UChicago Men's Basketball 2011-12 Media Guide

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General Information 2011-12 Schedule Date Nov. 15 Nov. 19 Nov. 22 Nov. 26 Nov. 27 Nov. 30 Dec. 3 Dec. 10 Dec. 14 Dec. 17 Dec. 18 Jan. 7 Jan. 13 Jan. 15 Jan. 20 Jan. 22 Jan. 27 Jan. 29 Feb. 3 Feb. 5 Feb. 10 Feb. 12 Feb. 17 Feb. 19 Feb. 25 * UAA game

Opponent Dominican Franklin Lake Forest Loras Coe Wheaton (Ill.) Kalamazoo Illinois Wesleyan Augustana Rhodes Tournament Rhodes Tournament Washington-St. Louis * Carnegie Mellon * Case * NYU * Brandeis * Emory * Rochester * Emory * Rochester * Carnegie Mellon * Case * NYU * Brandeis * Washington-St. Louis * |

Table of Contents Site Home Home Home Home Home Wheaton, Ill. Home Home Rock Island, Ill. Memphis, Tenn. Memphis, Tenn. St. Louis, Mo. Pittsburgh, Pa. Cleveland, Ohio Home Home Home Home Atlanta, Ga. Rochester, N.Y. Home Home New York, N.Y. Boston, Mass. Home

Time 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 8 p.m. 3 p.m. 4 p.m. 8 p.m. 4 p.m. 3 p.m. 7:30 p.m. 4/6 p.m. (ET) 1/3 p.m. (ET) 3 p.m. 8 p.m. (ET) Noon (ET) 8 p.m. Noon 8 p.m. Noon 8 p.m. (ET) Noon (ET) 8 p.m. Noon 8 p.m. (ET) Noon (ET) 3 p.m.

Home games in maroon

Welcome to the Gerald Ratner Athletics Center

General Information 2011-12 Schedule Chicago Traditions Gerald Ratner Athletics Center The University of Chicago Athletics at Chicago University Athletic Association NCAA Division III

1 2 2 3 4 5 5

Coaches & Players Coaches Profiles Player Profiles

6 7-12

This Week’s Games Weekend Preview Rosters & Scorecards Maroon Spotlight

13 14-15 16

2010-11 Review Statistics & Results UAA Standings & Postseason Awards

17 18

History & Records UAA Records Coaching Records Year-by-Year Records Individual & Team Records Career & Season Leaders Ratner Center Records Opponent Series Records Honor Roll NCAA Tournament History Basketball Alumni

19 20 20 21 22-23 24 25 26 27 28

UAA Sportsmanship Code

The University of Chicago and the members of the University Athletic Association are committed to principles of good sportsmanship. We believe that all student-athletes, coaches, and spectators should strive to represent the very best spirit and tradition of intercollegiate athletics. We request your cooperation by supporting the participants and officials in a positive manner. Intimidating actions directed at officials, student-athletes, coaches, or team representatives will not be tolerated and are grounds for removal from the site of competition. Also, consumption or possession of alcoholic beverages is prohibited.

Concessions

The concessions stand is located at the southeast corner of the facility. Proceeds from concessions sales benefit U. of C. undergraduate letter winner organizations.

Rest Rooms

Rest rooms are located at the facility’s southeast corner, adjacent to the concessions stand.

Scorer’s Table

Seating at the scorer’s table is reserved for game operations staff, sports information personnel, media, and officials.

UChicago Basketball 2011-12

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Traditions The “C” Logo The University of Chicago athletics emblem underwent several changes during the institution’s early years. The first football team in 1892 sported no recognizable emblem on its uniforms. In an effort to provide the team with an identity, the letters “UC” were cut out of brown paper and pasted on the players’ uniforms. In the spring of 1893, the emblem was modified into the form of a monogram that the baseball team incorporated on its uniforms. A single letter was used for the first time in 1894 when the football and track squads displayed an oblong “C” on their uniforms. That emblem remained in existence until 1897 when it was replaced by a “C” in large, round type. Then in 1898, Maroon teams adopted the Chicago “C” emblem, which has been worn to the present day.

1892

1893

1894-96

1897

1898––

Maroon, Maroons & The Phoenix Maroon and “Maroons” became the University of Chicago’s official color and nickname, respectively, at a meeting of students and faculty on May 5, 1894. Before the University held its first classes on October 1, 1892, the Board of Trustees had selected goldenrod (yellow) as the school’s official color. By 1894, however, Chicago’s legendary football coach Amos Alonzo Stagg believed that a change was necessary. “The yellow ran, soiled easily, and had a regrettable symbolism which our opponents might not be above commenting upon,” said Stagg in his autobiography, Touchdown! Because maroon was not already in use by any major school in the Midwest, Stagg and his associate J.E. Raycroft brought a selection of maroon shades to the 1894 meeting of students and faculty. The meeting attendees made a choice from those ribbons, and the baseball team appeared in that color during its final games of the 1894 season. On July 21, 1894, the first mention of a U. of C. athletic team as “Maroons” appeared in the Chicago Tribune in an article about the baseball team. The Phoenix – which is featured as part of the University’s official coat of arms, or shield – serves as the school’s mascot. The University of Chicago Board of Trustees adopted the shield in 1910.

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Gerald Ratner Athletics Center

Designed by famed architect Cesar Pelli, the Gerald Ratner Athletics Center serves as the home of the University of Chicago basketball, volleyball, and wrestling teams. Completed in the fall of 2003, the 150,000-square-foot facility includes the 1,658seat basketball competition gymnasium. In eight years under Head Coach Mike McGrath, the Maroons have posted a 69-32 overall record and 42-14 UAA mark at the Ratner Center. During the past eight years, the Ratner Center has served as the site of the 2004, 2007, and 2010 UAA Wrestling Championships, the 2009 UAA Volleyball Championship, the 2005 UAA Swimming & Diving Championship, and the 2006 NCAA Division III Great Lakes Regional Wrestling Championship. In addition to the competition gymnasium, the Ratner Center features a 50-meter x 25-yard swimming pool with a moveable bulkhead; a multilevel fitness facility with cardiovascular exercise equipment, selectorized weight lifting machines, and free weights; a multipurpose dance studio; an auxiliary gymnasium; classroom and meeting room space; permanent and day lockers and locker rooms; the University of Chicago Athletics Hall of Fame; and the athletic department offices. The $51 million facility received awards from the American Council of Engineering Companies, the American Institute of Steel Construction, and the Consulting Engineers Council of Illinois for its excellence in engineering and design. Among the notable features of the two-story facility is a roof is suspended by cables attached to five masts that peak 100 feet from the ground. The Ratner Athletics Center is named in honor of Gerald Ratner (A.B.’35, J.D.’37), an outfielder at Chicago during its days as a member of the Big Ten Conference.

UChicago Basketball 2011-12


The University of Chicago The University of Chicago is one of the world’s great intellectual communities and centers of learning. It has achieved particular distinction in faculty scholarship, the training of graduate students, and for its renowned undergraduate education that emphasizes critical thinking, intellectual depth, and cultural breadth. Founded in 1890 by John D. Rockefeller, the University opened its doors for classes on October 1, 1892, with an enrollment of 594 students. President William Rainey Harper presided over a faculty of 103, which included eight former college presidents. Today, the University features a total enrollment of approximately 15,149 students — including more than 5,027 undergraduates — and a 2,211-member faculty. The University is private, nondenominational, and coeducational, and it includes the undergraduate College, four graduate divisions, six graduate professional schools, the library, the Graham Center of General Studies, and the University of Chicago Press. The University also features several cultural resources, including the Oriental Institute Museum, Court Theatre, Renaissance Society, and the Smart Museum of Art. Extending along both sides of the Midway Plaisance, which was designed by Frederick Law Olmsted and used for the World’s Columbian Exposition of 1893, the University occupies a 190-acre campus. The English collegiate Gothic style set the general tone for the design and development of the campus. Around a series of tree-shaded quadrangles, imposing buildings of gray limestone with red-tile roofs, and deep-set rectangular windows show off elaborate ornamentation, gargoyles and chimeras, and decorated towers. These quadrangles are dominated by Rockefeller Memorial Chapel, with its 207-foot tower, and by the Joseph Regenstein Library, one of the largest academic libraries in the United States. Many campus structures have been designated national historic landmarks, including Frank Lloyd Wright’s Robie House and the site of the first controlled, self-sustaining nuclear reaction marked by the Henry Moore sculpture Nuclear Energy. Chicago has had a major impact on American higher education — inventing the four-quarter system, developing extension courses and programs in the liberal arts for adults, establishing a coherent program of general education for undergraduates, and initiating a full-time medical school teaching faculty. Chicago also pioneered orientation week and gives the nation’s oldest teaching awards. Since the University’s founding, more than 80 recipients of the Nobel Prize have been students, researchers, or faculty. The University is located in the Hyde Park neighborhood of Chicago, one of the world’s most exciting and vibrant cities. About 65 percent of the University’s faculty and their families and nearly all of its students live in the Hyde Park neighborhood. One of Chicago’s biggest tourist attractions, the Museum of Science and Industry, is located here, as well as the DuSable Museum of African-American History and the Weiss Museum of Judaica. Just 15 minutes north of Hyde Park is the Chicago Loop, where students and faculty regularly attend an array of theater, movies, art exhibits, museums, and restaurants. Some of Chicago’s main cultural attractions are the Art Institute, the Lyric Opera, the Chicago Symphony, the Goodman Theatre, and the Museum of Contemporary Art. Scores of other professional and community theater, dance, and visual arts organizations are active in the city. Architecturally, Chicago is the home of many major developments in 20thcentury architecture and urban design. One of the nation’s greatest sports cities, Chicago is the home of two Major League Baseball teams – the White Sox and the Cubs – as well as the National Basketball Association Bulls, the National Football League Bears, the National Hockey League Blackhawks, the Major League Soccer Fire, and the Women’s National Basketball Association Sky.

UChicago Basketball 2011-12

University President Robert J. Zimmer On July 1, 2006, Robert J. Zimmer became the 13th President of the University of Chicago. Prior to his appointment as President, Zimmer was a University of Chicago faculty member and administrator for more than two decades specializing in the mathematical fields of geometry, particularly ergodic theory, Lie groups, and differential geometry. As a University of Chicago administrator, Zimmer served as Chairman of the Mathematics Department, Deputy Provost, and Vice President for Research and for Argonne National Laboratory. He also served as Provost at Brown University from 2002-2006, returning to Chicago in 2006 to become President of the University. As President of the University, he serves as Chair of the Board of Governors of Argonne National Laboratory and Chair of the Board of Directors of Fermi Research Alliance LLC, the operator of Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory. Among other boards, he is chairman of the Board of Directors of the Consortium on Financing Higher Education (COFHE) and a member of the Board of Directors of the Chicago Council on Global Affairs. He serves on the President’s Committee on the National Medal of Science, and is on the executive committee of the Council on Competitiveness. He is a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the American Association for the Advancement of Science. President Zimmer is the author of two books, Ergodic Theory and Semisimple Groups (1984) and Essential Results of Functional Analysis (1990), and more than 80 mathematical research articles. The recipient of an Alfred P. Sloan Foundation Fellowship, he served on the Board of Mathematical Sciences of the National Research Council from 1992 to 1995, and was on the executive committee from 1993 to 1995. Zimmer held the title of Max Mason Distinguished Service Professor of Mathematics at Chicago before leaving for Brown, where he was the Ford Foundation Professor of Mathematics in addition to being Provost. President Zimmer earned his A.B., summa cum laude, from Brandeis University in 1968 and a Ph.D. in mathematics from Harvard University in 1975. He joined the Chicago faculty as an L.E. Dickson Instructor of Mathematics in 1977. He was also on the faculty of the U.S. Naval Academy from 1975 to 1977. He has held visiting positions at Harvard University and at institutions in Israel, France, Australia, Switzerland, and Italy.

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Athletics at UChicago At the University of Chicago, the classical and oldfashioned ideal of the student-athlete is consistent with the highest levels of athletics and academic success. Throughout the University’s history its student-athletes and teams have met that unique challenge, demonstrating that academic and athletic excellence can complement each other.

The UAA Chicago, which sponsors 19 intercollegiate sports, is a charter member of the University Athletic Association, an NCAA Division III conference formed in 1986 as a bold statement of what college athletics can and should be — that it is highly desirable and possible for a group of committed institutions to seek excellence in athletics while holding the student-athlete and the institution’s academic mission as the center of focus. The eight members of the UAA include Brandeis University, Carnegie Mellon University, Case Western Reserve University, Emory University, New York University, the University of Chicago, the University of Rochester, and Washington University in St. Louis. With its membership in the UAA, Chicago offers its student-athletes the opportunity to compete against athletes and teams from among the top research institutions in the country, as well as travel opportunities comparable to those offered by members of major Division I conferences. Chicago has played a major role in helping the UAA attain its goal of achieving the proper balance between athletics and academics. In Reclaiming the Game: College Sports and Education Values, author William Bowen –– president of the Mellon Foundation –– posed the question, “How has the UAA managed to mount what is, by all signs, a successful intercollegiate program without paying the academic price that is so evident in other similar college athletics conferences?” Bowen continued, “The active involvement of the University of Chicago, with its emphasis on core academic values, has without question been a help in achieving and maintaining this policy.”

Success on the Playing Field In 2010-11, Chicago finished 27th in the nation among 447 NCAA Division III institutions in the final standings for the Learfield Sports Directors’ Cup, which recognizes the top overall athletic programs in the country. Chicago teams notched national top-10 finishes in women’s tennis (4th), women’s basketball (quarterfinalist) and women’s cross country (10th), and won UAA championships in women’s basketball, football, women’s soccer, and wrestling. The Maroons also featured two NCAA Postgraduate Scholars, 14 All-Americans, 14 national qualifiers, seven UAA MVPs, two UAA Rookies of the Year, and 121 All-UAA performers.

Rhodes Scholars & Academic Excellence During Chicago’s early years as a member of the Big Ten Conference, the athletics program counted numerous distinguished scholar-athletes among its ranks, including 1910 Rhodes Scholar Edwin Hubble, a basketball player who later became a distinguished scientist for whom the Hubble Space telescope is named. Chicago has furthered that tradition in recent years as its student-athletes have continued to compile an extraordinary record of academic and athletic accomplishment, highlighted by four Rhodes Scholars, three individual national champions, and two national players of the year since 1996. Many of the most outstanding athletes at Chicago have also distinguished themselves in the classroom. In 2010-11, for example, Chicago featured 247 UAA All-Academic Recognition Award recipients.

Award-Winning Facility In the fall of 2003, Chicago Athletics entered a new era with the opening of the $51 million Gerald Ratner Athletics Center. Designed by famed architect Cesar Pelli, the 150,000-square-foot facility includes a 1,658-seat competition gymnasium which is home to the Chicago basketball, volleyball, and wrestling teams. In addition to the competition gymnasium, the facility features the 50-meter Myers-McLoraine Pool, the Bernard J. DelGiorno Fitness Center, a dance room, classrooms, the Athletics Hall of Fame, locker rooms, offices, and saunas. In short, the University of Chicago provides student-athletes with what might be the best balance in higher education: an extraordinary commitment to academic excellence recognized all over the world, a high-quality intercollegiate athletics program consistent with its academic mission, unique conference travel and competition, and outstanding athletics and recreational facilities.

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Athletic Director Tom Weingartner To m W e i n gartner has served as director of athletics and chairman of the department of physical education and athletics at the University of Chicago since March 1990. Weingartner was instrumental in the planning and building of the $51 million Gerald Ratner Athletics Center, which opened in the fall of 2003 to provide the University with its first new athletics center since the 1930s and its first new swimming pool in nearly a century. During Weingartner’s tenure, Chicago has sent teams and individuals to NCAA Division III postseason competition in 16 different sports and has captured University Athletic Association team titles in 11 sports. Under Weingartner, Chicago Athletics has maintained its adherence to the notion that academic and athletic excellence complement each other. For example, since 1996 four Chicago student-athletes have received Rhodes Scholarships. Chicago has also featured an NCAA Walter Byers Scholarship Award winner as well as numerous NCAA Postgraduate Scholars and Academic All-Americans. As a group, Chicago male and female student-athletes have consistently maintained a cumulative GPA roughly equal to, or higher than, that of the general student body. Weingartner chaired the NCAA Committee on Amateurism, which passed groundbreaking amateurism reform legislation at the 2001 NCAA convention. The committee offered recommendations regarding professional contracts, entry drafts, seasons of competition rules, competition with professionals, acceptance of prize money, and the acceptance of pay for play. Weingartner served as athletic director and associate professor of human development at Manhattanville (N.Y.) College from 1985-90. From 1979-85, he was the athletics director and an assistant professor of human development at St. Mary’s (Md.) College. Weingartner began his college athletics career at Northwestern University, where he served as director of intramural, recreational, and club sports from 1974-79. In 1970, Weingartner earned a bachelor’s degree from Stanford University, where he was a linebacker on the Cardinal football team. He received a master’s degree and doctorate in educational administration from Northwestern in 1972 and 1977, respectively. Weingartner and his wife, Susan, reside in Hyde Park. They have a daughter, Jessie, and a son, Clayton.

UChicago Basketball 2011-12


UAA & NCAA Division III The UAA

NCAA Division III

In 1987, Chicago became a charter member of a new and unique NCAA Division III conference, the University Athletic Association. Comprised of some of the nation’s leading research institutions, UAA members include Brandeis University, Carnegie Mellon University, Case Western Reserve University, Emory University, New York University, the University of Rochester, and Washington University in St. Louis. Since its founding, the UAA has continued to serve as a bold statement of the vision of its founders — that the pursuit of academic and athletic excellence are complementary goals and can be achieved without the compromise of one by the other. Implicit in this vision are three assumptions: • The academic enterprise is the primary element. Studentathletes are just that — students first and athletes second. • Athletic excellence is not to be confused with a win-at-allcosts attitude. It properly relates to the caliber of experience offered to students who participate in intercollegiate athletics. • Athletics should not only complement the academic experience, but should also reflect the quality of the academic environment within which they exist. Division III is an approach to athletics — not a synonym for third-rate. Since joining the UAA, Chicago teams have captured 44 conference championships, made 52 NCAA tournament appearances, and posted eight national top-four finishes. In addition, 10 Maroons have claimed NCAA individual titles and two have been selected as the national player of the year.

The University of Chicago has competed at the NCAA Division III level since it was established in 1973. The largest of the three NCAA Divisions, Division III counted as members 432 institutions (20 percent public, 80 percent private) in 2010-11.

The UAA in Theory • Academic excellence and athletic excellence are not mutually exclusive. • The academic enterprise is the primary element. • Athletic excellence properly relates to the caliber of experience offered to students. • Athletic programs should reflect the quality of the academic environment within which they exist. • A consistent and challenging level of athletic competition should be provided for both women and men.

The UAA in Practice • In 2010-11, 24 student-athletes from UAA institutions were recognized as CoSIDA Academic All-Americans ®, and five were named NCAA Postgraduate Scholars. • 189 UAA student-athletes received All-America honors, and 17 were individual national champions or players of the year in their respective sports. • In 2010-11 NCAA championship competition, 19 UAA teams finished in the top 10 in their national championships, while another 30 finished in the top 20.

UChicago Basketball 2011-12

What is the NCAA Division III? • Division III features student-athletes who are subject to the same admission standards, academic standards, housing, and support services as the general student body. Division III studentathletes are not permitted to receive athletically-related financial aid. • Division III offers an intense and competitive athletics environment for student-athletes who play for the love of the game, without the obligation of an athletics scholarship. • Division III athletics departments place special importance on the impact of athletics on the participants rather than on the spectators. The student-athlete’s experience is of paramount concern. • Division III athletics provides a well-rounded collegiate experience that involves a balance of rigorous academics, competitive athletics, and the opportunity to pursue the multitude of other co-curricular and extra-curricular opportunities. • Division III places primary emphasis on regional in-season and conference competition, while also offering 36 national championships annually. • Division III playing season and eligibility standards minimize conflicts between athletics and academics, allowing studentathletes to focus on their academic programs and the achievement of a degree. • Division III athletics departments are dedicated to offering broad-based programs with a high number and wide range of athletics participation opportunities for both men and women. • Division III affords student-athletes the opportunity to discover valuable lessons in teamwork, discipline, perseverance, and leadership, which in turn make student-athletes better students and responsible citizens. • Division III encourages student-athletes to take advantage of the many opportunities available to them, both within and beyond athletics, so that they may develop their full potential as students, athletes, and citizens.

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Coaching Staff Head Coach Mike McGrath Mike McGrath enters his 13th season as head men’s basketball coach at the University of Chicago in 2011-12 sporting a record of 181-126, including an 114-58 mark in University Athletic Association play. A three-time UAA Coach of the Year, McGrath has guided Chicago to an NCAA Division III elite eight berth and sweet 16 appearance, as well as four UAA titles. McGrath garnered UAA Coach of the Year accolades in 2007-08 after leading the Maroons to their second straight UAA championship and NCAA Division III tournament appearance. Chicago, which finished 18-8 overall and 11-3 in conference play, ranked 25th in the final D3hoops.com coaches poll. In 2000-01, McGrath guided the Maroons to their best-ever NCAA Division III finish, as Chicago advanced to the national elite eight. McGrath enjoyed a highly successful debut campaign in 1999-00, as he led the Maroons to a 23-4 record, the UAA title, and an NCAA Division III sweet 16 appearance. McGrath spent seven years as an assistant coach to Pat Cunningham from 1992-99. During that time, McGrath helped lead the Maroons to an overall record of 107-73 (.594), including an 82-23 mark (.781) from 1995-99. Under Cunningham and McGrath, Chicago garnered two UAA championships and advanced to the NCAA Division III sweet 16 on two occasions. During McGrath’s 17 years as head and assistant coach, Chicago teams have compiled a combined record of 247-164 (.601), won six conference championships, and made six national postseason appearances. McGrath has been actively involved in the National Association of Basketball Coaches, having represented the NABC Division III Congress as chair of the Marketing and Promotion Committee and been instrumental in organizing the annual NABC Division III All-Star Game as Chair of the Nominating Committee. McGrath also served a four-year stint on the NCAA Midwest Region Advisory Committee, and in 2011-12 he will begin his second year as a member of the NCAA Division III Men’s Basketball Committee, the organization responsible for selecting and bracketing teams for the NCAA tournament. McGrath is a 1992 graduate of DePauw University, where he spent three years as a student assistant coach. During his tenure at DePauw, the Tigers advanced to the 1990 NCAA Division III championship game. In 2003, McGrath and the other members of that team were inducted into the DePauw Athletics Hall of Fame. A native of Bartlett, Illinois, McGrath earned a master’s degree in sports management from the United States Sports Academy in 2004. He resides in Chicago with his wife, Kari.

Assistant Coach Drew Adams Drew Adams begins his fourth season as assistant coach at his alma mater in 2011-12. A four-year letter winner, Adams played in 83 games for the Maroons from 2003-07. As a senior in 2006-07, he earned honorable mention AllUniversity Athletic Association accolades to help lead Chicago to a 20-5 regular season record and an at-large berth in the NCAA Division III tournament. Starting 21 games his senior year, Adams shot 41% from three-point distance and 88% from the foul line while averaging 7.8 points per contest. He finished his career as an 83% free throw shooter. Adams, who graduated with a degree in political science in June 2007, was a two-time UAA All-Academic Recognition Award recipient.

Assistant Coach Jim Prunty Jim Prunty is in his 35th season of coaching. Prior to joining the staff at Chicago, he was the head basketball coach at St. Rita and York High Schools. In addition to serving as athletic director at Saint Ignatius College Prep in Chicago, Prunty serves as president of the Chicago Catholic League, the Division 1 Representative for the Illinois Athletic Directors Association, as a member of the Illinois High School Association Legislative Commission, and as a member of the Board of Directors of the Illinois Basketball Coaches Association (IBCA). He is a member of the Chicago Catholic League Coaches Association Hall of Fame and the IBCA Hall of Fame.

Assistant Coach Jason Petti Jason Petti enters his first season with the UChicago staff. A graduate of North Central College, where he earned a degree in exercise science, Petti has spent the last three years coaching at Wheaton-Warrenville South High School. During those three years, Petti served as a varsity assistant for one season and head coach of the freshman team for two seasons.

Director of Basketball Operations Sonali Rupani Sonali Rupani is starting her first year as Director of Basketball Operations. She graduated with a BBA degree from Emory University in May 2011. As a senior at Emory, she served as the head manager for the men’s basketball team. The previous year, Rupani interned in the community relations department of the NBA D-League Vipers in McAllen, Texas.

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UChicago Basketball 2011-12


Player Profiles – Seniors Chase Davis #10 Senior | 6-3 | Mobile, Ala. (Murphy) Career: Has played in 55 games with 30 starts … Has scored in double digits eight times. In 2010-11: Played in all 25 games, starting seven … Averaged 5.8 points per game … Scored in double figures in five contests, including a careerhigh 19 against Emory (2/13/11) … Opened the season with back-to-back 10-point performances against Dominican (11/15/10) and Hanover (11/19/10) ... Shot 76.3% from the free throw line (29-38). In 2009-10: Played in 24 games with 23 starts … Averaged 5.1 points and 1.5 rebounds per contest … Scored a season-high 13 points and buried the game-winning three-pointer with :22 remaining in a 61-60 win over Lake Forest (11/24/09) … Tallied double figures on two other occasions. In 2008-09: Saw action in six games … Averaged 1.2 points per contest … Scored a season-high four points in his collegiate debut against Edgewood (11/15/08). High School/Personal: Attended Murphy (Ala.) High School … Played for coach Tim Waller … Team assists leader and most accurate three-point and free throw shooter… Three-time all-county selection and a 2008 6A Division Alabama All-Star … Helped lead Murphy to the Area II 6A title ... Majoring in political science ... Son of Chuck and Laura Davis.

Career Statistics Year 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 TOTAL

GP-GS 6-0 24-23 25-7 55-30

Min/Avg 25/4.2 446/18.6 478/19.1 949/17.3

Total FG-FGA Pct 3-10 .300 47-123 .382 51-131 .389 101-264 .383

3-Point FG-FGA Pct 0-3 .000 12-35 .343 15-44 .341 27-82 .329

FT-FTA 1-2 16-28 29-38 46-68

Rebounds Pct Off-Def Tot .500 0-2 2 .571 13-22 35 .763 15-36 51 .676 28-60 88

Avg 0.3 1.5 2.0 1.6

PF-FO Ast 4-0 1 41-0 29 46-1 31 91-1 61

TO Blk Stl 2 0 0 34 2 2 30 6 11 66 8 13

Pts/Avg 7/1.2 122/5.1 146/5.8 275/5.0

Chase Davis

Matt Johnson #21 Senior | 6-4 | Ann Arbor, Mich. (Pioneer) Career: 2011-12 Sporting News Preseason All-American ... Returning All-Midwest Region and All-UAA performer ... Has played in 74 games … Has tallied double figures on 24 occasions. In 2010-11: NABC and D3hooops.com All-Midwest Region ... All-UAA First Team ... Started in all 25 contests … Averaged 17.7 points per game overall, 20.0 in UAA play … Tallied double-digits in 21 of 25 games, including a careerhigh and Ratner Center record 39 against NYU (2/20/11) … Stood among the UAA leaders in free throw percentage (2nd/86.1%), 3-point field goals (3rd/2.4 per game), and assists (7th/3.2 per game) ... Dished out 10 assists against Loras (12/19/10). In 2009-10: Played in all 25 games off the bench … UAA All-Academic Recognition Award recipient … Averaged 4.5 points, 1.8 assists, and 1.6 rebounds per contest … Scored double digits on two occasions, with a season-high 17 points against Earlham (11/21/09) and 11 against Rose-Hulman (11/22/09). In 2008-09: Played in 24 games, logging the most minutes (14.0 per game) among the Maroons’ non-starters … Averaged 2.8 points and 2.0 rebounds per contest … Scored a season-high 10 points against MSOE (1/2/10). High School/Personal: Attended Pioneer (Mich.) High School … Played for coach Rex Stanczak … Ann Arbor News Player of the Year and Detroit Free Press All-State second team selection ... Helped lead Pioneer to a 20-0 regular season record and a #2 AP ranking ... Majoring in law, letters, and society ... Son of Mark and Linda Johnson.

Career Statistics Year 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 TOTAL

GP-GS 24-0 25-0 25-25 74-25

Min/Avg 336/14.0 475/19.0 751/30.0 1562/21.1

Total FG-FGA Pct 25-72 .347 41-109 .376 138-327 .422 204-508 .402

3-Point FG-FGA Pct 8-39 .205 12-44 .273 61-162 .377 81-245 .331

FT-FTA 9-10 18-29 105-122 132-161

UChicago Basketball 2011-12

Rebounds Pct Off-Def Tot .900 9-38 47 .621 9-32 41 .861 12-77 89 .820 30-147 177

Avg PF-FO Ast TO Blk Stl 2.0 22-0 32 22 1 7 1.6 42-0 45 27 2 5 3.6 41-0 79 63 4 18 2.4 105-0 156 112 7 30

Pts/Avg 67/2.8 112/4.5 442/17.7 621/8.4

Matt Johnson

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Player Profiles – Seniors Stephen Palmtag #24 Senior | 6-5 | Nebraska City, Neb. (Bellevue West) Career: Has played in 30 games. In 2010-11: Saw action in all 25 games … Averaged 2.1 points per contest … Shot 45.2 from the field (14-31) … Scored a career-high against eight points against Emory (2/13/11). In 2009-10: Sidelined by injury. In 2008-09: Appeared in five games … Scored his first career basket in the season finale against Washington-St. Louis (2/28/09). High School/Personal: Attended Bellevue West (Neb.) High School … Played for coach Doug Woodard … Helped lead Bellevue West to a state second-place finish in 2007 and a third-place showing in 2008 ... Named honorable mention all-state and academic all-state ... Majoring in public policy ... Son of John and Janet Palmtag.

Career Statistics Year 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 TOTAL

GP-GS 5-0

Min/Avg 8/1.6

Total FG-FGA Pct 0-0 .000

25-0 30-0

314/12.6 322/10.7

14-31 14-31

.452 .452

3-Point Rebounds FG-FGA Pct FT-FTA Pct Off-Def Tot 0-0 .000 2-2 1.000 1-1 2 --- injured --0-1 .000 25-36 .694 25-35 60 0-1 .000 27-38 .711 26-36 62

Avg 0.4

PF-FO Ast 0-0 0

TO Blk Stl 0 0 0

2.4 2.1

50-0 50-0

14 14

11 11

3 3

Pts/Avg 2/0.4

4 4

53/2.1 55/1.8

Stephen Palmtag

Tommy Sotos #20 Senior | 6-3 | Elk Grove, Ill. (Conant) Career: Has played in 35 games, with 18 starts ... Has scored double digits five times ... In 2010-11: Played in all 25 contests, starting 18 … Averaged 6.8 points overall, 5.5 in UAA play … Recorded five double-digit scoring games, including a career-high 20 against Hanover (11/19/10) … Tied a Ratner Center record with six 3-point basketball against Hanover (11/19/10) ... Turned in his UAA scoring high with 15 points against Emory (1/16/11). In 2009-10: Played in five games … Averaged 1.6 points per contest … UAA All-Academic Recognition Award recipient … Scored a season-high four points against Rochester (2/7/10). In 2008-09: Played in five games … Collected three assists without a turnover in nine minutes of action … Scored his first collegiate points in the season finale against Washington-St. Louis (2/28/09). High School/ Personal: Attended Conant (Ill.) High School … Played for coach Tom McCormack … Helped lead Conant to a second straight Mid-Suburban League title ... Daily Herald Northwest all-area pick ... Academic all-area selection ... Majoring in economics ... Son of Jim and Katy Sotos.

Career Statistics

Tommy Sotos

8

Year 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 TOTAL

GP-GS 5-0 5-0 25-18 35-18

Min/Avg 9/1.8 19/3.8 643/25.7 671/19.2

Total FG-FGA Pct 1-4 .250 3-5 .600 54-154 .351 58-163 .356

3-Point FG-FGA Pct 0-1 .000 1-3 .333 42-125 .336 43-129 .333

FT-FTA 0-1 1-2 19-26 20-29

Rebounds Pct Off-Def Tot .000 0-1 1 .500 0-1 1 .731 6-48 54 .690 6-50 56

Avg 0.2 0.2 2.2 1.6

PF-FO Ast 3-0 3 1-0 0 40-0 44 44-0 47

TO Blk Stl 0 0 0 0 0 0 28 6 8 28 6 8

Pts/Avg 2/0.4 8/1.6 169/6.8 179/5.1

UChicago Basketball 2011-12


Player Profiles – Seniors Steve Stefanou #4 Senior | 6-8 | Cincinnati, Ohio (St. Xavier) Career: Has played in 45 games with 11 starts … Has scored in double figures 18 times and grabbed 10 or more rebounds on five occasions ... Has notched five double-doubles. In 2010-11: Played in 14 games … Averaged 8.5 points and 3.4 rebounds per game … Scored in the double digits in seven different contests, including six of 13 UAA affairs ... Tallied a season-high 14 points against Case (1/28/11). In 2009-10: Played in 24 games with 11 starts … Honorable mention All-UAA … Team’s scoring leader (12.4) and second-leading rebounder (6.5) … Ranked sixth in the UAA in rebounding and seventh in scoring … Tallied double digits on 18 occasions with a career-high 19 points against Carleton (11/28/09) and Brandeis (1/17/10) … Reached double figures in nine of 13 UAA games … Grabbed 10 or more rebounds five times … Grabbed a Ratner Center and career-best 14 rebounds against NYU (1/15/10) … Notched five double-doubles … Chicago’s blocked shots (19) and field goal percentage (51.0%) leader. In 2008-09: Saw action in seven games … Averaged 3.4 points and 1.4 rebounds per contest … Shot 38.5% from three-point range (5-for-13) … Scored a season-high nine points against MSOE (1/3/09). High School/Personal: Attended St. Xavier (Ohio) High School … Played for coach Scott Martin … Helped lead St. Xavier to the OHSAA Division 1 semifinals and a 23-3 record ... Majoring in economics ... Son of Peter and Biljana Stefanou.

Career Statistics

Steve Stefanou

Year 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 TOTAL

GP-GS 7-0 24-11 14-2 45-13

Min/Avg 50/7.1 586/24.4 226/16.1 862/19.2

Total FG-FGA Pct 9-23 .391 124-243 .510 45-106 .425 178-372 .478

3-Point FG-FGA Pct 5-13 .385 18-61 .295 7-22 .318 30-96 .313

FT-FTA 1-2 32-57 22-32 55-91

Rebounds Pct Off-Def Tot .500 3-7 10 .561 34-121 155 .688 16-31 47 .604 53-159 212

Avg 1.4 6.5 3.4 4.7

PF-FO Ast 8-0 5 55-0 46 24-0 21 87-0 72

TO Blk Stl 1 0 0 49 19 13 23 7 8 73 26 21

Pts/Avg 24/3.4 298/12.4 119/8.5 441/9.8

Michael Sustarsic #11 Senior | 6-0 | Liberty, Ind. (Union County) Career: Has played in 47 games with 20 starts … Has tallied in double figures five times … Sports a .380 lifetime threepoint field goal percentage. In 2010-11: Started all 25 games … Averaged 5.5 points per game … Shot 36.6% from three-point range (37-for-101) … Scored in double digits in two games, with a season-high 12 against St. John’s (Minn.) (11/28/10) … Recorded a 1.50 assist/turnover ratio … Dished out 66 assists, including a season-high six against Dominican (11/15/10). In 2009-10: Played in 22 games, making one start … Averaged 2.5 points … Scored a season-high 12 points against Edgewood (12/29/09), making three of four 3-point field goal attempts … Shot 44.4% from three-point range (12-27). In 2008-09: Played in all 25 games, starting 19 … Averaged 5.3 points … Shot 36.2% from three-point range (34-for-94) … Tied the Ratner Center with six 3-point baskets against Case (1/18/09) en route to a career-high 20-point performance … Scored in double digits four times … Ranked second on the team in assists (50) …Dished out a season-best six helpers against St. John’s (Minn.) (12/14/08). High School/Personal: Attended Union County (Ind.) High School … Played for coach Mark Detweiler … Union County’s all-time leading scorer with 1,290 points ... Indiana Basketball Coaches Association honorable mention all-state pick ... Majoring in economics ... Son of Al and Karen Sustarsic.

Career Statistics

Michael Sustarsic

UChicago Basketball 2011-12

Year 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 TOTAL

GP-GS 25-19 22-1 25-25 72-45

Min/Avg 652/26.1 213/9.7 750/30.0 1615/22.4

Total FG-FGA Pct 42-117 .359 16-41 .390 47-129 .364 105-287 .366

3-Point FG-FGA Pct 34-94 .362 12-27 .444 37-101 .366 83-222 .374

FT-FTA 15-26 10-13 6-9 31-48

Rebounds Pct Off-Def Tot .577 6-49 55 .769 5-13 18 .667 8-45 53 .646 19-107 126

Avg PF-FO Ast TO Blk Stl 2.2 48-0 50 39 1 10 0.8 16-0 13 30 0 6 2.1 55-0 66 44 1 13 1.8 119-0 129 113 2 29

Pts/Avg 133/5.3 54/2.5 137/5.5 324/4.5

9


Player Profiles – Seniors/Juniors Tom Williams #33 Senior | 6-7 | Cincinnati, Ohio (St. Xavier) Career: Two-time All-UAA … Has played in 61 games with 49 starts … Has scored double digits 23 times and grabbed at least 10 rebounds in 14 games ... Has posted 11 double-doubles. In 2010-11: Honorable mention All-UAA ... Started all 25 games … Averaged 9.4 points and 6.8 rebounds … Notched double digit points in 12 games, including a career-high 24 against Loras (12/19/10) …Recorded double-digit rebounds seven times … Recorded four double-doubles including three in consecutive games against Illinois Wesleyan (12/4/10), Kalamazoo (12/11/10), and Loras (12/19/10). In 2009-10: Played in 25 games with 24 starts … Honorable mention All-UAA … Maroons’ top rebounder (8.0) and fourth-leading scorer (10.0) … Scored double figures 11 times and pulled down double digit rebounds on seven occasions … Notched seven doubledoubles … Turned in a pair of 20-point performances, with a career-high 21 points against Emory (2/5/10) and 20 against Brandeis (1/17/10) … Grabbed a lifetime-best 16 boards against Carnegie Mellon (1/22/10) … Team’s second-leading shot blocker (17). In 2008-09: Played in 11 games … Averaged 2.1 points and 1.5 rebounds … Scored a season-high seven points against Emory (2/15/09). High School/Personal: Attended St. Xavier (Ohio) High School … Played for coach Scott Martin … Shot 76% from the foul line ... Helped lead St. Xavier to the OHSAA Division 1 semifinals and a 23-3 record ... Majoring in political science ... Son of Tom and Toni Williams.

Career Statistics Year 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 TOTAL

GP-GS 11-0 25-24 25-25 61-49

Min/Avg 80/7.3 613/24.5 658/26.3 1351/22.1

Total FG-FGA Pct 7-16 .438 84-194 .433 82-187 .439 173-397 .436

3-Point FG-FGA Pct 3-9 .333 32-89 .360 43-118 .364 78-216 .361

FT-FTA 6-8 49-68 27-36 82-112

Rebounds Pct Off-Def Tot .750 3-14 17 .721 42-159 201 .750 29-142 171 .732 74-315 389

Avg PF-FO Ast 1.5 8-0 4 8.0 85-5 31 6.8 79-5 37 6.4 172-10 72

TO Blk Stl 4 0 3 42 17 27 35 8 17 81 25 47

Pts/Avg 23/2.1 249/10.0 234/9.4 506/8.3

Tom Williams

Matt MacKenzie #42 Junior | 6-6 | Okemos, Mich. (Okemos) Career: Has played in 32 games, with 23 starts ... Has tallied double figures six times. In 2010-11: Played in 24 games, starting 23 … Averaged 7.5 points overall, 8.0 in UAA play … Recorded six double-digit scoring efforts, highlighted by a career-best 18 against St. Johns (Minn.) (11/28/10) … Shot 58.3% from the field (63-108). In 2009-10: Saw action in eight games … Grabbed 10 rebounds in 31 minutes of action … Had five boards and two points in seven minutes against Washington-St. Louis in the season finale (2/27/10). High School/Personal: Attended Okemos (Mich.) High School… Played for coach Dan Stoltz…Averaged 10 points and 7 rebounds per game…Helped lead Okemos to a CAAC Blue League Championship as well as a district title…Garnered first-team all-conference and all-area honorable mention in 2009… Economics major ... Son of Ralph and Judy MacKenzie.

Career Statistics Year 2009-10 2010-11 TOTAL

10

GP-GS 8-0 24-23 32-23

Min/Avg 31/3.9 531/22.1 562/17.6

Total FG-FGA Pct 2-4 .500 63-108 .583 65-112 .580

3-Point FG-FGA Pct 0-0 .000 0-0 .000 0-0 .000

FT-FTA 1-3 55-64 56-67

Rebounds Pct Off-Def Tot .333 3-7 10 .859 38-55 93 .836 41-62 103

Avg 1.3 3.9 3.2

PF-FO Ast 1-0 1 44-0 14 45-0 15

TO Blk Stl 2 0 0 21 2 6 23 2 6

Pts/Avg 5/0.6 181/7.5 186/5.8

Matt MacKenzie

UChicago Basketball 2011-12


Player Profiles – Sophomores Derrick Davis #14 Sophomore | 6-2 | Saginaw, Mich. (Bridgeport) In 2010-11: Played in all 25 contests ... Averaged 4.4 points per game … Recorded three double-digit scoring efforts, including a career high 17 against NYU (1/23/11) …Shot 45.6% from the field (41-90) … Grabbed six rebounds against NYU (1/23/11). High School/Personal: Played for Head Coach Jason Kowalski at Bridgeport (Mich.) High School ... Detroit Free Press Class B 1st Team ... Detroit News Class B 1st Team ... AP All-State 1st Team ... Averaged 19 points, 8 rebounds, 7 assists, and 4 steals ... Helped lead Bridgeport HS to a 17-4 record and an area championship ... Four-year letterwinner ... Political science major ... Son of Derrick Sr. and Devenise McCune.

Career Statistics Year 2010-11 TOTAL

GP-GS 25-0 25-0

Min/Avg 265/10.6 265/10.6

Total FG-FGA Pct 41-90 .456 41-90 .456

3-Point FG-FGA Pct 3-7 .429 3-7 .429

FT-FTA 25-48 25-48

Rebounds Pct Off-Def Tot .521 16-29 45 .521 16-29 45

Avg 1.8 1.8

PF-FO Ast 30-0 20 30-0 20

TO Blk Stl 26 6 10 26 6 10

Pts/Avg 110/4.4 110/4.4

Derrick Davis

Sam Gage #30 Sophomore | 6-6 | Waterloo, Wis. (Waterloo) In 2010-11: Played in 24 contests … Averaged 2.0 points per game…Shot 71.4% from 3-point range (5-7)… Recorded three straight double-digit scoring efforts against Lake Forest (11/23/10), St. Johns (Minn.) (11/28/10), and Wheaton (Ill.) (12/1/10), including a collegiate career-high 15 against St. Johns (Minn.) (11/28/10). High School/Personal: Played for Head Coach John Weiss at Waterloo (Wis.) High School ... Averaged 18.8 points, 7.1 rebounds, and 2.2 blocked shots per game ... All-Madison Area 2nd team ... All-conference 1st team ... Conference scoring champion ... Waterloo HS Math Student of the Year ... Economics major ... Son of Jim and Mary Gage.

Career Statistics Year 2010-11 TOTAL

GP-GS 24-0 24-0

Min/Avg 292/12.2 292/12.2

Total FG-FGA Pct 46-86 .535 46-86 .535

3-Point FG-FGA Pct 5-7 .714 5-7 .714

FT-FTA 25-28 25-28

Rebounds Pct Off-Def Tot .893 16-19 35 .893 16-19 35

Avg 1.5 1.5

PF-FO Ast 33-0 8 33-0 8

TO Blk Stl 10 4 1 10 4 1

Pts/Avg 122/5.1 122/5.1

Sam Gage

Charlie Hughes #3 Sophomore | 6-5 | Perrysburg, Ohio (Perrysburg) In 2010-11: Played in 23 games … Averaged 2.0 points per contest … Scored seven points in back-to-back contests against Hanover (11/19/10) and Denison (11/21/10 … Recorded an assist/turnover ratio of 2.2 … Collected five rebounds against Rochester (2/11/11). High School/Personal: Played for Head Coach Dave Boyce at Perrysburg (Ohio) High School ... Honorable mention all-state ... Two-time 1stteam all-league and all-district ... Averaged 19 points and 8 rebounds per game as a senior ... Averaged 16 points and 7 rebounds as a sophomore and junior ... Political science major ... Son of Jeff and Nancy Hughes.

Career Statistics Year 2010-11 TOTAL

GP-GS 23-0 23-0

Min/Avg 143/6.2 143/6.2

Total FG-FGA Pct 20-43 .465 20-43 .465

3-Point FG-FGA Pct 5-14 .357 5-14 .357

UChicago Basketball 2011-12

FT-FTA 1-2 1-2

Rebounds Pct Off-Def Tot .500 6-18 24 .500 6-18 24

Avg 1.0 1.0

PF-FO Ast 13-0 11 13-0 11

TO Blk Stl 5 3 6 5 3 6

Pts/Avg 46/2.0 46/2.0

Charlie Hughes

11


Player Profiles - Freshmen Adam Butterfield #23 Freshman | 6-3 | Valparaiso, Ind. (Valparaiso) High School/Personal: Hoosier Basketball Magazine All-State Second Team selection … Played for coach Joe Otis ... Helped Valparaiso (Ind.) High School average 18 victories over the past three years … Averaged 10 points, five rebounds, and four assists ... Ranked second in the state with a .533 3-point field goal percentage … Captain and three-year starter ... Son of Jeff and Diane Butterfield.

Ryan Davis #32 Freshman | 6-2 | Deerfield, Ill. (Deerfiled)

Maroons in the Community The University of Chicago men’s basketball program has been actively involved in community service, having participated for many years in the NABC Reading Program as well as the American Cancer Society “Relay For Life.” In 2011, the UChicago men’s and women’s basketball teams combined to raise more than $7,500 for the American Cancer Society through their participation in the “Relay for Life” event.

High School/Personal: Illinois Basketball Coaches Association (IBCA) honorable mention All-State honors ... Helped lead 24-4 Deerfield (Ill.) High School to the Central Suburban North Conference title and a regional title ... Played for coach Bret Just ... Averaged seven points, four rebounds, and four assists … Spent this past season as a postgraduate at Phillips Exeter (N.H.) Academy, playing for coach Jay Tilton ... Son of Ken and Darlene Davis.

Royce Muskeyvalley #5 Freshman | 5-11 | Rock Island, Ill. (Rock Island) High School/Personal: Member of the 2011 Class 3A Illinois State Champion Rock Island High School team … Played for coach Thom Sigel ... Three-time letter winner … Averaged eight points and five assists per contest as a senior … Son of Raymond and Joan Muskeyvalley.

Derrick Davis with UChicago women’s basketball players at the 2011 Relay for Life

Ian Joyce #2 Freshman | 6-6 | Madison, Wis. (Middleton) High School/Personal: Averaged 12 points, nine rebounds, and four blocked shots per game at Middleton High School … Played for Head Coach Kevin Bavery ... Earned all-conference and team MVP honors as a senior … As a junior, helped lead Middleton to a sectional runner-up appearance … Three-time letter winner … Son of Jerry and Nancy Brown-Joyce.

Coach McGrath serving up steaks at a Relay for Life fundraiser in 2011

Alex Pyper #44 Freshman | 6-5 | Scottsdale, Ariz. (Chaparral) High School/Personal: Helped lead Chaparral (Ariz.) High School to three state final fours and two championship game appearances … All-Desert Valley Region selection ... Played for coach Aaron Windler … Captain and two-time letter winner … Averaged 13 points per game while shooting better than 40% from three-point range … Son of Robert and Susan Pyper.

12

The Maroons raised over $3,200 at the 2009 “Relay for Life” event on the UChicago campus. Among the highlights of the event was an opportunity for Head Coach Mike McGrath’s players to pelt him with a pie in exchange for a donation to the worthy cause.

UChicago Basketball 2011-12


2010-11 Review Statistics Player Johnson

GP-GS 25-25

FG-FGA 138-327

Pct. .422

3FG-A Pct. FT-FTA 61-162 .377 105-122

Pct. .861

Williams

25-25

82-187

.439

43-118 .364

27-36

.750

171

6.8

37

35

8

Stefanou

14-2

45-106

.425

7-22 .318

22-32

.688

47

3.4

21

23

MacKenzie

24-23

63-108

.583

0-0 .000

55-64

.859

93

3.9

14

Sotos

25-18

54-154

.351

42-125 .336

19-26

.731

54

2.2

25-7

51-131

.389

15-44 .341

29-38

.763

51

C.Davis Sustarsic

Reb. RPG Ast TO Blk Stl 89 3.6 79 63 4 18

Pts 442

PPG 17.7

17

234

9.4

7

8

119

8.5

21

2

6

181

7.5

44

28

6

8

169

6.8

2.0

31

30

6

11

146

5.8

25-25

47-129

.364

37-101 .366

6-9

.667

53

2.1

66

44

1

13

137

5.5

Gage

24-0

46-86

.535

5-7 .714

25-28

.893

35

1.5

8

10

4

1

122

5.1

D.Davis

25-0

41-90

.456

3-7 .429

25-48

.521

45

1.8

20

26

6

10

110

4.4

Palmtag

25-0

14-31

.452

0-1 .000

25-36

.694

60

2.4

11

14

3

4

53

2.1

Hughes

23-0

20-43

.465

5-14 .357

1-2

.500

24

1.0

11

5

3

6

46

2.0

25 25

601-1392 643-1370

.432 .469

218-601 .363 164-444 .369

339-441 371-510

.769 .727

799 827

32.0 33.1

342 363

302 277

50 75

102 156

1759 1821

70.4 72.8

Chicago Opponents

Results Overall: 10-15

UAA: 7-7

Home: 6-6

Road: 4-9

Neutral: 0-0

Date Nov. 15 Nov. 19 Nov. 21 Nov. 23 Nov. 28

Opponent at Dominican HANOVER DENISON at Lake Forest ST. JOHN’S (MINN.)

W/L L W L L L

Score 73-74 84-66 65-66 58-76 87-90

High Points (22)Williams (20)Sotos (14)Johnson (14)Johnson (18)MacKenzie

High Rebounds (6)Williams (6)Williams, Johnson (5)Williams (5)MacKenzie, Palmtag (7)MacKenzie, Williams

Dec. 1 Dec. 4 Dec. 11 Dec. 19 Dec. 20

WHEATON (ILL.) at Illinois Wesleyan at Kalamazoo at Loras at Coe

L W L W L

67-95 83-78 61-68 77-56 50-65

(16)Johnson (28)Johnson (17)Johnson (24)Williams (14)Johnson

(3)MacKenzie (11)Williams (15)Williams (12)Williams (6)Williams

Jan. 2 Jan. 8 Jan. 14 Jan. 16 Jan. 21 Jan. 23 Jan. 28 Jan. 30

AUGUSTANA WASHINGTON-ST. LOUIS* ROCHESTER* EMORY* at Brandeis* at NYU* CASE* CARNEGIE MELLON*

L W W L L L W W

56-63 79-77 79-73 70-78 53-59 47-62 71-66 (ot) 86-76

(11)Johnson, Sotos (25)Johnson (16)Johnson (15)Williams, Sotos (27)Johnson (17)Davis (25)Johnson (25)Johnson

(6)MacKenzie (10)Williams (4)Williams (10)Williams (7)Palmtag (6)Davis, Johnson (8)Johnson (6)Sustarsic

Feb. 4 Feb. 6 Feb 11 Feb. 13 Feb. 18 Feb. 20 Feb. 26

at Case* at Carnegie Mellon* at Rochester* at Emory* BRANDEIS* NYU* at Washington-St. Louis*

L W L L L W W

75-88 79-71 53-65 87-91 63-71 82-80 74-67

(26)Johnson (20)Johnson (12)Stefanou, MacKenzie (20)Johnson (19)Johnson (39)Johnson (23)Johnson

(9)Williams (7)Stefanou, Johnson (10)Williams (7)Stefanou, Palmtag (8)Williams (13)Williams (8)Williams

* UAA game Home game in CAPS

UChicago Basketball 2011-12

17


2010-11 Review UAA Standings UAA Overall Team W L Pct. W L Rochester 12 2 .857 22 6 Emory 11 3 .786 20 5 Chicago 7 7 .500 10 15 Washington 7 7 .500 13 12 Brandeis 6 8 .429 19 9 Case 5 9 .357 9 16 NYU 4 10 .286 16 11 Carnegie Mellon 4 10 .286 7 17

Pct. .786 .800 .400 .520 .679 .360 .593 .292

All-UAA Team First Team Name Austin Claunch John DiBartolomeo Austin Fowler Spencer Gay Matt Johnson Nate Novosel Andy Stein

School Emory Rochester Case Washington Chicago Rochester NYU

Ht 5-9 5-11 6-6 6-6 6-4 6-5 6-8

Pos G G F F G F C

Yr Jr. So. So. Sr. Jr. Jr. Jr.

Second Team Name Jake Davis Alex Greven Tyrone Hughes Mike Labanowski Matt Pettit Dylan Richter Shane Rife

School Emory Emory Brandeis Rochester Carnegie Mellon Washington Carnegie Mellon

Ht 6-5 6-3 5-9 6-1 6-6 6-3 6-6

Pos F G G G C G/F F

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

Honorable Mention Brandeis: Youri Dascy; Carnegie Mellon: Christian Manoli; Case: Eric Duerr; Emory: Alex Gulotta, Julien Williams; NYU: D.J. Glavan, Richie Polan; Chicago: Tom Williams; Rochester: Chris Dende, David Gould, Nate Vernon; Washington: Ben Hoener.

Top Awards Player of the Year: John DiBartolomeo, Rochester Rookie of the Year: Jake Davis, Emory Coaching Staff of the Year: Rochester (Head Coach Luke Flockerzi)

Matt Johnson earned All-UAA First Team honors in 2010-11

18

2011-12 Conference Schedule Jan. 7

Chicago at Washington Rochester at Emory Brandeis at NYU Carnegie Mellon at Case

Jan. 13

Chicago at Carnegie Mellon Washington at Case Emory at NYU Rochester at Brandeis

Jan. 15

Chicago at Case Emory at Brandeis Rochester at NYU Washington at Carnegie Mellon

Jan. 20

NYU at Chicago Case at Rochester Carnegie Mellon at Emory Brandeis at Washington

Jan. 22

Brandeis at Chicago NYU at Washington Case at Emory Carnegie Mellon at Rochester

Jan. 27

Emory at Chicago Rochester at Washington Case at Brandeis Carnegie Mellon at NYU

Jan. 29

Rochester at Chicago Case at NYU Carnegie Mellon at Brandeis Emory at Washington

Feb. 3

Chicago at Emory Washington at Rochester Brandeis at Case NYU at Carnegie Mellon

Feb. 5

Chicago at Rochester NYU at Case Washington at Emory Brandeis at Carnegie Mellon

Feb. 10

Carnegie Mellon at Chicago NYU at Emory Brandeis at Rochester Case at Washington

Feb. 12

Case at Chicago Brandeis at Emory NYU at Rochester Carnegie Mellon at Washington

Feb. 17

Chicago at NYU Rochester at Case Emory at Carnegie Mellon Washington at Brandeis

Feb. 19

Chicago at Brandeis Emory at Case Rochester at Carnegie Mellon Washington at NYU

Feb. 25

Washington at Chicago NYU at Brandeis Emory at Rochester Case at Carnegie Mellon

UChicago Basketball 2011-12


History & Records UAA Records Individual

Team

Two Teams

Points 47 Charlie Borsheim, Washington (vs. Emory, 2/14/93)

Points 132 Washington (vs. Emory, 2/14/93)

Points 243

Field Goals 16 Six players - most recent: Funso Lafe, Case (vs. Carnegie Mellon, 1/23/04)

Field Goals 47 NYU (vs. Brandeis, 1/22/93)

Field Goals 89 NYU (47) 1/22/93 vs. Brandeis (42)

Field Goals Attempted 30 Rashad Williams, Brandeis (vs. NYU, 1/12/02) 3-Point Field Goals 9 Dustin Tylka, Washington (vs. Carnegie Mellon, 1/7/01); Mike McGlynn, Brandeis (vs. Washington, 2/6/00) 3-Point Field Goals Attempted 17 Matt Johnson, Chicago (vs. NYU, 2/20/11) Free Throws 19 Charlie Borsheim, Washington (vs. Emory, 2/14/93) Free Throws Attempted 21 Charlie Borsheim, Washington (vs. Emory, 2/14/93); Rob Novosel, Case (vs. Brandeis, 11/28/92) Offensive Rebounds 11 Uche Ndubizu, Rochester (vs. Carnegie Mellon, 12/1/07); Tim Garrett, Emory (vs. Washington, 1/6/89), (vs. Case, 11/21/87) Defensive Rebounds 17 Carson Oren (vs. Emory, 2/25/06) Total Rebounds 24 Greg Belinfanti, NYU (vs. Washington, 2/19/95) Assists 17 Rusty Loyd, Chicago (vs. Brandeis, 1/19/97) Blocked Shots 11 David Schaaf, Emory (vs. Brandeis, 2/9/01) Steals 10 Matt Maguire, Emory (vs. Carnegie Mellon, 3/1/98)

UChicago Basketball 2011-12

Field Goals Attempted 95 Emory (vs. Rochester, 2/17/91) Field Goal Percentage .682 Washington (vs. Rochester, 1/2/91) 3-Point Field Goals 17 Chicago (vs. Brandeis, 2/6/09), (vs. Rochester, 1/21/07) 3-Point Field Goals Attempted 39 Emory (vs. Case, 2/25/06) 3-Point Field Goal Percentage .867 Brandeis (vs. Washington, 2/23/97) Free Throws 46 Washington (vs. Emory, 2/12/06) Free Throws Attempted 59 Washington (vs. Emory, 2/12/06) Free Throw Percentage (Min. 20 Att.) .962 NYU (vs. Washington, 2/2/01), Emory (vs. Chicago, 1/4/91) Rebounds 64 Emory (vs. Carnegie Mellon, 2/15/02) Assists 31 Rochester (vs. Case, 12/7/88)

Washington (132) 2/14/93 vs. Emory (111)

Field Goals Attempted 165 NYU (90) vs. Brandeis (75)

1/22/93

3-Point Field Goals 27 Brandeis (14) vs. Emory (13)

2/1/04

3-Point Field Goals Attempted 59 Carnegie Mellon (27) 1/27/02 vs. Washington (32) Free Throws 71 Emory (25) 2/12/06 vs. Washington (46) Free Throws Attempted 94 Carnegie Mellon (36-52) 1/27/08 vs. Emory (32-42) Rebounds 110 NYU (47) 1/26/90 vs. Emory (63) Assists 57

NYU (28) 1/22/93 vs. Brandeis (29) Blocked Shots 18 NYU (12) 1/23/05 vs. Case (6) Brandeis (15) vs. Emory (3) Steals 35

2/7/92

Emory (24) 1/11/03 vs. Case (11) Case (21) vs. Chicago (14)

1/19/90

Longest Game 3 ot Brandeis (81) 2/4/07 at Washington (75)

Blocked Shots 15 Brandeis (vs. Emory, 2/7/92) Steals 24 Emory (vs. Case, 1/11/03); Washington (vs. Case, 2/8/02)

Records on this page include statistics from UAA games only.

19


History & Records Year by Year Records No Conference Affiliation (1903-05) Year 1903-04 1904-05

W-L 7-0 9-3

Pct. 1.000 .750

Coach Wilfred Childs Wilfred Childs

Big Ten Conference (1905-46) Year 1905-06 1906-07 1907-08 1908-09 1909-10 1910-11 1911-12 1912-13 1913-14 1914-15 1915-16 1916-17 1917-18 1918-19 1919-20 1920-21 1921-22 1922-23 1923-24 1924-25 1925-26 1926-27 1927-28 1928-29 1929-30 1930-31 1931-32 1932-33 1933-34 1934-35 1935-36 1936-37 1937-38 1938-39 1939-40 1940-41 1941-42 1942-43 1943-44 1944-45 1945-46

Overall

W-L 5-5 21-2 23-2 12-0 10-3 13-5 12-6 20-6 19-9 20-5 15-11 13-15 14-10 21-6 27-8 14-6 15-15 6-9 10-7 3-14 5-11 6-11 8-9 5-11 5-12 8-9 2-15 2-16 5-15 2-18 6-14 4-16 6-12 9-11 5-14 6-14 2-19 0-21 1-19 7-8 6-14

Pct. .500 .913 .920 1.000 .769 .722 .667 .769 .679 .800 .577 .464 .583 .778 .771 .700 .500 .400 .588 .176 .313 .353 .471 .313 .294 .471 .118 .111 .250 .100 .300 .200 .333 .450 .263 .300 .095 .000 .050 .467 .300

W-L 3-5 6-2 7-1 12-0 9-3 7-5 7-5 8-4 8-4 9-3 4-8 4-8 6-6 10-2 10-2 6-6 5-7 6-6 8-4 1-11 4-8 3-9 5-7 2-10 2-10 4-8 1-11 1-11 2-10 1-11 0-12 0-12 2-10 4-8 1-11 0-12 0-15 0-9 0-8 0-12

Big Ten

Pct. .375 .750 .875 1.000 .750 .583 .583 .667 .667 .750 .333 .333 .500 .833 .833 .500 .417 .500 .667 .083 .333 .250 .417 .167 .167 .333 .083 .083 .167 .083 .000 .000 .167 .333 .083 .000 .000 .000 .000 .000

Place 4th 1st 1st 1st 1st 3rd 3rd 3rd 3rd 2nd 7th 6th 4th 2nd 1st 8th 6th 6th 1st 10th 8th 8th 6th 9th 8th 7th 10th 9th 10th 10th 10th 10th 10th 7th 10th 10th 10th 10th 10th 10th

Coach Wilfred Childs Joseph Raycroft Joseph Raycroft Joseph Raycroft Joseph Raycroft John Schommer Pat Page Pat Page Pat Page Pat Page Pat Page Pat Page Pat Page Pat Page Pat Page Amos Alonzo Stagg Nelson Norgren Nelson Norgren Nelson Norgren Nelson Norgren Nelson Norgren Nelson Norgren Nelson Norgren Nelson Norgren Nelson Norgren Nelson Norgren Nelson Norgren Nelson Norgren Nelson Norgren Nelson Norgren Nelson Norgren Nelson Norgren Nelson Norgren Nelson Norgren Nelson Norgren Nelson Norgren Nelson Norgren J. Kyle Anderson J. Kyle Anderson Nelson Norgren Nelson Norgren

No Conference Affiliation (1946-76) Year 1946-47 1947-48 1948-49 1949-50 1950-51 1951-52 1952-53 1953-54 1954-55 1955-56

W-L 4-13 2-16 10-8 10-8 0-18 0-15 1-16 6-9 6-13 7-9

Pct. .235 .111 .556 .556 .000 .000 .058 .400 .316 .438

Coach Nelson Norgren Nelson Norgren Nelson Norgren Nelson Norgren Nelson Norgren Nelson Norgren Nelson Norgren Nelson Norgren Nelson Norgren Nelson Norgren

1956-57 1957-58 1958-59 1959-60 1960-61 1961-62 1962-63 1963-64 1964-65 1965-66 1966-67 1967-68 1968-69 1969-70 1970-71 1971-72 1972-73 1973-74 1974-75 1975-76

6-11 11-7 13-6 18-4 19-4 13-7 14-5 5-11 7-8 12-4 9-8 14-5 7-10 3-13 7-8 16-4 15-4 16-4 9-6 14-4

.353 .611 .684 .818 .826 .650 .737 .313 .467 .750 .529 .737 .412 .188 .467 .800 .789 .800 .600 .778

Nelson Norgren Joseph Stampf Joseph Stampf Joseph Stampf Joseph Stampf Joseph Stampf Joseph Stampf Joseph Stampf Joseph Stampf Joseph Stampf Joseph Stampf Joseph Stampf Joseph Stampf Joseph Stampf Joseph Stampf Joseph Stampf Joseph Stampf Joseph Stampf Joseph Stampf John Angelus

Midwest Conference (1976-87) Year 1976-77 1977-78 1978-79 1979-80 1980-81 1981-82 1982-83 1983-84 1984-85 1985-86 1986-87

Overall

W-L 11-9 7-12 8-10 5-13 10-9 10-10 10-9 11-9 13-9 8-13 13-8

Pct. .550 .368 .444 .278 .526 .500 .526 .550 .591 .381 .619

W-L 3-5 3-5 4-6 1-11 5-7 3-10 5-8 8-6 9-5 4-10 8-6

MWC Pct. .375 .375 .400 .083 .417 .231 .385 .571 .643 .286 .571

Place 4th 4th 4th 5th 3rd 4th 3rd 3rd 2nd 5th 3rd

Coach John Angelus John Angelus John Angelus John Angelus John Angelus John Angelus John Angelus John Angelus John Angelus John Angelus John Angelus

University Athletic Association (1987-present) Year 1987-88 1988-89 1989-90 1990-91 1991-92 1992-93 1993-94 1994-95 1995-96 1996-97 1997-98 1998-99 1999-00 2000-01 2001-02 2002-03 2003-04 2004-05 2005-06 2006-07 2007-08 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11

Overall

W-L 6-15 7-15 6-15 7-17 7-18 11-14 3-22 11-14 18-7 23-5 24-3 17-8 23-4 24-4 15-10 15-10 12-13 10-15 15-10 20-6 18-8 6-19 13-12 10-15

Pct. .286 .318 .286 .292 .280 .440 .120 .440 .720 .821 .889 .680 .852 .857 .600 .600 .480 .400 .600 .769 .692 .240 .520 .400

W-L 1-8 5-8 3-11 3-11 3-11 5-9 2-12 5-9 11-3 13-1 14-0 9-5 15-0 14-1 10-4 11-3 8-6 6-8 8-6 11-3 11-3 6-8 7-7 7-7

UAA

Pct. .111 .385 .214 .214 .214 .357 .143 .357 .786 .929 1.000 .643 .1000 .933 .786 .786 .571 .429 .571 .786 .786 .429 .500 .500

Place 8th 5th 8th 9th 6th 5th 6th 6th 2nd 1st 1st 2nd 1st 1st 3rd 3rd 3rd 5th 3rd 1st 1st 5th 3rd 3rd

Coach John Angelus John Angelus John Angelus John Angelus Pat Cunningham Pat Cunningham Pat Cunningham Pat Cunningham Pat Cunningham Pat Cunningham Pat Cunningham Pat Cunningham Mike McGrath Mike McGrath Mike McGrath Mike McGrath Mike McGrath Mike McGrath Mike McGrath Mike McGrath Mike McGrath Mike McGrath Mike McGrath Mike McGrath

All-Time Coaching Records

20

by Victories

by Winning Percentage

Coach Joseph Stampf Nelson Norgren Mike McGrath Pat Page John Angelus Pat Cunningham Joseph Raycroft Wilfred Childs Amos Alonzo Stagg John Schommer J. Kyle Anderson

Years 1957-75 1921-42, 44-57 1999–– 1911-20 1975-91 1991-99 1906-10 1903-06 1920-21 1910-11 1942-44

Coach Joseph Raycroft Wilfred Childs John Schommer Amos Alonzo Stagg Pat Page Joseph Stampf Mike McGrath Pat Cunningham John Angelus Nelson Norgren J. Kyle Anderson

W-L 208-118 185-430 181-126 161-76 146-177 114-91 66-7 21-8 14-6 13-5 1-40

Pct. .638 .301 .590 .679 .452 .556 .904 .724 .700 .722 .024

Years 1906-10 1903-06 1910-11 1920-21 1911-20 1957-75 1999–– 1991-99 1975-91 1921-42, 44-57 1942-44

W-L Pct. 66-7 .904 21-8 .724 13-5 .722 14-6 .700 161-76 .679 208-118 .638 181-126 .590 114-91 .556 146-177 .452 185-430 .301 1-40 .024

UChicago Basketball 2011-12


History & Records Individual & Team Records Individual Most Points •Career: •Season: •Game:

Highest 3-Point FG Percentage

2,254 636 44

Most Rebounds •Career: •Season: •Game:

934 293 23

Derek Reich ('99-03) Derek Reich ('02-03) Derek Reich (v. Southwestern, ‘02-03) Derek Reich ('99-03) Gene Ericksen ('62-63) Gene Ericksen (v. Carleton, ‘61-62); (v. Wis.-Oshkosh, ‘62-63)

•Career: •Season:

.469 .559

Most Free Throws Made •Career: •Season: •Game:

519 156 16

792 221 19

Derek Reich ('99-03) Derek Reich ('02-03) Bill Lester (v. Aurora, ‘56-57)

Most Field Goals Attempted •Career: •Season:

1,485 421

Derek Reich ('99-03) Ali Lejlic ('93-94)

•Career: •Season: •Game:

679 227 21

.533 .650

Derek Reich ('99-03) Martin Campbell ('65-66)

Most 3-Point Field Goals Made •Career: •Season: •Game:

205 71 8

Jesse Meyer ('03-07) Jesse Meyer ('06-07) Jesse Meyer (v. Case, ‘04-05); Clint Patterson (v. Washington, ‘94-95)

Most 3-Point Field Goals Attempted •Career: •Season:

496 193

Jesse Meyer ('03-07) Clint Patterson ('93-94)

Derek Reich ('99-03) Derek Reich ('02-03) Fred Dietz (v. Illinois Tech, ‘68-69)

Highest Free Throw Percentage •Career: •Season:

Most Assists •Career: •Season: •Game:

.817 .891

Larry Liss ('59-63) Larry Liss ('61-62)

484 168 17

Rusty Loyd ('94-98) Rusty Loyd ('96-97) Rusty Loyd (v. Brandeis, ‘96-97)

170 64 7

Rusty Loyd ('94-98) Rusty Loyd ('95-96) James Holcomb (v. Wheaton, ‘90-91); Matt Loucks (v. Oberlin, ‘94-95)

Highest Field Goal Percentage •Career: •Season:

Derek Reich ('99-03) Derek Reich ('02-03) Derek Reich (v. Wis.-Eau Claire, ‘00-01)

Most Free Throws Attempted

Most Field Goals Made •Career: •Season: •Game:

Tyler Smithson ('98-02) Tyler Smithson ('00-01)

Most Steals •Career: •Season: •Game:

Most Blocked Shots •Career: •Season: •Game:

136 42 7

Craig Kelleher ('95-99) Craig Kelleher ('97-98) Craig Kelleher (v. Carnegie Mellon, ‘97-98)

Team Most Points •Season: •Game:

2,048 137

Most Rebounds •Season: •Game:

982 60

Most Field Goals Made •Season: •Game:

752 53

(2000-01) (v. Grinnell, ‘95-96)

(1995-96) (v. Ill. College, ‘94-95)

(1996-97) (v. National, ‘72-73)

Most Field Goals Attempted •Season: •Game:

1,638 90

Highest Field Goal Pct. •Season: •Game:

.486 .723

(1994-95) (v. Grinnell, ‘95-96)

(1972-73) (v. Grinnell, ‘94-95)

Most 3-Point Field Goals Made •Season: •Game:

285 17

(2006-07) (v. Brandeis, ‘08-09), (v. Rochester, ‘06-07), (v. Kalamazoo, ‘06-07)

Most 3-Point Field Goals Attempted •Season: •Game:

721 37

(2006-07) (v. Coast Guard, ‘06-07)

Highest 3-Point FG Pct. (min. 5 made) •Season: •Game:

.436 .833

(1996-97) (v. Emory, ‘88-89)

Most Free Throws Made •Season: •Game:

462 40

(1999-00) (v. Principia, ‘71-72); (v. Valparaiso, ‘60-61)

Most Free Throws Attempted •Season: •Game:

603 63

(2000-01) (v. Valparaiso, ‘60-61)

Highest Free Throw Pct. (10 made) •Season: •Game:

Most Assists •Season: •Game:

Most Steals •Season: •Game:

.783 .955

(1999-2000) (v. DePauw, ‘07-08)

437 31

(1996-97) (v. Grinnell, ‘95-96), (v. Grinnell, ‘94-95)

237 16

(1994-95) (v. Brandeis, ‘97-98), (v. Oberlin, ‘94-95)

Most Blocked Shots •Season: •Game:

From 1994-98, Rusty Loyd (left) and Aaron Horne (right) helped lead a resurgence of Chicago men’s basketball. The Maroons posted a 76-29 record from 1994-98 with a pair of UAA championships and two trips to the NCAA Division III Sweet Sixteen.

UChicago Basketball 2011-12

80 9

(1999-00) (v. Kalamazoo, ‘05-06), (v. Emory, ‘04-05), (v. Thiel, ‘02-03), (v. Emory, ‘01-02)

Year-by-year statistics are incomplete prior to the 1957-58 season. The records listed in this program reflect the years 1958-2008.

21


History & Records Career & Season Statistical Leaders Points Career 2,254 1,406 1,334 1,324 1,303 1,293 1,283 1,272 1,220 1,126

Season 636 566 565 487 479 461 442 435 435 424

Assists Career Derek Reich Jerry Clark Aaron Horne Keith Libert Frank Edwards Bill Lester Matt Krapf Ali Lejlic Jay Alley Craig Kelleher

1999-03 1970-74 1994-98 1981-85 1970-74 1954-57 1988-92 1990-94 1975-79 1995-99

Derek Reich Derek Reich Derek Reich Derek Reich Ali Lejlic Matt Corning Matt Johnson Alexi Giannoulias Bill Lester Scott Fisher

2002-03 2001-02 2000-01 1999-00 1993-94 2007-08 2010-11 1994-95 1956-57 2003-04

Scoring Average Career 21.5 19.3 19.3 18.1 17.0 16.3 14.1 14.1 14.0 13.9

Season 25.5 25.4 22.6 22.6 20.7 20.7 20.2 19.9 19.2 19.2

934 840 807 696 646 637 588 547 536 524

Season 293 261 260 255 250 248 241 230 221 217

22

Season 168 155 134 115 113 109 108 101 100 100

Rusty Loyd Jake Pancratz Aaron Horne Brandon Woodhead Tyler Smithson Nate Hainje Brian Cuttica Jason Sears Jon Poyer Matt Krapf

1994-98 2006-10 1994-98 2003-07 1998–02 2004-08 2001-05 1991-94 1998-02 1988-92

Rusty Loyd Rusty Loyd Rusty Loyd Jake Pancratz Brandon Woodhead Jake Pancratz Tyler Smithson Jason Sears Aaron Horne Matt Benz

1996-97 1997-98 1995-96 2007-08 2005-06 2009-10 2000-01 1992-93 1995-96 1992-93

Rusty Loyd Aaron Horne Craig Kelleher Jake Pancratz James Holcomb Brandon Woodhead Jason Milesko Matt Morycz Jason Sears Eric Chilenskas

1994-98 1994-98 1995-99 2006-10 1987-91 2004-07 1994-98 1994-98 1991-94 1987-91

Rusty Loyd Rusty Loyd Jason Sears Rusty Loyd Aaron Horne Jason Sears James Holcomb James Holcomb Aaron Horne Aaron Horne Matt Morycz

1995-96 1996-97 1992-93 1997-98 1994-95 1993-94 1990-91 1989-90 1995-96 1996-97 1994-95

Steals Career

Derek Reich Bill Lester Jerry Clark Frank Edwards Keith Libert Jay Alley Martin Campbell Gary Pearson Aaron Horne Matt Krapf

1999-03 1954-57 1970-74 1970-74 1981-85 1975-79 1964-68 1956-60 1994-98 1988-92

Bill Lester Derek Reich Derek Reich Jerry Clark Jerry Clark Frank Edwards Derek Reich Jay Alley Frank Edwards Ali Lejlic

1956-57 2002-03 2001-02 1972-73 1973-74 1972-73 2000-01 1976-77 1973-74 1993-94

170 158 115 104 103 97 97 89 87 84

Season

Rebounds Career

484 332 324 310 283 268 235 222 195 194

64 50 45 44 42 42 41 41 40 39 39

Brandon Woodhead handed out 310 assists from 2003-07

Blocked Shots

Derek Reich Gene Ericksen Craig Kelleher Gary Pearson Frank Edwards Keith Libert Nate Hainje Martin Campbell Eric Chilenskas Dave Witt

1999-03 1959-63 1995-99 1957-60 1970-74 1981-85 2004-08 1964-68 1987-91 1983-87

Gene Ericksen Gene Ericksen Gene Ericksen Derek Reich Gary Pearson Gary Pearson Derek Reich Derek Reich Craig Kelleher Craig Kelleher

1962-63 1960-61 1961-62 2001-02 1959-60 1958-59 2000-01 2002-03 1996-97 1995-96

Career 136 91 80 64 57 49 34 34 33 30

Season 42 37 36 32 32 31 31 31 26 25

Craig Kelleher Mike Dolezal Eric Chilenskas Brad Henderson Tim Reynolds Derek Reich Mike Agema Ali Lejlic Clay Carmody Matt Morycz

1995-99 2001-05 1987-91 1998-01 2004-08 1999-03 1998-01 1990-94 2002-06 1994-98

Craig Kelleher Mike Dolezal Brad Henderson Tim Reynolds Craig Kelleher Craig Kelleher Craig Kelleher Eric Chilenskas Eric Chilenskas Lin Shannon

1997-98 2002-03 1999-00 2007-08 1995-96 1998-99 1996-97 1990-91 1987-88 1988-89

Nate Hainje is the only Maroon to rank among Chicago’s top ten in rebounds and assists

UChicago Basketball 2011-12


History & Records Career & Season Statistical Leaders Field Goals Made Career 792 585 562 545 541 508 505 483 472 384

Season 221 204 201 198 184 177 171 169 168 160

Field Goal Percentage

Derek Reich Jerry Clark Frank Edwards Ali Lejlic Keith Libert Jay Alley Aaron Horne Matt Krapf Craig Kelleher Dave Witt

1999-03 1970-74 1970-74 1990-94 1981-85 1975-79 1994-98 1988-92 1995-99 1983-87

Derek Reich Derek Reich Ali Lejlic Derek Reich Jerry Clark Jerry Clark Scott Fisher Derek Reich Frank Edwards Ali Lejlic

2002-03 2001-02 1993-94 2000-01 1973-74 1972-73 2003-04 1999-00 1972-73 1992-93

Free Throws Made Career 519 280 276 258 251 244 244 236 219 211 211

Season 156 137 131 125 113 105 101 97 94 93

205 197 185 171 154 151 146 137 128 114

Season 71 68 68 67 66 61 61 60 57 55

.533 .516 .516 .516 .508 .479 .477 .473 .472 .456

Derek Reich Matt Corning Ali Lejlic Keith Libert Frank Edwards Jerry Clark Nate Hainje Rob Omiecinski Rusty Loyd Matt Morycz

Season (min. 5 attempts per game) .650 .615 .582 .578 .565 .560 .558 .556 .550 .546

Martin Campbell Eric Chilenskas Ali Lejlic Mark Phelan Martin Campbell Carey Hines Peter Leinroth Eric Chilenskas Dave Witt Matt Corning

1999-03 2004-09 1990-94 1981-85 1970-74 1970-74 2004-08 1982-86 1994-98 1994-98

1965-66 1990-91 1992-93 1989-90 1964-65 1975-76 1979-80 1987-88 1983-84 2007-08

Free Throw Percentage

Derek Reich Aaron Horne Fred Dietz Joel Zemans Matt Corning Keith Libert Gary Pearson Jerry Clark Matt Krapf Nate Hainje Gene Ericksen

1999-03 1994-98 1965-69 1959-63 2004-09 1981-85 1956-60 1970-74 1988-92 2004-08 1959-63

Derek Reich Derek Reich Fred Dietz Derek Reich Matt Corning Matt Johnson Derek Reich Aaron Horne Gary Pearson Matt Corning

2002-03 2000-01 1968-69 2001-02 2007-08 2010-11 1999-00 1995-96 1959-60 2008-09

3-Pt. Field Goals Made Career

Career (min. 450 attempts)

Career (min. 150 attempts) .820 .817 .810 .806 .799 .787 .771 .769 .767 .764

Matt Johnson Larry Liss Mike Clifford Rob Omiecinski Dan Hayes Tyler Smithson Jon Poyer Brandon Woodhead Jay Alley Derek Reich

Season (min. 2.5 attempts per game) .891 .889 .875 .863 .861 .859 .847 .829 .820 .808

Larry Liss Brandon Woodhead Tyler Smithson Derek Reich Matt Johnson Matt MacKenzie Doug Petersen Mike Clifford Larry Liss Brad Henderson

2008–– 1959-63 1983-87 1982-86 1974-78 1998-02 1998-02 2003-07 1975-79 1999-03

Jake Pancratz finished his career in second place on Chicago’s all-time 3-point field goals chart

1961-62 2004-05 2001-02 1999-00 2010-11 2010-11 1965-66 1986-87 1962-63 1999-00

3-Pt. FG Percentage

Jesse Meyer Jake Pancratz Andy Strommen Jason Milesko Clint Patterson Derek Reich Nate Hainje Jim Waichulis Brian Cuttica Brandon Woodhead

2003-07 2006-10 1995-99 1994-98 1992-95 1999-03 2004-08 1998-01 2001-05 2003-07

Jesse Meyer Jesse Meyer Clint Patterson Clint Patterson Andy Strommen Matt Johnson Jim Waichulis Jake Pancratz Jesse Meyer Jake Pancratz

2006-07 2005-06 1993-94 1994-95 1998-99 2010-11 2000-01 2007-08 2004-05 2008-09

UChicago Basketball 2011-12

Career (min. 125 attempts) .469 .455 .440 .414 .414 .413 .405 .398 .397 .395

Tyler Smithson Andy Strommen Derek Reich Matt Loucks Matt Morycz Jesse Meyer Kurt Riemer Rusty Loyd Brad Henderon John Kinsella

Season (min. 1.5 attempts per game) .559 .527 .511 .510 .487 .478 .475 .467 .458 .453

Tyler Smithson Andy Strommen Jon Poyer Brandon Woodhead Jesse Meyer Alexi Giannoulias Derek Reich James Horning Matt Loucks Tyler Smithson

1998–02 1995-99 1999-03 ‘92-95,01 1994-98 2003-07 1996-00 1994-98 1998-01 2006-10

2000-01 1996-97 2000-01 2003-04 2004-05 1994-95 1999-00 1991-92 1993-94 2001-02

Jesse Meyer is the most prolific 3-point shooter in Chicago history

23


History & Records Ratner Center Records Individual Most Points •Chicago:

39

•Visitor:

35

Most Rebounds •Chicago: 14

•Visitor:

16

Matt Johnson (vs. NYU, 2/20/11) Andy Burns, St. John’s (Minn.) (11/28/10); Bryan Lambert, Brandeis (2/22/04) Steve Stefanou (vs. NYU, 1/15/10); Scott Fisher (vs. Case, 1/16/04) Seth Hauben, Rochester (2/18/05)

Most Field Goals Made •Chicago: 12 Matt Johnson (vs. NYU, 2/20/11) •Visitor: 15 Bryan Lambert, Brandeis (2/22/04) Most 3-Pt. Field Goals Made •Chicago: 7 Matt Johnson (vs. NYU, 2/20/11) •Visitor: 9 Andy Burns, St. John’s (Minn.) (11/28/10) Most Free Throws Made •Chicago: 15 Scott Fisher (vs. Kalamazoo, 12/16/03) •Visitor: 13 Kent Raymond, Wheaton (Ill.) (12/3/08) Most Assists •Chicago:

11

•Visitor:

11 11

Most Steals •Chicago:

6

•Visitor:

6

Most Blocked Shots •Chicago: 6 •Visitor:

Year by Year Records

Team

5

Adam Machones (vs. Brandeis, 2/6/09) Patrick Hanley, Lake Forest (11/24/09); Sean Wallis, Washington (1/10/09)

Most Points •Chicago: •Visitor:

100 101

Most Rebounds •Chicago: 48 •Visitor: 45

vs. Carnegie Mellon (1/19/07) Edgewood (11/15/08) vs. Colby (11/19/05) Carnegie Mellon (1/27/06)

Most Field Goals Made •Chicago: 37 vs. Carnegie Mellon (1/19/07) •Visitor: 37 Wheaton (Ill.) (12/1/10) Most Field Goals Attempted •Chicago: 74 vs. Carnegie Mellon (1/27/06) •Visitor: 72 Colby (11/20/05) Most 3-Pt. Field Goals Made •Chicago: 17 vs. Brandeis (2/6/09); vs. Rochester (1/21/07) •Visitor: 13 NYU (2/20/11); St. John’s (Minn.) (11/28/10) Most 3-Pt. Field Goals Attempted •Chicago: 37 vs. Coast Guard (11/18/06) •Visitor: 31 Emory (2/10/06) Most Free Throws Made •Chicago: 26 vs. Emory (2/5/10); vs. Lake Forest (11/17/07); vs. NYU (2/6/05) •Visitor: 23 Southwestern (11/21/04) Most Free Throws Attempted •Chicago: 40 vs. Edgewood (11/15/08) •Visitor: 40 Southwestern (11/21/04) Most Assists •Chicago: •Visitor:

26 26 23

vs. Emory (1/16/05); vs. Concordia Chicago (12/16/07) St. John’s (Minn.) (11/28/10); Wheaton (Ill.) (12/3/08)

10 13

vs. Carnegie Mellon (1/27/06); vs. NYU (2/20/04); Rochester (2/7/10); Carnegie Mellon (2/8/04)

Brandon Woodhead (vs. Brandeis, 1/28/07) Eliot Goren, Carnegie Mellon (2/8/04)

Most Steals •Chicago:

Mike Dolezal (vs. Case, 1/16/04) Drew Cohen, Colby (11/19/05)

Most Blocked Shots •Chicago: 9 vs. Kalamazoo (12/10/05); vs. Emory (1/14/05) •Visitor: 13 Trinity (Texas) (11/23/03)

•Visitor:

Chicago RAC Scoring Highs Pts. 39 33 30 27 27 26 25 25 25 25 25 25

24

Player Matt Johnson Scott Fisher Nate Hainje John Kinsella Clay Carmody Brandon Woodhead Matt Corning Matt Johnson Matt Johnson Matt Johnson Nate Hainje Scott Fisher

Opponent (Date) NYU (2/20/11) Kalamazoo (12/16/03) NYU (2/22/08) NYU (2/8/09) NYU (2/6/05) Coe (12/29/06) Carnegie Mellon (2/10/08) Carnegie Mellon (1/30/11) Case (1/28/11) Washington (1/8/11) Ill. Wesleyan (12/15/07) Emory (1/18/04)

Year 2003-04 2004-05 2005-06 2006-07 2007-08 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11

W 10 7 9 10 12 4 11 6

Overall L Pct. 2 .833 5 .583 4 .692 2 .833 2 .857 8 .333 3 .786 6 .500

W 6 5 5 6 6 4 5 5

Total

69

32 .683

42 14 .750

vs. Opponent Augustana (Ill.) Aurora Babson Brandeis Carleton Carnegie Mellon Case Coast Guard Coe Colby Concordia Chicago Cornell (Iowa) Denison DePauw Dominican (Ill.) Earlham Edgewood Emory Hanover Illinois Tech Illinois Wesleyan Kalamazoo Lake Forest Loras MSOE NYU Rochester Rose-Hulman St. John’s (Minn.) St. Mary’s (Minn.) St. Norbert Springfield Trinity (Texas) Washington-St. Louis Wheaton (Ill.) Wis.-Stevens Point

UAA L 1 2 2 1 1 3 2 2

Pct. .857 .714 .714 .857 .857 .571 .714 .714

W 0 1 1 5 1 6 7 1 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 7 1 0 2 4 3 0 1 7 5 2 0 1 0 1 0 5 1 0

L 2 0 0 3 1 2 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 2 0 0 1 1 1 3 0 1 0 1 0 1 3 3 1

Chicago RAC Firsts Pts. 24 24 24 24 22 22 22 22 22

Player Matt Corning Nate Hainje Jesse Meyer Clay Carmody John Kinsella Matt Corning Nate Hainje Brandon Woodhead Scott Fisher

Opponent (Date) Edgewood (11/15/08) Brandeis (2/24/08) Rochester (1/21/07) Kalamazoo (12/10/05) Brandeis (2/6/09) Case (1/18/08) Wheaton, Ill. (11/29/06) Wheaton, Ill. (11/29/06) Case (1/16/04)

Game:

Ill. Wesleyan 73, Chicago 48 (11/22/03)

Win:

Chicago 78, Springfield 66 (11/23/03)

UAA Win:

Chicago 58, Case 54 (1/16/04)

O.T. Game:

Chicago 83, Kalamazoo 78 (12/16/03)

Point:

Scott Fisher vs. Ill. Wesleyan (11/22/03)

Field Goal:

Scott Fisher vs. Ill. Wesleyan (11/22/03)

3-Pt. FG:

Brian Cuttica vs. Ill. Wesleyan (11/22/03)

Free Throw:

Bryan Fitzgerald vs. Ill. Wesleyan (11/22/03)

Rebound:

Mike Dolezal vs. Ill. Wesleyan (11/22/03)

Assist:

Bryan Fitzgerald vs. Ill. Wesleyan (11/22/03)

Steal:

Justin Waldie vs. Ill. Wesleyan (11/22/03)

Block:

Jon Todd vs. Ill. Wesleyan (11/22/03)

UChicago Basketball 2011-12


History & Records Series Records vs. All Opponents Opponent Adrian Albion Allegheny Alma Armour Tech Augustana (Ill.) Aurora

W 1 3 1 1 10 1 11

L 0 5 0 1 4 3 4

First 1997-98 1950-51 1999-00 1963-64 1906-07 1916-17 1953-54

Last 1997-98 1999-00 1999-00 1967-68 1939-40 2010-11 2004-05

Babson Beloit Benedictine (Ill.) Blackburn Bradley Brandeis Brigham Young Brown Butler

1 10 17 0 3 29 0 0 2

0 25 4 1 3 18 1 1 8

2007-08 1904-05 1955-56 1969-70 1930-31 1962-63 1930-31 1969-70 1920-21

2007-08 2001-02 2002-03 1969-70 1961-62 2010-11 1930-31 1969-70 1934-35

Calvin Carleton Carnegie Mellon Carnegie Tech Carroll Carthage Case Central Chicago Teachers Clark Coast Guard Coe Colby Colgate Colorado College Columbia Concordia (Mich.) Concordia (Wis.) Concordia Chicago Cornell (Iowa) Cornerstone Curry

1 8 33 0 3 0 28 0 10 0 1 8 1 0 11 1 3 0 10 4 3 0

0 11 14 1 1 4 8 1 10 1 0 19 0 1 5 0 1 1 9 6 0 1

2000-01 1929-30 1986-87 1931-32 1935-36 1978-79 1987-88 1965-66 1939-40 1973-74 2006-07 1946-47 2005-06 1921-22 1961-62 1907-08 1979-80 2003-04 1951-52 1930-31 1982-83 1950-51

2000-01 2009-10 2010-11 1931-32 1995-96 2002-03 2010-11 1965-66 1960-61 1973-74 2006-07 2010-11 2005-06 1921-22 2000-01 1907-08 1987-88 2003-04 2007-08 2006-07 1984-85 1950-51

2 5 1 7 0 3 5 0 0 3 0

7 10 0 6 2 0 1 1 1 0 1

1935-36 1921-22 1996-97 1959-60 1960-61 1964-64 1980-81 1962-63 1977-78 1959-60 1977-78

1943-44 2007-08 1996-97 2010-11 1961-62 1966-67 2010-11 1962-63 1977-78 1961-62 1977-78

2 0 2 3 33 0

0 2 2 11 16 1

1999-00 1983-84 1987-88 1952-53 1986-87 1979-80

2009-10 1985-86 2009-10 1992-93 2010-11 1979-80

0

1

1971-72

1971-72

9 1 20

5 0 11

1943-44 1940-41 1946-47

1982-83 1940-41 1995-96

1 0 2 1

0 1 1 4

2010-11 1950-51 1977-78 1957-58

2010-11 1950-51 1998-99 2006-07

28 16 5

35 14 3

1904-05 1948-49 1964-65

1945-46 1971-72 1994-95

DePaul DePauw Defiance Denison Detroit Mercy Detroit Tech Dominican (Ill.) Drake Drexel Dubuque Duke Earlham Eckerd Edgewood Elmhurst Emory Eureka Florida Tech George Williams Georgia Grinnell Hanover Harvard Haverford Hope Illinois Illinois-Chicago Illinois College

UChicago Basketball 2011-12

Opponent Illinois Tech Illinois Wesleyan Indiana Iowa Iowa State Iowa Wesleyan

W 34 7 13 16 0 0

L 51 12 21 29 1 3

First 1940-41 1991-92 1907-08 1903-04 1926-27 1965-66

Last 2008-09 2010-11 1945-46 1945-46 1926-27 1981-82

8 2

6 1

1959-60 1967-68

2000-01 1982-83

Kalamazoo Kendall Kentucky Kenyon King’s Point Knox

11 2 0 2 1 17

11 0 2 1 0 27

1965-66 1967-68 1932-33 1947-48 1958-59 1946-47

2010-11 1970-71 1934-35 2002-03 1958-59 1984-85

Lake Forest Lawrence Lewis and Clark Lewis Institute Loras Loyola (Ill.)

55 25 1 7 1 5

30 11 0 2 2 4

1904-05 1904-05 2000-01 1904-05 2007-08 1935-36

2010-11 1986-87 2000-01 1955-56 2010-11 1977-78

MacMurray Madonna Maranatha Baptist Marian (Ind.) Marian (Wis.) Marquette Mercer Methodist Michigan Michigan-Dearborn Michigan State Minnesota Missouri MIT Monmouth (Ill.) Moody Bible Mount Mercy Mount Senario Mount Union MSOE

7 0 3 1 1 4 1 0 10 1 1 27 0 2 3 1 0 2 0 2

4 1 0 0 1 15 0 1 23 0 0 34 1 1 5 0 1 0 1 2

1960-61 2003-04 1975-76 1997-98 1981-82 1930-31 1924-25 1996-97 1917-18 1978-79 1926-27 1903-04 1969-70 1961-62 1927-28 1995-96 1980-81 1974-75 1993-94 2006-07

1998-99 2003-04 1981-82 1997-98 1982-83 1942-43 1924-25 1996-97 1945-46 1978-79 1926-27 1945-46 1969-70 1986-87 1986-87 1995-96 1980-81 1992-93 1993-94 2009-10

National Education Navy Nazareth Niles North Central North Park Northeastern Illinois Northern Iowa Northern Michigan Northwestern (Ill.) Northwestern (Wis.) Notre Dame Nova Southeastern NYU

6 0 1 14 6 4 1 0 0 29 9 0 0 26

0 1 1 1 11 2 2 1 1 28 0 4 1 23

1971-72 1924-25 1980-81 1970-71 1933-34 1960-61 1967-68 1984-85 1958-59 1903-04 1971-72 1932-33 1987-88 1986-87

1973-74 1924-25 1989-90 1979-80 1996-97 1998-99 1988-89 1984-85 1958-59 1993-94 1977-78 1936-37 1987-88 2010-11

Oakland Oberlin Ohio State Ohio Northern Ohio Wesleyan Olivet

0 6 15 0 3 1

1 5 26 1 1 0

1968-69 1905-06 1912-13 1998-99 1929-30 1980-81

1968-69 1995-96 1945-46 1998-99 2004-05 1980-81

Penn Pittsburgh Princeton Principia Puget Sound Purdue Purdue-Calumet

3 0 2 2 0 22 0

2 1 0 2 2 34 1

1907-08 1927-28 1920-21 1969-70 1976-77 1903-04 1993-94

1919-20 1927-28 1940-41 1972-73 1984-85 1945-46 1993-94

Johns Hopkins Judson

Opponent Purdue-North Central

W 6

L 0

First 1971-72

Last 1975-76

0

1

1987-88

1987-88

Rhodes Ripon Robert Morris (Ill.) Rochester Rockford Rollins Roosevelt Rose-Hulman

0 9 1 23 2 2 12 3

1 17 1 26 2 1 1 0

2001-02 1957-58 1994-95 1959-60 1967-68 1975-76 1967-68 1999-00

2001-02 1999-00 1995-96 2010-11 1988-89 1985-86 1977-78 2009-10

St. Ambrose St. John’s (Minn.) St. Joseph’s (Ind.) St. Martin’s St. Mary’s (Md.) St. Mary’s (Mich.) St. Mary’s (Minn.) St. Norbert St. Olaf St. Thomas (Fla.) St. Thomas (Minn.) St. Xavier Savannah College Seattle Pacific Siena Heights Simpson South Florida Southern Illinois Southwestern Springfield Stetson

1 0 0 0 1 0 1 2 1 0 1 0 2 0 1 1 0 1 0 1 0

0 2 4 2 0 1 0 9 0 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 1 2 2 0 1

1978-79 2008-09 1949-50 1976-77 1996-97 1987-88 2004-05 1983-84 1957-58 1987-88 1961-62 1988-89 1995-96 1976-77 1979-80 1960-61 1973-74 1933-34 2002-03 2003-04 1978-79

1978-79 2010-11 1950-51 1984-85 1996-97 1987-88 2004-05 2009-10 1957-58 1987-88 1963-64 1988-89 1996-97 1976-77 1979-80 1960-61 1973-74 1946-47 2006-07 2003-04 1978-79

Thiel Toledo Transylvania Trinity (Texas) Trinity Christian Trinity International Tufts Tulane

1 1 1 1 7 8 1 0

0 0 0 2 1 3 0 4

2002-03 1919-20 2007-08 2002-03 1976-77 1969-70 1961-62 1965-66

2002-03 1919-20 2007-08 2007-08 1988-89 1992-93 1961-62 1968-69

Union Upper Iowa Utah

2 1 0

0 0 1

1959-60 1981-82 1939-40

1960-61 1981-82 1939-40

Valparaiso Vanderbilt

1 0

1 1

1960-61 1922-23

1961-62 1922-23

5 17 4 1 1 0 1 0 13 1 1 2 21 1 1 1 1 0 0 1 0

4 40 3 0 1 3 1 1 16 0 0 0 44 2 1 0 1 1 3 1 2

1956-57 1907-08 1958-59 1994-95 1931-32 1940-41 1964-65 1977-78 1933-34 1993-94 1995-96 1910-11 1903-04 1989-90 1953-54 1962-63 1961-62 1997-98 1999-00 1973-74 1989-90

1999-00 2010-11 1964-65 1994-95 1945-46 1942-43 1965-66 1977-78 2010-11 1993-94 1995-96 1911-12 1945-46 1991-92 2000-01 1962-63 1997-98 1997-98 2007-08 1997-98 2000-01

2

0

1923-24

1938-39

Queen’s

Wabash Washington-St. Louis Wayne State (Mich.) Webster Western Illinois Western Michigan Western Reserve Westminster (Pa.) Wheaton (Ill.) William Paterson William Penn Winona State Wisconsin Wisconsin Lutheran Wis.-Eau Claire Wis.-Oshkosh Wis.-Platteville Wis.-River Falls Wis.-Stevens Point Wittenberg Wooster Yale

25


History & Records Honor Roll Rhodes Scholar Brad Henderson Sean Mahoney John McDonough Edwin Hubble

2001 1984 1928 1910

NCAA Walter Byers Award Brad Henderson

2000-01

NCAA Postgraduate Scholar Aaron Horne Keith Libert Jerry Clark Dennis Waldon

1997-98 1984-85 1973-74 1968-69

Big Ten Era All-America Bill Haarlow Bill Haarlow Fritz Crisler Bob Birkhoff Paul Hinkle Arthur Hoffman Pat Page Pat Page John Schommer Pat Page John Schommer Albert Houghton John Schommer James Ozanne

1973-74 1962-63 1961-62 1960-61

1974 All-American Jerry Clark

26

All-UAA 1st & 2nd Team

Derek Reich

Matt Johnson Jake Pancratz John Kinsella John Kinsella Matt Corning Nate Hainje Jake Pancratz Nate Hainje Brandon Woodhead Jesse Meyer Brandon Woodhead Scott Fisher Derek Reich Scott Fisher Derek Reich Jon Poyer Derek Reich Jim Waichulis Tyler Smithson Brad Henderson Derek Reich Kurt Riemer Andy Strommen Aaron Horne Rusty Loyd Matt Morycz Craig Kelleher Rusty Loyd Aaron Horne Matt Morycz Aaron Horne Rusty Loyd Alexi Giannoulias Ali Lejlic Ali Lejlic Matt Krapf Matt Krapf

2002-03

NCAA Division III All-America Nate Hainje Derek Reich Derek Reich Derek Reich Aaron Horne Rusty Loyd

2007-08 2002-03 2001-02 2000-01 1997-98 1997-98

NCAA Division III Statistical Champion Andy Strommen*

*3-point field goal percentage

1996-97

All-Midwest Conference 1935-36 1934-35 1924-25 1920-21 1919-20 1909-10 1909-10 1908-09 1908-09 1907-08 1907-08 1906-07 1906-07 1904-05

NCAA College Division All-America Jerry Clark Gene Ericksen Joel Zemans Joel Zemans

NCAA Division III Player of the Year

Mike Clifford Tom Redburg Rob Omiecinski Dave Witt Mike Clifford Keith Libert Nick Meriggioli Rob Omiecinski Keith Libert Keith Libert Keith Libert Kenneth Jacobs Jay Alley Bret Schaefer Jay Alley Jay Alley

1986-87 1986-87 1985-86 1985-86 1984-85 1984-85 1984-85 1984-85 1983-84 1982-83 1981-82 1979-80 1978-79 1978-79 1977-78 1976-77

UAA Player of the Year Nate Hainje Derek Reich Derek Reich Derek Reich Derek Reich Andy Strommen

2007-08 2002-03 2001-02 2000-01 1999-90 1998-99

2003 NCAA Division III MVP Derek Reich

1st 1st 2nd 2nd 1st 1st 2nd 1st 1st 2nd 2nd 1st 1st 2nd 1st 2nd 1st 1st 2nd 1st 1st 2nd 1st 1st 1st 1st 1st 1st 2nd 2nd 1st 2nd 2nd 1st 2nd 1st 2nd

2010-11 2009-10 2009-10 2008-09 2007-08 2007-08 2007-08 2006-07 2006-07 2006-07 2005-06 2003-04 2002-03 2002-03 2001-02 2001-02 2000-01 2000-01 2000-01 1999-00 1999-90 1999-00 1998-99 1997-98 1997-98 1997-98 1996-97 1996-97 1996-97 1996-97 1995-96 1995-96 1994-95 1993-94 1992-93 1989-90 1988-89

2001 Rhodes Scholar Brad Henderson

UChicago Basketball 2011-12


History & Records NCAA Tournament History 2007-08

1997-98

First Round (Collegeville, Minn.) Wis.-Stevens Point 67, Chicago 53

Second Round (Chicago, Ill.) Chicago 67, Wabash 62

2006-07

Round of 16 (Platteville, Wis.) Wis.-Platteville 78, Chicago 63

First Round (Aurora, Ill.) Hope 76, Chicago 54

1996-97

2000-01

First Round (Chicago, Ill.) Chicago 59, Benedictine 52

Second Round (Chicago, Ill.) Chicago 74, Wis.-Eau Claire 67

Second Round (Chicago, Ill.) Chicago 78, Wabash 70

Round of 16 (Chicago, Ill.) Chicago 62, Lewis & Clark 52

Round of 16 (Bloomington, Ill.) Methodist 74, Chicago 70

Division III Tournament

Division III Tournament

Division III Tournament

Quarterfinals (Chicago, Ill.) Illinois Wesleyan 77, Chicago 68

Division III Tournament

Division III Tournament

1973-74

College Division Tournament

1999-00

Division III Tournament Second Round (Chicago, Ill.) Chicago 75, Ripon 68 Round of 16 (Buena Vista, Iowa) Wis.-Stevens Point 63, Chicago 49

First Round (Springfield, Ohio) Wittenberg 82, Chicago 58

Travel at Chicago Travel to exciting destinations, both international and domestic, has been a significant feature of the Chicago basketball program. After touring Italy in the fall of 2006, the team completed a trip to Argentina and Chile in 2010. “I believe that the foreign travel that our program has undertaken is one of the best things that we do. It is a wonderful experience for our student-athletes that is also tremendously beneficial in preparation for the upcoming season,� said Head Coach Mike McGrath. During the 20010-11 regular season, the Maroons logged more than 3,500 air miles as they navigated their 25-game slate with traditional weekend trips to UAA host cities New York, Boston, Atlanta, St. Louis, Pittsburgh, Cleveland, and Rochester. In addition to the annual UAA travel, the Maroons in recent years have visited cities throughout the country including San Antonio, Baltimore, Memphis, Indianapolis, Minneapolis-St. Paul, and Milwaukee.

1960-61

College Division Tournament First Round (Chicago, Ill.) Chicago 64, MacMurray 59 Round of 16 (Chicago, Ill.) Chicago 55, Lincoln 42 Quarterfinals (Evansville, Ind.) Southeast Missouri 67, Chicago 41 Maroons in Venice in 2006

2001 NCAA Division III Quarterfinalists

UChicago Basketball 2011-12

#1 Final Regular Season Ranking

In the Andes Mountains in 2009

27


Basketball Alumni Where Are They Now? Class of 1998 Aaron Horne Dan Klock Jason Milesko Jeff Boulanger Rusty Loyd Matt Morycz Tim O’Toole

Class of 1999

Andy Strommen Craig Kelleher Matt Scott Travis Wenstrom

Class of 2000 Steve Murphy Kurt Reimer Eric Nelson

Class of 2001

Mike Agema Mark Allen Brad Henderson Ben Hoffart Matt Loucks Jim Waichulis

Class of 2002

Jon Poyer Justin Slaughter Tyler Smithson

Class of 2003 Derek Reich

Class of 2004 Scott Fisher Scott Green Mike Lowney

Class of 2005 Brian Cuttica Mike Dolezal Justin Waldie

Class of 2006 Clay Carmody Jason Hicks Uche Okonkwo Jon Todd

Class of 2007

Drew Adams Derek Brannon Jesse Meyer Jason Vismatas Brandon Woodhead

Class of 2008 Kirk Ellsworth Nate Hainje Tim Reynolds Zach Sheline

Class of 2009

Adam Machones Tom Watson

Class of 2010

John Bonelli John Kinsella Marek Kowalewski Jake Pancratz

Class of 2011 Paul Riskus

28

Cardiology Fellow – Johns Hopkins University CEO – Bridgetown Natural Foods Senior Consultant/Project Manager – Galt and Co. Product Manager – FactSet Research Systems Inc. Assistant Basketball Coach – Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology Equity Trader – Baycrest Partners Fixed Income Portfolio Manager – Wells Fargo

Financial Advisor –UBS Financial Services Founder – Millstone Capital Management Trader – Wolverine Trading Vice President – Goldman Sachs & Co.

Consultant – CGI Veternarian Director – Equity Derivatives, Societe General

Vice President/Product Manager – UST Trading Assistant – Chopper Trading Principal – Boston Consulting Group Attorney – Sidley Austin Portfolio Manager – Sit Investment Associates Trader/Clerk – TK Trading

Alumni Reflections Academics "My coursework instilled in me a sense of focus and determination that seems to have separated me amongst my peers in the workplace today. - Mark Allen ('01) "I believe the education that you get from Chicago will prepare you for whatever you decide to do after college. The liberal arts style of education does not teach specific technical skills, but it does teach people how to think, and this skill is immeasurably more important than any technical training." -Derek Brannon ('07) "I credit the degree I have from the U. of C. as the biggest factor in landing the job I did. The combination of playing varsity basketball while balancing the educational workloadimpressed potential employers." -Brian Cuttica ('05) "More than any specific subject, the greatest thing I learned at Chicago is how to question the status quo and how to think about alternatives. I probably use this critical thinking perspective every day in my current job because I’m trying to see trends or opportunities where others don’t see them." -Matt Loucks ('01) "The education I received has played an important role in the success that I have experienced with life after college. Not only did my education provide me the skills and tools needed to succeed in the workplace, it also provided me experience with people from different cultures from all over the world." -Steve Murphy ('00)

Sales & Distribution Manager – NorthStar Financial Services Group Chief of Staff – Illinois Secretary of State Basketball Coach – East Side Basketball Club

"You have the chance to study with some of the brightest people, under some of the brightest professors in the world." -Brandon Woodhead ('07)

Trader – Superfund Asset Management

“The team became like a second family for me and the friendships formed are life long. After four years, I left as a better basketball player, but more importantly, a more complete person .” -Clay Carmody (‘06)

Physician/Psychiatry Resident – Northwestern Medical School Investment Banking – Keybanc Capital Marketes Osteopathic Resident – University of Massachusetts

Trader – Sun Trading Option Trader – Buttonwood Group Trading Attorney – Milbank, Tweed, Hadley, & McCoy

Medical Student – University of Illinois Sales & Trading – Israel A. Englander Ph.D. Student /International Relations & Diplomacy – AGS Paris MBA Student – Vanderbilt University

Assistant Basketball Coach – University of Chicago MBA Student – University of Chicago Master’s Candidate/Higher Education Administration – Univ. of Iowa Associate – Iaffaldano, Shaw, and Young Financial Advisor Associate – UBS Financial Services

Law Student – Michigan State University Law Student – University of Minnesota Investment Banking – JP Morgan Teacher – Tucson (Ariz.) Charter School

Senior Quantitative Trader – Transmarket Group LLC Graduate Student/Urban Planning & Policy – University of Illinois

Futures Associate/Municipal Bonds – Franklin Templeton Investments Analyst – Stout, Risius, Ross Associate – Kaufman Hall Investment Banking – JP Morgan

Basketball

“We were the first undefeated team in UAA history. That is the journey that Chicago basketball made during my time on the Midway. Was it the players? Was it the coaches? Was it the administration? YES!!!! Everyone associated with the program decided that success for University of Chicago athletic teams should not be an afterthought, but rather an expectation.” - Rusty Loyd (‘98) “Playing on a championship team with a collection of peers with a similar vision of the importance of basketball in the scheme of life was invaluable. The travel is rigorous, but you learn how to handle yourself on the road and gain the experience of being in large cities with diverse culture and freedom.” - Jon Poyer (‘02) “One of my fondest memories is making it to the Elite Eight and playing in front of cheering fans.” - Derek Reich (‘03)

Campus & City “On one hand, you’re attending school in one of the most amazing cities in the world. You have instant access to an enormous variety of restaurants, theaters, sports teams, parks, and museums. On the other hand, the U. of C. campus has all the trappings of the traditional college experience: beautiful, tree-lined campus, fraternities and sororities, successful college athletics programs, etc. That combination is hard to beat.” - Brad Henderson (‘01) “When you combine the prestigious academics, the beautiful campus, the diverse students, the amazing city, an outstanding athletics program with great facilities, and a caring coaching staff, it’s hard to ask for anything else.” - Jesse Meyer (‘07) “Going to school so close to a major city such as Chicago added a whole new element of excitement and fun that many other schools miss out on. The friendships I formed with other players while exploring the city are the kind that last a lifetime.” - Jason Milesko (‘98) “Living in Hyde Park and being that close to downtown was amazing. And this is coming from someone who grew up 30 minutes from the city.” - Jason Vismantas (07)

Teach for America

UChicago Basketball 2011-12


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