fbpx
Wikipedia

Marquette Golden Eagles men's basketball

The Marquette Golden Eagles men's basketball team (formerly the Marquette Hilltoppers and Marquette Warriors) represents Marquette University in NCAA Division I college basketball and competes in the Big East Conference. The team plays its home games at Fiserv Forum in downtown Milwaukee (also the home of the NBA's Milwaukee Bucks).[2]

Marquette Golden Eagles men's basketball
UniversityMarquette University
First season1916–17
All-time record1,651–1,019 (.618)
Athletic directorBill Scholl
Head coachShaka Smart (2nd season)
ConferenceBig East
LocationMilwaukee, Wisconsin
ArenaFiserv Forum
(Capacity: 18,412)
NicknameGolden Eagles
ColorsBlue and gold[1]
   
Uniforms
Home
Away
Alternate
NCAA tournament champions
1977
NCAA tournament runner-up
1974
NCAA tournament Final Four
1974, 1977, 2003
NCAA tournament Elite Eight
1955, 1969, 1974, 1976, 1977, 2003, 2013
NCAA tournament Sweet Sixteen
1955, 1959, 1968, 1969, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1974, 1976, 1977, 1979, 1994, 2003, 2011, 2012, 2013
NCAA tournament appearances
1955, 1959, 1961, 1968, 1969, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1974, 1975, 1976, 1977, 1978, 1979, 1980, 1982, 1983, 1993, 1994, 1996, 1997, 2002, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2017, 2019, 2022, 2023
Conference tournament champions
1997, 2023
Conference regular season champions
1994, 2003, 2013, 2023

Marquette has made 35 NCAA tournament appearances, including 23 round of 32 appearances, 16 sweet sixteens, 7 elite eights, and 3 final fours. They were the national runner-up 1 time and have won 1 national championship. Both of Marquette's appearances in National Title games came prior to the introduction of the three point line and the shot clock. Marquette first joined a conference in 1989, winning 5 conference regular season championships and 2 conference tournament championships. Marquette has had 3 national coaches of the year, 4 conference coaches of the year, 1 national player of the year, 9 consensus all-americans, 4 conference players of the year, and 16 all-conference first team selections. Marquette has also had 3 Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame and 4 National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame inductees. Additionally, 39 Marquette players have gone on to play in the NBA combining for 7 NBA championships, 25 NBA all-star selections, and 11 all-NBA selections.

History

McGuire era

Al McGuire became the head coach in 1964 and brought the program to national prominence, earning an NIT Championship in 1970 and a Final Four appearance in 1974 against the North Carolina State Wolfpack, where McGuire became the first coach ejected from a championship game.[3][4][5][6] McGuire coached with assistants Hank Raymonds and Rick Majerus, who would each have their own stints as head of the program following his departure. In his final season as a collegiate head coach, McGuire led Marquette to its only NCAA basketball championship in 1977.[7] Led by Alfred "Butch" Lee, Maurice "Bo" Ellis and Jerome Whitehead, the team beat UNC Charlotte in the national semifinals after Whitehead received a full-court pass and subsequently made a last-second shot. Two days later, Marquette defeated Dean Smith's North Carolina Tar Heels for the title. The team set a record with seven losses going into the NCAA tournament, the most losses up to that time for a team that would win the NCAA Championship.[7][8]

Crean era

Tom Crean took over the program on March 30, 1999.[9] According to Crean, "Once Marquette became available, that's where my sights were. I had unbelievable respect for the tradition and the name. When I thought of Marquette, I thought of a true basketball school and to me that had a lot to do with it."[10] Crean immediately made a number of changes at Marquette, creating a new team image by increasing the significance of the team's media day and instituting a "Midnight Madness" event commonly held by schools on the night teams are allowed to begin practice.[11] Crean's first recruiting class was considered by experts to be among the top twenty in the country, Marquette's first in a long time.[12]

In his nine years with Marquette, Crean's teams earned five NCAA tournament bids, one more than the previous four Marquette coaches had in the 16 years prior to his arrival. During his tenure there Crean recruited, developed and coached a number of skilled players that made significant contributions in both the NCAA and NBA, including Dwyane Wade, Dominic James, Steve Novak, Wesley Matthews, and Travis Diener.

Over his final seven seasons at Marquette, Crean compiled an aggregate record of 160–68 (.702). The 2002–03 season was one of the best in Marquette history. The team made a Final Four appearance for the first time since winning the NCAA Championship in 1977. Crean has referred to the team's run as "one of the greatest four or five days of my life."[13]

Later that year, Marquette accepted an offer to leave Conference USA for the Big East Conference after the 2004–2005 season. Big East commissioner Mike Tranghese cited his friendship with Crean as contributing to the invitation, saying, "That, to me, was one of the great appeals, to get Tommy as well as Marquette into the league."[14]

When Crean was asked why he left Marquette, Crean replied, "It's Indiana. It's Indiana, and that is the bottom line."[15]

Williams era

After Crean departed for the head job at Indiana, Buzz Williams was hired as the new head coach for the 2008–09 season, leading Marquette to a 25–10 record in and a second round loss to the Missouri Tigers in the 2009 NCAA tournament.[16] He coached Marquette to a 22–12 record in the 2009–10 season, which ended with a close loss to the 11th-seeded Washington Huskies in the First Round of the 2010 NCAA tournament.

During the 2010–11 campaign, Williams led the Golden Eagles back to the Sweet Sixteen for the first time since 2003. His team went 22–15 including a 9–9 Big East Conference record. They lost in the quarterfinals of the 2011 Big East men's basketball tournament to Louisville. Marquette received an at-large bid in the 2011 NCAA tournament. There they defeated Xavier in the second round (formerly the First Round) and Syracuse in the Third Round to advance to the Sweet Sixteen. In the Sweet Sixteen, they were defeated by No. 7-ranked and No. 2-seeded North Carolina.

Wiliams' 2012 team returned to the NCAA tournament after finishing second in the Big East regular season, finishing 14–4 in conference play. As a No. 3 seed in the NCAA tournament, they defeated BYU and Murray State to advance to their second straight Sweet Sixteen. There, they lost to No. 7-seeded Florida.

After winning a share of the Big East Men's regular season championship, Marquette received an at-large bid in the 2013 NCAA tournament as a No. 3 seed. There, they earned come-from-behind victories over Davidson in the Second Round and Butler in the Third Round. In the Sweet Sixteen, the school's third straight under Williams, they defeated ACC regular season and conference champion Miami to earn a trip to Williams's first Elite Eight, where they lost to Syracuse.

The 2013–14 season was Williams' worst at Marquette, finishing 17–15 with a loss to Xavier in the Big East tournament.

Wojciechowski era

On April 1, 2014, Steve Wojciechowski was hired as the new Marquette head basketball coach, replacing Buzz Williams, who left for Virginia Tech.[17]

Before the 2014-15 season, Marquette lost several players, including Jamil Wilson and Davante Gardner. The team struggled mightily, finishing 13-19 overall and 4-14 in conference play, tying for last in the conference standings. After beating Seton Hall in the first round of the Big East Tournament, Marquette lost to Villanova in the quarterfinals. Marquette failed to qualify for any postseason tournament.

The 2015-16 campaign was highlighted by Henry Ellenson, a five-star recruit from Rice Lake, Wisconsin. Ellenson won the 2016 Big East Rookie of the Year award, and was named first-team All-Big East in his lone season in the NCAA. Besides Ellenson, Luke Fischer and Haanif Cheatham also played significant roles. The Golden Eagles finished the year 20-13, with an 8-10 record in the Big East, placing 7th in the conference. Marquette's season would come to an end after losing to Xavier in the quarterfinals of the 2016 Big East Tournament.[18]

After losing Ellenson to the NBA, Marquette reloaded with 3 four-star recruits joining the 2016-17 team, Markus Howard, Sam Hauser, and Brendan Bailey.[19] Despite being picked to finish seventh in the Big East,[20] Marquette finished the season tied for 3rd in the Big East, going 19–13 with a 10–8 record in the Big East. After losing to Seton Hall in the quarterfinals of the 2017 Big East Tournament, Marquette earned a 10 seed in the 2017 NCAA Tournament, their first appearance since 2013, but lost to eventual final four participants South Carolina.[21]

After losing Luke Fischer, JaJuan Johnson, and Haanif Cheatham, Marquette added four-star recruits Jamal Cain and Ike Eke, and three-star recruits Theo John and Greg Elliott for the 2017-18 season. The team failed to match the success of the previous season, finishing 21-14 with a 9–9 record in the Big East, tying for 6th in the conference. The team was headlined by Markus Howard, Sam Hauser, and Andrew Rowsey, with the three combining for 55 PPG during the season.[22] After beating DePaul in the first round of the 2018 Big East Tournament, Marquette lost to eventual NCAA champion Villanova in the quarterfinals. Marquette qualified as a 2 seed for the 2018 NIT, beating Harvard and Oregon before losing to 4 seed Penn State in the quarterfinals.[23]

The 2018-19 campaign saw the team's first season in the Fiserv Forum, leaving the Bradley Center, their home since 1988. The season would end up being the best season of Wojciechowski's tenure at Marquette. Although the team lost Andrew Rowsey, Marquette signed Joey Hauser, the younger brother of Sam. The team finished 24-10 with a 12–6 record in the Big East, placing 2nd in the conference. The team saw a remarkable season for Markus Howard, who averaged 25 PPG.[24] Sam and Joey Hauser played supporting roles, along with Theo John and Sacar Anim. In February, Marquette ranked as high as 10 in the AP poll but lost 5 of their last 9 games of the regular season, including losing dropping 4 straight to close out the regular season. Marquette beat St. John's in the quarterfinals of the 2019 Big East Tournament, but lost to Seton Hall in the semifinals, by a score of 79-81.[25] Marquette was picked as a 5 seed in the 2019 NCAA Tournament, where they matched up against Murray State, led by eventual second overall pick in the 2019 NBA Draft, Ja Morant. Murray State dominated the entire game, upsetting Marquette 83-64.[26]

Despite lofty expectations for the 2019-20 season,[27] the Hauser brothers would transfer out of the program in the offseason, hurting Marquette's chances to make it back to the NCAA tournament. Wojciechowski was able to successfully recruit Symir Torrence and Dexter Akanno, but the hole left by the Hausers was too great. While Markus Howard averaged 27.8 PPG for the season, becoming Marquette's all-time leading scorer in the process, the team finished with an 18-12 overall record, and an 8-10 record in the Big East, their worst Big East record since 2016. The team was slated to play Seton Hall in the 2020 Big East Tournament, the tournament - and the entire season - was halted due to the outbreak of COVID-19.

The 2020-21 season was another disappointment for Marquette. With the departure of Markus Howard, the team struggled, going 13-14 overall, and 8-11 in the Big East. finishing 9th in the Big East. The incoming recruiting class looked promising however, with Dawson Garcia and Justin Lewis making an impact. Garcia stated all 27 games and averaged 13 points and 6.6 rebounds for the season,[28] and Lewis averaging 7.8 points and 5.4 rebounds per game off the bench.[29]

On March 19, 2021, it was announced that Marquette had fired Wojciechowski after seven seasons.[30]

Smart era

On March 26, 2021, Marquette University hired Shaka Smart to replace Wojciechowski as the Golden Eagles head coach.[31]

As Smart assumed control of the program, many players transferred out, including the promising Dawson Garcia, Theo John, Symir Torrence, Jamal Cain, and Koby McEwen. Additionally, D. J. Carton declared for the draft. Smart was able to land four key transfers to aid the team for the 2021-22 season: sophomores Olivier Maxence-Prosper from Clemson and Tyler Kolek from George Mason, along with graduate transfers Darryl Morsell from Maryland and Kur Kuath from Oklahoma. Smart was also able to obtain two four-star recruits from the class of 2021: Emarion Ellis and David Joplin, and three-star Keeyan Itejere, adding to the four-star and three-star that Wojciechowski recruited: Stevie Mitchell and Kam Jones.

Marquette finished the season with a surprising 19-13 record, including an 11-8 record in the Big East, tying for 5th in the conference. The team was ranked as high as 22 before a late-season skid saw the team lose 5 of their last 9 regular season games. They faced Creighton in the 2022 Big East Tournament, but lost 63-74.[32] The team was selected as a 9 seed in the 2022 NCAA Tournament, but lost to 8 seed North Carolina in the round of 64, 63-95.[33]

Marquette was projected to finish 9th in the Big East for the 2022-23 season,[34] but surprised many with their best season in a decade. Despite Justin Lewis declaring for the draft, and Darryl Morsell and Kur Kuath graduating, the team has been ranked since January and is currently 25-6 with a 17-3 conference record. Smart brought in three-stars Sean Jones and Chase Ross, as well as Kiwi prospect Ben Gold. Marquette won the Big East outright for the first time in program history on February 28, 2023.

Postseason results

NCAA tournament

Marquette has appeared in the NCAA tournament 35 times. Their combined record is 41–35. They were National Champions in 1977.[35]

 
Jamil Wilson shooting in 2012
Year Seed Round Opponent Result
1955 Round of 24
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Miami (OH)
Kentucky
Iowa
W 90–79
W 79–71
L 81–86
1959 Round of 23
Sweet Sixteen
Regional 3rd Place
Bowling Green
Michigan State
Kentucky
W 89–71
L 69–74
L 69–98
1961 Round of 24 Houston L 61–77
1968 Round of 23
Sweet Sixteen
Regional 3rd Place
Bowling Green
Kentucky
East Tennessee State
W 72–71
L 89–107
W 69–57
1969 Round of 25
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Murray State
Kentucky
Purdue
W 82–62
W 81–74
L 73–75OT
1971 Round of 25
Sweet Sixteen
Regional 3rd Place
Miami (OH)
Ohio State
Kentucky
W 62–47
L 59–60
W 91–74
1972 Round of 25
Sweet Sixteen
Regional 3rd Place
Ohio
Kentucky
Minnesota
W 73–49
L 69–85
L 72–77
1973 Round of 25
Sweet Sixteen
Regional 3rd Place
Miami (OH)
Indiana
Austin Peay
W 77–62
L 69–75
W 88–73
1974 Round of 25
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Final Four
National Championship
Ohio
Vanderbilt
Michigan
Kansas
NC State
W 85–59
W 69–61
W 72–70
W 64–51
L 64–76
1975 Round of 32 Kentucky L 54–76
1976 Round of 32
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Western Kentucky
Western Michigan
Indiana
W 79–60
W 62–57
L 56–65
1977 Round of 32
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Final Four
National Championship
Cincinnati
Kansas State
Wake Forest
Charlotte
North Carolina
W 66–51
W 67–66
W 82–68
W 51–49
W 67–59
1978 Round of 32 Miami (OH) L 81–84OT
1979 3 Round of 32
Sweet Sixteen
6 Pacific
2 DePaul
W 73–48
L 56–62
1980 9 Round of 48 8 Villanova L 59–77
1982 7 Round of 48
Second Round
10 Evansville
2 Missouri
W 67–62
L 69–73
1983 9 Round of 48 8 Tennessee L 56–57
1993 12 First Round 5 Oklahoma State L 62–74
1994 6 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
11 Southwestern Louisiana
3 Kentucky
2 Duke
W 81–59
W 75–63
L 49–59
1996 4 First Round
Second Round
13 Monmouth
12 Arkansas
W 68–44
L 56–65
1997 7 First Round 10 Providence L 59–81
2002 5 First Round 12 Tulsa L 69–71
2003 3 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Final Four
14 Holy Cross
6 Missouri
2 Pittsburgh
1 Kentucky
2 Kansas
W 72–68
W 101–92OT
W 77–74
W 83–69
L 61–94
2006 7 First Round 10 Alabama L 85–90
2007 8 First Round 9 Michigan State L 49–61
2008 6 First Round
Second Round
11 Kentucky
3 Stanford
W 74–66
L 81–82OT
2009 6 First Round
Second Round
11 Utah State
3 Missouri
W 58–57
L 79–83
2010 6 First Round 11 Washington L 78–80
2011 11 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
6 Xavier
3 Syracuse
2 North Carolina
W 66–55
W 66–62
L 63–81
2012 3 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
14 BYU
6 Murray State
7 Florida
W 88–68
W 62–53
L 58–68
2013 3 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
14 Davidson
6 Butler
2 Miami (FL)
4 Syracuse
W 59–58
W 74–72
W 71–61
L 39–55
2017 10 First Round 7 South Carolina L 73–93
2019 5 First Round 12 Murray State L 64–83
2022 9 First Round 8 North Carolina L 63–95
2023 2 First Round
Second Round
15 Vermont
7 Michigan State
W 78–61
L 60-69

NIT

Marquette has appeared in the National Invitation Tournament 16 times. Their combined record is 23–15. In 1970, Marquette was ranked 8th and received an at-large bid to the NCAA tournament. The NCAA slotted Marquette into the Midwest regional rather than the closer Mideast regional. Al McGuire was so displeased about this that Marquette actually turned down the NCAA bid and chose to instead play in the NIT, which they won. Marquette is the only university to spurn an NCAA tournament invite. The NCAA later instituted a rule which forbade an NCAA Division I men's basketball team from spurning an NCAA bid for an NIT bid. An antitrust case by the NIT ensued over this issue, and the NCAA settled out of court.

Year Seed Round Opponent Result
1956 Round of 12 Seton Hall L 78–96
1963 Quarterfinals
Semifinals
3rd Place
Saint Louis
Providence
Villanova
W 84–49
L 64–70
W 66–58
1967 Round of 14
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Final
Tulsa
Providence
Marshall
Southern Illinois
W 64–60
W 81–80OT
W 83–78
L 56–71
1970 Round of 16
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Final
Massachusetts
Utah
LSU
St. John's
W 62–55
W 83–63
W 101–79
W 65–53
1981 Round of 32 Syracuse L 81–88
1984 Round of 32
Round of 16
Iowa State
Michigan
W 73–53
L 70–83
1985 Round of 32
Round of 16
Quarterfinals
Bradley
Cincinnati
Indiana
W 77–64
W 56–54
L 82–942OT
1986 Round of 32
Round of 16
Drake
SW Missouri State
W 79–59
L 69–83
1987 Round of 32 Nebraska L 76–78
1990 Round of 32 Penn State L 54–57
1995 Round of 32
Round of 16
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Final
Auburn
St. Bonaventure
South Florida
Penn State
Virginia Tech
W 68–61
W 70–61
W 67–60OT
W 87–79
L 64–65OT
1998 Round of 32
Round of 16
Quarterfinals
Creighton
Auburn
Minnesota
W 80–68
W 75–60
L 71–73
2000 Round of 32 Xavier L 63–67
2004 Round of 32
Round of 16
Quarterfinals
Toledo
Boise State
Iowa State
W 87–72
W 66–53
L 69–77
2005 Round of 32 Western Michigan L 40–54
2018 2 Round of 32
Round of 16
Quarterfinals
7 Harvard
3 Oregon
4 Penn State
W 67–60
W 101–92
L 80–85

NCIT

Marquette appeared in the last National Catholic Invitational Tournament in 1952 and won the NCIT championship.[36]

Year Round Opponent Result
1952 Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Final
Iona
St. Francis Brooklyn
Saint Francis (PA)
W 66–59
W 79–57
W 76–64

Coaches

Awards and honors

Coaching

National Coach of the Year

Henry Iba Award

Great Midwest Conference Coach of the Year

Conference USA Coach of the Year

Big East Conference Men's Basketball Coach of the Year

Individual

 
Butch Lee was the school’s first NPOY in 1978.
 
Dean Meminger was a first-team All-American in 1971.

National Player of the Year

Consensus All-America First Team

Consensus All-America Second Team

Great Midwest Conference Player of the Year

Conference USA Player of the Year

Big East Conference Player of the Year

Big East Conference Men's Basketball Sixth Man of the Year Award

All-Midwestern Collegiate Conference First Team

All-Great Midwest Conference First Team

All-Conference USA First Team

All-Big East Conference First Team

Retired numbers

Marquette Golden Eagles retired numbers
No. Player Position Career
3 Dwyane Wade SG 2001–2003
14 Dean Meminger PG 1968–1971
15 Butch Lee PG 1974–1978
20 Maurice Lucas PF 1972–1974
24 George Thompson PG 1966–1969
31 Bo Ellis PF 1973–1977
Doc Rivers PG 1980–1983
38[rn 1] Bob Weingart Trainer[rn 2] 1946–1984
43 Earl Tatum SG / SF 1972–1976
44 Don Kojis SF 1958–1961
77[rn 1] Al McGuire Coach[rn 3] 1964–1977
Notes
  1. ^ a b Not a legal jersey number in college basketball (NCAA rules stipulates both digits must be no higher than five)[37]
  2. ^ Not a player but an athletic trainer. Number "38" honors the number of years he spent with the program.[38]
  3. ^ The "77" honors the year Marquette won their first national championship (1977), led by McGuire.[37]

Hall of Fame inductees

Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame

National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame

All-time career leaders

Lists are accurate through the 2019–20 season.[35]

Points

Rank Points Player Years
1 2761 Markus Howard 2016–20
2 1985 Jerel McNeal 2005–09
3 1859 Lazar Hayward 2006–10
4 1773 George Thompson 1966–69
5 1749 Dominic James 2005–09
6 1735 Butch Lee 1974–78
7 1691 Travis Diener 2001–05
8 1690 Brian Wardle 1997–01
9 1688 Tony Smith 1986–90
10 1673 Wesley Matthews 2005–09

Rebounds

Rank Rebounds Player Years
1 1222 Don Kojis 1958–61
2 1085 Bo Ellis 1973–77
3 978 Terry Rand 1953–56
4 938 Walt Mangham 1957–60
5 910 Lazar Hayward 2006–10
6 771 Tom Flynn 1963–66
7 768 Paul Carbins 1964–67
8 765 Trevor Powell 1987–91
9 753 John Glaser 1955–58
10 745 Russ Wittberger 1951–55

Assists

Rank Assists Player Years
1 956 Tony Miller 1991–95
2 632 Dominic James 2005–09
3 617 Travis Diener 2001–05
4 550 Aaron Hutchins 1994–98
5 480 Lloyd Walton 1973–76
6 469 Tony Smith 1986–90
7 455 Jerel McNeal 2005–09
8 449 Tyler Kolek 2021-Present
9 435 Junior Cadougan 2009–13
10 430 Cordell Henry 1998–02

Steals

Rank Steals Player Years
1 287 Jerel McNeal 2005–09
2 272 Mike Wilson 1978–82
3 253 Mandy Johnson 1981–85
4 238 Dominic James 2005–09
5 203 Doc Rivers 1980–83
6 190 Tony Smith 1986–90
7 188 Michael Sims 1984–88
8 185 Tony Miller 1991–95
9 165 Aaron Hutchins 1994–98
10 158 Lazar Hayward 2006–10
158 Travis Diener 2001–05
158 Kerry Trotter 1982–86

Blocks

Rank Blocks Player Years
1 399 Jim McIlvaine 1990–94
2 175 Amal McCaskill 1991–92, 93–96
3 172 Faisal Abraham 1993–97
4 153 Luke Fischer 2014–17
5 151 Theo John 2017–21
6 145 Chris Otule 2008–14
7 119 Mike Wilson 1978–82
8 113 Scott Merritt 2000–04
9 103 Walter Downing 1984–86
10 100 Ousmane Barro 2004–08

Players in the NBA

Current

All-time

Player NBA Draft Years Career Highlights and Awards
Bill Downey 1944 No NBA 1947–48
Gene Berce 1948 Drafted 1949–50
Don Kojis 1961 Round 2 Pick 21 1963–75 NBA All-Star (1968, 1969)
George Thompson 1969 Round 5 Pick 66 1974–75
Joe Thomas 1970 Round 6 Pick 95 1970–71
Dean Meminger 1971 Round 1 Pick 16 1971–77 NBA Champion (1973)
Larry McNeill 1973 Round 2 Pick 25 1973–79
Jim Chones 1973 Round 2 Pick 31 1974–82 NBA Champion (1980)
Allie McGuire 1973 Round 3 Pick 49 1973–74
Maurice Lucas 1974 Round 1 Pick 14 1976–88 NBA Champion (1977)
NBA All-Star (19771979, 1983)
All-NBA Second Team (1978)
Earl Tatum 1976 Round 2 Pick 21 1976–80
Lloyd Walton 1976 Round 3 Pick 40 1976–81
Bo Ellis 1977 Round 1 Pick 17 1977–80
Butch Lee 1978 Round 1 Pick 10 1978–80 NBA Champion (1980)
Jerome Whitehead 1978 Round 2 Pick 41 1978–89
Bernard Toone 1979 Round 2 Pick 37 1979–80
Sam Worthen 1980 Round 2 Pick 26 1980–82
Mike Wilson 1982 Round 3 Pick 47 1983–85, 86–87
Doc Rivers 1983 Round 2 Pick 31 1983–96 NBA All-Star (1988)
Tom Copa 1987 Undrafted 1991–92
Tony Smith 1990 Round 2 Pick 51 1990–98, 00–01
Jim McIlvaine 1994 Round 2 Pick 32 1994–01
Amal McCaskill 1996 Round 2 Pick 49 1996–97, 01–04
Chris Crawford 1997 Round 2 Pick 50 1997–04
Dwyane Wade 2003 Round 1 Pick 5 2003–19 NBA Champion (2006, 2012, 2013)
13× NBA All-Star (20052016, 2019)
All-NBA First Team (2009, 2010)
All-NBA Second Team (2005, 2006, 2011)
All-NBA Third Team (2007, 2012, 2013)
Travis Diener 2005 Round 2 Pick 38 2005–10
Steve Novak 2006 Round 2 Pick 32 2006–17
Wesley Matthews 2009 Undrafted 2009–present
Jerel McNeal 2009 Undrafted 2014–15
Lazar Hayward 2010 Round 1 Pick 30 2010–13
Jimmy Butler 2011 Round 1 Pick 30 2011–present NBA All-Star (20152018, 2020)
All-NBA Third Team (2017, 2018, 2020)
Dwight Buycks 2011 Undrafted 2013–15, 17–18
Jae Crowder 2012 Round 2 Pick 34 2012–present
Darius Johnson-Odom 2012 Round 2 Pick 55 2012–14
Vander Blue 2013 Undrafted 2013–15, 17–18
Jamil Wilson 2014 Undrafted 2017–18
Juan Toscano-Anderson 2015 Undrafted 2019–present
Henry Ellenson 2016 Round 1 Pick 18 2016–2020
Deonte Burton 2017 Undrafted 2018–present
Markus Howard 2020 Undrafted 2020–present

Players in international leagues

References

  1. ^ "Marquette Athletics Identity Standards" (PDF). Retrieved April 10, 2016.
  2. ^ "Marquette University to join Bucks at new Milwaukee arena". 15 August 2017. Retrieved May 22, 2018.
  3. ^ Kupper, Mike (March 26, 1974). "Warrior dream Wolfpacked away". Milwaukee Journal. p. 11, part 2.
  4. ^ Hofmann, Dale (March 26, 1974). "Wolfpack fouls up MU dream". Milwaukee Sentinel. p. 1, part 2.
  5. ^ Kirkpatrick, Curry (April 1, 1974). "Nothing could be finer". Sports Illustrated. p. 24.
  6. ^ Kent, Milton (March 31, 1991). "Smith gets 2 T's, Carolina 1 L as Kansas wins 79-73". Baltimore Sun. p. 15.
  7. ^ a b "Marquette wins 1st NCAA title, 67 to 59 in McGuire's last game". Milwaukee Sentinel. March 29, 1977. Retrieved March 18, 2011.
  8. ^ Lea, Bud (March 28, 1977). "Fortune keeps beaming on surprising Warriors". Milwaukee Sentinel. Retrieved March 18, 2011.
  9. ^ Nickel, Lori (March 30, 1999). "Marquette Will Name Crean as its New Coach Today". Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Journal Communications. p. 1 (Sports).
  10. ^ Rosiak, Todd (December 9, 2006). "Road to Marquette Shaped Crean". Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Journal Communications. p. 1 (Sports).
  11. ^ Nickel, Lori (October 6, 1999). "New-look MU has Touch of Crean". Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Journal Communications. p. 9 (Sports).
  12. ^ Nickel, Lori (November 11, 1999). "Crean's First MU Class Draws Rave Reviews". Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Journal Communications. p. 9 (Sports).
  13. ^ Scoggins, Chip (March 15, 2006). "The Big East Surprise". Star Tribune. Avista Capital Partners. p. 1C.
  14. ^ Rosiak, Todd (November 5, 2003). "MU Makes Move Official". Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Journal Communications. p. 8 (Sports).
  15. ^ Crean: It's Indiana and that is the bottom line". Inside Indiana Business, April 10, 2008.
  16. ^ "Marquette vs. Missouri - Game Summary - March 22, 2009 - ESPN". ESPN.com. Retrieved 2022-06-02.
  17. ^ Marquette hires Steve Wojciechowski
  18. ^ [1]
  19. ^ [2]
  20. ^ [3]
  21. ^ [4]
  22. ^ [5]
  23. ^ [6]
  24. ^ [7]
  25. ^ [8]
  26. ^ [9]
  27. ^ [10]
  28. ^ [11]
  29. ^ [12]
  30. ^ David Cobb (2021-03-19). "Marquette fires coach Steve Wojciechowski after seven seasons leading Golden Eagles program". CBS Sports.com. Retrieved 2021-03-19.
  31. ^ "Marquette names Shaka Smart as next men's basketball coach". WISN. March 26, 2021.
  32. ^ [13]
  33. ^ [14]
  34. ^ [15]
  35. ^ a b "Marquette Record Book" (PDF). Retrieved January 24, 2020.
  36. ^ "Former Marquette basketball player Grant Wittberger dies". Retrieved November 30, 2018.
  37. ^ a b "Marquette University retired No. 11 basketball jersey in honor of the Apollo 11 crew. Here's the back story".
  38. ^ "Bob Weingart (1980) - Marquette 'M Club' Hall of Fame".
  39. ^ Yeazel, Matt. "Jayce Johnson continues basketball career overseas". Marquette Wire. Retrieved 2020-11-22.

External links

  • Official website  

marquette, golden, eagles, basketball, team, formerly, marquette, hilltoppers, marquette, warriors, represents, marquette, university, ncaa, division, college, basketball, competes, east, conference, team, plays, home, games, fiserv, forum, downtown, milwaukee. The Marquette Golden Eagles men s basketball team formerly the Marquette Hilltoppers and Marquette Warriors represents Marquette University in NCAA Division I college basketball and competes in the Big East Conference The team plays its home games at Fiserv Forum in downtown Milwaukee also the home of the NBA s Milwaukee Bucks 2 Marquette Golden Eagles men s basketball2022 23 Marquette Golden Eagles men s basketball teamUniversityMarquette UniversityFirst season1916 17All time record1 651 1 019 618 Athletic directorBill SchollHead coachShaka Smart 2nd season ConferenceBig EastLocationMilwaukee WisconsinArenaFiserv Forum Capacity 18 412 NicknameGolden EaglesColorsBlue and gold 1 UniformsHome Away AlternateNCAA tournament champions1977NCAA tournament runner up1974NCAA tournament Final Four1974 1977 2003NCAA tournament Elite Eight1955 1969 1974 1976 1977 2003 2013NCAA tournament Sweet Sixteen1955 1959 1968 1969 1971 1972 1973 1974 1976 1977 1979 1994 2003 2011 2012 2013NCAA tournament appearances1955 1959 1961 1968 1969 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1982 1983 1993 1994 1996 1997 2002 2003 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2017 2019 2022 2023Conference tournament champions1997 2023Conference regular season champions1994 2003 2013 2023Marquette has made 35 NCAA tournament appearances including 23 round of 32 appearances 16 sweet sixteens 7 elite eights and 3 final fours They were the national runner up 1 time and have won 1 national championship Both of Marquette s appearances in National Title games came prior to the introduction of the three point line and the shot clock Marquette first joined a conference in 1989 winning 5 conference regular season championships and 2 conference tournament championships Marquette has had 3 national coaches of the year 4 conference coaches of the year 1 national player of the year 9 consensus all americans 4 conference players of the year and 16 all conference first team selections Marquette has also had 3 Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame and 4 National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame inductees Additionally 39 Marquette players have gone on to play in the NBA combining for 7 NBA championships 25 NBA all star selections and 11 all NBA selections Contents 1 History 1 1 McGuire era 1 2 Crean era 1 3 Williams era 1 4 Wojciechowski era 1 5 Smart era 2 Postseason results 2 1 NCAA tournament 2 2 NIT 2 3 NCIT 3 Coaches 4 Awards and honors 4 1 Coaching 4 2 Individual 4 3 Retired numbers 4 4 Hall of Fame inductees 5 All time career leaders 5 1 Points 5 2 Rebounds 5 3 Assists 5 4 Steals 5 5 Blocks 6 Players in the NBA 6 1 Current 6 2 All time 7 Players in international leagues 8 References 9 External linksHistory EditSee also List of Marquette Golden Eagles men s basketball seasons McGuire era Edit Al McGuire became the head coach in 1964 and brought the program to national prominence earning an NIT Championship in 1970 and a Final Four appearance in 1974 against the North Carolina State Wolfpack where McGuire became the first coach ejected from a championship game 3 4 5 6 McGuire coached with assistants Hank Raymonds and Rick Majerus who would each have their own stints as head of the program following his departure In his final season as a collegiate head coach McGuire led Marquette to its only NCAA basketball championship in 1977 7 Led by Alfred Butch Lee Maurice Bo Ellis and Jerome Whitehead the team beat UNC Charlotte in the national semifinals after Whitehead received a full court pass and subsequently made a last second shot Two days later Marquette defeated Dean Smith s North Carolina Tar Heels for the title The team set a record with seven losses going into the NCAA tournament the most losses up to that time for a team that would win the NCAA Championship 7 8 Crean era Edit Tom Crean took over the program on March 30 1999 9 According to Crean Once Marquette became available that s where my sights were I had unbelievable respect for the tradition and the name When I thought of Marquette I thought of a true basketball school and to me that had a lot to do with it 10 Crean immediately made a number of changes at Marquette creating a new team image by increasing the significance of the team s media day and instituting a Midnight Madness event commonly held by schools on the night teams are allowed to begin practice 11 Crean s first recruiting class was considered by experts to be among the top twenty in the country Marquette s first in a long time 12 In his nine years with Marquette Crean s teams earned five NCAA tournament bids one more than the previous four Marquette coaches had in the 16 years prior to his arrival During his tenure there Crean recruited developed and coached a number of skilled players that made significant contributions in both the NCAA and NBA including Dwyane Wade Dominic James Steve Novak Wesley Matthews and Travis Diener Over his final seven seasons at Marquette Crean compiled an aggregate record of 160 68 702 The 2002 03 season was one of the best in Marquette history The team made a Final Four appearance for the first time since winning the NCAA Championship in 1977 Crean has referred to the team s run as one of the greatest four or five days of my life 13 Later that year Marquette accepted an offer to leave Conference USA for the Big East Conference after the 2004 2005 season Big East commissioner Mike Tranghese cited his friendship with Crean as contributing to the invitation saying That to me was one of the great appeals to get Tommy as well as Marquette into the league 14 When Crean was asked why he left Marquette Crean replied It s Indiana It s Indiana and that is the bottom line 15 Williams era Edit After Crean departed for the head job at Indiana Buzz Williams was hired as the new head coach for the 2008 09 season leading Marquette to a 25 10 record in and a second round loss to the Missouri Tigers in the 2009 NCAA tournament 16 He coached Marquette to a 22 12 record in the 2009 10 season which ended with a close loss to the 11th seeded Washington Huskies in the First Round of the 2010 NCAA tournament During the 2010 11 campaign Williams led the Golden Eagles back to the Sweet Sixteen for the first time since 2003 His team went 22 15 including a 9 9 Big East Conference record They lost in the quarterfinals of the 2011 Big East men s basketball tournament to Louisville Marquette received an at large bid in the 2011 NCAA tournament There they defeated Xavier in the second round formerly the First Round and Syracuse in the Third Round to advance to the Sweet Sixteen In the Sweet Sixteen they were defeated by No 7 ranked and No 2 seeded North Carolina Wiliams 2012 team returned to the NCAA tournament after finishing second in the Big East regular season finishing 14 4 in conference play As a No 3 seed in the NCAA tournament they defeated BYU and Murray State to advance to their second straight Sweet Sixteen There they lost to No 7 seeded Florida After winning a share of the Big East Men s regular season championship Marquette received an at large bid in the 2013 NCAA tournament as a No 3 seed There they earned come from behind victories over Davidson in the Second Round and Butler in the Third Round In the Sweet Sixteen the school s third straight under Williams they defeated ACC regular season and conference champion Miami to earn a trip to Williams s first Elite Eight where they lost to Syracuse The 2013 14 season was Williams worst at Marquette finishing 17 15 with a loss to Xavier in the Big East tournament Wojciechowski era Edit On April 1 2014 Steve Wojciechowski was hired as the new Marquette head basketball coach replacing Buzz Williams who left for Virginia Tech 17 Before the 2014 15 season Marquette lost several players including Jamil Wilson and Davante Gardner The team struggled mightily finishing 13 19 overall and 4 14 in conference play tying for last in the conference standings After beating Seton Hall in the first round of the Big East Tournament Marquette lost to Villanova in the quarterfinals Marquette failed to qualify for any postseason tournament The 2015 16 campaign was highlighted by Henry Ellenson a five star recruit from Rice Lake Wisconsin Ellenson won the 2016 Big East Rookie of the Year award and was named first team All Big East in his lone season in the NCAA Besides Ellenson Luke Fischer and Haanif Cheatham also played significant roles The Golden Eagles finished the year 20 13 with an 8 10 record in the Big East placing 7th in the conference Marquette s season would come to an end after losing to Xavier in the quarterfinals of the 2016 Big East Tournament 18 After losing Ellenson to the NBA Marquette reloaded with 3 four star recruits joining the 2016 17 team Markus Howard Sam Hauser and Brendan Bailey 19 Despite being picked to finish seventh in the Big East 20 Marquette finished the season tied for 3rd in the Big East going 19 13 with a 10 8 record in the Big East After losing to Seton Hall in the quarterfinals of the 2017 Big East Tournament Marquette earned a 10 seed in the 2017 NCAA Tournament their first appearance since 2013 but lost to eventual final four participants South Carolina 21 After losing Luke Fischer JaJuan Johnson and Haanif Cheatham Marquette added four star recruits Jamal Cain and Ike Eke and three star recruits Theo John and Greg Elliott for the 2017 18 season The team failed to match the success of the previous season finishing 21 14 with a 9 9 record in the Big East tying for 6th in the conference The team was headlined by Markus Howard Sam Hauser and Andrew Rowsey with the three combining for 55 PPG during the season 22 After beating DePaul in the first round of the 2018 Big East Tournament Marquette lost to eventual NCAA champion Villanova in the quarterfinals Marquette qualified as a 2 seed for the 2018 NIT beating Harvard and Oregon before losing to 4 seed Penn State in the quarterfinals 23 The 2018 19 campaign saw the team s first season in the Fiserv Forum leaving the Bradley Center their home since 1988 The season would end up being the best season of Wojciechowski s tenure at Marquette Although the team lost Andrew Rowsey Marquette signed Joey Hauser the younger brother of Sam The team finished 24 10 with a 12 6 record in the Big East placing 2nd in the conference The team saw a remarkable season for Markus Howard who averaged 25 PPG 24 Sam and Joey Hauser played supporting roles along with Theo John and Sacar Anim In February Marquette ranked as high as 10 in the AP poll but lost 5 of their last 9 games of the regular season including losing dropping 4 straight to close out the regular season Marquette beat St John s in the quarterfinals of the 2019 Big East Tournament but lost to Seton Hall in the semifinals by a score of 79 81 25 Marquette was picked as a 5 seed in the 2019 NCAA Tournament where they matched up against Murray State led by eventual second overall pick in the 2019 NBA Draft Ja Morant Murray State dominated the entire game upsetting Marquette 83 64 26 Despite lofty expectations for the 2019 20 season 27 the Hauser brothers would transfer out of the program in the offseason hurting Marquette s chances to make it back to the NCAA tournament Wojciechowski was able to successfully recruit Symir Torrence and Dexter Akanno but the hole left by the Hausers was too great While Markus Howard averaged 27 8 PPG for the season becoming Marquette s all time leading scorer in the process the team finished with an 18 12 overall record and an 8 10 record in the Big East their worst Big East record since 2016 The team was slated to play Seton Hall in the 2020 Big East Tournament the tournament and the entire season was halted due to the outbreak of COVID 19 The 2020 21 season was another disappointment for Marquette With the departure of Markus Howard the team struggled going 13 14 overall and 8 11 in the Big East finishing 9th in the Big East The incoming recruiting class looked promising however with Dawson Garcia and Justin Lewis making an impact Garcia stated all 27 games and averaged 13 points and 6 6 rebounds for the season 28 and Lewis averaging 7 8 points and 5 4 rebounds per game off the bench 29 On March 19 2021 it was announced that Marquette had fired Wojciechowski after seven seasons 30 Smart era Edit On March 26 2021 Marquette University hired Shaka Smart to replace Wojciechowski as the Golden Eagles head coach 31 As Smart assumed control of the program many players transferred out including the promising Dawson Garcia Theo John Symir Torrence Jamal Cain and Koby McEwen Additionally D J Carton declared for the draft Smart was able to land four key transfers to aid the team for the 2021 22 season sophomores Olivier Maxence Prosper from Clemson and Tyler Kolek from George Mason along with graduate transfers Darryl Morsell from Maryland and Kur Kuath from Oklahoma Smart was also able to obtain two four star recruits from the class of 2021 Emarion Ellis and David Joplin and three star Keeyan Itejere adding to the four star and three star that Wojciechowski recruited Stevie Mitchell and Kam Jones Marquette finished the season with a surprising 19 13 record including an 11 8 record in the Big East tying for 5th in the conference The team was ranked as high as 22 before a late season skid saw the team lose 5 of their last 9 regular season games They faced Creighton in the 2022 Big East Tournament but lost 63 74 32 The team was selected as a 9 seed in the 2022 NCAA Tournament but lost to 8 seed North Carolina in the round of 64 63 95 33 Marquette was projected to finish 9th in the Big East for the 2022 23 season 34 but surprised many with their best season in a decade Despite Justin Lewis declaring for the draft and Darryl Morsell and Kur Kuath graduating the team has been ranked since January and is currently 25 6 with a 17 3 conference record Smart brought in three stars Sean Jones and Chase Ross as well as Kiwi prospect Ben Gold Marquette won the Big East outright for the first time in program history on February 28 2023 Postseason results EditNCAA tournament Edit Marquette has appeared in the NCAA tournament 35 times Their combined record is 41 35 They were National Champions in 1977 35 Jamil Wilson shooting in 2012 Year Seed Round Opponent Result1955 Round of 24Sweet SixteenElite Eight Miami OH KentuckyIowa W 90 79W 79 71L 81 861959 Round of 23Sweet SixteenRegional 3rd Place Bowling GreenMichigan StateKentucky W 89 71L 69 74L 69 981961 Round of 24 Houston L 61 771968 Round of 23Sweet SixteenRegional 3rd Place Bowling GreenKentuckyEast Tennessee State W 72 71L 89 107W 69 571969 Round of 25Sweet SixteenElite Eight Murray StateKentuckyPurdue W 82 62W 81 74L 73 75OT1971 Round of 25Sweet SixteenRegional 3rd Place Miami OH Ohio StateKentucky W 62 47L 59 60W 91 741972 Round of 25Sweet SixteenRegional 3rd Place OhioKentuckyMinnesota W 73 49L 69 85L 72 771973 Round of 25Sweet SixteenRegional 3rd Place Miami OH IndianaAustin Peay W 77 62L 69 75W 88 731974 Round of 25Sweet SixteenElite EightFinal FourNational Championship OhioVanderbiltMichiganKansasNC State W 85 59W 69 61W 72 70W 64 51L 64 761975 Round of 32 Kentucky L 54 761976 Round of 32Sweet SixteenElite Eight Western KentuckyWestern MichiganIndiana W 79 60W 62 57L 56 651977 Round of 32Sweet SixteenElite EightFinal FourNational Championship CincinnatiKansas StateWake ForestCharlotteNorth Carolina W 66 51W 67 66W 82 68W 51 49W 67 591978 Round of 32 Miami OH L 81 84OT1979 3 Round of 32Sweet Sixteen 6 Pacific2 DePaul W 73 48L 56 621980 9 Round of 48 8 Villanova L 59 771982 7 Round of 48Second Round 10 Evansville2 Missouri W 67 62L 69 731983 9 Round of 48 8 Tennessee L 56 571993 12 First Round 5 Oklahoma State L 62 741994 6 First RoundSecond RoundSweet Sixteen 11 Southwestern Louisiana3 Kentucky2 Duke W 81 59W 75 63L 49 591996 4 First RoundSecond Round 13 Monmouth12 Arkansas W 68 44L 56 651997 7 First Round 10 Providence L 59 812002 5 First Round 12 Tulsa L 69 712003 3 First RoundSecond RoundSweet SixteenElite EightFinal Four 14 Holy Cross6 Missouri2 Pittsburgh1 Kentucky2 Kansas W 72 68W 101 92OTW 77 74W 83 69L 61 942006 7 First Round 10 Alabama L 85 902007 8 First Round 9 Michigan State L 49 612008 6 First RoundSecond Round 11 Kentucky3 Stanford W 74 66L 81 82OT2009 6 First RoundSecond Round 11 Utah State3 Missouri W 58 57L 79 832010 6 First Round 11 Washington L 78 802011 11 First RoundSecond RoundSweet Sixteen 6 Xavier3 Syracuse2 North Carolina W 66 55W 66 62L 63 812012 3 First RoundSecond RoundSweet Sixteen 14 BYU6 Murray State7 Florida W 88 68W 62 53L 58 682013 3 First RoundSecond RoundSweet SixteenElite Eight 14 Davidson6 Butler2 Miami FL 4 Syracuse W 59 58W 74 72W 71 61L 39 552017 10 First Round 7 South Carolina L 73 932019 5 First Round 12 Murray State L 64 832022 9 First Round 8 North Carolina L 63 952023 2 First RoundSecond Round 15 Vermont7 Michigan State W 78 61 L 60 69NIT Edit Marquette has appeared in the National Invitation Tournament 16 times Their combined record is 23 15 In 1970 Marquette was ranked 8th and received an at large bid to the NCAA tournament The NCAA slotted Marquette into the Midwest regional rather than the closer Mideast regional Al McGuire was so displeased about this that Marquette actually turned down the NCAA bid and chose to instead play in the NIT which they won Marquette is the only university to spurn an NCAA tournament invite The NCAA later instituted a rule which forbade an NCAA Division I men s basketball team from spurning an NCAA bid for an NIT bid An antitrust case by the NIT ensued over this issue and the NCAA settled out of court Year Seed Round Opponent Result1956 Round of 12 Seton Hall L 78 961963 QuarterfinalsSemifinals3rd Place Saint LouisProvidenceVillanova W 84 49L 64 70W 66 581967 Round of 14QuarterfinalsSemifinalsFinal TulsaProvidenceMarshallSouthern Illinois W 64 60W 81 80OTW 83 78L 56 711970 Round of 16QuarterfinalsSemifinalsFinal MassachusettsUtahLSUSt John s W 62 55W 83 63W 101 79W 65 531981 Round of 32 Syracuse L 81 881984 Round of 32Round of 16 Iowa StateMichigan W 73 53L 70 831985 Round of 32Round of 16Quarterfinals BradleyCincinnatiIndiana W 77 64W 56 54L 82 942OT1986 Round of 32Round of 16 DrakeSW Missouri State W 79 59L 69 831987 Round of 32 Nebraska L 76 781990 Round of 32 Penn State L 54 571995 Round of 32Round of 16QuarterfinalsSemifinalsFinal AuburnSt BonaventureSouth FloridaPenn StateVirginia Tech W 68 61W 70 61W 67 60OTW 87 79L 64 65OT1998 Round of 32Round of 16Quarterfinals CreightonAuburnMinnesota W 80 68W 75 60L 71 732000 Round of 32 Xavier L 63 672004 Round of 32Round of 16Quarterfinals ToledoBoise StateIowa State W 87 72W 66 53L 69 772005 Round of 32 Western Michigan L 40 542018 2 Round of 32Round of 16Quarterfinals 7 Harvard3 Oregon4 Penn State W 67 60W 101 92 L 80 85NCIT Edit Marquette appeared in the last National Catholic Invitational Tournament in 1952 and won the NCIT championship 36 Year Round Opponent Result1952 QuarterfinalsSemifinalsFinal Iona St Francis Brooklyn Saint Francis PA W 66 59W 79 57W 76 64Coaches EditMain article List of Marquette Golden Eagles men s basketball head coachesAwards and honors EditCoaching Edit National Coach of the Year Eddie Hickey 1959 Al McGuire 1971 1974 Henry Iba Award Eddie Hickey 1959 Shaka Smart 2023 Great Midwest Conference Coach of the Year Kevin O Neill 1993 1994 Conference USA Coach of the Year Tom Crean 2002 2003 Big East Conference Men s Basketball Coach of the Year Shaka Smart 2023 Individual Edit Butch Lee was the school s first NPOY in 1978 Dean Meminger was a first team All American in 1971 National Player of the Year Butch Lee 1978 Consensus All America First Team Dean Meminger 1971 Jim Chones 1972 Butch Lee 1978 Dwyane Wade 2003 Markus Howard 2020 Consensus All America Second Team Earl Tatum 1976 Butch Lee 1977 Sam Worthen 1980 Markus Howard 2019 Great Midwest Conference Player of the Year Jim McIlvaine 1994 Conference USA Player of the Year Dwyane Wade 2003 Big East Conference Player of the Year Jae Crowder 2012 Markus Howard 2019 Tyler Kolek 2023 Big East Conference Men s Basketball Sixth Man of the Year Award Davante Gardner 2013 2014 David Joplin 2023 All Midwestern Collegiate Conference First Team Tony Smith 1990 All Great Midwest Conference First Team Ron Curry 1993 Jim McIlvaine 1994 All Conference USA First Team Brian Wardle 2001 Dwyane Wade 2002 2003 Travis Diener 2004 2005 All Big East Conference First Team Steve Novak 2006 Dominic James 2007 Jerel McNeal 2009 Jae Crowder 2012 Darius Johnson Odom 2012 Henry Ellenson 2016 Markus Howard 2019 2020 Justin Lewis 2022 Tyler Kolek 2023 Retired numbers Edit Main article List of NCAA men s basketball retired numbers Marquette Golden Eagles retired numbersNo Player Position Career3 Dwyane Wade SG 2001 200314 Dean Meminger PG 1968 197115 Butch Lee PG 1974 197820 Maurice Lucas PF 1972 197424 George Thompson PG 1966 196931 Bo Ellis PF 1973 1977Doc Rivers PG 1980 198338 rn 1 Bob Weingart Trainer rn 2 1946 198443 Earl Tatum SG SF 1972 197644 Don Kojis SF 1958 196177 rn 1 Al McGuire Coach rn 3 1964 1977Notes a b Not a legal jersey number in college basketball NCAA rules stipulates both digits must be no higher than five 37 Not a player but an athletic trainer Number 38 honors the number of years he spent with the program 38 The 77 honors the year Marquette won their first national championship 1977 led by McGuire 37 Hall of Fame inductees Edit Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame Tex Winter Contributor Eddie Hickey Coach Al McGuire Coach National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame Tex Winter Coach Eddie Hickey Coach Al McGuire Coach Rick Majerus Coach All time career leaders EditSee also Marquette Golden Eagles men s basketball statistical leaders Lists are accurate through the 2019 20 season 35 Points Edit Rank Points Player Years1 2761 Markus Howard 2016 202 1985 Jerel McNeal 2005 093 1859 Lazar Hayward 2006 104 1773 George Thompson 1966 695 1749 Dominic James 2005 096 1735 Butch Lee 1974 787 1691 Travis Diener 2001 058 1690 Brian Wardle 1997 019 1688 Tony Smith 1986 9010 1673 Wesley Matthews 2005 09Rebounds Edit Rank Rebounds Player Years1 1222 Don Kojis 1958 612 1085 Bo Ellis 1973 773 978 Terry Rand 1953 564 938 Walt Mangham 1957 605 910 Lazar Hayward 2006 106 771 Tom Flynn 1963 667 768 Paul Carbins 1964 678 765 Trevor Powell 1987 919 753 John Glaser 1955 5810 745 Russ Wittberger 1951 55Assists Edit Rank Assists Player Years1 956 Tony Miller 1991 952 632 Dominic James 2005 093 617 Travis Diener 2001 054 550 Aaron Hutchins 1994 985 480 Lloyd Walton 1973 766 469 Tony Smith 1986 907 455 Jerel McNeal 2005 098 449 Tyler Kolek 2021 Present9 435 Junior Cadougan 2009 1310 430 Cordell Henry 1998 02Steals Edit Rank Steals Player Years1 287 Jerel McNeal 2005 092 272 Mike Wilson 1978 823 253 Mandy Johnson 1981 854 238 Dominic James 2005 095 203 Doc Rivers 1980 836 190 Tony Smith 1986 907 188 Michael Sims 1984 888 185 Tony Miller 1991 959 165 Aaron Hutchins 1994 9810 158 Lazar Hayward 2006 10158 Travis Diener 2001 05158 Kerry Trotter 1982 86Blocks Edit Rank Blocks Player Years1 399 Jim McIlvaine 1990 942 175 Amal McCaskill 1991 92 93 963 172 Faisal Abraham 1993 974 153 Luke Fischer 2014 175 151 Theo John 2017 216 145 Chris Otule 2008 147 119 Mike Wilson 1978 828 113 Scott Merritt 2000 049 103 Walter Downing 1984 8610 100 Ousmane Barro 2004 08Players in the NBA EditCurrent Edit Player TeamWesley Matthews Milwaukee BucksJimmy Butler Miami HeatJae Crowder Milwaukee BucksJuan Toscano Anderson Los Angeles LakersDeonte Burton Sacramento KingsSam Hauser Boston CelticsJamal Cain Miami HeatDarryl Morsell Raptors 905Justin Lewis Chicago BullsAll time Edit Player NBA Draft Years Career Highlights and AwardsBill Downey 1944 No NBA 1947 48Gene Berce 1948 Drafted 1949 50Don Kojis 1961 Round 2 Pick 21 1963 75 2 NBA All Star 1968 1969 George Thompson 1969 Round 5 Pick 66 1974 75Joe Thomas 1970 Round 6 Pick 95 1970 71Dean Meminger 1971 Round 1 Pick 16 1971 77 NBA Champion 1973 Larry McNeill 1973 Round 2 Pick 25 1973 79Jim Chones 1973 Round 2 Pick 31 1974 82 NBA Champion 1980 Allie McGuire 1973 Round 3 Pick 49 1973 74Maurice Lucas 1974 Round 1 Pick 14 1976 88 NBA Champion 1977 4 NBA All Star 1977 1979 1983 All NBA Second Team 1978 Earl Tatum 1976 Round 2 Pick 21 1976 80Lloyd Walton 1976 Round 3 Pick 40 1976 81Bo Ellis 1977 Round 1 Pick 17 1977 80Butch Lee 1978 Round 1 Pick 10 1978 80 NBA Champion 1980 Jerome Whitehead 1978 Round 2 Pick 41 1978 89Bernard Toone 1979 Round 2 Pick 37 1979 80Sam Worthen 1980 Round 2 Pick 26 1980 82Mike Wilson 1982 Round 3 Pick 47 1983 85 86 87Doc Rivers 1983 Round 2 Pick 31 1983 96 NBA All Star 1988 Tom Copa 1987 Undrafted 1991 92Tony Smith 1990 Round 2 Pick 51 1990 98 00 01Jim McIlvaine 1994 Round 2 Pick 32 1994 01Amal McCaskill 1996 Round 2 Pick 49 1996 97 01 04Chris Crawford 1997 Round 2 Pick 50 1997 04Dwyane Wade 2003 Round 1 Pick 5 2003 19 3 NBA Champion 2006 2012 2013 13 NBA All Star 2005 2016 2019 2 All NBA First Team 2009 2010 3 All NBA Second Team 2005 2006 2011 3 All NBA Third Team 2007 2012 2013 Travis Diener 2005 Round 2 Pick 38 2005 10Steve Novak 2006 Round 2 Pick 32 2006 17Wesley Matthews 2009 Undrafted 2009 presentJerel McNeal 2009 Undrafted 2014 15Lazar Hayward 2010 Round 1 Pick 30 2010 13Jimmy Butler 2011 Round 1 Pick 30 2011 present 5 NBA All Star 2015 2018 2020 3 All NBA Third Team 2017 2018 2020 Dwight Buycks 2011 Undrafted 2013 15 17 18Jae Crowder 2012 Round 2 Pick 34 2012 presentDarius Johnson Odom 2012 Round 2 Pick 55 2012 14Vander Blue 2013 Undrafted 2013 15 17 18Jamil Wilson 2014 Undrafted 2017 18Juan Toscano Anderson 2015 Undrafted 2019 presentHenry Ellenson 2016 Round 1 Pick 18 2016 2020Deonte Burton 2017 Undrafted 2018 presentMarkus Howard 2020 Undrafted 2020 presentPlayers in international leagues EditNiv Berkowitz born 1986 Israeli basketball player in the Israeli Basketball Premier League Joseph Chartouny Lebanese Basketball League Sandy Cohen born 1995 American Israeli basketball player in the Israeli Basketball Premier League Henry Ellenson Liga ACB Jayce Johnson born 1997 basketball player in the Liga Națională 39 Markus Howard Saski Baskonia Jamil Wilson born 1990 basketball player for Hapoel Jerusalem in the Israeli Basketball Premier LeagueReferences Edit Marquette Athletics Identity Standards PDF Retrieved April 10 2016 Marquette University to join Bucks at new Milwaukee arena 15 August 2017 Retrieved May 22 2018 Kupper Mike March 26 1974 Warrior dream Wolfpacked away Milwaukee Journal p 11 part 2 Hofmann Dale March 26 1974 Wolfpack fouls up MU dream Milwaukee Sentinel p 1 part 2 Kirkpatrick Curry April 1 1974 Nothing could be finer Sports Illustrated p 24 Kent Milton March 31 1991 Smith gets 2 T s Carolina 1 L as Kansas wins 79 73 Baltimore Sun p 15 a b Marquette wins 1st NCAA title 67 to 59 in McGuire s last game Milwaukee Sentinel March 29 1977 Retrieved March 18 2011 Lea Bud March 28 1977 Fortune keeps beaming on surprising Warriors Milwaukee Sentinel Retrieved March 18 2011 Nickel Lori March 30 1999 Marquette Will Name Crean as its New Coach Today Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Journal Communications p 1 Sports Rosiak Todd December 9 2006 Road to Marquette Shaped Crean Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Journal Communications p 1 Sports Nickel Lori October 6 1999 New look MU has Touch of Crean Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Journal Communications p 9 Sports Nickel Lori November 11 1999 Crean s First MU Class Draws Rave Reviews Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Journal Communications p 9 Sports Scoggins Chip March 15 2006 The Big East Surprise Star Tribune Avista Capital Partners p 1C Rosiak Todd November 5 2003 MU Makes Move Official Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Journal Communications p 8 Sports Crean It s Indiana and that is the bottom line Inside Indiana Business April 10 2008 Marquette vs Missouri Game Summary March 22 2009 ESPN ESPN com Retrieved 2022 06 02 Marquette hires Steve Wojciechowski 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 David Cobb 2021 03 19 Marquette fires coach Steve Wojciechowski after seven seasons leading Golden Eagles program CBS Sports com Retrieved 2021 03 19 Marquette names Shaka Smart as next men s basketball coach WISN March 26 2021 13 14 15 a b Marquette Record Book PDF Retrieved January 24 2020 Former Marquette basketball player Grant Wittberger dies Retrieved November 30 2018 a b Marquette University retired No 11 basketball jersey in honor of the Apollo 11 crew Here s the back story Bob Weingart 1980 Marquette M Club Hall of Fame Yeazel Matt Jayce Johnson continues basketball career overseas Marquette Wire Retrieved 2020 11 22 External links EditOfficial website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Marquette Golden Eagles men 27s basketball amp oldid 1146515515, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.