The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Safer helm for Rocks guided by Red Lichtie

- SEAN HAMILTON

The lessons learned in cold school gyms in Arbroath never leave you, Gareth Murray proclaims. Wintry weeknights and sunny Saturday mornings, one for all and all for one as part of the town’s Musketeers, a basketball club turned talent pipeline.

The education took him far and wide. To America and college days in Michigan, to France and a lengthy spell soaking up the ambience and athletic opportunit­y. Big stages with Great Britain as a member of the starting line-up at two European championsh­ip finals. But principall­y, to Glasgow, where at the age of 36, the pupil has become master after taking over as playercoac­h of Glasgow Rocks, Scotland’s sole entrant in the British Baske tball League.

Murray ’s competitiv­e tenure begins tomorrow against Cheshire Phoenix in the group stages of the BBL Cup, with Murray now guiding many who were team-mates when the previous season was abruptly aborted in March, a rookie on the sidelines, leaning back on his initial education and the men who taught him well.

“When I was growing up in high school, my coaches were the two PE teachers,” Murray recounts. “John

Grant ran Arbroath Musketeers in his spare time. Keith Ritchie took a lot of the team. And we also had Jo h n Anton who taught PE in Carnoustie and who was a head coach of the Scotland team under16s as well.

“Those guys are still big influences on me as a player because they weren’t about team success. Obviously you want to win

and that’s what the goal was.

“But it was all about individual practice and individual fundamenta­ls and producing players.

“We didn’t have as many internatio­nal players as Falkirk Fury, who brought through Kieron Achara, Ali Fraser, Fraser Malcolm and Jonny Bunyan. But you had myself at the Musketeers. And you now have Hannah

Robb who came through the women’s side, who’s going to make her senior debut for GB against Poland on Saturday. She’s just 22. And she’s got a great future and it’s a credit to the work so many people put in.”

Murray was a veritable late bloomer, returning from the US as a relative unknown, forced to prove himself with the Rocks via an open trial to simply earn a shot at a profession­al.

The trajectory was slow but upward. Even so it took him until past his 30th birthday to earn his first GB cap before his diligent service made him a never-present under successive coaches, not a star but a vital cog.

“You work on those things that will help you,” he says. “So for instance, like in the BBL, I have a different role from the one I play for GB. With GB, I am literally a role player: you play defence, you hit open shots and you try and work on that.

“But when I’m in playing in the BBL, you’ve got to do a little bit of everything. You got to be really vocal, to be a leader, you’ve got to be able to score the ball in different ways, you got to defend multiple different players.

“You’re trying to work on your weaknesses, improve your overall game. And hopefully something will stick and you’ ll become really good at something.”

He’ll spell the mantra out to the Rocks, the youngest squad in the BBL of whom little is expected as the financial pressures of playing behind closed doors translate into budget prudence.

“We all have to adjust,” he concedes. “It’s going to be a tough season, for so many reasons and it’s going to be unpredicta­ble.”

 ??  ?? Gareth Murray has taken over as player-coach with Glasgow.
Gareth Murray has taken over as player-coach with Glasgow.

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