2010-11 MU Men's Basketball Media Guide

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2010-2011

S E A S O N

S C H E D U L E

NOVEMBER Sat 6 vs. St. John’s (Minn) - (Exh) 1:00 p.m. Fri 12 vs. Prairie View A&M 8:00 p.m. O'REILLY AUTO PARTS CBE CLASSIC (Milw.) Sun 14 vs. Bucknell 1:00 p.m. Wed 17 vs. Green Bay 8:00 p.m. Sat 20 vs. South Dakota 1:00 p.m. O'REILLY AUTO PARTS CBE CLASSIC (KC, Mo.) Mon 22 vs. Duke 6:30 p.m. Tue 23 vs. Kansas State/ 6:45 p.m./ Gonzaga 9:00 p.m. Sat 27 at Milwaukee 7:00 p.m. DECEMBER Sat 4 vs. Longwood 1:00 p.m. Tue 7 vs. Texas A&M (Corp. Chr.) 8:00 p.m. Sat 11 vs. Wisconsin 1:30 p.m. Sat 18 vs. Centenary 1:00 p.m. Tue 21 vs. Mississippi Valley St. 7:00 p.m. Wed 29 at Vanderbilt 8:00 p.m. JANUARY Sat 1 vs. West Virginia • 10:00 a.m. Wed 5 at Rutgers • 6:30 p.m. Sat 8 at Pittsburgh • 1:00 p.m. Mon 10 vs. Notre Dame • 6:00 p.m. Sat 15 at Louisville • 10:00 a.m. Tue 18 vs. DePaul • 8:00 p.m. Sat 22 at Notre Dame • 6:00 p.m. Tue 25 vs. Connecticut • 8:00 p.m. Sat 29 vs. Syracuse • 2:00 p.m. FEBRUARY Wed 2 at Villanova • 6:00 p.m. Wed 9 at USF • 6:00 p.m. Sun 13 at Georgetown + • Noon Tue 15 vs. St. John's (Al’s Night) • 8:00 p.m. Sat 19 vs. Seton Hall • 8:00 p.m. Thu 24 at Connecticut • 6:00 p.m. Sun 27 vs. Providence • 3:00 p.m. MARCH Wed 2 vs. Cincinnati (Senior Night) • 7:00 p.m. Sat 5 at Seton Hall • 5:00 p.m. BIG EAST CONF. CHAMPIONSHIP (N.Y., N.Y.) Tue-Sat 8-12 TBA Home games are listed in Bold and played at The Bradley Center, Milwaukee, WI All game times are listed in CST and subject to change. + Denotes a Jesuit Basketball Spotlight game. • Denotes BIG EAST games.



Marquette Basketball Storied Past and Bright Future ..............................2-3 Al McGuire Center....................................................4-5 BIG EAST Conference..............................................6-7 NCAA Tournament History ......................................8-9 Individual Instruction ..........................................10-11 Boot Camp ............................................................12-13 Brand Jordan/NIKE ..............................................14-15 Gameday at Marquette........................................16-17 Community Service ..............................................18-19 Coaching Staff Highlights/NBA Players ..........20-21 Strength and Conditioning ..................................22-23 Student-Athlete Performance ............................24-25 Marquette Graduates ..........................................26-27 Scholarship Endowment ....................................28-29 2009-10 Team Awards Banquet..........................30-31 Buzz’s BBQ ............................................................32-33 National Media Exposure....................................34-35 NBA Champions....................................................36-37 Marquette and the NBA ......................................38-39 Doc Rivers and Dwyane Wade ..........................40-41 A Family Affair ......................................................42-43 After Marquette ....................................................44-45 2009-10 In Review ................................................46-47 2010-11 Marquette Players Team Rosters ........................................................49-50 Jimmy Butler ........................................................50-51 Dwight Buycks ......................................................52-53 Junior Cadougan ..................................................54-55 Robert Frozena ......................................................56-57 Joseph Fulce ........................................................58-59 Darius Johnson-Odom ........................................60-61 Chris Otule ............................................................62-63 Erik Williams ..........................................................64-65 Vander Blue ................................................................66 Jae Crowder ..............................................................67 Davante Gardner ........................................................68 Jamail Jones ..............................................................69 Dave Singleton ..........................................................70 Reggie Smith ..............................................................71 Jamil Wilson ..............................................................72 Students/Managers/Leonard ..................................73 Coaching and Support Staff Buzz Williams ........................................................74-77 Tony Benford ........................................................78-79 Aki Collins ..............................................................80-81 Scott Monarch ......................................................82-83 Bart Lundy..............................................................84-85 Brad Autry..............................................................86-87 Basketball Support Staff ....................................88-97

All-Time Steal Leaders ............................................111 All-Time Letterwinners ....................................112-115 Individual Season Leaders..............................116-117 Individual Career Leaders ..............................118-119 Coaching History ..............................................120-121 All-America Selections....................................122-123 1977 NCAA Champions ....................................124-125 1974 NCAA Runners-Up ..........................................126 2003 Final Four ..........................................................127 Brand Jordan ............................................................128 Marquette Basketball Information School ........................................Marquette University City / Zip Code ..........................Milwaukee, WI 53233 Founded ..................................................................1881 Enrollment ............................................................11,618 Nickname ..............................................Golden Eagles School Colors ............................................Blue & Gold Arena ......................................Bradley Center (18,600) Affiliation ............................................NCAA Division I Conference ....................................................BIG EAST President ......................................Robert A. Wild, S.J. Director of Athletics ......................Steve Cottingham Athletic Department Phone ................(414) 288-6303 Ticket Office Phone ..............(414) 288-GOMU (4666) Press Row Phone ..................................(414) 227-0580 University Website ..................www.Marquette.edu Athletics Website ..........................GoMarquette.com Basketball Staff Head Coach ....Buzz Williams (Oklahoma City, 1994) Record at Marquette ......................................47-22 (2) Career Record ................................................61-38 (3) Basketball Office Phone ......................(414) 288-7130 Assistant Coaches Tony Benford (Texas Tech, 1992) Aki Collins (Clark Atlantic, 1997) Scott Monarch (MVSU, 1986) Director of Basketball Operations Bart Lundy (Winthrop, 1994) Coordinator of Student-Athlete Development Brad Autry (NW Oklahoma St., 1991) Head Strength & Conditioning Coach Todd Smith Head Athletic Trainer Ernest Eugene Director of Basketball Administration Barb Kellaher Coordinator of Basketball Administration Caitlin Nicoletto

Marquette University President/Provost/Senior VP ..............................98-99 University Leadership..............................................100 Prominent Alumni ....................................................101 Athletics Director/Senior Staff ......................102-105

Credits: The 2010-11 Marquette men's basketball media guide was written, designed and edited by Scott Kuykendall. Editorial assistance provided by Luke LeNoble, Amy Ufnowski, Michael Wittliff, Ray O’Connell, Catherine Benage and Shannon Walsh. Cover concept and graphic design by Tim Raasch.

Marquette Basketball History All-Time Scoring Leaders ................................106-107 All-Time Rebounding Leaders ........................108-109 All-Time Assist Leaders ..........................................110

Photo credit to: Dan Johnson, Ben Smidt, Maggie Casey, Gary Dineen, NBAE/Getty Images, Milwaukee Department of City Development Marketing (choosemilwaukee.com), the Bradley Center and Raynor Library Archives.


A STORIED

PAST AND A BRIGHT FUTURE The 2010-11 campaign, which marks the 94th year for Marquette basketball, promises to continue the rich tradition the program long ago established.

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Marquette basketball has and always will be a source of pride for the

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University, its fans, students and alumni. From its first All-America selection in 1934, Marquette basketball has produced a myriad of great teams and players. Consider the numbers:

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I Top-10 Winningest Program In Last 40Years

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I MU is ranked in the top-50 all-time in overall victories (1,444) and winning percentage (.619)

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I 1977 NCAA Championship

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I 1970 NIT Championship

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I 44 postseason appearances; ninth most among all Division I programs

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I 28 NCAATournament appearances

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I Five National Coach of theYear honorees

I Five-straight NCAA Tournament appearances

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I One of just 17 schools to have won both an NCAA and NIT Championship

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I Three trips to the Final Four

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I Over 1,400 victories all time

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I 27 All-America selections

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I 23 different players have earned 49 berths on all-conference teams in 21 years of conference affiliation

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I 52 National Basketball Association (NBA) draft picks

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THE

AL McGUIRE CENTER

Opened in October 2003, the facility is named after the legendary basketball coach Al McGuire, who led the program to an NCAA championship, an NIT title and 295 victories in 13 seasons. Through the generosity of alumni and friends, Marquette Basketball has been provided a facility that is unparalleled. The $31 million practice and play facility features a 4,000 seat arena and full-size practice gym, strength and conditioning area, sports medicine and athletic training areas, coaches’ offices, team locker room and lounge, and academic center. The Al McGuire Center provides the best possible environment for the development of Marquette's student-athletes – academically, athletically and personally. Marquette’s players have access to the entire facility 24 hoursper-day, seven days-a-week. The facility provides the best equipment and support possible to aid in a player’s development both on and off the court.

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The Al McGuire Center is truly the HOME OF MARQUETTE MEN’S BASKETBALL, containing an academic center, practice gym, staff offices, sports medicine area, multimedia theater and locker room facilities in one convenient location. Marquette’s players have access to the entire facility 24 hours-per-day, seven days-a-week. The facility provides the best equipment and support possible to aid in a player’s development both on and off the court.


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Practice Gym

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Marquette Basketball’s private full-size practice gym is located on the lower level of the Al McGuire Center. The practice court is an exact replica of the team’s court at the Bradley Center.

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Academic Center

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The Al McGuire Academic Center offers comfort, space and the latest in computing technologies to support Marquette basketball players in achieving academic success. The facility features a completely wireless environment in which student-athletes can work at one of 20 computer stations, four individual tutoring rooms and an adjacent conference room.

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Marquette’s state-of-the art 4,000 square-foot strength and conditioning facility, plus sports medicine suite that includes a three-pool hydrotherapy room, were designed to assist student athletes in reaching peak performance. The latest upgrades to the strength facility included the addition of three Woodway treadmills and an Alter-G.

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Video/Film Editing & Screening Rooms

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Utilizing the latest in video technology, Marquette basketball coaches and players gather to analyze film in the team’s screening room. The room features a 140” screen, DVD, VHS and computer software capabilities, surround sound and theatre-style seating.

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Men’s Basketball Offices, Player Lounge & Locker Room The staff’s offices, locker room and player lounge are all conveniently located within steps of the practice gym. These areas received a significant upgrade in the Summer of 2008, featuring a newly designed interior courtesy of ZE Design.

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Marquette is a member of the best college basketball conference ever assembled… the BIG EAST Conference.

THE

BIG EAST CONFERENCE BIG EAST programs have collected a total of 56 POSTSEASON INVITATIONS in the last five seasons, including 36 NCAA Tournament appearances.

The Golden Eagles’ membership in the BIG EAST Conference allows them to attract the interest of college basketball fans in the nation's largest media markets. BIG EAST institutions reside in nine of the nation’s top 50 largest media markets, including New York, Chicago, Philadelphia, Washington, D.C., Tampa, Pittsburgh and Milwaukee. BIG EAST markets make up nearly onefourth of all television households in the United States. The BIG EAST Conference has long been considered a leader in innovative concepts in promotion and publicity, particularly regarding television. Those efforts have resulted in unparalleled visibility for BIG EAST student-athletes. The conference has enjoyed long-standing relationships with CBS, ESPN and ABC. Some of the BIG EAST Conference’s best students are also some of its best athletes. More than 300 student-athletes have earned Academic All-America honors. Since 2006, the BIG EAST has had 28 players (16 first rounders) selected in the NBA Draft, including a national-best nine picks in 2009.

Madison Square Garden For over 25 years Madison Square Garden,The World’s Most Famous Arena, has been home to the BIG EAST Conference Championship. No other league in the country can boast a current streak longer than the BIG EAST’s at one venue. Over 150,000 fans watched the five exciting days of action in 2010.

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Along with sending a total of 13 teams to the postseason last season, BIG EAST BASKETBALL’S ACHIEVEMENTS include:

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I 16 - Final Four appearances

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I 23 - First Team All-Americans

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I Men’s basketball participants in

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the last seven Olympic games

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I Over 200 - NBA Draft selections

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54 BIG EAST Victories

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since 2005-06 One of three schools with 10-OR-MORE WINS each of the last four years. 7


MARQUETTE’S

NCAA HISTORY

1977 NATIONAL CHAMPIONS 28 ALL-TIME NCAA TOURNAMENT AP ELITE EIGHT FIVE-STRAIGHTTRIPSTOTHE “BIG DANCE” SEVEN NCA


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PPEARANCES 14 TRIPS TO THE SWEET 16 SIX APPEARANCES IN THE AA APPEARANCES INTHE LAST 11YEARS 34 ALL-TIME VICTORIES ...

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INDIVIDUAL

INSTRUCTION Marquette basketball student-athletes separate themselves from the rest through

personal individual instruction. Marquette Basketball's Skill Development Program is designed to help a player show constant improvement in different areas of his game while helping to assure that he is staying ahead of the competition. Regardless of position, the MU staff coaches every player to be the best he can be. Marquette players are reminded on a consistent basis,

“every day in every way, get better and better” and “players are made, not born.” Perhaps no player signifies the staff’s ability to develop talent better than

senior forward JIMMY

BUTLER .

Exclusively a reserve in 2008-09 as a sophomore, Butler enjoyed a breakthrough campaign in 2009-10, resulting in all-conference accolades. The Tomball, Texas, native established himself as one of the top players in the league as a junior after finishing among the conference leaders in several categories.

B U T L E R ’ S Y E A R - B Y- Y E A R I M P R O V E M E N T 2008-2009

2009-2010

Points Per Game

5.6

14.7

Rebounds Per Game

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Field Goal Pct.

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3-pt Field Goal Pct.

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JULY ‘10

Bench Press

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308

Squat

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Chin-ups

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Pro-Agility

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The Golden Eagles have had at least one player garner all-conference accolades in each of its 21 seasons of league affiliation.

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season was no exception as MU placed a conference-high three players (Dominic James, Lazar Hayward and McNeal) on the all-league rosters. James and McNeal

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have also been awarded BIG EAST specialty awards during their respective standout careers. James was tabbed the freshman of the year in 2005-06, while McNeal claimed defensive player of the year accolades in 2006-07.

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Rockets. James and McNeal earned All-BIG EAST Rookie team honors, and James was named the league’s rookie of the year.

• BIG EAST All-Rookie Team (2005-06) • BIG EAST Def. Player of the Year (2006-07) • Second Team All-BIG EAST (2007-08) • First Team All-BIG EAST (2008-09)

Lazar Hayward • Second Team All-BIG EAST (2007-08) • Second Team All-BIG EAST (2009-10)

Wesley Matthews • Second Team All-BIG EAST (2008-09)

Jimmy Butler • Honorable Mention All-BIG EAST (2009-10)

A B E T T E U

Jerel McNeal

TRAVIS DIENER (2004-05) AP, Honorable Mention DOMINIC JAMES (2006-07) AP, Honorable Mention

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• BIG EAST Rookie of the Year (2005-06) • BIG EAST All-Rookie Team (2005-06) • Honorable Mention All-BIG EAST (2005-06) • First Team All-BIG EAST (2006-07) • AP Honorable Mention All-America (2006-07) • Second Team All-BIG EAST (2007-08)

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Dominic James

DWYANE WADE (2001-02 & 2002-03) AP, First Team USBWA, First Team

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• First Team All-BIG EAST Selection (2005-06)

JEREL MCNEAL (2008-09) AP, Second Team

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Steve Novak

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BIG EAST Conference Honorees

RECENT ALL-AMERICA SELECTIONS

The 2007-08

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Jerel McNeal earned a spot on the league’s first team in 2008-09, marking the fourth time in as many seasons he earned a conference accolade. Classmate Wesley Matthews made his all-league debut, claiming second team honors.

LAZAR HAYWARD (2009-10) AP, Honorable Mention 11



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COACHING STAFF HIGHLIGHTS

Acie Law IV

Aki Collins Has made coaching stops in the Big 12, Conference USA and Mid-American Conference previous o joining a BIG EAST program.

Wesley Matthews Milt Palacio

Recruited a pair of preseason conference player of the year selections. Has helped develop multiple players to all-conference accolades at each of his previous institutions.

Daniel Santiago Charles Smith

Scott Monarch Coaching career has spanned nearly 20 years.

Awvee Storey

Has guided 42 players to NCAA Division I programs from junior college ranks.

Kenny Thomas

Coached the all-time leading scorer (Omar Thomas) in junior college history.

Antoine Wright

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Owns 20 years of NCAA Division I experience, including stops in the BIG EAST, Big 12, Pac-10 and WAC.

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Has been ranked among the top assistant coaches in the country by Basketball Times and HoopScoop.

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Ruben Garces Lazar Hayward Eddie House

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Has been on the coaching staff of 12 teams to reach the postseason.

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Tony Benford

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Has been a part of several nationally ranked recruiting classes.

TEAM(S)

Memphis Minnesota Golden State, Indiana Portland, Sacramento New Orleans Phoenix, Golden State Minnesota Miami, Los Angeles Charlotte, Milwaukee Sacramento, Phoenix New Jersey, Boston, New York Atlanta, Golden State, Charlotte, Chicago, Memphis Utah, Portland Vancouver, Boston, Phoenix, Cleveland, Toronto, Utah Phoenix, Milwaukee Miami, Los Angeles San Antonio, Portland, Denver New Jersey, Milwaukee, Washington Houston, Philadelphia, Sacramento New Jersey, Dallas Toronto, Sacramento

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Has recruited or coached over 21 players to all-conference accolades.

PLAYER

Mike Batiste Corey Brewer Ike Diogu

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Owns 15 years of coaching experience at the NCAA Division I level.

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Named the 16th head coach in Marquette’s history on April 8, 2008 after serving as an assistant with the Golden Eagles in 2007-08.

The Marquette coaching staff has had an impact on the Natonal Basketball Association, developing several former players into professional-level talent.

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Buzz Williams

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STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING Strength and Conditioning Philosophy at Marquette Strength and conditioning is an integral part of the athletes’ periodized year round training at Marquette University. , catering to the strengths and weaknesses of the individual athletes.

"I couldn’t leave here to go train somewhere. I wanted to work with Todd. I know there’s some great people out there and they do some great things, and I’m not trying to knock them, but Todd knows exactly what I need. He knows exactly how to make me mad, how to push me. He knows exactly what to do just to get me to keep pushing no matter what.” – Lazar Hayward 14


quality, not quantity.

ALL-TIME LEADERS

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Dominic James 36.5� Dominic James 2.93 sec. Dominic James 3.89 sec. Wesley Matthews 10.14 sec. Dominic James 484 lbs. Chris Otule 300 lbs. Wesley Matthews 41 David Diggs/Lazar Hayward 26

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Vertical Jump 25-yard dash Pro Agility Pro-Lane Agility Squat Clean Chin-up 185 reps

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The strength and conditioning programs are designed to improve strength and durability, as well as teach the body to perform explosively in athletic movements. All workouts are designed to work the entire body, focusing on

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conditioning tests

Sport specific are performed throughout the year in order to monitor changes in fitness and speed, as well as to motivate the athletes to perform at their highest level during each workout.

STRENGTH and Conditioning

work intervals, rest intervals, movements and distances.

of the sport through the manipulation of

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Conditioning workouts train for the metabolic demands

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he Student-Athlete Performance component of Student-Athlete Support Services includes the areas of Academic Support, Sports

Medicine and Strength & Conditioning. The staff members in these departments work together to provide services that maximize the opportunity for each student-athlete to prosper, academically and athletically. Services are offered to ensure physical, mental, and emotional well-being and individual programs are developed for student-athletes that request or require specific attention to needs in the areas of health, nutrition, performance enhancement, time management and academic success.

Medical and performance enhancement services are provided to Marquette University’s student-athletes yearround in two facilities, while academic support is provided year-round, seven-days-per-week in The Eagles Nest in the Al McGuire Center. While the emphasis in the departments that constitute the Student-Athlete Performance component is on preparing each individual for success as a Marquette University student-athlete, it is also each department’s goal to prepare the student-athlete for success following the completion of their academic degree(s) and athletic career.

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The sports medicine department places it emphasis on functional/integrated training. This form of training allows us to focus on the complete body of the student-athlete, while focusing primarily on core strengthening and core stability. This newly focused area of sports medicine is likely to minimize the occurrence of overuse injuries, poor muscular control and muscle imbalances. As a result, this allows the student-athlete to perform and train at optimum levels.

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MARQUETTE

GRADUATES Pictured to the left is the graduating class of 2010 including from left to right: Maurice Acker and David Cubillan

60 of 63 Marquette players have graduated over the past 19 years

33 of 34 studentathletes to complete their eligibility since 1999-2000 at Marquette will have graduated.

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Marquette GRADUATES

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Ousmane Barro Dan Fitzgerald Tommy Brice Trend Blackledge Dwight Burke Wesley Matthews Dominic James Jerel McNeal Maurice Acker David Cubillan

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John Cliff Brian Barone Brian Wardle John Mueller Greg Clausen Jon Harris Oluoma Nnamaka Cordell Henry David Diggs Robert Jackson Terry Sanders Scott Merritt Marcus Jackson Travis Diener Todd Townsend Mike Kinsella Joe Chapman Steve Novak Chris Grimm Jamil Lott Craig Kuphall

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Masters of Physical Therapy Marquette: Civil and Environmental Engineering MIT: Masters of Engineering in High Performance Structures Bachelor of Arts in Communication Studies Bachelor of Arts in Communications, Masters of Communications Bachelor of Arts in Communication Studies, Minor in Marketing Bachelor of Science Biomedical Engineering Bachelor of Arts in Communication Studies Bachelor of Arts in Sociology Bachelor of Arts in International Affairs Bachelor of Arts in Communication Studies Computer Engineering and Masters of Computer Engineering Bachelor of Arts in Communication Studies Bachelor of Arts in Communication Studies Bachelor of Arts in Communication Studies Bachelor of Arts in Communication Studies Bachelor of Arts in Communication Studies Bachelor of Arts in Communication Studies Bachelor of Arts in Communication Studies, Minor in Sociology Bachelor of Arts in Communication Studies Bachelor of Arts in Communication Studies, Minor in Advertising Bachelor of Arts in History Bachelor of Arts in Sociology Bachelor of Arts in Military Science & Leadership and Political Science Bachelor of Arts in Social Welfare & Justice Bachelor of Science in Marketing Pre-Physical Therapy Bachelor of Arts in Communication Studies Bachelor of Arts in Communication Studies Bachelor of Arts in Advertising Bachelor of Arts in Public Relations Bachelor of Arts in Communication Studies Bachelor of Arts in Communication Studies Bachelor of Arts in Corporate Communications

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DEGREE (S) EARNED

John Polonowski Bart Miller

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YEARS

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AWARDS

BANQUET ver 500 people attended the Marquette University men's basketball team banquet at the Al McGuire Center, honoring the accomplishments of the 2009-10 squad in a new "awards show" format.

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Following a social period allowing fans the ability to interact with all of the players and coaches, including the opportunity for autographs and photos, the group gathered to view the season highlight video and awards presentation.

2009-10 AWARD WINNERS "Rebounding Effort" Award - Lazar Hayward Hank Raymonds Sportsmanship Award - Junior Cadougan "Create for Others" Award - Maurice Acker Dwyane Wade Legacy of Leadership Award - David Cubillan "Sixth Man of the Year" Award - Dwight Buycks Standard of Excellence Student-Athlete Award - Rob Frozena Most Improved Player - Jimmy Butler Wesley Matthews "Just Today" Award - David Cubillan Golden Eagle "Everyday Tough" Award - Lazar Hayward Defensive Player of the Year Award - Darius Johnson-Odom "WDYL?-1%" Award - Joseph Fulce Best Performance In A Supporting Role - Pat Idstein (Manager) Most Valuable Performer - Lazar Hayward Best Choreography In A Leading Role - Buzz Williams (Walk It Out)

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Former MU coach and administrator Hank Raymonds presents Junior Cadougan with the Sportsmanship Award.


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Maurice Acker’s teammates lower

Buzz Williams presents Lazar Hayward

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the microphone stand for him

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Buzz’s award for best dance

as he accepts an award.

third of the night.

moves on the team.

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he Marquette basketball program enjoys a media spotlight that reaches across the nation, consisting of coverage by both print and electronic media outlets, best illustrated by the team’s constant television appearances. Marquette basketball is recognized on a state, regional and national level. Media exposure is an integral part of building and maintaining a program and MU basketball has significan appeal around the country. Marquette has made nearly 200 TELEVISION APPEARANCES SINCE 2002 and thanks to its affiliation with the BIG EAST Conference will once again enjoy the benefits of the best television package in all of collegiate basketball. Marquette players and coaches conduct hundreds of interviews throughout the course of the season, appearing at the local, regional and national level.

Highlights of the BIG EAST Television Package: • Every single intra-conference game (144 total) will be televised. • Minimum 60 GAMES ON ESPN or ESPN2 • 110 additional regular season games broadcast on the remaining ESPN platforms • 80 GAMES ON ESPN REGIONAL • 30 conference games on ESPNU/ESPN360 • Minimum of 10 CONFERENCE OR \ NON-CONFERENCE GAMES ON CBS • The above gives the BIG EAST a minimum grand total of 180 TELEVISION GAMES EACH YEAR • MU has earned 48 national television appearances since 2007-08. 22

MEDIA EXPOSURE


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MEDIA Exposure


BOOT CAMP BOOT

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CAMP2010

he Marquette University men's basketball team concluded its “Boot Camp" last Fall, capping over a week's worth of intense conditioning at the Al McGuire Center.

“Boot Camp” consisted grueling conditioning work twice a day, with all results based on strict time standards. Each of the players who participated in the sessions worked together as a team and if one player didn't make the time, no one on the team received credit for completing that segment. At the conclusion of the final day, head coach Buzz Williams distributes official “Boot Camp” T-shirts. Only those who have completed the grueling program are allowed to wear the shirts. 24


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have never been through anything like Boot Camp in my life. It’s probably the hardest thing I have ever been through, which made it a great experience and challenged me. At the end of the day it’s all about teamwork and effort and I think everyone responded very well.

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– Dwight Buycks

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think it was wonderful and terrible at the same time and I think that's how our guys would describe it as well. It tests every part of who they are, both physically and mentally and will be a huge bonus to us down the line. The guys are really proud they made it through.

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– Brad Autry

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The Marquette men’s basketball program is one of only four teams in the nation that benefits from a partnership with both JORDAN BRAND and NIKE.

From practice gear to uniforms, men’s basketball players at Marquette are always provided with the latest in technology and design. Through former Marquette standout Dwyane Wade’s relationship with Jordan Brand, the company provides game, practice and offcourt apparel including jerseys, performance shorts, warm-ups, sweat suits, shooting shirts and t-shirts. Marquette players also have a choice of the full line of Jordan Brand game shoes. NIKE and Marquette continue a long-standing relationship, most visible on the court by the game ball (NIKE 3005). 26

JORDAN BRAND /NIKE


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GAMEDAY AT MARQUETTE

2009 -10 Attendance Highlights 284-82 all-time in 22 seasons at the Bradley Center, including a remarkable Marquette is

134-24 record over the last nine years. The Golden

Eagles have drawn nearly 4.5 million fans

since 1988-89 and are the

only non-football school

to rank among the top-20 nationally in attendance each year since 2003. Each of the school’s top-10 all-time crowds have now come in the last four years. In 2009-10, Marquette’s

average attendance ranked third in the

BIG EAST and 10th in the nation. Over three million fans watched BIG EAST Conference teams compete last season. 28


1

in the nation in average

1

The Golden Eagles ranked 10th

-

attendance, the highest final ranking

1

0

in school history

0

15,617 fans per game

2

MU averaged

Season ticket accounts

L

all-time high

L

reached an

A

Student attendance was the

T

B

highest it has ever been 17,000 during

K

averaged nearly

Center

E

Crowds at the Bradley

B

A

S

BIG EAST Conference matchups

Top 10 Marquette Crowds in the Bradley Center ATTENDANCE

OPPONENT

DATE

RESULT

1. 19,144 2. 19,091 3. 19,085 4. 19,041 5. 19,037 6. 19,021 7. 19,020 8. 19,011 9. 19,007 10. 18,949

Syracuse Connecticut Georgetown Georgetown DePaul Pittsburgh Wisconsin Pittsburgh Pittsburgh DePaul

Mar. 7, 2009 Feb. 25, 2009 Mar. 1, 2008 Jan. 31, 2009 Jan. 26, 2008 Mar. 3, 2007 Dec. 9, 2006 Feb. 15, 2008 Feb. 18, 2006 Jan. 24, 2009

L L L W W W L W W W

M

A

R

Q

U

E

T

T

E

86-79 93-82 70-68 94-82 79-71 75-71 70-66 72-54 84-82 91-82

29


COMMUNITY

SERVICE

T

he Marquette University men’s basketball program participates in numerous team and individual service projects throughout the course of the year, both on campus and in the community. The year is highlighted by Al’s Run & Walk for Children’s Hospital, founded by former Marquette head coach Al McGuire.

Briggs & Al’s Run & Walk MU continued it’s tradition of involvement with the Briggs & Al's Run & Walk for Children 30

Hospital, participating in several pre-race activities. Every member of the team spent the morning with 200 Children's Champions. The Golden Eagles handed out Marquette hats and bookmarks prior to the start of the race and also cheered on the crowd as they began the route through downtown Milwaukee.

Hunger Clean-Up The Golden Eagles spent time participating in Hunger Clean-Up, one of the nation's largest one-day service projects. Over 2,100 members of the Marquette community participated in this year's event at approximately 40 sites throughout the Milwaukee area. MU volunteered at the Davis Boys and Girls Club.


1 1 0 1 0 2 L L A B T E K S A B E T T E

Buzz’s Bunch

M

A

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U

“Buzz’s Bunch” provides the opportunity for special needs children to experience a Marquette men’s basketball game, meet the team with exclusive behind-the-scenes access and the opportunity to attend a special end-of-theyear banquet. The Marquette basketball staff is dedicated to ensuring members of “Buzz’s Bunch” have a truly enjoyable and memorable experience. Marquette also hosted a day camp this summer for the members of Buzz’s Bunch. The program included time on the court with the staff and players and a special guest speaker. 31


MARQUETTE

NBA CHAMPIONS

Marquette’s NBA history includes a tremendous amount of individual and team success, highlighted by six former players who have claimed championships.

Doc Rivers most recently guided the Boston Celtics to the title in 2007-08 as a head coach and Dean Meminger was a member of the 1972-73 New York Knicks, becoming MU’s first-ever NBA champion.

Dwyane Wade captured MVP honors in the NBA finals in In his fourth season with the Celtics,

Doc Rivers guided the team to its first title in 22 seasons.

2005-06, helping Miami to the championship. He averaged 34.7 points and 7.8 rebounds per game in that six-game span.

32


Maurice Lucas (20) played a

0 1 9 0 B

A

S

K

E

T

B

A

L

L

key role in the 1977 title claimed by Portland, contributing 20.2 points and 11.4 rebounds per game.

0

for the Knicks in 1972-73, averaging 5.7 points and 2.9 rebounds per contest.

2

NBA Champions

Dean Meminger (7) appeared in 80 games

Q

1972-73

A

R

1976-77 1979-80

M

Dean Meminger New York Knicks Maurice Lucas Portland Trailblazers Jim Chones Los Angeles Lakers Butch Lee Los Angeles Lakers Dwyane Wade Miami Heat Doc Rivers Boston Celtics

U

E

T

T

E

With rookie Magic Johnson and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar garnering most of the headlines, Jim Chones (9) and Butch Lee (15) both contributed to the Lakers’ title run in 1979-80. Chones appeared in all 82 games and Lee came off the bench, including key playoff action.

1979-80 2005-06 2007-08 33


MARQUETTE IN THE

NBA

Marquette has had 53 players selected in the NBA Draft and 12 in the ABA Draft beginning with its first, Gene Berce in 1948. In 2003, Dwyane Wade became the fifth Marquette basketball player to be selected in the first round when the Miami Heat made him the fifth overall selection.

34


35 M

A

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0

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9

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1

0


RIVERS

GLENN “DOC”

Two of the most respected figures in the NBA, Glenn “Doc” Rivers and Dwyane Wade enjoyed another successful season in 2009-2010.

"I came to Marquette University wanting to be a basketball player, and I got that and a lot more. The years I spent at MU were some of my best years ... in basketball, the classroom, on campus, ... everywhere. You cannot beat the Marquette experience!" — D o c R i ve r s

Glenn “Doc” Rivers became the sixth former Marquette player to claim an NBA Championship when he guided the Boston Celtics to the title in 2007-08. The championship was the first in 22 years for the storied franchise. An All-American at Marquette in 1982, Doc closed out his career with 1,234 points and still ranks prominently among the school's all-time leaders in points, assists and steals. Following his college days, Rivers enjoyed a 13-year career in the NBA playing for the Atlanta Hawks, Los Angeles Clippers, New York Knicks and San Antonio Spurs. During the course of his career, he averaged 10.9 points, 5.7 assists and 3.0 rebounds. Rivers was selected to play in the 1988 NBA All-Star Game and was honored by the Pro Basketball Writers with the 1990 J. Walter Kennedy Citizenship Award. Following his retirement in 1996, Rivers joined TNT as a basketball analyst and served in that capacity until June 1999, when he was named the head coach of the Orlando Magic. In four-plus seasons at the helm of the Magic, he directed the club to three playoff appearances and in 2000 was awarded the Red Auerbach Trophy as the NBA’s Coach of the Year.

36


0 1 -

WADE

9

DWYANE

L

2

0

0

“Fifty years from now Marquette will still be my team. I’m proud to hear ‘Dwyane Wade from Marquette University’ each time I’m introduced in NBA arenas. It reminds me of who I am and what I learned, but most importantly it reminds me of the people who shared the experience with me.” — D w y a n e Wa d e

A

L

The 2008 Olympic Summer Olympic Games provided yet another opportunity for former Marquette star Dwyane Wade to display his talents.

T

B

Representing his country for the second time at the Olympic level, Wade helped the United States to the gold medal with a win over Spain. Wade scored a team-best 27 points in the title matchup and for the tournament he was the squad’s leading scorer.

A

S

K

E

One of the most decorated players in Marquette Basketball history, Dwyane Wade had a profound and successful impact during his three-year affiliation with the Golden Eagles' program. Wade helped lead Marquette to 53 victories, two NCAA appearances, the 2003 Final Four and the sixth best winning percentage in Division I in his two seasons of play.

E

T

T

E

B

Wade’s unbelievable final season of play in 2002-03 resulted in a myriad of national recognition. He was named a first team Associated Press All-American, the school's first such selection since 1978, one of five finalists for the Wooden Award, and also garnered Conference USA’s Player of the Year and Defensive Player of the Year awards.

Q

U

Wade holds the school seasonal scoring record with 710 points and finished his career ranked among Marquette’s all-time leaders in points, blocks and steals.

M

A

R

Wade has become one of the marquee superstars since being selected fifth overall by the Miami Heat in the 2003 NBA Draft. In just his third NBA season, Wade helped lead his team to a six-game victory over the Dallas Mavericks in the 2006 NBA Finals by averaging 34.7 points and 7.8 rebounds. His record-breaking finals performance earned him MVP honors. Wade is a five-time All-Star, was a first team All-NBA and All-NBA defensive team selection, and has represented his country in international competition on numerous occasions. 37


MARQUETTE

FAMILY

LED BY HEAD COACH BUZZ WILLIAMS, THE MARQUETTE BASKE IS COMMITTED TO CREATING THE BEST POSSIBLE ENVIRONME ATHLETIC DEPARTMENT ADMINISTRATIVE STAFF, EACH WILL PLAY

38


1 1 0 1 0 2 L L

Marquette FAMILY

A B T E K S A B E M

A

R

Q

U

E

T

T

ETBALL FAMILY IS A LARGE, CLOSE-KNIT, SELFLESS, TEAM-ORIENTED GROUP THAT ENT FOR THE STUDENT-ATHLETE. FROM THE WILLIAMS FAMILY, TO MEMBERS OF THE A ROLE IN SHAPING THE STUDENT-ATHLETES’ EXPERIENCE AT MARQUETTE UNIVERSITY.

39


AFTER

MARQUETTE

Former Marquette basketball players have gone on to successful careers in medicine, insurance, banking, sales, and government as a result of their Marquette education.

40


41 M

A

R

Q

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A

S

K

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T

B

A

L

L

2

0

1

0

-

1

1


2009-10 IN

T

REVIEW

he 2009-10 campaign continued Marquette’s strong tradition of success on the court, which included numerous team and individual accomplishments.

Season Highlights • Fifth-straight NCAA Tournament appearance • Fifth-straight season of 10-or-more wins in BIG EAST Conference play • Lazar Hayward named Associated Press Honorable Mention All-America and All-BIG EAST Second Team • MU led the nation with 16 games decided by four-or-less points, including three-straight overtime contests

42


43 M

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A

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L

2

0

1

0

-

1

1

2009-10 In REVIEW


BUZZ’S The Third Annual Texas Style Bar-B-Q was once again a huge success as nearly 1,500 Marquette fans attended the event at MU's Alumni Memorial Union. Attendees were able to interact with current and former Marquette players, participate in games and listen to comments from head coach Buzz Williams.

44


45 M

A

R

Q

U

E

T

T

E

B

A

S

K

E

T

B

A

L

L

2

0

1

0

-

1

1

BUZZ’S BBQ


MARQUETTE

BLUE & GOLD

Athletic Scholarship Fund Marquette’s ability to attract and retain exceptional student-athletes depends upon the willingness of thousands of donors to support the Blue & Gold

110 EQUIVALENT ATHLETIC SCHOLARSHIPS based on our 14 intercollegiate sports, but last year we had the funds to award only 92. Can we count on your help? Fund. The NCAA allows Marquette to offer

46


1 1 0 1 0 2 L L

BLUE & GOLD Fund

A B E B

$ 3.11

K

The Blue & Gold Athletic Scholarship Fund raised approximately $2.9 million . The Blue & Gold Fund provides current-use scholarships (“one-and-done” resources).

$ 3.5 Average Undergraduate Tuition & Costs, 2010 -11 Academic Year

T

For the 2009-10 academic year ... $ 4.4

$ 1.29

S

To appreciate our scholarship challenge, consider the following information ...

$ 4.5

A

MILLIONS

By the Numbers

$

422

Estimated Total

$ 1.5 FY 2010 BLUE & GOLD FUNDS RAISED PLUS ENDOWMENT PROCEEDS

$ 41, 2 5 2

Marquette

ATHLETIC SCHOLARSHIP FUNDING GAP

FY 2010 NCAA SCHOLARSHIP CAPACITY

Each year since joining

The average GPA

Marquette has produced

the BIG EAST, more than

for Marquette

37 Academic

51% of Marquette

student-athletes

All-Americans

student-athletes have

in the spring semester

since 1976.

Marquette student-athletes boast a

earned Academic

of 2009 was 3.11.

graduation rate of 93%.

All-Conference

Student-athlete

FACTS

E

Fees

T

900

T

$

NCAA provisions allow Marquette athletics to award up to $4.4 million in athletic scholarships.

E

Books

U

9,890

Q

$

The Marquette Athletic Scholarship Endowment, valued at more than $4 million, provided approximately $200,000 in athletic scholarship aid.

R

Room & Board

$ 2.5

Marquette athletics had a $1.29 million funding gap considering the NCAA’s provisions for scholarship capacity.

A

$ 3 0,0 4 0

M

Tuition

honors.

47


201011

ROSTER

A L PH A BE TICAL NO.

2 33 23 5 32 45 21 54 1 22 42 25 4 12 0

48

NAME

POS.

HT.

WT.

YR.

HOMETOWN (LAST COLLEGE/HS)

Vander Blue Jimmy Butler Dwight Buycks Junior Cadougan Jae Crowder Robert Frozena * Joseph Fulce Davante Gardner Darius Johnson-Odom Jamail Jones Chris Otule Dave Singleton * Reggie Smith Erik Williams Jamil Wilson

G G/F G G F G F F G F C G G F F

6-4 6-7 6-3 6-1 6-6 6-1 6-7 6-8 6-2 6-6 6-11 6-4 6-0 6-7 6-7

190 220 190 205 225 190 205 290 215 210 260 190 175 210 210

Fr. Sr. Sr. So. Jr. Sr. Sr. Fr. Jr. Fr. So. Jr. Fr. So. So.

Madison, Wis. (Memorial HS) Tomball, Texas (Tomball HS/Tyler JC) Milwaukee, Wis. (Bay View HS/Indian Hills JC) Toronto, Ontario (Christian Life Center Academy) Villa Rica, Ga. (Villa Rica HS) Sherwood, Wis. (St. Mary Central HS) Plano, Texas (Plano HS/Tyler JC) Suffolk, Va. (King's Fork HS) Raleigh, N.C. (Wakefield HS/Hutchinson CC) Atlanta, Ga. (Montverde Academy) Richmond, Texas (Ft. Bend Bush HS) Coatesville, Pa. (Hill School) Chicago, Ill. (Thornton Township HS) Houston, Texas (Cypress Springs HS) Racine, Wis. (Horlick HS)

* = walk-on

Head Coach Assistant Coaches

Dir. of Basketball Operations Coord. of Student-Athlete Development

Buzz Williams

(Oklahoma City, 1994)

Tony Benford

(Texas Tech, 1992)

Aki Collins

(Clark Atlanta, 1997)

Scott Monarch

(Mississippi Valley St., 1986)

Bart Lundy

(Winthrop, 1994)

Brad Autry

(NW Oklahoma St., 1991)


49


JIMMY

Butler TOMBALL, TEXAS

Tomball H.S.

Born September 14, 1989 in Houston, Texas … son of Londa and Jimmy Butler … one of four children ... majoring in communication studies ... NJCAA Honorable Mention All-America in 2007-08 ... Averaged 18.1 points, 7.7 rebounds and 3.1 assists per game as a freshman at Tyler (TX) JC ... Finished third in the conference in scoring ... All-district selection at Tomball (TX) High School.

50

YEAR 2008-09 2009-10

GP GS MIN 35 0 687 34 34 1165

AVG FG-FGA 19.6 55-107 34.3 148-279

PCT 51.4 53.0

TOTAL

69

2 6 .8

5 2 .6

34 1852

203-386

3FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA PCT OFF DEF TOT AVG 0-4 00.0 86-112 76.8 75 63 138 3.9 16-32 50.0 187-244 76.6 82 134 216 6.4 16-36

44.4 273-356 76.7 157

197

354

5 .1

PF 66 68

FO AST 2 26 2 68

TO BLK STL 17 16 17 39 21 45

PTS 196 499

AVG 5.6 14.7

134

4

56

695

1 0 .1

94

37

62


200809

Claimed MU’s “Super Sub” Award FINISHED 15TH IN THE BIG EAST IN FREE THROW PERCENTAGE (.768) Scored career high 19 points against Villanova in the BIG EAST Championship

33 Jimmy BUTLER

SEASON

LED MU RESERVES IN SCORING 22 TIMES, INCLUDING EACH OF THE LAST 15 OUTINGS Appeared in all 35 contests, averaging 5.6 points and 3.9 rebounds per game

SEASON

200910

All-BIG EAST Honorable Mention selection CLAIMED MU’S MOST IMPROVED PLAYER AWARD Finished among the BIG EAST leaders in four different categories FINISHED SECOND ON THE TEAM IN SCORING (14.7 PPG.) AND REBOUNDING (6.4 RPG.)

51


DWIGHT

Buycks MILWAUKEE, WIS.

Bay View H.S.

First Team NJCAA ... All-America selection at Indian Hills CC in 2008-09 ... Two-time all-region honoree who scored ... 1,254 points (third-most in school history) ... Helped Warriors to a No. 2 national ranking and 58-13 twoyear record ... Four-year starter and letterwinner at Bay View High School ... Named Associated Press First Team ... All-State as a senior ... First player in school history to score more than 1,000 points (1,312)

52

YEAR 2009-10

GP GS MIN 32 11 756

AVG FG-FGA 23.6 77-184

PCT 41.8

TOTAL

69

2 6 .8

5 2 .6

34 1852

203-386

3FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA PCT OFF DEF TOT AVG 15-55 27.3 34-49 69.4 27 69 96 3.0 16-36

44.4 273-356 76.7 157

197

354

5 .1

PF 54

FO AST 1 68

TO BLK STL 53 1 37

PTS 203

AVG 6.3

134

4

56

695

1 0 .1

94

37

62


200910

Earned MU’s “6th Man of the Year” Award APPEARED IN 32 GAMES, INCLUDING 11 STARTING ASSIGNMENTS Collected first career double-double with 10 points and 10 rebounds against Grambling State

23 Dwight BUYCKS

SEASON

NETTED SEASON-BEST 15 POINTS IN THE HOME VICTORY OVER VILLANOVA

PERSONAL

INFO

Born March 6, 1989 in Milwaukee, Wis. SON OF MARYANN WOODS Has a daughter, Sanyha (2) MAJORING IN COMMUNICATION STUDIES

53


JUNIOR

Cadougan TORONTO, ONTARIO

Christian Life Center Academy

Three-year letterwinner at Christian Life Center Academy ... Consensus top-100 nationally ranked prep prospect ... Helped team to National Association of Christian Athletes Elite Division I national title ... McDonald’s All-America nominee as a senior ... Led Grassroots Canada AAU program to team title at adidas Super 64 in 2008.

54

YEAR 2009-10

GP GS MIN 12 0 47

TOTAL

12

0

47

AVG FG-FGA 3.9 0-8 3 .9

0-8

PCT 00.0 0 0 .0

3FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA PCT OFF DEF TOT AVG 0-2 00.0 4-6 66.7 1 4 5 0.4 0-2

0 0 .0

4-6

6 6 .7

1

4

5

0 .4

PF 5

FO AST 0 4

5

0

4

TO BLK STL 3 0 1 3

0

1

PTS 4

AVG 0.3

4

0 .3


200910

Claimed the program’s Hank Raymonds Sportsmanship Award APPEARED IN 12 GAMES OFF THE BENCH AFTER MISSING MOST OF SEASON WITH INJURY Netted first collegiate points in home victory over Rutgers

5 Junior CADOUGAN

SEASON

Cadougan is the first Canadian to see game action for MU since Abel Joseph (1994-97)

PERSONAL

INFO

Born July 5, 1990 in Toronto, Canada SON OF SUZETTE CADOUGAN undecided on a major

55


ROBERT

Frozena SHERWOOD, WIS.

St. Mary’s H.S.

Born September 14, 1988 in Manitowoc, Wis. … son of John and Mary Frozena … father played football at Air Force … majoring in finance ... Three-year letterwinner at St. Mary ... Central High School ... Concluded career seventh on school’s all-time scoring list ... Honorable Mention AllState as a senior ... Three-time all-conference selection.

56

YEAR 2007-08 2008-09 2009-10

GP GS MIN 7 0 9 11 0 22 8 0 28

TOTAL

26

0

59

AVG FG-FGA 1.3 0-0 2.0 1-4 3.5 2-4 2 .3

3-8

PCT 00.0 25.0 50.0 3 7 .5

3FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA 0-0 00.0 3-4 0-0 00.0 2-4 1-1 1.000 1-3 1-1

1.000

6-11

PCT OFF DEF TOT AVG 75.0 0 2 2 0.3 50.0 4 3 7 0.6 33.3 1 3 4 0.5

PF 0 3 3

FO AST 0 1 0 0 0 1

5 4 .5

6

0

5

8

13

0 .5

2

TO BLK STL 0 0 1 3 0 0 2 0 1 5

0

2

PTS 3 4 6

AVG 0.4 0.4 0.8

13

0 .5


200708

Scored one point in collegiate debut, a victory over Savannah State JOINED TEAM IN LATE NOVEMBER AND APPEARED IN SEVEN GAMES Earned first letter

SEASON

200809

Netted his first career field goal in the closing moments against Seton Hall

45 Robert FROZENA

SEASON

GRABBED CAREER-HIGH TWO REBOUNDS IN VICTORY OVER TEXAS SOUTHERN Appeared in 11 games as a reserve

SEASON

200910

CLAIMED MU’S STANDARD OF EXCELLENCE STUDENT-ATHLETE AWARD Matched career high in points against Grambling State and South Dakota APPEARED IN EIGHT GAMES OFF THE BENCH, INCLUDING EACH OF THE FIRST FOUR OUTINGS Earned third letter

57


JOSEPH

Fulce PLANO, TEXAS

Plano

Born August 14, 1987 in Dallas, Texas … son of Roxanne Newbill and Joseph Fulce Jr. … majoring in communications ... NJCAA Second Team All-America selection at Tyler (TX) JC in 2007-08 ... Finished second in the nation with 13.2 rebounds per game ... Attended Massanutten Miliatry ... Academy in Virginia in 2006-07 ... Helped lead Plano (TX) High ... School to state title in 2005-06.

58

YEAR 2008-09 2009-10

GP GS MIN 11 0 62 34 13 398

AVG FG-FGA 5.6 6-12 11.7 50-100

PCT 50.0 50.0

TOTAL

45

1 0 .2

5 0 .0

13

460

56-112

3FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA PCT OFF DEF TOT AVG 0-2 00.0 3-4 75.0 6 6 12 1.1 4-11 36.4 15-18 83.3 38 68 106 3.1 4-13

3 0 .8

18-22

8 1 .8

44

74

118

2 .6

PF 13 55

FO AST 0 3 0 10

TO BLK STL 1 1 2 16 11 15

PTS 15 119

AVG 1.4 3.5

68

0

17

134

3 .0

13

12

17


200809

Grabbed four rebounds and scored two points against Western Carolina in collegiate debut

21 Joseph FULCE

SEASON

LED THE BENCH WITH SIX POINTS IN ROAD VICTORY AGAINST PROVIDENCE Appeared in 11 games as a reserve after missing first 10 contests because of injury

SEASON

200910

Earned team’s “WDYL - 1%” Award APPEARED IN ALL 34 GAMES, EARNING 13 STARTING ASSIGNMENTS Collected first double-double with 13 points and 10 rebounds against North Florida CHIPPED IN 13 POINTS IN THE OVERTIME WIN AT CINCINNATI, MATCHING A CAREER HIGH

59


DARIUS

Johnson-Odom RALEIGH, N.C.

Wakefield H.S.

First Team NJCAA All-America selection at Hutchinson Community College in 2008-09 ... Tabbed Jayhawk West Freshman of the Year and was all-region honoree ... Scored 21.6 points per game, the 14th-best average in the nation ... Three-year letterwinner at Wakefield High School in Raleigh, N.C. ... Helped program to state championship in 2006 ... Attended The Patterson School in Lenoir, N.C. in 2007-08.

60

YEAR 2009-10

GP GS MIN 34 22 1009

AVG FG-FGA 29.7 152-324

PCT 45.5

TOTAL

34

2 9 .7

4 5 .5

22 1009

152-324

3FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA PCT OFF DEF TOT AVG 73-154 47.4 65-96 67.7 16 74 90 2.6 73-154

4 7 .4

65-96

6 7 .7

16

74

90

2 .6

PF 77

FO AST 3 81

TO BLK STL 68 6 30

PTS 442

AVG 13.0

77

3

68

442

1 3 .0

81

6

30


200910

Claimed squad’s Defensive Player of the Year Award FINISHED AMONG THE BIG EAST LEADERS IN 3-POINT FIELD GOAL PERCENTAGE (2ND, .474) Reached double figures in points on 24 occasions STARTED 22 OF THE SQUAD’S 34 GAMES ON THE YEAR

PERSONAL

1 Darius JOHNSON-ODOM

SEASON

INFO

Born September 28, 1989 in Raleigh, North Carolina SON OF CAROLYN JOHNSON-ODOM AND LONNIE ODOM Undecided on a major

61


CHRIS

Otule RICHMOND, TEXAS

Ft. Bend Bush H.S.

Born January 4, 1990 in Houston, Texas … son of Catherine and Anthony Otule … full name is Christopher Chukwunonso Otule … one of three children … undecided on a major ... First Team AllRegion selection as a senior at Ft. Bend Bush (TX) High School ... Averaged 14.2 points, 9.5 rebounds and 6.3 blocks per game in 200708 ... Named to all-district squad in final season and had three triple-doubles.

62

YEAR 2008-09 2009-10

GP GS MIN 9 0 60 3 1 25

TOTAL

12

1

85

AVG FG-FGA 6.7 4-11 8.3 5-8 7 .1

9-19

PCT 36.4 62.5 4 7 .4

3FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA PCT OFF DEF TOT AVG 0-0 00.0 4-10 40.0 5 5 10 1.1 0-0 00.0 1-6 16.7 5 1 6 2.0 0-0

0 0 .0

5-16

3 1 .3

10

6

16

1 .3

PF 9 5

FO AST 0 0 0 0

14

0

0

TO BLK STL 6 5 0 3 5 0 9

10

0

PTS 12 11

AVG 1.3 3.7

23

1 .9


200809

Chipped in three points, one block and a rebound against Western Carolina in MU debut

42 Chris OTULE

SEASON

SCORED CAREER-BEST FOUR POINTS ON TWO OCCASIONS (PRESBYTERIAN & CINCINNATI) Appeared in nine games as a reserve after missing first 10 contests because of injury EARNED FIRST LETTER

SEASON

200910

Saw action in just three games after suffering season-ending foot injury EARNED FIRST CAREER START IN THE VICTORY OVER GRAMBLING STATE Averaged 3.7 points and 2.0 rebounds in his three outings

63


ERIK

Williams HOUSTON, TEXAS

Cypress Springs H.S.

First team all-state and all-region honoree at Cypress Springs High School in 2008-09 ... Consensus top-100 nationally ranked prep talent as a senior ... Tabbed player of the year by the Houston Area Boys Basketball Coaches Association ... Concluded career first in school history in rebounds (771) and blocked shots (375) ... Named the District 15 5A Most Valuable Player following final campaign.

64

YEAR 2009-10

GP GS MIN 19 0 106

TOTAL

19

0

106

AVG FG-FGA 5.6 8-22 5 .6

8-22

PCT 36.4 3 6 .4

3FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA PCT OFF DEF TOT AVG 0-1 00.0 6-12 50.0 11 15 26 1.4 0-1

0 0 .0

6-12

5 0 .0

11

15

26

1 .4

PF 19

FO AST 0 3

19

0

3

TO BLK STL 6 2 2 6

2

2

PTS 22

AVG 1.2

22

1 .2


200910

Appeared in 19 games off the bench in debut campain at MU MADE COLLEGIATE DEBUT IN THE SEASONOPENING WIN OVER CENTENARY Collected season-best six points against both Grambling State and North Florida

12 Erik WILLIAMS

SEASON

EARNED FIRST LETTER.

PERSONAL

INFO

Born September 23, 1990 in Houston, Texas SON OF ERROL AND JACKIE WILLIAMS Brother, Franz, played football at McNeese State UNDECIDED ON A MAJOR

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VANDER

Blue MADISON, WIS.

Memorial H.S. NOTES ON

BLUE

Helped USA Basketball U18 National Team to gold medal at FIFA Americas Championship Personal: Born July 17, 1992 in Milwaukee, Wis. … Son of Rita Blue … Undecided on a major.

CONSENSUS TOP-40 NATIONALLY RANKED RECRUIT PROSPECT Two-time WBCA Division I All-State selection RANKED THIRD AT SCHOOL IN POINTS (1,269), SECOND IN ASSISTS (211) AND FIRST IN STEALS (179)

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JAE

Crowder VILLA RICA, GA.

Villa Rica H.S.

NOTES ON

CROWDER

2009-10 NJCAA Player of the Year and First Team All-America selection HELPED HOWARD COLLEGE TO SCHOOL’S FIRST-EVER NATIONAL TITLE Born July 6, 1990 in Villa Rica, Ga. ... Son of Helen Thompson and Corey Crowder ... Has seven brothers and sisters ... Undecided on a major

Led South Georgia Tech JC to national tourney appearance in 2008-09 TIMES-GEORGIAN CO-PLAYER OF THE YEAR IN 2007-08 AT VILLA RICA HS

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DAVANTE

Gardner SUFFOLK, VA.

King’s Fork H.S. NOTES ON

GARDNER

Collected 1,431 points and 992 rebounds in three years at King’s Fork High School Personal: Born September 2, 1991 in Suffolk, Va. … Son of Audie and Sheila Gardner … Mother played basketball at East Carolina … Undecided on a major.

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NAMED TO ALL-STATE TEAM AS A SENIOR BY STATE’S COACHES ASSOCATION Helped Bulldogs to Virginia AAA state championship in 2008-09 THIRD PLAYER IN SCHOOL HISTORY TO SCORE OVER 1,000 CAREER POINTS


JAMAIL

Jones ATLANTA, GA.

Montverde Academy

NOTES ON

JONES

Nationally ranked prep prospect by ESPN.com and Rivals.com Personal: Born June 4, 1992 in Atlanta, Ga. … Son of Tyrone and Venda Jones … Youngest of five children … Father earned three letters in men’s basketball (1984-86) at Alaska-Anchorage … undecided on a major.

HELPED MONTVERDE ACADEMY TO TOP-10 NATIONAL RANKING IN 2009-10 Named region’s MVP while a junior at Green Forest Christian Academy in 2008-09

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DAVE

Singleton COATESVILLE, PA.

Hill School

NOTES ON

SINGLETON

Two-year letterwinner at High Point University and appeared in 60 career games AVERAGED 5.2 POINTS, 3.4 REBOUNDS, 2.1 ASSISTS AND 1.3 STEALS PER GAME IN 2009-10 FOR THE PANTHERS Four-year letterwinner at the Hill School in Pottstown, Pa. Personal: Born on Dec. 8, 1988 in Coatesville, Pa . … Son of David and Lila Singleton ... Has a sister, Alicia ... Majoring in marketing.

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CLAIMED ALL-CONFERENCE ACCOLADES AT THE PREP LEVEL ON TWO OCCASIONS


REGGIE

Smith CHICAGO. ILL

Thornton Township H.S. NOTES ON

SMITH

Three-year letterwinner at Thornton Township High School Personal: Born January 1, 1991 in Chicago, Ill. … Son of Tanish Hill and Reggie Smith … Has one brother, Terrell … Undecided on a major.

NATIONALLY RANKED GUARD PROSPECT BY SEVERAL RECRUITING OUTLETS Concluded career with over 1,300 points, 400 rebounds, 200 assists and 200 steals EARNED ALL-STATE HONORS ON TWO OCCASIONS AND WAS A THREE-TIME ALL-LEAGUE SELECTION

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JAMIL

Wilson RACINE, WIS.

Horlick H.S.

NOTES ON

WILSON

Averaged 4.7 points and 3.2 rebounds per game in 2009-10 as a freshman at Oregon Personal: Born Nov. 21, 1990 in Milwaukee, Wis. … Son of James Wilson … Has two sisters, Kamisha and Jazmin … Undecided on a major.

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CONSENSUS TOP-100 PROSPECT AT HORLICK HIGH SCHOOL Tabbed county’s player of the year in back-to-back campaigns (2007-08, 2008-09) TWO-TIME ALL-STATE HONOREE BY THE WISCONSIN COACHES ASSOCIATION AND ASSOCIATED PRESS


A

R

Q

TEAM U

E

T

T

E

B

A

S

K

BASKETBALL E

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T

B

A

L

L

2

0

1

0

-

1

1

TEAM SUPPORT Staff

STAFF

M

STUDENT


Character Revealed. Those two words have served as the foundation of the

Marquette University men’s basketball team under third-year head coach Buzz Williams ever since he was officially named program mentor on April 8, 2008.

The 2009-10 Golden Eagles were a perfect illustration of Williams’ core system of values, working hard on a daily basis to ensure the team’s accomplishments on the court and in the classroom would bring a sense of pride to all of the University’s supporters. The team’s character was tested from start to finish, beginning with low preseason expectations from the national pundits and concluding with a heartbreaking postseason loss. No team in the nation played in more onepossession games than MU, but that didn’t stop the squad from collecting the program’s fifth-straight NCAA Championship appearance and 20-win season. Marquette finished 22-12 overall, including an 11-7 mark in the BIG EAST Conference, which was good enough for fifth-place in the 16-team league. Lazar Hayward (Second Team All-BIG EAST) finished second all-time in scoring at MU and four of the program’s top-10 all-time scorers have now graduated within the past two seasons. Junior forward Jimmy Butler was one of the most improved players in the country and as a result was tabbed honorable mention all-league.

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games and summer camps. The Golden Eagles have also continued and strengthened their long-standing relationships with Children's Hospital as well as Special Olympics.

In 2007-08, Williams served as an assistant coach with the Golden Eagles in his first season at Marquette. MU concluded the year 25-10 and advanced to the second round of the NCAA Tournament for the first time since 2003. His coaching career has included stints as an assistant, associate head and head coach. He has over 15 years of experience at the NCAA Division I level. Williams has recruited and coached over 20 players who have earned all-conference accolades, including one league player of the year, two conference freshmen of the year and two Associated Press All-Americans (McNeal and Hayward). Williams arrived in Milwaukee after serving for one season as the head coach at the University of New Orleans. He guided the Privateers to a 14-win campaign in 2006-07 and his roster featured Bo McCalebb, the Sun Belt Conference Player of the Year. UNO claimed fourth place in the Sun Belt's Western Division and advanced to the league tournament quarterfinals. The squad claimed as many victories on the road that season as it had in the previous three seasons combined. His recruiting class for the 2007-08

season was ranked in the top 50 nationally by HoopScoopOnline.com.

Totals

0

61-39 75

9 0 0 2 L L A B T E K

by Williams, focuses on providing opportunities for special needs children to attend

S

reached new heights under Williams, highlighted by "Buzz's Bunch." This group, founded

A

HoopScoopOnline.com (2008-09). The program's community service efforts have also

B

each of the last two years, including a group rated as high as No. 1 in the country by

E

Off the court, Williams and his staff assembled a consensus top-25 recruiting class in

T

in each of THE LAST TWO YEARS

T

assembled a consensus TOP-25 RECRUITING CLASS

E

Williams and his staff

U

claimed all-league accolades and McNeal also claimed All-America honors.

Q

25 teams the entire campaign. A pair of players, Jerel McNeal and Wesley Matthews,

R

the second round of the NCAA Championship and were ranked among the nation's top-

A

which included a school-record 12 BIG EAST victories. The Golden Eagles advanced to

UALR _____________ 2-1 Arkansas St ________ 0-2 Centenary _________ 1-0 Central Michigan ____ 1-0 Chicago St. ________ 1-0 Cincinnati__________ 2-0 Connecticut _______ 1-1 Dayton ____________ 0-1 Denver ____________ 2-0 DePaul ____________ 3-1 Florida Atlantic _____ 0-2 Florida International _ 1-0 Florida St.__________ 0-2 Georgetown________ 3-1 Grambling State _____ 1-0 Hampton __________ 0-1 Houston Baptist _____ 1-0 IPFW _____________ 1-0 Jacksonville St. _____ 1-0 Lamar_____________ 1-0 UL-Lafayette _______ 1-1 UL-Monroe ________ 1-1 Louisville __________ 1-1 Maryland-E. Shore___ 1-0 Michigan __________ 1-0 Middle Tennessee St. 0-1 Milwaukee_________ 2-0 Mississippi_________ 0-1 Mississippi St. ______ 0-1 Missouri___________ 0-1 NC St._____________ 1-1 North Florida _______ 1-0 North Texas ________ 2-0 Northern Iowa ______ 1-0 Northwestern St. ____ 0-1 Notre Dame ________ 1-1 Pittsburgh _________ 0-2 Presbyterian _______ 2-0 Providence ________ 3-0 Rutgers ___________ 2-0 St. John’s __________ 4-0 Seton Hall _________ 2-0 South Alabama _____ 0-1 South Dakota _______ 1-0 USF ______________ 1-1 Syracuse __________ 0-2 Tennessee _________ 0-1 Texas Southern _____ 1-0 UT-Tyler ___________ 1-0 Troy ______________ 1-0 Tulane ____________ 1-1 Utah St. ___________ 1-0 Vermont ___________ 0-1 Villanova __________ 2-4 Washington ________ 0-1 West Virginia _______ 1-1 Western Carolina____ 1-0 Western Kentucky ___ 0-1 Wisconsin _________ 1-1 Xavier ____________ 1-0

M

Williams directed MU to a 25-10 overall record in 2008-09,

1

Coaching Record


BUZZ

Williams

Prior to UNO, Williams served as an assistant coach and recruiting coordinator at Texas A&M for two seasons (2004-05/2005-06) under head coach Billy Gillispie. Both of his recruiting classes with the Aggies were ranked among the best in the nation and featured some of the top-ranked talent at the prep level. The squad made its first NCAA Tournament appearance in 25 years in 2005-06 and the previous team posted the top turnaround in the nation, improving its win total in 2004-05 by 14 games compared to 2003-04. Williams spent four seasons (2000-01/2003-04) at Colorado State, serving as an assistant the first three seasons before being promoted to associate head coach in 2003-04. Two of his recruiting classes were ranked

among the 40-best in the nation, including the 2003 group, which was tabbed No. 1 in the Mountain West Conference. Colorado State made its first NCAA Tournament appearance in 13 years during his tenure and Williams was named one of the top assistants in the country by HoopScoopOnline.com. Williams was previously an assistant

All-conference P E RS O N A L

The Williams Family

Birth Date September 1, 1972

Corey (wife) and children Zera (8), Calvin (7), Mason (4) and Addyson (1)

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coaching career

Texas A&MKingsville, 1999 (Master’s in Kinesiology)

2009-10 (Marquette / BIG EAST) Lazar Hayward (Sr., Forward) – 2nd Team Jimmy Butler (Jr., Forward) – Honorable Mention 2008-09 (Marquette / BIG EAST) Jerel McNeal (Sr., Guard) – 1st Team Wesley Matthews (Sr., Guard) – 2nd Team 2007-08 (Marquette / BIG EAST) Jerel McNeal (Jr., Guard) – 2nd Team Lazar Hayward (So., Forward) – 2nd Team Dominic James (Jr., Guard) – 2nd Team

Hometown Van Alstyne, Texas Education Oklahoma City University 1994 (Bachelor’s in Kinesiology)

PLAYERS recruited or coached by BUZZ WILLIAMS

2009-10 2008-09 2007-08 2006-07 2004-05/2005-06

Head Coach Head Coach Assistant Coach Head Coach Assistant Coach

Marquette Marquette Marquette New Orleans Texas A&M

NCAA First Round NCAA Second Round NCAA Second Round

2003-04 2000-01/2002-03 1999-00 1998-99 1994-95/1997-98 1992-93/1993-94 1990-91/1991-92

Associate Head Coach Assistant Coach Assistant Coach Assistant Coach Assistant Coach Student Assistant Coach Student Assistant Coach

Colorado State Colorado State NCAA First Round (2002-03) Northwestern State Texas A&M-Kingsville Texas-Arlington Oklahoma City Univ. Navarro College

NCAA Second Round (2005-06) NIT Third Round (2004-05)

2006-07 (New Orleans / Sun Belt) Bo McCalebb (Sr., G) – 1st Team (Player of the Year) 2005-06 (Texas A&M / Big 12) Joseph Jones (So., Forward) – 2nd Team Acie Law (Jr., Guard) – Honorable Mention

2004-05 (Texas A&M / Big 12) Antoine Wright (Jr., Forward) – 2nd Team Joseph Jones (Fr., Center) – Honorable Mention Acie Law (So., Guard) – Honorable Mention 2003-04 (Colorado State / Mountain West) Matt Nelson (Jr., Center) – 3rd Team Dwight Boatner (Fr., Guard) – Honorable Mention Matt Williams (Jr., Forward) – Honorable Mention 2002-03 (Colorado State / Mountain West) Matt Nelson (So., Center) – 3rd Team Andy Birley (Sr., Guard) – Honorable Mention Brian Greene (Sr., Forward) – Honorable Mention Michael Morris (Fr., Guard) – Honorable Mention

2001-02 (Colorado State / Mountain West) Brian Greene (Jr., Forward) – 2nd Team Andy Birley (Jr., Guard) – Honorable Mention 1998-99 (Texas A&M-Kingsville / Lone Star) Eric Potter – Freshman of the Year 1997-98 (Texas-Arlington / Southland Conference) Bill Washington – Freshman of the Year Scott Cross – Academic All-American 1996-97 (Texas-Arlington / Southland Conference) Anthony Durham – 2nd Team Scott Cross – Academic All-American 1995-96 (Texas-Arlington / Southland Conference) Damon Johnson – 1st Team

The end of the 2009-10 CAMPAIGN marked the program’s fifth-straight

NCAA Championship appearance and 20-WIN SEASON.


1 1 0 1 0 2 L

The Demons advanced to their first ever NCAA Tournament the following season and two of his recruited players were named all-conference, while one was tabbed Southland Conference Tournament MVP.

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Williams signed the highest-rated recruiting class in the history of the Southland Conference while at Northwestern State.

Williams served as a student assistant from 1990-92 at Navarro College (Corsicana, Texas) where the team won consecutive conference titles while sporting a 45-17 record during his tenure. He began his career under mentor Lewis Orr, who was inducted into the National Junior College Athletic Association Hall of Fame in 2009 after a 37-year career at the junior college level.

Buzz WILLIAMS

at Northwestern State (1999-2000), Texas A&M- Kingsville (1998-99) and TexasArlington (1994-98).

A B T E K

Williams is married to the former Corey Norman and the couple has two daughters, Zera (8) and Addyson (1), and two sons, Calvin (7) and Mason (4).

2 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP APPEARANCES

E T T E

leading the

MARQUETTE UNIVERSITY

U

3 all-league players

first 2 seasons

Q

2 NATIONALLY RANKED RECRUITING CLASSES

men’s basketball program.

R

47 victories

A

23 BIG EAST CONFERENCE WINS

Each of these accomplishments, as well as numerous others, were recorded during head coach Buzz Williams’

M

Third Year

B

A

At Texas-Arlington, Williams recruited a Southland Conference Freshman of the Year and signed the first Academic All-American in the school's history. Williams was a student assistant coach from 1992-94 at Oklahoma City University where he assisted the team to the 1994 NAIA championship after it advanced to the Sweet 16 the previous season.

The Van Alstyne, Texas, native earned a bachelor's degree in kinesiology from Oklahoma City University in 1994 before completing his master's work in the same field at Texas A&MKingsville in 1999.

S

His accomplishments at Texas A&M-Kingsville include signing the 1998-99 Lone Star Conference Freshman of the Year and a third team All-America guard.

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Collegiate coaching veteran Tony Benford, considered one of the top assistant coaches in the country, is in his third season with the Marquette University men's basketball program. A veteran of postseason success, Marquette's NCAA

Championship appearance in 2010 marked the 12th campaign in Benford's career he has helped guide a program to tournament competition. Benford has played a key role in compiling a consensus top-25 recruiting class for the Golden Eagles in each of the past two seasons, including a 2009 group ranked by one media outlet as the best in the country.

P E RS O N A L Birth Date March 22, 1964 Hometown Hobbs, N.M. Family Deborah (wife) and children Audriana (21), Milena (13), Tony Jr. (18) and Jeremy (28) Education Texas Tech, 1992 (Bachelor’s in Physical Education)

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Before arriving at MU, he had spent each of the previous two campaigns at Nebraska under head coach Doc Sadler. The Huskers collected 37 total victories in the two seasons, highlighted by a trip to the National Invitation Tournament in 2008. The squad posted 20 victories in 2007-08, just the 12th 20win campaign in the program's 112-year history and the first in nearly a decade. Nebraska players were also well represented on the all-league squads, including three honorees last year. Following each of his two seasons at Nebraska, Benford earned well-deserved recognition as he was ranked among the top-35 assistant coaches in the nation by Basketball Times magazine and HoopScoopOnline.com. The list compiled the 100 top assistant coaches among the over 330 basketball schools at the Division I level. Benford is currently ranked 14th among assistants by HoopScoopOnline.com.

Assistant Coach THIRD YEAR

Texas Tech 1992


1 1 0 1 0 T

B

A native of Hobbs, N.M., Benford was a 1986 fourth-round NBA Draft selection by the Boston Celtics. He played professionally in Holland during the 1986-87 season.

A

S

K

E

As a prep all-star, Benford was a Converse All-American and the New Mexico Player of the Year after pouring in 27.5 points per game as a senior. He led Hobbs to the state title in his final season, earning MVP honors of the state championship tournament after posting 29 points in the title game.

B E T T E U

Asst. Coach

NIT (2005) NCAA (2003) NIT (2002) NIT (2000) NCAA (1998) NCAA (1997) NCAA (1996) – WAC Tournament Champions NCAA (1994) – WAC Regular Season Champions NCAA (1993) – WAC Tournament Champions

Q

New Mexico

NCAA (2009, 2010) NIT (2008)

R

Asst. Coach Asst. Coach Asst. Coach Assoc. Head Coach Asst. Coach

A

Marquette Nebraska UTEP Arizona St. Arizona St.

M

coaching career

Prior to Nebraska, Benford served on the Arizona State bench as an assistant coach for his first six years in Tempe. He was then named associate head coach for his last two seasons with the Sun Devils. During his time at Arizona State (1999 to 2006), Benford recruited and coached Pac-10 Players of the Year Ike Diogu (2005, consensus All-America) and Eddie House (2000), and also brought in all-freshman team performer Jeff Pendergraph in 2006. Benford helped the Sun Devils to four postseason appearances during his tenure, including 2008-pres. gaining a spot in the second 2006-08 round of the 2003 NCAA 2006 Tournament. 2004-06 Before joining the ASU 1998-04 staff, Benford spent six seasons as an assistant coach at New Mexico 1992-98 (1993 to 1998). He helped New Mexico to five NCAA Tournament bids while winning 73.2

2

Benford finished his playing career at Texas Tech in 1986 and during his playing days, he helped the Red Raiders to two Southwest Conference Tournament titles (1985, 1986) and the SWC regular-season championship in 1985. He was an all-conference pick as a senior and was the league tournament most valuable player. He earned his bachelor's in physical education from TTU in 1992.

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Off the court, Benford helped the Huskers make significant strides on the recruiting trail. Nebraska's eight-man recruiting class for 2007 was ranked among the top 25 in the nation by at least three major recruiting services, including ESPN.com's Bob Gibbons (21st), CSTV.com's Van Coleman (12th) and HoopScoopOnline.com's Clark Francis (5th).

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percent of its games (139-51 record). New Mexico picked up a pair of Western Athletic Conference tournament titles (1993 and 1996) and a regular-season championship (1994) with Benford on the sideline. During his stint with the Lobos, Benford coached the top four scorers in program history, including all-time leading scorer Kenny Thomas, who Benford recruited to New Mexico.

A

Benford's recruiting and coaching efforts have helped develop multiple all-conference caliber players at each of the stops during his coaching career. Ike Diogu (Arizona St.), Eddie House (Arizona St.), Jeff Pendergraph (Arizona St.) and Kenny Thomas (New Mexico) also continued their respective careers in the National Basketball Association.

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The 2010-11 campaign will mark the third for David “Aki ” Collins with the Marquette University men's basketball program.

Collins has played a key role in compiling a consensus top-25 recruiting class for the Golden Eagles in each of the last two years, including a 2009 group ranked by one media outlet as the best in the country. Collins arrived in Milwaukee after working as an assistant coach at fellow Jesuit institution Fairfield University for two seasons under Ed Cooley. The Stags collected 21 league victories in the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference during his tenure and in 2006-07 posted the program's longest winning streak in 20 years. Fairfield was represented on the all-league team both years.

P E RS O N A L Birth Date August 6, 1971 Hometown Brooklyn , N.Y. Family Ina (wife) and son Daniel (1) Education Clark Atlanta, 1997 (Bachelor’s in Communications)

Assistant Coach THIRD YEAR

Clark Atlanta 1997

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0 1 9 0 0 2 L L E

T

B

A

He began his collegiate playing career at Morehouse College, before transferring to Clark Atlanta University for his sophomore year. He prepped at LaSalle Academy in New York, where he led his team to a 26-1 record and the New York City championship as a sophomore. LaSalle earned a top 20 preseason ranking prior to his senior campaign.

B

A

S

K

He earned a bachelor's degree in communications from Clark Atlanta in 1997.

Asst. Coach

Howard

Asst. Coach

1997-00

Colorado

Asst. Coach

E

Marshall

2000-03

T

2003-06

T

Asst. Coach

E

Fairfield

NIT (2000) NIT (1999)

U

2006-08

NCAA (2009, 2010)

Q

Asst. Coach

R

2008-pres. Marquette

A

Collins helped sign two preseason MEAC Player of the Year candidates in Aki Thomas (2002) and Kyle Williams (2003), both of whom

Prior to Howard, Collins spent three seasons as an assistant coach at Colorado, one year as a volunteer and two as a full-time assistant. His responsibilities with the Buffalos included coordinating film exchange and participating in on-campus recruiting activities. He coached Jaquay Walls while in Boulder, who went on to become a second-round NBA draft pick by the Indiana Pacers in 2000.

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The Brooklyn native came to Marshall after three seasons as an assistant coach at Howard University, where he served under head coach Frankie Allen. Before his arrival at Howard, the program posted just three victories in the previous two seasons. After winning 10 games during the 2000-01 campaign, the Bison won 18 games in 2001-02 and advanced to the conference championship game.

transferred to Howard from the University of Colorado, following Collins when he made the trip back East. He also helped recruit 2003 MEAC Player of the Year, Ronnie Williams.

coaching career

Previous to Fairfield, Collins spent three seasons at Marshall University. During his stay at Marshall (2003-06), he assisted with the program's transition between conferences. The Thundering Herd placed several student-athletes on the Conference USA and Mid-American Conference all-league teams.

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The 2010-11 campaign with mark the third for Scott Monarch at Marquette, but the second season for him as an assistant coach with the program. After serving as director of basketball operations in 2008-09, Monarch moved up the bench to a similar position in which he served under Williams in 2006-07 at New Orleans. Monarch arrived in Milwaukee after most recently serving as an assistant coach at Tyler Junior College in Texas. He helped guide the Apaches to an overall record of 25-3 and the program's first outright league title in 21 years. TJC advanced to the quarterfinals of the Region XIV Tournament and posted a 19-3 league slate en route to a final national ranking of 10th in the country.

PE R S O N A L Birth Date December 26, 1966 Hometown Owensboro, Ky. Family Daughter Samantha (3) Education Mississippi Valley State, 1990 (Bachelor’s in Health & Physical Education Recreation) Baylor, 1991 (Master’s in Health & Physical Education Recreation)

Assistant Coach SECOND YEAR

Mississippi Valley State 1986

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1 1 0 1 0 2 L L A

Monarch served as an assistant coach at Grambling State in 1998-99.

E

T

B

He started his career at McLennan Community College in 1993 and oached there for three seasons. He then went on to spend three seasons at Navarro College.

NCAA (2010)

2008-09

Marquette

Dir. of Basketball Oper.

NCAA (2009)

2007-08

Tyler JC

Asst. Coach

2006-07

New Orleans

Asst. Coach

2000-06

Panola JC

Head Coach

1999-00

Tennessee St.

Assoc. Head Coach

1998-99

Grambling St.

Asst. Coach

1996-98

Kentucky Wes.

Assoc. Head Coach

1993-96

McLennan CC

Asst. Coach

1990-93

Navarro College

Asst. Coach

B

Asst. Coach

U

E

T

T

E

2009-pres. Marquette

A

R

Q

NCAA Division II (1998)

M

coaching career

A

During his career, Monarch has helped guide 42 players to NCAA Division I programs from the junior college ranks and nearly 20 to all-conference accolades. He also coached the all-time scoring leader in junior college history, Omar Thomas.

At Kentucky Wesleyan, Monarch was part of a program that reached the 1998 NCAA Division II national championship game. He also recruited and helped develop four players who would later be first-team All-Americans. Two of those standouts became National Players of the Year.

K

He had spent the previous six seasons as the head coach at Panola College in Carthage, Texas. Monarch left the program as the school's all-time winningest coach, posting a 63 percent winning percentage. He was named the 2003 National Junior College Athletic Association Region XIV Coach of the Year after leading the Ponies to the regular season conference championship.

Monarch, who received his master's degree from Baylor in 1991 after earning his undergraduate degree from Mississippi Valley State in 1990, has also served as an associate head coach at Tennessee State (1999-2000) and Kentucky Wesleyan (1996-98).

S

In 2006-07, the Owensboro, Ky., native served as an assistant coach and recruiting coordinator under Williams at the University of New Orleans. The Privateers posted a 14-win campaign that year and advanced to the quarterfinals of the Sun Belt Conference Tournament.

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The 2010-11 campaign will mark the second at Marquette for Bart Lundy, who serves as the program's Director of Basketball Operations. Lundy, 39, owns an 11-year head coaching record of 211-128 (.622) at a pair of programs. When he claimed his 200th win on February 27, 2008, he became one of the youngest coaches in NCAA history to reach that milestone. His career winning percentage also placed him in the top-10 percent among active coaches in the country.

P E RS O N A L

Lundy arrived in Milwaukee after serving for six seasons as head coach at High Point. He compiled an overall record of 96-87 and guided the program to numerous individual and team accolades. During his tenure, the Panthers set school records for NCAA Division I wins in a season, conference victories, road wins and RPI ranking.

Birth Date November 5, 1971 Hometown Galax, Va. Family Sons Ian (10) Kellen (8) and Alec (5) Education Winthrop, 1994 (Bachelor’s in Sociology) Winthrop, 1998 (Master’s in Liberal Arts)

Dir. of Basketball Ops SECOND YEAR

Winthrop 1994

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1 1 0 1 0 2 A

L

L

In the classroom during his decade as a head coach, 90 percent of the student-athletes under Lundy earned their degrees and 100 percent were on track to graduate entering their final season of eligibility. Highly involved in the profession and the community, he has served on NCAA and NABC committees while also working with the YMCA and Boys & Girls Club.

T

B

His career at Queens included a three-year stint (1995-97) as an assistant coach under Dale Layer.

K

E

A 1994 graduate of Winthrop, Lundy was a player at UNC Pembroke and Lenoir-Rhyne before starting his coaching career. Lundy was an assistant at Winthrop for three years (1993-95) under head coach Dan Kenney before becoming an assistant at Queens. He earned his master's degree from Winthrop in 1998..

B

2003-09

High Point

Head Coach

1997-03

Queens Univ.

Head Coach

NCAA (2010) E

Dir. of Basketball Oper.

NCAA Division II Final Four (2003)

T

2009-pres. Marquette

Queens Univ.

Asst. Coach

NCAA Division II (1999)

E

1995-97

T

NCAA Division II Elite Eight (2001)

Q

Asst. Coach

R

Winthrop

A

1993-95

U

NCAA Division II (1996)

M

coaching career

A

Previous to High Point, Lundy compiled an overall record of 115-41 in five seasons at Queens University of Charlotte. His tenure included a pair of NCAA Division II Elite Eight appearances and one trip to the Final Four (2003). He recruited and coached five All-America selections, including the 2003 national player of the year (Spencer Ross).

Lundy was tabbed the Carolinas-Virginia Athletic Conference Coach of the Year in 2001 and was also named the NCAA East Region Coach of the Year that season. The Royals claimed the league title in four of his five years on the bench and shattered the school record for victories in a season (29 in 200203) on three occasions.

S

The Galax, Va., native collected the top-rated Big South recruiting classes on five occasions at HPU and has developed multiple student-athletes into all-conference caliber performers. Honors collected by Royals players under Lundy's supervision include player of the year (3), defensive player of the year and the league's all-time leading rebounder (Arizona Reid). Lundy was tabbed the Big South Coach of the Year by several publications in 2004 after leading the team to a 19-11 overall record and an appearance in the league's conference tournament championship game in his first season.

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The 2010-11 campaign will mark the third with the Marquette men's basketball program for Brad Autry, who serves as Coordinator of Student-Athlete Development. In his role, Autry focuses his efforts on coordinating and monitoring the daily schedules of the players currently in the program. His administrative duties include managing class schedules and study hall attendance, scheduling individual and team community service projects and mentoring programs and coordinating student-athlete documentation as it relates to NCAA compliance. He also serves as director of the program's youth summer camp program. Autry brings over 20 years of experience at the collegiate level to Marquette, having made successful stops at programs including Baylor, Tulsa and Arkansas-Little Rock. P E RS O N A L Birth Date January 26, 1968 Hometown Balko, Okla. Education NW Oklahoma St., 1991 (Bachelor’s in Education) Central Oklahoma, 1993 (Master’s in Education)

Coordinator, Student Development THIRD YEAR

NW Oklahoma St 1991 86


1 1 0 1 0 2 L L A B E

T

While at NWOSU, Autry was a four-year basketball letterwinner (helped squad to league title in 1988), as well as an all-conference and all-district performer and the Oklahoma Intercollegiate Conference Scholar-Athlete of the Year in 990. Autry began his collegiate coaching career as a graduate assistant at University of Central Oklahoma, where he earned his master's degree in education, and was a part of a Lone Star Conference championship and the NCAA Division II national tournament in 1993.

2001-02

McKinney HS

Asst. Coach

1999-01

Tulsa

Asst. Coach

1994-99

Baylor

Asst. Coach

1992-94

Central Oklahoma

Grad. Asst. Coach

1991-92

Pond Creek

Head Coach

1990-91

NW Oklahoma St.

Grad. Asst. Coach

B

Head Coach

E

Assistant Coach

Fossil Ridge HS

T

UALR

2002-03

T

2003-07

NCAA Elite Eight (2000)

E

Head Coach

U

DeKaney HS

Q

2007-08

NCAA (2009, 2010)

R

Coordinator of StudentAthlete Development

A

2008-pres. Marquette

M

coaching career

A

Autry was an assistant coach at Tulsa under Bill Self when the Golden Hurricane won the Western Athletic Conference championship in 2000 with a school-record 32 wins and a No. 9 national ranking while advancing to the NCAA Elite Eight.

As a prep player, Autry was an Oklahoma all-state performer in football, basketball and track before continuing his playing career at Northwestern Oklahoma State University, where he graduated with his bachelor's degree in 1991.

K

Prior to Dekaney, Autry spent four seasons as an assistant coach at UALR. He was the final hire of Steve Shields' original staff and played an integral role in the early success of the Shields era at UALR. The program claimed back-to-back divisional titles (2003-04 & 2004-05) in the Sun Belt Conference for the first time in school history and the roster during Autry's tenure featured several all-conference performers, including the league's freshman of the year.

Before his time at Tulsa, Autry was an assistant coach for five seasons at Baylor in Waco, Texas. While at Baylor, Autry coached 1998 NBA first-round pick and current Milwaukee Buck, Brian Skinner for four years and helped the Bears to a school-record 11 consecutive wins. Baylor finished 18-11 that season, its first in the Big 12 Conference. Baylor's 1996 recruiting class was ranked as high as sixth in the nation, and the 1997-98 team recorded the school's best conference record and the highest conference finish (fifth) since Baylor joined the Big 12.

S

Autry arrived in Milwaukee after spending one year at Dekaney High School in Houston, Texas. He served as the fledgling program's head coach, directing four teams on the basketball court. DHS opened in the Fall of 2007 and featured only freshmen and sophomores as it continued its development. Autry did help guide the freshman squad to the district title in his lone campaign with the school.

87


Director of Basketball Administration NINTH YEAR

Barb Kellaher is in her ninth season with the Marquette basketball program and was recently promoted to her current position of Director of Basketball Administration. Kellaher’s primary responsibilities include supervising the daily operations of the men’s basketball office and the office staff – including the management of team travel and meals during the season – as well as personally assisting head coach Buzz Williams with his summer camps, recruiting travel, daily scheduling, correspondence and arrangement of speaking engagements and special events. Kellaher and her husband, Rich, are the proud parents of three children – Allison (22), Brooke (20) and Lauren (18). Allison recently graduated from Marquette and both Brooke and Lauren are currently enrolled at the University.

88


1 1 0

1

0

Coordinator of Basketball Administration

2

FIRST YEAR

L

Marquette University A

L

2007

B

Caitlin Nicoletto is in her first season with the

E

T

Golden Eagles as coordinator of basketball administration, but already owns a wealth of experience working with the University and men’s basketball program.

A

S

K

Nicoletto’s duties with the team will include assisting in the day-to-day operations of the team, including the coordination of the staff’s travel schedule and recruiting efforts.

T

E

B

A 2007 MU graduate with a degree in communications, Nicoletto arrives in the Al McGuire Center after spending two years with University Advancement. After joining the staff as an office associate, Nicoletto was named coordinator in the principal gifts program in May of 2009.

M

A

R

Q

U

E

T

Nicoletto spent one year (2007-08) with the Milwaukee Brewers serving as a special events coordinator. She worked as an office assistant with the men’s team for two years while completing her undergraduate work at MU.

89


Athletic Trainer THIRD YEAR

George Washington University 2000 Ernest Eugene enters his third season as the Athletic Trainer for the Marquette University men’s basketball program. Prior to joining the Golden Eagles, Eugene spent five seasons as the Assistant Athletic Trainer with the Washington Wizards of the National Basketball Association. With the Wizards, his duties included prevention/rehabilitation of athletic injuries, travel administration and injury tracking. Prior to joining the NBA ranks, Eugene served as a seasonal intern athletic trainer with the Washington Redskins in 2003. The Washington, D.C. native earned his Master’s Degree in Allied Health Management from The Ohio State University where he also served as a Graduate Assistant Athletic Trainer (2001-2003). Certified as an athletic trainer (ATC), performance enhancement specialist (PES) and corrective exercise specialist (CES), Eugene is also a member of the National Athletic Trainers’ Association and National Academy of Sports Medicine. Eugene graduated from The George Washington University in 2000, where he earned a Bachelor of Science Degree in Exercise Science with a concentration in Athletic Training. Eugene and the former Jackie Jovel married in August of 2005 and the couple’s first child, Jayden, was born in August of 2009.

90


1 1

0

-

1

Head Strength and Conditioning Coach FIFTH YEAR

2

0

Miami (OH) University

L

L

1995

A

Todd Smith is in his fifth year at Marquette as Head Strength and Conditioning Coach.

T

B

He is responsible for the total development of sport-specific strength and conditioning for the Marquette athletic department.

S

K

E

Smith arrived at Marquette after spending six years as the Director of Athletic Performance for the University of the Pacific. At Pacific, he oversaw strength and conditioning for all 16 NCAA Division I sports.

E

B

A

Prior to Pacific, he was the Assistant Strength and Conditioning Coach at San Jose State for one season. He started his post-graduate career at Pacific, where he served as the Assistant Director of Athletic Performance for two years. Smith also worked at five NFL training camps with the 49ers and two for the NHL’s Nashville Predators.

T

T

He served two years as the Graduate Assistant for Strength and Conditioning at the University of North Dakota.

M

A

R

Q

U

E

Smith graduated from Miami University with a BA in Exercise Science in 1995. Smith married the former Maggie Lamb in 2005 and the couple has two sons, Cooper (4) and Gradyn (2).

91


Assistant Athletic Director/ Academic Services SIXTH YEAR

Howard University 2001 Adrienne Ridgeway is in her sixth year with Marquette and was recently promoted to Assistant Athletic Director for Academic Services/Life Skills Coordinator. Ridgeway works closely with the men’s basketball team in planning academic schedules, monitoring the progress and status of student-athletes, coordinating the NCAA Clearinghouse Program, assisting with the admissions process by evaluating high school and junior college transcripts and helping with new student orientation and personal academic counseling. Ridgeway spent two years with the Milwaukee Public Schools as a Speech-Language Pathologist, where she provided language and articulation treatment and evaluation to culturally diverse elementary school students. Ridgeway ran track for four years at Howard University in Washington, D.C. and received her bachelor’s of science in speech-language pathology in 2001. Her minor was sports administration. In 2003, she earned her master’s degree in speech-language pathology while working as a graduate assistant to the athletics director in the Howard Athletics office. A native of Milwaukee, she attended Nicolet High School in Glendale and currently resides in Milwaukee. Ridgeway earned her master’s degree in education from Marquette in May of 2010 and she currently teaches at the University as well. Ridgeway and her husband, LeVar, were married in July of 2009.

92


1 1 0 0

1

Team Chaplain

2

27TH YEAR

Saint Louis University

B

A

L

L

1948

E

T

Father William Kelly, S.J. is entering his 27th season as team chaplain for the Marquette basketball program.

B

A

S

K

Born and raised in Chicago, Father Kelly earned his bachelor’s degree from Saint Louis University in 1948. Following a three-year teaching stint at Saint Louis University from 1948 to 1951, he went on to earn a master’s degree in theology from St. Mary’s College in Kansas.

M

A

R

Q

U

E

T

T

E

Ordained in 1954, Father Kelly attended Catholic University in Paris from 1958 to 1961 and subsequently obtained his doctorate of theology from there in 1963. Father Kelly taught at Marquette from 1961 until his retirement in 2000.

93


Team Physician 12TH YEAR

Dartmouth 1989

Dr. Darin A. Maccoux is in his 12th year as the medical team physician for the Marquette men’s basketball team. A native of Green Bay, Wis., Maccoux attended Dartmouth College where he was a four-year starter in basketball (1985-89). After graduating from Dartmouth in 1989, he attended the University of Wisconsin Medical School and earned his M.D. Degree in 1993. He completed a Family Practice Residency at St. Luke’s Hospital in Milwaukee, Wis., in 1996. Maccoux received a Fellowship in Sports Medicine from the Toledo Hospital, Ohio in 1997. He is Board Certified in Family Medicine and Sports Medicine. Maccoux has a private practice in Muskego, Wis., with Lakeshore Medical Clinic. His hospital privileges include St. Luke’s in Milwaukee, Sinai Samaritan and West Allis Memorial. He also serves as the team physician for Muskego High School.

94


1 1 0 0

1

Team Orthopaedic Surgeon SIXTH YEAR

2

Harvard College

A

L

L

1979

B

Dr. Ted Gertel specializes in the treatment of sports injuries and work-related

E

T

injuries of the knee, shoulder, elbow, and ankle. He performs arthroscopic surgery and other minimally invasive surgical procedures.

A

S

K

Dr. Gertel is the Team Orthopaedic Surgeon for the Marquette University men’s basketball team and is in his sixth season with the program. He previously served as Head Team Physician for the Milwaukee Brewers. He is a Clinical Associate Professor in the College of Health Sciences at Marquette University.

T

T

E

B

Dr. Gertel is a graduate of Harvard College and the New York University School of Medicine. He completed his Orthopaedic Surgery residency at the University of Connecticut School of Medicine, and he was a Sports Medicine Fellow at the University of Minnesota School of Medicine. His research on the biomechanics of anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction was presented at an international scientific conference and published in the American Journal of Sports Medicine.

M

A

R

Q

U

E

Currently, Dr. Gertel is the Chief of Orthopaedic Surgery at Aurora Sinai Medical Center. He is the Medical Advisor for the Aurora Sports Medicine Institute. He is a partner at the Milwaukee Orthopaedic Group, Limited (MOGL) with offices in downtown Milwaukee and Mequon. .

95


Graduate Manager THIRD YEAR

University of New Orleans 2007 The 2010-11 campaign will mark Jamie McNeilly’s third with the Marquette University men’s basketball program, but his first season as a program assistant. McNeilly spent the previous two years at Marquette as a graduate manager and completed his master’s degree in leadership studies in the Spring of 2010. As program assistant, McNeilly will assist in the day-to-day operations of the program. McNeilly, who played at the collegiate level at the University of New Orleans, saw action under Williams as a senior in 2006-07. After earning a bachelor's degree from UNO in general studies in 2007, the Toronto native played professionally in Germany in 2007-08. He joined USC Heidelberg of the Pro A league, playing in a total of 14 games. He averaged 10.9 points, 3.6 assists and 2.6 rebounds per game. A Third Team All-Sun Belt selection as a junior at UNO, McNeilly concluded his career averaging 10.7 points, 4.0 assists and 2.8 rebounds per contest. McNeilly was also recognized on the league’s academic honor roll following his senior year. He earned three letters with the Privateers after one season at South Georgia Technical College (2003-04), where he as an all-conference performer as well. McNeilly owned international experience prior to his stint in Germany, having played for Team Canada in the 2005 Summer Universiade event in Turkey and in the same tournament in Bangkok in 2007.

96


1 1 0

-

Graduate Manager

1

FIRST YEAR

0

West Texas A&M University

2

2010

A

L

L

The 2010-11 Marquette men’s basketball campaign will mark the first at the University for Blair Broadhurst , who will serve as a graduate manager with the program.

E

T

B

A 2010 graduate of West Texas A&M University with a bachelor’s degree in sports and exercise science, Broadhurst is a student in MU’s College of Professional Studies and will complete his master’s in sports leadership while in Milwaukee.

B

A

S

K

Broadhurst’s duties include assisting with the team’s video needs, coordinating the student manager staff, gameday setup and management and helping with the day-to-day operations of the program.

M

A

R

Q

U

E

T

T

E

A native of Amarillo, Texas, Broadhurst graduated from Randall High School in 2006. He was a varsity letterwinner in football and basketball in the prep ranks. He has worked as an instructor on the summer camp circuit, making stops at Marquette, Oklahoma State and Texas Tech.

97


ROBERT A.

WILD S.J.

R

obert A. Wild, S.J., is the 22nd president of Marquette University. He began his duties as chief executive on June 17, 1996. Father Wild is building on Marquette's core strengths: an academically rigorous, values-centered curriculum; solid, practical preparation for work in a world of increasing complexity and diversity; formation for life of students as ethical and informed leaders in their religious, cultural, professional and civic communities; and graduating women and men who will dedicate their lives to the service of others. Under his leadership, the university in 2000 embraced a statement of shared vision for the future:

"Our vision is to provide a Catholic, Jesuit education that is genuinely transformational so that our students graduate not simply better educated but better people, and to do so with such excellence that when asked to name the three or four best Catholic universities in America, people will include Marquette as a matter of course." Marquette has established clear, measurable goals and specific strategies to achieve this long-term vision. Under Father Wild's leadership, the university has improved academic quality, increased and stabilized enrollment and enhanced partnerships with the City of Milwaukee and community groups. In 2005 Marquette completed the most successful comprehensive campaign in the history of the university raising a total of $357 million. Marquette is committed to updating academic facilities for students in the 21st century: a new School of Dentistry opened in 2002, the John P. Raynor, S.J., Library was dedicated in 2003, and the Al McGuire Center, a practice facility for student-athletes, opened in 2004. Father Wild and his Marquette colleagues remain committed to providing students with a Catholic, Jesuit education in an atmosphere of care and faith.

98

Immediately prior to assuming the Marquette presidency, from 1992 to 1996 Father Wild served as president of the Weston Jesuit School of Theology in Cambridge, Mass., a graduate school which trains clergy and laity for leadership roles in the Catholic Church. From 1985 to 1991 he served as provincial superior of the Chicago Province of the Society of Jesus, directing the activities of Jesuits in northern Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky and southwestern Ohio. A biblical scholar and author of two books and numerous scholarly articles, Father Wild taught theology at Marquette from 1975 to 1984. He has been a member of the university's Board of Trustees since 1990. Father Wild is a native of Chicago. He holds a doctoral degree in New Testament and Christian origins from Harvard University, a master's degree in classical languages, a bachelor's degree in Latin from Loyola University Chicago, and a licentiate in theology from the Jesuit School of Theology in Chicago. He has held visiting professorships at Loyola University Chicago and the Pontifical Biblical Institute in Rome. Father Wild began his teaching career at St. Xavier High School in Cincinnati, where he taught Latin, Greek and speech and debate from 1964 to 1967. He entered the Society of Jesus in 1957 and was ordained to the priesthood in 1970. Father Wild is a member of the boards of the University of Detroit Mercy, Saint Joseph's University, the Association of Jesuit Colleges and Universities, the Big East Conference, the Wisconsin Association of Independent Colleges and Universities (past board chair), the Greater Milwaukee Committee and the Metropolitan Milwaukee Association of Commerce.


1 1 0 1 0 2 L L A B T

MARQUETTE University

E

a board member of Critical Studies in Mass Communication and Journalism Monographs. He edited the quarterly journal of the American Journalism Historians Association from 1989 to 1993. Pauly has also held several offices within the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication, most recently on its research committee. While at Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Pauly was a fellow at the Center for Twentieth Century Studies at UWM and a recipient of a National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowship for College Teachers. In 2002 and 2006, the Student Government Association at Saint Louis honored him for excellence in teaching. In addition to his teaching and scholarship, Pauly has served as a writing skills consultant to private businesses, a technical writer and editor for the Construction Engineering Research Laboratory of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers in Champaign, and a drama reviewer for The Courier in Urbana.

K

media, the theory and practice of literary journalism, and cultural approaches to communication research. He has worked previously at East Carolina University in Greenville, North Carolina (1978-79); Fordham University in New York City (197981); the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee (1981-86); the University of Tulsa in Oklahoma (1986-93); and Saint Louis University in Missouri (1993-2006). He served as chair of the communication department at Saint Louis for nine years, and held a secondary appointment as professor of American Studies for five years. Pauly received a bachelor of science in journalism with honors in 1972, a master of science in journalism in 1974, and a Ph.D. in communication in 1979, all from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Pauly has published more than 80 scholarly journal articles, book chapters, reviews and essays, and made numerous presentations in his fields of interest to both academic and professional organizations. He is a member of the editorial board of Journalism: Theory, Practice and Criticism and was formerly

B

A

Dr. John J. Pauly, is the provost of Marquette University. Reporting to the president, Dr. Pauly is responsible for academic affairs and institutional planning. As Provost he provides intellectual vision and leadership for the 10 academic deans and the dean of libraries. Prior to assuming the role of provost, Dr. Pauly was the dean of the J. William and Mary Diederich College of Communication from 2006 to 2008. Pauly specializes in the history and sociology of the mass

PAULY PROVOST

S

DR. JOHN J.

KLIEBHAN SR. VICE PRESIDENT

A

R

Q

U

E

T

T

absolutely vital to Marquette University’s success – whatever position they might hold and however far from daily contact with students it might be. Marquette University and the work it does with all of its publics is a vocation, not a job…'technical' competence is simply not enough by itself – competence coupled with sincere involvement in this institution is what we should expect and insist on.” Kliebhan and his wife Linda, Physical Therapy '74, bring a similar passion to volunteer activities. As a couple, they served as president of their daughters' high school parents association at Divine Savior/Holy Angels and Greg remains very involved in his own high school -- Marmion Academy -- where he gave the commencement address in 2004 and was awarded their highest alumni award. He coached basketball for eight years at Sts. Cecilia & James in Mequon and also high school AAU basketball for many years. In addition to his role as Marquette's corporate vice president, Kliebhan has served on the boards of a number of community organizations. He is a member of the St. Ignatius Legacy Society, Marquette's 1881 Society, and Alpha Sigma Nu.

M

Greg Kliebhan is the senior vice president of Marquette University, assuming that role in 2002. Reporting to the president, Kliebhan is responsible for top university support functions, which include these divisions: Administration, Finance, General Counsel, Intercollegiate Athletics, Marketing and Communication, Ombudsperson, Public Affairs, Student Affairs and University Advancement. Kliebhan has strong Marquette University legacy roots and a deep family allegiance. His father, wife Linda, daughters Kelly and Katy, brother, sister and brother-in-law are all Marquette alumni.

Kliebhan, himself, is a product of a Marquette education, having earned his undergraduate degree in 1973 from the College of Liberal Arts (now Arts and Sciences). He went on to earn his masters of business administration at the University of Illinois at Urbana — Champaign. He was very pleased to return to Marquette in 1976 to join the university's administrative team as a management analyst. Since that time, Kliebhan has assumed increasing responsibility for university administration, finance and planning, and has held more than a dozen positions including key strategic positions such as budget director, director of budget and institutional research, vice president for planning, vice president for administration, interim vice president for university advancement, corporate secretary, corporate treasurer and now senior vice president and corporate vice president. Passion for Marquette University and putting students first have characterized Kliebhan’s career at Marquette. His personal philosophy reads in part: "Together, we need to convince all of our staff that their work for students is noble, enriching, and

E

GREGORY

99


UNIVERSITY UNIVERSITY

LEADERSHIP COUNCIL

RANA H. ALTENBURG Vice President for Public Affairs

CYNTHIA M. BAUER Vice President and General Counsel

DR. LORI BERGEN Dean of the J. William and Mary Diederich College of Communication

DR. ROBERT H. BISHOP Dean of the College of Engineering

ROBY BLUST Dean of Undergraduate Admissions

DR. MARGARET FAUT CALLAHAN Dean of the College of Nursing

STEVE COTTINGHAM Athletic Director

DR. WILLIAM CULLINAN Dean of the College of Health Sciences

DR. ROBERT J. DEAHL Dean of the College of Professional Studies

TRICIA GERAGHTY V.P. for Marketing and Communication

DR. WILLIAM A. HENK Dean of the College of Education

DR. JEANNE HOSSENLOPP Vice Provost for Research and Dean of the Graduate School

JOSEPH D. KEARNEY Dean of the Law School

GREGORY KLIEBHAN Senior Vice President

JOHN C. LAMB Vice President for Finance

DR. WILLIAM K. LOBB Dean of the School of Dentistry

DR. GARY MEYER Vice Provost for Undergraduate Programs and Teaching

DR. L. CHRISTOPHER MILLER ANNE O’BRIEN Vice President for Associate Senior Vice Student Affairs President

DR. JOHN J. PAULY Provost

DR. THOMAS J. PETERS Associate Senior Vice President

REV. PHILIP J. ROSSI, S.J. Interim Dean of the Helen Way Klingler College of Arts and Sciences

STEPHANIE RUSSELL Vice President for the Office of Mission and Ministry

DR. LINDASALCHENBERGER Dean of College of Bus. Admin. & Graduate School of Management

ARTHUR F. SCHEUBER Vice President for Administration

100

The University Leadership Council represents all academic and administrative units of Marquette. It also serves as an advisory board for President Robert A. Wild, S.J.

DR. JEFFREY T. SNELL Special Advisor to the President

JULIE TOLAN Vice President for University Advancement

JANICE S. WELBURN Dean of University Libraries


Gail Gleason Collins, College of Journalism 1967 Editorial page editor, The New York Times

1 1 0 1 E

Glenn “Doc” Rivers (‘85), head coach of the Boston Celtics, with ESPN’s Stuart Scott in 2008 after Rivers led the Celtics to their 17th NBA championship.

K

Colleen C. Campbell, Helen W. Klingler College of Arts & Sciences 1996 Fellow, Ethics and Public Policy Center, Washington, D.C. Author, The New Faithful: Why Young Adults are Embracing Christian Orthodoxy

Marianne Szymanski, Helen W. Klingler College of Arts & Sciences 1989 Founder and President, Toy Tips Inc. Publisher of Toy Tips.com and Kid Tips Magazine

S

Richard Burton, Graduate School 1991 Commissioner, Australian National Basketball League (NBL)

0

John J. Stollenwerk, College of Speech 1961, Graduate School 1966 Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Allen-Edmonds Shoe Corp.

2

Richard A. Burke, College of Business Administration 1956 Co-founder and Chairman, Trek Corp.

L

Steve Rushin, College of Journalism 1988 Columnist, Sports Illustrated

L

Joy T. Bennett Kinnon, College of Journalism 1979 Senior Editor, Ebony

A

Glenn “Doc” Rivers, Helen W. Klingler College of Arts & Sciences 1985 Head Coach, Boston Celtics

B

Kathleen M. Quinn Abernathy, College of Speech 1982 Former Commissioner, Federal Communications Commission

T

MARQUETTE ALUMNI

A

PROMINENT

MARQUETTE University

ALUMNI

B

Steven J. Douglass, College of Business Administration 1971 Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer, Payless Shoesource

T

E

Margaret A. Drain, Helen Way Klingler College of Arts and Sciences 1967 Vice President of National Programming, WGBH Boston

E

T

Dr. Leona Patt Franciosi, Graduate School 1996 President, World Federation for Mental Health

R

Q

U

Kathleen Hall Jamieson, College of Speech 1967 Professor of Communication and Director, Annenberg Public Policy Center University of Pennsylvania

M

A

Jeffrey Joerres, College of Business Administration 1983 Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer, Manpower Felicia Mabuza-Suttle, College of Journalism 1977, Graduate School 1978 Former host, The Felicia Show, South Africa television (12 years) Rep. Gwendolynne S. Moore, Helen Way Klingler College of Arts and Sciences 1978 U.S. Congresswoman

101


UNIVERSITY STEVE

COTTINGHAM ATHLETICS DIRECTOR

A

member of the Marquette University family for 15 years, Steve Cottingham has played an intricate role in the development of the Intercollegiate Athletics program at the University. Cottingham was named Director of Athletics on Feb. 21, 2008 after serving as the department's interim director since January 2007. As Director of Athletics, Cottingham oversees Marquette’s 14 intercollegiate sports and coaching staffs. He also supervises the management of the Intercollegiate Athletics team that handles the administrative functions of the department including fiscal operations, media relations, facilities, fundraising, ticket sales and marketing. He is also a member of the University Leadership Council. During his tenure with the Golden Eagles, he has negotiated contracts of the MU coaching staff and helped complete the current deal with the Bradley Center (home of Marquette men’s basketball). Cottingham’s efforts in the University’s move to the BIG EAST Conference were vital and helped elevate the program’s profile on a national level. He is also a member of the Athletic Board. The mission of the Department of Intercollegiate Athletics is to strive for excellence in academics, athletics, leadership and service to others in the Jesuit tradition. Marquette student-athletes, teams and coaches across the broad spectrum of the program continue to achieve academic, athletic, personal and professional prominence at the conference, regional and national levels. “We are very proud of the way our coaches and student-athletes represent Marquette,” Cottingham said. “Marquette hopes its students and alumni will ‘Be the Difference’ in their communities and the world. Our student-athletes do that every day as students, competitors and leaders for others.” Previously, Cottingham served as Associate Senior Vice President. In that role, Cottingham was part of the University’s administrative leadership team. He joined the Senior Vice President’s office in 2003, after working the previous eight years as associate general counsel. Cottingham joined the University’s Office of the General Counsel in July 1995. Previously he was in private practice, specializing in corporate transactions, including the buying and selling of businesses, and securities law. He earned his undergraduate degree at UW-Madison in 1983 and received his law degree from George Washington University in 1987. A resident of Mequon, Cottingham and his wife, Lisa, have one daughter (Taira, 12).

102


1 1 0

-

ATHLETICS ADMINISTRATION

Associate A.D. Academic Support & Student Programs

L

TOM FORD

Senior Associate A.D. Internal Operations/SWA

L

SARAH BOBERT

Deputy Athletic Director

R

Q

U

E

T

T

E

B

A

S

K

E

T

Tom Ford is in his 21st year on the Marquette athletics staff and he oversees the academic support center (also known as "The Eagles Nest”) at the Al McGuire Center. The academic support center offers programs designed to meet the academic needs of studentathletes, including an extensive freshmen orientation program, academic advising, tutoring, writing assistance, organized study sessions, computer lab and the design and implementation of individual study plans. Prior to coming to Marquette, Ford served as an advisor/mentor at Wis.-Parkside. From 1982-87, he was the assistant director for the Educational Opportunity Program at the New Jersey Institute of Technology. Ford graduated from Wis.-Parkside with a bachelor’s degree in English in 1972 and received his Master's in Education in Guidance and Counseling from Carthage College in 1999. Ford and his wife, Susan, have two children, Jesse (2009 Marquette graduate) and Casey (currently attending MU).

A

Sarah Bobert is in her 11th year on the Marquette athletics staff and oversees the internal operations of the Athletic Department. In her position supervising internal operations, she is responsible for budget development and management, financial processing and reporting, oversight of facility management, all departmental human resources elements and other internal matters. She also oversees sports medicine, academic services and strength and conditioning. Bobert’s duties as related to serving as SWA include managing gender equity compliance, studentathlete welfare and working with the Student-Athlete Advisory Council. She is also a member of the NCAA Division I Awards, Benefits, Expenses and Financial Aid Cabinet and will serve as the group’s chair beginning in September of 2010. Bobert is also the sport administrator for women's basketball and men’s and women’s soccer. Prior to joining the staff in October of 2000, Bobert worked at the NCAA. She served the NCAA since 1989 in a number of business related areas including acting as the Business Services Manager, Accounting Manager, and Senior Accountant. Bobert earned her bachelor’s degree in business administration from Wis.-Stout in 1989. She and her husband, Clark, have two children, Bailee and Cody.

M

Mike Broeker is in his seventh year at Marquette at Marquette University. In his capacity, Broeker oversees marketing, media relations, licensing and merchandising (Spirit Shop), Nelligan Sports Marketing and ticket operations. He is the Chief Operating Officer responsible for management of Marquette's 14-sports NCAA Division I intercollegiate athletics program, and serves as sport administrator for men’s basketball. Broeker joined the Marquette Athletics staff in November 2003 as Assistant Athletic Director for Media Relations, after nearly four years as a member of the basketball communications group at the NBA. While at the NBA, he worked to generate awareness and publicity for the league, its executive staff, events and initiatives and served as the primary contact for local and national electronic media outlets. Prior to working with the NBA, Broeker spent two years working in the communications group for the Women's Tennis Association (WTA). He served as a primary on-site media contact for events including Wimbledon, the Australian Open, the U.S. Open, and the French Open. A graduate of Siena College, Broeker earned a bachelor of arts in English in 1997, and is on-schedule to earn his masters in leadership studies from Marquette in May 2011. Broeker got his start in college athletics working as a Marketing/Sports Information Assistant at his alma mater until 1998. Broeker and his wife, Anne, have three sons, Michael born in 2006, Daniel born in 2008, and Charlie born in 2010.

B

A

MIKE BROEKER

2

0

1

INTERCOLLEGIATE

103


ADMINISTRATIO INTERCOLLEGIATE

ATHLETICS ADMINISTRATION

DANIELLE JOSSETI

PAUL McINERNY, Ph.D.

JIM NASIOPULOS

Associate A.D./ Compliance

Associate A.D./ Engagement & External Affairs

Associate A.D. Facilities & Event Management

Danielle Josetti is in her ninth year on the Marquette athletics staff and oversees Marquette’s studentathletes, athletics staff and boosters to ensure they follow NCAA guidelines. In her role with the Golden Eagles, she also serves as the sport administrator for the volleyball program and has served on several BIG EAST Conference committees during her tenure. She serves as an NCAA Peer Reviewer for Athletic Certification and is also a member of the National Association of Collegiate Women Athletic Administrators and National Association for Athletics Compliance. Prior to Marquette, Josetti worked at her alma mater, Creighton University, as a Compliance Coordinator and External Operations Assistant. From 1997 until 2001, she served a dual role as assistant softball coach and assistant compliance coordinator. A member of the Creighton softball team from 19951997, Josetti was a 1995 Academic All-Conference Team Honorable Mention selection. She still ranks among the program’s top-10 career leaders in sacrifice hits and stolen bases and topped the roster in sacrifice hits in 1995 and 1996. She also owns a spot in the single-season stolen bases category. Josetti earned a bachelor of arts in journalism from Creighton in 1997. Josetti resides in New Berlin, Wis. with her husband, Jake, and daughters Payton and Lauren. 104

Paul McInerny serves as Associate Athletic Director for Engagement & External Affairs at Marquette University. McInerny is responsible for athletic alumni relations, planned giving initiatives, and assists with major gift solicitation and endowment strategies. He joined the department in March 2005 from Dominican High School, where he served as president since1995. An alumnus of MU, McInerny earned two degrees from the University, a bachelor of arts in 1972 and a Ph.D. in education in 1989. He also holds a master’s in journalism from Southern Illinois University. He returned to Marquette in 1976 as an administrator serving in several capacities before his tenure at Dominican. As an undergraduate, McInerny was a member of Marquette’s soccer team and also earned membership in Phi Gamma Mu, the national social studies academic honor society. He served on the M Club board of directors from 1985 to 2005 including serving as its representative to the Marquette University Alumni Association national board. In 1996, he was awarded the Hy Popuch Award for service to Marquette athletics. He helps coordinate a master’s in leadership studies sports specialization in the College of Professional Studies and serves on its faculty. He has served as an adjunct faculty member in two other colleges and has published in several academic journals. He and his wife Carol, also a Marquette graduate, have two children, Colleen, a Marquette student, and Kevin who attends Catholic Memorial High School.

Jim Nasiopulos is in his 29th year at Marquette and 18th in charge of facilities and events. Prior to his current position, Nasiopulos served as Director of the Helfaer Recreation Center and Tennis Stadium from 1982 to 1993. Nasiopulos was the Tournament Manager for the NCAA Basketball Tournament First and Second Rounds at the Bradley Center in 1999, 2004 and 2010. He also served as Tournament Manager when Marquette played host to the 2002 NCAA Women’s Basketball Mideast Regional at the U.S. Cellular Arena. Nasiopulos was the golf coach at Marquette from 1986-1992. Nasiopulos received his bachelor’s degree in physical education from Illinois-Chicago in 1969, and earned his master’s degree in physical education in 1972 from the University of Illinois. Nasiopulos and his wife, Phyllis, have two children, Kristen, a 1997 Marquette graduate and Michael, a 2000 Marquette graduate.


1 1 0 1 0 2 L L A B T

MARQUETTE University

E K S A B E T

Mark Wright joined Marquette in May of 2009 and serves as the Managing Director of Development, Athletics. In this role he leads fundraising efforts for the athletics department. Before Marquette, Wright served as the Associate Athletic Director for Development at Saint Louis University for almost four years, where he helped lead the capital campaign to build Chaifetz Arena, a new $81 million on-campus athletic complex. As a member of the senior management team, he also supervised the baseball and softball programs. Wright was the Director of Development at The Ohio State University for three years before joining the Billikens. He was responsible for major donor identification, cultivation, solicitation and stewardship of six-figure gifts for the athletic endowment and several capital projects. Before his tenure at OSU, he was the Associate Director of the National Commodore Club, the fundraising arm for Vanderbilt University Athletics, from 1999-2002. Wright attended Mercer University where he was a baseball student-athlete and graduated with a bachelor's in business administration in 1992. He earned his master's in the same field in 1994 while serving as the Bears' pitching coach. Wright and his wife, Erin, have one daughter, Marin (3).

T

Scott Kuykendall, Associate Athletic Director for Media Relations, is in his fourth season at Marquette. Kuykendall oversees the publicity efforts for each of the athletic department’s 14 NCAA Division I programs, while serving as the primary contact for men’s basketball and men’s tennis teams. He also serves as the sport administrator for the men’s and women’s tennis teams. A native of New Berlin, Wis., Kuykendall spent two years as an assistant sports information director at the University of South Florida. While in Tampa, he worked as the men’s basketball contact while also supervising the athletic departments official web site. Prior to USF, he spent six years at Western Michigan University. His duties included serving as the primary contact for seven sports, including men’s basketball and men’s and women’s soccer. A 1997 graduate of the University of WisconsinPlatteville, Kuykendall also completed one-year internships at the University of Cincinnati and Mississippi State University.

E

Senior Director of Development/Athletics

U

MARK WRIGHT

Associate A.D./ Media Relations

Q

SCOTT KUYKENDALL

R

ATHLETICS ADMINISTRATION

A

INTERCOLLEGIATE

M

ON

105


SCORING ALL-TIME

SCORING LEADERS G

FG-FGA

3FG-A

FT-A

Pts.

Avg.

31 29 35 35 130

138-312 154-369 198-434 236-534 726-1649

13-46 30-96 35-115 86-216 164-473

54-72 88-129 92-131 135-183 369-515

343 426 523 693 1985

11.1 14.7 14.9 19.9 15.3

34 35 35 34 138

83-194 158-333 204-435 222-514 667-1476

10-48 41-91 53-148 65-186 169-473

48-72 92-119 109-133 107-127 356-451

224 449 570 616 1859

6.6 12.8 16.3 18.1 13.5

29 29 29 87

200-400 252-507 206-443 658-1350

123-187 160-247 174-240 457-674

523 664 586 1773

18.0 22.9 20.2 20.4

31 34 35 29 129

174-404 171-445 159-399 122-288 626-1536

84-131 114-175 89-134 41-89 328-529

473 506 452 318 1749

15.3 14.9 12.9 11.0 13.6

26 29 32 28 115

85-188 160-354 239-501 182-360 666-1403

45-56 77-98 150-172 131-149 403-475

215 397 628 495 1735

8.3 13.7 19.6 17.7 15.1

33 33 31 23 120

77-179 124-313 179-424 131-312 511-1228

51-67 74-91 136-154 124-148 385-460

262 391 584 454 1691

7.9 11.8 18.8 19.7 14.1

1. JEREL MCNEAL 2005-06 2006-07 2007-08 2008-09 TOTALS

2. LAZAR HAYWARD 2006-07 2007-08 2008-09 2009-10 TOTALS

3. GEORGE THOMPSON 1966-67 1967-68 1968-69 TOTALS

4. DOMINIC JAMES 2005-06 2006-07 2007-08 2008-09 TOTALS

41-136 50-184 45-145 33-116 169-581

5. BUTCH LEE 1974-75 1975-76 1976-77 1977-78 TOTALS

6. TRAVIS DIENER 2001-02 2002-03 2003-04 2004-05 TOTALS 106

57-129 69-190 90-200 68-168 284-687


86-161 136-260 153-275 240-485 615-1181

1-3 7-19 8-12 36-87 52-121

61-81 88-119 84-115 173-202 406-517

234 367 398 689 1688

8.1 13.1 14.2 23.8 14.8

23 34 35 35 127

65-163 133-304 121-279 193-406 512-1152

14-32 23-80 31-67 42-114 100-293

63-80 141-183 132-167 213-257 549-687

207 430 395 641 1673

9.0 12.6 11.3 18.3 13.2

31 27 29 32 119

167-312 174-359 141-333 192-379 674-1383

44-61 93-135 63-85 115-153 315-434

378 441 345 499 1663

12.2 16.3 11.9 15.6 14.0

M

A

R

Q

U

E

T

T

E

B

A

10. BO ELLIS 1973-74 1974-75 1975-76 1976-77 TOTALS

1 S

K

E

T

9. WESLEY MATTHEWS 2005-06 2006-07 2007-08 2008-09 TOTALS

1 B

1986-87 1987-88 1988-89 1989-90 TOTALS

-

29 28 28 29 114

8. TONY SMITH

0

10.3 12.3 16.6 18.8 14.4

1

319 345 482 544 1690

0

55-71 73-88 94-120 129-154 351-433

2

46-157 36-101 50-125 65-170 197-553

L

109-306 118-311 169-380 175-433 571-1430

L

31 28 29 29 117

PROGRAM History

1997-98 1998-99 1999-00 2000-01 TOTALS

A

7. BRIAN WARDLE

107


108


8 26 26 19 79

3.6 6.5 8.6 7.5 6.6

8. TREVOR POWELL

34 35 35 34 138

124 228 302 256 910

1987-88 1988-89 1989-90 1990-91 TOTALS

27 28 29 28 112

0 1 9 0 0 2 K

5. LAZAR HAYWARD 2006-07 2007-08 2008-09 2009-10 TOTALS

L

4.4 11.7 11.4 6.9 9.7

1963-64 1964-65 1965-66 1966-67 TOTALS

L

35 305 297 131 768

7. PAUL CARBINS 10.2 12.8 13.6 12.3

PROGRAM History

225 372 341 938

10.2 10.5 9.0 9.9

A

22 29 25 76

264 273 234 771

E

1957-58 1958-59 1959-60 TOTALS

26 26 26 78

B

4. WALT MANGHAM

1963-64 1964-65 1965-66 TOTALS

T

10.3 14.7 13.1 12.7

161 175 225 204 765

6.0 6.3 7.8 7.3 6.8

182 349 222 753

7.6 14.0 10.1 10.6

165 159 155 260 739

5.7 5.7 5.7 7.9 6.39

S

8.5 10.5 9.3 8.3 9.1

6. TOM FLYNN 268 396 314 978

A

1973-74 1974-75 1975-76 1976-77 TOTALS

26 27 24 77

B

264 284 271 266 1085

2. BO ELLIS

1953-54 1954-55 1955-56 TOTALS

9. JOHN GLASER 1955-56 1956-57 1957-58 TOTALS

24 25 22 71

E

31 27 29 32 119

3. TERRY RAND

T

13.0 15.4 17.1 15.1

T

376 384 462 1222

E

1958-59 1959-60 1960-61 TOTALS

U

29 25 27 81

1. DON KOJIS

10. DAMON KEY 1990-91 1991-92 1992-93 1993-94 TOTALS

29 28 27 33 117

Q

Avg.

R

Reb.

A

G

REBOUNDING LEADERS

M

ALL-TIME

109


ALL-TIME

110

ASSIST LEADERS

1. 956

Tony Miller

1991-95

2. 632

Dominic James

2005-09

3. 617

Travis Diener

2001-05

4. 550

Aaron Hutchins

1994-98

5. 480

Lloyd Walton

1973-76

6. 469

Tony Smith

1986-90

7. 455

Jerel McNeal

2005-09

8. 430

Cordell Henry

1998-02

9. 409

Glenn Rivers

1980-83

10. 408

Michael Sims

1984-88


1 1 0 1 0 2 L L A

PROGRAM History Jerel McNeal

2005-09

2. 272

Michael Wilson

1978-82

3. 253

Mandy Johnson

1981-85

4. 238

Dominic James

2005-09

5. 203

Glenn Rivers

1980-83

6. 190

Tony Smith

1986-90

7. 188

Michael Sims

1984-88

8. 185

Tony Miller

1991-95

9. 165

Aaron Hutchins

1994-98

10. 158 158 158

Lazar Hayward Travis Diener Kerry Trotter

2006-10 2001-05 1982-86

A

R

Q

U

E

T

T

E

B

A

S

1. 287

K

E

T

B

STEAL LEADERS

M

ALL-TIME

111


ALL-TIME

MARQUETTE LETTERWINNERS

A________________________ Craig Aamot - 1992, 93 Faisal Abraham - 1994, 95, 96, 97 Maurice Acker - 2008, 09, 10 Glenn Adams - 1938, 39, 40 Vic Aiello - 1946 Steven Algeo - 1926, 27 Ryan Amoroso - 2005, 06 Ralph Amsden - 1938, 39, 40 Dan Anderson - 1965, 66, 67 William Anderson - 1928, 29 LeRoy Andrews - 1929, 30, 31 Mark Anglavar - 1988, 89, 90, 91 Fred Arsulich - 1947 Al Avant - 1956 B________________________ Richard Bader - 1926 Sylvester Bado - 1952 Jim Bailey - 1967, 68 Tyrone Baldwin - 1989, 90 Odell Ball - 1978, 79 Mike Bargen - 1996, 97, 98, 99 Cedric Barnett - 1950, 51 Brian Barone - 2000, 01 Ousmane Barro - 2005, 06, 07, 08 Peter Basarich - 1951, 52, 53 Wayland Becker - 1934, 35 George Belhumeur - 1938, 39 Brandon Bell - 2004 Marvin Bell - 1934, 35 Pat Below - 1961 Gerald Benka - 1945 Jim Benka - 1956, 57, 58 Eugene Berce - 1947, 48 Niv Berkowitz - 2005 Bob Black - 1969, 70, 71 Lawrence Blackledge, 2007, 08 Odartey Blankson - 2001, 02 James Blask - 1933, 34, 35 William Blommer - 1932, 33, 34 Raymond Bonning - 1921 David Boone - 1986, 87 Lee Borowski - 1961, 62, 63 Andrew Boylan - 1932, 33 Jim Boylan - 1977, 78 Karon Bradley - 2003, 04 Charles Brakes - 1991 Sean Brannon - 1982 Harvey Brechtl - 1946 Marvin Bredow - 1931, 32 Gary Brell - 1970, 71 Barry Brennan - 1973, 74, 75, 76 Tommy Brice, 2007, 08 Burton Bril - 1942, 43 Joseph Brock - 1929, 30 Gene Bromstead - 1969 Frank Bruce - 1934 112

Tillman Bruett - 1934 Brian Brunkhorst - 1965, 66, 67, 68 John Bryant - 1974 Randy Buchmann - 1973, 74, 75 Walter Budrunas - 1931, 32 Erwin Buettner - 1944 Don Bugalski - 1954, 55, 56 Larry Bugge - 1929, 30, 31 Raymond Buivid - 1936 Dwight Burke - 2006, 07, 08, 09 Jack Burke - 1968, 69, 70 James Burke - 1967, 68 Robert Burns - 1921 Dave Burton - 1964, 65 Jimmy Butler, 2009, 10 Craig Butrym - 1973, 75, 76, 77 Roger Buxton - 1964, 65, 66 Dwight Buycks - 2010 Robert Byrd - 1977, 78, 79, 80 Charles Byrnes - 1921, 22

C__________________________ Junior Cadougan - 2010 Albert Cafone - 1937, 38, 39 Rubin Cain - 1921 Rocke Calvelli - 1963, 64, 65 Rick Campbell - 1973, 74, 75 Anthony Candelino - 1988, 89 Tom Canti - 1929 Paul Carbins - 1965, 66, 67 A.J. Cardinal - 1922 Dennis Carroll - 1955, 56, 57 Ed Carter - 1959, 60, 61 Cory Casterton - 1933, 34, 35, 36 William Chandler - 1942, 43, 44, 45 Joe Chapman - 2003, 04, 05, 06 Jim Chermak - 1967 Scott Christopherson - 2008 Bob Chmielewski - 1961, 62, 63 Jim Chones - 1971, 72 Carlton Christian - 2004 Andy Chuchvara - 1961 Harold Clancy - 1928 Donald Clark - 1945 D.V. Clark - 1945 Eugene Clark - 1945, 46, 49, 50 Greg Clausen - 1998, 1999, 2000, 01 Odin Clemenson - 1928 John Cliff - 1997, 98, 99, 2000 Ric Cobb - 1969, 70 George Collentine - 1939, 40 Richard Collentine - 1941, 42, 43 Jim Cook - 1968 Arthur Cook - 1921 Tom Copa - 1984, 85, 86, 87 Robert Corbett - 1929 Wendel Corwin - 1933, 34 Jeff Couch - 1987

Chris Crawford - 1994, 95, 96, 97 Mario Crivello - 1960, 61, 62 Thomas Cronin - 1920 William Crowley - 1919 David Cubillan, 2007, 08, 09, 10 Dave Culver - 1962, 63 Mike Curran - 1966, 67, 68, 69 William Curran - 1925, 26, 27, 28 Ron Curry - 1991, 92, 93 Pat Cusak - 1950, 51

D___________________________ Ed Daniels - 1973, 74 Michael Davis - 1985, 86 Tony Davis - 1978, 79, 80, 81 James Dean - 1948 Al Delmore - 1918, 19 Dave Delsman - 1973, 74, 75 Robert Demoling - 1925, 26, 27 Robert Deneen - 1938, 39, 40 Jack Detinger - 1942 Hubert Devine - 1917, 18 Joseph Devine - 1924, 25, 26 Ron Dibelius - 1958 Bruce Dickman - 1964 Roland Diehl - 1950, 51 Travis Diener - 2002, 03, 04, 05 David Diggs - 1999, 2000, 01, 02 Laverne Dilweg - 1926 Harry Dobraska - 1943 Jay Dolezal - 1961, 62 Oliver Dostaler - 1928 John Doucette - 1945, 48, 49 Robert Doucette - 1942, 43 Malcolm Douglas - 1918 Pat Dowd - 1963, 64 William Downey - 1943, 44 Walter Downing - 1985, 86 Gerald Doyle - 1960 Jim Dudley - 1977, 78, 79 Pat Duffy - 1999 Wilfred (Dukes) Duford - 1921, 22, 23 Charles Dunn - 1952 Cornelius Dunn - 1927, 28 Joseph (Red) Dunn - 1922, 23, 24, 25

E___________________________ Norman Ebel - 1940 Raymond Eckstein - 1944, 45 Bernard Ederer- 1922, 23 Roney Eford - 1993, 94, 95, 96 Alfred Ehrig - 1935, 36, 37 Clement Eibl - 1935 Thomas Eidler - 1921 Charles Eirich - 1936, 37, 38 Curt Ekmark - 1986, 87 John Ellenson - 1987, 88 Maurice (Bo) Ellis - 1974, 75, 76, 77

Robert (Jim) Elsbury - 1948, 49, 50 Lawrence Engbring - 1945, 46, 47 Herbert Engel - 1944, 45 Dave Erickson - 1961, 62, 63 Jim Estes - 1961 John Evans - 1918 Joseph Evans - 1945

F_________________________ John Fahay - 1924, 25, 26 Gordon Falls - 1944 John Farrell - 1942, 43 Joseph Faupl - 1947, 48, 49, 50 John Fay - 1918, 19 John Fedders - 1961, 62 Art Felker - 1949, 50, 51 Tom Fetherston - 1956, 57 Mario Fiorani - 1932, 33, 34, 35 Charlie Fischer - 1983


G___________________________ Jack Gardner - 1957 William Gates - 1992, 93, 95 Anthony Gauckler - 1923 Guido Gauckler - 1924, 25,26 Walter (Swede) Gebert - 1928, 29, 30 Russell Geldmacher - 1949, 50, 51 Frank Geralts - 1940 Donald Gerkan - 1944, 45 Doug Gill - 1952, 53, 54 Raymond Gieringer - 1946 Paul Glasener - 1945, 46 Frank Glaser -1928 John Glaser - 1956, 57, 58 Ron Glaser - 1961, 62, 63 Joseph Goemans - 1927, 28 Alan Gomber - 1964 Neil Gonyo - 1929, 30, 31 Jim Goodin - 1966, 67

Mike Kakuska - 1958, 59 Gus Kalb - 1917 Howard Kallenberger - 1943, 44, 46 Carl Kaminski - 1945 Harold Kane - 1943 Edward Karst - 1921, 22 Gerald Keidel -1960, 61 Anthony Kelly - 1940 Kenneth Penny - 1935, 36 Paul Kern - 1925 James Kersten - 1958, 59, 60 Bernol Ketchum - 1940, 41 Damon Key - 1991, 92, 93, 94 Joseph King - 1930, 31, 32 Willie Kingsley - 1962, 63, 64 Mike Kinsella - 2005, 06, 07 Ernest Kivisto -1943, 46 Junius Klumb - 1923, 24, 25, 26 Roland Klumb - 1923, 24, 25 Don Kojis - 1959, 60, 61 Conrad Kolb - 1918, 19

1 1 0 1 0 2 L L

PROGRAM History

A B T E K S A B E

M_________________________ Joe Mack - 1958, 59 Edward Magnus - 1948, 49, 50 Jon Malmstrom - 1963 Douglas Mangan -1933 William Mangen - 1934 Walter Mangham - 1958, 59, 60 Dennis Manning - 1941 Donald Marek - 1949, 50, 51, 52 Edward Marek - 1918 Marc Marotta - 1981, 82, 83, 84 Dean Marquardt - 1979, 80, 81, 82 Gerald Martens - 1927 Dameon Mason - 2004, 05 Joseph Masnaghetti - 1950 Clem Massey - 1956, 57, 58 Dane Mathews - 1965 Wesley Matthews - 2006, 07, 08, 09 Jeronne Maymon - 2010 Trevor Mbakwe, 2008 Youssoupha Mbao - 2010 Frank McCabe - 1946, 47, 48, 49 Zack McCall - 1995, 96

T

K________________________________

E

Roman (Pat) Jankiewicz - 1948 John Jansky - 1952, 53, 54, 55 Robert Jaskulski - 1947, 48, 49, 50 Len Jefferson - 1961, 62 John Jimmerson - 1986 Walter Joers - 1947 Bill Johnson - 1962 Darius Johnson-Odom - 2010 Charles (Mandy) Johnson - 1982, 83, 84, 85 Dwayne Johnson - 1982, 83, 84 Greg Johnson - 1973, 74, 75 Kevin Johnson - 1986, 87 Vernjoy Johnson - 1946 Ward Johnson - 1918 Robert Jonas - 1947, 49 Abel Joseph - 1994, 95, 97, 98 Eugene Joyce - 1941

U

Fred Fischer - 1959 Dan Fitzgerald - 2006, 07, 08 Joseph Fitzgerald - 1932 William Fitzgerald - 1922, 23, 24, 25 Michael Flory - 1987, 89 Tom Flynn - 1964, 65, 66 Pat Foley - 1985, 86, 87, 88 Mike Fons - 1968 George Frazier - 1971, 72, 73 Ralph Freeman - 1926 Andy Freund - 2004 Andy Friedrich - 1972 Robert Frozena - 2008, 09, 10 Joe Fulce, 2009, 10 LeRoi Fulmer - 1947

Bronson Haase - 1964, 65 Paul Hagerty - 1959 Pete Hall - 1958 Robert Hall - 1984, 85 Holton Halverson - 1920, 21 Charles Hammer - 1939, 40, 41 Rob Hanley - 2005 Wade Harbin - 1995 William Harley - 1919 William Harrigan - 1928 Jon Harris - 1999, 2000, 01, 02 Mark Harris - 1994, 95, 96 Herbert Harrison - 1984, 85, 86, 87 Larry Hatchett - 1978, 79, 80, 81 Mike Haviland - 1957 Bruce Hayes - 1990, 91 Lazar Hayward, 2007, 08, 09, 10 Patrick Hazel - 2008, 09 Jack Heaps - 1917 John Heimsch - 1925, 26, 27 John Heisdorf - 1929 Cordell Henry - 1999, 2000, 01, 02 Edward Herte - 1927, 28 George Hesik - 1938, 39 Krunti Hester - 2000 Arthur Himmelmann - 1927 Willie Hines - 1984, 85 Simon Hochhaus - 1932, 33 Albert Hoffman - 1927 John Holmes - 1921 Marty Holmes - 1965, 66 Jerry Homan - 1973, 74, 75 Jerry Hopfensperger - 1956, 57 Bob Hornak - 1961, 62, 63 Ron Howard - 2002 Frank Hozeska - 1946 Carl Hren - 1994 Harvey Hruska - 1944 LeRoy Hughes - 1936 William Hughes - 1938, 39 Aaron Hutchins -1995, 96, 97, 98 Bob Hutchison - 1956, 57, 58 Donald Huth - 1931 John Hyde - 1935

Q

H________________________

L__________________________ Robert Lackey - 1971, 72 Guy Lam - 1970, 71, 72 Jim Langenkamp - 1967, 68 Mark Lavin - 1977 Vic Lazzaretti - 1983, 84 John Leaf - 1969 Alfred (Butch) Lee - 1975, 76, 77, 78 Oliver Lee - 1978, 79, 80, 81 Craig Leonard - 1964, 65 Holly Lepley - 1934 John Leurck - 1988, 89, 90 Gerald Liska - 1934, 35, 36 Shane Littles - 1994 Robb Logterman - 1991, 92, 93, 94 J.C. Long - 1918, 19 Herbert Lonsdorf - 1932 Jamil Lott - 2006, 07 Jarrod Lovette - 1996, 97, 98 Maurice Lucas - 1973, 74 Brad Luchini - 1966, 67, 68 Charles Luter - 1989, 90, 91

R

J______________________________ Marcus Jackson - 2004, 05 Robert Jackson - 2003 Dominic James - 2006, 07, 08, 09

T

Jim Kollar - 1958, 59, 60 Frank Komar - 1935, 36 William Komenich - 1939, 40, 41 Daniel Koster - 1939 William Kosterman - 1943 Gil Krueger - 1950, 51 Joe Krysiak - 1989, 90, 91 Raymond Kuffel - 1942, 43, 47 George Kuker - 1938, 39 Ernest Kukla - 1933, 34, 35 Craig Kuphall, 2007 James Kuppe - 1943

A

I___________________________ Raymond Illig - 1921

M

John Goodyear - 1940, 41 Adolph Gorychka - 1933, 34, 35 Bill Gosse - 1982, 83 Robert Grace - 1935 Erwin Graf - 1938, 39, 40 Frank Graff, Jr. - 1948, 49 Pete Grant - 1964 Artie Green - 1979, 80, 81 John Gresik - 1938, 39 Tony Gries - 2003, 04 Chris Grimm - 2003, 04, 05, 06 Rod Grosse - 1988, 89, 90, 91 Joseph Grove - 1944 Gary Grzesk - 1970, 71, 72 Tom Gurtler - 1957, 58

113


LETTER WINN ALL-TIME

MARQUETTE LETTERWINNERS

Bob McCarthy - 1955, 56 Thomas McCarthy - 1940, 41 Amal McCaskill - 1992, 94, 95, 96 Ralph McClone - 1948, 49, 50 Francis McCormick - 1925, 26 Richard McCormick - 1984 Vincent McCormick - 1921 James McCoy - 1957, 58, 59 William McDonald - 1939, 40 Francis McElligott - 1930, 31, 32 Mike McGonigle - 1980 Allie McGuire - 1971, 72, 73 Jim McIlvaine - 1991, 92, 93, 94 Robert McIntosh - 1943 John McKenna - 1922, 23, 24, 25 Patrick McKenzie - 1921 Charles McLaughlin - 1929 Hugh McMahon - 1969, 70, 71 LeRoy McMahon - 1936, 37, 38 John McNamara - 1931 Jerel McNeal - 2006, 07, 08, 09

Larry McNeill - 1972, 73 Terry McQuade - 1969, 70, 71 Thomas McQueen - 1931, 32 Jack Meganck - 1948 Dean Meminger - 1969, 70, 71 Kevin Menard - 2002 Scott Merritt - 2001, 02, 03, 04 Don Metz - 1954, 55, 56 Alex Meyer - 1929 Don Meyers - 1945, 46 Robert Meyers - 1944, 45, 46, 47 Bart Miller - 1997, 98, 99, 2000 Tony Miller - 1992, 93, 94, 95 Mike Mills - 1971, 72, 73 John Millunze - 1942, 46, 47 Joe Mimlitz - 1964, 65 DeMarcus Minor - 1998 Melvin Mochalski - 1945 Benny Moore - 1985, 86 Lloyd Moore - 1983 Mike Moran - 1957, 58, 59

L.C. Moran - 1921, 22, 23 Leo Moriarity - 1918, 19, 20 Raymond Morstadt - 1934, 35, 36 Ben Moser - 1929, 30, 31 John Mueller - 1998, 99, 2000, 01 Edward Mullen - 1933, 34, 35 Robert Mullen - 1938, 39 Walter Mullen - 1942, 43 LeRoy Muth - 1936 Cyril Multhauf - 1936 Clarence Mundt - 1931, 32 John (Jack) Myers - 1949, 50, 51

N_____________________________ Delbert Nachazel - 1952, 53, 54 Jack Nagle - 1939, 40 Bill Neary - 1973, 75, 76, 77 Joe Nethen - 1988, 89, 90 Abel Netzer - 1919 Paul Newman - 1983 George Nicoud - 1936 Richard Nixon - 1961, 62, 63 Oluoma Nnamaka - 1999, 2000, 01, 02 Steve Novak - 2003, 04, 05, 06 Brian Nyenhuis - 1981, 82 O_____________________________ Eugene O'Brien - 1941 Gerald O'Brien - 1952, 53 Paul O'Brien - 1931 Edward O'Byrne - 1926 James O'Connell - 1946, 47, 48 James O'Donnell - 1929, 30, 31 Pat O'keefe - 1954, 55, 56 Robert O'Keefe - 1936, 37, 38 Edward Oleniczak - 1949 Earl O'Malley - 1921 Mark O'Malley - 1919, 20, 21 Donald Orth - 1942 Mark Ostrans - 1971, 72, 73 Chris Otule, 2009, 10 James Ove - 1947, 48

P_____________________________ Tom Packee - 1963 John Padden - 1927, 28, 29 Orlando Palesse - 1946 Melvin Paterson - 1921 William Pautkee - 1944 Ulice Payne - 1976, 77, 78 Robert Paynter - 1946 Ben Peavy - 1992, 93 Melvin Peterson - 1947, 48, 49, 50 Richard Peterson - 1947, 48, 49, 50 Anthony Pieper - 1994, 95, 96, 97 Robert Pierce - 1942, 43 114

Bob Piercy - 1970 Leonard Piontek - 1947 Joel Plinska - 1959, 60, 61 Joel Pogodzinski - 1994 Michael Poja - 1941 John Polonowski - 1997, 98, 99, 2000 Charles Polzin - 1943, 44, 47 Gerald Posey - 1989 Jim Poulsen - 1962, 63, 64 Trevor Powell - 1988, 89, 90, 91 John Powers - 1951, 52 Pedro Prado - 1944, 45 Joe Price - 1964 Scott Przybyla - 1988 John Puk - 1952, 53, 54 Dick Pyzunski - 1961

Q_____________________________ Dave Quabius - 1938, 39 Richard Quinn - 1922, 23, 24, 25 James Quirk - 1927 R_____________________________ Ron Rahn - 1968, 69, 70 Francis Ramierz - 1950, 51 Terry Rand - 1954, 55, 56 James Rasmusen - 1935, 36, 37 Leo Ratchen - 1920, 21, 22 Steve Raymonds - 1972, 73 Floyd Razner - 1927, 28, 29 Terry Reason - 1982, 83, 84 James Reavley - 1940, 41 William Redmond - 1931 Tony Reeder - 1985, 86, 87, 88 Charles Regan - 1922, 23 Matthew Reich - 1940, 41 John Reider - 1968, 69 Pierce Reilley - 1918, 19, 20 M.O. Reinhart - 1923 Joel Reitinger - 1960 Ken Rice - 1986, 87 Greg Ripp - 1960 Glenn (Doc) Rivers - 1981, 82, 83 Tim Rogan - 1959 William Rogers - 1939, 40, 41 Alfred Rohlofl - 1941 Eugene Ronzani - 1932, 33, 34 Floyd Ronzani - 1932, 33 Tom Rooyakkers - 1963 Gary Rosenberger - 1975, 76, 77, 78 Robert Rosendahl - 1941, 42, 43, 46 Frank Rozga - 1941 William (Cy) Rubado - 1935, 36, 37 Al Rudolph - 1933 Clare Ruehl - 1931 William Ryan, Jr. - 1949


1 1 0 1 0 2 L L

PROGRAM History

A B T

Z_____________________________

E

Jeff Zavada - 1990, 91 Thaddeus Zimowicz - 1953 Jay Zulauf - 1991, 92, 93 Francis Zummach - 1932, 33, 34 Jack Zummach - 1928, 29, 30

B

William (Earl) Tatum - 1973, 74, 75, 76 Joe Thomas - 1968, 69, 70 Gil Thomsen - 1940 George Thompson - 1967, 68, 69 John Thranow - 1927 Bernard Toone - 1976, 77, 78, 79 Todd Townsend - 2002, 03, 04, 05 James Trad - 1948 John Traudt - 1934 James Treis - 1955 Kerry Trotter - 1983, 84, 85, 86 Terry True - 1958

Y_____________________________ Con Yagodzinski - 1964

K

T_____________________________

Ralph Wilson - 1952, 53, 54 Fred Winter - 1944 Thomas Wise - 1946 Grant Wittberger - 1951, 52 Russell Wittberger - 1952, 53, 54, 55 Michael Wittenberg - 1928 Jon Wochner - 1965 John Wold - 1944 Bob Wolf - 1965, 66, 67 John Wolf - 1989, 90 Bernard Wolfe - 1936, 37, 38 Mark Worgull - 1980 Sam Worthen - 1979, 80 Eugene Wozny - 1937 Calvin Wunsch - 1946

S

William Staffeld - 1938, 39, 40 Charles Stark - 1921 Raymond Stawicki - 1946 Bob Steber - 1966 Harry Stehling - 1926 Thomas Stemper - 1922, 23, 24 William Stemper - 1931, 32 John Stone - 1963, 64 Joseph Storto - 1939, 40 Dwaine Streater - 1993, 94, 95, 96 Walter Stumpf - 1940 Robert Sullivan - 1948, 49 Gene Suppelsa - 1957, 58, 59 George Sutter - 1939, 40 Anthony Swanke - 1935 Michael Swieciak - 1941, 47

V_____________________________

E

T

T

E

Robert Vanderhyden - 1962, 63 Ray Van Landuyt - 1951 Robert Van Vooren - 1952, 53, 54, 55 Robert Van Bereghy - 1939, 40, 41 Paul Vollmer - 1972, 73, 74, 75 Vic Vrobel - 1927, 28 William Vytiska - 1937

W____________________________

A

R

Q

U

Dwyane Wade - 2002, 03 Randy Wade - 1972 William Waite, Jr., 1948, 49 Bob Walczak - 1952, 55, 56, 57 Lloyd Walton - 1974, 75, 76 Brian Wardle - 1998, 99, 2000, 01 Jim Warras - 1964 Marcus Washington - 1972, 73, 74 Carl Weisner - 1944 Henry Weisner - 1945, 46 William Wendt - 1933 Roy Werntz - 1942, 43 Marcus West - 1997, 98 James Westerdahl - 1944 Raymond Wherry - 1937 Jerome Whitehead - 1976, 77, 78 Kenneth Wiesner - 1945, 46, 47 Erik Williams - 2010 Michael Wilson - 1979, 80, 81, 82

M

S_____________________________ Edwin Sadowski - 1947 William Saffeld - 1939, 40 Terry Sanders - 2001, 02, 03, 04 Anthony Santilli - 1950 Samuel Sauceda - 1947, 48, 49, 50 Eugene Sanders - 1921 Thomas Savage - 1931, 32, 33 Joe Scanlon - 1960, 61, 62 Adam Schabes - 1992, 93 C.C. Schad - 1923, 24, 25 Robert Schaefer - 1943 Jay Schauer - 1956 Tom Schilke - 1963 John Schimenz - 1947 Terrell Schlundt - 1980, 81, 82, 83 Eric Schnepp - 1950, 51 Roger Scholbe - 1944 Gene Schramka - 1950, 51, 52 Jerome Schudrowitz - 1941, 42, 43 Carl Schuette - 1943 William Schuette - 1930 Rueben (Rube) Schulz - 1952, 53, 54, 55 Jack Schumacker - 1928, 29 Richard Schwab - 1951, 52, 53 Franklin Schweers - 1941 Howard Scott - 1934, 35 Tom Sebastian - 1957 Elmer Seefeld - 1935, 36 Fredrick Seegar - 1934, 35, 36 Lawlor Seely - 1927 Dale Sevcik - 1952, 53, 54, 55 Jeff Sewell - 1968, 69, 70 Richard Shaw - 1995, 96, 97, 98 William Sheeley - 1921, 22 Greg Shimon - 1979, 80, 81, 82 Charles Shinner - 1937 Albert Shipley - 1930, 31, 32 John Sichterman - 1984, 85 Jared Sichting - 2003, 04 Glenn Sievers - 1951, 52, 53 Blanton Simmons - 1966, 67, 68 Michael Sims - 1985, 86, 87, 88 Erich Siverling - 1951, 52, 53 Alvin Skat - 1942, 43, 47 Billy Joe Smith - 1965, 66 Gene Smith - 1966, 67 Jim Smith - 1954, 55, 56 Leo Smith - 1933 Marcell Smith - 1921 Morley Smith - 1966 Pat Smith - 1967, 68, 69 Shannon Smith - 1992, 93 Tony Smith - 1987, 88, 89, 90 Donald Smolinski - 1981, 82, 83, 84 Frank Snyder - 1944 Paul Sokody - 1937, 38, 39 Tom Sonnenberg - 1969, 70, 71 Frank Sprafka - 1923, 24 Kurt Spychalla - 1971, 72, 73 Joe Stadden - 1932

A

NERS

115


SEASON LEADE ALL-TIME Points 1. 710 2. 693 3. 689 4. 664 5. 640 6. 628 7. 616 616 9. 586 10. 584

116

SEASON LEADERS

Dwyane Wade Jerel McNeal Tony Smith George Thompson Wesley Matthews Butch Lee Lazar Hayward Dean Meminger George Thompson Travis Diener

2002-03 2008-09 1989-90 1967-68 2008-09 1976-77 2009-10 1970-71 1968-69 2003-04

Field Goals Made 1. 252 George Thompson 2. 251 Dwyane Wade 3. 241 Earl Tatum 4. 240 Tony Smith 5. 239 Butch Lee 6. 236 Bernard Toone 236 Jerel McNeal 8. 232 Don Kojis 9. 230 Jim Chones 10. 223 Dwyane Wade

1967-68 2002-03 1975-76 1989-90 1976-77 1978-79 2008-09 1960-61 1970-71 2001-02

Scoring Average 1. 23.8 Tony Smith 2. 22.9 George Thompson 3. 22.0 Bob Wolf 4. 21.5 Dwyane Wade 5. 21.4 Don Kojis 6. 21.2 Dean Meminger 7. 20.9 Don Kojis 8. 20.5 Jim Chones 9. 20.4 Mike Moran 10. 20.3 Terry Rand

1989-90 1967-68 1965-66 2002-03 1960-61 1970-71 1959-60 1971-72 1956-57 1955-56

Field Goals Attempted 1. 536 Don Kojis 2. 534 Jerel McNeal 3. 514 Lazar Hayward 4. 507 George Thompson 5. 501 Dwyane Wade 501 Butch Lee 7. 493 Earl Tatum 8. 485 Tony Smith 9. 483 Bernard Toone 10. 481 Don Kojis

1960-61 2008-09 2009-10 1967-68 2002-03 1976-77 1975-76 1989-90 1978-79 1959-60

Field Goal Percentage (min. 230 FGA) 1. 65.5% (152-232) Terry Rand 2. 59.2% (138-233) Ron Curry 3. 57.7% (146-253) Damon Key 4. 57.4% (230-401) Jim Chones 5. 55.7% (191-343) Robert Jackson 6. 55.3% (182-329) Glenn Rivers 7. 54.1% (164-303) Ron Curry 8. 53.0% (148-279) Jimmy Butler 9. 52.8% (170-322) Jim McIlvaine 10. 52.7% (184-349) Trevor Powell

1953-54 1991-92 1991-92 1970-71 2002-03 1980-81 1992-93 2009-10 1993-94 1988-89

3-Point Field Goals Made 1. 121 Steve Novak 2. 90 Travis Diener 3. 89 Steve Novak 89 Steve Novak 5. 86 Jerel McNeal 6. 75 Robb Logterman 7. 73 Darius Johnson-Odom 73 Anthony Pieper 9. 71 Aaron Hutchins 10. 69 Travis Diener 69 Robb Logterman

2005-06 2003-04 2004-05 2003-04 2008-09 1993-94 2009-10 1994-95 1995-96 2002-03 1991-92


1 1 0 1 0 2 L L

PROGRAM History

A B T E K S

1993-94 1994-95 1991-92 1995-96 1992-93 1978-79 2003-04 2002-03 1975-76 1979-80

2008-09 2002-03 2009-10 1970-71 1969-70 1968-69 1989-90 1967-68 1976-77 1954-55

A

Assists 1. 274 2. 248 3. 221 4. 215 5. 213 6. 209 7. 187 8. 184 9. 183 10. 175

Free Throws Made 1. 213 Wesley Matthews 2. 194 Dwyane Wade 3. 187 Jimmy Butler 4. 184 Dean Meminger 5. 178 Dean Meminger 6. 174 George Thompson 7. 173 Tony Smith 8. 160 George Thompson 9. 150 Butch Lee 10. 150 Rube Schulz

B

1960-61 1959-60 1954-55 1956-57 1959-60 1955-56 1958-59 1958-59 1971-72 1964-65

E

Rebounding Average 1. 17.1 Don Kojis 2. 15.4 Don Kojis 3. 14.7 Terry Rand 4. 14.0 John Glaser 5. 13.6 Walt Mangham 6. 13.1 Terry Rand 7. 13.0 Don Kojis 8. 12.8 Walt Mangham 9. 11.9 Jim Chones 10. 11.7 Paul Carbins

2003-04 1954-55 1976-77 1992-93 1967-68 1965-66 1989-90 1995-96 2009-10 2000-01 2004-05

10. 65 65

Michael Wilson 1980-81 Mandy Johnson 1984-85 Dwyane Wade 2001-02 Glenn Rivers 1982-83 Jerel McNeal 2007-08 Jerel McNeal 2006-07 Mandy Johnson 1983-84 Jerel McNeal 2008-09 Dwyane Wade 2002-03 Glenn Rivers 1981-82 Michael Wilson 1981-82

T

Free Throw Percentage (min. 100 FTA) 1. 88.3% (136-154) Travis Diener 2. 88.1% (104-118) Bob Walczak 3. 87.2% (150-172) Butch Lee 4. 86.9% (93-107) Damon Key 5. 86.3% (107-124) Brad Luchini 6. 86.0% (86-100) Brian Brunkhorst 7. 85.6% (173-202) Tony Smith 8. 84.9% (90-106) Aaron Hutchins 9. 84.3% (107-127) Jimmy Butler 10. 83.8% (129-154) Brian Wardle 83.8% (124-148) Travis Diener

Steals 1. 89 2. 87 3. 79 4. 77 5. 76 76 7. 75 8. 71

T

1960-61 1954-55 1959-60 1958-59 1958-59 1956-57 1959-60 1970-71 1973-74 1985-86

E

Rebounds 1. 462 Don Kojis 2. 396 Terry Rand 3. 384 Don Kojis 4. 376 Don Kojis 5. 372 Walt Mangham 6. 349 John Glaser 7. 341 Walt Mangham 8. 333 Jim Chones 9. 328 Maurice Lucas 10. 319 David Boone

1993-94 1990-91 1991-92 1996-97 1992-93 1994-95 1984-85 1995-96 1995-96 1983-84

U

3-Point Field Goal Percentage (min. 75 3FGA) 1. 53.5% (53-99) Mark Anglavar 1988-89 2. 50.5% (55-109) Steve Novak 2002-03 3. 49.5% (51-103) Maurice Acker 2009-10 4. 47.4% (74-154) Darius Johnson-Odom 2009-10 47.4% (55-116) Mark Anglavar 1990-91 6. 46.9% (46-98) Tony Miller 1992-93 7. 46.7% (121-259) Steve Novak 2005-06 8. 46.1% (89-193) Steve Novak 2004-05 9. 45.1% (41-91) Lazar Hayward 2007-08 10. 45.0% (90-200) Travis Diener 2003-04

Blocked Shots 1. 142 Jim McIlvaine 2. 92 Jim McIlvaine 3. 86 Jim McIlvaine 4. 84 Faisal Abraham 5. 79 Jim McIlvaine 6. 76 Amal McCaskill 7. 63 Walter Downing 8. 58 Faisal Abraham 9. 55 Amal McCaskill 10. 47 Dwayne Johnson

Q

1969-70 2008-09 1970-71 2002-03 1967-68 2009-10 1968-69 1968-69 1958-59 1955-56

R

Free Throws Attempted 1. 279 Dean Meminger 2. 257 Wesley Matthews 3. 250 Dean Meminger 4. 249 Dwyane Wade 5. 247 George Thompson 6. 244 Jimmy Butler 7. 240 George Thompson 8. 233 Dean Meminger 9. 206 Mike Moran 10. 205 Terry Rand

2005-06 2008-09 2003-04 2003-04 1994-95 2004-05 1995-96 2002-03 1994-95 2009-10

Tony Miller Tony Miller Tony Miller Aaron Hutchins Tony Miller Sam Worthen Travis Diener Travis Diener Lloyd Walton Sam Worthen

A

3-Point Field Goals Attempted 1. 259 Steve Novak 2. 216 Jerel McNeal 3. 207 Steve Novak 4. 200 Travis Diener 5. 195 Anthony Pieper 6. 193 Steve Novak 7. 192 Aaron Hutchins 8. 190 Travis Diener 9. 187 Tony Miller 10. 186 Lazar Hayward

M

ERS

117


CARE ALL-TIME

Games Played 1. 138 2. 133 3. 130 4. 129 5. 127 127 7. 126 126 126 10. 125 Points 1. 1985 2. 1859 3. 1773 4. 1749 5. 1735 6. 1691 7. 1690 8. 1688 9. 1673 10. 1663

Lazar Hayward David Cubillan Jerel McNeal Dominic James Ousmane Barro Wesley Matthews Steve Novak Joe Chapman Scott Merritt Roney Eford Jerel McNeal Lazar Hayward George Thompson Dominic James Butch Lee Travis Diener Brian Wardle Tony Smith Wesley Matthews Bo Ellis

Scoring Average 1. 20.4 George Thompson 2. 19.7 Dwyane Wade 3. 19.0 Jim Chones 4. 18.8 Dean Meminger 5. 18.6 Don Kojis 6. 18.6 Mike Moran 7. 18.3 Bob Wolf 8. 17.0 Terry Rand 9. 16.4 Tom Flynn 10. 16.2 Ron Glaser 118

CAREER LE

Field Goals Made 1. 726 Jerel McNeal 2. 674 Bo Ellis 3. 667 Lazar Hayward 4. 666 Butch Lee 5. 656 George Thompson 6. 627 Damon Key 7. 626 Dominic James 8. 615 Tony Smith 9. 603 Don Kojis 10. 572 Dean Meminger

2005-09 1973-77 2006-10 1974-78 1966-69 1990-94 2005-09 1987-90 1958-61 1968-71

2006-10 2006-10 2005-09 2005-09 2004-08 2005-09 2002-06 2002-06 2000-04 1992-96

Field Goals Attempted 1. 1649 Jerel McNeal 2. 1535 Dominic James 3. 1476 Lazar Hayward 4. 1430 Brian Wardle 5. 1403 Butch Lee 6. 1400 Don Kojis 7. 1383 Bo Ellis 8. 1350 George Thompson 9. 1272 Tom Flynn 10. 1252 Roney Eford

2005-09 2005-09 2006-10 1997-01 1974-78 1958-61 1973-77 1966-69 1963-66 1992-96

2005-09 2006-10 1966-69 2005-09 1974-78 2001-05 1997-01 1986-90 2005-09 1973-77

Field Goal Percentage (min. 450 FGA) 1. 58.8% Ric Cobb 1968-70 2. 58.1% Ousmane Barro 2005-08 3. 55.2% Jim McIlvaine 1990-94 4. 54.8% Jerome Whitehead 1975-78 5. 54.7% Jim Chones 1970-72 6. 54.5% Amal McCaskill 1991-92, 93-96 7. 53.4% Tyrone Baldwin 1988-90 8. 53.1% Ron Curry 1990-93 9. 52.1% Trevor Powell 1987-91 10. 52.0% Tony Smith 1986-71

1966-69 2001-03 1970-72 1968-71 1958-61 1956-59 1964-67 1953-56 1963-66 1960-63

3-Point Field Goals Made 1. 354 Steve Novak 2. 284 Travis Diener 3. 244 Robb Logterman 4. 221 Aaron Hutchins 5. 216 Mark Anglavar 6. 211 Anthony Pieper 7. 197 Brian Wardle 8. 178 Tony Miller 9. 169 John Cliff 169 Dominic James

2002-06 2001-05 1990-94 1994-98 1987-91 1993-97 1997-01 1991-95 1996-00 2005-09


Assists 1. 956 2. 632 3. 617 4. 550 5. 480 6. 469 7. 455 8. 430 9. 409 10. 408

1991-95 2005-09 2001-05 1994-98 1973-76 1986-90 2005-09 1998-02 1980-83 1984-88

1972-76 1973-77 1974-78 1974-78 1975-79 2006-10 2006-10 2005-09 2005-09 2005-09 2005-09

1 1 0 T T E U Q R A

Tony Miller Dominic James Travis Diener Aaron Hutchins Lloyd Walton Tony Smith Jerel McNeal Cordell Henry Glenn Rivers Michael Sims

1

1968-71 2005-09 1966-79 1964-67 1951-55 1953-56 1951-55 2005-09 1956-59 1986-90

Earl Tatum Bo Ellis Butch Lee Gary Rosenberger Bernard Toone David Cubillan Lazar Hayward Dwight Burke Dominic James Wesley Matthews Jerel McNeal

0

Free Throws Attempted 1. 762 Dean Meminger 2. 687 Wesley Matthews 3. 674 George Thompson 4. 549 Bob Wolf 5. 532 Rube Schulz 6. 531 Terry Rand 7. 529 Russ Wittberger 529 Dominic James 9. 525 Mike Moran 10. 517 Tony Smith

Wins 1. 101 101 3. 99 99 5. 98 6. 96 96 8. 94 94 94 94

2

1958-61 1953-56 1957-60 1970-72 1972-74 1955-58 1963-66 1964-67 1985-87 1971-73

L

2005-09 1968-71 1966-69 1986-90 1974-78 1964-67 1951-55 2001-05 1990-94 1952-55

Rebounding Average 1. 15.1 Don Kojis 2. 12.7 Terry Rand 3. 12.3 Walt Mangham 4. 11.7 Jim Chones 5. 10.7 Maurice Lucas 6. 10.6 John Glaser 7. 9.9 Tom Flynn 8. 9.7 Paul Carbins 9.7 David Boone 10. 9.6 Larry McNeill

2005-09 1978-82 1981-85 2005-09 1980-83 1986-90 1984-88 1991-95 1994-98 2006-10 2001-05 1982-86

L

Free Throws Made 1. 549 Wesley Matthews 2. 493 Dean Meminger 3. 457 George Thompson 4. 406 Tony Smith 5. 403 Butch Lee 6. 393 Bob Wolf 7. 390 Rube Schulz 8. 385 Travis Diener 9. 378 Damon Key 10. 361 Russ Wittberger

Jerel McNeal Michael Wilson Mandy Johnson Dominic James Glenn Rivers Tony Smith Michael Sims Tony Miller Aaron Hutchins Lazar Hayward Travis Diener Kerry Trotter

PROGRAM History

1958-61 1973-77 1953-56 1957-60 2006-10 1963-66 1964-67 1987-91 1955-58 1990-94

A

Don Kojis Bo Ellis Terry Rand Walt Mangham Lazar Hayward Tom Flynn Paul Carbins Trevor Powell John Glaser Damon Key

Steals 1. 287 2. 272 3. 253 4. 238 5. 203 6. 190 7. 188 8. 185 9. 165 10. 158 158 158

B

Rebounds 1. 1222 2. 1085 3. 978 4. 938 5. 910 6. 771 7. 768 8. 765 9. 753 10. 739

T

3-Point Field Goal Percentage (min. 100 3FGA) 1. 46.1% Steve Novak 2002-06 2. 43.1% Mark Anglavar 1987-91 3. 42.9% Tony Smith 1986-90 4. 41.6% Maurice Acker 2007-10 5. 41.5% Mike Flory 1986-87, 88-89 6. 41.3% Travis Diener 2001-05 7. 41.0% Robb Logterman 1990-94 8. 40.5% Dan Fitzgerald 2005-08 9. 38.5% Roney Eford 1992-96 10. 38.3% David Diggs 1998-02

E

1990-94 1991-92, 93-96 1993-97 1978-82 2000-04 1984-86 2004-08 1987-91 1995-99 1983-87

K

Jim McIlvaine Amal McCaskill Faisal Abraham Michael Wilson Scott Merritt Walter Downing Ousmane Barro Trevor Powell Mike Bargen Tom Copa

S

Blocked Shots 1. 399 2. 175 3. 172 4. 119 5. 113 6. 103 7. 100 8. 93 9. 89 10. 84

E

Free Throw Percentage (min. 200 FTA) 1. 93.1% Steve Novak 2002-06 2. 84.8% Butch Lee 1974-78 3. 83.7% Travis Diener 2001-05 4. 82.6% Brian Brunkhorst 1964-68 5. 82.5% Oliver Lee 1977-81 6. 81.3% Bob Walczak 1951-52, 54-57 7. 81.1% Brad Luchini 1965-68 81.1% Brian Wardle 1997-01 9. 79.9% Robb Logterman 1990-94 79.9% Wesley Matthews 2005-09

2002-06 2001-05 1990-94 1994-98 2005-09 1993-97 1997-01 1987-91 1996-00 1991-95

M

3-Point Field Goals Attempted 1. 768 Steve Novak 2. 687 Travis Diener 3. 595 Robb Logterman 4. 592 Aaron Hutchins 5. 581 Dominic James 6. 564 Anthony Pieper 7. 553 Brian Wardle 8. 501 Mark Anglavar 9. 486 John Cliff 10. 482 Tony Miller

A

EADERS

B

EER LEADERS

119


COACHING ALL-TIME

Postseason Appearances (Record)

Period

Seasons

W-L

Ralph Risch

1916-17

1

8-3

72.7

8-3 (1916-17)

Jack Ryan

1917-20

2

13-9

59.1

9-3 (1919-20)

Frank Murray

1920-29

9

94-73

56.3

19-2 (1922-23)

Cord Lipe

1929-30

1

11-12

47.8

11-12 (1929-30)

Bill Chandler

1930-51

21

193-198

49.4

14-3 (1932-33)

Tex Winter

1951-53

2

25-25

50.0

13-11 (1952-53)

1 (3-0)

Jack Nagle

1953-58

5

69-55

55.6

24-3 (1954-55)

2 (2-2)

Eddie Hickey

1958-64

6

92-70

56.8

23-6 (1958-59)

3 (3-4)

Al McGuire

1964-77

13

295-80

78.7

28-1 (1970-71)

11 (27-10)

Hank Raymonds

1977-83

6

126-50

71.6

24-4 (1977-78)

6 (2-6)

Rick Majerus

1983-86

3

56-35

61.5

20-11 (1984-85)

3 (4-3)

Bob Dukiet

1986-89

3

39-46

45.9

16-13 (1986-87)

1 (0-1)

Kevin O’Neill

1989-94

5

86-62

58.1

24-9 (1993-94)

3 (2-3)

Mike Deane

1994-99

5

100-55

64.5

23-8 (1995-96)

4 (7-4)

Tom Crean

1999-08

9

190-96

66.4

27-6 (2002-03)

8 (7-8)

2008-pres.

2

47-22

71.4

25-10 (2008-09)

2 (1-2)

93

1444-890

61.9

TOTALS

Pct.

Best Record (Season)

Coach

Buzz Williams

120

COACHING RECORDS/HONORS

44 (58-43)


1 1 0

Coach

Honor

1955

Jack Nagle

National Jesuit College Coach of the Year

1959

Eddie Hickey

United States Basketball Writers Association Coach of theYear

1971

Al McGuire

Associated Press, United Press International, Sporting News,

0

1

Year

2

G 1979

Hank Raymonds

Medalist Sports Education Coach of the Year

1993

Kevin O’Neill

Great Midwest Conference Co-Coach of the Year

L

National Association of Basketball Coaches Coach of the Year

A

Al McGuire

B

1974

L

United States Basketball Writers Association Coach of the Year

T

Basketball Weekly Midwest Coach of the Year

E

National Association of Basketball Coaches

K

District 11 Coach of the Year Kevin O’Neill

Great Midwest Conference Coach of the Year

A

1994

S

Finalist, Associated Press National Coach of the Year

B

National Association of Basketball Coaches District 11 Co-Coach of the Year Tom Crean

Ray Meyer Conference USA Coach of the Year

E

2002

T

United States Basketball Writers Association

T

District V Coach of the Year

E

National Association of Basketball Coaches

U

District 11 Coach of the Year

R

Ray Meyer Conference USA Coach of the Year United States Basketball Writers Association

A

Tom Crean

District V Coach of the Year

M

2003

Q

Basketball Times Mideast Coach of the Year

National Association of Basketball Coaches District 11 Coach of the Year Coach Clair Bee Award Recipient Finalist Naismith Coach of the Year 121


ALL-AMER ALL-

AMERICA SELECTIONS

Ray Morstadt Literary Digest, Third Team, 1933-34 Ed Mullen Converse Yearbook, First Team, 1933-34 Erwin Graf MSG, Second Team, 1938-39 David Quabius Converse Yearbook, Third Team, 1938-39 Bill Chandler Pic Magazine, Third Team, 1943-44 Terry Rand NABC, Third Team, 1955-56 Don Kojis Converse Yearbook, First Team, 1960-61 George Thompson Converse Yearbook, Second Team, 1968-69 Dean Meminger Converse Yearbook, Second Team, 1969-70 Helms Foundation, 1969-70 Basketball News, Second Team, 1969-70 Consensus First Team All-America, 1970-71

122

Jim Chones AP, First Team, 1971-72 UPI, First Team, 1971-72 Converse Yearbook, First Team, 1971-72 Sporting News, Second Team, 1971-72 NEA, Second Team, 1971-72 Bob Lackey Helms Foundation, 1971-72 Maurice Lucas Converse Yearbook, Second Team, 1973-74 NABC, Third Team, 1973-74 Helms Foundation, 1973-74 Bo Ellis Converse Yearbook, Second Team, 1974-75 NABC, Fourth Team, 1974-75 Converse Yearbook, Second Team, 1975-76 Converse Yearbook, Second Team, 1976-77 NABC, Second Team, 1976-77 AP, Third Team, 1976-77 Earl Tatum NABC, Second Team, 1975-76 USBWA, Second Team, 1975-76 UPI, Second Team, 1975-76 Converse Yearbook, Second Team, 1975-76 Basketball Weekly, Second Team, 1975-76 AP, Third Team, 1975-76


1 9 0 0 2 L L T

B

A

Dwyane Wade Basketball Times, Second Team, 2001-02 Sporting News, Third Team, 2001-02

K

E

Consensus First Team All-America, 2002-03

Dominic James AP, Honorable Mention, 2006-07

Bernard Toone NABC, Fourth Team, 1978-79

Jerel McNeal AP, Second Team, 2008-09

Sam Worthen NABC, Second Team, 1979-80 USBWA, Second Team, 1979-80 AP, Third Team, 1979-80 UPI, Third Team, 1979-80

Lazar Hayward AP, Honorable Mention, 2009-10

A

Jerome Whitehead Converse Yearbook, Second Team, 1977-78 NABC, Third Team, 1977-78

S

Travis Diener AP, Honorable Mention, 2004-05

B

Consensus First Team All-America, 1977-78

Jim McIlvaine AP, Honorable Mention, 1993-94

E

Butch Lee Converse Yearbook, First Team, 1976-77 AP, Second Team, 1976-77 UPI, Second Team, 1976-77 NABC, Third Team, 1976-77 Helms Foundation, 1976-77 Helms Foundation, 1975-76

Tony Smith AP, Honorable Mention, 1989-90

U A

R

Q

AP = Associated Press MSG = Madison Square Garden NABC = National Association of Basketball Coaches UPI = United Press International USBWA = United States Basketball Writers Association

M

Doc Rivers Converse Yearbook, Second Team, 1981-82 Converse Yearbook, Second Team, 1982-83 AP, Honorable Mention, 1982-83 UPI, Honorable Mention, 1982-83

E

T

T

Lloyd Walton Converse Yearbook, Second Team, 1975-76 AP, Honorable Mention, 1975-76

0

RICA

Marquette’s All-America selections are determined by the NCAA publication “Men’s Basketball’s Finest,” which recognizes each of the teams listed as an official squad. Meminger (1970-71), Lee (1977-78) and Wade (2002-03) are considered consensus selections based on a scoring system used by the NCAA.

123


1977

NCAA CHAMPIONS

1977 CHAMPIONSHIP RESULTS FR: RS: RC: FF: NC:

1976-77 MARQUETTE BASKETBALL TEAM (pictured left to right): Jim Boylan, Bill Neary, Ulice Payne, Butch Lee, Jim Dudley, Gary Rosenberger, Bernard Toone, Jerome Whitehead, Craig Butrym, Robert Byrd, Bo Ellis. Not pictured: Mark Lavin.

124

MARQUETTE MARQUETTE MARQUETTE MARQUETTE MARQUETTE

66, 67, 82, 51, 67,

Cincinnati 51 Kansas State 66 Wake Forest 68 Charlotte 49 North Carolina 59

at Omaha, Neb. at Oklahoma City

at Atlanta, Ga.


0 1 9 0 0

From Marquette Head Coach Al McGuire:

L

2

(immediately following game) “I think they fell apart in the second half. We hung in there.” (How do you feel?) “Emotionally drained. I’m pleased for the guys. It doesn’t seem real. Ya know, you think about something like this, but ... I’ve always been an alley fighter. I don’t usually get into the silk lace situations. It seems like it is preordained, but I don’t like to use the words of TV announcers, the cliches.”

A

L

(in the interview room) “We put in the four corners just yesterday in the hour allotted us for practice. We figured to run it and look for the good shot, keeping the big men underneath. For a while, both teams were playing a chess game.”

T

B

“I was not emotional until a five-second count triggered me. I trigger easily. As a coach, you have to be constantly alert. Right now, I feel washed out.

E

“Once the avalanche came and we were tied, I tried to stop the avalanche by delays and I called timeouts. Usually we try to do it by contact lens timeouts or something like that. You have to stop the momentum no matter what.”

From North Carolina Player Mike O’Koren: “I knew that we were going to come back, but I didn’t expect it to be that quick. And I knew that once we got the lead, we would go into the four corners and get them to chase us. But Marquette played the four corners smart. They laid back and didn’t foul us.”

All-Tournament Team Mike O’Koren (North Carolina); Butch Lee (Marquette); Cedric Maxwell (UNC Charlotte); Bo Ellis (Marquette); Jerome Whitehead (Marquette); Walter Davis (North Carolina). Outstanding Player: Butch Lee

S

S 2 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5

Min 33 30.5 25.5 38 31 10 10 5.5 10.5 3 1.5 0.5 0.5 0.5 200

TP 20 14 6 6 5 2 4 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 59

MARQUETTE Bo Ellis Bill Neary Jerome Whitehead Butch Lee Jim Boylan Gary Rosenberger Bernard Toone TOTALS

FG-FGA 5-9 0-2 2-8 6-14 5-7 1-1 3-6 22-47

FT-FTA 4-5 0-0 4-4 7-7 4-4 4-4 0-1 23-25

Reb 9 0 11 3 4 1 0 29

PF 4 1 2 1 3 1 1 13

A 3 0 2 2 0 1 0 8

B 1 0 2 0 0 0 0 3

S 1 0 0 3 1 0 0 5

Min 39.5 11.5 38.5 40 33 8.5 29 200

TP 14 0 8 19 14 6 6 67

A E

B 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1

T

A 3 0 1 5 6 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 15

T

PF 4 5 0 3 5 0 3 2 1 0 0 0 0 1 24

B

ATLANTA, GA.

Reb 8 11 4 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 28

E

FT-FTA 8-10 2-4 0-0 0-0 1-2 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 11-16

U

THE OMNI

FG-FGA 6-13 6-10 3-5 3-10 2-6 1-1 2-3 1-1 0-1 0-1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 24-51

Q

From North Carolina Player Phil Ford: “I don’t want anybody to quote me as saying that my elbow affected my play out there or cost us the game. But, I feel that I have been useless to the team for the last two games. Anytime that you play for the national championship, that should give you enough to win.”

NORTH CAROLINA Walter Davis Mike O’Koren Rich Yonakor Phil Ford John Kuester Steve Krafcism Tom Zaliagins Dudley Bradley Bruce Buckey Jeff Wolf Dave Colescott Woody Coley Ged Doughton John Virgil TOTALS

R

From North Carolina Head Coach Dean Smith: “We went into the four corners to get them out of a zone. That’s a great zone with 6-9 players - Bo Ellis, Bernard Toone and Jerome Whitehead - in there. (Bruce) Buckley went in for a layup and either Bo or Whitehead blocked it. Then they went into their delay game. They hit all of their free throws down the stretch. Of course, that is what we did to get here.

MARCH 28, 1977

A

From Marquette Player Butch Lee: (On what it is like playing for McGuire) “It’s not bad for the older guys. They know what to expect. For the freshmen, it gets rough. You have to get some good ear plugs.”

MARQUETTE 67, NORTH CAROLINA 59

M

From Marquette Player Bo Ellis: (On McGuire’s last game) “It’s a super way to go, for him and for us. I’m glad for him, I’m glad for me, I’m glad for the team, I’m glad for the people of Milwaukee and even for those who said we wouldn’t get this far.”

K

“At the end of the game, I sat there and thought of all the locker rooms, the dirty jocks, the PALS, and the other things that a New Yorker street fighter knows when growing up.”

Halftime: Marquette 39, North Carolina 27 Turnovers: North Carolina 14, Marquette 11 Technical fouls: Toone - 1 Officials: Paul Galvan, Reggie Copeland Attendance: 16,086.

125


1974

NCAA RUNNERS-UP

All-Tournament Team

From Marquette Head Coach Al McGuire:

David Thompson (North Carolina State);Tom Burleson (North Carolina State); Monte Towe (North Carolina State); Maurice Lucas (Marquette); Bill Walton (UCLA). Outstanding Player: David Thompson

(On two technical fouls) “I would say that I lost the game there. I would say that I gave them two five-point plays and that was it. I had a bad day. I have no complaint with the way we played. We played just about as well as we could, but I didn’t have a good coaching game.”

NORTH CAROLINA STATE 76, MARQUETTE 64 MARCH 25, 1974•GREENSBORO COLISEUM•GREENSBORO, N.C. MARQUETTE Bo Ellis Earl Tatum Maurice Lucas Lloyd Walton Marcus Washington Dave Delsman Ed Daniels Rick Campbell Jerry Homan Barry Brennan TOTALS

FG-FGA 6-16 2-7 7-13 4-10 3-13 0-0 1-3 2-3 0-4 0-0 25-69

FT-FTA 0-0 0-0 7-9 0-0 5-8 0-0 1-2 0-0 1-2 0-0 14-21

Reb 11 3 13 2 4 0 0 1 6 0 43

PF 5 4 4 2 3 2 3 3 2 1 29

A 1 1 0 2 0 0 2 0 1 0 7

B 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 3

S 3 0 0 0 5 0 0 1 0 0 9

Min 39 20 40 24 35.5 5 17.5 12 6 1 200

TP 12 4 21 8 11 0 3 4 1 0 64

FG-FGA 3-4 7-12 6-9 4-9 5-10 1-2 0-0 26-46

FT-FTA 2-2 7-8 2-6 6-9 6-7 1-2 0-0 24-34

Reb 7 7 11 2 3 3 0 34

PF 5 3 4 2 1 2 0 17

A 2 2 0 5 2 3 0 14

B 0 1 7 0 0 0 0 8

S 3 3 1 3 1 1 0 12

Min 25.5 40 36 40 37.5 18.5 2.5 200

TP 8 21 14 14 16 3 0 76

NORTH CAROLINA STATE Tim Stoddard David Thompson Tom Burleson Morris Rivers Monte Towe Phil Spence Mark Moeller TOTALS

1974-75 MARQUETTE BASKETBALL TEAM First row (left to right): Assistant coach Hank Raymonds, Head coach Al McGuire, Assistant coach Rick Majerus. Second row: Manager Kevin Gleason, Dave Delsman, Lloyd Walton, Randy Buchmann, Paul Vollmer, Bill Neary, Greg Johnson, John Bryant, Bo Ellis, Craig Butrym, Maurice Lucas, Jerry Homan, Earl Tatum, Ed Daniels, Rick Campbell, Marcus Washington, Barry Brennan, Manager Bob Hyndman.

126

Halftime: North Carolina State 39, Marquette 30. Turnovers: North Carolina State 23, Marquette 18. Technical fouls: Coach McGuire - 2. Officials: Jim Howell, Irv Brown. Attendance: 15,742


1 1 0

-

NCAA FINAL FOUR

B

A

L

L

2

0

1

2003

T

Head Coach Tom Crean

Dwyane Wade – Consensus First Team All-America

E

• Clair Bee Award

Robert Jackson – Conference USA Second Team

K

• Conf. USA Ray Meyer Coach of the Year Award

Travis Diener – Conference USA Second Team

S

• NABC District II Coach of the Year • USBWA District V Coach of the Year

B

A

Steve Novak – Conference USA Sixth Man of the Year

14) Holy Cross 68 6) Missouri 92 • OT

at Indianapolis

RS: Marquette 77, RC: Marquette 83,

2) Pittsburgh 74 1) Kentucky 69

at Minneapolis, Minn.

FF:

Marquette 61

at New Orleans, La.

U Q R

1) Kansas 94,

E

T

T

FR: 3) Marquette 72, SR: Marquette 101,

E

20 03 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP RESULTS

A

20 03-03 TEAM ACCOMPLISHMENTS

M

• 27-6 Overall Record • 14-2 Conference USA Record 2002-03 MARQUETTE BASKETBALL TEAM First row (left to right): Assistant coach Jeff Strohm, Jared Sichting, Karon Bradley, Travis Diener, Head coach Tom Crean, Dwyane Wade, Joe Chapman, Assistant coach Darrin Horn, Assistant coach Dwayne Stephens. Back row: Student manager Dean Manglona, Head athletic trainer Steve Condon, Special assistant Trey Schwab, Andy Freund, Terry Sanders, Scott Merritt, Chris Grimm, Robert Jackson, Steve Novak, Todd Townsend, Head strength and conditioning coach Scott Holsopple, Head student manager Dan Idstein, Father William Kelly.

• Conference USA Regular Season Champions • Top-10 Final National Ranking

127





2010-2011

S E A S O N

S C H E D U L E

NOVEMBER Sat 6 vs. St. John’s (Minn) - (Exh) 1:00 p.m. Fri 12 vs. Prairie View A&M 8:00 p.m. O'REILLY AUTO PARTS CBE CLASSIC (Milw.) Sun 14 vs. Bucknell 1:00 p.m. Wed 17 vs. Green Bay 8:00 p.m. Sat 20 vs. South Dakota 1:00 p.m. O'REILLY AUTO PARTS CBE CLASSIC (KC, Mo.) Mon 22 vs. Duke 6:30 p.m. Tue 23 vs. Kansas State/ 6:45 p.m./ Gonzaga 9:00 p.m. Sat 27 at Milwaukee 7:00 p.m. DECEMBER Sat 4 vs. Longwood 1:00 p.m. Tue 7 vs. Texas A&M (Corp. Chr.) 8:00 p.m. Sat 11 vs. Wisconsin 1:30 p.m. Sat 18 vs. Centenary 1:00 p.m. Tue 21 vs. Mississippi Valley St. 7:00 p.m. Wed 29 at Vanderbilt 8:00 p.m. JANUARY Sat 1 vs. West Virginia • 10:00 a.m. Wed 5 at Rutgers • 6:30 p.m. Sat 8 at Pittsburgh • 1:00 p.m. Mon 10 vs. Notre Dame • 6:00 p.m. Sat 15 at Louisville • 10:00 a.m. Tue 18 vs. DePaul • 8:00 p.m. Sat 22 at Notre Dame • 6:00 p.m. Tue 25 vs. Connecticut • 8:00 p.m. Sat 29 vs. Syracuse • 2:00 p.m. FEBRUARY Wed 2 at Villanova • 6:00 p.m. Wed 9 at USF • 6:00 p.m. Sun 13 at Georgetown + • Noon Tue 15 vs. St. John's (Al’s Night) • 8:00 p.m. Sat 19 vs. Seton Hall • 8:00 p.m. Thu 24 at Connecticut • 6:00 p.m. Sun 27 vs. Providence • 3:00 p.m. MARCH Wed 2 vs. Cincinnati (Senior Night) • 7:00 p.m. Sat 5 at Seton Hall • 5:00 p.m. BIG EAST CONF. CHAMPIONSHIP (N.Y., N.Y.) Tue-Sat 8-12 TBA Home games are listed in Bold and played at The Bradley Center, Milwaukee, WI All game times are listed in CST and subject to change. + Denotes a Jesuit Basketball Spotlight game. • Denotes BIG EAST games.


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