S. Kingstown’s Alex Murphy Granted 6th Year by NCAA, Commits to Northeastern

Wednesday, September 21, 2016

 

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Alex Murphy

South Kingstown’s Alex Murphy has been granted a 6th year of eligibility by the NCAA and will play at Northeastern University this season. 

Murphy’s Road to Northeastern

Murphy is coming off of 2 1/2 seasons at the University of Florida where he averaged 5.1 points per game in 23 contests during the 2014-15 season before suffering a right foot injury and missing the 2015-16 season. 

Murphy transferred to Florida from Duke during the holiday break of the 2013-14 season and spent the remainder of the year on the scout team. 

“I want to thank the University of Florida, the coaching staffs, my teammates and especially all of Gator Nation for your support over the past three years,” Murphy said on twitter. He added, “I’m extremely grateful that I’ve been given this chance and can’t wait to get up to Boston to start this next chapter.” 

Prior to Florida, Murphy played two and a half seasons at Duke where his best season came in 2012-13 when he averaged 2.1 points and one rebound in 31 games of action. 

He left Duke for Florida in 2013 after playing  a total of 33 minutes in five games. 

Murphy in High School

Murphy went to St. Mark’s Academy where he was a three year letter winner. He reclassified from the class of 2012 to bypass his final year of high school basketball and became a member of Duke’s 2011 recruiting class. 

He completed his high school requirements at South Kingstown High School. 

Basketball Family

Alex is the older brother of Tomas Murphy who recently committed to Northeastern’s incoming class of 2017, and the younger brother of Erik Murphy who played college basketball at Florida. 

Jay Murphy, Alex’s father, played college basketball at Boston College before having an NBA career.

 

Related Slideshow: GoLocal’s All-Rhode Island 2015-16 Division I Hoop Teams

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G - Kris Dunn 

After skipping out on the NBA and returning to school, Dunn averaged 16.4 points, 6.2 assists and 5.3 rebounds per game for PC, leading them to the second round of the NCAA Tournament as a redshirt junior.

Dunn has been named the Big East Player of the Year and the Defensive Player of the Year in each of the past two seasons.

It was reported earlier this week that Dunn will declare for the NBA Draft where he is expected to be a top 5 pick.

"It's tough to see a young man that has grown up in front of my eyes in Kris and what he's meant to our organization, and to see where he was, and now where he's at, and then where he's going. You know, you look at it where, damn, you're like a dad seeing somebody grow up in front of your eyes. I can't tell you how much I love this kid and this team, what they've meant to Providence and what they've meant to me this year. I'm going to really miss them," said PC Head Coach Ed Cooley after Dunn played his final game as a Friar. 

The Friars went 23-10 overall this season, and 10-8 in the Big East, making the tournament for the third straight season. 

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G - Jared Terrell 

The Rams had a year to forget due to injuries to star players E.C. Matthews and Hassan Martin. However, they still managed to go 17-15 overall and 9-9 in the A-10 due in large part to Jared Terrell. 

Jared Terrell averaged 13.6 points, 3.4 rebounds and 2.6 assists per game for the Rams this season, reaching double figures in scoring in 13 of URI's final 14 games. 

In those 13 games, Terrell had at least 20 points in 6 of them. 

Terrell was named to the USBWA All-District one team at the close of the regular season. 

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F - Ben Bentil 

After averaging just 6.4 points per game as a freshman, Ben Bentil averaged 21.2 points per game overall and 22.9 points per game in conference play, making him the leading scorer in the Big East. 

Bentil is the 7th Friar all-time to lead the league in scoring and the fourth Friar in the last six seasons to do it.

Bentil was named the Big East's Most Improved Player, joining  Kadeem Batts (2013) and Herbert Hill (2007) as Friar recipients of the Big East Most Improved Player Award.

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He is the only player in Ivy League history to score 1,000 points, grab 900 rebounds and block 200 shots.

In his senior season, Kuakumensah averaged 14 point and 9.2 rebounds per game for the Brown Bears while also blocking 2.7 shots per game. 

"He's met alot to our program in so many ways," Martin added. 

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F - Hassan Martin 

Martin became the first URI Ram to win the A-10 Defensive Player of the Year Award since its inception in 1996-97. 

Martin averaged 2.5 blocks per game overall this season and 2.4 in conference play, putting him atop the league leaders for the third straight season. The 2.5 blocks per game is 18th best in the country.

Martin finished his season with 65 blocked shots, ranking him sixth in program history for most blocks in a season.

Earlier in the season, Martin moved into the #2 spot on Rhode Island's all-time blocked shots list, passing current assistant coach Antonio Reynolds Dean.

Martin now has 248 career blocked shots, 10th most among active NCAA Division I players and second among active juniors.

Offensively, Martin averaged 12 points per game for URI before going down with a knee injury that bothered him all season. Martin did not play in URI's last four games. 

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Rookie of the Year - Marcel Pettway

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Pettway started the last 22 games for Bryant and finished his freshman season averaging 11.4 points per game, fourth best among league rookies. Pettway shot 59.7 percent from the field on the season and recorded 8 double-doubles, including a career high 26 points and 11 rebounds against Fairleigh Dickinson. 

The 8 double-doubles are tied for most by a freshman in Bryant's division I history. 

"It's great to recruit a local player who is able to do great things right away. Marcel plays very mature for his age, makes few mistakes, he can pass out of double teams and contrbutes on the offensive and defensive glass," said Bryant Associate Head Coach Happy Dobbs. 

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Coach of The Year - Ed Cooley 

Ed Cooley led the Friars to a record of 23-10 overall and 10-8 in the Big East Conference. 

Providence advanced to their third straight NCAA tournament where they defeated the University of Southern California in the first round. The win was PC's first NCAA Tournament win since 1997.  

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Player of The Year - Ben Bentil 

After averaging just 6.4 points per game as a Freshman, Sophomore Ben Bentil averaged 21.2 points per game overall and 22.9 points per game in conference play, making him the leading scorer in the Big East. 

After a breakout season, Bentil has declared for the NBA Draft, at least just to test the waters. He is not signing with an agent, leaving him eligible to return to Providence next season. 

"We support Ben and as he goes through this process. We believe this will enable him to gain valuable experience and have better knowledge about when it will be best for him to pursue his dreams of playing in the NBA," said PC Head Coach Ed Cooley. 

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G - Jarvis Garrett (URI)

Sophomore Jarvis Garrett averaged 12.5 points and 4.7 assists per game for the Rams this season.

He was named to the USBWA All-District one team at the close of the regular season. 

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G - Quarry Greenaway  (JWU) 

Senior guard Quarry Greenaway led Johnson & Wales averaging 25.8 points per game and earned D3 All-American Third Team honors. He is the first Wildcat player to do so since 2012. 

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Photo: thegnac.com

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F - Dan Garvin (Bryant)

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F - Steven Spieth (Brown)

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GoLocal Second Team

F - Marcel Pettway (Bryant)

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