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Daemen University Athletics

Western New York's Premier Division II Team
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harris mbb vs stac
Senior guard Kyle Harris has played an integral role in leading Daemen to its first NCAA Division II Elite Eight appearance

Wildcats Set For Elite Eight Debut Vs. Top-Seeded Buffs

Daemen to meet West Texas A&M Wednesday in Evansville

3/22/2021 6:30:00 PM

NCAA DIVISION II MEN'S BASKETBALL CHAMPIONSHIP - ELITE EIGHT
(#8 SEED) DAEMEN WILDCATS (10-5) vs. #5/#6 (#1 SEED) WEST TEXAS A&M BUFFS (17-2, 10-2 LSC)

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 24
FORD CENTER (EVANSVILLE, IND.) - 3:45 PM


NCAA MENS ELITE EIGHT FORD CENTERFASTBREAK POINTS
1. Daemen makes its first-ever appearance in the NCAA Division II Elite Eight when they face top-seeded West Texas A&M. The Wildcats are the No. 8 seed and will be meeting the Buffs for the first time in program history.


2. Daemen advanced to the Elite Eight with a 71-70 victory over nationally ranked St. Thomas Aquinas on March 16 to capture the program's first East Region championship. Andrew Sischo posted his 12th double-double of the season and scored 17 of his game-high 25 points in the second half en route to earning Most Outstanding Player honors for the regional. Kyle Harris nailed a career-high six three-pointers and totaled 21 points for the Wildcats who held the high-powered STAC offense 20 points off its season average.


3. West Texas A&M is in the Elite Eight for the third time in last four seasons after knocking off a pair of nationally ranked teams to win the South Central Region championship. Qua Grant scored 40 points in the Buffs' 101-92 victory over No. 10 Lubbock Christian in the regional final. Grant (22.5 ppg) teams with fellow junior Joel Murray (23.5 ppg) to form one of, if not, the best backcourts in Division II basketball.


4. Daemen's regional championship victory came in their fourth game against St. Thomas Aquinas this season – all in a 17-day span. The teams split two regular season meetings in late February, but STAC won 83-67 to claim the ECC tournament championship in early March. Tuesday's 71-70 win was Daemen's first in six postseason tries against the Spartans (first in NCAA tournament). The Wildcats are 2-2 against nationally ranked opponents this season – all against St. Thomas Aquinas.  


5. Redshirt senior center Andrew Sischo enters the Elite Eight as the number two active scoring leader in Division II. With 2,194 points, Sischo trails only West Liberty's Dalton Bolon (2,232). He's also the country's active leader in rebounds (1,084), rebound average (10.5), field goals (870) and double-doubles (59).


6. Sischo is producing 26.7 points and 12.8 rebounds per game this season. He ranks fourth in scoring and third in rebounding among the national leaders while also leading the country with 12 double-doubles. He is just the second player in ECC history to reach 2,000 points and 1,000 rebounds and was named the ECC Player of the Year for the third time. He has scored 20+ points in 13 of 14 games this season (58 games in his career) and has reached double figures in 65 straight games.
7. Graduate guard Sean Fasoyiro (13.8 ppg, 7.4 rpg, 4.0 apg) and freshman guard Andrew Mason (13.1 ppg, 6.5 rpg, 3.4 apg) have each made immediate contributions in their first season with the program. Fasoyiro appeared in 81 games over three seasons at Franklin Pierce and is nearly doubling his scoring output from his best season there while also posting three double-doubles and leading the team in assists.  Mason is shooting 49% from three-point range and has reached double figures in nine of the last 10 games.
8. Daemen head coach Mike MacDonald stands just four wins shy of 400 for his career which has spanned nearly a quarter century. MacDonald is among an elite fraternity of coaches that have achieved 100 victories as a head coach at the Division I, II and III levels. He ranks 37th among active Division II coaches in career victories.  
9. Since joining the East Coast Conference in 2013-14, Daemen's 160 victories rank second among all teams in the league as well as all Division II teams within New York State.
10. This year's Elite Eight appearance matches the deepest postseason run in program history when looking at both the NAIA and NCAA eras. Daemen advanced to the NAIA Division II Elite Eight in 2004. The program also won the USCAA national title in 2015 while transitioning from the NAIA to NCAA.

BONUS: Daemen is coming off back-to-back 24-win seasons that resulted in NCAA tournament berths. Daemen's 89 wins from 2016-17 through 2019-20 represents the most successful four-year span in program history. The Wildcats were hit hard by graduation, losing four of their five starters, all of whom were 1,000-point scorers.



WEST TEXAS A&M SCOUTING REPORT

  • West Texas A&M is located in the small city of Canyon between Amarillo and Lubbock. The Buffs are members of the Lone Star Conference and are in the midst of their 19th NCAA tournament appearance. They have advanced to the Elite Eight three times in the last four seasons.
  • After taking over a team that went 10-17 in the season prior to his arrival, head coach Tom Brown has led the Buffs to a 179-42 record in the last seven seasons as well as a four LSC tournament championships and a Final Four appearance in 2018.
  • The Buffs enter the Elite Eight as the top seed and ranked sixth (D2SIDA) and fifth (NABC) in the respective Division II national polls. They've won 17 of their 19 contests this season, including the last five in a row.
  • After earning their fourth straight LSC tournament championship with a 108-89 win over St. Edward's on Mar. 6, WT knocked off No. 16 Dallas Baptist (82-65) and No. 10 Lubbock Christian (101-92) to claim the South Central Region championship. The NCAA tournament wins avenged the Buffs' only two losses of the season which came on Jan. 9 (87-78 to Dallas Baptist) and Feb. 27 (103-85 to Lubbock Christian).
  • The Buffs are led by two of the top guards in the country. Juniors Joel Murray (23.5 ppg) and Qua Grant (22.5 ppg) rank ninth and 13th respectively among the national scoring leaders. Grant put up a season-high 40 points in WT's regional championship victory.
  • The Buffs, who rank sixth in scoring offense (91.6 ppg), are also getting double-figure production from junior guard Jon'il Fugett (12.7 ppg) and sophomore guard Zach Toussaint (10.9 ppg). Toussaint has hit a team-high 58 three-pointers and the Buffs rank seventh nationally by averaging 11.7 made threes per game.
  • WT features four starters listed at 6-foot-1 or shorter and are forcing opponents into 17-6 turnovers per game – fourth best in the country.


SERIES HISTORY VS. WEST TEXAS A&M
All-Time Series: 0-0
At Neutral Site: 0-0
In NCAA Tournament: 0-0
Current Streak: N/A
Last Meeting: N/A


DID YOU KNOW?

Did you know that Wednesday's Elite Eight game will be Daemen's fourth against a member of the Lone Star Conference since the program transitioned to NCAA Division II? Daemen is 2-1 against Lone Star Conference teams with victories over St. Edward's (2016-17) and Dallas Baptist (2018-19).

UNPRECEDENTED SEASON
The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic has wreaked havoc upon collegiate sports with postponements, pauses and cancelations. Daemen, which experienced its own 10-day pause in team activities due to a positive COVID-19 test result, was out of action for 328 days before making their long-awaited season debut on Jan. 29 vs. Gannon. Daemen competed in 11 regular season games, including nine ECC contests. The limited schedule was comprised with the health and safety of all players, coaches and other Tier 1 personnel in mind, and in accordance with COVID-19 guidelines established by the NCAA. 

RETURN OF THE MAC
Mike MacDonald returns to the bench for his seventh season as Daemen's head coach, and his 24th overall as a collegiate head coach. Since beginning to roam the Daemen sidelines, MacDonald has led the Wildcats to a 139-56 overall record. The Wildcats have won at least 19 games in each of MacDonald's first six seasons, and the team's 129 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 Feb. 10, 2019 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 went on to be named the East Coast Conference, NABC District and Basketball Coaches Association of New York Division II Coach of the Year following the 2018-19 season. 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 396-282.

SUSTAINED SUCCESS
The Daemen program has been built on sustained success, winning at least 19 games in each of the last nine seasons. In that span (2011-20), which encompasses the end of Daemen's NAIA Era, its' NCAA transition period and the first five seasons of full NCAA Division II membership, the Wildcats have won 70% of their contests, going 176-75. Looking more recently, Daemen is 70-22 in the last three seasons (.761 winning percentage), and their 89 wins in the last four seasons is the most successful four-year span in program history. 

BACK-TO-BACK-TO-BACK
Daemen has earned a third consecutive NCAA tournament berth this season. The Wildcats won 24 games (NCAA Era program record) and earned at-large bids to the NCAA tournament in each of the two seasons prior. The team's 2019 bid was the first in program history, and the Wildcats made their NCAA tournament debut as the No. 5 seed in the East Region, falling in the opening round to fourth-seeded New Haven, 72-67. Daemen was awarded the No. 8 seed in the East Region, however the tournament was canceled before it even began due to the COVID-19 pandemic. 

GOING STREAKING
Daemen has embarked on four winning streaks of at least nine games since the start of the 2018-19 season. Last season, the Wildcats put together an 11-game winning streak, covering games played Nov. 2 through Dec. 13 - the longest of Daemen's NCAA Era. 

DEFENDING THE DEN

Success on their home floor has been a staple of Daemen's rise within the NCAA Division II ranks. The Wildcats have won 10+ home games in eight of the last nine seasons, including identical 15-1 records in the last two seasons which established a new program benchmark for homecourt victories. Dating back to the 2017-18 season, Daemen has won 42 of their last 46 home games. Since joining the ECC (2013-14 season), Daemen is 59-10 in home conference games (.855 win %). The Wildcats are also 70-13 at home during the program's NCAA era (.843 win %). In the 20 seasons from 2000-01 through 2019-20, the Wildcats won 83% of all home games, going 220-45. 

POLL POSITION

Daemen has been among the nationally ranked teams for the third straight season. The Wildcats have been ranked as high as No. 21 in the Division II Sports Information Directors of America (D2SIDA) national media poll and have also received votes in the National Association of Basketball Coaches (NABC) top-25 poll this season. The Wildcats have been ranked 18 times in the D2SIDA poll dating back to the 2018-19 season, rising as high as No. 8, a position they held for three successive weeks early last season. In addition, the Wildcats have been ranked in 34 of the last 35 D2SIDA East Region media polls.

WALKING THE STAGE
Daemen was hit hard by graduation in 2020, losing starters Breon Harris, Jay Sarkis, Jeff Redband and Joey Wallace who were each 1,000-point scorers as well as All-ECC honorees at one point or another. Harris, Sarkis and Redband were well entrenched in the Wildcats' lineup, combining for 330 games and 297 starts in their respective careers, and played key roles in leading Daemen to 89 wins. 

UNFAMILIAR TERRITORY

Daemen had won 17 consecutive season openers spanning 2002-18. That streak was snapped last season with their loss to No. 1 Northwest Missouri State. This season, back-to-back losses to Gannon put Daemen at 0-2 for the first time since the 2001-02 season.

BIG MAN ON CAMPUS
Redshirt senior center Andrew Sischo, the two-time East Coast Conference and East Region Player of the Year and a consensus All-American, headlines Daemen's returning players. Sischo has already cemented his place among Daemen's all-time great players by racking up 1,820 points, 906 rebounds and a program-record 722 field goals in his first three collegiate seasons. Sischo's 2019-20 season was one for the record books as well. He set Daemen and ECC records for points (773) and field goals (298) in a season, led the country in total rebounds (362) and double-doubles (22) and became the first Division II player since the 2010-11 season to average at least 24 points and 11 rebounds per game while shooting at least 64% from the field. He enters the season having scored 20+ points 45 times in his career, including a record 47-point outburst in the opening round of the ECC Championship tournament last March. Already this season, he's been named a Preseason All-American by Basketball Times, as well as the ECC Preseason Player of the Year - an honor he's now earned in three straight seasons. 

DOUBLE-DOUBLE YOUR DELIGHTMENT
Andrew Sischo has been a double-double machine throughout his career, racking up 59 of them in 103 games - the most for a Daemen player since Gerald Beverly totaled 46 double-doubles in his career spanning 2011-15. Since the start of his sophomore season, Sischo has recorded double-doubles in more than two-thirds of the games he's appeared in (50 double-doubles in 72 games). Sischo's 22 double-doubles in 2019-20 led all Division II players.  

BEST OF THE BEST
During Daemen's game vs. Roberts Wesleyan on Feb. 11, 2021, Andrew Sischo became the program's all-time leading scorer, surpassing the benchmark of 1,962 points set by Robert Robinson (1988-92). In 103 career games, Sischo has totaled 2,194 points and 1,085 rebounds. He stands as the only player in program history and one of only two players in ECC history with at least 2,000 points and 1,000 rebounds. He is Daemen's and the ECC's all-time leader in field goals with 870. Sischo ranks second in Daemen history in rebounding, and has placed himself among impressive company within ECC history, ranking second in scoring and third in rebounding.

MORE SISCHO
By eclipsing 2,000 points and 1,000 rebounds, Andrew Sischo has joined an elite fraternity of East Region players to reach both milestones:
 
Lambert Shell – Bridgeport – 3,001 / 1,345
John Grochowalski – Assumption – 2,489 / 1,756
Garret Kerr – U. Sciences – 2,434 / 1,391
Michael Allocco – Stonehill – 2,399 / 1,150
James Hector – American Int'l – 2,306 / 1,444
Jon Cronin – Stonehill – 2,301 / 1,044
Cleveland Woods – NH College – 2,247 / 1,170
Justin Reyes – St. Thomas Aq. – 2,247 / 1,144
Andrew Sischo – Daemen – 2,194 / 1,085
Norman Taylor – Bridgeport – 2,170 / 1,232
Mario Elie – American Int'l – 2,124 / 1,001
Peter Alexis – Philadelphia – 2,116 / 1,162
Wayne Robertson – NH College – 2,092 / 1,487
Ed Czernota – Sacred Heart – 2,075 / 1,317
Al Hicks – Keene Stat – 2,023 / 1,076

VETERAN PRESENCE
Daemen will turn to graduate transfer Sean Fasoyiro and senior guard Kyle Harris to provide a veteran presence on a relatively young roster. A 6-foot-3 guard, Fasoyiro appeared in 81 games over the last three seasons for Franklin Pierce, helping them to a 45-38 record. In 28 games last season, including eight starts, Fasoyiro produced career-highs in scoring (7.8 ppg), minutes (21.8 mpg), field goal percentage (45.7), three-point percentage (37.5), rebounding (5.0 rpg) and assists (1.3). The Wildcats have had success in recent years on the transfer market, getting successful one-year contributors such as Joey Wallace and Quinn Lee Yaw. Now in his second season with the program, Harris is Daemen's most experienced returning player after center Andrew Sischo. Harris appeared in all 32 games and made nine starts last season when he shot 38% from three-point range and averaged 4.4 points per game. 

ALL-WNY PEDIGREE

Mike MacDonald and his staff made a sizable dent in the available WNY talent pool by inking 6-foot guard Juston Johnson, 6-foot-6 forward Justin Hemphill and 5-foot-11 guard Tyler Hind in the program's 2020 recruiting class. Johnson and Hemphill represent the first All-WNY first team selections to commit to Daemen out of high school since Mark Coppola in 2010. 
Hind, a second team All-WNY brings a stellar resume of his own, including 2,244 points which ranks eighth all-time among WNY players. He also set a new WNY record with 400 three-pointers in his career and was named the New York State Class C Player of the Year as a senior.

585 ----> 716
Daemen has had great success recruiting out of the Rochester area through the years. In fact, of the 11 Daemen players that have earned All-ECC honors since the 2013-14 season, eight of them have been products of Section V high schools. The Wildcats are hoping for continued production from the Rochester pipeline as freshmen guards Andrew Mason and Tony Arnold join the list of Section V standouts to choose Daemen. Both were All-Greater Rochester selections who graduated as the all-time leading scorers at their respective high schools. Arnold led the Eastridge, the same school that produced former Daemen guard Supreme Hannah, to their first sectional title in some 56 years last winter. Daemen has signed 11 All-Greater Rochester players since 2010. 

HEY ROOKIE
Freshman guard Andrew Mason has twice earned ECC Rookie of the Week honors this season. Mason is the sixth Daemen player to be named ECC Rookie of the Week since the Wildcats joined the conference in 2013. Mason netted a career-high 25 points in Daemen's 103-69 win at D'Youville on Feb. 15 – the most for a Daemen freshman since the 2017-18 season when teammate Andrew Sischo posted a pair of 25+ point games.

OPTING OUT
Daemen has had eight players exercise their right to opt out of the 2020-21 season due to COVID-19. These players include guard Tajmin Holt, forward Ryan Bradley and center Chris Luke who all saw regular minutes last season. Each player's decision has been fully supported by the Daemen coaching staff and athletics administration.


A NEW STREAK
Daemen's 80-75 loss to Roberts Wesleyan on Feb. 11 snapped a series winning streak that had reached 20 games over a span of 10 years. It was the Redhawks' first win over Daemen since Feb. 15, 2011, and also their first home win in the series since Feb. 21, 2007. Daemen earned some redemption with an 85-69 win over RWC on Feb. 17 and a 78-72 triumph in the ECC Championship semifinals on Mar. 5. The Wildcats have won 29 of the last 31 meetings overall and 12 straight home meetings in the series.

HAVE MERCY

Daemen's 82-51 win over Mercy on Feb. 20 pushed the Wildcats to 16-0 all-time against the Mavericks. Their success in the series is tied for the program's longest active winning streak against any single opponent. Daemen has also won 16 straight meetings with former NAIA rival Houghton, but haven't met the Highlanders since the 2011-12 season.

BUDDING BUFFALO RIVALRY
After not playing since 2004, Daemen met crosstown rival D'Youville three times in as many weeks this season. The Wildcats posted wins in all three matchups, improving to 9-0 all-time in the series. D'Youville is in its first season as a member of the ECC as it transitions to NCAA Division II membership following a long history within Division III. With the two schools separated by less than 10 miles, the Daemen-D'Youville rivalry has the potential to be among the best in the ECC.

INSTANT CLASSIC

Daemen earned its most impressive win of the season on Feb. 2 by defeating #11/#5 St. Thomas Aquinas 84-81 in overtime. The Daemen win snapped STAC's 13-game winning streak and knocked the Spartans from the ranks of the unbeaten. Sean Fasoyiro scored off a miraculous feed from Andrew Mason to even the score at 71-71 with less than five seconds remaining in regulation. In the overtime period, Ryan Salzberg drilled back-to-back three-pointers inside of two minutes left to give Daemen the lead. Andrew Sischo logged 39 minutes – including the last 10 with four personal fouls – and totaled 28 points and 13 rebounds.

CHAMPIONSHIP QUEST

Daemen's quest for an elusive ECC tournament title will have to wait for another season after they lost 83-67 to nationally ranked St. Thomas Aquinas in the 2021 title game at Aquinas Hall on Mar. 7. It marked Daemen's second appearance in the final round of the ECC Championship, and the first since 2016 when they also fell to the Spartans. STAC used a 21-6 spurt over the final six minutes of the first half to seize control. Their lead ballooned to 21 points in the second half before Daemen cut it to 11, but the Wildcats could get no closer.

A WIN WORTH WAITING FOR

Daemen earned the first NCAA tournament victory in program history, defeating third-seeded Caldwell in the regional semifinals on Mar. 14. The win came a year to the day after Daemen was supposed to play in the NCAA tournament vs. Bridgeport before the 2020 event was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The Wildcats, who made their NCAA tournament debut in 2019, have earned postseason bids in three successive seasons.

SURVIVE & ADVANCE

Daemen earned the program's first NCAA Division II East Region championship with a gutty 71-70 victory over archnemesis St. Thomas Aquinas at the Albany Capital Center on Mar. 16. The Wildcats built a 10-point lead early in the second half thanks to the hot three-point shooting of senior guard Kyle Harris (21 points, 6-for-10 3PT), but found themselves trailing by five points with less than four minutes to play. Daemen's defense stiffened and held the high-powered STAC offense without a field goal for more than three minutes. An old-fashioned three-point play from Andrew Sischo (25 points, 13 rebounds) – the regional's Most Outstanding Player – at the 1:46 mark put Daemen ahead for good. The Wildcats held off the nationally ranked Spartans down the stretch to advance to the Elite Eight.

NEXT JUMP BALL
The winner of Wednesday's game will advance to the Final Four to play the winner of fourth-seeded Lincoln Memorial and fifth-seeded Colorado Mines at the Ford Center on Thursday evening (7 p.m. or 9:45 p.m.).

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