Indiana University Athletics
PREVIEW: IU Hosts Hope College To Open Exhibition Play
10/30/2016 8:42:00 PM | Men's Basketball
OPENING TIP
• Indiana University begins its 117th season of men's basketball and the defending Big Ten Champions will begin the season ranked 11th in the Associated Press preseason poll and 12th in the USA Today Coaches preseason poll. IU finished 9th in the country a season ago, the second time in four years the Hoosiers finished the year ranked in the top ten.
Under Tom Crean, IU is 14-0 in exhibition games.
UP NEXT
• The Hoosiers will host Bellarmine on November 5 in their final exhibition game of the season.
HEAD COACH TOM CREAN
• Tom Crean, the 2016 Big Ten Coach of the Year, begins his ninth year of leading the Hoosiers. Over the last five years, IU is 120-53 and leads the Big Ten with 23 regular season wins over ranked opponents during that time. IU is nationally ranked for the sixth straight season. The Hoosiers are one of just 11 teams to have appeared in the Sweet Sixteen three of the last five years.
• Eight players in his first six recruiting classes have scored 1,000 points in their career under Crean at Indiana. Yogi Ferrell (1,986), Christian Watford (1,730), Verdell Jones III (1,347), Jordan Hulls (1,318), Cody Zeller (1,157), Will Sheehey (1,120), Victor Oladipo (1,117) and Troy Williams (1,115) also have scored 1,000 points or more. From the Class of 2014, James Blackmon, Jr., is the next closest Hoosier to approach the mark. He has scored 714 points in a season and a half. Three players, Kevin "Yogi" Ferrell (2016), Cody Zeller (2013) and Victor Oladipo (2013) have been selected as All-Americans.
In addition, Oladipo earned two National Player of the Year honors and was named National Defensive Player of the Year.
• IU won the 2013 and 2016 Big Ten titles outright. Last year's outright title is the team's second in a four year period with the last time that happened at IU was in 1980, 81 and 83. The Hoosiers are now tied for the Big Ten lead in overall championships (22) and outright titles (13).
ABOUT HOPE
• The Flying Dutchman of Holland, Michigan are in their third season under Head Coach Greg Mitchell. They are 42-13 in his two seasons and last year made the NCAA Division III Tournament. They are led by 6-6 senior forward Harrison Blackledge who averaged 12.1 points and 3.8 rebounds for last year's team which finished 24-4.
DID YOU KNOW
• The Hoosiers finished 17-0 at Assembly Hall last season.
• The Hoosiers were 8-4 against Top 50 teams.
• In the last five seasons, IU has had the most potent offense in the Big Ten leading in points scored (77.7), field goal percentage (47.8), and three-point field goal percentage (40.2). The Hoosiers lead all major conference schools in field goal percentage and three-point percentage during that same time frame.
• Four former Crean-coached Hoosiers were on opening day NBA rosters including Cody Zeller (Charlotte), Victor Oladipo (Oklahoma City), Noah Vonleh (Portland) and Troy Williams (Memphis). Three of his former players at Marquette also are active including Dwyane Wade (Chicago), Steve Novak (Milwaukee) and Wes Matthews (Dallas). Since 2013, the four active NBA players that Crean coached at Indiana have earned $47,060,833.
IU INSIGHT
• In non-conference play, the Hoosiers will play #2 Kansas in the season opener in the Armed Forces Classic in Honolulu on November 11. IU also will take on #6 North Carolina at home in the Big Ten/ACC Challenge.
The Hoosiers will face Butler, ranked #19 by Kenpom, in the 6th Annual Crossroads Classic in Indianapolis on December 17. Two weeks later, the Hoosiers and #14 Louisville will start at three-year series with a game at Bankers Life Fieldhouse on New Years Eve.
• Since 2011, the Hoosiers have averaged 24 wins per season compared to 20 averaged at IU from 1995-2008.
• In the last five seasons, the Hoosiers have an 88.0 winning percentage at home (81-11), the highest of any Big Ten school.
• The Hoosiers were 3rd in the country in field goal percentage (50.2), 5th in three-point field goal percentage (41.6), 7th in total three-point field goals (345), 11th in scoring (82.6), 12th in scoring margin (12.7), and 19th in assists (560). Their 345 three-point field goals also established a new school record and Big Ten record.
• The 2015-16 Hoosiers were just one of three teams in the last 20 years in college basketball to average more than 80 points, shoot better than 50 percent from the field and 41 percent from three-point range. The others are the 2001-02 Kansas Jayhawks and the 2000-01 Stanford Cardinal.
• The Hoosiers have three former head coaches on their coaching staff this season (Buckley, Martin, Judson). Associate Head Coach Tim Buckley begins his ninth year at Indiana. The former head coach at Ball State. His Cardinals beat No. 3 Kansas and No. 4 UCLA at the 2001 Maui Classic. Assistant Coach Chuck Martin is in his third year with the Hoosiers and was the head coach at Marist (2008-13). Assistant Coach Rob Judson is in his second year as an assistant coach after serving as Director of Operations in early 2014. He was the head coach at Northern Illinois (2001-07) and won the MAC West title in 2006.
• Sophomore center Thomas Bryant was named Preseason All-American by Blue Ribbon Basketball Yearbook (first team) and NBCSports.com (second team). He averaged 14.4 points and 5.5 rebounds in postseason play. Had 19 points, five rebounds and two steals against Kentucky. He led the Big Ten in Field Goal Percentage. He also was named Preseason All-Big Ten and is on the Kareem Abdul Jabbar Watch List.
• Junior guard James Blackmon Jr. has the second highest career average (15.7) of any player who has played for Crean at Indiana (Zeller, 16.1). When he went down with an injury prior to the start of Big Ten play, he was averaging 15.8 points and was shooting 46.3 percent from 3-point range. He had a career-high 33 points against Alcorn State. He was named Preseason All-Big Ten and is on the Jerry West Award watch list.
• Junior guard Robert Johnson is the most experienced Hoosier having started 55 career games. Despite the ankle injury, Johnson made five of seven field goals and three of four 3-pointers in 34 minutes of action against Chattanooga and Kentucky in the NCAA Tournament. He also had six assists with no turnovers against Chattanooga. He shot 44.7 percent from 3-point range and is shooting 41.5 percent from long distance during his career at IU.
• Senior forward Collin Hartman will begin rehab for his knee immediately. Over the last two seasons, he has averaged 4.9 points and has shot 40.8% from 3-point range. He played three games in the NCAA Tournament with a fractured wrist and averaged 5.7 points, 4.0 rebounds and 3.3 rebounds.
• Sophomore forward OG Anunoby saw his playing time increase as conference play began. He averaged 5.8 points, 3.3 rebounds and shot 53.3% from the field and 40.9% from 3-point range in Big Ten play. In the NCAA Tournament he tied for the team lead in blocked shots (3) and offensive rebounds (5) and made 10 of his 15 field goal attempts (66.7). He was named third-team Preseason All-American by The Sporting News and is on the Julius Erving Award watch list.
• Junior guard Josh Newkirk is eligible after sitting out a season following his transfer from Pittsburgh. With the Panthers, he averaged 5.9 points and 2.7 assists as a sophomore. In his career, he had 154 assists and 77 turnovers. He scored 16 points against Indiana in the 2014 Big Ten ACC Challenge.
• Sophomore forward Juwan Morgan came on in the last nine games of the season despite the shoulder issues. He made four of seven 3-pointers during that time frame and averaged 4.2 points and 3.0 rebounds down the stretch for the Hoosiers.
• Junior forward Tim Priller begins his third season with the Hoosiers and walk-on Quentin Taylor also is back from last year's Big Ten title squad.
• Junior Freddie McSwain, Jr. is a Georgia native who comes to IU after averaging 14.0 points and 8.4 rebounds at Neosho County Community College. He is a tremendous athlete at 6-6, 215.
• Freshman De'Ron Davis was Mr. Basketball in Colorado and was one of the most coveted power forwards in the county. He led his team to back-to-back state championships at Overland High School in Aurora, Colorado.
• Freshman guard Curtis Jones is a Virginia native and a Boo Williams AAU product. He played with Thomas Bryant at Huntington Prep. IU fans got to see him up close in the Derby Classic when he scored 25 points.
• Freshman guard Devonte Green is another big-bodied guard who was the Long Island Player of the Year as a senior when averaged 20.3 points, 5.9 rebounds, 3.5 assists and 2.7 steals as a senior and shot 42 percent from behind the 3-point line.
Freshman guard Grant Gelon, a graduate of Crown Point High School, will be counted on to stretch the floor with his shooting range. He averaged 14.5 points and shot 41.8 percent from long distance as a senior. He was an Indiana All-Star.
• Redshirt sophomore Zach McRoberts is a former Indiana All-Star from Carmel and comes to IU after averaging 4.2 points and 4.4 rebounds per game as a freshman in 14-15 at Vermont. He attended IU as a student last year and is a non-scholarship player.
• Sophomore Johnny Jager is a Bloomington native who played his freshman year at Wabash. An Indiana All-Star from South High School, the same school where Jordan Hulls played, he averaged 15.0 points and 5.5 assists. He also is a non-scholarship player.
• Four former Crean-coached Hoosiers were on opening day NBA rosters including Cody Zeller (Charlotte), Victor Oladipo (Oklahoma City), Noah Vonleh (Portland) and Troy Williams (Memphis).
Three of his former players at Marquette also are active including Dwyane Wade (Chicago), Steve Novak (Milwaukee) and Wes Matthews (Dallas). IU's Eric Gordon (Houston) also is still playing. Former Hoosiers Christian Watford and Nick Zeisloft will play for the Fort Wayne Mad Ants of the NBA Development League. Yogi Ferrell is with the Long Island Nets and Will Sheehey will play with the Raptors 905 in Toronto. Jordan Hulls is playing overseas in Germany.
During the last two years, the Hoosiers have averaged 9.6 three-point field goals per game, the most of any major college program. Villanova is second at 8.9.
• Indiana University begins its 117th season of men's basketball and the defending Big Ten Champions will begin the season ranked 11th in the Associated Press preseason poll and 12th in the USA Today Coaches preseason poll. IU finished 9th in the country a season ago, the second time in four years the Hoosiers finished the year ranked in the top ten.
Under Tom Crean, IU is 14-0 in exhibition games.
UP NEXT
• The Hoosiers will host Bellarmine on November 5 in their final exhibition game of the season.
HEAD COACH TOM CREAN
• Tom Crean, the 2016 Big Ten Coach of the Year, begins his ninth year of leading the Hoosiers. Over the last five years, IU is 120-53 and leads the Big Ten with 23 regular season wins over ranked opponents during that time. IU is nationally ranked for the sixth straight season. The Hoosiers are one of just 11 teams to have appeared in the Sweet Sixteen three of the last five years.
• Eight players in his first six recruiting classes have scored 1,000 points in their career under Crean at Indiana. Yogi Ferrell (1,986), Christian Watford (1,730), Verdell Jones III (1,347), Jordan Hulls (1,318), Cody Zeller (1,157), Will Sheehey (1,120), Victor Oladipo (1,117) and Troy Williams (1,115) also have scored 1,000 points or more. From the Class of 2014, James Blackmon, Jr., is the next closest Hoosier to approach the mark. He has scored 714 points in a season and a half. Three players, Kevin "Yogi" Ferrell (2016), Cody Zeller (2013) and Victor Oladipo (2013) have been selected as All-Americans.
In addition, Oladipo earned two National Player of the Year honors and was named National Defensive Player of the Year.
• IU won the 2013 and 2016 Big Ten titles outright. Last year's outright title is the team's second in a four year period with the last time that happened at IU was in 1980, 81 and 83. The Hoosiers are now tied for the Big Ten lead in overall championships (22) and outright titles (13).
ABOUT HOPE
• The Flying Dutchman of Holland, Michigan are in their third season under Head Coach Greg Mitchell. They are 42-13 in his two seasons and last year made the NCAA Division III Tournament. They are led by 6-6 senior forward Harrison Blackledge who averaged 12.1 points and 3.8 rebounds for last year's team which finished 24-4.
DID YOU KNOW
• The Hoosiers finished 17-0 at Assembly Hall last season.
• The Hoosiers were 8-4 against Top 50 teams.
• In the last five seasons, IU has had the most potent offense in the Big Ten leading in points scored (77.7), field goal percentage (47.8), and three-point field goal percentage (40.2). The Hoosiers lead all major conference schools in field goal percentage and three-point percentage during that same time frame.
• Four former Crean-coached Hoosiers were on opening day NBA rosters including Cody Zeller (Charlotte), Victor Oladipo (Oklahoma City), Noah Vonleh (Portland) and Troy Williams (Memphis). Three of his former players at Marquette also are active including Dwyane Wade (Chicago), Steve Novak (Milwaukee) and Wes Matthews (Dallas). Since 2013, the four active NBA players that Crean coached at Indiana have earned $47,060,833.
IU INSIGHT
• In non-conference play, the Hoosiers will play #2 Kansas in the season opener in the Armed Forces Classic in Honolulu on November 11. IU also will take on #6 North Carolina at home in the Big Ten/ACC Challenge.
The Hoosiers will face Butler, ranked #19 by Kenpom, in the 6th Annual Crossroads Classic in Indianapolis on December 17. Two weeks later, the Hoosiers and #14 Louisville will start at three-year series with a game at Bankers Life Fieldhouse on New Years Eve.
• Since 2011, the Hoosiers have averaged 24 wins per season compared to 20 averaged at IU from 1995-2008.
• In the last five seasons, the Hoosiers have an 88.0 winning percentage at home (81-11), the highest of any Big Ten school.
• The Hoosiers were 3rd in the country in field goal percentage (50.2), 5th in three-point field goal percentage (41.6), 7th in total three-point field goals (345), 11th in scoring (82.6), 12th in scoring margin (12.7), and 19th in assists (560). Their 345 three-point field goals also established a new school record and Big Ten record.
• The 2015-16 Hoosiers were just one of three teams in the last 20 years in college basketball to average more than 80 points, shoot better than 50 percent from the field and 41 percent from three-point range. The others are the 2001-02 Kansas Jayhawks and the 2000-01 Stanford Cardinal.
• The Hoosiers have three former head coaches on their coaching staff this season (Buckley, Martin, Judson). Associate Head Coach Tim Buckley begins his ninth year at Indiana. The former head coach at Ball State. His Cardinals beat No. 3 Kansas and No. 4 UCLA at the 2001 Maui Classic. Assistant Coach Chuck Martin is in his third year with the Hoosiers and was the head coach at Marist (2008-13). Assistant Coach Rob Judson is in his second year as an assistant coach after serving as Director of Operations in early 2014. He was the head coach at Northern Illinois (2001-07) and won the MAC West title in 2006.
• Sophomore center Thomas Bryant was named Preseason All-American by Blue Ribbon Basketball Yearbook (first team) and NBCSports.com (second team). He averaged 14.4 points and 5.5 rebounds in postseason play. Had 19 points, five rebounds and two steals against Kentucky. He led the Big Ten in Field Goal Percentage. He also was named Preseason All-Big Ten and is on the Kareem Abdul Jabbar Watch List.
• Junior guard James Blackmon Jr. has the second highest career average (15.7) of any player who has played for Crean at Indiana (Zeller, 16.1). When he went down with an injury prior to the start of Big Ten play, he was averaging 15.8 points and was shooting 46.3 percent from 3-point range. He had a career-high 33 points against Alcorn State. He was named Preseason All-Big Ten and is on the Jerry West Award watch list.
• Junior guard Robert Johnson is the most experienced Hoosier having started 55 career games. Despite the ankle injury, Johnson made five of seven field goals and three of four 3-pointers in 34 minutes of action against Chattanooga and Kentucky in the NCAA Tournament. He also had six assists with no turnovers against Chattanooga. He shot 44.7 percent from 3-point range and is shooting 41.5 percent from long distance during his career at IU.
• Senior forward Collin Hartman will begin rehab for his knee immediately. Over the last two seasons, he has averaged 4.9 points and has shot 40.8% from 3-point range. He played three games in the NCAA Tournament with a fractured wrist and averaged 5.7 points, 4.0 rebounds and 3.3 rebounds.
• Sophomore forward OG Anunoby saw his playing time increase as conference play began. He averaged 5.8 points, 3.3 rebounds and shot 53.3% from the field and 40.9% from 3-point range in Big Ten play. In the NCAA Tournament he tied for the team lead in blocked shots (3) and offensive rebounds (5) and made 10 of his 15 field goal attempts (66.7). He was named third-team Preseason All-American by The Sporting News and is on the Julius Erving Award watch list.
• Junior guard Josh Newkirk is eligible after sitting out a season following his transfer from Pittsburgh. With the Panthers, he averaged 5.9 points and 2.7 assists as a sophomore. In his career, he had 154 assists and 77 turnovers. He scored 16 points against Indiana in the 2014 Big Ten ACC Challenge.
• Sophomore forward Juwan Morgan came on in the last nine games of the season despite the shoulder issues. He made four of seven 3-pointers during that time frame and averaged 4.2 points and 3.0 rebounds down the stretch for the Hoosiers.
• Junior forward Tim Priller begins his third season with the Hoosiers and walk-on Quentin Taylor also is back from last year's Big Ten title squad.
• Junior Freddie McSwain, Jr. is a Georgia native who comes to IU after averaging 14.0 points and 8.4 rebounds at Neosho County Community College. He is a tremendous athlete at 6-6, 215.
• Freshman De'Ron Davis was Mr. Basketball in Colorado and was one of the most coveted power forwards in the county. He led his team to back-to-back state championships at Overland High School in Aurora, Colorado.
• Freshman guard Curtis Jones is a Virginia native and a Boo Williams AAU product. He played with Thomas Bryant at Huntington Prep. IU fans got to see him up close in the Derby Classic when he scored 25 points.
• Freshman guard Devonte Green is another big-bodied guard who was the Long Island Player of the Year as a senior when averaged 20.3 points, 5.9 rebounds, 3.5 assists and 2.7 steals as a senior and shot 42 percent from behind the 3-point line.
Freshman guard Grant Gelon, a graduate of Crown Point High School, will be counted on to stretch the floor with his shooting range. He averaged 14.5 points and shot 41.8 percent from long distance as a senior. He was an Indiana All-Star.
• Redshirt sophomore Zach McRoberts is a former Indiana All-Star from Carmel and comes to IU after averaging 4.2 points and 4.4 rebounds per game as a freshman in 14-15 at Vermont. He attended IU as a student last year and is a non-scholarship player.
• Sophomore Johnny Jager is a Bloomington native who played his freshman year at Wabash. An Indiana All-Star from South High School, the same school where Jordan Hulls played, he averaged 15.0 points and 5.5 assists. He also is a non-scholarship player.
• Four former Crean-coached Hoosiers were on opening day NBA rosters including Cody Zeller (Charlotte), Victor Oladipo (Oklahoma City), Noah Vonleh (Portland) and Troy Williams (Memphis).
Three of his former players at Marquette also are active including Dwyane Wade (Chicago), Steve Novak (Milwaukee) and Wes Matthews (Dallas). IU's Eric Gordon (Houston) also is still playing. Former Hoosiers Christian Watford and Nick Zeisloft will play for the Fort Wayne Mad Ants of the NBA Development League. Yogi Ferrell is with the Long Island Nets and Will Sheehey will play with the Raptors 905 in Toronto. Jordan Hulls is playing overseas in Germany.
During the last two years, the Hoosiers have averaged 9.6 three-point field goals per game, the most of any major college program. Villanova is second at 8.9.
Players Mentioned
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FB: Drew Evans - Spring Practice No. 11
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