill thinks the time is right to go D-1 while UHar decided the exact opposite.
It is possibly a really bad time. The NCAA transformation committee could come out as soon as the end of the month with updated more exclusive requirements to remain Division 1.
 

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