Northwestern University Athletics

Evan Eschmeyer leads<B>R the Wildcats against <BR>No. 25 Minnesota on Saturday.

Wildcats Face No. 25 Minnesota on Saturday

6/21/1999 12:00:00 AM | Men's Basketball

February 26, 1999

Northwestern Wildcats (14-11, 6-9 Big Ten)
vs. #25 Minnesota Golden Gophers (16-9, 7-8 Big Ten)

Sat., Feb. 27, 1999 -- 3:30 p.m. CST

  • Radio: WGN AM 720
  • TV: ESPN Regional (WJYS in Chicago)

    Northwestern looks to snap a five-game losing skid on Saturday when the Wildcats host 25th-ranked Minnesota. It marks the final regular season home game for four NU seniors: Julian Bonner, Evan Eschmeyer, Joe Harmsen and Nate Pomeday. That quartet will be honored on the court following Saturday's game.

    NU is coming off a 65-48 loss at 18th-ranked Iowa on Tuesday. The Hawkeyes stormed out of the gate, scoring the game's first 17 points. The Wildcats gained control of the tempo late in the first half, holding the Hawkeyes scoreless over the final 4:05 of the period. NU scored the final seven points of the first half to trim the margin to 12 points (29-17) at halftime. Iowa maintained a double-digit lead throughout the second half to earn the victory.

    David Newman, a native of nearby Des Moines, led Northwestern with 11 points in a return to his home state. Tavaras Hardy added 10 points while Steve Lepore notched a team-high five rebounds. Evan Eschmeyer scored eight points, ending his school-record double-digit scoring streak at 65 games. NU held Iowa to .386 shooting from the floor, well below the Hawkeyes season average of .468.

    Wildcat Probable Starters

      
    Pos. No. Name           (height, weight, class, hometown)        ppg   rpg   
    G    #4  Julian Bonner  (6-1, 198, Sr., Detroit, Mich.)          4.6   2.4
    G   #24  David Newman   (5-11, 165, Fr., Des Moines, Iowa)       8.5   1.8
    C   #42  Evan Eschmeyer (6-11, 255, Sr.-6, New Knoxville, Ohio) 19.3  10.5
    F   #33  Tavaras Hardy  (6-8, 210, Fr., Joliet, Ill.)            7.0   4.2
    F   #14  Steve Lepore   (6-5, 200, Fr., North Olmstead, Ohio)    6.6   4.0
    

    Off the bench F #5 Joe Harmsen (6-9, 248, Sr., Fond du Lac, Wis.) 0.8 1.4 F #11 Danny Allouche (6-5, 200, Sr., Omer, Israel) 2.9 1.6 G #22 Sean Wink (6-2, 176, So., Brea, Calif.) 7.8 1.7 C #35 Aron Molnar (6-11, 242, Jr., Mississauga, Ontario) 2.8 2.5

    Northwestern-Minnesota, The Series
    This will be the 138th all-time meeting between the two schools. Minnesota holds an 87-50 series lead. Northwestern has won two of the last three meetings, including a 58-55 decision in Minneapolis on January 6. That victory was NU's first at Williams Arena since 1986. NU is looking to sweep the season series from Minnesota for the first time since the 1975-76 campaign.

    Head Coach Kevin O'Neill
    Kevin O'Neill (McGill, 1979) is in his second season at the helm of the Wildcat basketball program. This is his 11th season as head coach at the Division I level and 13th overall as a collegiate head coach. He also has served as head coach at North Country CC (1980-82), Marycrest (1982-83), Marquette (1989-94) and Tennessee (1994-97).

    O'Neill owns a 24-28 record at NU and a 164-148 record as a Division I head coach. Known as one of the best recruiters in the nation, O'Neill resurrected the Marquette and Tennessee programs, taking two teams which had not enjoyed recent success to postseason play.

    Most Big Ten Wins in 15 Years
    The turnaround of the Wildcat program under head coach Kevin O'Neill is making a dent in the Wildcat history books.

    NU has notched 14 wins for just the 11th time in school history, the last coming in the 1993-94 NIT campaign (15-14 overall). A win vs. Minnesota would give NU 15 wins for just the seventh time in school history.

    The 'Cats have won six Big Ten games for the first time since the 1983-84 squad compiled a 7-11 mark in the conference.

    Watching the Big Ten Tournament Brackets
    Depending on this weekend's results, Northwestern could earn either the six, seven or eight seed at next weekend's Big Ten Tournament.

    If the Wildcats defeat Minnesota, NU will earn either the six or seven seed, depending upon the outcome of Sunday's Michigan State at Purdue game. If Purdue defeats MSU, then Northwestern would draw the No. 7 seed. If the Spartans defeat Purdue, Northwestern would earn the No. 6 seed.

    In the second scenario, all three schools (NU, Minnesota and Purdue) would tie in the standings at 7-9, but the Wildcats would earn the higher seed based on a 3-0 record in head-to-head competition. Purdue (1-2 head-to-head) would become the seventh seed and Minnesota (1-3) would then be the eighth seed.

    If Minnesota defeats Northwestern on Saturday, the Wildcats would be locked in as the tournament's No. 8 seed.

    Postseason Tournament Ticket Hotline
    The Northwestern ticket office has established a hotline to update fans on ticket availability for any potential postseason games involving the Wildcats.
    The phone number is: (847) 467-1300

    The hotline will continue to be updated as more information becomes available.

    The Nation's Top Field Goal Defense
    As of the latest NCAA statistics, the 'Cats continue to hold the NCAA's No. 1 ranking in field goal percentage defense. NU enters the Minnesota game holding opponents to .370 shooting from the field. NU is second in the Big Ten and sixth in the NCAA in scoring defense, allowing just 56.9 points per game.

    Northwestern also leads the Big Ten in three-point field goal defense, allowing opponents to shoot just .290 from beyond the arc. Here's what NU has done to some opposing offenses this season:

  • Held #21 Iowa (76 ppg entering the game) to just 52 points.
  • Held #16 Minnesota (74 ppg entering game) to 55 points. Also held UM to .311 shooting (.486 entering game).
  • Held UT-Pan Am's Brian Merriweather, who entered the game as the nation's leading scorer at 25.3 ppg, to just 14 points.
  • Held St. Francis' Ray Minlend, currently the NCAA leader in scoring, to just 11 points.
  • Held Michigan's Louis Bullock, who entered the game 17th in the country averaging 21.6 ppg, to just eight points. NU also snapped his consecutive-game streak of hitting at least one three pointer at 45 games.
  • Held #11 Ohio State (75.8 ppg entering the game) to 59 pts.

    Eschmeyer Named National Player of the Year Finalist Twice in February
    This month, Evan Eschmeyer has twice been named one of 10 finalists for a National Player of the Year Award.

    First, he was named one of 10 finalists for the Oscar Robertson Award, presented by the U.S. Basketball Writers Association. He also was named a finalist for the Naismith Award, presented by the Atlanta Tipoff Club.

    On December 29, he was named to the mid-season top 30 team for the John Wooden Award, which is presented by the Los Angeles Athletic Club to the national player of the year. Eschmeyer was one of only two true centers to earn a spot on the list (Washington's Todd MacCulloch).

    The Oscar Robertson Award will be presented March 28 at the Final Four in St. Petersburg, Fla. The Wooden Award will be presented in Los Angeles on April 2. The Naismith Award will be presented in Atlanta on April 3.

    Eschmeyer Leads the Big Ten -- Times Three
    Evan Eschmeyer currently stands atop the Big Ten in three statistical categories: rebounds (10.3 rpg), field goal percentage (.591) and double-doubles (14). He also is third in the Big Ten in scoring (19.3 ppg).

    Nationally, "Esch" ranks fifth in rebounding, 12th in field goal percentage and 38th in scoring. He enters the Minnesota game with 44 career double-doubles.

    He's a Rolls Roycer, Baby!
    Evan Eschmeyer was named the starting center on Dick Vitale's "All-Rolls Royce Team" for the best players in the country. The other four to make Vitale's lineup were Richard Hamilton (UConn), Andre Miller (Utah), Elton Brand (Duke) and Jason Terry (Arizona).

    Said Vitale: "Eschmeyer is a very strong, physical player and really has great touch around the basket. He's also tireless attacking the glass as a rebounder."

    More on Eschmeyer
    Entering the Minnesota game, Evan Eschmeyer has scored 1,107 points in his 67 career games against Big Ten competition. Against Iowa, he became the 36th player in conference history to score 1,100 points in Big Ten games. Billy McKinney is the only other NU player to reach the century mark (1,197).

    Eschmeyer's league-leading 14 double-doubles is double that of his closest Big Ten competitor. Penn State's Calvin Booth is second with seven double-doubles.

    On January 13, he recorded just the second triple-double in program history with his 27-point, 12-rebound, 10-assist performance at Indiana. It also was the first-ever triple-double posted in IU's Assembly Hall.

    In the Jan. 27 USA Today, Eschmeyer was named to their midseason All-America first team and described as "the most productive player in the nation's best conference." CNN/SI also named him to their midseason All-America team on Jan. 25.

    Three-time Big Ten Player of the Week
    Evan Eschmeyer has been named Big Ten Player of the Week three times this season.

    On Dec. 28, he was named Big Ten Co-Player of the Week after recording double-doubles in NU's games against Boston College (23p, 10r) and Long Beach State (16p, 13r). On Jan. 11, he earned the honor again after leading NU to wins at 16th-ranked Minnesota (24p, 15r) and at Illinois (16p, 17r, 5a).

    Eschmeyer earned the nod for the third time on Feb. 8 after scoring a combined 57 points (29 vs. Michigan, 28 at PSU) and adding 22 rebounds in just 56 minutes of play.

    Eschmeyer Holds Four NU Career Records
    Evan Eschmeyer has already set four NU career marks and enters the Minnesota game needing just eight blocked shots to break the NU career blocks record. Here's where Eschmeyer currently ranks among NU's all-time career leaders:

    Category          Eschmeyer   Next Up
    FG Pct.          1st - .597   ---
    FT Attempts       1st - 823   ---
    Rebounds          1st - 966   ---
    FT Made           1st - 533   ---
    Blocked Shots     2nd - 126   Kevin Rankin (133)
    Scoring         2nd - 1,719   Billy McKinney (1,900)
    Field Goals       3rd - 593   Jim Stack (623), Billy McKinney (768)
    
    What They're Saying About Eschmeyer
    Many coaches and media have started to take notice of Northwestern's National Player of the Year Candidate Evan Eschmeyer, including CNN/SI and USA Today, both of which named Esch to their midseason All-America teams. Here's a sampling of what's appeared within the last month:

    "The most productive player in the nation's best conference." -- USA Today (January 27)

    "As long as I've been in the Big Ten, I'm not sure there has been a single player like Eschmeyer where his team has played to and from one guy. Not even Magic Johnson. I love to watch him." -- Indiana head coach Bob Knight (February 13)

    "Evan Eschmeyer's shoulders are big enough to carry all of Chicago." -- Greg Collins, ESPN.com (February 8)

    "Eschmeyer is the man to beat for MVP." -- Gary Reinmuth, Chicago Tribune (February 3)

    "There's no better post player in college." -- Seth Davis, Sports Illustrated (February 2)

    "Evan Eschmeyer is my pick for Big Ten Player of the Year. Kevin O'Neill has helped develop him into a well-balanced player on both sides of the court." -- Digger Phelps, ESPN (February 2)

    "Northwestern is efficient-playing the inside-outside game with Evan Eschmeyer, who averages 20 points and 10 rebounds despite being double-, triple- and quadruple-teamed in the paint." -- Chris Altruda, Sportsticker (January 29)

    "He's the best center in the Big Ten, if not the country." -- Purdue head coach Gene Keady (January 27)

    Bonner's Tough on 'D'
    Senior guard Julian Bonner has drawn quite a few tough defensive assignments this season. He has already defended the second- and fourth-ranked scorers in the country this season, and Saturday will once again guard the third-ranked scorer in Minnesota's Quincy Lewis.

    Against Bonner and the Wildcats, Ray Minlend of St. Francis, currently second in the NCAA at 24.7 ppg, scored just 11 points on 3-of-12 shooting. Brian Merriweather of Texas Pan-Am, fourth in the NCAA at 24.1 ppg, scored just 14 points on 5-of-23 shooting.

    On February 10, alternating between Wisconsin's backcourt of Sean Mason and Ty Calderwood, Bonner helped keep the Badger duo to 7-of-25 (.280) from the field. They had entered the game shooting a combined .421 for the season.

    Versus Michigan, he held Louis Bullock to just eight points on 2-of-11 shooting, and also snapped Bullock's streak of 45-straight games hitting a three pointer. Approximately 36 hours later, he held Penn State's Joe Crispin to 1-of-12 from the field. Among the other guards he's kept off the scoreboard were MSU's Mateen Cleaves (seven points, 2-9 FG) and Seton Hall's Shaheen Holloway (nine points, 3-10 FG).

    Don't discount Bonner's offensive accomplishments, however. He ranks fourth in Wildcat history with 277 career assists. Michael Jenkins (342) is in third place. He enters the Minnesota contest with 102 career three-pointers, fifth on NU's all-time list.

    Lepore Getting Back in the Groove
    Freshman forward Steve Lepore has reclaimed his starting slot. After starting the first seven games, he was replaced in the rotation by Julian Bonner. Lepore moved back into the starting five versus Indiana on Feb. 13, replacing Sean Wink.

    Last Saturday at Ohio State, he shot 4-of-7 beyond the arc. On Feb. 6 at Penn State, he nailed five three-pointers and hit 3-of-4 free throws in the final 14 seconds to lead the 'Cats to victory. He also hit four three-pointers in the overtime loss to Indiana. Lepore also hit a running jumper with eight seconds left against Penn State on Jan. 20 to send the game into overtime. On Jan. 27, he hit two free throws with three seconds left to seal the win against No. 14 Purdue.

    Wildcats Among the Big Ten Leaders in Three Pointers
    Northwestern enters Saturday's game second in the Big Ten in three pointers made, averaging 7.12 per contest (178 in 25 games). Penn State holds s slim lead, with 179 three-pointers in 25 games. NU's 178 treys is the second-highest total in school history. The 1993-94 squad holds the record with 187.

    Sophomore guard Sean Wink ranks eighth in the Big Ten in three pointers made, averaging 2.2 per game. For his career, Wink is shooting .429 (141-329) from three-point range. His 141 career threes rank second in NU history. Todd Leslie holds the all-time Wildcat record with 203 treys.

    Against Boston College, Wink hit 6-of-12 from three-point range, the fifth time in his NU career that he has hit six three-pointers. Wink also hit five three-pointers this season against Long Beach State and four at Minnesota, Illinois and Indiana.

    Two freshmen also have shown the ability to hit from beyond the arc. Freshman point guard David Newman has nailed 48 threes (1.9 per game) while fellow freshman Steve Lepore has 41 (1.6 per game) to his credit. Newman hit a career-high six threes in the overtime loss to Indiana. Lepore has hit 32 of his 41 threes during the Big Ten season. He hit five threes at Penn State and four last Saturday at Ohio State as well as in the overtime loss to Indiana.

    The Wink-Newman-Lepore combination has hit 144 of the Wildcats' 178 threes this year. Wink's 55 threes this season is fifth in NU history while Newman's 48 threes ranks 10th in school history.

    Wildcat Freshman Trio Starting to Mature
    Northwestern's freshman trio of David Newman, Steve Lepore and Tavaras Hardy continue to play a key role as the Wildcats look to earn a postseason berth. The trio has combined for 36 percent of NU's scoring, 28 percent of the rebounding and 50 percent of NU's three-point field goals.

    Newman, playing the point guard position as a true freshman, leads the team in assists (2.9 apg) and is the team's second leading scorer (8.5 ppg). Lepore, who started the first seven games of the season, moved back into the starting lineup on February 13 against the Hoosiers. He is fifth on the team in scoring (6.6 ppg) and is third in rebounding (4.0 rpg). Hardy stands second on the team in rebounding (4.2 rpg) and fourth in scoring (7.0 ppg).

    Big Ten Stat Leaders
    Here's where the 'Cats rank among the Big Ten and NCAA stat leaders (Big Ten as of Feb. 25, NCAA as of Feb. 23):

    Individual - All Games

    Scoring:          Evan Eschmeyer - 3rd Big Ten, 38th NCAA (19.3 ppg)
    Rebounds:         Evan Eschmeyer - 1st Big Ten, 5th NCAA (10.3 rpg)
    FG Pct.:          Evan Eschmeyer - 1st Big Ten, 12th NCAA (.591)
    Double-Doubles:   Evan Eschmeyer - 1st Big Ten (14)
    FT Pct.:          Evan Eschmeyer - 13th (.751)
    3pt Pct.:         Sean Wink - 5th (.390)
                      Steve Lepore - 12th (.369)
    3pt Made:         Sean Wink - t8th (2.2 tpg)
    Blocks:           Evan Eschmeyer - 4th (1.7 bpg)
    Offensive Rebs:   Evan Eschmeyer - 1st (3.5 orpg)
    Defensive Rebs:   Evan Eschmeyer - 1st (7.0 drpg)
    
    Team - All Games
    3pt Pct. Defense:   1st (.290)
    FG Pct. Defense:    1st Big Ten, 1st NCAA (.370)
    3pt FG Made:        2nd (7.1 tpg)
    Scoring Defense:    2nd Big Ten, 6th NCAA (56.9 ppg)
    3pt Pct. Offense:   3rd (.373)
    Blocked Shots:      4th (3.7 bpg)
    Assists:            t4th (15.3 apg)
    
    Home Court Advantage
    In Kevin O'Neill's two seasons as head coach, the Wildcats have made Welsh-Ryan Arena a tough place to play. NU has a 21-10 (.677) home court record under O'Neill, which is a marked improvement considering that, in the three seasons prior to O'Neill's arrival in Evanston, NU won just 14 home games. This marks the first time in school history that NU has recorded back-to-back seasons of 10-or-more home victories. Northwestern has never trailed at halftime in 16 home games this year.

    Big Ten Tournament Tickets Now on Sale
    The Big Ten Conference office has placed a limited number of all-session tickets to the Big Ten Tournament on sale to the public. This is a special opportunity for Big Ten and college basketball fans to access men's basketball tournament tickets. Tickets can be purchased by phone or in person through any Ticketmaster outlet.

    Letter-of-Intent Signees
    During the November early signing period, the Wildcats signed five players to National Letters of Intent to begin playing basketball at NU next season:

       Winston Blake  (F, 6-5, 180, Plano, Texas/Plano Senior)
       Brody Deren    (F, 6-7, 223, Harlan, Iowa/Harlan Comm.)
       Aaron Jennings (C, 6-11, 200, Atkins, Iowa/Benton Comm.)
       Ben Johnson    (G, 6-3, 180, Minneapolis, Minn./De La Salle)
       Adam Robinson  (F, 6-10, 210, Cedar Falls, Iowa/Cedar Falls)
    
    Johnson (No. 60) and Blake (No. 95) are each ranked among the top 100 players in the country by Bob Gibbons. Deren was "Southwest Iowa Player of the Year" as a junior, while Jennings and Robinson were both named All-Americans this season by various publications.

    In Memoriam
    The Wildcats will wear a patch on the left corner of their shorts for the remainder of the season bearing the initials "D.P." The patch is in memory of Don Pomeday, father of senior guard Nate Pomeday, who passed away on December 9.

    #4 Julian Bonner - Has started the past 17 games after coming off the bench in the first seven - Hit the game-winning three pointer against St. Francis with 0.4 seconds remaining on the clock - Also hit a running jumper with 0.6 seconds left in overtime to defeat Penn State - Ranks fourth in NU history with 277 career assists - Ranks fifth in NU history with 102 career three pointers.

    #5 Joe Harmsen - Reserve power forward/center - Grabbed season-high four rebounds against Oakland, Dayton and Seton Hall.

    #10 Matt Kammrath - Walk-on - Saw game action vs. Oakland, UWM, UT-Pan Am and Michigan this season - Lone rebound came vs. UT-Pan Am.

    #11 Danny Allouche - Tallied season-best 11 points, including three three-pointers, at Wisconsin - Collected season-best five rebounds against Long Beach State - Reserve forward - Sat out last season after transferring from Missouri.

    #14 Steve Lepore - Started the first seven games - Moved back into the starting five versus Indiana on Feb. 13 - Nailed five three-pointers in the win at Penn State - Hit four three-pointers at Ohio State as well as in the overtime loss to Indiana - Hit a running jumper with :08 left against Penn State to send the game into overtime - Hit both free throws with :03 left to seal the win against No. 14 Purdue - Also hit 3-of-4 free throws in the final 14 seconds to seal the win at Penn State.

    #22 Sean Wink - NU's top three-point threat - Has hit 141 career three pointers, second-most in NU history - Hit six three-pointers against Boston College, tying his career best - Also nailed five three-pointers against Long Beach State and four treys on four other occasions - Set the NU single-season three-point mark (86) last season as a freshman.

    #24 David Newman - Starting point guard as a true freshman - Tallied a season-best 22 points and five rebounds against Furman - Scored 18 points, on six three-pointers, against Indiana - Dished eight assists in his collegiate debut against Maine - Scored in double figures 10 times this season - Has come through in several clutch situations this season, especially from the free-throw line in the final minute.

    #31 Nate Pomeday - Suffered a torn ACL in his right knee during the first half against Texas Pan-American - Reserve shooting guard - Plays with a lot of heart and emotion - One of the team's most vocal leaders - Hit at least one three pointer in four of his last nine games, all coming off the bench.

    #32 Collier Drayton - Extremely quick athlete - Is a stronger defensive player than offensive - Grabbed three rebounds in seven minutes against Oakland.

    #33 Tavaras Hardy - Scored in double figures three of his first five collegiate games - Tallied first career double-double (18p, 10r) vs. Oakland - Has a nice outside touch from about 15 feet - Had 13 points at Indiana, his highest point total since the Oakland game.

    #35 Aron Molnar - Backup center - Vastly improved in all facets of his game - Tied his career best with seven boards against Penn State - Posted season-best 10 points, on 5-of-9 shooting, at Michigan State - Pulled down five rebounds in 15 minutes at Wisconsin and five boards in 10 minutes against Boston College - Also had three boards in nine minutes against Dayton.

    #42 Evan Eschmeyer - National Player of the Year candidate - One of only two true centers on the midseason top candidate list for the Wooden Award - Finalist for the Oscar Robertson Award and Naismith Award - Leads the Big Ten in three statistical categories (rebounds, field goal percentage, double-doubles) - Has 14 double-doubles this season, including a triple-double at Indiana - Has scored 20-or-more points in 11 games this season - Has 44 career double-doubles.

    #44 Jeff Eschmeyer - Younger brother of Evan Eschmeyer - Walked onto the squad last season - Saw action against Oakland, UWM, UT-Pan Am and Michigan - Tallied one rebound against UWM and Michigan.

    Wildcat Season Bests

    #4 Julian Bonner
    Points: 14 vs. Illinois (2/17/99) and at Ohio State (2/20/99)
    Rebounds: 7 vs. UT-Pan American (1/23/99)
    Assists: 6 at Minnesota (1/6/99) and vs. Purdue (1/27/99)
    Steals: 4 vs. UT-Pan American (1/23/99) and at Iowa (2/23/99)

    #5 Joe Harmsen
    Points: 4 at Iowa (2/23/99)
    Rebounds: 4 three times, last at Seton Hall (12/19/98)

    #10 Matt Kammrath
    Points: none
    Rebounds: 1 vs. UT-Pan American (1/23/99)

    #11 Danny Allouche
    Points: 11 at Wisconsin (2/10/99)
    Rebounds: 5 vs. Long Beach State (12/27/98)

    #14 Steve Lepore
    Points: 18 at Penn State (2/6/99)
    Rebounds: 12 vs. St. Francis (11/25/98)
    Assists: 5 vs. St. Francis (11/25/98) and Furman (11/28/98)
    Steals: 3 vs. Maine (11/17/98)
    3pt. FG: 5 at Penn State (2/6/99)

    #22 Sean Wink
    Points: 20 vs. Boston College (12/23/98)
    Rebounds: 5 vs. Furman (11/28/98)
    Assists: 4 at Seton Hall (12/19/98)
    3pt. FG: 6 vs. Boston College (12/23/98)

    #24 David Newman
    Points: 22 vs. Furman (11/28/98)
    Rebounds: 5 vs. Furman (11/28/98)
    Assists: 8 vs. Maine (11/17/98)
    3pt. FG: 6 vs. Indiana (2/13/99)

    #31 Nate Pomeday
    Points: 6 vs. UW-Milwaukee (12/14/98)
    Rebounds: 2 five times, last vs. UT-Pan American (1/23/99)
    3pt. FG: 2 vs. UW-Milwaukee (12/14/98)

    #32 Collier Drayton
    Points: none
    Rebounds: 3 vs. Oakland (11/21/98)

    #33 Tavaras Hardy
    Points: 18 vs. Oakland (11/21/98)
    Rebounds: 10 vs. Oakland (11/21/98)
    Assists: 5 vs. Boston College (12/23/98)

    #35 Aron Molnar
    Points: 10 at Michigan State (1/30/99)
    Rebounds: 7 vs. Penn State (1/20/99)

    #42 Evan Eschmeyer
    Points: 29 vs. Michigan (2/4/99)
    Rebounds: 21 vs. Penn State (1/20/99)
    * also a Welsh-Ryan Arena record *
    Assists: 10 at Indiana (1/13/99)
    Blocks: 7 vs. Purdue (1/27/99)

    #44 Jeff Eschmeyer
    Points: none
    Rebounds: 1 vs. UW-Milwaukee (12/14/98) and vs. Michigan (2/4/99)

    Wildcat Career Bests

    #4 Julian Bonner
    Points: 23 vs. Siena (11/22/97)
    Rebounds: 7 vs. DePaul (12/6/97) and vs. Texas Pan-American (1/23/99)
    Assists: 9 three times, last vs. Michigan State (1/31/98)
    Steals: 4 vs. Texas Pan-American (1/23/99) and at Iowa (2/23/99)

    #5 Joe Harmsen
    Points: 21 at Wisconsin (1/29/97)
    Rebounds: 10 vs. Chicago State (1/27/98) and vs. Penn State (2/8/98)

    #10 Matt Kammrath
    Points: 4 vs. Central Michigan (11/26/96) and Penn State (1/25/97)
    Rebounds: 1 five times, last vs. Texas Pan-Am. (1/23/99)

    #11 Danny Allouche
    Points: 20 vs. Kansas State (2/1/97)
    Rebounds: 7 vs. Nebraska (1/22/97)
    Assists: 4 vs. Oklahoma State (2/13/96)
    * all were recorded during career at Missouri

    #14 Steve Lepore
    Points: 18 at Penn State (2/6/99)
    Rebounds: 12 vs. St. Francis (11/25/98)
    Assists: 5 vs. St. Francis (11/25/98) and Furman (11/28/98)
    Steals: 3 vs. Maine (11/17/98)
    3pt. FG: 5 at Penn State (2/6/99)

    #22 Sean Wink
    Points: 24 vs. Ohio State (2/21/98)
    Rebounds: 7 at Illinois (2/18/98)
    Assists: 4 four times, last vs. Texas Pan-Am. (1/23/99)
    3pt. FG: 6 five times, last vs. Boston College (12/23/98)

    #24 David Newman
    Points: 22 vs. Furman (11/28/98)
    Rebounds: 5 vs. Furman (11/28/98)
    Assists: 8 vs. Maine (11/17/98)
    3pt. FG: 6 vs. Indiana (2/13/99)

    #31 Nate Pomeday
    Points: 18 vs. Michigan State (2/19/97)
    Rebounds: 6 vs. Md.-Eastern Shore (11/29/97)
    3pt. FG: 4 five times, last vs. Iowa (2/25/98)

    #32 Collier Drayton
    Points: none
    Rebounds: 3 vs. Oakland (11/21/98)

    #33 Tavaras Hardy
    Points: 18 vs. Oakland (11/21/98)
    Rebounds: 10 vs. Oakland (11/21/98)
    Assists: 5 vs. Boston College (12/23/98)

    #35 Aron Molnar
    Points: 12 at Illinois (1/10/98)
    Rebounds: 7 vs. Sam Houston State (11/26/97) and vs. Penn State (1/20/99)

    #42 Evan Eschmeyer
    Points: 37 vs. Penn State (2/8/98)
    Rebounds: 21 vs. Penn State (1/20/99)
    * also a Welsh-Ryan Arena record *
    Assists: 10 at Indiana (1/13/99) Blocks: 7 vs. Purdue (1/27/99)

    #44 Jeff Eschmeyer
    Points: 2 vs. Minnesota (1/7/98)
    Rebounds: 4 at Iowa (1/3/98)

  • Men's Basketball - Purdue Postgame Press Conference (3/12/26)
    Friday, March 13
    Men's Basketball - Wildcats Fall to Boilermakers in Big Ten Tournament (3/12/26)
    Friday, March 13
    Men's Basketball - 'Cats Advance in Big Ten Tournament with 74-61 Win Over Indiana (3/11/26)
    Thursday, March 12
    Men's Basketball - Indiana Postgame Press Conference (3/11/26)
    Thursday, March 12