Stretch Run for Emporia State basketball begins against Newman on Saturday

Prairie Band Potawatomi Nation to be recognized in pregame

2022-23 ESU MBB Game Notes Graphic vs Newman

Men's Basketball | 2/9/2023 5:15:00 PM

Game #24
Emporia State Hornets (17-6, 11-6 MIAA)
vs. Newman Jets (7-16, 3-14 MIAA)

Saturday, February 11, 2023 • 3:30 p.m. • Emporia, Kan. • WL White Auditorium
Series Record: ESU leads 26-13 Last Meeting: ESU 89, at NU 64 (Dec. 31, 2022)   
Radio: KFFX 104.9FM  Internet Audio: kvoe.com
Television: None Internet Video: The MIAA Network
Live Stats • Ticket Info • Complete Notes in pdf
Up Next: at Central Missouri • Thursday, February 16, 2023 • 7:30 p.m.
Warrensburg, Mo. • UCM Multipurpose Building

FINAL STRETCH      
The Hornets return to White Auditorium to take on Newman. It will be Prairie Band Potawatomi Nation Day in White Auditorium.

LAST TIMEOUT
Missouri Western closed the game on a 14-4 run to steal a 65-60 win over Emporia State on Saturday in St. Joseph, Mo. The Griffons led 19-11 with 8:23 left in the first half when the Hornets went on a 16-6 run to take a 27-25 lead with 2:44 remaining in the half.  After trailing by one at the break, Emporia State scored the first six points of the second half to go up 33-28 with 17:48 left. MWSU used a 14-3 run to take a 51-48 lead at the 8:12 mark. The Hornets answered quickly with an 8-0 run to go up 56-51 with 6:19 left. The Griffons scored the next five points to re-tie the game at 56 with 4:02 left. Neither team would take more than a two point lead until Julius Dixon scored with 1:21 left to give Western a 62-58 lead. The Griffs would hit three of four free throws in the final 24 seconds to secure the win. Alijah Comithier led Emporia State with 21 points and was joined in double figures by Peyton Rogers-Schmidt with 14 and Kaden Evans with ten points.
 
THE COACHES
Craig Doty is 72-61 in his fifth season at Emporia State. In his 11th season as a head coach at the D2, NAIA, and NJCAA level he is 234-110 with three national championships. He was 49-22 in two seasons at Graceland, and won the 2018 NAIA National Championship. Doty spent four years at Rock Valley College winning two NJCAA D-III national championships to finish with a 113-28 record. He is 5-3 against Newman.
R.J. Allen is 60-97 in his sixth season at Newman. He is 3-6 against Emporia State.

ABOUT THE HORNETS
Emporia State is 17-6, 11-6 in the MIAA. They are ranked 19th in the nation in scoring defense and 24th in field goal percentage defense. Owen Long is sixth in the MIAA in scoring at 16.9 points per game and is tenth in the nation in made 3-pointers.

ABOUT THE JETS
Newman is 7-16, 3-14 in the MIAA. Stevie Strong is the leading scorer in the MIAA at 18.0 points per game and ranks fifth in assists and seventh in steals.

SERIES HISTORY
Emporia State leads the series 26-13 all-time. The Hornets have won five in a row including the last two in White Auditorium.

LAST TIME VS NEWMAN
The Hornets used an 11-2 run to erase an early deficit on the way to an 89-64 win at Newman. The Jets jumped out to a 7-0 lead less than two minutes into the game. Emporia State went on an 11-2 run with Atavian Butler scoring six of the points. Newman tied the game at 17 with 12:54 left when ESU went on a 10-0 run to take the lead for good. The Hornets closed the half on a 10-4 run to take a 49-37 lead to the locker room. The lead would reach 30 points in the second half at 89-59 with 2:39 left. Atavian Butler had 17 points to lead four Hornets in double figures. Alijah Comithier had 16 points, Owen Long added 11 and Gage McGuire scored ten points.

UP NEXT
The Hornets travel to Warrensburg, Mo. on Thursday, February 16 to take on Central Missouri. Tip-off from the UCM Multipurpose Building is set for 7:30 p.m.

DOTY MAGIC
Three-time National Champion head coach Craig Doty is in his fifth season as head coach at Emporia State. He is 234-111 in his 11th year at the NCAA D2, NAIA and NJCAA levels, including an 120-81 mark in conference play. Doty is 121-83 as a head coach at four year schools with a 72-61 record since taking over for the Hornets.
He is 74-35 (.679) in games played in February and March with a 29-7 (.806) record in the post-season. Three of those six post season losses were to the eventual national champion.
Doty led Rock Valley College and Graceland University to national prominence earlier in his career. In just two seasons at Graceland, Doty's program had a 49-22 record and won the 2018 NAIA Division I National Championship in the school's first trip to the national tournament at Kansas City's historic Municipal Auditorium. The Yellowjackets started the 2017-18 season 10-8 and ended the year winning 19 of their final 21 games. Along the way Doty earned NAIA National Coach of the Year, HoopDirt.com NAIA National Coach of the Year, and the 2018 Don Meyer Award. Doty's programs at Rock Valley College won NJCAA Division III National titles in 2014 and 2016 while his 2015 squad came up just short finishing National Runner-up.

IN THE RANKINGS
The Hornets have received votes in the National Association of Basketball Coaches (NABC) National Poll seven times this season. Earlier this year ESU had a string of five straight weeks being ranked, their longest streak since a ten week span during the 2006-07 season. This year is the first since the 2007-08 season Emporia State has cracked the Top 25. The Hornets spent 22 weeks in the NABC Top 25 from 2003-08, getting as high as seventh in the nation on three different occasions.  In two computerized ratings systems the Hornets are currently ranked #18 in the Massey Ratings and #14 in the Wilson ratings system.

MORE BALANCE, STILL A 1-2 PUNCH
The duo of Tray Buchanan and Jumah'Ri Turner was the top scoring back court in the nation last year. Buchanan led the nation in scoring at 25.6 points per game while Turner averaged 19.8 to rank third in the MIAA. Their combined 45.4 points per game was the top average in NCAA Division II for a pair of guards.  This year Owen Long is leading ESU at 16.9 points per game and Alijah Comithier is averaging 14.3 points with three other players over 7.0 points per game.  A total of ten different Hornets have scored in double figures at least once this year with eight having multiple games of at least ten points.

GETTING STARTED
The Hornets opened the season 7-0 for the first time since going 16-0 to open the 2006-07 season.  It is the tenth time in 119 seasons of Emporia State basketball that the Hornets have opened the year 7-0 and the first time at least six of the wins have come against D2 teams.

GIVE ME 20
The Hornets 16-4 start is their best record after 20 games since opening the 2006-07 season 18-2. Emporia State won 20 games for the first time since the 2007 season when they finished the year 21-8 and advanced to the NCAA Tournament. Last year was the third time the Hornets have won 20 games as a member of the NCAA and the 11th time in school history.  ESU won at least 20 games in five out of six seasons from 1985-90. Emporia State has won at least ten games in conference play 11 times over the last 33 seasons.

CENTURY MARK
Emporia State's 110-66 win over Saint Mary marked the 103rd time the Hornets have cracked the century mark in their history.  They have reached 100 points seven times in 133 games under Coach Doty, matching their total for the previous eight seasons combined.  
The Hornets scored at least 100 points 60 times under coach Ron Slaymaker (827 total games in 28 seasons), 26 times under David Moe (288 games in 10 seasons), five times under Shaun Vandiver (199 games in seven seasons), three times under Gus Fish (602 games in 25 seasons) and once under Marc Comstock (82 games in three seasons).

REGIONALLY SPEAKING
The NCAA Central Region is made up of teams in the MIAA, Northern Sun and Great American Conferences. The MIAA is 12-15 against the region with an 8-10 record against the NSIC and a 4-5 record against the GAC. Last year the MIAA was 19-18 against the rest of the region with a 9-6 record against the GAC and a 10-12 record against  the NSIC. According to the latest NCAA stats, the MIAA has the best record against outside competition in the nation with a 60-24 (.714) mark against all outside competition. In addition the MIAA is the only conference in the nation where every team's opponents winning percentage was at least .500 on the season at the break. The NSIC is 62-26 (.705) and the GAC is 40-29 (.580) against outside competition.

FRIENDLY CONFINES
The Hornets are 420-197 (.681) since 1979 in White Auditorium. Emporia State has won 204 of their last 296 games (.689) in White Auditorium dating back to the 2002-03 season. In the last 35 years, they have twice had home court winning streaks of at least 20 games. The first was 23 games from 1985-87 followed by a school record 25 game streak from February 12, 2003-January 1, 2005.  They have posted home winning seasons in 18 of the last 20 seasons.

HORNETS RANK IN NATION IN ATTENDANCE
In 11 home games this year the Hornets are averaging 1,240 fans per game to rank ninth in the nation. Emporia State men's basketball fans helped the Hornets rank in the top ten in attendance among the over 300 NCAA Division II basketball playing schools last season. The #7 national ranking continued a string of 19 straight years, not counting COVID, ranking in the top 25 in attendance for Emporia State. The Hornets drew 19,627 total fans for an average of 1,402 fans to their 14 home games at Slaymaker Court in White Auditorium during the 2021-22 season to rank seventh nationally.   Emporia State had a season high 2,865 for their game against Washburn on February 26 on Senior Day.   Emporia State outdrew 123 NCAA Division I schools in total attendance during the 2021-22 school year including eight teams that made the NCAA Tournament. Within the Division II ranks, the Hornets outdrew 60 of the 64 teams that were selected for the NCAA Tournament, including six of the eight #1 seeds and six of the teams that made the Elite Eight.
The Hornets were among six MIAA teams in the top 15 nationally. As a conference the MIAA drew 210,078 fans to 203 games to lead all Division II conference in average attendance at 1,035 fans per game. It is the 13th straight year the MIAA has led the nation in average attendance. The MIAA's total attendance was better than eight NCAA Division I conferences. The Central Region had a total of eight teams ranked in the top 25 as two teams from the NSIC were on the list as well. All three conferences within the Central Region were ranked in the top ten nationally.

LISTEN & WATCH LIVE
Video webcasts for all of Emporia State's regular season home games are available on a pay per view basis from the MIAA Network. Content is available live and is immediately archived for on-demand viewing after each event at www.themiaanetwork.com. Audio of all Emporia State games are available on KFFX 104.9FM and at www.kvoe.com with Greg Rahe on the call. KFFX is in their 35th straight year as the radio home of Hornet Athletics, the longest active streak between a commercial station and an MIAA school. All games will also be available on the internet at www.kvoe.com.

TURNING PRO
Emporia State's Tray Buchanan and Brenden Van Dyke both signed professional contracts following last season, giving the Hornets six professional players in the last four seasons. Buchanan signed with AEL-Limassol in Limassol, Cyprus while Van Dyke signed with CD Agulia San Miguel in El Salvador
Julius Jackson became the fourth Hornet men's basketball player to sign professionally following the 2018-19 season when he signed a professional contract with Raiders Basket Jarvenpaa in Finland. Hassan Thomas signed with Sampaense Basket of Portugal Proliga while Malik Hluchoweckyj signed with KK Bratunac of the Bosnia BiH Liga also signed pro contracts overseas while Kooper Glick played with the Washington Generals - the regular opponent of the Harlem Globetrotters. It is the first time in school history the Hornets  had four players from the same class sign to play professionally in the same year.

ON THE COURT
The court at William L. White Auditorium was formally named Ron Slaymaker Court at half-time of the Hornets win over Washburn on Feb. 28, 2014 after the City of Emporia approved a proclamation at their Feb. 20, 2014  city commission meeting.

AND IN THE RAFTERS
Dale Cushinberry (1966-69) - Cushinberry was an All-American for Emporia State and became the first Hornet with 1,000 points and 700 rebounds.
•Wilbur Reeser (1944-48) - Reeser was named an NAIB All-American and was the Hornets leading scorer as the won a conference championship in 1948.
•Ron Slaymaker (Player 1954-60, Coach 1970-98) - As a player Slaymaker was named All-Conference and All-American during the 1957-58 season. As a coach he won an ESU leading 462 games from 1970-98.
•Jim Fraley (1956-60) - Fraley was the school's all-time leading scorer (1,509) until Brian Robinson broke his record in 1985. He was named Second-team NAIA All-American.
•Doug Glaysher (1960-64) - Glaysher was named an All-American after leading the Hornets to the NAIA National Semi-finals in 1964. He graduated as the second leading scorer in ESU history.
•Brian Robinson (1984-86) - Robinson was named a first team All-American in both his junior and senior season. He is the ESU all-time leading scorer with 2,533 career points.

 
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Players Mentioned

Jumah

#5 Jumah'Ri Turner

G
6' 3"
Senior
Brenden Van Dyke

#24 Brenden Van Dyke

F
6' 8"
Senior
Tray Buchanan

#2 Tray Buchanan

G
6' 1"
Graduate Student
Kaden Evans

#24 Kaden Evans

G
6' 4"
Sophomore
Gage McGuire

#3 Gage McGuire

F
6' 7"
Junior
Peyton Rogers-Schmidt

#1 Peyton Rogers-Schmidt

F
6' 7"
Sophomore
Alijah Comithier

#2 Alijah Comithier

G
6' 7"
Junior
Owen  Long

#14 Owen Long

G
6' 3"
Junior
Atavian Butler

#22 Atavian Butler

G
6' 2"
Junior

Players Mentioned

Jumah

#5 Jumah'Ri Turner

6' 3"
Senior
G
Brenden Van Dyke

#24 Brenden Van Dyke

6' 8"
Senior
F
Tray Buchanan

#2 Tray Buchanan

6' 1"
Graduate Student
G
Kaden Evans

#24 Kaden Evans

6' 4"
Sophomore
G
Gage McGuire

#3 Gage McGuire

6' 7"
Junior
F
Peyton Rogers-Schmidt

#1 Peyton Rogers-Schmidt

6' 7"
Sophomore
F
Alijah Comithier

#2 Alijah Comithier

6' 7"
Junior
G
Owen  Long

#14 Owen Long

6' 3"
Junior
G
Atavian Butler

#22 Atavian Butler

6' 2"
Junior
G