Nazareth girls basketball coach Apache Paschall dies

By John Schiano Jan 3, 2012, 1:45pm

Coach of reigning New York Federation champions had been diagnosed with cancer last fall.

Apache Paschall, who died Tuesday, took his Mount St. Michael Academy team to the Class AA championship in 2009.
Apache Paschall, who died Tuesday, took his Mount St. Michael Academy team to the Class AA championship in 2009.
File photo by Lonnie Webb
Robert "Apache" Paschall, highly successful but at times a lightning rod for controversy on the New York City girls basketball scene, died Tuesday of cardiac arrest, Nazareth Regional High School officials said.

Paschall, who had been undergoing chemotherapy as well as five weekly radiation treatments on his neck and jaw after being diagnosed with skin cancer in October, was rushed to New York Infirmary-Beekman Downtown Hospital early in the afternoon and was pronounced dead.

Paschall fought cancer in his finalmonths, undergoing radiation.
Paschall fought cancer in his finalmonths, undergoing radiation.
File photo by Lonnie Webb
He was 37.

"Apache was dedicated above all else to the girls in his program and to improving the profile of girls basketball," the school said in a statement announcing his death. "Our prayers are with his family, particularly his daughter, and his players. May he rest in peace."



Paschall coached Nazareth (Brooklyn, N.Y.) to a 29-3 record and the Federation Class AA championship in Albany last season. Paschall and many of his players came over to Brooklyn from St. Michael Academy in Manhattan - which won a Federation crown in 2009 - after that school closed its doors in June 2010.

Nazareth, which pulled out of California's West Coast Jamboree last week because Paschall wasn't able to travel, is 3-0 and ranked No. 1 in the state by the New York State Sportswriters Association and No. 9 nationally in the MaxPreps Xcellent 25 National Girls Basketball Rankings presented by the Army National Guard.

Assistant coaches Ron Kelley and Lauren Best had assumed many of the responsibilities with the team this winter, though the obviously fatigued Paschall was on the bench for games and had attended practice on Monday.

"He was important. He was a mentor for me, like a second father," Darius Falk, who played for Paschall for two years at SMA before moving to Nazareth with him, told the New York Daily News. "I've been with him since I was in seventh grade. He helped me get where I'm at right now."

As of Tuesday night there were conflicting reports as to whether the Lady Kingsmen's game against Brooklyn/Queens league foe Bishop Ford on Thursday would be played as scheduled. Nazareth has another big league contest scheduled Saturday vs. perennial national power Christ the King as part of homecoming weekend.

Paschall, a product of the housing projects who endured the pain of having his mother sentenced to prison when he was 10 years old, registered success beyond the high school ranks. His Exodus summer program is considered must-see viewing for college recruiters, having helped launch the careers of players inside and outside the SMA/Nazareth dynasty such as Long Island's Samantha Prahalis, now at Ohio State, and WNBA player Samantha Prahalis (Ohio State), who once scored 113 points in a PSAL game for Murry Bergtraum.



But it's the string of great players at St. Michael Academy and then Nazareth that nearly proved to be his undoing. Paschall coached much of last season under the shadow of a CHSAA investigation into whether players were offered improper incentives to follow him to Nazareth, which had been without a girls program for several seasons before Paschall arrived.

Paschall was cleared by the league before the Federation playoffs, but not before being hospitalized in December 2010 for congestive heart failure and being suspended for a week – including two early-round playoff victories – by his principal for speaking at length with The New York Post about the Catholic High School Athletic Association probe.

This season, the Nazareth roster was bolstered by the arrival in September of three-out-of-state guards – seen as over the top even by the casual standards of many in the New York City high school/AAU circuit. Brianna Butler from William Penn Charter School in Pennsylvania and a Syracuse University recruit; Sadie Edwards, out of Our Lady of Mercy School in Connecticut; and Destini Feagin from Ben Davis High in Indiana were all initially ruled ineligible by the CHSAA.

In November, the school supplied the CHSAA with documentation that the players had properly moved to New York with their families, clearing the way for them to join the lineup.

Combined with highly regarded sophomore Bianca Cuevas and seniors Faulk (who signed with West Virginia), Brianna Sidney (UNC-Wilmington) and Taylor Ford (Syracuse), they formed a lineup that made Nazareth the favorite to repeat in the Federation Class AA tournament.

John Schiano has written about high school sports in western and central New York for more than 25 years, and is president of the New York State Sportswriters Association. He may be reached at john.schiano@maxpreps.com.