Date: Fri 22-Mar-1996
Date: Fri 22-Mar-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: KIMH
Illustration: I
Quick Words:
McKenzie-Calandruccio
Full Text:
TJ McKenzie and JP Calandruccio at St. Joe's
B Y T.W YATT
In the winter of 1991, Hank Gellert and Steve Wasko began a sixth-grade travel
basketball team in Newtown for young players to gain the experience of playing
against some of the state's best competition at an early age. The team played
together for three years and was successful from the start. This group, it was
certain, would have a chance to be of state champion caliber by the time it
reached the high school level. . .
The date was Saturday, March 16, 1996. The scene was the Central Connecticut
State University gymnasium at Kayser Hall. Newtown's TJ McKenzie and JP
Calandruccio had just taken their turns climbing a six-foot step ladder to cut
down a piece of the nylon basketball net. The two, immersed in the sheer
elation that lies at the end of the rainbow, then joined the rest of their
teammates in celebration.
But it wasn't Newtown High School doing the celebrating. It was St Joseph's of
Trumbull. The two high school juniors, members of that Newtown travelling
all-star team, opted, three years ago, for private school and the perennial
high school basketball dynasty that is St Joe's.
" They're two of the nicest kids we've ever had, " said St Joe's coach Vito
Montelli who's 1996 state championship was his eighth in 13 appearances in the
title game. " They have great attitudes, they work hard, and they listen and
do anything the coaches tell them to do. They've both improved quite a bit
since they've been here, and have been great assets to our program. "
McKenzie, who was over six-and-a-half feet tall and still growing heading into
his freshman year, received the most fanfare when he chose to attend St Joe's
in the fall of 1993.
TJ's opportunity to cut down the state championship nets, Saturday, was part
of the dividend he sought when making that decision.
" That was a lot of it, " he admitted, " and I just wanted to try a new
school. It was tough to lose my friends and go meet all new people, but it
worked out better for me. Jon Paul [Calandruccio] was the only guy I knew in
the whole school when we started, but we've made a lot of new friends
together. "
Currently at 6-10 and 225 pounds, TJ has blossomed into one of the biggest,
and best, centers in the state.
This season, despite missing six games with a foot injury, McKenzie averaged
15 points, 12 rebounds, and five blocked shots per game. During a game against
Wilton earlier this winter, TJ broke a school record when be swatted eleven
shots. In the first half of the state title game against Torrington, who had
incidentally knocked off Newtown in the state quarterfinals, McKenzie led his
team with seven first-half points.
During the third quarter, with St Joe's trailing 32-27, TJ put together a
sequence that ignited an overwhelming Cadets' charge.
TJ assisted a hoop to cut his team's deficit to 32-29 and then blocked a shot
on the other end that led to a game-tying three pointer.
Ahead 38-36 at the end of three quarters, McKenzie pulled another big rebound
which led to a St Joe's three-point play. With his team's lead at five points,
McKenzie then electrified the crowd when he ripped an offensive rebound and
then rocked the boards with a two-handed dunk in traffic.
At 43-36, the rout was on. St Joseph's went on to win, 67-47.
TJ finished his workman-like day with eleven points, ten rebounds, four
assists, three steals, and three blocked shots. It was just another day at the
office. " TJ has made great strides in his time with us, " coach Montelli
said. " The sad thing is that he's missed so much time. He would have made
even greater strides if he hadn't been injured last year and then again this
year. If you put all that together, and see the progress he's made, you can
only surmise that he'd be that much further ahead if he hadn't been hurt.
There's no question; by next year, TJ McKenzie could become one of the highest
recruited kids we've ever had. "
TJ's short career at St Joe's has been plagued by injuries. After a full
freshman year in which he played the freshman game and the jayvee game each
night and then suited up for varsity, he broke his ankle causing him to miss
the majority of his sophomore year before injuring his foot and missing
several games as a junior this season.
" It's really tough when you put in all that work and then get injured, " said
McKenzie, who plays basketball with an AAU program in the spring and then
plays summer leagues. " All you can do is work to stay in shape. The first few
games back, this year, it was still a little bit painful, but after about
three weeks I didn't have any more troubles with it. I'm healthy again. "
McKenzie was certainly healthy enough to dominate Torrington's talented center
Justin Leftkowski, Saturday, as he helped St Joe's to one of it's more
gratifying state championship titles.
" We really didn't expect this at all, " said coach Montelli, who's Cadets
were seeded sixth in the tournament after a 15-5 regular season. " We lost six
out of our first seven players from last year including all five starters.
Looking at what we had at the start of the season we were hoping to break 500
and make the state tournament. "
And while McKenzie called the victory one of the most special basketball
moments of his lifetime, he admitted that it would have been that much more
special if his team had the chance to face his old friends from Newtown in
that contest.
" I was really wondering if we'd meet up with them, " he said. " I was
following along and hoping. That would have been a good game. "
JP Calandruccio
While he wasn't touted as highly as his friend, TJ, Jon Paul Calandruccio, who
had starred alongside of McKenzie in eighth grade with the Newtown Middle
School team, ended up in that same state-championship lineup.
" I didn't come to St Joe's to play basketball, " Calandruccio said. "
Everybody thinks that, but that wasn't it at all. I wanted to go to a Catholic
School and saw that TJ was going to St Joe's and I thought that it would be a
good idea. "
But it didn't take the 6-foot-3 shooting guard long to catch the fever.
Calandruccio played with TJ on the freshman team before being called up to
jayvee at the season's halfway point. As a sophomore he stared the year at the
jayvee level and then earned another promotion.
This year, as a junior, JP earned himself a starting position in December and
started 13 of his team's 20 games, averaging nearly seven points per contest
before being benched in favor of a senior.
" The only reason we went with Max Gomez at the end of the year was because he
was a senior and had been giving us great minutes off the bench, " explained
coach Montelli. " Jon Paul accepted his role as the sixth man and did an
outstanding job for us. He's going to be a fine player here. I think Jon's
best attribute is shooting the ball. He's an excellent shooter and will get a
chance to show that a bit more next year. "
In the state final, Calandruccio played nearly the entire first quarter and
scored his team's first bucket. He finished the game with three points and two
steals. Also like his classmate, McKenzie, Calandruccio has spent his off
seasons playing AAU and summer league basketball in preparation for the high
school season.
As seniors next winter, the sky's the limit for St Joe's Newtown connection.
" We've got a number of juniors on our team, " coach Montelli said. " If they
dedicate themselves I think they'll both be very important to us next year. "
Over at Newtown High School they're still talking about what it would be like
to see TJ McKenzie and JP Calandruccio out there on the same floor with
Patrick Reilly, Andrew Gellert, Sean Pond, and Company.
It nearly happened this winter.
Maybe next.
CIAC Class L Championships
ST JOSEPH (67) - TJ McKenzie 4 3-4 11, JP Calandruccio 1 1-2 3, Tim Owens 6
4-5 16, Chris Schrade 2 4-4 8, Jimmy Driggs 5 6-6 19, Max Gomez 1 3-5 5,
Vernon Thompson 1 0-0 2, Ken Nappi 0 0-0 0, Jason Manning 0 1-2 1, John Hayes
0 2-2 2, Rob Benedetto 0 0-0 0. Totals: 20 24-30 67.
TORRINGTON (47) - Adriano Calabrese 4 0-1 8, Justin Lefkowski 5 1-2 11,
Clayton Demine 1 0-0 2, Marcus Werner 6 0-0 13, Jason Conrad 2 0-0 4, Mike
Crausz 2 0-0 5, Jimmy Erace 0 1-2 1, Joel Chamberlin 1 0-0 3. Totals 21 2-4
47.
St Joseph's 12 13 13 29 - 67
Torrington 17 9 10 11 - 47
Halftime: Torrington 26, St Joe's 25.
Three-point field goals: Driggs (SJ) 3, Chamberlin (T), Werner (T), Crausz
(T).
