UIW men open new era, fully eligible for Division I postseason

Incarnate Word coach Ken Burmeister (left) and point guard Jalin Hart

By Jerry Briggs
For thejbreplay.com

The long wait is finally over for Coach Ken Burmeister and the Incarnate Word Cardinals.

After a four-year transition, the Cardinals will open a season fully eligible for the Southland Conference and NCAA Division I postseason tournaments.

UIW tips off at home Friday night with a non-conference game against the Southwestern University Pirates.

“We’re real excited to get a game,” Burmeister said. “It’s been a long summer, a long fall, and now we’re ready to go. The guys are very anxious to play a game, to get an opportunity to play somebody else. You get to experience where you are with your offenses, defenses and so on and so forth.”

Previously an NCAA Division II program, UIW accepted an invitation in 2012 to make the move to the SLC and Division I.

As a result, in each of the past four years, the Cardinals were ineligible even to play in the conference tournament once the regular season ended.

It was particularly frustrating time for the Cardinals, because they posted winning records during the first three seasons and defeated a few quality programs along the way.

Last year, adversity set in, and UIW fell to 12-17.

But as the new season dawns, the Cardinals are noticeably more athletic.

Hopes are running high with the return of veteran standouts Jalin Hart, Shawn Johnson and Simi Socks.

In addition, the veteran core has been bolstered with the addition of highly-touted freshman guard Keaton Hervey and forward Charles Brown III.

Senior guard Sam Burmeister, the coach’s son, said his father is excited about getting past the transition period.

“He’s very amped up,” the UIW guard said. “This is something we’ve been looking forward to for four years now. It feels good that we’re finally able to play in the postseason. I feel a lot more excitement in the preseason than I have in the past years.

“With our talent this year I think we have a chance to play deep in March.”

Eight teams will qualify for the SLC tournament in Katy. UIW’s coach said it will be a challenge just to get there.

“You got to play well,” Ken Burmeister said. “You can’t turn the switch on and off … It’s one of the top conferences in the country. The last place team thinks they can win it.”

Notes: The Cardinals’ season-opening homestand continues against Trinity next Monday and against McMurry next Friday.

The first three games count on the record for UIW but are exhibitions for the opponents.

Starters are expected to be Hart, Hervey and Johnson in the backcourt, with Brown and either Socks or Christian Peevy at forward.

First players off the bench are expected to be Sam Burmeister, Jorden Kite and newcomer Augustine Ene.

Burmeister said he’s waiting on NCAA clearance for transfer Konstantin Kulikov, a 7-foot center from Russia out of San Jacinto College.

Forward Devin Wyatt recently returned to practice after suffering a hamstring injury.

Fond memories of a coaching sage: ‘One more rebound than a dead man’

Former Texas coach Abe Lemons holds court with the media. (Courtesy of UT Athletics)

Former Texas coach Abe Lemons holds court with the media. (Courtesy of UT Athletics)

By Jerry Briggs
For thejbreplay.com

More than 40 years ago, a wise-cracking coach who presided over one of the minor sports at the University of Texas started teaching us all that life didn’t necessarily end after the bowl games.

I remember meeting Abe Lemons, all right.

As a University of Texas senior studying journalism, I learned that perhaps the best post-game quotes in college basketball history could be yours if you could just find the coach’s tiny office in the bowels of Gregory Gym.

Lemons was always in a pretty good mood with us, even though his team was decidedly mediocre in his first season in Austin. I think the Horns finished 13-13 that season, or some such.

Nevertheless, Abe seemed to be genuinely appreciative of the attention he’d get from the media in general and from student reporters, in particular.

Could he deliver the one-liners? Oh, my gracious. He was an aspiring scribe’s dream.

Reflecting on his days as coach at Pan American University in Edinburg – now, UT Rio Grande Valley – Lemons would say he’d warn his players about straying too far from campus lest they be carried off by the coyotes.

As he looked over the stat sheet after UT games, the coach would chew an ever-present cigar down to a nub. Then he’d let fly with zingers, sparing no one.

A UT power forward coming off a modest performance would be hailed by Lemons for producing “one more rebound than a dead man.”

So, with a nod to Lemons’ humor, irreverence and genuine enthusiasm for the game, I want to welcome you to another college basketball season.

Also, welcome to my new website, which we will call, The JB Replay. You can find it by typing in www.thejbreplay.com.

I’m not entirely sure where I’m going with this project.

But with a unique year in basketball dawning in the Alamo City, I think it’s the obvious choice as website’s primary focus for the next several months.

I’m not talking about Spurs/NBA coverage. You can get your Spurs coverage anywhere, most notably from my erstwhile former employers at the San Antonio Express-News.

Dial up The JB Replay, and you can expect to get an expanded look at the game from the grassroots level, to the colleges.

Why prep and college basketball?

Well, for the first time, San Antonio will host both the UIL state tournaments and the NCAA Men’s Final Four in the same year.

The state girls and boys tournaments will be held in the first few weeks of March, followed by the Final Four from March 31-April 2, both at the refurbished Alamodome.

In addition, San Antonio for the first time will have two universities eligible to qualify for the NCAA Division I men’s and women’s tournaments.

UTSA, as the Final Four’s official host school, features a men’s team led by second-year coach Steve Henson and a first-year women’s coach in Kristen Holt.

The University of the Incarnate Word, meanwhile, will come charging into full-fledged Division I membership under 12th-year men’s coach Ken Burmeister and second-year women’s coach Christy Smith.

So (and excuse me for carrying on a conversation with myself) maybe that’s the initial goal for this news site … devote a day or two per week in the spring to reporting on the high schools and then split the rest of it between the local and major colleges.

Before long, it will be football season again.

Then, maybe we can do the basketball thing all over again in 2019, just in case fans need a reminder on the worldview of Lemons, an Oklahoma native who won 599 games in his college basketball career.

At Texas, Lemons led the Longhorns to the 1978 NIT championship and raised the possibility that basketball could indeed spark interest in a football state.

Without knowing it, he also opened a young journalist’s eyes to the potential for a pretty cool life-long pursuit.

Suffering from Parkinson’s, the coach died in 2002 at age 79. Even basketball referees, a frequent target of his verbal barbs, smiled at the memories.

“You can say something to popes, kings and presidents, but you can’t talk to officials,” Lemons once complained. “In the next war, they ought to just give everyone a whistle.”

Photo gallery: Former Texas men’s coach Abe Lemons

Abe Lemons was the men's basketball coach at Texas from 1976-77 through the 1981-82 season.  (Courtesy of UT Athletics)

Abe Lemons was the men’s basketball coach at Texas from 1976-77 through the 1981-82 season. (Courtesy of UT Athletics)