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MU ALL-TIME POSTSEASON RESULTS 2008 South 1976 Mideast NCAA Records by Round FR: 6) Marquette 74, No. 11 Kentucky 66 at Anaheim, Calif. FR: Marquette 79, Western Ky. 70 at Dayton, Ohio Opening Round (OR) — SR: 3) Stanford 82, Marquette 81 • OT RS: Marquette 62, Western Mich. 57 at Baton Rouge, La. First Round (FR) 15-10 RC: Indiana 65, Marquette 56 Second Round (SR) 3-3 2007 East Regional Semifinal (RS) 6-7 FR: 9) Michigan St. 61, 8) Marquete 49 at Winston-Salem, N.C. 1975 Mideast Regional Third Place (RT) 3-2 FR: Kentucky 76, Marquette 54 at Tuscaloosa, Ala. Regional Championship (RC) 3-3 2006 Oakland National Semifinal (FF) 2-1 FR: 10) Alabama 90, 7) Marquette 65 at San Diego, Calif. 1974 Mideast National Championship (NC) 1-1 FR: Marquette 108, Austin Peay 66 at Terre Haute, Ind. All Time Record 33-27 2003 Midwest RS: Marquette 69, Vanderbilt 61 at Tuscaloosa, Ala. FR: 3) Marquette 72, 14) Holy Cross 68 at Indianapolis RC: Marquette 72, Michigan 70 NCAA Records by Seed SR: Marquette 101, 6) Missouri 92 • OT FF: Marquette 64, Kansas 51 at Greensboro, N.C. Third seed 5-2 RS: Marquette 77, 2) 74 at Minneapolis, Minn. NC: North Carolina State 76, Marquette 64 Fourth seed 1-1 RC: Marquette 83, 1) Kentucky 69 Fifth seed 0-1 FF: 1) Kansas 94, Marquette 61 at New Orleans, La. 1973 Mideast Sixth seed 3-2 FR: Marquette 77, Miami (Ohio) 62 at Dayton, Ohio Seventh seed 0-1 2001 East RS: Indiana 75, Marquette 69 at Nashville, Tenn. Eighth seed 0-1 FR: 12) Tulsa 71, 5) Marquette 69 at St. Louis, Mo. RT: Marquette 88, Austin Peay 73* Ninth seed 0-1 10th seed 0-1 1997 Southeast 1972 Mideast 12th seed 0-1 FR: 7) Providence 81, 10) Marquette 59 at Charlotte, N.C. FR: Marquette 73, Ohio 49 at Knoxville, Tenn. RS: Kentucky 85, Marquette 69 at Dayton, Ohio NCAA Record Against Seed 1996 East RT: Minnesota 77*, Marquette 72 vs Top seed 1-1 FR: 4) Marquette 68, 13) Monmouth 44 at Providence, R.I. vs Second seed 1-2 SR: 12) Arkansas 66, Marquette 56 1971 Mideast vs Third seed 0-1 FR: Marquette 62, Miami (Ohio) 47 at South Bend, Ind. vs Fifth seed 0-1 1994 Southeast RS: Ohio State 60, Marquette 59 at Athens, Ga. vs Sixth seed 2-0 FR: 6) Marquette 81, 11) La.-Lafayette 59 at St. Pete., Fla. RT: Marquette 91, Kentucky 74 vs Seventh seed 0-1 SR: Marquette 76, 3) Kentucky 53 vs Eighth seed 0-2 RS: 2) Duke 59, Marquette 49 at Nashville, Tenn. 1969 Mideast vs Ninth seed 0-1 FR: Marquette 82, Murray State 62 at Carbondale, Ill. vs 10th seed 1-1 1993 Midwest RS: Marquette 81, Kentucky 74 at Madison, Wis. vs. 11th seed 3-1 FR: 5) Okla. State 74, 12) Marquette 62 at Indianapolis RC: Purdue 75, Marquette 73 • OT vs 12th seed 0-2 vs 13th seed 1-0 1983 Mideast 1968 Mideast vs 14th seed 1-0 FR: 8) Tennessee 57, 9) Marquette 56 at Evansville, Ind. FR: Marquette 72, Bowling Green 71 at Kent, Ohio RS: Kentucky 107, Marquette 89 at Lexington, Ky. NCAA Record Against Opponents 1982 Midwest RT: Marquette 69, East Tennessee State 57 Austin Peay 1-1 FR: 7) Marquette 67, 10) Evansville 62 at Tulsa, Okla. Bowling Green 2-0 SR: 2) Missouri 73, Marquette 69 1961 Midwest Indiana 0-2 FR: Houston 77, Marquette 61 at Houston, Texas Kansas 1-1 1980 East Kentucky 6-4 FR: 8) Villanova 77, 9) Marquette 59 at Providence, R.I. 1959 Mideast Miami (Ohio) 3-1 FR: Marquette 89, Bowling Green 71 at Lexington, Ky. Michigan State 0-2 1979 West RS: Michigan State 74, Marquette 69 at Evanston, Ill. Missouri 1-1 FR: Bye RT: Kentucky 69, Marquette 68 SR: 3) Marquette 73, 6) Pacific 48 at Los Angeles One win: Cincinnati, Charlotte, East RS: 2) DePaul 62, Marquette 56 at Provo, Utah 1955 East Tennessee State, Holy Cross, La.-Lafayette, FR: Marquette 90, Miami (Ohio) 79 at Lexington, Ky. Michigan, Monmouth, Murray State, Ohio, 1978 Mideast RS: Marquette 79, Kentucky 71 at Evanston, Ill. Pacific, Pittsburgh, Wake Forest, Western FR: Miami (Ohio) 84, Marquette 81 at Indianapolis, Ind. RC: Iowa 86, Marquette 81 Kentucky, Western Michigan, Vanderbilt

1977 Midwest * = victory was later vacated One loss: Alabama, Arkansas, DePaul, Duke, FR: Marquette 66, Cincinnati 51 at Omaha, Neb. Houston, Iowa, Minnesota, North Carolina, RS: Marquette 67, Kansas State 66 at Oklahoma City North Carolina State, Ohio State, Oklahoma RC: Marquette 82, Wake Forest 68 State, Providence, Purdue, Stanford, FF: Marquette 51, Charlotte 49 at , Ga. ALL TIME POSTSEASON RECORDS Tennessee, Tulsa, Villanova NC: Marquette 67, North Carolina 59 National Catholic Tournament 1 appearance 3-0 NCAA Tournament 26 appearances 33-27 National Invitation Tournament 15 appearances 21-14 TOTALS 42 appearances 57-41

164 ALL-TIME COACHING RECORDS POSTSEASON BEST RECORD APPEARANCES COACH PERIOD SEASONS W-L PCT. (SEASON) (RECORD) Ralph Risch 1916-17 1 8-3 72.7 8-3 (1916-17) Jack Ryan 1917-20 2 13-9 59.1 9-3 (1919-20) 1920-29 9 94-73 56.3 19-2 (1922-23) Cord Lipe 1929-30 1 11-12 47.8 11-12 (1929-30) Bill Chandler 1930-51 21 193-198 49.4 14-3 (1932-33) 1951-53 2 25-25 50.0 13-11 (1952-53) 1 (3-0) 1953-58 5 69-55 55.6 24-3 (1954-55) 2 (2-2) 1958-64 6 92-70 56.8 23-6 (1958-59) 3 (3-4) Al McGuire 1964-77 13 295-80 78.7 28-1 (1970-71) 11 (27-10) 1977-83 6 126-50 71.6 24-4 (1977-78) 6 (2-6) 1983-86 3 56-35 61.5 20-11 (1984-85) 3 (4-3) 1986-89 3 39-46 45.9 16-13 (1986-87) 1 (0-1) Kevin O’Neill 1989-94 5 86-62 58.1 24-9 (1993-94) 3 (2-3) 1994-99 5 100-55 64.5 23-8 (1995-96) 4 (7-4) 1999-08 9 190-96 66.4 27-6 (2002-03) 8 (7-8) 2008-pres. 1 ------TOTALS 91 1397-868 61.7 42 (57-41)

Ralph Risch Jack Ryan Frank Murray Cord Lipe Bill Chandler Tex Winter

Jack Nagle Eddie Hickey Al McGuire Hank Raymonds Rick Majerus Bob Dukiet

Kevin O’Neill Mike Deane Tom Crean Buzz Williams

165 ALL-TIME COACHING HONORS Year Coach Honor Al McGuire 1955 Jack Nagle National Jesuit College Coach of the Year 1959 Eddie Hickey United States Writers Association Coach of the Year 1971 Al McGuire Associated Press, United Press International, Sporting News, United States Basketball Writers Association Coach of the Year 1974 Al McGuire National Association of Basketball Coaches Coach of the Year 1979 Hank Raymonds Medalist Sports Education Coach of the Year 1993 Kevin O’Neill Great Midwest Conference Co-Coach of the Year Basketball Weekly Midwest Coach of the Year National Association of Basketball Coaches District 11 Coach of the Year Finalist, Associated Press National Coach of the Year 1994 Kevin O’Neill Great Midwest Conference Coach of the Year National Association of Basketball Coaches District 11 Co-Coach of the Year 2002 Tom Crean Conference USA Coach of the Year United States Basketball Writers Association District V Coach of the Year Tom Crean National Association of Basketball Coaches District 11 Coach of the Year Mideast Coach of the Year 2003 Tom Crean Ray Meyer Conference USA Coach of the Year United States Basketball Writers Association District V Coach of the Year National Association of Basketball Coaches District 11 Coach of the Year Coach Award Recipient Finalist Naismith Coach of the Year

Hank Raymonds

166 MU IN THE WIRE SERVICE POLLS 1955 UPI 1955 AP 11. Drake Drake 1973 UPI 1973 AP 1. San Francisco San Francisco 12. Colorado New Mexico State 1. UCLA UCLA 2. Kentucky Kentucky 13. Louisville South Carolina 2. North Carolina State North Carolina State 3. LaSalle LaSalle 14. MARQUETTE MARQUETTE 3. Long Beach State Long Beach State 4. Utah North Carolina State 15. Villanova Louisville 4. MARQUETTE Providence 5. Iowa Iowa 16. Boston College 5. Providence MARQUETTE 6. North Carolina State Duquesne 17. Weber State Notre Dame 6. Indiana Indiana 7. Duquesne Utah 18. Wyoming Colorado 7. Southwestern Louisiana Southwestern Louisiana 8. Oregon State MARQUETTE 19. Colorado State Kansas 8. Kansas State Maryland 9. MARQUETTE Dayton 20. South Carolina Kansas Illinois 9. Minnesota Kansas State 10. Dayton Oregon State 10. Maryland Minnesota 11. Colorado Minnesota 1970 UPI 1970 AP 11. Memphis State North Carolina 12. UCLA Alabama 1. Kentucky Kentucky 12. North Carolina Memphis State 13. Minnesota UCLA 2. UCLA UCLA 13. Arizona State Houston 14. Tulsa George Washington 3. St. Bonaventure St. Bonaventure 14. Syracuse Syracuse 15. George Washington Colorado 4. New Mexico State Jacksonville 15. Kentucky Missouri 16. Illinois Tulsa 5. Jacksonville New Mexico State 16. South Carolina Arizona State 17. Niagara Vanderbilt 6. South Carolina South Carolina 17. Missouri Kentucky 18. Saint Louis Illinois 7. Iowa Iowa 18. Weber State Pennsylvania 19. Holy Cross West Virginia 8. Notre Dame MARQUETTE 19. Houston Austin Peay 20. Cincinnati Saint Louis 9. Drake Notre Dame 20. Pennsylvania San Francisco 10. MARQUETTE North Carolina State 1959 UPI 1959 AP 11. Houston Florida State 1974 UPI 1974 AP 1. Kansas State Kansas State 12. Notre Dame Houston 1. North Carolina State North Carolina State 2. Kentucky Kentucky 13. Pennsylvania Pennsylvania 2. UCLA UCLA 3. Michigan State Mississippi State 14. Florida State Drake 3. Notre Dame MARQUETTE 4. Cincinnati Bradley 15. Villanova Davidson 4. Maryland Maryland 5. North Carolina State Cincinnati 16. Long Beach State Utah State 5. MARQUETTE Notre Dame 6. North Carolina North Carolina State 17. Western Kentucky Niagara 6. Providence Michigan Mississippi State Michigan State 18. Utah State Western Kentucky 7. Vanderbilt Kansas 8. Bradley Auburn 19. Niagara Long Beach State 8. North Carolina Providence 9. California North Carolina 20. Cincinnati UTEP USC 9. Indiana Indiana 10. Auburn West Virginia 10. Kansas Long Beach State 11. West Virginia California 1971 UPI 1971 AP 11. Long Beach State Purdue 12. Texas Christian Saint Louis 1. UCLA UCLA 12. Michigan North Carolina 13. Saint Louis Seattle 2. MARQUETTE MARQUETTE 13. USC Vanderbilt 14. Utah St. Joseph’s 3. Pennsylvania Pennsylvania 14. Pittsburgh Alabama 15. MARQUETTE St. Mary’s (Calif.) 4. Kansas Kansas 15. Louisville Utah 16. Tennessee Tech Texas Christian 5. USC USC 16. South Carolina Pittsburgh 17. St. John’s (N.Y.) Oklahoma City 6. South Carolina South Carolina 17. Creighton USC 18. Navy Utah 7. Western Kentucky Western Kentucky 18. New Mexico Oral Roberts 19. St. Mary’s (Calif.) St. Bonaventure 8. Kentucky Kentucky 19. Alabama South Carolina 20. St. Joseph’s MARQUETTE 9. Fordham Fordham 20. Dayton Dayton 10. Ohio State Ohio State 1968 UPI 1968 AP 11. Jacksonville Jacksonville 1975 UPI 1975 AP 1. Houston Houston 12. BYU Notre Dame 1. Indiana UCLA 2. UCLA UCLA 13. North Carolina North Carolina 2. UCLA Kentucky 3. St. Bonaventure St. Bonaventure 14. Notre Dame Houston 3. Louisville Indiana 4. North Carolina North Carolina 15. Long Beach State Duquesne 4. Kentucky Louisville 5. Kentucky Kentucky 16. Drake Long Beach State 5. Maryland Maryland 6. Columbia New Mexico 17. Villanova Tennessee 6. MARQUETTE Syracuse 7. New Mexico Columbia 18. Duquesne Villanova 7. Arizona State North Carolina State 8. Louisville Davidson 19. Houston Drake 8. Alabama Arizona State 9. Davidson Louisville 20. Weber State BYU 9. North Carolina State North Carolina 10. MARQUETTE Duke 10. North Carolina Alabama 11. Duke 1972 UPI 1972 AP 11. Pennsylvania MARQUETTE 12. New mexico State 1. UCLA UCLA 12. USC Princeton 13. Vanderbilt 2. North Carolina North Carolina 13. Utah State Cincinnati 14. Kansas State 3. Pennsylvania Pennsylvania 14. UNLV Notre Dame 15. Princeton 4. Louisville Louisville 15. Notre Dame Kansas State 16. Army 5. South Carolina Long Beach State 16. Creighton Drake 17. Santa Clara 6. Long Beach State South Carolina 17. Arizona UNLV 18. Utah 7. MARQUETTE MARQUETTE 18. New Mexico State Oregon State 19. Bradley 8. Southwestern Louisiana Southwestern Louisiana 19. Clemson Michigan 20. Iowa 9. BYU BYU 20. UTEP Pennsylvania 10. Florida State Florida State 1969 UPI 1969 AP 11. Maryland Minnesota 1976 UPI 1976 AP 1. UCLA UCLA 12. Minnesota Marshall 1. Indiana Indiana 2. North Carolina LaSalle 13. Memphis State Memphis State 2. MARQUETTE MARQUETTE 3. Davidson Santa Clara 14. Kentucky Maryland 3. Rutgers UNLV 4. Santa Clara North Carolina 15. Villanova Villanova 4. UNLV Rutgers 5. Kentucky Davidson 16. Kansas State Oral Roberts 5. UCLA UCLA 6. LaSalle Purdue 17. UTEP Indiana 6. North Carolina Alabama 7. Purdue Kentucky 18. Marshall Kentucky 7. Alabama Notre Dame 8. St. John’s (N.Y.) St. John’s (N.Y.) 19. Missouri Ohio State 8. Notre Dame North Carolina 9. New Mexico State Duquesne 20. Weber State Virginia 9. Michigan Michigan 10. Duquesne Villanova 10. Washington Western Michigan

167 11. Missouri Maryland 1994 CNN/USA Today 1994 AP 2003 USA Today/ESPN 2003 AP 12. Arizona Cincinnati 1. Arkansas North Carolina 1. Syracuse Kentucky 13. Maryland Tennessee 2. Duke Arkansas 2. Kansas Arizona 14. Tennessee Missouri 3. Arizona Purdue 3. Texas Oklahoma 15. Virginia Arizona 4. Florida Connecticut 4. Kentucky Pittsburgh 16. Cincinnati Texas Tech 5. Purdue Missouri 5. Arizona Texas 17. Florida State DePaul 6. Missouri Duke 6. MARQUETTE Kansas 18. St. John’s (N.Y.) Virginia 7. Connecticut Kentucky 7. Oklahoma Duke 19. Western Michigan Centenary 8. Michigan Massachusetts 8. Pittsburgh Wake Forest 20. Princeton Pepperdine 9. North Carolina Arizona 9. Duke MARQUETTE 10. Louisville Louisville 10. Maryland Florida 1977 UPI 1977 AP 11. Boston College Michigan 11. Connecticut Illinois 1. Michigan Michigan 12. Kansas Temple 12. Wake Forest Xavier 2. San Francisco UCLA 13. Kentucky Kansas 13. Illinois Syracuse 3. North Carolina Kentucky 14. Syracuse Florida 14. Louisville 4. UCLA UNLV 15. Massachusetts Syracuse 15. Notre Dame Creighton 5. Kentucky North Carolina 16. Indiana California 16. Florida Dayton 6. UNLV Syracuse 17. MARQUETTE UCLA 17. Xavier Maryland 7. Arkansas MARQUETTE 18. Temple Indiana 18. Michigan State Stanford 8. Tennessee San Francisco 19. Tulsa Oklahoma State 19. Louisville Memphis 9. Syracuse Wake Forest 20. Maryland Texas 20. Stanford Mississippi State 10. Utah Notre Dame 21. Oklahoma State MARQUETTE 21. Butler Wisconsin 11. Kansas State Alabama 22. UCLA Nebraska 22. Missouri Notre Dame 12. Cincinnati Detroit Mercy 23. Minnesota Minnesota 23. Creighton Connecticut 13. Louisville Minnesota 24. Texas Saint Louis 24. Oklahoma State Missouri 14. MARQUETTE Utah 25. Pennsylvania Cincinnati 25. Dayton Georgia 15. Providence Tennessee 16. Indiana State Kansas State 1996 CNN/USA Today 1996 AP 2007 USA Today/ESPN 2007 AP 17. Minnesota UNC-Charlotte 1. Kentucky Massachusetts 1. Florida Ohio State 18. Alabama Arkansas 2. Massachusetts Kentucky 2. Ohio State Kansas 19. Detroit Mercy Louisville 3. Syracuse Connecticut 3. UCLA Florida 20. Purdue Virginia Military 4. Mississippi State Georgetown 4. Georgetown North Carolina 5. Kansas Kansas 5. Kansas Memphis 1978 UPI 1978 AP 6. Cincinnati Purdue 6. North Carolina Wisconsin 1. Kentucky Kentucky 7. Georgetown Cincinnati 7. Memphis UCLA 2. UCLA UCLA 8. Connecticut Texas Tech 8. Oregon Georgetown 3. MARQUETTE DePaul 9. Wake Forest Wake Forest 9. Texas A&M Texas A&M 4. New Mexico Michigan State 10. Texas Tech Villanova 10. Pittsburgh Oregon 5. Michigan State Arkansas 11. Arizona Arizona 11. Southern Illinois Texas 6. Arkansas Notre Dame 12. Utah Utah 12. Wisconsin Pittsburgh 7. DePaul Duke 13. Georgia Tech Georgia Tech 13. Butler Washington State 8. Kansas MARQUETTE 14. Louisville UCLA 14. UNLV Southern Illinois 9. Duke Louisville 15. Purdue Syracuse 15. USC Nevada 10. North Carolina Kansas 16. Georgia Memphis 16. Texas Louisville 11. Notre Dame San Francisco 17. Villanova Iowa State 17. Washington State Notre Dame 12. Florida State New Mexico 18. Arkansas Penn State 18. Tennessee Maryland 13. San Francisco Indiana 19. UCLA Mississippi State 19. Vanderbilt UNLV 14. Louisville Utah 20. Iowa State MARQUETTE 20. Louisville MARQUETTE 15. Indiana Florida State 21. Virginia Tech Iowa 21. Nevada Butler 16. Houston North Carolina 22. Iowa Virginia tech 22. Winthrop Wintrop 17. Utah State Texas 23. MARQUETTE New Mexico 23. Maryland USC 18. Utah Detroit Mercy 24. North Carolina Louisville 24. Virginia BYU 19. Texas Miami (Ohio) 25. New Mexico North Carolina 25. Virginia Tech Tennessee 20. Georgetown Pennsylvania 2002 USA Today/ESPN 2002 AP 2008 USA Today/ESPN 2008 AP 1979 UPI 1979 AP 1. Maryland Duke 1. Kansas North Carolina 1. Indiana State Indiana State 2. Kansas Kansas 2. Memphis Memphis 2. UCLA UCLA 3. Indiana Oklahoma 3. North Carolina UCLA 3. North Carolina Michigan State 4. Oklahoma Maryland 4. UCLA Kansas 4. Michigan State Notre Dame 5. Duke Cincinnati 5. Texas Tennessee 5. Notre Dame Arkansas 6. Connecticut Gonzaga 6. Louisville Wisconsin 6. Arkansas DePaul 7. Oregon Arizona 7. Tennessee Texas 7. Duke LSU 8. Cincinnati Alabama 8. Xavier Georgetown 8. DePaul Syracuse 9. Pittsburgh Pittsburgh 9. Davidson Duke 9. LSU North Carolina 10. Arizona Connecticut 10. Wisconsin Stanford 10. Syracuse MARQUETTE 11. Illinois Oregon 11. Stanford Butler 11. Iowa Duke 12. Kent State MARQUETTE 12. Georgetown Xavier 12. Georgetown San Francisco 13. Kentucky Illinois 13. Michigan State Louisville 13. MARQUETTE Louisville 14. Alabama Ohio State 14. Butler Drake 14. Purdue Pennsylvania 15. Missouri Florida 15. Washington State Notre Dame 15. Texas Purdue 16. Gonzaga Kentucky 16. Duke Connecticut 16. Temple Oklahoma 17. Ohio State Mississippi State 17. West Virginia Pittsburgh 17. San Francisco St. John’s (N.Y.) 18. MARQUETTE USC 18. Pittsburgh Michigan State 18. Tennessee Rutgers 19. Texas Western Kentucky 19. Notre Dame Vanderbilt 19. Louisville Toledo 20. UCLA Oklahoma State 20. Purdue Purdue 20. Detroit Mercy Iowa 21. Mississippi State Miami (Fla.) 21. MARQUETTE Washington State 22. Southern Illinois Xavier 22. Western Kentucky Clemson 23. Florida Georgia 23. Drake Davidson 24. Xavier Stanford 24. Villanova Gonzaga 25. North Carolina State Hawaii 25. Vanderbilt MARQUETTE

168 RETIRED JERSEYS Marquette has honored nine outstanding players by retiring their jersey numbers, the highest honor a player can receive from the university. A total of 12 numbers have received special recognition at MU. The university also retired the number 11, in honor of the Apollo 11 crew, and the number 38, in honor of the 38 years the late Robert Weingart served as Marquette's ath- letic trainer. On November 21, 1997, the number 77 was retired in honor of legendary head coach Al McGuire, who led the 1977 team to the NCAA Championship and is the program’s all-time winningest coach. The most recent honoree was former consensus All- America performer Dwyane Wade, who saw his jersey raised to the rafters of the Bradley on Feb. 3, 2007. A two-year letterwinner from 2001-03, Wade guided his teams to a Conference USA Regular Season Championship, two NCAA Tournaments, including the 2003 NCAA Final Four, and an overall record of 53-13. # 24 George Thompson # 14 # 31 #20 # 15 # 43 Earl Tatum # 77 Al McGuire # 44 Don Kojis # 31 Glenn “Doc” Rivers # 38 Bob Weingart

169 ALL-AMERICA SELECTIONS Ray Morstadt Butch Lee Literary Digest, Third Team, 1933-34 Converse Yearbook, First Team, 1976-77 AP, Second Team, 1976-77 Ed Mullen UPI, Second Team, 1976-77 Converse Yearbook, First Team, 1933-34 NABC, Third Team, 1976-77 Helms Foundation, 1976-77 Erwin Graf Helms Foundation, 1975-76 MSG, Second Team, 1938-39 Consensus First Team All-America, 1977-78 Ray Morstadt Ed Mullen Erwin Graf David Quabius David Quabius Converse Yearbook, Third Team, 1938-39 Converse Yearbook, Second Team, 1977-78 NABC, Third Team, 1977-78 Bill Chandler Pic Magazine, Third Team, 1943-44 NABC, Fourth Team, 1978-79 Terry Rand NABC, Third Team, 1955-56 Sam Worthen NABC, Second Team, 1979-80 Don Kojis USBWA, Second Team, 1979-80 Bill Chandler Terry Rand Don Kojis George Thompson Converse Yearbook, First Team, 1960-61 AP, Third Team, 1979-80 UPI, Third Team, 1979-80 George Thompson Converse Yearbook, Second Team, 1968-69 Converse Yearbook, Second Team, 1981-82 Dean Meminger Converse Yearbook, Second Team, 1969-70 Converse Yearbook, Second Team, 1982-83 Helms Foundation, 1969-70 AP, Honorable Mention, 1982-83 Basketball News, Second Team, 1969-70 UPI, Honorable Mention, 1982-83 Dean Meminger Bob Lackey Maurice Lucas Consensus First Team All-American, 1970-71 Tony Smith AP, Honorable Mention, 1989-90 Jim Chones AP, First Team, 1971-72 UPI, First Team, 1971-72 Jim McIlvaine AP, Honorable Mention, 1993-94 Converse Yearbook, First Team, 1971-72 Sporting News, Second Team, 1971-72 NEA, Second Team, 1971-72 Dwyane Wade Basketball Times, Second Team, 2001-02 Sporting News, Third Team, 2001-02 Bob Lackey Bo Ellis Earl Tatum Lloyd Walton Butch Lee Helms Foundation, 1971-72 Consensus First Team All-American, 2002-03 Maurice Lucas Converse Yearbook, Second Team, 1973-74 Travis Diener AP, Honorable Mention, 2004-05 NABC, Third Team, 1973-74 Helms Foundation, 1973-74 Dominic James AP, Honorable Mention, 2006-07 Bo Ellis Converse Yearbook, Second Team, 1974-75 AP = Associated Press NABC, Fourth Team, 1974-75 MSG = Madison Square Garden Jerome Whitehead Bernard Toone Sam Worthen Doc Rivers NABC = National Association of Basketball Coaches Converse Yearbook, Second Team, 1975-76 UPI = United Press International USBWA = United States Basketball Writers Association Converse Yearbook, Second Team, 1976-77 NABC, Second Team, 1976-77 Marquette’s All-America selections are determined by the NCAA publication “Men’s Basketball’s Finest,” AP, Third Team, 1976-77 which recognizes each of the teams listed as an offi- cial squad. Earl Tatum NABC, Second Team, 1975-76 Meminger (1970-71), Lee (1977-78) and Wade (2002- USBWA, Second Team, 1975-76 03) are considered consensus selections based on a scoring system used by the NCAA. Tony Smith Jim McIlvaine Dwyane Wade Travis Diener UPI, Second Team, 1975-76 Converse Yearbook, Second Team, 1975-76 Basketball Weekly, Second Team, 1975-76 AP, Third Team, 1975-76

Lloyd Walton Converse Yearbook, Second Team, 1975-76 AP, Honorable Mention, 1975-76

Dominic James

170 CHAMPIONSHIP HISTORY 1952 NATIONAL CATHOLIC TOURNAMENT CHAMPIONS

FIRST ROW (LEFT TO RIGHT): Manager Erwin, Cliff DeCeault, Ralph Wilson, Bob Van Vooren, Erich Siverling, Doug Gill, Glenn Sievers, Bob Walczak. Second row: Head coach Tex Winter, Syl Bado, Charles Dunn, Dick Schwab, John Jansky, Ray Kotz, John Powers, Gene Schramka, Assistant coach Jack Nagle. Third row: Don Marek, Pete Basarich, Russ Wittberger, Rube Schulz, Grant Wittberger, Dale Sevcik, John Puk, Gerald O’Brien.

1967 NATIONAL INVITATIONAL TOURNAMENT RUNNERS-UP

FIRST ROW (LEFT TO RIGHT): Manager Bob Neklewicz, Paul Carbins, Brian Brunkhorst, Bob Wolf, Jim Burke, Mike Curran, Brad Luchini, Manager Goran Raspudic. Second row: Head coach Al McGuire, Jim Langenkamp, Jim Ghermak, George Thompson, Blanton Simmons, Dan Anderson, Assistant coach Hank Raymonds. Third row: Jim Bailey, Jim Goodin, Gene Smith, Athletic trainer Bob Weingart.

171 1970 NATIONAL INVITATIONAL TOURNAMENT CHAMPIONS

FIRST ROW (LET TO RIGHT): Bob Black, Gary Grzesk, Jackie Burke. Second row: Ron Rahn, Jeff Sewell, Joe Thomas, Dean Meminger, Bob Piercy, Ric Cobb. Third row: Athletic trainer Bob Weingart, Assistant coach Hank Raymonds, Manager Goran Raspudic, Terry McQuade, Guy Lam, Mike Mills, Gary Brell, Hugh McMahon, Manager Joe Kozar, Head coach Al McGuire

FROM HEAD COACH AL MCGUIRE: MARQUETTE 65, ST.JOHN’S (N.Y.) 53 • MARCH 21, 1970 “I thought we had won the game in the first half, but you have to give MADISON SQUARE GARDEN •, N.Y. Lou (Carnesecca) credit. He keeps coming at you.” On the 1967 NIT championship loss to Southern Illinois: “The only time I thought of that St. John’s FG-FGA FT-FTA Reb PF A TP game was at the start of the second half. I was afraid if St. John’s scored first, that might be it.” Ralph Abraham 1-6 2-4 10 304 Joe DePre 0-2 5-5 4515 (On Dean Meminger) “There is one way I say you can tell a pro in this game. When they 7-19 1-2 17 5215 put combination defenses on him - a triangle and two or something like that - he passes off. Jim Smyth 3-10 0-1 1326 Unless the All-American passes off, his team is going to get beat.” Richie Lyons 1-4 1-3 0303 “It’s been a hard week. You get locked up with 12 boys for eight days and you get on John DeVasto 3-3 2-2 0348 each other’s nerves. But I was very pleased to meet St. John’s in the final and beat them. Greg Cluess 2-4 4-5 4318 And frankly, I don’t care what other people think about us being here.” Richie Gilkes 1-4 2-2 4004 John Phillips 0-1 0-0 0000 “I was real pleased with my seniors. They were fortunate enough to go out TOTALS 18-53 17-24 40 25 10 53 champions and they won it themselves.” Marquette FG-FGA FT-FTA Reb PF A TP “Our balance helped a lot. We had four different high scorers in four games and Ric Cobb played a fine tournament. I thought it was a toss-up between him and Gary Brell 4-4 1-1 2519 Dean Meminger for the Most Valuable Player award. Ric has that certain type of thing Joe Thomas 3-5 5-7 74111 in pressure situations. I guess it’s a tremendous confidence in himself.” Ric Cobb 3-5 1-6 9127 Jeff Sewell 8-16 6-7 34422 “Because of our aggressive defense, it’s very difficult to play four games in a week. Dean Meminger 4-14 8-13 31416 We played our defense though, and we didn’t let everybody shoot right away. I think Hugh McMahon 0-0 0-0 1410 that was one of the hidden things that won the tournament. We ran Jack Burke 0-0 0-0 0100 (of LSU) into the ground. We pressured him on offense and kept running on defense.” Guy Lam 0-0 0-1 1000 FROM ST.JOHN’S COACH : TOTALS 22-44 21-35 26 20 13 65 (On Marquette) “The best defensive club I have ever played against. They’re marvelous. I hate to lose, but my kids didn’t quit. Their whole team deserved the MVP award.” HALFTIME:MARQUETTE 35, ST.JOHN’S 25 FROM MARQUETTE PLAYER RIC COBB: The National Collegiate Athletic Association asked Marquette to dance Tuesday but the invi- “All the time in practice, you hear that voice screaming at you ‘get up, get up, play tation was to the wrong ballroom and the Warriors, their feelings wounded, decided they defense, play defense.’ You’ll do anything to silence that voice.” would do their stepping with another partner at Madison Square Garden. Marquette, expecting a bid in the NCAA Mideast Regional basketball tournament in Dayton, “I just wanted to win it. I was coming back home and I wanted to win it for the people of New York.” Ohio, was asked instead to leave its home area and play in the Midwest Regional at Fort Worth, Texas. ALL-TOURNAMENT TEAM After five hours and 40 minutes of deliberation, Marquette’s athletic board advised : Dean Meminger (Marquette); Danny Hester (LSU); Pete Maravich (LSU); NCAA to find some other independent school to fill the open berth in the Midwest Jim Oxley (Army); Mike Gyovai (Army). and announced it would accept a bid to the National Invitational Tournament in Second team: Joe DePre (St. John’s); Joe Thomas (Marquette); Ric Cobb (Marquette); New York. Journal Garfield Heard (Oklahoma); Rich Yunkas (Georgia Tech). Most Valuable Player: Dean Meminger

172 1974 NCAA RUNNERS-UP

FIRST ROW (LEFT TO RIGHT): Assistant coach Hank Raymonds, Head coach Al McGuire, Assistant coach Rick Majerus. Second row: Manager Kevin Gleason, Dave Delsman, Lloyd Walton, Randy Buchmann, Paul Vollmer, Bill Neary, Greg Johnson, John Bryant, Bo Ellis, Craig Butrym, Maurice Lucas, Jerry Homan, Earl Tatum, Ed Daniels, Rick Campbell, Marcus Washington, Barry Brennan, Manager Bob Hyndman.

FROM MARQUETTE HEAD COACH AL MCGUIRE: NORTH CAROLINA STATE 76, MARQUETTE 64 • MARCH 25, 1974 (On two technical fouls) “I would say that I lost the game there. I would say that GREENSBORO COLISEUM •GREENSBORO, N.C. I gave them two five- plays and that was it. I had a bad day.” Marquette FG-FGA FT-FTA Reb PF ABSMin TP “I have no complaint with the way we played. We played just about as well as we could, but I didn’t have a good coaching game.” Bo Ellis 6-16 0-0 11 510339 12 Earl Tatum 2-7 0-0 3411020 4 “Officials never win or lose a game for anyone. North Carolina State is a better Maurice Lucas 7-13 7-9 13 401040 21 ball club than .” Lloyd Walton 4-10 0-0 2220024 8 “I think North Carolina State is a super ball club. We gave them an alley fight for a while. Marcus Washington 3-13 5-8 4300535.5 11 But they have no weak spots, plus that little guy can really run the show. They’ve got an aircraft Dave Delsman 0-0 0-0 0200050 carrier in (Tom) Burleson a battleship in (David) Thompson and destroyers all over the place.” Ed Daniels 1-3 1-2 0320017.5 3 Rick Campbell 2-3 0-0 1300112 4 ROM ARQUETTE LAYER ARCUS ASHINGTON F M P M W : Jerry Homan 0-4 1-2 6211061 “This night, in this tournament, North Carolina State was the best. I think we could Barry Brennan 0-0 0-0 0100010 have played better, but they are the best.” TOTALS 25-69 14-21 43 29 739200 64 “We stopped playing defense. I don’t think we pressed as well as we should have. We weren’t playing well right off the bat. I think we were a little tight. This is all new to us.” North Carolina State FG-FGA FT-FTA Reb PF ABSMin TP FROM MARQUETTE PLAYER BO ELLIS: Tim Stoddard 3-4 2-2 7520325.5 8 “We’ll be back. Not here, but somewhere else in a championship game. David Thompson 7-12 7-8 7321340 21 This was the wrong place and the wrong time, but we’ll be back.” Tom Burleson 6-9 2-6 11 407136 14 Morris Rivers 4-9 6-9 2250340 14 FROM MARQUETTE PLAYER MAURICE LUCAS: “The technicals? We never got back on our feet after that. That first one was five points. Monte Towe 5-10 6-7 3120137.5 16 That got them back in the game and gave them their momentum. Mad at him? How can Phil Spence 1-2 1-2 3230118.5 3 I be mad at him? He’s the coach, and he’s the coach of the year. They are a good Mark Moeller 0-0 0-0 000002.5 0 ball club, you know. They’ve only lost once in the last two years.” TOTALS 26-46 24-34 34 17 14 8 12 200 76

ALL-TOURNAMENT TEAM HALFTIME:NORTH CAROLINA STATE 39, MARQUETTE 30. David Thompson (North Carolina State);Tom Burleson (North Carolina State); TURNOVERS:NORTH CAROLINA STATE 23, MARQUETTE 18. Monte Towe (North Carolina State); Maurice Lucas (Marquette); (UCLA). TECHNICAL FOULS:COACH MCGUIRE - 2. Outstanding Player: David Thompson OFFICIALS:JIM HOWELL,IRV BROWN. ATTENDANCE: 15,742

173 1977 NCAA CHAMPIONS

(LEFT TO RIGHT): , Bill Neary, Ulice Payne, Butch Lee, Jim Dudley, Gary Rosenberger, Bernard Toone, Jerome Whitehead, Craig Butrym, Robert Byrd, Bo Ellis. Not pictured: Mark Lavin.

From Marquette Head Coach Al McGuire: MARQUETTE 67, NORTH CAROLINA 59 • MARCH 28, 1977 (immediately following game) “I think they fell apart in the second half. We hung in there.” THE OMNI •ATLANTA,GA. (How do you feel?) “Emotionally drained. I’m pleased for the guys. It doesn’t seem real. Ya know, you think about something like this, but ... I’ve always been an alley fighter. I don’t usually get into the silk lace situations. It seems like it is preordained, but I don’t like to North Carolina FG-FGA FT-FTA Reb PF ABSMin TP use the words of TV announcers, the cliches.” Walter Davis 6-13 8-10 8430233 20 (in the interview room) “We put in the four corners just yesterday in the hour allotted us for prac- Mike O’Koren 6-10 2-4 11 501130.5 14 tice. We figured to run it and look for the good shot, keeping the big men underneath. Rich Yonakor 3-5 0-0 4010125.5 6 For a while, both teams were playing a chess game.” 3-10 0-0 2350038 6 “I was not emotional until a five-second count triggered me. I trigger easily. As a coach, John Kuester 2-6 1-2 0560031 5 you have to be constantly alert. Right now, I feel washed out. Steve Krafcism 1-1 0-0 0000010 2 Tom Zaliagins 2-3 0-0 0300110 4 “Once the avalanche came and we were tied, I tried to stop the avalanche by delays and I called timeouts. Usually we try to do it by contact lens timeouts or something like that. 1-1 0-0 020005.5 2 You have to stop the momentum no matter what.” Bruce Buckey 0-1 0-0 0100010.5 0 Jeff Wolf 0-1 0-0 1000030 “At the end of the game, I sat there and thought of all the locker rooms, the dirty jocks, the PALS, and the other things that a New Yorker street fighter knows when growing up.” Dave Colescott 0-0 0-0 000001.5 0 Woody Coley 0-0 0-0 000000.5 0 From Marquette Player Bo Ellis: Ged Doughton 0-0 0-0 000000.5 0 (On McGuire’s last game) “It’s a super way to go, for him and for us. I’m glad for him, I’m glad for me, I’m glad for the team, I’m glad for the people of Milwaukee and even John Virgil 0-0 0-0 010000.5 0 for those who said we wouldn’t get this far.” TOTALS 24-51 11-16 28 24 15 15200 59 From Marquette Player Butch Lee: Marquette FG-FGA FT-FTA Reb PF ABSMin TP (On what it is like playing for McGuire) “It’s not bad for the older guys. They know Bo Ellis 5-9 4-5 9431139.5 14 what to expect. For the freshmen, it gets rough. You have to get some good ear plugs.” Bill Neary 0-2 0-0 0100011.5 0 From North Carolina Head Coach : Jerome Whitehead 2-8 4-4 11 222038.5 8 “We went into the four corners to get them out of a zone. That’s a great zone with 6-9 players - Butch Lee 6-14 7-7 3120340 19 Bo Ellis, Bernard Toone and Jerome Whitehead - in there. (Bruce) Buckley went in for a layup and either Bo or Whitehead blocked it. Then they went into their delay game. They hit all of Jim Boylan 5-7 4-4 4300133 14 their free throws down the stretch. Of course, that is what we did to get here. Gary Rosenberger 1-1 4-4 111008.5 6 Bernard Toone 3-6 0-1 0100029 6 From North Carolina Player Phil Ford: “I don’t want anybody to quote me as saying that my elbow affected my play out there or cost TOTALS 22-47 23-25 29 13 835200 67 us the game. But, I feel that I have been useless to the team for the last two games. HALFTIME:MARQUETTE 39, NORTH CAROLINA 27 Anytime that you play for the national championship, that should give you enough to win.” TURNOVERS:NORTH CAROLINA 14, MARQUETTE 11 From North Carolina Player Mike O’Koren: TECHNICAL FOULS:TOONE - 1 “I knew that we were going to come back, but I didn’t expect it to be that quick. And I OFFICIALS:PAUL GALVAN,REGGIE COPELAND knew that once we got the lead, we would go into the four corners and get them to chase us. But Marquette played the four corners smart. They laid back and didn’t foul us.” ATTENDANCE: 16,086.

All-Tournament Team Mike O’Koren (North Carolina); Butch Lee (Marquette); (UNC Charlotte); Bo Ellis (Marquette); Jerome Whitehead (Marquette); Walter Davis (North Carolina). Outstanding Player: Butch Lee

174 1993-94 GREAT MIDWEST CONFERENCE REGULAR SEASON CHAMPIONS

FRONT ROW (LEFT TO RIGHT): Roney Eford, Carl Hren, Shane Littles, Anthony Pieper, Tony Miller, Joel Pogodzinski, William Gates, Robb Logterman, Faisal Abraham. Second row (left to right): Manager Jordan Wells, Special assistant Mark Anglavar, Assistant coach Bo Ellis, Abel Joseph, Chris Crawford, Amal McCaskill, Head coach Kevin O’Neill, Jim McIlvaine, Damon Key, Dwaine Streater, Assistant coach Craig McMillan, Head trainer David Leigh, Team chaplain Rev. William Kelly, S.J., Assistant coach Dan Theiss.

1995 NATIONAL INVITATION TOURNAMENT RUNNERS-UP

FIRST ROW (LEFT TO RIGHT): Manager Patrick Sturm, Manager Jon Hoff, Manager Jim Mews, Manager Peter Ranola. Second row: Roney Eford, Anthony Pieper, William Gates, Aaron Hutchins, Tony Miller, Mark Harris, Zack McCall, Shane Littles, Wade Harbin. Third row: Administrative assistant Darrin Kibel, Assistant coach , Faisal Abraham, Dwaine Streater, Abel Joseph, Richard Shaw, Head coach Mike Deane, Amal McCaskill, Chris Crawford, Assistant coach Bo Ellis, Trainer Dave Leigh, Assistant coach Dan Theiss.

175 1996-97 CONFERENCE USA TOURNAMENT CHAMPIONS

FIRST ROW (LEFT TO RIGHT); Manager Jim Mews, Manager Mike McMahon, Manager Chris Roche, Manager Pat Sturm Second row (left to right): John Polonowski, John Cliff, Bart Miller, Marcus West, Anthony Pieper, Aaron Hutchins, Alton Mason, Mike Bargen, Zack McCall. Third row (left to right): Administrative assistant Sean Rivers, Assistant coach Mike Rice, Assistant coach Bo Ellis, Faisal Abraham, Abel Joseph, Richard Shaw, Head coach Mike Deane, Jarrod Lovette, Chris Crawford, Trainer David Leigh, Assistant athletic director Tom Ford, Assistant coach Dan Theiss, Team chaplain Rev. William Kelly, S.J. 2002-03 NCAA FINAL FOUR - C-USA REGULAR SEASON CHAMPIONS

FRONT ROW (LEFT TO RIGHT): Assistant coach Jeff Strohm, Jared Sichting, Karon Bradley, Travis Diener, Head coach Tom Crean, Dwyane Wade, Joe Chapman, Assistant coach Darrin Horn, Assistant coach Dwayne Stephens. Back row: Student manager Dean Manglona, Head athletic trainer Steve Condon, Special assistant Trey Schwab, Andy Freund, Terry Sanders, Scott Merritt, Chris Grimm, Robert Jackson, Steve Novak, Todd Townsend, Head strength and conditioning coach Scott Holsopple, Head student manager Dan Idstein, Father William Kelly.

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