Saturday, July 17, 2010

Graham's highlight video says, "Thanks!" to everybody

Graham starts for the West in the 2010 Piedmont Athletic Association Senior Showase All-Star Game

Graham scored the West's first five points and led the squad in scoring in the first half with seven in a 69-65 overtime win.

Graham leads all scorers in Senior Night Win

Graham scores 6 of Riverside's last 8 points in the final 45 seconds in comeback win.

Battle of the Border, December 28-30, 2009

Graham was the only Warrior to play all 96 minutes of regulation in the three games in three days. He was Riverside's second leading scorer behind all-tournament selection Horrace Tobin.

Graham's 2009-2010 Season Begins with a Broken Thumb


First game back playing the point with a broken right thumb.

Seventeen days after breaking the thumb on his shooting hand in practice the week before the season began, Graham took the court for the first time at home against Berea hours after being cleared by orthopedist Dr. Philip Wessinger to play with a splint. Entering the game with 3:10 left in the first quarter, he played 14:38 with a modest stat line: 5 points on 2 for 4 from the field, 1 assist, 1 rebound, 2 turnovers and 2 charges drawn. He hit his first field-goal attempt of the season, a 3-pointer.

Graham interviewed before the 2009-2010 season for a story on Riverside's new coach Murray Long


From GoUpstate.com, the website of The Spartanburg Herald-Journal

New basketball coach takes over at Riverside High
By John Clayton
For the Greer Herald

Published: Monday, November 23, 2009 at 12:10 p.m.
Last Modified: Monday, November 23, 2009 at 12:10 p.m.

As high school basketball teams begin play in the coming days, the Riverside boys team will have a new head coach for the first time in two decades.


Murray Long, whose father and brother are also coaches, has officially joined the family business, taking the helm of the Warriors after working for six years as an assistant coach at Riverside.

"I had looked hard (for a head-coaching opportunity), and there were a couple of offers here and there, but nothing that felt right to me and my family," said Long. "I liked working here, but I didn't feel like the heir-apparent (to former coach Sam Oates). We never discussed it like that. My family and I like it here, and it just worked out."

Long's Warriors begin their season Dec. 1 against neighborhood rival Eastside. Meanwhile, the Greer boys team, which is ranked No. 1 in Class 3A, tips off the season Nov. 30 by hosting Eastside. Blue Ridge opens Dec. 1 at Berea.

Oates reportedly resigned as head coach after 21 seasons this past spring, opening the door for Long. Oates remained at the school and is still Riverside's golf coach.

Long worked as an assistant coach at Crescent High School and under long-time Mullins High head coach Mark Gerald before returning to his Upstate roots to join the Riverside staff.

But Long's coaching apprenticeship began long before his teaching career got started. He is the son of long-time Mauldin High athletic director Carroll Long. His younger brother, Wes, played at Clemson and is in his second year as head coach at Queens University in Charlotte, N.C.

"I've always known that I wanted to be involved in this," Murray Long said. "It's kind of what I grew up doing."

He said he is ready for the challenge, but can appreciate the fact that he's still a rookie head coach with state powerhouse Greer to compete against in Region III-3A.

"I've learned a lot so far," Long said. "And I know I'll keep on learning."

Graham Rogers, one of Riverside's captains, said the change at the top has been challenging but fun, so far.

"If we don't have the energy level, he's going to find a way to get it out of us,whether it's through me and the other captains of whether he has to do it himself," Rogers said. "Once we figure out, all the options out of the offense, it'll be fun, and we'll have fun doing it."

Long, who played at Mauldin -- where he was teammates with NBA star Kevin Garnett -- before going on to a collegiate career at Erskine, has been busy installing his new offensive scheme this preseason, which included a Thursday night scrimmage against Greenville Tech, and hopes the learning curve is a small one for the Warriors.

"We're looking for a connection with these kids between their bodies and their brains," he said. We're spending a lot of classroom time, and that's something that we've never done before."

With Greer as the measuring stick, Long has set this season's goal as a trip to the playoffs.

"Our goal right now is to win enough region games to get in the playoffs," he said. "That's our goal right now, to be playing well enough in February to be a playoff team.

"We've got kids who are working hard, and who have bought in to what we're doing."

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