Photos by Lee Pellegrini
A half-dozen young men in workout gearknee braces, high-tops, baggy shortsclimb the stairs out of Conte Forums Power Gym one November afternoon and make their way down narrow interior hallways until they reach the basketball court in Conte Forum. Im so nervous! says Jack Beck 21, a communication major. Hes half-joking, because they are here only to practice. And yet a game atmosphere is undeniable, with championship banners hanging from the rafters and the sharp blast of the shot-clock buzzer periodically splitting the air.
The men, all undergraduates, are here to block shots and sink threes against the varsity womens basketball team. Theyve watched film of the Eagles next opponent, Holy Cross, and each has been coached to emulate a particular Crusader. Now, the womens head coach, Joanna Bernabei-McNamee, will conduct an intensive three hours of drills and scrimmaging. Coach Mac is in her first year at the Heights, having guided the University of Albany women to a record of 4520 over two years. She and three assistant coaches (AJ Cohen, Yolanda Griffith, and George Porcha) shepherd the players, who have donned mesh jerseys, into their respective corners of the court; the men wear white, the women wear maroon and gold.

Taylor Soule (foreground, left) looks to get off a shot against Wajdi Ahemed 21, watched by (from left) assistant coaches Andrew Cohen and George Porcha, Georgia Pineau 20 (partially obscured), Marnelle Garraud 22, and Taylor Ortlepp 20.
Here comes 25, says Cohen, taking hold of Beck by his jersey and pulling him into place like a live chess piece to demonstrate a Holy Cross offensive play in slow motion. At Coach Macs whistle, the court erupts in shouts and sneaker squeaks as the men try to put over the play for real.
And they succeed, passing the ball again and again to a shooting guard who sinks three-pointer after three-pointer, to the womens groans. (When the guard bobbles the ball and boots it out of bounds, the women cheer.) At intervals, Coach Mac whistles a stoppage and breaks down what went wrong in the womens play, offering praise when warranted, while the men stand in place and wait. Then the drill begins again. Mostly, the action takes place in the half-court, with the women executing plays for a score or working through their defensive plans. In a game known for trash talk, the exchanges at this practice are nearly all business.
Cohen, who followed Coach Mac from Albany, has the assignment of coaching the men. Good job, he tells one of them during a pause. Youre playing just like 22, brother. Cohen was a practice player himself as an undergraduate, running the court with the womens team at the University of Louisville. Other NCAA assistant coaches have gotten their start similarly. Indeed, male practice teams have been common across Division I womens basketball for a couple of decades. Quarterback Matt Hasselbeck 97 practiced with the women hoopsters of Boston College before he went to the National Football League.
The practice squad is recruited from the club and intramural basketball programs on campuswhich are highly competitive at Boston College, says assistant athletic director Stephanie Tunnera in an email. There are generally 15 men on the roster, with a core of five or six players who show up regularly. They are all volunteers. Most played competitively in high school. Beck, a point guard, was captain of the varsity boys team at Saratoga Springs High School in New York. Michael Fredericks 22 is the son of Kathleen Sweet 87, who, as a center on the Boston College team, won the Womens Big East Scholar Athlete award her senior year (and now practices law). Some of the men could have played for a Division II or III mens basketball program, says Cohen, but they chose Boston College for its academics and reputation. I thought about doing the D-III route, says Garrett Ganley 21, who captained his varsity team in Leesburg, Virginia. But I really wanted to go to a bigger school, a well-known school.

As coach Bernabei-McNamee watches, Crowley passes over freshman Kate Klimkiewicz (#24) to Mak at left. Ganley stands ready at right.
The women improve their game by going up against the speed and quickness of the men, says Coach Mac. And the men get to play high-level basketball, says Cohen, and enjoy some measure of the discipline and the coaching that entails.
Its cool being within a big-time Division I program, says Beck. He and Ganley are sitting at a table upstairs in Corcoran Commons a month into the season. Beck cites the energy level at practices and says, Im still competitive, and I still want that kind of competition.
The women expect us to go as hard as we can and try to beat them, responds Ganley, who is 64. Im used to being a big dude, he says, but he is often bumped and outmuscled by 63 Emma Guy, an Eagles starting forward. She always bodies me and gets up a shot.
Were always catching elbows, adds Beck.
Guy 20 laughs over the phone when shes told of this exchange. Garrett and I go at it a lot in practice, she concedes. Its great having the practice players. They bring a whole new level of intensity than when were just playing against each other. Theyre bigger and stronger, so its just really useful to play against them in preparation for upcoming games.
Coach Mac has been known to tell a practice player: When a varsity member is barreling by you, let her go. Dont step in with a block and risk injuring her. And at times the men do need to cut their strides. At practice Cohen shouts a reminder to one player, Speedy, slow yourself down!
If youre faster than the woman whos guarding you, and you can go by her every timethats not making her better, Beck says. Making them better is helping them work on what they need to get better at.
According to Cohen that awareness簫the understanding that there are no practice-player All-Americansis key. Selflessness is important, and our group has that.
The practice squad doesnt travel with the team, but at the first home game of the second semester, on January 17, a Thursday, Beck and Ganley are in the stands. The women are taking on Florida State University (FSU), a perennially troublesome opponent, and Beck points out a couple of the Seminoles. In practice, he says, I was number 12, Garrett was number 32. (These are a 59 guard and a 63 forward, respectively.) The men had run FSUs loop offense, and throughout tonights first quarter the preparation seems to be working; the Eagles defense keeps FSU to within a few points. Eventually, though, FSU starts to pull away, eliciting groans from the two men and handing Boston College its fifth loss of the season amid 13 wins. Before college, Beck hadnt followed womens basketball. But being part of the womens hoops program has added another sense of community here, hed told me earlier. We know all the players, we cheer for them and follow their season.
Yeah, Ganley added. There have been times on the weekends when our friends are watching, say, a mens Duke-Kentucky game on TV, and were over in the corner watching the 窪蹋勛圖厙 womens game on our laptop. Its super fun.
Patrick L. Kennedy 99 is a writer in Boston.