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Daemen Makes NCAA Tournament Debut Saturday Vs. New Haven

3/15/2019 10:15:00 AM

GAME INFORMATION & LINKS9901
Game No. 30
NCAA Division II East Region Championship - First Round
#5 Daemen Wildcats (24-5) vs. #4 New Haven Chargers (20-9)
Saturday, Mar. 16 |  7:30 p.m.
Manchester, N.H. |  Stoutenburgh Gymnasium

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TICKETS

All tickets for the 2019 NCAA Division II Men's Basketball East Regional Tournament are general admission and are valid for all games during that session (one session per day; arena will not be cleared between games). Please see ticket representatives for re-admittance information if you intend to leave the arena and return at a later time that day.

  • $10 for adults
  • $5 for youths (ages 5-17), students and senior citizens
  • Tickets are only valid for the day of purchase. There are no all-tournament passes for sale.
  • The ticket window and pass gates will open 60 minutes prior to the start of the first game of each daily session. There will be no advanced ticket sales


JUMP BALL
The nationally-ranked Daemen Wildcats will make their first-ever NCAA tournament appearance this weekend. Daemen has earned the No. 5 seed in the East Regional portion of the 2019 NCAA Division II Men's Basketball Championship, and will face No. 4 New Haven in the opening round. Daemen and New Haven are two of five teams that have earned at-large bids to the East Regional, joining automatic qualifiers Merrimack (NE-10 champion), Molloy (ECC champion) and Dominican (CACC champion). Daemen has won 13 of their last 15 contests, but must regroup after being upset by Bridgeport (79-77) in the semifinal round of the ECC Championship tournament last weekend. New Haven has won seven of their last 10 games, and recently made a run to the NE-10 Championship finals where they fell 51-46 to Merrimack. The Daemen-New Haven game is the fourth of four first-round contests being played Saturday at Stoutenburgh Gymnasium on the campus of St. Anselm; the winner moves on to Sunday's regional semifinals (7:30 p.m.) where they'll meet either No. 1 St. Anselm or No. 8 Molloy. 

HISTORY IN THE MAKING
In just their fourth year of postseason eligibility since gaining full NCAA Division II membership, Daemen has earned the program's first NCAA tournament berth. It marks the eighth national tournament berth in team history across all former affiliations, and their first since winning the United States Collegiate Athletic Association (USCAA) Division I national championship in 2015, the team's final year of non-eligibility for NCAA postseason play. Daemen appeared at the USCAA national tournament for three straight seasons (2012-13, 2013-14, 2014-15), and appeared in the national title game twice. During the team's long history as a member of the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA), Daemen made four trips to the NAIA national tournament. The team's farthest advancement came in 2004 when they made it to the NAIA Elite Eight. 


NATIONAL RANKING
Daemen has been ranked in both Division II national polls this season. The Wildcats are currently ranked 22nd in the National Association of Basketball Coaches (NABC) Division II poll, marking the seventh straight week they've been included in that poll. The Wildcats are also receiving votes in the latest Division II Sports Information Directors of America (D2SIDA) national media poll. Daemen has been included in the D2SIDA top-25 nine times this season. Daemen has risen as high as No. 10 in the D2SIDA poll and No. 13 in the NABC poll this season. The ascent into the national rankings comes after Daemen was ranked 22nd in the Division II Bulletin preseason poll, marking the first time in the program's Division II era that they've been included in any of the several national polls. Division II Bulletin is a national publication that specializes in the coverage of NCAA Division II men's basketball.

REGIONAL RANKING (D2SIDA)
Daemen is the unanimous No. 1 ranked team in the final Division II Sports Information Directors of America (D2SIDA) East Region media poll which was released last month. Daemen has been ranked in each of the 13 regional polls released this season, and this is the sixth time in the last seven weeks that they've sat atop the rankings. It also marks the fourth straight week that the Wildcats have garnered all six first-place votes to make their No. 1 ranking unanimous. The poll includes teams from the East Coast Conference, Northeast-10 Conference and Central Atlantic Collegiate Conference.

REGIONAL RANKING (NCAA)
Daemen was ranked No. 2 in each of the three official NCAA Division II East Region rankings that were released late in the season, prior to the announcement of NCAA tournament berths. The East Region of NCAA Division II is comprised of teams from the East Coast Conference, the Northeast-10 Conference and the Central Atlantic Collegiate Conference. The NCAA announces the 10-team regional rankings each of the three Wednesdays prior to the NCAA Championships selection announcement, which were made this year on Sunday, March 10. 

ECC REGULAR SEASON CHAMPS
Daemen's 93-71 win over Bridgeport on the final day of the regular season clinched their second ECC regular season title and the number one seed in the ECC Championship tournament, finishing with a 16-2 league record. Daemen last captured the ECC regular season title during the 2013-14 season, their inaugural year in the league. Daemen's 16 ECC wins this season are the most they've had since going 17-3 during the 2013-14 season. 

20-WIN CAMPAIGN
Daemen's 108-63 win over LIU Post on Feb. 15 was their 20th of the season. It marks Daemen's sixth 20-win campaign in the last eight seasons. Daemen has not won less than 19 games in a season since the 2010-11 campaign. Daemen's 24 wins are their most in a season since going 27-6 during the 2012-13 campaign, a year before the Wildcats began play in the ECC. 


DON'T LET THE BALL DROP
The 2018 calendar year was a remarkable one for Daemen. The Wildcats posted a 25-3 record in the calendar year. The team's success also included a 14-1 record in home games, a 17-1 record in East Coast Conference contests and a 22-2 mark against all regional opponents. 


DEFENDING THE DEN
Daemen has posted a 15-1 record at the friendly confines of Lumsden Gymnasium this season, reaching double-figure home wins for the seventh time in the last eight seasons, and establishing a new benchmark for home-court wins in a single season. Daemen's 14th home win this season came on March 1 with an 89-69 defeat of Mercy, matching the prior team record which was established during both the 1999-2000 and 2016-17 seasons. The Wildcats broke that mark with a 93-71 win over Bridgeport in the regular season finale on March 3. The Wildcats have won 23 of their last 25 home games dating back to last season, as well as they last eight in a row. Since joining the ECC (2013-14 season), Daemen is 48-9 in home conference games (.842 winning percentage). Since the start of the 2011-12 season, Daemen is 97-14 at Lumsden Gymnasium (.874 winning percentage). Of those 14 losses, six have been decided by three points or fewer, including three by just a single point.  


STARTING 1-0
Daemen's 75-60 win over Caldwell on Nov. 9 extended their winning streak in season openers to 17, a streak that dates back to the 2002-03 season. The wins in that span have come over 14 different opponents. Fisher (Mass.), Wilfrid Laurier (Ont.) and Caldwell are the only opponents Daemen has defeated twice in season openers during the streak. The Wildcats' average margin of victory during the streak is an astonishing 23.8 points per game; in the team's six season openers since beginning to play a full Division II schedule, the average margin of victory is 18.2 points per game. Just two games - a 68-65 final over Toronto in 2011, and a 62-57 final over Felician in 2017 - have been decided by single digits. Daemen has gone over 100 points in three of the last seven season openers; the high-water mark came in 2013 when they downed Ohio Valley 111-90. Daemen's last loss in a season opener came at the Spring Hill College (Ala.) Tournament against the hosts on Nov. 2, 2001, falling 75-35.

THRUWAY RIVALRY DOMINANCE
Daemen's 78-70 win at Roberts Wesleyan on Dec. 5 was their 16th straight win in the Thruway Rivalry series, and it came as the national spotlight shined. The game was featured as part of the NCAA Division II Basketball Showcase, and it was broadcast across a variety of online mediums. Andrew Sischo racked up 32 points and 18 rebounds, and Deion Hamilton (season-high 24 points) keyed a game-closing 20-7 run by scoring 11 points, including the tying and go-ahead buckets. The Wildcats also scored an 83-64 win over the Redhawks when the teams met at Lumsden Gymnasium on Feb. 2. Sischo again led the way with 32 points, and Breon Harris chipped in with 18. Daemen has won 17 straight and 24 of the last 25 meetings with RWC. Eleven of the last 17 meetings have been decided by nine points or fewer. The closest margin was a 98-96 final on Jan. 12, 2016 when Daemen erased a 22-point deficit with just over six minutes to play, riding the strong play of Rochester native Torrence Dyck who finished with a career-high 35 points. The streak also includes one overtime game, a 77-72 final on Nov. 26, 2013 which was Daemen's first-ever ECC victory. 


ROAD WARRIORS
Daemen has won 15 of their last 16 ECC road games dating back to last season. That streak includes a pair of nail-biting road wins last month, and recently the avenging of their only conference loss of the season. The Wildcats rallied for a 75-74 win at Mercy on Jan. 18, overcoming a four-point deficit with less than 25 seconds to play. Breon Harris drilled a pull-up three-pointer to bring them within a point, then converted an acrobatic steal and layup on the ensuing inbounds pass to put the Wildcats ahead for good. Harris canned a career-high six three-pointers and scored a season-high 24 points in the win. Less than 48 hours later, the Wildcats pulled off an 87-85 win over ECC preseason favorite Bridgeport. Andrew Sischo and Deion Hamilton scored 18 points apiece to lead the way in Daemen's first win at Hubbell Gymnasium since the 2013-14 season. On Feb. 8, Sischo matched his career-high with 36 points and added 16 rebounds in an 89-75 win over Molloy.


SIGNATURE WINS
Daemen picked up a pair of wins over nationally-ranked opponents last month. The Wildcats opened 2019 by knocking off #4/#4 St. Anselm 78-72 on Jan. 2. St. Anselm had entered the contest with an unblemished 10-0 record, and hadn't suffered a regulation loss in regular season play since Feb. 6, 2018. Deion Hamilton scorched the nets with six three-pointers and 26 points, and Andrew Sischo tallied 20 points in his return to the Daemen lineup after missing the previous two games with an injury. The meeting was billed as the "Game of the Year" by the experts from d2easthoops.org, and it lived up the hype. The game featured 13 lead changes, and Daemen rallied from a five-point halftime deficit with a 51-40 second half. Just last weekend, the Wildcats did it again with an 82-79 overtime victory over #11/#12 St. Thomas Aquinas. Hamilton's steal and layup with 14 seconds left in the extra session put the Wildcats on top for good in a game that had no more than a five-point separation for either team in the final 17 minutes. Sischo notched 26 points and 11 boards, while Hamilton added 22 points.


RETURN OF THE MAC
Mike MacDonald returns to the bench for his fifth season as Daemen's head coach, and his 22nd season overall as a collegiate head coach. Since beginning to roam the Daemen sidelines, MacDonald has led the Wildcats to a 105-42 overall record. The Wildcats have won at least 19 games in each of MacDonald's five seasons, and the team's 105 victories in that span are the second most among all NCAA Division II programs in New York State, as well as all East Coast Conference teams. He recorded the 100th win of his Daemen tenure on Feb. 10 against Queens, placing him in an elite fraternity of coaches that have achieved at least 100 wins in each of the NCAA's three divisions. He was also subsequently named the HoopDirt.com Division II Coach of the Week, and was recently featured in a story posted to NCAA.org. Before coming to Daemen, MacDonald transformed the Division III program at Medaille into a perennial powerhouse, averaging 18 wins per season and advancing to the postseason six times in his eight years as head coach. MacDonald made his head coaching debut at the Division I level, leading the program at Canisius from 1997-2006. While there, MacDonald's teams racked up 108 wins making him the third all-time winningest coach in the program's history. The longtime bench boss holds a career record of 361-268. He picked up the 350th win of his career on Jan. 18 at Mercy College. 

MACDONALD NAMED ECC COACH OF THE YEAR
Mike MacDonald has been named the 2018-19 East Coast Conference Coach of the Year. It marks the seventh Coach of the Year accolade in MacDonald's career, and his second while at Daemen. He was named the Basketball Coaches Association of New York (BCANY) Division II Coach of the Year for his inaugural season with the Wildcats (2014-15), a year in which he led the team to the United States Collegiate Athletic Association (USCAA) Division I national championship during their final season of non-postseason eligibility at the NCAA Division II level. MacDonald was also the BCANY Division I Coach of the Year for the 2000-01 season while at Canisius, and he was a four-time Allegheny Mountain Collegiate Conference Coach of the Year honoree during his Medaille tenure.

ECC PLAYER OF THE YEAR SISCHO HEADLINES DAEMEN'S ALL-LEAGUE SELECTIONS
Redshirt sophomore center Andrew Sischo was named the ECC Player of the Year as well as to the All-ECC first-team, headlining a quartet of All-ECC selections for the Wildcats. In addition, Jeff Redband (Batavia, N.Y.) and Deion Hamilton (Rochester, N.Y.) were named to the All-ECC second-team, and Breon Harris (Niagara Falls, N.Y.) earned All-ECC third-team honors. It marks the second straight season that Daemen has placed four players on the All-ECC teams which are selected by a vote of the league's 10 head coaches.


MAN IN THE MIDDLE
Redshirt sophomore center Andrew Sischo headlines Daemen's returning players. After earning first team All-ECC and ECC Rookie of the Year honors last season, Sischo was named the ECC Preseason Player of the Year for 2018-19. An eight-time ECC Rookie of the Week selection in 2017-18, Sischo was downright dominant on the interior last season as he led the team in points (462), points per game (15.4), made field goals (195), field goal percentage (56.5%), rebounds (261), rebounds per game (8.7) and blocked shots (25). His point total established a new team record for scoring by a freshman, eclipsing the previous mark of 420 set by Brian Montanaro during the 2002-03 season. He was also the first Daemen player with more than 200 rebounds in a season since Gerald Beverly (373 in 2014-15), and his rebound total is second among freshmen players in team history. Appearing in all 30 games, Sischo reached double-figure scoring 25 times and totaled seven double-doubles. Sischo led all ECC freshmen and ranked among the league's overall leaders in scoring (seventh), rebounding (second) and field goal percentage (third). He was Daemen's first major award winner from the conference since Beverly earned ECC Defensive Player of the Year honors for the 2013-14 and 2014-15 seasons, and the first freshman to earn first team All-ECC honors since John Petrucelli of Molloy College in the 2010-11 season. During the 2018-19 campaign, Sischo has picked up right where he left off. He's recorded 17 double-doubles (ranks sixth among national leaders), and is averaging 21.0 points, 10.3 rebounds and 1.0 blocks per game. He has reached 20 points in 14 games, including six of the last 12 outings. He scored 32 points in both of Daemen's wins over Roberts Wesleyan, and matched his career-high with 36 points in a road win at Molloy. He was named to the all-tournament team at the season-opening ECC-CACC Challenge. He's also been named the ECC Player of the Week five times, and the ECC Defensive Player of the Week once. Sischo is shooting 58.5 percent from the field, and he ranks second in scoring, rebounding, made field goals and field goal percentage among the ECC leaders. He also ranks 15th in rebounding (sixth in offensive rebounding) and 31st in scoring among the national leaders for Division II. 

AWARD WATCH LIST
Last month, Andrew Sischo was named to the Bevo Francis Award Top 50 Watch List. The Bevo Francis Award is named for the former basketball star at Rio Grande College, and it is awarded to the player who is deemed to have had the finest season within Small College Basketball, which consists of NCAA Divisions II and III as well as the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA), United States Collegiate Athletic Association (USCAA) and National Christian College Athletic Association (NCCAA). Sischo is one of 24 NCAA Division II players on the list, and one of four from the East Region. Small College Basketball will publish its 25-player watch list on March 15. The finalists will be announced on April 6, and the 2019 Bevo Francis Award winner will be announced on April 8. 

MORE SISCHO MILESTONES

Andrew Sischo has surpassed a pair of career milestones this season. He recorded his 500th career rebound in a loss at St. Thomas Aquinas on Feb. 22, becoming just the 14th player in team history to do so. He then surpassed 1,000 career points in Daemen's regular-season finale victory over Bridgeport on Mar. 3. He became the 24th member of Daemen's 1,000-point club, and just the 10th player with 1,000 points and 500 rebounds in a career. In 57 career games, Sischo has totaled 1,028 points (22nd all-time) and 538 rebounds (ninth all-time). He's the first Daemen player with 250+ rebounds in back-to-back seasons since Gerald Beverly in 2013-14 and 2014-15. He's currently just two points shy of breaking Rob Robinson's program record for points scored by a sophomore (567). He enters NCAA tournament play ranking in the top-10 among Daemen's all-time single season leaders in points (566 -  ninth) and rebounds (277 - 10th).

THREE-DICULOUS SHOOTING
Over his first three collegiate seasons, forward Jeff Redband has established himself as one of the preeminent three-point shooters in the ECC, as well as among Daemen's all-time leaders. In the 2016-17 season, Redband canned 68-of-151 three-point attempts becoming the first Daemen freshman with more than 50 triples since Brian Montanaro's 70 in 2002-03. He followed that up by shooting 69-for-169 from deep last season, and he's made 75-of-164 this season. He's the first Daemen player with 60 or more three-pointers in three straight seasons since Montanaro did so in four straight times from 2002-06. A third team All-ECC pick in 2017-18, Redband averaged 11.2 points and 4.3 rebounds per game, while finishing third in three-point field goals and sixth in three-point shooting percentage among the ECC leaders. This season, Redband has increased his production while placing himself among the national three-point shooting leaders. He is averaging a career-best 13.0 points per game while shooting 46.9 percent from the field and 45.6 percentage from three-point range, while totaling 77 three-pointers. He ranks among the ECC leaders in field goal percentage (11th), three-point field goals (3rd) and three-point field goal percentage (3rd). He's also presently 10th in the country in three-point shooting accuracy, and he ranks in the top-100 in both total three-point field goals and three-point field goals made per game (2.66). He was named to the ECC-CACC Challenge all-tournament team after helping Daemen pick up wins over Caldwell and Nyack, and has been a two-time ECC Defensive Player of the Week selection this season. He's scored 20 or more points five times this season, and was named the ECC Player of the Week for Dec. 31-Jan. 6. Redband has made at least one three-pointer in 31 of the last 33 games, and recently became just the fifth player in team history with 200 three-pointers. His 77 three-pointers this season are tied for sixth in team history for a single season, and he ranks fourth in team history with 214 total three-pointers. Redband scored the 1,000th point of his career in Daemen's conference tournament game vs. Bridgeport. He ranks 25th in team history with 1,002 points. 

THE HAMILTON PRODUCTION

Redshirt senior guard/forward Deion Hamilton has returned to the lineup after missing the final 20 games of the 2017-18 season. The 6-foot-4 slasher provides another viable scoring option for the Wildcats with a career scoring average of 11.2 points per game. Hamilton was leading the team in scoring (15.1 ppg) through the first 10 games last season, while also chipping in 4.2 rebounds per game before being lost for the season. He's also been a two-time all-tournament team pick at the season-opening ECC-CACC Challenge. Daemen is 24-8 since the start of the 2016-17 season when Hamilton shoots 50 percent or better from the field. He registered just the second double-double of his career (12 points, 10 rebounds) in an earlier win over Slippery Rock, and scored 24 points in Daemen's 78-70 win over Roberts Wesleyan on Dec. 5, 11 of which came in a game-closing 20-7 run. He posted his best outings of the season in big-time matchups against nationally-ranked opponents, canning six three-pointers and matching his career-high with 26 points in a win over #4/#4 St. Anselm, and scoring 22 points, including the go-ahead layup in overtime, in an 82-79 defeat of #11.#12 St. Thomas Aquinas. For the season, he's averaging 12.0 points, 4.1 rebounds and 2.4 assists per game. Hamilton scored the 1,000th point of his career in a late-season win over Mercy. 

BREAKOUT BREON
Junior guard Breon Harris has helped Daemen to wins in 41 of 48 games since he was inserted into the starting lineup midway through the 2017-18 season. After producing just 3.1 points on 31.8 percent shooting while coming off the bench in the team's first 11 games last season, Harris contributed 13.4 points, 5.6 rebounds, 3.8 assists and 2.7 steals per game, while shooting 51.4 percent from the field as a starter. After totaling just just three three-pointers in the first 21 games of his career, Harris has made at least one in 41 of the last 47 games (82 total three-point field goals in that span). A third team All-ECC and ECC All-Tournament Team selection, Harris finished the 2017-18 season averaging 9.6 points, 4.1 rebounds, 3.1 assists and 2.3 steals per game. He finished second in the ECC in total steals with 70, becoming the first Daemen player with more than 60 steals in a season since Casey Sheehan (68) during the 2012-13 campaign. Harris opened the 2018-19 season by earning MVP honors at the ECC-CACC Challenge where he averaged 16.0 points, 4.0 rebounds and 4.0 assists while leading Daemen to wins over Caldwell and Nyack. He heated up in December, registering back-to-back 20-point games for the first time in his career. Harris knocked down five three-pointers and totaled 22 points in a road win at NYIT on Dec. 16, and followed up with 23 points and five steals in a home win over St. Michael's on Dec. 29. He was named the ECC Defensive Player of the Week for games played Dec. 28-30. Harris' biggest game of the season came Jan. 18 at Mercy where he scored 24 points, including five in the final 25 seconds that helped Daemen overcome a four-point deficit; his pull-up three-pointer - his career-high sixth of the night - pulled Daemen within a point, then he converted an acrobatic steal and layup which proved to be the difference in the game. For the season, he's producing 12.0 points, 3.2 rebounds, 2.1 assists and 1.8 steals per game. His 55 three-point field goals rank seventh in the league, and he's also second among the ECC leaders in total steals (51). He's the first Daemen player with at least 50 steals in back-to-back seasons since Mark Coppola in 2011-12 and 2012-13, and he ranks 14th in team history with 124 total steals. 

QUINN-ING
Daemen has gotten great production out of redshirt senior forward Quinn Lee Yaw so far this season. The 6-foot-5 Jamestown native is presently third in the ECC in field goal percentage (56.7%) and producing 9.1 points, 4.6 rebounds and 2.3 assists per game. Lee Yaw has reached double-figure scoring in 12 games, including a season-best 23 in a late-season win over Mercy. He recently recorded his first double-double with 13 points and 10 rebounds in a home win over District of Columbia. The 2018-19 season marks Lee Yaw's first with actual game action since 2015-16. He began his career at Division II Edinboro where he appeared in 41 games over two seasons. He later transferred to Division I St. Bonaventure where he made the team as a walk-on, but had to sit out per NCAA transfer rules. He was forced to sit out the 2017-18 season after transferring to Daemen, again per the NCAA transfer rules. The Lee Yaw name is a familiar one in local basketball circles as he earned Co-Player of the Year honors in the Erie County Interscholastic Conference and second team All-Western New York honors while leading Jamestown High School to a section title in his senor season. 

SHINING STAR-KIS
Redshirt junior guard Jay Sarkis returned to the lineup recently after missing the majority of November and December with an injury. Sarkis scored the go-ahead bucket in what turned out to be a 64-55 win over St. Michael's on Dec. 29, and totaled nine points, four rebounds and three assists in his return. He has gone on to record double-figure scoring in nine games, including 13 points in a victory over nationally-ranked St. Anselm and a season-high 19 points in a neutral site win over Dallas Baptist. For the season, Sarkis has appeared in 22 games and is averaging 8.3 points and a team-high 3.1 assists per game. He ranks 14th in team history with 243 career assists. Sarkis, who quarterbacked the Wildcats to an appearance in the ECC Tournament finals as a freshman in 2015-16, was a four-time ECC Rookie of the Week selection that season as he appeared in all 29 games while making 26 starts, and averaging 8.5 points and 2.3 assists per game that season. In 30 games last season, Sarkis produced 12.5 points and a team-best 3.6 assists per game and earned third team All-ECC honors. Sarkis finished the season ranking among the ECC leaders in total minutes (1,057 - 3rd),  minutes per game (35.2 - 5th), three-point field goal percentage (42.5 - 5th), three-point field goals (68 - 4th), total assists (106 - 3rd) and assists per game (3.5 - 6th). 

GARV-ELOUS
Daemen has become reliant on the steady play of senior guard Darius Garvin who has appeared in 112 of a possible 116 games while making 76 starts over the course of his career. Each season he's increased his statistical impact on the team, and he was voted as the team's MVP by his teammates in 2017-18. Only fellow backcourt mate Jay Sarkis logged more minutes than Garvin's 1,022 last season. He finished the year averaging 9.9 points, 5.5 rebounds and 3.2 assists per game. Garvin was one of only two players in the ECC to record double-figure points, rebounds and assists at some point during last season. Daemen is 24-6 since the start of the 2015-16 season when Garvin scores 10 or more points in a game, including a perfect 3-0 this season. He was slowed by an injury early this season, exiting just four minutes into Daemen's second game of the season vs. Nyack on Nov. 10. Garvin was out of the lineup when Daemen suffered its first loss of the season (Nov. 14 at Mercyhurst), but returned for the Nov. 24 game vs. Slippery Rock. Garvin came off the bench to log 29 minutes against The Rock, and made perhaps the biggest play of the game, connecting on a hanging jumper with under two minutes to play after SRU had cut a comfortable Daemen lead to just four points. Garvin was again out of the lineup in mid-December, but made his return to the lineup on Dec. 29. He scored 13 points in a road win at Bridgeport on Jan. 20, and again played a huge role down the stretch of Daemen's 82-79 win over nationally-ranked St. Thomas Aquinas on Jan. 25. He scored a season-high 14 points in a win over Mercy on March 1.   


NEW HAVEN SCOUTING REPORT 
New Haven is led by ninth-year head coach Ted Hotaling who has posted a 139-112 record in his tenure to date. The Chargers are making the eighth NCAA tournament appearance in team history, and their first since 2015. With nine players returning from their 2017-18 team that went 17-10 overall, the Chargers were picked second in the Northeast-10 Conference Southwest Division preseason poll, and that's what played out as they posted a 13-7 conference record which placed them as the divisional runners-up, finishing one game back of Le Moyne. UNH came up one game shy of achieving their first-ever NE-10 championship; After defeating Bentley (70-69) and Southern Connecticut State (87-66) in the first two rounds of conference tournament play, the Chargers registered a season-low 46 points and fell by five points to Merrimack in the NE-10 finals. First-team All-NE-10 selection Elijah Bailey has led the way. A junior guard, Bailey is averaging 19.2 points per game this season, seventh-best in the NE-10 this season. He's made a team-high 67 three-pointers, four better than redshirt sophomore guard Derrick Rowland who is producing 12.8 points and 3.5 assistsper game. Rowland was an honorable mention All-NE-10 selection. The Chargers are getting additional production from Roy Kane, Jr. (12.2 ppg, 6.1 rpg) , Kelsey Felizor (10.7 ppg, 7.2 rpg, 57% FG) and Quashawn Lane (8.7 ppg, 3.5 apg). As a team, the Chargers' offense is predicated on three-point shooting; 42 percent of their total field goal attempts come from behind the three-point line. They are shooting 38 percent from downtown and averaging 8.7 made three-pointers per game. The Chargers are 14-4 when shooting 33 percent or better from three-point range, and just 6-5 when failing to do so. The Chargers also feature a stingy defense as they are allowing just 65.7 points per game (13th in the country). Opponents are shooting just 41.6 percent, ranking UNH 35th nationally in field goal percentage defense. 

ALL-TIME SERIES
Daemen vs. New Haven: 0-0
Streak: N/A
Last Meeting: N/A

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