http://www.redstormsports.com/sports/m-baskbl/spec-rel/012612aaa.htmlFrom "Wonder Five" To "Fresh Five"
St. John's "Freshman Five" starting lineup of Phil Greene, D'Angelo Harrison, Moe Harkess, Sir'Dominic Pointer and Amir Garrettin its Jan. 25 78-62 win over West Virginia is believed to be a first for the program since 1927-28. That season, three original "Wonder Five" members Mac Kinsbrunner, Jack "Rip" Gerson and Max Posnack first took the floor for legendary St. John's coach and Naismith Hall of Famer James "Buck" Freeman.
The "Wonder Five" never won a national championship in their two seasons together but in that time they did manage to make St. John's the darling of New York fans and bring the Redmen a national following.
Freeman went from St. John's player to St. John's coach over the summer of 1927 and the sport would never be the same. His first team featured freshmen Kinsbrunner, Gerson and Posnack with two other first-year players as starters. The team played a style that featured constant ball movement, including having the pivot touch it, and new plays such as the give-and-go. The Redmen won their first eight games that season and finished 18-4. The freshman class would lose that many games over the next three seasons, going 23-2, 23-1 and 21-1.
Allie Shuckman joined the team in 1929-30. Matty Begovich started as a freshman the season after that and the Wonder Five was complete: Kinsbrunner -- an amazing dribbler, Gerson -- the spark plug on offense and defense, Schuckman -- the shooter, Begovich -- the pivot, and Posnack -- the captain and the team's best passer.
They captured New York's imagination as a team of neighborhood kids playing basketball a different way, a fun way, a successful way. Defense was also a key for Freeman's team and playing keep away was its most effective tactic as the Redmen often held teams without a field goal for long periods of time.
The team outgrew the buildings it played in and it was the Wonder Five who moved college basketball into the big arenas, specifically Madison Square Garden where a special charity game between St. John's and CCNY was arranged. The Redmen beat the Beavers 17-9, their second win over CCNY that season.
The Wonder Five made its last appearance on March 4, 1931, and seniors Gerson, Kinsbrunner and Posnack went out with a 30-16 victory over Manhattan. Posnack was considered by many to be the best player college basketball had seen to that time and there was almost unanimous consent that the Wonder Five was the best team to have ever taken the court.