
Bulls Face St. Joe's In City Of Brotherly Love
11/18/2015 12:00:00 AM | Men's Basketball
Buffalo (1-1) at St. Joseph's (2-0)
November 18, 2015
Hagan Arena - 7:00 pm
Radio - Radio in Buffalo - 1520-AM WWKB
Television - None
The Opening Tip...
• The Bulls remain on the road for their second of four straight away from Alumni Arena Wednesday night at St. Joseph's. It will be just the second all-time meeting between the two schools and the first since the 2005 NIT, a 55-50 St. Joe's victory.
• The Bulls are looking to get back into the win column after a 77-58 setback at Old Dominion on Monday night, while St. Joseph's is 2-0 on the year after defeating Niagara 73-62 on Sunday.
• The Bulls have three players averaging double figures after the first two games of the season, including two newcomers. Senior Rodell Wigginton leads UB's in scoring at 17.0 points per game, while Blake Hamilton (15.0) and CJ Massinburg (12.0) are also in double figures.
• The Bulls won their last game in Philadelphia when they defeated Drexel 55-52 back in 2013. UB has three wins all time against schools in the Big 5. The Bulls have beat Temple twice and Villanova once. They are 0-1 against St. Joseph's and Penn and they have never played LaSalle.
The Opponent...
• St. Joseph's is 2-0 on the season after home victories against Drexel and Niagara to begin the year. The Hawks are part of the Hall of Fame Tipoff Classic just like UB and will be heading to Mohegan Sun Arena this weekend.
• St. Joseph's is led by DeAndre' Bembry, who is averaging 17.5 points per game and is tied for the team high with nine assists. Aaron Brown is averaging 14.5 points per game, while Isaiah Miles has 13.5 points and 7.0 rebounds per contest.
• Phil Martelli is in his 21st year as head coach at St. Joseph's. He picked up his 200th career win against UB in the 2005 NIT.
Bulls Prepare To Defend MAC Crown
Coming off their first Mid-American Conference Championship in school history, the Bulls begin the 2015-16 season looking to defend their title. If the Bulls are to repeat as MAC Champs, they will do it with a new coaching staff and a revamped roster.
First-year head coach Nate Oats brings back seven players from last season, but just four of those players were part of the regular rotation. The returning leading scorer is senior Jarryn Skeete. The Bulls also welcome eight newcomers to the team this season, led by three Junior College transfers.
Bulls Have Record-Setting Performance In Season Opener
The Bulls etched their names into a number of records in the season-opening win over Pitt-Bradford. The 60-point victory for UB was its largest win since the 1969-70 season when UB defeated Western Ontario, 117-48. The 109 points scored by the Bulls in the game were the eighth most in school history and the most in a game since 2011. The Bulls also went 40-of-75 from the floor and the 40 field goals are tied for eighth in school history and the most since Feb. 24, 1998 vs. Chicago State.
Skeete Shooter
Senior Jarryn Skeete begins his fourth season in the Blue and White, the only four-year member of the Bulls. Skeete will be playing under his third head coach in four seasons. Skeete leads all active players on the Bulls in points (637), rebounds (290) and assists (169).
Skeete tied his career high with 19 points last season against Central Michigan and he also had 14 points in a game at Kent State, scoring the first 12 points of the contest on 4-of-4 shooting from behind the arc.
Skeete led the Bulls in scoring against Old Dominion, finishing with 12 points.
No Sophomore Slump
Sophomore Lamonte Bearden looks to continue his strong freshman season in 2015-16 after being named to the All-MAC Freshman Team just a year ago. Bearden, who was one of five players named to the Preseason All-MAC East Division squad, led the MAC in assist to turnover ratio last season in conference games. Bearden had at least six assists 10 times last season, including a career-high 10 assists against Cornell, the first UB freshman to have double figures in assists since 2012-13.
Bearden also showed his ability as a scorer last season, averaging 8.3 points per game. The Milwaukee, WI native had a career-high 23 points against Big 4 rival Canisius. Bearden hit the game-winning shot in the regular season finale last season against Bowling Green, giving the Bulls a share of the regular season MAC Title and their second straight East Division crown.
Getting Wiggy With It
Senior Rodell Wigginton came on late in the season last year, his first in a UB uniform. Wigginton averaged 7.3 points and 4.3 rebounds in his first season with the Bulls, scoring a career-high 20 points against Ohio in early March. Wigginton started six games, but came of the bench in 26 games last year. He had his first double-double against Binghamton with 14 points and 11 rebounds.
Wigginton did make an early impression against one of the nation's best teams as he scored 15 points against Kentucky. The Dartmouth, Nova Scotia native, who played at College of Central Florida, had 11 points and eight rebounds in the MAC Semifinals against Akron and added eight points and six rebounds in the MAC Championship game against Central Michigan.
Wigginton began his senior season with a spark on Friday against Pitt-Bradford as he finished with a career-high 25 points on 10-of-12 shooting from the floor, while adding 10 rebounds for his second career double-double. Wigginton added nine points on 4-of-6 shooting against Old Dominion as he added three rebounds, three steals and two blocked shots.
Raheem The Dream
Senior Raheem Johnson played in all 33 games off the bench last season and was one of the top defensive players on the Bulls. Johnson led UB in blocked shots with 37, including a career-high four swats against Kent State on national television.
Johnson had 10 points at Ohio, which was a season high for him. Johnson, who played for head coach Nate Oats at Romulus High School, spent his first two years at Barton Community College.
Johnson is currently out with a foot injury.
Eagle Eye
Head coach Nate Oats spent 11 years as the head coach at Romulus High School and he now coaches two of his high school players on this year's team. Senior Raheem Johnson and sophomore Christian Pino both played for Coach Oats at Romulus as did the 2014-15 MAC Player of the Year, Justin Moss. Oats and Romulus won a state title in 2012-13, finishing the year 27-1.
Other current Division-I players that Coach Oats mentored at Romulus High School include: E.C. Matthews (Rhode Island), Wes Clark (Missouri), Jaylin Walker (Kent State), Raven Lee (Eastern Michigan).
Get Smart
Redshirt freshman Ikenna Smart will look to make an impact on the floor this season, after redshirting last year. Smart has tremendous potential, but has only been playing basketball for three years. Smart is a native of Nigeria and was originally a soccer player before he was taught basketball in his native country.
Smart was then brought to the United States, ending up in Greensboro, NC where he played his high school basketball at the New Garden Friends School, where he averaged 13 points and 13 rebounds a game. Smart started in the exhibition game against Daemen and led all players with 11 rebounds.
Con-Air
Junior Willie Conner joins the Bulls this season after playing last year at Odessa Community College, where he averaged 18.0 points per game. Conner, who played his freshman season at Florida A&M, is a knock down shooter as he hit 43% of his attempts from behind the arc last season.
A Chicago, IL native, Conner played his High School ball at Richard T. Crane High School, averaging 20.0 points. Conner started in the exhibition game and recorded 18 points on 8-of-12 shooting from the floor. He had 10 points and four steals in the win over Pitt-Bradford.
Alright Hamilton
Fellow junior college transfer Blake Hamilton played last season at Mt. San Antonio College in California after spending his freshman year at Northern Arizona. Hamilton averaged 13.5 points and 6.4 rebounds per game last season as he shot 61.5% from the field.
Hamilton is a native of Pasadena, CA and comes from an extremely athletic family that has seen numerous cousins play college basketball. His father played for legendary head coach Don Haskins at UTEP.
Hamilton scored 21 points and had seven rebounds in the win over Pitt-Bradford, going 7-of-11 from the floor and 3-of-5 from three-point range. Hamilton added nine points and five rebounds against Old Dominion.
David Is Goliath
UB's third junior college transfer on this year's team is David Kadiri, who played at South Plains Community College after spending his freshman year at Maryland-Baltimore County. Kadiri helped lead his junior college to an appearance in the JUCO national championship, recording 13 points, 14 rebounds and eight blocked shots in the championship game. Kadiri made his UB debut at Old Dominion and he finished with six points, four rebounds and two blocked shots.
I Know You...
Both Willie Conner and David Kadiri both played in the WJCAC and Kadiri's South Plains squad got the better of each of the two meetings last season. In the first meeting at South Plains, Kadiri's squad won 107-86, while in the second meeting, which was held at Odessa, South Plains won, 80-69. Conner had 14 points in the second meeting between the two schools.
In the Nick of Time
Freshman Nick Perkins joins the Bulls from Ypsilanti, MI after playing his high school ball at Milan High School. In his high school career, Perkins recorded four league titles, four district crowns, two regional titles, and one state title.
Perkins went 22-3 during his senior season at Milan, averaging 18.0 points and 10.0 rebounds. He was a 1,000 point scorer in high school and a four-time All-State selection.
Mass Production
Freshman CJ Massinburg is the first UB basketball player from the state of Texas as the Dallas native played his high school ball at South Oak Cliff, where he averaged 22.3 points per game. Massinburg had a 42-point game against Spruce High School during his senior year. He also played in the prestigious Dallas vs. Tarrant County All-Star Game, where he was named the Most Valuable Player.
Massinburg was the most impressive player for the Bulls in the exhibition game as he had 25 points, five rebounds, three assists and two steals against Daemen. Massinburg went 5-of-6 from three point range. He added 19 points in the regular season opener against Pitt-Bradford as he went 6-of-9 from the floor, including 2-of-2 from three point range and 5-of-6 from the charity stripe.
3-Kola
Fellow freshman Nikola Rakicevic joins the Bulls from Serbia and he is a dynamic three-point shooter, showcasing his skills at Bulls Madness in October. Rakicevic was a member of the Serbian U-17 National Team, being named to the All-Tournament team at the U-17 World Championships.
Rakicevic averaged 12.4 points and 5.7 rebounds during the World Championships, scoring 19 points in a game against the United States and 17 points in a game against China.
Cleared by the NCAA just before the regular season opener, Rakicevic played a team-high 25 minutes against Pitt-Bradford and finished with two points and seven rebounds.
Walk, Walk, Walk...
Part of the 15-man roster for the Bulls includes three walk-ons for UB, including sophomore Christian Pino, who spent his redshirt freshman season with the Bulls last year. Pino saw action in 11 games last year, scoring a pair of points in games against Binghamton and Kent State.
UB added two freshman walk-ons this season in a pair of New York natives. Zac DiSalvo joins the Bulls from Rochester, NY where he played at Greece Athena High School and helped his team to a 24-1 record, averaging 18.0 points. His team was Section V state runner ups.
Fellow freshman Tyler Moffe comes to UB from Elmira, NY where he averaged 20.0 points a game at Elmira High School and graduated as his school's all-time leading scorer.
The Pine Is Fine
The UB bench outscored Pitt-Bradford, 67-8, in the opener as three players reached double figures off the bench, including 20-point performances from Wigginton and Hamilton. The bench outscored the starting five in the game. UB got a strong contribution off the bench in the exhibition game as well as the Bulls outscored Daemen, 54-14, in bench points led by 25 points from Massinburg. Freshman Nick Perkins added 12 points and eight rebounds, while senior Raheem Johnson had nine points.
New Faces On The Bench
First-year head coach Nate Oats put together an experienced coaching staff that includes individuals that have both head coaching experience at the college ranks and individuals who have played in the NBA.
Associate head coach Jim Whitesell has spent 24 years as a head coach and 34 seasons overall as a collegiate coach. Whitesell spent seven years as the head coach at Loyola (IL), while also serving as an associate head coach at Saint Louis for the late Rick Majerus. Most recently, Whitesell was an assistant coach at St. John's for Steve Lavin.
Assistant coach Donyell Marshall comes to the Bulls after spending the last two seasons at Rider, but he most known for a 15-year NBA career. Marshall was selected fourth overall by the Minnesota Timberwolves in the 1994 NBA Draft out of UConn. He played for Minnesota, Golden State, Utah, Chicago, Toronto, Cleveland, Seattle and Philadelphia over his career. Marshall still holds the NBA record for three-pointers in a game with 12, a record he shares with Kobe Bryant.
The third assistant for the Bulls is Bryan Hodgson, a Western New York native, who most recently served as an assistant coach at Midland Community College in Texas. Hodgson has also coached at Jamestown Community College, where he played for two seasons.
Also on the staff for the Bulls is another NBA First Round pick in Julius Hodge, who serves as the Director of Player of Development. Hodge was the 2004 ACC Player of the Year out of North Carolina State and was selected 20th overall in the NBA Draft by the Denver Nuggets. He played with both the Nuggets and the Milwaukee Bucks before continuing his professional career overseas.
The staff is completed by Adam Bauman, who is the Director of Basketball Operations. Bauman comes to UB from Mississippi State, where he was the video coordinator for the Bulldogs. Bauman is a 2008 graduate of Southern Illinois.
Bulls To Face Some Of Nation's Best
UB will have a tough non-conference schedule in front of them for the second straight season. Last year, UB faced Kentucky and Wisconsin, two teams that were both in the Final Four. The Bulls led both teams at the half, including holding the biggest halftime leads on Kentucky during non-conference play.
This season, the Bulls again have challenged themselves, and not only will they play a pair of Top 10 teams, but they will do it on the same road trip. The Bulls will begin with a trip to Durham, NC on Dec. 5 where they will face Duke, the defending National Champions. That game will be televised nationally on ESPN2.
Two days later, UB heads to Ames, IA where they will face Iowa State on Dec. 7 on ESPNU. The Cyclones will be one of the teams competing for the Big 12 title this year.
In addition to playing the two national powerhouses, UB also has road trips to Old Dominion and VCU, two teams that many believe will compete for their respective league titles.
Home Sweet Home
Since the beginning of the 2013-14 season, which included two years of Nate Oats as assistant coach, the Bulls have been nearly perfect at home, winning 25 of 28 games. Since the start of the 2010-11 season, the Bulls are 61-15 in Alumni Arena and going back even further, the Bulls are 126-45 at home since the 2003-04 season.
Road Warriors
Last season, the Bulls ended the regular season with 10 true road wins, which was the most in school history. The Bulls joined Kentucky, Virginia, Gonzaga and Wichita St. as the only teams in the RPI Top 30 prior to the NCAA Tournament with at least 10 road wins. The 10 true road wins were tied for the fourth most amongst NCAA Tournament Teams.
Coming off their first Mid-American Conference Championship in school history, the Bulls begin the 2015-16 season looking to defend their title. If the Bulls are to repeat as MAC Champs, they will do it with a new coaching staff and a revamped roster.
First-year head coach Nate Oats brings back seven players from last season, but just four of those players were part of the regular rotation. The returning leading scorer is senior Jarryn Skeete. The Bulls also welcome eight newcomers to the team this season, led by three Junior College transfers.
Bulls Have Record-Setting Performance In Season Opener
The Bulls etched their names into a number of records in the season-opening win over Pitt-Bradford. The 60-point victory for UB was its largest win since the 1969-70 season when UB defeated Western Ontario, 117-48. The 109 points scored by the Bulls in the game were the eighth most in school history and the most in a game since 2011. The Bulls also went 40-of-75 from the floor and the 40 field goals are tied for eighth in school history and the most since Feb. 24, 1998 vs. Chicago State.
Skeete Shooter
Senior Jarryn Skeete begins his fourth season in the Blue and White, the only four-year member of the Bulls. Skeete will be playing under his third head coach in four seasons. Skeete leads all active players on the Bulls in points (637), rebounds (290) and assists (169).
Skeete tied his career high with 19 points last season against Central Michigan and he also had 14 points in a game at Kent State, scoring the first 12 points of the contest on 4-of-4 shooting from behind the arc.
Skeete led the Bulls in scoring against Old Dominion, finishing with 12 points.
No Sophomore Slump
Sophomore Lamonte Bearden looks to continue his strong freshman season in 2015-16 after being named to the All-MAC Freshman Team just a year ago. Bearden, who was one of five players named to the Preseason All-MAC East Division squad, led the MAC in assist to turnover ratio last season in conference games. Bearden had at least six assists 10 times last season, including a career-high 10 assists against Cornell, the first UB freshman to have double figures in assists since 2012-13.
Bearden also showed his ability as a scorer last season, averaging 8.3 points per game. The Milwaukee, WI native had a career-high 23 points against Big 4 rival Canisius. Bearden hit the game-winning shot in the regular season finale last season against Bowling Green, giving the Bulls a share of the regular season MAC Title and their second straight East Division crown.
Getting Wiggy With It
Senior Rodell Wigginton came on late in the season last year, his first in a UB uniform. Wigginton averaged 7.3 points and 4.3 rebounds in his first season with the Bulls, scoring a career-high 20 points against Ohio in early March. Wigginton started six games, but came of the bench in 26 games last year. He had his first double-double against Binghamton with 14 points and 11 rebounds.
Wigginton did make an early impression against one of the nation's best teams as he scored 15 points against Kentucky. The Dartmouth, Nova Scotia native, who played at College of Central Florida, had 11 points and eight rebounds in the MAC Semifinals against Akron and added eight points and six rebounds in the MAC Championship game against Central Michigan.
Wigginton began his senior season with a spark on Friday against Pitt-Bradford as he finished with a career-high 25 points on 10-of-12 shooting from the floor, while adding 10 rebounds for his second career double-double. Wigginton added nine points on 4-of-6 shooting against Old Dominion as he added three rebounds, three steals and two blocked shots.
Raheem The Dream
Senior Raheem Johnson played in all 33 games off the bench last season and was one of the top defensive players on the Bulls. Johnson led UB in blocked shots with 37, including a career-high four swats against Kent State on national television.
Johnson had 10 points at Ohio, which was a season high for him. Johnson, who played for head coach Nate Oats at Romulus High School, spent his first two years at Barton Community College.
Johnson is currently out with a foot injury.
Eagle Eye
Head coach Nate Oats spent 11 years as the head coach at Romulus High School and he now coaches two of his high school players on this year's team. Senior Raheem Johnson and sophomore Christian Pino both played for Coach Oats at Romulus as did the 2014-15 MAC Player of the Year, Justin Moss. Oats and Romulus won a state title in 2012-13, finishing the year 27-1.
Other current Division-I players that Coach Oats mentored at Romulus High School include: E.C. Matthews (Rhode Island), Wes Clark (Missouri), Jaylin Walker (Kent State), Raven Lee (Eastern Michigan).
Get Smart
Redshirt freshman Ikenna Smart will look to make an impact on the floor this season, after redshirting last year. Smart has tremendous potential, but has only been playing basketball for three years. Smart is a native of Nigeria and was originally a soccer player before he was taught basketball in his native country.
Smart was then brought to the United States, ending up in Greensboro, NC where he played his high school basketball at the New Garden Friends School, where he averaged 13 points and 13 rebounds a game. Smart started in the exhibition game against Daemen and led all players with 11 rebounds.
Con-Air
Junior Willie Conner joins the Bulls this season after playing last year at Odessa Community College, where he averaged 18.0 points per game. Conner, who played his freshman season at Florida A&M, is a knock down shooter as he hit 43% of his attempts from behind the arc last season.
A Chicago, IL native, Conner played his High School ball at Richard T. Crane High School, averaging 20.0 points. Conner started in the exhibition game and recorded 18 points on 8-of-12 shooting from the floor. He had 10 points and four steals in the win over Pitt-Bradford.
Alright Hamilton
Fellow junior college transfer Blake Hamilton played last season at Mt. San Antonio College in California after spending his freshman year at Northern Arizona. Hamilton averaged 13.5 points and 6.4 rebounds per game last season as he shot 61.5% from the field.
Hamilton is a native of Pasadena, CA and comes from an extremely athletic family that has seen numerous cousins play college basketball. His father played for legendary head coach Don Haskins at UTEP.
Hamilton scored 21 points and had seven rebounds in the win over Pitt-Bradford, going 7-of-11 from the floor and 3-of-5 from three-point range. Hamilton added nine points and five rebounds against Old Dominion.
David Is Goliath
UB's third junior college transfer on this year's team is David Kadiri, who played at South Plains Community College after spending his freshman year at Maryland-Baltimore County. Kadiri helped lead his junior college to an appearance in the JUCO national championship, recording 13 points, 14 rebounds and eight blocked shots in the championship game. Kadiri made his UB debut at Old Dominion and he finished with six points, four rebounds and two blocked shots.
I Know You...
Both Willie Conner and David Kadiri both played in the WJCAC and Kadiri's South Plains squad got the better of each of the two meetings last season. In the first meeting at South Plains, Kadiri's squad won 107-86, while in the second meeting, which was held at Odessa, South Plains won, 80-69. Conner had 14 points in the second meeting between the two schools.
In the Nick of Time
Freshman Nick Perkins joins the Bulls from Ypsilanti, MI after playing his high school ball at Milan High School. In his high school career, Perkins recorded four league titles, four district crowns, two regional titles, and one state title.
Perkins went 22-3 during his senior season at Milan, averaging 18.0 points and 10.0 rebounds. He was a 1,000 point scorer in high school and a four-time All-State selection.
Mass Production
Freshman CJ Massinburg is the first UB basketball player from the state of Texas as the Dallas native played his high school ball at South Oak Cliff, where he averaged 22.3 points per game. Massinburg had a 42-point game against Spruce High School during his senior year. He also played in the prestigious Dallas vs. Tarrant County All-Star Game, where he was named the Most Valuable Player.
Massinburg was the most impressive player for the Bulls in the exhibition game as he had 25 points, five rebounds, three assists and two steals against Daemen. Massinburg went 5-of-6 from three point range. He added 19 points in the regular season opener against Pitt-Bradford as he went 6-of-9 from the floor, including 2-of-2 from three point range and 5-of-6 from the charity stripe.
3-Kola
Fellow freshman Nikola Rakicevic joins the Bulls from Serbia and he is a dynamic three-point shooter, showcasing his skills at Bulls Madness in October. Rakicevic was a member of the Serbian U-17 National Team, being named to the All-Tournament team at the U-17 World Championships.
Rakicevic averaged 12.4 points and 5.7 rebounds during the World Championships, scoring 19 points in a game against the United States and 17 points in a game against China.
Cleared by the NCAA just before the regular season opener, Rakicevic played a team-high 25 minutes against Pitt-Bradford and finished with two points and seven rebounds.
Walk, Walk, Walk...
Part of the 15-man roster for the Bulls includes three walk-ons for UB, including sophomore Christian Pino, who spent his redshirt freshman season with the Bulls last year. Pino saw action in 11 games last year, scoring a pair of points in games against Binghamton and Kent State.
UB added two freshman walk-ons this season in a pair of New York natives. Zac DiSalvo joins the Bulls from Rochester, NY where he played at Greece Athena High School and helped his team to a 24-1 record, averaging 18.0 points. His team was Section V state runner ups.
Fellow freshman Tyler Moffe comes to UB from Elmira, NY where he averaged 20.0 points a game at Elmira High School and graduated as his school's all-time leading scorer.
The Pine Is Fine
The UB bench outscored Pitt-Bradford, 67-8, in the opener as three players reached double figures off the bench, including 20-point performances from Wigginton and Hamilton. The bench outscored the starting five in the game. UB got a strong contribution off the bench in the exhibition game as well as the Bulls outscored Daemen, 54-14, in bench points led by 25 points from Massinburg. Freshman Nick Perkins added 12 points and eight rebounds, while senior Raheem Johnson had nine points.
New Faces On The Bench
First-year head coach Nate Oats put together an experienced coaching staff that includes individuals that have both head coaching experience at the college ranks and individuals who have played in the NBA.
Associate head coach Jim Whitesell has spent 24 years as a head coach and 34 seasons overall as a collegiate coach. Whitesell spent seven years as the head coach at Loyola (IL), while also serving as an associate head coach at Saint Louis for the late Rick Majerus. Most recently, Whitesell was an assistant coach at St. John's for Steve Lavin.
Assistant coach Donyell Marshall comes to the Bulls after spending the last two seasons at Rider, but he most known for a 15-year NBA career. Marshall was selected fourth overall by the Minnesota Timberwolves in the 1994 NBA Draft out of UConn. He played for Minnesota, Golden State, Utah, Chicago, Toronto, Cleveland, Seattle and Philadelphia over his career. Marshall still holds the NBA record for three-pointers in a game with 12, a record he shares with Kobe Bryant.
The third assistant for the Bulls is Bryan Hodgson, a Western New York native, who most recently served as an assistant coach at Midland Community College in Texas. Hodgson has also coached at Jamestown Community College, where he played for two seasons.
Also on the staff for the Bulls is another NBA First Round pick in Julius Hodge, who serves as the Director of Player of Development. Hodge was the 2004 ACC Player of the Year out of North Carolina State and was selected 20th overall in the NBA Draft by the Denver Nuggets. He played with both the Nuggets and the Milwaukee Bucks before continuing his professional career overseas.
The staff is completed by Adam Bauman, who is the Director of Basketball Operations. Bauman comes to UB from Mississippi State, where he was the video coordinator for the Bulldogs. Bauman is a 2008 graduate of Southern Illinois.
Bulls To Face Some Of Nation's Best
UB will have a tough non-conference schedule in front of them for the second straight season. Last year, UB faced Kentucky and Wisconsin, two teams that were both in the Final Four. The Bulls led both teams at the half, including holding the biggest halftime leads on Kentucky during non-conference play.
This season, the Bulls again have challenged themselves, and not only will they play a pair of Top 10 teams, but they will do it on the same road trip. The Bulls will begin with a trip to Durham, NC on Dec. 5 where they will face Duke, the defending National Champions. That game will be televised nationally on ESPN2.
Two days later, UB heads to Ames, IA where they will face Iowa State on Dec. 7 on ESPNU. The Cyclones will be one of the teams competing for the Big 12 title this year.
In addition to playing the two national powerhouses, UB also has road trips to Old Dominion and VCU, two teams that many believe will compete for their respective league titles.
Home Sweet Home
Since the beginning of the 2013-14 season, which included two years of Nate Oats as assistant coach, the Bulls have been nearly perfect at home, winning 25 of 28 games. Since the start of the 2010-11 season, the Bulls are 61-15 in Alumni Arena and going back even further, the Bulls are 126-45 at home since the 2003-04 season.
Road Warriors
Last season, the Bulls ended the regular season with 10 true road wins, which was the most in school history. The Bulls joined Kentucky, Virginia, Gonzaga and Wichita St. as the only teams in the RPI Top 30 prior to the NCAA Tournament with at least 10 road wins. The 10 true road wins were tied for the fourth most amongst NCAA Tournament Teams.







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