Following what will be a 12-day break in the schedule after losing two games to COVID protocol cancellations, the Milwaukee men's basketball team returns to action with a pair of contests against Horizon League newcomer Robert Morris. The two teams will be renewing a series that hasn't been played since 1977. The matchups against the Colonials are set to tip at 12 p.m. CST Friday and 11 a.m. CST Sunday. They will both feature a live stream on ESPN3, will have live statistics available and will be carried on the Black & Gold Network with
Scott Warras on the call. All links are posted on the MKE website.
With no fans permitted at most venues this season, including the Klotsche Center until at least January 15, fans can engage with the
Panthers' Virtual Gameday hub, a page on MKEPanthers.com that houses all links fans will need for the gameday experience.
LOOKING AT THE COLONIALS
Head coach Andrew Toole (11th season) has led the Colonials during a very successful stretch prior to them joining the Horizon League. He has coached them to a pair of appearances in the NCAA Tournament (2015, 2020), two appearances in the NIT (2013, 2014), and two trips to the CollegeInsider.com Postseason Tournament (2012, 2019). The team went 20-14 last year.
RMU enters play at 2-3 on the season, including a 1-1 conference ledger after splitting two games with Purdue Fort Wayne last weekend. The team is led by Preseason All-Horizon League Second Team member AJ Bramah, who leads the league with his scoring average of 21.4 ppg, while adding 7.4 rpg and shooting .550 from the floor. Jon Williams adds double-figures at 11.2 ppg (.516 3PT FG%).
SERIES HISTORY
Milwaukee and Robert Morris have played just twice all-time and both games came during the 1976-77 campaign. The Panthers claimed wins in both ends of that home-and-home series, recording an 88-56 decision at home (2/12/1977) and an 84-77 victory on the road two weeks later.
LAST TIME OUT
DeAndre Gholston recorded a double-double to highlight four players in double-figures as Milwaukee handed Green Bay a 74-62 defeat Dec. 20. The Panthers (3-1, 2-0 Horizon League) went ahead for good early in the second half against the Phoenix (0-6, 0-2 Horizon League), using a 13-1 scoring run while holding their opponent without a field goal for over eight minutes to put the game away.
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Gholston finished with 18 points and 10 rebounds, with
Josh Thomas close behind with 15 points. Thomas added five rebounds and three assists.
Amir Allen put together a great outing, recording 11 points, seven rebounds, three assists and a pair of blocks in just 18 minutes.
Te'Jon Lucas was also in double-figures with a stat-stuffing line of 11 points/7 rebounds/5 assists.
PHOILING THE PHOENIX
The Panthers started Horizon League play with a pair of wins, moving to 2-0 to open the conference slate for the first time since the 2011-12 campaign. It also marked the first regular-season sweep of the Phoenix since that same winter.
Te'Jon Lucas paced the win Dec. 19 by scoring 18 of his 21 points in the second half, leading the way in scoring, rebounding (7) and assists (6) in the contest. The next day it was
DeAndre Gholston coming through with his first double-double as a Panther, netting a team-high 18 points and 10 rebounds to pace four players in double-figures.
THE TREK TO 1,000
Te'Jon Lucas will have a major milestone waiting for him this season, as he is on pace to cross the 1,000-point plateau for points in a career at some point. The most recent player to achieve the feat in a Panther uniform was
Jake Wright, who netted his 1,000th in his final collegiate game to close out the 2018-19 season (with 288 of those points coming at MKE).
When Lucas gets the milestone, he would be the 28th player to do so wearing a Panther uniform, while also joining Wright as the second one to not have spent most of his career at Milwaukee. The most recent to hit the mark in MKE-only games was Matt Tiby in 2016, finishing with 1,332 points (in three seasons).
Lucas enters Friday at 810 points.
BUCKING THE BRONCOS
The Panthers claimed their first victory of the season against Western Michigan with a strong finish Dec. 13, with
Te'Jon Lucas playing the leading role down the stretch. His 1-of-2 effort at the line with 2:39 left started the decisive span, pushing the lead to 60-57. After a WMU miss, he hit a tough shot in the paint and, following another miss by the Broncos, found
Courtney Brown Jr. for a huge three-pointer that made it 66-57 with 1:06 to go. Lucas then made 5-of-6 from the line over the final 33 seconds to ice the win. He accounted for each of MKE's final 11 points, scoring eight of them while assisting Brown Jr.'s three.
LEAGUE LIFTOFF
Milwaukee broke a recent skid in Horizon League openers, topping Green Bay (68-65) after having dropped the initial game of the conference slate each of the past six seasons, dating back to an 82-76 victory over Youngstown State in 2013-14. Since joining the MCC/Horizon League, Milwaukee is now 14-13 in league openers. The last time the team was 2-0 was 2011-12, the same year they started 3-0 before a loss. The last 4-0 start came in 2008-09 (in which they started 5-0).
DROPPING DIMES
Te'Jon Lucas wasted no time in setting the bar for what he can do in the passing game. He recorded nine assists in the season-opener against Kansas State Dec. 11, finishing just one off of his career-high that he set against Kansas City last season. The nine helpers is also the most in a season opener in Milwaukee's NCAA DI history, with the closest totals over the past 25 years coming from Jordan Johnson (7 vs. Denver in 2015) and Jordan Aaron (7 vs. Mary in 2012).
IS IT STILL TECHNICALLY A RECORD?
Speaking of helpers,
Te'Jon Lucas will start play Saturday with 366 assists in his NCAA career. The Milwaukee career record is 383 set by Kaylon Williams (2010-12), a total that Lucas will pass sooner than later.
However, to clarify, 177 of his 366 have come while wearing a Panther uniform.
DOUBLE-FIGURES IN No. 1
The Panthers had four different players finish in double-figures in the season opener against Kansas State Dec. 11, including one freshman when
Grant Coleman scored 14 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. The last time someone had more was when Clay Tucker lit up Central Michigan for 24 in his MKE debut in the 1999 opener - a game he sank a three at the buzzer to win. In addition, it marks only the third time since Meier that a frosh has netted double-figures in the opener: Jeremy Johnson had 11 against MSOE in 2016-17 and Justin Jordan also finished with 11 in the 2014-15 debut against Auburn. Coleman's six rebounds against the Wildcats tied for the team lead - again the first time that has been accomplished by a freshman since Meier's 12 in 2008.
FRESHIE-FRESH DEBUTS
The Panthers saw four different freshmen make their collegiate debuts against Kansas State Dec. 11, with
Grant Coleman (20 minutes),
Kaleim Taylor (14),
Donovan Newby (8) and
Devon Hancock (2) all seeing time on the court against the Wildcats. It's the most freshmen to see action in a season opener for the Panthers since the 2016-17 campaign. That season, six different freshmen made their initial college debuts against MSOE:
Bryce Barnes, Sam Burkhart, August Haas, Seth Dittmer, Bryce Nze, and Jeremy Johnson.
THE NEXT LEVEL
DeAndre Gholston put together an impressive debut for the Panthers against Kansas State in the season opener Dec. 11. He led the way with 15 points against the Wildcats, adding six rebounds, three assists and a pair of blocks. It's the second consecutive season that Milwaukee has seen a great debut by a JUCO transfer - a year ago it was
Josh Thomas who finished with 18 points against Concordia Wisconsin.
A WHOLE NEW WORLD
The program was paused in late November due to COVID-19 protocols, forcing the Panthers to cancel the MKE Classic and postpone the start of the new campaign. The 2020-21 season-opening date of Dec. 11 is the first to take place in the month of December since the 1992-93 campaign (Dec. 1 that season) and the latest in program history since the 1926-27 slate tipped off on Dec. 22, 1926.
P.O.Y. POSSIBILITIES
Te'Jon Lucas is embarking on what should be a memorable senior season. Following a junior campaign in which he led the Horizon League in assists and steals while also scoring nearly 15 points per game, Lucas will be on the short list of everyone's conference Player of the Year candidates. In addition to topping the field in assists and steals, Lucas also ranked third in the league in assist-to-turnover ratio (1.6), fifth in free throw percentage (79.4), ninth in minutes played (33.4 mpg), and 12th in scoring.
NEW FACES
There will be numerous new faces for the fans to get to know this season. In fact, just one team in the country at the NCAA Division I level has more newcomers than the eleven MKE now has on the 2020-21 roster.
12 – Arkansas
(4 grad transfers/3 transfers/5 freshmen)
11 – Milwaukee
11 – Alcorn State
11 – Arizona
11 – New Mexico
11 – Seattle
11 – South Dakota
The makeup of Milwaukee's 11 fresh faces breaks down to the following:
Transfers set to play (2):
Vin Baker Jr.,
Joey St. Pierre
Transfers who will sit (1):
Jordan Lathon (Jr.)
JUCO transfers (2):
DeAndre Gholston,
Tafari Simms
Redshirt Freshmen (1):
Tyler Ellingson
True Freshmen (5):
Donovan Newby,
Devon Hancock,
Kaleim Taylor,
Nick Pappas,
Grant Coleman
LEAGUE SCHEDULE NOTE
The updated 2020-21 Horizon League schedule for Panthers features a unique slate of 20 games split evenly between home and road venues. However, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the setup of the games is unprecedented, with teams playing the same opponent on back-to-back dates at the same location. Each school will have five home weekends and five road weekends and will play 10 of 11 league opponents (Milwaukee will not play Youngstown State.)
START ME UP
The Panthers will return five players who made starts in 2019-20, including a pair of players in
Te'Jon Lucas (30-of-30, missing one to injury) and
C.J. Wilbourn (30-of-31) that started 30 of the team's 31 contests.
In addition, MKE returns
Josh Thomas (20 starts in 31 games),
Courtney Brown Jr. (starts in 16 of the final 17 outings while playing in all 31 games), and
Amir Allen (10 starts in 23 appearances).
SPECIAL COMBINATION
Te'Jon Lucas pulled off a pair of special statistical achievements last winter, finishing as the Horizon League leader in both assists (5.1 apg) and steals (1.9 spg). In finishing No. 1 on the assist chart, he joined Kaylon Williams (league leader in 2010-11 and 2011-12) as the only other Panther to do so in program history while also becoming the first MKE player to pace the league in steals. In the process, he became just the fifth Horizon League player to accomplish the double-No. 1 feat.
The others:
*Kay Felder, Oakland (2013-14)
*Cedric Jackson, Cleveland State (2008-09)
*Roy Simms, Detroit Mercy (1982-83)
*Darius Clemons, LaSalle (1980-81).
TOP TALENT IN 2019-20
Te'Jon Lucas got the nod as a member of the second team when the Horizon League announced its All-Conference Teams last winter, making him the first Panther to earn a postseason award since Jeremiah Bell was also a second-team honoree in 2017-18. In addition,
C.J. Wilbourn was also recognized, earning a spot on the Horizon League All-Freshmen Team. He was the first Panther to be named to the All-Freshman team since Jordan Aaron in 2012-13 (formerly the All-Newcomer team).
THE MAIN DISH
With his league-leading assists total finishing at 153,
Te'Jon Lucas was creeping up on an all-time mark as a junior. He finished with the sixth-best total in program history, just behind Marc Mitchell's 156 in 1991-92. For perspective, Kaylon Williams set the standard with 178 in 2010-11.
CHARITY STRIPE SAGA
The Panthers have been very good at the free throw line as a team over the past few seasons, recording the top two marks in program history very recently. A year ago, the team connected on .709 (399-of-563) to finish third in the Horizon League and just outside of the Top 5 in program history.
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TOP TEAM FREE THROW %/SEASON
1. 2013-14 season: .745 (527-707)
2. 2017-18 season: .744 (375-504)
NEARLY NO ONE BETTER
Speaking of free throws, MKE had two of the top five in the Horizon League a season ago, with
Te'Jon Lucas (.794 on 108-136) at No. 5 and
Darius Roy (.815 on 97-119) checking in at No. 4. After passing the minimum amount of attempts to qualify for the career free throw percentage list in program history, Roy was knocking on the door of a school record. The current mark of .838 (207-of-247) is held by Jordan Aaron (2012-14). Roy finished his Milwaukee career at .828 (183-of-221).
Lucas himself looks to keep a three-year trend going, having converted at a better rate from the free throw line each of his three college seasons:
FRESHMAN: 42-of-71 (.592)
SOPHOMORE: 32-of-52 (.615)
JUNIOR: 108-of-136 (.794)
CAREER: 182-of-259 (.703)
AND WE'RE OFF
A couple of different looks to the season opener, which saw Milwaukee playing its opening game of the season on the road for the fifth time in eight years. The team is now 18-13 in season openers since returning to the NCAA Division I ranks full-time in 1990-91, including a 72-62 victory over Concordia Wisconsin to start the 2019-20 slate a year ago. In all, the Panthers have also posted a 4-12 mark in season openers played away from home in that span. On the flip side, MKE is 25-5 in that same stretch in home openers, claiming victories in 18 of the past 20 (13 in a row at one point). This was the fourth opener for head coach
Pat Baldwin, having gone 2-1 over the previous three seasons at the helm.
WILBOURN FINDING HIS WAY
Not only did
C.J. Wilbourn become the first Panther to be named to the All-Freshman team since 2012-13, but he also finished the season on a high note by connecting on 65.1 percent of his field goals (28-for-43) over his final 10 games. He earned a spot in the starting lineup from day one, starting 30 of the 31 games (all but "Senior Night") on the season, averaging 4.4 points and 2.9 rebounds per outing.
ENTER THE FROSH
Speaking of big "frosh" moments, the starting lineup against IUPUI Jan. 3 a year ago featured three different freshmen, with
C.J. Wilbourn,
Courtney Brown Jr., and
Shae Mitchell all earning the opportunity against the Jaguars. It's a rare feat for the Panthers, happening just one other time in recent memory. That was in January of 2016 when August Haas, Jeremy Johnson and Bryce Nze accomplished the feat.
Wilbourn was also a member of the starting lineup in the season opener against Concordia Wisconsin Nov. 5, marking just the third time a frosh has been a starter in a season opener in the past decade for the Panthers, joining August Haas (against MSOE, 11/11/16) and Thierno Niang (against Mary, 11/9/12).
20/20/20 VISION
The Panthers pulled off an offensive feat not seen in quite some time last season when the team finished with three players with 20 or more points in the same game.
Te'Jon Lucas,
DeAndre Abram and
Darius Roy all contributed exactly 20 points each against Green Bay Feb. 15, the first time three Panthers have done the trick since February 5, 2005. That day, Milwaukee defeated UIC by a final score of 85-75, with Joah Tucker (26), Ed McCants (22) and Boo Davis (20) all finishing with impressive point totals.
TE'JON TAKEOVER
Te'Jon Lucas came up big against IUPUI Feb. 8 last season, matching his career-high with 31 points. His career-best 12 rebounds also gave him his second career double-double (his other came via points/assists) and he did most of his damage down the stretch. On the bench with four fouls, Lucas came back in with 7:30 to play and the contest tied at 60. He came down and hit a huge three-pointer the next possession, getting fouled and converting the free throw for the four-point play with seven minutes to go.
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He ended up playing the rest of the day with those 4 fouls, scoring 16 of his 31 in that 12 1/2-minute span – including what turned into the eventual game-winner with 7.0 seconds left. With the game tied, 78-78, he drove down the left side of the lane, sidestepped the defense and banked it in off the glass for the go-ahead bucket. He was named Horizon League Player of the Week as a result, the first two-time winner in one season for the Panthers since Jordan Johnson in December of 2015.
RISE AGAINST THE PHOENIX
Te'Jon Lucas finished with a new career-high and the first 30-point game of his career when he netted 31 against Green Bay Jan. 11 last year. The 30-point effort was the first for a Panther since
DeAndre Abram went for 31 against Detroit Mercy last January, a span of 29 games. The 31 points topped Lucas' former career-best of 26 against Morgan State earlier and included a 9-of-10 showing at the free throw line - his most made free throws in one game in his career as well. For his efforts, he was named the Horizon League Player of the Week, just the second time for a Milwaukee player since December of 2015. He was also tabbed the College Sports Madness Horizon League Player of the Week.
A TRUE SPORTSCENTER #1
While it may have been a bit of time since the Panthers last made the SportsCenter Top 10, they did so with a bang Jan. 5 last season.
Te'Jon Lucas' game-winner against UIC not only made the list, but came in at No. 1 on the "Worldwide Leader in Sports". It is the first time the Panthers have ever earned the top spot on the highlight feature.
BROADCAST BASICS
Each and every Panther game this season will be available on the Black & Gold Network. In conjunction with the website mixlr.com,
Scott Warras - back for his fifth season with the MKE men and 15th with the Panthers overall - will broadcast every game over the internet at the following link: mixlr.com/mke-panthers.
GAME PROGRAMS AVAILABLE ON-LINE
With the announcement of no fans in the stands until at least January of 2021, fans can still be part of the in-arena feel with the option to download game programs as the season rolls on. Head to the MKE website and click on the "Multimedia" tab for download options.
THE BEAR NECESSITIES
Former Milwaukee forward Demetrius Harris (2011-13) is once again on the active roster in the National Football League in 2020, playing with the Chicago Bears following one season with the Cleveland Browns and five years with the Kansas City Chiefs. An undrafted free agent to start his career, he has caught seven passes for 45 yards this season, making five starts in 14 appearances. Coming into 2020, Harris had caught 79 passes for 799 yards, including nine touchdowns. 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. The 6-foot-7 Harris made his NFL debut when he 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 Milwaukee's sixth 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 U.S. Cellular Arena.
UP NEXT
The Panthers are scheduled to finally play at home, welcoming Detroit Mercy to the Klotsche Center January 8-9. Both games are scheduled to tip at 11 a.m.
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