Following a signature victory over Iowa State to start the week, the Milwaukee men's basketball program welcomes Elon, FIU and Concordia-St. Paul to UWM Panther Arena for the "Black & Gold Shootout". Each team will play three games in the event, set to be played from Friday through Sunday in downtown Milwaukee. Each of the UWM contests will feature an ESPN3 broadcast and will be carried on WISN AM 1130 with
Scott Warras on the call. All games in the event will have live statistics and live video available, with all links on the UWM website.
LOOKING AT THE OPPONENTS
Concordia-St. Paul is 1-2 on the season, posting an 85-51 win over North Central in its most recent outing Nov. 14. Fourth-year head coach Joey James (39-54 record/6-25 last season) brings an offense that is shooting 52.6 percent on the season and is led by three players in double-figures (Bryndan Matthews 18.7 ppg/Avan Ward 15.0 ppg/Ted Brown 11.3 ppg).
Elon is led by ninth-year head coach Matt Matheny (126-130 record). The Phoenix are coming off an 18-14 record a season ago and were picked third in the Colonial Athletic Association preseason poll. The team is off to a 1-2 start, falling to top-ranked Duke in the season opener before claiming a 96-53 win over William Peace Nov. 11. The offense is led by Tyler Seibring (13.7 ppg) and Dmitri Thompson (10.0 ppg), with Seibring named to the 2017-18 All-CAA Preseason First Team.
Fifth-year coach Anthony Evans (51-76 at FIU) brings in a Panther squad that features eight newcomers and no returning starters from last year's roster (finished 7-24). They are off to a 1-1 start this season, defeating Florida Memorial, 70-47, before falling to Stetson in overtime. Trejon Jacob (16.5 ppg) and Josh Stamps (15.0 ppg) lead the offense.
SERIES HISTORY
The Panthers stand in at a perfect 4-0 against Concordia-St. Paul, last having played the Golden Bears in 2014 (a 64-59 victory). The series dates back to 2001, with all games played in Milwaukee.
Milwaukee and Elon will be playing for the first time on the hardcourt.
UWM is 3-0 in the all-time series against Florida International, but the two teams have not matched up since a 61-48 win by the Panthers back in December of 2002.
LAST GAME
Milwaukee held Iowa State to 25 percent shooting after halftime and gradually built a lead to as many as 20 points in claiming an impressive 74-56 victory over Iowa State Monday night on the road at Hilton Coliseum.
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The Panthers (2-0) used an 11-2 run midway through the second half to extend their lead to double-figures for the first time over the Cyclones (0-2) at 52-41. It was all Milwaukee from there, never allowing Iowa State to get any closer the rest of the way. The statement victory by UWM and first-year head coach
Pat Baldwin gave Iowa State – a team that has made the NCAA Tournament each of the past six seasons and had won 44 of its last 50 at home – its first loss in a home opener in 20 years.
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Balanced scoring and strong defense were the keys to the night, played in front of a packed house of 13,853.
Brock Stull led the way with 17 points, including a deep three-pointer at the halftime buzzer that gave the squad the added momentum it needed heading into the locker room.
Brett Prahl had 14 and
Bryce Nze 13, with the duo down low combining for 11-of-13 shooting from the floor and nine rebounds.
Bryce Barnes added 10 points to make it four in double-figures.
CLAIMING A WIN IN CYCLONE ALLEY
Iowa State's Hilton Coliseum is known as one of the toughest places to play on the road in college basketball, with the home team claiming victory in over 75 percent of its games since 1971. That didn't seem to matter to the Panthers Nov. 13, handing the Cyclones their first loss in a home opener since 1997. Iowa State had won 45 of its last 50 at home coming into the contest, posting an 88-10 mark on its own court the past eight seasons. It was also the first win by an opponent in November at Hilton Coliseum in 16 games.
BALANCE IS KEY
It's only been two games, but it's hard not to see one of the strengths of the team in 2017-18 to this point - balanced scoring. Milwaukee had five players in double figures in the season opener against La Crosse and followed that up with four players with 10 or more against Iowa State Nov. 13. The starting lineup has accounted for nine of the 10 games in double figures so far.
HARD TO TOP
The Panthers shot an impressive 62.5 percent (30-of-48) from the floor against La Crosse in the season opener. By making nearly 2/3 of their shots, it puts them near the top of the charts, finishing as the sixth-best team performance from the floor in a game in program history. Not only was it the sixth-best outing in any game, but also goes down as the BEST shooting effort as a team in any season opener all-time.
Best Field-Goal Percentage, Single Game
1. 67.8 (40-59) Cleveland State, 2/8/96
2. 65.0 (26-40) UMKC, 11/30/13
3. 63.9 (39-61) Chicago State, 1/19/91
4. 62.8 (27-43) South Dakota State, 12/11/10
5. 62.7 (47-75) Judson, 12/13/15
6. 62.5 (30-48) La Crosse, 11/10/17
SUPER START
Highlighting the victory over La Crosse in the season opener Nov. 10 was the best outing of sophomore
Bryce Barnes' young career. He filled up the stat sheet with 19 points in just 19 minutes of playing time, making 6-7 shots from the floor and 6-7 attempts from the line, while adding three rebounds, three assists and a pair of steals in the win. The 19 points tops his former high-water mark of 14 points, recorded against DePaul early last season (11/20/16). His assist total and made field goals against the Eagles also equaled career-bests.
HE SHOOTS, HE SCORES
After establishing a new program record for field-goal percentage in a season as a junior a year ago (.664),
Brett Prahl has seemingly gotten better. In his first four outings this season (including the two exhibition contests), he has missed just three shots on 23 total attempts. Prahl was 5-5 from the floor against Marquette and then 5-6 against Wisconsin Lutheran in the exhibition season. He then made 5-6 attempts in both the season opener against La Crosse and again in the win at Iowa State, a shooting percentage of 86.9 percent overall.
THE BIG DEBUT
November 10 against La Crosse marked the big day for
Pat Baldwin, making his head-coaching debut following four very successful years as an assistant coach at Northwestern. His tenure with the Wildcats culminated in the 2016-17 season with a school-record 24 victories and the first NCAA tournament berth in school history. That followed what was a school-record 20 wins during the 2015-16 campaign. Baldwin also has valuable firsthand experience in the Horizon League, beginning with two seasons as an assistant at Green Bay before a seven-year stop at Loyola Chicago, where he finished as the associate head coach.
AND WE'RE OFF
A couple of different looks to the season opener, which saw Milwaukee playing its opening game of the season at the UWM Panther Arena for the second year in a row after not doing so since a win over SW Minnesota State to kick off the 2011-12 campaign. The team is now 17-11 in season openers since returning to the NCAA Division I ranks full-time in 1990-91 following the 83-73 win over the Eagles. More impressively, the team is 24-4 in that same span in home openers, claiming wins in 17 of the past 18 (13 in a row at one point). Also, the Panthers have not lost the season opener when it was played at home since dropping an 80-79 decision to Platteville in November of 1994 (having won the previous 12 in that scenario).
A WARM WELCOME
In addition to getting to know the players on the roster this season,
Pat Baldwin and staff announced the newest signings for next year when Zach Cameron-Chodes, Shae Mitchell, Tyronn Mosley and Fabio Soehnel all signed their NLI Nov. 8. The group become Baldwin's first members of the 2018 recruiting class.
STULL COMES OF AGE
A season ago,
Brock Stull emerged as a go-to threat for the Panthers, going on to earn the team's Clay Tucker Most Valuable Player Award after a breakout sophomore campaign in which he led the Panthers in scoring (13.5 ppg) and rebounding (6.6 rpg). Stull started all 35 games, shooting 44.4 percent from the floor, 39.3 percent from three-point range and 80.7 percent from the line. That was a big step up from a redshirt freshman year in which he made appearances in 30 games on the season as a key reserve off the bench, contributing 2.6 points and 1.7 rebounds per game.
A REAL SHOOTING SHOWCASE
It was a back-and-forth affair all season long, eventually coming down to just hundredths of a percentage point. The Panthers established a program-first, as no team in UWM's NCAA Division I history has ever had two players make 60 percent or better from the floor in a season. The now-former school record of .610 (86-of-141) for the year (minimum of 100 attempts), set by Adrian Tigert back in 2001-02, has been broken.
Brett Prahl holds the new standard at .664, making 99-of-149 attempts on the season.
Bryce Nze was just a hair behind, finishing at .662, making 100-of-151 attempts - also finishing as the top two percentages in the Horizon League last season. To realize how close that was, had Brett missed just one of the makes, or had Bryce made just one of his misses, the two would have flip-flopped the final order. Brett is no stranger to the impressive stat, having made an eye-popping 78.9 percent (15-of-19) from the floor as a sophomore. The last person to make over 60 percent of their field goal attempts (while averaging at least one FGA per game) was Derrick Ford back in 2005-06, who made shots at a 61.5 percent clip that campaign. It's hard to believe, but the duo actually shot BETTER in league games - Prahl ended at 71.8 percent in the 18 conference affairs, with Nze just behind at 70.0 percent. They ranked one-two in Horizon League play as well.
BROTHER ACT
Speaking of the twins, Brett and
Alex Prahl are one set of 29 brothers currently playing together at the NCAA Division I level this season. Of the 29 combinations, just seven are twins and Brett and Alex are the ONLY set of identical duos in the bunch.
UNCHARTED TERRITORY
The Panthers closed out last season with an unprecedented run at Motor City Madness. Milwaukee became the first No. 10 seed to claim a victory in the Horizon League Tournament history (going back to 1994-95). The prior seven No. 10 seeds went 0-7 combined, losing by an average of 15.2 points.
The team is familiar with the underdog role. In 2013-14, the Panthers became the first-ever No. 5 seed to win the Horizon League Tournament. In fact, they followed the same exact path to open both trips. That season, UWM beat Detroit and Valparaiso their first two matchups on the way to the crown. At No. 10, Milwaukee was the lowest seed to ever play in the championship game (prior was Wright State as the No. 8 seed in 1995). The also had the chance to become the lowest-ever seed to win (lowest prior was UIC as the No. 6 seed in 2002).
BUCKLE DOWN
The Panthers knocked off second-seeded Valparaiso at Motor City Madness with the best first-half defensive effort against an NCAA Division I opponent in school history. The 12 points allowed included just five made field goals, as the Panthers also held the Crusaders scoreless for the first 6:59 of the evening. Best marks in school history:
11: Mount Senario, 12/27/00 (NAIA school)
12: Valparaiso, 3/4/17*
13: Texas Southern, 11/20/11
FOR WHOM THE BELL TOLLS
Jeremiah Bell had gone five games without scoring in double-figures, but when he did against Detroit Mercy March 3, he did so in near record-breaking fashion. His 31 points were not only a career-high (prior best was 16 on a pair of occasions), but put his name into numerous places in the record book for UWM Horizon League Tournament games.
POINTS: 31
-Tied Joah Tucker's 31 vs. Loyola in 2005
MADE FG'S
-Tied record of 9 set three other times
FG PERCENTAGE
-Broke record with 9-of-10, .900 effort
-This also tied the Horizon League tourney game record (also 9-of-10) set by Terrell Riggs, Detroit vs. Loyola, 2003
In addition, he also became the first Panther to score 30-plus points off the bench since Avery Smith netted 36 against Oakland on December 2, 2006. He joined
Brock Stull as just the second-ever UWM sophomore to record over 30 points in a game. Combined with
Brock Stull's 20-point effort, it gave UWM two players with 20-or-more in one contest for the first time in 43 games.
THAT'S 30 FOR #3
Brock Stull came up with a little history against UIC Feb. 4 when he scored a career-high 30 points. For starters, it was the first 30-point effort for UWM in 42 games (Akeem Springs last had 33 at Youngstown State on Jan. 7, 2016), propelling the team to its first 100-point outburst in 47 tries (had 125 against Judson Dec. 13, 2015 ... it was also the first time an opponent hit 100 in 272 games). Most significantly, it marked the first time in UWM's NCAA Division I history that a sophomore scored at least 30 points in a game - a span of 801 contests.
BROCK OF AGES
Brock Stull just kept grabbing rebounds against Detroit Mercy Jan. 27. When the game finally ended, not only did he break his former career-high of 11, but finished with 17 to just miss the school record of 18 boards in the process. Matt Tiby was the last to grab as many as 17, doing so against South Dakota back in December of 2015. The program mark of 18 is held by Nathan Schrameyer and was set against SEMO on March 2, 1995.
BULLSEYE FOR JOHNSON
Jeremy Johnson posted one of the best free-throw shooting seasons in school history a year ago. The then-redshirt freshman finished the campaign at an impressive .846 this year, missing just eight tries out of 52 attempts. The school record (minimum is 40 attempts) belongs to Pat Easterlin, who connected on 87.0 of his charity stripe tosses (40-of-46) back in 1993-94. Johnson was above 90 percent until well after midseason, eventually settling for the fifth-best percentage from the charity stripe in school history.
HIS TURN
Brett Prahl seized the opportunity he received with increased playing time during the 2016-17 season. Coming into the year, he had per-game averages of 1.8 points and 1.0 rebounds per game (while averaging 6.2 minutes played). He finished the year with averages of 7.2 ppg and 3.6 rpg (in 19.8 mpg), which he upped to 8.5 points and 4.1 rebounds per contest in Horizon League play.
AND THE FROSH WILL LEAD
The Panthers had a freshman lead them in scoring on six different occasions last season - including Jan. 20 when
Jeremy Johnson went for a season-high 17 points. Not only did Johnson lead the way, but classmate
Bryce Nze was the second-leading scorer in the win over CSU with 13 points. The duo combined to go 12-18 from the floor.
OH WHAT A NIGHT
Just a freshman at the time,
Bryce Nze finished the night against UIC Jan. 17 at 10-of-12 from the floor, an .833 clip that checked in as the third-best shooting percentage in a single game in program history.
1. .846 (11-13) Adrian Tigert 3/18/06
2. .846 (11-13) Dylan Page, 2/1/03
3. .833 (10-12) Nze
In addition, his 22-point outburst not only set a season-high for the newcomer, but marked the first outing of 20-or-more points for a UWM freshman since nearly before Nze was born in 1998. The 22 points is the most since Clay Tucker scored 23 (also against UIC) back on February 12, 2000. Tucker had five games of 20-plus points that season, topped by a 24-point showing in the season opener against Central Michigan (11/20/99) - a game that included a Tucker 3-pointer at the buzzer to win the game for Milwaukee.
PRAHL ON THE PROWL
Not to be outdone,
Brett Prahl actually topped them all, making 90 percent (9-of-10) of his field goal attempts in the win over Youngstown State Jan. 22. (the school-record for FG% in a game carries a minimum of 10 makes). Prahl's 18 points helped him set a career-high for the third time last season and included an offensive rebound and reverse lay-in with 2.5 seconds left that tied the game at the end of regulation and forced overtime.
EZ FOR NZE
Bryce Nze was named Horizon League Freshman of the Week last Jan. 23 after averaging 13.7 points and 5.3 rebounds per game despite playing, on average, only 18.7 minutes per outing. He shot 79.2 percent (19-24 FG) for the week. That was the first Freshman of the Week honor for Nze in his career and marked the first for a Milwaukee player since Justin Jordan earned the honor Nov. 17, 2014.
CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARDS
Bryce Nze needed to get accustomed to the college game, last playing on a regular basis as a high school junior following an injury that cost him his senior season. While foul trouble was tough to avoid early in the year, rebounding at an impressive level all season long was not. He was the team's leading rebounder on 12 occasions last year - the most for a UWM freshman since Adrian Tigert accomplished the feat seven times in 2001-02. Nze also grabbed a career-high 11 boards at Montana Dec. 3 - Tony Meier was the last freshmen to grab 10-or-more rebounds in a game, doing so three times during the 2008-09 campaign.
WHO NEEDS A BREAK?
Two Panthers barely stepped off the court in the game against the Penguins Dec. 29 of last season, with
Brock Stull playing 47 of the 50 minutes on the night and Cody Wichmann just behind at 46. Both of those totals wound up at the top of the all-time UWM record book, with Stull tying the single-game record.
47: Stull at YSU, 12/29/16
47: Dan Weisse at UIC, 1/11/01
47: Jason Frederick at UIC, 1/11/01
46: Wichmann at YSU, 12/29/16
46: Craig Greene at Sacramento St., 1/9/92
46: Joe Schultz at Illinois, 12/3/90
THE NEXT LEVEL
The freshmen grew up quickly for the Panthers last season and came through in the scoring column. Four different newcomers contributed a total of 21 games of double-figure scoring on the year. They were:
Bryce Nze (7 games, high of 22 points),
Jeremy Johnson (8/17),
Bryce Barnes (4/14) and
August Haas (2/12). For comparison, freshmen accounted for just six games of double-figure scoring two years ago. The highest recent output of double-figure scoring by a frosh over the course of a season was six such games by Austin Arians (2012-13), with Ricky Franklin the most recent UWM freshman to score in double-figures in at least 10 games in his first season in a Panther uniform (Franklin did so 10 times back in 2006-07).
GETTING IT DONE QUICKLY
Bryce Nze recorded the first double-double of his career against Montana Dec. 3 of last season, posting 15 points and 11 rebounds in just the eighth game of his UWM debut campaign. It's a noteworthy effort, marking the first double-double for a UWM freshman since Tony Meier had 17 points and 16 rebounds against UIC almost eight years ago (Jan. 31, 2009). Meier also had a double-double in his collegiate debut, finishing with 14 points and 12 boards against Loyola Marymount Nov. 14, 2008. Nze will have the chance to record the most double-doubles by a freshman in some time. Meier finished that season with two, the same amount that Adrian Tigert had as a frosh in 2001-02 (10 pts/11 reb against Butler 1/19/02 and 15 pts/13 boards against Omaha 12/1/01). Tigert's first double-double came in his fifth game of the season.
ONE OF THE BEST EVER
The showing by the Milwaukee defense against UC Irvine Nov. 26 of last season goes into the record book in numerous spots. The 37 points allowed rank as the lowest ever allowed to an NCAA Division I opponent, with only the 21 scored in December of 2000 by Mount Senario - an NAIA opponent - coming in ahead of it. The last time UWM held an opponent under 40 points came 143 games ago (see list below).
21: Mount Senario, 12/27/00
37: UC Irvine, 11/26/16
38: Wright State, 1/12/12
38: Texas Southern, 11/20/11
HOW LOW CAN YOU GO?
Had the Anteaters not found a way to make two of their final three field goals of the game Nov. 26, a couple other marks could have fallen. UC Irvine ended the contest with 11 made field goals and a 25.6 percent mark from the floor, with each total marking a new entry in the all-time top five.
FEWEST FIELD GOALS MADE
7: Mount Senario, 12/27/00
10: Detroit, 1/9/97
11: UC Irvine, 11/26/16
14: Two times
LOWEST OPP. FIELD GOAL %
.189 (7-37): Mount Senario, 12/27/00
.215 (14-65): UIC, 2/17/96
.245 (12-49): YSU, 1/7/08
.256 (11-43): UC Irvine, 11/26/16
WE'LL LEAVE THE LIGHT ON FOR YOU
The Panthers opened the 2016-17 season with two contests at home - an exhibition against Concordia Wisconsin and the regular-season opener against MSOE. From there, the fans had to get to know the team from afar, as the Panthers went through a stretch of nine out of 10 games away from home. The only home date between the opener Nov. 11 and the Dec. 17 matchup when they hosted Western Illinois was Nov. 30 against Jacksonville. In between, UWM traveled to five different states (Tennessee, Illinois, South Dakota, Montana, back to Illinois and then to Ohio) and put on approximately 6,500 miles of travel via airplane and bus.
The stretch of nine of 11 games on the road to open the season marked the most in Milwaukee's NCAA Division I history and equals the most all-time - tying the same start that the squad opened the season with way back in the 1939-40 campaign.
TEN IN No. 1
The Panthers had five different players finish in double-figures in the season opener against MSOE last Nov. 11, including one freshman when
Jeremy Johnson scored 11 points off the bench. That marked the most points for a freshman in a season opener since Tony Meier recorded a double-double of 14 points and 12 rebounds against Loyola Marymount on November 14, 2008. It is also just the second time since then that a frosh has netted double-figures: Justin Jordan also finished with 11 in the 2014-15 debut against Auburn.
MAKING HISTORY
Cody Wichmann appeared in the 126th game of his Milwaukee career against Northern Kentucky March 7. That moved him into the top spot by himself - past the former top mark held by three former Panther greats.
1. Cody Wichmann - 126 (2013-17)
T2. J.J. Panoske - 125 (2012-16)
T2. Kyle Kelm - 125 (2010-14)
T2. Ricky Franklin - 125 (2006-10)
HE'S THE CHIEF
Former Milwaukee forward Demetrius Harris (2011-13) is once again on the active roster for the National Football League's Kansas City Chiefs, catching seven passes in nine games (5 starts) for 52 yards and a touchdown this season. In fact, last year, he set career highs with 11 starts, 17 catches and 123 yards. He made nine starts in the 16 games of the regular season in 2015, recording seven catches, including his first career TD in the regular-season finale. The first Panther to play in the NFL since 1983, Harris played two seasons at Milwaukee and helped the team to a College Basketball Invitational appearance in 2012 before putting up 9.1 ppg and 5.3 rpg in 2012-13. Last season, the 6-foot-7 Harris appeared in eight games as a tight end for the Chiefs in 2014 and hauled in three passes for 20 yards before suffering a season-ending foot injury during warm-ups against Buffalo in early November.
IT'S OUR HOUSE
Although the building is not new and has been the site to many historic basketball moments in Milwaukee history, this is UWM's fourth season in an arena that bears its name - UW-Milwaukee Panther Arena. In July of 2014, the University and Wisconsin Center District entered into a 10-year partnership that included naming rights to the facility formerly known as The MECCA and most recently, U.S. Cellular Arena.
UP NEXT
Following the three games in the "Black & Gold Shootout", the Panthers will make the short drive to Madison to take on the Badgers November 24. Game time at the Kohl Center is set for 8 p.m.
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