If he needs a job, I may hire him as a goon to run on the court and go after Johni Broome. Bonus money awarded for any serious damage inflicted to Baker-Mazara.
Former Northville coach Jim Zullo puts a second-place medal on standout senior Hailey Monroe after the team lost to LaFargeville in the state Class D finals on Friday at Hudson Valley Community College in Troy. Zullo was fired shortly after the contest after he was caught on film pulling Monroeās ponytail. Jim Franco/Times Union
TROY ā This was going to be a story about the remarkable rebirth of a legendary coach amid personal heartbreak. A feel-good piece about the Northville girls' basketball team and the North Country community that supports it.
That column disappeared immediately after the Falcons and coach Jim Zullo lost their game in the Class D state championship Friday night at Hudson Valley Community College. Thatās when television cameras caught the 81-year-old yanking the hair of senior Hailey Monroe and berating his players ā an ugly scene that spread like wildfire across social media, sparking understandable outrage.
Soon after, Northville Central School District Superintendent Sarah A. Chauncey sent me an email that said, āPlease know that he will no longer be with us. We take this incident very seriously. ⦠We are addressing this unacceptable situation.ā
And with that, Zulloās long and storied career was over.
As many of you will know, Zullo taught fifth graders for 34 years in the Shenendehowa Central School District and spent 26 years as the varsity boys' basketball coach. His 1987 state championship at Shen stands among many other accomplishments, and it was during his time in Clifton Park that words like ālegendaryā began appearing in front of his name. In 2006, he was inducted into the state Basketball Hall of Fame.
Zullo retired, supposedly, in 1998 but returned to coaching for two additional stints: at Broadalbin-Perth from 2001 to 2004 and Indian Lake from 2006 to 2010. At that point, it seemed he had left coaching for good. He worked as a North Country fly-fishing guide. He embraced pickleball.
But Zullo and his wife, Linda, moved to Northville when she was diagnosed with cancer, to be closer to family. And when a coaching position opened at the nearby high school, Linda encouraged him to take the job. Despite 13 years away from coaching, he did.
āI needed to get out of the house and do something other than sit there and watch her waste away,ā Zullo told me. āIt wasnāt something I was looking to do.ā
Zullo, who had never coached a girls' basketball team before, quickly remade the team in his image ā meaning the squad began playing with an incredible intensity marked by a swarming and aggressive defense. In his first year at Northville, he led the team to its first sectional girls' basketball title in 27 years and to the state championship game, where the Falcons lost to the North Country's Hammond Central High School.
āIt was a difficult year, because my wife died in the middle of it,ā Zullo said immediately after that game last year. āI did the best I could and Iām very proud of them. They play very hard and try to make up for a lack of skill, sometimes, with effort. We need to get better, is the bottom line ā and we will.ā
The team did get better, remarkably returning to the state championship final. And Zulloās son told me the teamās progress and discipline pleased his dad even more than the back-to-back title games did.
āThere isnāt a thing that goes on out there on the court that he hasnāt worked on with his players,ā said Sam Zullo, who resigned last year after leading his Simsbury, Conn., girls' basketball team to its first state title. āHeās spent hours thinking about every pass and every pivot.ā
All the while, Zullo became something of a hero in Northville, the idyllic village along Great Sacandaga Lake. A recent Associated Press profile described how he could hardly go anywhere without being stopped by fans wanting to talk about the team, how it took him 10 minutes to extract himself from well-wishers at the Stewartās near the school campus.
āItās amazing,ā a longtime Zullo friend told me. āThey think he walks on water up there.ā
'Unacceptable'
I didnāt see Friday nightās ugly moment firsthand. But during that game and another Thursday night, I did see things that made me pause. Zullo was commanding and very tough on his players in ways that have largely disappeared from youth coaching. When two girls jumped up in shock at a refereeās call, Zullo rushed over and used the back of his arm to command them back into their seats with a furious bark.
Moments like that could be dismissed as old-school discipline. But there was something in Zulloās coiled, angry pacing ā and the joyless tension of his players ā that brought to mind Bobby Knight, the legendary Indiana University basketball coach fired in 2000 for what the school described as āunacceptable behavior.ā
To be clear, my suggestion here isnāt that Friday nightās incident was part of the sort of prolonged pattern cited in Knightās dismissal. If thereās more to learn in that respect, weāll no doubt hear about it in the coming days.
But a statement posted to the Northville districtās website a few hours after the game cited ābehavior that is completely unacceptable.ā Without naming Zullo directly, it went on to say that the district is ādeeply disturbedā by āthe conduct of the coach of the girlsā varsity basketball team" and that "this individual will no longer be coaching for the Northville Central School District."
The online anger provoked by the video is entirely justifiable. When a raging Zullo pulls on Monroeās ponytail, he does so with enough force to jerk her head backward. Almost worse is the fear on the faces of several of her teammates as they edge away from a clearly furious coach.
What provoked Zullo? It doesnāt matter, because there is no excuse for what he did. Notably, he ducked the media after the game, and, as of this writing, I havenāt been able to reach him for comment.
We can assume Zullo was upset that his team had lost (43-37) and he appeared angered by the distress expressed by Monroe, a star player who sobbed on the bench after fouling out with 55 seconds left in the game.
Earlier Friday, Zullo said that dealing with the emotions of the players was one of the challenges of coaching girls, as was an age gap of more than 60 years.
āThey think Iām some kind of old dinosaur,ā he said. āIām not on their wavelength.ā
Zullo also told me he hadnāt decided whether heād continue coaching or retire for good.
Hours later, the decision was made for him.
Churchill is one of the most well-known names, and faces, at the Times Union. His columns ā published on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Sundays ā are shared heavily on social media and have won several awards. Churchill studied English and history at the University of Texas before beginning his journalism career at small weeklies in Maine, later working at the Biddeford Journal Tribune, Waterville Morning Sentinel and Kennebec Journal newspapers. He started at the Times Union as a business writer in 2007 and became a columnist in 2012. Reach him at cchurchill@timesunion.com or 518-454-5442.
Iām with you on this one! I would have done something but if it was one of my daughters, they would have arrested my ass!!! That son of a bitch would have to leave the state to be safe from my whole damn family.
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