New York Post

LOST & FOUND

Once homeless, Paulicap has made his home at Manhattan

- HOWIEKUSSO­Y hkussoy@nypost.com

THE WHEELS went up. Some seats went back. New York slowly faded from view. The Manhattan Jaspers were sailing over the Atlantic Ocean to the Basketball Hall of Fame Belfast Classic in Northern Ireland, and Pauly Paulicap was leaving his home country for the first time.

He didn’t have to worry where he would sleep that night. He didn’t have to wonder if he would eat that day He already had traveled far. “Sometimes I just don’t believe it. I’ll wake up and I can’t believe I’m here,” Paulicap said. “I was homeless. I had nowhere to go, and I was walking around carrying a duffle bag. I barely had any clothes. “Life hit hard.” At Manhattan, the 6-foot-8 sophomore forward has become one of the nation’s best shotblocke­rs, and the Steve Masiello’s first first-year captain, but growing up on Long Island, Paulicap didn’t play sports and was frequently in trouble at Elmont High School.

When his mother, Marie, and his stepfather separated, the family struggled to pay the rent, and was forced to move multiple times. Paulicap’s relationsh­ip with his mom grew rockier. A landlord evicted him from his brother’s apartment when he learned Paulicap was staying there without paying. A friend’s uncle demanded he leave their house, believing Paulicap to be a bad influence.

He didn’t know where to go. The school suggested the Nassau Haven group home, which provides housing for runaway and homeless youth.

It became his only option too many times.

“I was lost. I was pretty much alone,” Paulicap said. “My mom was going through her own stuff, and couldn’t keep up with the bills, and things started getting difficult. She was around, but she really wasn’t. My brothers were around, but they really weren’t. I didn’t have the support I needed at the time.”

That was until the family of one of Paulicap’s closest childhood friends opened its home to him. He still resides there when he’s back from school.

“His parents kind of knew something was going on. I didn’t have food, so I would always eat over there, and they would give me money on the side,” Paulicap said. “When I stayed with them, I had food. I had a bed. They bought me clothes, and it allowed me to focus more on basketball and school, and that support made me really realize how talented I was in sports.”

That year, Paulicap picked up a basketball for the first time in his life. With no experience, but exceptiona­l athleticis­m, he joined JV basketball — in addition to volleyball and track — as an 11th-grader and decided he wasn’t going to be like many of his siblings, who never graduated high school.

He wasn’t going to be like he had been.

“I’m not gonna lie, I was a knuck- lehead. I was with the wrong crowd and doing stupid stuff,” Paulicap said. “My brothers didn’t have a great reputation, and everyone expected the same thing of me. They said, ‘Pauly’s always getting suspended. He’s gonna end up just like his brothers. He’s not gonna graduate. He’s not gonna do anything.’ That’s when I said, ‘I got to get my life together. I can’t not be anything.’ ”

As a senior, Paulicap was an All-County selection, and earned a spot at Harcum College in Bryn Mawr, Pa., where he finished sixth in the NJCAA in blocks last season. He then chose Manhattan over Cal State Northridge.

In his first month in Division I, Paulicap has averaged 7.9 points, 5.4 rebounds and 2.9 blocks, and already has become one of the most unique players of Masiello’s sevenyear tenure.

“He just plays so hard all the time, and when you meet him, he’s just a special young man and very selfless,” Masiello said. “He’s everyone’s fan favorite. He’s infectious, and he’s probably the first player I’ve had that has more energy than I do. The way he is in the locker room, the way he is on the bus, he’s got a personalit­y that’s bigger than 20 people. He’s probably the most independen­t young man I’ve coached. He’s a selfstarte­r. He’s a self-motivator. He has great pride in everything he does. He’s really changed our program.

“He’s given us a presence that we haven’t had in a couple years and I think our guys are really feeding off that. … The fact that he has three years left is really scary. I think you’re looking at someone that can be a three-time defensive player of the year, possibly a defensive All-American, and someone who can have a long future in this game.”

 ??  ?? PAULY PAULICAP Belfast Classic Photograph­y
PAULY PAULICAP Belfast Classic Photograph­y

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