#8 Men’s Basketball Opens Regular-Season Tuesday vs. FAMU


Game #1:  Florida A&M Rattlers (0-0) at #8 Creighton Bluejays (0-0)
Tuesday, Nov. 7, 2023 • 8:00 p.m. • Omaha, Neb. • CHI Health Center Omaha
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Next Game
No. 8 Creighton (0-0) takes on Florida A&M (0-0) on Tuesday, Nov. 7 to open the 2023-24 season.
    Tip-off on First National Bank Court at CHI Health Center Omaha (17,352) in Omaha, Neb., is set for 8:00 p.m.

Radio Broadcast Information
KOZN (1620 AM) and KOOO (101.9 FM) will carry all Creighton men’s basketball games during the 2023-24 season. John Bishop and Taylor Stormberg will call the action.  
    The audio is webcast at 1620thezone.com and can be heard on SiriusXM channel 84 as well as at https://siriusxm.us/sxmcollegesports.

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

Live Stats Information
All of Creighton’s games this season will have free live stats. Visit www.gocreighton.com and click on the small bar graph icon on the scoreboard at the top of the page for the event of your choosing.
    Home games can also be followed by those who have mobile devices with internet capability at www.gocreightonstats.com.

Scouting #8 Creighton
Ranked eighth nationally in the preseason AP and Coaches polls, Creighton has lofty expectations after coming one possession shy of the program’s first Final Four last March.
    The nucleus of the team is formed by three returning starters as senior center Ryan Kalkbrenner (15.9 ppg., 6.1 rpg.., 2.1 bpg., 69.5 FG%), senior forward Baylor Scheierman (12.8 ppg., 8.3 rpg., 3.3 apg.) and junior guard Trey Alexander (13.6 ppg., 41.0 3FG%) all put their professional aspirations on hold and came back.
    Add in senior transfer Steven Ashworth (16.2 ppg., 4.8 apg., 43.4 3FG%), the USBWA District VII Player of the Year last year at Utah State, and it’s easy to see why CU is one of three BIG EAST teams picked in the top-10 nationally.
    Other returners include sophomores Mason Miller (2.3 ppg., 37.0 3FG%) and Fredrick King (3.4 ppg.), as well as senior Francisco Farabello (3.0 ppg.).
    CU also boasts transfers Johnathan Lawson (Memphis) and Josh Townley-Thomas (North Platte CC) in addition to two redshirt freshmen  and four true freshmen who will look to make an impact.
    The Bluejay season started with three double-digit victories in The Bahamas during an August exhibition tour, then walloped Wayne State 95-48 on Friday.
    Creighton was picked to finish second of 11 teams in a preseason poll of BIG EAST coaches.
    
Scouting Florida A&M
Florida A&M went 7-22 last season and return just three of the seven men who started 10 or more games a year ago.
    Leading scorer and distributor Jordan Tillmon (10.6 ppg., 2.4 apg.) as well as leading rebounder Jaylen Gates (9.0 ppg., 7.1) are gone, meaning the top returning scorer is Dimingus Stevens, a one-time Seton Hall player who averaged 8.4 points in 12.7 minutes per game off the bench last season.
    Others to keep an eye on with a bit of starting experience are Hantz Louis-Jeune (5.6 ppg.), Jordan Chatman (5.5 ppg.) and Chase Barrs (3.9 ppg., 1.0 bpg.).
    FAMU averaged just 58.6 points per game last season, shooting 38.7 percent from the field, 31.3 percent from three-point land and 69.2 percent at the line. The Rattlers had 280 assists compared to 464 turnovers and were also outrebounded by 3.0 caroms per contest.
    The Rattlers have been picked to finish 11th in the SWAC in a preseason poll of league coaches and SID’s.

The Series With Florida A&M
Creighton is 2-0 all-time against Florida A&M, having defeated the Rattlers 74-70 on Dec. 22, 1993 at Ak-Sar-Ben Coliseum in Omaha, then again 78-53 on Nov. 17, 2009 at CHI Health Center Omaha.
    Greg McDermott is 1-0 against Florida A&M, having won 76-53 on Dec. 17, 2005 at the UNI-Dome when he was head coach at UNI. He has never coached against Robert McCullum.
    McDermott is also 11-0 against current members of the Southwestern Athletic Conference, including a 6-0 mark since coming to Creighton.

The Creighton Coaches
Greg McDermott (Northern Iowa, 1988) owns a 300-150 record entering his 14th season with the Bluejays. He owns a career mark of 580-345 entering his 30th season, and is 449-281 entering his 23rd Division I campaign.
    McDermott led Creighton to its first BIG EAST regular-season title in 2019-20, taking a Bluejay team that was picked seventh in the league’s preseason poll and ending the year ranked seventh nationally. The Cascade, Iowa native has coached Creighton to a share of its first regular-season BIG EAST title in 2019-20 its first Sweet 16 since 1974 in 2020-21 and its first Elite Eight since 1941 in 2022-23.
    McDermott has previously been a head coach at Iowa State (2006-10), Northern Iowa (2001-06), North Dakota State (2000-01) and Wayne State (1994-2000).
    He is assisted by Ryan Miller, Jalen Courtney-Williams and Derek Kellogg.

With A Win…
– Creighton would improve to 1-0 on the season.
Greg McDermott would improve to 22-1 as a Division I head coach in season-openers, including 22 straight wins, and 14-0 at Creighton.
– Creighton would improve to 91-15 all-time in season-opening games, including a 26-1 mark in the past 27 lid-lifters.
– Creighton would win its 29th consecutive home opener, a streak that started in 1995.
– Creighton would improve to 3-0 all-time against Florida A&M.
Greg McDermott would improve to 12-0 against teams presently in the Southwestern Athletic Conference, and 7-0 against those teams as the coach at Creighton.

Milestone Watch
Ryan Kalkbrenner enters Tuesday with 199 career blocked shots and can join Benoit Benjamin (411) as the only Bluejays with 200 or more rejections.
Ryan Kalkbrenner enters Tuesday with 1,67 career points. He’s five points behind Dick Harvey (1956-59) for 30th-most in program history.
Ryan Kalkbrenner enters Tuesday having played in 99 career games.
Johnathan Lawson enters Tuesday having scored 99 career points, all last season while at Memphis.
Baylor Scheierman enters Tuesday having made 246 career three-pointers, including 87 at Creighton.

Exhibition Recap
Trey Alexander had 22 points in 18 minutes and Creighton never trailed in last Friday’s 95-48 exhibition win over Division II Wayne State.
    The Bluejays led 49-24 at the and finished the game 16-for-38 from three-point range as seven different men made at least one triple.

It Gets Earlier Every Year
Tuesday’s game will take place on November 7, tied for the third-earliest start date for a season-opener in Creighton basketball history with last year.
    The only earlier starts in program history were in 2019-20 (Nov. 5) and 2018-19 (Nov. 6).
    By comparison, 31 years ago, Creighton’s season-opener in 1992-93 didn’t take place until Dec. 3rd.

Season Opener History
Creighton owns a sparkling 90-15 record (.856) on opening day, including 13 straight wins and victories in 25 of its last 26 lid-lifters after last year’s 72-60 win vs. St. Thomas.
    Creighton has won 13 of its last 23 season-openers by 20 or more points and hasn’t trailed in its home opener in 10 of the past 23 seasons (2000-01, 2002-03, 2003-04, 2004-05, 2005-06, 2009-10, 2011-12, 2014-15, 2016-17 and 2019-20).
    The Bluejays have outscored foes by an average of 84.48 to 61.61 in the last 23 openers.

Opening Statements
Including last year’s 72-60 victory vs. Arkansas-Pine Bluff, Greg McDermott has won each of the last 21 season openers he’s coached in, and he is 21-1 at the Division I level in season-openers. That includes double-digit victories in 12 of his first 13 openers on the Creighton sideline.
    Overall as a head coach, McDermott is 26-3 in season-opening games. That includes an impressive 99-point win (137-38) in his first game on the sidelines when he was at Wayne State.
Date    School    Opponent    Result
1994-95    Wayne St.    York    W 137-38
1995-96    Wayne St.    Nebraska-Omaha    L 63-72
1996-97    Wayne St.    St. Francis    W 72-66
1997-98    Wayne St.    Nebraska-Omaha    W 78-76
1998-99    Wayne St.    Mount Marty    W 76-70
1999-00    Wayne St.    South Dakota    L 64-66
11/17/00    NDSU    Macalester    W 81-69
11/16/01    UNI    vs. San Diego State    L 57-71
11/22/02    UNI    at Montana    W 77-71
11/21/03    UNI    Chicago State    W 83-59
11/21/04    UNI    Wayne State    W 84-66
11/20/05    UNI    Western Carolina    W 68-46
11/10/06    Iowa State    UC Riverside    W 69-61
11/09/07    Iowa State    Winston-Salem St.    W 58-44
11/14/08    Iowa State    UC Davis    W 61-58
11/13/09    Iowa State    Idaho State    W 88-68
11/12/10    Creighton    Alabama State    W 71-57
11/11/11    Creighton    N. Carolina A&T    W 97-65
11/09/12    Creighton    North Texas    W 71-51
11/08/13    Creighton    Alcorn State    W 107-61
11/14/14    Creighton    Central Arkansas    W 104-77
11/14/15    Creighton    Texas Southern    W 93-70
11/11/16    Creighton    UMKC    W 89-82
11/10/17    Creighton    Yale    W 92-76
11/06/18    Creighton    Western Illinois    W 78-67
11/05/19    Creighton    Kennesaw State    W 81-55
11/29/20    Creighton    North Dakota State    W 69-58
11/09/21    Creighton    Arkansas-Pine Bluff    W 90-77
11/07/22    Creighton    St. Thomas    W 72-60

A One And A Two…
Not only is Creighton a perfect 13-0 in season-openers under Greg McDermott, but the Bluejays have started 2-0 in all but one campaign (2019-20) under McDermott as well. That 2019-20 team, of course, went on to share the BIG EAST regular-season title.

Making An Entrance
Two years ago Arthur Kaluma (15) and Ryan Nembhard (15) became CU’s first true freshmen to debut with 10 points or more since Khyri Thomas had 18 points vs. Texas Southern in 2015.
    Last year South Dakota State transfer Baylor Scheierman (11 pts, 10 reb.) had a double-double in his Bluejay debut, something that had only been done twice previously since 1980 (Ryan Hawkins and Ryan Nembhard, both in 2021).
     CU’s best opening-day effort in history would have to be the way Creighton Hall of Famer Bob Harstad began his senior season. Harstad went 13-for-13 from the floor and 12-for-13 at the line to score 38 points against Texas-San Antonio on Nov. 30, 1990.
    Below is a list of some of Creighton’s most famous players and how they performed in their regular-season debuts in a Bluejay uniform.
Name, Yr.    Pts.    Reb.    Ast.    Stl.    Min.    Result
Scheierman, 2022    11    10    3    1    34    W 72-60
Zegarowski, 2018    8    4    2    0    18    W 78-67
Foster, 2016    19    1    2    0    28    W 89-82
Patton, 2016    12    8    2    0    22    W 89-82
Thomas, 2015    18    3    0    2    26    W 93-70
McDermott, 2010    16    7    0    1    32    W 71-57
Stinnett, 2007    23    4    3    3    26    W 74-62
Tolliver, 2003    0    1    2    0    7    W 79-44
Funk, 2002    3    5    4    1    21    W 106-50
Kyle Korver, 1999    2    2    0    1    10    W 70-62
Buford, 1995    3    4    0    0    19    W 63-59
Harstad, 1987    4    5    1    1    21    L 49-70
Gallagher, 1987    10    3    0    0    37    L 49-70
Benjamin, 1982    14    4    1    0    22    W 98-54
McKenna, 1977    14    3    7    ?    ?    W 95-66
Harmon, 1971    21    7    ?    ?    ?    W 74-62
C. Baptiste, 1969    24    17    ?    ?    ?    W 84-62
Portman, 1966    9    ?    ?    ?    ?    W 78-76
Silas, 1961    22    29    ?    ?    ?    W 85-51
Gibson, 1954    19    ?    ?    ?    ?    W 66-51

Hello, World
Creighton has eight players who could make their regular-season Bluejay debuts on Tuesday vs. Florida A&M; Steven Ashworth, Josiah Dotzler, Jasen Green, Sterling Knox, Johnathan Lawson, Shane Thomas, Josh Townley-Thomas and Isaac Traudt and Brock Vice.
    Below is a look at how Creighton’s current players have done in their regular-season and Creighton debuts in a Division I uniform.
Name    Pts.    Reb.    Ast.    Stl.    Min.
Alexander    5    4    1    2    22
Ashworth (USU)    5    4    0    0    20
Farabello (TCU)•    0    0    5    1    26
Farabello (CU)    2    1    2    2    17
Kalkbrenner    8    2    1    1    11
King        5    2    0    0    9
Lawson (MEM)    8    1    1    0    17
Miller        8    3    0    0    12
Osmani    0    0    0    0    1
Scheierman (SDSU)    3    6    1    1    21
Scheierman (CU)•    11    10    3    1    34
•indicates game started

Nifty Fifty Leads To Postseason?
Not counting 2019-20, when there was no postseason, Creighton has made the postseason each of the last 10 times in which it has made at least 50 percent of its field goal attempts to open the year. Eight of those postseason trips were NCAA Tournament berths. The last time that didn’t hold true was 1991-92, when CU shot 51.0 percent in the opener but finished just 9-19.
    Creighton has shot 50 percent or better in seven of its last 11 season-openers.
CU Season-Opener Field Goal Percentage 50+%
Since 1993-94
FG%    Year    Opponent    Postseason
.541    1997-98    UMKC    NIT
.524    1998-99    Towson State    NCAA
.569    2000-01    Western Illinois    NCAA
.594    2002-03    UT Arlington    NCAA
.500    2012-13    North Texas    NCAA
.556    2013-14    Alcorn State    NCAA
.528    2015-16    Texas Southern    NIT
.508    2016-17    UMKC    NCAA
.558    2017-18    Yale    NCAA
.524    2019-20    Kennesaw St.    Postseason CCD
.585    2021-22    Ark.-Pine Bluff    NCAA

The Push For 90
Of Creighton’s 24 all-time NCAA Tournament teams, 11 have scored 90 or more points in their season-opener.
    Put another way…of CU’s 18 teams to score 90 points in an opener, 11 would reach the NCAA Tournament.
    Here’s a look at Creighton’s last nine teams to score 90 or more points in a season-opener:
                Final    Post-
    Score    Opponent    Date    W-L    Season
    93-47    UT-San Antonio    11/30/90    24-8    NCAA
    93-48    Towson State    11/14/98    22-9    NCAA
    96-50    Western Illinois    11/20/00    24-8    NCAA
    106-50    Texas-Arlington    11/17/02    29-5    NCAA
    97-65    N. Carolina A&T    11/11/11    29-6    NCAA
    107-61    Alcorn State    11/08/13    27-8    NCAA
    104-77    Central Arkansas    11/14/14    14-19    —
    93-70    Texas Southern    11/14/15    20-15    NIT
    92-76    Yale    11/10/17    21-12    NCAA
    90-77    Ark.-Pine Bluff    11/09/21    23-12    NCAA

Good Defense, A Good Sign
Each of the last nine times that Creighton has held its season-opening opponent to 50 points or less, the Bluejays have advanced to the postseason.  It hasn’t happened since 2006, however.
    That list is seen below:
Date    Opponent    Score    NCAA/NIT
11/30/73    Regis    W 93-38    NCAA
11/27/76    St. Thomas (MN)    W 79-39    NIT
11/30/90    UT San Antonio    W 93-47    NCAA
11/14/98    Towson State    W 93-48    NCAA
11/20/00    Western Illinois    W 96-50    NCAA
11/17/02    Texas-Arlington    W 106-50    NCAA
11/22/03    San Diego    W 76-44    NIT
11/15/04    Alcorn State    W 74-40    NCAA
11/13/06    Mississippi Valley St.    W 78-42    NCAA

November Reign
Creighton is a 71-1 all-time in regular-season home games that take place on or before Nov. 26th. The lone loss came in 2018 when it lost to Ohio State.
    Creighton has won 78 of its 80 regular-season November home games since 1990, falling only to Boise State in 2012 and Ohio State in 2018.
    Overall, Creighton is 110-21 in regular-season November games at all sites since the start of the 1998-99 campaign.

Jays At Home Against Winless Teams
Creighton’s opponent on Tuesday, Florida A&M, is 0-0. The Bluejays have won 44 straight home games against teams that are winless entering the night, winning those games by an average of 24.07 points. Fifteen of those wins came by 30 points or more, and only five were decided by single-digits.
    The streak dates to a 77-70 loss versus an 0-2 SMU team on Dec. 3, 1994. That game was Dana Altman’s home debut at Creighton.
    Since the start of the 2002-03 season Creighton has won 130 of its last 132 home games against teams that enter the night with a record of .500 or worse.
Creighton at Home vs. Winless Teams, Since 12/3/1994
Opp. W-L     Opponent    CU Result    Date
    0-4    UMKC    W 75-61    12/17/94
    0-1    UMKC    W 70-68    11/25/96
    0-0    UMKC    W 81-59    11/14/97
    0-0    Towson    W 93-48    11/14/98
    0-1    Western Illinois    W 96-50    11/20/00
    0-1    North Carolina A&T    W 72-51    11/18/01
    0-0    Texas-Arlington    W 106-50    11/17/02
    0-3    San Diego    W 79-44    11/22/03
    0-1    Bethune-Cookman    W 69-49    12/03/03
    0-0    Alcorn State    W 74-40    11/15/04
    0-0    Arkansas-Pine Bluff    W 83-58    11/20/04
    0-0    Arkansas-Pine Bluff    W 87-55    11/19/05
    0-1    Miss. Valley State    W 78-42    11/13/06
    0-4    Arkansas-Pine Bluff    W 74-39    11/29/06
    0-0    DePaul    W 74-62    11/09/07
    0-2    Miss. Valley State    W 76-46    11/17/07
    0-2    Arkansas-Pine Bluff    W 82-50    11/20/08
    0-9    Miss. Valley State    W 82-58    12/02/08
    0-7    Southern    W 71-60    12/15/08
    0-1    Florida A&M    W 78-53    11/17/09
    0-0    Alabama State    W 71-57    11/12/10
    0-1    Northern Arizona    W 74-70    11/14/10
    0-0    N. Carolina A&T    W 97-65    11/11/11
    0-1    Chicago State    W 95-61    11/13/11
    0-0    North Texas    W 71-51    11/09/12
    0-2    Presbyterian    W 87-58    11/18/12
    0-4    Longwood    W 105-57    11/20/12
    0-0    Alcorn State    W 107-61    11/08/13
    0-1    UMKC    W 96-70    11/11/13
    0-3    Tulsa    W 82-72    11/23/13
    0-0    Central Arkansas    W 104-77    11/14/14
    0-1    Chicago State    W 84-66    11/16/14
    0-1    Texas Southern    W 93-70    11/14/15
    0-2    UTSA    W 103-78    11/17/15
    0-0    UMKC    W 89-82    11/11/16
    0-0    Yale    W 92-76    11/10/17
    0-1    Alcorn State    W 109-72    11/12/17
    0-0    Western Illinois    W 78-67    11/06/18
    0-0    East Tennessee State    W 75-69    11/11/18
    0-0    Kennesaw State    W 81-55    11/05/19
    0-2    North Dakota State    W 69-58    11/29/20
    0-0    Ark.-Pine Bluff    W 90-77    11/09/21
    0-1    Kennesaw State    W 51-44    11/11/21
    0-0    St. Thomas    W 72-60    11/07/22

Crowd Watch
Last Friday’s exhibition crowd of 17,132 was Creighton’s largest exhibition crowd ever, breaking the previous mark of 16,317 on Nov. 7, 2014 vs. Sioux Falls.
    Creighton’s largest crowd ever to open a regular-season was the 18,160 fans who gathered to watch the Bluejays dispatch Central Arkansas (104-77) on Nov. 14, 2014.
    Creighton, meanwhile, has sold out of season tickets for the first time after selling 15,768 tickets.

A Head Start
Creighton got a jump start on the season with nine practices in July before heading to the Bahamas to play in three games during the first week of August.
    Creighton won all three games by 14 points or more, averaged 98.3 points., and outrebounded foes by 21.3 caroms per contest.
    Trey Alexander led CU by averaging 20.0 points before missing the final contest, but Ryan Kalkbrenner (11.0 ppg.), Baylor Scheierman (10.0 ppg.) and Fredrick King (10.0 ppg.) also scored at a double-digit clip.
    Steven Ashworth led CU with 15 assists, King and Brock Vice had a team-high 18 rebounds and Kalkbrenner topped the team with 10 swats.

Who’s Back?
With Creighton returning seven of the 13 men who appeared in a game last season, it’s no surprise that a similar ratio of the production from 2022-23 is also gone. Below is a breakdown of what is back:
Stat    Returners    Departures
Blocks    126 (82.9%)    26 (17.1%)
Rebounds    860 (67.9%)    411 (32.1%)
3FG Made    207 (64.9%)    112 (35.1%)
Points    1833 (64.8%)    995 (35.2%)
Steals    119 (64.3%)    66 (35.7%)
Minutes    4693 (63.0%)    2757 (37.0%)
Starts    111 (60.0%)    74 (40.0%)
Charges Taken    16 (59.3%)    11 (40.7%)
Assists    308 (53.0%)    273 (47.0%)

Preseason Top 10
The Creighton men’s basketball team was ranked eighth in the Associated Press Preseason Top 25 poll, its highest preseason AP ranking ever. That’s one spot better than the previous best, done last year, when the Bluejays started the season ranked ninth.
    The announcement marks just the sixth time in program history the writers have voted CU to the top-25 in the preseason, joining 2006-07 (No. 19), 2012-13 (No. 16) and 2016-17 (No. 22), 2020-21 (No. 11) and 2022-23 (No. 9). All five of those teams would end up in the NCAA Tournament, with the last two making the Sweet 16 and last year’s club reaching the Elite Eight.
    It’s also the 23rd week in program history that Creighton has been in the top-10 at any point, with all but one of those occasions happening under head coach Greg McDermott. Creighton’s best ranking in program history is seventh, done five times (Jan. 16, 2017, March 10, 2020, March 18, 2020, Jan. 7, 2021 and Nov. 28, 2022).
    Creighton has now been ranked 123 times in program history, with 95 of those under the direction of McDermott. Creighton is 152-63 all-time as a ranked team, including a 118-51 mark under McDermott. Creighton has now been ranked at least one week in 10 of McDermott’s 14 seasons on The Hilltop after doing it just five different seasons in program history before his 2010 arrival.
        Creighton is one of four schools to be ranked in the preseason top-10 each of the past two seasons, joining Kansas, Duke and Houston.
    Along with No. 5 Marquette, No. 6 Connecticut and No. 8 Creighton, this year marked the first time since 2011-12 that the BIG EAST had three Preseason Top-10 teams.
    Creighton is also eighth in the preseason USA Today Coaches poll, its best preseason mark ever.

Preseason BIG EAST Poll
The Creighton men’s basketball team has been picked to finish second in the BIG EAST Conference in the annual survey of league coaches, which was unveiled as part of BIG EAST Media Day.
    It’s the second time in Creighton’s 11 years in the BIG EAST Conference that the Bluejays have been picked second, as the 2020-21 squad was also picked second (and eventually finished second). The Bluejays also had three players receive recognition on one of the Preseason All-BIG EAST teams, tied with preseason favorite Marquette for the most in the league.
    The Bluejays collected four first-place votes and earned 92 points in the poll, trailing only Marquette’s seven first-place votes and 96 overall points. Defending national champion Connecticut was tabbed third with 79 points, just ahead of Villanova’s 76 for fourth place. Hall of Fame coach Rick Pitino’s first St. John’s team garnered 59 points to be chosen fifth, just ahead of Xavier (57) and Providence (51). The bottom four teams in the poll are Georgetown (34), Seton Hall (30), Butler (16) and DePaul (15).
    Creighton finished 24-13 overall and 14-6 in BIG EAST play last season and are the only league team to return three of its scorers that averaged at least a dozen points per game. The Bluejays won three NCAA Tournament games to advance to its first Elite Eight since 1941.
    In 2023-24, Creighton will be led by senior center Ryan Kalkbrenner, who is a Preseason First Team All-BIG EAST selection. Kalkbrenner becomes the first player in program history to earn Preseason First Team All-BIG EAST honors multiple times, and along with Preseason Player of the Year Tyler Kolek from Marquette was one of two men to be named on every ballot.
    Joining Kalkbrenner with the Preseason First Team All-BIG EAST acclaim was junior guard Trey Alexander. Alexander was an Honorable Mention All-BIG EAST choice at the end of last season, as was teammate Baylor Scheierman. A senior guard from Aurora, Neb., Scheierman earned Preseason Second Team All-BIG EAST plaudits in 2023-24.
    This year marks the second time that Creighton has had more than two players land on the Preseason All-BIG EAST Team, and comes 12 months after Creighton had four men listed prior to the 2022-23 campaign. Creighton last had two men named Preseason First Team All-Conference in its Missouri Valley Conference days in 2006-07 (Anthony Tolliver, Nate Funk).
    Kolek was named 2023-24 BIG EAST Preseason Player of the Year by a vote of the league’s head coaches, which comes as little surprise after the point guard was named 2023 BIG EAST Player of the Year and BIG EAST Tournament MVP after leading the Golden Eagles to both the regular-season and tournament titles. Connecticut guard Stephon Castle was chosen BIG EAST Preseason Freshman of the Year. The coaches, who were not permitted to select their own players, also chose an All-BIG EAST First Team, All-BIG EAST Second Team and All-BIG EAST Honorable Mention.  
    Creighton has matched or exceeded its preseason projection in all but one season since joining the BIG EAST in 2013-14, the best showing in the league in that time. The Bluejays are seeking an eighth straight finish in the top four of the league standings. CU’s team two years ago was predicted to finish eighth in the BIG EAST, then ended up in fourth. Four years ago, a team picked seventh in the BIG EAST’s preseason poll went 13-5 in league play to share its first league title with Villanova and Seton Hall. That Bluejay team ended the year ranked seventh in the entire nation.
Creighton’s BIG EAST Preseason Poll History
Year     Preseason     Actual     Preseason All-BIG EAST
2013-14     3rd     2nd     Doug McDermott (1st)
2014-15     9th     T-9th     –
2015-16     9th     6th     –
2016-17     3rd     T-3rd     Maurice Watson Jr. (1st); Marcus Foster (HM)
2017-18     5th     T-3rd     Marcus Foster (1st); Khyri Thomas (HM)
2018-19     9th     T-3rd     Martin Krampelj (HM)
2019-20     7th     T-1st    Ty-Shon Alexander (1st)
2020-21     2nd     2nd    Marcus Zegarowski (1st); Mitch Ballock (2nd)
2021-22    8th    4th    –
2022-23    1st    3rd    Ryan Kalkbrenner (1st); Arthur Kaluma (2nd)
            Ryan Nembhard (2nd); Baylor Scheierman (HM)
2023-24    2nd    ??    Ryan Kalkbrenner (1st); Trey Alexander (1st)
            Baylor Scheierman (2nd)

Newcomer Report
Six players made their fall exhibition debut in a Creighton uniform in the win vs. Wayne State as transfers Steven Ashworth, Johnathan Lawson, Josh Townley-Thomas and Isaac Traudt, as well as freshmen Josiah Dotzler, Sterling Knox, Brock Vice and Shane Thomas combined for  48 points, 26 rebounds and nine assists in 100 minutes of action in Creighton’s 95-48 triumph.
    Below is a look at how Creighton’s newcomers have produced in their exhibition debuts since 2018:
2023
Ashworth/Lawson/Knox/Thomas
Vice/Dotzler/Townley-Thomas/Traudt
44 pts., 23 reb., 15 ast., 84 min (W 109-57)
2022
Scheierman/Farabello/King
Shtolzberg/Green/Young
44 pts., 23 reb., 15 ast., 84 min (W 109-57)
2021
Alexander/Andronikashvili/Christofilis
Feazell/Hawkins/Kaluma/Kancleris
Miller/Nembhard/Yates
56 pts., 37 reb., 15 ast., 155 min (W 76-61)
2019
Mitchell/Windham/Zeil/Jones
25 pts., 18 reb., 0 ast., 68 min (W 95-63)
2018
Bishop/Canfield/Cashaw/
Froling/Jefferson/Zegarowski
40 pts., 20 reb., 9 ast., 96 min. (W 101-57)

Among The Nation’s Best
Below is where Creighton ranks nationally since the start of the 2010-11 season among teams to have played 100 or more Division I games, per Basketball-Reference.com.
2010-11 to 2022-23
Category    CU Stat    CU Rank
3FG Made    3,943    3rd    
FG Percentage    .476    4th
Assists    7,161    6th    
3FG Percentage    .375    8th
FG Made    12,254    8th    
Points    34,280    9th    
Wins    300    24th    
Winning Percentage    .667    32nd

Freshman Starts Almost Unheard Of
Since 1992-93, only six true freshmen have started Creighton’s regular-season opener.
    Ryan Sears did so in 1997-98. The point guard would go on to start all 124 games of his CU career and remains the program’s all-time career assist (570) and steals (283) leader.
    Doug McDermott did so in 2010-11, and he went on to start all 145 games of his career. He would graduate as the fifth-leading scorer in NCAA history with 3,150 career points and is the only three-time First Team All-American since 1986. He now plays for the San Antonio Spurs.
    Khyri Thomas got a start in 2015-16 and remained in CU’s starting five each of his first 24 games, and 96-of-102 career contests with the Jays. He later spent parts three seasons in the NBA.
    Shereef Mitchell joined this elite group in 2019-20 when he got the starting nod against Kennesaw State.
    In 2021-22, both Ryan Nembhard and Arthur Kaluma started the opener vs. Arkansas-Pine Bluff, marking the first time Creighton started two true freshmen in a regular-season opener since 1991-92 (Eric Dantzler and Mike Amos). Both men ended up on the BIG EAST’s All-Freshman Team, with Nembhard being named Freshman of the Year.
    The last time Creighton started three true freshmen in a regular-season opener was 1987-88 (Chris Rodgers, Bob Harstad, Chad Gallagher).

Who Are These Guys?
Creighton returns 111 starts from last year’s team, its most since bringing back 124 starts from its 2020-21 club.
    Creighton has won 20 or more games each of the previous eight times (and 12 of the last 13 times) it has returned 100 or more starts.
    Returning    Returning Starts     Final
Year    Starters    From Previous Year    W-L
2023-24    3    111    ? ? ?
2022-23    3    104    24-13
2021-22    0    2    23-12
2020-21    5    124    22-9
2019-20    4    136    24-7
2018-19    2    57    20-15
2017-18    2    72    21-12
2016-17    4    130    25-10
2015-16    1    64    20-15
2014-15    1    49    14-19
2013-14    4    144    27-8
2012-13    4    140    28-8
2011-12    3    101    29-6
2010-11    4    123    23-16
2009-10    3    106    18-16
2008-09    3    83    27-8
2007-08    1    44    22-11
2006-07    4    120    22-11
2005-06    4    134    20-10
2004-05    2    58    23-11
2003-04    3    101    20-9
2002-03    5    159    29-5
2001-02    2    65    23-9
2000-01    3    90    24-8
1999-00    3    84    23-10
1998-99    3    84    22-9
1997-98    4    72    18-10
1996-97    4    126    15-15
1995-96    4    100    14-15
1994-95    2    52    7-19
1993-94    3    73    7-22
1992-93    2    64    8-18
1991-92    2    51    9-19
1990-91    4    132    24-8
1989-90    4    127    21-12
1988-89    4    123    20-11
1987-88    3    83    16-16
1986-87    2    65    9-19
1985-86    1    48    12-16
1984-85    4    124    20-12
1983-84    3    72    17-14
1982-83    3    77    8-19
1981-82    2    78    7-20
1980-81    4    112    21-9

Four Of A Kind
Creighton has four players that were named to a Preseason Watch List in Steven Ashworth (Bob Cousy Point Guard), Trey Alexander (Jerry West Shooting Guard), Baylor Scheierman (Julius Erving Small Forward) and Ryan Kalkbrenner (Kareem Abdul-Jabbar Center).
    Creighton is one of six schools to have four men listed at a position, joining Duke, Kansas, Kentucky, Marquette and UConn.
    Those same four men were named to CBS Sports Preseason Top 100 And 1 player listings, with Kalkbrenner (5), Alexander (12), Scheierman (26) and Ashworth (76) making CU the only school with three of the top 30 players or four of the top 76 players. Kansas and Duke were the only other teams with four players listed in the Top 100 And 1.
    Last but not least, both Alexander and Kalkbrenner were two of 20 players on the NABC’s Preseason Division I Player of the Year Watch List. The only other schools with two players on that list were Duke and USC.

Downtown Duo
Only two players nationally that are returning in 2023-24 had 120+ assists, 87+ three-pointers and 38+ steals in 2022-23.
    Baylor Scheierman and Steven Ashworth.
    Both will play for Creighton this season.

#ProJays
Former Creighton All-American Doug McDermott is back for a third season with the San Antonio Spurs, giving Creighton at least one NBA player in 40 of the last 41 seasons. McDermott is in his 10th season in the NBA.  Other famous Bluejays to play in the NBA in the past include Paul Silas, Kyle Korver and Anthony Tolliver.

Let’s Go On A Run
Creighton has won at least one NCAA Tournament game in 2021, 2022 and 2023. That makes CU one of seven teams in the country to have a win in each of the last three NCAA Tournaments, joining Arkansas, Baylor, Gonzaga, Houston, Kansas and UCLA.
    The only other time that Creighton has won an NCAA Tournament game in consecutive seasons came in 2012, 2013 and 2014, also under Greg McDermott.
    Creighton is one of six schools with 20 or more wins in each of the last eight seasons, joining Belmont, Gonzaga, Houston, Kansas and Oregon.
    Creighton is one of seven teams to post 22 or more wins in each of the last four seasons, joining Baylor, Gonzaga, Houston, Liberty, San Diego State and Southern California.
    Creighton is one of just eight teams to have reached at least two of the last three Sweet 16s. Gonzaga, Houston and UCLA have done it each of the last three seasons, while Alabama, Creighton, Michigan and Villanova have done it twice each.

23 of 25 Seasons With 20 Wins
Creighton has won 20 or more games in 23 of the last 25 seasons, a feat that puts the Jays among an exclusive group, nationally.
    Just two schools have had 20 or more wins each of the last 25 years: Gonzaga and Kansas. Duke has done it 24 times, Creighton and Kentucky 23 times.
Most 20-Win Seasons, Last 25 Seasons
Team    20-Win Seasons       2022-23 W-L
Gonzaga    25    31-6
Kansas    25    28-8
Duke    24    27-9
Creighton    23    24-13
Kentucky    23    22-12

Dynamic Duo
Creighton is also one of eight schools to have men’s and women’s basketball programs to both own 22 wins or more each of the previous two seasons, a list that includes Creighton, Gonzaga, Liberty, Princeton, Tennessee, Texas, Toledo and UConn.
    This season, Creighton is one of eight teams with a preseason top-25 squad on both the men’s and women’s side, joining Baylor, Connecticut, Illinois, North Carolina, Southern California, Tennessee and Texas.
    The only five schools to be ranked in the preseason men’s and women’s basketball Top 25 of the AP Poll both this season and last season are Baylor, Creighton, North Carolina, Tennessee and Texas.
    Creighton is one of 11 schools to make the NCAA Tournament in both men’s and women’s basketball each of the past two seasons, a list that consists of Arizona, Baylor, Creighton, Gonzaga, Indiana, Iowa, Iowa State, Miami (Fla.), Tennessee, Texas and UConn.
    The only schools with at-large bids in each of the previous two years in both men’s and women’s basketball are Baylor, Creighton, Indiana and Miami (Fla.).

A Dozen Will Do
Creighton finished 14-6 in the BIG EAST last season and is the only school in the BIG EAST with 12 or more league wins each of the previous four seasons.
    Among the other BIG EAST or “Power 5”  Conference schools, Kansas, UCLA and Virginia have also done it the previous four years.
    Creighton has now owned a .500 mark or better in league play 27 times in the last 28 seasons.
    The only BIG EAST teams to finish .500 or better in league play each of the previous six seasons are Creighton, Villanova and Seton Hall.

Big Deficits, No Big Deal
Creighton owns 27 victories since the start of the 2010-11 season after trailing by double-figures at some point.
    Thirteen of those 27 comebacks have come away from home.
    If you’re curious, CU’s largest comeback win since 2000 came on Jan. 28, 2006, when the Jays trailed 25-6 early before rallying to beat Wichita State on a buzzer-beater by Anthony Tolliver.
CU’s Double-Digit Comebacks Under McDermott
Deficit    Opponent    Date
18    #18 Oklahoma    11/19/14
17    at San Diego State    11/30/11
16    at Evansville    02/16/13
16    at Seton Hall    01/27/21
16    SIU Edwardsville    11/27/21
15    Arkansas-Pine Bluff    11/09/21
14    Evansville    02/21/12
14    vs. San Diego State    03/17/22
13    at Saint Joseph’s    11/16/13
13    Xavier    01/12/14
13    #22 Xavier    12/23/20
12    Saint Joseph’s    12/11/10
12    at DePaul    01/17/16
12    East Tennessee State    11/11/18
11    at Wichita State    12/31/11
11    Northern Iowa    01/10/12
11    vs. Alabama    03/16/12
11    vs. Ole Miss    11/21/16
11    vs. Connecticut    03/12/21
11    DePaul    01/22/22
10    UAB    11/14/12
10    vs. Drake    03/02/12
10    at Nebraska    12/07/14
10    South Dakota    12/09/14
10    St. John’s    01/03/18
10    at DePaul    02/07/18
10    Bemidji State    02/13/18

McDermott Ranks Second On CU Wins List
Greg McDermott has 300 victories at Creighton, good for second place on CU’s all-time wins list.
    McDermott’s .667 winning percentage is Creighton’s best since Arthur A. Schabinger’s .714 win rate more than 85 years ago.
    Below is a list of the most victorious Creighton coaches in program history.
Most Coaching Wins, Creighton History
Rk.    W-L    Name    Years
1.    327-176    Dana Altman    1994-2010
2.    300-150    Greg McDermott    2010-Pres.
3.    165-66    Arthur A. Schabinger     1922-1935
4.    138-118    John J. “Red” McManus     1959-1969
5.    130-64    Tom Apke    1974-1981

CHI Health Center Omaha Dramatics
Creighton is 8-8 in contests with a game-winning go-ahead score in the final 10 seconds at CHI Health Center Omaha, which opened in 2003.
    The last time such a game happened was in 2020 when Creighton’s Marcus Zegarowski hit a shot with 3.2 seconds left to beat Providence.
Creighton’s Go-Ahead Scores in Wins at
CHI Health Center Omaha, Last 10 Seconds
Date    Opponent    Score    Player/Score    Time
11/26/05    Dayton    W 91-90*    Funk FG    :5.7
01/28/06    Wichita St.    W 57-55    Tolliver FG    :0.0
11/25/06    George Mason    W 58-56    Watts FT    :7.5
03/18/08    Rhode Island    W 74-73    Witter 3FG    :3.2
01/13/10    Southern Illinois    W 71-69    Young FG    :1.3
02/18/12    Long Beach St.    W 81-79    Young FG    :0.3
01/28/14    St. John’s    W 63-60    McDermott 3FG    :2.8
01/18/20    Providence    W 78-74    Zegarowski 3FG    :3.2
*double-overtime

Opponent Go-Ahead Scores in CU Losses at
CHI Health Center Omaha, Last 10 Seconds
Date    Opponent    Score    Player/Score    Time
03/20/06    Miami (Fla.)    L 53-52    G. Diaz FT    :2.6
01/20/07    Southern Illinois    L 58-57    B. Mullins FG    :4.1
01/10/15    #19 Seton Hall    L 68-67    S. Gibbs 3FG    :2.2
02/16/15    #19 Butler    L 58-56    R. Jones FG    :1.9
03/07/15    Xavier    L 74-73    D. Davis FT’s    :6.3
01/12/16    #12 Providence    L 50-48    K. Dunn FG    :0.0
02/22/17    Providence    L 68-66    K. Cartwright 3FG    :2.4
02/10/18    #5 Xavier    L 71-72    Q. Goodin FT’s    :0.3

Top-20 Crowds
Here’s a look at Creighton’s top-20 home crowds all-time.
      Rank    Att.    Opponent    Date
    1.    18,868    Providence    03/08/14
    2.    18,859    Georgetown    01/25/14
    3.    18,831    #1 Villanova    12/31/16
    4.    18,797    #6 Villanova    02/16/14
    5.    18,759    #1 Gonzaga    12/01/18
    6.    18,742    Seton Hall    02/23/14
    7.    18,735    Wichita State    02/11/12
    8.    18,613    Wichita State    03/02/13
    9.    18,525    Marquette    12/31/13
    10.    18,519    #8 Seton Hall    03/07/20
    11.    18,518    Georgetown    01/27/18
    12.    18,509    Villanova    02/04/23
    13.    18,495    Marquette    02/17/18
    14.    18,494    Illinois State    02/09/13
    15.    18,458    Evansville    12/29/12
    16.    18,436    Bradley    01/28/12
    17.    18,323    DePaul    02/07/14
    18.    18,321    #3 Villanova    02/24/18
    19.    18,294    #19 Iowa State    12/04/21
    20.    18,286    #21 Connecticut    02/12/23

CHI Health Center Omaha Success
Creighton has played 338 regular and postseason contests at CHI Health Center Omaha all-time in the 21-year-old facility.
    The Bluejays own a 278-60 (.822) record all-time at the facility, and have never lost there on a Friday (22-0).
    Creighton’s Nov. 25, 2017 win over SIU Edwardsville was the program’s 200th at the facility, coming in its 242nd home game. CU’s 100th win came on Nov. 17, 2010, a 63-58 win over Louisiana.
    Creighton has outscored its opponents 26,418-22,127 in games at CHI Health Center Omaha, an average margin of 12.70 points per game. Creighton has not trailed 89 different times, including three times this year (Holy Cross, DePaul, Georgetown).
    Incredibly, Creighton hasn’t trailed in its home opener in 10 of the past 23 seasons (2000-01, 2002-03, 2003-04, 2004-05, 2005-06, 2009-10, 2011-12, 2014-15, 2016-17 and 2019-20).
    Creighton is also 32-36 all-time in the 68 games at the arena in which it’s fallen behind by double-figures at any point, 8-11 when down by 10+ points at halftime in the facility, and 40-29 when trailing at halftime at CHI Health Center Omaha.
    Creighton is 181-42 (.812) at CHI Health Center Omaha under Greg McDermott and hasn’t trailed in 64 of those games. In that same span, CU owns a 95-9 home record vs. non-conference teams.
    Factor in a 17-0 home mark at the Omaha Civic Auditorium in 2002-03 and two wins at the Civic in the 2010 CIT, and the Bluejays are 297-60 (.832) at home since the start of the 2002-03 campaign.
 
Home Run
Under Greg McDermott Creighton is averaging 80.38 points per home game (17,924 points in 223 home games), a figure that climbs to 83.84 points in non-conference home games (8,719 points in 104 home games).
    Creighton is 135-6 all-time at CHI Health Center Omaha when scoring 80 or points.

Elite Eight
Greg McDermott guided his team to the NCAA Tournament for the eighth time last season. That put him in the company of some of the greatest coaches in CU Athletics history, and most among basketball coaches.
    McDermott is one of five head coaches in Creighton history to lead seven or more NCAA Tournament teams.
Name    Sport    NCAA’s @CU
Kirsten Bernthal Booth    Volleyball    12
Bob Warming    Men’s Soccer    11
Greg McDermott    Men’s Basketball    8
Dana Altman    Men’s Basketball    7
Brent Vigness    Softball    7

Firing On All Cylinders
Creighton finished last season ranked 12th overall by KenPom.com. That included the nation’s No. 23 offense, and No. 14 defense. Creighton’s No. 14 defense was its best mark in the 21 seasons of the KenPom era.
    Creighton has had a top-25 offense per KenPom seven times in 13 seasons under Greg McDermott and a top-25 defense twice.
Year    Off. Rating    Def. Rating    Overall Rank
2010-11    66    174    98
2011-12    5    166    28
2012-13    5    66    15
2013-14    2    124    17
2014-15    59    138    79
2015-16    43    76    40
2016-17    32    46    28
2017-18    25    58    30
2018-19    47    83    55
2019-20    3    78    12
2020-21    25    32    22
2021-22    112    19    50
2022-23    23    14    12

Kalkbrenner Repeats As Top Defender
Creighton center Ryan Kalkbrenner was named 2023 BIG EAST Defensive Player of the Year for the second straight season.
    Kalkbrenner became just the 11th player in league history to win the recognition more than once, joining the likes of Patrick Ewing, Alonzo Mourning, Dikembe Mutombo, Kris Dunn and Allen Iverson among those to win the award multiple times, and is the first repeat winner since former Bluejay guard Khyri Thomas in 2017 and 2018.
    Between Kalkbrenner and Thomas, Creighton has now had a BIG EAST Defensive Player of the Year in four of the previous seven seasons.
Most BIG EAST Defensive Player of the Year Honors
    Honors    Name, School    Years (*ties)
    4    Patrick Ewing, Georgetown    1982, 83, 84, 85
    3    Alonzo Mourning, Georgetown    1989, 90*, 92
    2    Dikembe Mutombo, Georgetown    1990, 91
    2    Allen Iverson, Georgetown    1995, 96
    2    Etan Thomas, Syracuse    1999, 00
    2    John Linehan, Providence    2001, 02
    2    Emeka Okafor, Connecticut    2003, 04
    2    Hasheem Thabeet, Connecticut    2008, 09
    2    Kris Dunn, Providence    2015*, 16
    2    Khyri Thomas, Creighton    2017*, 18
    2    Ryan Kalkbrenner, Creighton    2022, 23

Kalkbrenner Surpasses 1,000 Points
Ryan Kalkbrenner owns 1,167 career points, as he became the 45th men’s player in Creighton history to surpass 1,000 on Feb. 25, 2023 at Villanova. He was the first Bluejay to score 1,000 since Marcus Zegarowski did it on Jan. 20, 2021 vs. Providence.
    He currently ranks 31st in program history, which is also 18th-most by any Bluejay after three full seasons (or less).
    Here’s a list of Creighton’s top scorers ever:
Most Career Points, Creighton History
    Rank    Pts.    Name    Years
    1.    3,150    Doug McDermott    2010-14
    2.    2,116    Rodney Buford    1995-99
    3.    2,110    Bob Harstad     1987-91
    4.    1,983    Chad Gallagher     1987-91
    5.    1,876    Bob Portman     1966-69
    6.    1,801    Kyle Korver    1999-03
    7.    1,754    Nate Funk    2002-07
    8.    1,682    Rick Apke     1974-78
    9.    1,661    Paul Silas    1961-64
    10.    1,654    Vernon Moore     1981-85
    11.    1,575    Benoit Benjamin     1982-85
    12.    1,526    John C. Johnson    1975-79
    13.    1,500    Kevin McKenna    1977-81
    14.    1,437    Eddie Cole    1951-55
    15.    1,369    Gene Harmon    1971-74
    16.    1,361    Duan Cole    1987-92
    17.    1,342    Antoine Young    2008-12
    18.    1,313    Kenny Lawson Jr.    2006-11
    19.    1,309    Ryan Sears    1997-01
    20.    1,304    Mitch Ballock    2017-21
    21.    1,303    Elton Tuttle    1951-54
    22.    1,293    Marcus Zegarowski    2018-21
    23.    1,292    Marcus Foster    2016-18
    24.    1,272    Bob Gibson    1954-57
    25.    1,267    Wally Anderzunas    1965-67, 1968-69
    26.    1,254    Gary Swain    1983-87
    27.    1,241    Ty-Shon Alexander    2017-20
    28.    1,238    Ben Walker    1997-01
    29.    1,196    Ray Yost    1951-54
    30.    1,172    Dick Harvey    1956-59
    31.    1,167    Ryan Kalkbrenner    2020-Pres.

    Kalkbrenner also ranks second in program history in blocked shots with 199.
Most Creighton Blocked Shots, Since 1979-80
    Blk.    Name    Years
    411    Benoit Benjamin    1982-85
    199    Ryan Kalkbrenner    2020-Pres.
    183    Chad Gallagher    1987-91
    174    Gregory Echenique    2010-13
    153    Kenny Lawson Jr.    2006-11

Among The Best…EVER!
Ryan Kalkbrenner has made 472 of 707 career shots, putting him at 66.8 percent overall. That places the senior center sixth in field goal percentage in NCAA history among players to make 400 or more field goals and at least four field goals per game.
Best Career FG%, NCAA History (min. 400 FG, 4FG/game)
    Pct. (FG-FGA)    Name, School    Years
    .746 (469-629)    Udoka Azubuike, Kansas    2016-20
    .740 (497-672)    Tacko Fall, UCF    2015-19
    .678 (828-1222)    Steve Johnson, Oregon State    1976-81
    .677 (441-651)    Michael Bradley, Kentucky/Villanova    1998-01
    .6682 (566-847)    Murray Brown, Florida State    1976-80
    .6676 (472-707)    Ryan Kalkbrenner, Creighton    2020-Pres.
    .6673 (740-1109)    Evan Bradds, Belmont    2013-17
    .665 (411-618)    Lee Campbell, MTSU, Missouri State    1987-90
    .664 (496-747)    Warren Kidd, Middle Tennessee State    1990-93
    .664 (702-1058)    Todd MacCulloch, Washington    1995-99
    .662 (476-719)    Joe Senser, West Chester    1975-79

Scheierman Drains 200th Trey
Baylor Scheierman has made 246 three-pointers in his college career, doing so at a 39.5 percent clip.
    Scheierman also owns 1,586 points, 941 rebounds, 442 assists and 121 career steals.
    Per Basketball-Reference.com, Scheierman is the nation’s only player in the last 30 years with career totals of at least 225 three-pointers, 425 assists and 900 rebounds.

Can’t Stop Scheierman
Baylor Scheierman made a three-point basket in all 37 games he played last season, stretching his streak dating to last year to 47 in a row if you include the end of his time at South Dakota State.
    Scheierman’s streak is the longest streak in Creighton history, four more than Ty-Shon Alexander’s 33.
    Also listed is the nation’s longest active streaks of games with a three-pointer, per the FOX Sports research team.
Consecutive Games With A 3-Pointer, Creighton History
    Streak    Name    Dates of Streak
    37    Baylor Scheierman    Nov. 7, 2022 – Present
    33    Ty-Shon Alexander    Feb. 27, 2018-March 6, 2019
    31    Booker Woodfox    Nov. 25, 2008-March 23, 2009
    28    Kyle Korver    Feb. 4, 2001-Feb. 6, 2002
    27    Kyle Korver    Feb. 13, 2002-Jan. 20, 2003

Consecutive Games With A 3-Pointer
Nation’s Longest Active Streaks
    Streak    Name, School    Next Game
    65    Kamdyn Curfman, Marshall    11/6
    48    Santiago Vescovi, Tennessee    11/6
    47    Baylor Scheierman, Creighton / S. Dakota St.    11/7

Release, Rotation, Splash, Repeat
Creighton has made at least one three-pointer in 985 straight games. The streak is the nation’s 12th-longest active streak.
    Creighton’s last game without a three-pointer came at Illinois State on Feb. 20, 1993, when the Jays were 0-for-5. Creighton’s last win without making a three-point basket came on March 3, 1991 when the Jays went 0-for-2 from three-point range in a 71-66 win over Southern Illinois in the championship game of the MVC Tournament.
    Below is a list of the nation’s longest active three-point streaks.
Longest Active 3-Point Streaks
    Rk.    Streak    School    Next Game
    1.    1,192    UNLV    11/8
    2.    1,189    Duke    11/6
    3.    1,127    Western Kentucky    11/6
    4.    1,115    East Tennessee State    11/6
    5.    1,094    Oakland    11/6
    6.    1,095    Texas    11/6
    7.    1,092    Pacific    11/6
    8.    1,035    Marshall    11/6
    9.    1,030    Baylor    11/7
    10.    1,020    Gonzaga    11/10
    11.    1,019    Princeton    11/6
    12.    985    Long Island    11/8
        985    Creighton    11/7
    14.    974    Mount St. Mary’s    11/7
    15.    963    Tennessee State    11/6

Triple Trouble
During Creighton’s current streak of 985 straight games with a three-pointer, the Jays have drained 7,785 trifectas, an average of 7.90 treys per game.
    That’s not surprising since during the streak, Creighton has made exactly seven three-pointers 147 times, more than any figure.
    Only five times in the streak has Creighton made just one three-pointer, but on 282 occasions the Bluejays have made 10 or more trifectas, including three games of 20 or more.
    Since the start of the 2019-20 season, the Bluejays are 63-15 when making eight or more three-pointers, compared to a 28-25 mark when making seven treys or fewer.
Team 3FG Made During Creighton’s 3-Point Streak
1:    5 times    2:  19 times    3:  36 times
4:    75 times    5:   103 times    6:  101 times
7:   147 times    8:   124 times    9:  93 times
10:  82 times    11:  57 times    12:  56 times
13:  45 times    14: 19 times    15:  7 times
16:  8 times    17: 3 times    19:  2 times
20: 1 time    21:  1 time    22:  1 time

Ticket Information
Single-game tickets for the 2023-24 season went on sale on September 28th.
    Fans can purchase single-game tickets at CHI Health Center Omaha Box Office, Ryan Athletic Center, by calling Ticketmaster or visiting Ticketmaster.com, and charging by phone at (800) 745-3000.
    For more information, call the Creighton Ticket Office at (402) 280-JAYS.

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