
Photo by: Joey Gardner
2020-21 Men's Basketball Season Recap
5/24/2021 10:10:00 AM | Men's Basketball
A summary of Creighton men's basketball's 2020-21 season
2020-21 Season Recap (PDF)
   Creighton's first trip to the Sweet 16 since 1974 highlighted a 2020-21 season that will be remembered for years to come because of the adversity the Bluejays had to overcome.
   The Bluejays returned all five starters from a team that was ranked No. 7 following the abrupt ending of the 2019-20 season due to the global COVID-19 pandemic and started the 2020-21 campaign 11th in both the AP and coaches polls.
   With COVID-19 still running rampant, the start of the 2020-21 season was pushed back roughly three weeks. The pandemic also eliminated virtually all international travel, and as a result CU's long-anticipated trip to the Battle for Atlantis in the Bahamas instead moved to nearby Sioux Falls, S.D., where it was rebranded as the Crossover Classic. Days before CU was to start the season in Sioux Falls, the Bluejay program had multiple positive COVID tests to Tier I individuals, which forced the program to withdraw from the Crossover Classic and temporarily halt practice to minimize the risk of the virus spreading.
   As a result, on November 25th Creighton announced it had added a game to its schedule, the regular-season opener vs. North Dakota State, to be played on November 29th. The Bluejays would go on to defeat the defending Summit League Tournament champions, 69-58.
   Two days later, Creighton faced Nebraska-Omaha in the regular-season for the first time in 25 seasons and defeated the Mavericks, 94-67.
   CU improved to 3-0 with a 93-58 victory vs. Kennesaw State before hitting the road for the first time on Dec. 8 for a top-10 showdown at No. 5 Kansas. Playing inside historic Allen Fieldhouse, the game featured nine ties and 13 lead changes before the host Jayhawks escaped, 73-72, when CU missed a potential game-tying free throw with 1.1 seconds left.
   Creighton responded from its setback by hosting Nebraska in the regular-season for a second straight season, using a 23-2 second half run to once again blitz the Cornhuskers 98-74, and close non-conference play with a 4-1 record.
   The Bluejays opened league play on December 14 with a surprising home loss to Marquette before reeling off a six-game win streak that included road victories at St. John's (94-76), UConn (76-74 in OT) and Providence (67-65) in addition to home triumphs vs. No. 22 Xavier (66-61), Seton Hall (89-53) and St. John's (97-79).
   Consecutive losses to Butler and Providence dropped CU to 6-3 in league action before a 74-66 home win vs. No. 23 UConn in the Huskies' first trip to Omaha.
   CU closed out January with road triumphs over Seton Hall (85-81) and DePaul (69-62), rallying from 16 points down in the final 11 minutes to upend the Pirates.
   The Bluejays opened February with an 86-79 home loss on the program's annual Creighton vs. Cancer Pink Out prior to a four-game win streak featuring triumphs at Marquette (71-68) and Georgetown (63-48, as well as home victories vs. No. 5 Villanova (86-70) and DePaul (77-53).
   Cruising along with a 17-5 record and 13-4 mark in league play, Creighton closed February with a 77-69 loss at Xavier. Addressing his team in the locker room following the game, head coach Greg McDermott used an inappropriate and offensive analogy. Numerous public and private apologies in the days to follow preceded CU's 72-60 loss at No. 10 Villanova, which clinched the BIG EAST regular-season title for the Wildcats.
   With some civic leaders and members of the national media calling for his ouster and tensions still running high, McDermott was suspended for CU's March 6 regular-season finale vs. Butler. Assistant Alan Huss handled interim head coach duties in CU's 93-73 win vs. the Bulldogs, and after the game CU recognized seniors Mitch Ballock, Damien Jefferson, Denzel Mahoney as well as graduates Jett Canfield and Jacob Epperson.
   The Bluejays finished BIG EAST play with a 14-6 record -- good for second place -- and opened the BIG EAST Tournament five days later with a rematch against Butler. Creighton won the rematch, 87-56, with McDermott returning to the sideline.
   Creighton then beat UConn for the third time of the season, 59-56 in the semifinals, to advance to the BIG EAST Tournament title game for the third time in eight seasons.
   The championship game wasn't close, as eighth-seeded Georgetown compiled a 34-3 run to claim its first league tournament title since 2007 with a 73-48 win over CU.
   One day after the conclusion of the BIG EAST Tournament, Creighton earned an at-large berth to the NCAA Tournament, which was held in its entirety in Indianapolis this spring.
   The fifth-seeded Bluejays opened the postseason with a narrow 63-62 win against Big West Conference Tournament champion UC Santa Barbara. Creighton trailed by six points with five minutes to play before baskets by four different Bluejays spurred a 9-0 run to retake the lead.
   UCSB regained a 62-61 lead on two free throws with 37.9 seconds to play, but the Gauchos fouled CU's Christian Bishop with 16.0 seconds left. A 57.1 percent foul shooter, Bishop drained both shots to give CU a 63-62 edge. On the defensive end, Shereef Mitchell helped challenge a point-blank shot by Amadou Sow that rolled off the rim in the closing seconds as the Bluejays earned its first NCAA Tournament victory since 2014.
   Creighton's Second Round match-up ended up being 13th-seeded Ohio, which had upset defending national champion Ohio in the First Round. Creighton used a 23-5 run spanning halftime and went on to defeat the Bobcats, 72-58. It marked the first time in program history that CU won consecutive NCAA Tournament games in the same season and also propelled the Bluejays into the Sweet 16 for the first time since 1974.
   The Sweet 16 match-up would be against top-ranked and undefeated Gonzaga and air on CBS. CU fell behind 9-2 in the opening minutes and never led, ultimately falling 83-65 to finish the season with a 22-9 record.
   Creighton had three men named All-BIG EAST for the first time ever, with Jefferson (Second Team) and Mahoney (Honorable Mention) joining Marcus Zegarowski (First Team). Zegarowski would also earned Honorable Mention All-America honors from the Associated Press. In addition, Ballock received the BIG EAST's Sportsmanship Award.
Radio Information
KOZN (1620 AM) broadcasted all Creighton men's basketball games during the 2020-21 season. John Bishop called all the games along with a bevy of analysts that included Brody Deren, Taylor Stormberg, Ross Ferrarini and Nick Bahe.
   Late in the season Creighton games began being picked up by Sirius/XM for the first time, as well.
   The non-NCAA Tournament games were also heard on 1620TheZone.com, and home games on KOOO (101.9 FM).
Television Information
All 31 games were televised this season. The games aired on FS1 (16 times), FOX (7), CBS Sports Network (3), BTN (1), TNT (1), truTV (1), CBS (1) and ESPN (1).
   Of Creighton's last 162 games, all but the three contests at the 2018 Cayman Islands Classic have been televised. CU is 109-53 in those contests.
21 of 23 Seasons With 20 Wins
Creighton has won 20 or more games in 21 of the last 23 seasons (including 2020-21), a feat that puts the Jays among an exclusive group, nationally.
   Just two schools have had 20 or more wins each of the last 23 years: Gonzaga and Kansas. Duke has done it 22 times, Creighton and Kentucky 21 times.
Most 20-Win Seasons, Last 23 Years (Includes 2020-21)
Team   20-Win Seasons   2020-21 W-L  Â
Gonzaga   23   31-1  Â
Kansas   23   21-9  Â
Duke   22   13-11  Â
Creighton   21   22-9  Â
Kentucky   21   9-16  Â
Twenty Wins, Again
Creighton had 22 wins this season, its sixth consecutive campaign with 20 or more victories.
   Only six teams have won 20 games or more in each of the last six seasons: Belmont, Creighton, Gonzaga, Houston, Kansas and Oregon.
NCAA Tournament History
Creighton made its 22nd NCAA Tournament appearance, and 13th in the last 23 years. The Bluejays are 14-23 all-time in NCAA action, including a 10-12 record in its first game, a 2-9 mark in its second game and a 2-2 performance in its third game.
   This year was Creighton's first NCAA Tournament appearance since a 2018 First Round exit at the hands of Kansas State, and CU's first NCAA Tournament victories since a 2014 win vs. Louisiana.
   Including this year, Creighton owns a 5-5 record all-time in the West Region. The Bluejays were 2-1 this year (beat UCSB and Ohio, lost to Gonzaga), were 1-1 in 2014 (beat Louisiana; lost to Baylor), 0-1 in 2003 (losing to Central Michigan), 1-1 in 1991 (beating New Mexico State, losing to Seton Hall) and 1-1 in 1941 (losing to Washington State, beating Wyoming).
   This year marked the third time in 34 NCAA or NIT appearances that Creighton has won consecutive games in the same event, and first time in the NCAA's (also 2016 NIT and 2019 NIT). CU has never won three straight games in the NIT or NCAA Tournament.
   This was the first time Creighton has reached the Round of 16 or beyond since 1974, when the tournament was 25 teams and CU won its first game before losing by one point to Kansas.
   Creighton has now had at least one sport reach the NCAA Tournament in each of the last 34 academic calendar years.
   Including the NCAA's, NIT, CBI and CIT, Creighton made its 22nd postseason appearance in the last 24 seasons this year. Last year's team was one of those exceptions, but was likely headed for a 2 or 3 seed in the NCAA's before COVID-19 canceled the event.
Coaching Experience In The Dance
Creighton's full-time coaching staff in 2020-21 boasted a combined 49 Division I NCAA Tournament games under their collective belts as either a player (3-9), assistant coach (13-10) or head coach (5-9), winning 21 of those games.
   Greg McDermott is 5-9 in NCAA Tournament action as a Division head coach. He went 0-3 at Northern Iowa (0-1 in 2004, 2005 and 2006) and is 5-6 at Creighton (2-1 in 2021, 1-1 in 2012, 2013 and 2014 and 0-1 in 2017 and 2018).
   Alan Huss is 3-5 in NCAA Tournament action, going three times as a player at Creighton (1-1 in 1999 and 0-1 in both 2000 and 2001). He is also 2-2 as an assistant coach thanks to a 2018 Creighton loss and a 2-1 mark in 2021.
   Paul Lusk owns a 9-10 record in NCAA Tournament action. He was an assistant coach at Purdue from 2004-11 and the Boilermakers made five straight NCAA trips from 2007-11. Purdue went 1-1 in 2007, 2008 and 2011 and 2-1 in 2009 and 2010. He was also an assistant at Southern Illinois in the 2004 NCAA Tournament, where the Salukis went 0-1. He was 2-1 as a Creighton assistant in March Madness. As a player, Lusk appeared in three NCAA Tournaments while with Southern Illinois, losing his first game in 1993, 1994 and 1995. He averaged 11.7 points and 3.0 rebounds per game.
   Terrence Rencher went 2-3 as a player at Texas in the NCAA Tournament, going 0-1 in 1992 and 1-1 in 1994 and 1995. In five games as a player, Rencher averaged 18.0 points, 4.0 rebounds and 3.4 assists. He was 2-1 as an assistant coach in the NCAA Tournament with Creighton.
NCAA Experience
Entering this year, four players on the Creighton team had been a part of an NCAA Tournament squad before, and two of them had appeared for the Bluejays in the Big Dance.
   Mitch Ballock played 32 minutes in Creighton's 2018 loss to Kansas State. He scored 16 points, becoming CU's first freshman to lead his team in scoring in his NCAA Tournament debut since Kevin McKenna in 1977.
   Jacob Epperson played 16 minutes in Creighton's 2018 loss to Kansas State, scoring two points and adding one rebound and one blocked shot.
   Damien Jefferson redshirted on Creighton's 2017-18 team and was not allowed to travel to Charlotte per NCAA policy regarding transfers at the time.
   Alex O'Connell played in seven NCAA Tournament games at Duke, including a pair of starts, as the Blue Devils went 5-2 in those contests. Duke also won one other game in which he didn't appear in. The Blue Devils reached the Elite Eight in both seasons. He averaged 1.6 points and 1.6 rebounds in those games and started Duke's Sweet 16 and Elite Eight games in 2019 in place of an injured Cam Reddish.
  Â
Against NCAA Tournament Opponents
Creighton was 7-5 this season against teams that made the 2021 NCAA Tournament. The Jays were 3-0 against UConn, 1-0 vs. UC Santa Barbara, 1-0 vs. Ohio, 1-1 vs. Villanova, 1-2 vs. Georgetown and 0-1 against Kansas and Gonzaga.
   All five Creighton starters averaged in double-figures during those games, a group led by Marcus Zegarowski (15.5 ppg., 3.9 apg.). Mitch Ballock (10.9 ppg.) made 31 three-pointers in those 12 games, and Christian Bishop (12.0 ppg.) hauled in a team-leading 7.8 rebounds per game while sinking 67.4 percent of his shots from the floor.
   CU held opponents to 40.1 percent shooting from the field, and 32.0 percent marksmanship from three-point territory.
History As A No. 5 Seed
Creighton was a No. 5 seed for the first time. It is Creighton's second-best seed slot since the NCAA began seeding all the teams in 1979, trailing only CU's No. 3 seed in 2014. This was also the sixth straight NCAA berth that the Bluejays were a better seed and in its "home whites" for its initial NCAA Tournament game.
   Creighton and Villanova this year are the 17th and 18th BIG EAST teams to ever earn a No. 5 seed, after just one team since 2012 (Marquette in 2019). Including the first two rounds this year, those BIG EAST teams are now 19-16 as a No. 5 seed.
   Before Villanova and Creighton this year, the only three previous BIG EAST teams to reach the Regional semifinals as a fifth seed were Syracuse (2004), Notre Dame (2003) and Syracuse (1998). Four teams went winless and nine other squads were exactly 1-1.
   Since 1985, No. 5 seeds are 8-36 (.182) against No. 1 seeds, with the last such upset coming in 2019 when Auburn walloped North Carolina 97-80.
   Since 1985, seven No. 5 seeds have reached the Final Four, most recently Auburn in 2019.
Creighton's NCAA Tourney Seeds
(since seeding began in 1979)
Year   Seed   Record
1981   8th   0-1
1989   14th   0-1
1991   11th   1-1
1999   10th   1-1
2000   10th   0-1
2001   10th   0-1
2002   12th   1-1
2003   6th   0-1
2005   10th   0-1
2007   10th   0-1
2012   8th   1-1
2013   7th   1-1
2014   3rd   1-1
2017   6th   0-1
2018   8th   0-1
2021   5th   2-1
BIG EAST Success
Creighton was one of four BIG EAST teams to make the NCAA Tournament this season, down from six clubs in 2019 and seven programs in 2018.
   Including this season, the BIG EAST has had a Sweet 16 squad in 25 of the past 27 tournaments, and multiple Sweet 16 teams in 14 of the last 19 tournaments.
   Even when you remove Louisville's vacated 2013 title, the BIG EAST Conference has won a combined 14 NCAA men's and women's basketball titles in the previous 21 seasons a tournament has been held.
McDermott In The Postseason
Creighton coach Greg McDermott made his ninth postseason appearance at Creighton, and 12th overall as a Division I head coach when you include his time at Northern Iowa.
   McDermott's Division I teams own an 13-13 record in those 12 postseason appearances, including a 13-10 mark in nine trips with Creighton.
McDermott's Division I Postseason Appearances
Year (School)   Tourney   Postseason W-L
2003-04 (UNI)Â Â Â NCAAÂ Â Â 0-1
2004-05 (UNI)Â Â Â NCAAÂ Â Â 0-1
2005-06 (UNI)Â Â Â NCAAÂ Â Â 0-1
2010-11 (CU)Â Â Â CBIÂ Â Â 4-2
2011-12 (CU)Â Â Â NCAAÂ Â Â 1-1
2012-13 (CU)Â Â Â NCAAÂ Â Â 1-1
2013-14 (CU)Â Â Â NCAAÂ Â Â 1-1
2015-16 (CU)Â Â Â NITÂ Â Â 2-1
2016-17 (CU)Â Â Â NCAAÂ Â Â 0-1
2017-18 (CU)Â Â Â NCAAÂ Â Â 0-1
2018-19 (CU)Â Â Â NITÂ Â Â 2-1
2020-21 (CU)Â Â Â NCAAÂ Â Â 2-1
Most Postseason Bids By CU Coaches
This year's bid to the NCAA was the ninth postseason bid for Greg McDermott at Creighton. Only Dana Altman (13) has taken the Bluejays to more postseason appearances in men's basketball.
   McDermott's five NCAA Tournament wins are two more than any coach in program history.
   McDermott's six NCAA Tournament trips are second-most in program history as well, trailing only Altman's seven.
   McDermott's 13 postseason wins at Creighton are the most in school history, six more than Altman's seven.
   McDermott (13-9) is one of two coaches in program history with a winning record in postseason play, joining Eddie Sutton (2-1).
Coach (Bids)Â Â Â NCAAÂ Â Â NITÂ Â Â CBIÂ Â Â CITÂ Â Â NCITÂ Â Â Total
Hickey (3)Â Â Â 1-1Â Â Â 2-2Â Â Â 0-0Â Â Â 0-0Â Â Â 0-0Â Â Â 3-3
Belford (1)Â Â Â 0-0Â Â Â 0-0Â Â Â 0-0Â Â Â 0-0Â Â Â 0-1Â Â Â 0-1
McManus (3)Â Â Â 3-3Â Â Â 0-0Â Â Â 0-0Â Â Â 0-0Â Â Â 1-1Â Â Â 4-4
Sutton (1)Â Â Â 2-1Â Â Â 0-0Â Â Â 0-0Â Â Â 0-0Â Â Â 0-0Â Â Â 2-1
Apke (4)Â Â Â 0-3Â Â Â 0-1Â Â Â 0-0Â Â Â 0-0Â Â Â 0-0Â Â Â 0-4
Barone (3)Â Â Â 1-2Â Â Â 0-1Â Â Â 0-0Â Â Â 0-0Â Â Â 0-0Â Â Â 1-3
Altman (13)Â Â Â 2-7Â Â Â 3-5Â Â Â 0-0Â Â Â 2-1Â Â Â 0-0Â Â Â 7-13
McDermott (9)Â Â Â 5-6Â Â Â 4-2Â Â Â 4-2Â Â Â 0-0Â Â Â 0-0Â Â Â 13-9
Super Six
Greg McDermott joined some select company by directing his troops to a sixth NCAA Tournament this season. That puts him in the company of some of the greatest coaches in CU Athletics history.
   McDermott is one of six head coaches in Creighton history to lead six different NCAA Tournament teams, through May 15, 2021.
Name   Sport   NCAA's @CU
Bob Warming   Men's Soccer   11
Kirsten Bernthal Booth   Volleyball   10
Dana Altman   Men's Basketball   7
Brent Vigness   Softball   7
Elmar Bolowich   Men's Soccer   6
Greg McDermott   Men's Basketball   6
Ranked vs. Ranked
Creighton is 13-15 all-time as a ranked team when facing a ranked team, including a 12-11 overall mark under Greg McDermott. That includes a 7-3 mark over the past two seasons.
Creighton's Top-25 vs. Top-25 Games
Date   CU Rank   Opponent Rank   Result
03/04/1974   #16   #14 South Carolina   L 69-78
03/14/1974   #19   vs. #14 Kansas   L 54-55
03/16/1974   #19   vs. #16 Louisville   W 80-71
03/08/1975   #13   #5 Marquette   L 60-64
12/31/2002   #15   at #19 Xavier   L 73-75
03/18/2012   #19   vs. #4 North Carolina   L 73-87
03/24/2013   #22   vs. #6 Duke   L 50-66
02/16/2014   #18   #6 Villanova   W 101-80
03/23/2014   #16   vs. #23 Baylor   L 55-85
11/15/2016   #22   #9 Wisconsin   W 77-69
12/31/2016   #10   #1 Villanova   L 70-80
01/11/2017   #8   #12 Butler   W 75-64
01/16/2017   #7   at #22 Xavier   W 72-67
01/31/2017   #22   at #16 Butler   W 76-67
02/25/2017   #23   at #2 Villanova   L 63-79
12/01/2017   #25   at #15 Gonzaga   L 74-91
12/28/2017   #25   at #23 Seton Hall   L 84-90
01/13/2018   #25   at #10 Xavier   L 70-92
02/12/2020   #23   at #10 Seton Hall   W 87-82
02/18/2020   #15   at #19 Marquette   W 73-65
02/23/2020   #15   #21 Butler   W 81-59
03/07/2020   #11   #8 Seton Hall   W 77-60
12/08/2020   #8   at #5 Kansas   L 72-73
12/21/2020   #13   #22 Xavier   W 66-61
01/23/2021   #11   #23 Connecticut   W 74-66
02/13/2021   #19   #5 Villanova   W 86-70
03/03/2021   #14   at #10 Villanova   L 60-72
03/28/2021   #19   vs. #1 Gonzaga   L 65-83
Pink Out Auction Raises $40,381 This Year
Creighton raised $40,381 for this Wednesday's "Creighton vs. Cancer Pink Out" Pink Out game vs. Georgetown. Below is the final numbers for each jersey/item in the auction this year:
#0Â Â Â $700Â Â Â #4Â Â Â $750Â Â Â #5Â Â Â $800
#10Â Â Â $850Â Â Â #11Â Â Â $3,550Â Â Â #12Â Â Â $700
#13Â Â Â $1,600Â Â Â #14Â Â Â $650Â Â Â #20Â Â Â $650
#22Â Â Â $750Â Â Â #23Â Â Â $1,750Â Â Â #24Â Â Â $2,150
#32Â Â Â $1,550Â Â Â #34Â Â Â $1,500Â Â Â #41Â Â Â $850
#44Â Â Â $650Â Â Â #55Â Â Â $606Â Â Â Ball 1: $1,025
Ball 2: $1,050Â Ball 3: $1,000Â Â Ball 4: $1,100Â Â Â Â Ball 5: $950
Arbor Links Golf: $5,100Â Â Â Omaha CC Golf: $3,400
Des Moines Golf: $3,600Â Â Â Southern Highlands Golf: $3,100
Creighton's Pink Out History
This year will mark Creighton's 11th Pink Out, which coincides with the arrival of head coach Greg McDermott. The Bluejays are 8-2 in the first 10 Pink Out games, while playing in front of an average of 17,903 fans per game, as seen below:
Date   Result   Attendance
01/29/11Â Â Â Creighton 83, Indiana State 69Â Â Â 16,044
01/28/12Â Â Â Creighton 73, Bradley 59Â Â Â 18,436
02/02/13Â Â Â Creighton 75, Bradley 58Â Â Â 18,111
01/25/14Â Â Â Creighton 76, Georgetown 63Â Â Â 18,859
01/17/15Â Â Â Providence 74, Creighton 65Â Â Â 17,640
01/30/16Â Â Â Seton Hall 75, Creighton 65Â Â Â 17,924
01/28/17Â Â Â Creighton 83, DePaul 66Â Â Â 17,611
01/27/18Â Â Â Creighton 85, Georgetown 77Â Â Â 18,518
01/25/19Â Â Â Creighton 75, Butler 61Â Â Â 18,089
01/26/20Â Â Â Creighton 77, Xavier 66Â Â Â 17,796
Yearly Pink Out Totals
Creighton has raised 307,095.18 since the start of the 2011-12 season during its annual men's basketball Pink Out.
2011-12:Â Â Â $20,600
2012-13:Â Â Â $24,444
2013-14:Â Â Â $48,247.11
2014-15:Â Â Â $16,384.03
2015-16:Â Â Â $16,527.90
2016-17:Â Â Â $26,361.64
2017-18:Â Â Â $28,796
2018-19:Â Â Â $19,595
2019-20:Â Â Â $31,803.18
2020-21:Â Â Â $40,381
Additional Donations:Â Â Â $25,988.32
10-Year Totals: $307,095.18
Top 25 Success
Creighton had six wins over top-25 teams last season, breaking the school-record of four set in 2016-17 and 2017-18.
   This year's team owned top-25 wins vs. No. 5 Villanova, No. 22 Xavier and No. 23 UConn. It marked the 10th Bluejay team in history with multiple top-25 victories, and sixth straight year that's happened.
   On a national basis, the only 11 teams that have posted multiple top-25 wins in each of the last six seasons (including 2020-21) are Baylor, Creighton, Florida State, Gonzaga, Kansas, Michigan, Michigan State, Penn State, Purdue, Texas Tech, Villanova and West Virginia.
Creighton's Most Top-25 Wins, Season
   Wins   Season   Top-25 Victims
   6   2019-20   #8 Villanova, #10 Seton Hall,
         #12 Texas Tech, #19 Marquette,
         #21 Butler, #8 Seton Hall
   4   2016-17   #9 Wisconsin, #12 Butler,
         #16 Butler, #22 Xavier
   4   2017-18   #3 Villanova, #19 Seton Hall,
         #20 Northwestern, #23 UCLA
   3   2020-21   #5 Villanova, #22 Xavier, #23 UConn
   2   1973-74   #6 Marquette, #16 Louisville
   2   2001-02   #15 Florida, #17 Western Kentucky
   2   2006-07   #11 Southern Illinois, #24 Xavier
   2   2013-14   #4 Villanova, #6 Villanova
   2   2015-16   #5 Xavier, #18 Butler
   2   2018-19   #10 Marquette, #16 Clemson
Ranking News & Notes
- Creighton is 24-35 under Greg McDermott against nationally-ranked teams, 17 more top-25 wins than any other coach in Creighton history. Prior to McDermott's arrival, Creighton was 18-115 all-time against top-25 foes.
- Creighton has beaten at least one ranked team in each of the last eight seasons (including 2020-21), and multiple ranked foes in each of the last seven years.
   On a national basis, the only 23 teams with a top-25 win each of the last eight seasons (including 2020-21) are Baylor, Clemson, Creighton, Duke, Florida State, Indiana, Kansas, Kansas State, Kentucky, Louisville, Michigan, Michigan State, Ohio State, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Carolina, Syracuse, Texas Tech, Villanova, Virginia, West Virginia, Wisconsin and Xavier.
- Creighton is 19-18 since the start of the 2016-17 season against ranked teams. The 19 wins over ranked teams in that time are 16th-most nationally, and trails only Villanova (24) among BIG EAST clubs. Â
Against The Top 10
Creighton owns 10 top-10 victories in the past eight seasons. Seven of those wins have come by double-figures. Four of the top-10 victories have been away from home.
Date   Opponent   Score
01/20/14   at #4 Villanova   W 96-68
02/16/14   #6 Villanova   W 101-80
02/09/16   #5 Xavier   W 70-56
11/15/16   #9 Wisconsin   W 79-67
02/24/18   #3 Villanova   W 89-83 (OT)
03/03/19   at #10 Marquette   W 66-60
02/01/20   at #8 Villanova   W 76-61
02/12/20   at #10 Seton Hall   W 87-82
03/07/20   #8 Seton Hall   W 77-60
02/13/21   #5 Villanova   W 86-70
Big Mac On The Attack
Greg McDermott's teams have consistently battled some of the best teams in the country.
   The chart below shows how his teams have consistently outpaced those of his predecessors against top-25 foes.
Category   Pre-McDermott   Under McDermott
vs. Top 25 Teams   18-115   24-35
vs. Top 10 Teams   5-31   10-17
vs. Top 10 on Road   1-28   4-9
vs. Top 25 on Road   2-63   8-16
No Fear On The Road
Creighton owns five top-10 victories vs. top-10 teams since the start of the 2018-19 season. That ranks tied for 12th-most in the nation.
Top 10 Wins Since 2018-19 Started
   Rank   Wins   Team
   1.   9   Illinois
      9   Michigan State
      9   Baylor
   4.   8   Virginia
      8   Duke
   6.   7   Ohio State
   7.   6   Oklahoma State
      6   Michigan
      6   Kansas
      6   West Virginia
      6   Texas Tech
   12.   5   Creighton
      5   Indiana
      5   Kentucky
Man In The Middle
Christian Bishop was one of seven players to have double-doubles in a pair of NCAA Tournament games this season, joining Colin Castleton (Florida), Evan Mobley (USC), Cody Riley (UCLA), Justin Smith (Arkansas), Cameron Krutwig (Loyola Chicago) and Kevin Obanor (Oral Roberts). Of that group, only Obanor had three or more.
   Bishop had back-to-back career-high efforts of 11 rebounds (vs. UCSB) and then 15 rebounds (vs. Ohio). The 15 rebounds were the most by a Bluejay since Ronnie Harrell Jr. had 15 vs. No. 23 UCLA on Nov. 20, 2017.
   Bishop's 31 rebounds in the NCAA Tournament ranked 13th-most among all players, and just eight behind the overall leader, Gonzaga's Joel Ayayi.
   Bishop was Creighton's first player with multiple double-doubles in the same NCAA Tournament since Chad Gallagher in 1991.
   The only Creighton player with three double-doubles in the same NCAA Tournament is Paul Silas, who did it in 1964.
   Paul Silas owns every rebounding-related record in program history, including those in the NCAA Tournament. He had single-game program highs of 27 (March 9, 1964 vs. Oklahoma City), single-year program highs of 57 (over 3 games in 1964) and in a career (101 in 6 games).
Denzel A Leading Man
In seven career games as a Bluejay against a top-10 opponent, Denzel Mahoney averaged 13.7 points, 3.3 rebounds and 1.3 steals per game to help CU to a 4-3 mark. Mahoney has made 47.4.percent (36-76) of his shots from the floor, 36.1 percent (13-36) from three-point range and 85.7 percent (12-14) at the charity stripe.
   Four of his top 14 single-game scoring efforts at CU came in games against top-10 teams.
Denzel Mahoney's Top Scoring Games at Creighton
   Points   Opponent   Date
   29   at Butler   01/16/21
   24   St. John's   01/09/21
   22   Georgetown   02/03/21
   21   at #8 Villanova   02/01/20
   21   Marquette   12/14/20
   20   Nebraska   12/11/20
   20   #23 Connecticut   01/23/21
   19   at Georgetown   01/15/20
   19   at #5 Kansas   12/08/20
   18   St. John's   02/08/20
   18   at #10 Seton Hall   02/12/20
   17   Nebraska-Omaha   12/01/20
   16   #8 Seton Hall   03/08/20
   16   at St. John's   12/17/20
Sixty Percent Club
Since Greg McDermott was hired in 2010, Creighton has shot 60 percent or better in 25 different games.
   The only team with more games making 60 percent or better in that span is Gonzaga (34), while Loyola (Chicago) did it 23 times to rank third.
   Drop the list to teams shooting 50 percent or better since 2010-11 and Gonzaga (222) is once against first and Creighton (161) tied for third.
   Since 2010-11, Creighton and Gonzaga are also in the top-10 nationally in field goal percentage, field goals made and (not coincidentally) assists.
   Here's some of those lists, per Basketball-Reference.com.
Most Games, 60%+ FG Shooting, Since 2010-11
Rk.   Games   Team
1.   34   Gonzaga  Â
2.   25   Creighton
3.   23   Loyola Chicago
4.   22   Utah
5.   21   Belmont
   21   Dayton
   21   Kansas
Most Games, 50%+ FG Shooting, Since 2010-11
Rk.   Games   Team
1.   222   Gonzaga  Â
2.   165   Belmont
3.   161   Creighton
   161   Kansas
5.   159   Saint Mary's
Best FG% , Since 2010-11
Rk.   FG%   Team
1.   50.4%   Gonzaga
2.   48.4%   Belmont
3.   48.0%   Creighton
4.   47.9%   Kansas
5.   47.7%   Saint Mary's
Most Assists , Since 2010-11
Rk.   Assists   Team
1.   6,729   North Carolina
2.   6,520   Michigan State
3.   6,151   Gonzaga  Â
4.   6,122   Belmont  Â
4.   6,114   Creighton
Most Field Goals Made , Since 2010-11
Rk.   Assists   Team
1.   11,603   North Carolina
2.   11,361   Gonzaga
3.   10,903   Kansas
4.   10,798   Duke
5.   10,538   BYU
6.   10,519   Kentucky
7.   10,430   Oregon
8.   10,344   Creighton
Magnificent Debuts
With 15 points and 11 rebounds vs. UCSB, Christian Bishop had his team-leading fifth double-double of the season and established a career-high in the carom column.
   Bishop's 11 rebounds were the most by a Creighton player in their NCAA Tournament debut since George Morrow had 14 rebounds vs. Saint Joseph's in 1981.
   Bishop's double-double was the first by a Bluejay in an NCAA Tournament since Doug McDermott had 30 points and 12 rebounds in a 2014 win vs. Louisiana, which also happened to be CU's last NCAA Tournament victory.
   Bishop was the first Bluejay with a double-double in his NCAA Tournament debut since Doug McDermott vs. Alabama on March 16, 2012. McDermott had 16 point and 10 rebounds in a one-point win.
   Bishop followed up his UCSB performance with 12 points and 15 rebounds vs. Ohio two days later for his sixth double-double.
   In Creighton's last 14 NCAA Tournament games (since March 17, 2002), the Bluejays are 5-0 when it has an individual with a double-double but 0-10 when it doesn't have a double-double.
More Debut News
Speaking of fantastic NCAA Tournament debuts, what more can be said about Marcus Zegarowski's 17 points and eight assists vs. UCSB?
   Zegarowski's 17 points were the most by a Bluejay in their NCAA Tournament debut since Duan Cole had 17 points vs. New Mexico State on March 14, 1991.
   Zegarowski was the first Bluejay with eight or more assists in his NCAA Tournament debut since Todd Eisner had nine helpers vs. Missouri on March 17, 1989.
   Zegarowski is Creighton's first player with 17 points and eight assists in the same NCAA Tournament game since Ryan Sears had 18 points and eight assists vs. Auburn on March 16, 2000.
   Zegarowski then had a game-high 20 points vs. Ohio.
   After scoring 19 points vs. Gonzaga in the Sweet 16, Zegarowski became the first Bluejay to score 17 or more points in each of his first three career NCAA Tournament games.
Won By One
A First Round 63-62 win was Creighton's first one-point win of the season, and improved the Bluejays to 5-1 this year in games decided by three points or less.
   It was just the third Creighton win by a 63-62 score ever, and first since Booker Woodfox hit a buzzer-beater to eliminate Wichita State in the 2009 MVC Tournament quarterfinals. The first 63-62 win came on Dec. 14, 1968 at Kansas State.
   Creighton improved to 81-76 all-time in one-point games, and 8-8 under Greg McDermott.
   Of Creighton's 14 all-time NCAA Tournament wins, four of them have come by exactly one point (45-44 vs. Wyoming in 1944; 83-82 vs. Florida in 2002; 58-57 vs. Alabama in 2012; 63-62 vs. UC Santa Barbara in 2021).
   Overall, seven of CU's 14 NCAA wins have been by four points or less.
Zegarowski Goes Streaking
Marcus Zegarowski made a three-pointer in each of his last 23 games, a streak that started on Dec. 17th. That's tied for the sixth-longest streak in program history, as seen below.
   Seniors Denzel Mahoney and Mitch Ballock finished their careers with streaks of 17 straight games with a trey, as well.
   Streak   Name   Dates of Streak
   33   Ty-Shon Alexander   Feb. 27, 2018-March 6, 2019
   31   Booker Woodfox   Nov. 25, 2008-March 23, 2009
   28   Kyle Korver   Feb. 4, 2001-Feb. 6, 2002
   27   Kyle Korver   Feb. 13, 2002-Jan. 20, 2003
   25   Rodney Buford   Jan. 25, 1997-Jan. 10, 1998
   23   Ethan Wragge   Nov. 8, 2013-Feb. 9, 2014
   23   Mitch Ballock   Nov. 12, 2019-Feb. 8, 2020
   23   Marcus Zegarowski   Dec. 17, 2020 - Present
   22   Khyri Thomas   Jan. 28-Dec. 5, 2017
   21   Ethan Wragge   Jan. 3-March 24, 2010
   20   Johnny Mathies   Dec. 22, 2004-Feb. 28, 2005
   20   Marcus Foster   Dec. 31, 2017-March 16, 2018
You Can't Spell Marcus Without March
Marcus Zegarowski was named to BIG EAST's All-Tournament Team after averaging 16.0 points,, 4.0 assists and 4.0 rebounds as Creighton reached the final.
   He shot 62.5 percent from the floor (20-32) and 61.5 percent from deep (8-13).
   Zegarowski is the fourth Bluejay ever named to the BIG EAST's All-Tournament Team, joining Doug McDermott (2014), Austin Chatman (2014) and Marcus Foster (2017).
Postseason Features Last-Second Drama
Twelve of Creighton's last 17 postseason runs (all but 2010, 2014 and 2016, 2017 and 2019) have included a game that was decided in the final seconds, including 2021.
   In fact, Creighton's past 17 postseason openers have been decided by an average of 6.35 points and feature five games decided by one point (including a double-OT finish), two by two points, one game by four points, two by six points (including an OT finish), two games by 10 points, three games by 11 points one by 12 points, and one decided by 18 points.
   In 2021, Christian Bishop made two go-ahead free throws with 16.0 seconds left and UC Santa Barbara's Amadou Sow missed a point-bank lay-up with two seconds left as Creighton won, 63-62.
   In 2013 Cincinnati missed a game-tying three-pointer in the final 20 seconds and Creighton guard Austin Chatman made 3-of-4 free throws down the stretch to hold on to a 67-63 win.
   In 2012 Creighton edged Alabama in the second round of the NCAA Tournament, 58-57, as Trevor Releford's game-winning three-pointer at the buzzer came up short.
   Creighton's 2010-11 campaign ended in heartbreaking fashion in the CBI title game at Oregon. Creighton had the ball in a tie game with the shot clock off, but committed a backcourt violation on Oregon's "unique" floor. The Ducks' E.J. Singler then banked in a game-winning shot with 2.0 seconds left. A desperation three-pointer by Creighton was off the mark.
   In 2009, Creighton rallied from a 14-point deficit and would hang on to beat Bowling Green, 73-71 in the first round of the NIT. The Jays needed a last-second defensive stand, as BGSU's Darryl Clements' game-winning three-pointer at the buzzer was off the mark.
   The following game, Creighton led Kentucky by one with 36 seconds left, only to miss two free throws and see UK All-American Jodie Meeks convert a three-point play. CU's Booker Woodfox, the nation's No. 2 three-point shooter, missed an open trey as time expired, and Creighton lost 65-63.
   In 2008, Creighton rallied from a 12-point deficit in the final 3:07 to top Rhode Island, 74-73, 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 second round of the 2006 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 2003 Creighton lost 79-73 to Central Michigan in the NCAA's. The Jays trailed 50-24 with 16:24 left but a furious rally got them within two points (72-70) with 1:20 left, only to turn it over the next three possessions.
   In the 2002 NCAA's, 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.
Postseason Wins In 10 of Last 12 Appearances
Creighton has won at least one game in 10 of its last 12 postseason appearances. The streak began in 2008.
Creighton's Last 12 Postseason Appearances
Year   Tourney   First Game
2007-08Â Â Â NITÂ Â Â Beat Rhode Island, 74-73
2008-09Â Â Â NITÂ Â Â Beat Bowling Green, 73-71
2009-10Â Â Â CITÂ Â Â Beat South Dakota, 89-78
2010-11Â Â Â CBIÂ Â Â Beat San Jose State, 85-74
2011-12Â Â Â NCAAÂ Â Â Beat Alabama, 58-57
2012-13Â Â Â NCAAÂ Â Â Beat Cincinnati, 67-63
2013-14Â Â Â NCAAÂ Â Â Beat Louisiana, 76-66
2015-16Â Â Â NITÂ Â Â Beat Alabama, 72-54
2016-17Â Â Â NCAAÂ Â Â Lost to Rhode Island, 84-72
2017-18Â Â Â NCAAÂ Â Â Lost to Kansas State, 69-59
2018-19Â Â Â NITÂ Â Â Beat Loyola (Chicago), 70-61
2020-21Â Â Â NCAAÂ Â Â Beat UC Santa Barbara, 63-62
Only In 2020-21
Though Creighton's 14 BIG EAST wins were three more than any other team in the BIG EAST, the Bluejays were the second seed in this week's conference tournament since the league decided before the year to go by winning percentage to determine a league champion and seeds.
   The BIG EAST isn't alone in this. It's one of eight leagues that saw the top team in winning percentage not be the same team that had the most conference wins.
Wins Leader Not League Champ, Nationally
League   Wins Leader   Conf Champ
American   Houston, 14-3   Wichita St., 11-2
BIG EASTÂ Â Â Creighton, 14-6Â Â Â Villanova, 11-4
Big 10Â Â Â Illinois, 16-4Â Â Â Michigan, 14-3
Conf-USAÂ Â Â UAB, 13-5Â Â Â Louisiana Tech, 12-4
MEACÂ Â Â Norfolk St., 8-4Â Â Â North Carolina A&T, 7-1
   Coppin State, 8-4  Â
MWCÂ Â Â Utah State, 15-4Â Â Â San Diego St., 14-3
Pac-12Â Â Â USC, 15-5Â Â Â Oregon, 14-4
Summit   South Dakota, 11-4   South Dakota St., 9-3
   N. Dakota St., 11-4
All-BIG EAST Trio
Creighton's Marcus Zegarowski (First Team), Damien Jefferson (Second Team) and Denzel Mahoney (Honorable Mention) each picked up All-BIG EAST recognition in a vote of league coaches
   This year marks the first time that Creighton had three players named All-BIG EAST in the same season.
   In addition, Mitch Ballock brought home the league's Sportsmanship Award.
Ballock Reaches 300 Treys
Mitch Ballock made 308 three-pointers in his Bluejay career, including a season-high eight on Dec. 14 vs. Marquette. That put him in third place in program history in that category, and ahead of Doug McDermott (274).
   His 232 career treys entering the year were second-most in school history after a junior season, trailing only Kyle Korver (242).
   Two of Ballock's teammates also made 200 or more career triples. Marcus Zegarowski made 215, while Denzel Mahoney owned 214 if you include the 121 he made at Southeast Missouri State.
Most Career 3FG, Creighton History
Rank      3FG   Name   Years
   1.   371   Kyle Korver   1999-03
   2.   334   Ethan Wragge   2009-14
   3.   308   Mitch Ballock   2017-Pres.
   4.   274   Doug McDermott   2010-14
   5.   245   Ryan Sears   1997-01
   6.   215   Marcus Zegarowski   2018-Pres.
   7.   212   Rodney Buford   1995-99
   8.   210   Ty-Shon Alexander   2017-20
   9.   206   Jahenns Manigat   2010-14
   10.   200   Nate Funk   2002-07
The Great Eight
Mitch Ballock made nine three-pointers in Creighton's first five games of the season before erupting on Dec. 14 vs. Marquette. The senior guard from Eudora, Kan., made 8-of-14 three-pointers en route to 26 points.
   His eight trifectas were tied for fourth-most in a game in Bluejay history, but three behind his record 11 vs. DePaul on March 9, 2019.
   Ballock joined Kyle Korver as the only players in school history with multiple games of eight or more triples.
   In addition, Ballock's 14 three-point attempts were also tied for fourth-most in program history and one behind the program record.
   Ballock made 182 career three-pointers in BIG EAST games, which ranks fifth all-time.
   Ballock's 26 points were the most by a Bluejay in any conference opener since 2012, when Doug McDermott scored 29 points vs. Evansville. That came when CU belonged to the Missouri Valley Conference.
3-Pointers Made, Game, Creighton History
   3FG   Name, Opponent   Date
   11   Mitch Ballock vs. DePaul   03/09/19
   9   Kyle Korver vs. Evansville   01/15/03
      Ethan Wragge at Villanova   01/20/14
   8   Tad Ackerman at Drake   01/23/95
      Kyle Korver at Xavier   12/31/02
      Terrell Taylor vs. Florida   03/15/02
      Isaiah Zierden at DePaul   01/17/16
      Mitch Ballock vs. Marquette   12/14/20
Most Career 3FG Made, BIG EAST Games Only
   Rank   3FG   Name, School
   1.   245   Markus Howard, Marquette
   2.   201   Jeremy Hazell, Seton Hall
   3.   189   Colin Falls, Notre Dame
   4.   183   Gerry McNamara, Syracuse
   5.   182   Mitch Ballock, Creighton
   6.   180   Myles Powell, Seton Hall
Three-Ballock, Corner Pocket
Mitch Ballock finished his career with 308 career three-pointers made, which ranked eighth nationally among active players at season's end.
   He's the third Bluejay to make 300 or more trifectas, joining Kyle Korver (371) and Ethan Wragge (334) in that elite grouping. Ballock is the first of that trio to drain 300 three-pointers while also dishing 300 or more career assists (341).
   Korver reached 300 treys in his 108th game as a Bluejay, while Wragge achieved that milestone in his 134th career contest. It took Ballock 124 contests.
Â
Inbounds, In Range
Mitch Ballock has frequently displayed his long-range marksmanship. Per research from WhiteAndBlueReview.com writer Matt DeMarinis using Synergy Sports database, Ballock made 8-of-13 three-pointers this season taken from between 30-40 feet away.
   Over the past two seasons, he was 13-of-26 from 30-40 feet away.
Up, Up, And Away
Since Feb. 19, 2019, Creighton owns a 32-11 mark in regular-season BIG EAST games. That's six more wins than anyone else in the league in that time.
   Not only that, but Creighton owned the most wins to close the 2018-19 season after Feb. 19th, tied for the most wins in 2019-20, and has the most wins in 2020-21 as well.
Conference Records Since Feb. 19, 2019
Team   After 2/19/19   '19-20   '20-21   Total
Creighton   5-0   13-5   14-6   32-11
Villanova   2-3   13-5   11-4   26-12
Seton Hall   2-3   13-5   10-9   25-17
Providence   3-2   12-6   9-10   24-18
UConn   2-4#   10-8#   11-6   23-18
Butler   1-4   10-8   8-12   19-24
Xavier   4-1   8-10   6-7   18-18
Marquette   2-4   8-10   8-11   18-25
Georgetown   4-2   5-13   7-9   16-24
St. John's   1-4   5-13   10-9   16-26
DePaul   2-3   3-15   2-13   7-31
#includes 2018-19 and 2019-20 in the AAC
Fool Me Once...But Eight Times?
Creighton has met or exceeded its preseason BIG EAST prognostication every year since joining the league, as seen below.
   This year also marks the fifth straight season that Creighton has finished in first, second or a tie for third place.
Creighton's BIG EAST Preseason Poll History
Year    Preseason    Actual    Preseason All-BIG EAST
2013-14    3rd    2nd    Doug McDermott (1st)
2014-15    9th    T-9th    -
2015-16    9th    6th    -
2016-17    3rd    T-3rd    Maurice Watson Jr. (1st); Marcus Foster (HM)
2017-18    5th    T-3rd    Marcus Foster (1st); Khyri Thomas (HM)
2018-19    9th    T-3rd    Martin Krampelj (HM)
2019-20    7th    T-1st   Ty-Shon Alexander (1st)
2020-21    2nd    2nd   Marcus Zegarowski (1st); Mitch Ballock (2nd)
Up Is Down; Down Is Up
Creighton finished in second place in the BIG EAST standings with a 14-6 league record, trailing only Villanova's 11-4 mark. Though CU had three more wins, it has a worse winning percentage (.700) than Villanova (.733).
   What's unusual is how Creighton got to that point. The Bluejays went 7-1 against the top five seeds in this year's BIG EAST Tournament, but 7-5 against the bottom six seeds.
   Matching that trend, Creighton was 1-0 against top-five seeds during the BIG EAST Tournament, but 1-1 against teams seeded 6-11.
On Any Given Day
For the second consecutive season, Creighton beat every other team in the BIG EAST during the regular-season.
   Creighton went 2-0 against four programs and 1-1 against six schools this season.
   Creighton was the only BIG EAST team with a win over all other 10 teams in the league this year.
Fourteen Is Fine
Creighton won 14 conference games this season, tied for its most in any of its eight seasons in the BIG EAST (also 2013-14).
   This year's squad is just the seventh team in Creighton history with 14 or more league victories. Six have won exactly 14 while the 2002-03 squad led by Kyle Korver finished 15-3 in the Missouri Valley Conference.
   Creighton has now won 10 or more league games in 22 of the last 25 seasons.
.500 Or Better in League Play, Again
Creighton went 14-6 in league play, clinching a .500 mark or better in league play for the 26th time in the last 27 seasons.
   The only BIG EAST teams to finish .500 or better in league play each of the last five seasons (including 2020-21) are Creighton, Villanova and Seton Hall.
On The Double
Marcus Zegarowski had his second career double-double on Feb. 27th when the junior point guard turned in 15 points and 10 assists against Xavier.
   Zegarowski's only previous double-double came on Dec. 1 vs. Nebraska-Omaha, when he had 11 points and a career-best 11 assists.
   Zegarowski is one of four Bluejays with a double-dip this season, as Christian Bishop (6), Damien Jefferson (2) and Denzel Mahoney (1) have also done it.
Winning On the Road
Creighton owns a 35-38 record in BIG EAST road games since the league's 2013-14 realignment. Those 35 victories trail only Villanova's 50.
   Since the start of the 2018-19 campaign, Creighton's 16 BIG EAST road wins lead the league.
BIG EAST Road Records (through 2020-21)
Team   Since 2013-14   Since 2018-19
Butler   28-45   7-21
Connecticut   5-4   5-4
Creighton   35-38   16-12
DePaul   13-57   5-20
Georgetown   23-47   8-17
Marquette   28-45   13-15
Providence   33-40   11-17
Seton Hall   32-41   14-14
St. John's   19-54   8-20
Villanova   50-20   14-11
Xavier   31-36   9-15
Quad Squad
Creighton owned a 12-6 record entering the NCAA Tournament against teams that were either Quad 1 (7-3) or Quad 2 (5-3) this season according to the NET.
   Creighton was one of 10 clubs nationwide with 12 or more victories against teams in the top two quadrants, joining Alabama (17-5), Illinois (17-6), Ohio State (15-9), Gonzaga (14-0), Michigan (14-4), Purdue (13-8), Iowa (13-8), Oklahoma State (12-6) and Arkansas (12-6).
   Creighton's seven Quad 1 wins were tied for 10th-most nationally.
   Creighton was 26th in the March 15th edition of the NET at the end of the regular-season.
Road Warriors
Creighton went 7-3 in BIG EAST road games this season, tying a program record for most road wins in a league season.
   Creighton, Baylor, Illinois, USC, Oregon and Alabama were the nation's only major conference (Power 5 or BIG EAST) teams with seven or more league road wins this season.
   League Road   After   After   After
Year   Games 1-6 W-L   7 Road   8 Road   9 Road
2020-21Â Â Â 5-1Â Â Â 6-1Â Â Â 7-1Â Â Â 7-2
2019-20Â Â Â 3-3Â Â Â 4-3Â Â Â 5-3Â Â Â 5-4
2018-19Â Â Â 2-4Â Â Â 2-5Â Â Â 3-5Â Â Â 3-6
2017-18Â Â Â 2-4Â Â Â 3-4Â Â Â 3-5Â Â Â 3-6
2016-17Â Â Â 5-1Â Â Â 5-2Â Â Â 5-3Â Â Â 5-4
2015-16Â Â Â 4-2Â Â Â 4-3Â Â Â 4-4Â Â Â 4-5
2014-15Â Â Â 1-5Â Â Â 1-6Â Â Â 2-6Â Â Â 2-7
2013-14Â Â Â 4-2Â Â Â 5-2Â Â Â 5-3Â Â Â 5-4
2012-13Â Â Â 3-3Â Â Â 3-4Â Â Â 4-4Â Â Â 5-4
2011-12Â Â Â 5-1Â Â Â 5-2Â Â Â 6-2Â Â Â 7-2
2010-11Â Â Â 3-3Â Â Â 3-4Â Â Â 3-5Â Â Â 3-6
2009-10Â Â Â 2-4Â Â Â 2-5Â Â Â 2-6Â Â Â 3-6
2008-09Â Â Â 4-2Â Â Â 5-2Â Â Â 6-2Â Â Â 7-2
2007-08Â Â Â 3-3Â Â Â 3-4Â Â Â 3-5Â Â Â 3-6
2006-07Â Â Â 4-2Â Â Â 5-2Â Â Â 5-3Â Â Â 5-4
2005-06Â Â Â 3-3Â Â Â 4-3Â Â Â 4-4Â Â Â 4-5
2004-05Â Â Â 3-3Â Â Â 3-4Â Â Â 4-4Â Â Â 5-4
2003-04Â Â Â 4-2Â Â Â 4-3Â Â Â 4-4Â Â Â 4-5
2002-03Â Â Â 5-1Â Â Â 5-2Â Â Â 6-2Â Â Â 7-2
2001-02Â Â Â 5-1Â Â Â 6-1Â Â Â 6-2Â Â Â 7-2
2000-01Â Â Â 2-4Â Â Â 3-4Â Â Â 4-4Â Â Â 5-4
1999-00Â Â Â 2-4Â Â Â 3-4Â Â Â 3-5Â Â Â 4-5
1998-99Â Â Â 4-2Â Â Â 4-3Â Â Â 4-4Â Â Â 4-5
1997-98Â Â Â 4-2Â Â Â 5-2Â Â Â 5-3Â Â Â 5-4
1996-97Â Â Â 2-4Â Â Â 3-4Â Â Â 3-5Â Â Â 3-6
High Wire Act
Creighton went 7-3 in conference road games this season. After a 94-76 win at St. John's on Dec. 17th, five of Creighton's last nine league road tilts were tied at some point in the last 3:02 of regulation. In one of the games that wasn't, Creighton won by three after Marquette missed a tying three-pointer in the final seconds.
   Creighton beat UConn 76-74 in overtime on Dec. 20th, as Damien Jefferson tied the game with 0.2 seconds left in regulation.
   Creighton won 67-65 at Providence on Jan. 2nd on Christian Bishop's dunk with 0.8 seconds left.
   Creighton lost 70-66 in overtime at Butler on Jan. 16th.
   On Jan. 27th at Seton Hall, Mitch Ballock's three-pointer with 37.8 seconds left broke an 81-all tie and helped Creighton to an 85-81 victory.
   On Jan. 30th at DePaul, Creighton trailed 60-59 before Denzel Mahoney made two free throws with 3:02 left to start a game-ending 10-2 run.
   In Creighton's 10 BIG EAST road games this season, Marcus Zegarowski averaged 15.0 points and 4.1 rebounds per game while shooting 40.1 percent from three-point range.
   Denzel Mahoney averaged 11.0 points per game and Damien Jefferson averaged 12.4 points, 6.7 rebounds and 1.8 steals per game.
   Mitch Ballock averaged 11.9 points per game and shooting 45.3 percent from downtown.
Give Me 10
The Feb. 24 win vs. DePaul was Creighton's 10th home win of the season. It's the 24th time in the last 25 seasons CU has done that.
   The only exception in that time came in 2014-15, when the Jays won nine times at home.
Bishop The Ultimate Chess Piece
Christian Bishop is a tad undersized to play the center position, but his versatility has made him a match-up nightmare for some opponents.
   For the year, Bishop shot 68.1 percent from the field, far ahead of the next best competitor in the BIG EAST (Nate Watson, 60.2 percent).
   In league play only, Bishop's 65.4 percent marksmanship easily outpaced St. John's Isaih Moore's 60.7 percent.
A Nice Problem To Have
Creighton continues to find ways to win when scoring 69 points or less. The Bluejays owned six wins this winter when scoring 69 point or less, a figure that exceeds its total number of wins (4) in that situation during the previous four years combined.
   This year was the first season since 2012-13 that Creighton won six games in the same season when scoring 69 points or less. It hasn't happened more than six times in a year since 2010-11 (8 times).
Release, Rotation, Splash, Repeat
Creighton has made at least one three-pointer in 913 straight games. The streak is the nation's 14th-longest active streak.
   Creighton's last game without a three-pointer came at Illinois State on Feb. 20, 1993, when the Jays were 0-for-5. Creighton's last win without making a three-point basket came on March 3, 1991 when the Jays went 0-for-2 from three-point range in a 71-66 win over Southern Illinois in the championship game of the MVC Tournament.
   Below is a list of the nation's longest active three-point streaks.
Longest Active 3-Point Streaks
   Rk.   Streak   School  Â
   1.   1,129   UNLV  Â
   2.   1,113   Duke  Â
   3.   1,076   Arkansas  Â
   4.   1,062   Western Kentucky  Â
   5.   1,051   East Tennessee State  Â
   6.   1,031   Oakland  Â
      1,031   Pacific  Â
   8.   1,023   Texas  Â
   9.   969   Marshall  Â
   10.   962   Baylor  Â
   11.   958   Princeton  Â
   12.   950   Gonzaga  Â
   13.   926   Long Island  Â
   14.   913   Creighton  Â
   15.   911   Mount St. Mary's  Â
   16.   899   Tennessee State  Â
Let It Fly
Creighton made 17-of-35 three-pointers on Jan. 27th at Seton Hall. The 17 three-pointers were tied for fifth-most in program history for a single game, and second-most ever in a road contest.
   Creighton started the night by making 8-of-9 three-point shots and would also hit 6-of-8 trifectas in the final 5:22.
Creighton's Most 3-Pointers, Game
   Rk.   3FG-3FGA   Opponent   Date
   1.   22-37   Coe   12-20-18
   2.   21-35   at #4 Villanova   01-20-14
   3.   20-30   Chattanooga   02-19-05
   4.   19-34   USC Upstate   12-20-17
   5.   17-33   #21 Marquette   01-09-19
      17-36   Georgetown   03-04-20
      17-35   at Seton Hall   01-27-21
   8.   16-30   Evansville   01-04-99
      16-27   Drake   01-08-13
      16-25   Chicago State   12-29-13
      16-26   vs. Ole Miss   11-21-16
      16-33   Alcorn State   11-12-17
      16-36   at Georgetown   01-06-18
      16-36   St. John's   01-09-21
No. 19 Bluejays
After starting the year ranked 11th in both the AP and Coaches polls, Creighton ascended into the top 10 for three weeks in the AP edition. CU finished the season 19th in the AP poll and 14th in the Coaches poll.
   The No. 19 AP ranking is 12 spots behind the best mark in program history, which was done on Jan. 16, 2017, March 9, 2020, March 16, 2020 and Jan. 4, 2021.
   This season is the sixth time that Creighton has been ranked in the year-end AP poll, joining 2002-03 (15th), 2011-12 (19th), 2012-13 (22nd), 2013-14 (16th) and 2019-20 (7th).
   This year marked the first time that Creighton has been ranked in every AP poll of the same season.
   Creighton is one of six teams that have been ranked in all 24 AP polls since Feb. 3, 2020, joining Gonzaga (95), Villanova (40), Baylor (37), Houston (26) and Iowa (26). The 24 straight weeks in the rankings is the longest stretch in program history, six more than the 17-week streak done from Feb. 27, 2012 - Feb. 4, 2013.
   This season is the eighth time that Creighton has been ranked in the year-end Coaches poll, joining 1973-74 (17th), 1974-75 (16th), 2002-03 (23rd), 2011-12 (21st), 2012-13 (21st), 2013-14 (20th) and 2019-20 (9th).
   Creighton is also one of just five programs to finish the season in the top-15 of the coaches poll each of the past two seasons, joining Baylor, Gonzaga, Florida State and Villanova.
   After being ranked 30th in the inaugural NET rankings that were released on Jan. 4th, Creighton was 26th in the final update of the regular-season on March 15th.
Firing On All Cylinders
Creighton continued to be highly regarded by KenPom.com, and finished the season 22nd. That includes the nation's No. 25 offense, and No. 32 defense.
   Creighton had not finished with a top-35 defense since 2006-07, and has not finished better than 30th since 2001-02.
   This season was the sixth different time in the last 10 seasons that Creighton has had a top-25 offense per KenPom.
Year   Off. Rating   Def. Rating   Team W-L
2010-11Â Â Â 66Â Â Â 174Â Â Â 23-16
2011-12Â Â Â 5Â Â Â 166Â Â Â 29-6
2012-13Â Â Â 5Â Â Â 66Â Â Â 28-8
2013-14Â Â Â 2Â Â Â 124Â Â Â 27-8
2014-15Â Â Â 59Â Â Â 138Â Â Â 14-19
2015-16Â Â Â 43Â Â Â 76Â Â Â 20-15
2016-17Â Â Â 32Â Â Â 46Â Â Â 25-10
2017-18Â Â Â 25Â Â Â 58Â Â Â 21-12
2018-19Â Â Â 47Â Â Â 83Â Â Â 20-15
2019-20Â Â Â 3Â Â Â 78Â Â Â 24-7
2020-21Â Â Â 25Â Â Â 32Â Â Â 22-9
Double-Double Duo
Creighton had a pair of players record a double-double in the Feb. 13 victory vs. Villanova as Christian Bishop (16 points, 10 rebounds) and Damien Jefferson (10 points, 10 rebounds) each did it.
   Bishop (11 points, 10 rebounds) and Jefferson (10 points, 10 rebounds) also accomplished the feat earlier this season in CU's Dec. 17 win at St. john's.
   Before Bishop and Jefferson (twice), the last Bluejay duo to record double-doubles in the same contest since Dec. 9, 2017, when both Martin Krampelj and Ronnie Harrell Jr. did it.
Moving On Up
Last year Damien Jefferson scored in double-figures in just 13-of-30 contests, and he finished the season averaging 9.4 points per game.
   This year, the senior forward scored in double-figures in 23-of-31 games and he upped his average to 11.9 points per contest.
   Jefferson pumped in a career-high 26 points on Jan. 20th vs. Providence, six more than his previous best.
Big Wins In The BIG EAST
Creighton never trailed in its 89-53 win over Seton Hall on Jan. 6th. The 36-point win was Creighton's second-largest ever in BIG EAST action.
   The 36-point loss tied for Seton Hall's third-largest ever in league play for the charter member of the BIG EAST, and was its largest league setback since falling 99-57 vs. UConn on Feb. 11, 2006.
Creighton's Largest BIG EAST Winning Margins
Margin   Score   Date
 41   at Creighton 100, St. John's 59   02/28/16
 36   at Creighton 89, Seton Hall 53   01/06/21
 35   Creighton 93, at DePaul 58   02/11/17
 29   at Creighton 93, DePaul 64   02/15/20
 28   at Creighton 88, Butler 60   01/14/14
 28   Creighton 68, at #4 Villanova 68   01/20/14
 25   at Creighton 82, DePaul 57   02/27/18
Major Success
Among teams in the leagues considered the "Power Five", plus the BIG EAST, Creighton has enjoyed almost more success than anyone else recently.
   Creighton's 46 victories since the start of the 2019-20 season trail only Baylor, Kansas6 and USC.
Best Records Since 2019-20
(Power 5 Conferences + BIG EAST)
Team   2019-20   2020-21   Total
Baylor   26-4   28-2   54-6
Kansas   28-3   21-9   49-12
USCÂ Â Â 22-9Â Â Â 25-8Â Â Â 47-17
Creighton   24-7   22-9   46-16
Oregon   24-7   21-7   45-14
Illinois   21-10   24-7   45-17
Arkansas   20-12   25-7   45-19
Florida State   26-5   18-7   44-12
Colorado   21-11   23-9   44-20
Zegarowski Earns National Honor
NCAA.com correspondent Andy Katz named Creighton guard Marcus Zegarowski as his National Player of the Week on Feb. 15th.
   The junior averaged 17.0 points, 4.5 rebounds and 4.5 assists as Creighton picked up double-digit wins vs. Georgetown and No. 5 Villanova.
   Zegarowski opened his week with nine points, six rebounds, and four assists as Creighton defeated Georgetown on the road, 63-48. He also had two of Creighton's school-record 19 steals in the triumph.
   Zegarowski finished his week with a season-high 25 points in Creighton's 86-70 victory vs. No. 5 Villanova and added five assists and three rebounds. He made 10-of-18 field goal attempts in the victory, and his 17 points in the first half matched the most by a Bluejay all season before intermission.
Big Deficits, No Big Deal
Creighton owns 23 victories since the start of the 2010-11 season after trailing by double-figures at some point, including three this season. Twelve of those 23 comebacks have come away from home.
   Creighton's comeback from 16 points down at Seton Hall on Jan. 27th was its largest since trailing by 18 vs. No. 18 Oklahoma on Nov. 19, 2014.
   In that Seton Hall game Creighton trailed 68-52 with 10:40 to play before rallying to win thanks to a 33-13 run. It was the first time that Creighton overcame a 10-point halftime deficit to win since trailing 35-24 vs. No. 18 Oklahoma on Nov. 19, 2014, and the first road win after trailing by 10 or more points at halftime since overcoming a 32-21 margin at half in a 65-59 win at Missouri State on Feb. 24, 2009.
   If you're curious, CU's largest comeback win since 2000 came on Jan. 28, 2006, when the Jays trailed 25-6 early before rallying to beat Wichita State.
CU's Double-Digit Comebacks Since 2010-11
Deficit   Opponent   Date
18   #18 Oklahoma   11/19/14
17   at San Diego State   11/30/11
16   at Evansville   02/16/13
16   at Seton Hall   01/27/21
14   Evansville   02/21/12
13   at Saint Joseph's   11/16/13
13   Xavier   01/12/14
13   #22 Xavier   12/23/20
12   Saint Joseph's   12/11/10
12   at DePaul   01/17/16
12   East Tennessee State   11/11/18
11   at Wichita State   12/31/11
11   Northern Iowa   01/10/12
11   vs. Alabama   03/16/12
11   vs. Ole Miss   11/21/16
11   vs. Connecticut   03/12/21
10Â Â Â UABÂ Â Â 11/14/12
10   vs. Drake   03/02/12
10   at Nebraska   12/07/14
10   South Dakota   12/09/14
10   St. John's   01/03/18
10   at DePaul   02/07/18
10   Bemidji State   02/13/18
Ballock Passes 1,300; Zegarowski Not Far Behind
Mitch Ballock finished with 1,304 career points after surpassing the 1,000 point mark on Nov. 29 vs. North Dakota State in CU's season-opener, which was also his 100th career game.
   Ballock entered last season's BIG EAST Tournament with 996 points and scored nine points in the first half vs. St. John's on March 12th, but those points were erased when the game was abandoned at halftime.
   Marcus Zegarowski became the 44th Bluejay in school history to surpass 1,000 career points on Jan. 20 vs. Providence when he scored 17 points. Zegarowski needed 75 games to reach the milestone. He owned 1,293 career points.
Games To 1,000 Points, Last 19 Bluejays
Name   CU Games to 1,000 pts.    Date
Marcus Zegarowski   75   01/20/21
Mitch Ballock   100   11/29/20
Ty-Shon Alexander   85   01/15/20
Khyri Thomas   94   02/10/18
Marcus Foster   54   01/17/18
Austin Chatman   138   03/11/15
Ethan Wragge   132   01/18/14
Gregory Echenique   101   03/24/13
Doug McDermott   57   01/15/12
Antoine Young   115   12/10/11
Kenny Lawson Jr.   108   11/21/10
P'Allen Stinnett   86   01/16/10
Dane Watts   115   01/22/08
Anthony Tolliver   124   03/16/07
Johnny Mathies   91   03/03/06
Nate Funk   92   02/28/05
Kyle Korver   81   01/30/02
Ben Walker   105   01/06/01
Ryan Sears   97   12/01/00
Rodney Buford   59   03/01/97
Most Career Points, Creighton History
   Rank   Pts.   Name   Years
   1.   3,150   Doug McDermott   2010-14
   2.   2,116   Rodney Buford   1995-99
   3.   2,110   Bob Harstad    1987-91
   4.   1,983   Chad Gallagher    1987-91
   5.   1,876   Bob Portman    1966-69
   6.   1,801   Kyle Korver   1999-03
   7.   1,754   Nate Funk   2002-07
   8.   1,682   Rick Apke    1974-78
   9.   1,661   Paul Silas   1961-64
   10.   1,654   Vernon Moore    1981-85
   11.   1,575   Benoit Benjamin    1982-85
   12.   1,526   John C. Johnson   1975-79
   13.   1,500   Kevin McKenna   1977-81
   14.   1,437   Eddie Cole   1951-55
   15.   1,369   Gene Harmon   1971-74
   16.   1,361   Duan Cole   1987-92
   17.   1,342   Antoine Young   2008-12
   18.   1,313   Kenny Lawson Jr.   2006-11
   19.   1,309   Ryan Sears   1997-01
   20.   1,304   Mitch Ballock   2017-Pres.
   21.   1,303   Elton Tuttle   1951-54
   22.   1,293   Marcus Zegarowski   2018-Pres.
   23.   1,292   Marcus Foster   2016-18
   24.   1,272   Bob Gibson   1954-57
   25.   1,267   Wally Anderzunas   1965-67, 1968-69
Are You Experienced?
Year after year, one common theme to success in college basketball is to have veteran players. This year's Creighton team is full of experienced players.
   CU's starting five featured two juniors and three seniors who combined for 20 years of college experience. They combined for 4,761 career points at Creighton, and 6,001 career points if you add in Mahoney and Jefferson's points at their previous stops.
   Off the bench, Alex O'Connell and Jacob Epperson are in their fourth college campaign, Antwann Jones in his third year and Shereef Mitchell in his second season. Of the regular Bluejay rotation, only Ryan Kalkbrenner is a freshman.
   On March 28th, Creighton's starting five (Mitch Ballock, Christian Bishop, Damien Jefferson, Denzel Mahoney and Marcus Zegarowski) was a collective 41,176 days old. By comparison, the starting line-up used by the Chicago Bulls in its first four games this season (Wendell Carter Jr., Zach Lavine, Lauri Markkanen, Coby White and Patrick Williams) was a combined 41,227 days old on March 28th.
High-Powered Offense
Creighton pumped in 93 or more points in six games this season, one of 10 teams in the country (with Iowa, Gonzaga, Baylor, The Citadel, Eastern Kentucky, Sam Houston State, Southern Utah, Oral Roberts and McNeese State) who can say that. Last year's BIG EAST champion squad only cracked the 93-point barrier three times all season.
   Creighton is 48-3 in since 2010-11 when scoring 93 points or more. The nation's only teams to score 93+ more than 51 times since 2010-11 are Gonzaga (73), North Carolina (69) and Belmont (52).
   By comparison, McDermott's teams scored 93+ points just once in his four seasons at Iowa State (96 on 11/22/09 vs. Mississippi Valley State), and also just once in five years at Northern Iowa (99 on 12/1/04 vs. Iowa State).
They Scored How Many?
Creighton put up 56 points in the first half on Jan. 9 vs. St. John's, its highest output before intermission in a league game since joining the BIG EAST.
   After a total of eight halves of 52 points or more in its first seven years in the league, Creighton scored 52 points or more in three different halves this BIG EAST season.
   Creighton's Highest Scoring BIG EAST Halves
   Points   Opponent (Half)   Date
   56   Xavier (2nd)   01/12/14
   56   St. John's (1st)   01/09/21
   54   at #4 Villanova (1st)   01/20/14
   54   Marquette (2nd)   01/21/17
   54   at DePaul (2nd)   02/11/17
   53   Butler (1st)   01/14/14
   53   St. John's (1st)   02/28/16
   53   #23 Seton Hall (1st)   12/28/17
   53   Marquette (1st)   02/17/18
   53   at St. John's (2nd)   12/17/20
   52   Seton Hall (2nd)   01/09/21
   51   #6 Villanova (1st)   02/16/14
   51   DePaul (2nd)   02/15/20
   50   #6 Villanova (1st)   02/16/14
   50   Seton Hall (1st)   12/28/16
   50   at Georgetown (2nd)   01/21/19
   50   DePaul (2nd)   03/09/19
Balance Is Big
All five Creighton starters averaged 9.9 points or more this season, and the Bluejays have had at least five men score in double-digits in seven contests overall.
   Creighton has won 20 games in a row when five or more players score 10 or more points.
   Nine different players have scored 10 or more points in a game this season, a list that doesn't include Jacob Epperson. Epperson did it four times as a Bluejay in 2017-18 or 2018-19.
   In the last 5:01 of play at UConn, Creighton had 12 points, with each starter scoring either two or three points.
   In league play, all five Bluejay starters averaged 10.6 points per game or more.
CHI Health Center Omaha Success
Creighton has played 308 regular and postseason contests at CHI Health Center Omaha all-time in the 18-year-old facility.
   The Bluejays own a 254-54 (.825) record all-time at the facility, and have never lost there on a Friday (21-0).
   Creighton's Nov. 25, 2017 win over SIU Edwardsville was the program's 200th at the facility, coming in its 242nd home game. CU's 100th win came on Nov. 17, 2010, a 63-58 win over Louisiana.
   Creighton has outscored its opponents 24,184-20,244 in games at CHI Health Center Omaha, an average margin of 12.79 points per game. Creighton has not trailed 85 different times.
   Creighton is also 29-33 all-time in the 62 games at the arena in which it's fallen behind by double-figures at any point, 7-11 when down by 10+ points at halftime in the facility, and 35-27 when trailing at halftime at CHI Health Center Omaha.
   Creighton is 157-36 (.813) at CHI Health Center Omaha since 2010-11 and hasn't trailed in 60 of those games. In that same span, CU owns an 87-6 home record vs. non-conference teams.
   Factor in a 17-0 home mark at the Omaha Civic Auditorium in 2002-03 and two wins at the Civic in the 2010 CIT, and the Bluejays are 273-54 (.835) at home since the start of the 2002-03 campaign.
Â
Big Ryan's Big Night
Freshman center Ryan Kalkbrenner had a season-high 15 points in just 16 minutes of work on Dec. 17 at St. John's, including four baskets in a three-minute span during the decisive 22-4 second half run.
   For the season, Kalkbrenner averaged 5.9 points, 3.5 rebounds and 1.2 blocked shots while playing just 13.6 minutes per game. Kalkbrenner ranked seventh nationally among freshmen with 38 blocked shots, and first in the BIG EAST among classmates.
   Creighton was 14-3 when he has a blocked shot (6-6 when he didn't), 20-6 when he scored a field goal (0-3 when he didn't) and 7-0 when he scored in double-figures (13-9 when he didn't).
   Kalkbrenner became CU's first true freshman since Benoit Benjamin (1982-83) to have a blocked shot in each of CU's first three games of the season.
Dame Time
Damien Jefferson came two assists shy of producing Creighton's first traditional triple-double when he posted 10 points, 10 rebounds and eight assists on Thursday at St. John's.
   His performance made him the only Creighton player in the last 34 seasons with at least 10 points, 10 rebounds and eight or more assists in the same game.
   Creighton has had only three triple-doubles in program history, but all three were of the points/rebounds/blocks variety by Benoit Benjamin.
   Jefferson was just the second Bluejay player with a game of at least eight points, rebounds and assists in the last 11 seasons. Khyri Thomas had 16 points, eight rebounds and eight assists vs. DePaul on Feb. 27, 2018.
   Here's a list of Creighton players with at least 7+ points, 7+ rebounds and 7+ assists in the same game since 1987-88.
7+ Point, 7+ Rebound, 7+ Assist Games, Since 1987-88
   Pts.   Reb.   Ast.   Name   Date
   16   9   7   Mike Amos   1/30/1993
   24   11   7   Rodney Buford   11/18/1998
   25   8   8   Ryan Sears   1/8/2000
   9   7   10   Grant Gibbs   12/19/2011
   12   10   7   Grant Gibbs   1/13/2012
   12   7   9   Austin Chatman   11/11/2013
   9   7   7   Austin Chatman   1/25/2014
   7   9   7   Khyri Thomas   12/9/2015
   16   8   7   Maurice Watson Jr.   1/26/2016
   14   12   7   Khyri Thomas   2/28/2017
   16   8   8   Khyri Thomas   2/27/2018
   10   10   8   Damien Jefferson   12/17/2020
3's Are Falling
Creighton was tied for seventh in the country with seven different games of 13 three-pointers this year. Among power conference teams, only Alabama did it more.
   Four players in the BIG EAST made more than 63 three-pointers this season, and three of them were Bluejays. Marcus Zegarowski led the way with 80, four more than Mitch Ballock's 76. Georgetown's Jahvon Blair was third with 66 while CU's Denzel Mahoney was fourth with 64.
O'Connell Makes Creighton Debut
A vote by the NCAA Division I Council on Dec. 16 made Alex O'Connell immediately eligible. He made his debut one day later at St. John's with six points, two rebounds a steal, and an assist in 12 minutes of action.
   A senior guard from Roswell, Ga., O'Connell had not played in Creighton's first six games this season while sitting out after an off-season transfer from Duke University. He had been awaiting a ruling on a waiver that Creighton had filed on his behalf with the NCAA.
   While at Duke, O'Connell appeared in 101 games, including 14 starts. He contributed 431 points and 182 rebounds for the Blue Devils with single-game highs of 20 points, seven rebounds and four steals.
   Though a senior, O'Connell will also be eligible to return to Creighton for the 2021-22 season as a result of a previous NCAA decision that indicated winter sport student-athletes who compete during 2020-21 in Division I will receive both an additional season of competition and an additional year in which to complete it.
   Creighton was 18-7 after O'Connell became eligible.
Preseason Acclaim
Junior guard Marcus Zegarowski was named Preseason BIG EAST Player of the Year on Oct. 28th. In addition, senior guard Mitch Ballock was also voted as a Preseason Second Team All-BIG EAST performer in the annual survey of league coaches.
   The Bluejays, along with Kansas, are one of six schools with a Watch List candidate for both the Bob Cousy and Jerry West Awards, joining Baylor (MaCio Teague & Jared Butler), Florida State (MJ Walker & Scottie Barnes), Gonzaga (Joel Ayayi & Jalen Suggs), Kansas (Ochai Agbaji & Marcus Garrett) and Villanova (Justin Moore & Collin Gillespie).
   Zegarowski is Creighton's second player ever named Preseason BIG EAST Player of the Year, joining Doug McDermott (2013-14). McDermott would go on to win BIG EAST Player of the Year honors, as well as 14 National Player of the Year accolades, at season's end.
   In addition, both men have been recognized among the best in the nation at their position. Zegarowski was one of 20 players on the Preseason Watch List for the Bob Cousy Point Guard of the Year Award, and Ballock one of 20 players on the Preseason Watch List for the Jerry West Shooting Guard of the Year Award.
Home Run
Since the start of the 2010-11 season, Creighton is averaging 81.30 points per home game (15,690 points in 193 home games), a figure that climbs to 85.14 points in non-conference home games (7,918 points in 93 home games).
   Creighton is 122-6 all-time at CHI Health Center Omaha when scoring 80 or points.
Jays Mourn Loss Of Two Greats
Two prominent members of the Creighton Basketball family passed away in the off-season, as Eddie Sutton died on May 23rd and Bob Gibson lost his battle with pancreatic cancer a few months later on October 2nd. Both men were 84.
   Sutton went 82-50 as Creighton's head coach and athletic director between 1969-74. His 806-329 overall mark in 37 years of coaching ranks 11th on the all-time Division I wins list. In April he was announced as part of the Class of 2020 that will be enshrined into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame -- part of a group that also contains Tim Duncan, Kevin Garnett and Kobe Bryant. However, COVID-19 has pushed that induction ceremony back to May 15, 2021.
   Gibson starred in both baseball and basketball with the Bluejays from 1954-57, finishing his college career third with 1,272 career points (he's currently 24th). He remains in the top-five in CU history in free throws made (418), free throw attempts (575) and scoring average (20.19 ppg.), and his No. 45 basketball jersey is retired. He would play a year with the Harlem Globetrotters before joining the St. Louis Cardinals organization full-time. Gibson is a member of the Hall of Fame's for Creighton Athletics (1968 induction), Missouri Valley Conference (2005) and St. Louis Cardinals (2014), and was honored with a spot on Major League Baseball's All-Century Team in 1999. Gibson was named the best athlete in state history by the Omaha World-Herald in both 2005 and 2015, one spot ahead of Gale Sayers. Tragically, Sayers died nine days before Gibson.
Preseason BIG EAST Poll
Creighton was picked second in the preseason BIG EAST Conference poll that was selected via a vote of league coaches.
   Villanova earned 9-of-11 first place votes to top the poll with 99 points, just ahead of Creighton's two first place votes and 91 overall points. Third in the poll was Providence (79), who was just ahead of UConn (69), Seton Hall (67) and Marquette (50).
   Rounding out the bottom half of the poll were Xavier (47) in seventh place, Butler (37), St. John's (33), DePaul (20) and Georgetown (13).
   Seton Hall edged Villanova by one point to be named league favorites for the first time since 1992-93, as both the Pirates and Wildcats garnered five first place votes.
   Xavier was third, with Marquette and Providence tying for fourth place. Georgetown was tabbed sixth, just ahead of Creighton, while Butler, St. John's and DePaul round out the poll.
   Creighton's Marcus Zegarowski was tabbed Preseason BIG EAST Player of the Year, and was joined on the Preseason All-BIG EAST team by Charlie Moore (DePaul), David Duke (Providence), Sandro Mamukelashvili (Seton Hall), Collin Gillespie (Villanova) and Jeremiah Robinson-Earl (Villanova).
   Creighton has met or exceeded its preseason BIG EAST prognostication every year since joining the league, as seen below:
Creighton's BIG EAST Preseason Poll History
Year    Preseason    Actual    Preseason All-BIG EAST
2013-14    3rd    2nd    Doug McDermott (1st)
2014-15    9th    T-9th    -
2015-16    9th    6th    -
2016-17    3rd    T-3rd    Maurice Watson Jr. (1st); Marcus Foster (HM)
2017-18    5th    T-3rd    Marcus Foster (1st); Khyri Thomas (HM)
2018-19    9th    T-3rd    Martin Krampelj (HM)
2019-20    7th    T-1st   Ty-Shon Alexander (1st)
2020-21    2nd    2nd   Marcus Zegarowski (1st); Mitch Ballock (2nd)
#ProJays
Creighton had five players appear in an NBA game this season,  Doug McDermott (Indiana Pacers), Ty-Shon Alexander (Phoenix Suns) and Justin Patton (Houston Rockets), Khyri Thomas (Houston Rockets), Anthony Tolliver (Philadelphia 76ers).
   Including 2020-21, Creighton has now had an NBA player in 37 of the last 38 years.
   McDermott is in his seventh season in the NBA, and third with the Indiana Pacers. He averaged 10.3 points per game last season and is the only player in the NBA to rank in the top-20 in three-point percentage each of the previous three seasons. This year he averaged career-high 13.6 points and 3.3 rebounds per game.
   Alexander bypassed his senior season to turn pro. After going undrafted, he signed a two-way contract with the Phoenix Suns. He made his NBA debut on December 27th and had nine points, 10 rebounds and six assists in 15 games played.
   Patton was in the G-League with the Westchester Knicks before signing a 2-way contract and being called up by the Houston Rockets. He made his first career NBA start on Feb. 28th and scored a then-career-high 10 points. He averaged 5.4 points and 3.8 rebounds per game before getting cut on April 3rd.
   Tolliver signed a 10-day contract with the 76ers on April 12th. In 11 games with Philadelphia, he contributed 17 points and 10 rebounds.
   Thomas was signed by the Rockets on May 6th with just over two weeks left in the season. He averaged 16.4 points, 5.0 assists, 3.6 rebounds, 1.8 steals and 1.2 blocked shots per season and signed a multi-year deal with the Rockets after just four games.
McDermott Ranks Second On CU Wins List
Greg McDermott has 252 victories at Creighton, good for second place on CU's all-time wins list.
   McDermott's .668 winning percentage is Creighton's best since Arthur A. Schabinger's .714 win rate more 80 years ago.
   Below is a list of the most victorious Creighton coaches in program history.
Most Coaching Wins, Creighton History
Rk.   W-L   Name   Years
1.   327-176   Dana Altman   1994-2010
2.   252-125   Greg McDermott   2010-Pres.
3.   165-66   Arthur A. Schabinger    1922-1935
4.   138-118   John J. "Red" McManus    1959-1969
5.   130-64   Tom Apke   1974-1981
Triple Trouble
During Creighton's current streak of 913 straight games with a three-pointer, the Jays have drained 7,221 trifectas, an average of 7.91 treys per game.
   That's not surprising since during the streak, Creighton has made exactly 7 three-pointers 137 times, more than any figure.
   Only four times in the streak has Creighton made just one three-pointer, but on 260 occasions the Bluejays have made 10 or more trifectas, including three games of 20 or more.
   Creighton has also made at least one three-pointer before halftime in 284 consecutive contests (since 0-7 at Drake on 1/23/13).
   Since the start of the 2019-20 season, the Bluejays are 36-6 when making eight or more three-pointers, compared to an 8-9 mark when making seven treys or fewer.
Team 3FG Made During Creighton's 3-Point Streak
1:   4 times   2: 15 times   3: 31 times
4:   71 times   5:  97 times   6: 95 times
7:  137 times   8:  115 times   9: 88 times
10: 76 times   11: 52 times   12: 49 times
13: 44 times   14: 18 times   15: 7 times
16: 7 times   17: 3 times   19: 1 time
20: 1 time   21: 1 time   22: 1 time
Among The Nation's Best
Below is where Creighton ranks nationally since the start of the 2010-11 season, per Basketball-Reference.com.
2010-11 through 2020-21
Category   CU Stat   CU Rank  Â
3FG Percentage   .383   2nd  Â
3FG Made   3,389   2nd  Â
FG Percentage   .480   3rd  Â
Assists   6,114   5th
FG Made   10,344   8th
Wins   253   27th
Winning Percentage   .669   34th
Getting Votes A Good Sign
Creighton was ranked 11th in the Associated Press preseason poll.
   It's the sixth time that Creighton has picked up votes in the preseason poll since 2010-11. Five times when that happened, the Bluejays would finish top three in the league, reach the finals of the conference tournament, and play in the NCAA Tournament. Last year's team shared the BIG EAST title before the Conference and NCAA Tournaments were canceled.
AP Preseason Poll Votes Since 2010-11
Year   AP Preseason Rank   League Finish   NCAA's?
2011-12   34th   2nd, MVC   Yes
2012-13   16th   1st, MVC   Yes
2013-14   27th   2nd, BIG EAST   Yes
2016-17   22nd   T-3rd, BIG EAST   Yes
2019-20   40th   T-1st; BIG EAST    No Tourney
2020-21   11th   2nd, BIG EAST   Yes
What Does #11 Mean?
Creighton was ranked 11th in the preseason Associated Press poll. Below is a listing of how teams ranked 11th in the preseason have done since 1999-2000.
Year   School   Year-End Rank*   NCAA's (Wins)
2020-21:   Creighton   19   Yes (2)
2019-20:   Virginia   16   Tourney Canceled
2018-19:    Kansas State   15   Yes (0)
2017-18:    West Virginia   14   Yes (2)
2016-17:    Indiana   NR   No (0)
2015-16:    Gonzaga   21   Yes (2)
2014-15:    Wichita State   14   Yes (2)
2013-14:    Ohio State   22   Yes (0)
2012-13:    North Carolina   NR   Yes (1)
2011-12:    Memphis   NR   Yes (0)
2010-11:    Kentucky   11   Yes (4)
2009-10:    Butler   11   Yes (5)
2008-09:    Purdue   17   Yes (2)
2007-08:    Marquette   25   Yes (1)
2006-07:    Alabama   NR   No (0)
2005-06:   Boston College   7   Yes (2)
2004-05:   Duke   3   Yes (2)
2003-04:   Kentucky   2   Yes (1)
2002-03:   Oregon   NR   Yes (0)
2001-02:   Virginia   NR   No (0)
2000-01:   Florida   8   Yes (1)
1999-00:   Kansas   NR   Yes (1)
*based on final poll before NCAA Tournament
Torn ACL's End Two Seasons Early
Creighton played without Rati Andronikashvili and Modestas Kancleris during the 2020-21 season after both men tore the anterior cruciate ligaments in their left knee three days apart during practices in early November.
   Andronikashvili was injured on Nov. 1, with Kancleris three days last on Nov. 4. The two men, who are roommates, hail from the countries of Georgia and Lithuania, respectively.
   Creighton's first trip to the Sweet 16 since 1974 highlighted a 2020-21 season that will be remembered for years to come because of the adversity the Bluejays had to overcome.
   The Bluejays returned all five starters from a team that was ranked No. 7 following the abrupt ending of the 2019-20 season due to the global COVID-19 pandemic and started the 2020-21 campaign 11th in both the AP and coaches polls.
   With COVID-19 still running rampant, the start of the 2020-21 season was pushed back roughly three weeks. The pandemic also eliminated virtually all international travel, and as a result CU's long-anticipated trip to the Battle for Atlantis in the Bahamas instead moved to nearby Sioux Falls, S.D., where it was rebranded as the Crossover Classic. Days before CU was to start the season in Sioux Falls, the Bluejay program had multiple positive COVID tests to Tier I individuals, which forced the program to withdraw from the Crossover Classic and temporarily halt practice to minimize the risk of the virus spreading.
   As a result, on November 25th Creighton announced it had added a game to its schedule, the regular-season opener vs. North Dakota State, to be played on November 29th. The Bluejays would go on to defeat the defending Summit League Tournament champions, 69-58.
   Two days later, Creighton faced Nebraska-Omaha in the regular-season for the first time in 25 seasons and defeated the Mavericks, 94-67.
   CU improved to 3-0 with a 93-58 victory vs. Kennesaw State before hitting the road for the first time on Dec. 8 for a top-10 showdown at No. 5 Kansas. Playing inside historic Allen Fieldhouse, the game featured nine ties and 13 lead changes before the host Jayhawks escaped, 73-72, when CU missed a potential game-tying free throw with 1.1 seconds left.
   Creighton responded from its setback by hosting Nebraska in the regular-season for a second straight season, using a 23-2 second half run to once again blitz the Cornhuskers 98-74, and close non-conference play with a 4-1 record.
   The Bluejays opened league play on December 14 with a surprising home loss to Marquette before reeling off a six-game win streak that included road victories at St. John's (94-76), UConn (76-74 in OT) and Providence (67-65) in addition to home triumphs vs. No. 22 Xavier (66-61), Seton Hall (89-53) and St. John's (97-79).
   Consecutive losses to Butler and Providence dropped CU to 6-3 in league action before a 74-66 home win vs. No. 23 UConn in the Huskies' first trip to Omaha.
   CU closed out January with road triumphs over Seton Hall (85-81) and DePaul (69-62), rallying from 16 points down in the final 11 minutes to upend the Pirates.
   The Bluejays opened February with an 86-79 home loss on the program's annual Creighton vs. Cancer Pink Out prior to a four-game win streak featuring triumphs at Marquette (71-68) and Georgetown (63-48, as well as home victories vs. No. 5 Villanova (86-70) and DePaul (77-53).
   Cruising along with a 17-5 record and 13-4 mark in league play, Creighton closed February with a 77-69 loss at Xavier. Addressing his team in the locker room following the game, head coach Greg McDermott used an inappropriate and offensive analogy. Numerous public and private apologies in the days to follow preceded CU's 72-60 loss at No. 10 Villanova, which clinched the BIG EAST regular-season title for the Wildcats.
   With some civic leaders and members of the national media calling for his ouster and tensions still running high, McDermott was suspended for CU's March 6 regular-season finale vs. Butler. Assistant Alan Huss handled interim head coach duties in CU's 93-73 win vs. the Bulldogs, and after the game CU recognized seniors Mitch Ballock, Damien Jefferson, Denzel Mahoney as well as graduates Jett Canfield and Jacob Epperson.
   The Bluejays finished BIG EAST play with a 14-6 record -- good for second place -- and opened the BIG EAST Tournament five days later with a rematch against Butler. Creighton won the rematch, 87-56, with McDermott returning to the sideline.
   Creighton then beat UConn for the third time of the season, 59-56 in the semifinals, to advance to the BIG EAST Tournament title game for the third time in eight seasons.
   The championship game wasn't close, as eighth-seeded Georgetown compiled a 34-3 run to claim its first league tournament title since 2007 with a 73-48 win over CU.
   One day after the conclusion of the BIG EAST Tournament, Creighton earned an at-large berth to the NCAA Tournament, which was held in its entirety in Indianapolis this spring.
   The fifth-seeded Bluejays opened the postseason with a narrow 63-62 win against Big West Conference Tournament champion UC Santa Barbara. Creighton trailed by six points with five minutes to play before baskets by four different Bluejays spurred a 9-0 run to retake the lead.
   UCSB regained a 62-61 lead on two free throws with 37.9 seconds to play, but the Gauchos fouled CU's Christian Bishop with 16.0 seconds left. A 57.1 percent foul shooter, Bishop drained both shots to give CU a 63-62 edge. On the defensive end, Shereef Mitchell helped challenge a point-blank shot by Amadou Sow that rolled off the rim in the closing seconds as the Bluejays earned its first NCAA Tournament victory since 2014.
   Creighton's Second Round match-up ended up being 13th-seeded Ohio, which had upset defending national champion Ohio in the First Round. Creighton used a 23-5 run spanning halftime and went on to defeat the Bobcats, 72-58. It marked the first time in program history that CU won consecutive NCAA Tournament games in the same season and also propelled the Bluejays into the Sweet 16 for the first time since 1974.
   The Sweet 16 match-up would be against top-ranked and undefeated Gonzaga and air on CBS. CU fell behind 9-2 in the opening minutes and never led, ultimately falling 83-65 to finish the season with a 22-9 record.
   Creighton had three men named All-BIG EAST for the first time ever, with Jefferson (Second Team) and Mahoney (Honorable Mention) joining Marcus Zegarowski (First Team). Zegarowski would also earned Honorable Mention All-America honors from the Associated Press. In addition, Ballock received the BIG EAST's Sportsmanship Award.
Radio Information
KOZN (1620 AM) broadcasted all Creighton men's basketball games during the 2020-21 season. John Bishop called all the games along with a bevy of analysts that included Brody Deren, Taylor Stormberg, Ross Ferrarini and Nick Bahe.
   Late in the season Creighton games began being picked up by Sirius/XM for the first time, as well.
   The non-NCAA Tournament games were also heard on 1620TheZone.com, and home games on KOOO (101.9 FM).
Television Information
All 31 games were televised this season. The games aired on FS1 (16 times), FOX (7), CBS Sports Network (3), BTN (1), TNT (1), truTV (1), CBS (1) and ESPN (1).
   Of Creighton's last 162 games, all but the three contests at the 2018 Cayman Islands Classic have been televised. CU is 109-53 in those contests.
21 of 23 Seasons With 20 Wins
Creighton has won 20 or more games in 21 of the last 23 seasons (including 2020-21), a feat that puts the Jays among an exclusive group, nationally.
   Just two schools have had 20 or more wins each of the last 23 years: Gonzaga and Kansas. Duke has done it 22 times, Creighton and Kentucky 21 times.
Most 20-Win Seasons, Last 23 Years (Includes 2020-21)
Team   20-Win Seasons   2020-21 W-L  Â
Gonzaga   23   31-1  Â
Kansas   23   21-9  Â
Duke   22   13-11  Â
Creighton   21   22-9  Â
Kentucky   21   9-16  Â
Twenty Wins, Again
Creighton had 22 wins this season, its sixth consecutive campaign with 20 or more victories.
   Only six teams have won 20 games or more in each of the last six seasons: Belmont, Creighton, Gonzaga, Houston, Kansas and Oregon.
NCAA Tournament History
Creighton made its 22nd NCAA Tournament appearance, and 13th in the last 23 years. The Bluejays are 14-23 all-time in NCAA action, including a 10-12 record in its first game, a 2-9 mark in its second game and a 2-2 performance in its third game.
   This year was Creighton's first NCAA Tournament appearance since a 2018 First Round exit at the hands of Kansas State, and CU's first NCAA Tournament victories since a 2014 win vs. Louisiana.
   Including this year, Creighton owns a 5-5 record all-time in the West Region. The Bluejays were 2-1 this year (beat UCSB and Ohio, lost to Gonzaga), were 1-1 in 2014 (beat Louisiana; lost to Baylor), 0-1 in 2003 (losing to Central Michigan), 1-1 in 1991 (beating New Mexico State, losing to Seton Hall) and 1-1 in 1941 (losing to Washington State, beating Wyoming).
   This year marked the third time in 34 NCAA or NIT appearances that Creighton has won consecutive games in the same event, and first time in the NCAA's (also 2016 NIT and 2019 NIT). CU has never won three straight games in the NIT or NCAA Tournament.
   This was the first time Creighton has reached the Round of 16 or beyond since 1974, when the tournament was 25 teams and CU won its first game before losing by one point to Kansas.
   Creighton has now had at least one sport reach the NCAA Tournament in each of the last 34 academic calendar years.
   Including the NCAA's, NIT, CBI and CIT, Creighton made its 22nd postseason appearance in the last 24 seasons this year. Last year's team was one of those exceptions, but was likely headed for a 2 or 3 seed in the NCAA's before COVID-19 canceled the event.
Coaching Experience In The Dance
Creighton's full-time coaching staff in 2020-21 boasted a combined 49 Division I NCAA Tournament games under their collective belts as either a player (3-9), assistant coach (13-10) or head coach (5-9), winning 21 of those games.
   Greg McDermott is 5-9 in NCAA Tournament action as a Division head coach. He went 0-3 at Northern Iowa (0-1 in 2004, 2005 and 2006) and is 5-6 at Creighton (2-1 in 2021, 1-1 in 2012, 2013 and 2014 and 0-1 in 2017 and 2018).
   Alan Huss is 3-5 in NCAA Tournament action, going three times as a player at Creighton (1-1 in 1999 and 0-1 in both 2000 and 2001). He is also 2-2 as an assistant coach thanks to a 2018 Creighton loss and a 2-1 mark in 2021.
   Paul Lusk owns a 9-10 record in NCAA Tournament action. He was an assistant coach at Purdue from 2004-11 and the Boilermakers made five straight NCAA trips from 2007-11. Purdue went 1-1 in 2007, 2008 and 2011 and 2-1 in 2009 and 2010. He was also an assistant at Southern Illinois in the 2004 NCAA Tournament, where the Salukis went 0-1. He was 2-1 as a Creighton assistant in March Madness. As a player, Lusk appeared in three NCAA Tournaments while with Southern Illinois, losing his first game in 1993, 1994 and 1995. He averaged 11.7 points and 3.0 rebounds per game.
   Terrence Rencher went 2-3 as a player at Texas in the NCAA Tournament, going 0-1 in 1992 and 1-1 in 1994 and 1995. In five games as a player, Rencher averaged 18.0 points, 4.0 rebounds and 3.4 assists. He was 2-1 as an assistant coach in the NCAA Tournament with Creighton.
NCAA Experience
Entering this year, four players on the Creighton team had been a part of an NCAA Tournament squad before, and two of them had appeared for the Bluejays in the Big Dance.
   Mitch Ballock played 32 minutes in Creighton's 2018 loss to Kansas State. He scored 16 points, becoming CU's first freshman to lead his team in scoring in his NCAA Tournament debut since Kevin McKenna in 1977.
   Jacob Epperson played 16 minutes in Creighton's 2018 loss to Kansas State, scoring two points and adding one rebound and one blocked shot.
   Damien Jefferson redshirted on Creighton's 2017-18 team and was not allowed to travel to Charlotte per NCAA policy regarding transfers at the time.
   Alex O'Connell played in seven NCAA Tournament games at Duke, including a pair of starts, as the Blue Devils went 5-2 in those contests. Duke also won one other game in which he didn't appear in. The Blue Devils reached the Elite Eight in both seasons. He averaged 1.6 points and 1.6 rebounds in those games and started Duke's Sweet 16 and Elite Eight games in 2019 in place of an injured Cam Reddish.
  Â
Against NCAA Tournament Opponents
Creighton was 7-5 this season against teams that made the 2021 NCAA Tournament. The Jays were 3-0 against UConn, 1-0 vs. UC Santa Barbara, 1-0 vs. Ohio, 1-1 vs. Villanova, 1-2 vs. Georgetown and 0-1 against Kansas and Gonzaga.
   All five Creighton starters averaged in double-figures during those games, a group led by Marcus Zegarowski (15.5 ppg., 3.9 apg.). Mitch Ballock (10.9 ppg.) made 31 three-pointers in those 12 games, and Christian Bishop (12.0 ppg.) hauled in a team-leading 7.8 rebounds per game while sinking 67.4 percent of his shots from the floor.
   CU held opponents to 40.1 percent shooting from the field, and 32.0 percent marksmanship from three-point territory.
History As A No. 5 Seed
Creighton was a No. 5 seed for the first time. It is Creighton's second-best seed slot since the NCAA began seeding all the teams in 1979, trailing only CU's No. 3 seed in 2014. This was also the sixth straight NCAA berth that the Bluejays were a better seed and in its "home whites" for its initial NCAA Tournament game.
   Creighton and Villanova this year are the 17th and 18th BIG EAST teams to ever earn a No. 5 seed, after just one team since 2012 (Marquette in 2019). Including the first two rounds this year, those BIG EAST teams are now 19-16 as a No. 5 seed.
   Before Villanova and Creighton this year, the only three previous BIG EAST teams to reach the Regional semifinals as a fifth seed were Syracuse (2004), Notre Dame (2003) and Syracuse (1998). Four teams went winless and nine other squads were exactly 1-1.
   Since 1985, No. 5 seeds are 8-36 (.182) against No. 1 seeds, with the last such upset coming in 2019 when Auburn walloped North Carolina 97-80.
   Since 1985, seven No. 5 seeds have reached the Final Four, most recently Auburn in 2019.
Creighton's NCAA Tourney Seeds
(since seeding began in 1979)
Year   Seed   Record
1981   8th   0-1
1989   14th   0-1
1991   11th   1-1
1999   10th   1-1
2000   10th   0-1
2001   10th   0-1
2002   12th   1-1
2003   6th   0-1
2005   10th   0-1
2007   10th   0-1
2012   8th   1-1
2013   7th   1-1
2014   3rd   1-1
2017   6th   0-1
2018   8th   0-1
2021   5th   2-1
BIG EAST Success
Creighton was one of four BIG EAST teams to make the NCAA Tournament this season, down from six clubs in 2019 and seven programs in 2018.
   Including this season, the BIG EAST has had a Sweet 16 squad in 25 of the past 27 tournaments, and multiple Sweet 16 teams in 14 of the last 19 tournaments.
   Even when you remove Louisville's vacated 2013 title, the BIG EAST Conference has won a combined 14 NCAA men's and women's basketball titles in the previous 21 seasons a tournament has been held.
McDermott In The Postseason
Creighton coach Greg McDermott made his ninth postseason appearance at Creighton, and 12th overall as a Division I head coach when you include his time at Northern Iowa.
   McDermott's Division I teams own an 13-13 record in those 12 postseason appearances, including a 13-10 mark in nine trips with Creighton.
McDermott's Division I Postseason Appearances
Year (School)   Tourney   Postseason W-L
2003-04 (UNI)Â Â Â NCAAÂ Â Â 0-1
2004-05 (UNI)Â Â Â NCAAÂ Â Â 0-1
2005-06 (UNI)Â Â Â NCAAÂ Â Â 0-1
2010-11 (CU)Â Â Â CBIÂ Â Â 4-2
2011-12 (CU)Â Â Â NCAAÂ Â Â 1-1
2012-13 (CU)Â Â Â NCAAÂ Â Â 1-1
2013-14 (CU)Â Â Â NCAAÂ Â Â 1-1
2015-16 (CU)Â Â Â NITÂ Â Â 2-1
2016-17 (CU)Â Â Â NCAAÂ Â Â 0-1
2017-18 (CU)Â Â Â NCAAÂ Â Â 0-1
2018-19 (CU)Â Â Â NITÂ Â Â 2-1
2020-21 (CU)Â Â Â NCAAÂ Â Â 2-1
Most Postseason Bids By CU Coaches
This year's bid to the NCAA was the ninth postseason bid for Greg McDermott at Creighton. Only Dana Altman (13) has taken the Bluejays to more postseason appearances in men's basketball.
   McDermott's five NCAA Tournament wins are two more than any coach in program history.
   McDermott's six NCAA Tournament trips are second-most in program history as well, trailing only Altman's seven.
   McDermott's 13 postseason wins at Creighton are the most in school history, six more than Altman's seven.
   McDermott (13-9) is one of two coaches in program history with a winning record in postseason play, joining Eddie Sutton (2-1).
Coach (Bids)Â Â Â NCAAÂ Â Â NITÂ Â Â CBIÂ Â Â CITÂ Â Â NCITÂ Â Â Total
Hickey (3)Â Â Â 1-1Â Â Â 2-2Â Â Â 0-0Â Â Â 0-0Â Â Â 0-0Â Â Â 3-3
Belford (1)Â Â Â 0-0Â Â Â 0-0Â Â Â 0-0Â Â Â 0-0Â Â Â 0-1Â Â Â 0-1
McManus (3)Â Â Â 3-3Â Â Â 0-0Â Â Â 0-0Â Â Â 0-0Â Â Â 1-1Â Â Â 4-4
Sutton (1)Â Â Â 2-1Â Â Â 0-0Â Â Â 0-0Â Â Â 0-0Â Â Â 0-0Â Â Â 2-1
Apke (4)Â Â Â 0-3Â Â Â 0-1Â Â Â 0-0Â Â Â 0-0Â Â Â 0-0Â Â Â 0-4
Barone (3)Â Â Â 1-2Â Â Â 0-1Â Â Â 0-0Â Â Â 0-0Â Â Â 0-0Â Â Â 1-3
Altman (13)Â Â Â 2-7Â Â Â 3-5Â Â Â 0-0Â Â Â 2-1Â Â Â 0-0Â Â Â 7-13
McDermott (9)Â Â Â 5-6Â Â Â 4-2Â Â Â 4-2Â Â Â 0-0Â Â Â 0-0Â Â Â 13-9
Super Six
Greg McDermott joined some select company by directing his troops to a sixth NCAA Tournament this season. That puts him in the company of some of the greatest coaches in CU Athletics history.
   McDermott is one of six head coaches in Creighton history to lead six different NCAA Tournament teams, through May 15, 2021.
Name   Sport   NCAA's @CU
Bob Warming   Men's Soccer   11
Kirsten Bernthal Booth   Volleyball   10
Dana Altman   Men's Basketball   7
Brent Vigness   Softball   7
Elmar Bolowich   Men's Soccer   6
Greg McDermott   Men's Basketball   6
Ranked vs. Ranked
Creighton is 13-15 all-time as a ranked team when facing a ranked team, including a 12-11 overall mark under Greg McDermott. That includes a 7-3 mark over the past two seasons.
Creighton's Top-25 vs. Top-25 Games
Date   CU Rank   Opponent Rank   Result
03/04/1974   #16   #14 South Carolina   L 69-78
03/14/1974   #19   vs. #14 Kansas   L 54-55
03/16/1974   #19   vs. #16 Louisville   W 80-71
03/08/1975   #13   #5 Marquette   L 60-64
12/31/2002   #15   at #19 Xavier   L 73-75
03/18/2012   #19   vs. #4 North Carolina   L 73-87
03/24/2013   #22   vs. #6 Duke   L 50-66
02/16/2014   #18   #6 Villanova   W 101-80
03/23/2014   #16   vs. #23 Baylor   L 55-85
11/15/2016   #22   #9 Wisconsin   W 77-69
12/31/2016   #10   #1 Villanova   L 70-80
01/11/2017   #8   #12 Butler   W 75-64
01/16/2017   #7   at #22 Xavier   W 72-67
01/31/2017   #22   at #16 Butler   W 76-67
02/25/2017   #23   at #2 Villanova   L 63-79
12/01/2017   #25   at #15 Gonzaga   L 74-91
12/28/2017   #25   at #23 Seton Hall   L 84-90
01/13/2018   #25   at #10 Xavier   L 70-92
02/12/2020   #23   at #10 Seton Hall   W 87-82
02/18/2020   #15   at #19 Marquette   W 73-65
02/23/2020   #15   #21 Butler   W 81-59
03/07/2020   #11   #8 Seton Hall   W 77-60
12/08/2020   #8   at #5 Kansas   L 72-73
12/21/2020   #13   #22 Xavier   W 66-61
01/23/2021   #11   #23 Connecticut   W 74-66
02/13/2021   #19   #5 Villanova   W 86-70
03/03/2021   #14   at #10 Villanova   L 60-72
03/28/2021   #19   vs. #1 Gonzaga   L 65-83
Pink Out Auction Raises $40,381 This Year
Creighton raised $40,381 for this Wednesday's "Creighton vs. Cancer Pink Out" Pink Out game vs. Georgetown. Below is the final numbers for each jersey/item in the auction this year:
#0Â Â Â $700Â Â Â #4Â Â Â $750Â Â Â #5Â Â Â $800
#10Â Â Â $850Â Â Â #11Â Â Â $3,550Â Â Â #12Â Â Â $700
#13Â Â Â $1,600Â Â Â #14Â Â Â $650Â Â Â #20Â Â Â $650
#22Â Â Â $750Â Â Â #23Â Â Â $1,750Â Â Â #24Â Â Â $2,150
#32Â Â Â $1,550Â Â Â #34Â Â Â $1,500Â Â Â #41Â Â Â $850
#44Â Â Â $650Â Â Â #55Â Â Â $606Â Â Â Ball 1: $1,025
Ball 2: $1,050Â Ball 3: $1,000Â Â Ball 4: $1,100Â Â Â Â Ball 5: $950
Arbor Links Golf: $5,100Â Â Â Omaha CC Golf: $3,400
Des Moines Golf: $3,600Â Â Â Southern Highlands Golf: $3,100
Creighton's Pink Out History
This year will mark Creighton's 11th Pink Out, which coincides with the arrival of head coach Greg McDermott. The Bluejays are 8-2 in the first 10 Pink Out games, while playing in front of an average of 17,903 fans per game, as seen below:
Date   Result   Attendance
01/29/11Â Â Â Creighton 83, Indiana State 69Â Â Â 16,044
01/28/12Â Â Â Creighton 73, Bradley 59Â Â Â 18,436
02/02/13Â Â Â Creighton 75, Bradley 58Â Â Â 18,111
01/25/14Â Â Â Creighton 76, Georgetown 63Â Â Â 18,859
01/17/15Â Â Â Providence 74, Creighton 65Â Â Â 17,640
01/30/16Â Â Â Seton Hall 75, Creighton 65Â Â Â 17,924
01/28/17Â Â Â Creighton 83, DePaul 66Â Â Â 17,611
01/27/18Â Â Â Creighton 85, Georgetown 77Â Â Â 18,518
01/25/19Â Â Â Creighton 75, Butler 61Â Â Â 18,089
01/26/20Â Â Â Creighton 77, Xavier 66Â Â Â 17,796
Yearly Pink Out Totals
Creighton has raised 307,095.18 since the start of the 2011-12 season during its annual men's basketball Pink Out.
2011-12:Â Â Â $20,600
2012-13:Â Â Â $24,444
2013-14:Â Â Â $48,247.11
2014-15:Â Â Â $16,384.03
2015-16:Â Â Â $16,527.90
2016-17:Â Â Â $26,361.64
2017-18:Â Â Â $28,796
2018-19:Â Â Â $19,595
2019-20:Â Â Â $31,803.18
2020-21:Â Â Â $40,381
Additional Donations:Â Â Â $25,988.32
10-Year Totals: $307,095.18
Top 25 Success
Creighton had six wins over top-25 teams last season, breaking the school-record of four set in 2016-17 and 2017-18.
   This year's team owned top-25 wins vs. No. 5 Villanova, No. 22 Xavier and No. 23 UConn. It marked the 10th Bluejay team in history with multiple top-25 victories, and sixth straight year that's happened.
   On a national basis, the only 11 teams that have posted multiple top-25 wins in each of the last six seasons (including 2020-21) are Baylor, Creighton, Florida State, Gonzaga, Kansas, Michigan, Michigan State, Penn State, Purdue, Texas Tech, Villanova and West Virginia.
Creighton's Most Top-25 Wins, Season
   Wins   Season   Top-25 Victims
   6   2019-20   #8 Villanova, #10 Seton Hall,
         #12 Texas Tech, #19 Marquette,
         #21 Butler, #8 Seton Hall
   4   2016-17   #9 Wisconsin, #12 Butler,
         #16 Butler, #22 Xavier
   4   2017-18   #3 Villanova, #19 Seton Hall,
         #20 Northwestern, #23 UCLA
   3   2020-21   #5 Villanova, #22 Xavier, #23 UConn
   2   1973-74   #6 Marquette, #16 Louisville
   2   2001-02   #15 Florida, #17 Western Kentucky
   2   2006-07   #11 Southern Illinois, #24 Xavier
   2   2013-14   #4 Villanova, #6 Villanova
   2   2015-16   #5 Xavier, #18 Butler
   2   2018-19   #10 Marquette, #16 Clemson
Ranking News & Notes
- Creighton is 24-35 under Greg McDermott against nationally-ranked teams, 17 more top-25 wins than any other coach in Creighton history. Prior to McDermott's arrival, Creighton was 18-115 all-time against top-25 foes.
- Creighton has beaten at least one ranked team in each of the last eight seasons (including 2020-21), and multiple ranked foes in each of the last seven years.
   On a national basis, the only 23 teams with a top-25 win each of the last eight seasons (including 2020-21) are Baylor, Clemson, Creighton, Duke, Florida State, Indiana, Kansas, Kansas State, Kentucky, Louisville, Michigan, Michigan State, Ohio State, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Carolina, Syracuse, Texas Tech, Villanova, Virginia, West Virginia, Wisconsin and Xavier.
- Creighton is 19-18 since the start of the 2016-17 season against ranked teams. The 19 wins over ranked teams in that time are 16th-most nationally, and trails only Villanova (24) among BIG EAST clubs. Â
Against The Top 10
Creighton owns 10 top-10 victories in the past eight seasons. Seven of those wins have come by double-figures. Four of the top-10 victories have been away from home.
Date   Opponent   Score
01/20/14   at #4 Villanova   W 96-68
02/16/14   #6 Villanova   W 101-80
02/09/16   #5 Xavier   W 70-56
11/15/16   #9 Wisconsin   W 79-67
02/24/18   #3 Villanova   W 89-83 (OT)
03/03/19   at #10 Marquette   W 66-60
02/01/20   at #8 Villanova   W 76-61
02/12/20   at #10 Seton Hall   W 87-82
03/07/20   #8 Seton Hall   W 77-60
02/13/21   #5 Villanova   W 86-70
Big Mac On The Attack
Greg McDermott's teams have consistently battled some of the best teams in the country.
   The chart below shows how his teams have consistently outpaced those of his predecessors against top-25 foes.
Category   Pre-McDermott   Under McDermott
vs. Top 25 Teams   18-115   24-35
vs. Top 10 Teams   5-31   10-17
vs. Top 10 on Road   1-28   4-9
vs. Top 25 on Road   2-63   8-16
No Fear On The Road
Creighton owns five top-10 victories vs. top-10 teams since the start of the 2018-19 season. That ranks tied for 12th-most in the nation.
Top 10 Wins Since 2018-19 Started
   Rank   Wins   Team
   1.   9   Illinois
      9   Michigan State
      9   Baylor
   4.   8   Virginia
      8   Duke
   6.   7   Ohio State
   7.   6   Oklahoma State
      6   Michigan
      6   Kansas
      6   West Virginia
      6   Texas Tech
   12.   5   Creighton
      5   Indiana
      5   Kentucky
Man In The Middle
Christian Bishop was one of seven players to have double-doubles in a pair of NCAA Tournament games this season, joining Colin Castleton (Florida), Evan Mobley (USC), Cody Riley (UCLA), Justin Smith (Arkansas), Cameron Krutwig (Loyola Chicago) and Kevin Obanor (Oral Roberts). Of that group, only Obanor had three or more.
   Bishop had back-to-back career-high efforts of 11 rebounds (vs. UCSB) and then 15 rebounds (vs. Ohio). The 15 rebounds were the most by a Bluejay since Ronnie Harrell Jr. had 15 vs. No. 23 UCLA on Nov. 20, 2017.
   Bishop's 31 rebounds in the NCAA Tournament ranked 13th-most among all players, and just eight behind the overall leader, Gonzaga's Joel Ayayi.
   Bishop was Creighton's first player with multiple double-doubles in the same NCAA Tournament since Chad Gallagher in 1991.
   The only Creighton player with three double-doubles in the same NCAA Tournament is Paul Silas, who did it in 1964.
   Paul Silas owns every rebounding-related record in program history, including those in the NCAA Tournament. He had single-game program highs of 27 (March 9, 1964 vs. Oklahoma City), single-year program highs of 57 (over 3 games in 1964) and in a career (101 in 6 games).
Denzel A Leading Man
In seven career games as a Bluejay against a top-10 opponent, Denzel Mahoney averaged 13.7 points, 3.3 rebounds and 1.3 steals per game to help CU to a 4-3 mark. Mahoney has made 47.4.percent (36-76) of his shots from the floor, 36.1 percent (13-36) from three-point range and 85.7 percent (12-14) at the charity stripe.
   Four of his top 14 single-game scoring efforts at CU came in games against top-10 teams.
Denzel Mahoney's Top Scoring Games at Creighton
   Points   Opponent   Date
   29   at Butler   01/16/21
   24   St. John's   01/09/21
   22   Georgetown   02/03/21
   21   at #8 Villanova   02/01/20
   21   Marquette   12/14/20
   20   Nebraska   12/11/20
   20   #23 Connecticut   01/23/21
   19   at Georgetown   01/15/20
   19   at #5 Kansas   12/08/20
   18   St. John's   02/08/20
   18   at #10 Seton Hall   02/12/20
   17   Nebraska-Omaha   12/01/20
   16   #8 Seton Hall   03/08/20
   16   at St. John's   12/17/20
Sixty Percent Club
Since Greg McDermott was hired in 2010, Creighton has shot 60 percent or better in 25 different games.
   The only team with more games making 60 percent or better in that span is Gonzaga (34), while Loyola (Chicago) did it 23 times to rank third.
   Drop the list to teams shooting 50 percent or better since 2010-11 and Gonzaga (222) is once against first and Creighton (161) tied for third.
   Since 2010-11, Creighton and Gonzaga are also in the top-10 nationally in field goal percentage, field goals made and (not coincidentally) assists.
   Here's some of those lists, per Basketball-Reference.com.
Most Games, 60%+ FG Shooting, Since 2010-11
Rk.   Games   Team
1.   34   Gonzaga  Â
2.   25   Creighton
3.   23   Loyola Chicago
4.   22   Utah
5.   21   Belmont
   21   Dayton
   21   Kansas
Most Games, 50%+ FG Shooting, Since 2010-11
Rk.   Games   Team
1.   222   Gonzaga  Â
2.   165   Belmont
3.   161   Creighton
   161   Kansas
5.   159   Saint Mary's
Best FG% , Since 2010-11
Rk.   FG%   Team
1.   50.4%   Gonzaga
2.   48.4%   Belmont
3.   48.0%   Creighton
4.   47.9%   Kansas
5.   47.7%   Saint Mary's
Most Assists , Since 2010-11
Rk.   Assists   Team
1.   6,729   North Carolina
2.   6,520   Michigan State
3.   6,151   Gonzaga  Â
4.   6,122   Belmont  Â
4.   6,114   Creighton
Most Field Goals Made , Since 2010-11
Rk.   Assists   Team
1.   11,603   North Carolina
2.   11,361   Gonzaga
3.   10,903   Kansas
4.   10,798   Duke
5.   10,538   BYU
6.   10,519   Kentucky
7.   10,430   Oregon
8.   10,344   Creighton
Magnificent Debuts
With 15 points and 11 rebounds vs. UCSB, Christian Bishop had his team-leading fifth double-double of the season and established a career-high in the carom column.
   Bishop's 11 rebounds were the most by a Creighton player in their NCAA Tournament debut since George Morrow had 14 rebounds vs. Saint Joseph's in 1981.
   Bishop's double-double was the first by a Bluejay in an NCAA Tournament since Doug McDermott had 30 points and 12 rebounds in a 2014 win vs. Louisiana, which also happened to be CU's last NCAA Tournament victory.
   Bishop was the first Bluejay with a double-double in his NCAA Tournament debut since Doug McDermott vs. Alabama on March 16, 2012. McDermott had 16 point and 10 rebounds in a one-point win.
   Bishop followed up his UCSB performance with 12 points and 15 rebounds vs. Ohio two days later for his sixth double-double.
   In Creighton's last 14 NCAA Tournament games (since March 17, 2002), the Bluejays are 5-0 when it has an individual with a double-double but 0-10 when it doesn't have a double-double.
More Debut News
Speaking of fantastic NCAA Tournament debuts, what more can be said about Marcus Zegarowski's 17 points and eight assists vs. UCSB?
   Zegarowski's 17 points were the most by a Bluejay in their NCAA Tournament debut since Duan Cole had 17 points vs. New Mexico State on March 14, 1991.
   Zegarowski was the first Bluejay with eight or more assists in his NCAA Tournament debut since Todd Eisner had nine helpers vs. Missouri on March 17, 1989.
   Zegarowski is Creighton's first player with 17 points and eight assists in the same NCAA Tournament game since Ryan Sears had 18 points and eight assists vs. Auburn on March 16, 2000.
   Zegarowski then had a game-high 20 points vs. Ohio.
   After scoring 19 points vs. Gonzaga in the Sweet 16, Zegarowski became the first Bluejay to score 17 or more points in each of his first three career NCAA Tournament games.
Won By One
A First Round 63-62 win was Creighton's first one-point win of the season, and improved the Bluejays to 5-1 this year in games decided by three points or less.
   It was just the third Creighton win by a 63-62 score ever, and first since Booker Woodfox hit a buzzer-beater to eliminate Wichita State in the 2009 MVC Tournament quarterfinals. The first 63-62 win came on Dec. 14, 1968 at Kansas State.
   Creighton improved to 81-76 all-time in one-point games, and 8-8 under Greg McDermott.
   Of Creighton's 14 all-time NCAA Tournament wins, four of them have come by exactly one point (45-44 vs. Wyoming in 1944; 83-82 vs. Florida in 2002; 58-57 vs. Alabama in 2012; 63-62 vs. UC Santa Barbara in 2021).
   Overall, seven of CU's 14 NCAA wins have been by four points or less.
Zegarowski Goes Streaking
Marcus Zegarowski made a three-pointer in each of his last 23 games, a streak that started on Dec. 17th. That's tied for the sixth-longest streak in program history, as seen below.
   Seniors Denzel Mahoney and Mitch Ballock finished their careers with streaks of 17 straight games with a trey, as well.
   Streak   Name   Dates of Streak
   33   Ty-Shon Alexander   Feb. 27, 2018-March 6, 2019
   31   Booker Woodfox   Nov. 25, 2008-March 23, 2009
   28   Kyle Korver   Feb. 4, 2001-Feb. 6, 2002
   27   Kyle Korver   Feb. 13, 2002-Jan. 20, 2003
   25   Rodney Buford   Jan. 25, 1997-Jan. 10, 1998
   23   Ethan Wragge   Nov. 8, 2013-Feb. 9, 2014
   23   Mitch Ballock   Nov. 12, 2019-Feb. 8, 2020
   23   Marcus Zegarowski   Dec. 17, 2020 - Present
   22   Khyri Thomas   Jan. 28-Dec. 5, 2017
   21   Ethan Wragge   Jan. 3-March 24, 2010
   20   Johnny Mathies   Dec. 22, 2004-Feb. 28, 2005
   20   Marcus Foster   Dec. 31, 2017-March 16, 2018
You Can't Spell Marcus Without March
Marcus Zegarowski was named to BIG EAST's All-Tournament Team after averaging 16.0 points,, 4.0 assists and 4.0 rebounds as Creighton reached the final.
   He shot 62.5 percent from the floor (20-32) and 61.5 percent from deep (8-13).
   Zegarowski is the fourth Bluejay ever named to the BIG EAST's All-Tournament Team, joining Doug McDermott (2014), Austin Chatman (2014) and Marcus Foster (2017).
Postseason Features Last-Second Drama
Twelve of Creighton's last 17 postseason runs (all but 2010, 2014 and 2016, 2017 and 2019) have included a game that was decided in the final seconds, including 2021.
   In fact, Creighton's past 17 postseason openers have been decided by an average of 6.35 points and feature five games decided by one point (including a double-OT finish), two by two points, one game by four points, two by six points (including an OT finish), two games by 10 points, three games by 11 points one by 12 points, and one decided by 18 points.
   In 2021, Christian Bishop made two go-ahead free throws with 16.0 seconds left and UC Santa Barbara's Amadou Sow missed a point-bank lay-up with two seconds left as Creighton won, 63-62.
   In 2013 Cincinnati missed a game-tying three-pointer in the final 20 seconds and Creighton guard Austin Chatman made 3-of-4 free throws down the stretch to hold on to a 67-63 win.
   In 2012 Creighton edged Alabama in the second round of the NCAA Tournament, 58-57, as Trevor Releford's game-winning three-pointer at the buzzer came up short.
   Creighton's 2010-11 campaign ended in heartbreaking fashion in the CBI title game at Oregon. Creighton had the ball in a tie game with the shot clock off, but committed a backcourt violation on Oregon's "unique" floor. The Ducks' E.J. Singler then banked in a game-winning shot with 2.0 seconds left. A desperation three-pointer by Creighton was off the mark.
   In 2009, Creighton rallied from a 14-point deficit and would hang on to beat Bowling Green, 73-71 in the first round of the NIT. The Jays needed a last-second defensive stand, as BGSU's Darryl Clements' game-winning three-pointer at the buzzer was off the mark.
   The following game, Creighton led Kentucky by one with 36 seconds left, only to miss two free throws and see UK All-American Jodie Meeks convert a three-point play. CU's Booker Woodfox, the nation's No. 2 three-point shooter, missed an open trey as time expired, and Creighton lost 65-63.
   In 2008, Creighton rallied from a 12-point deficit in the final 3:07 to top Rhode Island, 74-73, 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 second round of the 2006 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 2003 Creighton lost 79-73 to Central Michigan in the NCAA's. The Jays trailed 50-24 with 16:24 left but a furious rally got them within two points (72-70) with 1:20 left, only to turn it over the next three possessions.
   In the 2002 NCAA's, 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.
Postseason Wins In 10 of Last 12 Appearances
Creighton has won at least one game in 10 of its last 12 postseason appearances. The streak began in 2008.
Creighton's Last 12 Postseason Appearances
Year   Tourney   First Game
2007-08Â Â Â NITÂ Â Â Beat Rhode Island, 74-73
2008-09Â Â Â NITÂ Â Â Beat Bowling Green, 73-71
2009-10Â Â Â CITÂ Â Â Beat South Dakota, 89-78
2010-11Â Â Â CBIÂ Â Â Beat San Jose State, 85-74
2011-12Â Â Â NCAAÂ Â Â Beat Alabama, 58-57
2012-13Â Â Â NCAAÂ Â Â Beat Cincinnati, 67-63
2013-14Â Â Â NCAAÂ Â Â Beat Louisiana, 76-66
2015-16Â Â Â NITÂ Â Â Beat Alabama, 72-54
2016-17Â Â Â NCAAÂ Â Â Lost to Rhode Island, 84-72
2017-18Â Â Â NCAAÂ Â Â Lost to Kansas State, 69-59
2018-19Â Â Â NITÂ Â Â Beat Loyola (Chicago), 70-61
2020-21Â Â Â NCAAÂ Â Â Beat UC Santa Barbara, 63-62
Only In 2020-21
Though Creighton's 14 BIG EAST wins were three more than any other team in the BIG EAST, the Bluejays were the second seed in this week's conference tournament since the league decided before the year to go by winning percentage to determine a league champion and seeds.
   The BIG EAST isn't alone in this. It's one of eight leagues that saw the top team in winning percentage not be the same team that had the most conference wins.
Wins Leader Not League Champ, Nationally
League   Wins Leader   Conf Champ
American   Houston, 14-3   Wichita St., 11-2
BIG EASTÂ Â Â Creighton, 14-6Â Â Â Villanova, 11-4
Big 10Â Â Â Illinois, 16-4Â Â Â Michigan, 14-3
Conf-USAÂ Â Â UAB, 13-5Â Â Â Louisiana Tech, 12-4
MEACÂ Â Â Norfolk St., 8-4Â Â Â North Carolina A&T, 7-1
   Coppin State, 8-4  Â
MWCÂ Â Â Utah State, 15-4Â Â Â San Diego St., 14-3
Pac-12Â Â Â USC, 15-5Â Â Â Oregon, 14-4
Summit   South Dakota, 11-4   South Dakota St., 9-3
   N. Dakota St., 11-4
All-BIG EAST Trio
Creighton's Marcus Zegarowski (First Team), Damien Jefferson (Second Team) and Denzel Mahoney (Honorable Mention) each picked up All-BIG EAST recognition in a vote of league coaches
   This year marks the first time that Creighton had three players named All-BIG EAST in the same season.
   In addition, Mitch Ballock brought home the league's Sportsmanship Award.
Ballock Reaches 300 Treys
Mitch Ballock made 308 three-pointers in his Bluejay career, including a season-high eight on Dec. 14 vs. Marquette. That put him in third place in program history in that category, and ahead of Doug McDermott (274).
   His 232 career treys entering the year were second-most in school history after a junior season, trailing only Kyle Korver (242).
   Two of Ballock's teammates also made 200 or more career triples. Marcus Zegarowski made 215, while Denzel Mahoney owned 214 if you include the 121 he made at Southeast Missouri State.
Most Career 3FG, Creighton History
Rank      3FG   Name   Years
   1.   371   Kyle Korver   1999-03
   2.   334   Ethan Wragge   2009-14
   3.   308   Mitch Ballock   2017-Pres.
   4.   274   Doug McDermott   2010-14
   5.   245   Ryan Sears   1997-01
   6.   215   Marcus Zegarowski   2018-Pres.
   7.   212   Rodney Buford   1995-99
   8.   210   Ty-Shon Alexander   2017-20
   9.   206   Jahenns Manigat   2010-14
   10.   200   Nate Funk   2002-07
The Great Eight
Mitch Ballock made nine three-pointers in Creighton's first five games of the season before erupting on Dec. 14 vs. Marquette. The senior guard from Eudora, Kan., made 8-of-14 three-pointers en route to 26 points.
   His eight trifectas were tied for fourth-most in a game in Bluejay history, but three behind his record 11 vs. DePaul on March 9, 2019.
   Ballock joined Kyle Korver as the only players in school history with multiple games of eight or more triples.
   In addition, Ballock's 14 three-point attempts were also tied for fourth-most in program history and one behind the program record.
   Ballock made 182 career three-pointers in BIG EAST games, which ranks fifth all-time.
   Ballock's 26 points were the most by a Bluejay in any conference opener since 2012, when Doug McDermott scored 29 points vs. Evansville. That came when CU belonged to the Missouri Valley Conference.
3-Pointers Made, Game, Creighton History
   3FG   Name, Opponent   Date
   11   Mitch Ballock vs. DePaul   03/09/19
   9   Kyle Korver vs. Evansville   01/15/03
      Ethan Wragge at Villanova   01/20/14
   8   Tad Ackerman at Drake   01/23/95
      Kyle Korver at Xavier   12/31/02
      Terrell Taylor vs. Florida   03/15/02
      Isaiah Zierden at DePaul   01/17/16
      Mitch Ballock vs. Marquette   12/14/20
Most Career 3FG Made, BIG EAST Games Only
   Rank   3FG   Name, School
   1.   245   Markus Howard, Marquette
   2.   201   Jeremy Hazell, Seton Hall
   3.   189   Colin Falls, Notre Dame
   4.   183   Gerry McNamara, Syracuse
   5.   182   Mitch Ballock, Creighton
   6.   180   Myles Powell, Seton Hall
Three-Ballock, Corner Pocket
Mitch Ballock finished his career with 308 career three-pointers made, which ranked eighth nationally among active players at season's end.
   He's the third Bluejay to make 300 or more trifectas, joining Kyle Korver (371) and Ethan Wragge (334) in that elite grouping. Ballock is the first of that trio to drain 300 three-pointers while also dishing 300 or more career assists (341).
   Korver reached 300 treys in his 108th game as a Bluejay, while Wragge achieved that milestone in his 134th career contest. It took Ballock 124 contests.
Â
Inbounds, In Range
Mitch Ballock has frequently displayed his long-range marksmanship. Per research from WhiteAndBlueReview.com writer Matt DeMarinis using Synergy Sports database, Ballock made 8-of-13 three-pointers this season taken from between 30-40 feet away.
   Over the past two seasons, he was 13-of-26 from 30-40 feet away.
Up, Up, And Away
Since Feb. 19, 2019, Creighton owns a 32-11 mark in regular-season BIG EAST games. That's six more wins than anyone else in the league in that time.
   Not only that, but Creighton owned the most wins to close the 2018-19 season after Feb. 19th, tied for the most wins in 2019-20, and has the most wins in 2020-21 as well.
Conference Records Since Feb. 19, 2019
Team   After 2/19/19   '19-20   '20-21   Total
Creighton   5-0   13-5   14-6   32-11
Villanova   2-3   13-5   11-4   26-12
Seton Hall   2-3   13-5   10-9   25-17
Providence   3-2   12-6   9-10   24-18
UConn   2-4#   10-8#   11-6   23-18
Butler   1-4   10-8   8-12   19-24
Xavier   4-1   8-10   6-7   18-18
Marquette   2-4   8-10   8-11   18-25
Georgetown   4-2   5-13   7-9   16-24
St. John's   1-4   5-13   10-9   16-26
DePaul   2-3   3-15   2-13   7-31
#includes 2018-19 and 2019-20 in the AAC
Fool Me Once...But Eight Times?
Creighton has met or exceeded its preseason BIG EAST prognostication every year since joining the league, as seen below.
   This year also marks the fifth straight season that Creighton has finished in first, second or a tie for third place.
Creighton's BIG EAST Preseason Poll History
Year    Preseason    Actual    Preseason All-BIG EAST
2013-14    3rd    2nd    Doug McDermott (1st)
2014-15    9th    T-9th    -
2015-16    9th    6th    -
2016-17    3rd    T-3rd    Maurice Watson Jr. (1st); Marcus Foster (HM)
2017-18    5th    T-3rd    Marcus Foster (1st); Khyri Thomas (HM)
2018-19    9th    T-3rd    Martin Krampelj (HM)
2019-20    7th    T-1st   Ty-Shon Alexander (1st)
2020-21    2nd    2nd   Marcus Zegarowski (1st); Mitch Ballock (2nd)
Up Is Down; Down Is Up
Creighton finished in second place in the BIG EAST standings with a 14-6 league record, trailing only Villanova's 11-4 mark. Though CU had three more wins, it has a worse winning percentage (.700) than Villanova (.733).
   What's unusual is how Creighton got to that point. The Bluejays went 7-1 against the top five seeds in this year's BIG EAST Tournament, but 7-5 against the bottom six seeds.
   Matching that trend, Creighton was 1-0 against top-five seeds during the BIG EAST Tournament, but 1-1 against teams seeded 6-11.
On Any Given Day
For the second consecutive season, Creighton beat every other team in the BIG EAST during the regular-season.
   Creighton went 2-0 against four programs and 1-1 against six schools this season.
   Creighton was the only BIG EAST team with a win over all other 10 teams in the league this year.
Fourteen Is Fine
Creighton won 14 conference games this season, tied for its most in any of its eight seasons in the BIG EAST (also 2013-14).
   This year's squad is just the seventh team in Creighton history with 14 or more league victories. Six have won exactly 14 while the 2002-03 squad led by Kyle Korver finished 15-3 in the Missouri Valley Conference.
   Creighton has now won 10 or more league games in 22 of the last 25 seasons.
.500 Or Better in League Play, Again
Creighton went 14-6 in league play, clinching a .500 mark or better in league play for the 26th time in the last 27 seasons.
   The only BIG EAST teams to finish .500 or better in league play each of the last five seasons (including 2020-21) are Creighton, Villanova and Seton Hall.
On The Double
Marcus Zegarowski had his second career double-double on Feb. 27th when the junior point guard turned in 15 points and 10 assists against Xavier.
   Zegarowski's only previous double-double came on Dec. 1 vs. Nebraska-Omaha, when he had 11 points and a career-best 11 assists.
   Zegarowski is one of four Bluejays with a double-dip this season, as Christian Bishop (6), Damien Jefferson (2) and Denzel Mahoney (1) have also done it.
Winning On the Road
Creighton owns a 35-38 record in BIG EAST road games since the league's 2013-14 realignment. Those 35 victories trail only Villanova's 50.
   Since the start of the 2018-19 campaign, Creighton's 16 BIG EAST road wins lead the league.
BIG EAST Road Records (through 2020-21)
Team   Since 2013-14   Since 2018-19
Butler   28-45   7-21
Connecticut   5-4   5-4
Creighton   35-38   16-12
DePaul   13-57   5-20
Georgetown   23-47   8-17
Marquette   28-45   13-15
Providence   33-40   11-17
Seton Hall   32-41   14-14
St. John's   19-54   8-20
Villanova   50-20   14-11
Xavier   31-36   9-15
Quad Squad
Creighton owned a 12-6 record entering the NCAA Tournament against teams that were either Quad 1 (7-3) or Quad 2 (5-3) this season according to the NET.
   Creighton was one of 10 clubs nationwide with 12 or more victories against teams in the top two quadrants, joining Alabama (17-5), Illinois (17-6), Ohio State (15-9), Gonzaga (14-0), Michigan (14-4), Purdue (13-8), Iowa (13-8), Oklahoma State (12-6) and Arkansas (12-6).
   Creighton's seven Quad 1 wins were tied for 10th-most nationally.
   Creighton was 26th in the March 15th edition of the NET at the end of the regular-season.
Road Warriors
Creighton went 7-3 in BIG EAST road games this season, tying a program record for most road wins in a league season.
   Creighton, Baylor, Illinois, USC, Oregon and Alabama were the nation's only major conference (Power 5 or BIG EAST) teams with seven or more league road wins this season.
   League Road   After   After   After
Year   Games 1-6 W-L   7 Road   8 Road   9 Road
2020-21Â Â Â 5-1Â Â Â 6-1Â Â Â 7-1Â Â Â 7-2
2019-20Â Â Â 3-3Â Â Â 4-3Â Â Â 5-3Â Â Â 5-4
2018-19Â Â Â 2-4Â Â Â 2-5Â Â Â 3-5Â Â Â 3-6
2017-18Â Â Â 2-4Â Â Â 3-4Â Â Â 3-5Â Â Â 3-6
2016-17Â Â Â 5-1Â Â Â 5-2Â Â Â 5-3Â Â Â 5-4
2015-16Â Â Â 4-2Â Â Â 4-3Â Â Â 4-4Â Â Â 4-5
2014-15Â Â Â 1-5Â Â Â 1-6Â Â Â 2-6Â Â Â 2-7
2013-14Â Â Â 4-2Â Â Â 5-2Â Â Â 5-3Â Â Â 5-4
2012-13Â Â Â 3-3Â Â Â 3-4Â Â Â 4-4Â Â Â 5-4
2011-12Â Â Â 5-1Â Â Â 5-2Â Â Â 6-2Â Â Â 7-2
2010-11Â Â Â 3-3Â Â Â 3-4Â Â Â 3-5Â Â Â 3-6
2009-10Â Â Â 2-4Â Â Â 2-5Â Â Â 2-6Â Â Â 3-6
2008-09Â Â Â 4-2Â Â Â 5-2Â Â Â 6-2Â Â Â 7-2
2007-08Â Â Â 3-3Â Â Â 3-4Â Â Â 3-5Â Â Â 3-6
2006-07Â Â Â 4-2Â Â Â 5-2Â Â Â 5-3Â Â Â 5-4
2005-06Â Â Â 3-3Â Â Â 4-3Â Â Â 4-4Â Â Â 4-5
2004-05Â Â Â 3-3Â Â Â 3-4Â Â Â 4-4Â Â Â 5-4
2003-04Â Â Â 4-2Â Â Â 4-3Â Â Â 4-4Â Â Â 4-5
2002-03Â Â Â 5-1Â Â Â 5-2Â Â Â 6-2Â Â Â 7-2
2001-02Â Â Â 5-1Â Â Â 6-1Â Â Â 6-2Â Â Â 7-2
2000-01Â Â Â 2-4Â Â Â 3-4Â Â Â 4-4Â Â Â 5-4
1999-00Â Â Â 2-4Â Â Â 3-4Â Â Â 3-5Â Â Â 4-5
1998-99Â Â Â 4-2Â Â Â 4-3Â Â Â 4-4Â Â Â 4-5
1997-98Â Â Â 4-2Â Â Â 5-2Â Â Â 5-3Â Â Â 5-4
1996-97Â Â Â 2-4Â Â Â 3-4Â Â Â 3-5Â Â Â 3-6
High Wire Act
Creighton went 7-3 in conference road games this season. After a 94-76 win at St. John's on Dec. 17th, five of Creighton's last nine league road tilts were tied at some point in the last 3:02 of regulation. In one of the games that wasn't, Creighton won by three after Marquette missed a tying three-pointer in the final seconds.
   Creighton beat UConn 76-74 in overtime on Dec. 20th, as Damien Jefferson tied the game with 0.2 seconds left in regulation.
   Creighton won 67-65 at Providence on Jan. 2nd on Christian Bishop's dunk with 0.8 seconds left.
   Creighton lost 70-66 in overtime at Butler on Jan. 16th.
   On Jan. 27th at Seton Hall, Mitch Ballock's three-pointer with 37.8 seconds left broke an 81-all tie and helped Creighton to an 85-81 victory.
   On Jan. 30th at DePaul, Creighton trailed 60-59 before Denzel Mahoney made two free throws with 3:02 left to start a game-ending 10-2 run.
   In Creighton's 10 BIG EAST road games this season, Marcus Zegarowski averaged 15.0 points and 4.1 rebounds per game while shooting 40.1 percent from three-point range.
   Denzel Mahoney averaged 11.0 points per game and Damien Jefferson averaged 12.4 points, 6.7 rebounds and 1.8 steals per game.
   Mitch Ballock averaged 11.9 points per game and shooting 45.3 percent from downtown.
Give Me 10
The Feb. 24 win vs. DePaul was Creighton's 10th home win of the season. It's the 24th time in the last 25 seasons CU has done that.
   The only exception in that time came in 2014-15, when the Jays won nine times at home.
Bishop The Ultimate Chess Piece
Christian Bishop is a tad undersized to play the center position, but his versatility has made him a match-up nightmare for some opponents.
   For the year, Bishop shot 68.1 percent from the field, far ahead of the next best competitor in the BIG EAST (Nate Watson, 60.2 percent).
   In league play only, Bishop's 65.4 percent marksmanship easily outpaced St. John's Isaih Moore's 60.7 percent.
A Nice Problem To Have
Creighton continues to find ways to win when scoring 69 points or less. The Bluejays owned six wins this winter when scoring 69 point or less, a figure that exceeds its total number of wins (4) in that situation during the previous four years combined.
   This year was the first season since 2012-13 that Creighton won six games in the same season when scoring 69 points or less. It hasn't happened more than six times in a year since 2010-11 (8 times).
Release, Rotation, Splash, Repeat
Creighton has made at least one three-pointer in 913 straight games. The streak is the nation's 14th-longest active streak.
   Creighton's last game without a three-pointer came at Illinois State on Feb. 20, 1993, when the Jays were 0-for-5. Creighton's last win without making a three-point basket came on March 3, 1991 when the Jays went 0-for-2 from three-point range in a 71-66 win over Southern Illinois in the championship game of the MVC Tournament.
   Below is a list of the nation's longest active three-point streaks.
Longest Active 3-Point Streaks
   Rk.   Streak   School  Â
   1.   1,129   UNLV  Â
   2.   1,113   Duke  Â
   3.   1,076   Arkansas  Â
   4.   1,062   Western Kentucky  Â
   5.   1,051   East Tennessee State  Â
   6.   1,031   Oakland  Â
      1,031   Pacific  Â
   8.   1,023   Texas  Â
   9.   969   Marshall  Â
   10.   962   Baylor  Â
   11.   958   Princeton  Â
   12.   950   Gonzaga  Â
   13.   926   Long Island  Â
   14.   913   Creighton  Â
   15.   911   Mount St. Mary's  Â
   16.   899   Tennessee State  Â
Let It Fly
Creighton made 17-of-35 three-pointers on Jan. 27th at Seton Hall. The 17 three-pointers were tied for fifth-most in program history for a single game, and second-most ever in a road contest.
   Creighton started the night by making 8-of-9 three-point shots and would also hit 6-of-8 trifectas in the final 5:22.
Creighton's Most 3-Pointers, Game
   Rk.   3FG-3FGA   Opponent   Date
   1.   22-37   Coe   12-20-18
   2.   21-35   at #4 Villanova   01-20-14
   3.   20-30   Chattanooga   02-19-05
   4.   19-34   USC Upstate   12-20-17
   5.   17-33   #21 Marquette   01-09-19
      17-36   Georgetown   03-04-20
      17-35   at Seton Hall   01-27-21
   8.   16-30   Evansville   01-04-99
      16-27   Drake   01-08-13
      16-25   Chicago State   12-29-13
      16-26   vs. Ole Miss   11-21-16
      16-33   Alcorn State   11-12-17
      16-36   at Georgetown   01-06-18
      16-36   St. John's   01-09-21
No. 19 Bluejays
After starting the year ranked 11th in both the AP and Coaches polls, Creighton ascended into the top 10 for three weeks in the AP edition. CU finished the season 19th in the AP poll and 14th in the Coaches poll.
   The No. 19 AP ranking is 12 spots behind the best mark in program history, which was done on Jan. 16, 2017, March 9, 2020, March 16, 2020 and Jan. 4, 2021.
   This season is the sixth time that Creighton has been ranked in the year-end AP poll, joining 2002-03 (15th), 2011-12 (19th), 2012-13 (22nd), 2013-14 (16th) and 2019-20 (7th).
   This year marked the first time that Creighton has been ranked in every AP poll of the same season.
   Creighton is one of six teams that have been ranked in all 24 AP polls since Feb. 3, 2020, joining Gonzaga (95), Villanova (40), Baylor (37), Houston (26) and Iowa (26). The 24 straight weeks in the rankings is the longest stretch in program history, six more than the 17-week streak done from Feb. 27, 2012 - Feb. 4, 2013.
   This season is the eighth time that Creighton has been ranked in the year-end Coaches poll, joining 1973-74 (17th), 1974-75 (16th), 2002-03 (23rd), 2011-12 (21st), 2012-13 (21st), 2013-14 (20th) and 2019-20 (9th).
   Creighton is also one of just five programs to finish the season in the top-15 of the coaches poll each of the past two seasons, joining Baylor, Gonzaga, Florida State and Villanova.
   After being ranked 30th in the inaugural NET rankings that were released on Jan. 4th, Creighton was 26th in the final update of the regular-season on March 15th.
Firing On All Cylinders
Creighton continued to be highly regarded by KenPom.com, and finished the season 22nd. That includes the nation's No. 25 offense, and No. 32 defense.
   Creighton had not finished with a top-35 defense since 2006-07, and has not finished better than 30th since 2001-02.
   This season was the sixth different time in the last 10 seasons that Creighton has had a top-25 offense per KenPom.
Year   Off. Rating   Def. Rating   Team W-L
2010-11Â Â Â 66Â Â Â 174Â Â Â 23-16
2011-12Â Â Â 5Â Â Â 166Â Â Â 29-6
2012-13Â Â Â 5Â Â Â 66Â Â Â 28-8
2013-14Â Â Â 2Â Â Â 124Â Â Â 27-8
2014-15Â Â Â 59Â Â Â 138Â Â Â 14-19
2015-16Â Â Â 43Â Â Â 76Â Â Â 20-15
2016-17Â Â Â 32Â Â Â 46Â Â Â 25-10
2017-18Â Â Â 25Â Â Â 58Â Â Â 21-12
2018-19Â Â Â 47Â Â Â 83Â Â Â 20-15
2019-20Â Â Â 3Â Â Â 78Â Â Â 24-7
2020-21Â Â Â 25Â Â Â 32Â Â Â 22-9
Double-Double Duo
Creighton had a pair of players record a double-double in the Feb. 13 victory vs. Villanova as Christian Bishop (16 points, 10 rebounds) and Damien Jefferson (10 points, 10 rebounds) each did it.
   Bishop (11 points, 10 rebounds) and Jefferson (10 points, 10 rebounds) also accomplished the feat earlier this season in CU's Dec. 17 win at St. john's.
   Before Bishop and Jefferson (twice), the last Bluejay duo to record double-doubles in the same contest since Dec. 9, 2017, when both Martin Krampelj and Ronnie Harrell Jr. did it.
Moving On Up
Last year Damien Jefferson scored in double-figures in just 13-of-30 contests, and he finished the season averaging 9.4 points per game.
   This year, the senior forward scored in double-figures in 23-of-31 games and he upped his average to 11.9 points per contest.
   Jefferson pumped in a career-high 26 points on Jan. 20th vs. Providence, six more than his previous best.
Big Wins In The BIG EAST
Creighton never trailed in its 89-53 win over Seton Hall on Jan. 6th. The 36-point win was Creighton's second-largest ever in BIG EAST action.
   The 36-point loss tied for Seton Hall's third-largest ever in league play for the charter member of the BIG EAST, and was its largest league setback since falling 99-57 vs. UConn on Feb. 11, 2006.
Creighton's Largest BIG EAST Winning Margins
Margin   Score   Date
 41   at Creighton 100, St. John's 59   02/28/16
 36   at Creighton 89, Seton Hall 53   01/06/21
 35   Creighton 93, at DePaul 58   02/11/17
 29   at Creighton 93, DePaul 64   02/15/20
 28   at Creighton 88, Butler 60   01/14/14
 28   Creighton 68, at #4 Villanova 68   01/20/14
 25   at Creighton 82, DePaul 57   02/27/18
Major Success
Among teams in the leagues considered the "Power Five", plus the BIG EAST, Creighton has enjoyed almost more success than anyone else recently.
   Creighton's 46 victories since the start of the 2019-20 season trail only Baylor, Kansas6 and USC.
Best Records Since 2019-20
(Power 5 Conferences + BIG EAST)
Team   2019-20   2020-21   Total
Baylor   26-4   28-2   54-6
Kansas   28-3   21-9   49-12
USCÂ Â Â 22-9Â Â Â 25-8Â Â Â 47-17
Creighton   24-7   22-9   46-16
Oregon   24-7   21-7   45-14
Illinois   21-10   24-7   45-17
Arkansas   20-12   25-7   45-19
Florida State   26-5   18-7   44-12
Colorado   21-11   23-9   44-20
Zegarowski Earns National Honor
NCAA.com correspondent Andy Katz named Creighton guard Marcus Zegarowski as his National Player of the Week on Feb. 15th.
   The junior averaged 17.0 points, 4.5 rebounds and 4.5 assists as Creighton picked up double-digit wins vs. Georgetown and No. 5 Villanova.
   Zegarowski opened his week with nine points, six rebounds, and four assists as Creighton defeated Georgetown on the road, 63-48. He also had two of Creighton's school-record 19 steals in the triumph.
   Zegarowski finished his week with a season-high 25 points in Creighton's 86-70 victory vs. No. 5 Villanova and added five assists and three rebounds. He made 10-of-18 field goal attempts in the victory, and his 17 points in the first half matched the most by a Bluejay all season before intermission.
Big Deficits, No Big Deal
Creighton owns 23 victories since the start of the 2010-11 season after trailing by double-figures at some point, including three this season. Twelve of those 23 comebacks have come away from home.
   Creighton's comeback from 16 points down at Seton Hall on Jan. 27th was its largest since trailing by 18 vs. No. 18 Oklahoma on Nov. 19, 2014.
   In that Seton Hall game Creighton trailed 68-52 with 10:40 to play before rallying to win thanks to a 33-13 run. It was the first time that Creighton overcame a 10-point halftime deficit to win since trailing 35-24 vs. No. 18 Oklahoma on Nov. 19, 2014, and the first road win after trailing by 10 or more points at halftime since overcoming a 32-21 margin at half in a 65-59 win at Missouri State on Feb. 24, 2009.
   If you're curious, CU's largest comeback win since 2000 came on Jan. 28, 2006, when the Jays trailed 25-6 early before rallying to beat Wichita State.
CU's Double-Digit Comebacks Since 2010-11
Deficit   Opponent   Date
18   #18 Oklahoma   11/19/14
17   at San Diego State   11/30/11
16   at Evansville   02/16/13
16   at Seton Hall   01/27/21
14   Evansville   02/21/12
13   at Saint Joseph's   11/16/13
13   Xavier   01/12/14
13   #22 Xavier   12/23/20
12   Saint Joseph's   12/11/10
12   at DePaul   01/17/16
12   East Tennessee State   11/11/18
11   at Wichita State   12/31/11
11   Northern Iowa   01/10/12
11   vs. Alabama   03/16/12
11   vs. Ole Miss   11/21/16
11   vs. Connecticut   03/12/21
10Â Â Â UABÂ Â Â 11/14/12
10   vs. Drake   03/02/12
10   at Nebraska   12/07/14
10   South Dakota   12/09/14
10   St. John's   01/03/18
10   at DePaul   02/07/18
10   Bemidji State   02/13/18
Ballock Passes 1,300; Zegarowski Not Far Behind
Mitch Ballock finished with 1,304 career points after surpassing the 1,000 point mark on Nov. 29 vs. North Dakota State in CU's season-opener, which was also his 100th career game.
   Ballock entered last season's BIG EAST Tournament with 996 points and scored nine points in the first half vs. St. John's on March 12th, but those points were erased when the game was abandoned at halftime.
   Marcus Zegarowski became the 44th Bluejay in school history to surpass 1,000 career points on Jan. 20 vs. Providence when he scored 17 points. Zegarowski needed 75 games to reach the milestone. He owned 1,293 career points.
Games To 1,000 Points, Last 19 Bluejays
Name   CU Games to 1,000 pts.    Date
Marcus Zegarowski   75   01/20/21
Mitch Ballock   100   11/29/20
Ty-Shon Alexander   85   01/15/20
Khyri Thomas   94   02/10/18
Marcus Foster   54   01/17/18
Austin Chatman   138   03/11/15
Ethan Wragge   132   01/18/14
Gregory Echenique   101   03/24/13
Doug McDermott   57   01/15/12
Antoine Young   115   12/10/11
Kenny Lawson Jr.   108   11/21/10
P'Allen Stinnett   86   01/16/10
Dane Watts   115   01/22/08
Anthony Tolliver   124   03/16/07
Johnny Mathies   91   03/03/06
Nate Funk   92   02/28/05
Kyle Korver   81   01/30/02
Ben Walker   105   01/06/01
Ryan Sears   97   12/01/00
Rodney Buford   59   03/01/97
Most Career Points, Creighton History
   Rank   Pts.   Name   Years
   1.   3,150   Doug McDermott   2010-14
   2.   2,116   Rodney Buford   1995-99
   3.   2,110   Bob Harstad    1987-91
   4.   1,983   Chad Gallagher    1987-91
   5.   1,876   Bob Portman    1966-69
   6.   1,801   Kyle Korver   1999-03
   7.   1,754   Nate Funk   2002-07
   8.   1,682   Rick Apke    1974-78
   9.   1,661   Paul Silas   1961-64
   10.   1,654   Vernon Moore    1981-85
   11.   1,575   Benoit Benjamin    1982-85
   12.   1,526   John C. Johnson   1975-79
   13.   1,500   Kevin McKenna   1977-81
   14.   1,437   Eddie Cole   1951-55
   15.   1,369   Gene Harmon   1971-74
   16.   1,361   Duan Cole   1987-92
   17.   1,342   Antoine Young   2008-12
   18.   1,313   Kenny Lawson Jr.   2006-11
   19.   1,309   Ryan Sears   1997-01
   20.   1,304   Mitch Ballock   2017-Pres.
   21.   1,303   Elton Tuttle   1951-54
   22.   1,293   Marcus Zegarowski   2018-Pres.
   23.   1,292   Marcus Foster   2016-18
   24.   1,272   Bob Gibson   1954-57
   25.   1,267   Wally Anderzunas   1965-67, 1968-69
Are You Experienced?
Year after year, one common theme to success in college basketball is to have veteran players. This year's Creighton team is full of experienced players.
   CU's starting five featured two juniors and three seniors who combined for 20 years of college experience. They combined for 4,761 career points at Creighton, and 6,001 career points if you add in Mahoney and Jefferson's points at their previous stops.
   Off the bench, Alex O'Connell and Jacob Epperson are in their fourth college campaign, Antwann Jones in his third year and Shereef Mitchell in his second season. Of the regular Bluejay rotation, only Ryan Kalkbrenner is a freshman.
   On March 28th, Creighton's starting five (Mitch Ballock, Christian Bishop, Damien Jefferson, Denzel Mahoney and Marcus Zegarowski) was a collective 41,176 days old. By comparison, the starting line-up used by the Chicago Bulls in its first four games this season (Wendell Carter Jr., Zach Lavine, Lauri Markkanen, Coby White and Patrick Williams) was a combined 41,227 days old on March 28th.
High-Powered Offense
Creighton pumped in 93 or more points in six games this season, one of 10 teams in the country (with Iowa, Gonzaga, Baylor, The Citadel, Eastern Kentucky, Sam Houston State, Southern Utah, Oral Roberts and McNeese State) who can say that. Last year's BIG EAST champion squad only cracked the 93-point barrier three times all season.
   Creighton is 48-3 in since 2010-11 when scoring 93 points or more. The nation's only teams to score 93+ more than 51 times since 2010-11 are Gonzaga (73), North Carolina (69) and Belmont (52).
   By comparison, McDermott's teams scored 93+ points just once in his four seasons at Iowa State (96 on 11/22/09 vs. Mississippi Valley State), and also just once in five years at Northern Iowa (99 on 12/1/04 vs. Iowa State).
They Scored How Many?
Creighton put up 56 points in the first half on Jan. 9 vs. St. John's, its highest output before intermission in a league game since joining the BIG EAST.
   After a total of eight halves of 52 points or more in its first seven years in the league, Creighton scored 52 points or more in three different halves this BIG EAST season.
   Creighton's Highest Scoring BIG EAST Halves
   Points   Opponent (Half)   Date
   56   Xavier (2nd)   01/12/14
   56   St. John's (1st)   01/09/21
   54   at #4 Villanova (1st)   01/20/14
   54   Marquette (2nd)   01/21/17
   54   at DePaul (2nd)   02/11/17
   53   Butler (1st)   01/14/14
   53   St. John's (1st)   02/28/16
   53   #23 Seton Hall (1st)   12/28/17
   53   Marquette (1st)   02/17/18
   53   at St. John's (2nd)   12/17/20
   52   Seton Hall (2nd)   01/09/21
   51   #6 Villanova (1st)   02/16/14
   51   DePaul (2nd)   02/15/20
   50   #6 Villanova (1st)   02/16/14
   50   Seton Hall (1st)   12/28/16
   50   at Georgetown (2nd)   01/21/19
   50   DePaul (2nd)   03/09/19
Balance Is Big
All five Creighton starters averaged 9.9 points or more this season, and the Bluejays have had at least five men score in double-digits in seven contests overall.
   Creighton has won 20 games in a row when five or more players score 10 or more points.
   Nine different players have scored 10 or more points in a game this season, a list that doesn't include Jacob Epperson. Epperson did it four times as a Bluejay in 2017-18 or 2018-19.
   In the last 5:01 of play at UConn, Creighton had 12 points, with each starter scoring either two or three points.
   In league play, all five Bluejay starters averaged 10.6 points per game or more.
CHI Health Center Omaha Success
Creighton has played 308 regular and postseason contests at CHI Health Center Omaha all-time in the 18-year-old facility.
   The Bluejays own a 254-54 (.825) record all-time at the facility, and have never lost there on a Friday (21-0).
   Creighton's Nov. 25, 2017 win over SIU Edwardsville was the program's 200th at the facility, coming in its 242nd home game. CU's 100th win came on Nov. 17, 2010, a 63-58 win over Louisiana.
   Creighton has outscored its opponents 24,184-20,244 in games at CHI Health Center Omaha, an average margin of 12.79 points per game. Creighton has not trailed 85 different times.
   Creighton is also 29-33 all-time in the 62 games at the arena in which it's fallen behind by double-figures at any point, 7-11 when down by 10+ points at halftime in the facility, and 35-27 when trailing at halftime at CHI Health Center Omaha.
   Creighton is 157-36 (.813) at CHI Health Center Omaha since 2010-11 and hasn't trailed in 60 of those games. In that same span, CU owns an 87-6 home record vs. non-conference teams.
   Factor in a 17-0 home mark at the Omaha Civic Auditorium in 2002-03 and two wins at the Civic in the 2010 CIT, and the Bluejays are 273-54 (.835) at home since the start of the 2002-03 campaign.
Â
Big Ryan's Big Night
Freshman center Ryan Kalkbrenner had a season-high 15 points in just 16 minutes of work on Dec. 17 at St. John's, including four baskets in a three-minute span during the decisive 22-4 second half run.
   For the season, Kalkbrenner averaged 5.9 points, 3.5 rebounds and 1.2 blocked shots while playing just 13.6 minutes per game. Kalkbrenner ranked seventh nationally among freshmen with 38 blocked shots, and first in the BIG EAST among classmates.
   Creighton was 14-3 when he has a blocked shot (6-6 when he didn't), 20-6 when he scored a field goal (0-3 when he didn't) and 7-0 when he scored in double-figures (13-9 when he didn't).
   Kalkbrenner became CU's first true freshman since Benoit Benjamin (1982-83) to have a blocked shot in each of CU's first three games of the season.
Dame Time
Damien Jefferson came two assists shy of producing Creighton's first traditional triple-double when he posted 10 points, 10 rebounds and eight assists on Thursday at St. John's.
   His performance made him the only Creighton player in the last 34 seasons with at least 10 points, 10 rebounds and eight or more assists in the same game.
   Creighton has had only three triple-doubles in program history, but all three were of the points/rebounds/blocks variety by Benoit Benjamin.
   Jefferson was just the second Bluejay player with a game of at least eight points, rebounds and assists in the last 11 seasons. Khyri Thomas had 16 points, eight rebounds and eight assists vs. DePaul on Feb. 27, 2018.
   Here's a list of Creighton players with at least 7+ points, 7+ rebounds and 7+ assists in the same game since 1987-88.
7+ Point, 7+ Rebound, 7+ Assist Games, Since 1987-88
   Pts.   Reb.   Ast.   Name   Date
   16   9   7   Mike Amos   1/30/1993
   24   11   7   Rodney Buford   11/18/1998
   25   8   8   Ryan Sears   1/8/2000
   9   7   10   Grant Gibbs   12/19/2011
   12   10   7   Grant Gibbs   1/13/2012
   12   7   9   Austin Chatman   11/11/2013
   9   7   7   Austin Chatman   1/25/2014
   7   9   7   Khyri Thomas   12/9/2015
   16   8   7   Maurice Watson Jr.   1/26/2016
   14   12   7   Khyri Thomas   2/28/2017
   16   8   8   Khyri Thomas   2/27/2018
   10   10   8   Damien Jefferson   12/17/2020
3's Are Falling
Creighton was tied for seventh in the country with seven different games of 13 three-pointers this year. Among power conference teams, only Alabama did it more.
   Four players in the BIG EAST made more than 63 three-pointers this season, and three of them were Bluejays. Marcus Zegarowski led the way with 80, four more than Mitch Ballock's 76. Georgetown's Jahvon Blair was third with 66 while CU's Denzel Mahoney was fourth with 64.
O'Connell Makes Creighton Debut
A vote by the NCAA Division I Council on Dec. 16 made Alex O'Connell immediately eligible. He made his debut one day later at St. John's with six points, two rebounds a steal, and an assist in 12 minutes of action.
   A senior guard from Roswell, Ga., O'Connell had not played in Creighton's first six games this season while sitting out after an off-season transfer from Duke University. He had been awaiting a ruling on a waiver that Creighton had filed on his behalf with the NCAA.
   While at Duke, O'Connell appeared in 101 games, including 14 starts. He contributed 431 points and 182 rebounds for the Blue Devils with single-game highs of 20 points, seven rebounds and four steals.
   Though a senior, O'Connell will also be eligible to return to Creighton for the 2021-22 season as a result of a previous NCAA decision that indicated winter sport student-athletes who compete during 2020-21 in Division I will receive both an additional season of competition and an additional year in which to complete it.
   Creighton was 18-7 after O'Connell became eligible.
Preseason Acclaim
Junior guard Marcus Zegarowski was named Preseason BIG EAST Player of the Year on Oct. 28th. In addition, senior guard Mitch Ballock was also voted as a Preseason Second Team All-BIG EAST performer in the annual survey of league coaches.
   The Bluejays, along with Kansas, are one of six schools with a Watch List candidate for both the Bob Cousy and Jerry West Awards, joining Baylor (MaCio Teague & Jared Butler), Florida State (MJ Walker & Scottie Barnes), Gonzaga (Joel Ayayi & Jalen Suggs), Kansas (Ochai Agbaji & Marcus Garrett) and Villanova (Justin Moore & Collin Gillespie).
   Zegarowski is Creighton's second player ever named Preseason BIG EAST Player of the Year, joining Doug McDermott (2013-14). McDermott would go on to win BIG EAST Player of the Year honors, as well as 14 National Player of the Year accolades, at season's end.
   In addition, both men have been recognized among the best in the nation at their position. Zegarowski was one of 20 players on the Preseason Watch List for the Bob Cousy Point Guard of the Year Award, and Ballock one of 20 players on the Preseason Watch List for the Jerry West Shooting Guard of the Year Award.
Home Run
Since the start of the 2010-11 season, Creighton is averaging 81.30 points per home game (15,690 points in 193 home games), a figure that climbs to 85.14 points in non-conference home games (7,918 points in 93 home games).
   Creighton is 122-6 all-time at CHI Health Center Omaha when scoring 80 or points.
Jays Mourn Loss Of Two Greats
Two prominent members of the Creighton Basketball family passed away in the off-season, as Eddie Sutton died on May 23rd and Bob Gibson lost his battle with pancreatic cancer a few months later on October 2nd. Both men were 84.
   Sutton went 82-50 as Creighton's head coach and athletic director between 1969-74. His 806-329 overall mark in 37 years of coaching ranks 11th on the all-time Division I wins list. In April he was announced as part of the Class of 2020 that will be enshrined into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame -- part of a group that also contains Tim Duncan, Kevin Garnett and Kobe Bryant. However, COVID-19 has pushed that induction ceremony back to May 15, 2021.
   Gibson starred in both baseball and basketball with the Bluejays from 1954-57, finishing his college career third with 1,272 career points (he's currently 24th). He remains in the top-five in CU history in free throws made (418), free throw attempts (575) and scoring average (20.19 ppg.), and his No. 45 basketball jersey is retired. He would play a year with the Harlem Globetrotters before joining the St. Louis Cardinals organization full-time. Gibson is a member of the Hall of Fame's for Creighton Athletics (1968 induction), Missouri Valley Conference (2005) and St. Louis Cardinals (2014), and was honored with a spot on Major League Baseball's All-Century Team in 1999. Gibson was named the best athlete in state history by the Omaha World-Herald in both 2005 and 2015, one spot ahead of Gale Sayers. Tragically, Sayers died nine days before Gibson.
Preseason BIG EAST Poll
Creighton was picked second in the preseason BIG EAST Conference poll that was selected via a vote of league coaches.
   Villanova earned 9-of-11 first place votes to top the poll with 99 points, just ahead of Creighton's two first place votes and 91 overall points. Third in the poll was Providence (79), who was just ahead of UConn (69), Seton Hall (67) and Marquette (50).
   Rounding out the bottom half of the poll were Xavier (47) in seventh place, Butler (37), St. John's (33), DePaul (20) and Georgetown (13).
   Seton Hall edged Villanova by one point to be named league favorites for the first time since 1992-93, as both the Pirates and Wildcats garnered five first place votes.
   Xavier was third, with Marquette and Providence tying for fourth place. Georgetown was tabbed sixth, just ahead of Creighton, while Butler, St. John's and DePaul round out the poll.
   Creighton's Marcus Zegarowski was tabbed Preseason BIG EAST Player of the Year, and was joined on the Preseason All-BIG EAST team by Charlie Moore (DePaul), David Duke (Providence), Sandro Mamukelashvili (Seton Hall), Collin Gillespie (Villanova) and Jeremiah Robinson-Earl (Villanova).
   Creighton has met or exceeded its preseason BIG EAST prognostication every year since joining the league, as seen below:
Creighton's BIG EAST Preseason Poll History
Year    Preseason    Actual    Preseason All-BIG EAST
2013-14    3rd    2nd    Doug McDermott (1st)
2014-15    9th    T-9th    -
2015-16    9th    6th    -
2016-17    3rd    T-3rd    Maurice Watson Jr. (1st); Marcus Foster (HM)
2017-18    5th    T-3rd    Marcus Foster (1st); Khyri Thomas (HM)
2018-19    9th    T-3rd    Martin Krampelj (HM)
2019-20    7th    T-1st   Ty-Shon Alexander (1st)
2020-21    2nd    2nd   Marcus Zegarowski (1st); Mitch Ballock (2nd)
#ProJays
Creighton had five players appear in an NBA game this season,  Doug McDermott (Indiana Pacers), Ty-Shon Alexander (Phoenix Suns) and Justin Patton (Houston Rockets), Khyri Thomas (Houston Rockets), Anthony Tolliver (Philadelphia 76ers).
   Including 2020-21, Creighton has now had an NBA player in 37 of the last 38 years.
   McDermott is in his seventh season in the NBA, and third with the Indiana Pacers. He averaged 10.3 points per game last season and is the only player in the NBA to rank in the top-20 in three-point percentage each of the previous three seasons. This year he averaged career-high 13.6 points and 3.3 rebounds per game.
   Alexander bypassed his senior season to turn pro. After going undrafted, he signed a two-way contract with the Phoenix Suns. He made his NBA debut on December 27th and had nine points, 10 rebounds and six assists in 15 games played.
   Patton was in the G-League with the Westchester Knicks before signing a 2-way contract and being called up by the Houston Rockets. He made his first career NBA start on Feb. 28th and scored a then-career-high 10 points. He averaged 5.4 points and 3.8 rebounds per game before getting cut on April 3rd.
   Tolliver signed a 10-day contract with the 76ers on April 12th. In 11 games with Philadelphia, he contributed 17 points and 10 rebounds.
   Thomas was signed by the Rockets on May 6th with just over two weeks left in the season. He averaged 16.4 points, 5.0 assists, 3.6 rebounds, 1.8 steals and 1.2 blocked shots per season and signed a multi-year deal with the Rockets after just four games.
McDermott Ranks Second On CU Wins List
Greg McDermott has 252 victories at Creighton, good for second place on CU's all-time wins list.
   McDermott's .668 winning percentage is Creighton's best since Arthur A. Schabinger's .714 win rate more 80 years ago.
   Below is a list of the most victorious Creighton coaches in program history.
Most Coaching Wins, Creighton History
Rk.   W-L   Name   Years
1.   327-176   Dana Altman   1994-2010
2.   252-125   Greg McDermott   2010-Pres.
3.   165-66   Arthur A. Schabinger    1922-1935
4.   138-118   John J. "Red" McManus    1959-1969
5.   130-64   Tom Apke   1974-1981
Triple Trouble
During Creighton's current streak of 913 straight games with a three-pointer, the Jays have drained 7,221 trifectas, an average of 7.91 treys per game.
   That's not surprising since during the streak, Creighton has made exactly 7 three-pointers 137 times, more than any figure.
   Only four times in the streak has Creighton made just one three-pointer, but on 260 occasions the Bluejays have made 10 or more trifectas, including three games of 20 or more.
   Creighton has also made at least one three-pointer before halftime in 284 consecutive contests (since 0-7 at Drake on 1/23/13).
   Since the start of the 2019-20 season, the Bluejays are 36-6 when making eight or more three-pointers, compared to an 8-9 mark when making seven treys or fewer.
Team 3FG Made During Creighton's 3-Point Streak
1:   4 times   2: 15 times   3: 31 times
4:   71 times   5:  97 times   6: 95 times
7:  137 times   8:  115 times   9: 88 times
10: 76 times   11: 52 times   12: 49 times
13: 44 times   14: 18 times   15: 7 times
16: 7 times   17: 3 times   19: 1 time
20: 1 time   21: 1 time   22: 1 time
Among The Nation's Best
Below is where Creighton ranks nationally since the start of the 2010-11 season, per Basketball-Reference.com.
2010-11 through 2020-21
Category   CU Stat   CU Rank  Â
3FG Percentage   .383   2nd  Â
3FG Made   3,389   2nd  Â
FG Percentage   .480   3rd  Â
Assists   6,114   5th
FG Made   10,344   8th
Wins   253   27th
Winning Percentage   .669   34th
Getting Votes A Good Sign
Creighton was ranked 11th in the Associated Press preseason poll.
   It's the sixth time that Creighton has picked up votes in the preseason poll since 2010-11. Five times when that happened, the Bluejays would finish top three in the league, reach the finals of the conference tournament, and play in the NCAA Tournament. Last year's team shared the BIG EAST title before the Conference and NCAA Tournaments were canceled.
AP Preseason Poll Votes Since 2010-11
Year   AP Preseason Rank   League Finish   NCAA's?
2011-12   34th   2nd, MVC   Yes
2012-13   16th   1st, MVC   Yes
2013-14   27th   2nd, BIG EAST   Yes
2016-17   22nd   T-3rd, BIG EAST   Yes
2019-20   40th   T-1st; BIG EAST    No Tourney
2020-21   11th   2nd, BIG EAST   Yes
What Does #11 Mean?
Creighton was ranked 11th in the preseason Associated Press poll. Below is a listing of how teams ranked 11th in the preseason have done since 1999-2000.
Year   School   Year-End Rank*   NCAA's (Wins)
2020-21:   Creighton   19   Yes (2)
2019-20:   Virginia   16   Tourney Canceled
2018-19:    Kansas State   15   Yes (0)
2017-18:    West Virginia   14   Yes (2)
2016-17:    Indiana   NR   No (0)
2015-16:    Gonzaga   21   Yes (2)
2014-15:    Wichita State   14   Yes (2)
2013-14:    Ohio State   22   Yes (0)
2012-13:    North Carolina   NR   Yes (1)
2011-12:    Memphis   NR   Yes (0)
2010-11:    Kentucky   11   Yes (4)
2009-10:    Butler   11   Yes (5)
2008-09:    Purdue   17   Yes (2)
2007-08:    Marquette   25   Yes (1)
2006-07:    Alabama   NR   No (0)
2005-06:   Boston College   7   Yes (2)
2004-05:   Duke   3   Yes (2)
2003-04:   Kentucky   2   Yes (1)
2002-03:   Oregon   NR   Yes (0)
2001-02:   Virginia   NR   No (0)
2000-01:   Florida   8   Yes (1)
1999-00:   Kansas   NR   Yes (1)
*based on final poll before NCAA Tournament
Torn ACL's End Two Seasons Early
Creighton played without Rati Andronikashvili and Modestas Kancleris during the 2020-21 season after both men tore the anterior cruciate ligaments in their left knee three days apart during practices in early November.
   Andronikashvili was injured on Nov. 1, with Kancleris three days last on Nov. 4. The two men, who are roommates, hail from the countries of Georgia and Lithuania, respectively.
Players Mentioned
Creighton Men's Basketball vs. Iowa State. Press Conference - 10/17/25
Tuesday, October 14
Creighton Men's Basketball Availability - 9/24/25
Wednesday, September 24
Meet the Jays - MBB Blake Harper
Friday, August 15
Meet the Jays - MBB Austin Swartz
Friday, August 15