Panther Men Head To League Tournament

UWM faces either Detroit or Loyola Saturday

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Dylan Page

Dylan Page

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March 4, 2004

UWM Tournament Notes in PDF Format
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UWM 2003-04 Game Recaps in PDF Format
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Game #28

UWM (18-9, 13-3 Horizon)

at

Horizon League Semifinals

Saturday, March 6 * 4:30 p.m. CST

Hinkle Fieldhouse, Indianapolis, Ind.

Milwaukee Radio: WOKY (920 AM), Bill Johnson play-by-play

Milwaukee TV: Fox Sports North - Eric Collins, David Kaplan and Mitch Robinson

Internet: Live audio at uwmpanthers.com

Tickets: Call the UWM Ticket Office at 414-229-5886

* Game #28

The University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee returns to action Saturday, facing either Detroit or Loyola in the semifinals of the Horizon League Tournament. The game, which will be played at Butler's Hinkle Fieldhouse, begins at 4:30 p.m. CST.

* Last Time Out

UWM returned to form in clinching the outright Horizon League regular season championship with an 88-63 win over Cleveland State Saturday night at the Klotsche Center. The Panthers led by double figures most of the first half and then led by as many as 31 points in the second half en route to the Senior Night win. Dylan Page led the way with 24 points and eight rebounds in just 25 minutes of action.

* A Brief Look At The Season That Was

The 2003-04 regular season will go down as one of the better ones in UWM's basketball history. Looking to recover from the loss of seven seniors that helped the Panthers to their first-ever NCAA Tournament berth, UWM opened the year 6-5. But a 10-game Horizon League winning streak sent the Panthers to the top of the league standings and, despite a three-game losing streak, UWM won the outright Horizon League title.

* Counting On A Championship

This year's regular season Horizon League title is UWM's first in the Division I ranks. UWM had been close to breaking through in each of the last two seasons. In 2001-02, the Panthers were in first place after 13 games before losing two of three on the road. Then last year, UWM dropped a buzzer-beating heartbreaker on the final day of the regular season to Butler, giving the Bulldogs the crown.

* Who Has And Hasn't Won

With UWM winning the Horizon League title, it has eliminated its name from the list of current league schools who have not won a regular season league title in either the Horizon League or the MCC. Youngstown State, which joined the league just two years ago, joins Cleveland State and Wright State as the only league schools to not win a regular season crown. Butler had won the last four regular season titles - a streak that is being broken this season.

* Just Like Our Other Sports

The UWM men are the fourth Panther squad to win a Horizon League regular season title this season. The UWM volleyball team, men's soccer team and women's soccer team won titles this fall. The UWM women's basketball team finished second in the Horizon League this season, adding to a stellar string of success by all of UWM's teams.

* Horizon League Bracketology

The 2004 Horizon League Men's Basketball Championship shapes up like this. UWM holds the number one seed while UIC is the number two seed and each team gets a bye until Saturday. UW-Green Bay is the third seed and receives a bye until Friday's second round. Fourth-seeded Detroit, sixth-seeded Butler and eighth-seeded Loyola all advanced from first round games Tuesday night. The only upset winner in the bunch was in Dayton, where Loyola knocked off fifth-seeded Wright State. Ninth-seeded Cleveland State and seventh-seeded Youngstown State, each of whom played on the road, were the other two teams eliminated from the tournament during Tuesday's first round action.

* Horizon League History

UWM enters this year's tournament as the number-one seed for the first time in school history. In fact, before Bruce Pearl took over as the Panthers' head coach, UWM had never mustered better than a fifth-seed in the league tournament. Under Pearl, UWM has been the third seed (2002), second seed (2003) and first seed (2004). All-time, UWM is 4-7 in the league tournament and has advanced to the title game just once.

* Is It Good To Be Number One?

The top seed in the Horizon League Men's Basketball Championship has advanced to the title game 18 times in the 24-year history of the tournament, winning 11 of those championship games. The last number-one seed to win the tournament was Butler in 2001, the final in a three-year streak of top seeds winning the league title.

* Why The Tournament Is Where It Is

Butler clinched the hosting rights of the second and semifinal rounds of the tournament with a win Tuesday night over Youngstown State in the first round of the Horizon League Tournament. The Bulldogs, just like UWM last year, will play at home for as long as they are in the tournament, a right given to them as the next school in the league's original tournament rotation. Should Butler lose on either Friday or Saturday, the championship game of the tournament Tuesday will shift to the highest-remaining seed.

* A Historic Site

Like most visiting teams, UWM hasn't enjoyed much success at Hinkle Fieldhouse, winning just one time against the Bulldogs in 12 tries. That win was a memorable one, though, as the Panthers knocked off the nationally-ranked Bulldogs in 2002 on a Clay Tucker three at the buzzer. The tournament hasn't been at Hinkle Fieldhouse since 1994, before UWM was even in the league.

* What's On The Line

The winner of the 2004 Horizon League Tournament receives an automatic berth to the NCAA Tournament, the only way a league school will qualify for the field of 65 this year. UWM is looking for its second-straight appearance in the "Big Dance," which would also be only the second in school history. UWM has never played in the NIT, which is the likely destination for the Panthers should they stumble in league tournament play.

* Simply The Best

Dylan Page capped off one of the best regular seasons in UWM history by winning Horizon League Player of the Year honors. The senior from Amherst, Wis., is the first Panther to ever win the award, voted on by the league's coaches, sports information directors and media. Among the reasons Page won - the best scoring average in the Horizon League, a top -10 ranking in six other statistical categories, 17 20-point-or-more outings and three double-doubles.

* Also Honored

Dylan Page wasn't the only Panther honored in the Horizon League's post-season awards. Junior Ed McCants was named the League's Newcomer of the Year and joined Page as a First-Team All-Horizon League selection. Sophomore Joah Tucker, a transfer from Bradley, also made the League's All-Newcomer Team.

* Page And Viall - An Honorable Pair

Along with Dylan Page being named the Horizon League's Men's Basketball Player of the Year, Maria Viall of UWM was named the Horizon League's Women's Basketball Player of the Year. It's the first time the same school has claimed both honors since the 1994-95 season, when Sherrill Ford and Penny Armstrong each won the awards for UIC. Brian Grant and Carol Madsen each won the awards in 1993-94 for Xavier.

* Keeping The Awards At Home

With Dylan Page winning player of the year honors and Ed McCants winning newcomer of the year honors, it's the first time since the 1993-94 season, and just the third time in league history, that the same school has captured both awards. Xavier's Brian Grant (player of the year) and Jeff Massey (newcomer of the year) combined for the feat in '93-'94, while Loyola's Alfredrick Hughes (POTY) and Carl Goldston (NOTY) did it in the 1983-84 campaign.

* Scoring Duo

Along with capturing the league's major honors and each garnering All-Horizon League First Team honors, Dylan Page and Ed McCants have teamed up to be one of the best scoring duos in the country. The two combine to average 37.8 ppg, tied for the eighth-best mark in the country. The duo of Mike Helms and Rawle Marshall of Oakland lead the way at 40.9 ppg.

* Senioritis

UWM's three seniors were honored last Saturday at the Klotsche Center, prior to the game with Cleveland State. Each will be remembered for some time in the UWM basketball program. Along with being a part of UWM's first-ever NCAA Division I Tournament team from a season ago, Dylan Page, Nate Mielke and Kalombo Kadima have led the Panthers to their first regular season Horizon League title this season. Entering Saturday's semifinal contest, the trio has combined for 294 appearances in Panther uniforms, including 167 starts. UWM's three seniors have all followed different paths in getting to their final seasons. Kadima is the most veteran of the group, having spent the last five years at UWM. Kadima started most of his first two seasons as a Panther before playing as a reserve in his junior year. Kadima redshirted last year. Page has played the last four seasons at UWM, though he was limited by injuries in his first two years before excelling in his final two campaigns. Mielke was a transfer from Marshalltown CC and sat out his first season at UWM before playing in each of the last three seasons.

* Ending A Slide

UWM's win last Saturday over Cleveland State snapped a three-game losing streak by the Panthers, just their second three-game losing streak in three years under Bruce Pearl. The Panthers are 22-6 in games following a loss under Pearl and have still never lost three-straight league games in his tenure.

* Back On Track

Defense and rebounding seemed to be the two biggest woes for the Panthers during their three-game slide, but both areas were much improved last Saturday against the Vikings. UWM limited Cleveland State to just 36.7 percent from the field, including 32.3 percent in the second half. And, the Panthers outrebounded the Vikings, 51-35, including 19-10 on the offensive glass.

* Extra Contributions

UWM claimed its win over Cleveland State in part because of extra contributions it had not been receiving of late. Mark Pancratz, who had played just nine total minutes over the previous four games, scored nine points in 14 minutes of action against the Vikings. Plus James Wright, only a spot player most of the season, scored four points and grabbed two rebounds in six minutes of action. Both players saw more action due to a shoulder injury to Rob Sanders. Sanders is expected to be back in the rotation Saturday.

* Providing Assistance

UWM leads the Horizon League in assists and that was never more obvious than Saturday night. The Panthers tallied 28 assists, one off a single-game school record. Kalombo Kadima led the way with seven assists while three other players had at least four.

* Getting Involved In Other Ways

Ed McCants is often one of UWM's top scorers but found other ways to contribute Saturday in the win over Cleveland State. McCants set a new career-high with eight rebounds, including five offensive boards. He also had five assists and two blocks. Along with ranking second on the team in scoring at 16.9 ppg, McCants is first on the team in steals, third in blocks, fourth in rebounding and fifth in assists.

* Happy To Have A Break

After going two months without a week off, UWM is enjoying some down time late in the season. The Panthers had a full week off before the regular season finale with Cleveland State and will now enjoy another week off before their Horizon League semifinal. Interestingly, the teams UWM had been fighting with at the top of the league standings have all received breaks from the schedule makers throughout the year. UIC enjoyed two weeks off during league play - plus this week off leading up to the semifinals - while UW-Green Bay has also had two weeks off during the last two months.

* What They Were Recovering From

The time off allowed UWM a chance to fix some problems that cropped up during the three-game losing streak, a streak in which the numbers didn't lie. The Panthers, who shoot 48.4 percent from the field for the year, shot just 43.3 percent from the field in the three-game streak. That number included just 28 percent shooting from three-point range. Meanwhile, opponents shot 49.7 percent from the field in the three-game span, including 52.5 percent from three-point range. UWM was outscored 96-42 from beyond the arc in the three games.

* Hoping To Get Hot Again

UWM enters Saturday's semifinal contest with wins in 12 of its last 16 games despite a three-game losing streak. The Panthers had their nine-game winning streak snapped Feb. 5 at UIC. The streak was the second-longest streak in the school's Division I history and the longest under Bruce Pearl. Last year, UWM posted a pair of eight-game streaks. The longest winning streak in the school's Division I history is still a 10-game spell in 1992-93. UWM has posted winning streaks of five games or more three other times under Pearl. UWM has had league winning streaks of nine, eight and five games under Pearl while, prior to his arrival at UWM, the Panthers never won more than three-straight league games.

* Seeking 20 Again

Two wins in the Horizon League Tournament would not only give UWM a second-straight NCAA Tournament berth, but it would also give UWM its first back-to-back 20-win seasons since the early 1990's. Plus, it would be just the sixth 20-win season in school history. Last year, UWM tied the all-time school record with 24 wins, equaling a mark set when the Panthers went to the NCAA Division II Elite Eight in 1989. UWM also won 23 games in the 1992-93 campaign, 20 games in the 1991-92 season and 20 games in the 1981-82 season.

* Winning On The Horizon

The Panthers have found plenty of success in league play over the past two-plus seasons, adding 13 wins this year to the 13 wins last year and the 11 wins in the league the year before. Bruce Pearl has a 37-11 record in regular-season Horizon League contests in his three years at UWM, which computes to a .771 winning percentage. It's the best among active coaches with at least three years in the league.

* Paging The All-District Honoree

UWM senior Dylan Page was named to the National Association of Basketball Coaches All-District 11 First Team last week. Page, who leads the Horizon League in scoring and is fifth in rebounding, is now eligible for All-America consideration. Page is joined on the first team by an impressive group - Devin Harris of Wisconsin, Kris Humphries of Minnesota, Paul Davis of Michigan State and Travis Diener of Marquette. Cedrick Banks of UIC, Jitim Young of Northwestern, Mike Williams of Western Michigan, Mike Wilkinson of Wisconsin and Deron Williams of Illinois were named to the second team.

* Top 10 List

Dylan Page is in the Horizon League's top 10 in seven different categories. Page, who leads the league in scoring, ranks sixth in rebounding, sixth in field goal percentage, seventh in free throw percentage, fifth in three-point field goal percentage, eighth in three-point field goals made and fourth in blocks.

* Dylan Always Does It

After leading the way with 24 points Saturday, Dylan Page has now held or shared game-high scoring honors 20 times this season. He has been in double figures in scoring in all 27 games this season and in 60 of his last 62 contests while scoring 20 or more points 17 times this year. He has been named the Horizon League Player of the Week twice and has three double-doubles this season (five for his career).

* The Century Mark

Dylan Page continues to climb up the scoring charts at UWM, with his career total now standing at 1,305 points. His 23 points Jan. 8 against Butler sent him past the 1,000 mark for his career. Page is now one of just seven Panthers to have passed the 1,000-point barrier since UWM moved back to the Division I ranks in 1990 and he currently stands third in that same time period in scoring. Making Page's accomplishment particularly remarkable is that injury and illness limited him to just 176 points in his first two seasons as a Panther.

* A Successful Road

UWM may not have to play another true road game this season but, if they do, the Panthers will be able to look back on another reasonably successful road campaign in 2003-04. UWM went 7-7 in overall road games, including 5-3 in league road games. In three years under Pearl, UWM is 20-21 in true road contests, including 15-9 in league play, and 5-3 in neutral floor contests. In the seven years prior to Pearl's arrival, the Panthers were just 13-71 on the road and never won more than three games in a season. Also, prior to Pearl's arrival in Milwaukee, UWM was just 7-38 in regular season Horizon League road contest. And, UWM's road wins in the league have been impressive. After recording just two double-digit league road wins in seven seasons, the Panthers have posted 11 double-digit road league wins in the last three seasons, including five this year.

* Lineup Change

Sophomore Chris Hill moved back into the starting lineup against Manhattan Feb. 21 and will likely remain in it the rest of the season. Hill started the first 12 games of the season before giving way to Kalombo Kadima, who started the next 13. Other than the change at point guard, UWM has changed its lineup just one other time this season. Mark Pancratz started for Ed McCants Dec. 3 at Prairie View A&M after McCants was late for a team function prior to the game.

* Winning At Home = Title

Home league losses have been few and far between for UWM in the last few seasons. In fact, UWM has now won 18-straight regular season league games at home. The Panthers are 24-2 in regular season league home games under Bruce Pearl.

* Keeping An Eye On Others

All you have to do is check out the six teams UWM lost to in non-league play to know the Panthers played the toughest non-league schedule in school history. In fact, the six teams UWM lost to in non-league play have combined for a 118-41 record. Plus, in the latest AP poll, Southern Illinois is ranked 15th, North Carolina State 16th, Wisconsin 17th and Air Force 28th..

* Playing Well With The Lead

UWM usually comes out a winner when it has the lead after 20 minutes. The Panthers are 17-2 this season when leading at the half. The only losses came at Santa Clara and at Youngstown State.

* Double Figure Figures

UWM can often count on at least two of its "Big 3" to reach double figures, with the remainder of the roster taking its turn in joining the group of players tossing in more than 10 points in a game. Dylan Page has scored in double figures in all 27 UWM games, while Ed McCants has been in double digits in 24 of 27 contests and Joah Tucker has reached double digits in 21 of 27 games. After that, four other players have combined for 18 double-digit outings, with Chris Hill collecting seven, Adrian Tigert six, Kalombo Kadima tallying four and Nate Mielke one.

* Already Looking Ahead

The 2003-04 season may not yet be over, but UWM is already eyeing up its schedule for the 2004-05 campaign. The Panthers know they will have home games against Air Force, Prairie View A&M and UW-Parkside in non-league play, with road games at Wisconsin, Manhattan and Montana, as well as a game in ESPN's Bracket Buster. UWM is also scheduled to play Valparaiso at a site to be determined and the Panthers are in negotiations to be in a tournament at Purdue. UWM will play 11 non-league games next season in addition to 16 Horizon League contests.

* National Numbers

UWM is in the latest NCAA statistical rankings (March 1), with the Panthers standing 19th nationally in field goal percentage and 25th in scoring. Individually, Dylan Page ranks 18th in scoring while Ed McCants is 16th in three-point field goals per game.

* League Leaders

Some UWM players are at the top of the Horizon League statistical charts. Dylan Page stands first in the league in scoring and sixth in rebounding. In fact, UWM has three players in the top 10 in the league in scoring, with Ed McCants fourth and Joah Tucker ninth. Tucker is fifth, Page sixth and McCants ninth in field goal percentage while McCants is second in three-pointers made and third in three-point percentage. As a team, UWM is first in scoring, field goal percentage and assists.

* Notable Notes From Earlier This Year

Sophomore Chris Hill knocked down all 12 of his free throw attempts Feb. 14 at Youngstown State, becoming one of six Panthers to make all of his free throw attempts - while attempting at least 10 - since UWM returned to the Division I ranks in 1990. Derek Durham made all 13 of his free throw tries against Stetson during the 1995-96 season, while Hill equaled Shannon Smith's 12-for-12 effort in 1995 ... UWM tied a Division I school-record Feb. 7 by turning the ball over just five times in its win over Wright State. The Panthers have turned the ball over just five times on three other occasions since returning to the Division I ranks in 1990 - the most recent coming Feb. 24, 1994, against UW-Green Bay. Prior to Feb. 7, the fewest turnovers in a game for UWM under Bruce Pearl was seven at Wisconsin in the season opener last year ... Sophomores Joah Tucker and Adrian Tigert have both checked in with double-doubles this season. Tigert has two of them, including a 13-point, 14-rebound effort against UIC, while Tucker went for 17 points and 12 rebounds against Wright State ... Along with two-time honoree Dylan Page, Joah Tucker and Kalombo Kadima have each been honored as the Horizon League Player of the Week this season. Tucker was honored after opening his UWM career with a 22-point outing against Montana. Kadima was honored after scoring a career-high 22 points to help the Panthers beat UW-Green Bay ... Dylan Page leads the team with 32 blocks but Nate Mielke is right behind with 28. Mielke has 76 career blocks - the third-most by a Panther since 1992. Page has 69 career blocks, fourth on UWM's all-time Division I list ... UWM has shot 50 percent or better 12 times this season and 28 times in the two-plus seasons under Bruce Pearl. Two of the best outings this year were a 60.4 percent effort at Loyola Jan. 10 and a 59.2 percent mark Jan. 24 at Detroit ... When Dylan Page scored 26 points and Ed McCants added 21 Feb. 12 in the win over Loyola, it marked the seventh time this season the two each scored at least 20 points in the same game. Meanwhile, Page, McCants and Joah Tucker all eclipsed the 20-point mark in the Dec. 30 win over Idaho State, marking the first time since last February's win at Loyola that three Panthers scored 20 points or more in the same game ... The crowd Jan. 31 against UW-Green Bay of 8,703 was the largest crowd ever for a regular season UWM game at the Arena while the crowd of 4,752 for ESPN's Bracket Buster Saturday this past week ranks as the eighth-largest crowd of all-time for UWM at the Arena. UWM averaged over 4,200 fans per game for its nine games downtown and saw regular season attendance jump 14 percent overall this season.

* Lights ... Camera ... Action

Saturday's semifinal contest will be UWM's 11th television appearance of the season, including two national TV dates. UWM faced Manhattan on ESPN2 during Bracket Buster Saturday and was on Fox Sports Net's ACC Sunday Night Hoops in December against North Carolina State. UWM has also made four additional appearances on Fox Sports regional outlets and four appearances on Milwaukee's WMLW, TV-41.

* Clear Channel On Your Dial

UWM and Clear Channel Broadcasting have signed a three-year agreement to place all Panther games on 920AM, WOKY, with a 15-minute pregame show and 15-minute postgame show. Bill Johnson returns for his fifth season as the voice of the Panthers. The station also airs "Bruce Pearl on Basketball," every Monday night from 7-8 p.m. at the Gasthaus in the basement of the UWM Union.

* Signing On The Dotted Line

Indianapolis prep standout Anthony Passley and junior college transfer Derrick Ford have signed National Letters of Intent to play basketball at UWM. Passley, of North Central High School, is a possible Mr. Basketball in Indiana. Ford was a Top 20 player in the state of Ohio as a high school senior and is a Top 70 JUCO prospect from Olney Central Community College in Illinois. UWM also has a pair of Division I transfers on its roster that will sitting out this season. Jason McCoy is a 6-foot-9 small forward from Rutgers while Derrick Wimmer is a 6-foot-3 shooting guard from Chicago State.

* Up Next

UWM hopes to still be playing after the Horizon League Tournament championship game Tuesday night. The Panthers would find out more information on either an NCAA or NIT bid Sunday, March 14.