Call & Times

Syracuse legend McNamara leaves to coach Siena

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ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) — Siena coach Gerry McNamara has plenty of memories — some new, some old — from the arena where the Saints play their home games.

He earned a trip to the Final Four by playing for the Syracuse team that won a regional there on the way to the national championsh­ip in 2003. He played there again in 2004, a game where he got the first dunk of his college career and dove into the Siena band to save a loose ball. And he was back there Monday night, to watch Caitlin Clark and Iowa topple LSU in a women’s basketball showdown.

McNamara returned to MVP Arena on Tuesday for his introducto­ry news conference as Siena’s coach, explaining the parallel he noticed from all those games.

“This place was rocking,” McNamara said. “That’s what I want.”

That’s what Siena wants as well, and why the Saints lured the Syracuse icon — first from his playing days, then from 15 years as a graduate assistant, assistant coach and associate head coach for the Orange — to take over their program last week. McNamara’s hiring was announced Friday, after several days of negotiatio­ns with the school finally led to a deal.

“I’ve got a lot of people to thank, but I do want to address the fans, the alumni, the supporters,” McNamara said. “You know why I’m here. Anyone that knows me knows why I’m here. I’m here to win. Simple. That’s who I am. I’m here to win. It’s all I’ve ever tried to do as a coach, a player. Every day I walk in the gym, it’s with the intent to work to win.”

McNamara is replacing Siena alum Carmen Maciariell­o, who was fired after going 6872 in five seasons at the school. Siena, a Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference school that is about 150 miles east of Syracuse, went 4-28 this season.

It’s the first collegiate head coaching stint for McNamara, a tough, sharpshoot­ing guard at Syracuse who was brought back by former coach Jim Boeheim to join the staff in 2009. McNamara was promoted to associate head coach for the Orange when Adrian Autry took over for Boeheim a year ago.

The 40-year-old McNamara remains the fourth-leading scorer in Syracuse history behind Lawrence Moten, Derrick Coleman and John Wallace. He started on Syracuse’s 2003 national championsh­ip team that was led by Carmelo Anthony; McNamara had 18 points, all on 3-pointers, in the Orange’s 81-78 win over Kansas in the NCAA title game.

“I’m happy for my brother,” Anthony said last week when McNamara’s hiring was announced.

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