
No. 9 Men's Soccer Returns Home to Host SIUE in First Place Battle
10/28/2010 3:12:00 PM | Men's Soccer
Match 15 vs. SIU Edwardsville • Saturday, Oct. 30 • 7:00 p.m.
SIU Edwardsville Cougars at #9 Creighton Bluejays
Morrison Stadium • Omaha, Neb.
Series History: SIUE leads 4-3-0
SIU Edwardsville Cougars at #9 Creighton Bluejays
Morrison Stadium • Omaha, Neb.
Series History: SIUE leads 4-3-0
Following the Jays: Every Creighton home match this season can be followed on the internet via live stats and live video at www.gocreighton.com. Live stats for all home matches can be viewed free by clicking on the 'Live Stats' link. New this year – fans can also follow home live stats on their mobile device at www.gocreightonstats.com. Fans can subscribe to watch a live video stream of the Bluejays' home matches via the 'Live Video' link.
This Week: The ninth-ranked Bluejays concluded their four-game road trip with a hard-fought 1-0 loss at No. 1-ranked Akron on Wednesday. The Bluejays are back home to begin a three-game MVC home stand to conclude the regular-season, starting with a first-place showdown against Valley newcomer SIU Edwardsville on Saturday at 7 pm.
Last Week: Creighton won a pair of conference road matches last week, starting with a come-from-behind 2-1 win at Drake last Wednesday. Kris Clark scored a pair of first-half goals at Drake to help the Jays rebound from an early Bulldog goal. Ethan Finlay and Dion Acoff each scored in a 2-0 win at Central Arkansas, while the shutout was goalkeeper Brian Holt's 26th career clean sheet – tying the school record. Acoff, who scored on goal and assisted two others was named the MVC Offensive Player of the Week.
Scouting #9 Creighton (11-3-0, 4-0-0 MVC): Creighton won its first four games via shutout, jumped out to its best start since 1998 and is 4-0-0 in the MVC for the first time since 1999. The Jays are 5-1-0 at home this season and 22-3-2 at home in MVC play all-time at Morrison Stadium. The Bluejays lead the MVC and rank 20th in the NCAA with 1.9 goals per game and top the league in points per game (6.2) and assists per game (2.4). Preseason All-American forward Ethan Finlay, a MAC Hermann Trophy candidate, leads the league and ranks sixth in the NCAA with 11 goals and ranks sixth in the nation and tops the MVC with 1.9 points per game (24 in 14). A pair of Bluejay sophomores are tied for the team and league-lead with eight assists, as newcomer Jose Gomez and reigning MVC Freshman of the Year Dion Acoff rank seventh in the NCAA in assists. With 26 career shutouts in 48 starts, junior goalkeeper Brian Holt has tied the Bluejay shutout record and his career goals against average of 0.69 ranks second in school and MVC history. Senior Kyle Deremer, two-time MVC Defensive Player of the Week this season, is the only returning starter for the CU defense. Freshman Tyler Polak – the only Bluejay to play every minute this season – is a U.S. U-20 National Team member. The Bluejays will be without starting midfielder Greg Jordan on Saturday, as he serves his red card suspension resulting from his two yellow cards against Akron in CU's previous match.
Scouting SIU Edwardsville (9-5-1, 4-1-0 MVC): The Cougars are are 7-1-1 in their last nine games after starting the season 2-4-0. SIUE is 2-3-0 away from home this season and has out-scored opponents 21-14 on the year. Chris Anzalone leads the team with five goals and 11 points and Benny Jeffery leads the team with five assists. Scott Meyer (559 min., 0.80 GAA) and Nick Collico (828 min., 0.98 GAA) have combined in net for a 0.91 team GAA and four shutouts on the season.
Head Coach: Jamie Clark (Stanford, 1999) is in his first season at Creighton after spending two successful seasons at Harvard in his first head coaching assignment. A former MLS player and collegiate All-American, Clark is 37-13-1 (.735) in his third season as a head coach, guiding Harvard to the NCAA Tournament in his first two years as a head coach. He was named the NSCAA Northeast Region Coach of the Year in 2009 while leading Harvard to a top-10 ranking, Ivy League championship and third round of the NCAA Tournament. Prior to becoming a head coach he served as an assistant at New Mexico and Notre Dame.
CU-SIUE Series: Creighton trails the all-time series with SIUE, 3-4-0, but the teams have not met since 1994. The Jays are 3-1-0 against SIUE since the program was restarted in 1990, including wins in each of the last three meetings. CU is 2-1-0 at home against SIUE, with both wins coming since 1990 and the loss coming on Nov. 9, 1985. The Cougars are one of just three teams to own a winning record against Creighton (in at least five meetings). Marquette (3-5-0) and SMU (6-17-1) are the only other teams to own a winning record against the Bluejays.
4-0-0 in MVC: The Bluejays have won their first four MVC matches for the first time since 1999. Since its previous 4-0-0 start, the Bluejays have won four regular-season conference titles, including a pair of undefeated Valley seasons. The Bluejays have not started MVC play with five straight wins since 1997. Creighton's last five-game winning streak inside MVC play came in 2004, when it won six straight.
Home Again: Creighton returns home for its final three matches after its longest road trip since 2005. The Bluejays went 3-1-0 on their road trip following a 3-1-0 homestand. Saturday's home match will be CU's first in three weeks. The last time the Bluejays were at home on Oct. 9, four MVC teams were playing their first conference match of the season that day.
Odds are With Us: Creighton suffered a 3-2 loss to Indiana on Oct. 9 in its previous home match and the Jays enter this weekend following a 1-0 loss at No. 1 Akron on Wednesday. Things still appear to be fine for the Bluejays, just look at the historical precedent:
• Creighton has never lost consecutive home matches at Morrison Stadium and has not lost consecutive home games since the program was re-started in 1990. Every home loss since 1990 has been followed by a home win.
• The last time CU lost consecutive home matches was 1985, before any current Bluejay was born.
• Creighton has not lost consecutive matches since opening weekend of 2006, falling to Indiana and Notre Dame on Aug. 25 & 27, respectively.
Due for a Draw: Creighton has not played to a draw through 14 matches this season, the longest it has made it into a season without a tie since the 2004 team didn't draw until its 18th match of the season. CU has recorded at least two draws in every season since 2002. The last time CU did not play to a tie during a season was 2000, when the Jays led the NCAA with 22 wins and finished 22-4-0, ending their season in the NCAA Tournament title game.
No Drawing Here: While Creighton might be due for a draw this season, the Bluejays haven't followed a home loss with a tie in its next home match since 1981.
The Streak Ends: Nearly four months to the day of their previous regular-season road loss, the Bluejays had their 22-match regular-season unbeaten streak snapped by top-ranked Akron on Oct. 27. Before the 1-0 loss at Akron, the Bluejays' previous regular-season road loss was a 2-1 defeat at Bradley on Oct. 28, 2006. The Jays went 15-0-7 in regular-season road contests before the defeat. Since the start of the 2007 season, the Bluejays are now 20-5-7 overall in matches away from Omaha, 15-1-7 in regular-season road matches (0-2-0 in postseason road matches) and 5-2-0 in neutral contests.
Playing No. 1: Creighton played at consensus No. 1-ranked Akron in its final non-conference match of the season on Oct. 27. The Bluejays dropped to 0-4-0 all-time against top-ranked teams with a 1-0 loss to the Zips. The Jays also lost on the road at Indiana 1-0 on Nov. 27, 1994 in NCAA Tournament, 4-2 at SMU on Oct. 14, 2001 and again to SMU, 2-1 in four overtimes on Nov. 18, 2001 in the MVC Tournament championship match in St. Louis.
Pulling Rank: Creighton is 2-2-0 against top-25 opponents this year, with wins over No. 5 Tulsa (Oct. 5) and at No. 21 UC Santa Barbara (Sept. 7) and losses to No. 18 SMU (Sept. 17) and No. 1 Akron (Oct. 27). The Bluejays are now 55-41-9 (.567) all-time against the coaches top 25, including 22-17-7 (.554) all-time on the road against top-25 teams. The Jays are 15-2-1 (.861) against the NSCAA top 25 at Morrison Stadium and 25-9-2 (.722) against nationally-ranked foes at home all-time.
Clark Hits 50: Creighton's match at Central Arkansas was Jamie Clark's 50th match as a head coach. His teams went 37-12-1 (.750) through his first 50 contests.
Finlay's Streak Snapped: Ethan Finlay had a streak of nine straight matches with at least one point scored snapped in CU's 1-0 loss at No. 1 Akron (Oct. 27). Before Finlay's streak, the last Bluejay to score a point in more than eight straight matches was CU Hall of Famer and current MLS star Brian Mullan. Mullan had a point in 10 straight matches during the 2000 season. Finlay was the first Bluejay to score a point in eight straight matches since Julian Nash did so in the 2002 season. Following the lead of teammate Jose Gomez (who scored a point in six straight matches to start the season), the pair are the first Jays to record a point in six straight contests since Brian Biggerstaff in 2004.
NCAA Stats: Creighton started the week ranked ninth in the NCAA in shutout percentage (.540), with seven clean sheets in 13 matches. The Jays ranked 20th in the NCAA with 2.1 goals per game. Ethan Finlay ranks fifth in the NCAA in goals per game (0.85) and sixth in total goals (11). Finlay's 1.85 points per game rank sixth in the NCAA and his 24 points rank 12th in the nation. Jose Gomez and Dion Acoff rank seventh in the NCAA with eight assists each, while Gomez ranks sixth in assists per game and Acoff ranks seventh.
Creighton in the Polls: After receiving no votes in any preseason national poll, the Bluejays jumped into the top 25 after a solid opening week and have remained there, climbing all the way to the top-10. This week, the NSCAA, Soccer Times and College Soccer News rank the Bluejays ninth. Soccer America has the Jays at No. 10 this week.
Creighton in the RPI: The Bluejays are ranked 14th in the RPI released by the NCAA on Oct. 26, after ranking ninth in last week's RPI and 14th in the initial RPI report. Missouri State is second in the MVC with an RPI of 63. Five of CU's opponents this year are in the RPI top-50, including the top two, Akron and SMU respectively. Indiana (8), Tulsa (18) and UCSB (35) are also in the RPI top-50. Each of Creighton's losses this year have come to teams inside the RPI top-10 (Akron, SMU and Indiana).
2009 vs. 2010 Offense: Creighton has scored 27 goals this year – seven more than it did in the entire 2009 campaign. The Jays started the week ranked 20th in the NCAA with 2.1 goals per game, one year after averaging 1.3 per match (20 goals in 16 matches).
• In 2009 Creighton had only four players score at least two goals over the entire season. This season, five players – Ethan Finlay (11), Jose Gomez (3), Andrew Ribeiro (3), Greg Jordan (3), Kris Clark (4) – have at least a pair of goals scored.
• The Bluejays have scored at least two goals in 10 of their first 14 games this year. They scored two or more goals in a match just four times in 2009.
• The Jays were shutout five times last season, all within their first 13 matches. CU was not shutout for the first time this season until its 14th match.
Ten: Ethan Finlay has joined Andrei Gotsmanov as the only two Bluejays to score at least 10 goals in a season since 2003. Gotsmanov scored exactly 10 in 2008. Finlay now has 11 goals on the season, the most by a Bluejay since Mike Tranchilla's 15 goals in 2002. Finlay's three multi-goal matches this year are the most by a Bluejay since Tranchilla had three in 2002.
Holt Keeps Clean Sheets: Junior Brian Holt tied a school record with his 26th career shutout last Saturday in a 2-0 win at Central Arkansas. Holt pulled even with his predecessor Matt Allen for the school record. With four matches remaining in the regular-season this year and the entire 2011 campaign to play, Holt is sure to obliterate not only the CU record, but also the MVC record currently held by Bradley's Chris Dunsheath (27.5).
October Dominance: Creighton is 5-2-0 this month, marking the first October since 2005 that the Bluejays have suffered two losses. The Jays went 4-1-3 last October, suffering their first October loss since 2006, which snapped a 16-match unbeaten streak in the month (11-0-5). In 2008 the Jays were 4-0-2 in October and the 2007 squad was 5-0-2 in October. Since 2002, the Bluejays are now 48-10-11 (.775) in the month of October, including four unbeaten Octobers in that span (2002, 2003, 2007, 2008).
Bluejays in October Since 2002
Year Oct. Season NCAA
2002 6-0-1 18-4-2 College Cup
2003 7-0-1 12-6-4 Quarterfinals
2004 6-3-0 14-4-2 Third Round
2005 5-3-1 15-5-3 Quarterfinals
2006 5-1-1 13-5-3 First Round
2007 5-0-2 12-3-5 Third Round
2008 4-0-2 16-2-2 Quarterfinals
2009 4-1-3 7-4-5 DNQ
2010 4-2-0 11-3-0 ???
Total 48-10-11 118-36-26
Home Sweet Morrison: Including a 5-1-0 start this season, Creighton is now 57-12-11 (.781) all-time at Morrison Stadium. Creighton has lost just one home match in four of its last six seasons. Since 1990, the Bluejays are 159-28-15 (.824) at home. The Jays are 22-3-2 (.851) at Morrison Stadium all-time in MVC play.
Hot Starts: At 8-1-0, the Bluejays were off to their best start since the 1998 team posted an 8-1-0 start. The Jays won their first four games this season for the first time since 2000 – when that squad opened with six straight wins and advanced to the College Cup championship match. Creighton logged four straight shutouts to open the year for just the second time in school history, equalling the feat first accomplished by the 1999 team. Creighton is 4-0-0 in MVC play for the first time since that 1999 team and looking for its first 5-0-0 start in Valley play since 1997.
10 Wins in a Dozen: Creighton won at least 10 of its first 12 matches for the eighth time since 1990. The Jays were exactly 10-2-0 for the fourth time in that span and for the first time since 2004. The previous three times the Jays have had 10 wins through 12 matches, they have advanced to at least the third round of the NCAA Tournament, including a 10-2-0 start in 2000 when they reached the NCAA Championship match.
Finlay's a Winner: Junior Ethan Finlay has led the MVC in game-winning goals in each of his first two collegiate seasons and his five game-winners this year again lead the league. Of his 25 career goals, 14 are game-winners.
Fantastic Freshman: Freshman Tyler Polak has played every minute of his rookie season at outside left back – the only Bluejay starter to not have been subbed for this season. He has played a team-leading 1,289 minutes because of his outstanding play on defense. Playing every minute of important matches is nothing new to the newcomer, as he played every minute of the FIFA U-17 World Cup in Nigeria and the U-17 CONCACAF Tournament in Mexico in 2009 with the U.S. U-17 National Team. Now a member of the U-20 U.S. National Team Pool, he was recently ranked by TopDrawerSoccer.com as the fifth-best freshman in the country, one of the top-15 freshman in the nation by Goal.com and was named a “Top 100 Freshman to Watch” by College Soccer News before the season.
Chart Climbing: With a career-high 11 goals this year, junior Ethan Finlay has started to climb up the Creighton career scoring charts. The forward now has 25 goals to rank 10th in school history, becoming the first Bluejay to crack the top-10 in career scoring since Mike Tranchilla finished his career second in goals (55) in 2002. His three multiple-goal matches this year are tied for seventh in single-season CU history and his four career multi-goal matches are tied for eighth in school history. He has scored 13 goals and 32 points at home in his career to rank second in both categories in Morrison Stadium history.
Finlay's Honors: Junior Ethan Finlay was named the MVC Offensive Player of the Week, MVC Scholar-Athlete of the Week and College Soccer News National Player of the Week on Oct. 11 after an impressive week. The forward had two two-goal matches, striking twice against No. 5 Tulsa (Oct. 5) and also against nationally-ranked Indiana (Oct. 9).
Never Behind: Creighton scored first in its first nine matches of the season before falling behind to Indiana (Oct. 9). In fact, when Indiana scored in the first half, it marked the first time all season the Bluejays had trailed in a match with time still on the clock. The only time the Jays had been behind prior to the Indiana match this year was on SMU's double overtime game-winning goal on Sept. 17.
Quick Strikes: Ethan Finlay scored just 41 seconds into Creighton's 3-1 win over No. 5 Tulsa last Tuesday. The score was the sixth fastest score from the start of the match in school history and the second fastest in Morrison Stadium history. Andrei Gotsmanov's score against Tulsa in the 2008 NCAA Tournament was the only one faster than Finlay's at the stadium. Finlay again had a quick score on Saturday, putting it in the back of the net just 13 seconds after the halftime whistle against Indiana.
Fastest Scores From Start of Match
1. Brian Kamler, 0:16 vs. Bradley, 10-9-92
2. Vince Odorisio, 0:26 vs. UCLA, 9-10-04
3. Lance Hill, 0:30 vs. Missouri St., 11-5-94
4. Johnny Torres, 0:34 at Bradley, 10-6-95
5. Andrei Gotsmanov, 0:36 vs. Tulsa, 11-25-08
6. Ethan Finlay, 0:41 vs. Tulsa, 10-5-10
Home Shutout Streak Ends: Creighton posted four straight home shutouts to start the season, before allowing a second-half goal to No. 5 Tulsa on Oct. 5. Tulsa's goal snapped a streak of 420 consecutive scoreless minutes CU had held opponents at home to start the season. The four straight home shutouts were the longest single-season home shutout streak since the 2003 posted five consecutive home matches shutout. The Jays had posted shutouts in five straight home games dating back to last year's 1-0 home finale over UCLA and had an overall count of nearly 554 (553:46) straight shutout minutes at home dating back to last season.
That Hurts: Creighton has lost two of its starting defenders to injury indefinitely. Senior Andrew Duran suffered a torn meniscus in his knee against SMU on Sept. 17 and had surgery on Sept. 23. Junior Jace Peters was injured against Dartmouth on Sept. 19, tearing muscles in his upper leg and abdomen area. Both players have no set date to return.
Unusual Goals: CU did now allow a goal in its first four matches this year, one of only four teams nationally to not allow a goal in the first two weeks of the season. The Jays allowed five goals in two matches on Sept. 17 and 19, yet only two came the "old fashioned" way. Two of SMU's three goals on Sept. 17 came via penalty kick, while one of Dartmouth's two tallies on Sept. 19 was a Bluejay own goal.
Ribeiro's Firsts: Sophomore Andrew Ribeiro scored his first career goal against 18th-ranked SMU on Sept. 17, in his ninth career match off the bench for the Bluejays. He earned his first career start against Eastern Illinois on Oct. 1, after coming off of the bench in his first 11 career appearances.
Duran Duran: Senior Andrew Duran has been slowed by injuries throughout his career, limiting him to just 30 matches through his first three seasons. Duran, the 2006 NSCAA National High School Player of the Year, scored his first collegiate goal in a 1-0 win at No. 21 UC Santa Barbara (Sept. 7). Duran has again been bitten by the injury bug this season, suffering a torn meniscus against SMU on Sept. 17 and undergoing surgery on Sept. 23. With Duran on the pitch, the Bluejays did not allow a goal through four and a half matches.
First Two Weeks = Sweeps: Through two weeks of the season, Creighton accounted for all four weekly honors awarded by the Missouri Valley Conference. In week one, Kris Clark and Kyle Deremer were named Offensive and Defensive Players of the Week, respectively. In week two, Jose Gomez and Brian Holt notched the same honors. Deremer again earned MVC Defensive Player of the Week honors on Sept. 27.
A Hoie There!: Redshirt junior goalkeeper Bryan Hoie made his regular-season collegiate debut for the Bluejays in their shutout of UNC Greensboro (Sept. 4). Hoie, in his fourth year with the program, faced no shots while playing just over nine minutes in his first action as a Bluejay.
Bluejays Hit Blackjack: Creighton has its smallest roster since 1996, with just 21 student-athletes listed on the squad this year. The entire roster of 21 played in CU's 4-0 win over UNC Greensboro on Sept. 4. The small roster is in sharp contrast to the last decade at Creighton, where the average roster size was 30.2 between 2000-09. That 1996 team had 22 players on the squad, but capped the season by appearing in the first College Cup Final Four in school history.
Clark Wins Debut: Head coach Jamie Clark won 2-0 over Loyola Chicago on Sept. 1 in his first match as CU's leader. The win puts the six all-time Bluejay coaches at 5-1-0 in their debut match. (The only head coach to lose in his debut was Bret Simon, falling to No. 20 Duke in 1995.)
Scoring in Debut: Sophomore transfer Jose Gomez scored at Loyola Chicago on Sept. 1 to become the first Bluejay to score in his Creighton debut since another transfer did so in 2005. Brian Kallman (older brother of current sophomore Brent Kallman) scored in his first game of his only season at Creighton, helping the Bluejays tie Portland 1-1 on Sept. 2, 2005. Gomez, who has three goals and 13 points, has avoided Kallman's fate, as that proved to be the only goal of his season.
Don't Shoot: The Bluejays did not allow a shot on goal in their season-opening win at Loyola Chicago (Sept. 1). It marked the first time since Oct. 18, 2008 that the Bluejays held an opponent without a shot on goal. CU allowed only two shots total to the Ramblers, the fewest shots by a Bluejay foe since Memphis attempted only three shots on Oct. 8, 2008. Since 2000, the Jays have posted six matches in which they allowed three shots, but none with two or fewer before their 2010 opener.
California Dreaming: With its 1-0 win at No. 21 UC Santa Barbara on Sept. 7, Creighton is now 10-0-3 in its last 13 meetings with California-based schools. The Bluejays have posted three straight on 1-0 wins over ranked California teams. In fact, Creighton has not allowed a goal to a California school in its last nine meetings, out-scoring Golden State squads 10-0 in that span. CU last allowed a goal to a California school in a 2-2 tie with San Diego State on Aug. 31, 2007 and last lost to a team from California on Sept. 7, 2003 (2-1, 2OT, at Loyola Marymount).
Ethan Finlay Nets Preseason Honors: Junior forward Ethan Finlay has joined a long list of former Bluejays that have been candidates for college soccer's top individual honor, as he has been named to the preseason MAC Hermann Trophy Watch List. Finlay, who has also been tabbed to Soccer America's Preseason All-America Team, led the team with eight goals and 19 points as a sophomore and is CU's active career leader with 14 goals, seven assists and 35 points. He has led the team and MVC in game-winning goals in each of his first two seasons, as nine of his 14 career goals have been game-winners. Finlay is now on the long list of National Player of the Year candidates from Creighton, including the 1997 winner and current assistant coach, Johnny Torres.
CU National Player of the Year Candidates
Year Player
2010 Ethan Finlay
2009 Byron Dacy, Chris Schuler, Seth Sinovic
2008 Byron Dacy, Andrei Gotsmanov
2007 Byron Dacy, Matt Allen
2006 Byron Dacy
2004 Julian Nash
2003 David Wagenfuhr
2002 Mike Tranchilla
2001 Mike Tranchilla
1997 Johnny Torres (Won)
1996 Ross Paule
1993 Keith DeFini & Brian Kamler
MVC Preseason Poll: For the first time since 2004, the Bluejays are not favored to win the Missouri Valley Conference as voted on by league coaches. MVC coaches have tabbed Creighton for a third-place finish, behind Evansville and defending regular-season champion Missouri State. This marks just the second time in 20 years of MVC soccer that the Jays have not been picked to finish in the top-two, as CU was tabbed third in the initial MVC preseason poll in 1991. The Bluejays, who have been picked to win The Valley 12 times, own a league record nine regular-season titles.
Familiar Faces Return: Jamie Clark retained assistant coach Johnny Torres on his staff, while two other former Bluejay standouts have returned to the bench this fall. Matt Wieland, the 2003 MVC Defensive Player of the Year and 2005 NSCAA Third-Team All-American, is serving as CU's graduate manager this season. Michael Kraus, 2006 MVC Player of the Year, has returned to campus to complete his undergraduate work this semester and will be a student assistant coach for the Bluejays while finishing up his school work.
Torres is HOFer: Assistant coach Johnny Torres, already a Creighton Athletics Hall of Famer, will be inducted into the Missouri Valley Conference Hall of Fame in March, 2011 – becoming the first soccer inductee into the Valley's Hall. A two-time National Player of the Year with the Bluejays between 1994 and 1997, Torres is arguably the greatest soccer player in school and league history, ending his career as the MVC's all-time leader in points (128) and assists (36).
Updated & Extended Coverage: Fans will notice Creighton home matches not only have a new live stats platform, but will also benefit from Creighton's change to BCS Stats. The new live stats provider allows fans to follow the live action on their mobile device at www.gocreightonstats.com. Fans can also find more info on Bluejay athletics on Facebook at the “Official Creighton Athletics Page” and on Twitter at www.twitter.com/gocreighton. The men's soccer team also has its own Facebook page.
Players Mentioned
Creighton Men's Soccer Media Availability 9/30/25
Tuesday, September 30
Creighton Men's Soccer Highlights at DePaul - 9-27-25
Saturday, September 27
Creighton Men's Soccer Media Availability 9/24/25
Thursday, September 25
Creighton MSOC Highlights & Postgame vs Marquette 9-19-25
Saturday, September 20