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Game #15:

Seton Hall Pirates (8-7, 1-3 BIG EAST) at Creighton Bluejays (8-6, 2-1 BIG EAST)

Tuesday, Jan. 3, 2023 • 7:30 p.m. • Omaha, Neb. • CHI Health Center Omaha

| LIVE VIDEO | LIVE AUDIO | LIVE STATS | CU NOTES (PDF) |

Next Game

Creighton (8-6, 2-1 BIG EAST) opens the 2023 calendar year when it hosts  Seton Hall (8-7, 1-3 BIG EAST) at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Jan. 3rd.

    First National Bank Court inside CHI Health Center Omaha (17,352) in Omaha, Neb., will host the action.

Radio Broadcast Information

KOZN (1620 AM) and KOOO (101.9 FM) will carry all Creighton men’s basketball games during the 2022-23 season. John Bishop and Taylor Stormberg will call the action.  

    The audio is webcast live at www.1620thezone.com and can be heard on SiriusXM channel 380 and on SXM app channel 970.

Telecast Information

Tuesday’s game will be called by Matt Schumacker and Nick Bahe and be televised on FS1. The game will also be video webcast on the FoxSports app or at http://foxsports.com/live. Cable authorization may be required.

Live Stats Information

All of Creighton’s games this season will have free live stats. Visit www.gocreighton.com and click on the small bar graph icon on the scoreboard at the top of the page for the event of your choosing.

    Home games can also be followed on mobile devices at www.gocreightonstats.com.

Scouting Creighton

Creighton started 6-0, including wins at the Maui Jim Maui Invitational over No. 21 Texas Tech and No. 9 Arkansas, then dropped its next six games before picking up BIG EAST wins by double-figures over Butler and DePaul to close 2022.

    CU had three men named to the BIG EAST’s All-Freshman Team last winter who are now sophomores. That trio includes BIG EAST Freshman of the Year Ryan Nembhard (11.3 ppg., 5.9 apg.) as well as Arthur Kaluma (12.6 ppg., 5.1 rpg.) and Trey Alexander (12.5 ppg., 4.4 rpg.).

    Creighton’s highest-impact newcomer to date has been South Dakota State transfer Baylor Scheierman (12.9 ppg., 9.6 rpg.), who also owns the team lead with eight double-doubles and 36 three-pointers made.

    All-BIG EAST center Ryan Kalkbrenner (15.1 ppg., 6.9 rpg.), who was named 2022 BIG EAST Defensive Player of the Year, ranks second in the nation in field goal percentage (.761) this season. CU is 8-3 with him in the line-up this year.

    Creighton was picked to win the BIG EAST Conference and earned its best preseason AP poll ranking ever (No. 9), thanks to the return of 10 lettermen and three starters from last year’s team that finished 23-12.

    CU averages 76.7 points while allowing just 67.9 points per contest. CU shoots 46.9 percent from the floor, 35.9 percent from deep and 70.6 percent at the line.

Scouting Seton Hall

Seton Hall is 8-7 overall and 1-3 in BIG EAST play, picking up its first league win of the winter on New Year’s Eve over St. John’s (88-66).

    Four Pirates average between 10.3 – 11.3 points per game, a quartet led by Al-Amir Dawes (11.3 ppg.). The Clemson transfer has made 36 of The Hall’s 87 three-pointers this season.

    Dre Davis (10.7), Tyrese Samuel (10.6 ppg., 6.4 rpg.) and Kadary Richmond (10.3 ppg., 3.8 apg.) also score in double-figures.

    Seton Hall averages 69.9 points per game on 44.3 percent shooting from the field, 30.3 percent shooting from deep and 67.2 percent marksmanship at the line. The Pirates outrebound teams by 3.4 caroms per contest, hold foes to 64.0 points per game and limit the opposition to 28.3 percent shooting from deep.

    

The Series With Seton Hall

Seton Hall leads the all-time series with Creighton 16-10, but Creighton is 5-4 in Omaha meetings.

    Creighton has won four of the last six games in the series at all sites, including a 77-60 win in Omaha to clinch a share of the 2020 BIG EAST regular-season title and an 89-53 dismantling in 2021 in Omaha.

    Greg McDermott is 9-10 against Seton Hall and but has never coached against Shaheen Holloway.

The Creighton Coaches

Greg McDermott (Northern Iowa, 1988) owns a 284-143 record in his 13th season with the Bluejays. He owns a career mark of 564-338 in his 29th season, and is 433-274 in his 22nd Division I campaign.

    McDermott led Creighton to its first BIG EAST regular-season title in 2019-20, taking a Bluejay team that was picked seventh in the league’s preseason poll and ending the year ranked seventh nationally. The Cascade, Iowa native then coached Creighton to its first Sweet 16 since 1974 in 2020-21 and to a share of its first regular-season BIG EAST title in 2019-20.

    McDermott has previously been a head coach at Iowa State (2006-10), Northern Iowa (2001-06), North Dakota State (2000-01) and Wayne State (1994-2000).

    He is assisted by Alan Huss, Ryan Miller and Jalen Courtney-Williams.

With A Win…

– Creighton would win its third straight game.

– Creighton would improve to 6-4 in Omaha against Seton Hall all-time.

Trèy’s Bien

Sophomore Trey Alexander scored a career-high 32 points in a Christmas Day win over DePaul in Creighton’s last game, easily surpassing his previous high of 18 points.

    Alexander had 14 points in the first half and 18 more after the break. He made a career-high seven three-pointers.

    Creighton’s largest lead of the game was 17, done four times. Each came after an Alexander hoop.

    Alexander is the first Bluejay in more than 55 years to have a game with 30 or more points before finishing a game with 20-29 points.

Trèy’s Bien, Part II

Creighton made 16 three-point shots in its Christmas Day victory over DePaul, including 10 in the first half.

    It was Creighton’s most three-pointers in a game since sinking 17 trifectas at Seton Hall on Jan. 27, 2021.

    CU made 10 triples in the first half of that Seton Hall contest, which was also the last time CU made 10 treys in one half.

    Individually, Trey Alexander made a career-high seven three-pointers. That’s the most by any Bluejay since Ryan Hawkins made eight shots from downtown at Georgetown on Feb. 12, 2022.

Arc’s-manship

After making just 4-of-20 three-pointers in its BIG EAST opening loss at Marquette, Creighton has shot 50 percent or better from deep against both Butler (8-16) and DePaul (16-29).

    Prior to those two wins, CU had shot 50 percent  from deep just once all season (7-14 in a win vs. No. 9 Arkansas).

     Creighton is 71-4 under Greg McDermott when making at least half of its three-point attempts, including a 43-1 mark in the past 10 seasons. The lone loss as a BIG EAST member was a 106-104 overtime setback to No. 21 Marquette on Jan. 9, 2019.

    Creighton last made 50 percent or better of its three-point shots in three consecutive games from Feb. 16-23, 2014 in wins over No. 6 Villanova (9-15), Marquette (12-23) and Seton Hall (8-15).

    According to Basketball-Reference.com, since McDermott was hired in 2010, Creighton’s 75 games shooting 50 percent or better from downtown trail only Weber State (78).

Mr. 3,150 Turns 31

Tuesday marks the 31st birthday for 2014 National Player of the Year Doug McDermott, who scored 3,150 career points at Creighton from 2010-14.

    McDermott, who scored 30 and 25 points in a pair of 2014 wins over Seton Hall, ranks sixth in NCAA history in career points.

Holiday Hoops Proves Popular

Creighton’s Christmas Day victory over DePaul scored 2.99 million viewers on FOX – the network’s most-watched college hoops game ever.

    Per FOX Sports PR, it was the most-watched college basketball game on any network this season, far ahead of the Kentucky/Michigan State game on ESPN (2.03 million).

    In the last three years, the only regular-season game higher was North Carolina/Duke in Mike Krzyzewski’s final home game last March (3.98 million).

It’s So Hard To Say Goodbye to 2022

Tuesday marks Creighton’s first game of the 2023 calendar year. Among the highlights from 2022…

– Creighton returned to the Second Round of the NCAA Tournament after an overtime win over San Diego State.

– Creighton reached the final of the BIG EAST Tournament and final of the Maui Jim Maui Invitational.

– Creighton earned 15 wins against BIG EAST competition during the 2022 calendar year.

– Creighton owned a 21-15 record in the 2022 calendar year, including five top-25 victories.

– All three seniors on last year’s team (KeyShawn Feazell, Ryan Hawkins, Alex O’Connell) own a college degree and are currently playing professionally.

– Creighton was ranked ninth in both the preseason Associated Press and USA Today Coaches polls, its highest preseason rank ever in each poll.

– Creighton reached No. 7 in the Associated Press poll on Nov. 28th, matching its highest-rank in program history.

Milestone Watch

Arthur Kaluma enters January 3rd with 498 career points and 46 career three-pointers.

Ryan Kalkbrenner enters January 3rd with 144 career blocked shots and 792 career points.

The Kalkbrenner Difference

Here’s a look at the difference with and without Ryan Kalkbrenner this season.

Stat    Kalkbrenner Plays    Kalkbrenner Out

Team W-L    8-3    0-3

Team FG%    .487    .403

Team 3FG%    .365    .338

Team FG/Game    29.1    27.0

Rebound Margin    +7.0    -8.6

Off. Rebounds/Game    8.8    5.7

CU Points/Game    78.6    69.7

Opp. Points/Game    66.0    75.0

Scoring Margin    +12.6    -5.3

Turnovers/Game    11.6    13.0

Opp. FG%    .429    .440

Establish The Run Game

Creighton has embarked on some scintillating runs against Seton Hall in its past three wins over the Pirates.

    In March of 2020 in Omaha, Creighton made 12 of its final 13 shots to end a 77-60 win on a 30-10 run.

    In 2020-21 in Omaha, Creighton converted its first seven shots and raced to a 17-4 lead that Seton Hall never recovered from. In the second half of the same game, a 28-5 run helped Creighton turn a 54-37 lead into an 82-42 advantage.

    In 2020-21 in Newark, Creighton trailed 68-52 with 10:39 left and 79-71 with 3:00 left before a game-ending 14-2 run to claim an 85-81 victory.

King Him!

After 38 total points and 25 total rebounds in the first 10 games of his college career, Fredrick King put together back-to-back double-doubles since after pressed into a starting role when Ryan Kalkbrenner was sidelined by a non-COVID illness in mid-December. King had 16 points and 11 rebounds vs. Arizona State on Dec. 12th, then added 16 points and 10 rebounds at Marquette four days later.

    King is CU’s freshman with multiple double-doubles in a season since Justin Patton had three in 2016-17.

    King is CU’s first true freshman with multiple double-doubles in a season since Doug McDermott had nine in 2010-11. McDermott had also been the last Bluejay freshman with back-to-back double-doubles, having done it on Feb. 1 and Feb. 5, 2011.

    For his efforts, King was named BIG EAST Freshman of the Week on Dec. 19.

    After shooting 8-for-8 vs. Marquette, King was 3-for-3 from the field against Butler to move him to 11-for-11 in league play with eight dunks.

Simply Perfect

Below is a list of Creighton players to shoot 100 percent from the field on eight or more attempts in a game since the start of the 1991-92 campaign:

Most FGA, 100% Shooting, Since 1991-92

    FGA    Name, Opponent    Date

    11    Anthony Tolliver vs. Illinois State    01/01/07

    10    Ryan Kalkbrenner vs. Holy Cross    11/14/22

    8    Geoffrey Groselle vs. Coppin State    12/28/15

    8    Justin Patton vs. Loyola (Md.)    12/07/16

    8    Fredrick King at Marquette    12/16/22

Fool Me Once…But Nine Times?

Creighton has met or exceeded its preseason BIG EAST prognostication every year since joining the league, as seen below.

    Last year marked the sixth straight season that Creighton has finished in fourth place or better.

Creighton’s BIG EAST Preseason Poll History

Year     Preseason     Actual     Preseason All-BIG EAST

2013-14     3rd     2nd     Doug McDermott (1st)

2014-15     9th     T-9th     –

2015-16     9th     6th     –

2016-17     3rd     T-3rd     Maurice Watson Jr. (1st); Marcus Foster (HM)

2017-18     5th     T-3rd     Marcus Foster (1st); Khyri Thomas (HM)

2018-19     9th     T-3rd     Martin Krampelj (HM)

2019-20     7th     T-1st    Ty-Shon Alexander (1st)

2020-21     2nd     2nd    Marcus Zegarowski (1st); Mitch Ballock (2nd)

2021-22    8th    4th    None

2022-23    1st    ??    Ryan Kalkbrenner (1st); Arthur Kaluma (2nd)

            Ryan Nembhard (2nd); Baylor Scheierman (HM)

Strong League Start Projects To Postseason

Creighton has started 5-2 or better in league play in seven of Greg McDermott‘s first 12 seasons at the helm.

    Six of those teams to start like that reached the NCAA Tournament, while a seventh reached the quarterfinals of the NIT.

    Each of Creighton’s 15 teams since 1988-89 to start 5-2, 6-1 or 7-0 after seven games in league play have reached the postseason, a stretch that includes 10 NCAA Tournaments and five NIT’s.

Among The Best

Since the league’s 2013 realignment, Villanova has 131 league wins to lead the BIG EAST by a wide margin, but Creighton’s 97 league victories are second-most.

Most Men’s Basketball  BIG EAST Wins

(2013-14 to 12/31/22)

Team    W    L    Pct.

Villanova    131    33    .799

Creighton    97    71    .577

Providence    95    69    .579

Xavier    92    70    .568

Seton Hall    88    79    .527

Marquette    82    86    .488

Butler    78    91    .462

St. John’s    63    104    .377

Georgetown    58    105    .356

DePaul    37    127    .226

Connecticut    27    13    .675

Big Fred’s Big Night

Making his second career start, freshman center Fredrick King had career-highs with 16 points, 11 rebounds and five blocked shots in the Dec. 12 game vs. Arizona State.

    King was just the second Bluejay of any age in Greg McDermott‘s 13 years on the CU sideline to post a game with at least 16/11/5, joining Gregory Echenique (18 points, 14 rebounds, 5 blocks) vs. Houston Christian on Dec. 17, 2011.

    Per Basketball-Reference.com, King is the seventh different freshmen with 16 points, 11 rebounds, five blocks and no turnovers in the same game since 2010-11, a list that includes  Chet Holmgren, Armando Bacot, Mo Bamba, Anthony Davis (twice), Thik Bol and Chris Horton.

Freshmen With 16 Pts., 11 Reb., 5 Blk, 0 Turnovers

(Since 2010-11)

Name, School    Date    PTS    REB    BLK

Anthony Davis, Kentucky    01/17/12    27    14    7

Anthony Davis, Kentucky    03/25/12    18    11    6

Chris Horton, Austin Peay    12/05/12    21    11    5

Thik Bol, Southern Illinois    02/19/17    19    11    6

Mo Bamba, Texas    12/29/17    22    15    8

Armando Bacot, N. Carolina    11/29/19    23    12    6

Chet Holmgren, Gonzaga    03/17/22    19    17    7

Fredrick King, Creighton    12/12/22    16    11    5

A Good Start

Here’s a look at how Creighton has done statistically after 14 games under Greg McDermott.

Creighton Stats Through 14 Games, Since 2010-11

Year    W-L    FG%    3FG%    FT%    PPG    Opp PPG

2022-23    8-6    .469    .359    .706    76.7    67.9

2021-22    10-4    .469    .301    .692    70.4    65.9

2020-21    10-4    .490    .367    .662    81.1    69.4

2019-20    12-2    .474    .375    .709    79.9    68.4

2018-19    10-4    .520    .448    .638    84.7    73.9

2017-18    11-3    .514    .379    .742    91.1    72.4

2016-17    13-1    .536    .431    .674    88.4    72.6

2015-16    10-4    .503    .396    .675    86.9    74.8

2014-15      9-5    .427    .342    .746    70.8    64.6

2013-14    12-2    .483    .426    .766    81.5    63.9

2012-13    13-1    .509    .433    .759    79.5    62.1

2011-12    12-2    .506    .451    .698    82.6    68.4

2010-11    10-4    .433    .319    .771    67.5    61.9

Scheierman’s Great Start

Baylor Scheierman has scored 180 points in his first 14 games as a Bluejay. Since 1995-96, that’s the sixth-most by a Creighton newcomer.

Most Points, Newcomers First 14 Games Since 1995-96

    Pts.    Name, Class    Year    After 15

    266    Marcus Foster, Jr.    2016-17    281

    188    Ryan Hawkins, Sr.    2021-22    201

    185    Doug McDermott, Fr.     2010-11    197

    183    Justin Patton, Fr.    2016-17    208

    180    Baylor Scheierman, Sr.    2022-23    ? ? ?

    179    Maurice Watson Jr., Jr.    2015-16    194

    169    Ryan Nembhard, Fr.    2021-22    187

    163    Cole Huff, Jr.    2015-16    176

    161    P’Allen Stinnett, Fr.    2007-08    177

    157    Rodney Buford, Fr.    1995-96    179

    148    Gregory Echenique, So.    2010-11    156

    146    Brody Deren, So.    2001-02    162

    146    Marcus Zegarowski, Fr.    2021-22    155

    145    Damien Jefferson, So.    2018-19    149

    142    Ryan Sears, Fr.    1997-98    152

    138    Doug Swenson, Jr.    1997-98    146

    134    Darryl Ashford, Jr.    2009-10    148

    130    Khyri Thomas, Fr.    2015-16    132

    129    Edward St. Fleur, Jr.    1995-96    145

    128    Nick Porter, Jr.    2005-06    140

Paul Silas Passes Away at 79

Paul Silas, Creighton’s first Academic All-American and one of the top players in Bluejay men’s basketball history, has passed away at the age of 79. Bob Ryan, longtime Boston Globe reporter and a close friend of Silas over many decades, reported the news the morning of Dec. 11th.

    Silas was recruited to Creighton by John J. “Red” McManus out of McClymonds High School in Oakland, Calif., the same high school that produced Bill Russell. Silas arrived on campus in 1960 when freshmen were ineligible to play for the varsity but quickly made a difference a year later when he led CU to the 1961-62 NCAA Tournament and the team closed with a 21-5 record. His 1963-64 team returned to the Big Dance and finished 22-7.

    Silas is the only player in NCAA history with three or more seasons of 557 rebounds and owns the top three single-season rebound totals in Bluejay annals, including 631 as a senior in 1963-64. That figure remains fifth-most in NCAA history and is the most by any player since 1960. He’s first in CU history with 1,751 rebounds, ninth in career points (1,661), third in career scoring average (20.51) and also in the top-10 in field goals made (8th) and free throws made (6th).

    Silas’ 21.6 career rebounds per game are third-most in NCAA history and his 1,751 rebounds are sixth in NCAA history as well as the most ever by a three-year player.  Silas, along with Bill Russell, Julius Erving, Artis Gilmore and Kermit Washington is one of five players to average at least 20 points and 20 rebounds for an NCAA career. Silas owns the top 29 single-game rebound performances in Creighton history, including a 38 rebound effort vs. Centenary on Feb. 19, 1962 that ranks tied for ninth-most in NCAA history.

    He was the first Creighton student-athlete to be named a CoSIDA Academic All-American in 1963-64, was a member of Alpha Sigma Nu, the Jesuit Honor Society, and received the College of Business Administration’s Alumni Merit Award in 1993.

    In an old article, Silas boasted about his education, saying “I’m more proud of my academic success at Creighton than of all my athletic accomplishments. What Creighton University does for an athlete or any student is that they teach you how to think, how to deal with everyday living. What I learned at Creighton has helped me close the gap between professional sports and the business world.”

    A two-time All-Star and five-time NBA All-Defensive team member, he scored 11,782 points and grabbed 12,357 rebounds while winning three titles (Boston 1974 & 1976, Seattle 1979) during a 16-year NBA career from 1964-80. He later coached 12 seasons in the NBA for the Clippers, Hornets, Bobcats and Cavalier organizations. He was LeBron James’ first NBA head coach. His son, Stephen Silas, is the current head coach of the NBA’s Houston Rockets.

    Paul was inducted into the Creighton Athletics Hall of Fame in 1974, the Missouri Valley Conference Hall of Fame in 2012 and the College Basketball Hall of Fame in 2017.

On The Rebound

Baylor Scheierman gets lots of attention for his shooting and passing skills, but he did lead the Summit League in rebounding last year as well.

    Scheierman has grabbed 10 or more rebounds in nine of his first 14 games this season, and has eight double-doubles to date. The eight double-doubles rank third nationally, while his 8.57 defensive rebounds per game are most in the country, ahead of even Oscar Tshiebwe (8.20) and Zach Edey (8.17).

    Since 2012-13, the only BIG EAST player to finish a season averaging at least 8.0 defensive rebounds per game was Seton Hall’s Angel Delgado (8.03) in 2016-17, and the only other BIG EAST player to average at least 8.25 defensive rebounds per game  since 2004-05 was Notre Dame’s Luke Harangody (8.29) in 2008-09.

    Since 2009-10, Scheierman is the nation’s only major conference player to average at least 8.00 defensive rebounds and 2.00 three-pointers per game.

    The Aurora, Neb., product’s current 9.6 rebounds per game average is the best mark by a Bluejay since Benoit Benjamin averaged 14.1 rebounds per game in 1984-85.

    Scheierman remains on pace to become the first man in school history to average at least 8.0 rebounds and 2.0 three-pointers per game.

    Earlier this year Scheierman became the first Bluejay with four straight double-doubles since Doug McDermott from Nov. 25-Dec. 10, 2011.

    Since the 1994-95 season, Scheierman, Ryan Hawkins, Martin Krampelj and McDermott (twice) are the only four Bluejays to record three straight double-doubles.

    Here’s a list of the Creighton players with seven or more double-doubles in a season under Greg McDermott:

Most Double-Doubles, Season, Since 2010-11

    D-D    Creighton Player    Year

    11    Doug McDermott    2011-12

    11    Ryan Hawkins    2021-22

    10    Doug McDermott    2012-13

    9    Doug McDermott    2010-11

    8    Baylor Scheierman    2022-23

    7    Doug McDermott    2013-14

    7    Martin Krampelj    2018-19

3-Ball Falling For Scheierman

Baylor Scheierman has made multiple three-pointers in every game this season. Going back to last season when he played for South Dakota State, Scheierman has made two or more three-pointers in each of his past 21 games. That’s easily the longest active streak in the nation.

    Scheierman has drained at least one triple in each of his last 24 contests dating to last season.

Big Fred’s World

Fredrick King had four points (on two dunks) and three blocked shots in his first career start on Saturday vs. BYU.

    King was the first Bluejay true freshman to start a game at center since Kenton Walker on Feb. 5, 2008, when the Jays topped UNI, 74-50.

    One of the other Creighton starters that night was Nick Bahe, who was on the call for FS1 for each of King’s first two starts.

    King is the first true freshman center to make multiple starts for Creighton since Joel Templeman in 1994-95.

Fantastic Five

Much has been written about Creighton’s starting five this season, and the success CU has had when Ryan Nembhard, Ryan Kalkbrenner, Trey Alexander, Arthur Kaluma and Baylor Scheierman are on the floor together.

    The quintet has played 197:37 (of a possible 560 minutes) together this season, outscoring the opposition 500-320 in those minutes.

    In four games against ranked foes, the group has been paired together for 88:18 (of a possible 160 minutes) and outscored opponents 185-165.

Deep Dive Into The Rankings

The Creighton men’s basketball team was ranked ninth in the Associated Press Preseason Top 25 poll, its highest preseason AP ranking ever.

    The Oct. 17th announcement marked just the fifth time in program history the writers have voted CU to the top-25 in the preseason, joining 2006-07 (No. 19), 2012-13 (No. 16) and 2016-17 (No. 22) and 2020-21 (No. 11). All four of those Bluejay teams would end up in the NCAA Tournament.

    Creighton was 10th in the AP poll released on Nov. 14th and Nov. 21 and was seventh last Nov. 28th. The team fell to No. 21 on Dec. 5th.

    The Nov. 28 week was the 21st time in program history that Creighton has been in the top-10 at any point, with all but one of those weeks happening under head coach Greg McDermott. Creighton’s best ranking in program history is seventh, done five times (Jan. 16, 2017, March 10, 2020, March 18, 2020, Jan. 7, 2021 and Nov. 28, 2022).

    Creighton has been ranked 118 times in program history, with 90 of those weeks under the direction of McDermott. Creighton is 148-60 all-time as a ranked team, including a 114-46 mark under McDermott. Creighton has been ranked at least one week in nine of McDermott’s 13 seasons on The Hilltop after doing it just five different seasons in program history before his 2010 arrival.

    Creighton was also ninth in the preseason USA Today Coaches poll, its best preseason mark ever in the Coaches poll. The Jays remained ninth in the Nov. 14 Coaches poll and climbed to eighth in the Nov. 21 Coaches poll and were seventh on Nov. 28. CU was 21st on Dec. 5th. The program’s best slotting ever in the Coaches poll is fifth, done on Jan. 4, 2021.

Sophomores Standing Tall

Legendary Marquette coach Al McGuire once said that the best thing about freshmen is that they become sophomores. The Bluejay trio of Arthur Kaluma, Trey Alexander and Ryan Nembhard were all part of the BIG EAST All-Freshman Team last season, and all three are off to fantastic starts as sophomores.

    This year the trio have combined to average 36.4 points per contest.

    Collectively, they shoot 42.4 percent from the field (173-408), 36.1 percent from downtown (61-169) and 76.2 percent at the line  (102-134) while also contributing 170 rebounds and 132 assists against just 79 turnovers.

Nationally Relevant

Through games of Dec. 30, Creighton ranked second in the country in fewest fouls per game (12.36).

    The Jays are also 10th in defensive rebounds per game (29.29) and 36th in assist/turnover ratio (1.38).

    Individually, Baylor Scheierman ranks third nationally with eight double-doubles and first with 8.57 defensive rebounds per game.

    Teammate Ryan Kalkbrenner is second in field goal percentage (76.1%) among players to make five field goals per game. Kalkbrenner is the only player shooting 65 percent or better who has made four or more three-pointers.

    Ryan Nembhard ranks 18th in assist/turnover ratio (3.15) and ninth in total assists (82).

 

Wooden Award Watch List

The Creighton duo of Baylor Scheierman and Ryan Kalkbrenner have been named to the Preseason Top 50 Watch List for the John R. Wooden Award® presented by Wendy’s®.

    The players on the list are considered strong candidates for the 2023 John R. Wooden Award Men’s Player of the Year presented by Wendy’s. Players not chosen to the preseason list are still eligible for the Wooden Award™ midseason list, late season list, and the National Ballot. The National Ballot consists of 15 top players who have proven to their universities that they meet or exceed the qualifications of the Wooden Award. Nearly 1,000 voters will rank in order 10 of those 15 players when voting opens prior to the NCAA Tournament and will allow voters to take into consideration performance during early round games. The Wooden Award All American Team™ will be announced the week of the “Elite Eight” round of the NCAA Tournament. The winner of the 2023 John R. Wooden Award will be presented in Los Angeles in April.

    Scheierman and Kalkbrenner give Creighton nine Preseason John R. Wooden Award Watch List recognitions in 13 seasons under Greg McDermott. Marcus Zegarowski made the list in 2020-21, one year after Ty-Shon Alexander was listed prior to the 2019-20 campaign. Others to make the list include Marcus Foster (2017-18), Maurice Watson Jr. (2016-17), Doug McDermott (2013-14, 2012-13 and 2011-12). Creighton’s lone recipient of the John R. Wooden Award®  is Doug McDermott, who was recognized following the completion of the 2013-14 campaign.

Turnover Free At The Point

Ryan Nembhard’s 12 assists without a turnover vs. Holy Cross on Nov. 14 made him just the fourth player in Bluejay history to accomplish that feat. He’s the first to do it inside CHI Health Center Omaha and the first Bluejay to do it at any site since 2002.

    Here’s the single-game assist leaders at Creighton, along with their turnover statistics on that night:

 Ast.    Name, Opponent    Date    TO

 17    Ralph Bobik vs. Bradley    01/22/74    0

    Ralph Bobik at St. Francis (Pa.)    02/23/73    ??

 16    Ralph Bobik vs. BYU    12/17/73    4

 14    Maurice Watson Jr. at Providence    01/07/17    2

    Maurice Watson Jr. at Seton Hall    01/09/16    4

 13    Maurice Watson Jr. vs. Washington St.    11/18/16    4

    Maurice Watson Jr. vs. Akron    12/03/16    5

    Jason Bey vs. Southern Illinois    02/27/95    1

    Latrell Wrightsell vs. Nebraska    12/07/91    1

12    Ryan Nembhard vs. Holy Cross    11/14/22    0

    Grant Gibbs vs. Northwestern    12/22/11    4

    Tyler McKinney at Nebraska    12/21/02    0

     Ed St. Fleur at CS-Sacramento    01/13/96    0

     Latrell Wrightsell vs. N. Iowa    02/01/92    4

     Duan Cole at Iowa State    01/16/90    5

     Vernon Moore at Southern Illinois    01/17/85    2

     Randy Eckker at Gonzaga    01/14/77    2

    Randy Eckker at Bradley    01/12/77    4

Speaking Of Assists

Ryan Nembhard’s 12 assists vs. Holy Cross were the second double-figure assist game of his Bluejay career, joining the 10 helpers he dished in his collegiate debut last November vs. Arkansas-Pine Bluff.

    Nembhard is the seventh different Bluejay with 10 or more assists in a game under Greg McDermott, joining Maurice Watson Jr. (12 times), Grant Gibbs (4), Marcus Zegarowski (4), Austin Chatman (3), Antoine Young (2) and Malik Albert (1).

    Also worth noting regarding Nembhard’s big night? He played just 19 minutes in the win, making him the nation’s only player with 12 assists against a Division I opponent this year while playing less than 30 minutes.

McDermott Among The Best

A Nov. 10th article on CBSSports.com ranked the nation’s best Top 25 And 1 coaches, with Creighton’s Greg McDermott making that list.

    McDermott and Providence’s Ed Cooley were the lone BIG EAST coaches named to the list.

    McDermott and Cooley both rank in the top-13 in league history for BIG EAST victories.

Most League Wins, BIG EAST MBB Coaches (12/31)

    Rk.    Wins    Name, School

    1.    366    Jim Boeheim, Syracuse

    2.    274    Jim Calhoun, UConn

    3.    244    Jay Wright, Villanova

    4.    198    John Thompson Sr., Georgetown

    5.    136    Mike Brey, Notre Dame

    6.    131    John Thompson III, Georgetown

    7.    127    Lou Carnesecca, St. John’s

    8.    115    Jamie Dixon, Pittsburgh

    9.    111    Rick Pitino, Providence/Louisville

    10.    110    Rollie Massimino, Villanova

    11.    109    Ed Cooley, Providence

    12.    105    Kevin Willard, Seton Hall

    13.    97    Greg McDermott, Creighton

    14.    87    Steve Lappas, Villanova

Kalkbrenner Up For Naismith Award

Ryan Kalkbrenner has been named one of 50 players to watch during the season-long competition for the 2023 Jersey Mike’s Naismith Trophy Men’s Player of the Year honor, as announced by The Atlanta Tipoff Club.

    A junior from Florissant, Mo., Kalkbrenner averaged 13.1 points, 7.7 rebounds and 2.6 blocked shots per game while starting CU’s first 34 contests last season. He was an Honorable Mention All-BIG EAST choice, BIG EAST Defensive Player of the Year and named to the All-BIG EAST Tournament Team while ranking fourth nationally in both field goal percentage (.646) and offensive rebounds per game (3.9). He was the lone Bluejay named Preseason First Team All-BIG EAST last month for ninth-ranked team in the nation, who are predicted to win the BIG EAST.

    Kalkbrenner’s recognition makes him the fourth different Bluejay in 13-year head coach Greg McDermott‘s tenure to be on a Naismith Award watch list. Doug McDermott was on the Preseason watch list in 2011-12, 2012-13 and 2013-14 and was a finalist in 2012-13 before winning the award in 2013-14. Marcus Foster was named to the Midseason watch list in 2016-17, then made the Preseason and Midseason watch list in 2017-18. More recently, Marcus Zegarowski was on the Preseason and Midseason watch list in 2020-21.

    The midseason 30 team will be announced in February, and then the competition will be narrowed down to 10 national semifinalists in early March. Following those results, four finalists will be named on March 21, 2023, and the winner of the 2023 Jersey Mike’s Naismith Trophy for Men’s Player of the Year will be announced on April 2, 2023.

Top 10 Under McDermott

Prior to Greg McDermott‘s 2010 arrival, Creighton had spent one week ranked in the top 10 of the Associated Press poll in program history (10th on Jan. 20, 2003, when Dana Altman’s team led by Kyle Korver lost at Steve Merfeld‘s Evansville team).

    Under McDermott, Creighton has spent 21 weeks in the top 10, including at least one week in five different seasons (1 week in 2012-13; 8 weeks in 2016-17, 3 weeks in 2019-20, 5 weeks in 2020-21 and 4 weeks so far this year).

    Creighton’s best AP ranking ever is seventh, done five times (Jan. 16, 2017; March 10, 2020; March 18, 2020; Jan. 7, 2021 and Nov. 28, 2022).

An Area for Improvement

One area that Creighton will look to improve in 2022-23 is its marksmanship from behind the arc, as last year’s 30.8 percent shooting from deep was its worst as a team since 1993-94.

    The Creighton staff is confident those numbers can improve as its talented freshman class is now sophomores. Thus far, Creighton is second in the BIG EAST with 9.21 three-pointers made per game but ranks fourth with 35.9 percent marksmanship from deep.

    Last year’s freshmen combined to shoot 27.2 percent from deep (85-313), but they’re not the first Bluejay freshmen to struggle early on from downtown, as seen in the chart below of some other prominent marksmen.

    Even that chart is a little misleading, as Doug McDermott shot 15-of-53 (.283) from deep in his first 20 games of his freshman year before finishing 32-of-63 (.508) in his last 19 games. Likewise, Kyle Korver was shooting 11-for-41 (.268) from downtown after his first 14 contests before blistering the nets to the tune of 52-of-104 (.500).

    As a Freshman    Other College Years

Name    3FG-3FGA    3FG%    3FG-3FGA    3FG%

Ky. Korver    63-145    .434    308-674    .457

McDermott    47-116    .405    237-482    .492

Ty. Alexander     32-96    .333    178-469    .380

Ballock    44-135    .326    264-638    .414

CHI Health Center Omaha Success

Creighton has played 330 regular and postseason contests at CHI Health Center Omaha all-time in the 20-year-old facility.

    The Bluejays own a 271-59 (.821) record all-time at the facility, and have never lost there on a Friday (22-0).

    Creighton’s Nov. 25, 2017 win over SIU Edwardsville was the program’s 200th at the facility, coming in its 242nd home game. CU’s 100th win came on Nov. 17, 2010, a 63-58 win over Louisiana.

    Creighton has outscored its opponents 25,782-21,610 in games at CHI Health Center Omaha, an average margin of 12.64 points per game. Creighton has not trailed 88 different times, including twice this year (Holy Cross, DePaul).

    Incredibly, Creighton hasn’t trailed in its home opener in 10 of the past 23 seasons (2000-01, 2002-03, 2003-04, 2004-05, 2005-06, 2009-10, 2011-12, 2014-15, 2016-17 and 2019-20).

    Creighton is also 32-35 all-time in the 67 games at the arena in which it’s fallen behind by double-figures at any point, 8-11 when down by 10+ points at halftime in the facility, and 40-29 when trailing at halftime at CHI Health Center Omaha.

    Creighton is 174-41 (.809) at CHI Health Center Omaha under Greg McDermott and hasn’t trailed in 63 of those games. In that same span, CU owns a 95-9 home record vs. non-conference teams.

    Factor in a 17-0 home mark at the Omaha Civic Auditorium in 2002-03 and two wins at the Civic in the 2010 CIT, and the Bluejays are 290-59 (.831) at home since the start of the 2002-03 campaign.

 

Home Run

Under Greg McDermott Creighton is averaging 80.41 points per home game (17,288 points in 215 home games), a figure that climbs to 83.84 points in non-conference home games (8,719 points in 104 home games).

    Creighton is 131-6 all-time at CHI Health Center Omaha when scoring 80 or points.

Who’s Back?

With Creighton returning eight of the 13 men who appeared in a game last season, it’s no surprise that a similar ratio of the production from 2021-22 is also gone. Below is a breakdown of what is back:

Stat    Returners    Departures

Blocks    118 (79.2%)    31 (20.8%)

Assists    284 (60.9%)    182 (39.1%)

Starts    104 (59.4%)    71 (40.6%)

Points    1,360 (56.2%)    1,062 (43.8%)

Minutes    3,881 (54.9%)    3,194 (45.1%)

Charges Taken    7 (53.8%)    6 (46.2%)

Rebounds    663 (53.3%)    580 (46.7%)

Steals    98 (51.0%)    94 (49.0%)

3FG Made    83 (35.3%)    152 (64.7%)

Youth Is Served

In case you’ve forgotten, Creighton had at least one freshman on the floor for every second of every game last season, and actually had a late stretch of 1:28 vs. Colorado State when all five of its players on the floor were freshmen.

    All told, 3171:36 of Creighton’s 7,075 total minutes (44.83 percent) were played by freshmen last season.

    By comparison, in 2020-21 Creighton had a freshman on the floor just 32.4 percent of the time and had multiple freshmen on the floor just 17 minutes (of 1,250) all season (1.4 percent). Only 7.5 percent (465:52 of 6250) of CU’s overall minutes were played by freshmen in 2020-21.

    Through 14 games this season, Creighton’s freshmen have played 395:02 of 2800 possible minutes (14.11 percent).

2021-22 Minute Breakdown

Freshmen    Time    Score    Margin

0 freshmen:    Never    —    —

1 freshman:    34:23    59-49    +10

2 freshmen:    962:14    1,692-1,578    +114

3 freshmen:    347:15    611-407    +4

4 freshmen:    45:54    54-85    (-31)

5 freshmen:    1:28    5-2    +3

Watch This

Creighton has four men that made a preseason watch list for their respective position.

    Ryan Nembhard is one of 20 candidates on the watch list for the 2023 Bob Cousy Award, given to the nation’s best point guard. Nembhard is the fourth different Bluejay in the last 12 years named to the Bob Cousy Award watch list, joining Antoine Young (2011-12), Maurice Watson Jr. (2016-17) and Marcus Zegarowski (2020-21).

    Baylor Scheierman is one of 20 candidates on the watch list for the 2023 Julius Erving Award, given to the nation’s best small forward. Scheierman is Creighton’s first player in the nine seasons of the Julius Erving Award to be named to the watch list at any point.

    Arthur Kaluma is one of 20 candidates on the watch list for the 2023 Karl Malone Award, given to the nation’s best power forward. Kaluma is Creighton’s first player in the nine seasons of the Karl Malone Award to be named to the watch list at any point.

    Ryan Kalkbrenner is one of 20 candidates on the watch list for the 2023 Kareem Abdul-Jabbar Award, given to the nation’s best center. Kalkbrenner joins Justin Patton (2016-17) as Creighton’s second player in the nine seasons of the Kareem Abdul-Jabbar Award to be named to the watch list at any point.

    Creighton (4) is one of six schools with four or more MBB players on a watch list, joining Duke (5), Kentucky (5), Arizona (4), Gonzaga (4) and UCLA (4).

    CU’s four watch list student-athletes match the totals of the rest of the BIG EAST combined (Xavier 2, Villanova 1, UConn 1).

Preseason BIG EAST Poll

The Creighton men’s basketball team was picked to win the BIG EAST Conference in the annual survey of league coaches, which was unveiled as part of BIG EAST Media Day on Oct. 18th at Madison Square Garden.

    It’s the first time since 2012-13 that Creighton has been chosen as a preseason favorite in its league, though that recognition came in CU’s final season in the Missouri Valley Conference.

    This is the 10th time Creighton has been tabbed as the preseason favorite (also 1989-90, 1990-91, 1998-99, 2000-01, 2002-03, 2006-07, 2008-09, 2011-12 and 2012-13), though the first nine occurrences all happened in the Missouri Valley Conference. Four of those MVC teams finished first (1990-91, 2000-01, 2008-09, 2012-13), while the other five took second place. Six of those nine Bluejay squads went on to win the MVC Tournament (1990-91, 1998-99, 2002-03, 2006-07, 2011-12, 2012-13) and seven of the nine squads played in the NCAA Tournament (1990-91, 1998-99, 2000-01, 2002-03, 2006-07, 2011-12, 2012-13).

    The Bluejays collected eight first-place votes and earned 98 points in the poll. Xavier was picked second in the poll with 86 points, including two first-place votes. Villanova, the defending BIG EAST Tournament champion, was one point behind Xavier with 85 points and received one first-place vote from the men’s basketball head coaches, who did not vote for their own teams. Connecticut was picked fourth with 77 points and Providence was fifth with 62 points. St. John’s and Seton Hall finished sixth and seventh with 62 and 52 points, respectively. Butler was eighth with 36 points, four points ahead of ninth-place Marquette with 32 points. Georgetown was 10th with 21 points and DePaul 11th with 12 points.

    Creighton is the only school in the league that has met or exceeded its preseason BIG EAST prognostication every year since joining the league, as seen below:

Creighton’s BIG EAST Preseason Poll History

Year     Preseason     Actual     Preseason All-BIG EAST

2013-14     3rd     2nd     Doug McDermott (1st)

2014-15     9th     T-9th     –

2015-16     9th     6th     –

2016-17     3rd     T-3rd     Maurice Watson Jr. (1st); Marcus Foster (HM)

2017-18     5th     T-3rd     Marcus Foster (1st); Khyri Thomas (HM)

2018-19     9th     T-3rd     Martin Krampelj (HM)

2019-20     7th     T-1st    Ty-Shon Alexander (1st)

2020-21     2nd     2nd    Marcus Zegarowski (1st); Mitch Ballock (2nd)

2021-22    8th    4th    –

2022-23    1st    ??    Ryan Kalkbrenner (1st); Arthur Kaluma (2nd)

            Ryan Nembhard (2nd); Baylor Scheierman (HM)

#ProJays

Former Creighton All-American Doug McDermott is back for a second season with the San Antonio Spurs, giving Creighton at least one NBA player in 39 of the last 40 seasons. McDermott is in his ninth season in the NBA.

    Other famous Bluejays to play in the NBA in the past include Paul Silas, Kyle Korver, Benoit Benjamin and Anthony Tolliver.

We’re Jamming!

Ryan Kalkbrenner owns 123 dunks in his career, including 69 last year. He has more career dunks than any other Bluejay player since Greg McDermott‘s arrival in 2010.

     Here’s a look at the Creighton student-athletes with 20 or more dunks in a season, and 25 or more dunks in a career, under Greg McDermott:

Most Creighton Dunks, Season, Since 2010-11

Dunks    Name    Year

74    Martin Krampelj    2018-19

72    Justin Patton    2016-17

69    Ryan Kalkbrenner    2021-22

50    Christian Bishop    2020-21

38    Christian Bishop    2019-20

36    Gregory Echenique    2012-13

33    Martin Krampelj    2017-18

30    Gregory Echenique    2011-12

29    Marcus Foster    2017-18

29    Ryan Kalkbrenner    2020-21

25    Ryan Kalkbrenner    2022-23

24    Gregory Echenique    2010-11

23    Marcus Foster    2016-17

22    Kenny Lawson Jr.    2010-11

21    Alex O’Connell    2021-22

21    Arthur Kaluma    2021-22

20    Khyri Thomas    2017-18

Most Creighton Dunks, Career, Since 2010-11

Dunks    Name    Years

123    Ryan Kalkbrenner    2020-Pres.

121    Martin Krampelj    2015-19

103    Christian Bishop    2018-21

90    Gregory Echenique    2010-13

72    Justin Patton    2016-17

52    Marcus Foster    2016-18

51    Khyri Thomas    2015-18

38    Will Artino    2011-15

33    Zach Hanson    2013-17

31    Arthur Kaluma    2021-Pres.

25    Geoffrey Groselle    2012-16

25    Damien Jefferson    2018-21

Most Creighton Dunks, Team, Season, Since 2010-11

Dunks    Year    Team W-L

144    2016-17    25-10 (NCAA)

132    2021-22    23-12 (NCAA)

107    2017-18    21-12 (NCAA)

106    2018-19    20-15 (NIT)

90    2020-21    22-9 (NCAA)

60    2019-20    24-7 (Postseason Canceled)

58    2015-16    20-15 (NIT)

56    2010-11    23-16 (CBI)

56    2022-23    8-6 so far (Postseason TBD)

54    2012-13    28-8 (NCAA)

42    2011-12    29-6 (NCAA)

Fun Fact

Creighton is the only school in the BIG EAST with 12 or more league wins each of the previous three seasons.

    Among the other BIG EAST or “Power 5”  Conference schools, only Baylor, Illinois, Kansas, UCLA and Virginia have done so.

Among The Nation’s Best

Below is where Creighton ranks nationally since the start of the 2010-11 season, per Basketball-Reference.com.

2010-11 to Dec. 30, 2022

Category    CU Stat    CU Rank

3FG Made    3,753    3rd    

FG Percentage    .477    4th

3FG Percentage    .377    4th

Assists    6,809    6th    

FG Made    11,631    8th    

Points    32,526    10th    

Wins    284    29th    

Winning Percentage    .665    35th    

20 Wins, Again

Creighton had 23 wins in 2021-22, securing a seventh straight 20-win season.

    Creighton is one of six schools with 20 or more wins in each of the previous seven seasons, joining Belmont, Gonzaga, Houston, Kansas and Oregon.

22 of 24 Seasons With 20 Wins

Creighton has won 20 or more games in 22 of the last 24 seasons, a feat that puts the Jays among an exclusive group, nationally.

    Just two schools have had 20 or more wins each of the last 24 years: Gonzaga and Kansas. Duke has done it 23 times, Creighton and Kentucky 22 times.

Most 20-Win Seasons, Last 24 Seasons

Team    20-Win Seasons       2021-22 W-L

Gonzaga    24    28-4

Kansas    24    34-6

Duke    23    32-7

Creighton    22    23-12

Kentucky    22    26-8

Multiple Choices

For the first time since 1964-65, Creighton had five men average in double-figures for an entire season last season. Last year’s double-figure group included Ryan Hawkins (13.8 ppg.), Ryan Kalkbrenner (13.1), Alex O’Connell (11.8), Ryan Nembhard (11.3) and Arthur Kaluma (10.4).

    Creighton had not had five or more men finish a season averaging 10 or more points per game since the 1964-65 club had SIX men average in double- figures (Neil Johnson, 17.3; Elton McGriff, 15.0; Fritz Pointer, 14.3; Tim Powers, 12.6; Bob Miles, 11.9; Charlie Brown (11.6), though Johnson only played in 8-of-23 games.

    This year’s team has five players averaging 10.9 points per game or more, Ryan Kalkbrenner (15.1), Trey Alexander (12.5), Ryan Nembhard (11.3), Arthur Kaluma (12.6), Baylor Scheierman (12.9).

    Creighton has won each of its last 26 games when five or more players score in double-figures, a streak that dates to Jan. 9, 2019 vs. Marquette.

Dynamic Duo

Creighton was one of 11 schools to earn at-large bids in the NCAA Tournament in both men’s and women’s basketball in 2021-22, a list that featured Arkansas, Baylor, Creighton, Indiana, Iowa State, LSU, Miami (Fla.), Michigan, North Carolina, Notre Dame and Ohio State.

    Those 11 schools, in addition to 13 others (Arizona, Delaware, Gonzaga, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Longwood, Montana State, Tennessee, Texas, UConn, Villanova and Virginia Tech) were the only 24 schools with both men’s and women’s basketball teams to make the Big Dance.

    This season, Creighton was one of nine teams with a preseason top-25 squad on both the men’s and women’s side, joining Arizona, Baylor, Indiana, Michigan, North Carolina, Oregon, Tennessee and Texas.

Big Deficits, No Big Deal

Creighton owns 27 victories since the start of the 2010-11 season after trailing by double-figures at some point, including four such rallies last season.  In its NCAA Tournament win vs. San Diego State, Creighton trailed 35-21 late in the first half.

    Thirteen of those 27 comebacks have come away from home.

    If you’re curious, CU’s largest comeback win since 2000 came on Jan. 28, 2006, when the Jays trailed 25-6 early before rallying to beat Wichita State on a buzzer-beater by Anthony Tolliver.

CU’s Double-Digit Comebacks Under McDermott

Deficit    Opponent    Date

18    #18 Oklahoma    11/19/14

17    at San Diego State    11/30/11

16    at Evansville    02/16/13

16    at Seton Hall    01/27/21

16    SIU Edwardsville    11/27/21

15    Arkansas-Pine Bluff    11/09/21

14    Evansville    02/21/12

14    vs. San Diego State    03/17/22

13    at Saint Joseph’s    11/16/13

13    Xavier    01/12/14

13    #22 Xavier    12/23/20

12    Saint Joseph’s    12/11/10

12    at DePaul    01/17/16

12    East Tennessee State    11/11/18

11    at Wichita State    12/31/11

11    Northern Iowa    01/10/12

11    vs. Alabama    03/16/12

11    vs. Ole Miss    11/21/16

11    vs. Connecticut    03/12/21

11    DePaul    01/22/22

10    UAB    11/14/12

10    vs. Drake    03/02/12

10    at Nebraska    12/07/14

10    South Dakota    12/09/14

10    St. John’s    01/03/18

10    at DePaul    02/07/18

10    Bemidji State    02/13/18

McDermott Ranks Second On CU Wins List

Greg McDermott has 284 victories at Creighton, good for second place on CU’s all-time wins list.

    McDermott’s .665 winning percentage is Creighton’s best since Arthur A. Schabinger’s .714 win rate more than 85 years ago.

    Below is a list of the most victorious Creighton coaches in program history.

Most Coaching Wins, Creighton History

Rk.    W-L    Name    Years

1.    327-176    Dana Altman    1994-2010

2.    284-143    Greg McDermott    2010-Pres.

3.    165-66    Arthur A. Schabinger     1922-1935

4.    138-118    John J. “Red” McManus     1959-1969

5.    130-64    Tom Apke    1974-1981

Super Seven

Greg McDermott joined some select company when he directed his troops to a seventh NCAA Tournament last season. That put him in the company of some of the greatest coaches in CU Athletics history.

    McDermott is one of five head coaches in Creighton history to lead seven different NCAA Tournament teams.

Name    Sport    NCAA’s @CU

Kirsten Bernthal Booth    Volleyball    12

Bob Warming    Men’s Soccer    11

Dana Altman    Men’s Basketball    7

Brent Vigness    Softball    7

Greg McDermott    Men’s Basketball    7

McDermott’s Coaching Tree

A bunch of former Greg McDermott protégés are thriving at the Division I level.

    Eric Henderson led South Dakota State to the first 18-0 season in Summit League history. The Jackrabbits went 30-5 after winning the Summit League Tournament and clinching an NCAAA bid.

    North Dakota State’s Dave Richman went 23-10 overall and finished as the runner-up in the Summit League standings  and Summit League Tournament to Henderson’s SDSU team.

    Ben Jacobson won the MVC regular-season title while coaching Northern Iowa. The Panthers went 20-12 and reached the NIT.

    Drake’s Darian DeVries led the Bulldogs to a 25-11 mark and runner-up finish in the MVC (to Jacobson’s UNI team) in the regular-season and the league tournament. Drake played in the CBI.

    Steve Lutz led his Texas A&M-Corpus Christi team to a 24-12 record and a Southland Conference Tournament title in his first year as a head coach, with the Islanders reaching the NCAA Tournament First Four. He inherited a 5-19 team that hadn’t won 20 games or had a winning record since 2016-17.

    TJ Otzelberger turned around Iowa State in his first year in Ames. He inherited a 2-22 team (0-18 Big 12) and turned it into a team that reached the Sweet 16 and finished 22-13.

    Patrick Sellers led Central Connecticut State to an 8-24 record in his first season with the Blue Devils, including a victory in the Northeast Conference Tournament.

    Paul Sather is the head coach at North Dakota after successful tenures at Black Hills State and Northern State.

CHI Health Center Omaha Dramatics

Creighton is 8-8 in games with a game-winning go-ahead score in the final 10 seconds at CHI Health Center Omaha, which opened in the fall of 2003.

Creighton’s Go-Ahead Scores in Wins at

CHI Health Center Omaha, Last 10 Seconds

Date    Opponent    Score    Player/Score    Time

11/26/05    Dayton    W 91-90*    Funk FG    :5.7

01/28/06    Wichita St.    W 57-55    Tolliver FG    :0.0

11/25/06    George Mason    W 58-56    Watts FT    :7.5

03/18/08    Rhode Island    W 74-73    Witter 3FG    :3.2

01/13/10    Southern Illinois    W 71-69    Young FG    :1.3

02/18/12    Long Beach St.    W 81-79    Young FG    :0.3

01/28/14    St. John’s    W 63-60    McDermott 3FG    :2.8

01/18/20    Providence    W 78-74    Zegarowski 3FG    :3.2

*double-overtime

Opponent Go-Ahead Scores in CU Losses at

CHI Health Center Omaha, Last 10 Seconds

Date    Opponent    Score    Player/Score    Time

03/20/06    Miami (Fla.)    L 53-52    G. Diaz FT    :2.6

01/20/07    Southern Illinois    L 58-57    B. Mullins FG    :4.1

01/10/15    #19 Seton Hall    L 68-67    S. Gibbs 3FG    :2.2

02/16/15    #19 Butler    L 58-56    R. Jones FG    :1.9

03/07/15    Xavier    L 74-73    D. Davis FT’s    :6.3

01/12/16    #12 Providence    L 50-48    K. Dunn FG    :0.0

02/22/17    Providence    L 68-66    K. Cartwright 3FG    :2.4

02/10/18    #5 Xavier    L 71-72    Q. Goodin FT’s    :0.3

Firing On All Cylinders

Creighton finished last season ranked 50th overall by KenPom.com. That included the nation’s No. 112 offense, and No. 19 defense. Creighton’s No. 19 defense was its best mark in the 20 seasons of the KenPom era.

    Creighton has had a top-25 offense per KenPom in six of the previous 11 seasons.

    Here’s where Creighton ranked after games on Dec. 30.

Year    Off. Rating    Def. Rating    Team W-L

2010-11    66    174    23-16

2011-12    5    166    29-6

2012-13    5    66    28-8

2013-14    2    124    27-8

2014-15    59    138    14-19

2015-16    43    76    20-15

2016-17    32    46    25-10

2017-18    25    58    21-12

2018-19    47    83    20-15

2019-20    3    78    24-7

2020-21    25    32    22-9

2021-22    112    19    23-12

2022-23    37    28    8-6 so far

Top-20 Crowds

Here’s a look at Creighton’s top-20 home crowds all-time.

      Rank    Att.    Opponent    Date

    1.    18,868    Providence    03/08/14

    2.    18,859    Georgetown    01/25/14

    3.    18,831    #1 Villanova    12/31/16

    4.    18,797    #6 Villanova    02/16/14

    5.    18,759    #1 Gonzaga    12/01/18

    6.    18,742    Seton Hall    02/23/14

    7.    18,735    Wichita State    02/11/12

    8.    18,613    Wichita State    03/02/13

    9.    18,525    Marquette    12/31/13

    10.    18,519    #8 Seton Hall    03/07/20

    11.    18,518    Georgetown    01/27/18

    12.    18,495    Marquette    02/17/18

    13.    18,494    Illinois State    02/09/13

    14.    18,458    Evansville    12/29/12

    15.    18,436    Bradley    01/28/12

    16.    18,323    DePaul    02/07/14

    17.    18,321    #3 Villanova    02/24/18

    18.    18,294    #19 Iowa State    12/04/21

    19.    18,257    #5 Xavier    02/10/18

    20.    18,192    Marquette    02/20/22

Release, Rotation, Splash, Repeat

Creighton has made at least one three-pointer in 962 straight games. The streak is the nation’s 13th-longest active streak.

    Creighton’s last game without a three-pointer came at Illinois State on Feb. 20, 1993, when the Jays were 0-for-5. Creighton’s last win without making a three-point basket came on March 3, 1991 when the Jays went 0-for-2 from three-point range in a 71-66 win over Southern Illinois in the championship game of the MVC Tournament.

    Below is a list of the nation’s longest active three-point streaks.

Longest Active 3-Point Streaks (through 12/31)

    Rk.    Streak    School    Next Game

    1.    1,175    UNLV    1/7

    2.    1,165    Duke    1/4

    3.    1,107    Western Kentucky    1/5

    4.    1,098    East Tennessee State    1/4

    5.    1,077    Oakland    1/6

    6.    1,076    Pacific    1/5

    7.    1,070    Texas    1/3

    8.    1,018    Marshall    1/5

    9.    1,009    Baylor    1/4

    10.    1,001    Princeton    1/6

    11.    997    Gonzaga    1/5

    12.    970    Long Island    1/5

    13.    962    Creighton    1/3

    14.    955    Mount St. Mary’s    1/2

    15.    945    Tennessee State    1/5

Triple Trouble

During Creighton’s current streak of 962 straight games with a three-pointer, the Jays have drained 7,584 trifectas, an average of 7.88 treys per game.

    That’s not surprising since during the streak, Creighton has made exactly 7 three-pointers 143 times, more than any figure.

    Only five times in the streak has Creighton made just one three-pointer, but on 273 occasions the Bluejays have made 10 or more trifectas, including three games of 20 or more.

    Since the start of the 2019-20 season, the Bluejays are 52-13 when making eight or more three-pointers, compared to a 23-20 mark when making seven treys or fewer.

Team 3FG Made During Creighton’s 3-Point Streak

1:    5 times    2:  17 times    3:  34 times

4:    75 times    5:   101 times    6:  101 times

7:   143 times    8:   121 times    9:  92 times

10:  80 times    11:  54 times    12:  54 times

13:  44 times    14: 19 times    15:  7 times

16:  8 times    17: 3 times    19:  1 time

20: 1 time    21:  1 time    22:  1 time

Ticket Information

Single-game tickets for the 2022-32 season went on sale on October 14th. Fans can purchase single-game tickets at CHI Health Center Omaha Box Office, Ryan Athletic Center, by calling Ticketmaster or visiting Ticketmaster.com.

    For more information, call the Creighton Ticket Office at (402) 280-JAYS.



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