ÐÔÊӽ紫ý

This issue: Summer 2017

JJ Lacey

By Sarah Reid

Four years ago, JJ Lacey came to ÐÔÊӽ紫ý as a lanky freshman, but he quickly grew into a pillar of the men’s basketball program. Over the course of his four-year career he played in 101 games and scored 1,149 points, good for 22nd all-time in the Bruin record book. Last season, his senior year, Lacey led his team to the Northwest Conference Tournament and was rewarded with a NWC first-team selection.

In April, he graduated with a degree in marketing. The soft skills that propelled Lacey to excel on the basketball court also served him well in the classroom. “JJ is extremely dependable, a serious student, engaging in the classroom, teachable, open to constructive feedback and hardworking,” says business professor Dirk Barram.

Lacey’s determination to succeed academically paid off, earning him dean’s list recognition four consecutive semesters to end his undergraduate career.

But stats and accolades don’t tell the whole story. Head men’s basketball coach Maco Hamilton arrived at ÐÔÊӽ紫ý in 2013 – the same year as Lacey – and is quick to point to his star player’s growth as a person over the course of four years.

“Besides him being an outstanding basketball player, what’s made this time so rewarding is to be a part of his natural growth as a man,” says Hamilton. “I’ve pushed and challenged him in various aspects of life that were out of his comfort zone. To see him overcome these fears and develop a belief in himself has been tremendous.”

JJ Lacey

Hamilton pushes, challenges and shapes his athletes from their first moments on campus. He teaches them to be “MBFOs” – “men built for others” – which flies in the face of the stereotypical tough, strong and emotionally isolated picture of manhood popular in today’s culture. Hamilton expects vulnerability from his players. He expects them to share emotion and live their lives not just for themselves.

It was a jarring transition for Lacey, who entered college with the bravado he’d learned through high school, firmly believing men weren’t supposed to show emotion or weakness. The trouble was, Lacey is an emotional person, and sometimes he would break down – he just made sure to do it privately to avoid embarrassment.

Hamilton’s mentorship and coaching changed his perspective. Lacey recalls his junior year when his great-grandma was coming to the end of her life in the middle of the basketball season. He drove out to visit her and say goodbye before heading back to Newberg that afternoon in time for the Bruins’ game against Pacific University. She passed away hours before tipoff, and with her loss still heavy on his heart he rallied his team to a double-overtime victory, scoring 19 points.

As his teammates gathered in their team room to celebrate the hard-fought win, an emotionally exhausted Lacey broke down at his locker. “I wasn’t afraid because I knew that all 15 guys and our managers and coaching staff had my back,” he recalls. “Over the last four years everyone on this team has gone through something family related or something off the court. Maco has taught us how to deal with that collectively, how sharing emotion is actually being a man.”

Hamilton also challenged Lacey to flex his mentoring muscles by putting him in a team leadership role midway through his sophomore season – far earlier than is asked of most college athletes. Lacey didn’t always feel prepared to take that position, but Hamilton was certain he’d found the right person to lead the team and develop the right culture for the men’s basketball program.

“JJ has natural leadership gifts that, quite frankly, I don’t believe he realized he had,” says Hamilton. “He is a compassionate individual and genuinely cares about the well-being of others. There is no agenda attached to a relationship with him. Just by being himself, he eliminates any of the awkward stages of connecting with someone.”

Now, as of April a college graduate, Lacey knows that those meaningful interactions and life-shaping experiences with his teammates will mean more to him in the long run than any statistic or athletic milestone. “I feel most proud of just knowing that I walked away doing everything that I could to make the program better, make my team better, make the school better,” he says.

His impact, both competitively and interpersonally, will be felt for years to come. “The culture that we envisioned establishing is now in place because of JJ Lacey,” says Hamilton. “He will always be a pillar to our program as long as I am the head coach at ÐÔÊӽ紫ý.”

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