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Xavier Musketeers men's basketball

The Xavier Musketeers men's basketball team represents Xavier University in Cincinnati, Ohio. The school's team currently competes in the Big East Conference, and are coached by Sean Miller.[2] Xavier has appeared in the NCAA tournament 29 times, 16 times in the 18 tournaments between 2001 and 2018. On March 11, 2018, Xavier earned its first ever No. 1 seed in the NCAA Tournament.[3] Xavier is also a two-time winner of the NIT, with their most recent championship coming in 2022.

Xavier Musketeers
UniversityXavier University
Head coachSean Miller (1st season of 2nd stint, 6th overall season)
ConferenceBig East
LocationCincinnati, Ohio
ArenaCintas Center
(Capacity: 10,224)
ColorsNavy blue, white, and gray[1]
     
Uniforms
Home
Away
Alternate
NCAA tournament Elite Eight
2004, 2008, 2017
NCAA tournament Sweet Sixteen
1990, 2004, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2012, 2015, 2017, 2023
NCAA tournament round of 32
1987, 1990, 1991, 1993, 1997, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2012, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2023
NCAA tournament appearances
1961, 1983, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1993, 1995, 1997, 1998, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2023
Conference tournament champions
1983, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1991, 1998, 2002, 2004, 2006
Conference regular season champions
1981, 1986, 1988, 1990, 1991, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1997, 1998, 2002, 2003, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2018

Xavier won four Atlantic 10 tournament championships (1998, 2002, 2004 and 2006). Xavier has won or shared 17 regular season conference championships, while winning 9 conference tournament championships. In addition, they have won one Big East Conference regular season title in 2018. They made the 2023 Big East Championship but lost to the Marquette Golden Eagles.

Xavier has been listed among the top-20 most valuable college basketball teams.[4]

History

The first Xavier basketball game on record was February 20, 1920 at the Fenwick Club in Cincinnati. Coached by Joe Meyer, the Musketeers compiled a 94–52 record during Meyer's's 13-year run as head coach from 1920 to 1933. The Musketeer's success continued under second head coach Clem Crowe. During Crowe's 10 years as Xavier head coach, Xavier compiled a record of 96–78. Crowe's 96 wins as a head coach rank fourth all-time among Xavier head coaches.[5]

Following the 1942–43 season, play was suspended for the following two seasons because of World War II. In 1945, the program resumed under the leadership of head coach Ed Burns. In his one season as head coach, Burns compiled a record of 3–16.

In 1946, Burns was replaced by Lew Hirt. Under Hirt, the Musketeers first postseason appearance was in the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) during the 1948 NAIA National Basketball tournament, the national tournament for small colleges. Xavier finished in 4th place, losing to Hamline University in the national third-place game, 58–59. 1948 was the only year Xavier appeared in the NAIA tournament.[6]

In 1951, Hirt was replaced as head coach by Ned Wulk. Wulk guided the Musketeers to National Invitational Tournament appearances in 1956 and 1957. The 1956 appearance marked Xavier's first NIT win, an 84–80 victory over Saint Louis.[6]

After a loss to Bradley in the 1957 NIT, Wulk was replaced as head coach by Jim McCafferty. McCafferty led the Musketeers back to a third straight NIT in 1958. With wins over Niagara, Bradley, St. Bonaventure and Dayton, Xavier captured the NIT. According to most college basketball historians, the NIT was the elite post season tournament until the NCAA overtook it in the early 1960s. That was the first postseason championship won by any Ohio Division I school.

In 1961, McCafferty led Xavier to their first appearance in the NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament. On March 14, 1961, Xavier fell to Morehead State at the Kentucky State Fairgrounds in Louisville, Kentucky.

McCafferty was replaced as head coach in 1963. He would be followed by Don Ruberg (1963–67), George Krajack (1967–71), Dick Campbell (1971–73) and Tay Baker (1973–79).

In 1979, Xavier was one of the charter members of the Midwestern City Conference (nicknamed the MCC or Midwestern City 6, and now known as the Horizon League), which also included Butler, Evansville, Loyola (Chicago), Oklahoma City, and Oral Roberts. That year also marked the hiring of head coach Bob Staak, who compiled an 88–86 record during his six seasons as head coach, including a return to both the NCAA Tournament and NIT.

Pete Gillen era

1985 once again marked considerable change for the program. In addition to the hiring of head coach Pete Gillen, the Midwestern City Conference altered its name slightly to the Midwestern Collegiate Conference, adding more teams including Detroit, Notre Dame (excluding men's basketball and football), Saint Louis, Marquette and Dayton. The MCC is the predecessor to the present-day Horizon League. Xavier was a member of the MCC from 1979 to 1995 and won eight regular season and six conference tournament championships.

From 1985 to 1994, Gillen compiled a 202–75 record, including the program's first five wins in the NCAA Tournament. The Musketeers advanced to the NCAA Tournament in six of Gillen's nine years at the helm. In 1990, Xavier beat Kansas State and future Big East colleagues Georgetown to advance to the program's first Sweet Sixteen.

Skip Prosser era

Skip Prosser was hired in the spring of 1994 to replace departed head coach Pete Gillen. In his seven seasons as head coach, Prosser compiled a 148–65 record with four NCAA tournament appearances. Prosser's 148 wins are third all-time at Xavier. During his time at Xavier, Prosser continued to build on the momentum Gillen had created. Early in his tenure, Prosser added recruits Gary Lumpkin, Darnell Williams, Lenny Brown and James Posey. Those four players provided the core of Prosser's success during his time at Xavier. After missing the NCAA Tournament in both 1999 and 2000, Xavier returned to the tournament in 2001. Following a loss to Notre Dame in the tournament's first round, Prosser accepted the position of head coach at Wake Forest.

Thad Matta era

Thad Matta left alma mater Butler to replace Skip Prosser as Xavier's head coach in 2001. Hired with only one year of head coaching experience, Matta inherited a talented core of players in David West, Lionel Chalmers, and Romain Sato. During his three years at the helm, Matta compiled a record of 78–23, with three straight NCAA tournament appearances and Xavier's first appearance in the NCAA Tournament Elite Eight. Matta won two Atlantic 10 regular-season championships in his first two years behind the play of National Player of the Year David West. Following Matta's second year, West was drafted in the first round of the 2003 NBA draft by the New Orleans Hornets. With West's departure, seniors Lionel Chalmers, Romain Sato and Anthony Myles became the team's cornerstone for the 2003–04 season. After a 10–9 start, Xavier closed the season by winning 16 of its last 18 games. "The Run", as it became known, left Xavier 3 points shy of making the program's first NCAA Final Four appearance.

Sean Miller era

The summer following Xavier's first Elite Eight appearance, Matta was offered and accepted the position of head men's basketball coach at Ohio State. Xavier Athletic Director, Dawn Rogers, quickly promoted Xavier Associate Head Coach Sean Miller.[7] From 2004 to 2009, Miller compiled a record of 120–47. Advancing to the NCAA Tournament in four of his five seasons as head coach, Miller led the Musketeers to another Elite Eight appearance in 2008 and a Sweet Sixteen appearance in 2009. During Miller's tenure as head coach, Xavier continued to shed the "mid-major" label and separate itself as one of the country's premier college basketball programs.[8] Miller's NCAA Tournament success, aggressive non-conference scheduling and national recruiting allowed Xavier to be recognized with the likes of Memphis and Gonzaga as one of the premier basketball programs.[9] After turning away interest from many programs, Sean Miller left Xavier to become the head basketball coach at Arizona.

Chris Mack era

On April 15, 2009, Xavier's Athletic Director named Xavier Assistant Coach Chris Mack as the 17th head basketball coach in the program's history.[10] A Cincinnati native and Xavier graduate, Mack compiled a record of 26–9 in his first year as head coach. Behind the play of 2010 NBA draft pick Jordan Crawford, Xavier advanced to the NCAA Tournament's Sweet Sixteen for a third straight season. Chris Mack, the 2009–10 Basketball Times Rookie Coach of the Year,[11] was the first Xavier head coach to lead the Musketeers to the Sweet Sixteen in his first season at the helm. With a 14–2 record in Atlantic 10 play, Xavier also won a share of their fourth straight conference championship.

Finishing with a 24–8 overall record including a 15–1 record in the A-10, Mack lead the Musketeers to a fifth consecutive A-10 title and another NCAA tournament berth in 2010–11.

In a 2011–12 season filled with highs and lows. The early season was marred by the Crosstown Shootout brawl in their yearly rivalry game against Cincinnati. The Musketeers had reached as high as #8 in the AP Poll before numerous suspensions from the Crosstown Shootout brawl lead to the team losing 5 of their next 6 games. Xavier rebounded from this ugly incident and reached Mack's second Sweet Sixteen.

In 2013, Xavier joined the newly reconstituted Big East Conference following Big East conference realignment. Xavier became one of the new members of the new 10-team Big East with the "Catholic 7" (DePaul, Georgetown, Marquette, Providence, Seton Hall, St. John's, and Villanova) plus Butler and Creighton. Xavier finished their first season in the Big East with a record of 21–13, 10–8 to finish Big East play in a tie for third place. They received a bid to the NCAA tournament, but lost in the First Round (First Four).

The 2014–15 season also saw a return to the Sweet Sixteen for the Musketeers. From 2008 to 2015, Xavier made five Sweet Sixteens, tied for third in the nation over that span behind only Louisville and Michigan State. The 2015–16 team finished second in the Big East to Villanova, Xavier's highest finish in the Big East, and advanced to the Second Round of the NCAA tournament.[12]

In 2017, Mack led Xavier to a 24–14 season and got the 11th seed in the West and advanced to the Elite Eight by defeating 6th seed Maryland, 3rd seed Florida State, and 2nd seed Arizona. In the Elite Eight they lost to Gonzaga.

Mack's 215 wins concluding the 2017–18 season placed him first in all-time wins in Xavier history.

Travis Steele era

On March 27, 2018, Mack was named the head coach at the University of Louisville.[13] Four days after Mack left Xavier for Louisville, longtime Xavier assistant coach Travis Steele was named head coach of the Musketeers.[14] Despite success against rival Cincinnati, Steele was criticized for his inability to lead the Musketeers to the NCAA Tournament. After missing the tournament for the fourth consecutive year, Steele was fired on March 16, 2022.

2nd Sean Miller era

Only three days after the firing of Travis Steele, Xavier hired former coach Sean Miller as his replacement.[15] During the period in between Steele’s exit and Miller’s full installation as head coach, Jonas Hayes served as interim. Hayes would lead the Musketeers to their second-ever NIT Championship.

In his first season back at Xavier, Miller led the team to a 27-10 record, earning a berth in the NCAA Tournament as a 3 seed, where they would be eliminated in the Sweet 16.

Home courts

Cintas Center

Xavier currently plays its home games at the Cintas Center, a 10,224 seat multi-purpose arena that opened in 2000. The Cintas Center is the fifth different home site in program history.

At Cintas Center, Xavier enjoys one of the nation's best home court advantages. As of April 2018 the Musketeers have compiled a 258–41 (an .863 winning percentage) record since moving to its on-campus home in 2000. Xavier enjoyed a 15–0 mark at home during the 2009–10, its only perfect record for a season at Cintas Center. During the 2017–2018 season, the Musketeers set a Cintas Center record with 17 home victories. The building was named the #3 "Toughest Place to Play" on EA Sports' NCAA Basketball '10. In August 2018 the NCAA named it as the 8th toughest home court in college basketball.[16]

Through the 2018–2019 season, Cintas Center has hosted 3,011,308 fans for Xavier home games and the Musketeers have averaged 10,071 fans (better than 98% capacity) per game during that time. The 2017–2018 season marked the highest average attendance in Cintas Center history with an average 10,475 (over 102% capacity) Musketeer fans at each home game.

Season Record Pct. Games Attendance Average Sellouts
2000–01 13–1 .929 14 141,011[17] 10,072 12
2001–02 13–1 .929 14 143,129[18] 10,224 13
2002–03 14–1 .933 15 152,664[19] 10,178 14
2003–04 13–3 .813 16 158,432[20] 9,902 8
2004–05 12–4 .750 16 178,259[21] 9,903 7
2005–06 11–4 .733 15 146,615[22] 9,774 4
2006–07 14–1 .933 15 148,650[23] 9,910 5
2007–08 16–1 .941 17 170,133[24] 10,008 9
2008–09 14–1 .933 15 151,456[25] 10,097 11
2009–10 15–0 1.000 15 151,843[26] 10,123 7
2010–11 14–1 .933 15 151,475[27] 10,098 9
2011–12 13–3 .813 16 162,474[28] 10,155 10
2012–13 11–4 .733 15 146,710[29] 9,781 1
2013–14 15–2 .882 17 168,127[30] 9,890 7
2014–15 13–3 .813 16 159,974[31] 9,998 9
2015–16 15–1 .938 16 164,501[32] 10,281 11
2016–17 12–4 .750 16 164,520[33] 10,282 12
2017–18 17–1 .944 18 188,554[34] 10,475 18
2018–19 13–5 .722 18 180,611[35] 10,034 13
Total 258–41 .863 299 3,011,308 10,071 180

Cincinnati Gardens

The Musketeers played their final season at Cincinnati Gardens in 1999–2000. Located 2 miles from the Xavier campus, the Gardens was the home court for the Xavier Musketeers since 1983–84 season.

The Xavier men's team played all of its regular season games off campus at the Cincinnati Gardens for 17 years, beginning with the 1983–84 season and ending with an NIT game against Marquette in the 1999–2000 season. The only exception was a game against Florida International that was played at Schmidt Fieldhouse on January 9, 1988.[36]

Xavier compiled an impressive 215–25 (.896) record after moving to the Gardens in the 1983–84 season, including 14–1 in its final season.

Schmidt Fieldhouse

Prior to moving to the Cincinnati Gardens in the 1983–84 season, Xavier called Schmidt Fieldhouse home. Located on the west side of the Xavier Campus, Xavier compiled an impressive 326–129 (.716) record at the Fieldhouse.[37]

Until opening Cintas Center, the men's basketball team had only played one regular season game on campus since early in the 1983–84 season. Xavier scored a school-record point total in a 125–84 win over Florida International on Saturday, January 9, 1988.

Other home courts

The Musketeers have also used Riverfront Coliseum and the Fenwick Club.

Postseason

NCAA tournament results

The Musketeers have appeared in the NCAA tournament 29 times. Their combined record is 30–29.[38]

Year Seed Round Opponent Result
1961 First Round Morehead State L 66–71
1983 No. 12 Preliminary Round No. 12 Alcorn State L 75–81
1986 No. 12 First Round No. 5 Alabama L 80–97
1987 No. 13 First Round
Second Round
No. 4 Missouri
No. 5 Duke
W 70–69
L 60–65
1988 No. 11 First Round No. 6 Kansas L 72–85
1989 No. 14 First Round No. 3 Michigan L 87–92
1990 No. 6 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
No. 11 Kansas State
No. 3 Georgetown
No. 10 Texas
W 87–79
W 74–71
L 89–102
1991 No. 14 First Round
Second Round
No. 3 Nebraska
No. 11 Connecticut
W 89–84
L 50–66
1993 No. 9 First Round
Second Round
No. 8 New Orleans
No. 1 Indiana
W 73–55
L 70–73
1995 No. 11 First Round No. 6 Georgetown L 63–68
1997 No. 7 First Round
Second Round
No. 10 Vanderbilt
No. 2 UCLA
W 80–68
L 83–96
1998 No. 6 First Round No. 11 Washington L 68–69
2001 No. 11 First Round No. 6 Notre Dame L 71–83
2002 No. 7 First Round
Second Round
No. 10 Hawaii
No. 2 Oklahoma
W 70–58
L 65–78
2003 No. 3 First Round
Second Round
No. 14 Troy State
No. 6 Maryland
W 71–59
L 64–77
2004 No. 7 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
No. 10 Louisville
No. 2 Mississippi State
No. 3 Texas
No. 1 Duke
W 80–70
W 89–74
W 79–71
L 63–66
2006 No. 14 First Round No. 3 Gonzaga L 75–79
2007 No. 9 First Round
Second Round
No. 8 BYU
No. 1 Ohio State
W 79–77
L 71–78 OT
2008 No. 3 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
No. 14 Georgia
No. 6 Purdue
No. 7 West Virginia
No. 1 UCLA
W 73–61
W 85–78
W 79–75 OT
L 57–76
2009 No. 4 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
No. 13 Portland State
No. 12 Wisconsin
No. 1 Pittsburgh
W 77–59
W 60–49
L 55–60
2010 No. 6 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
No. 11 Minnesota
No. 3 Pittsburgh
No. 2 Kansas State
W 65–54
W 71–68
L 96–101 2OT
2011 No. 6 Second Round No. 11 Marquette L 55–66
2012 No. 10 Second Round
Third Round
Sweet Sixteen
No. 7 Notre Dame
No. 15 Lehigh
No. 3 Baylor
W 67–63
W 70–58
L 70–75
2014 No. 12 First Four No. 12 NC State L 59–74
2015 No. 6 Second Round
Third Round
Sweet Sixteen
No. 11 Ole Miss
No. 14 Georgia State
No. 2 Arizona
W 76–57
W 75–67
L 60–68
2016 No. 2 First Round
Second Round
No. 15 Weber State
No. 7 Wisconsin
W 71–53
L 63–66
2017 No. 11 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
No. 6 Maryland
No. 3 Florida State
No. 2 Arizona
No. 1 Gonzaga
W 76–65
W 91–66
W 73–71
L 59–83
2018 No. 1 First Round
Second Round
No. 16 Texas Southern
No. 9 Florida State
W 102–83
L 70–75
2023 No. 3 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
No. 14 Kennesaw State
No. 11 Pittsburgh
No. 2 Texas
W 72-67
W 84-73
L 71-83

*Following the introduction of the "First Four" round in 2011, the Round of 64 and Round of 32 were referred to as the Second Round and Third Round, respectively, from 2011 to 2015. Then from 2016 forward, the Round of 64 and Round of 32 are called the First and Second Rounds, as they were prior to 2011.

NCAA Tournament seeding history

The NCAA began seeding the tournament with the 1979 edition.

Years '83 '86 '87 '88 '89 '90 '91 '93 '95 '97 '98 '01 '02 '03 '04 '06 '07 '08 '09 '10 '11 '12 '14 '15 '16 '17 '18 '23
Seeds 12 12 13 11 14 6 14 9 11 7 6 11 7 3 7 14 9 3 4 6 6 10 12 6 2 11 1 3

NIT results

The Musketeers have appeared in the National Invitation Tournament (NIT) nine times. Their combined record is 21–7. They were NIT Champions in 1958 and 2022.

Year Round Opponent Result
1956 First Round
Quarterfinals
Saint Louis
Dayton
W 84–80
L 68–72
1957 First Round
Quarterfinals
Seton Hall
Bradley
W 85–79
L 81–116
1958 First Round
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Final
Niagara
Bradley
St. Bonaventure
Dayton
W 95–86
W 72–62
W 72–53
W 78–74
1984 First Round
Second Round
Quarterfinals
Ohio State
Nebraska
Michigan
W 60–57
W 58–57
L 62–63
1994 First Round
Second Round
Quarterfinals
Miami (OH)
Northwestern
Villanova
W 80–68
W 83–79
L 74–76
1999 First Round
Second Round
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
3rd Place Game
Toledo
Wake Forest
Princeton
Clemson
Oregon
W 86–84
W 87–76
W 65–58
L 76–79
W 106–75
2000 First Round
Second Round
Marquette
Notre Dame
W 67–63
L 64–76
2019 First Round
Second Round
Toledo
Texas
W 78–64
L 76–78OT
2022 First Round
Second Round
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Final
Cleveland State
Florida
Vanderbilt
St. Bonaventure
Texas A&M
W 72–68
W 72–56
W 75–73
W 84–77
W 73–72

NAIA tournament results

The Musketeers have appeared in the NAIA tournament one time. Their record is 3–2.

Year Round Opponent Result
1948 First Round
Second Round
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
3rd Place Game
Northwestern State
New Britain State
Mankato State
Louisville
Hamline
W 67–43
W 57–35
W 62–50
L 49–56
L 58–59

Musketeers in the NBA

The following table shows Xavier players selected in the NBA or ABA draft or appearing on an NBA or ABA roster.

Draft
Year
Player Team Round Pick
(Overall)
1949 Mal McMullen Baltimore 6 5 (57)
1952 Gene Smith Minneapolis 15 1 (104)
1953 Hank Budde Minneapolis 9 9 (79)
1954 Bob Heim Baltimore 6 1 (46)
1956 Dave Piontek Rochester 3 1 (16)
1957 Jim Boothe Cincinnati 12 1 (80)
1958 Frank Tartaton Cincinnati 11 2 (74)
1959 Hank Stein St. Louis 3 7 (21)
Joe Viviano Cincinnati 10 1 (65)
1962 Jack Thobe Cincinnati 4 6 (33)
Bill Kirvin Philadelphia [a] 8 7 (67)
Frank Pinchback Cincinnati 11 4 (88)
1964 Bob Pelkington Philadelphia 8 4 (65)
Joe Geiger Cincinnati 8 8 (69)
1966 Brian Williams St. Louis 8 4 (72)
1968 Bob Quick Baltimore (NBA) 2 4 (18)
Indiana (ABA) 4 6 (39)
1969 Luther Rackley Cincinnati (NBA) 3 8 (37)
Minnesota (ABA) 1 4 (4)
1973 Bob Fullerton Buffalo (NBA) 9 3 (140)
San Antonio (ABA) 3 Senior 5 (41)
Conny Warren Philadelphia (NBA) 12 1 (175)
Denver (ABA) 9 Supp. 2 (188)
1979 Nick Daniels Kansas City 7 17 (145)
1983 Tony Hicks Milwaukee 7 18 (157)
Jon Hanley Cleveland 10 2 (208)
1984 Vic Fleming Portland 2 2 (26)
Jeff Jenkins Seattle 4 13 (83)
John Shimko Cleveland 9 3 (187)
Dexter Bailey Denver 10 9 (215)
1989 Stan Kimbrough Detroit undrafted
1990 Tyrone Hill Golden State 1 11 (11)
Derek Strong Philadelphia 2 20 (47)
1993 Aaron Williams Utah undrafted
1994 Brian Grant Sacramento 1 8 (8)
1995 Michael Hawkins Boston undrafted
Larry Sykes Boston undrafted
1998 Torraye Braggs Utah 2 28 (57)
1999 James Posey Denver 1 18 (18)
2003 David West New Orleans 1 18 (18)
2004 Lionel Chalmers Los Angeles Clippers 2 4 (33)
David Young[b] Seattle 2 12 (41)
Romain Sato San Antonio 2 23 (52)
2009 Derrick Brown Charlotte 2 10 (40)
2010 Jordan Crawford New Jersey 1 27 (27)
2014 Semaj Christon Miami 2 25 (55)
2017 Edmond Sumner New Orleans 2 22 (52)
2018 J. P. Macura Charlotte undrafted
Trevon Bluiett[c] New Orleans undrafted
2020 Naji Marshall New Orleans undrafted
  Active players
For undrafted players, the team listed is the one with which the player made his NBA debut.
The NBA debut of undrafted players may have occurred later than the draft year shown.
References:[40][41][42][43][44][45][46][47][48][49][50][51]

Musketeers overseas

As of April 7, 2022, 30 former Xavier players are currently playing professionally overseas.[52]

Last
Year at
Xavier
Player Home Town Country
2021 Bryan Griffin Pomona, New York  
2020 Tyrique Jones Hartford, Connecticut  
2020 Joe Clark Floop, Massachusetts  
2020 Quentin Goodin Campbellsville, Kentucky  
2019 Kyle Kastlin Marietta, Georgia  
2018 Trevon Bluiett Indianapolis, Indiana  
2018 J. P. Macura Lakeville, Minnesota  
2018 Kaiser Gates Atlanta, Georgia  
2018 Kerem Kanter Gemlik, Turkey  
2018 Sean O'Mara Lisle, Illinois  
2016 Jalen Reynolds Detroit, Michigan  
2016 Remy Abell Louisville, Kentucky  
2016 James Farr Evanston, Illinois  
2016[d] Larry Austin Springfield, Illinois  
2015 Matt Stainbrook Lakewood, Ohio  
2015 Dee Davis Bloomington, Indiana  
2015[e] Brandon Randolph Inglewood, California  
2014 Semaj Christon Cincinnati, Ohio  
2014[f] Justin Martin Indianapolis, Indiana  
2014 Isaiah Philmore Bel Air, Maryland  
2013 Travis Taylor Union, New Jersey  
2012[g] Mark Lyons Albany, New York  
2012 Kenny Frease Massillon, Ohio  
2012 Tu Holloway Hempstead, New York  
2011 Jamel McLean Hampton, Virginia  
2010 Jason Love Philadelphia, Pennsylvania  
2009 B.J. Raymond Toledo, Ohio  
2008 Josh Duncan Cincinnati, Ohio  
2008 Charles Bronson Philadelphia, Pennsylvania  
2007 Justin Cage Indianapolis, Indiana  

Romain Sato, 2010 Italian League MVP, won two straight Italian League Championships in 2009 and 2010.[53] More recently, Justin Doellman was named ACB MVP in 2014 while with Valencia.[54] Mark Lyons was the top scorer in the Israel Basketball Premier League in both 2015 and 2017.[55][56] Zach Hankins plays for Hapoel Jerusalem of the Israeli Basketball Premier League.

Awards

All-Americans

Xavier has a total of 20 players who have won All-American honors during their careers with the program.

Conference Player of the Year

Year Player Conference
1985–86
1987–88
Byron Larkin Midwestern Collegiate Conference
1989–90 Tyrone Hill Midwestern Collegiate Conference
1992–93
1993–94
Brian Grant Midwestern Collegiate Conference
2000–01
2001–02
2002–03
David West Atlantic 10
2010–11 Tu Holloway Atlantic 10

Retired numbers

Xavier has retired jersey numbers for four players in their history.

Xavier Musketeers retired numbers
No. Player Pos. Career No. ret. Ref.
23 Byron Larkin SG 1984–1988 1997 [57][58]
30 David West PF 1999–2003 2003 [59]
33 Brian Grant PF / C 1990–1994 2011 [60]
42 Tyrone Hill PF 1986–1990 1997 [61]

Former university President Fr. James Hoff has also had a "jersey" retired in memory of all that he contributed to the school and basketball program. This was unveiled before a 2004 meeting with Creighton, where Hoff was vice president of university relations and President of the Creighton Foundation. Fr. Hoff died from cancer in 2004.

Coaching history

Name (Alma Mater) Seasons Games Wins Losses Win % NCAA Tour NIT Tour MCC Tour A-10 Tour Big East Tour
Jonas Hayes (Georgia) 1 (2022) 4 4 0 1.000 0-0 4-0 0-0 0-0 0-0
Pete Gillen (Fairfield) 9 (1985–94) 277 202 75 .729 5–7 2–1 17–4 0–0 0–0
Chris Mack (Xavier) 9 (2009–18) 312 215 97 .694 11–8 0–0 0–0 3–4 7–5
Skip Prosser (Merchant Marine Acad.) 7 (1994–01) 213 148 65 .695 1–4 5–2 0–1 6–5 0–0
Sean Miller (Pittsburgh) 6 (2004–09)(2022–) 204 147 57 .721 8–5 0–0 0–0 8–4 2–1
Cameron Crowe (Notre Dame) 10 (1933–43) 174 96 78 .552 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0
Joe Meyer (Xavier) 13 (1920–33) 146 94 52 .618 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0
Jim McCafferty (Loyola, La.) 6 (1957–63) 162 91 71 .562 0–1 4–0 0–0 0–0 0–0
Ned Wulk (LaCrosse) 6 (1951–57) 159 89 70 .560 0–0 2–2 0–0 0–0 0–0
Bob Staak (Connecticut) 6 (1979–85) 174 88 86 .506 0–1 2–1 7–5 0–0 0–0
Thad Matta (Butler) 3 (2001–04) 101 78 23 .772 5–3 0–0 0–0 8–1 0–0
Lew Hirt (DePauw) 5 (1946–51) 137 76 61 .555 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0
Tay Baker (Cincinnati) 6 (1973–79) 159 70 89 .440 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0
Don Ruberg (Xavier) 4 (1963–67) 103 52 51 .505 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0
George Krajack (Clemson) 4 (1967–71) 103 34 69 .330 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0
Dick Campbell (Furman) 2 (1971–73) 52 15 37 .288 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0
Ed Burns (Xavier) 1 (1945–46) 19 3 16 .158 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0
Harry Gilligan (Xavier) 1 (1919–20) 1 0 1 .000 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0
Travis Steele (Butler) 4 (2018–22) 120 70 50 .583 0–0 2–1 0–0 0–0 1–4
Chart Data[37]

Basketball and academics

NCAA academic progress rate

In May 2010, the NCAA honored a school-record tying eight Xavier University athletic programs with Public Recognition Awards for academic excellence.[62] The award is given to the top-ten percent of teams in each sport based on the NCAA Academic Progress Rate. The APR is a term-by-term progress for every student-athlete in Division I athletics. Out of the 65 teams to make the 2010 NCAA tournament Xavier had the 11th highest Academic Progress Rate.[63]

Graduation

Since 1986, Xavier has graduated every men's basketball player that has exhausted his eligibility.[63]

Sister Rose Ann Fleming

During the 2010 NCAA tournament Xavier's Academic Advisor Sister Rose Ann Fleming garnered considerable national attention for the role she has played in the program's academic success. Fleming was featured in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal and on both ABC's Good Morning America and NBC Nightly News. Fleming has over 40 years of experience as an educator. She was president of Cincinnati's Summit Country Day School from 1975 to 1976 and president of Trinity College in Washington, D.C. from 1976 to 1982.[64] In addition to the national recognition she received during the 2010 NCAA tournament she has also been featured in Reader's Digest, Woman's Day, was voted one of the Cincinnati Enquirer's Women of the Year, and was the subject of a promotional spot on The Family Channel.[64]

Rivalries

Crosstown Shootout

Xavier's main rival is the University of Cincinnati. The two schools play annually in the Skyline Chili Crosstown Shootout. Xavier's record in the Shootout is 39–51.

Other rivals

Xavier and Dayton play for the Blackburn/McCafferty Trophy, named for former coaches at the respective universities. Dayton has not beaten Xavier in Cincinnati since 1981.[65] Dayton maintains a lead in the overall series 85–76. However, Xavier won nine straight games against Dayton between March 1991 and December 1994, and went 24–8 between the 2001–02 and 2015–16 seasons.[66][67]

Xavier also maintains a heated rivalry with Butler, with the Musketeers leading the overall series, 44–24. Xavier won four of the six games between the teams during the 2020–21 and 2021–22 seasons, sweeping the four regular-season matchups and losing each year to Butler in the Big East tournament.[68]

Between the 2009–10 and 2019–20 seasons, Xavier played Wake Forest seven times in a series known as the Skip Prosser Classic, named for the former coach of both schools.[69] Xavier won four of the seven games played.[70]

Notes

  1. ^ The Philadelphia Warriors relocated following the 1962 NBA draft and played the 1962–63 season as the San Francisco Warriors.
  2. ^ Young transferred from Xavier to North Carolina Central after the 2002–03 season.
  3. ^ Bluiett was not selected in the 2018 NBA draft. He appeared in the 2018 NBA Summer League with the New Orleans Pelicans and made the Pelicans' opening-day regular-season roster but did not appear in an NBA regular-season game.[39] He also appeared in the 2021 NBA Summer League with the Cleveland Cavaliers.
  4. ^ Austin transferred from Xavier to Vanderbilt in 2016, and completed his NCAA eligibility with Central Michigan in the 2017–18 season.
  5. ^ Randolph transferred from Xavier to Utah Valley in 2015, and completed his NCAA eligibility in 2018
  6. ^ Martin transferred from Xavier to Southern Methodist in 2014, and completed his NCAA eligibility in 2015
  7. ^ Lyons transferred from Xavier to Arizona in 2012, and completed his NCAA eligibility in 2013

References

  1. ^ Xavier University: Brand and Graphic Identity Guide (PDF). Retrieved September 3, 2019.
  2. ^ Brennan, Eamonn (August 22, 2012). "50 in 50 rankings". ESPN. Retrieved October 13, 2012.
  3. ^ ESPN Stats & Info (March 12, 2018). "Xavier is making its first appearance as a No. 1 seed looking for its first Final Four appearance. The Musketeers have won 27 NCAA Tournament games, the most all-time by a school never to reach the Final Four. For reference, their rival, Cincinnati, reached the Championship game long before the internet was invented". Retrieved March 13, 2018.
  4. ^ Schwartz, Peter J. (March 16, 2009). "The Most Valuable College Basketball Teams". forbes.com. Retrieved March 16, 2009.
  5. ^ 2010 Xavier Basketball Media Guide. Xavier Athletic Department, 2010, p. 196.
  6. ^ a b 2010 Xavier Basketball Media Guide. Xavier Athletic Department, 2010, p. 183.
  7. ^ "Sean Miller is Xavier's New Head Basketball Coach". goxavier.com. Retrieved July 8, 2004.
  8. ^ "Xavier Playing Above Mid Major Status". espn.com. Retrieved March 21, 2010.
  9. ^ "Xavier, Memphis top non-BCS schools". espn.com. Retrieved November 18, 2010.
  10. ^ "Chris Mack Introduced As Xavier's New Men's Basketball Head Coach". goxavier.com. Retrieved April 14, 2008.
  11. ^ "Chris Mack Honored As Basketball Times Rookie Coach Of The Year". goxavier.com. Retrieved April 8, 2010.
  12. ^ "Wisconsin vs. Xavier – Game Recap – March 20, 2016 – ESPN". ESPN.com. Retrieved April 11, 2016.
  13. ^ "Sources: Louisville, Mack agree to 7-year deal". March 27, 2018. Retrieved March 27, 2018.
  14. ^ Borzello, Jeff (March 31, 2018). "Musketeers promote longtime assistant Travis Steele to head coach". ESPN.com. Retrieved March 31, 2018.
  15. ^ Eisen, Tom; Xavier Athletic Communications (March 19, 2022). "Sean Miller Returns As Head Men's Basketball Coach at Xavier University" (Press release). Xavier Musketeers. Retrieved March 19, 2022.
  16. ^ "These are the toughest home courts in college basketball | NCAA.com". NCAA.com. August 14, 2018. Retrieved November 9, 2018.
  17. ^ "2001 National College Basketball Attendance" (PDF). NCAA.org. Retrieved March 20, 2023.
  18. ^ "2002 National College Basketball Attendance" (PDF). NCAA.org. Retrieved March 20, 2023.
  19. ^ "2003 National College Basketball Attendance" (PDF). NCAA.org. Retrieved March 20, 2023.
  20. ^ "2004 National College Basketball Attendance" (PDF). NCAA.org. Retrieved March 20, 2023.
  21. ^ "2005 National College Basketball Attendance" (PDF). NCAA.org. Retrieved March 20, 2023.
  22. ^ "2006 National College Basketball Attendance" (PDF). NCAA.org. Retrieved March 20, 2023.
  23. ^ "2007 National College Basketball Attendance" (PDF). NCAA.org. Retrieved March 20, 2023.
  24. ^ "2008 National College Basketball Attendance" (PDF). NCAA.org. Retrieved March 20, 2023.
  25. ^ "2009 National College Basketball Attendance" (PDF). NCAA.org. Retrieved March 20, 2023.
  26. ^ "2010 National College Basketball Attendance" (PDF). NCAA.org. Retrieved March 20, 2023.
  27. ^ "2011 National College Basketball Attendance" (PDF). NCAA.org. Retrieved March 20, 2023.
  28. ^ "2012 National College Basketball Attendance" (PDF). NCAA.org. Retrieved March 20, 2023.
  29. ^ "2013 National College Basketball Attendance" (PDF). NCAA.org. Retrieved March 20, 2023.
  30. ^ "2014 National College Basketball Attendance" (PDF). NCAA.org. Retrieved March 20, 2023.
  31. ^ "2015 National College Basketball Attendance" (PDF). NCAA.org. Retrieved March 20, 2023.
  32. ^ "2016 National College Basketball Attendance" (PDF). NCAA.org. Retrieved March 20, 2023.
  33. ^ "2017 National College Basketball Attendance" (PDF). NCAA.org. Retrieved March 20, 2023.
  34. ^ "2018 National College Basketball Attendance" (PDF). NCAA.org. Retrieved March 20, 2023.
  35. ^ "2019 National College Basketball Attendance" (PDF). NCAA.org. Retrieved March 20, 2023.
  36. ^ 2010 Xavier Basketball Media Guide. Xavier Athletic Department, 2010, p. 146.
  37. ^ a b 2010 Xavier Basketball Media Guide. Xavier Athletic Department, 2010, p. 144.
  38. ^ . College Basketball at Sports-Reference.com. Archived from the original on March 19, 2016. Retrieved March 31, 2016.
  39. ^ "Pelicans' Trevon Bluiett: Sent to G-League". CBS Sports. October 22, 2018. Retrieved March 30, 2022.
  40. ^ 2010 Xavier Basketball Media Guide. Xavier Athletic Department, 2010, p. 154.
  41. ^ "Xavier NBA Draft Selections". Real GM. Retrieved April 7, 2022.
  42. ^ . databaseBasketball.com. Archived from the original on July 16, 2014. Retrieved April 7, 2022.
  43. ^ . databaseBasketball.com. Archived from the original on July 16, 2014. Retrieved April 7, 2022.
  44. ^ . databaseBasketball.com. Archived from the original on July 16, 2014. Retrieved April 7, 2022.
  45. ^ "Stan Kimbrough | G | #21". Real GM. Retrieved April 7, 2022.
  46. ^ "Aaron Williams | F-C | #34". Real GM. Retrieved April 7, 2022.
  47. ^ "Michael Hawkins | G | #17". Real GM. Retrieved April 7, 2022.
  48. ^ "Larry Sykes | PF". Real GM. Retrieved April 7, 2022.
  49. ^ "J.P. Macura | SG | #55". Real GM. Retrieved April 7, 2022.
  50. ^ "Trevon Bluiett | SG | #5". Real GM. Retrieved April 7, 2022.
  51. ^ "Pelicans 2021-22 Roster". NBA. Retrieved April 7, 2022.
  52. ^ "Former Xavier Players Currently Playing Professionally". Real GM. Retrieved April 7, 2022.
  53. ^ 2010 Xavier Basketball Media Guide. Xavier Athletic Department, 2010, p. 42.
  54. ^ [Justin Doellman, Orange MVP of the Liga Endesa 2013–14]. acb.com (in Spanish). May 27, 2014. Archived from the original on February 14, 2018. Retrieved April 7, 2022.
  55. ^ "Statistics - Leaders, Regular Season, 2014-15 Season". Israel Basketball Super League. Retrieved April 7, 2022.
  56. ^ "Statistics - Leaders, Regular Season, 2016-17 Season". Israel Basketball Super League. Retrieved April 7, 2022.
  57. ^ BYRON K. LARKIN bio at Goxavier.com
  58. ^ Larkin bio at Ohio HoF
  59. ^ DAVID M. WEST bio at Goxavier.com
  60. ^ Brian Grant's Jersey to be Retired During Saturday's Game Against Temple, 18 Jan 2011
  61. ^ TYRONE HILL bio at Goxavier.com
  62. ^ "NCAA Honors Eight Xavier Programs For Being In The Top 10 Percent Of The Latest APR". goxavier.com. Retrieved May 12, 2010.
  63. ^ a b Branch, John (March 15, 2010). "At Xavier, Nun Works Out Players' Academic Side". The New York Times. Retrieved March 15, 2010.
  64. ^ a b "Sister Rose Ann Fleming, Xavier Athletics". goxavier.com. Retrieved March 24, 2010.
  65. ^ "Dayton vs. Xavier – Game Recap – January 30, 2013 – ESPN". ESPN.com. Retrieved March 27, 2018.
  66. ^ Nagel, Kyle. "Dayton-Xavier Basketball Series in UD's Modern Era". Dayton Daily News. Retrieved April 7, 2022.
  67. ^ "Men's Basketball History vs University of Dayton from Feb 19, 2005 - Nov 29, 2015". goxavier.com. Xavier University. Retrieved April 7, 2022.
  68. ^ "From 1949-50 to 2021-22, for Xavier, against Butler, Sorted by Descending Date". sports-reference.com. Retrieved April 7, 2022.
  69. ^ . Archived from the original on July 24, 2011. Retrieved December 6, 2010.
  70. ^ "Men's Basketball History vs Wake Forest University from Jan 3, 2010 - Dec 14, 2019". goxavier.com. Xavier University. Retrieved April 7, 2022.

External links

  • Official website  

xavier, musketeers, basketball, this, article, uses, bare, urls, which, uninformative, vulnerable, link, please, consider, converting, them, full, citations, ensure, article, remains, verifiable, maintains, consistent, citation, style, several, templates, tool. This article uses bare URLs which are uninformative and vulnerable to link rot Please consider converting them to full citations to ensure the article remains verifiable and maintains a consistent citation style Several templates and tools are available to assist in formatting such as Reflinks documentation reFill documentation and Citation bot documentation June 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Xavier Musketeers men s basketball team represents Xavier University in Cincinnati Ohio The school s team currently competes in the Big East Conference and are coached by Sean Miller 2 Xavier has appeared in the NCAA tournament 29 times 16 times in the 18 tournaments between 2001 and 2018 On March 11 2018 Xavier earned its first ever No 1 seed in the NCAA Tournament 3 Xavier is also a two time winner of the NIT with their most recent championship coming in 2022 Xavier Musketeers2022 23 Xavier Musketeers men s basketball teamUniversityXavier UniversityHead coachSean Miller 1st season of 2nd stint 6th overall season ConferenceBig EastLocationCincinnati OhioArenaCintas Center Capacity 10 224 ColorsNavy blue white and gray 1 UniformsHome Away AlternateNCAA tournament Elite Eight2004 2008 2017NCAA tournament Sweet Sixteen1990 2004 2008 2009 2010 2012 2015 2017 2023NCAA tournament round of 321987 1990 1991 1993 1997 2002 2003 2004 2007 2008 2009 2010 2012 2015 2016 2017 2018 2023NCAA tournament appearances1961 1983 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1993 1995 1997 1998 2001 2002 2003 2004 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2023Conference tournament champions1983 1986 1987 1988 1989 1991 1998 2002 2004 2006Conference regular season champions1981 1986 1988 1990 1991 1993 1994 1995 1997 1998 2002 2003 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2018Xavier won four Atlantic 10 tournament championships 1998 2002 2004 and 2006 Xavier has won or shared 17 regular season conference championships while winning 9 conference tournament championships In addition they have won one Big East Conference regular season title in 2018 They made the 2023 Big East Championship but lost to the Marquette Golden Eagles Xavier has been listed among the top 20 most valuable college basketball teams 4 Contents 1 History 1 1 Pete Gillen era 1 2 Skip Prosser era 1 3 Thad Matta era 1 4 Sean Miller era 1 5 Chris Mack era 1 6 Travis Steele era 1 7 2nd Sean Miller era 2 Home courts 2 1 Cintas Center 2 2 Cincinnati Gardens 2 3 Schmidt Fieldhouse 2 4 Other home courts 3 Postseason 3 1 NCAA tournament results 3 2 NCAA Tournament seeding history 3 3 NIT results 3 4 NAIA tournament results 4 Musketeers in the NBA 5 Musketeers overseas 6 Awards 6 1 All Americans 6 2 Conference Player of the Year 6 3 Retired numbers 7 Coaching history 8 Basketball and academics 8 1 NCAA academic progress rate 8 2 Graduation 8 3 Sister Rose Ann Fleming 9 Rivalries 9 1 Crosstown Shootout 9 2 Other rivals 10 Notes 11 References 12 External linksHistory EditSee also List of Xavier Musketeers men s basketball seasons The first Xavier basketball game on record was February 20 1920 at the Fenwick Club in Cincinnati Coached by Joe Meyer the Musketeers compiled a 94 52 record during Meyer s s 13 year run as head coach from 1920 to 1933 The Musketeer s success continued under second head coach Clem Crowe During Crowe s 10 years as Xavier head coach Xavier compiled a record of 96 78 Crowe s 96 wins as a head coach rank fourth all time among Xavier head coaches 5 Following the 1942 43 season play was suspended for the following two seasons because of World War II In 1945 the program resumed under the leadership of head coach Ed Burns In his one season as head coach Burns compiled a record of 3 16 In 1946 Burns was replaced by Lew Hirt Under Hirt the Musketeers first postseason appearance was in the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics NAIA during the 1948 NAIA National Basketball tournament the national tournament for small colleges Xavier finished in 4th place losing to Hamline University in the national third place game 58 59 1948 was the only year Xavier appeared in the NAIA tournament 6 In 1951 Hirt was replaced as head coach by Ned Wulk Wulk guided the Musketeers to National Invitational Tournament appearances in 1956 and 1957 The 1956 appearance marked Xavier s first NIT win an 84 80 victory over Saint Louis 6 After a loss to Bradley in the 1957 NIT Wulk was replaced as head coach by Jim McCafferty McCafferty led the Musketeers back to a third straight NIT in 1958 With wins over Niagara Bradley St Bonaventure and Dayton Xavier captured the NIT According to most college basketball historians the NIT was the elite post season tournament until the NCAA overtook it in the early 1960s That was the first postseason championship won by any Ohio Division I school In 1961 McCafferty led Xavier to their first appearance in the NCAA Division I men s basketball tournament On March 14 1961 Xavier fell to Morehead State at the Kentucky State Fairgrounds in Louisville Kentucky McCafferty was replaced as head coach in 1963 He would be followed by Don Ruberg 1963 67 George Krajack 1967 71 Dick Campbell 1971 73 and Tay Baker 1973 79 In 1979 Xavier was one of the charter members of the Midwestern City Conference nicknamed the MCC or Midwestern City 6 and now known as the Horizon League which also included Butler Evansville Loyola Chicago Oklahoma City and Oral Roberts That year also marked the hiring of head coach Bob Staak who compiled an 88 86 record during his six seasons as head coach including a return to both the NCAA Tournament and NIT Pete Gillen era Edit 1985 once again marked considerable change for the program In addition to the hiring of head coach Pete Gillen the Midwestern City Conference altered its name slightly to the Midwestern Collegiate Conference adding more teams including Detroit Notre Dame excluding men s basketball and football Saint Louis Marquette and Dayton The MCC is the predecessor to the present day Horizon League Xavier was a member of the MCC from 1979 to 1995 and won eight regular season and six conference tournament championships From 1985 to 1994 Gillen compiled a 202 75 record including the program s first five wins in the NCAA Tournament The Musketeers advanced to the NCAA Tournament in six of Gillen s nine years at the helm In 1990 Xavier beat Kansas State and future Big East colleagues Georgetown to advance to the program s first Sweet Sixteen Skip Prosser era Edit Skip Prosser was hired in the spring of 1994 to replace departed head coach Pete Gillen In his seven seasons as head coach Prosser compiled a 148 65 record with four NCAA tournament appearances Prosser s 148 wins are third all time at Xavier During his time at Xavier Prosser continued to build on the momentum Gillen had created Early in his tenure Prosser added recruits Gary Lumpkin Darnell Williams Lenny Brown and James Posey Those four players provided the core of Prosser s success during his time at Xavier After missing the NCAA Tournament in both 1999 and 2000 Xavier returned to the tournament in 2001 Following a loss to Notre Dame in the tournament s first round Prosser accepted the position of head coach at Wake Forest Thad Matta era Edit Thad Matta left alma mater Butler to replace Skip Prosser as Xavier s head coach in 2001 Hired with only one year of head coaching experience Matta inherited a talented core of players in David West Lionel Chalmers and Romain Sato During his three years at the helm Matta compiled a record of 78 23 with three straight NCAA tournament appearances and Xavier s first appearance in the NCAA Tournament Elite Eight Matta won two Atlantic 10 regular season championships in his first two years behind the play of National Player of the Year David West Following Matta s second year West was drafted in the first round of the 2003 NBA draft by the New Orleans Hornets With West s departure seniors Lionel Chalmers Romain Sato and Anthony Myles became the team s cornerstone for the 2003 04 season After a 10 9 start Xavier closed the season by winning 16 of its last 18 games The Run as it became known left Xavier 3 points shy of making the program s first NCAA Final Four appearance Sean Miller era Edit The summer following Xavier s first Elite Eight appearance Matta was offered and accepted the position of head men s basketball coach at Ohio State Xavier Athletic Director Dawn Rogers quickly promoted Xavier Associate Head Coach Sean Miller 7 From 2004 to 2009 Miller compiled a record of 120 47 Advancing to the NCAA Tournament in four of his five seasons as head coach Miller led the Musketeers to another Elite Eight appearance in 2008 and a Sweet Sixteen appearance in 2009 During Miller s tenure as head coach Xavier continued to shed the mid major label and separate itself as one of the country s premier college basketball programs 8 Miller s NCAA Tournament success aggressive non conference scheduling and national recruiting allowed Xavier to be recognized with the likes of Memphis and Gonzaga as one of the premier basketball programs 9 After turning away interest from many programs Sean Miller left Xavier to become the head basketball coach at Arizona Chris Mack era Edit On April 15 2009 Xavier s Athletic Director named Xavier Assistant Coach Chris Mack as the 17th head basketball coach in the program s history 10 A Cincinnati native and Xavier graduate Mack compiled a record of 26 9 in his first year as head coach Behind the play of 2010 NBA draft pick Jordan Crawford Xavier advanced to the NCAA Tournament s Sweet Sixteen for a third straight season Chris Mack the 2009 10 Basketball Times Rookie Coach of the Year 11 was the first Xavier head coach to lead the Musketeers to the Sweet Sixteen in his first season at the helm With a 14 2 record in Atlantic 10 play Xavier also won a share of their fourth straight conference championship Finishing with a 24 8 overall record including a 15 1 record in the A 10 Mack lead the Musketeers to a fifth consecutive A 10 title and another NCAA tournament berth in 2010 11 In a 2011 12 season filled with highs and lows The early season was marred by the Crosstown Shootout brawl in their yearly rivalry game against Cincinnati The Musketeers had reached as high as 8 in the AP Poll before numerous suspensions from the Crosstown Shootout brawl lead to the team losing 5 of their next 6 games Xavier rebounded from this ugly incident and reached Mack s second Sweet Sixteen In 2013 Xavier joined the newly reconstituted Big East Conference following Big East conference realignment Xavier became one of the new members of the new 10 team Big East with the Catholic 7 DePaul Georgetown Marquette Providence Seton Hall St John s and Villanova plus Butler and Creighton Xavier finished their first season in the Big East with a record of 21 13 10 8 to finish Big East play in a tie for third place They received a bid to the NCAA tournament but lost in the First Round First Four The 2014 15 season also saw a return to the Sweet Sixteen for the Musketeers From 2008 to 2015 Xavier made five Sweet Sixteens tied for third in the nation over that span behind only Louisville and Michigan State The 2015 16 team finished second in the Big East to Villanova Xavier s highest finish in the Big East and advanced to the Second Round of the NCAA tournament 12 In 2017 Mack led Xavier to a 24 14 season and got the 11th seed in the West and advanced to the Elite Eight by defeating 6th seed Maryland 3rd seed Florida State and 2nd seed Arizona In the Elite Eight they lost to Gonzaga Mack s 215 wins concluding the 2017 18 season placed him first in all time wins in Xavier history Travis Steele era Edit On March 27 2018 Mack was named the head coach at the University of Louisville 13 Four days after Mack left Xavier for Louisville longtime Xavier assistant coach Travis Steele was named head coach of the Musketeers 14 Despite success against rival Cincinnati Steele was criticized for his inability to lead the Musketeers to the NCAA Tournament After missing the tournament for the fourth consecutive year Steele was fired on March 16 2022 2nd Sean Miller era Edit Only three days after the firing of Travis Steele Xavier hired former coach Sean Miller as his replacement 15 During the period in between Steele s exit and Miller s full installation as head coach Jonas Hayes served as interim Hayes would lead the Musketeers to their second ever NIT Championship In his first season back at Xavier Miller led the team to a 27 10 record earning a berth in the NCAA Tournament as a 3 seed where they would be eliminated in the Sweet 16 Home courts EditCintas Center Edit Xavier currently plays its home games at the Cintas Center a 10 224 seat multi purpose arena that opened in 2000 The Cintas Center is the fifth different home site in program history At Cintas Center Xavier enjoys one of the nation s best home court advantages As of April 2018 the Musketeers have compiled a 258 41 an 863 winning percentage record since moving to its on campus home in 2000 Xavier enjoyed a 15 0 mark at home during the 2009 10 its only perfect record for a season at Cintas Center During the 2017 2018 season the Musketeers set a Cintas Center record with 17 home victories The building was named the 3 Toughest Place to Play on EA Sports NCAA Basketball 10 In August 2018 the NCAA named it as the 8th toughest home court in college basketball 16 Through the 2018 2019 season Cintas Center has hosted 3 011 308 fans for Xavier home games and the Musketeers have averaged 10 071 fans better than 98 capacity per game during that time The 2017 2018 season marked the highest average attendance in Cintas Center history with an average 10 475 over 102 capacity Musketeer fans at each home game Season Record Pct Games Attendance Average Sellouts2000 01 13 1 929 14 141 011 17 10 072 122001 02 13 1 929 14 143 129 18 10 224 132002 03 14 1 933 15 152 664 19 10 178 142003 04 13 3 813 16 158 432 20 9 902 82004 05 12 4 750 16 178 259 21 9 903 72005 06 11 4 733 15 146 615 22 9 774 42006 07 14 1 933 15 148 650 23 9 910 52007 08 16 1 941 17 170 133 24 10 008 92008 09 14 1 933 15 151 456 25 10 097 112009 10 15 0 1 000 15 151 843 26 10 123 72010 11 14 1 933 15 151 475 27 10 098 92011 12 13 3 813 16 162 474 28 10 155 102012 13 11 4 733 15 146 710 29 9 781 12013 14 15 2 882 17 168 127 30 9 890 72014 15 13 3 813 16 159 974 31 9 998 92015 16 15 1 938 16 164 501 32 10 281 112016 17 12 4 750 16 164 520 33 10 282 122017 18 17 1 944 18 188 554 34 10 475 182018 19 13 5 722 18 180 611 35 10 034 13Total 258 41 863 299 3 011 308 10 071 180Cincinnati Gardens Edit The Musketeers played their final season at Cincinnati Gardens in 1999 2000 Located 2 miles from the Xavier campus the Gardens was the home court for the Xavier Musketeers since 1983 84 season The Xavier men s team played all of its regular season games off campus at the Cincinnati Gardens for 17 years beginning with the 1983 84 season and ending with an NIT game against Marquette in the 1999 2000 season The only exception was a game against Florida International that was played at Schmidt Fieldhouse on January 9 1988 36 Xavier compiled an impressive 215 25 896 record after moving to the Gardens in the 1983 84 season including 14 1 in its final season Schmidt Fieldhouse Edit Prior to moving to the Cincinnati Gardens in the 1983 84 season Xavier called Schmidt Fieldhouse home Located on the west side of the Xavier Campus Xavier compiled an impressive 326 129 716 record at the Fieldhouse 37 Until opening Cintas Center the men s basketball team had only played one regular season game on campus since early in the 1983 84 season Xavier scored a school record point total in a 125 84 win over Florida International on Saturday January 9 1988 Other home courts Edit The Musketeers have also used Riverfront Coliseum and the Fenwick Club Postseason EditNCAA tournament results Edit The Musketeers have appeared in the NCAA tournament 29 times Their combined record is 30 29 38 Year Seed Round Opponent Result1961 First Round Morehead State L 66 711983 No 12 Preliminary Round No 12 Alcorn State L 75 811986 No 12 First Round No 5 Alabama L 80 971987 No 13 First RoundSecond Round No 4 MissouriNo 5 Duke W 70 69L 60 651988 No 11 First Round No 6 Kansas L 72 851989 No 14 First Round No 3 Michigan L 87 921990 No 6 First RoundSecond RoundSweet Sixteen No 11 Kansas StateNo 3 GeorgetownNo 10 Texas W 87 79W 74 71L 89 1021991 No 14 First RoundSecond Round No 3 NebraskaNo 11 Connecticut W 89 84L 50 661993 No 9 First RoundSecond Round No 8 New OrleansNo 1 Indiana W 73 55L 70 731995 No 11 First Round No 6 Georgetown L 63 681997 No 7 First RoundSecond Round No 10 VanderbiltNo 2 UCLA W 80 68L 83 961998 No 6 First Round No 11 Washington L 68 692001 No 11 First Round No 6 Notre Dame L 71 832002 No 7 First RoundSecond Round No 10 HawaiiNo 2 Oklahoma W 70 58L 65 782003 No 3 First RoundSecond Round No 14 Troy StateNo 6 Maryland W 71 59L 64 772004 No 7 First RoundSecond RoundSweet SixteenElite Eight No 10 LouisvilleNo 2 Mississippi StateNo 3 TexasNo 1 Duke W 80 70W 89 74W 79 71L 63 662006 No 14 First Round No 3 Gonzaga L 75 792007 No 9 First RoundSecond Round No 8 BYUNo 1 Ohio State W 79 77L 71 78 OT2008 No 3 First RoundSecond RoundSweet SixteenElite Eight No 14 GeorgiaNo 6 PurdueNo 7 West VirginiaNo 1 UCLA W 73 61W 85 78W 79 75 OTL 57 762009 No 4 First RoundSecond RoundSweet Sixteen No 13 Portland StateNo 12 WisconsinNo 1 Pittsburgh W 77 59W 60 49L 55 602010 No 6 First RoundSecond RoundSweet Sixteen No 11 MinnesotaNo 3 PittsburghNo 2 Kansas State W 65 54W 71 68L 96 101 2OT2011 No 6 Second Round No 11 Marquette L 55 662012 No 10 Second RoundThird RoundSweet Sixteen No 7 Notre DameNo 15 LehighNo 3 Baylor W 67 63W 70 58L 70 752014 No 12 First Four No 12 NC State L 59 742015 No 6 Second RoundThird RoundSweet Sixteen No 11 Ole MissNo 14 Georgia StateNo 2 Arizona W 76 57W 75 67L 60 682016 No 2 First RoundSecond Round No 15 Weber StateNo 7 Wisconsin W 71 53L 63 662017 No 11 First RoundSecond RoundSweet SixteenElite Eight No 6 MarylandNo 3 Florida State No 2 Arizona No 1 Gonzaga W 76 65W 91 66W 73 71L 59 832018 No 1 First RoundSecond Round No 16 Texas SouthernNo 9 Florida State W 102 83 L 70 752023 No 3 First RoundSecond RoundSweet Sixteen No 14 Kennesaw State No 11 Pittsburgh No 2 Texas W 72 67 W 84 73 L 71 83 Following the introduction of the First Four round in 2011 the Round of 64 and Round of 32 were referred to as the Second Round and Third Round respectively from 2011 to 2015 Then from 2016 forward the Round of 64 and Round of 32 are called the First and Second Rounds as they were prior to 2011 NCAA Tournament seeding history Edit The NCAA began seeding the tournament with the 1979 edition Years 83 86 87 88 89 90 91 93 95 97 98 01 02 03 04 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 14 15 16 17 18 23Seeds 12 12 13 11 14 6 14 9 11 7 6 11 7 3 7 14 9 3 4 6 6 10 12 6 2 11 1 3NIT results Edit The Musketeers have appeared in the National Invitation Tournament NIT nine times Their combined record is 21 7 They were NIT Champions in 1958 and 2022 Year Round Opponent Result1956 First RoundQuarterfinals Saint LouisDayton W 84 80L 68 721957 First RoundQuarterfinals Seton HallBradley W 85 79L 81 1161958 First RoundQuarterfinalsSemifinalsFinal NiagaraBradleySt BonaventureDayton W 95 86W 72 62W 72 53W 78 741984 First RoundSecond RoundQuarterfinals Ohio StateNebraskaMichigan W 60 57W 58 57L 62 631994 First RoundSecond RoundQuarterfinals Miami OH NorthwesternVillanova W 80 68W 83 79L 74 761999 First RoundSecond RoundQuarterfinalsSemifinals3rd Place Game ToledoWake ForestPrincetonClemsonOregon W 86 84W 87 76W 65 58L 76 79W 106 752000 First RoundSecond Round MarquetteNotre Dame W 67 63L 64 762019 First RoundSecond Round ToledoTexas W 78 64L 76 78OT2022 First RoundSecond RoundQuarterfinalsSemifinalsFinal Cleveland StateFloridaVanderbiltSt BonaventureTexas A amp M W 72 68W 72 56W 75 73W 84 77W 73 72NAIA tournament results Edit The Musketeers have appeared in the NAIA tournament one time Their record is 3 2 Year Round Opponent Result1948 First RoundSecond RoundQuarterfinalsSemifinals3rd Place Game Northwestern StateNew Britain StateMankato StateLouisvilleHamline W 67 43W 57 35W 62 50L 49 56L 58 59Musketeers in the NBA EditThe following table shows Xavier players selected in the NBA or ABA draft or appearing on an NBA or ABA roster DraftYear Player Team Round Pick Overall 1949 Mal McMullen Baltimore 6 5 57 1952 Gene Smith Minneapolis 15 1 104 1953 Hank Budde Minneapolis 9 9 79 1954 Bob Heim Baltimore 6 1 46 1956 Dave Piontek Rochester 3 1 16 1957 Jim Boothe Cincinnati 12 1 80 1958 Frank Tartaton Cincinnati 11 2 74 1959 Hank Stein St Louis 3 7 21 Joe Viviano Cincinnati 10 1 65 1962 Jack Thobe Cincinnati 4 6 33 Bill Kirvin Philadelphia a 8 7 67 Frank Pinchback Cincinnati 11 4 88 1964 Bob Pelkington Philadelphia 8 4 65 Joe Geiger Cincinnati 8 8 69 1966 Brian Williams St Louis 8 4 72 1968 Bob Quick Baltimore NBA 2 4 18 Indiana ABA 4 6 39 1969 Luther Rackley Cincinnati NBA 3 8 37 Minnesota ABA 1 4 4 1973 Bob Fullerton Buffalo NBA 9 3 140 San Antonio ABA 3 Senior 5 41 Conny Warren Philadelphia NBA 12 1 175 Denver ABA 9 Supp 2 188 1979 Nick Daniels Kansas City 7 17 145 1983 Tony Hicks Milwaukee 7 18 157 Jon Hanley Cleveland 10 2 208 1984 Vic Fleming Portland 2 2 26 Jeff Jenkins Seattle 4 13 83 John Shimko Cleveland 9 3 187 Dexter Bailey Denver 10 9 215 1989 Stan Kimbrough Detroit undrafted1990 Tyrone Hill Golden State 1 11 11 Derek Strong Philadelphia 2 20 47 1993 Aaron Williams Utah undrafted1994 Brian Grant Sacramento 1 8 8 1995 Michael Hawkins Boston undraftedLarry Sykes Boston undrafted1998 Torraye Braggs Utah 2 28 57 1999 James Posey Denver 1 18 18 2003 David West New Orleans 1 18 18 2004 Lionel Chalmers Los Angeles Clippers 2 4 33 David Young b Seattle 2 12 41 Romain Sato San Antonio 2 23 52 2009 Derrick Brown Charlotte 2 10 40 2010 Jordan Crawford New Jersey 1 27 27 2014 Semaj Christon Miami 2 25 55 2017 Edmond Sumner New Orleans 2 22 52 2018 J P Macura Charlotte undraftedTrevon Bluiett c New Orleans undrafted2020 Naji Marshall New Orleans undrafted Active playersFor undrafted players the team listed is the one with which the player made his NBA debut The NBA debut of undrafted players may have occurred later than the draft year shown References 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 Musketeers overseas EditAs of April 7 2022 update 30 former Xavier players are currently playing professionally overseas 52 Zach Hankins Jalen Reynolds LastYear atXavier Player Home Town Country2021 Bryan Griffin Pomona New York 2020 Tyrique Jones Hartford Connecticut 2020 Joe Clark Floop Massachusetts 2020 Quentin Goodin Campbellsville Kentucky 2019 Kyle Kastlin Marietta Georgia 2018 Trevon Bluiett Indianapolis Indiana 2018 J P Macura Lakeville Minnesota 2018 Kaiser Gates Atlanta Georgia 2018 Kerem Kanter Gemlik Turkey 2018 Sean O Mara Lisle Illinois 2016 Jalen Reynolds Detroit Michigan 2016 Remy Abell Louisville Kentucky 2016 James Farr Evanston Illinois 2016 d Larry Austin Springfield Illinois 2015 Matt Stainbrook Lakewood Ohio 2015 Dee Davis Bloomington Indiana 2015 e Brandon Randolph Inglewood California 2014 Semaj Christon Cincinnati Ohio 2014 f Justin Martin Indianapolis Indiana 2014 Isaiah Philmore Bel Air Maryland 2013 Travis Taylor Union New Jersey 2012 g Mark Lyons Albany New York 2012 Kenny Frease Massillon Ohio 2012 Tu Holloway Hempstead New York 2011 Jamel McLean Hampton Virginia 2010 Jason Love Philadelphia Pennsylvania 2009 B J Raymond Toledo Ohio 2008 Josh Duncan Cincinnati Ohio 2008 Charles Bronson Philadelphia Pennsylvania 2007 Justin Cage Indianapolis Indiana Romain Sato 2010 Italian League MVP won two straight Italian League Championships in 2009 and 2010 53 More recently Justin Doellman was named ACB MVP in 2014 while with Valencia 54 Mark Lyons was the top scorer in the Israel Basketball Premier League in both 2015 and 2017 55 56 Zach Hankins plays for Hapoel Jerusalem of the Israeli Basketball Premier League Awards EditAll Americans Edit Xavier has a total of 20 players who have won All American honors during their careers with the program Trevon Bluiett2015 16 USA Today Third Team Associated Press Honorable Mention 2017 18 Associated Press Second Team United States Basketball Writers Association Second Team National Association of Basketball Coaches Second Team Sporting News Second TeamLenny Brown1996 97 Basketball Weekly Honorable Mention 1998 99 John R Wooden FinalistSemaj Christon2012 13 Kyle Macy Freshman All American collegeinsider com Jordan Crawford2009 10 Sporting News Third TeamMyles Davis2013 14 Kyle Macy Freshman All American collegeinsider com Jamie Gladden1992 93 Associated Press Honorable Mention 1989 90 Basketball Times Freshman Fifth TeamBrian Grant1990 91 Basketball Times Freshman Seventh Team 1993 94 John R Wooden Finalist Associated Press Honorable MentionAnthony Hicks1982 83 Sporting News Honorable Mention Associated Press Honorable MentionTyrone Hill1988 89 Associated Press Honorable Mention 1989 90 Basketball Times Third Team Associated Press Honorable MentionTu Holloway2010 11 Associated Press Fox Sports and Sporting News Magazine Third team All AmericanT J Johnson1994 95 Basketball Weekly Freshman Honorable Mention Byron Larkin1984 85 Basketball Weekly All Freshman Second Team Basketball Times All Freshman Team 1985 86 Associated Press Honorable Mention 1986 87 Sporting News Honorable Mention 1987 88 United Press International Second Team Scripps Howard Second Team Associated Press Third TeamGary Massa1977 78 Basketball Weekly All Freshman TeamJames Posey1998 99 College Hoops Insider Top 15 John R Wooden FinalistBob Quick1967 68 Associated Press Honorable MentionRomain Sato2003 04 Associated Press Honorable MentionHank Stein1957 58 Converse Second Team 1958 59 United Press International Third TeamEdmond Sumner2015 16 Kyle Macy Freshman All American collegeinsider com Steve Thomas1963 64 Basketball News First Team Helms Foundation First Team AP United Press International and Sporting News Honorable MentionBrian Thornton2005 06 ESPN the Magazine COSIDA All AmericanDavid West2000 01 Associated Press Honorable Mention 2001 02 Associated Press Second Team United States Basketball Writers Association Second Team Basketball Times Second Team FOXSports com Second Team National Association of Basketball Coaches Third Team Sporting News Third Team Basketball America Third Team Dick Vitale s Rolls Royce Super Five collegeinsider com All American John R Wooden Finalist 2002 03 Associated Press First Team amp AP National Player of the Year United States Basketball Writers Association First Team amp USBWA National Player of the Year Basketball Times First Team amp BT National Player of the Year National Association of Basketball Coaches First Team John R Wooden First Team ESPN com First Team Sporting News First Team Dick Vitale s Rolls Royce Super Five collegeinsider com All American amp collegeinsider com National MVP NABC Pete Newell Big Man of the Year Conference Player of the Year Edit Tu Holloway Year Player Conference1985 86 1987 88 Byron Larkin Midwestern Collegiate Conference1989 90 Tyrone Hill Midwestern Collegiate Conference1992 93 1993 94 Brian Grant Midwestern Collegiate Conference2000 01 2001 02 2002 03 David West Atlantic 102010 11 Tu Holloway Atlantic 10Retired numbers Edit Main article List of NCAA men s basketball retired numbers Xavier has retired jersey numbers for four players in their history Xavier Musketeers retired numbersNo Player Pos Career No ret Ref 23 Byron Larkin SG 1984 1988 1997 57 58 30 David West PF 1999 2003 2003 59 33 Brian Grant PF C 1990 1994 2011 60 42 Tyrone Hill PF 1986 1990 1997 61 Former university President Fr James Hoff has also had a jersey retired in memory of all that he contributed to the school and basketball program This was unveiled before a 2004 meeting with Creighton where Hoff was vice president of university relations and President of the Creighton Foundation Fr Hoff died from cancer in 2004 Coaching history EditName Alma Mater Seasons Games Wins Losses Win NCAA Tour NIT Tour MCC Tour A 10 Tour Big East TourJonas Hayes Georgia 1 2022 4 4 0 1 000 0 0 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0Pete Gillen Fairfield 9 1985 94 277 202 75 729 5 7 2 1 17 4 0 0 0 0Chris Mack Xavier 9 2009 18 312 215 97 694 11 8 0 0 0 0 3 4 7 5Skip Prosser Merchant Marine Acad 7 1994 01 213 148 65 695 1 4 5 2 0 1 6 5 0 0Sean Miller Pittsburgh 6 2004 09 2022 204 147 57 721 8 5 0 0 0 0 8 4 2 1Cameron Crowe Notre Dame 10 1933 43 174 96 78 552 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0Joe Meyer Xavier 13 1920 33 146 94 52 618 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0Jim McCafferty Loyola La 6 1957 63 162 91 71 562 0 1 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0Ned Wulk LaCrosse 6 1951 57 159 89 70 560 0 0 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 0Bob Staak Connecticut 6 1979 85 174 88 86 506 0 1 2 1 7 5 0 0 0 0Thad Matta Butler 3 2001 04 101 78 23 772 5 3 0 0 0 0 8 1 0 0Lew Hirt DePauw 5 1946 51 137 76 61 555 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0Tay Baker Cincinnati 6 1973 79 159 70 89 440 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0Don Ruberg Xavier 4 1963 67 103 52 51 505 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0George Krajack Clemson 4 1967 71 103 34 69 330 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0Dick Campbell Furman 2 1971 73 52 15 37 288 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0Ed Burns Xavier 1 1945 46 19 3 16 158 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0Harry Gilligan Xavier 1 1919 20 1 0 1 000 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0Travis Steele Butler 4 2018 22 120 70 50 583 0 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 1 4Chart Data 37 Basketball and academics EditNCAA academic progress rate Edit In May 2010 the NCAA honored a school record tying eight Xavier University athletic programs with Public Recognition Awards for academic excellence 62 The award is given to the top ten percent of teams in each sport based on the NCAA Academic Progress Rate The APR is a term by term progress for every student athlete in Division I athletics Out of the 65 teams to make the 2010 NCAA tournament Xavier had the 11th highest Academic Progress Rate 63 Graduation Edit Since 1986 Xavier has graduated every men s basketball player that has exhausted his eligibility 63 Sister Rose Ann Fleming Edit During the 2010 NCAA tournament Xavier s Academic Advisor Sister Rose Ann Fleming garnered considerable national attention for the role she has played in the program s academic success Fleming was featured in The New York Times The Wall Street Journal and on both ABC s Good Morning America and NBC Nightly News Fleming has over 40 years of experience as an educator She was president of Cincinnati s Summit Country Day School from 1975 to 1976 and president of Trinity College in Washington D C from 1976 to 1982 64 In addition to the national recognition she received during the 2010 NCAA tournament she has also been featured in Reader s Digest Woman s Day was voted one of the Cincinnati Enquirer s Women of the Year and was the subject of a promotional spot on The Family Channel 64 Rivalries EditCrosstown Shootout Edit Xavier s main rival is the University of Cincinnati The two schools play annually in the Skyline Chili Crosstown Shootout Xavier s record in the Shootout is 39 51 Other rivals Edit Xavier and Dayton play for the Blackburn McCafferty Trophy named for former coaches at the respective universities Dayton has not beaten Xavier in Cincinnati since 1981 65 Dayton maintains a lead in the overall series 85 76 However Xavier won nine straight games against Dayton between March 1991 and December 1994 and went 24 8 between the 2001 02 and 2015 16 seasons 66 67 Xavier also maintains a heated rivalry with Butler with the Musketeers leading the overall series 44 24 Xavier won four of the six games between the teams during the 2020 21 and 2021 22 seasons sweeping the four regular season matchups and losing each year to Butler in the Big East tournament 68 Between the 2009 10 and 2019 20 seasons Xavier played Wake Forest seven times in a series known as the Skip Prosser Classic named for the former coach of both schools 69 Xavier won four of the seven games played 70 Notes Edit The Philadelphia Warriors relocated following the 1962 NBA draft and played the 1962 63 season as the San Francisco Warriors Young transferred from Xavier to North Carolina Central after the 2002 03 season Bluiett was not selected in the 2018 NBA draft He appeared in the 2018 NBA Summer League with the New Orleans Pelicans and made the Pelicans opening day regular season roster but did not appear in an NBA regular season game 39 He also appeared in the 2021 NBA Summer League with the Cleveland Cavaliers Austin transferred from Xavier to Vanderbilt in 2016 and completed his NCAA eligibility with Central Michigan in the 2017 18 season Randolph transferred from Xavier to Utah Valley in 2015 and completed his NCAA eligibility in 2018 Martin transferred from Xavier to Southern Methodist in 2014 and completed his NCAA eligibility in 2015 Lyons transferred from Xavier to Arizona in 2012 and completed his NCAA eligibility in 2013References Edit Xavier University Brand and Graphic Identity Guide PDF Retrieved September 3 2019 Brennan Eamonn August 22 2012 50 in 50 rankings ESPN Retrieved October 13 2012 ESPN Stats amp Info March 12 2018 Xavier is making its first appearance as a No 1 seed looking for its first Final Four appearance The Musketeers have won 27 NCAA Tournament games the most all time by a school never to reach the Final Four For reference their rival Cincinnati reached the Championship game long before the internet was invented Retrieved March 13 2018 Schwartz Peter J March 16 2009 The Most Valuable College Basketball Teams forbes com Retrieved March 16 2009 2010 Xavier Basketball Media Guide Xavier Athletic Department 2010 p 196 a b 2010 Xavier Basketball Media Guide Xavier Athletic Department 2010 p 183 Sean Miller is Xavier s New Head Basketball Coach goxavier com Retrieved July 8 2004 Xavier Playing Above Mid Major Status espn com Retrieved March 21 2010 Xavier Memphis top non BCS schools espn com Retrieved November 18 2010 Chris Mack Introduced As Xavier s New Men s Basketball Head Coach goxavier com Retrieved April 14 2008 Chris Mack Honored As Basketball Times Rookie Coach Of The Year goxavier com Retrieved April 8 2010 Wisconsin vs Xavier Game Recap March 20 2016 ESPN ESPN com Retrieved April 11 2016 Sources Louisville Mack agree to 7 year deal March 27 2018 Retrieved March 27 2018 Borzello Jeff March 31 2018 Musketeers promote longtime assistant Travis Steele to head coach ESPN com Retrieved March 31 2018 Eisen Tom Xavier Athletic Communications March 19 2022 Sean Miller Returns As Head Men s Basketball Coach at Xavier University Press release Xavier Musketeers Retrieved March 19 2022 These are the toughest home courts in college basketball NCAA com NCAA com August 14 2018 Retrieved November 9 2018 2001 National College Basketball Attendance PDF NCAA org Retrieved March 20 2023 2002 National College Basketball Attendance PDF NCAA org Retrieved March 20 2023 2003 National College Basketball Attendance PDF NCAA org Retrieved March 20 2023 2004 National College Basketball Attendance PDF NCAA org Retrieved March 20 2023 2005 National College Basketball Attendance PDF NCAA org Retrieved March 20 2023 2006 National College Basketball Attendance PDF NCAA org Retrieved March 20 2023 2007 National College Basketball Attendance PDF NCAA org Retrieved March 20 2023 2008 National College Basketball Attendance PDF NCAA org Retrieved March 20 2023 2009 National College Basketball Attendance PDF NCAA org Retrieved March 20 2023 2010 National College Basketball Attendance PDF NCAA org Retrieved March 20 2023 2011 National College Basketball Attendance PDF NCAA org Retrieved March 20 2023 2012 National College Basketball Attendance PDF NCAA org Retrieved March 20 2023 2013 National College Basketball Attendance PDF NCAA org Retrieved March 20 2023 2014 National College Basketball Attendance PDF NCAA org Retrieved March 20 2023 2015 National College Basketball Attendance PDF NCAA org Retrieved March 20 2023 2016 National College Basketball Attendance PDF NCAA org Retrieved March 20 2023 2017 National College Basketball Attendance PDF NCAA org Retrieved March 20 2023 2018 National College Basketball Attendance PDF NCAA org Retrieved March 20 2023 2019 National College Basketball Attendance PDF NCAA org Retrieved March 20 2023 2010 Xavier Basketball Media Guide Xavier Athletic Department 2010 p 146 a b 2010 Xavier Basketball Media Guide Xavier Athletic Department 2010 p 144 Xavier College Basketball at Sports Reference com Archived from the original on March 19 2016 Retrieved March 31 2016 Pelicans Trevon Bluiett Sent to G League CBS Sports October 22 2018 Retrieved March 30 2022 2010 Xavier Basketball Media Guide Xavier Athletic Department 2010 p 154 Xavier NBA Draft Selections Real GM Retrieved April 7 2022 1968 NBA Draft databaseBasketball com Archived from the original on July 16 2014 Retrieved April 7 2022 1969 NBA Draft databaseBasketball com Archived from the original on July 16 2014 Retrieved April 7 2022 1973 NBA Draft databaseBasketball com Archived from the original on July 16 2014 Retrieved April 7 2022 Stan Kimbrough G 21 Real GM Retrieved April 7 2022 Aaron Williams F C 34 Real GM Retrieved April 7 2022 Michael Hawkins G 17 Real GM Retrieved April 7 2022 Larry Sykes PF Real GM Retrieved April 7 2022 J P Macura SG 55 Real GM Retrieved April 7 2022 Trevon Bluiett SG 5 Real GM Retrieved April 7 2022 Pelicans 2021 22 Roster NBA Retrieved April 7 2022 Former Xavier Players Currently Playing Professionally Real GM Retrieved April 7 2022 2010 Xavier Basketball Media Guide Xavier Athletic Department 2010 p 42 Justin Doellman MVP Orange de la Liga Endesa 2013 14 Justin Doellman Orange MVP of the Liga Endesa 2013 14 acb com in Spanish May 27 2014 Archived from the original on February 14 2018 Retrieved April 7 2022 Statistics Leaders Regular Season 2014 15 Season Israel Basketball Super League Retrieved April 7 2022 Statistics Leaders Regular Season 2016 17 Season Israel Basketball Super League Retrieved April 7 2022 BYRON K LARKIN bio at Goxavier com Larkin bio at Ohio HoF DAVID M WEST bio at Goxavier com Brian Grant s Jersey to be Retired During Saturday s Game Against Temple 18 Jan 2011 TYRONE HILL bio at Goxavier com NCAA Honors Eight Xavier Programs For Being In The Top 10 Percent Of The Latest APR goxavier com Retrieved May 12 2010 a b Branch John March 15 2010 At Xavier Nun Works Out Players Academic Side The New York Times Retrieved March 15 2010 a b Sister Rose Ann Fleming Xavier Athletics goxavier com Retrieved March 24 2010 Dayton vs Xavier Game Recap January 30 2013 ESPN ESPN com Retrieved March 27 2018 Nagel Kyle Dayton Xavier Basketball Series in UD s Modern Era Dayton Daily News Retrieved April 7 2022 Men s Basketball History vs University of Dayton from Feb 19 2005 Nov 29 2015 goxavier com Xavier University Retrieved April 7 2022 From 1949 50 to 2021 22 for Xavier against Butler Sorted by Descending Date sports reference com Retrieved April 7 2022 Skip Prosser Classic Archived from the original on July 24 2011 Retrieved December 6 2010 Men s Basketball History vs Wake Forest University from Jan 3 2010 Dec 14 2019 goxavier com Xavier University Retrieved April 7 2022 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Xavier Musketeers men s basketball Official website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Xavier Musketeers men 27s basketball amp oldid 1161421126, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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