Red Storm Sports News

Monique McLean: Bring It On

Guard Monique McLean

Guard Monique McLean

Published: March 02, 2007
QUEENS, N.Y.

When Monique McLean was growing up in Newport News, Va., as the only daughter in a family of basketball-playing brothers, it wasn’t hard to see what the future had in store for her. A phenomenal athlete with long, sculpted arms, a charming smile and graceful movements, she logically aspired to put her natural talents to use and become the best cheerleader that Virginia had ever seen.

Cheerleader?

Looking at her now, a slashing, dynamic guard for the St. John’s women’s basketball team, she has certainly ended up in a different place than her childhood aspirations led her, emerging on the national scene as one of the up-and-coming players in the BIG EAST Conference.

After a successful freshman year for the Red Storm, McLean has stepped up her game to become the team’s leading scorer and second-best rebounder in her sophomore campaign. The team heads to the 2007 BIG EAST Tournament this weekend and will be relying on their sharpshooting guard to help carry them deep into the bracket.

Listening to McLean describe her glory days as a cheerleader, she can’t help but laugh. “Yeah, it’s true,” she says. “For some reason, I really wanted to be a cheerleader.”

In fact, McLean chose to cheer on the varsity cheerleading squad her freshman year for the Bruton High School Panthers, even though she had grown up playing organized basketball since the age of nine. She spent her fall reminding the football team that it was (boom) dynamite and her winter urging the men’s and women’s basketball teams to b-e a-g-g-r-e-s-s-i-v-e.

But basketball remained a big part of the McLean family. Her father, James, retired from the United States Navy, played college basketball at Campbell University in North Carolina and her two brothers, James and Hughes were avid players up until college. McLean recalls playing with her brothers at the gym on the Navy base where her father was stationed all throughout middle school and high school.

After a year on the cheerleading team, the high school girls basketball coach at Bruton, previously McLean’s gym teacher in middle school, convinced her to give the basketball team a try.

The next year, instead of cheering the team from the sidelines, McLean was starring for Bruton as a do-it-all guard. Once she began playing AAU Basketball for the traditional powerhouse Boo Williams program, St. John’s head coach Kim Barnes Arico took notice.

On a home visit, both Barnes Arico and McLean recall having a connection. “My parents and I just had a lot of fun with her and assistant coach Jonath Nicholas,” McLean says. “A lot of fun doing nothing. That’s when I started becoming really interested in seeing what St. John’s had to offer.”

She ended up at St. John’s for the 2005-06 season and found a role as a rookie on a team with five seniors. In a ‘sixth man’ role, McLean made her mark not only in games by averaging 7.0 points per game, but in practice as well.

“She challenged our seniors last year every single day in practice,” Barnes Arico says. “She wasn’t afraid of anything as a freshman. If she could score 30 times in a row, she would.”

2005-06 was a banner year for Red Storm women’s basketball. A second-round appearance in the NCAA Tournament and a 22-8 overall record marked one of the most successful seasons ever for St. John’s.

Heading into this year, her coach knew McLean would have to step up during her sophomore season. Back in August, Barnes Arico said this about her second-year guard: “Monique could be the X-factor for us. How she plays may determine a lot about how our season goes.”

McLean now averages 16.4 points per game and has had four double-doubles and four 20+ point performances on the year. She is easily one of the most improved players in the league and has garnered the attention of media and coaches.

“So many people have come up to me this year talking about Monique,” Barnes Arico says. “She has really shown she can compete with anyone in the BIG EAST.”

Heading into the BIG EAST Tournament, McLean has gone from a freshman role player to a sophomore starter. Along with senior guard Kia Wright, the Red Storm boasts one of the most exciting backcourts in the nation.

Both will be on display on Saturday at noon against Louisville in the first round of the conference tournament, being held in Hartford, Conn., at the Hartford Civic Center.

McLean has fond memories of her time as a cheerleader, but knows she made the right decision.

“If I’m at another game other than ours, I’ll look at the cheerleaders and say to myself ‘I could be out there doing that.’ 

“But then our games come around and I know I’m a basketball player.”

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