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New coaches augur an interesting year at Rhode Island colleges

08:52 AM EDT on Friday, July 18, 2008

By MIKE SZOSTAK
Journal Sports Writer

Forecasters are calling for one of the hottest weekends of the summer, so I offer this touch of fall to cool you off.

On Aug. 3, the University of Rhode Island football team will report for preseason training camp. The Rams will not kick off until Aug. 30 (at home against Monmouth), but their arrival on campus will mark the beginning of what should be a most interesting year in college sports in Rhode Island.

Think about it. URI has a new football coach, Providence College, Brown and Bryant have new men's basketball coaches, Salve Regina has a new director of athletics, and Bryant has jumped to Division I.

URI coach Darren Rizzi, the former Ram tight end and All-American, started generating buzz the day he was hired last December. All he had to say was that he would open up the URI offense by throwing the ball. As a result, die-hard alums are looking forward to this season as they have not since the glory days of Bob Griffin and his URI Ehr Force, directed by quarterback Tom Ehrhardt, in 1984 and 1985.

And Griffin is back, as Rizzi's tight ends' coach and special consultant. All-Conference fullback Joe Casey returns for his final season and a chance to break the URI career rushing record.

"As a staff, we're very excited," offensive coordinator Chris Pincince said yesterday. He mentioned excitement around the program stemming from Rizzi's hiring and Rizzi's decision to involve Griffin, his coach at URI.

"That brought back a lot of alums and supporters from the '80s. Our golf outing at the beginning of the summer was sold out, and our spring game had better attendance because guys from the '80s and '90s who played for Griff and with Rizz wanted to check out the new product," he said.

URI is promoting season ticket sales now and promising individual game sales starting Aug. 1. Check GoRhody.com.

Bryant University coach Marty Fine will welcome his Bulldogs in mid-August and begin writing a new chapter in the school's athletics history. Bryant is Division I now and will open the season Aug. 30 at Central Connecticut. The Bulldogs will play old Division II Northeast-10 Conference foes Southern Connecticut and Merrimack and then face a Division I schedule the rest of the way, the highlight of which is an Oct. 25 trip to UMass-Amherst.

That's correct. Bryant will tackle a team that is a perennial contender in the tough Colonial Athletic Association.

Brown has been picked to finish third in the Ivy League behind Harvard and Yale, but coach Phil Estes is more optimistic. With 19 starters back from a 5-5 team, he is confident his Bears can make a run for the title.

Soccer at URI and Brown should be successful again and should draw crowds, especially for the popular night games.

3 new coaches

The fall will be a warm-up for what will no doubt be a hot winter. When was the last time three of the four Division I schools in the state introduced new head coaches. Never, of course, because Rhode Island boasted only three D-I basketball schools until Bryant jumped up a division.

Keno Davis, the new coach at Providence College, will be under intense scrutiny even before practice starts in October. Davis didn't play college basketball, but he worked alongside his father, Tom Davis, and learned the game well. He was the national coach of the year in 2008 at Drake.

Can he win in the brutal Big East? We'll see.

Craig Robinson made a splash in his two years at Brown because the Bears won and because his brother-in-law decided to run for president. After a 19-10 season, he opted for the big bucks of Oregon State and the Pac 10 instead of the cachet of Brown and the Ivy League. Jesse Agel, a career assistant who never played college basketball, is the new coach at Brown. With 19 seasons as an assistant under his belt, he knows the game. His challenge is to make Brown a consistent winner in the Ivy League.

Max Good put together a demanding schedule for Bryant's first winter of Division I basketball and then accepted Billy Baynor's invitation to join him at Loyola Marymount in Los Angeles. Bryant responded by hiring Tim O'Shea, who played basketball at Boston College, coached and met his wife at URI and for the last seven seasons was head coach at Ohio University. O'Shea won 120 games at Ohio, and his challenge is to make Bryant competitive in the Northeast Conference.

The firing of Tim Welsh leaves URI coach Jim Baron as the dean of Division I coaches in Rhode Island. Baron will have to endure the barbs of ardent Ram fans again if he doesn't deliver an NCAA Tournament appearance.

Bryant was so successful in its final Division II season - the Bulldogs won the Northeast-10 Conference Presidents Cup for the third time in four years - that it will be interesting to see how often the Bulldogs win in their inaugural season in Division I. Ron Machtley, the university's president, expects a winning atmosphere on his campus, and while he is realistic and understands his program will experience growing pains, he will want to see more Ws than Ls before long.

Colin Sullivan, senior associate athletics director at Marist College, is the new AD at Salve Regina. He replaces Del Malloy, who is the new commissioner of the new Division III New England Collegiate Conference.

CCRI should name a permanent AD soon. Joe Pavone served as interim AD in 2007-2008 while Lou Pullano served a temporary assignment in the admissions office. Pullano retired in June.