Sometime Sunday, 20 Pima College basketball players, coaches and staff will split up in Phoenix and board five different flights to Chicago.
Some will arrive for the NJCAA Division II national championships at 2 p.m. Some not until late at night. It’s not the best way — that’s often life in junior college sports — but when the Aztecs reunite and drive 150 miles to Danville, Illinois, they will be a team no one wants to play.
The Aztecs lead the nation with a 100.8 scoring average. They beat No. 8-ranked Phoenix College to get a ticket to Danville. They are no longer a secret.
Last week, Washington State coach Ernie Kent was on PCC’s campus to offer sophomore forward Deion James of Empire High School a scholarship. Later in the day, former Villanova NCAA championship coach Rollie Massimino, now the coach at Florida’s NAIA Keiser University, phoned in attempt to persuade Aztecs shooting star Emilio Acedo to play for him.
James was the ACCAC’s co-player of the year. Acedo scored 27 points in the region-clinching victory in Phoenix. Coach Brian Peabody’s team is an irresistible story.
One night last summer, while Peabody was dining at Fini’s Landing in the Foothills, he was introduced to the bartender, Acedo, who was a Salpointe Catholic standout way back in 2011. Acedo originally played JC basketball at Lincoln College in Illinois, but left at midseason and returned to Tucson.
Now, at 24, he’s an Aztecs shooting machine.
“I almost cut Emilio during our first tryouts,” said Peabody. “But in the ACCAC Jamboree, he hit nine 3-pointers. So I decided not to over-think it. You hit nine 3’s, you can play for me.”
James played last year at North Carolina A&T. He averaged 1.3 points. His team was awful. He returned to Tucson and sometimes worked out at Pima, whose roster includes two of his friends from Cienega, injured Keven Biggs and standout forward Isaiah Murphy.
“After a few weeks, I decided I would at least ask Deion if he’d consider playing at Pima,” said Peabody. “He didn’t say no. After that, I talked to his family, and some Division I coaches called on my behalf. Most of the heavy-hitters in JC basketball were after him. Fortunately, he decided to stay home and everything changed.”
The Aztecs don’t have the most favorable schedule in the NJCAA Division II finals. They open with Illinois power, but unseeded, Waubonsee Community College on its home floor. If Pima wins, it’s likely to play No. 1 Southwestern CC of Iowa in the second round.
“The league we play in, with five Division I schools, from Cochise College to Arizona Western, is as good as anything we’ll see in the nationals,” said Peabody. “I’d like to think we won’t be intimidated after playing those teams all year.”
Peabody coached state high school championships at Ironwood Ridge and Green Fields, and twice took Salpointe Catholic to the title game. One reason he continues to win — he has 513 career victories — is because his coaching staff has so much continuity.
Mike Morgan, Joe Hickle, Dylan Hidalgo and Matt Minder are all ranking names in Tucson basketball coaching. Sometime Sunday, they’ll all be together again in Illinois, this time going for the biggest prize in their game.