Sydney Johnson
’97, center, with Kareem Maddox ’11, left, and Zach
Woolridge ’08 at an October practice, is preaching patience
and unity in his first season as head coach. (Beverly Schaefer)
The
Captain Returns Basketball’s Sydney Johnson ’97 has been ‘a
coach all along’
By Brett Tomlinson
The photo on Northwestern coach Bill Carmody’s desk shows one
of the most enduring images in the recent history of Princeton basketball.
Mitch Henderson ’98, now one of Carmody’s assistants, is leaping
and shouting, arms raised in jubilation, as the Tigers complete their
unthinkable victory over defending national champion UCLA in the 1996
NCAA tournament. But behind Henderson, teammate Sydney Johnson ’97
does not seem quite ready to celebrate. His eyes are fixed on some point
in the distance — the game clock, Carmody suspects. Johnson seems
to be checking it one more time to confirm that it reads all zeroes.
“He wanted to be sure all the bases were covered,” Carmody
says. “He’s been a coach all along.”
When Johnson, at age 33 and with just three years of coaching experience
on his résumé, was named Princeton’s head coach last
April, those outside the program might have been surprised. But for Johnson’s
former coaches — including Carmody, Armond Hill ’85, and John
Thompson III ’88 — and the two dozen players who called him
“captain,” the choice made perfect sense. “He’s
more than ready,” says Thompson, who was Johnson’s boss and
mentor at Georgetown. “There’s no better person for that job.”
Of course, being called the right man for the job does not make the
job any easier, as Joe Scott ’87 discovered. Under Scott, who left
for the University of Denver after three seasons at Princeton, the Tigers
struggled to a 2–12 record in Ivy League games last year and posted
consecutive losing seasons for the first time since the 1940s. Meanwhile,
Penn has been dominant, winning three straight Ivy titles, and Cornell
and Yale have emerged as consistent winners. Harvard, a perennial second-tier
team, seems determined to improve its program after hiring former Michigan
coach Tommy Amaker in April.
Princeton opened its 2007–08 schedule earlier this month, and
before the season, Johnson preached patience and unity, hoping to apply
some of the lessons he had learned in helping to turn around a tradition-rich
program at Georgetown. The Hoyas won the Big East Tournament and reached
the NCAA Final Four in 2007, but when Thompson and his staff took over
in 2004, they were coming off a 13–15 season. “It was tough
[in the first year], and we had our fair share of losses,” Johnson
says. “We had to learn about ourselves along the way. ... But we
never doubted that it was us against them. That’s certainly
what I want for Princeton basketball.”
Just a few years removed from a successful career as a professional
player in Europe, Johnson has an impressive track record. He played for
two celebrated high school programs — Towson (Md.) Catholic and
Fork Union (Va.) Military Academy — before coming to Princeton.
With the Tigers, he was the only three-year captain in team history, leading
his teams to two Ivy titles. He went on to win three more championships
in seven seasons in Italy and Spain before returning to the United States
to join Thompson’s staff.
At Georgetown, Johnson was asked to do a little bit of everything —
recruiting, individual instruction, planning practices, breaking down
game tapes, organizing the scout team — and he excelled in them
all, according to Thompson. But Johnson’s leadership training began
long before his coaching days, or even his high school days. His parents
divorced when he was young, and his father, LeRoy, a history professor,
raised Sydney and his two older brothers in a series of college towns.
LeRoy Johnson had been a college basketball standout at Indiana University
and was one of the first Americans to play professionally in France, but
with his sons, he emphasized academics and life lessons. Someday, you’ll
have the opportunity to lead the people around you, he would tell them.
Prepare for that. Be ready. Sydney took the message to heart.
When he first visited Princeton, late in his postgraduate year at Fork
Union, Johnson made an immediate impression on assistant coach Hill, now
an assistant with the NBA’s Boston Celtics. Johnson was soft-spoken,
polite, and engaging. “You could tell then and there that he was
a thinker,” Hill says. “He was never afraid to ask questions.
He wanted to know why things worked or why they didn’t.”
Johnson had made plans to play at other colleges before Princeton showed
interest, first committing to Boston University when he was a senior at
Towson Catholic, and later signing with Miami University in Ohio when
he was at Fork Union. (The twists and turns in his college search, he
says, make him sympathetic to the difficult choices that today’s
recruits face.) By the time Princeton’s coaches arranged his visit,
spring classes had ended, and Johnson’s host, Chris Mooney ’94,
was studying for exams. There was no wining and dining — just a
meeting with coach Pete Carril and the assistants and an informal tour
— but Johnson was hooked. He loved the program and the place. “If
you choose to go to a school based on a visit like that, you’re
probably coming for the right reasons,” he says.
When practice began in the fall, teammates did not know exactly what
to make of Johnson when they saw the spindle-legged freshman sprinting
from basket to basket in layup drills like a little kid who’d never
seen a full court. Mooney, now the head coach at the University of Richmond,
says no one figured Johnson’s enthusiasm could last. But it did,
and it was contagious.
Johnson found a place in the starting lineup early that season, and
the Tigers went 11–3 in Ivy games. But they could not get past Penn,
with its stellar duo of guards Jerome Allen and Matt Maloney, both of
whom would go on to play in the NBA. The story continued in Johnson’s
sophomore
year, and even in his junior year, after Allen and Maloney graduated.
Princeton was 12–2 in Ivy games that season, and both losses were
to the Quakers.
Years later, after he had gone head-to-head with some of the best teams
in Europe, Johnson realized that there are some teams so loaded with talent
and so in sync with each other that opponents have to play a near-perfect
game just to stay close. Penn, in the Allen and Maloney days, was one
of those teams. “I’m just glad that at some point, it turned
our way, and we were forcing other teams to play mistake-free basketball,”
he says.
Johnson almost single-handedly reversed the trend in 1996, when Princeton
faced Penn in a playoff that would turn out to be Carril’s final
Ivy game. The Quakers had beaten Princeton six straight times and, after
a remarkable second-half comeback, seemed headed toward seven. But with
just over a minute left in overtime, Johnson drained an arching 3-pointer
from the right corner, recapturing the lead for Princeton.
Moments later, after making two free throws to put the Tigers up by
five, Johnson poked the ball free as Penn guard Ira Bowman tried a crossover
dribble near the foul line, forcing a turnover and punching Princeton’s
ticket to the NCAA Tournament, where it would face UCLA. “The sheer
joy [of the win over Penn] is just something that those of us who were
there will never forget,” Director of Athletics Gary Walters ’67
said last April. “Knowing that this was Coach Carril’s last
year, there was something magical about it.”
The win over UCLA, which came less than a week later, drew national
attention to the Tigers’ resurgence, and afterward, Princeton basketball
became synonymous with the slow, low-scoring approach that Carril’s
team used to beat the UCLA Bruins. “Coach Carril had a particular
game plan,” Johnson says. “We slowed the ball down, we didn’t
go for any offensive rebounds. We really changed our game drastically
to beat them, and we did. And it was terrific. But then everybody thought
that’s how we play all the time.”
The 43–41 final score, Johnson says, was an anomaly. Princeton
scored 88 points in a win over St. Joseph’s earlier that season
and averaged 60 points per game for the year. Carril, perceived as rigid
and old-school, showed flexibility by understanding matchups and seeing
what it would take to beat each opponent — an attribute that Johnson
tries to emulate in his coaching.
While Thompson is Johnson’s most recent mentor and a trusted adviser,
Carril’s influence remains apparent. Outside of his immediate family,
LeRoy Johnson says, no one did more to shape Sydney than the man who brought
him to Princeton. Playing for Carril was never easy, and being a captain
raised the expectations another notch. But Johnson took it in stride.
“If Coach Carril put pressure on me,” he says, “it meant
that he saw something in me worth bringing out.”
Among Carril’s many philosophies is the idea that sports reveal
character, not build it. If that’s true, then Johnson’s trajectory
as a player stands as a testament to his selflessness. A deadly 3-point
shooter in his freshman season, Johnson gradually stepped back as a scorer.
Brian Earl ’99 became the Tigers’ long-range specialist, and
Steve Goodrich ’98 emerged as a pivotal player in the post. But
Johnson aggressively improved in other aspects like passing, rebounding,
and defense, which became his calling card. With boundless energy, long,
sinewy arms, and a knack for working around screens, he would shut down
the leading scorers on opposing teams.
In Johnson’s senior year, Ivy coaches voted him Player of the
Year, even though he scored fewer than 10 points per game. “You’d
have to watch the games to know [how important Johnson was],” says
Goodrich, who would win Player of the Year honors in 1998. “He wasn’t
our leading scorer, but he was always our best player.”
When Johnson’s playing days at Princeton ended, he had several
options, and graduate school in history was near the top of the list.
But the chance to play professional basketball in Europe was too attractive
to ignore. In May of his senior year, Johnson went to a tryout camp in
Treviso, Italy, following the path of both his father and older brother
Steve, who had played at the University of California, Berkeley, before
starting a pro career overseas.
In Italy, and later Spain, Johnson witnessed an intense pressure to
win, and he thrived, finding his niche as a defender and playmaker. Brent
Scott, an assistant coach at Rice, played alongside Johnson with Reggio
Calabria, a second-division team in Italy, during the late 1990s. The
team had a mix of players, including Brian Oliver, an ex-NBA guard settling
into the second act of his career, and Manu Ginobili, a young, relatively
unknown Argentinian who would go on to be an NBA All-Star. Oliver and
Ginobili were headliners in what would be a championship season, but Johnson
“was the engine,” Scott says.
Johnson soon began to think that coaching could be his next step, and
his experiences on the floor reinforced that idea. The fundamentals that
Carril and other Princeton coaches treasured — passing, dribbling,
and shooting — were second nature for European players, so Johnson
had to work harder to find weaknesses in his opponents. Living abroad,
he jokes, was “a seven-year vacation,” but it was an education
as well.
When Johnson decided to leave pro basketball in 2004, his timing was
perfect. He had kept in touch with Thompson, an assistant coach during
Johnson’s Princeton years, and got a message from the coach about
his upcoming move to Georgetown. A job offer soon followed. Timing again
helped last spring, when Joe Scott left Princeton for Denver in the middle
of Georgetown’s impressive march through the NCAA East Regional.
Of the half-dozen coaches most frequently mentioned as candidates for
the Princeton job, Johnson would be the only one who coached in the Final
Four.
Leaving Georgetown was difficult, and not just because of his team’s
recent success. After bouncing around Europe, Johnson and his wife, Jennifer
(Zarr) Johnson ’97, had settled into their new home with their 2-year-old
son, Jalen, and newborn daughter, Julia. But Princeton, where Sydney and
Jennifer first met as freshmen in Wilson College, seemed like home as
well. Johnson accepted the job in late April. When he was introduced,
he told reporters, “I just knew this was the right place for me.”
At the April press conference and in the months that followed, Johnson’s
public comments focused on his plans for the future, from encouraging
his players to be more aggressive to raising the level of talent through
recruiting. But on one morning in September, a week before students arrived
for the fall semester, he sat in the office where Carril once worked and
allowed himself to drift back to his undergraduate days for a few minutes.
Of the many memories, the playoff game against Penn remains most vivid,
he says, recalling the quiet confidence he and his teammates had on the
bus that morning and the exhilaration they felt as Princeton fans poured
onto the court as time expired.
“I think we all smile about that moment,” Johnson says.
“As great as that moment was, I want to share [another one] with
our guys in the program right now.”