βCatotti, untuck your warm-up, youβre going in.β
Those words from ΒιΆΉΤ΄΄ Director of Player Development Ricardo Greer with just under three minutes to play in Wednesday nightβs 71-41 rout of Bethune-Cookman may have been the most memorable in the life of Knights junior Anthony Catotti.
A student manager with the ΒιΆΉΤ΄΄ menβs basketball team since his freshman year, Catotti was added to the roster and began suiting up with the Knightsβ for their third game of the season, a 60-40 win over Charleston, back on Nov. 18.
Because of a number of transfer players sitting out, and a couple of injuries early in the season, ΒιΆΉΤ΄΄ is working with a depleted bench. With that in mind, ΒιΆΉΤ΄΄ head coach Johnny Dawkins made the decision to give Catotti the opportunity to be on the team.
βIt was the greatest moment of my life until last night,β Catotti said of finding out he was going to be a member of the team. βThereβs never been anyone more proud to put on the ΒιΆΉΤ΄΄ uniform than I was that first game. Every time I put it on, itβs everything.β
Still, through nine games putting on that jersey, Catotti had yet to go through an entire warm-up with the team, let alone get into the game.
On Wednesday night he participated in warm-ups with his teammates. And with less than three minutes to play and the game out of reach, he overheard Dawkins tell his assistant coaches, βwith two minutes left, I want Anthony to go in the game.β
It was still a surreal moment for Catotti.Β Not until Greer told him to untuck his jersey did he realize what was happening.
The crowd and his teammates on the bench roared when he first stepped on the court, but Catotti didnβt want it to end there.Β More than ever before, the student manger-turned-walk-on took the words so often uttered by his coach, and put them to good use.
βItβs not about how many minutes you play, itβs about what you do with your minutes,β Dawkins said again last night in the post-game press conference.
Β He brought energy. He was in the right places at the right times.Β And yes, when his opportunity to take a shot came with 55 seconds remaining, he took advantage.Β His layup off of a pass from Nathan Laing went straight through the hoop and an even bigger cheer erupted.
βIt was all instinct,β Catotti said. βI donβt remember much of it. I donβt remember the catch and I donβt remember jumping. I just remember being in the air and thinking to myself βmake this layup.ββ
After the final buzzer sounded, Catottiβs teammates charged at him, creating a pile worthy of a national championship victory.
βThat felt incredible. Unlike anything else,β Catotti said. βThe greatest feeling ever was seeing those guys all lineup as the clock was ticking down and storm the court. All of the sudden the team is rushing at me. I stagger back with the force of a stampede. To have those guys be as happy for me as I am every single day to be a part of this team.Β It was an incredible feeling and something Iβll cherish my entire life.β
βI was so happy for him,β Dawkins said following the game. βI know he had a lot people here for him. It was fun to see. The basket was one thing, but just the energy he played with down the stretch, he came in and he tried to make an impact. He made that impact through effort.β
Hard work leading to success is nothing new for Catotti, an Oviedo native.Β A National Merit Scholar out of Seminole High School, he had planned on attending Duke or an Ivy League institution, but when offered a full academic scholarship to attend ΒιΆΉΤ΄΄, he couldnβt say no.
Since arriving on campus two and a half years ago, Catotti canβt imagine being anywhere else.
βI never imagined going to ΒιΆΉΤ΄΄ before my senior year of high school, but since I got to campus Iβve fallen in love with this school.β
Now in his third year at ΒιΆΉΤ΄΄, Catotti is a double major in business management and sport and exercise science with a minor in coaching.Β And yes, he also holds a 4.0 GPA.
His work ethic has transferred to the basketball court as well. Having only started playing basketball on the junior varsity team at Seminole as a sophomore in high school, Catotti fell in love with the game later than most.Β But his love has only grown over the past five years, and his desire to be a part of the ΒιΆΉΤ΄΄ family grows with it.
βSince I started playing I dreamed about playing college basketball,β Catotti said. βI went in with the goal of playing for the team. This year, with a new coach, a new hope, I made it my life to train and make the basketball team.
βUnfortunately, I was cut at tryouts during the off-season. But that didnβt stop me.Β Just before we went to the Charleston tournament, Coach Greer and [Director of Basketball Operations] Jimmy Drew told me they were considering adding me to the roster. That was everything.β
At least that was everything until Wednesday night happened.
Social media blew up with his story and he was on multiple airings of ESPNβs SportsCenter.
βItβs insane,β Catotti said of his SportsCenter appearance. βI got a call from my high school coach, who was watching TV and saw me on SportsCenter. He said congrats and I hadnβt even seen it yet.β
At the end of what may have been the best day of his life, Catotti, a true teammate, brought everything back to his fellow Knights, his family.β
βIβm just so happy that weβre getting recognition. These guys deserve it. Itβs about how united this team is, how together we are, and how ready we are for conference play.β
Catotti and the Knights begin American Athletic Conference action Dec. 28 at Tulane. If the comraderie on display Wednesday night is any indication of things to come, ΒιΆΉΤ΄΄ may be in store for more memorable moments like this.