August 24, 2007
Lawrence (Mass.) Eagle-Tribune:
Not Missing the Point
On the basketball court and in the classroom, Methuen's
Ryan Middlemiss has his priorities in order
This article is reprinted with
permission of the Lawrence Eagle-Tribune. It ran on August 24, 2007.
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By Bob Albright, Eagle Tribune Writer
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Middlemiss
became the Eagles' first ever selection to the prestigious NABC
'Honor Court' for his academic achievements (Gil Talbot photo). |
(Nashua) - "He gets it."
Of
all the sound bites the irrepressible Bill Parcells was fond of bombarding
the assembled press with, that one always seemed to resonate above the rest.
It was usually used to describe that late drafted rookie who may have put
the scouts asleep at the combine, but nevertheless still had a shot at
making the team simply due to an innate knowledge of the game, his
surroundings and what was at stake.
Give the Tuna a few moments with Methuen's Ryan Middlemiss and you get the
feeling he might go to the well one more time with the phrase.
The senior point guard and newly elected captain of the Daniel Webster
College men's basketball team recently was named to the National Association
of Basketball Coaches (NABC) Honor Court (read the original DWC announcement
here). The award recognizes the top
collegiate academic achievers at all levels and Middlemiss is the first DWC
men's hoop player to earn it. Ask Middlemiss about the award and Parcells'
phrase pop immediately to mind.
"When you are playing Division 3 basketball, you have to keep your
priorities straight and be looking ahead to what is next," said the sports
management student, who posted a 3.6 GPA while also finishing second in the
Great Northeast Athletic Conference in assists at 4.0 a contest. "I love
basketball, but I realized from a young age that when you're a 5-foot-8
point guard, you probably are not going to the NBA. You need to be looking
towards your future."
Middlemiss will also be the first to admit that there was a time that he
didn't quite get it. Never a bad student while starring at Methuen High,
he's also quick to admit that his picture probably is not going to jog the
memory of the Methuen library staff anytime soon.
"In high school, I really didn't apply myself as much as I could," said
Middlemiss, who added 5.7 points and 3.1 rebounds a game. "There's just so
much going on and the last thing you're thinking about is your future. But
it's definitely a maturing process. You look at how much college costs these
days and books become the most important thing. I want to get the most out
of it as possible."
Middlemiss says that maturing process has not been solely confined to the
classroom, but the hardwood as well. While he looks back at his eventful
career with the Rangers fondly, he wishes that he was remembered more for
his play than his sometimes tempestuous nature.
"We had some tough years and I think I got a bad rap because I got T'ed up
(received technical fouls) a lot," said Middlemiss, who was an Eagle-Tribune
All-Star in 2003. "I think a lot of people probably thought I was this loud
punk out there, but it was just that I was so competitive and hated losing.
But that's high school. It's all part of the maturing process."
Out of high school, he had a brief stay at Springfield College, then starred
at Northern Essex.
Middlemiss, 22, says he would like to stay involved in basketball after
graduation either as a coach or in a marketing capacity. First-year Daniel
Webster coach Jeremy Currier says he can see Middlemiss doing the former and
is hopeful that he might have him right next to him on the bench a year from
now as a graduate assistant.
"There's no question that it would be a great fit for him," said the former
Pinkerton Academy and Endicott College standout, who became one of the
youngest college basketball coaches in the country when he took over the DWC
program in March at the age of 25. "There's no question that he's a natural
leader and the type of person that people respond to."
That type of leadership will be invaluable this year in Nashua. Forced to
play last year with as little as nine players, Currier and his equally young
staff went into recruiting overdrive and netted a plethora of talented
freshmen including Eagle-Tribune Player of the Year Stephen Savage of Salem
as well as his teammate with the Class L champion Blue Devils, Chris
Voukides.
Middlemiss recently helped guide a group of those freshman all the way to
the Adidas College Summer League finals in Nashua, where he was the only
upperclassmen on the team. He looks forward to guiding them through the
inevitable pitfalls that come during your first year away from home as well.
"Absolutely. We're going to have study halls three times a week anyway,"
says the team's lone captain. "I'll be the first to tell them that I was
just like them, but once again they're not at a Division 1 school. They're
here to get an education."
The Tuna couldn't have said it better himself.
Bob Albright is a staff writer for the Eagle-Tribune newspaper of Lawrence,
Mass.