Sports
Six members of the MonroeCommunity College
women’s basketball team pound their feet on their treadmills, the hum of the
machines drowning out their heavy breaths. They are sweaty, exhausted, spent,
but they keep running, some shouting out encouragement to each other, some
stoically silent.
Their coach, Tim Parrinello, flits
between them, checking their speeds and making sure they get the most out of
their grueling workout. “They don’t just give you that trophy!” he barks.
“You’ve got to earn it!”
The trophy in question is the National Junior College
Athletic Association’s national championship trophy. MCC has claimed three of
them in a row, and the Tribunes desperately want a fourth in 2007.
Parrinello has built one of the
junior college world’s best women’s basketball programs, and tonight offers an
explanation of how. As the six players grind through their workout, Parrinello pushes them to the wall, but he does it knowing
that they’re capable of not only surviving the workout, but also thriving on
it.
For the last 11 seasons, Parrinello
has demanded excellence from his players, and they’re given it to him, to the
college — and to themselves. They succeed because they believe they can
succeed, because he believes they can
succeed.
“He’s the best coach I’ve ever had,” says sophomore guard
and East High grad Tiffany Wilson. “I consider him like a father figure to me.
He has so much respect for us.”
That’s a word you’ll hear early and often when discussing
the MCC women’s program. “What impresses me most of all,” says MCC athletic
director Bruce “Murph” Shapiro, “is that he gets a
great respect from his players, and he treats them with an equal amount of
respect.”
That coaching style has been honed over the years as Parrinello has slowly transformed the way he teaches the
game. In the past, he might have gotten on a player for making a mistake. Not
anymore.
“I think I’ve progressed as a coach,” he says. “I used to
demand perfection, but now I do more encouraging than screaming. I do a lot
more of pointing out the positive, not the negative. We’re players’ coaches. I
always ask myself, ‘Would I want to play for me?'”
Last season perhaps
exemplifiedParrinello’s ability to raise his
players’ expectations of themselves. After winning three NJCAA Division II
titles in five years, the Tribunes made the move up to Division I for the
2005-06 season, meaning the quality of play they faced
moved up as well.
But MCC didn’t skip a beat. The Tribunes went 31-1 and
rolled to another title by beating Odessa College, 76-64, in the national
championship game. With the crown came even more…what’s that word again?
“It gets you a lot of respect,” says sophomore guard Dawn
Coleman. “Everyone knows who Monroe
is. It’s an honor playing here. MCC has a great legacy, and I’m glad I can add
to it.”
Parrinello says that winning
championships has earned the attention of NCAA Division I coaches who want MCC
grads to play for their team. In all, Parrinello’s
MCC teams have sent 31 players to NCAA Division I programs, including Syracuse, Temple, Pittsburgh, and Miami.
“When my phone rings and it’s
[legendary Tennessee coach] Pat Summitt or the coach at [defending NCAA champion] Maryland, or when I get
text messages from eight or 10 coaches, it shows what people think of MCC,” Parrinello says.
But Parrinello prides himself on
his ability to develop a player not only athletically, but academically and
personally as well. “We’re involved in every facet of their lives,” he says.
“We’ve stressed academics from Day One, because it matters how many players you
graduate.”
Parrinello scours the eastern United States
looking for diamonds in the rough, players who might have been passed over by
other programs for whatever reasons. “I get a lot of players who aren’t
supposed to make it,” he says. “We help them to succeed.”
Trenise Fuller puts her hands on her hips and
gulps for breath, sweat pouring down her face. She’s taking a break — albeit
a short one — from her treadmill workout, and she’s clearly exhausted. But
she still extends her hand to the reporter, smiles, and answers questions with
composure.
“He’s fun,” the Queens
native says of Parrinello, “but he also knows how to
take care of business. He works us hard, but it pays off in the end. He’s
pushed me to become a better player. I’m grateful to be here.”
Fuller says her goal is to earn a scholarship to a four-year
school and continue her basketball career. Well, that and win another juco championship.
Is that possible? she’s asked. A
huge smile breaks across her face.
“Of course, yeah,” she says. “Everybody here is hungry for
another one. We’ll go after it.”
With the conclusion of the interview, Fuller heads back to
her treadmill and continues her workout with her
teammates. Standing behind her is Parrinello, ready
to encourage her and push her even more.
The MCC women’s basketball team plays its next home game
Tuesday, January 23, at 6 p.m. against NiagaraCountyCommunity College. For
more information call 292-2830.
This article appears in Jan 17-23, 2007.






