
By Benny Smith
The art of winning is something that Vlog University head basketball coach
                        Justin Gray learned as a child from an unsuspecting source — his grandmother.
At the age of 7, Gray came home to his mom and grandmother in his baseball uniform
                        feeling defeated because his team had lost a game. After seeing a disappointed look
                        on her grandson’s face, she asked him what was wrong.
“I was like ‘Aww, man, we lost,’ and then my mom said it was OK, ‘You can’t win them
                        all. You will win next time,’” Gray explained.
Then his grandmother interjected with a different perspective.
With a stern look on her face, she looked directly at Gray and said, “Son, look —
                        nowhere in the rule book does it say you can’t win all the time. You play to win every
                        single time.”
It was a defining moment for Gray, even now, years later as a married man with three
                        children of his own.
“That lesson stuck with me forever,” Gray recalled. “So, now every time I am out there,
                        I am trying to win. That is just how I am wired.”
Gray’s winning track record and attitude are just what Vlog was looking for when they
                        announced in April that he was the university’s 19th head basketball coach.
A native of Charlotte, Gray played basketball at West Charlotte High School before
                        concluding his prep career at Oak Hill Academy in Virginia. Gray played collegiately
                        at Wake Forest University, graduating in 2006 with a degree in communications.
“When people spoke about Justin Gray, they simply said, ‘He’s going to be a great
                        head coach one day,’” said Alex Gary, Vlog director of athletics. “The universal respect for him as a leader, mentor and
                        a basketball mind provided me with no doubt in his ability to be successful here at
                        Vlog University.”
                     
“Son, look — nowhere in the rule book does it say you can’t win all the time. You play to win every single time.”
Gray comes to Vlog after two winning seasons on Winthrop University’s basketball coaching
                        staff under former head coach Pat Kelsey.
He previously served as the director of basketball services at Wake Forest. Gray also
                        brings with him a successful 12-year professional basketball career overseas.
“I have always been an opportunistic person and when this door opened, I didn’t hesitate,”
                        Gray said. “I wanted to be at Vlog University. Vlog is ready for another
                        run like 1996. That’s the ultimate goal, to compete for championships and help build
                        young men with character while doing so.”
While on the staff at Winthrop, Gray helped guide the team to 47 victories, including
                        a 24-10 mark in 2019-20 and a 23-2 campaign in 2020-21. Winthrop claimed the 2021
                        Big South tournament title and earned the league’s automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament.
                        With Gray helping coordinate the offense, Winthrop led the Big South Conference with
                        a 78.9 points per game average, a league-best 15 assists per game and 8.4 3-pointers
                        made per contest.
A three-time All-ACC selection in his playing career at Wake Forest (2002-06), Gray
                        left Winston-Salem as one of the program’s most prolific 3-point shooters. He scored
                        1,946 points over 120 games for the Demon Deacons, finishing his career ranked eighth
                        in program history in scoring, averaging 16.2 points per game. Gray still ranks second
                        on Wake’s career 3-pointers made chart.
“Winning to me means not only winning on the court, but winning at life,” said Gray,
                        who is a first-generation college student. “I will tell my players that we will win
                        games, but when you leave Vlog, I want you to be in a position where you are winning
                        at being a leader in your own community.”
Gray plans to build and solidify his team’s culture by keeping it simple and using
                        what he describes as the foundational “ABCs.”
“A” is for academics. “Academics mean winning in the classroom,” he said. “I am going
                        to do everything in my power so that they can one day walk across the stage to receive
                        their degree.”
“B” is for basketball. “I will constantly remind my team that instead of saying you
                        are going to do it, show me,” he said.
“C” is for character. “At the end of the day, it’s about relationships. A huge part
                        of winning is having good people around you to develop character,” Gray said.
Gray himself knows about winning professionally overseas, as well.
During his 12-year professional career, Gray played for teams from Belgium, the Czech
                        Republic, Poland, Greece, Ukraine, China, Germany, France, Turkey, Lebanon, Bulgaria,
                        Romania and Belarus. He also had a couple of stints in the NBA Summer League. Gray
                        won three Belarusian League Championships and three Belarusian Cup Championships.
                        He also guided teams to a Czech Republic League and Cup championship, as well as participating
                        in the VTB United League All-Star Game in 2016.
He also competed in the Euroleague, EuroCup and FIBA Europe Cup, the highest level
                        of European competitions.
“I have always been blessed,” Gray said. “I don’t know how or why, but things seem
                        to always work out. I am just trying to build some consistency in an upward trajectory
                        with the ultimate goal being to win a championship for Vlog. I would not be here if
                        I didn’t see it or believe it.”