The Jersey Express
is a team in the Blue Conference (Eastern Conference) of the American Basketball Association based in Morris County, New Jersey. The team was formed in 2005 as the Newark Express. Marsha Blount (President) and Jacqueline Halyard (General Manager) are co-owners of the team. The team previously played at the gym at Essex County College in Newark, New Jersey. They will be playing their home games at Drew University in Madison next season, according to their website.
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Inaugural Season (2005-2006)
The Express ended the regular season on
March 5,
2006, after losing an away game to the
Buffalo Rapids. Their record for the regular season was 14-16 and they finished third in the
Roger Brown Division behind the
Harlem Strong Dogs and the
Strong Island Sound. They had a bye week for the first round of the playoffs. They played on
March 17,
2006, in Atlanta against their second round opponent, the
Atlanta Vision.
The Express started the season with star players Aswan Morris, Rasheed Sparks,
Jamie Sowers and Derek Washington and Marcus Toney-El from the
Jersey SkyCats.
The Head Coach of the team in their first season was
Darryl Dawkins. The assistant coach was Rick Nash.
BOMBO Sports & Entertainment, LLC, the company who produced
Still We Believe: The Boston Red Sox Movie
and other films agreed to produce a film about the Newark Express and their African American female owners
[1].
The Newark Express are the first professional basketball team in the city of Newark, the city that was the birthplace of
Shaquille O'Neal. Newark has a rich history in baseball and with the recent building of the
Bears and Eagles Riverfront Stadium and the future
Newark Arena and
Harrison Stadium, the city is seeing a growth in entertainment greatly centered around its sports.
Former Newark Mayor,
Sharpe James, and the city council gave money to the team and became an official sponsor during their inaugural season. Sharpe James also showed up at some of the team's home games.
The Newark Express had a small number (100-250 fans on average) at their games, but there was more loyalty and noise among the fans toward the end of the season. Despite having a number of star players including Rob Thompson, Rasheed Sparks and Aswan Morris, no player from the Express made it to the ABA All Star game at the
BankAtlantic Center in February.
The team had mentioned the possibility of moving to a larger arena in the future. Although, the Newark Arena will be completed in 2007, the low attendance suggests that it will take more time and marketing for the team to be able to be supported in a larger venue.
Players during the season were: Rasheed Sparks, Shaheen Holloway, Marcus Tony-El, Aswan Morris, Dezmond Morgan, Rob Thompson, Amin Wright, Ike Williams, Derek Washington, Mufeed Thomas, Marcos Sanchez, Robert Cheeks, Jamie Sowers, Travis Snell, Khayri Battle, Andrew Feeley, Jimmy Luu, Dwayne Howell, Nick Valdez, Tim Gittens, Desmond Morgen and Reginald Tyler.
The Newark Express season ended with a loss against the top ranked
Rochester Razorsharks 126-98 on
March 19,
2006 in the second round of the playoffs. The Razorsharks went on to beat the
Atlanta Vision, the
San Jose Skyrockets and the
SoCal Legends to win the 2005-2006 ABA Championship.
Roster
- Khayri Battle
(#25) is a 6'7" guard for the Express. He played college basketball at William Paterson University (along with Newark Express teammates Jimmy Luu and Mufeed Thomas). He averaged 15.4 pts/game during his first season with the Express and added 8.2 rebounds and 6.4 assists.
- Andrew Feeley
(#15)' is a center for the Express. He is a 6'10" and went to school at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County. He averaged 10.8 pts per game and 8.5 rebounds.
- Shaheen Holloway
(#10) is a basketball player from Hillside, New Jersey. He went to college at Seton Hall University and played for Newark during their inaugural season. He is a six foot guard and averaged nearly eighteen points per game and eight assists.
- Dwayne Howell
(#20) is a 6'9" forward from Newark, New Jersey who plays for the Express. He averages 7.3 points per game and 4.9 rebounds.
- Jimmy Luu
(#4) is a guard for the Express. Luu attended William Paterson University. He is a 5'9" guard and had less court time since he came to the Express than Newark's other guards.
- Travis Snell
(#3) is a 6'4" guard from Jonesboro, Georgia. He went to the University of West Florida and now plays for the Express. He wears number three in Newark and has averaged 11.2 points per game. Snell is a very quick player and has an excellent spin move under the basket.
- Mufeed Thomas
(#5) is a 6'5" forward for the Express. He played college basketball at William Paterson University. He averaged 8.6 points per game and eight rebounds during his first season with Newark.
- Rob Thompson
(#24) is a 7-foot tall center from Hellertown, Pennsylvania. He attended Saucon Valley High School where he averaged double-double's during his junior and senior seasons. Thompson attended Fairfield University in Fairfield, Connecticut where he put up 165 field goals and 363 rebounds during his four years playing for the Stags. He played with the Express during their inaugural season as their starting center. Thompson averaged 14.5 points per game and 9.9 rebounds with the Express.
- Ike Williams
(#21) is a 6'9" center from Jersey City, New Jersey. He attended Fairleigh Dickinson University and now plays for the Newark Express.
Second Season (2006-2007)
Ron Moore
The Express hired
Ron Moore, a
Brooklyn native and former
New York Knick to serve as head coach beginning in November 2006. Moore was named an All City player (
NYC) in high school, All American in college and played for the Knicks, the
Detroit Pistons and
Phoenix Suns in his
NBA career. Moore's coaching history began at
Hunter College as an assistant coach and his first stint at head coach was from 1997-1999 with
Concordia College. Moore also coached for the
Long Island Surf and
Westchester Kings (defunct teams of the
USBL,
Five Towns College and
York College before coming to the Express.
At the end of November 2006, Ron Moore resigned from the Express and was replaced by co-owner Marsha Blount, who will serve as interim head coach.
[2]
Tryouts
In August, the former
Harlem Strong Dog, Obadiah Toppin, who was a 2005 All-Star, came to an open tryout for the Express. Sekani Francis, Jonathan Oliver, Brandon Weldon and Terrance Watkins are four players who the team said they expected to see a lot from at training camp. Another group of four players: Christopher Jean, Justin Carter, Telron Spell and Keimon Thompson were invited back for another workout.
Roster
- Sekani Francis (#24) is a 6'10" center from the Bronx, New York. Francis went to Lehman College.
- Dwayne Howell (#20), a Newark native, will play his second season with the Express in 2006-2007.
- Jonathan Oliver (#10) is a 7' forward from New York City, New York. Oliver went to college at the University of Southern California.
- Tony Key (#22) is a 6'11" center from Los Angeles. Key went to Centennial High School in Compton.
- Elijah T. Thorpe (#13) is a 6'3" for the Express. Thorpe is a Newark Native and went to school at Essex Community College, the home of the Express.
- Obadiah Toppin (#14) is a 6'7" forward for the Express. Toppin is from Brooklyn, New York and went to Eastern Oklahoma State College. Toppin played for the Harlem Strong Dogs the previous season, but the team moved to Tampa Bay for the 2006-2007 season.
- Terrance Watkins (#3) is a 6'3" forward from Queens, New York. Watkins went to Saint Peter's College in Jersey City, New Jersey.
- Delvon Arrington (#1) is a 5'10" guard from Newark, New Jersey. He went to Florida State University.
- Zakee Boyd (#33) is a 6'6" guard from Newark, New Jersey. He went to school at Wright State University.
- Donald Hennie (#8) is a 5'10" guard from Englewood, New Jersey and Seton Hill University.
- Marvin McCullough (#6) is a 6' guard from New York, New York. He went to Iona College.
- Daniel O'Neill (#32) is a 6'8" forward/center from Woodbury, New Jersey. He attended Franklin Pierce College.
- Patrick Okpwae (#23) is a 6'7" forward from Silver Spring, Maryland. He attended school at American University.
- Rashaan Palmer (#34) is a 6'6" forward from Newark, New Jersey. He went to St. Bonaventure University.
Games
Newark lost their home-opener against the
Maryland Nighthawks by a score of 118-113 on Saturday,
November 4,
2006. The Express bounced back at a home game on November 8 against the expansion team, the
Richmond Ballerz, winning 103-94. The game went into
double overtime, the second of which in the
ABA means the score is reset and the first team to ten wins. Newark aggressively and quickly outscored Richmond in the second overtime by 11-2. At the end of regulation Newark was down by three with seven seconds left, but point guard Tayquan Goode shot a buzzer-beating three point shot to get the team in the first overtime period. This first period by ABA rules lasts three minutes and after that time the score was tied 92-92. Newark lost their third game of the season in Brooklyn to the expansion franchise, the
Brooklyn Wonders. The game was played on November 11 and was close throughout the game, but Newark dropped to their second loss on the season by a score of 93-94. Newark lost their next seven games on the season falling to a record of 1-9. They beat the
Montreal Matrix on December 22 in Montreal, but lost their next six games, four of which were on the road. Despite a 2-16 record at the end of January, eleven of Newark's losses were by less than ten points including four games lost by one point
[3].
Third Season (2007-08)
The team announced they have changed their name to the Jersey Express and have relocated to
Madison in
Morris County.
[4] They will now be playing at the Baldwin Gymnasium at
Drew University.
[5]
References
- [1] ABA Homepage
- Express names Marsha Blount head coach, accessed December 4, 2006
- [1] Our Sports Central
- [1] ABALive.com
- "JERSEY EXPRESS HOME VENUE - DREW UNIVERSITY", American Basketball Association press release dated June 29, 2007. Accessed July 13, 2007.