Princeton University Athletics
Players Mentioned

Men's Basketball to Meet Towson for First Time Wednesday
December 20, 2010 | Men's Basketball
Wednesday, Dec. 22 at 4 p.m. at Towson, Md.
Princeton Head Coach: Sydney Johnson (fourth season/Princeton '97/49-49 at Princeton & overall)
Radio: WPRB 103.3 FM, GoPrincetonTigers.com (John Sadak, Play-by-Play)
Live Stats | Live Audio
All-Time Series: First Meeting
Streak: N/A
Last game: Princeton 69, at Wagner 57 (12/17/10)
Princeton stats: 2010-11 Stats
Individual 2010-11 game-by-game: 2 Maddox | 3 Sherburne | 5 Bray | 11 Foley | 12 Hazel | 14 Clement | 15 Comfort | 20 Davis | 22 Saunders | 24 Barrett | 25 Noonan | 32 Darrow | 33 Mavraides | 34 Hummer | 41 Edwards | 44 Connolly
Individual career stats can be found on each player's roster page.
Towson links: Towson men's basketball page | Towson game notes
Last game's starters:
20 • Douglas Davis • G • Jr. • 5-11 • Philadelphia, Pa.
Has 874 career points, an active best among Tigers ... eight double-digit scoring games out of 11 this season ... second-team All-Ivy 2010, honorable mention 2009.
33 • Dan Mavraides (mav-RAID-eez) • G • Sr. • 6-4 • San Mateo, Calif.
Nine double-digit scoring games of 11 this season ... has made a three-pointer in eight straight games ... team is 8-1 when he reaches double digits (loss to Duke), 0-2 when he doesn't ... 2010 second-team All-Ivy.
22 • Patrick Saunders • F • Jr. • 6-8 • Gilford, N.H.
Has started the last eight games ... has reached double digits in scoring in three of the last four games, comprising all three double-digit scoring games this season.
34 • Ian Hummer • F • So. • 6-7 • Vienna, Va.
Team's leading scorer (14.8 ppg) and leading rebounder (6.5 ppg) ... has scored double digits in 9 of 11 games this season ... has had multiple assists in each of the last six games ... had a double-double (24 pts., 14 reb.) vs. Presbyterian on Nov. 24.
44 • Brendan Connolly • C • So. • 6-11 • Brentwood, Tenn.
Has made first 11 starts of career this season ... first career double-digit scoring game (10 pts) came Friday at Wagner.
Towson will bring Princeton to Maryland for its first game in the Old Line State since Dec. 29, 2003 when Princeton played at Loyola College.
Princeton has won its last two in Maryland, defeating Loyola and UMBC both in 2003, with its last loss in the state coming to the Maryland Terrapins in Baltimore in 1998.
Towson is Princeton's fifth first-time opponent of the season after James Madison, Presbyterian, Siena and Tulsa. The Tigers will have six first-time opponents this season, including whichever team it faces on Dec. 30 in Florida, whether UCF or Furman.
Last time out, Princeton used a 24-5 run over less than nine minutes in the first half to close an early four-point deficit and defeat Wagner 69-57. Even after that big run, Princeton shot 64.7% (11 of 17) in the second half to put the game away and finish with a 54.3% clip on the game overall. It was Princeton's sixth straight win this season and the second-highest shooting percentage for the Tigers in a game this season (Lafayette, 30-49/61.2%).
Kareem Maddox scored 23 points to lead all scorers against Wagner, a total that followed up his 31-point effort in the Dec. 12 double-overtime win at Tulsa. Dan Mavraides (12), Patrick Saunders (11) and Brendan Connolly (10) were also in double figures, with both Saunders and Connolly making all four shots each attempted from the field. Maddox's last two games have earned him back-to-back Ivy League Player of the Week honors.
Princeton won the rebounding battle against Wagner 32-23, breaking a five-game string in which the Tigers did not win the rebounding battle. It was Princeton's second-largest rebounding margin of the season after outboarding Bucknell by 12 last month. Conversely, the Tigers lost the turnover stat 18-16, breaking a six-game string in which Princeton had won that stat.
In the nine games since the Duke contest, Princeton has trailed by double digits only once, against Bucknell, by 11 points and for less than a minute. The Tigers came back to win that game, making it the largest deficit rallied from in a Princeton win this season.
With the win at Wagner, Princeton head coach Sydney Johnson returned to a .500 winning precentage for the first time since the fourth game of the 2007-08 season, now at 49-49. From the 2008-09 season forward, Johnson's record is 43-26. The next milestone for Johnson will come with Princeton's next win, which will be his 50th victory as a head coach.
Though the Tigers will not play at Jadwin Gym again until Jan. 5, Princeton has won its first three home games for the first time since the 2004-05 season. The Tigers last won their first four home games against Division I teams in the 1999-2000 season.
The current six-game road trip is the longest consecutive string of games away from Jadwin since Princeton opened the 2006-07 season with seven games away from home.
This year's Princeton team has scored the most points through 11 games (792) since the 1971-72 team, which had 917 through 11 games. Princeton needs just eight points to maintain the title of the highest-scoring team through 12 games since '71-'72, as the 2002-03 team had 799 through 12. The '71-'72 team scored 986 through 12 games.
The '71-'72 team was the last Tiger team to start the season with as many as 11 games scoring at least 60 points, as these Tigers have done. That team started the season with 14 straight games with at least 60 points and missed meeting that mark in every game by a single point in a single game, as Penn held Princeton to 59 in the 15th game of the season.
Princeton has scored
at least 60 points in 11 straight games for the first time in a
single season since the last 12 games of the 1971-72 season. Twice, the Tigers have had longer streaks bridging two seasons, including an 11-gamer in 1987 and a 13-gamer in 1974.
The Tigers have played three overtime games in a season for the 15th time in program history. The program record for OT games in a season is five, set in 1980-81. The last time Princeton played four OT games in a season was in 1998-99. The three OT victories tie a program record, set in 1956-57 and matched in 2003-04 and 2005-06.
Kareem Maddox's 54 points over the last two games (31 at Tulsa, 23 at Wagner) are the most in a two-game span for any Tiger since Noah Savage '08 had 57 (35 at Brown, 22 at Harvard) in February 2008.
Kareem Maddox's 31 points at Tulsa, coming four games after he scored 30 points against Siena, made him the first Tiger since Kevin Mullin '84 with two 30-point games in a season and only the second player since Brian Taylor '84 (entered with the Class of 1973) did so six times in the 1971-72 season. If Maddox can reach 30 again this season, he would be just the fourth player in program history, after Bill Bradley '65, Geoff Petrie '70 and Taylor, to have at least three 30-point games in a single season.
Douglas Davis and Dan Mavraides each had back-to-back 20-point efforts in 2009-10, as Kareem Maddox has done over the last two games. The last player to have three straight 20-point games was Judson Wallace '05, who did so in five straight games in February 2004.
Princeton attempted just five 3-pointers at Wagner, tying a program low set on Feb. 9, 1990 against Harvard, when Princeton was 2 for 5.Wednesday's game doesn't figure to be a low-scoring contest. Princeton has scored at least 60 points in every game this season, and Towson has done so in each of the last eight games, surpassing 70 in six of those. Towson's opponents have scored at least 60 in every game, surpassing 70 on eight occasions.
Douglas Davis is three 3-pointers away from moving into fifth place by himself on Princeton's career 3-point scoring chart. Davis has 154 career threes, behind Noah Savage '08 and Bob Scrabis '89 (155) and Kyle Koncz '08 (156). Fourth place is also within reach and is held by head coach Sydney Johnson '97 (162). Current assistant coach Brian Earl '99 is the leader with 281.
Despite 12 other Division I schools having the Tigers nickname, the Towson game will be just the second meeting all-time against a D-I school with the same moniker as Princeton, and nearly 40 years to the day since the first. On Dec. 21, 1970, Princeton fell at Memphis, 86-77.
The last time Princeton played in the hometown of its head coach was in December 2001, when the Tigers dropped games against Maryland and George Washington in an event in Washington, D.C. That was the hometown of then-coach John Thompson III, who went to Gonzaga College High School, the same alma mater of current Tiger Ian Hummer. Princeton was 5-0 playing at Lehigh during the tenure of Pete Carril, a native of Bethlehem, Pa. The Tigers were also a combined 3-0 at Monmouth, the Division I school closest to the hometowns of recent former coaches Bill Carmody (Spring Lake, N.J.) and Joe Scott (Pelican Island, N.J.).
Sydney Johnson is a 1992 alumnus of Towson Catholic High School, along with fellow basketball alumni of recent vintage Carmelo Anthony of the Denver Nuggets and Donte Greene of the Sacramento Kings. Anthony went to Towson Catholic for three years before moving on to prep school in Virginia, and Greene is now alongside former Princeton coach Pete Carril, who is an assistant with the Kings.
Princeton has won back-to-back games against teams playing on just one day's rest, as Towson will do against Princeton. On Dec. 5, Princeton defeated Saint Joseph's, which had played two days earlier at Villanova, and on Nov. 28, Princeton defeated Siena, which played two days earlier at Rider. Towson will be traveling further than Saint Joseph's or Siena for its second-in-three-days game against Princeton, as Towson will be making the 230-plus mile trip from Hampton after Monday's game there.
Wednesday's game will be just the fifth for Princeton against a Colonial Athletic Association team at the time of the game. Princeton swept UNC Wilmington in a home-and-home series in 1997 and 1998 before losing to Drexel in Jadwin Gym in 2005 and at James Madison earlier this season. It will be Princeton's third trip to face a CAA team on its home floor. Princeton's only win in such a situation came Nov. 21, 1998, in a 61-54 OT win at UNC Wilmington.
Princeton will have back-to-back games against CAA teams, with a game against Northeastern at UCF's tournament coming next Wednesday.
Towson coach Pat Kennedy's son Joe played for former Princeton coach Bill Carmody at Northwestern from 2003-07.
Princeton has never played against a Pat Kennedy-coached team, despite Kennedy having been a head coach since 1980 at Iona, Florida State, DePaul, Montana and Towson. Kennedy is also a New Jersey native from Keyport, N.J.
Princeton's longest winning streak in the Sydney Johnson era is seven games, once each in the 2008-09 and 2009-10 seasons. If Princeton wins its next two (at Towson on Dec. 22, vs. Northeastern in Florida on Dec. 29), the Tigers would have their longest winning streak since a nine-game string at the end of the 2004 regular season.
As of Dec. 19, the latest NCAA release, Princeton's best national statistical ranking was 32nd in 3-point field goal percentage at 39.8%. Individually, Ian Hummer had the top ranking with a 22nd-best 59.6% field goal percentage. Towson's best statistical ranking at that point was 51st in rebounding margin at +6.1 rpg. That was paced by Braxton Dupree's 10.1 rebounds per game, then the 24th best in Division I and Towson's best statistical ranking in any category.
Princeton has shot almost twice as many free throws in the second half (126) as in the first half (72) this season while overall and 3-point field goal attempts have gone down from the first half to the second. Princeton's free-throw percentage is higher in the first half (72.2%) than in the second half (66.7%). On the glass, the Tigers have a rebounding edge of +1.6 boards per game in first halves and a deficit of -0.1 in second halves.
In games Princeton has won, Dan Mavraides and Kareem Maddox are averaging a co-team-best 16.0 points per game. In losses, Mavraides is averaging 8.7 points and Maddox 4.7 points. Both Ian Hummer and Douglas Davis are averaging comparable double figures in wins and losses.
Princeton has outshot its opponents from the field overall in five of the six games during the winning streak, with the Monmouth game (43.4% to 44.2%) as the exception.
Princeton hasn't shot under 42.4% from the field this season, the percentage it hit against Presbyterian on Nov. 24. The Tigers have shot 40% in 15 straight games dating back to last season, its longest streak since a 19-gamer to end the 1997-98 season.
During the current six-game winning streak, Princeton has converted 75.2% of free-throw attempts (100 of 133).
Six of Princeton's last seven regular-season losses have come by a total of 14 points. Aside from the Duke game, the deficits were one (James Madison), two (Maine, Presbyterian) and three (Cornell twice, Brown) points.
Princeton is 4-0 this season when it holds opponents under 40% shooting, as it did against Bucknell, Siena, Tulsa and Wagner.
Princeton's streak of winning the turnover statistic in six straight games ended at Wagner, 18-16. The only times Princeton did not win the turnover stat this season prior to the Wagner game were the first four games of the season, in which Princeton finished 2-2.
With a 32-23 edge on the glass, the Tigers won the rebounding battle at Wagner to end a five-game string of losing that statistic. Princeton won all five of those games anyway and have won eight of the last nine games it's been outrebounded, dating back to last season.
Princeton is 7-0 this season when it shoots at least 70% from the free-throw line, as it did against Rutgers, Bucknell, Siena, Lafayette, Saint Joseph's, Tulsa and Wagner.
The Tigers are 6-1 when leading at the half and 2-2 when trailing. Princeton was down to Siena by four at the half and to Tulsa by one before winning both in OT, and the Tigers were up 13 on James Madison at the break before losing by one.
Princeton has used two starting lineups this season. Ian Hummer, Douglas Davis, Dan Mavraides and Brendan Connolly have started all 11 games, while Patrick Saunders has started in place of Kareem Maddox the last eight games.
Entering Monday's games, Princeton ranked No. 1 in the Ivy in field goal percentage (47.2%), while the Tigers' top individual ranking was second, held by Douglas Davis in 3-pointers per game (2.7) and minutes played per game (36.6), and by Ian Hummer in field goal percentage (59.6%).
A Tiger overview entering 2010-11...
•The Tigers are
coming off a 22-9 season that saw their most wins since 1999, their
first postseason appearance (CBI semifinals) since 2004, and their first
postseason win since 1999.
•Princeton was tabbed as the Ivy favorite in the league's media poll for the first time since 2004-05, getting 12 of 17 first-place votes. Harvard (four first-place votes), Cornell (one), Penn, Yale, Brown, Columbia and Dartmouth rounded out the poll.
•Princeton returns its top five scorers for the second straight year. This year, the list includes (2009-10 ppg) Douglas Davis (12.7), Dan Mavraides (11.5), Ian Hummer (6.9), Kareem Maddox (6.2) and Patrick Saunders (5.1). The Tigers also return their top two rebounders in Mavraides (4.3 rpg in 2009-10) and Maddox (3.5) but lose their top two assist-makers, Marcus Schroeder '10 (90 assists in 2009-10) and Pawel Buczak '10 (52).
•The Tigers were the top defensive team in the nation by points per game allowed last season at 53.3 ppg.
•Under Sydney Johnson, Princeton has improved from a 6-23 record in 2007-08, Johnson's first year, to 22-9 last year. The 14-win improvement is the largest in program history for a period of two or fewer years.
•Princeton
outrebounded its opponents in 2009-10 for the first time in a season
since 2003-04. The margin last year was 30.6 to 29.5 rpg, while the
margin in '04 was 30.6 to 27.8 rpg.
•From 2007-08, Johnson's first
year, to 2009-10, several key statistics improved for Princeton,
including field goal percentage (42.5 to 44.1), FG percentage defense
(46.8 to 39.8), three-point FG percentage (32.9 to 35.9) and free throw
percentage (69.8 to 71.8).
•Last season was the first time since 2005-06 that the Tigers had more steals and fewer turnovers than their opponents.
•Princeton
will try to fill the contributions of four graduated seniors, Marcus
Schroeder, Pawel Buczak, Zach Finley and Nick Lake. Among the tangibles,
Finley and Buczak were two of four Tigers last year to stand 6-9 or
taller, and Schroeder was a do-everything point guard. His 52 steals led
the team, as did his 90 assists. Schroeder was one of four Tigers to
grab 100 rebounds and one of two to shoot better than 80% of the line
with at least 30 attempts.
•If their 2009-10 scoring totals are
replicated, Douglas Davis '12 and Dan Mavraides '11 will become the 27th
and 28th members of Princeton's 1,000-point club. Through 10 games this season, Davis is at 874,
while Mavraides is at 801. They would become the first members of that
club since Judson Wallace '05 and Will Venable '05 reached it one month
apart in 2005.
•Since freshman eligibility began in the program
for the 1978-79 season, only Kit Mueller '91 has reached 1,000 points
before his senior year, a feat Davis would match at his current pace.
The only other players to reach 1,000 before their senior seasons in
program history are Brian Taylor '84 and Bill Bradley '65, who did so
using only their sophomore and junior seasons. Taylor entered with the
Class of 1973.
•Named head coach on April 20, 2007, Sydney Johnson
(fourth season) is already the third-longest tenured active coach in
the Ivy League, one week short of Harvard's Tommy Amaker. Yale's James
Jones is the Ivy dean, having been hired April 27, 1999.
•Johnson
is in line to coach his 100th game at Princeton on Dec. 29 against
Northeastern at the Central Florida tournament. He would become the
eighth coach in Princeton history to do so, following Frederick
Leuhring, Albert Wittmer, Cappy Cappon, Butch van Breda Kolff, Pete
Carril, Bill Carmody and John Thompson III.
•Princeton is tied with Indiana, and behind North Carolina (seven), for the second-most active Division I head coaches produced. The Tigers' five, all disciples of Pete Carril, are Sydney Johnson '97 (Princeton), Chris Mooney '94 (Richmond), John Thompson III '88 (Georgetown), Joe Scott '87 (Denver) and Craig Robinson '83 (Oregon State).
Princeton's "MARV" patches are in honor of Marvin Bressler, the late professor who came to Princeton in 1963 and began serving in an informal advisor role with the team. He was an inspiration to create the Academic-Athletic Fellows program that serves all Princeton teams. Bressler was an Academic-Athletic Fellow for men's basketball through the 2009-10 season before he passed away on July 7 at age 87.
On Towson: The Tigers lost both of their double-digit average scorers from last season, Josh Thornton (11.4 ppg '09-'10) and Calvin Lee (10.6) ... the team finished 10-21 overall last season ... Robert Nwankwo is the leading returning scorer, averaging 9.9 ppg last season ... Nwankwo was academically ineligible to play during the fall semester this season ... 6-7 sophomore forward Isaiah Philmore (14.2 ppg), 6-2 junior guard RaShawn Polk (14.0) and 6-8 junior forward Braxton Dupree (13.2) all average double-figure scoring this season, while Philmore and Polk averaged between six and nine points per game last season and Dupree sat out last season after transferring from Maryland ... Towson's most common starting lineup consists of 6-5 grad student guard Brian Morris, Dupree, 5-11 junior guard Troy Franklin, Philmore and Polk ... those five players have played 87% of the minutes this season ... Towson has used that starting lineup in five of the nine games while using three other combinations in the other four games ... Towson was picked to finish 10th of 12 in the CAA preseason poll ... Towson's only NCAA Tournament appearances were in 1990 and 1991, when it was known as Towson State ... the university's name changed to Towson University for the 1997-98 school year ... Towson's only games against the Ivy League were both against Penn in a home-and-home series in 1995-96 and 1996-97, with Penn winning both and Towson hosting first ... Towson lost to Georgetown 69-41 during the 2006-07 season with Sydney Johnson on the Hoyas' bench as an assistant coach ... through games of Dec. 18, Towson was second in the CAA in points scored per game at 74.5 but 12th in points allowed at 75.9 ... also through Dec. 18, Towson was the second-best free throw shooting team in the CAA at 71.4%, while also ranking 12th in 3-point FG% defense at 39.2% and 11th in turnover margin at -3.88 ... also through Dec. 18, Braxton Dupree was the CAA's second-leading rebounder at 10.1 per game, while Troy Franklin was second in assists at 4.6 per game.
Individual Notes
2 • Kareem Maddox • F • 6-8 • Sr.
Back-to-back reigning Ivy League Player of the Week ... All five double-digit scoring games this season have come in the last six contests ... is averaging 18.8 ppg over the last six games after averaging 5.8 ppg in the first five games ... scored a career-high 31 points Dec. 12 at Tulsa on 10-of-13 shooting from the field and 10-of-12 shooting from the free-throw line ... had second career double-double Nov. 28 against Siena (30 pts., 10 reb.) ... team leader in assists (33) and blocks (18) and second in rebounds (6.5 rpg) and field goal percentage (.571, 48 of 84) ... has at least four rebounds in every game this season ... has come off the bench the last eight games after starting the first three ... won the team's sixth-man award last season.
3 • Jimmy Sherburne • G • 6-3 • So.
Played a season-high seven minutes Dec. 17 at Wagner in third game played this season ... saw limited minutes (38 in six games) last season due to injury and illness.
5 • T.J. Bray • G • 6-6 • Fr.
Leads freshman class in minutes per game (11.7) ... had season-high four rebounds at Wagner on Dec. 17 ... Wisconsin Mr. Basketball 2010.
11 • Bobby Foley • G • 6-5 • Sr.
Played
the final minute at Duke, hitting a three-pointer, as well as late time at Lafayette and Wagner ... played in eight
games as a reserve last season ... played in 28 career games over first
three seasons ... one of three seniors on the roster.
12 • Ben Hazel • G/F • 6-5 • Fr.
Played
three minutes at Duke, one at Lafayette ... first-team All-Washington Catholic Athletic
Conference as a senior ... played against current teammate Ian Hummer on
opposing league teams.
14 • Chris Clement (CLEM-ent) • G • 6-2 • Fr.
Season-high six minutes against Saint Joseph's on Dec. 5 ... has played in four games (Duke, James Madison, Lafayette, Saint Joseph's) ... averaged 15 points per game as a senior,
leading to district MVP and all-region honors in Texas 5A.
15 • John Comfort • F • 6-8 • Jr.
Played the final minute at Duke ... played in 28 games over first two seasons ... 11 of 35 career from three-point range.
20 • Douglas Davis • G • 5-11 • Jr.
Second-team
All-Ivy 2010, All-Ivy honorable mention 2009 ... second on the team with 13 steals ... third on the team in scoring (13.3 ppg) ... has scored double digits eight times this season with a high of 23 against Presbyterian on Nov. 24.
22 • Patrick Saunders • F • 6-8 • Jr.
Made season's first start vs.
Bucknell and has started the last eight games ... averaging 10.5 points per game over the last four contests after 5.2 over his first six games played ... matched season high with six rebounds at Wagner on Dec. 17.
24 • Will Barrett • F • 6-10 • So.
Has
played in six games this season (Rutgers, Duke, Lafayette, Saint Joseph's, Tulsa, Wagner) ... played in 27 games as a freshman
... started 1 of 12 from three-point range last season, made 6 of last
12.
25 • Tom Noonan • F • 6-9 • Fr.
Has not yet played this season ... team MVP as a senior at Penn Charter ... first-team all-league and honorable mention All-Philadelphia as a senior.
32 • Mack Darrow (DAIR-oh) • F • 6-9 • So.
Averaging 19.3 minutes per game after playing 17 minutes total last season ... most minutes per game for a Tiger who has not started a game this season ... has scored 48 points so far this season after scoring six points all last season ... had seven-rebound games against Bucknell and Siena.
33 • Dan Mavraides (mav-RAID-eez) • G • 6-4 • Sr.
Second-team
All-Ivy 2010 ... nine double-digit games this season, including six straight, with a high of 26 in the season opener against Rutgers ... has played at least 28 minutes in every game ... has the highest free-throw percentage (80.0%) of any player on the team with double-digit attempts ... leads the team in steals (14) and second on the team in scoring (14.0 ppg) ... is Princeton's most bellwether player, as the Tigers have gone 0-2 when he does not score 10 points and 8-1, with the loss at Duke, when he does.
34 • Ian Hummer • F • 6-7 • So.
Team's leading scorer at 14.8 ppg and leading rebounder at 6.5 rpg ... had first career double-double (24 pts., 14 reb.) against Presbyterian ... shooting 59.6% (68 of 114) from the field this season, best among players with multiple attempts ... second on the team in blocks (12) and assists (26) ... scored double digits in 9 of 11 games this season ... both father Ed and uncle
John played at Princeton ... John played six seasons in the NBA from
1970-76 for Buffalo Braves, Chicago Bulls and Seattle SuperSonics.
41 • Daniel Edwards • F • 6-8 • Fr.
Played
one minute at Duke before seeing late action again at Wagner on Dec. 17 ... averaged a double-double (17 points, 10
rebounds) as a HS senior ... two-year team offensive MVP ... two-time
first-team all-district honoree.
44 • Brendan Connolly • C • 6-11 • So.
First career double-digit scoring game came Dec. 17 at Wagner with 10 points ... played 39 minutes in the Rutgers game but no more than 19 in any game since while making all 11 starts ... played 79 minutes in 15 games last season.
Tigers from the Line
Player 2010-11 Season/Career
2 Maddox 45-58 (.776)/162-206 (.786)
3 Sherburne 0-0 (.000)/1-2 (.500)
5 Bray 6-8 (.750)/6-8 (.750)
11 Foley 0-0 (.000)/0-1 (.000)
12 Hazel 0-0 (.000)/0-0 (.000)
14 Clement 4-5 (.800)/4-5 (.800)
15 Comfort 0-0 (.000)/5-8 (.625)
20 Davis 22-29 (.759)/108-133 (.812)
22 Saunders 2-2 (1.000)/50-58 (.862)
24 Barrett 2-4 (.500)/8-12 (.667)
25 Noonan 0-0 (.000)/0-0 (.000)
32 Darrow 10-14 (.714)/10-14 (.714)
33 Mavraides 36-45 (.800)/171-215 (.795)
34 Hummer 27-48 (.563)/73-126 (.579)
41 Edwards 0-4 (.000)/0-4 (.000)
44 Connolly 12-17 (.706)/13-19 (.684)
Individual Season & Career Highs (highs set last game in bold)
Will Barrett
2010-11 Season Highs
Points: 4 at Lafayette (11/30/10)
Rebounds: 1, last vs. Saint Joseph's (12/5/10)
Assists: 0
Steals: 1 at Lafayette (11/30/10)
Blocks: 1 at Duke (11/14/10)
Field Goals: 1 at Lafayette (11/30/10)
Three-Pointers: 1 at Lafayette (11/30/10)
Free Throws: 1, last at Tulsa (12/12/10)
Minutes: 8 vs. Rutgers (11/12/10)
Career Highs
Points: 13 vs. Goucher (1/24/10)
Rebounds: 8 vs. Goucher (1/24/10)
Assists: 3, last vs. Yale (2/19/10)
Steals: 3, last at George Washington (11/24/09)
Blocks: 1, last at Duke (11/14/10)
Field Goals: 5 vs. Goucher (1/24/10)
Three-Pointers: 3 vs. Goucher (1/24/10)
Free Throws: 5 at California (11/29/09)
Minutes: 26 vs. Army (11/21/09)
T.J. Bray
2010-11 Season/Career Highs
Points: 5 at Duke (11/14/10)
Rebounds: 4 at Wagner (12/17/10)
Assists: 2 at Duke (11/14/10)
Steals: 2 at Lafayette (11/30/10)
Blocks: 1 vs. Siena (11/28/10)
Field Goals: 2 at Duke (11/14/10)
Three-Pointers: 1, last at JMU (11/22/10)
Free Throws: 2, last against Saint Joseph's (12/5/10)
Minutes: 19 at Duke (11/14/10)
Chris Clement
2010-11 Season/Career Highs
Points: 3, last vs. Saint Joseph's (12/5/10)
Rebounds: 0
Assists: 0
Steals: 1, last vs. Saint Joseph's (12/5/10)
Blocks: 0
Field Goals: 1 vs. Saint Joseph's (12/5/10)
Three-Pointers: 0
Free Throws: 3 at Lafayette (11/30/10)
Minutes: 6 vs. Saint Joseph's (12/5/10)
John Comfort
2010-11 Season Highs
Points: 0
Rebounds: 0
Assists: 1 at Duke (11/14/10)
Steals: 0
Blocks: 0
Field Goals: 0
Three-Pointers: 0
Free Throws: 0
Minutes: 1 at Duke (11/14/10)
Career Highs
Points: 6, last vs. Harvard (2/20/09)
Rebounds: 3 at Yale (2/13/09)
Assists: 1, last at Duke (11/14/10)
Steals: 1 vs. Goucher (1/24/10)
Blocks: 1 vs. Lehigh (1/7/09)
Field Goals: 2, last vs. Harvard (2/20/09)
Three-Pointers: 2 vs. Penn (2/17/09)
Free Throws: 2, last vs. Brown (2/27/09)
Minutes: 19 vs. Penn (2/17/09)
Brendan Connolly
2010-11 Season Highs
Points: 10 at Wagner (12/17/10)
Rebounds: 11 vs. Rutgers (11/12/10)
Assists: 5 vs. Rutgers (11/12/10)
Steals: 1 at Duke (11/14/10)
Blocks: 1, last at Wagner (12/17/10)
Field Goals: 4 at Wagner (12/17/10)
Three-Pointers: 0
Free Throws: 3 vs. Rutgers (11/12/10)
Minutes: 39 vs. Rutgers (11/12/10)
Career Highs
Points: 10 at Wagner (12/17/10)
Rebounds: 11 vs. Rutgers (11/12/10)
Assists: 5, last vs. Rutgers (11/12/10)
Steals: 2 vs. Goucher (1/24/10)
Blocks: 2 vs. Goucher (1/24/10)
Field Goals: 4, last at Wagner (12/17/10)
Three-Pointers: 0
Free Throws: 3 vs. Rutgers (11/12/10)
Minutes: 39 vs. Rutgers (11/12/10)
Mack Darrow
2010-11 Season Highs
Points: 13 vs. Bucknell (11/23/10)
Rebounds: 7, last vs. Siena (11/28/10)
Assists: 5 vs. Siena (11/28/10)
Steals: 1, last vs. Siena (11/28/10)
Blocks: 3 at Monmouth (12/8/10)
Field Goals: 3, last vs. Bucknell (11/23/10)
Three-Pointers: 2, last vs. Saint Joseph's (12/5/10)
Free Throws: 5 vs. Bucknell (11/23/10)
Minutes: 33 vs. Siena (11/28/10)
Career Highs
Points: 13 vs. Bucknell (11/23/10)
Rebounds: 7, last vs. Siena (11/28/10)
Assists: 5 vs. Siena (11/28/10)
Steals: 1, last vs. Siena (11/28/10)
Blocks: 3 at Monmouth (12/8/10)
Field Goals: 3, last vs. Bucknell (11/23/10)
Three-Pointers: 2, last vs. Saint Joseph's (12/5/10)
Free Throws: 5 vs. Bucknell (11/23/10)
Minutes: 33 vs. Siena (11/28/10)
Douglas Davis
2010-11 Season Highs
Points: 23 vs. Presbyterian (11/24/10)
Rebounds: 5 at Monmouth (12/8/10)
Assists: 4, last at Wagner (12/17/10)
Steals: 3, last vs. Lafayette (11/30/10)
Blocks: 0
Field Goals: 8 vs. Presbyterian (11/24/10)
Three-Pointers: 6, last at Monmouth (12/8/10)
Free Throws: 6, last at JMU (11/22/10)
Minutes: 44 vs. Siena (11/28/10)
Career Highs
Points: 27 at Manhattan (12/14/08)
Rebounds: 5, last at Monmouth (12/8/10)
Assists: 4, last at Wagner (12/17/10)
Steals: 4, last vs. Wagner (12/30/09)
Blocks: 2 vs. UNCG (1/3/09)
Field Goals: 10, last vs. Manhattan (12/14/08)
Three-Pointers: 7 vs. Lafayette (12/6/09)
Free Throws: 6, last at JMU (11/22/10)
Minutes: 44 vs. Siena (11/28/08)
Daniel Edwards
2010-11 Season/Career Highs
Points: 0
Rebounds: 0
Assists: 0
Steals: 2 at Duke (11/14/10)
Blocks: 0
Field Goals: 0
Three-Pointers: 0
Free Throws: 0
Minutes: 1 at Duke (11/14/10)
Bobby Foley
2010-11 Season Highs
Points: 3 at Duke (11/14/10)
Rebounds: 0
Assists: 0
Steals: 0
Blocks: 0
Field Goals: 1 at Duke (11/14/10)
Three-Pointers: 1 at Duke (11/14/10)
Free Throws: 0
Minutes: 1, last at Lafayette (11/30/10)
Career Highs
Points: 6, last vs. Lafayette (1/9/08)
Rebounds: 4 at Lehigh (1/6/08)
Assists: 2 at Lehigh (1/6/08)
Steals: 1, last vs. Goucher (1/24/10)
Blocks: 0
Field Goals: 2, last at Yale (2/13/08)
Three-Pointers: 2, last vs. Lafayette (1/9/08)
Free Throws: None
Minutes: 22 at Lehigh (1/6/08)
Ben Hazel
2010-11 Season/Career Highs
Points: 0
Rebounds: 1 at Duke (11/14/10)
Assists: 0
Steals: 0
Blocks: 0
Field Goals: 0
Three-Pointers: 0
Free Throws: 0
Minutes: 3 at Duke (11/14/10)
Ian Hummer
2010-11 Season Highs
Points: 24 vs. Presbyterian (11/24/10)
Rebounds: 14 vs. Presbyterian (11/24/10)
Assists: 5 at Wagner (12/17/10)
Steals: 3, last at Monmouth (12/8/10)
Blocks: 3 at Monmouth (12/8/10)
Field Goals: 10, last at Lafayette (11/30/10)
Three-Pointers: 0
Free Throws: 6 vs. Siena (11/28/10)
Minutes: 46 at Tulsa (12/12/10)
Career Highs
Points: 24 vs. Presbyterian (11/24/10)
Rebounds: 14 vs. Presbyterian (11/24/10)
Assists: 5 at Wagner (12/17/10)
Steals: 3, last at Monmouth (12/8/10)
Blocks: 3, last at Monmouth (12/8/10)
Field Goals: 10, last at Lafayette (11/30/10)
Three-Pointers: 0
Free Throws: 9 at UNC Greensboro (12/13/09)
Minutes: 46 at Tulsa (12/12/10)
Kareem Maddox
2010-11 Season Highs
Points: 31 at Tulsa (12/12/10)
Rebounds: 10 vs. Siena (11/28/10)
Assists: 6 at Duke (11/14/10)
Steals: 3 at Duke (11/14/10)
Blocks: 3, last at Monmouth (12/8/10)
Field Goals: 10, last at Tulsa (12/12/10)
Three-Pointers: 0
Free Throws: 10, last at Tulsa (12/12/10)
Minutes: 43 vs. Siena (11/28/10)
Career Highs
Points: 31 at Tulsa (12/12/10)
Rebounds: 10, last vs. Siena (11/28/10)
Assists: 6 at Duke (11/14/10)
Steals: 3 at Duke (11/14/10)
Blocks: 3, last at Monmouth (12/8/10)
Field Goals: 10, last at Tulsa, (12/12/10)
Three-Pointers: 2, last at Brown (2/13/09)
Free Throws: 10, last at Tulsa (12/12/10)
Minutes: 45 vs. Maine (11/19/08)
Dan Mavraides
2010-11 Season Highs
Points: 26 vs. Rutgers (11/12/10)
Rebounds: 7, last vs. Bucknell (11/23/10)
Assists: 5 at Lafayette (11/30/10)
Steals: 3 at Tulsa (12/12/10)
Blocks: 2 at Monmouth (12/8/10)
Field Goals: 8 vs. Rutgers (11/12/10)
Three-Pointers: 6 vs. Rutgers (11/12/10)
Free Throws: 8 vs. Siena (11/28/10)
Minutes: 49 at Tulsa (12/12/10)
Career Highs
Points: 26 vs. Rutgers (11/12/10)
Rebounds: 9 vs. Monmouth (12/16/09)
Assists: 5, last at Lafayette (11/30/10)
Steals: 4 vs. Monmouth (12/16/09)
Blocks: 2 at Monmouth (12/8/10)
Field Goals: 8, last vs. Rutgers (11/12/10)
Three-Pointers: 6 vs. Rutgers (11/12/10)
Free Throws: 10 at Penn (2/16/10)
Minutes: 49, last at Tulsa (12/12/10)
Tom Noonan
2010-11 Season/Career Highs
Has not played.
Patrick Saunders
2010-11 Season Highs
Points: 14 vs. Saint Joseph's (12/5/10)
Rebounds: 6, last at Wagner (12/17/10)
Assists: 3 at Lafayette (11/30/10)
Steals: 1, last at Wagner (12/17/10)
Blocks: 1 at Lafayette (11/30/10)
Field Goals: 5 vs. Saint Joseph's (12/5/10)
Three-Pointers: 4 vs. Saint Joseph's (12/5/10)
Free Throws: 2 at Wagner (12/17/10)
Minutes: 38 at Wagner (12/17/10)
Career Highs
Points: 21 at Marist (1/6/10)
Rebounds: 9 vs. Penn (2/17/09)
Assists: 3, last at Lafayette (11/30/10)
Steals: 2 vs. Yale (2/19/10)
Blocks: 6 vs. Penn (2/17/09)
Field Goals: 8 at Marist (1/6/10)
Three-Pointers: 5 at Marist (1/6/10)
Free Throws: 4, last vs. Dartmouth (3/5/10)
Minutes: 38 at Wagner (12/17/10)
Jimmy Sherburne
2010-11 Season Highs
Points: 0
Rebounds: 1 at Wagner (12/17/10)
Assists: 1 at Wagner (12/17/10)
Steals: 0
Blocks: 0
Field Goals: 0
Three-Pointers: 0
Free Throws: 0
Minutes: 7 at Wagner (12/17/10)
Career Highs
Points: 3 at Marist (1/6/10)
Rebounds: 1, last at Wagner (12/17/10)
Assists: 1, last at Wagner (12/17/10)
Steals: 0
Blocks: 1 at Saint Joseph's (1/2/10)
Field Goals: 1 at Marist (1/6/10)
Three-Pointers: 0
Free Throws: 1 at Marist (1/6/10)
Minutes: 11, last vs. Dartmouth (3/5/10)

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