Developing Emotional Intelligence At Carleton Will Continue To Help Carry Aiden Warnholtz(Giessen 46ers) Through Difficult Times

There were 9,7 seconds remaining in a real tight dogfight between the Fraport Skyliners and EPG Baskets Koblenz with the score dead locked at 71-71 in double overtime. Almost most everybody was standing in the living room for the Skyliners except for me. When I look back to the moment, I´m not really sure why I was sitting down, because in the past, it wouldn´t have been like that, but maybe I have mellowed a bit through the last 20 years of doing play by play. Back in 2007, it was Eric Chatfield who beat ratiopharm Ulm on a last second shot a few feet to the left to where Aiden Warnholtz (188-G-2000, college: Carleton) would show his magic and in 2014, it was ex Vanderbilt (NCAA) guard Kevin Bright that helped Frankfurt beat Rasta Vechta on the road. I was fortunate to have called both games and was at it again in 2024. But this time, I just knew Aiden Warnholtz would drill it home. How did I know, well when his ex coach Taffe Charles told me the summer before that the Canadian was a better shooter than Philipp Scrubb, well then I just knew he was going to sink that last shot. I remember how well Scrubb shot out the lights with the Skyliners in the 2015-2016 season and I was right. This time I let my colleague Jan Kolod do the screaming. Warnholtz was all alone at the top of the key and drilled home the three pointer with nothing but net. This was Warnholtz´s first game winner at the pro level, but he had had some at Carleton. ““This was one of the more exciting games that I have been a part of. I only have played in 2 double OT games. Our defense got us the win. It was a challenge playing against their bigs. Our biggest strength was just being on the same page defensively. We also did a good job winning other battles like the loose balls. The original play wasn´t for me. I got open and it was an in rhythm shot. It was an easy shot I usually make”, smiled Aiden Warnholtz.

Aiden Warnholtz who lists current Oklahoma Thunder guard Shai Gilgeous-Alexander as his toughest opponent so far in his career and a top 3 NBA guard right now was born on February 4th, 2000 in Ottawa, Canada. He played at the well known Carleton University from 2018-2023 playing a total of 97 games and is the third player from that school to strap on a Fraport Skyliners uniform after Aaron Doornekamp and Philipp Scrubb. Scrubb won 8 titles at Carleton, but Warnholtz didn´t too shabby himself winning 6 titles. “In my four seasons with Carleton I was a part of some pretty special teams, winning 2 provincial championships and 4 National Championships. Each one is very special in its own way, it’s hard to really rank them, but the most recent one, the 2023 National Championship feels especially unique to me. It was my last year at Carleton, playing with some great friends that I had been with for the last 5 years, and we had some ups and downs that year as a team that all culminated in a crazy double overtime National Championship game”, remembered Aiden Warnholtz. He had many incredible games at Carleton including 2 triple doubles, but he saved his best for a game that counted most. “I was fortunate enough to have some pretty cool moments and contribute to some pretty great games in my time at Carleton. In terms of my performances, there are some games where I scored more, but just because of the importance of the game and the moments that came with it, I think my best game at Carleton was that 2023 National Championship game”, stated Aiden Warnholtz. He paid his dues in his first 2 seasons averaging only 3.9ppg, 1.2rpg, 1.6 and in his second season averaged 5.6ppg, 1.8rpg, 1.6apg while his minutes rose from 9 to 14. He really broke out in his last 2 seasons as his minutes fluctuated from 28 to 34 as did his stats as he averaged 13.1ppg, 4.1rpg, 4.2apg, 1.4spg, FGP: 44.7%, 3PT: 38.8%, FT: 79.2% and 17.9ppg, 5.5rpg, Assists-2 (6.8apg), FGP: 45.3%, 3PT: 42.9%, FT: 87.5%. His step by step development is commendable as head coach Taffe Charles showed him the correct way. “He pushed me everyday. He made sure that I was always going hard in practice and challenged me to be better. We would have conversations and watch video of ways he thought I needed to improve or how I could be better for the team and myself. We both had a strong feeling of working towards the goal of winning National championships, and he knew what I was capable of individually in terms of helping the team and after University. He helped me to get better for the team, and by doing so helped me get to a place where I could pursue professional basketball. Something that was also important for my development as I played for him is that he also cared about me as a person, and took an interest in how I was doing during some tough times for me outside of basketball”, commented Aiden Warnholtz. But he didn´t only grow on the court, but off of it as well as he was a solid citizenship and boosted his character further on Sunday´s teaching 8th graders at 8 Am after coming home in the wee hours of the morning after long road trips. “ At Carleton, part of playing on the team involved coaching some youth basketball throughout the year, which I think was as much a benefit for us as I hope it was for the guys we coached. It was amazing to create more of an attachment to the local basketball community and feel like you were contributing to the development of up and coming players. I also think it helped my own understanding of the game. When you have to break things down and teach it to others, it requires that you have a thorough understanding of the what you are talking about, which helped my own knowledge of the game”, expressed Aiden Warnholtz who remembers Alan Louis getting the better of him in 1-1 battles in practice. He was a U Sports All-Canadian First Team and U Sports Tournament MVP in 2023.

The scoring guard who lists Connor Vreeken, Elliot Bailey, Yasiin Joseph, Biniam Ghebrekidan, Lloyd Pandi, Alain Louis, and Munis Tutu as his best teammates of all-time started his professional career in the summer of 2023 in Canada with the Niagara River Lions (CEBL) playing 12 games averaging 3.3ppg, 1.5rpg, 1.8apg. He got his feet wet and then came overseas and signed with German Pro A team Fraport Skyliners. He couldn´t have asked for a better organization to begin his professional career as it has been around for almost 25 years and was s fighting to get back to the easyCredit BBL where it was a staple for 24 years. “It has been great to be able to play for the Skyliners organization. They are a well established club, with high aspirations for the season, so it’s an environment where everyone wants to improve both as individuals and as a team. It’s also great to be a part of a club that is such a factor in the community, with youth teams and camps, as well as the Pro B and Pro A teams, it makes you feel part of something bigger than just the team itself. The club also has a great facility with lots of availability to get in and work on our bodies or our games, which is especially important for a guy like me playing in my first year as a professional”, said Aiden Warnholtz. The club began with a 9 game winning streak and then lost 5 of 8 games. It is only normal that team´s will go through ups and downs during a season. “We had a great start to the season like you said, but in a league like this you are not going to go through a season without some adversity. Teams had seen us more by that time in the season, and had more of a plan of how to beat us, and I think it maybe took us a few games to grow and adjust ourselves to play the way we wanted to. As you say, we may have relied a lot on three point shooting, but I think it was more about taking the right shots, the ones that we want and not the ones that the defense wants us to take”, stressed Aiden Warnholtz. The team found it´s groove again in January 2024 and were fighting to reach the best position before the playoffs started in May. “Our defense and the effort we put in on that side of the floor has helped us win more again. They are going to be games where maybe we don’t shoot as well, but if we can stop the other team we know we have a good chance. Other than that it´s just been about playing with the right energy, putting people in the right spots and guys playing to their strengths on the offensive end”, added Aiden Warnholtz. A big key to the consistent defensive game of the Skyliners was head coach Dennis Wucherer who had a strict defensive vision from day 1. “Coach has emphasized our defense all season long, so it´s a theme that he has given us from the start. We have some solid defenders and, coach has been on guys to use those defensive abilities and make people uncomfortable. He also recognizes where there may be weaknesses at times, depending on situations on the floor, so he gives us the tools to deal with those as a team”, warned Aiden Warnholtz.

The Canadian native who names Michael Jordan, Lebron James, Steph Curry and Steve Nash on his personal NBA Mount Rushmore played his rookie season in Frankfurt and was one of many young players on a team that was very experienced. So many players could decide a game on any night, but there are times when that player is simply missing. A player that can really dominate at any time. One of those guys that can be that dominate player was Kevin McClaine. He is seeing it again this season as he is his teammate again in Giessen. “I think we have a team full of guys that can score and there are a few guys that have shown the ability to dominate at times. Kevin is definitely one of those guys that can make things happen, and I think he has been getting into more of an offensive rhythm lately, and he is a guy we are going to need down the stretch”, warned Aiden Warnholtz. Maybe the most important player on the team was Minnesota native Booker Coplin who plays with so much energy and was perhaps the team´s best all around player. “Booker is a lot of fun to play with, he plays with a toughness and a grit that you love to have on your side. He can score in multiple ways, on the catch, on the dribble, from 3, at the rim, and in the post, but he has also really shown that he can make plays with the pass. He is a guy that we can have in multiple spots on the floor, whether with or without the ball, and he is a threat to score or make a play. He is huge for our team on the offensive end, but I also think he does a great job defensively too”, said Aiden Warnholtz. One young player that made a great progression was German Justin Onyejiaka who is with Vechta this season shows his crazy athleticism every day and was key in many games last season. “Justin is super talented and athletic, as you say. He often finds ways to make very athletic plays seem easy, or make something happen where you didn’t really think it could. It’s fun to watch the way he uses his strength and athleticism mixed with his change of pace to keep people off balance”, commented Aiden Warnholtz. The club wouldn´t be the defensive team that they were without the 2 anchors with then rookies Cam Henry and David Muenkat. “Both of those guys are solid on the defensive end, I think one thing that Cam has is great hands to deflect and steal passes, whereas where David really helps us is on the rebounds. He tracks the ball really well and isn’t gets right into the crowd to grab some big rebounds”. Stressed Aiden Warnholtz.

The 188cm guard who lists Lebron James as his personal GOAT is a player that has a similar game to ex Giessen guard Skyler Bowlin who had many potent seasons in the easyCredit BBL, but also to NBA legend Steve Nash, a guy he has tried to emulate. “He was not the biggest or most athletic player, but used his abilities to shoot and pass to be great NBA player”, stressed Aiden Warnholtz. He is a pass first point guard, but it is his shooting and scoring that really stands out. “A big strength is my shooting ability, playing off of it to open up other things. Something else that I try to bring to the game is being vocal on the floor and making sure guys are on the same page”, said Aiden Warnholtz. Using his IQ is something that he does on the offensive end, but he also needs a massive portion of that on the defensive end as he isn´t the biggest guard on the floor. “I am not the quickest player but try to use knowledge of how the opponents play to defend the ball well, and feel like I do a good job of fighting physically when I am undersized in a matchup. I try to contribute with my off ball defense by being in the right places and being willing to put my body on the line by taking charges”, stated Aiden Warnholtz. He may only be in his second season, but he knows exactly what he has to do in order to keep making strides with his game. “I am working on improving my strength and understanding of the game, as well as my finishing around the rim. I am of course continually working on my shooting and ball handling as well”, added Aiden Warnholtz. But one of his most special and unique strengths is one that you don´t hear often, but Taffe Charles mentioned that he had this rare ability of having emotional intelligence. “That’s a nice compliment from my coach. Intangible skills like that came from lots of tough practices and games throughout my career. In my first few years at Carleton university practices were very tough for me, we had a lot of great players older than me and it caused me to have to fight through some tough times on the court. My coaches Taffe Charles and Dave Smart both worked with me and other teammates to help build a level of what you could call emotional intelligence to help myself and teammates. It’s important to have an understanding of how you work individually and how you can try to get the best out of yourself and those around you even in tough times”, stressed Aiden Warnholtz. Time really flies as Philipp Scrubb last played in Frankfurt in 2018 and since has continued to carve out a fine career overseas, but how did coach Taffe Charles see their games at Carleton? “Phil and Aiden have similar paths in a way and in some ways don’t. Phil was a big part of the team right in his freshman year and in the 5 titles. Phil is a better finisher, but Aiden is as good of a shooter and maybe an even better shooter. Aiden may be a better spot up shooter and Phil better off the dribble. Both of those guys lived in their own ways being very quiet and no raw raw’, stressed Taffe Charles. Warnholtz has trained with Scrubb in Canada and has the utmost respect for him. “Phil Scrubb was a great player for Carleton University and still is overseas. For Taffe to compare me to Phil in any way is a great compliment. I got to watch him play at Carleton before I went there, so to see the way he led those teams, and then scrimmage with him and try to learn from the way he plays, trains, and conducts himself was really beneficial to my time at Carleton and my development”, stated Aiden Warnholtz. Scrubb helped the Fraport Skyliners win the Fiba Europe Cup in his rookie season and guys coming from Carleton simply know how to win. Aiden Warnholtz came up a little short losing the Pro A title with Frankfurt, but still it was enough to move back to the easyCredit BBL which was the clubs biggest goal. This season Warnholtz is balling with the Giessen 46ers currently averaging 8,6ppg, 2,2rpg and 1,9apg. He was injured after 2 games to start the season and was out for more than 4 months, but is back now. He had a incredible 22 point game in the 89-60 victory in Koblenz and 19 points in the 105-84 trouncing of Kirchheim. He also gave stability in the Bremerhaven playoff series scoring 12 and 10 points. Now he and Giessen face favorite Jena. Giessen will need everyone to make the upset. After the 22 point game, I was interviewing Wartnholtz on the court and ex EPG Guardians Koblenz head coach Marco Van Den Berg came over and said “Aiden you were the reason why the Skyliners moved back to the easyCredit BBL”. It is a pity that the Skyliners didn´t retain him, but who knows, he may help move up the Giessen 46ers to the easyCredit BBL. And just maybe do what he couldn´t do last season and win the Pro A title

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