Saint John Riptide

Last updated
Saint John Riptide
Riptide logo.png
Division Atlantic Division
League ABA 2007–2008
PBL 2009–2011
NBLC 2011–2019
Founded2007
HistoryManchester Millrats (ABA)
2007–2008
Manchester Millrats (PBL)
2008–2010
Saint John Mill Rats (PBL)
2010–2011
Saint John Mill Rats (NBLC)
2011–2016
Saint John Riptide (NBLC)
2016–2019
Arena Harbour Station
Location Saint John, New Brunswick
Team coloursNavy blue, gold, white
   
PresidentKelly Patterson [1]
Head coachNelson Terroba
Website www.sjriptide.ca

The Saint John Riptide were a Canadian professional basketball team based in Saint John, New Brunswick, that had home games at Harbour Station. They were a member of the National Basketball League of Canada (NBL Canada) in the Atlantic Division. The team was one of two professional basketball teams from the province of New Brunswick, the other being the Moncton Magic.

Contents

Established in 2007 as the Manchester Millrats (an expansion team based in Manchester, New Hampshire, which played in the American Basketball Association (ABA), a year later it moved to the Premier Basketball League (PBL). [2] In 2010, it relocated to Saint John and in 2016 was renamed.

In 2019, the team was granted a one-season hiatus by the league, [3] but has since been inactive.

History

2007–08 season

In their inaugural ABA season, the Manchester Millrats compiled a regular season record of 28–12, playing their home games at the Fieldhouse of Southern New Hampshire University (SNHU). They won their first 12 games and first four games against the reigning champion Vermont Frost Heaves. These were the only losses the Frost Heaves had in that season. The Millrats were one of eight teams to make the post season. They got to the semifinals but lost in overtime to the San Diego Wildcats. Larry Lessett was the head coach.

There were major logistical issues, as two of the four teams in the Millrats' division suspended operations. The ABA flew the Millrats to the Bahamas once and to Singapore twice to play against ABA teams with no local competition. Nevertheless, Millrats management organized additional games against local rivals and gave season ticket owners the full number of events they had been promised, although the final regular season game was played at a private center ten miles away.

Point guard Anthony Anderson got the ABA's Most Valuable Player award among other awards and recognition. Ian McCarthy was named the league's General Manager of the Year. Ismael Caro and Ife Anosike were separated from the team after a brawl that brought a game in Vermont to a premature end.

2008–09 season

The logistical problems of the ABA led the Millrats to join the Premier Basketball League, with teams from Vermont, Quebec City, and Halifax. The 20-game PBL regular season began in January 2009. The Millrats and three other teams from the PBL's Atlantic Division added 6 exhibition games apiece in pursuit of the "Champlain Cup." The Millrats played three other exhibitions, including two against the Arecibo Captains of Puerto Rico.

Owner Jason Briggs bought a mansion in Manchester and remodeled it to contain sauna, steam rooms, a dinner table on stilts, and custom, seven-foot bunks. Players and coaches resided there and the garage became the business office. Sam Carey joined P.J. Young as Millrats who had played college basketball on the same home court for SNHU. Ife Anosike rejoined the Millrats, left at mid-season to pursue a nursing career, but returned for the playoffs.

The Millrats started the PBL regular season with two road losses, but lost only two other games and finished the regular season at 16–4, atop the Atlantic Division. The team was undefeated at home, and undefeated in February, for which Rob Spon got the PBL Coach of the Month award and Desmond Ferguson got a Player of the Week award.

On February 5, the PBL suspended the Montreal Sasquatch [4] and conducted a dispersal draft on February 7. The Millrats selected Jamaal Wise. On March 9, the Millrats traded Wise and other considerations to Quebec for power forward John Ruffus, whom Quebec selected in the same dispersal draft. This was called the PBL's first in-season player trade. [5] On February 13, the Millrats played a scheduled home game against a Montreal team with new roster and ownership. [6]

Vermont remained the principal rival; many Vermont fans made the 130-mile drive. A showdown on February 15 enthused 1,052 fans. [7] February's winning streak ended on March 6 with an overtime loss to Vermont in Burlington, but the Millrats clinched the Atlantic Division the next day in Quebec. [8]

Third-seeded Manchester met the second-seeded Rochester RazorSharks for the best-of-three PBL semifinals. The RazorSharks delayed the third and deciding game four days, blamed on a malfunctioning backboard, [9] and won the game to eliminate the Millrats. Millrats point guard Al Stewart shared post-season honors for the PBL Defensive Player of the Year. [10]

2009–10 season

The PBL had massive turnover of franchises and began the 2009–10 season reduced from 13 to 9 teams, playing as a single division. Four teams of the old Atlantic Division returned, except the problematic Montréal franchise. But the entire Midwest Division disappeared. Battle Creek, with the league's best record, quit the PBL over the PBL's decision to hold a one-game league championship in Rochester, denying Battle Creek up to two home dates, and over disagreement over compensation for this decision. In the Eastern Division, Rochester and Buffalo returned, but the Wilmington franchise left, reportedly over loss of nearby competitors. However, the Maryland GreenHawks (formerly the Nighthawks) came out of dormancy, and the PBL picked up the Lawton-Fort Sill Cavalry from the Continental Basketball Association; and the Capitanes de Arecibo, from the Baloncesto Superior Nacional league of Puerto Rico.

Heath Teixeira was promoted to head coach. An exposure combine on October 24–25, 2009, drew over 70 athletes. The Champlain Cup became a three-team tournament hosted by the Vermont Frost Heaves from December 27–29 against the Millrats and the Québec Kebs. The Millrats won the Cup with lopsided victories. The team played no exhibition games at home.

Among players from the previous season, only Al Stewart and Marlowe Currie started the regular season with the Millrats, and they were not with the team by late January. Charles Mason trained with the team and joined the roster in late January, as did P.J. Young. Anthony Anderson rejoined the team after a year's absence, and Charles Easterling joined in mid-season. The Millrats drafted Tyrece Gibbs and Eric Gilchrese, alumni of the University of New Hampshire, with their picks in the PBL player draft. The signing of Luke Bonner on January 15 spurred media interest, as Bonner is from Concord, New Hampshire, and is the brother of Matt Bonner of the San Antonio Spurs. [11] But he played only the weekend of January 16–17 before going to the Austin Toros in the NBA Development League. On January 21, Currie was traded to Halifax. [12]

Admission to the SNHU Fieldhouse remained at $10 ($90 for a ten-game season ticket), but the bleachers on one side were replaced by $17 courtside seating. Mascot Millie the Millrat was not seen, but a dog mascot took his or her place, wearing 00. One home game was moved to Hesser College, and one was moved to UNH, as it featured Keith Friel of the visiting Rochester Razorsharks (the son of former UNH Head Coach Gerry Friel) and the two UNH alumni mentioned above for the Millrats.

2010–11 season

Saint John Mill Rats logo Saint John Mill Rats logo.gif
Saint John Mill Rats logo

In May 2010, a report surfaced that the Millrats ownership was looking to leave Manchester for Saint John, New Brunswick, saying that seating and concessions in the arena were the main impetus for moving. [13] On June 21, 2010, a press conference was held at Harbour Station in Saint John to officially announce the move. [14] A naming contest was held in conjunction with Rogers Communications titled "Got Name?" where fans could text their choice of name via text-messaging. The choices for the names were: Millrats, Fog, Shamrocks, Fire, and Rip Tide. The fans could also select their own. [15] On July 27, Ian McCarthy, president of the team, announced that with overwhelming support, the Mill Rats moniker would remain the same, although a space was added between the two words. A new logo was also unveiled. [16]

The Mill Rats were in contention for most of the regular season, but finished with a record of 9–11, in 5th place, one game out of the playoffs.

The playoffs were notable for New York state-based referees traveling to work several away games involving the Rochester Razorsharks (which share a common owner with the PBL). When this, an uneven number of foul calls, and a final game terminated prematurely by fan reaction marred the semifinal series in Quebec, McCarthy (who had chafed at out-of-state referees during the 2009 playoffs) wrote a protest letter to the league on behalf of his and the other Canadian teams. The same events recurred in the final series, which concluded in the Mill Rats and Rainmen quitting the PBL moments after the playoffs ended. The Kebs followed suit one day later, with Lawton-Fort Sill suspending operations. [17]

NBL Canada: 2011–present

On May 12, 2011, the Mill Rats (along with the existing Halifax and Québec teams of the PBL) were announced as founding members of the National Basketball League of Canada. [2] On October 12, the Mill Rats announced the signing of former Detroit Pistons guard Will Blalock. The team looked forward to intense interest for the season given the 2011 NBA lockout.

After the 2015–16 season, the NBLC announced that the Mill Rats ownership group would no longer continue to operate the team. [18] It voted unanimously to transfer the ownership of the Saint John team to a local ownership group called Saint John Pro Basketball headed by Scott VanWart, Mike Cormier and Paul Vaughan. [19] The new ownership group retained on-and-off franchise head coach, Rob Spon. On 26 October, the new ownership announced the rebranded team would be called the Saint John Riptide. [20]

Spon left Saint John after the 2016–17 season to coach the Cape Breton Highlanders. The Riptide then hired Nelson Terroba as head coach after he had previously served as an assistant with the Erie BayHawks of the NBA Development League. [21]

Season standings

Manchester Millrats/Saint John Mill Rats/Saint John Riptide season-by-season record
SeasonLeagueGames playedWinsLossesAveragePlay-offs
2007–2008 ABA 402812.700Semi-finalist
2009 PBL 20164.800Atlantic Division champion
2010PBL20614.300none
2011PBL20911.450none
2011–12 NBLC 361719.472Lost to London 0–2 in semi-finals
2012–13 NBLC402020.500Lost to Moncton 1–2 in wild card
2013–14 NBLC402317.575Lost to Halifax 1–3 in division semi-finals
2014–15 NBLC321715.531Lost to Island 2–3 in division semi-finals
2015–16 NBLC402515.625Lost to Hurricanes 0–4 in division semi-finals
2016–17 NBLC402218.550Lost to Storm 2–3 in division semifinals
2017–18 NBLC402020.500Lost to Moncton 2–3 in division semifinals
TotalsABA402812.700
TotalsPBL603129.518
TotalsNBLC268144124.537

Current roster

Note: Flags indicate national team eligibility at FIBA-sanctioned events. Players may hold other non-FIBA nationality not displayed.

Saint John Riptide roster
PlayersCoaches
Pos.No.Nat.NameHt.Wt.Age
PG 4 Flag of the United States.svg Arrington, Brent 6 ft 3 in (1.91 m)190 lb (86 kg)31 – (1992-07-12)12 July 1992
G 15 Flag of the United States.svg Bartley, Frank 6 ft 3 in (1.91 m)215 lb (98 kg)29 – (1994-02-25)25 February 1994
G 6 Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Binney, Marvin 6 ft 3 in (1.91 m)195 lb (88 kg)33 – (1990-12-15)15 December 1990
F 1 Flag of the United States.svg Dingle, Daniel 6 ft 7 in (2.01 m)225 lb (102 kg)30 – (1994-02-14)14 February 1994
F 25 Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Dixon, Renaldo 6 ft 9 in (2.06 m)225 lb (102 kg)33 – (1990-09-20)20 September 1990
F 0 Flag of the United States.svg Early, Chris 6 ft 7 in (2.01 m)235 lb (107 kg)35 – (1988-11-05)5 November 1988
PG 55 Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Holmes, Andrew 5 ft 10 in (1.78 m)175 lb (79 kg)
F 33 Flag of the United States.svg Isom, Mareik 6 ft 10 in (2.08 m)230 lb (100 kg)29 – (1994-07-25)25 July 1994
SG 34 Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Landon, Darnell 6 ft 3 in (1.91 m)190 lb (86 kg)
G 23 Flag of the United States.svg Mordi, Jeremiah 6 ft 3 in (1.91 m)193 lb (88 kg)
G 12 Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Osse, Kemy 6 ft 2 in (1.88 m)200 lb (91 kg)30 – (1993-03-12)12 March 1993
C 32 Flag of the United States.svg Phillips, Randy 6 ft 8 in (2.03 m)245 lb (111 kg)
F 35 Flag of the United States.svg Pitchford, Walter 6 ft 11 in (2.11 m)238 lb (108 kg)31 – (1992-04-24)24 April 1992
Head coach
Assistant coach(es)
  • Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Aaron Drummond
  • Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Randy Loatman
  • Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Jim Palmer
  • Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Paul Vaughan

Legend
  • (C) Team captain
  • (I) Inactive
  • Cruz Roja.svg Injured

Updated: December 3, 2018

Notable players

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