Ryan Hawkins and Creighotn face Butler on Tuesday
Photo by: Marc Lebryk-USA TODAY Sports
Men's Basketball Returns Home on Tuesday vs. Butler
2/6/2022 3:13:00 PM | Men's Basketball
Bluejays have won last six appearances on CBS Sports Network
Game #22: Butler Bulldogs at Creighton Bluejays
Tuesday, Feb. 8, 2022 • 8:00 p.m.
CHI Health Center Omaha (17,352) • Omaha, Neb.
Radio: KOZN 1620 AM; KOOO 101.9 FM; 1620thezone.com;Â XM 381; SiriusXM app 971
Television: CBS Sports Network (Andrew Catalon, Steve Lappas, Jenny Dell)
Series History: Creighton leads, 14-11
Last Meeting: Butler 72, Creighton 55 on Jan. 26, 2022 in Indianapolis, Ind.
LIVE VIDEO | LIVE AUDIO | LIVE STATS | CU NOTES (PDF) | BU NOTES (PDF)
Next Game
Creighton (13-8, 5-5 BIG EAST) seeks revenge from a loss against Butler (11-12, 4-8 BIG EAST) less than two weeks ago in a rematch on Tuesday, Feb. 8th.
   Tip-off on First National Bank Court at CHI Health Center Omaha (17,352) is scheduled for 8 p.m.
Radio Broadcast Information
KOZN (1620 AM) will broadcast all Creighton men's basketball games during the 2021-22 season. KOOO (101.9 FM) also broadcasts all home games.
   John Bishop and former Bluejay Taylor Stormberg will call the action.
   The audio is also webcast live at www.1620thezone.com and can be heard on channel 971 of the Sirius/XM app or XM channel 381.
Broadcast Information
Tuesday's game will be called by Andrew Catalon, Steve Lappas and Jenny Dell, and be televised on CBS Sports Network.
   The game will also be video webcast online at https://www.cbssports.com/cbs-sports-network/.
COVID-19 Precautions at CU Athletic Events
Creighton University is requiring face coverings to be worn in all indoor spaces on its campuses and in all athletic venues, including CHI Health Center Omaha. These requirements will continue through March 4th, at which time the University will reassess conditions.
Live Stats Information
All of Creighton's games this season will have free live stats. Visit www.gocreighton.com and click on the small bar graph icon on the scoreboard at the top of the page for the event of your choosing.
   Home games can also be followed by those who have mobile devices with internet capability at www.gocreightonstats.com.
Scouting Creighton
Creighton is 13-8 this season, including wins over No. 9 Villanova (79-59), No. 17 UConn (59-55) and No. 24 BYU (83-71). The Bluejays are 5-5 in league play and 3-1 in BIG EAST home games.
   The Bluejays return seven lettermen but no starters from last year's team that finished 22-9 overall, runner-up in the BIG EAST, and reached the program's first Sweet 16 since 1974.
   Creighton has four players averaging at least 11.4 points per game, including the trio of Ryan Hawkins (12.6 ppg., 7.2 rpg.), Ryan Nembhard (11.5 ppg., 4.1 apg.) and Ryan Kalkbrenner (11.4 ppg., 7.0 rpg., 2.9 bpg.).
   Alex O'Connell (12.4 ppg., 5.6 rpg.) had a career-high 22 points on Jan. 15 at Xavier, then outdid himself and scored 28 points in a Jan. 19 win vs. St. John's.
   More than 40.9 percent of Creighton's points this season have come from freshmen, who composed much of the team's top-10 recruiting class.
   Creighton averages 68.5 points per game while allowing 66.1 per game. CU shoots 45.1 percent from the floor, 30.5 percent from deep and 72.8 percent at the line. The Jays are +3.5 on the glass but have also turned the ball over an average of 14.7 times per game.
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Scouting Butler
Butler is 11-12 this season and 4-8 in BIG EAST play. The Bulldogs have lost their last four road games in league play.
   Chuck Harris leads a balanced effort with 10.8 points per game, just ahead of Jayden Taylor (8.9 ppg.), Bryce Golden (8.8 ppg.), Bo Hodges (8.4 ppg.), Bryce Nze (8.2 ppg., 5.9 rpg.) and Jair Bolden (7.7 ppg.).
   Fifth-year senior Aaron Thompson (7.8 ppg., 4.1 apg.) also returns to man the point guard position and ranks as one of the league's top defenders.
   The Bulldogs average 62.8 points per game while shooting 41.9 percent from the field, 31.3 percent from three-point range and 70.1 percent at the line. BU surrenders 64.7 points per game and forces 12.0 turnovers per contest.
The Series With Butler
Creighton is 14-11 all-time vs. Butler in a series that dates to a 27-22 Bluejay win in 1933. The home team has won the last nine meetings not played on a neutral site.
   Creighton is 9-2 all-time in Omaha against the Bulldogs, including a 7-1 mark since the schools became BIG EAST rivals. Each the last five games played in Omaha have been double-digit Bluejay victories.
   Greg McDermott is 10-10 in his career vs. Butler, including a 10-8 mark on the Creighton sideline. He is 5-5 against LaVall Jordan, with the home team winning each time (except one neutral meeting).
   Since joining the BIG EAST, Creighton is 9-1 when scoring 72 or more points against the Bulldogs and 1-7 when scoring 71 points or less.
   CU walloped the Bulldogs 93-73 last March 6 in Omaha and again 87-56 five days later at the BIG EAST Tournament, but Butler won this year's initial meeting on Jan. 26 in Indy by a 72-55 count.
The Creighton Coaches
Greg McDermott (Northern Iowa, 1988) owns a 266-133 record in his 12th season with the Bluejays. He owns a career mark of 546-328 in his 28th season, and is 415-264 in his 21st Division I campaign.
   McDermott led Creighton to its first BIG EAST regular-season title in 2019-20, taking a Bluejay team that was picked seventh in the league's preseason poll and ending the year ranked seventh nationally. The Cascade, Iowa native then coached Creighton to its first Sweet 16 since 1974 in 2020-21 and to a share of its first regular-season BIG EAST title in 2019-20.
   McDermott has previously been a head coach at Iowa State (2006-10), Northern Iowa (2001-06), North Dakota State (2000-01) and Wayne State (1994-2000).
   He is assisted by Alan Huss, Ryan Miller and Jalen Courtney-Williams.
With A Win...
- Teams with Ryan Hawkins would improve to 173-16 at the college level, and 98-11 in league play.
- Creighton would improve to 8-3 at home this season, including a 4-1 mark in conference play.
- Creighton will extend its stretch of being .500 or better in league play to 29 games, the BIG EAST's only active streak longer than 12.
- Creighton would avoid being swept by Butler for the first time since 2014-15.
CBS Sports Network History
Since joining the BIG EAST, Creighton is 18-14 on CBS Sports Network and brings a six-game winning streak on the network into Tuesday nigh's game.
   The Bluejays are 1-0 on the station this winter, with a Feb. 17 game at DePaul also scheduled.
McDermott's 400th Game at Creighton
Greg McDermott will coach in his 400th game on the Creighton sideline on Tuesday vs. Butler.
   He enters the night with a 266-133 record.
   Only one previous person in program history has served as head men's basketball coach for 400 games, with that being McDermott's predecessor Dana Altman.
   Altman finished his CU career in 2010 with a 327-176 record, and owned a 260-140 mark after 400 games with the Bluejays.
   Here's a look at Altman and McDermott per each 50 games at Creighton:
Game # at CUÂ Â Â Altman W-LÂ Â Â McDermott W-L
50Â Â Â 20-30Â Â Â 33-17
100Â Â Â 45-55Â Â Â 72-28
150Â Â Â 82-68Â Â Â 112-38
200Â Â Â 116-84Â Â Â 135-65
250Â Â Â 155-95Â Â Â 168-82
300Â Â Â 194-106Â Â Â 198-102
350Â Â Â 226-124Â Â Â 234-116
400Â Â Â 260-140Â Â Â 266-133 so far
450Â Â Â 294-156Â Â Â --
500Â Â Â 325-175Â Â Â --
Lapping The Field
Creighton's victory last Tuesday at No. 17 UConn was Greg McDermott's 88th career win in BIG EAST play. Those 88 wins rank 13th in league history, breaking a tie he had held with Steve Lappas.
   Here's the top-15, ranked by wins:
Name   W-L   Pct.
Jim Boeheim   366-192   .656
Jim Calhoun   274-162   .628
Jay Wright   238-120   .665
John Thompson Jr.   198-110   .643
Mike Brey   136-87   .610
John Thompson IIIÂ Â Â 131-97Â Â Â .575
Lou Carnesecca   127-69   .648
Jamie Dixon   115-57   .669
Rick Pitino   111-60   .649
Rollie Massimino   110-80   .579
Ed Cooley   102-90   .531
Kevin Willard   99-111   .471
Greg McDermott   88-68   .564
Steve Lappas   87-71   .551
P.J. Carlesimo   77-120   .391
BIG EAST Partners With Black Fives Foundation
During the month of February, the BIG EAST Conference and Creighton Athletics will celebrate Black History Month by partnering with the Black Fives Foundation, a nonprofit public charity whose mission is to research, preserve, showcase, teach, and honor the pre-NBA history of African Americans in basketball, to host 22 games honoring Black athletes, coaches, and communities who played a critical part in America's basketball history.
    After basketball was invented in 1891, teams were often called "fives," for their five starting players. The sport, like society, was racially segregated, and all-Black squads were called "Black fives." From 1904, when basketball was first introduced to African Americans on a wide scale organized basis, through the racial integration of all-White professional leagues in the 1940's, dozens of Black fives emerged and thrived while their skill, athleticism, and innovative styles of play helped shape and popularize the game to know and love today.
   Black Fives flourished on the amateur, semi-professional and professional levels in cities like New York City, Washington, D.C., Philadelphia, and Chicago, as well as in other locations with substantial African American populations. The men and women of the Black Fives Era opened doors for generations of African American players and coaches while staging culturally rich, socially meaningful events that strengthened and inspired Black communities in the face of Jim Crow oppression.
    For 22 games (Including Tuesday), the BIG EAST Men's and Women's Basketball Teams will be wearing the name and logo of a Black Fives Team to honor these pioneers. Coaches will wear a "Make History Now" pin to draw awareness to the Foundation's mission, and fans will be educated through videos and other game time promotions on the relevance and importance of the Black Fives.
   This is the first time that basketball programs across an entire athletic conference (either collegiate or professional) have come together to honor the Black Fives and showcase the impact these pioneering teams had on the sport.
More About The Cudahy Rex
Creighton's warm-ups on Tuesday will once again pay homage to the Cudahy Rex, a team that was established in 1930.
   During the 1930s and 40s, the Omaha-based Cudahy Packing Company was among the so-called "big four" of meatpackers, including Armour, Swift, and Wilson.
   Cudahy operated a large packing plant in South Omaha that produced hams, bacon, lard, beef, and lamb, eventually becoming the "biggest employer of Negro labor" in the city.
   By the 1930s, Omaha had the largest population of African Americans among Western cities, second only to Los Angeles.
   In 1930, the company organized an all-Black basketball team comprised of its own African American employees known as Cudahy Rex, named after the company's popular brand of cooking lard.
   "No other word except 'flashy' can describe their two-toned satin sweat jackets," the Grand Island Herald wrote in 1936. But they were no flash in the pan. Its players were former star athletes from the city's predominantly Black high schools.
   In addition to competing for an annual plant-wide basketball championship, Cudahy Rex also played throughout the Omaha region and in local Urban League and YMCA open tournaments. During the 1936-37 season, the Rex team was directed by Creighton University trainer Otto Williams, according to the Omaha Evening Bee-News.
   The existence of the Cudahy Rex team was an important step by the company during this time because African Americans in Omaha could be arrested, jailed, and fined merely for having "no visible means of support," then forced to work off their fines laboring for the city.
   The company's president, Ed Cudahy, Jr., was known for his progressive views and in his 1938 letter to employees openly asked why, with all the country's "wealth, comforts and conveniences of life," had America "not long since conquered the depression and why millions of our workers are unemployed."
Best In Class
Seniors Ryan Hawkins (264 points) and Alex O'Connell (261 points) are atop the Bluejay leaderboard when it comes to points scored this season.
   No Bluejay senior has led the team in scoring since 2017-18 (Marcus Foster), and the last CU's top two scorers were seniors was 2013-14 (Doug McDermott & Ethan Wragge).
   On the other end of the spectrum, freshman Ryan Nembhard leads the Bluejays with 26 steals so far this season. CU hasn't had its steals leader be a freshman since P'Allen Stinnett in 2007-08.
Leading Men
Creighton has had a different leading scorer in each of its last five games.
   The streak started with Ryan Kalkbrenner's 18 in a win vs. DePaul before Arthur Kaluma finished with 18 at Butler. Ryan Nembhard poured in a season-high 23 points vs. No. 21 Xavier on Jan. 29 and Ryan Hawkins followed with 23 big ones in a win at No. 17 UConn. Most recently, Alex O'Connell had 12 points at Seton Hall on Friday.
   Creighton has not had a uniquely different outright leading scorer in six straight games at any point in the last 35 seasons.
   Also notable? Creighton has played 30 straight games where its leading scorer held the outright team lead since Denzel Mahoney, Christian Bishop and Marcus Zegarowski all had 13 points in a 77-53 win vs. DePaul on Feb. 24, 2021.
.500 Or Better
Currently 5-5 in the BIG EAST, Creighton owned a winning percentage of .500 or better at the midway point in league play for the 24th time in the past 26 seasons.
   Here's how Creighton's teams have fared in the various halves of the MVC/BIG EAST season since 1995-96.
Year   Midway Thru League Play   League
2021-22Â Â Â 5-5Â Â Â BIG EAST
2020-21Â Â Â 7-3Â Â Â BIG EAST
2019-20Â Â Â 6-3 Â Â Â BIG EAST
2018-19Â Â Â 4-5Â Â Â BIG EAST
2017-18Â Â Â 6-3Â Â Â BIG EAST
2016-17Â Â Â 6-3Â Â Â BIG EAST
2015-16Â Â Â 5-4Â Â Â BIG EAST
2014-15Â Â Â 1-8Â Â Â BIG EAST
2013-14Â Â Â 8-1Â Â Â BIG EAST
2012-13Â Â Â 7-2Â Â Â Missouri Valley
2011-12Â Â Â 8-1Â Â Â Missouri Valley
2010-11Â Â Â 5-4Â Â Â Missouri Valley
2009-10Â Â Â 5-4Â Â Â Missouri Valley
2008-09Â Â Â 5-4Â Â Â Missouri Valley
2007-08Â Â Â 5-4Â Â Â Missouri Valley
2006-07Â Â Â 6-3Â Â Â Missouri Valley
2005-06Â Â Â 7-2Â Â Â Missouri Valley
2004-05Â Â Â 5-4Â Â Â Missouri Valley
2003-04Â Â Â 7-2Â Â Â Missouri Valley
2002-03Â Â Â 8-1Â Â Â Missouri Valley
2001-02Â Â Â 8-1Â Â Â Missouri Valley
2000-01Â Â Â 5-4Â Â Â Missouri Valley
1999-00Â Â Â 5-4Â Â Â Missouri Valley
1998-99Â Â Â 6-3Â Â Â Missouri Valley
1997-98Â Â Â 5-4Â Â Â Missouri Valley
1996-97Â Â Â 5-4Â Â Â Missouri Valley
1995-96Â Â Â 4-5Â Â Â Missouri Valley
Total   154-91 (.629)
Give Me Five
Per Basketball-Reference.com, Creighton is one of nine schools to have used the same starting five in every game this season
   Creighton is joined by Gonzaga, Purdue Fort Wayne, Murray State, North Texas, San Francisco, Syracuse, Toledo and Virginia Tech.
   Of those programs, Creighton is the only one who's line-up includes two freshmen.
   This season marks the third time in Greg McDermott's 12 seasons that the Bluejays have utilized the same starting five for the first 21 games of the season. CU opened the 2012-13 campaign starting Doug McDermott, Gregory Echenique, Grant Gibbs, Jahenns Manigat and Austin Chatman while the 2011-12 team started Echenique, Gibbs, Manigat, Doug McDermott and Antoine Young.
Stepping It Up
Ryan Hawkins has averaged 15.9 points and 8.1 rebounds per game in seven contests against ranked teams, shooting 50.6 percent from the field, 45.9 percent from three-point range and 94.1 percent at the line.
   By comparison, Hawkins averages 10.9 points and 6.7 rebounds against unranked foes, shooting 38.7 percent from the field, 32.1 percent from downtown and 77.8 percent from the stripe.
Clutch When It Counts
In last Tuesday's win at UConn, all 27 points after halftime were scored by Trey Alexander (11), Ryan Hawkins (10) or Alex O'Connell (6).
   Those three men are also CU's top scorers after halftime in league play, with each man scoring between 56-67 points.
   For the season in BIG EAST play, Alexander has scored 14 points in the first half compared to 56 in the second half. The freshman is also shooting a team-best 58.1 percent from the floor after the break in those contests.
They Are Called Free Throws, After All
After shooting a combined 54-for-65 (83.1 percent)from the line over the last five games, Creighton has climbed to 72.8 percent shooting at the free throw line for the season (129th nationally). That's a significant improvement over last year's team that ranked 322nd nationally with 64.0 percent marksmanship at the stripe.
   The last five games mark the first time that Creighton has shot 80 percent or better at the line in five straight games since an eight-game stretch from Jan. 6-Feb. 1, 2018.
   It's also the first time since Jan. 6-23, 2018 that Creighton has missed four free throws or less in eight straight games. CU hasn't done that in nine consecutive contests in more than 40 years.
   Individually, Alex O'Connell is shooting 88.9 percent and has sunk 13 straight free throws, Ryan Kalkbrenner has made 16 of his last 17 attempts and Ryan Hawkins has drained his last 15 tries.
Shortest Month Also The Busiest
Creighton is scheduled to play nine games in the shortest month of the year, February.
   If everything takes place as planned, it'd be CU's first month with nine games since January of 2017, when the Bluejays went 7-2.
   The last time Creighton played nine games during the month of February came in 2009. That Bluejay squad went 9-0 in those games, winning by an average of 11.67 points per game, en route to a Missouri Valley Conference regular-season title.
   Creighton is 1-1 so far in February.
Run It Back
Last year's Creighton team finished second in the BIG EAST and went on to reach the program's first Sweet 16 since 1974.
   Through 10 league games this season, Creighton has had the exact same result as it did a year ago against the same opponent/site in every game but two (home vs. Xavier and at Seton Hall).
   If that trend continues to hold true, Creighton will win both games this week.
Site/School   2020-21   2021-22
Villanova   CU 86-70   CU 79-59
at Marquette   CU 71-68   CU 75-69 (2OT)
at Villanova   VU 72-60   VU 75-41
at Xavier   XU 77-69   XU 80-73
St. John's   CU 97-79   CU 87-64
DePaul   CU 77-53   CU 60-47
at Butler   BU 70-66 (OT)   BU 72-55
Xavier   CU 66-61   XU 74-64
at UConn   CU 76-74 (OT)   CU 59-55
at Seton Hall   CU 83-81   SHU 74-55
Butler   CU 93-73   Tuesday
at Georgetown   CU 63-48   Saturday
All Ball
Ryan Kalkbrenner ranks third in the BIG EAST and 14th nationally with 2.90 blocked shots per game, a figure that ranks as the best by a Bluejay since Benoit Benjamin averaged 5.06 blocks per game in 1984-85.
   Though he's got an uphill climb to catch Big Ben, Kalkbrenner is still on track to become the first Bluejay to average more than 2.00 blocks per game since Chad Gallagher (2.19) in 1990-91.
   Kalkbrenner's 61 swats are the second-most in school history by a sophomore, but still far behind Benjamin's 157 in 1983-84. No Bluejay of any class has had more than 62 blocked shots in a season since Gallagher in 1990-91 (70).
   Of Kalkbrenner's 61 blocked shots this year, only 12 have gone out of bounds, whereas Creighton has rebounded 32 of the rejections.
   Making the 7-foot-1 sophomore's accomplishments all the more impressive is that the big man owns 61 blocks but has been called for just 25 fouls. Through games of Feb. 5, that made him the nation's only player with 60 or more blocked shots and 31 personal fouls or less.
   Kalkbrenner owns 99 career blocked shots. He ranks ninth in Creighton history in that category and is in position to become the third-fastest Bluejay to reach 100 blocks as he enters his 53rd career game.
Most Career Blocked Shots (Since 1979-80)
   Blk.   Name   Years
   411   Benoit Benjamin   1982-85
   183   Chad Gallagher   1987-91
   174   Gregory Echenique   2010-13
   153   Kenny Lawson Jr.   2006-11
   138   Brody Deren   2001-04
   136   Anthony Tolliver   2003-07
   109   Doug Swenson   1997-99
   104   Joe Dabbert   2000-04
   99   Ryan Kalkbrenner   2020-Present
   82   Christian Bishop   2018-21
Most Blocked Shots, Season (Since 1979-80)
   Blk.   Name   Years
   162   Benoit Benjamin (Jr.)   1984-85
   157   Benoit Benjamin (So.)   1983-84
   92   Benoit Benjamin (Fr.)   1982-83
   70   Chad Gallagher (Sr.)   1990-91
   62   Chad Gallagher (Jr.)   1989-90
   62   Gregory Echenique (Sr.)   2012-13
   61   Ryan Kalkbrenner (So.)   2021-22
   57   Doug Swenson (Jr.)   1997-98
   57   Anthony Tolliver (Sr.)   2006-07
   57   Gregory Echenique (Jr.)   2011-12
   56   Brody Deren (Jr.)   2002-03
   56   Kenny Lawson Jr. (So.)   2008-09
Fewest Games to 100 Career Blocks
Games   Name   Date, Opponent
31   Benoit Benjamin   12/6/83 vs. Rockhurst
47   Doug Swenson   1/30/99 at Northern Iowa
57   Gregory Echenique   2/14/12 at Southern Illinois
64   Brody Deren   3/9/03 vs. Wichita State
84   Kenny Lawson Jr.   1/3/10 at Evansville
91   Chad Gallagher   2/19/90 at Drake
105   Anthony Tolliver   1/6/07 at Evansville
121   Joe Dabbert   2/18/04 vs. Indiana State
SWAT Team
Ryan Kalkbrenner owns a blocked shot in each of Creighton's last 19 games, including multiple rejections in all but three of those contests.
   Kalkbrenner is the first Bluejay with a swat in 19 straight games or longer since Benoit Benjamin began a streak of 28 consecutive contests with a swat on Dec. 14, 1984, a streak that only ended when he left early for the NBA Draft.
You've Been Blocked!
Ryan Kalkbrenner had five blocked shots on both Nov. 22 vs. Southern Illinois and Nov. 27 vs. SIUE. Just how rare is that? In Greg McDermott's 12 years on the Creighton sideline, the only Bluejay with multiple games of 5+ blocks in the same season had been Gregory Echenique, who did it in 2010-11 (2x) as well as 2012-13 (4x).
   Kalkbrenner owns seven different games this season with five blocks or more, with three of those coming against top-25 foes (BYU, Villanova, Xavier).
   Kalkbrenner became the first Bluejay with five swats in consecutive games since Benoit Benjamin did it in six straight games from Jan. 27-Feb. 14, 1985. Benjamin had a streak of 7, 12, 6, 5, 5 and 6 rejections during that stretch.
   Benjamin set MVC records that still stand with 411 career blocks and 162 rejections in 1984-85.
Block Party
After owning seven or more blocked shots in a game just nine times in Greg McDermott's first 11 seasons on the Bluejay sideline, Creighton has eight contests this winter with at least seven swats.
   Creighton is 11-6 all-time under McDermott when blocking seven or more shots, and the six losses have come by a combined 34 points.
   Creighton's 4.90 blocked shots per game as a team this winter is its best figure since averaging 6.03 blocks per game in 1984-85.
   Creighton is 7-3 this season when blocking six shots or more.
Top 25 Success
A 79-59 win vs. No. 9 Villanova coupled with an 83-71 win vs. No. 24 BYU means Creighton owns a pair double-digit wins over top-25 competition this season, something only eight other schools can also claim. Gonzaga, Marquette and Villanova have done it three times while Arizona, Kentucky, Iowa State, Oklahoma and Tennessee have also done it twice.
   The Bluejays have now beaten multiple top-25 foes each of the last seven seasons (2015-16 to 2021-22), something only Baylor, Gonzaga, Kansas, Michigan State, Purdue, Texas Tech and Villanova can also claim. Four other schools have beaten multiple top-25 foes in each of the previous six seasons --  Florida State (1), Michigan, Penn State and West Virginia (1) but are still seeking two top-25 wins this winter.
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
   3   2021-22   #9 Villanova, #17 UConn, #24 BYU
   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
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   27-39
vs. Top 10 Teams   5-31   11-17
vs. Top 10 on Road   1-28   4-9
vs. Top 25 on Road   2-63   9-18
Ranking News & Notes
- Creighton is 27-39 under Greg McDermott against nationally-ranked teams, 20 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's 27 top-25 wins since McDermott took over in 2010 are tied for 38th-most nationally with UCLA and more than schools like Arizona (26), Maryland (22), LSU (16), Auburn (16), Houston (14), Nebraska (14), Wichita State (14), USC (10), Memphis (9) and Saint Mary's (6) in that time.
- Creighton has beaten at least one ranked team in each of the last eight seasons (including 2021-22), and multiple ranked foes in each of the last seven seasons (including 2021-22).
   On a national basis, the only 23 teams with a top-25 win each of the previous seven seasons (entering 2021-22) were 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 22-22 since the start of the 2016-17 season against ranked teams. The 22 wins over ranked teams in that time are tied with Kentucky for 14th-most nationally, and trails only Villanova (29) among BIG EAST clubs. Â
- Creighton's eight road wins against top-25 teams since the start of the 2016-17 season rank tied for fourth-most nationally. It trails only Michigan State (10), Virginia (9) and Kansas (9), and is tied with Villanova (8), Duke (8) and Baylor (8).
- Creighton, Purdue, Texas Tech, Villanova and Wisconsin are the nation's only teams with a top-25 win at home, on the road and at a neutral site this season.
-Creighton is one of eight schools with three or more top-25 wins in each of the past three seasons. That list consists of Creighton, Gonzaga, Kansas, Ohio State, Oklahoma, Purdue, Villanova and Wisconsin, with Baylor, Florida State, Georgetown, Illinois, Iowa, Maryland, Michigan, Michigan State, Texas, UCLA and West Virginia still trying to get there.
Frosh Watch
Creighton is winning at a regular rate despite playing three freshmen (Trey Alexander, Arthur Kaluma, Ryan Nembhard) more than 22 minutes per game.
   On a national basis through Feb. 5, only 167 players classified as freshmen (true, redshirt or otherwise) were playing 22 minutes per game per Basketball-Reference.com.
   Only seven of those freshmen are from the BIG EAST, and besides Alexander, Kaluma and Nembhard the only other true freshmen in the BIG EAST playing 22 minutes per game or more are Georgetown's Aminu Mohammed and Butler's Jayden Taylor.
   CU is the only team nationally to play three true freshmen more than 22 minutes per game.
   And speaking of freshman minutes, Nembhard ranks fifth nationally among true freshmen with 34.3 minutes per game. The next-closest freshman from a Power 5 or BIG EAST program is Nebraska's Bryce McGowens (33.7 mpg.).
Youth Is Served
Creighton has just seven non-freshmen on this year's roster, and is playing multiple freshmen on a consistent basis this season. Creighton has had at least one freshman on the floor for every second of every game this season, and actually had a late stretch of 1:28 vs. Colorado State when all five of its players on the floor were freshmen.
   Creighton has outscored teams by 109 when it has two freshmen or less on the court, but have been outscored by 58 points when it has three or more freshmen on the floor.
   All told, 1992:57 of Creighton's 4,250 total minutes (46.89 percent) have been played by freshmen this season.
   By comparison, last season Creighton had a freshman on the floor just 32.4 percent of the time and had multiple freshmen on the floor just 17 minutes (of 1,250) all season (1.4 percent). Only 7.5 percent (465:52 of 6250) of CU's overall minutes were played by freshmen in 2020-21.
Freshmen   Time   Score   Margin
0 freshmen:   Never   --   --
1 freshmen:Â Â Â 33:45Â Â Â 54-49Â Â Â +5
2 freshmen:Â Â Â 520:15Â Â Â 945-841Â Â Â +104
3 freshmen:Â Â Â 223:00Â Â Â 383-411Â Â Â (-28)
4 freshmen:Â Â Â 45:32Â Â Â 52-85Â Â Â (-33)
5 freshmen:Â Â Â 1:28Â Â Â 5-2Â Â Â +3
Elite Company For Hawkins
Creighton senior Ryan Hawkins owns 2,362 career points and 1,099 career rebounds, though the majority of his totals were accumulated at the Division II level at Northwest Missouri State.
   That's more points than legends such as Alonzo Mourning (2,001), Bob Lanier (2,067), Tim Duncan (2,117), Derrick Coleman (2,143), Patrick Ewing (2,184), Ralph Sampson (2,225), Jerry West (2,309) and Lew Alcindor (2,325).
   Only 24 Division I players in NCAA history have finished their careers with 2,362 points and 1,099 rebounds or more.
Name, School(s)   Last Year   Pts.   Reb.
Lionel Simmons, La Salle   1990   3,217   1,429
Mike Daum, South Dakota State   2019   3,067   1,236
Oscar Robertson, Cincinnati   1960   2,973   1,338
Danny Manning, Kansas   1988   2,951   1,187
Elvin Hayes, Houston   1968   2,884   1,602
Tyler Hansbrough, North Carolina   2009   2,872   1,219
Larry Bird, Indiana State   1979   2,850   1,247
Hank Gathers, USC/Loyola Marymount   1990   2,273   1,128
David Robinson, Navy   1987   2,669   1,314
Michael Brooks, La Salle   1980   2,628   1,372
Dickie Hemric, Wake Forest   1955   2,587   1,802
Calvin Natt, La.-Monroe   1979   2,581   1,285
Terry Taylor, Austin Peay   2021   2,507   1,248
Caleb Green, Oral Roberts   2007   2,503   1,189
Elgin Baylor, College of Idaho/Seattle   1958   2,500   1,559
Luke Harangody, Notre Dame   2010   2,476   1,222
Nick Fazekas, Nevada   2007   2,464   1,254
Tom Gola, La Salle   1955   2,462   2,201
Christian Laettner, Duke   1992   2,460   1,149
Keith Lee, Memphis   1985   2,408   1,336
Phil Sellers, Rutgers   1976   2,399   1,115
Byron Houston, Oklahoma State   1992   2,379   1,190
Ron Harper, Miami (Ohio)Â Â Â 1986Â Â Â 2,377Â Â Â 1,119
Bryant Reeves, Oklahoma State   1995   2,367   1,152
Defense Steps Up
Creighton allowed just 15 points in the second half of its Jan. 22 victory vs. DePaul.
   It was the fewest points allowed in the second half of a game against a Division I team since the Bluejays did it twice in a 10-day span in 2001 when Alan Huss was wrapping up his senior season.
   DePaul's 47 points were the least allowed by Creighton in a conference game since joining the BIG EAST, and fewest since a 59-45 win vs. Southern Illinois on Feb. 19, 2013.
Kalkbrenner Doubles Up
Midway into his sophomore season, Ryan Kalkbrenner has surpassed all of his totals from all of last season already.
   Last season Kalkbrenner had 182 points, 108 rebounds, 38 blocks and 29 dunks in 422 minutes. This year Kalkbrenner owns 240 points, 148 rebounds, 61 blocks and 39 dunks in 567 minutes.
   A big part of that has been his increased stamina. Even though his minutes per game have nearly doubled from 13.6 to 27.0 minutes per game, his per-minute stats have also risen.
Per 40 Minutes - Ryan Kalkbrenner
Year   PTS/40   REB/40   BLOCKS/40   DUNKS/40
2020-21Â Â Â 17.3Â Â Â 10.2Â Â Â 3.6Â Â Â 2.7
2021-22Â Â Â 16.9Â Â Â 10.4Â Â Â 4.2Â Â Â 2.8
Not Your Ordinary Freshman
Arthur Kaluma had a season-high 20 points on Jan. 19 vs. St. John's.
   Kaluma (9.0 ppg.) and classmate Ryan Nembhard (11.5 ppg.) are attempting to become the seventh and eighth Creighton freshmen in the past 28 seasons to average at least 10 points per game.
   In that span, five previous Bluejay freshmen have averaged 10.5 points per game or more, and each was named league Freshman of the Year.
   Before this season, Creighton hadn't had a freshman score 20 points in a game since Marcus Zegarowski vs. Coe on Dec. 20, 2018.
   Nembhard, who had a career-high 23 points vs. Xavier on Jan. 29, is the first Bluejay with multiple games of 20 points or more as a true freshman since Doug McDermott in 2010-11.
CU Freshmen With 20+ Point Games, Since 1994-95
   20+ Point Games   Name   Season
   6   Rodney Buford   1995-96
   6   Doug McDermott   2010-11
   5   Justin Patton   2016-17
   4   P'Allen Stinnett   2007-08
   3   Kyle Korver   1999-00
   2   Terrell Taylor   1999-00
   2   Ryan Nembhard   2021-22
   1   Ryan Sears   1999-00
   1   Ben Walker   1999-00
   1   Ethan Wragge   2009-10
   1   Toby Hegner   2014-15
   1   Khyri Thomas   2015-16
   1   Mitch Ballock   2017-18
   1   Marcus Zegarowski   2018-19
   1   Arthur Kaluma   2021-22
Most Points Per Game, CU Freshmen, Since 1994-95
   PPG   Name   Season
   14.9   *Doug McDermott   2010-11
   14.5   *Rodney Buford   1995-96
   12.9   *Justin Patton   2015-16
   12.6   *P'Allen Stinnett   2007-08
   11.5   Ryan Nembhard   2021-22
   10.5   *Ryan Sears   1997-98
   10.4   Marcus Zegarowski   2018-19
*Went on to win league Freshman of the Year
Trey's Bien
Creighton guard Trey Alexander was named BIG EAST Freshman of the Week on Jan. 24th, the sixth time in the first 10 weeks of the season a Bluejay has earned the league honor.
   Alexander averaged 11.5 points, 6.0 rebounds, 3.0 assists and 1.5 steals in a pair of Creighton wins last week.
   The Oklahoma City product had a career-high 11 points and four assists in Creighton's win on Wednesday vs. St. John's, adding five rebounds.
   In Saturday's come-from-behind win vs. DePaul, Alexander scored all of his new career-high 12 points after halftime as the Bluejays outscored the Blue Demons, 37-15. Alexander also finished the afternoon with seven rebounds, two assists and a career-high three steals.
   Creighton classmate Ryan Nembhard has already won the honor five times this season.
Filling The Gym
Creighton ranks sixth nationally this season with 16,507 fans per home game.
2021-22 NCAA Home Attendance Per Game Leaders
Through 2/5/22
   Rank   School   Average
   1.   Kentucky   19,057
   2.   Arkansas   18,899
   3.   Syracuse   18,359
   4.   North Carolina   18,241
   5.   Tennessee   17,182
   6.   Creighton   16,507
   7.   Wisconsin   16,244
   8.   Kansas   16,227
   9.   Indiana   15,569
   10.   BYU   15,254
Arthur The Great?
Arthur Kaluma is just Creighton's fifth true freshman since 1983-84 to average 8.0 points and 4.0 rebounds per game.
   The only others to do it are Doug McDermott (2010-11), Rodney Buford (1995-96), Bob Harstad (1987-88) and Chad Gallagher (1987-88).
   What do McDermott, Buford, Harstad and Gallagher have in common? They rank as the top four career scorers in Creighton Basketball history.
8 PPG & 4 RPG as True Freshmen Since 1983-84
Name, Fr. Year   Fr. PPG   Fr. RPG   Career Pts.
Doug McDermott, 2010-11Â Â Â 14.9Â Â Â 7.2Â Â Â 3,150
Rodney Buford, 1995-96Â Â Â 14.5Â Â Â 4.2Â Â Â 2,116
Bob Harstad, 1987-88Â Â Â 9.0Â Â Â 8.5Â Â Â 2,110
Chad Gallagher, 1987-88Â Â Â 11.4Â Â Â 5.3Â Â Â 1,983
Arthur Kaluma, 2021-22Â Â Â 9.0Â Â Â 4.9Â Â Â 188
Kaluma In Elite Company
Arthur Kaluma is one of four freshmen nationally from the BIG EAST or a Power Five Conference to be averaging at least 8.0 points, 4.0 rebounds and 0.66 blocked shots per game.
   He's joined by a pair of projected top-3 NBA Draft picks, Duke's Paolo Banchero and Auburn's Jabari Smith, as well as Michigan's Moussa Diabate.
Power 5/BIG EAST Frosh With 8 PPG/4 RPG/0.66 BPG
Name, School   PPG   RPG   BPG
Paolo Banchero, Duke   17.5   8.4   0.9
Jabari Smith, Auburn   15.3   6.7   1.1
Moussa Diabate, Michigan   8.6   6.1   0.7
Arthur Kaluma, Creighton   9.0   4.9   0.7
BIG EAST Pacesetters
- Ryan Kalkbrenner leads the BIG EAST with 3.52 offensive rebounds per game in all games and 3.80 offensive rebounds per game in league play.
- Alex O'Connell leads the BIG EAST in three-point percentage (.439) in league action and is also third with 2.50 three-pointers per conference game.
- In league play, Ryan Hawkins is tied for the BIG EAST lead with four double-doubles.
- Creighton leads the BIG EAST in all games with 28.38 defensive rebounds per game while Butler is last with 23.22 per game. In league play only, Creighton is first with 28.50 per game while Butler is 10th with 22.50 per contest.
- On the other end of the spectrum, Creighton ranks 11th in the league with 30.5 percent shooting from three-point range while Butler is tops in three-point percentage defense by holding teams to 30.1 percent marksmanship from deep.
What's The Difference?
Creighton is off to a 5-5 start in league play, but the difference in a number of categories really jump out.
Stat   5 BE Wins   5 BE Losses
Points Scored Per Game   72.0   57.6
Points Allowed Per Game   58.8   75.0
Rebound Margin   +10.2   -5.6
Offensive Rebounds/Game   13.4   7.2
3FG Made Per Game   8.8   5.0
A/TO Ratio   68/78   45/76
CU's FG% Defense   .352   .441
After Halftime Score   187-152   156-227
Ryan Hawkins Points/Game   16.8   5.8
Ryan Kalkbrenner Reb./Game   9.6   5.4
R. Andronikashvili Assists/Game   2.6   0.2
Iron Men
Creighton's Ryan Nembhard ranks fourth in the BIG EAST with 34.3 minutes per game as he attempts to become the first freshman to lead the BIG EAST in minutes per game (all games) in the last 15 seasons.
   Nembhard's 34.3 minutes per game average in all games is on pace to be the most by a BIG EAST freshman in 10 years, as Providence's LaDontae Henton (37.2), St. John's Maurice Harkless (36.1) and St. John's D'Angelo Harrison (35.3) all did it in 2011-12. No BIG EAST freshman has averaged more than 34 minutes per game since.
O'Connell Can
Senior Alex O'Connell has scored in double-figures in 10 of the past 12 games.
   After scoring in double-figures in 16 of 125 contests over his first four seasons at Duke and Creighton, O'Connell has scored 10 or more points in 16-of-21 battles this season.
   He scored a career-high 22 points at No. 17 Xavier on Jan. 15th, making 7-of-10 shots, 4-of-6 three-pointers and all four free throw tries, before upping that with a new high of 28 points vs. St. John's on Jan. 19, including a career-high six three-pointers.
   The Georgia native is averaging 12.4 points per game overall this season and 13.7 points per game in BIG EAST action.
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Up, Up And Away
Since Feb. 19, 2019, Creighton owns a 37-16 mark in regular-season BIG EAST games. That's one more win 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 had the most wins in 2020-21 as well.
Conference Records Since Feb. 19, 2019
(Through Feb. 6, 2022)
Team   After 2/19/19   '19-20   '20-21   '21-22   Total
Creighton   5-0   13-5   14-6   5-5   37-16
Villanova   2-3   13-5   11-4   10-3   36-15
Providence   3-2   12-6   9-10   10-1   34-19
Seton Hall   2-3   13-5   10-9   5-6   30-23
UConn   2-4#   10-8#   11-6   6-4   29-22
Marquette   2-4   8-10   8-11   8-4   26-29
Xavier   4-1   8-10   6-7   6-5   24-23
Butler   1-4   10-8   8-12   4-8   23-32
St. John's   1-4   5-13   10-9   5-6   21-32
Georgetown   4-2   5-13   7-9   0-10   16-34
DePaul   2-3   3-15   2-13   2-9   9-40
#includes 2018-19 and 2019-20 in the AAC
Among The Best
Since the league's 2013 realignment, Villanova has 123 league wins to lead the BIG EAST by a wide margin, but Creighton's 88 league victories are second-most.
Men's Basketball BIG EAST Wins, 2013-14 to 2/6/22
Team   W   L   Pct.
Villanova   124   30   .805
Creighton   88   68   .564
Providence   88   67   .568
Xavier   86   64   .573
Seton Hall   81   74   .523
Butler   76   82   .481
Marquette   76   81   .484
Georgetown   58   93   .384
St. John's   59   96   .381
DePaul   32   120   .211
Connecticut   17   10   .630
Big Deficits, No Big Deal
Creighton owns 26 victories since the start of the 2010-11 season after trailing by double-figures at some point, including three such rallies this season. In its Jan. 22 win vs. DePaul, CU trailed 34-23 a minute into the second half before beginning its push.
   Twelve of those 26 comebacks have come away from home.
   Creighton's comeback from 16 points down vs. SIUE on Nov. 27 was its biggest since rallying from 16 points down at Seton Hall on Jan. 27th.
   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 on a buzzer-beater by Anthony Tolliver.
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
16   SIU Edwardsville   11/27/21
15   Arkansas-Pine Bluff   11/09/21
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
11   DePaul   01/22/22
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
Nembhard Bags Fifth Freshman Honor
Creighton point guard Ryan Nembhard was named BIG EAST Freshman of the Week for the fifth time this season on Monday, Jan. 17th.
   Nembhard had 18 points, six assists, three steals and two rebounds in an 80-73 defeat at #17 Xavier on Saturday. Nembhard's eight field goals were a season-best while his three steals matched his personal high.
   The Aurora, Ontario, Canada product was previously honored on Nov. 15, Nov. 22, Nov. 29 and Dec. 20, while the rest of the league's freshmen have combined to win five total accolades (one of which was won by teammate Trey Alexander).
   Nembhard is Creighton men's basketball's first player named Freshman or Newcomer of the Week five times in the same season since Doug McDermott was recognized as Missouri Valley Conference Newcomer of the Week seven times in 2010-11.
Hawkins, Villanova or COVID?
It's tough to predict who will win the national title in mid-January, but if the past is any indication, there was a good chance an unstoppable force was on the floor at Finneran Pavilion on Jan. 5th.
   Each of the past six basketball seasons have seen either Villanova, Ryan Hawkins or COVID-19 emerge above all others end the season.
   Villanova won the Division I national title in 2015-16 and 2017-18.
   Hawkins was part of the Northwest Missouri State teams that won national titles at the Division II level in 2016-17, 2018-19 and 2020-21.
   COVID-19 ended the 2019-20 season, a year in which Creighton and Villanova were likely headed towards top-three seeds. Meanwhile, Hawkins' Northwest Missouri State team was the top-ranked squad in the Division II ranks and finished with 31-1 overall record and on a 23-game win streak.
Year   National Champion
2015-16Â Â Â Villanova
2016-17Â Â Â Ryan Hawkins (Northwest Missouri State)
2017-18Â Â Â Villanova
2018-19Â Â Â Ryan Hawkins (Northwest Missouri State)
2019-20Â Â Â COVID-19
2020-21Â Â Â Ryan Hawkins (Northwest Missouri State)
How's This, For Starters?
Creighton is the only team in the BIG EAST Conference to have used the same starting five for every game this season, scoring 245 points in 21 games.
   What makes it all the more impressive is that the five men to start for Creighton this year had combined for ZERO combined starts as Bluejays entering the season.
We're Jamming!
Ryan Kalkbrenner owns 39 dunks this season and 68 in his career. As a team, Creighton owns 78 dunks this season. Here's a look at the Creighton student-athletes with 20 or more dunks in a season, and 25 or more dunks in a career, under Greg McDermott:
Most Creighton Dunks, Season, Since 2010-11
Dunks   Name   Year
74   Martin Krampelj   2018-19
72   Justin Patton   2016-17
50   Christian Bishop   2020-21
39   Ryan Kalkbrenner   2021-22
38   Christian Bishop   2019-20
36   Gregory Echenique   2012-13
33   Martin Krampelj   2017-18
30   Gregory Echenique   2011-12
29   Marcus Foster   2017-18
29   Ryan Kalkbrenner   2020-21
24   Gregory Echenique   2010-11
23   Marcus Foster   2016-17
22   Kenny Lawson Jr.   2010-11
20   Khyri Thomas   2017-18
Most Creighton Dunks, Career, Since 2010-11
Dunks   Name   Years
121   Martin Krampelj   2015-19
103   Christian Bishop   2018-21
90   Gregory Echenique   2010-13
72   Justin Patton   2016-17
68   Ryan Kalkbrenner   2020-Pres.
52   Marcus Foster   2016-18
51   Khyri Thomas   2015-18
38   Will Artino   2011-15
33   Zach Hanson   2013-17
25   Geoffrey Groselle   2012-16
25   Damien Jefferson   2018-21
Most Creighton Dunks, Team, Season, Since 2010-11
Dunks   Year   Team W-L
144Â Â Â 2016-17Â Â Â 25-10 (NCAA)
107Â Â Â 2017-18Â Â Â 21-12 (NCAA)
106Â Â Â 2018-19Â Â Â 20-15 (NIT)
90Â Â Â 2020-21Â Â Â 22-9 (NCAA)
78Â Â Â 2021-22Â Â Â 13-8 so far
60Â Â Â 2019-20Â Â Â 24-7 (Postseason Canceled)
58Â Â Â 2015-16Â Â Â 20-15 (NIT)
56Â Â Â 2010-11Â Â Â 23-16 (CBI)
54Â Â Â 2012-13Â Â Â 28-8 (NCAA)
42Â Â Â 2011-12Â Â Â 29-6 (NCAA)
35Â Â Â 2013-14Â Â Â 27-8 (NCAA)
29Â Â Â 2014-15Â Â Â 14-19
Our 2, D Too
Unlike past Creighton teams that thrived from three-point land, this year's Bluejay squad is dominating from two-point range.
   Creighton ranks 48th nationally (per BartTorvik.com) with its shooting 53.7 percent from two-point range. That includes a 58.1 percent mark from inside the paint.
   Defensively, Creighton is holding the opposition to 42.6 percent shooting from two-point range, the nation's ninth-best figure. That's CU's best mark under McDermott, far surpassing the 45.5 percent mark allowed by the 2012-13 club. Bluejay foes are shooting just 47.5 percent in the paint this season.
#1 In The Record Book; #44 In Your Program
Ryan Hawkins leads every active player at the Division I level in career rebounds (1,099) and field goals made (845) and is second in points (2,362).
   Hawkins also ranks in the top 11 among the nation's active Division I players in double-doubles (5th), games played (9th), three-pointers made (10th) and steals (11th).
   And while it's not among the categories the NCAA tracks among active players, it's worth noting that Hawkins owns 104 career games of 10 or more points. The NCAA Division I record in that category is 135, done by former Creighton All-American Doug McDermott.
Only In 2020-21 (Let's Hope)
Though Creighton's 14 BIG EAST wins last season were three more than any other team in the BIG EAST, the Bluejays were the second seed in the conference tournament since the league decided before the season to go by winning percentage to determine a league champion and seeds.
   The BIG EAST wasn't alone in this. It was 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, in 2020-21
League   Conf. 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
Conference Openers Have Gone Well
Creighton owns a 17-7 record in its last 24 conference openers after a 79-59 win vs. Villanova in its last outing.
   Greg McDermott is 12-9 all-time in conference openers as a Division I head coach, including an 8-4 mark at Creighton (6-3 in the BIG EAST).
   The last team to win a share of any BIG EAST regular-season title after losing the league opener was the 2012-13 Georgetown club. No squad has won an outright title after losing the league opener since Notre Dame won the West Division in 2000-01. And no team has won a league outright title in a one-division BIG EAST after losing the league lid-lifter since Georgetown in 1988-89.
Yearly League Openers Under Greg McDermott
Year   Won (Final W-L)   Lost (Final W-L)
2010-11Â Â Â Illinois St. (10-8)
2011-12Â Â Â Â Â Â Missouri St. (14-4)
2012-13Â Â Â Evansville (13-5)
2013-14Â Â Â Marquette (14-4)
2014-15Â Â Â Â Â Â Providence (4-14)
2015-16Â Â Â St. John's (9-9)
2016-17Â Â Â Seton Hall (10-8)
2017-18Â Â Â Â Â Â Seton Hall (10-8)
2018-19Â Â Â Providence (9-9)
2019-20Â Â Â Marquette (13-5)
2020-21Â Â Â Â Â Â Marquette (14-6)
2021-22Â Â Â #9 Villanova (TBD)
Preseason BIG EAST Poll
Creighton was picked eighth in the preseason BIG EAST Conference poll that was selected via a vote of league coaches.
   Villanova was a unanimous selection to win the league, with Connecticut and Xavier finishing second and third, respectively. St. John's is fourth, followed by Seton Hall, Butler, Providence and Creighton. Rounding out the poll are Marquette, Georgetown and DePaul.
   Villanova standout Collin Gillespie was named Preseason BIG EAST Player of the Year, and was joined on the Preseason All-BIG EAST Team by Nate Watson (Providence), Julian Champagnie (St. John's), Jared Rhoden (Seton Hall), Paul Scruggs (Xavier) and Zach Freemantle (Xavier).
   Creighton is the only school in the league that 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)
2021-22   8th   ? ? ?   --
Wins On Wins on Wins
Creighton's Nov. 21 loss vs. Colorado State was the first time in the six-year college career of Ryan Hawkins that one of his teams lost on a neutral floor. The Northwest Missouri State transfer is now 40-1 on neutral sites when you include his 3-1 mark this year.
   He enters Tuesday's game vs. Butler with a team record of 172-16 (.915) at all sites. He's lost consecutive games in his career just twice, and coming off a loss in CU's most recent game on Friday.
   CU's January 1st win at Marquette marked the 100th conference game of Hawkins' college career. He's currently 97-11 in league games.
Hawkins Scores 25
Ryan Hawkins scored 25 points vs. No. 19 Iowa State. It was the 96th time in his career that the Atlantic, Iowa native scored in double-figures, and 46th time he's scored 20 points or more in a game.
   Hawkins' 25 points were the most by a Bluejay in any game this season, and most by any CU player against a top-25 team since Marcus Zegarowski scored 25 points in an 86-70 win vs. No. 5 Villanova on Feb. 13, 2021.
   Hawkins then scored 25 points against No. 24 BYU in his next outing, making him the first Bluejay with back-to-back games of 25 or more points since Marcus Foster had consecutive 29 point efforts on Feb. 7 & 10, 2018.
   Hawkins is the first Bluejay with multiple games of 25+ points vs. top-25 teams in the same season since Ty-Shon Alexander in 2018-19. Marcus Foster in 2017-18 is the last person with three such games in a season.
The Ryan Express
Creighton has started three players with the first name of Ryan in each game this winter, as Ryan Nembhard, Ryan Hawkins and Ryan Kalkbrenner are all entrenched as starters. Those three men are also three of CU's top four scorers (along with Alex O'Connell).
   In the Dec. 11 win vs. No. 24 BYU, Nembhard, Hawkins and Kalkbrenner combined for 56 points, 21 rebounds and seven blocked shots.
    For the season, the "Ryan Express" has contributed 68.9 percent of Creighton's blocked shots, 51.8 percent of its points, 48.3 percent of its assists, 48.7 percent of its rebounds grabbed and 42.9 percent of its steals.
   Creighton had not started multiple players with the same first name in the same regular-season game since Nov. 18, 2006, when both Nick Porter and Nick Bahe started against Nebraska.
   Creighton has not had a season in which three players with the same first name all started at least once in the regular-season since at least 1980.
   With so many men named Ryan (not to mention assistant coach Ryan Miller), the Bluejay staff has gone to referring to Hawkins as "Hawk", the 7-foot-1 Kalkbrenner as "Big Ryan" and Nembhard as "R2", in honor of his uniform number, as well as "Coach Miller".
At The Buzzer!
Ryan Nembhard drove the length of the court in the final 5.2 seconds to sink a floater as time expired to give Creighton a 66-64 win vs. Southern Illinois on Nov. 22 in the third-place game of the Paradise Jam.
   Ironically enough, the game-ending play was installed several years ago by former Bluejay assistant Paul Lusk, himself a Southern Illinois grad.
   The basket was Creighton's first go-ahead shot as time expired since Booker Woodfox beat Wichita State in the Missouri Valley Conference Tournament quarterfinals on March 6, 2009.
   Prior to Woodfox, Creighton's last previous buzzer-beater had also come against Wichita State, as Anthony Tolliver's shot from the right baseline beat Wichita State on Jan. 28, 2006.
   Nate Funk also hit a buzzer-beater to beat Greg McDermott's Northern Iowa team on Jan. 15, 2005 in Cedar Falls.
   Shots by those four men remain the only game-winning buzzer-beaters by Creighton since the start of the 1999-2000 season.
Five Threats To Score
All five Creighton starters are averaging at least 9.0 points per game this season, a fact made all the more impressive when you consider that these men owned a total of ZERO career starts as a Bluejay entering this winter.
   Creighton has won 22 straight games when five or more players have 10 points or more.
Nembhard's Big Day
Playing his first collegiate road game, freshman point guard Ryan Nembhard thrived in a hostile environment in Lincoln. The Canadian native had 22 points, five rebounds and five assists.
   Since Greg McDermott was hired in 2010, the only other Bluejays with a 20/5/5 game were Mitch Ballock (1), Marcus Foster (3), Grant Gibbs (1), Doug McDermott (2), Khyri Thomas (2), Maurice Watson Jr. (2) and Marcus Zegarowski (3).
   Nembhard is CU's first freshman with a 20/5/5 line since at least 1981-82.
   Nembhard's 22 points were the most by a Bluejay of any year in their first game vs. Nebraska since at least 1980.
Nembhard Earns All-Tourney Honors
Ryan Nembhard earned All-Tournament Team honors at the Paradise Jam after averaging 12.3 points, 4.7 assists, 3.0 rebounds and 2.3 steals in three games.
   Nembhard shot 55.6 percent from the field, 50 percent from three-point range and 60 percent from the line and made a shot at the buzzer vs. Southern Illinois in the third-place game.
   He is CU's first true freshman to pick up All-Tournament Team honors at any event since Doug McDermott was named to the Global Sports Hy-Vee Challenge All-Tournament Team in 2010.
Hawk Talk
Ryan Hawkins finished with 15 points, 10 rebounds and five assists on Nov. 16 at Nebraska. It was just the fourth 15/10/5 game in Greg McDermott's 12 seasons at Creighton, and first since Khyri Thomas had 24 points, 10 rebounds and five assists in a Nov. 15, 2017 Gavitt Tipoff Games win at Northwestern.
   The only others with a 15/10/5 game under McDermott were Austin Chatman (17 points, 11 rebounds, 6 assists vs. Oklahoma on Nov. 19, 2014) and Doug McDermott (30 points, 10 rebounds, 5 assists at Seton Hall on Jan. 4, 2014).
   Hawkins' performance was CU's first 15/10/5 line without a turnover since at least 1980-81.
Like A Hawk
Ryan Hawkins had 10 or more rebounds in each of CU's first three games. He's the first Bluejay to do that to start a season since Benoit Benjamin's streak of 27 consecutive double-figure rebounding games to open his junior campaign in 1984-85.
   Hawkins owns 43 games with 10 or more rebounds in his college career.
Winning With Defense
Creighton's made its reputation on the offensive side with its "Let It Fly" philosophy, but the Bluejays have won thanks in large part to their defense so far this season.
   Creighton held each of its first four opponents under 40 percent from the field for the first time since at least 1980-81.
   Creighton is holding teams to 39.6 percent shooting this season, which would also be the program's best mark in more than 40 years.
Playing With The Lead
In 318 games at CHI Health Center Omaha all-time, Creighton has not trailed in 85 of those contests, a staggering 26.7 percent of the time.
    Under Greg McDermott at home, Creighton is Â
164-39 and hasn't trailed in 60 of those games. He owns an 91-8 record vs. non-conference teams at CHI Health Center Omaha.
Assists 'R' Us
Ryan Nembhard's 10 assists in CU's season-opener were the most by a Bluejay freshman in any game since Marcus Zegarowski had 10 on March 9, 2018 vs. DePaul. He was the nation's ONLY freshman with 10+ assists on the opening night of the college basketball season.
   Prior to Nembhard, no Bluejay (of any year) had dished 10 or more assists in a season-opener since Edward St. Fleur on Nov. 22, 1996 at Wyoming.
Making An Entrance
Arthur Kaluma (15) and Ryan Nembhard (15) became CU's first true freshmen to debut with 10 points or more since Khyri Thomas had 18 points vs. Texas Southern in 2015.
   Nembhard (15 pts., 10 ast.) and Ryan Hawkins (16 pts., 11 reb.) were the first Bluejays since at least 1980 with double-doubles in the season-opener of their debut campaign. No CU player (of any year) had started the season with a double-double since Will Artino (14 pts., 10 reb.) in 2014-15 vs. Central Arkansas.
   Kaluma's eight rebounds were the most by a true freshman in the regular-season opener since Martin Krampelj in 2015 and the most by any Bluejay freshman since redshirt freshman Justin Patton snared eight rebounds in his 2016 debut.
   Kaluma had four blocked shots on Nov. 9 vs. UAPB. The last previous Bluejay newcomer with multiple blocked shots in a season-opener? That'd be Artino on Nov. 11, 2011 vs. North Carolina A&T. Kaluma's four swats were the most by any Bluejay (of any year) on Opening Day since Jeffrey Day had five swats vs. Alcorn State to open the 2004-05 campaign.
   Kaluma (15 & 8) became Creighton's second freshman since at least 1973 to debut with 15+ points and 5+ rebounds, joining Doug McDermott (16 & 7) in 2010.
   Ryan Hawkins grabbed 11 rebounds vs. Arkansas-Pine Bluff, the most by a Bluejay since Damien Jefferson had 12 in 2018. Other than Jefferson, no one's had more than 11 rebounds in their CU debut since Cyril Baptiste snared 17 caroms in 1969. When Hawkins followed with 10 rebounds vs. Kennesaw State, he became CU's first player (of any year) with 10+ rebounds in CU's first two games since Doug Swenson in 1998-99.
Freshman Starts Almost Unheard Of
Between 1992-93 and 2020-21, only four true freshmen started Creighton's regular-season opener. Then on Nov. 9 vs. Arkansas-Pine Bluff, both Ryan Nembhard and Arthur Kaluma got the nod on opening night. Nembhard had 15 points and 10 assists while Kaluma owned 15 points, eight rebounds and four blocks.
   This season marked the first time Creighton started two true freshmen in a regular-season opener since 1991-92 (Eric Dantzler and Mike Amos).
   About the other true freshmen to start...
   Ryan Sears did so in 1997-98. The point guard would go on to start all 124 games of his CU career and remains the program's all-time career assist (570) and steals (283) leader.
   Doug McDermott did so in 2010-11, and he went on to start all 145 games of his career. He would graduate as the fifth-leading scorer in NCAA history with 3,150 career points and is the only three-time First Team All-American since 1986. He now plays for the San Antonio Spurs.
   Khyri Thomas got a start in 2015-16 and remained in CU's starting five each of his first 24 games, and 96-of-102 career contests with the Jays. He has spent parts of the past three seasons in the NBA.
   Shereef Mitchell joined this elite group in 2019-20 when he got the starting nod against Kennesaw State. Mitchell finished with eight points, six rebounds, three assists and three steals in 28 minutes of work.
My Name Is...
Only five men who played for Creighton last season are back this winter, and none of them averaged more than 15 minutes per game.
   Per research by TCU, Creighton's 18.0 percent of minutes returning ranks third-lowest among all teams nationally, and is the least among all teams from the BIG EAST or a Power 5 Conference.
Lowest Percentage of Minutes Returning
School   Pct. of Minutes Returning
Tennessee-Martin    0.0
Portland    8.5
Creighton   18.0
Missouri   19.7
Duquesne   23.2
Iowa State   25.1
Robert Morris   26.3
Boston College   27.6
South Alabama   28.6
TCUÂ Â Â 29.2
Who's Back?
With Creighton returning only five of the 15 men who appeared in a game last season, it's no surprise that much of the production from 2020-21 is also gone. Below is a breakdown of what is back:
Stat   Returners   Departures
Starts   2 (1.3%)   153 (98.7%)
3FG Made   25 (8.5%)   268 (91.5%)
Assists   68 (14.0%)   417 (86.0%)
Points   371 (15.8%)   1,984 (84.2%)
Minutes   1,124 (18.0%)   5,126 (82.0%)
Steals   39 (18.1%)   177 (81.9%)
Rebounds   207 (20.7%)   794 (79.3%)
Charges Taken   5 (29.4%)   12 (70.6%)
Blocks   39 (37.9%)   64 (62.1%)
Release, Rotation, Splash, Repeat
Creighton has made at least one three-pointer in 934 straight games. The streak is the nation's 13th-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 (2/6)
   Rk.   Streak   School   Next
   1.   1,152   UNLV   2/8
   2.   1,135   Duke   2/7
   3.   1,085   Western Kentucky   2/10
   4.   1,076   East Tennessee State   2/7
   5.   1,053   Oakland   2/9
   6.   1,052   Pacific   2/8
   7.   1,046   Texas   2/7
   8.   992   Marshall   2/10
   9.   985   Baylor   2/9
   10.   978   Princeton   2/12
   11.   971   Gonzaga   2/10
   12.   948   Long Island   2/10
   13.   934   Creighton   2/8
   14.   933   Mount St. Mary's   2/10
   15.   922   Tennessee State   2/10
Triple Trouble
During Creighton's current streak of 934 straight games with a three-pointer, the Jays have drained 7,356 trifectas, an average of 7.88 treys per game.
   That's not surprising since during the streak, Creighton has made exactly 7 three-pointers 140 times, more than any figure.
   Only five times in the streak has Creighton made just one three-pointer, but on 263 occasions the Bluejays have made 10 or more trifectas, including three games of 20 or more.
   Creighton has also made a trifecta in the first half of 305 straight games (since going 0-7 vs. Drake on Jan. 23, 2013). That streak was in serious jeopardy on Opening Day this season as CU missed its first 14 three-point tries before a man named Trey (Alexander) extended the streak.
   Since the start of the 2019-20 season, the Bluejays are 41-7 when making eight or more three-pointers, compared to a 16-16 mark when making seven treys or fewer.
Team 3FG Made During Creighton's 3-Point Streak
1:   5 times   2: 16 times   3: 33 times
4:   71 times   5:  100 times   6: 100 times
7:  140 times   8:  116 times   9: 90 times
10: 77 times   11: 53 times   12: 49 times
13: 44 times   14: 19 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 Feb. 5, 2022
Category   CU Stat   CU Rank  Â
3FG Made   3,525   3rd  Â
3FG Percentage   .379   3rd  Â
FG Percentage   .478   4th  Â
Assists   6,383   5th  Â
FG Made   10,886   9th  Â
Points   30,469   9th  Â
Wins   266   30th  Â
Winning Percentage   .667   33rd  Â
Top-10 Class
Creighton signed four top-100 players en route to inking the No. 7 recruiting class in the country, per 247Sports. That also ranks as the best class in the BIG EAST Conference.
   Here's how the nation's top-10 classes shake out:
1.   Memphis
2.   Michigan
3.   Gonzaga
4.   Tennessee
5.   Duke
6.   LSU
7.   Creighton
8.   Florida State
9.   Connecticut
10.   Kentucky
#ProJays
Former Creighton All-American Doug McDermott is a starter for the San Antonio Spurs, giving Creighton at least one NBA player in 38 of the last 39 seasons.
   Last year five Bluejays appeared in an NBA game, as McDermott was joined by Ty-Shon Alexander, Justin Patton, Khyri Thomas and Anthony Tolliver.
   McDermott is in his eighth season in the NBA. Last year he with Indiana he averaged a career-high 13.6 points per game.
   Other famous Bluejays to play in the NBA in the past include Paul Silas, Kyle Korver, Benoit Benjamin and Anthony Tolliver.
In Search Of 20 Wins, Again
Creighton had 22 wins last season, its sixth consecutive campaign with 20 or more victories.
   Only six teams have won 20 games or more in each of the previous six seasons: Belmont, Creighton, Gonzaga, Houston, Kansas and Oregon.
21 of 23 Seasons With 20 Wins
Creighton has won 20 or more games in 21 of the last 23 seasons (entering 2021-22), 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, Previous 23 Seasons
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
Who Are These Guys?
For the first time since at least 1980-81, Creighton will not return any of its five starters as Mitch Ballock, Christian Bishop, Damien Jefferson, Denzel Mahoney and Marcus Zegarowski are all gone after combining to make 152-of-155 possible starts last season.
   In fact, there's only been four previous times in the last 40 years that just one starter has returned. Those four occurrences came in 1985-86 (went 12-16), 2007-08 (22-11), 2014-15 (14-19) and
2015-16 (20-15).
   Shereef Mitchell started two games last season when Zegarowski was injured, and no other active Bluejay had ever started a game for CU prior to CU's Nov. 9 season-opener. In the previous 40 seasons, Creighton's always returned players who combined for at least 40 starts in the previous season.
   Returning   Returning Starts    Final
Year   Starters   From Previous Year   W-L
2021-22Â Â Â 0Â Â Â 2Â Â Â ? ? ?
2020-21Â Â Â 5Â Â Â 124Â Â Â 22-9
2019-20Â Â Â 4Â Â Â 136Â Â Â 24-7
2018-19Â Â Â 2Â Â Â 57Â Â Â 20-15
2017-18Â Â Â 2Â Â Â 72Â Â Â 21-12
2016-17Â Â Â 4Â Â Â 130Â Â Â 25-10
2015-16Â Â Â 1Â Â Â 64Â Â Â 20-15
2014-15Â Â Â 1Â Â Â 49Â Â Â 14-19
2013-14Â Â Â 4Â Â Â 144Â Â Â 27-8
2012-13Â Â Â 4Â Â Â 140Â Â Â 28-8
2011-12Â Â Â 3Â Â Â 101Â Â Â 29-6
2010-11Â Â Â 4Â Â Â 123Â Â Â 23-16
2009-10Â Â Â 3Â Â Â 106Â Â Â 18-16
2008-09Â Â Â 3Â Â Â 83Â Â Â 27-8
2007-08Â Â Â 1Â Â Â 44Â Â Â 22-11
2006-07Â Â Â 4Â Â Â 120Â Â Â 22-11
2005-06Â Â Â 4Â Â Â 134Â Â Â 20-10
2004-05Â Â Â 2Â Â Â 58Â Â Â 23-11
2003-04Â Â Â 3Â Â Â 101Â Â Â 20-9
2002-03Â Â Â 5Â Â Â 159Â Â Â 29-5
2001-02Â Â Â 2Â Â Â 65Â Â Â 23-9
2000-01Â Â Â 3Â Â Â 90Â Â Â 24-8
1999-00Â Â Â 3Â Â Â 84Â Â Â 23-10
1998-99Â Â Â 3Â Â Â 84Â Â Â 22-9
1997-98Â Â Â 4Â Â Â 72Â Â Â 18-10
1996-97Â Â Â 4Â Â Â 126Â Â Â 15-15
1995-96Â Â Â 4Â Â Â 100Â Â Â 14-15
1994-95Â Â Â 2Â Â Â 52Â Â Â 7-19
1993-94Â Â Â 3Â Â Â 73Â Â Â 7-22
1992-93Â Â Â 2Â Â Â 64Â Â Â 8-18
1991-92Â Â Â 2Â Â Â 51Â Â Â 9-19
1990-91Â Â Â 4Â Â Â 132Â Â Â 24-8
1989-90Â Â Â 4Â Â Â 127Â Â Â 21-12
1988-89Â Â Â 4Â Â Â 123Â Â Â 20-11
1987-88Â Â Â 3Â Â Â 83Â Â Â 16-16
1986-87Â Â Â 2Â Â Â 65Â Â Â 9-19
1985-86Â Â Â 1Â Â Â 48Â Â Â 12-16
1984-85Â Â Â 4Â Â Â 124Â Â Â 20-12
1983-84Â Â Â 3Â Â Â 72Â Â Â 17-14
1982-83Â Â Â 3Â Â Â 77Â Â Â 8-19
1981-82Â Â Â 2Â Â Â 78Â Â Â 7-20
1980-81Â Â Â 4Â Â Â 112Â Â Â 21-9
McDermott Ranks Second On CU Wins List
Greg McDermott has 266 victories at Creighton, good for second place on CU's all-time wins list.
   McDermott's .667 winning percentage is Creighton's best since Arthur A. Schabinger's .714 win rate more than 85 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.   266-133   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
Firing On All Cylinders
Creighton continued to be highly regarded by KenPom.com, and finished last season 22nd. That included 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.
   Last season was the sixth different time in the last 10 seasons that Creighton has had a top-25 offense per KenPom.
   Creighton has finished with an offensive and defensive rating in the top-83 nationally every season since 2015-16. Nationally, the only nine other schools that can claim that (entering 2021-22) are Baylor, Florida, Florida State, Gonzaga, Kansas, Maryland, Purdue, Texas Tech and Villanova.
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
2021-22Â Â Â 104Â Â Â 34Â Â Â 13-8 so far
CHI Health Center Omaha Dramatics
Creighton is 8-8 in games with a game-winning go-ahead score in the final 10 seconds at CHI Health Center Omaha, which opened in the fall of 2003.
Creighton's Go-Ahead Scores in Wins at
CHI Health Center Omaha, Last 10 Seconds
Date   Opponent   Score   Player/Score   Time
11/26/05   Dayton   W 91-90*   Funk FG   :5.7
01/28/06   Wichita St.   W 57-55   Tolliver FG   :0.0
11/25/06   George Mason   W 58-56   Watts FT   :7.5
03/18/08   Rhode Island   W 74-73   Witter 3FG   :3.2
01/13/10   Southern Illinois   W 71-69   Young FG   :1.3
02/18/12   Long Beach St.   W 81-79   Young FG   :0.3
01/28/14   St. John's   W 63-60   McDermott 3FG   :2.8
01/18/20   Providence   W 78-74   Zegarowski 3FG   :3.2
*double-overtime
Opponent Go-Ahead Scores in CU Losses at
CHI Health Center Omaha, Last 10 Seconds
Date   Opponent   Score   Player/Score   Time
03/20/06Â Â Â Miami (Fla.)Â Â Â L 53-52Â Â Â G. Diaz FTÂ Â Â :2.6
01/20/07   Southern Illinois   L 58-57   B. Mullins FG   :4.1
01/10/15   #19 Seton Hall   L 68-67   S. Gibbs 3FG   :2.2
02/16/15   #19 Butler   L 58-56   R. Jones FG   :1.9
03/07/15   Xavier   L 74-73   D. Davis FT's   :6.3
01/12/16   #12 Providence   L 50-48   K. Dunn FG   :0.0
02/22/17   Providence   L 68-66   K. Cartwright 3FG   :2.4
02/10/18   #5 Xavier   L 71-72   Q. Goodin FT's   :0.3
Top-20 Crowds
Here's a look at Creighton's top-20 home crowds all-time.
    Rank   Att.   Opponent   Date
   1.   18,868   Providence   03/08/14
   2.   18,859   Georgetown   01/25/14
   3.   18,831   #1 Villanova   12/31/16
   4.   18,797   #6 Villanova   02/16/14
   5.   18,759   #1 Gonzaga   12/01/18
   6.   18,742   Seton Hall   02/23/14
   7.   18,735   Wichita State   02/11/12
   8.   18,613   Wichita State   03/02/13
   9.   18,525   Marquette   12/31/13
   10.   18,519   #8 Seton Hall   03/07/20
   11.   18,518   Georgetown   01/27/18
   12.   18,495   Marquette   02/17/18
   13.   18,494   Illinois State   02/09/13
   14.   18,458   Evansville   12/29/12
   15.   18,436   Bradley   01/28/12
   16.   18,323   DePaul   02/07/14
   17.   18,321   #3 Villanova   02/24/18
   18.   18,294   #19 Iowa State   12/04/21
   19.   18,257   #5 Xavier   02/10/18
   20.   18,191   DePaul   02/27/18
CHI Health Center Omaha Success
Creighton has played 318 regular and postseason contests at CHI Health Center Omaha all-time in the 19-year-old facility.
   The Bluejays own a 261-57 (.821) record all-time at the facility, and have never lost there on a Friday (22-0).
   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 24,880-20,851 in games at CHI Health Center Omaha, an average margin of 12.67 points per game. Creighton has not trailed 85 different times.
   Creighton is also 32-34 all-time in the 66 games at the arena in which it's fallen behind by double-figures at any point, 8-11 when down by 10+ points at halftime in the facility, and 39-27 when trailing at halftime at CHI Health Center Omaha.
   Creighton is 164-39 (.808) at CHI Health Center Omaha under Greg McDermott and hasn't trailed in 60 of those games. In that same span, CU owns an 91-8 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 280-57 (.831) at home since the start of the 2002-03 campaign.
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Home Run
Under Greg McDermott Creighton is averaging 80.72 points per home game (16,386 points in 203 home games), a figure that climbs to 84.08 points in non-conference home games (8,324 points in 99 home games). Creighton is 125-6 all-time at CHI Health Center Omaha when scoring 80 or points.
Ticket Information
Single-game tickets for the 2021-22 season went on sale on October 18th. Fans can purchase single-game tickets at CHI Health Center Omaha Box Office, Ryan Athletic Center, by calling Ticketmaster or visiting Ticketmaster.com, and charging by phone at (800) 745-3000.
   For more information, call the Creighton Ticket Office at (402) 280-JAYS.
Tuesday, Feb. 8, 2022 • 8:00 p.m.
CHI Health Center Omaha (17,352) • Omaha, Neb.
Radio: KOZN 1620 AM; KOOO 101.9 FM; 1620thezone.com;Â XM 381; SiriusXM app 971
Television: CBS Sports Network (Andrew Catalon, Steve Lappas, Jenny Dell)
Series History: Creighton leads, 14-11
Last Meeting: Butler 72, Creighton 55 on Jan. 26, 2022 in Indianapolis, Ind.
LIVE VIDEO | LIVE AUDIO | LIVE STATS | CU NOTES (PDF) | BU NOTES (PDF)
Next Game
Creighton (13-8, 5-5 BIG EAST) seeks revenge from a loss against Butler (11-12, 4-8 BIG EAST) less than two weeks ago in a rematch on Tuesday, Feb. 8th.
   Tip-off on First National Bank Court at CHI Health Center Omaha (17,352) is scheduled for 8 p.m.
Radio Broadcast Information
KOZN (1620 AM) will broadcast all Creighton men's basketball games during the 2021-22 season. KOOO (101.9 FM) also broadcasts all home games.
   John Bishop and former Bluejay Taylor Stormberg will call the action.
   The audio is also webcast live at www.1620thezone.com and can be heard on channel 971 of the Sirius/XM app or XM channel 381.
Broadcast Information
Tuesday's game will be called by Andrew Catalon, Steve Lappas and Jenny Dell, and be televised on CBS Sports Network.
   The game will also be video webcast online at https://www.cbssports.com/cbs-sports-network/.
COVID-19 Precautions at CU Athletic Events
Creighton University is requiring face coverings to be worn in all indoor spaces on its campuses and in all athletic venues, including CHI Health Center Omaha. These requirements will continue through March 4th, at which time the University will reassess conditions.
Live Stats Information
All of Creighton's games this season will have free live stats. Visit www.gocreighton.com and click on the small bar graph icon on the scoreboard at the top of the page for the event of your choosing.
   Home games can also be followed by those who have mobile devices with internet capability at www.gocreightonstats.com.
Scouting Creighton
Creighton is 13-8 this season, including wins over No. 9 Villanova (79-59), No. 17 UConn (59-55) and No. 24 BYU (83-71). The Bluejays are 5-5 in league play and 3-1 in BIG EAST home games.
   The Bluejays return seven lettermen but no starters from last year's team that finished 22-9 overall, runner-up in the BIG EAST, and reached the program's first Sweet 16 since 1974.
   Creighton has four players averaging at least 11.4 points per game, including the trio of Ryan Hawkins (12.6 ppg., 7.2 rpg.), Ryan Nembhard (11.5 ppg., 4.1 apg.) and Ryan Kalkbrenner (11.4 ppg., 7.0 rpg., 2.9 bpg.).
   Alex O'Connell (12.4 ppg., 5.6 rpg.) had a career-high 22 points on Jan. 15 at Xavier, then outdid himself and scored 28 points in a Jan. 19 win vs. St. John's.
   More than 40.9 percent of Creighton's points this season have come from freshmen, who composed much of the team's top-10 recruiting class.
   Creighton averages 68.5 points per game while allowing 66.1 per game. CU shoots 45.1 percent from the floor, 30.5 percent from deep and 72.8 percent at the line. The Jays are +3.5 on the glass but have also turned the ball over an average of 14.7 times per game.
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Scouting Butler
Butler is 11-12 this season and 4-8 in BIG EAST play. The Bulldogs have lost their last four road games in league play.
   Chuck Harris leads a balanced effort with 10.8 points per game, just ahead of Jayden Taylor (8.9 ppg.), Bryce Golden (8.8 ppg.), Bo Hodges (8.4 ppg.), Bryce Nze (8.2 ppg., 5.9 rpg.) and Jair Bolden (7.7 ppg.).
   Fifth-year senior Aaron Thompson (7.8 ppg., 4.1 apg.) also returns to man the point guard position and ranks as one of the league's top defenders.
   The Bulldogs average 62.8 points per game while shooting 41.9 percent from the field, 31.3 percent from three-point range and 70.1 percent at the line. BU surrenders 64.7 points per game and forces 12.0 turnovers per contest.
The Series With Butler
Creighton is 14-11 all-time vs. Butler in a series that dates to a 27-22 Bluejay win in 1933. The home team has won the last nine meetings not played on a neutral site.
   Creighton is 9-2 all-time in Omaha against the Bulldogs, including a 7-1 mark since the schools became BIG EAST rivals. Each the last five games played in Omaha have been double-digit Bluejay victories.
   Greg McDermott is 10-10 in his career vs. Butler, including a 10-8 mark on the Creighton sideline. He is 5-5 against LaVall Jordan, with the home team winning each time (except one neutral meeting).
   Since joining the BIG EAST, Creighton is 9-1 when scoring 72 or more points against the Bulldogs and 1-7 when scoring 71 points or less.
   CU walloped the Bulldogs 93-73 last March 6 in Omaha and again 87-56 five days later at the BIG EAST Tournament, but Butler won this year's initial meeting on Jan. 26 in Indy by a 72-55 count.
The Creighton Coaches
Greg McDermott (Northern Iowa, 1988) owns a 266-133 record in his 12th season with the Bluejays. He owns a career mark of 546-328 in his 28th season, and is 415-264 in his 21st Division I campaign.
   McDermott led Creighton to its first BIG EAST regular-season title in 2019-20, taking a Bluejay team that was picked seventh in the league's preseason poll and ending the year ranked seventh nationally. The Cascade, Iowa native then coached Creighton to its first Sweet 16 since 1974 in 2020-21 and to a share of its first regular-season BIG EAST title in 2019-20.
   McDermott has previously been a head coach at Iowa State (2006-10), Northern Iowa (2001-06), North Dakota State (2000-01) and Wayne State (1994-2000).
   He is assisted by Alan Huss, Ryan Miller and Jalen Courtney-Williams.
With A Win...
- Teams with Ryan Hawkins would improve to 173-16 at the college level, and 98-11 in league play.
- Creighton would improve to 8-3 at home this season, including a 4-1 mark in conference play.
- Creighton will extend its stretch of being .500 or better in league play to 29 games, the BIG EAST's only active streak longer than 12.
- Creighton would avoid being swept by Butler for the first time since 2014-15.
CBS Sports Network History
Since joining the BIG EAST, Creighton is 18-14 on CBS Sports Network and brings a six-game winning streak on the network into Tuesday nigh's game.
   The Bluejays are 1-0 on the station this winter, with a Feb. 17 game at DePaul also scheduled.
McDermott's 400th Game at Creighton
Greg McDermott will coach in his 400th game on the Creighton sideline on Tuesday vs. Butler.
   He enters the night with a 266-133 record.
   Only one previous person in program history has served as head men's basketball coach for 400 games, with that being McDermott's predecessor Dana Altman.
   Altman finished his CU career in 2010 with a 327-176 record, and owned a 260-140 mark after 400 games with the Bluejays.
   Here's a look at Altman and McDermott per each 50 games at Creighton:
Game # at CUÂ Â Â Altman W-LÂ Â Â McDermott W-L
50Â Â Â 20-30Â Â Â 33-17
100Â Â Â 45-55Â Â Â 72-28
150Â Â Â 82-68Â Â Â 112-38
200Â Â Â 116-84Â Â Â 135-65
250Â Â Â 155-95Â Â Â 168-82
300Â Â Â 194-106Â Â Â 198-102
350Â Â Â 226-124Â Â Â 234-116
400Â Â Â 260-140Â Â Â 266-133 so far
450Â Â Â 294-156Â Â Â --
500Â Â Â 325-175Â Â Â --
Lapping The Field
Creighton's victory last Tuesday at No. 17 UConn was Greg McDermott's 88th career win in BIG EAST play. Those 88 wins rank 13th in league history, breaking a tie he had held with Steve Lappas.
   Here's the top-15, ranked by wins:
Name   W-L   Pct.
Jim Boeheim   366-192   .656
Jim Calhoun   274-162   .628
Jay Wright   238-120   .665
John Thompson Jr.   198-110   .643
Mike Brey   136-87   .610
John Thompson IIIÂ Â Â 131-97Â Â Â .575
Lou Carnesecca   127-69   .648
Jamie Dixon   115-57   .669
Rick Pitino   111-60   .649
Rollie Massimino   110-80   .579
Ed Cooley   102-90   .531
Kevin Willard   99-111   .471
Greg McDermott   88-68   .564
Steve Lappas   87-71   .551
P.J. Carlesimo   77-120   .391
BIG EAST Partners With Black Fives Foundation
During the month of February, the BIG EAST Conference and Creighton Athletics will celebrate Black History Month by partnering with the Black Fives Foundation, a nonprofit public charity whose mission is to research, preserve, showcase, teach, and honor the pre-NBA history of African Americans in basketball, to host 22 games honoring Black athletes, coaches, and communities who played a critical part in America's basketball history.
    After basketball was invented in 1891, teams were often called "fives," for their five starting players. The sport, like society, was racially segregated, and all-Black squads were called "Black fives." From 1904, when basketball was first introduced to African Americans on a wide scale organized basis, through the racial integration of all-White professional leagues in the 1940's, dozens of Black fives emerged and thrived while their skill, athleticism, and innovative styles of play helped shape and popularize the game to know and love today.
   Black Fives flourished on the amateur, semi-professional and professional levels in cities like New York City, Washington, D.C., Philadelphia, and Chicago, as well as in other locations with substantial African American populations. The men and women of the Black Fives Era opened doors for generations of African American players and coaches while staging culturally rich, socially meaningful events that strengthened and inspired Black communities in the face of Jim Crow oppression.
    For 22 games (Including Tuesday), the BIG EAST Men's and Women's Basketball Teams will be wearing the name and logo of a Black Fives Team to honor these pioneers. Coaches will wear a "Make History Now" pin to draw awareness to the Foundation's mission, and fans will be educated through videos and other game time promotions on the relevance and importance of the Black Fives.
   This is the first time that basketball programs across an entire athletic conference (either collegiate or professional) have come together to honor the Black Fives and showcase the impact these pioneering teams had on the sport.
More About The Cudahy Rex
Creighton's warm-ups on Tuesday will once again pay homage to the Cudahy Rex, a team that was established in 1930.
   During the 1930s and 40s, the Omaha-based Cudahy Packing Company was among the so-called "big four" of meatpackers, including Armour, Swift, and Wilson.
   Cudahy operated a large packing plant in South Omaha that produced hams, bacon, lard, beef, and lamb, eventually becoming the "biggest employer of Negro labor" in the city.
   By the 1930s, Omaha had the largest population of African Americans among Western cities, second only to Los Angeles.
   In 1930, the company organized an all-Black basketball team comprised of its own African American employees known as Cudahy Rex, named after the company's popular brand of cooking lard.
   "No other word except 'flashy' can describe their two-toned satin sweat jackets," the Grand Island Herald wrote in 1936. But they were no flash in the pan. Its players were former star athletes from the city's predominantly Black high schools.
   In addition to competing for an annual plant-wide basketball championship, Cudahy Rex also played throughout the Omaha region and in local Urban League and YMCA open tournaments. During the 1936-37 season, the Rex team was directed by Creighton University trainer Otto Williams, according to the Omaha Evening Bee-News.
   The existence of the Cudahy Rex team was an important step by the company during this time because African Americans in Omaha could be arrested, jailed, and fined merely for having "no visible means of support," then forced to work off their fines laboring for the city.
   The company's president, Ed Cudahy, Jr., was known for his progressive views and in his 1938 letter to employees openly asked why, with all the country's "wealth, comforts and conveniences of life," had America "not long since conquered the depression and why millions of our workers are unemployed."
Best In Class
Seniors Ryan Hawkins (264 points) and Alex O'Connell (261 points) are atop the Bluejay leaderboard when it comes to points scored this season.
   No Bluejay senior has led the team in scoring since 2017-18 (Marcus Foster), and the last CU's top two scorers were seniors was 2013-14 (Doug McDermott & Ethan Wragge).
   On the other end of the spectrum, freshman Ryan Nembhard leads the Bluejays with 26 steals so far this season. CU hasn't had its steals leader be a freshman since P'Allen Stinnett in 2007-08.
Leading Men
Creighton has had a different leading scorer in each of its last five games.
   The streak started with Ryan Kalkbrenner's 18 in a win vs. DePaul before Arthur Kaluma finished with 18 at Butler. Ryan Nembhard poured in a season-high 23 points vs. No. 21 Xavier on Jan. 29 and Ryan Hawkins followed with 23 big ones in a win at No. 17 UConn. Most recently, Alex O'Connell had 12 points at Seton Hall on Friday.
   Creighton has not had a uniquely different outright leading scorer in six straight games at any point in the last 35 seasons.
   Also notable? Creighton has played 30 straight games where its leading scorer held the outright team lead since Denzel Mahoney, Christian Bishop and Marcus Zegarowski all had 13 points in a 77-53 win vs. DePaul on Feb. 24, 2021.
.500 Or Better
Currently 5-5 in the BIG EAST, Creighton owned a winning percentage of .500 or better at the midway point in league play for the 24th time in the past 26 seasons.
   Here's how Creighton's teams have fared in the various halves of the MVC/BIG EAST season since 1995-96.
Year   Midway Thru League Play   League
2021-22Â Â Â 5-5Â Â Â BIG EAST
2020-21Â Â Â 7-3Â Â Â BIG EAST
2019-20Â Â Â 6-3 Â Â Â BIG EAST
2018-19Â Â Â 4-5Â Â Â BIG EAST
2017-18Â Â Â 6-3Â Â Â BIG EAST
2016-17Â Â Â 6-3Â Â Â BIG EAST
2015-16Â Â Â 5-4Â Â Â BIG EAST
2014-15Â Â Â 1-8Â Â Â BIG EAST
2013-14Â Â Â 8-1Â Â Â BIG EAST
2012-13Â Â Â 7-2Â Â Â Missouri Valley
2011-12Â Â Â 8-1Â Â Â Missouri Valley
2010-11Â Â Â 5-4Â Â Â Missouri Valley
2009-10Â Â Â 5-4Â Â Â Missouri Valley
2008-09Â Â Â 5-4Â Â Â Missouri Valley
2007-08Â Â Â 5-4Â Â Â Missouri Valley
2006-07Â Â Â 6-3Â Â Â Missouri Valley
2005-06Â Â Â 7-2Â Â Â Missouri Valley
2004-05Â Â Â 5-4Â Â Â Missouri Valley
2003-04Â Â Â 7-2Â Â Â Missouri Valley
2002-03Â Â Â 8-1Â Â Â Missouri Valley
2001-02Â Â Â 8-1Â Â Â Missouri Valley
2000-01Â Â Â 5-4Â Â Â Missouri Valley
1999-00Â Â Â 5-4Â Â Â Missouri Valley
1998-99Â Â Â 6-3Â Â Â Missouri Valley
1997-98Â Â Â 5-4Â Â Â Missouri Valley
1996-97Â Â Â 5-4Â Â Â Missouri Valley
1995-96Â Â Â 4-5Â Â Â Missouri Valley
Total   154-91 (.629)
Give Me Five
Per Basketball-Reference.com, Creighton is one of nine schools to have used the same starting five in every game this season
   Creighton is joined by Gonzaga, Purdue Fort Wayne, Murray State, North Texas, San Francisco, Syracuse, Toledo and Virginia Tech.
   Of those programs, Creighton is the only one who's line-up includes two freshmen.
   This season marks the third time in Greg McDermott's 12 seasons that the Bluejays have utilized the same starting five for the first 21 games of the season. CU opened the 2012-13 campaign starting Doug McDermott, Gregory Echenique, Grant Gibbs, Jahenns Manigat and Austin Chatman while the 2011-12 team started Echenique, Gibbs, Manigat, Doug McDermott and Antoine Young.
Stepping It Up
Ryan Hawkins has averaged 15.9 points and 8.1 rebounds per game in seven contests against ranked teams, shooting 50.6 percent from the field, 45.9 percent from three-point range and 94.1 percent at the line.
   By comparison, Hawkins averages 10.9 points and 6.7 rebounds against unranked foes, shooting 38.7 percent from the field, 32.1 percent from downtown and 77.8 percent from the stripe.
Clutch When It Counts
In last Tuesday's win at UConn, all 27 points after halftime were scored by Trey Alexander (11), Ryan Hawkins (10) or Alex O'Connell (6).
   Those three men are also CU's top scorers after halftime in league play, with each man scoring between 56-67 points.
   For the season in BIG EAST play, Alexander has scored 14 points in the first half compared to 56 in the second half. The freshman is also shooting a team-best 58.1 percent from the floor after the break in those contests.
They Are Called Free Throws, After All
After shooting a combined 54-for-65 (83.1 percent)from the line over the last five games, Creighton has climbed to 72.8 percent shooting at the free throw line for the season (129th nationally). That's a significant improvement over last year's team that ranked 322nd nationally with 64.0 percent marksmanship at the stripe.
   The last five games mark the first time that Creighton has shot 80 percent or better at the line in five straight games since an eight-game stretch from Jan. 6-Feb. 1, 2018.
   It's also the first time since Jan. 6-23, 2018 that Creighton has missed four free throws or less in eight straight games. CU hasn't done that in nine consecutive contests in more than 40 years.
   Individually, Alex O'Connell is shooting 88.9 percent and has sunk 13 straight free throws, Ryan Kalkbrenner has made 16 of his last 17 attempts and Ryan Hawkins has drained his last 15 tries.
Shortest Month Also The Busiest
Creighton is scheduled to play nine games in the shortest month of the year, February.
   If everything takes place as planned, it'd be CU's first month with nine games since January of 2017, when the Bluejays went 7-2.
   The last time Creighton played nine games during the month of February came in 2009. That Bluejay squad went 9-0 in those games, winning by an average of 11.67 points per game, en route to a Missouri Valley Conference regular-season title.
   Creighton is 1-1 so far in February.
Run It Back
Last year's Creighton team finished second in the BIG EAST and went on to reach the program's first Sweet 16 since 1974.
   Through 10 league games this season, Creighton has had the exact same result as it did a year ago against the same opponent/site in every game but two (home vs. Xavier and at Seton Hall).
   If that trend continues to hold true, Creighton will win both games this week.
Site/School   2020-21   2021-22
Villanova   CU 86-70   CU 79-59
at Marquette   CU 71-68   CU 75-69 (2OT)
at Villanova   VU 72-60   VU 75-41
at Xavier   XU 77-69   XU 80-73
St. John's   CU 97-79   CU 87-64
DePaul   CU 77-53   CU 60-47
at Butler   BU 70-66 (OT)   BU 72-55
Xavier   CU 66-61   XU 74-64
at UConn   CU 76-74 (OT)   CU 59-55
at Seton Hall   CU 83-81   SHU 74-55
Butler   CU 93-73   Tuesday
at Georgetown   CU 63-48   Saturday
All Ball
Ryan Kalkbrenner ranks third in the BIG EAST and 14th nationally with 2.90 blocked shots per game, a figure that ranks as the best by a Bluejay since Benoit Benjamin averaged 5.06 blocks per game in 1984-85.
   Though he's got an uphill climb to catch Big Ben, Kalkbrenner is still on track to become the first Bluejay to average more than 2.00 blocks per game since Chad Gallagher (2.19) in 1990-91.
   Kalkbrenner's 61 swats are the second-most in school history by a sophomore, but still far behind Benjamin's 157 in 1983-84. No Bluejay of any class has had more than 62 blocked shots in a season since Gallagher in 1990-91 (70).
   Of Kalkbrenner's 61 blocked shots this year, only 12 have gone out of bounds, whereas Creighton has rebounded 32 of the rejections.
   Making the 7-foot-1 sophomore's accomplishments all the more impressive is that the big man owns 61 blocks but has been called for just 25 fouls. Through games of Feb. 5, that made him the nation's only player with 60 or more blocked shots and 31 personal fouls or less.
   Kalkbrenner owns 99 career blocked shots. He ranks ninth in Creighton history in that category and is in position to become the third-fastest Bluejay to reach 100 blocks as he enters his 53rd career game.
Most Career Blocked Shots (Since 1979-80)
   Blk.   Name   Years
   411   Benoit Benjamin   1982-85
   183   Chad Gallagher   1987-91
   174   Gregory Echenique   2010-13
   153   Kenny Lawson Jr.   2006-11
   138   Brody Deren   2001-04
   136   Anthony Tolliver   2003-07
   109   Doug Swenson   1997-99
   104   Joe Dabbert   2000-04
   99   Ryan Kalkbrenner   2020-Present
   82   Christian Bishop   2018-21
Most Blocked Shots, Season (Since 1979-80)
   Blk.   Name   Years
   162   Benoit Benjamin (Jr.)   1984-85
   157   Benoit Benjamin (So.)   1983-84
   92   Benoit Benjamin (Fr.)   1982-83
   70   Chad Gallagher (Sr.)   1990-91
   62   Chad Gallagher (Jr.)   1989-90
   62   Gregory Echenique (Sr.)   2012-13
   61   Ryan Kalkbrenner (So.)   2021-22
   57   Doug Swenson (Jr.)   1997-98
   57   Anthony Tolliver (Sr.)   2006-07
   57   Gregory Echenique (Jr.)   2011-12
   56   Brody Deren (Jr.)   2002-03
   56   Kenny Lawson Jr. (So.)   2008-09
Fewest Games to 100 Career Blocks
Games   Name   Date, Opponent
31   Benoit Benjamin   12/6/83 vs. Rockhurst
47   Doug Swenson   1/30/99 at Northern Iowa
57   Gregory Echenique   2/14/12 at Southern Illinois
64   Brody Deren   3/9/03 vs. Wichita State
84   Kenny Lawson Jr.   1/3/10 at Evansville
91   Chad Gallagher   2/19/90 at Drake
105   Anthony Tolliver   1/6/07 at Evansville
121   Joe Dabbert   2/18/04 vs. Indiana State
SWAT Team
Ryan Kalkbrenner owns a blocked shot in each of Creighton's last 19 games, including multiple rejections in all but three of those contests.
   Kalkbrenner is the first Bluejay with a swat in 19 straight games or longer since Benoit Benjamin began a streak of 28 consecutive contests with a swat on Dec. 14, 1984, a streak that only ended when he left early for the NBA Draft.
You've Been Blocked!
Ryan Kalkbrenner had five blocked shots on both Nov. 22 vs. Southern Illinois and Nov. 27 vs. SIUE. Just how rare is that? In Greg McDermott's 12 years on the Creighton sideline, the only Bluejay with multiple games of 5+ blocks in the same season had been Gregory Echenique, who did it in 2010-11 (2x) as well as 2012-13 (4x).
   Kalkbrenner owns seven different games this season with five blocks or more, with three of those coming against top-25 foes (BYU, Villanova, Xavier).
   Kalkbrenner became the first Bluejay with five swats in consecutive games since Benoit Benjamin did it in six straight games from Jan. 27-Feb. 14, 1985. Benjamin had a streak of 7, 12, 6, 5, 5 and 6 rejections during that stretch.
   Benjamin set MVC records that still stand with 411 career blocks and 162 rejections in 1984-85.
Block Party
After owning seven or more blocked shots in a game just nine times in Greg McDermott's first 11 seasons on the Bluejay sideline, Creighton has eight contests this winter with at least seven swats.
   Creighton is 11-6 all-time under McDermott when blocking seven or more shots, and the six losses have come by a combined 34 points.
   Creighton's 4.90 blocked shots per game as a team this winter is its best figure since averaging 6.03 blocks per game in 1984-85.
   Creighton is 7-3 this season when blocking six shots or more.
Top 25 Success
A 79-59 win vs. No. 9 Villanova coupled with an 83-71 win vs. No. 24 BYU means Creighton owns a pair double-digit wins over top-25 competition this season, something only eight other schools can also claim. Gonzaga, Marquette and Villanova have done it three times while Arizona, Kentucky, Iowa State, Oklahoma and Tennessee have also done it twice.
   The Bluejays have now beaten multiple top-25 foes each of the last seven seasons (2015-16 to 2021-22), something only Baylor, Gonzaga, Kansas, Michigan State, Purdue, Texas Tech and Villanova can also claim. Four other schools have beaten multiple top-25 foes in each of the previous six seasons --  Florida State (1), Michigan, Penn State and West Virginia (1) but are still seeking two top-25 wins this winter.
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
   3   2021-22   #9 Villanova, #17 UConn, #24 BYU
   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
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   27-39
vs. Top 10 Teams   5-31   11-17
vs. Top 10 on Road   1-28   4-9
vs. Top 25 on Road   2-63   9-18
Ranking News & Notes
- Creighton is 27-39 under Greg McDermott against nationally-ranked teams, 20 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's 27 top-25 wins since McDermott took over in 2010 are tied for 38th-most nationally with UCLA and more than schools like Arizona (26), Maryland (22), LSU (16), Auburn (16), Houston (14), Nebraska (14), Wichita State (14), USC (10), Memphis (9) and Saint Mary's (6) in that time.
- Creighton has beaten at least one ranked team in each of the last eight seasons (including 2021-22), and multiple ranked foes in each of the last seven seasons (including 2021-22).
   On a national basis, the only 23 teams with a top-25 win each of the previous seven seasons (entering 2021-22) were 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 22-22 since the start of the 2016-17 season against ranked teams. The 22 wins over ranked teams in that time are tied with Kentucky for 14th-most nationally, and trails only Villanova (29) among BIG EAST clubs. Â
- Creighton's eight road wins against top-25 teams since the start of the 2016-17 season rank tied for fourth-most nationally. It trails only Michigan State (10), Virginia (9) and Kansas (9), and is tied with Villanova (8), Duke (8) and Baylor (8).
- Creighton, Purdue, Texas Tech, Villanova and Wisconsin are the nation's only teams with a top-25 win at home, on the road and at a neutral site this season.
-Creighton is one of eight schools with three or more top-25 wins in each of the past three seasons. That list consists of Creighton, Gonzaga, Kansas, Ohio State, Oklahoma, Purdue, Villanova and Wisconsin, with Baylor, Florida State, Georgetown, Illinois, Iowa, Maryland, Michigan, Michigan State, Texas, UCLA and West Virginia still trying to get there.
Frosh Watch
Creighton is winning at a regular rate despite playing three freshmen (Trey Alexander, Arthur Kaluma, Ryan Nembhard) more than 22 minutes per game.
   On a national basis through Feb. 5, only 167 players classified as freshmen (true, redshirt or otherwise) were playing 22 minutes per game per Basketball-Reference.com.
   Only seven of those freshmen are from the BIG EAST, and besides Alexander, Kaluma and Nembhard the only other true freshmen in the BIG EAST playing 22 minutes per game or more are Georgetown's Aminu Mohammed and Butler's Jayden Taylor.
   CU is the only team nationally to play three true freshmen more than 22 minutes per game.
   And speaking of freshman minutes, Nembhard ranks fifth nationally among true freshmen with 34.3 minutes per game. The next-closest freshman from a Power 5 or BIG EAST program is Nebraska's Bryce McGowens (33.7 mpg.).
Youth Is Served
Creighton has just seven non-freshmen on this year's roster, and is playing multiple freshmen on a consistent basis this season. Creighton has had at least one freshman on the floor for every second of every game this season, and actually had a late stretch of 1:28 vs. Colorado State when all five of its players on the floor were freshmen.
   Creighton has outscored teams by 109 when it has two freshmen or less on the court, but have been outscored by 58 points when it has three or more freshmen on the floor.
   All told, 1992:57 of Creighton's 4,250 total minutes (46.89 percent) have been played by freshmen this season.
   By comparison, last season Creighton had a freshman on the floor just 32.4 percent of the time and had multiple freshmen on the floor just 17 minutes (of 1,250) all season (1.4 percent). Only 7.5 percent (465:52 of 6250) of CU's overall minutes were played by freshmen in 2020-21.
Freshmen   Time   Score   Margin
0 freshmen:   Never   --   --
1 freshmen:Â Â Â 33:45Â Â Â 54-49Â Â Â +5
2 freshmen:Â Â Â 520:15Â Â Â 945-841Â Â Â +104
3 freshmen:Â Â Â 223:00Â Â Â 383-411Â Â Â (-28)
4 freshmen:Â Â Â 45:32Â Â Â 52-85Â Â Â (-33)
5 freshmen:Â Â Â 1:28Â Â Â 5-2Â Â Â +3
Elite Company For Hawkins
Creighton senior Ryan Hawkins owns 2,362 career points and 1,099 career rebounds, though the majority of his totals were accumulated at the Division II level at Northwest Missouri State.
   That's more points than legends such as Alonzo Mourning (2,001), Bob Lanier (2,067), Tim Duncan (2,117), Derrick Coleman (2,143), Patrick Ewing (2,184), Ralph Sampson (2,225), Jerry West (2,309) and Lew Alcindor (2,325).
   Only 24 Division I players in NCAA history have finished their careers with 2,362 points and 1,099 rebounds or more.
Name, School(s)   Last Year   Pts.   Reb.
Lionel Simmons, La Salle   1990   3,217   1,429
Mike Daum, South Dakota State   2019   3,067   1,236
Oscar Robertson, Cincinnati   1960   2,973   1,338
Danny Manning, Kansas   1988   2,951   1,187
Elvin Hayes, Houston   1968   2,884   1,602
Tyler Hansbrough, North Carolina   2009   2,872   1,219
Larry Bird, Indiana State   1979   2,850   1,247
Hank Gathers, USC/Loyola Marymount   1990   2,273   1,128
David Robinson, Navy   1987   2,669   1,314
Michael Brooks, La Salle   1980   2,628   1,372
Dickie Hemric, Wake Forest   1955   2,587   1,802
Calvin Natt, La.-Monroe   1979   2,581   1,285
Terry Taylor, Austin Peay   2021   2,507   1,248
Caleb Green, Oral Roberts   2007   2,503   1,189
Elgin Baylor, College of Idaho/Seattle   1958   2,500   1,559
Luke Harangody, Notre Dame   2010   2,476   1,222
Nick Fazekas, Nevada   2007   2,464   1,254
Tom Gola, La Salle   1955   2,462   2,201
Christian Laettner, Duke   1992   2,460   1,149
Keith Lee, Memphis   1985   2,408   1,336
Phil Sellers, Rutgers   1976   2,399   1,115
Byron Houston, Oklahoma State   1992   2,379   1,190
Ron Harper, Miami (Ohio)Â Â Â 1986Â Â Â 2,377Â Â Â 1,119
Bryant Reeves, Oklahoma State   1995   2,367   1,152
Defense Steps Up
Creighton allowed just 15 points in the second half of its Jan. 22 victory vs. DePaul.
   It was the fewest points allowed in the second half of a game against a Division I team since the Bluejays did it twice in a 10-day span in 2001 when Alan Huss was wrapping up his senior season.
   DePaul's 47 points were the least allowed by Creighton in a conference game since joining the BIG EAST, and fewest since a 59-45 win vs. Southern Illinois on Feb. 19, 2013.
Kalkbrenner Doubles Up
Midway into his sophomore season, Ryan Kalkbrenner has surpassed all of his totals from all of last season already.
   Last season Kalkbrenner had 182 points, 108 rebounds, 38 blocks and 29 dunks in 422 minutes. This year Kalkbrenner owns 240 points, 148 rebounds, 61 blocks and 39 dunks in 567 minutes.
   A big part of that has been his increased stamina. Even though his minutes per game have nearly doubled from 13.6 to 27.0 minutes per game, his per-minute stats have also risen.
Per 40 Minutes - Ryan Kalkbrenner
Year   PTS/40   REB/40   BLOCKS/40   DUNKS/40
2020-21Â Â Â 17.3Â Â Â 10.2Â Â Â 3.6Â Â Â 2.7
2021-22Â Â Â 16.9Â Â Â 10.4Â Â Â 4.2Â Â Â 2.8
Not Your Ordinary Freshman
Arthur Kaluma had a season-high 20 points on Jan. 19 vs. St. John's.
   Kaluma (9.0 ppg.) and classmate Ryan Nembhard (11.5 ppg.) are attempting to become the seventh and eighth Creighton freshmen in the past 28 seasons to average at least 10 points per game.
   In that span, five previous Bluejay freshmen have averaged 10.5 points per game or more, and each was named league Freshman of the Year.
   Before this season, Creighton hadn't had a freshman score 20 points in a game since Marcus Zegarowski vs. Coe on Dec. 20, 2018.
   Nembhard, who had a career-high 23 points vs. Xavier on Jan. 29, is the first Bluejay with multiple games of 20 points or more as a true freshman since Doug McDermott in 2010-11.
CU Freshmen With 20+ Point Games, Since 1994-95
   20+ Point Games   Name   Season
   6   Rodney Buford   1995-96
   6   Doug McDermott   2010-11
   5   Justin Patton   2016-17
   4   P'Allen Stinnett   2007-08
   3   Kyle Korver   1999-00
   2   Terrell Taylor   1999-00
   2   Ryan Nembhard   2021-22
   1   Ryan Sears   1999-00
   1   Ben Walker   1999-00
   1   Ethan Wragge   2009-10
   1   Toby Hegner   2014-15
   1   Khyri Thomas   2015-16
   1   Mitch Ballock   2017-18
   1   Marcus Zegarowski   2018-19
   1   Arthur Kaluma   2021-22
Most Points Per Game, CU Freshmen, Since 1994-95
   PPG   Name   Season
   14.9   *Doug McDermott   2010-11
   14.5   *Rodney Buford   1995-96
   12.9   *Justin Patton   2015-16
   12.6   *P'Allen Stinnett   2007-08
   11.5   Ryan Nembhard   2021-22
   10.5   *Ryan Sears   1997-98
   10.4   Marcus Zegarowski   2018-19
*Went on to win league Freshman of the Year
Trey's Bien
Creighton guard Trey Alexander was named BIG EAST Freshman of the Week on Jan. 24th, the sixth time in the first 10 weeks of the season a Bluejay has earned the league honor.
   Alexander averaged 11.5 points, 6.0 rebounds, 3.0 assists and 1.5 steals in a pair of Creighton wins last week.
   The Oklahoma City product had a career-high 11 points and four assists in Creighton's win on Wednesday vs. St. John's, adding five rebounds.
   In Saturday's come-from-behind win vs. DePaul, Alexander scored all of his new career-high 12 points after halftime as the Bluejays outscored the Blue Demons, 37-15. Alexander also finished the afternoon with seven rebounds, two assists and a career-high three steals.
   Creighton classmate Ryan Nembhard has already won the honor five times this season.
Filling The Gym
Creighton ranks sixth nationally this season with 16,507 fans per home game.
2021-22 NCAA Home Attendance Per Game Leaders
Through 2/5/22
   Rank   School   Average
   1.   Kentucky   19,057
   2.   Arkansas   18,899
   3.   Syracuse   18,359
   4.   North Carolina   18,241
   5.   Tennessee   17,182
   6.   Creighton   16,507
   7.   Wisconsin   16,244
   8.   Kansas   16,227
   9.   Indiana   15,569
   10.   BYU   15,254
Arthur The Great?
Arthur Kaluma is just Creighton's fifth true freshman since 1983-84 to average 8.0 points and 4.0 rebounds per game.
   The only others to do it are Doug McDermott (2010-11), Rodney Buford (1995-96), Bob Harstad (1987-88) and Chad Gallagher (1987-88).
   What do McDermott, Buford, Harstad and Gallagher have in common? They rank as the top four career scorers in Creighton Basketball history.
8 PPG & 4 RPG as True Freshmen Since 1983-84
Name, Fr. Year   Fr. PPG   Fr. RPG   Career Pts.
Doug McDermott, 2010-11Â Â Â 14.9Â Â Â 7.2Â Â Â 3,150
Rodney Buford, 1995-96Â Â Â 14.5Â Â Â 4.2Â Â Â 2,116
Bob Harstad, 1987-88Â Â Â 9.0Â Â Â 8.5Â Â Â 2,110
Chad Gallagher, 1987-88Â Â Â 11.4Â Â Â 5.3Â Â Â 1,983
Arthur Kaluma, 2021-22Â Â Â 9.0Â Â Â 4.9Â Â Â 188
Kaluma In Elite Company
Arthur Kaluma is one of four freshmen nationally from the BIG EAST or a Power Five Conference to be averaging at least 8.0 points, 4.0 rebounds and 0.66 blocked shots per game.
   He's joined by a pair of projected top-3 NBA Draft picks, Duke's Paolo Banchero and Auburn's Jabari Smith, as well as Michigan's Moussa Diabate.
Power 5/BIG EAST Frosh With 8 PPG/4 RPG/0.66 BPG
Name, School   PPG   RPG   BPG
Paolo Banchero, Duke   17.5   8.4   0.9
Jabari Smith, Auburn   15.3   6.7   1.1
Moussa Diabate, Michigan   8.6   6.1   0.7
Arthur Kaluma, Creighton   9.0   4.9   0.7
BIG EAST Pacesetters
- Ryan Kalkbrenner leads the BIG EAST with 3.52 offensive rebounds per game in all games and 3.80 offensive rebounds per game in league play.
- Alex O'Connell leads the BIG EAST in three-point percentage (.439) in league action and is also third with 2.50 three-pointers per conference game.
- In league play, Ryan Hawkins is tied for the BIG EAST lead with four double-doubles.
- Creighton leads the BIG EAST in all games with 28.38 defensive rebounds per game while Butler is last with 23.22 per game. In league play only, Creighton is first with 28.50 per game while Butler is 10th with 22.50 per contest.
- On the other end of the spectrum, Creighton ranks 11th in the league with 30.5 percent shooting from three-point range while Butler is tops in three-point percentage defense by holding teams to 30.1 percent marksmanship from deep.
What's The Difference?
Creighton is off to a 5-5 start in league play, but the difference in a number of categories really jump out.
Stat   5 BE Wins   5 BE Losses
Points Scored Per Game   72.0   57.6
Points Allowed Per Game   58.8   75.0
Rebound Margin   +10.2   -5.6
Offensive Rebounds/Game   13.4   7.2
3FG Made Per Game   8.8   5.0
A/TO Ratio   68/78   45/76
CU's FG% Defense   .352   .441
After Halftime Score   187-152   156-227
Ryan Hawkins Points/Game   16.8   5.8
Ryan Kalkbrenner Reb./Game   9.6   5.4
R. Andronikashvili Assists/Game   2.6   0.2
Iron Men
Creighton's Ryan Nembhard ranks fourth in the BIG EAST with 34.3 minutes per game as he attempts to become the first freshman to lead the BIG EAST in minutes per game (all games) in the last 15 seasons.
   Nembhard's 34.3 minutes per game average in all games is on pace to be the most by a BIG EAST freshman in 10 years, as Providence's LaDontae Henton (37.2), St. John's Maurice Harkless (36.1) and St. John's D'Angelo Harrison (35.3) all did it in 2011-12. No BIG EAST freshman has averaged more than 34 minutes per game since.
O'Connell Can
Senior Alex O'Connell has scored in double-figures in 10 of the past 12 games.
   After scoring in double-figures in 16 of 125 contests over his first four seasons at Duke and Creighton, O'Connell has scored 10 or more points in 16-of-21 battles this season.
   He scored a career-high 22 points at No. 17 Xavier on Jan. 15th, making 7-of-10 shots, 4-of-6 three-pointers and all four free throw tries, before upping that with a new high of 28 points vs. St. John's on Jan. 19, including a career-high six three-pointers.
   The Georgia native is averaging 12.4 points per game overall this season and 13.7 points per game in BIG EAST action.
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Up, Up And Away
Since Feb. 19, 2019, Creighton owns a 37-16 mark in regular-season BIG EAST games. That's one more win 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 had the most wins in 2020-21 as well.
Conference Records Since Feb. 19, 2019
(Through Feb. 6, 2022)
Team   After 2/19/19   '19-20   '20-21   '21-22   Total
Creighton   5-0   13-5   14-6   5-5   37-16
Villanova   2-3   13-5   11-4   10-3   36-15
Providence   3-2   12-6   9-10   10-1   34-19
Seton Hall   2-3   13-5   10-9   5-6   30-23
UConn   2-4#   10-8#   11-6   6-4   29-22
Marquette   2-4   8-10   8-11   8-4   26-29
Xavier   4-1   8-10   6-7   6-5   24-23
Butler   1-4   10-8   8-12   4-8   23-32
St. John's   1-4   5-13   10-9   5-6   21-32
Georgetown   4-2   5-13   7-9   0-10   16-34
DePaul   2-3   3-15   2-13   2-9   9-40
#includes 2018-19 and 2019-20 in the AAC
Among The Best
Since the league's 2013 realignment, Villanova has 123 league wins to lead the BIG EAST by a wide margin, but Creighton's 88 league victories are second-most.
Men's Basketball BIG EAST Wins, 2013-14 to 2/6/22
Team   W   L   Pct.
Villanova   124   30   .805
Creighton   88   68   .564
Providence   88   67   .568
Xavier   86   64   .573
Seton Hall   81   74   .523
Butler   76   82   .481
Marquette   76   81   .484
Georgetown   58   93   .384
St. John's   59   96   .381
DePaul   32   120   .211
Connecticut   17   10   .630
Big Deficits, No Big Deal
Creighton owns 26 victories since the start of the 2010-11 season after trailing by double-figures at some point, including three such rallies this season. In its Jan. 22 win vs. DePaul, CU trailed 34-23 a minute into the second half before beginning its push.
   Twelve of those 26 comebacks have come away from home.
   Creighton's comeback from 16 points down vs. SIUE on Nov. 27 was its biggest since rallying from 16 points down at Seton Hall on Jan. 27th.
   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 on a buzzer-beater by Anthony Tolliver.
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
16   SIU Edwardsville   11/27/21
15   Arkansas-Pine Bluff   11/09/21
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
11   DePaul   01/22/22
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
Nembhard Bags Fifth Freshman Honor
Creighton point guard Ryan Nembhard was named BIG EAST Freshman of the Week for the fifth time this season on Monday, Jan. 17th.
   Nembhard had 18 points, six assists, three steals and two rebounds in an 80-73 defeat at #17 Xavier on Saturday. Nembhard's eight field goals were a season-best while his three steals matched his personal high.
   The Aurora, Ontario, Canada product was previously honored on Nov. 15, Nov. 22, Nov. 29 and Dec. 20, while the rest of the league's freshmen have combined to win five total accolades (one of which was won by teammate Trey Alexander).
   Nembhard is Creighton men's basketball's first player named Freshman or Newcomer of the Week five times in the same season since Doug McDermott was recognized as Missouri Valley Conference Newcomer of the Week seven times in 2010-11.
Hawkins, Villanova or COVID?
It's tough to predict who will win the national title in mid-January, but if the past is any indication, there was a good chance an unstoppable force was on the floor at Finneran Pavilion on Jan. 5th.
   Each of the past six basketball seasons have seen either Villanova, Ryan Hawkins or COVID-19 emerge above all others end the season.
   Villanova won the Division I national title in 2015-16 and 2017-18.
   Hawkins was part of the Northwest Missouri State teams that won national titles at the Division II level in 2016-17, 2018-19 and 2020-21.
   COVID-19 ended the 2019-20 season, a year in which Creighton and Villanova were likely headed towards top-three seeds. Meanwhile, Hawkins' Northwest Missouri State team was the top-ranked squad in the Division II ranks and finished with 31-1 overall record and on a 23-game win streak.
Year   National Champion
2015-16Â Â Â Villanova
2016-17Â Â Â Ryan Hawkins (Northwest Missouri State)
2017-18Â Â Â Villanova
2018-19Â Â Â Ryan Hawkins (Northwest Missouri State)
2019-20Â Â Â COVID-19
2020-21Â Â Â Ryan Hawkins (Northwest Missouri State)
How's This, For Starters?
Creighton is the only team in the BIG EAST Conference to have used the same starting five for every game this season, scoring 245 points in 21 games.
   What makes it all the more impressive is that the five men to start for Creighton this year had combined for ZERO combined starts as Bluejays entering the season.
We're Jamming!
Ryan Kalkbrenner owns 39 dunks this season and 68 in his career. As a team, Creighton owns 78 dunks this season. Here's a look at the Creighton student-athletes with 20 or more dunks in a season, and 25 or more dunks in a career, under Greg McDermott:
Most Creighton Dunks, Season, Since 2010-11
Dunks   Name   Year
74   Martin Krampelj   2018-19
72   Justin Patton   2016-17
50   Christian Bishop   2020-21
39   Ryan Kalkbrenner   2021-22
38   Christian Bishop   2019-20
36   Gregory Echenique   2012-13
33   Martin Krampelj   2017-18
30   Gregory Echenique   2011-12
29   Marcus Foster   2017-18
29   Ryan Kalkbrenner   2020-21
24   Gregory Echenique   2010-11
23   Marcus Foster   2016-17
22   Kenny Lawson Jr.   2010-11
20   Khyri Thomas   2017-18
Most Creighton Dunks, Career, Since 2010-11
Dunks   Name   Years
121   Martin Krampelj   2015-19
103   Christian Bishop   2018-21
90   Gregory Echenique   2010-13
72   Justin Patton   2016-17
68   Ryan Kalkbrenner   2020-Pres.
52   Marcus Foster   2016-18
51   Khyri Thomas   2015-18
38   Will Artino   2011-15
33   Zach Hanson   2013-17
25   Geoffrey Groselle   2012-16
25   Damien Jefferson   2018-21
Most Creighton Dunks, Team, Season, Since 2010-11
Dunks   Year   Team W-L
144Â Â Â 2016-17Â Â Â 25-10 (NCAA)
107Â Â Â 2017-18Â Â Â 21-12 (NCAA)
106Â Â Â 2018-19Â Â Â 20-15 (NIT)
90Â Â Â 2020-21Â Â Â 22-9 (NCAA)
78Â Â Â 2021-22Â Â Â 13-8 so far
60Â Â Â 2019-20Â Â Â 24-7 (Postseason Canceled)
58Â Â Â 2015-16Â Â Â 20-15 (NIT)
56Â Â Â 2010-11Â Â Â 23-16 (CBI)
54Â Â Â 2012-13Â Â Â 28-8 (NCAA)
42Â Â Â 2011-12Â Â Â 29-6 (NCAA)
35Â Â Â 2013-14Â Â Â 27-8 (NCAA)
29Â Â Â 2014-15Â Â Â 14-19
Our 2, D Too
Unlike past Creighton teams that thrived from three-point land, this year's Bluejay squad is dominating from two-point range.
   Creighton ranks 48th nationally (per BartTorvik.com) with its shooting 53.7 percent from two-point range. That includes a 58.1 percent mark from inside the paint.
   Defensively, Creighton is holding the opposition to 42.6 percent shooting from two-point range, the nation's ninth-best figure. That's CU's best mark under McDermott, far surpassing the 45.5 percent mark allowed by the 2012-13 club. Bluejay foes are shooting just 47.5 percent in the paint this season.
#1 In The Record Book; #44 In Your Program
Ryan Hawkins leads every active player at the Division I level in career rebounds (1,099) and field goals made (845) and is second in points (2,362).
   Hawkins also ranks in the top 11 among the nation's active Division I players in double-doubles (5th), games played (9th), three-pointers made (10th) and steals (11th).
   And while it's not among the categories the NCAA tracks among active players, it's worth noting that Hawkins owns 104 career games of 10 or more points. The NCAA Division I record in that category is 135, done by former Creighton All-American Doug McDermott.
Only In 2020-21 (Let's Hope)
Though Creighton's 14 BIG EAST wins last season were three more than any other team in the BIG EAST, the Bluejays were the second seed in the conference tournament since the league decided before the season to go by winning percentage to determine a league champion and seeds.
   The BIG EAST wasn't alone in this. It was 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, in 2020-21
League   Conf. 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
Conference Openers Have Gone Well
Creighton owns a 17-7 record in its last 24 conference openers after a 79-59 win vs. Villanova in its last outing.
   Greg McDermott is 12-9 all-time in conference openers as a Division I head coach, including an 8-4 mark at Creighton (6-3 in the BIG EAST).
   The last team to win a share of any BIG EAST regular-season title after losing the league opener was the 2012-13 Georgetown club. No squad has won an outright title after losing the league opener since Notre Dame won the West Division in 2000-01. And no team has won a league outright title in a one-division BIG EAST after losing the league lid-lifter since Georgetown in 1988-89.
Yearly League Openers Under Greg McDermott
Year   Won (Final W-L)   Lost (Final W-L)
2010-11Â Â Â Illinois St. (10-8)
2011-12Â Â Â Â Â Â Missouri St. (14-4)
2012-13Â Â Â Evansville (13-5)
2013-14Â Â Â Marquette (14-4)
2014-15Â Â Â Â Â Â Providence (4-14)
2015-16Â Â Â St. John's (9-9)
2016-17Â Â Â Seton Hall (10-8)
2017-18Â Â Â Â Â Â Seton Hall (10-8)
2018-19Â Â Â Providence (9-9)
2019-20Â Â Â Marquette (13-5)
2020-21Â Â Â Â Â Â Marquette (14-6)
2021-22Â Â Â #9 Villanova (TBD)
Preseason BIG EAST Poll
Creighton was picked eighth in the preseason BIG EAST Conference poll that was selected via a vote of league coaches.
   Villanova was a unanimous selection to win the league, with Connecticut and Xavier finishing second and third, respectively. St. John's is fourth, followed by Seton Hall, Butler, Providence and Creighton. Rounding out the poll are Marquette, Georgetown and DePaul.
   Villanova standout Collin Gillespie was named Preseason BIG EAST Player of the Year, and was joined on the Preseason All-BIG EAST Team by Nate Watson (Providence), Julian Champagnie (St. John's), Jared Rhoden (Seton Hall), Paul Scruggs (Xavier) and Zach Freemantle (Xavier).
   Creighton is the only school in the league that 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)
2021-22   8th   ? ? ?   --
Wins On Wins on Wins
Creighton's Nov. 21 loss vs. Colorado State was the first time in the six-year college career of Ryan Hawkins that one of his teams lost on a neutral floor. The Northwest Missouri State transfer is now 40-1 on neutral sites when you include his 3-1 mark this year.
   He enters Tuesday's game vs. Butler with a team record of 172-16 (.915) at all sites. He's lost consecutive games in his career just twice, and coming off a loss in CU's most recent game on Friday.
   CU's January 1st win at Marquette marked the 100th conference game of Hawkins' college career. He's currently 97-11 in league games.
Hawkins Scores 25
Ryan Hawkins scored 25 points vs. No. 19 Iowa State. It was the 96th time in his career that the Atlantic, Iowa native scored in double-figures, and 46th time he's scored 20 points or more in a game.
   Hawkins' 25 points were the most by a Bluejay in any game this season, and most by any CU player against a top-25 team since Marcus Zegarowski scored 25 points in an 86-70 win vs. No. 5 Villanova on Feb. 13, 2021.
   Hawkins then scored 25 points against No. 24 BYU in his next outing, making him the first Bluejay with back-to-back games of 25 or more points since Marcus Foster had consecutive 29 point efforts on Feb. 7 & 10, 2018.
   Hawkins is the first Bluejay with multiple games of 25+ points vs. top-25 teams in the same season since Ty-Shon Alexander in 2018-19. Marcus Foster in 2017-18 is the last person with three such games in a season.
The Ryan Express
Creighton has started three players with the first name of Ryan in each game this winter, as Ryan Nembhard, Ryan Hawkins and Ryan Kalkbrenner are all entrenched as starters. Those three men are also three of CU's top four scorers (along with Alex O'Connell).
   In the Dec. 11 win vs. No. 24 BYU, Nembhard, Hawkins and Kalkbrenner combined for 56 points, 21 rebounds and seven blocked shots.
    For the season, the "Ryan Express" has contributed 68.9 percent of Creighton's blocked shots, 51.8 percent of its points, 48.3 percent of its assists, 48.7 percent of its rebounds grabbed and 42.9 percent of its steals.
   Creighton had not started multiple players with the same first name in the same regular-season game since Nov. 18, 2006, when both Nick Porter and Nick Bahe started against Nebraska.
   Creighton has not had a season in which three players with the same first name all started at least once in the regular-season since at least 1980.
   With so many men named Ryan (not to mention assistant coach Ryan Miller), the Bluejay staff has gone to referring to Hawkins as "Hawk", the 7-foot-1 Kalkbrenner as "Big Ryan" and Nembhard as "R2", in honor of his uniform number, as well as "Coach Miller".
At The Buzzer!
Ryan Nembhard drove the length of the court in the final 5.2 seconds to sink a floater as time expired to give Creighton a 66-64 win vs. Southern Illinois on Nov. 22 in the third-place game of the Paradise Jam.
   Ironically enough, the game-ending play was installed several years ago by former Bluejay assistant Paul Lusk, himself a Southern Illinois grad.
   The basket was Creighton's first go-ahead shot as time expired since Booker Woodfox beat Wichita State in the Missouri Valley Conference Tournament quarterfinals on March 6, 2009.
   Prior to Woodfox, Creighton's last previous buzzer-beater had also come against Wichita State, as Anthony Tolliver's shot from the right baseline beat Wichita State on Jan. 28, 2006.
   Nate Funk also hit a buzzer-beater to beat Greg McDermott's Northern Iowa team on Jan. 15, 2005 in Cedar Falls.
   Shots by those four men remain the only game-winning buzzer-beaters by Creighton since the start of the 1999-2000 season.
Five Threats To Score
All five Creighton starters are averaging at least 9.0 points per game this season, a fact made all the more impressive when you consider that these men owned a total of ZERO career starts as a Bluejay entering this winter.
   Creighton has won 22 straight games when five or more players have 10 points or more.
Nembhard's Big Day
Playing his first collegiate road game, freshman point guard Ryan Nembhard thrived in a hostile environment in Lincoln. The Canadian native had 22 points, five rebounds and five assists.
   Since Greg McDermott was hired in 2010, the only other Bluejays with a 20/5/5 game were Mitch Ballock (1), Marcus Foster (3), Grant Gibbs (1), Doug McDermott (2), Khyri Thomas (2), Maurice Watson Jr. (2) and Marcus Zegarowski (3).
   Nembhard is CU's first freshman with a 20/5/5 line since at least 1981-82.
   Nembhard's 22 points were the most by a Bluejay of any year in their first game vs. Nebraska since at least 1980.
Nembhard Earns All-Tourney Honors
Ryan Nembhard earned All-Tournament Team honors at the Paradise Jam after averaging 12.3 points, 4.7 assists, 3.0 rebounds and 2.3 steals in three games.
   Nembhard shot 55.6 percent from the field, 50 percent from three-point range and 60 percent from the line and made a shot at the buzzer vs. Southern Illinois in the third-place game.
   He is CU's first true freshman to pick up All-Tournament Team honors at any event since Doug McDermott was named to the Global Sports Hy-Vee Challenge All-Tournament Team in 2010.
Hawk Talk
Ryan Hawkins finished with 15 points, 10 rebounds and five assists on Nov. 16 at Nebraska. It was just the fourth 15/10/5 game in Greg McDermott's 12 seasons at Creighton, and first since Khyri Thomas had 24 points, 10 rebounds and five assists in a Nov. 15, 2017 Gavitt Tipoff Games win at Northwestern.
   The only others with a 15/10/5 game under McDermott were Austin Chatman (17 points, 11 rebounds, 6 assists vs. Oklahoma on Nov. 19, 2014) and Doug McDermott (30 points, 10 rebounds, 5 assists at Seton Hall on Jan. 4, 2014).
   Hawkins' performance was CU's first 15/10/5 line without a turnover since at least 1980-81.
Like A Hawk
Ryan Hawkins had 10 or more rebounds in each of CU's first three games. He's the first Bluejay to do that to start a season since Benoit Benjamin's streak of 27 consecutive double-figure rebounding games to open his junior campaign in 1984-85.
   Hawkins owns 43 games with 10 or more rebounds in his college career.
Winning With Defense
Creighton's made its reputation on the offensive side with its "Let It Fly" philosophy, but the Bluejays have won thanks in large part to their defense so far this season.
   Creighton held each of its first four opponents under 40 percent from the field for the first time since at least 1980-81.
   Creighton is holding teams to 39.6 percent shooting this season, which would also be the program's best mark in more than 40 years.
Playing With The Lead
In 318 games at CHI Health Center Omaha all-time, Creighton has not trailed in 85 of those contests, a staggering 26.7 percent of the time.
    Under Greg McDermott at home, Creighton is Â
164-39 and hasn't trailed in 60 of those games. He owns an 91-8 record vs. non-conference teams at CHI Health Center Omaha.
Assists 'R' Us
Ryan Nembhard's 10 assists in CU's season-opener were the most by a Bluejay freshman in any game since Marcus Zegarowski had 10 on March 9, 2018 vs. DePaul. He was the nation's ONLY freshman with 10+ assists on the opening night of the college basketball season.
   Prior to Nembhard, no Bluejay (of any year) had dished 10 or more assists in a season-opener since Edward St. Fleur on Nov. 22, 1996 at Wyoming.
Making An Entrance
Arthur Kaluma (15) and Ryan Nembhard (15) became CU's first true freshmen to debut with 10 points or more since Khyri Thomas had 18 points vs. Texas Southern in 2015.
   Nembhard (15 pts., 10 ast.) and Ryan Hawkins (16 pts., 11 reb.) were the first Bluejays since at least 1980 with double-doubles in the season-opener of their debut campaign. No CU player (of any year) had started the season with a double-double since Will Artino (14 pts., 10 reb.) in 2014-15 vs. Central Arkansas.
   Kaluma's eight rebounds were the most by a true freshman in the regular-season opener since Martin Krampelj in 2015 and the most by any Bluejay freshman since redshirt freshman Justin Patton snared eight rebounds in his 2016 debut.
   Kaluma had four blocked shots on Nov. 9 vs. UAPB. The last previous Bluejay newcomer with multiple blocked shots in a season-opener? That'd be Artino on Nov. 11, 2011 vs. North Carolina A&T. Kaluma's four swats were the most by any Bluejay (of any year) on Opening Day since Jeffrey Day had five swats vs. Alcorn State to open the 2004-05 campaign.
   Kaluma (15 & 8) became Creighton's second freshman since at least 1973 to debut with 15+ points and 5+ rebounds, joining Doug McDermott (16 & 7) in 2010.
   Ryan Hawkins grabbed 11 rebounds vs. Arkansas-Pine Bluff, the most by a Bluejay since Damien Jefferson had 12 in 2018. Other than Jefferson, no one's had more than 11 rebounds in their CU debut since Cyril Baptiste snared 17 caroms in 1969. When Hawkins followed with 10 rebounds vs. Kennesaw State, he became CU's first player (of any year) with 10+ rebounds in CU's first two games since Doug Swenson in 1998-99.
Freshman Starts Almost Unheard Of
Between 1992-93 and 2020-21, only four true freshmen started Creighton's regular-season opener. Then on Nov. 9 vs. Arkansas-Pine Bluff, both Ryan Nembhard and Arthur Kaluma got the nod on opening night. Nembhard had 15 points and 10 assists while Kaluma owned 15 points, eight rebounds and four blocks.
   This season marked the first time Creighton started two true freshmen in a regular-season opener since 1991-92 (Eric Dantzler and Mike Amos).
   About the other true freshmen to start...
   Ryan Sears did so in 1997-98. The point guard would go on to start all 124 games of his CU career and remains the program's all-time career assist (570) and steals (283) leader.
   Doug McDermott did so in 2010-11, and he went on to start all 145 games of his career. He would graduate as the fifth-leading scorer in NCAA history with 3,150 career points and is the only three-time First Team All-American since 1986. He now plays for the San Antonio Spurs.
   Khyri Thomas got a start in 2015-16 and remained in CU's starting five each of his first 24 games, and 96-of-102 career contests with the Jays. He has spent parts of the past three seasons in the NBA.
   Shereef Mitchell joined this elite group in 2019-20 when he got the starting nod against Kennesaw State. Mitchell finished with eight points, six rebounds, three assists and three steals in 28 minutes of work.
My Name Is...
Only five men who played for Creighton last season are back this winter, and none of them averaged more than 15 minutes per game.
   Per research by TCU, Creighton's 18.0 percent of minutes returning ranks third-lowest among all teams nationally, and is the least among all teams from the BIG EAST or a Power 5 Conference.
Lowest Percentage of Minutes Returning
School   Pct. of Minutes Returning
Tennessee-Martin    0.0
Portland    8.5
Creighton   18.0
Missouri   19.7
Duquesne   23.2
Iowa State   25.1
Robert Morris   26.3
Boston College   27.6
South Alabama   28.6
TCUÂ Â Â 29.2
Who's Back?
With Creighton returning only five of the 15 men who appeared in a game last season, it's no surprise that much of the production from 2020-21 is also gone. Below is a breakdown of what is back:
Stat   Returners   Departures
Starts   2 (1.3%)   153 (98.7%)
3FG Made   25 (8.5%)   268 (91.5%)
Assists   68 (14.0%)   417 (86.0%)
Points   371 (15.8%)   1,984 (84.2%)
Minutes   1,124 (18.0%)   5,126 (82.0%)
Steals   39 (18.1%)   177 (81.9%)
Rebounds   207 (20.7%)   794 (79.3%)
Charges Taken   5 (29.4%)   12 (70.6%)
Blocks   39 (37.9%)   64 (62.1%)
Release, Rotation, Splash, Repeat
Creighton has made at least one three-pointer in 934 straight games. The streak is the nation's 13th-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 (2/6)
   Rk.   Streak   School   Next
   1.   1,152   UNLV   2/8
   2.   1,135   Duke   2/7
   3.   1,085   Western Kentucky   2/10
   4.   1,076   East Tennessee State   2/7
   5.   1,053   Oakland   2/9
   6.   1,052   Pacific   2/8
   7.   1,046   Texas   2/7
   8.   992   Marshall   2/10
   9.   985   Baylor   2/9
   10.   978   Princeton   2/12
   11.   971   Gonzaga   2/10
   12.   948   Long Island   2/10
   13.   934   Creighton   2/8
   14.   933   Mount St. Mary's   2/10
   15.   922   Tennessee State   2/10
Triple Trouble
During Creighton's current streak of 934 straight games with a three-pointer, the Jays have drained 7,356 trifectas, an average of 7.88 treys per game.
   That's not surprising since during the streak, Creighton has made exactly 7 three-pointers 140 times, more than any figure.
   Only five times in the streak has Creighton made just one three-pointer, but on 263 occasions the Bluejays have made 10 or more trifectas, including three games of 20 or more.
   Creighton has also made a trifecta in the first half of 305 straight games (since going 0-7 vs. Drake on Jan. 23, 2013). That streak was in serious jeopardy on Opening Day this season as CU missed its first 14 three-point tries before a man named Trey (Alexander) extended the streak.
   Since the start of the 2019-20 season, the Bluejays are 41-7 when making eight or more three-pointers, compared to a 16-16 mark when making seven treys or fewer.
Team 3FG Made During Creighton's 3-Point Streak
1:   5 times   2: 16 times   3: 33 times
4:   71 times   5:  100 times   6: 100 times
7:  140 times   8:  116 times   9: 90 times
10: 77 times   11: 53 times   12: 49 times
13: 44 times   14: 19 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 Feb. 5, 2022
Category   CU Stat   CU Rank  Â
3FG Made   3,525   3rd  Â
3FG Percentage   .379   3rd  Â
FG Percentage   .478   4th  Â
Assists   6,383   5th  Â
FG Made   10,886   9th  Â
Points   30,469   9th  Â
Wins   266   30th  Â
Winning Percentage   .667   33rd  Â
Top-10 Class
Creighton signed four top-100 players en route to inking the No. 7 recruiting class in the country, per 247Sports. That also ranks as the best class in the BIG EAST Conference.
   Here's how the nation's top-10 classes shake out:
1.   Memphis
2.   Michigan
3.   Gonzaga
4.   Tennessee
5.   Duke
6.   LSU
7.   Creighton
8.   Florida State
9.   Connecticut
10.   Kentucky
#ProJays
Former Creighton All-American Doug McDermott is a starter for the San Antonio Spurs, giving Creighton at least one NBA player in 38 of the last 39 seasons.
   Last year five Bluejays appeared in an NBA game, as McDermott was joined by Ty-Shon Alexander, Justin Patton, Khyri Thomas and Anthony Tolliver.
   McDermott is in his eighth season in the NBA. Last year he with Indiana he averaged a career-high 13.6 points per game.
   Other famous Bluejays to play in the NBA in the past include Paul Silas, Kyle Korver, Benoit Benjamin and Anthony Tolliver.
In Search Of 20 Wins, Again
Creighton had 22 wins last season, its sixth consecutive campaign with 20 or more victories.
   Only six teams have won 20 games or more in each of the previous six seasons: Belmont, Creighton, Gonzaga, Houston, Kansas and Oregon.
21 of 23 Seasons With 20 Wins
Creighton has won 20 or more games in 21 of the last 23 seasons (entering 2021-22), 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, Previous 23 Seasons
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
Who Are These Guys?
For the first time since at least 1980-81, Creighton will not return any of its five starters as Mitch Ballock, Christian Bishop, Damien Jefferson, Denzel Mahoney and Marcus Zegarowski are all gone after combining to make 152-of-155 possible starts last season.
   In fact, there's only been four previous times in the last 40 years that just one starter has returned. Those four occurrences came in 1985-86 (went 12-16), 2007-08 (22-11), 2014-15 (14-19) and
2015-16 (20-15).
   Shereef Mitchell started two games last season when Zegarowski was injured, and no other active Bluejay had ever started a game for CU prior to CU's Nov. 9 season-opener. In the previous 40 seasons, Creighton's always returned players who combined for at least 40 starts in the previous season.
   Returning   Returning Starts    Final
Year   Starters   From Previous Year   W-L
2021-22Â Â Â 0Â Â Â 2Â Â Â ? ? ?
2020-21Â Â Â 5Â Â Â 124Â Â Â 22-9
2019-20Â Â Â 4Â Â Â 136Â Â Â 24-7
2018-19Â Â Â 2Â Â Â 57Â Â Â 20-15
2017-18Â Â Â 2Â Â Â 72Â Â Â 21-12
2016-17Â Â Â 4Â Â Â 130Â Â Â 25-10
2015-16Â Â Â 1Â Â Â 64Â Â Â 20-15
2014-15Â Â Â 1Â Â Â 49Â Â Â 14-19
2013-14Â Â Â 4Â Â Â 144Â Â Â 27-8
2012-13Â Â Â 4Â Â Â 140Â Â Â 28-8
2011-12Â Â Â 3Â Â Â 101Â Â Â 29-6
2010-11Â Â Â 4Â Â Â 123Â Â Â 23-16
2009-10Â Â Â 3Â Â Â 106Â Â Â 18-16
2008-09Â Â Â 3Â Â Â 83Â Â Â 27-8
2007-08Â Â Â 1Â Â Â 44Â Â Â 22-11
2006-07Â Â Â 4Â Â Â 120Â Â Â 22-11
2005-06Â Â Â 4Â Â Â 134Â Â Â 20-10
2004-05Â Â Â 2Â Â Â 58Â Â Â 23-11
2003-04Â Â Â 3Â Â Â 101Â Â Â 20-9
2002-03Â Â Â 5Â Â Â 159Â Â Â 29-5
2001-02Â Â Â 2Â Â Â 65Â Â Â 23-9
2000-01Â Â Â 3Â Â Â 90Â Â Â 24-8
1999-00Â Â Â 3Â Â Â 84Â Â Â 23-10
1998-99Â Â Â 3Â Â Â 84Â Â Â 22-9
1997-98Â Â Â 4Â Â Â 72Â Â Â 18-10
1996-97Â Â Â 4Â Â Â 126Â Â Â 15-15
1995-96Â Â Â 4Â Â Â 100Â Â Â 14-15
1994-95Â Â Â 2Â Â Â 52Â Â Â 7-19
1993-94Â Â Â 3Â Â Â 73Â Â Â 7-22
1992-93Â Â Â 2Â Â Â 64Â Â Â 8-18
1991-92Â Â Â 2Â Â Â 51Â Â Â 9-19
1990-91Â Â Â 4Â Â Â 132Â Â Â 24-8
1989-90Â Â Â 4Â Â Â 127Â Â Â 21-12
1988-89Â Â Â 4Â Â Â 123Â Â Â 20-11
1987-88Â Â Â 3Â Â Â 83Â Â Â 16-16
1986-87Â Â Â 2Â Â Â 65Â Â Â 9-19
1985-86Â Â Â 1Â Â Â 48Â Â Â 12-16
1984-85Â Â Â 4Â Â Â 124Â Â Â 20-12
1983-84Â Â Â 3Â Â Â 72Â Â Â 17-14
1982-83Â Â Â 3Â Â Â 77Â Â Â 8-19
1981-82Â Â Â 2Â Â Â 78Â Â Â 7-20
1980-81Â Â Â 4Â Â Â 112Â Â Â 21-9
McDermott Ranks Second On CU Wins List
Greg McDermott has 266 victories at Creighton, good for second place on CU's all-time wins list.
   McDermott's .667 winning percentage is Creighton's best since Arthur A. Schabinger's .714 win rate more than 85 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.   266-133   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
Firing On All Cylinders
Creighton continued to be highly regarded by KenPom.com, and finished last season 22nd. That included 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.
   Last season was the sixth different time in the last 10 seasons that Creighton has had a top-25 offense per KenPom.
   Creighton has finished with an offensive and defensive rating in the top-83 nationally every season since 2015-16. Nationally, the only nine other schools that can claim that (entering 2021-22) are Baylor, Florida, Florida State, Gonzaga, Kansas, Maryland, Purdue, Texas Tech and Villanova.
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
2021-22Â Â Â 104Â Â Â 34Â Â Â 13-8 so far
CHI Health Center Omaha Dramatics
Creighton is 8-8 in games with a game-winning go-ahead score in the final 10 seconds at CHI Health Center Omaha, which opened in the fall of 2003.
Creighton's Go-Ahead Scores in Wins at
CHI Health Center Omaha, Last 10 Seconds
Date   Opponent   Score   Player/Score   Time
11/26/05   Dayton   W 91-90*   Funk FG   :5.7
01/28/06   Wichita St.   W 57-55   Tolliver FG   :0.0
11/25/06   George Mason   W 58-56   Watts FT   :7.5
03/18/08   Rhode Island   W 74-73   Witter 3FG   :3.2
01/13/10   Southern Illinois   W 71-69   Young FG   :1.3
02/18/12   Long Beach St.   W 81-79   Young FG   :0.3
01/28/14   St. John's   W 63-60   McDermott 3FG   :2.8
01/18/20   Providence   W 78-74   Zegarowski 3FG   :3.2
*double-overtime
Opponent Go-Ahead Scores in CU Losses at
CHI Health Center Omaha, Last 10 Seconds
Date   Opponent   Score   Player/Score   Time
03/20/06Â Â Â Miami (Fla.)Â Â Â L 53-52Â Â Â G. Diaz FTÂ Â Â :2.6
01/20/07   Southern Illinois   L 58-57   B. Mullins FG   :4.1
01/10/15   #19 Seton Hall   L 68-67   S. Gibbs 3FG   :2.2
02/16/15   #19 Butler   L 58-56   R. Jones FG   :1.9
03/07/15   Xavier   L 74-73   D. Davis FT's   :6.3
01/12/16   #12 Providence   L 50-48   K. Dunn FG   :0.0
02/22/17   Providence   L 68-66   K. Cartwright 3FG   :2.4
02/10/18   #5 Xavier   L 71-72   Q. Goodin FT's   :0.3
Top-20 Crowds
Here's a look at Creighton's top-20 home crowds all-time.
    Rank   Att.   Opponent   Date
   1.   18,868   Providence   03/08/14
   2.   18,859   Georgetown   01/25/14
   3.   18,831   #1 Villanova   12/31/16
   4.   18,797   #6 Villanova   02/16/14
   5.   18,759   #1 Gonzaga   12/01/18
   6.   18,742   Seton Hall   02/23/14
   7.   18,735   Wichita State   02/11/12
   8.   18,613   Wichita State   03/02/13
   9.   18,525   Marquette   12/31/13
   10.   18,519   #8 Seton Hall   03/07/20
   11.   18,518   Georgetown   01/27/18
   12.   18,495   Marquette   02/17/18
   13.   18,494   Illinois State   02/09/13
   14.   18,458   Evansville   12/29/12
   15.   18,436   Bradley   01/28/12
   16.   18,323   DePaul   02/07/14
   17.   18,321   #3 Villanova   02/24/18
   18.   18,294   #19 Iowa State   12/04/21
   19.   18,257   #5 Xavier   02/10/18
   20.   18,191   DePaul   02/27/18
CHI Health Center Omaha Success
Creighton has played 318 regular and postseason contests at CHI Health Center Omaha all-time in the 19-year-old facility.
   The Bluejays own a 261-57 (.821) record all-time at the facility, and have never lost there on a Friday (22-0).
   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 24,880-20,851 in games at CHI Health Center Omaha, an average margin of 12.67 points per game. Creighton has not trailed 85 different times.
   Creighton is also 32-34 all-time in the 66 games at the arena in which it's fallen behind by double-figures at any point, 8-11 when down by 10+ points at halftime in the facility, and 39-27 when trailing at halftime at CHI Health Center Omaha.
   Creighton is 164-39 (.808) at CHI Health Center Omaha under Greg McDermott and hasn't trailed in 60 of those games. In that same span, CU owns an 91-8 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 280-57 (.831) at home since the start of the 2002-03 campaign.
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Home Run
Under Greg McDermott Creighton is averaging 80.72 points per home game (16,386 points in 203 home games), a figure that climbs to 84.08 points in non-conference home games (8,324 points in 99 home games). Creighton is 125-6 all-time at CHI Health Center Omaha when scoring 80 or points.
Ticket Information
Single-game tickets for the 2021-22 season went on sale on October 18th. Fans can purchase single-game tickets at CHI Health Center Omaha Box Office, Ryan Athletic Center, by calling Ticketmaster or visiting Ticketmaster.com, and charging by phone at (800) 745-3000.
   For more information, call the Creighton Ticket Office at (402) 280-JAYS.
Players Mentioned
Meet the Jays - MBB Blake Harper
Friday, August 15
Meet the Jays - MBB Austin Swartz
Friday, August 15
Meet the Jays - MBB Jasen Green
Friday, August 15
Meet the Jays - MBB Ty Davis
Friday, August 15