
2008-09 Men's Basketball Season Recap
5/7/2009 10:15:00 AM | Men's Basketball
         The school's first MVC regular-season title since 2001-02, 27 wins, the Findlay Toyota Las Vegas Classic title and record-breaking crowds at Qwest Center Omaha highlighted the 2008-09 Creighton men's basketball season.
    Creighton entered the fall as the preseason favorites in the MVC for the second time in three years and lived up to that billing, sharing the league's regular-season title with Northern Iowa at 14-4 in Valley play.
         For the second straight season Creighton overcame a double-digit deficit in the home opener to win going away. A year ago it was DePaul, but this time it was eventual Mountain West Conference co-champion New Mexico that fell to Creighton. CU trailed by nine with 3:39 to play before embarking on a breathtaking 17-0 run to steal the win. P'Allen Stinnett scored 21 of his career-best 30 points in the second half, while eventual Valley Player of the Year Booker Woodfox gave fans a glimpse of what was to come by scoring 23 of his 26 points after intermission.
         CU followed with a 32-point win over Arkansas-Pine Bluff and 22-point win over Oral Roberts before falling for the first two times of the season. CU was unable to hold a 16-point lead in a loss at Arkansas-Little Rock that saw the Trojans score the winning points on an offensive putback with 7.1 seconds left. Four days later, Nebraska overcame a 13-point halftime deficit to beat the Jays on a Ade Dagunduro lay-up with 2.7 seconds left.
         Creighton would answer those two setbacks by reeling off nine straight wins, spanning the entire month of December. The streak started with a 24-point win over defending SWAC champion Mississippi Valley State.
         Creighton then picked up wins over a pair of Atlantic-10 contenders. First, CU rode a magnificent shooting display by Woodfox (29 points, 7-9 from ?3') to win by 11 at Saint Joseph's in the famed Palestra. Four days later the Jays knocked Dayton from the ranks of the unbeaten with a convincing 77-59 win over the Flyers.
         Creighton then commenced play in the Findlay Toyota Las Vegas Classic. CU earned home wins over Northern Colorado and Southern University before trekking to Sin City. In Vegas, the Jays downed Fresno State by 19 points and DePaul by eight to claim the tournament crown. Woodfox earned tournament MVP honors, scoring 50 points over the two games who hitting 9-of-15 shots from downtown.
         Spurred on by its 10-2 start in non-conference action, CU opened Valley action with a 12-point victory over Wichita State for its eighth straight triumph. A Creighton record crowd of 17,954 jammed the Qwest Center Omaha rafters as the Jays beat WSU for the 16th straight time in Omaha.
         The Jays would close the month with a 79-61 win at Indiana State, leading from wire-to-wire, while handing Dana Altman his 500th win as a college head coach at all levels.
         Creighton lost four of its first seven games in January before putting together an 11-game win streak. CU started the calendar year with a loss to a then-unbeaten Illinois State squad, then suffered a rare home loss to Northern Iowa. Playing without Woodfox at Valley leader Bradley, the Jays won by nine as freshman Antoine Young played his best game to date.
         Creighton then overcame a three-point deficit in the final minute of regulation and a four-point deficit in the final minute of overtime to beat rival Southern Illinois in overtime, 73-72. CU's next three games featured a loss at Wichita State, a road win at Evansville and home loss to Drake before a strong finish.
         The Bluejays would win 11 straight games down the stretch to thrust themselves back in the mix for at-large consideration.
         The streak started with home wins over Indiana State and Missouri State. CU would then gain revenge for home losses to Drake and UNI with road wins against those same schools.
         A home win over Bradley gave Creighton its 11th straight 20-win season as well as its 13th straight campaign of 10 or more conference victories. The Bluejays followed that triumph with its first win in Carbondale since 2001 and a home victory over Evansville.
         Creighton would conquer George Mason in a late-night broadcast as part of ESPN BracketBusters, then rally from an 11-point halftime margin to win at Missouri State in its first trip to JQH Arena.
         The Bluejays closed out the regular-season with a 74-70 win over recent nemesis Illinois State on Senior Day. The victory also clinched a share of CU's first MVC regular-season title since 2001-02, a crown it shared with UNI.
         Creighton headed to the State Farm MVC Tournament in St. Louis, Mo., as the second seed, where it opened with a red-hot Wichita State team.
         The Bluejays would open up a 22-point lead early in the second half and led by 16 with four minutes left before WSU rallied. After the Shockers' Toure Murry hit a go-ahead three-pointer with nine seconds left, the Jays had one last chance when they called their final timeout with 1.9 seconds to go. Josh Dotzler found Woodfox, who took one dribble and buried the game-winning jumper as time expired to give CU the 63-62 win.
         Creighton wouldn't be as fortunate the next afternoon, falling in the semi's to Illinois State by a 73-49 score.
         After eight days of waiting, Creighton was squarely on the bubble for the NCAA Tournament. However instead of earning an NCAA bid, CU would instead make history as the first 26-win team from a top-10 conference to be left out of “The Dance”.
    Creighton would earn one of four top seeds in the NIT, opening with Mid-American Conference champion Bowling Green.
         The Jays trailed by eight with 8:30 to play before once again making one of their patented runs. A three-pointer by Justin Carter with 1:46 to play gave CU the lead, and a last-second three-point try by BGSU's Darryl Clements rimmed out to give CU the victory.
    Creighton's win set up a much-anticipated home game against national power Kentucky, marking the first visit to Omaha by an SEC school since 1940.
         The teams would wage a fierce battle that featured nine ties and 13 lead changes, with neither team leading by more than five all night long. UK All-American Jodie Meeks was kept in check most of the night, but would convert a three-point play with 10.6 seconds left to give the Wildcats a slim 65-63 lead. CU came down and after several timeouts got the ball to Woodfox, but his three-point try for the win would bounce off the rim to end CU's season at 27-8.
         Woodfox led Creighton in scoring (15.8 ppg.), three-pointers made (91), three-point percentage (.476) and free-throw percentage (.868) en route to becoming the school's fourth person ever named MVC Player of the Year. Woodfox, who finished second nationally in three-point percentage, would eventually be invited to the Three-Point Shootout at the Final Four as well.
         Stinnett followed up Freshman of the Year honors last season with second-team all-Valley accolades as a sophomore. He averaged 12.5 points per game while ranking second on the squad in scoring, steals (48) and three-pointers made (43).
         Rounding out CU's starting backcourt was senior Josh Dotzler, who led The Valley with 70 steals while earning a spot on the league's all-Defensive team. Dotzler also led CU with 121 assists and ranked fourth nationally with a 3.46 assist/turnover ratio.
    Creighton's front line was anchored by Kenny Lawson Jr., Carter and Kenton Walker. 
         Lawson led the MVC in all games with 56 blocked shots and was second on CU's club with 4.8 rebounds and third with 8.5 points per game. Lawson was also voted to the MVC's all-Defensive Team.
         Carter was fourth on the team in scoring at 8.1 ppg., but would lead CU with 5.5 rebounds per game in his first season on The Hilltop. Carter hauled down 15 rebounds against Kentucky, CU's most in a game since 1999, and also led the team by taking nine charges.
         Walker averaged 5.1 points and 3.9 rebounds per game while shooting 54.9 percent from the field. Walker, who also pulled down CU's only double-double of the season, had an MVC-best 31 blocked shots league action.
         In addition to Walker, Creighton's bench corps was paced by Young, Cavel Witter, Casey Harriman, Chad Millard, Dustin Sitzmann and Kaleb Korver.
         Young came on strong down the stretch and finished averaging 4.9 points per game while scoring in double-figures seven times in the final nine weeks of the season.
         Witter scored 7.7 points per game and finished second on the team in free-throw percentage (.854) and assists (78) while moving from point guard to shooting guard as the season wore on.
         Harriman averaged 3.6 points and 2.7 rebounds per game while shooting 40.3 percent from downtown. His 50 percent marksmanship from three-point territory in conference action paced the MVC.
         Millard averaged 3.0 points and 1.5 rebounds despite missing nine games in January/February with a high ankle sprain.
         Korver played in all 35 games, including two starts, and averaged 3.7 points per game while connecting on 39 shots from three-point range.
         Sitzmann's fifth and final year in the Bluejay program once again saw him providing invaluable leadership to a squad full of relative inexperience at the Division I level.
         Creighton's 27 wins were second-most in school history, trailing only the 2002-03 club that finished 29-5.
     CU attracted 302,676 fans in 19 home games, an average of 15,930 fans per contest. The aggregate made CU the first school in Valley history to attract 300,000 fans in a season, and the 15,930 fans per game ranked 12th nationally and also established a school- and MVC-record.
Radio Broadcast Information
KXSP (“Big Sports 590” AM) broadcasted all Creighton men's basketball games during the 2008-09 season. T. Scott Marr, Nick Bahe, Kevin Sarver, Jimmy Motz, Pierce Hibma and Brody Deren called the action at various times.
    With the exception of the NIT contests, all games were streamed on www.bigsports590.com.
    Former Big Sports 590 afternoon host Matt Perrault hosted a call-in show prior to all home games focusing on the Bluejays, that led into the pre-game show. Perrault also took calls after the game, also on Big Sports 590.
Television Broadcast Information
Creighton had 25 games on television this season, going 17-8 in those contests.
    Networks to televise the Bluejays this winter included KMTV (nine games), FSN Midwest (7), ESPN2 (2), ESPNU (2), NET-1 (2), NET-2 (1), WTVP (1) and ESPN (1).
    Travis Justice and Nick Bahe handled the call for the nine KMTV telecasts.
Video Webcast Information
Close to 20 games were video webcast on a pay-per-view basis via gocreighton.com this season. The schedule included all home games except contests broadcast by FSN and ESPN, and several road games in which video was shared or televised by KMTV.    
Live Stats
Creighton had live stats for nearly every game during the 2008-09 season, including all home games. 
The Coach
The dean of Missouri Valley Conference coaches, Creighton's Dana Altman (Eastern New Mexico, 1980) finished his 15th year as head coach of the Bluejays. 
    He now owns a 309-160 (.659) mark at Creighton and a career record of 392-227 (.633) in his 20th year as a NCAA Division I head coach when you add four seasons at Kansas State and one at Marshall. Tack on four years at the junior college level and Altman's overall record as a college head coach is 515-251 (.672).
    Creighton's all-time winningest coach, Altman has been named national, conference, regional or district coach of the year in 10 of his 24 years as a head coach. The 2001 and 2002 MVC Coach of the Year was a finalist for the Naismith National Coach of the Year Award in 2003. In 2004, Altman was named the Collegeinsider.com Jim Phelan National Mid-Season Coach of the Year. In March, 2007,  Altman was named a coach on the MVC's All-Centennial Team.
    Additionally, Altman has led Creighton to seven NCAA Tournaments and his teams have played in the postseason in 12 straight seasons. He was assisted by Brian Fish, Darian DeVries and Todd Eisner. Nick Bahe was the team's graduate manager.
MVC Tournament Recap
Creighton went 1-1 at the State Farm Missouri Valley Conference Tournament (March 6-7), which was contested at Scottrade Center in St. Louis, Mo.
    The second-seeded Bluejays defeated Wichita State, 63-62, in quarterfinal round action thanks to a buzzer-beating game-winner by Booker Woodfox.
    In the semifinals, Creighton would never lead while losing a 73-49 decision to Illinois State.
    Woodfox, who led CU with 30 combined points in the two games, was named to the All-Tournament Team.
Altman Among These Leaders
Creighton head coach Dana Altman ranks tied for 11th nationally in Division I wins at his current school with 309. The 12 coaches on this list have combined for 12 national titles and 26 Final Four appearances.
Rk.    W-L    Name, School    Years
1.    799-288    Jim Boeheim, Syracuse    33
2.    760-215    Mike Krzyzewski, Duke    29
3.    557-205    Jim Calhoun, Connecticut    23
4.    418-229    Gary Williams, Maryland    20
5.    407-351    Tom Green, Fairleigh Dickinson    26
6.    371-321    Fang Mitchell, Coppin State    23
7.    367-233    Bob McKillop, Davidson    20
8.    364-263    Bob Thomason, Pacific    21
9.    336-137    Tom Izzo, Michigan State    14
10.    314-261    Dave Loos, Austin Peay    19
T11.    309-160    Dana Altman, Creighton    15
T11.    309-126    Billy Donovan, Florida    13
Altman Passing Coaching Legends
Dana Altman continues to pass some of the coaching greats in MVC history in two categories. Altman's 309 wins at Creighton are third in MVC history, while his 172 triumphs in regular-season conference games are second-most in league history.
    Both men above him, Henry Iba and Eddie Hickey, are in the Basketball Hall of Fame. Hickey entered the MVC Hall of Fame this March in conjunction with Arch Madness. 
Coaches--Most Wins As MVC Member--All Games
    Wins    Coach    School(s)
1.    486    Henry Iba    Oklahoma A&M
2.    337    Eddie Hickey    Creighton & St. Louis
3.    309    Dana Altman    Creighton
MVC Coaches--Most Wins In Conference Games
    Wins    Coach       School(s)
1.    187    Henry Iba    Oklahoma A&M
2.    172    Dana Altman    Creighton    
3.    163    Eddie Hickey    Creighton & St. Louis
Tenure? He's Got 15 Years
Dana Altman is the dean of MVC coaches, as he just finished his 15th season as head coach at  Creighton. 
    According to a recent article by The Washington Times, Altman's 15 years at CU ranks 16th-longest nationally among active head coaches at one school. Below is that list:
Yrs.    Name, School
33    Jim Boeheim, Syracuse
31    Dave Bike, Sacred Heart
29    Mike Krzyzewski, Duke
27    Don Maestri, Troy
26    Tom Green, Fairleigh Dickinson
25    Greg Kampe, Oakland
23    Rick Byrd, Belmont; Jim Calhoun, Connecticut; Ron “Fang” Mitchell, Coppin State; Vann Pettaway, Alabama A&M
21    Bob Thomason, Pacific
20    Bob McKillop, Davidson; Gary Williams, Maryland
19    Dave Loos, Austin Peay
16    Kirk Speraw, Central Florida
15    Dana Altman, Creighton; Ron Hunter, IUPUI; Rick Scruggs, Gardner-Webb
14    Tom Izzo, Michigan State; Phil Martelli, Saint Joseph's, Scott Nagy, South Dakota State; Fran O'Hanlon, Lafayette
Postseason x 12
Creighton has made either the NIT or NCAA in 12 consecutive seasons, the longest streak of postseason bids in MVC history. It is two more than the 10 straight from 1966 to 1975 by Louisville.
    The only 12 schools to make the postseason in each of the last 12 years are Arizona, Creighton, Duke, Florida, Gonzaga, Kansas, Kentucky, Maryland, Michigan State, Oklahoma State, Stanford and Syracuse.
    Creighton, which also boasts a men's soccer team with 17 straight NCAA appearances, is the nation's only school with 12 straight postseason appearances in both men's basketball and men's soccer.
20 Overall Wins x 11 Years = MVC History
Creighton is the only school in the 102-year history of the Missouri Valley Conference to post 11 straight 20-win campaigns, a figure it reached this season on Feb. 11 with a win over Bradley. No other Valley school has ever won more than six straight 20-win seasons.
    Creighton is one of six teams nationally with 20 or more wins in each of last 11 seasons. That list consists of Creighton, Duke, Florida, Gonzaga, Kansas and Syracuse.
20 Wins = Postseason Again
Creighton, Northern Iowa, Bradley and Illinois State all had 20 or more wins this year, and all four made the postseason. Since the NCAA Tournament field was expanded to 64 teams (1985), 65 Valley teams have posted 20 wins prior to "Selection Sunday."  All but one reached post-season play (Creighton in 1985 did not).
10 Conference Wins x 13
Creighton has also extended its MVC record by winning 10 or more league games for a 13th consecutive season. Prior to Dana Altman's arrival, the Bluejays had 10 or more conference wins in only six different seasons all-time.
    On a national basis, the only other team with at least 13 straight years of 10 or more league wins is Kansas (15).
Record Breaking Attendance
Creighton attracted 302,676 home fans this season, a figure that is the most in the 102-year history of the MVC. 
    The Jays also set an MVC record in average attendance. Creighton averaged 15,930 fans currently (12th nationally), just ahead of the 15,909 average from 2006-07.
Highest Season Home Attendance, MVC History
    Home Att.    School    Year
    302,676    Creighton    2008-09
    276,000    Creighton    2007-08
    236,313    Creighton    2005-06
    222,728    Creighton    2006-07
    192,258    Creighton    2003-04
    191,440    Louisville    1974-75
Highest Average Attendance, MVC History
    Avg. Att.    School    Year
    15,930    Creighton    2008-09
    15,909    Creighton     2006-07 
    15,333    Creighton    2007-08
    13,901    Creighton    2005-06
    13,674    Louisville    1974-75
2008-09 Attendance Leaders
    Rk.    School    Average    
    1.    Kentucky    23,012    
    2.    Syracuse    21,044    
    3.    North Carolina    21,035    
    4.    Tennessee    20,483    
    5.    Louisville    19,397    
    6.    Wisconsin    17,230    
    7.    Maryland    17,048    
    8.    Memphis    16,933    
    9.    Kansas    16,350    
    10.    Marquette    16,200    
    11.    Arkansas    16,043    
    12.    Creighton    15,930
    13.    Illinois    15,498    
    14.    Ohio State    15,462    
    15.    Indiana    14,331    
Team of the Decade?
Below is the records for each MVC school since the start of the 2000-01 season, ranked by overall winning percentage. Creighton leads the MVC overall with 210 wins in the decade, as well as nine postseason appearances:
MVC Standings (2000-01 to end of 2008-09)
        MVC     only          All Games
Team    W    L    Pct.    W    L    Pct.
Creighton    115    47    .710    210    82    .719
Southern Illinois    118    44    .728    202    93    .685
Northern Iowa    84    78    .519    156    125    .555
Missouri State    85    77    .525    157    126    .555
Wichita State    83    79    .512    156    127    .551
Illinois State    75    87    .463    146    131    .527
Bradley    78    84    .481    154    137    .529
Drake    69    93    .426    135    138    .495
Indiana State    50    112    .309    107    168    .389
Evansville    53    109    .327    101    163    .383
Postseason Appearances by MVC Teams 
(Since 2000-01)
Team    NCAA    NIT    CBI    CIT      Total
Creighton    5    4    0    0    9
Southern Illinois    6    1    0    0    7
Bradley    1    2    1    1    5
Wichita State    1    3    1    0    5
Northern Iowa    4    0    0    0    4
Missouri State    0    3    0    0    3
Illinois State    0    3    0    0    3
Drake    1    0    0    1    2
Evansville    0    0    0    1    1
Indiana State    1    0    0    0    1
Creighton's NIT History
Creighton played in its 10th National Invitation Tournament, owning a 5-10 all-time record in the event.
    Creighton owns a 3-5 home record, an 0-3 road record and a 2-2 neutral-site record in games played at Madison Square Garden.
    This was Creighton's fifth NIT appearance under Dana Altman, who is 3-5 in NIT games at Creighton and 7-8 in his career when you include two NIT appearances while at Kansas State.
1942 (2-1) in New York City, N.Y.
3/16    Creighton 59, West Texas A&M 58
3/23    W. Kentucky 49, Creighton 36    
3/25    Creighton 48, Toledo 46
1943 (0-1) in New York City, N.Y.
3/18    Washington & Jefferson 43, Creighton 42
1977 (0-1) in Omaha, Neb.
3/08    Illinois State 65, Creighton 58
1984 (0-1) in Omaha, Neb.
3/15    Nebraska 56, Creighton 54
1990 (0-1) in Chicago, Ill.
3/16    DePaul 89, Creighton 72
1998 (0-1) in Milwaukee, Wis.
3/11    Marquette 80, Creighton 68
2004 (0-1) in Omaha, Neb.
3/16    Nebraska 71, Creighton 70
2006 (1-1) in Omaha, Neb.
3/16    Creighton 71, Akron 60
3/20    Miami (Fla.) 53, Creighton 52
2008 (1-1) in Omaha, Neb. & Gainesville, Fla.
3/18    Creighton 74, Rhode Island 73
3/21    Florida 82, Creighton 54
2009 (1-1) in Omaha, Neb.
3/18    Creighton 73, Bowling Green 71
3/23    Kentucky 65, Creighton 63
Back-to-Back NIT Appearances
This was Creighton's 10th appearance in the NIT, but just the second time it made back-to-back appearances. CU also earned consecutive NIT bids in 1942 and 1943, back when the NIT was considered the “elite” postseason tournament.
The 27-Win Group
Creighton tied for 15th nationally with 27 wins this season, and were one of 24 schools with 27 or more wins this season.
    This year Creighton became the only school from a top-10 league to ever win 26 or more games by Selection Sunday and not receive an NCAA Tournament bid. 
Wins    Schools
34    North Carolina
33    Memphis
31    Missouri, Louisville, Pittsburgh, Connecticut, Michigan State
30    Duke, Villanova, Oklahoma, Utah State
28    Gonzaga, Saint Mary's, Syracuse
27    Creighton, Davidson, LSU, Charleston, Dayton, Purdue, Penn State, Kansas, Siena, Xavier
Dance Regulars
Creighton is one of 20 schools to have appeared in multiple NCAA Tournaments during each of the past five decades.
Multiple NCAA Appearances, Last 5 Decades
Team    60's    70's    80's    90's    00's
Arizona State    4    2    2    2    2
BYU    2    3    5    5    7
Creighton    2    3    2    2    6
DePaul    2    3    9    2    2
Duke    4    2    7    9    10
Kansas    3    4    6    10    10
Kentucky    6    7    9    8    9
Louisville    4    6    8    7    7
Marquette    3    9    3    4    6
North Carolina    3    6    10    10    8
Princeton    7    2    4    6    2
Providence    3    5    2    3    2
Temple    2    3    5    10    4
Texas Tech    2    2    2    2    4
UCLA    7    10    5    10    8
Utah    3    3    3    7    6
UTEP    4    2    6    2    2
Villanova    3    4    8    6    5
Weber State    2    6    2    2    2
Western Kentucky    4    4    4    3    5
Non-Conference Home Success
Creighton owns an 80-13 (.860) record in non-conference home games under Dana Altman. Equally impressive, CU is 40-6 (.870) in non-conference home games since moving to Qwest Center Omaha.
    During CU's active string of 12 straight postseason bids, the Bluejays are 63-8 (.887) in home games against non-conference foes.
Rare SEC Team Visited Omaha
The March 23 second-round NIT game marked Kentucky's first trip to Omaha to play Creighton since Dec. 19, 1940. As hard as it may be to believe, that trip still made them the most recent Southeastern Conference squad to play Creighton in Omaha.
    The SEC was formed in 1932, but only two members have ever visited Creighton. Creighton hosted Kentucky twice in 1933, once in 1940 and once this March, while Vanderbilt played at CU on consecutive nights during the 1936 season.
    Creighton is 2-2 in the home games against Kentucky and 2-0 in the home games with Vanderbilt.
    Getting BCS schools to come to Omaha to play is a consistent issue. Creighton has hosted just one ACC team since 1963 (Miami in the 2006 NIT), one Big Ten team since 1973 (Iowa in 1999) and no Pacific-10 teams in the past 30 years.
BCS Bracket Buster
Some of Creighton's most thrilling victories in recent seasons have been against teams from the six major college football BCS Conferences. Head coach Dana Altman is 22-20 at CU against those schools, including a 20-13 mark in the past 11 seasons.
    Creighton went 1-2 against BCS opponents in 2008-09, including a win over DePaul.
    Among CU's victims in that time have been Nebraska (nine times), DePaul (twice), Florida (twice), Iowa (twice), Baylor (twice), Oklahoma State (once), Notre Dame (once), Providence (once), Missouri (once) and Ohio State (once).
Qwest To Be The Best
Creighton has played 100 regular and post-season contests at Qwest Center Omaha all-time, which means the Kentucky game was the 100th such contest. The Bluejays own an 84-16 (.840) record all-time at the facility, including a perfect 18-0 figure on Wednesday's, a 6-0 mark on Thursday's and a 1-0 mark on Friday's. 
    Creighton has outscored its opponents 7,406-6,241 in games at Qwest Center Omaha, an average margin of 11.7 points per game. The 16 losses have been by a combined 87 points.
    The Jays have led wire-to-wire 19 different times.
Bright Lights, Big Wins
Creighton is 27-10 in its last 37 games on ESPN, ESPN2 or ESPNU. Creighton is 8-1 since March 1, 1999 on ESPN (The Original).
    Creighton went 4-1 this season on ESPN/ESPN2/ESPNU, winning three of those games by double-figures.
    In these 37 ESPN appearances, Creighton is 26-3 when scoring 62 points or more, but just 1-7 when scoring 61 points or less.
    Below is CU's recent results on the ESPN family of networks:
Date    Opponent    Score    Network
03/23/09    Kentucky    L 63-65    ESPN
02/28/09    Illinois State    W 74-70    ESPN2
02/21/09    George Mason    W 76-63    ESPNU
02/14/09    at Southern Illinois    W 82-60    ESPN2
01/20/09    at Evansville    W 79-57    ESPNU
03/21/08    at Florida    L 54-82    ESPN2
03/18/08    Rhode Island    W 74-73    ESPNU
02/23/08    at Oral Roberts    W 65-64    ESPN2
02/19/08    Missouri State    W 88-67    ESPNU
02/10/08    Southern Illinois    W 72-53    ESPNU
02/05/08    Northern Iowa    W 74-50    ESPNU
01/26/08    at Southern Illinois    L 44-48    ESPN2
01/15/08    at Northern Iowa    W 68-59    ESPN2
02/24/07    Wichita State    W 71-54    ESPN2
02/17/07    Drexel    L 58-64    ESPN2
02/13/07    Northern Iowa    W 66-55    ESPNU
02/10/07    at Southern Illinois    L 68-72    ESPN2
12/30/06    Missouri State    W 77-74    ESPN2
12/06/06    at Dayton    L 54-60    ESPNU
02/18/06    Fresno State    W 67-62    ESPN
02/14/06    at Wichita State    L 61-62 ot    ESPNU
01/31/06    Northern Iowa    W 63-55    ESPNU
03/07/05    vs. Missouri State    W 75-57    ESPN
02/12/05    at Southern Illinois    L 67-71    ESPN2
02/09/05    Northern Iowa    W 83-82    ESPN2
02/21/04    at Kent State     L 55-70    ESPN2
02/07/04    Southern Illinois     L 60-61    ESPN2
03/10/03    vs. Southern Illinois    W 80-56    ESPN
02/22/03    Fresno State    W 67-66    ESPN2
01/18/03    Southern Illinois    W 85-76    ESPN2
03/04/02    vs. Southern Illinois    W 84-76    ESPN2
02/23/02    at Bradley    W 80-64    ESPN2
02/17/01    Wyoming    W 84-72    ESPN
02/10/01    at Southern Illinois    W 77-63    ESPN
03/06/00    vs. Missouri State    W 57-45    ESPN
02/07/00    at Colorado State    W 78-67    ESPN
03/01/99    vs. Evansville    W 70-61    ESPN
Qwest Center Home To Some Close Games
March 23 was Creighton's sixth postseason game at the six-year-old Qwest Center Omaha. Three of the six games were decided by a single point, and two others were decided by exactly two points.
    Creighton has won 16 of its last 21 games decided by one point (including six straight), and is 18-11 under Dana Altman in such contests. 
NIT Games, Qwest Center Omaha History
Date    Att.    Score
3/16/04    13,483    Nebraska 71, Creighton 70
3/16/06    10,197    Creighton 71, Akron 60
3/20/06    10,018    Miami 53, Creighton 52
3/18/08      7,948    Creighton 74, Rhode Island 73
3/18/09    9,577    Creighton 73, Bowling Green 71
3/23/09    16,984    Kentucky 65, Creighton 63
Qwest Center Record Falls
Booker Woodfox set a Qwest Center Omaha record for points in a season by one player. He  scored 297 points in 19 games at home this year, ahead of Nate Funk's 286 points in 15 games during the 2004-05 campaign.
Stinnett Plays Distributor
Creighton sophomore P'Allen Stinnett tied a career-high with six assists in the win over Bowling Green. Stinnett dished his helpers to five different men.
    Last year in Creighton's NIT opener against Rhode Island, Stinnett was double-teamed in the closing seconds and found a wide-open Cavel Witter, who drained a game-winning three-pointer with 3.2 seconds left.
About The Senior Class
Creighton's senior class consisted of Josh Dotzler, Booker Woodfox and Dustin Sitzmann. Over the past four years, Creighton was 91-40 with four 20-win seasons and four postseason appearances (one NCAA, three NIT's).
    Dotzler is a senior guard from Omaha who owned 422 points, 388 assists, 196 steals and 182 rebounds in his career. He played in 117 games, including 96 starts, and ranks in the top-seven in CU history in both assists and steals.
    Sitzmann is a senior guard from LeMars, Iowa, who owned 16 points, eight rebounds and six assists in his career. Sitzmann played in 40 games, all as a reserve, while seeing 77 minutes of action.
    Woodfox is a senior guard from Lewisville, Texas, who owned 853 points, 158 rebounds and 79 assists in his career. Woodfox played in 67 games, including 34 starts, and set a CU record for three-point percentage in a career.
Woodfox Named MVC Player of the Year
Senior Booker Woodfox was named the Larry Bird Missouri Valley Conference Player of the Year, edging out Evansville's Shy Ely and UNI's Adam Koch.
    Woodfox is the fourth player in school history to earn MVC Player of the Year accolades, joining Bob Harstad (1990), Chad Gallagher (1991) and Kyle Korver (2002 and 2003).
    Woodfox led Creighton with 15.8 points per game, 91 three-pointers made, 47.6 percent from three-point range and 86.8 percent from the line.
Honor Roll Update
No fewer than eight different players on this year's Creighton team were honored by the MVC office this season.
    Booker Woodfox was named Larry Bird MVC Player of the Year, as well as a first-team all-Valley selection. This is his first honor on the first-team all-MVC squad, and he joins Bob Harstad (1990), Chad Gallagher (1991), Kyle Korver (2002 and 2003) as CU student-athletes to win Valley Player of the Year accolades. Woodfox was also named to the NABC's All-District Team on March 5th and to the MVC All-Tournament Team on March 8th.
    P'Allen Stinnett was a second-team all-MVC pick. Last season Stinnett was an honorable-mention all-Valley choice.
    Josh Dotzler and Kenny Lawson Jr. were both on the MVC's All-Defensive Team. Dotzler topped the league with 70 steals while Lawson led the way with 56 blocked shots. This was the first such honor for both men.
    CU also landed two men on the MVC's All-Bench Team. Freshman Antoine Young and sophomore Kenton Walker both earned a spot on that club.
    Last but not least, Creighton had two men on The Valley's Scholar-Athlete Team. Sophomore Kaleb Korver (3.377 GPA in Business) and senior Dustin Sitzmann (3.886 in Exercise Science) were honored on the second-team. It is the first such honor for both gentlemen.
Against Postseason Opponents
Creighton played 20 games against postseason qualifiers this season, going 13-7.
    Creighton was 2-1 against NCAA qualifiers, 3-4 against NIT foes, 5-1 against Collegeinsider.com Tournament qualifiers and 2-1 against teams that played in the CBI.
What Is The Patch For?
Creighton wore one patch on its uniform. Located near the top of the shorts on the right leg is a black patch with the words “Doc” inscribed. The patch honors Dr. Lee “Doc” Bevilacqua, Creighton's volunteer team physician for 32 years until his passing in October of 1998. A member of the Creighton Athletics and MVC Hall's of Fame, Bevilacqua never received monetary compensation and always paid his own way when he traveled with teams.
Postseason Features Last-Second Endings
Seven of Creighton's last eight postseason runs have included a game that was decided in the final seconds, including the past six seasons.
    On March 23, 2009, Kentucky nipped Creighton 65-63 in a game that neither team led by more than five points. After Jodie Meeks' three-point play with 10.6 seconds left, CU's Booker Woodfox would miss a game-winning three-pointer as time expired.
    On March 18, 2009, Creighton rallied from a 14-point deficit and would hang on to beat Bowling Green, 73-71. The Jays needed a last-second defensive stand, as BGSU's Darryl Clements' game-winning three-pointer at the buzzer was off the mark.
    Last year Creighton rallied from a 12-point deficit in the final 3:07 to top Rhode Island, 73-72, in the first round of the NIT. Cavel Witter hit the game-winner with 3.2 seconds left to give CU its first lead of the game since 3-0.
    In 2007, Creighton had the ball for a final shot in a tie game against Nevada in the first round of the NCAA Tournament. Nate Funk's shot attempt missed, and a tip-in try was also not converted. The Jays would eventually lose 77-71 in overtime.
    In 2006 in the NIT, Miami (Fla.) guard Guilermo Diaz drained a free throw with 2.6 seconds left to beat Creighton 53-52. A last-second shot attempt by Bluejay senior Johnny Mathies was knocked out of his hands.
    In the 2005 NCAA Tourney, Nate Funk had his three-point try with seven seconds left blocked by Tyrone Sally, and Sally raced downcourt for a breakaway dunk with 2.4 seconds left to give West Virginia a 63-61 win. Funk's three-point try from the corner missed at the buzzer.
    In 2004, Creighton fell 71-70 to Nebraska in the NIT. The Jays led nearly the entire second half before NU's go-ahead basket with 12 seconds left. Nate Funk's game-winning jumper from 18-feet away was blocked by Husker guard Jake Muhleisen.
    In 2002, Creighton beat #15 Florida, 83-82, in Chicago. Terrell Taylor hit a game-winning trey with 0.2 seconds left in double-overtime, his final three of 28 points after a scoreless first half.
We Got Game
Creighton's game vs. Kentucky was its 35th of the season, setting the school record for most games in a season. The Bluejays played 34 games in 2004-05 and 2002-03.
    Creighton's players to start all 35 games this season included Kenny Lawson Jr., Justin Carter and Josh Dotzler.
    Current Creighton players to appear in all 35 games this season include Lawson, Carter, Dotzler, Cavel Witter, Casey Harriman and Kaleb Korver.
    Below are the players who currently own a share of those single-season records: 
Games Played (35)    Games Started (35)
Kenny Lawson Jr., ?09    Kenny Lawson Jr., ?09
Justin Carter, ?09    Justin Carter, ?09
Josh Dotzler, ?09    Josh Dotzler, ?09
Cavel Witter, ?09
Casey Harriman, ?09
Kaleb Korver, ?09
At The Buzzer!
Booker Woodfox's jumper as time expired on March 6th to beat Wichita State was the first time that Creighton hit a go-ahead basket at the buzzer since Jan. 28, 2006, when Anthony Tolliver scored to give CU a 58-56 victory over Wichita State.
    Woodfox hit three baskets in his Creighton career that gave CU the lead for good in the final 30 seconds of an eventual win. Last year he hit a shot to beat Oral Roberts, and earlier this year he drained a three-pointer that beat Southern Illinois.
Half-Grand Man
Senior Booker Woodfox scored 536 points this season, good for 26th on CU's all-time single-season list.
    Woodfox is just the fourth different Creighton player to score more than 500 points in the past 15 years, joining an elite group that includes Kyle Korver (2003), Nate Funk (2005 and 2007) and Rodney Buford (1997, 1998 and 1999).
An Unlikely Turnaround?
Creighton trailed Northern Iowa by three games in the league standings with six conference games left, heading into a road game against the first-place Panthers  on Feb. 8th.
    Creighton left Cedar Falls with a 77-71 road win, snapping UNI's school-record 11-game win streak, and sending notice that the race was on for the regular-season title.
    Creighton owns a combined 14 all-time regular-season titles (7 outright, 7 shared), more than any other league school except Oklahoma A&M (15) and Kansas (also 14). 
Three Streak Set A Record
Booker Woodfox made a three-pointer in his final 31 straight games, which was the seventh-longest active streak nationally to end the year.
    Woodfox's streak was the longest in CU history, three ahead of Kyle Korver's stretch of 28 games in a row with a trifecta. 
    It's worth noting that Korver's streak of 28 games with a trey was snapped when he did not attempt a field goal in 24 minutes of play during an 83-56 win over UNI on Feb. 9, 2002. Korver then drained a triple in 27 more games in a row, a stretch from Feb. 13, 2002 to Jan. 20, 2003.
Consecutive Games With a 3-Pointer, CU History
Streak    Name    Dates
    31    Booker Woodfox    11/25/08 to 3/23/09
    28    Kyle Korver    2/4/01 to 2/6/02
    27    Kyle Korver    2/13/02 to 1/20/03
Consecutive Games With A 3-Pointer, Individuals
Courtesy STATS Inc.
Rank    No.    Name, Team    Next Game
1.    44    Josh Akognon, Cal St Fullerton    --
2.    43    Craig Moore, Northwestern    --
3.    36    Jack McClinton, Miami Fla.    --
4.    34    Ryan Schneider, Marist    --
    34    Ryan Wittman, Cornell    --
6.    32    Chase Adams, Centenary    --
7.    31    Booker Woodfox, Creighton    --
8.    30    Jamarco Warren, Charleston So.    --
9.    29    David Holston, Chicago State    --
Nation's Best Shooter?
Creighton guard Booker Woodfox continued to sink shots from all distances and angles, making his case as one of the nation's top shooters.
    Woodfox ranked second in the NCAA in three-point field goal percentage (47.6 percent) and was 21st in free-throw percentage at 86.8 percent, which made him one of three players in the country to rank in the top-21 nationally in both three-point percentage and free-throw percentage.
    Below is a list of 11 incredible figures as they relate to Woodfox:
1. Ranked second in the nation in three-point percentage (47.6 percent).
2. One of three players to rank in the top-20 nationally in both 3FG% and FT%, joining Miami's Jack McClinton and Texas Tech's Alan Voskuil.
3. Set a Creighton record with 36 consecutive made free throws earlier this season.
4. Made 48-of-51 free-throw attempts away from home this season (94.1 percent), including 25-of-25 in MVC road games this year.
5. Shot 53.2 percent (50-94) from three-point range in games not against MVC schools.
6. When you subtract nine games played in January when he was hobbled by a bum ankle, Woodfox shot 51.0 percent from three-point land (77-151) this season.
7. Made 54.2 percent (13-24) of his three-point attempts in games televised by ESPN, ESPN2 or ESPNU this year.
8. Shattered CU's career mark for three-point accuracy at 45.5 percent, just ahead of Kyle Korver's school-record mark.
9. Woodfox made a three-pointer in a school-record 31 straight games to end his career.
10. Hit a 16-foot jumper as time expired as Creighton beat Wichita State, 63-62, in the MVC Tournament quarterfinals. The shot helped avoid a potentially devastating loss that saw CU blow a 16-point lead in the final four minutes before his heroics.
11. Creighton was 15-0 this year when Woodfox made more than 50 percent of his field goal attempts and 11-0 when he was over 50 percent from three-point territory.
Woodfox Takes Seventh at 3-Point Shootout
Booker Woodfox took seventh at the ESPN's Three-Point Shootout at the Final Four in Detroit. Miami's Jack McClinton won the event.
    Woodfox is Creighton's second player in the past six years to earn an invite to this event. In 2003, Kyle Korver finished second to Butler's Darnell Archey in the competition.
Pair of 9's
Creighton was one of four teams in the country that posted multiple win streaks of nine or more this season, joining Connecticut, North Carolina and Xavier.
    Creighton won nine straight games from Dec. 2-31 and then 11 victories in a row from Jan. 27-March 6th.
    This was the first time in school history that Creighton had two win streaks of nine or longer in the same season.
A Tradition of Win Streaks
Creighton's 11-game win streak (Jan. 27-March 6) was its longest streak in five years. The Bluejays have had at least one five-game win streak in 12 straight seasons, and 20 such streaks overall in the 15-year tenure of Dana Altman. Since 1988-89, the Bluejays have made the postseason all 15 times they've had a five-game winning streak in a season, but missed the postseason all six times they haven't.
    Below is a list of Creighton's longest win streaks under Dana Altman.
CU's Longest Win Streaks Under Dana Altman
    W's       Dates    Postseason?
    12    Nov. 22, 2003-Jan. 11, 2004    NIT
    11    Jan. 27-March 3, 2001    NCAA
    11    Jan. 27 - March 6, 2009    NIT
    10    Nov. 17-Dec. 29, 2002    NCAA
    9    Jan. 21-Feb. 16, 1998    NIT
    9    Nov. 22-Dec. 21, 1999    NCAA
    9    Dec. 2-31, 2008    NIT
    8    Feb. 16-March 7, 2005    NCAA
    7    Four Times
    6    Four Times    
    5    Four Times
Perfect Months
Creighton went 9-0 in December, closing out a perfect month with a Dec. 31 win at Indiana State. This marked Creighton's first-ever unbeaten month when playing nine games or more. Creighton's last previous undefeated December came in 2003-04, when the team went 7-0.
    Creighton also went 9-0 in the month of February, the school's first ever unbeaten February in which it played nine or more games.
Chasing History
Creighton picked up its 20th win this season on Feb. 11th with a win over Bradley. This was the 21st time that Creighton had won 20 or more games, but only once before has it gotten there quicker on the calendar.
    In the 2002-03 season, Creighton became the nation's first team to 20 wins when it beat Northern Iowa on Feb. 4th. That Creighton team won a school-record 29 games.
    Creighton's 27 wins this season are second-most all-time, trailing only the 2002-03 season.    Below is a list of the campaigns in which Creighton has had 24 or more wins in a season.
Wins    Year(s)
29    2002-03
27    2008-09
24    2000-01, 1990-91
Five In Double-Figures x 3
Creighton placed five men in double-figures in consecutive wins over Bradley, Southern Illinois and Evansville in February.
    Prior to that stretch, CU hadn't placed five players in double-figures during the same game since Jan. 31, 2007 when it did so against Bradley.
    Creighton had not placed five men in double-figures in three consecutive games in a search back through readily available box scores dating to the 1981-82 season.
Biggest Road Wins
Creighton won four Valley road games by double-digits this season. 
    Creighton's 79-57 win at Evansville on Jan. 20th ranked as the school's fourth-largest victory margin ever out of 367 Valley road games played. The Jays posted another 22-point Valley road win on Feb. 14th at Southern Illinois, topping the Salukis 82-60.
    In fact, since 1933, the Jays had only posted one Valley road win by 22 points or more, a 28-point win in 2003 at Indiana State.
    The 22-point victories at Evansville and Southern Illinois match the largest in the MVC this season by a road team in a conference game, as UNI also defeated Drake 81-59 on Jan. 17th and Illinois State beat Drake 67-45 on Feb. 15th.
    Below is a list of CU's all-time Valley road wins by 22 points or more:
Largest MVC Road Win Margins, CU History
Score    Margin    Opponent    Date
46-16    +30    at Morningside    2/16/1925
74-46    +28    at Indiana State    1/29/2003
43-17    +26    at Drake    1/15/1932
79-57    +22    at Evansville    1/20/2009
82-60    +22    at Southern Illinois    2/14/2009
Road Reversal
Six of Creighton's MVC road results were the opposite of how it did in those road trips last season. In the six Valley venues Creighton lost in last season, it went 5-1. In the three Valley cities Creighton won in last year, it went 2-1.
Opponent    2007-08    2008-09
at Bradley    BU 87-59    CU 73-64
at Drake    DU 75-65    CU 79-68
at Evansville    UE 60-56    CU 79-57
at Illinois State    ILS 68-54    ILS 86-64
at Indiana State    INS 62-54    CU 79-61
at Missouri State    CU 50-49    CU 65-59
at Northern Iowa    CU 68-59    CU 77-71
at Southern Illinois    SIU 48-44    CU 82-60
at Wichita State    CU 68-65    WSU 74-61
Road The Key To Success
College basketball is one of the ultimate home-court sports, as roughly two-thirds of all games are traditionally won by the host school. Creighton's postseason destination often seems to revolve around its success, or lack thereof, while playing on the road.
    Consider the following evidence:
    -Creighton's 7-2 MVC road record was the school's best mark since the 2001-02 team also went 7-2.
    -Since 1977-78 (when Creighton rejoined the MVC) it has had five or more road wins nine times. Eight of those 10 teams reached the NCAA's while the other two reached the NIT. Of the 22 teams with four or less Valley road wins, three reached the NCAA's, four reached the NIT and 15 did not make the postseason.
    -Additionally, Creighton had 11 wins away from home (eight road, three neutral) this winter. Eight of the past nine times it has had seven  or more wins away from home (road + neutral), the Jays have made the NCAA Tournament, with this year being the only exception.
    -Creighton had eight true road wins this season. Four of the six most recent times it had won eight or more true road games, it had made the NCAA's. This was the first Bluejay team with eight true road wins since the 1999-2000 club finished 8-6 on the road.
    -At 7-2 on the MVC road, Creighton has now won three or more Valley road contests in 14 straight seasons.
Record Chasers
A trio of Bluejay guards are moving up on the school's single-season record lists.
    Josh Dotzler led Creighton with 70 steals thus far. That places him tied for fourth in school history. 
Most Steals, Season
    Stl.    Name (Class)    Year
    80    Ryan Sears (Jr.)    1999-00
    73    Ryan Sears (Sr.)    2000-01
    72    Latrell Wrightsell (Sr.)    1991-92
    70    Duan Cole (Sr.)    1991-92
    70    Josh Dotzler (Sr.)    2008-09
    68    Ryan Sears (So.)    1998-99
    Fellow senior Booker Woodfox made 91 three-point baskets this season, which ranks third in single-season Creighton history.
Most 3-Point Field Goals Made, Season
    3FG    Name (Class)    Year
    129    Kyle Korver (Sr.)    2002-03
    100    Kyle Korver (So.)    2000-01
    91    Booker Woodfox (Sr.)    2008-09
    82    Tad Ackerman (Jr.)    1994-95
    79    Kyle Korver (Jr.)    2001-02
    Both Woodfox and Cavel Witter also made a dent on the school's free-throw percentage list. Woodfox is fifth at 86.8 percent, while Witter is ninth at 85.4 percent.
Free Throw Percentage, (Minimum 70 Attempts)
    Pct.    Name (Class, Year)    FTM-FTA
    .908    Kyle Korver (Sr., 2002-03)    109-120
    .890    Kyle Korver (Jr., 2001-02)    97-109
    .882    Doug Brookins (Sr., 1974-75)    98-111
    .880    Mike Caruso (Sr., 1970-71)    95-108
    .868    Booker Woodfox (Sr., 2008-09)    99-114
    .867    Kyle Korver (So., 2000-01)    72-83
    .863    Nate Funk (Sr., 2006-07)    126-146
    .855    Ryan Sears (So., 1989-99)    71-83
    .854    Cavel Witter (Jr., 2008-09)    88-103
More Defense
Creighton held Northern Iowa to season-low 29.0 percent field goal shooting on Feb. 8th. It's the 10th time in the past 15 years that Creighton has held a team under 30 percent from the field.
    Below is a list of all the teams to shoot less than 30 percent in a game against Creighton since Dana Altman came arrived 15 years ago.
Poorest FG Pct., Opponents, Under Altman
Pct.    Opponent    FG-FGA      Date    CU Result
.233    Indiana State    10-43    03/02/07    W 59-38
.241    Ark.-Pine Bluff    14-58    11/29/06    W 74-39
.266    CS-Sacramento    17-64    12/14/96    W 59-42
.266    Tulsa    17-64    01/17/96    W 72-59
.273    Western Illinois    15-55    11/20/00    W 96-50
.274    Nebraska    17-62    12/11/05    W 70-44
.286    Indiana State    20-70    01/05/95    W 70-63
.289    Missouri State    13-45    01/05/08    W 50-49
.290    Northern Iowa    18-62    02/08/09    W 77-71
.291    George Mason    16-55    11/22/05    W 72-52
Statistical Leaders, Nationally
Booker Woodfox finished the season ranked second in three-point field goal percentage (47.6%), 21st in free-throw percentage (86.8%) and 66th in three-pointers per game (2.7). Josh Dotzler ranked fourth with a 3.46 assist/turnover ratio and 46th with 2.1 steals per game. Cavel Witter's 85.4 percent free-throw percentage ranked 32nd. Kenny Lawson Jr. was 83rd in blocked shots per game (1.6).
    As a team, Creighton was ranked 17th in winning percentage (.771), 20th in free-throw percentage (.749), 12th in turnover margin (+3.8), 32nd in three-point field-goal percentage (.380) and 42nd in three-point field goals per game (7.9).
Altman Records 500th Win
Creighton head coach Dana Altman picked up his 500th win as a college head coach at all levels on New Year's Eve against Indiana State.
    Altman owns a career record of 515-251 in 24 years as a head coach at the Division I and junior college levels. Altman owns 29 wins at Southeast Junior College (1982-83), 94 wins at Moberly Junior College (1983-86), 15 wins at Marshall (1989-90), 68 wins at Kansas State (1990-94) and 309 victories at Creighton (1994-Present).
Altman Picks Up 300th Win With Jays
With Creighton's 79-68 win last on Feb. 4 at Drake, Dana Altman became just the second coach in the 102-year history of the Missouri Valley Conference to win 300 games at one school. Altman, who owns a 309-160 mark with the Jays, joins Henry Iba (486 wins at Oklahoma A&M) in that elite group.
    Below is a list of some of Altman's milestone wins at Creighton:
W-L Rec.    Opponent    Date    Result
50-55    at Evansville    02/02/98    W 85-76
100-78    Western Illinois    11/20/00    W 96-50
150-95    vs. Notre Dame%    11/26/02    W 80-75
200-109    vs. Ohio State%    11/24/04    W 65-63 (OT)
250-136    Bradley    01/18/07    W 65-64
300-158    at Drake    02/04/09    W 79-68 
%Guardians Classic (Kansas City, Mo.)
Largest...Crowd...Ever...
Creighton drew its largest crowd, a record crowd for the state of Nebraska, and a record for a league game in its win against Wichita State on Dec. 28, 2008 as 17,954 attended the game at Qwest Center Omaha.  That bettered the previous Creighton single-game mark (17,607 vs. Drexel - 2/17/07).
    Louisville formerly held the league's single-game attendance record for a regular-season conference game (17,661 vs. Cincinnati, Feb. 22, 1969).
A Ton of Points
Creighton scored 2,565 points this season, moving over the 2,000-point barrier for the 11th time in 15 seasons under Dana Altman.
    Creighton has now had nine teams score more than 2,200 points under Altman. Seven of those teams reached the NCAA Tournament, while the past two teams have done it but been sent to the NIT.
Most Points, Season, Under Altman
Rank    Points    Year    Postseason
1.    2,688    2002-03    NCAA
2.    2,565    2008-09    NIT
3.    2,421    2004-05    NCAA
    2,421    2001-02    NCAA
5.    2,410    1999-00    NCAA
6.    2,360    2007-08    NIT
7.    2,357    1998-99    NCAA
8.    2,325    2000-01    NCAA
9.    2,220    2006-07    NCAA
10.    2,100    1997-98    NIT
Check The Book's
Booker Woodfox scored 20 or more points nine times this season, but his 23 points at Drake on Feb. 4 were the first time over the 20-point barrier in Valley action this season.
    Creighton was 11-1 when Woodfox scores 20 or more points in his Bluejay career.
    Woodfox made five three-pointers in one game six times this year and eight times in his career. Creighton was 7-1 all-time when Woodfox makes at least five treys.
Iowa Road Sweep
Creighton picked up road wins at both Drake and Northern Iowa this year for the fourth time in five seasons, and seventh time in the past 12 years. Creighton also accomplished the feat in 1997-98, 2000-01, 2002-03, 2004-05, 2005-06 and 2006-07.
    CU's Feb. 8th win over UNI marked the first time Creighton has beaten the same opponent on the road in five straight seasons since topping Washington (Mo.) five years in a row from 1936-40.
All The Small Things
Josh Dotzler scored just 42 points in the final 14 games, but you'd have a tough time finding a Creighton player doing any better.
    In the last 14 games (12 wins), Dotzler had 58 assists, nine turnovers and 23 steals in 293 minutes. 
    Despite being CU's primary ballhandler, Dotzler owned just 18 turnovers in 18 MVC games this season, including 15 league games with zero or one miscue this winter. He ranked fourth nationally with a 3.46 assist/turnover ratio.
Give Me Four (Or More) From 3
Creighton has made four or more three-pointers in 68 consecutive games, which ranks eighth nationally.
Consecutive Games, 4+ 3-Pointers, Teams
Courtesy STATS Inc.
Rank    No.    Team    
1.    98    Belmont    
2.    96    Lafayette    
3.    80    Eastern Kentucky    
4.    76    Liberty    
5.    74    Michigan    
6.    71    Drake    
    71    Portland State    
8.    68    Creighton    
9.    62    Valparaiso    
Room To Board
The rebound differential between Creighton and its opponent stood at 10 or larger in 17 of the 35 games this year. 
    The Jays have won the boards by 10 or more five times (going 4-1), but lost on the glass by double-digits on 12 occasions (going 8-4).
    In the 18 games that the rebound discrepancy has been a single-digit, CU was 15-3.
    Creighton was 13-2 when winning the rebound battle this year, and 19-4 when they were -9 or better on the glass.
Jays Reach 10 Home Wins, Again
The Jan. 27 win over Indiana State was Creighton's 10th home win this season. Creighton has now won 10 or more home games in 13 straight seasons, setting  a school-record.
    Creighton previously won 10 or more home games in 12 straight seasons from the 1969-70 season to the 1980-81 campaign.
Ball Control
Creighton point guards Josh Dotzler and Antoine Young did an admirable job of taking care of the ball down the stretch, combining for just 27 turnovers in the final 15 games.
    Young had 17 turnovers in 264 minutes of action, while Dotzler had just 10 in 310 minutes of play in those 15 games.
Carter Carries Jays
Junior Justin Carter had one of his best all-around games on Jan. 27th in Creighton's victory over Indiana State.
    Carter had career-highs with 17 points, four steals and two blocked shots. He also tied his previous best with eight rebounds.
    Carter led the team with 192 rebounds and ranked tied for third with 62 assists while playing the power forward position. He is CU's first junior college transfer to lead Creighton in rebounding in his first season since Chuckie Johnson in 1995-96.
    Carter has started each of his first 35 games at Creighton. The last player that could say that was Ryan Sears, who started all 124 games of his Bluejay career from 1997-2001.
Consec. Starts To Open CU Career, Last 15 Years
Starts    Name    Years
124    Ryan Sears    1997-2001
59    Edward St. Fleur    1995-1997
42    Tad Ackerman    1994-1996
35    Justin Carter    2008-Present
7-Up
Creighton went 7-for-7 from the field in the final seven minutes of its Jan. 27 win over Indiana State, getting four baskets from P'Allen Stinnett and one each from Booker Woodfox, Antoine Young and Kenton Walker.
    Creighton shot 112-for-212 in the final seven minutes of regulation in its 27 wins this season, good for 52.8 percent. That figure includes Stinnett shooting 24-of-28 from two-point range (85.7 percent), and the team shooting 37-of-87 (42.5 percent) from three-point range in that time range.
    On the other hand in the final seven minutes of its eight losses, Creighton was 20-of-66 from the field (30.3 percent) and 7-of-32 from three-point range (21.9 percent). Stinnett was 0-for-9 from the field in the last seven minutes of CU's eight losses this season.
Historically After 12 MVC Games
The last time that Creighton was 8-4 after 12 MVC games was the 2000-01 season, when it closed out the year with six straight wins to claim the Valley title at 14-4.
    This is the 14th straight season that Creighton has had a league record of .500 or better after 12 games, and each of those 14 campaigns the Jays would also go .500 or better in its final six contests as well.
    Prior to this year, Creighton had made the NCAA Tournament each of the last seven times it has gone 4-2 or better in its last six MVC games.
Year    W-L After 12    W-L Final 6
2008-09    8-4    6-0    
2007-08    7-5    3-3    
2006-07    9-3    4-2    
2005-06    9-3    3-3    
2004-05    6-6    5-1    
2003-04    9-3    3-3    
2002-03    11-1    4-2    
2001-02    10-2    4-2    
2000-01    8-4    6-0    
1999-00    7-5    4-2
1998-99    7-5    4-2
1997-98    8-4    4-2
1996-97    7-5    3-3
1995-96    6-6    3-3
1994-95    3-9    1-5
Total    115-65 (.639)    57-33 (.633)
Over .500 Again
Creighton has been better than .500 in either the first or second-half of the league season in 28 straight trips through the league, including both halves this year.
    Creighton's 27 consecutive halves above .500 in league play is easily the Valley's longest active streak, far ahead of Illinois State (4), Northern Iowa (3), Indiana State (1) and Wichita State (1).
    Here's how Dana Altman's clubs have fared in the various halves of the MVC season since his arrival:
Year    1st Half    2nd Half
2008-09    5-4    9-0
2007-08    5-4    5-4
2006-07    6-3    7-2
2005-06    7-2    5-4
2004-05    5-4    6-3
2003-04    7-2    5-4
2002-03    8-1    7-2
2001-02    8-1    6-3
2000-01    5-4    9-0
1999-00    5-4    6-3
1998-99    6-3    5-4
1997-98    5-4    7-2
1996-97    5-4    5-4
1995-96    4-5    5-4
1994-95    3-6    1-8
Total    84-51 (.622)    88-47 (.652)
Second Half Turnaround, Again
This season turned around just like the 2000-01 campaign did. That season, like this one, saw the preseason favorite Bluejays drop to 5-4 at the midway point after a loss on Jan. 24th.
    The 2000-01 team would post a win on Jan. 27th to start an 11-game win streak that helped carry the team to the MVC regular-season title and eventual at-large bid into the NCAA Tournament.
    This year Creighton also lost on Jan. 24th before starting its recent 11-game winning streak on Jan. 27th, and would go on to win a share of the MVC.
Home Cooking
Creighton is 44-10 at home all-time at Qwest Center Omaha in MVC games (.815), compared to a 28-26 (.519) road record in the MVC during that stretch.
    Only five MVC visiting schools (DU, ILS, MSU, UNI, SIU) have ever won a game in the six-year old Qwest Center Omaha.  In fact, four Valley schools have not won a game in Omaha since the decade started.
    Below is a look at Creighton's current home winning streaks over current league foes:
Opponent    CU Streak    Last Opp. Win in Omaha
Bradley    Won 11    1/17/98
Drake    Lost 2    1/24/09
Evansville    Won 10    1/04/99
Illinois State    Won 1    12/29/07
Indiana State    Won 10    1/04/99
Missouri State    Won 4    2/05/05
Northern Iowa    Lost 1    1/6/09
So. Illinois    Won 2    1/20/07
Wichita State    Won 16    2/22/92
Lawson's Blocks Way Towards The Top
Sophomore center Kenny Lawson Jr. owns a league-high 56 blocked shots. Lawson blocked a shot in 31 of CU's 35 contests this season. Lawson owns 84 career blocked shots, moving him into seventh on CU's all-time list.
Most Blocked Shots, CU History, Since 1979-80
    Blk.    Name    Years
    411    Benoit Benjamin    1982-85
    183    Chad Gallagher    1987-91
    138    Brody Deren    2001-04
    136    Anthony Tolliver    2003-07
    109    Doug Swenson    1997-99
    104    Joe Dabbert    2000-04
    84    Kenny Lawson Jr.    2006-Pres.
    79    Adam Reid    1994-97
    76    Livan Pyfrom    1999-01
    75    Jeffrey Day    2004-06
Let's Start With Dotzler
Josh Dotzler has started each of Creighton's last 69 games, winning 49 of those starts. The streak dates back to the final contest of the 2006-07 campaign and was the longest active string in the Missouri Valley Conference at season's end.
    For his career, Dotzler made 96 starts, with CU winning 67 of them (69.8 percent).
Blocking Bookends
Sophomore post men Kenny Lawson Jr. and Kenton Walker were both among the MVC leaders in blocked shots, albeit in two different categories.
    Lawson's 56 blocked shots for the season are six more than his closest competition, Bradley's David Collins.
    Walker owned the Valley lead in conference play with 31 blocks, four more than UNI's Jordan Eglseder.
    Creighton's last player to lead the league in blocked shots for an entire season had been Brody Deren, who had 56 swats during the 2002-03 season when he was also a sophomore.
Big Shot Booker Strikes Again
Creighton's Booker Woodfox has drained a pair of game-winning baskets this season, and three in the past two years.
    Woodfox's most recent heroics were at the MVC Tournament on March 7th, when he caught an inbounds pass with 1.8 seconds left, took two dribbles and fired in the game winner as the horn sounded to beat Wichita State.
    Woodfox drained a go-ahead three-pointer with 21.4 seconds left in overtime against Southern Illinois on Jan. 14th. 
    He also hit a game-winning three-pointer to beat Oral Roberts by one point with 26.5 seconds left last season.
    Fellow teammate P'Allen Stinnett hit five different shots on Jan. 14th that gave CU the lead against Southern Illinois and now has 23 go-ahead baskets this year, six behind Woodfox's team-best 29.
    Below is a list of Creighton's baskets that gave them a lead this season, as well as baskets that gave the team the lead for good.
    Gave CU    Lead    Got Lead Last 
Name    Lead    For Good    2 Minutes
Booker Woodfox    29    7    2
Kenny Lawson Jr.    25    5    1
P'Allen Stinnett    23    6    2
Justin Carter    15    4    1
Antoine Young    10    1    0
Kaleb Korver    5    1    0
Cavel Witter    5    0    0
Casey Harriman    5    0    0
Kenton Walker    4    1    0
Chad Millard    3    1    0
Josh Dotzler    2    1    1
Kenton Walker    1    0    0
Cardiac Kids
Creighton's win over Wichita State on March 6th marked the eighth time in the past two seasons that Creighton won in which it trailed or had been tied at some point in the final minute, and second time this season.
    Five of those eight wins came at home, and three of the games featured a go-ahead three-pointer in the final 30 seconds. 
Margin    Opponent    Date
-5    Bradley    3/1/08
-4    Saint Joseph's    12/9/07
-4    Southern Illinois    1/14/09
-3    Rhode Island    3/18/08
-2    at Oral Roberts    2/23/08
-1    Wichita State    2/2/08
-1    vs. Wichita State    3/6/09
Tie    at Missouri State    1/5/08
Step Right Up Young Man
Antoine Young scored 27 points in his first 16 games with Creighton (1.7 ppg.), but exploded to score 141 points over the last 19 games (7.4 ppg.). 
    That includes 15 points against Evansville, 13 points against Bradley and George Mason and 12 points against Indiana State, Wichita State and Bowling Green.
    Young delivered the breakthrough game of his fledgling career on Jan. 10th at Bradley. Young had a career-best 13 points while adding two assists and a team-high two steals in 21 minutes. Young, who had entered the contest 0-for-11 from three-point range, also went 2-for-2 from downtown in the victory.
    Young scored a career-high 15 points in Creighton's 89-84 win over Evansville on Feb. 17th. He missed his first six attempts, but would score all his points in the final 14:40 to help CU rally for the victory.
    In his first career postseason game, Young made 5-of-6 shots from the floor and scored 12 points in CU's NIT win over Bowling Green.
Fish Gets Call From Hall
Creighton University assistant coach Brian Fish was named to the Indiana Basketball Hall of Fame Silver Anniversary Team. He and 16 other former Indiana high school basketball standouts were honored at a dinner on March 25 in Indianapolis.
     Fish will be the just the seventh graduate in Seymour High School history to be honored. To qualify for the honor, a player must have graduated high school 25 years ago.
    Fish still holds Seymour career records for charges taken (42), free throws made (390) and free throws attempted, ranks second with 1,400 points and is fourth with 128 steals, 505 field goals made and 1,112 field goals attempted.
Comparison To Past Years
Below is a comparison of this year's team to that of last year's team, as well as the memorable 2002-03 squad that finished 29-5, and the 2000-01 team that also won the MVC regular-season title, with season-bests in bold:
Statistic    2008-09    2007-08    2002-03    2000-01
W-L Record    27-8    22-11    29-5    24-8
MVC W-L    14-4    10-8    15-3    14-4
FG%    .444    .447    .498    .442
3FG%    .380    .366    .390    .359
3FG/Game    7.9    8.3    7.9    7.8
FT%    .749    .719    .693    .702
Reb. Margin    -3.4    +1.4    +1.6    +1.1
Assists    493    473    575    490
Turnovers    428    469    462    426
Blocks    138    116    153    114
Steals    287    245    283    293
PPG Scored    73.3    71.5    79.1    72.7
PPG Allowed    65.5     66.0    64.8    63.2
Woodfox Automatic At The Line Too
Not only was Booker Woodfox lights-out from the field, but it carried over to the free-throw line. Despite one of the nation's most unique pre-shot rituals, Woodfox drained a Creighton-record 36 straight free throws from Dec. 6-Jan. 3rd.
    The 36 straight makes is four more than the previous Creighton record set by Michael Lindeman.  The streak was seventh-longest in MVC history, and the longest in five years by a league player not named Blake Ahearn (Ahearn holds six of the 12 best streaks in MVC history). 
    For the season, Woodfox led the MVC with 86.8 percent marksmanship from the line (99-114), which was 21st-best nationally.
Most Consecutive Free Throws Made, MVC History
60    Blake Ahearn, MSU (12/20/03 - 2/14/04)
60    Blake Ahearn, MSU (12/19/04 - 2/28/05)
57    Vince Greene, ILS (1/18/04 - 11/30/04)
51    Blake Ahearn, MSU (12/15/05 - 1/29/06)
48    Marcus Wilson, Evansville (12/1/96 - 2/2/97)
44    James Gillingham, BU (2/8/03 - 2/25/03)
36    Booker Woodfox, CU (12/6/08 - 1/6/09)
35    Aaron Zobrist, Bradley (12/27/96 - 1/27/97)
P For 3
Sophomore guard P'Allen Stinnett drained a three-pointer on the first possession of both halves, as well as a double-clutch banked trey at the first-half buzzer, en route to shooting 6-of-8 from three-point range at Indiana State on Dec. 31. The six three-pointers was a career-high for Stinnett, who opened his career with five three-pointers in the second half of a 2007 win over DePaul.
    Stinnett is one of seven players on the current roster who have made three or more three-pointers in a game during their Bluejay career.
They Hit How Many?
Creighton drained 15-of-24 three-point attempts in its road win at Indiana State on Dec. 31st. The 15 three-pointers were tied for third-most ever, and the most by the Jays since they set a school and MVC record with a 20-of-30 display from downtown in a Feb. 19, 2005 win over Chattanooga.
    Among games that Creighton has made 10 or more three-pointers all-time, Creighton's 62.5 percent shooting behind the arc was fourth-best in history, and its best since the 20-for-30 (66.7 percent) against Chattanooga.
    Creighton is 20-0 all-time under Dana Altman when making 10 or more three-pointers and 54 percent or better of those attempts from downtown.
    Creighton made 10 three-pointers or more nine times this season, making at least 40 percent of its tries in eight of those contests.
Heating Up December
Booker Woodfox was red-hot from the field in the nine games played in December. Woodfox scored 180 points in 219 minutes in nine December games, all Bluejay wins. Woodfox shot 58-for-99 from the floor in that time (58.6 percent), including 35-of-60 (58.3 percent) from three-point land. Woodfox also hit 29-of-31 free throws (93.5 percent) in December.
Leading Scorer, Again
Booker Woodfox led Creighton in scoring during seven straight games from Dec. 6-28, averaging 21.3 points per game in that time. In Dana Altman's 15-year tenure, Creighton's only longer streak was by Rodney Buford, who twice had eight straight games.
Consec. Games as Leading Scorer, Under Altman
    Games    Name    Dates
    8    Rodney Buford    Jan. 27-Feb. 17, 1997
    8    Rodney Buford    Feb. 23-Dec. 2, 1998
    7    Rodney Buford    Jan. 2-20, 1997
    7    Booker Woodfox    Dec. 6-28, 2008
Book It!
Booker Woodfox was 91-of-191 (47.6 percent) from three-point range this season, second-best nationally.
    For his career, he was 147-of-323, which computes to 45.5 percent, just ahead of the school-record figure achieved by noted marksman Kyle Korver. The only previous player in CU history to shoot better than 44.5 percent from three-point range in their career was two-time MVC Player of the Year Korver, who made 45.3 percent from downtown while hitting 371-of-819 from long-range. Kaleb Korver ranks fifth on the list with 43.5 percent accuracy.
Creighton's 3-Point Percentage Leaders, Career 
(Minimum 100 Attempts)
    Pct.    Name, Years    3FGM-FGA
    .4551    Booker Woodfox, 2007-09    147-323
    .4530    Kyle Korver, 1999-03    371-819
    .4415    Rod Mason, 1986-88    132-299
    .4404    Nerijus Karlikanovas, 1998-00    48-109
    .4348    Kaleb Korver, 2007-Present    50-115
    .4306    Michael Lindeman, 2000-04    62-144
    .4293    Duan Cole, 1987-92    176-410
    .4141    Casey Harriman, 2007-Present    53-128
    .4065    Nate Funk, 2002-07    200-492
    .4053    Matt West, 1996-00    92-227
    .4051    Matt Petty, 1989-93    143-353
    .4017    Darin Plautz, 1989-91    94-234
Heavy Lumber For Woodfox
Booker Woodfox had a career-high in several categories during CU's 69-58 win at Saint Joseph's on Dec. 6. Woodfox had career-highs with 29 points, nine field goals and seven three-pointers while also matching his previous best with seven rebounds.
    The seven three-pointers by Woodfox were the most by a Creighton player since Nate Funk made seven trifectas at Nebraska on Nov. 18, 2006. 
    Additionally, he was the first player in Creighton history to make at least seven three-pointers while shooting 75 percent or better from behind the arc in the same game. Below is a list of Creighton players to make seven treys in a  game.
    Creighton's Most 3-Pointers Made, Single-Game
    3FG-A    Name, Opponent    Date
    9-14    Kyle Korver vs. Evansville    01/15/03
    8-13    Tad Ackerman at Drake    01/23/95
    8-15    Terrell Taylor vs. Florida    03/15/02
    8-13    Kyle Korver at Xavier    12/31/02
    7-12    Gary Swain vs. Nebraska-Omaha    12/11/86
    7-10    Ryan Sears vs. Wyoming    12/06/97
    7-11    Kyle Korver vs. Notre Dame    11/26/02
    7-15    Kyle Korver vs. Fresno State    02/22/03
    7-11    Nate Funk at Nebraska    11/18/06
    7-9    Booker Woodfox at Saint Joseph's    12/06/08
MVC Preseason Poll
For the second time in three years, Creighton was picked to win the Missouri Valley Conference in a preseason poll of coaches, beat writers, SID's and play-by-play men.
    Creighton was picked first on 36 of the 39 ballots to earn 386 of a possible 390 points. Last year's favorite, Southern Illinois, earned two first-place votes and totaled 322 points for second place, just ahead of Illinois State, which garnered 309 points and the lone remaining first-place vote. Rounding out the rest of the poll was Drake (274), Bradley (219), UNI (186), Indiana State (137), Evansville (122), Wichita State (105) and Missouri State (85). 
    The preseason all-MVC team was headlined by preseason player of the year Osiris Eldridge (Illinois State). Joining Eldridge on the first team are P'Allen Stinnett (Creighton), Bryan Mullins (Southern Illinois) and the Drake tandem of Jonathan Cox and Josh Young. Honorable-mention picks include the Bradley pair of Theron Wilson and Andrew Warren, as well as the Evansville duo of Shy Ely and Jason Holsinger.
Crowds Increase For League Action
Compared to its non-conference crowds, Creighton's attendance has increased in MVC action each of the last nine years:
Creighton's Yearly Home Attendance
Year    Non-MVC Games    MVC Games    Change
2000-01    7,132    7,268    +2%
2001-02    6,333    6,800    +7%
2002-03    7,401    8,996    +22%
2003-04    11,467    12,443    +9%
2004-05    9,926    12,207    +23%
2005-06    13,404    14,343    +7%
2006-07    15,471    16,153    +4%
2007-08    14,544    16,122    +10%
2008-09    15,488    16,422    +6%
Dotzler Top Seven in Assists & Steals
After seven previous games with exactly five steals in his career, Josh Dotzler had a career-best six steals on Dec. 13 against Northern Colorado. Creighton turned all six of those steals into points, scoring 13 points on its ensuing possessions.
    Dotzler's 196 career steals ranks second in CU history. Dotzler's 388 career assists places him seventh in Creighton history.
    Dotzler is one of four players in CU history with more than 150 steals and 300 career assists, joining Ryan Sears, Duan Cole and Latrell Wrightsell.
Steals (Since 1979-80)
    Stl.    Name    Years
    283    Ryan Sears    1997-01
196    Josh Dotzler    2005-09
    195    Rodney Buford    1995-99
    186    Duan Cole    1987-92
Assists (Since 1970-71)
    Ast.    Name    Years
    570    Ryan Sears    1997-01
    549    Ralph Bobik    1971-74
    458    Randy Eccker    1974-78
    430    Tyler McKinney    2001-05
    418    Vernon Moore    1981-85
388    Josh Dotzler    2005-09
    382    Duan Cole    1987-92
    
Steal Leader
KenPom.com, a college basketball website dedicated to statistics, ranked Creighton guard Josh Dotzler among its best defenders. The site calculates that Dotzler earns a steal on 5.6 percent of all defensive possessions that he's in the game for, the nation's second-best rate.
    The same website ranks Booker Woodfox 31st in offensive rating, a calculation of a player's offensive efficiency from two-point range, three-point range and the free-throw line, as well as scarcity of turnovers per minute played.
Army of Iowans
Every Creighton team since 1988-89 has had at least one Iowa native, and this season is no exception. 
    Creighton had three players from Iowa on this season's team, continuing a long trend of relying on some of the Hawkeye State's top preps. CU's native Iowans this season include senior Dustin Sitzmann (LeMars) and sophomores Casey Harriman (Ida Grove) and Kaleb Korver (Pella). 
    Other past notable Iowans include Kyle Korver and Pierce Hibma (Pella), Ryan Sears (Ankeny), Brody Deren (Harlan), Tyler McKinney (Urbandale), Nate Funk (Sioux City) and Michael Lindeman (Iowa Falls).
    Creighton has played at least one Iowa native in 477 straight games. That streak dates to a Feb. 5, 1994 win against Wichita State.
Big Blue Wave
Eleven different players averaged 9.2 minutes per game or more this season for Creighton, and 10 men averaged 14.3 or more minutes per game. No player played more than 26.3 minutes per game.
    Creighton has had at least 10 players average 10.7 minutes per game or more in each of previous three seasons, as well.
Long-Distance Streak Alive
Creighton has made at least one three-pointer in a league-best 501 straight games since a 59-53 loss at Illinois State on Feb. 20, 1993. That's the longest active streak in the MVC.
The Charge Chart
Creighton took 47 charges in 35 games this year after taking 62 in 2007-08. Over the previous seven seasons, the Bluejays have averaged 48.4 per year. 
    Below is a list of the Creighton players that have taken charges since the 2002-03 season:
Name    2002-07    ?07-08    ?08-09    Total
Justin Carter    n/a    n/a    9    9
Casey Harriman    n/a    17    8    25
Josh Dotzler    4    5    6    15
Chad Millard    n/a    7    4    11
P'Allen Stinnett    n/a    5    4    9
Kenton Walker    n/a    3    4    7
Kenny Lawson Jr.    0    2    4    6
Antoine Young    n/a    n/a    4    4
Kaleb Korver    n/a    0    3    3
Booker Woodfox    n/a    2    1    3
Cavel Witter    n/a    3    0    3
Dustin Sitzmann    0    1    0    1
Former Players    226    17    n/a    243
Total    230    62    47    339
Two Years, 700 Points Under Altman
Creighton has had four players score 700 or more points in their first two years playing for Dana Altman. Two of those men, Booker Woodfox and P'Allen Stinnett, are currently in the program.
     Among players in the Altman era, only Rodney Buford has scored more points in their first two years in the program.
700+Points In First 2 Years Under Dana Altman
Name    Points    Games    Years
Rodney Buford    1,010    59    1995-1997
Booker Woodfox    853    67    2007-2009
P'Allen Stinnett    841    67    2007-2009
Kyle Korver    759    65    1999-2001
What's Your Twenty?
This was the 12th straight year that Creighton has won at least 13 of its first 20 games. Each of those 12 seasons it has done that, it reached the postseason. Here's a look at Creighton's record after 20 games in the 15 seasons under Dana Altman.
Creighton -- First 20 Games Under Dana Altman
Year    First 20 W-L    Final W-L    Postseason
2008-09    15-5    27-8    NIT
2007-08    14-6    22-11    NIT
2006-07    13-7    22-11    NCAA
2005-06    15-5     20-10    NIT
2004-05    13-7    23-11    NCAA
2003-04    17-3    20-9    NIT
2002-03    18-2    29-5    NCAA
2001-02    14-6    23-9    NCAA
2000-01    14-6    24-8    NCAA
1999-00    14-6    23-10    NCAA
1998-99    14-6    22-9    NCAA
1997-98    14-6    18-10    NIT
1996-97    10-10    15-15    ---
1995-96    11-9    14-15    ---
1994-95    6-14    7-19    ---
Walker Nabs Double-Double
Sophomore center Kenton Walker became the only current member of the Creighton team to record a double-double, when he recorded 10 points and 10 rebounds in 20 minutes off the bench against Mississippi Valley State on December 2nd.
    Walker's 10 points tied for the second-highest scoring output of his young career, while his 10 rebounds were one more of his previous career-best.
Like A Good Neighbor
Sophomore center Kenton Walker was named one of 10 recipients of the MVC's Good Neighbor Award. The award is  given to model student-athletes in good academic standing who demonstrate good sportsmanship and significant community service.
Jays Were 3-0 Once Again
Creighton's win against Oral Roberts on Nov. 22nd gave it a 3-0 start for the 10th time in the past 11 seasons. The 2006-07 team that started 2-1 is the lone exception in the past decade.
    Each of Creighton's 3-0 starts under Dana Altman have been culminated in a postseason tournament appearance at the end of the year.
    Creighton has not taken the floor with a losing record since December 3, 1997 when it faced Grambling. Creighton has played 379 game in a row the Jays have played with a record of .500 or better.
3 Players, 20 Points, First 3 Games
Creighton had three different players score 20 or more points during its first three contests this winter. P'Allen Stinnett (30) and Booker Woodfox (26) did it against New Mexico, while Cavel Witter (25) did it against Oral Roberts.
    This is the first time it's happened in Dana Altman's 15-year tenure at Creighton, as well as the first time its happened at Creighton in at least 30 years.
Double-Double Eludes Lawson
Sophomore Kenny Lawson Jr. hasn't notched a double-double in his young career, but he's been steadily getting closer.
    Lawson, who had 13 points and nine rebounds at Southern Illinois on Feb. 14, owns nine career games of at least eight points and eight boards in his career. CU has won eight of those games, outscoring foes by an average of 78.4-62.8.
    Creighton is 25-5 in Lawson's career when he has five rebounds or more, but 26-14 in games he's appeared in and snared less than five caroms.
25 Points Off The Bench, Again
Cavel Witter scored 25 points off the bench in CU's Nov. 22 win over Oral Roberts. 
    It marked the second time in his career he's done that, as the junior guard torched Bradley for a Qwest Center Omaha record 42 points on March 1, 2008, in a double-overtime win over Bradley.
    Before Witter, Creighton had not had a player score 25 points or more off the bench since March of 2002.
Television Records
Creighton is a combined 101-56 in televised games in the last seven seasons, including a 36-22 mark on KMTV-produced games (which does not include CU's record in NCAA Tournament games on KMTV). Creighton went 4-2 in games aired on KMTV in 2002-03, 6-3 in 2003-04, 4-5 in 2004-05, 5-3 in 2005-06, 6-2 in 2006-07 and 5-4 last year in KMTV-produced games. CU is 6-3 on KMTV this year.
    The Jays are also 46-30 in games that air regionally or nationally in that time, including a 24-17 mark on MVC TV.
    Creighton had 27-of-33 games on television last season. Twenty-five games aired on television this year, including all but one MVC game.
What A Start!
The 2007-08 MVC Sixth Man of the Year, Booker Woodfox scored 26 points in his first career start against New Mexico on Nov. 16.
    Woodfox's 26 points are the most by a Bluejay in their first career start since at least 1980.
Dynamic Duo, Part II?
From 1987-91, Creighton big men Bob Harstad and Chad Gallagher were known as the “Dynamic Duo”. Both men were named MVC Player of the Year (Harstad in 1990, Gallagher in 1991) and finished their careers first and second in school history for points scored.
    The Jays had quite the dynamic duo in the season-opening win over New Mexico when P'Allen Stinnett (30) and Booker Woodfox (26) both lit up the Lobos. 
    The current duo became the first Bluejay pair to score 25 points or more in the same game in the Dana Altman era.  
    CU hadn't had that happen since, you guessed it, Gallagher (29) and Harstad (26) did it against Bradley on Jan. 21, 1991.
P'henomenal Debut x 2
P'Allen Stinnett's 23 points last year against DePaul were the most by a Bluejay in their first game since Cyril Baptiste scored 24 points on Dec. 1, 1969 against Wisconsin-Oshkosh.
    Stinnett's 30 points in this year's opener were the most by a Creighton player in the season lid-lifter since Bob Harstad scored 38 points against Texas-San Antonio on Nov. 30, 1990.
Piling Up The Points, and Wins
Creighton has won 53 straight home games when scoring 68 points or more since Feb. 5, 2005.
    Creighton has won 64 straight games when scoring 72 points or more at all sites dating to Jan. 29, 2005.
    The Bluejays have won 67 consecutive games when scoring 80 points or more, dating to Feb. 19, 2000.
    Creighton has also won 44 straight games when scoring 90 points or more, dating to Jan. 11, 1988.
    Creighton has won 15 straight when scoring 100 points or more, dating to Feb. 26, 1977.
Who Are Those Guys?
Creighton also has two walk-ons practicing with the team that might suit up on but are not listed in the media guide.
    No. 24 is Matt Dorwart, a 6-7 freshman forward from Sidney, Neb. Dorwart played at Sidney High School and averaged 8.0 points and 5.3 rebounds per game while shooting 38.5 percent from three-point range.
    No. 40 Derek Sebastian is a 6-5 freshman guard/forward from Loveland, Colo. Sebastian played at Thompson Valley High School, where he averaged 14.8 points and 8.8 rebounds per game last year.
Turning Point?
One common theme when Creighton is successful is that they have had an advantage in “points off turnovers” in many of those contests.
    Creighton was 17-4 when scoring more points off turnovers than its opponent last year. In the last five years, Creighton is 85-14 when winning this category, including an 24-4 mark this winter.
Paint Points
Since Creighton started tracking points in the paint six years ago, CU is 64-9 in games when scoring 28 or more points in the paint.
Consistent Challengers
One of the most impressive facets of the Dana Altman tenure is how often his teams have been in the running for the MVC regular-season title. Nine of his last 12 teams have finished either first or second in The Valley's regular-season race, including this year. Two of the three that didn't won the MVC Tournament.
    The Bluejays won the MVC in 2000-01 and tied for the title in 2001-02 and 2008-09. CU was second in the MVC in 1997-98 and 2006-07, tied for second in the MVC in 1998-99, 2003-04 and 2005-06, and finished tied for third in 2004-05. The 1999-00 club was fourth in the MVC, but won the MVC Tournament.
Creighton's MVC Finishes, Last 12 Years
1st Place    2000-01
Tied for First    2001-02 (won MVC Tourn.), 2008-09
2nd Place    1997-98, 2002-03 (won MVC Tourn.), 2006-07 (won MVC Tourn.)
Tied for 2nd    1998-99 (won MVC Tourn.), 2003-04, 2005-06
Tied for 3rd Place    2004-05 (won MVC Tourn.)
4th Place    1999-00 (won MVC Tourn.); 2007-08
?W'inning Edge
Creighton's men's and women's basketball teams have been nearly unbeatable at home in recent seasons, going a combined 220-48 in the last nine seasons. In fact, the men and women have both lost a home game in the same month just four times since March, 2000.
Creighton's Home Records, Last Nine Years
Year    Men    Women    Combined
2008-09    16-3    12-4    28-7
2007-08    16-2    11-1    27-3
2006-07    12-2    7-7    19-9
2005-06    15-2    5-7    20-9
2004-05    11-5    12-3    23-8
2003-04    14-2    12-1    26-3
2002-03    17-0    13-1    30-1
2001-02    12-3    11-1    23-4
2000-01    14-0    10-4    24-4
TOTALS    127-19    93-29    220-48
One of the Best Programs Around
Every five years since 1997, Basketball Times has evaluated the best of the best NCAA programs -- those that have won two-thirds of their games over the previous 10 season span. The 2007 edition of the report had 29 teams that met that qualification, including Creighton.
    Those 29 schools were then ranked from 1-29 on categories like 10-year winning percentage, number of active NBA players, freshman graduation rate and US News & World Report's academic peer assessment score, as well as a subjective vote of 10 panelists who judged teams based on “program cleanliness” and “head coach ranking”.
    Creighton finished an impressive seventh, trailing only Duke, North Carolina, Florida, Stanford, Gonzaga and Michigan State.
Basketball Times Overall Rankings
Rk.    School    Avg. Ranking
1.    Duke    3.7
2.    North Carolina    7.5
3.    Florida    8.0
4.    Stanford    8.8
5.    Gonzaga    10.0
    Michigan State    10.0
7.    Creighton    10.2
8.    Kansas    10.8
9.    Xavier    11.5
10.    Illinois    12.0
11.    Arizona    13.5
12.    Connecticut    13.7
13.    Syracuse    14.5
14.    Butler    14.8
15.    College of Charleston    15.2
    Southern Illinois    15.2
    Texas    15.2
18.    Kentucky    16.0
    Pennsylvania    16.0
20.    Maryland    17.3
21.    Pittsburgh    17.5
22.    Utah State    18.3
23.    Kent State    18.8
24.    Utah    20.2
25.    Cincinnati    20.5
26.    Murray State    20.7
    Oklahoma    20.7
28.    Oklahoma State    21.0
29.    Memphis    23.0
Double-Digit Comebacks at Home
Creighton has fallen behind by double-digits in 25 of its 100 all-time home games all-time at Qwest Center Omaha. In 17 of those 25 games, the Bluejays came back to win.
    Creighton's incredible streak of 181 straight games without a double-digit home loss (dating to Jan. 3, 1996) was snapped on Dec. 29, 2007 by Illinois State. That had ranked as the nation's oldest streak in that obscure category.
Double Digit Deficits at Qwest Center Omaha
Date    Opponent    Deficit    Final Score
12/30/03    Missouri State    10    W 59-54
12/04/04    High Point    13    W 79-60
12/07/04    Kent State    16    L 58-67
12/18/04    Wyoming    13    L 64-68
02/01/05    Wichita State    10    W 73-69
02/05/05    Missouri State    15    L 71-79
11/26/05    Dayton    11    W 91-90 2ot
12/18/05    Xavier    10    W 61-59
01/18/06    Bradley    12    W 80-76
01/28/06    Wichita State    19    W 57-55
02/11/06    Southern Illinois    14    L 67-74
02/22/06    Indiana State    14    W 67-62
03/20/06    Miami (Fla.)    12    L 52-53
12/30/06    Missouri State    11    W 77-74
01/20/07    Southern Illinois    12    L 57-58
02/07/07    Evansville    14    W 79-74
11/09/07    DePaul    17    W 74-62
12/29/07    Illinois State    19    L 67-80
02/02/08    Wichita State    15    W 65-63
03/01/08    Bradley    12    W 111-110 2ot
03/18/08    Rhode Island    17    W 74-73
11/16/08    New Mexico    16    W 82-75
01/24/09    Drake    14    L 62-74
02/01/09    Missouri State    10    W 75-51
03/18/09    Bowling Green    14    W 73-71
Double-Digit Comebacks 
Including four times this season, Creighton has won after overcoming a double-digit deficit 30 times in the last nine seasons.
    Below is a list of those comebacks, listed by size of the margin overcome:
Overcoming Double Digit Deficits, Last 9 Years
Date    Opponent    Deficit    Final Score
01/28/06    Wichita State    19    W 57-55
11/27/01    Western Kentucky    18    W 95-91 2ot
02/12/03    Missouri State    17    W 70-67 ot
11/09/07    DePaul    17    W 74-62
03/18/08    Rhode Island    17    W 74-73
11/16/08    New Mexico    16    W 82-75
02/04/06    at Drake    16    W 72-67 ot
01/26/03    TCU    16    W 89-79
02/02/08    Wichita State    15    W 65-63
02/22/06    Indiana State    14    W 67-62
02/07/07    Evansville    14    W 79-74
03/18/09    Bowling Green    14    W 73-71
12/04/04    High Point    13    W 79-60
03/09/03    vs. Wichita State    13    W 70-69
01/18/03    Southern Illinois    13    W 85-76
02/04/01    at Indiana State    13    W 77-71
02/24/09    at Missouri State    13    W 65-59
01/07/04    at Illinois State    12    W 56-55
01/18/06    Bradley    12    W 80-76
03/01/08    Bradley    12    W 111-110 2ot
12/30/06    Missouri State    11    W 77-74
11/26/05    Dayton    11    W 91-90 2ot
01/15/05    at Northern Iowa    11    W 67-66
11/30/04    at Xavier    11    W 73-72
03/15/02    vs. #15 Florida    11    W 83-82 2ot
12/18/05    Xavier    10    W 61-59
02/16/05    at Wichita State    10    W 82-68
02/01/05    Wichita State    10    W 73-69
12/30/03    Missouri State    10    W 59-54
02/01/09    Missouri State    10    W 75-51
Academically Tops In The MVC Too
Creighton ranks first in the Missouri Valley Conference in graduation success rate (94.7 percent) among all sports.
    Also, for the fourth time in the six-year existence of the award, Creighton University has been recognized with the 2007-08 MVC All-Academic Award. Bluejay student-athletes posted a 3.30 cumulative grade-point average over the 2007-08 academic calendar. Creighton previously shared the award in 2003-04, and were the outright winners in 2004-05 and 2006-07.
    Creighton had seven men's basketball players earn Dean's List (3.50 GPA or better) accolades last year, which helped the team to a 3.01 GPA overall.
Bench Points Add Up
Creighton owned 41 different double-figure scoring games last season off the bench, compared to a total of 30 during the previous three years combined. In fact, there were only four (of 33) contests in which it didn't have a double-figure scorer off the bench.
    Last year's team scored 18 or more bench points in every game but one, with a low of 13.
    This year, the Bluejay bench scored 922 of the team's 2,565 points (35.9 percent).
    Creighton's bench has scored 51 points in two different games this season and 41 or more four times.
    This year's Creighton team has produced 32 double-digit scoring games off the bench, including 13 such efforts from Cavel Witter.
Recruits Inked
A pair of prep standouts signed letters-of-intent in November to join the Creighton men's basketball team next year. 
    Andrew Bock is a 6'1” guard from Eisenhower High School in Rialto, Calif. Bock averaged 18 points and eight assists per game while helping the Eagles to a 27-4 record. He was named Most Valuable Player of the Citrus Belt League last season.
    Ethan Wragge (RAH-gy) is a 6'8” forward from Eden Prairie, Minn., where he attends Eden Prairie High School. He averaged 16 points and nine rebounds per game and owns the school record for three-point baskets made. He made 91 percent of his free-throw attempts last year. His team finished 19-9 last winter.
    Both men will be freshmen and have four years of eligibility.
    Two other junior college prospects signed with Creighton in the spring.
    Wayne Runnells is a 6-6 forward from Northern Oklahoma, while Darryl Ashford is a 6-4 guard from Jacksonville JC.
Last Season Recap
Creighton put together a second consecutive 22-11 season last fall, reaching the second round of the NIT with a team featuring nine newcomers.
    P'Allen Stinnett (12.6 ppg.) swept MVC Newcomer and Freshman of the Year honors after leading Creighton in scoring, while senior Dane Watts (11.3 ppg.) led the team with 6.4 rebounds per game.
    Booker Woodfox (9.6 ppg.) was named MVC Sixth Man of the Year as the leader for a bench that outscored CU's starters by 76 points for the season.
Ticket Information
Single game tickets for regular-season home games went on sale on Nov. 11 at 10 am.
    Fans could purchase tickets in advance at Qwest Center Omaha Box Office, all Ticketmaster locations (Baker's, Younkers), Ticketmaster online at http://www.ticketmaster.com or by calling Ticketmaster and charging by phone at (402) 422-1212. 
    Morrison Stadium also sells tickets (in-person only) from 9:00 am-4:30 pm weekdays.
    Only upper bowl seats will be available for any game and cost is $12 for adults and $8 for youth ages 3-18 (children two and under are free). For more information, call the Creighton Ticket Office at (402) 280-JAYS.
    Creighton sold an MVC-record 13,615 season tickets for this year. The previous MVC record had been the 12,888 season-tickets Creighton fans bought for the 2007-08 season. 




















