DRAKE (24-4, 14-3 MVC)
vs. WICHITA STATE (11-18, 4-13 MVC)
1:05 p.m. Saturday, March 1, 2008
Drake Knapp Center (7,002), Des Moines, Iowa
PROBABLE STARTING LINEUPS
Drake Bulldogs: 24-4, 14-3 MVC (Coach: Keno Davis, first year)
Pos. Player (Ht., Yr., Hometown) PPG RPG FG% FT%
G-5 Leonard Houston (6-3, Sr., Holland, Mich.) 14.2 4.3 .423 .776
G-15 Adam Emmenecker (6-1, Sr., Saginaw, Mich.) 7.5 4.6 .492 .802
G-20 Josh Young (6-1, So., Lawton, Okla.) 16.6 2.5 .467 .771
F-24 Klayton Korver (6-5, Sr., Pella, Iowa) 9.6 3.8 .355 .889
F-31 Jonathan Cox (6-8, Jr., Barrington, Ill.) 11.8 8.4 .504 .807
Top Reserves
F-4 Brent Heemskerk (6-8, Jr., Grand Rapids, Mich.) 5.3 3.4 .725 .472
G-11 Jacob Baryenbruch (6-0, Jr., Spring Green, Wis.) 2.1 0.6 .273 .727
G-23 Josh Parker (6-0, Fr., Harvey, Ill.) 2.0 0.9 .340 .700
F- 50 John Michael Hall (6-5, Jr., Moultrie, Ga.) 4.0 1.3 .429 .789
Wichita State Shockers: 11-18, 4-13 MVC (Coach: Greg Marshall, first year)
Pos. Player (Ht., Yr., Hometown) PPG RPG FG% FT%
G-3 Lance Harris (6-2, Sr., Wichita, Kan.) 2.0 0.6 .333 1.00
G-22 Matt Brauer (5-11, Sr., Belton, Texas) 11.9 3.5 .457 .526
F-0 Aaron Ellis (6-7, Fr., Myrtle Beach, S.C.) 1.8 2.1 .308 .833
F-2 PJ Couisnard (6-4, Sr., Houston, Texas) 13.3 5.7 .425 .630
F-10 Ramon Clemente (6-6, Jr., Queens, N.Y.) 6.8 7.6 .514 .587
Top Reserves
G-1 Gal Mekel (6-3, So., Tel Aviv, Israel) 9.7 3.2 .359 .877
G-5 Wendell Preadom (6-1, Jr., Houston, Texas) 1.2 1.4 .267 .333
F-11 Phillip Thomasson (6-7, Sr., Burlison, Texas) 9.4 4.3 .466 .718
F-31 JT Durley (6-7, Fr., Pittsburg, Texas) 7.1 3.8 .455 .617
TELEVISION: ESPN2 will televise the game with Jon Sciambi handling the play by play and Mark Adams serving as the analyst.
DRAKE RADIO: KRNT Radio (1350 AM) is the flagship station of Drake basketball with Larry Cotlar and Dolph Pulliam handling the broadcasting. The pregame show begins 30 minutes before tipoff.
THE SETTING: Drake will close out the home portion of its schedule playing host to Wichita State in a nationally televised game on ESPN2, while trying to generate momentum for the upcoming State Farm Missouri Valley Conference Tournament next weekend.
It will be Senior Day with graduating players Adam Emmenecker, Leonard Houston and Klayton Korver being recognized in special ceremonies after the game. Emmenecker has 169 assists, needing six to set the school single-season record of 174 set by Al Stewart last year.
Korver, who will be appearing in a school-record 118th game, is just the second player in Drake history to score more than 1,000 points and make more than 200 three-point baskets. He ranks second on the school career three-point basket list at 222 and also ranks 16th on the career scoring charts with 1,071 points.
Houston, who did not make a start in his career until this season, is a top candidate for the MVC Most Improved player after averaging 14.2 points compared to just 4.5 points in 2006-07.
SUCCESS STARTS WITH SENIORS: With graduation claiming four senior starters from last year's 17-15 team, it was easy for prognosticators to pick Drake to finish ninth in the Missouri Valley Conference preseason poll.
But the media forgot to look at the veteran leadership returning that has made Drake's 24-3 start draw national attention as THE STORY in college basketball this season.
Seniors Adam Emmenecker, Leonard Houston and Klayton Korver have combined to appear in 309 Drake games during their careers. Then there's fourth-year Drake juniors Jonathan Cox and Brent Heemskerk who have combined to appear in 187 games.
EMMENECKER NAMED ACADEMIC ALL-AMERICAN PLAYER OF YEAR: Drake senior guard Adam Emmenecker and senior forward Troy Ruths of Washington University (Mo.) head the 2008 ESPN the Magazine Academic All-America? Men's Basketball Teams, as selected by the College Sports Information Directors of America (CoSIDA).
Emmenecker was named the Academic All-American? of the Year for the University Division Emmenecker owns a 3.97 grade point average in management, business, finance and entrepreneurial management. He has led nationally ranked Drake to a 24-3 record and its first Missouri Valley Conference title since 1971.
A former walk-on Emmenecker is averaging 7.4 points; 10.1 ppg in conference play. He leads the MVC with 169 assists, and leads Drake with 47 steals and an 80.2 free throw shooting percentage.
He is second on the team in field goal percentage (49.2), but is shooting a team-best 51.1 percent from the floor in MVC contests. Emmenecker is a two-time MVC Scholar-Athlete of the Week selection (Jan. 9, Jan. 22) and also earned MVC Player of the Week honors Jan. 21.
Emmenecker was joined on the 2008 ESPN the Magazine Academic All-America? First Team by D.J. Augustin (Texas), Justin Hare (Belmont), Jack Leasure (Coastal Carolina) and Brett Winkelman (North Dakota State). Hare, Leasure and Winkelman all earned second team accolades in 2007. In addition, A.J. Graves (Butler University), Joe Reitz and Mike Schachtner (Wisconsin-Green Bay) are repeat members from the 2007 squad.
LAST POSSESSION:Did you know In Drake's last three losses, the Bulldogs had opportunities to win or tie the game on each of their last possessions? Trailing 65-62 at Southern Illinois, Leonard Houston missed a 20-foot three-point basket with 1.3 seconds left that would have tied the game.
Trailing 72-71 to Bradley, Drake had three chances in the wanning seconds to win the game. Guard Adam Emmenecker drove the paint but missed a layup with six seconds remaining. However, the rebound went out of bounds off a Bradley defender.After taking a time out with 4.3 seconds left, Klayton Korver missed a 12-footer from the left baseline and then guard Josh Young fell short on a 10-footer in the paint.
Last Tuesday at Missouri State Drake trailed, 86-83, with 26.2 seconds left. But Korver missed a three-point shot and then Emmenecker had a three-point shot fall short with 3.2 seconds left.
THE SERIES: Wichita State, having won 18 of the last 23 games dating back to 1997, owns an 89-43 lead in the series which began Dec. 23, 1936, when the Shockers earned a 42-38 overtime home victory. The Shockers have won eight of the last 10 meetings.
THE LAST TIME: Drake 62, Wichita State 54 Dec. 29, 2007, Wichita, Kan.) ? Junior forward Jonathan Cox scored 15 points in the second half, including two straight three-point baskets, to key Drake to a 62-54 victory past Wichita State in the Missouri Valley Conference opener for both teams..
Sophomore guard Josh Young led both teams with 17 points, while collecting a career-high five steals.Cox tied a career high with three three-point baskets, while sharing the team lead with eight rebounds.
With the score knotted at 39-39, Cox drilled two straight treys to build the lead to 45-39 with 12:05 left. After Wichita State pulled within 48-44, Cox made a layup and hit another three-point basket with 9:11 left to give the Bulldogs their biggest lead of the game at 53-44.
Drake senior guard Adam Emmenecker had a then career-high eight rebounds. He hit the clinching free throws with 28.4 seconds left, giving Drake a five-point margin. while silencing the sellout crowd of 10,478 in Koch Arena.
Drake snapped a three-game road losing streak at Wichita State, claiming its first victory since a 71-60 triumph Jan. 3, 2004.
Drake owned a 30-25 halftime lead, thanks in part to a steal by freshman guard Josh Parker who then turned around to hit a three-point basket right before the buzzer .
THE LAST VISIT: Drake 62, Wichita State 58 (Feb. 14, 2007, Des Moines, Iowa) ? A rare four-point play by junior swingman Klayton Korver proved to be the difference as Drake snapped an eight-game losing streak to Wichita State. It marked the Bulldogs' first victory against Wichita State in the Knapp Center since 2001.
Trailing 58-56, Korver made his only basket of the game ? a three-point shot at the top of the key ? and was fouled by Kyle Wilson. Korver converted the free throw with 1:25 left to stake Drake to a 60-58 lead as the Bulldogs stopped Wichita State on its next two possessions.
After Wichita State guard Matt Braeuer lost the ball with four seconds left, he fouled Drake senior guard Nick Grant who made two free throws with 3.7 seconds left to account for the final victory margin.
Drake relied on strong board play to earn the victory, outrebounding Wichita State, 37-26. The Bulldogs scored 20 second-chance points compared to seven by Wichita State.
Ajay Calvin led Drake with 16 points, including nine in the first half. Grant finished with 13 points, seven rebounds and two steals. Al Stewart added 10 points and seven rebounds, along with four assists for the Bulldogs. Aliou Keita also had seven rebounds for Drake. A three-point play by Grant staked Drake to its biggest lead of the game at 19-11 with 12:22 left in the first half.
Drake enjoyed a 33-26 halftime lead when freshman guard Josh Young threw an inbounds lob pass to Calvin with 0.1 who scored just before the buzzer sounded.
REVERSAL OF FORTUNE: Drake lost five MVC games by a combined total of 23 points (4.6 avg.) in 2006-07, en route to a 6-12 league mark. This season the Bulldogs have won six MVC games by a combined total of 26 points. Drake also has cut down on turnovers, owning the lowest average in the league at 12.0. The Bulldogs committed a school-record low four turnovers at Northern Iowa Feb. 16.
A SEASON TO REMEMBER: Drake's 24-4 mark is the best start in school history, along with the recent school-record 21-game winning streak. The 21-game winning streak was the fourth longest winning streak by a team in Missouri Valley Conference history, and the longest winning streak since Bradley reeled off 22 straight wins in 1985-86.
The 24 victories are the most at the school since the 1968-69 team, under Maury John, went 26-5 en route to finishing third in the 1969 NCAA FInal Four. That team owned the previous school record winning streak at 12 games until losing in the semifinal round of the Final Four to eventual national champion UCLA, 85-82.
Drake's 13-0 league start marked just the fifth time in the last 50 years that a school has enjoyed a 13-0 start in the MVC. Only 14 previous teams in MVC history have started the conference schedule with 13-0 records. Southern Illinois was the last MVC school to win its first 13 league games, en route to going 17-0 in the 2003-04 season.
Drake has more than doubled its entire MVC victory output of six wins in 2006-07, while the 14 wins are the most MVC victories since the 1969-70 team, under coach Maury John, went 14-2, en route to winning a share of the league title.
AMBITIOUS: Drake is looking to get back to post-season play for the first time since 1986. The Bulldogs played in the NIT that year and last reached the NCAA Tournament in 1971.
Drake's post-season drought is the longest among any MVC member, as every other current member of the league has been in the NCAA Tournament at least once in the past 10 seasons. Drake's NCAA Tournament drought is the eighth-longest nationally (the distinction goes to Harvard, which hasn't been to the NCAA Tournament since 1946).
TITLE TOWN: Drake became the first Division I school to win a conference regular season title this season when it earned a 65-55 victory at Northern Iowa Feb. 16. It marked the Bulldogs' first Missouri Valley Conference title since the 1970-71 season.
Drake has seven MVC titles in its history, including three straight from 1969-71, winning one-game playoffs for the crown in 1969 and 1971 and taking an outright title in 1970.
The Bulldogs also have earned the top seed for the State Farm MVC Tournament in St. Louis, Mo., March 6-9. Drake has never been seeded higher than No. 3 (1986) in the history of the 32-year tournament until this year.
BANKING ON HISTORY: Fourteen straight MVC regular-season champions have reached the NCAA Tournament. Illinois State (1992-93) was the last to win the league's regular season crown and not make it to the Big Dance.
THE COACHES: Keno Davis was named Drake's 24th head men's basketball coach on March 21, 2007, succeeding his father, Dr. Tom Davis, who retired as head coach but remains at Drake as a special assistant to the athletic director.
Keno Davis served six years as an assistant coach under former Drake head coach Gary Garner at Southeast Missouri State, before being named the first assistant to join the men's basketball coaching staff at Drake under Tom Davis on May 19, 2003.
He also was an assistant coach at Southern Indiana from 1995-97 under coach Bruce Pearl who is now the highly successful coach at Tennessee. Keno earned a bachelor of arts degree in communications studies from Iowa in 1995.
Greg Marshall, a 1985 graduate of Randolph Macon, was named the 26th head coach at Wichita State on April 24, 2007. He posted a 194-83 record in nine years as head coach at Winthrop, guiding teams to five Big South Conference championships and seven appearances in the NCAA Tournament including four consecutive trips during his first four years at the helm.
KUDOS FOR KENO: Keno Davis finished fourth in national voting for the Hugh Durham mid-season coaching honor by Collegeinsider.com.
Renamed after the legendary Georgia and Jacksonville head coach Hugh Durham, the award is given annually by Collegeinsider.com to the top mid-major coach in America. Former Winthrop head coach Gregg Marshall was the recipient of the award last season, which was presented at the Final Four in Atlanta.
Saint Mary's head coach Randy Bennett earned the Hugh Durham mid-season coaching honor. Saint Mary's handed Drake its only loss of the season with a second-half rally to claim a 72-66 home victory Nov. 10. Bennett received nine of 20 first-place votes. Davis earned 20 points, garnering one first-place vote. Butler's Brad Stevens finished second in the voting, with Bob Marlin (Sam Houston State), Davis (Drake) and Danny Kaspar (Stephen F. Austin) rounding out the top five
LIKE FATHER, LIKE SON: Besides similar coaching styles, first-year Drake coach Keno Davis is also enjoying the same type of success his father, legendary coach Dr. Tom Davis, encountered.
?Tom Davis was 21-6 in his first year as a college head coach ? at Lafayette in 1971-72.
?Tom Davis won 18 straight games in his first year at Iowa in 1986-87 posting a 30-5 mark
GARNERING RESPECT: Drake enters the Wichita State game ranked...
? No. 1 in the latest CollegeInsider.com Mid-Major poll
? No. 13 in the latest College Basketball Ratings Percentage Index
? No. 19 in the latest Sagarin NCAA basketball ratings
? No. 20 in the latest Associated Press poll
? No. 20 in the ESPN/USA Today Coaches poll
TOM DAVIS “MENTORS” THE BEST: Some might be surprised at Drake's success under first-year coach Keno Davis, but he has worked under the same mentor who has developed Bruce Pearl and Gary Williams into two of the top college basketball coaches in the United States. Together, the trio have combined to win 1,015 college games and that doesn't include the 598 victories Dr. Tom Davis collected during an illustrious 32-year coaching career.
Williams, who served as an assistant coach under Davis at Lafayette (1972-78) and Boston College (1978-79 ) has accumulated 603 victories in 30 years as a college head coach, including a school record 395 at Maryland where he guided the Terps to the 2002 NCAA title. Williams began his coaching career as a graduate student at Maryland under then freshman coach Tom Davis. The 1969 freshman team finished with a 12-4 record as Williams bonded with Davis to start a lasting relationship.
Pearl has won 388 games in 16 years as a college head coach at Southern Indiana (1992-2001) Wisconsin-Milwaukee (2001-05) and Tennessee (2005-present) He served as an assistant coach, under Davis, at Boston College (1978-82), Stanford (1982-86) and Iowa (1986-92).
Pearl, Williams and Tom Davis have been named national college coaches of the year.
MR. ESPN SPORTSCENTER: Drake senior guard Leonard Houston has shown both his versatility and athleticism by making ESPN SportsCenter top 10 highlights with an array of shots in Drake's last two games. Last Saturday he leaped high above the rim at Butler to lay in alob pass from Klayton Korver with the play ranking No. 4 on ESPN SportsCenter Plays of the Day.
Then Tuesday at Missouri State, Houston's 35-foot bank shot which beat the halftime buzzer was ranked No. 10 on ESPN SportsCneter Plays of the Day.
BEARS ESCAPE DRAKE: On an emotional night, in which five seniors played their final home game, Missouri State, playing its final game in the 32-year Hammons Student Center, shot a sizzling 59.6 percent from the floor to hold off No. 20 ranked Drake, 86-83.
The Bulldogs used a barrage of three-point baskets down the stretch giving them an opportunity to win the game. But Missouri State made just enough free throws to hold off the charging Bulldogs.
Sophomore guard Josh Young paced a balanced Drake attack in which all five starters reached double figures, with 18 points, including four three-point baskets. Senior guard Leonard Houston and junior forward Jonathan Cox added 17 points apiece. Senior forward Klayton Korver collected 16 points, including four treys. Senior guard Adam Emmenecker scored 10 points while collecting seven assists and four steals.
Drake's pressure defense rattled Missouri State, forcing the Bears into 19 turnovers. Drake had nine steals with a career tying four by Houston and three by Korver. Drake scored 21 points off Missouri State miscues.
Behind six three-point baskets, Drake went on a 29-15 run to pull within 81-79 with 50.3 seconds remaining. Korver scored 10 points to trigger the outburst including the last four points in the surge coming on a layup and two free throws.
The Bulldogs threatened to pull even during the comeback when Houston made a steal and layup that trimmed the margin to 77-73 with 2:18 left. Missouri State's Deven Mitchelll was called for an intentional foul, but Houston missed both free throws. Drake retained possession but Young failed to connect on a three-point basket from the right wing.
Missouri State extended the lead to 83-79 following a layup by guard Justin Fuehmeyer but a layup by Emmenecker allowed Drake to trim the deficit back to two points at 83-81. After two free throws by Mitchelll upped the Bears' advantage to 85-81, Emmenecker would answer with another layup with 33 seconds remaining.
Forced to foul, Drake sent Missouri State to the free throw line. Fuehmeyer made one of two free throws to increase Missouri State's lead to 86-83 with 26.2 seconds. But Korver missed a three-point baskets and then Emmenecker had a three-point shot fall short with 3.2 seconds left.
Missouri State built a 13-point lead in the first half. but Drake cut the lead to 38-36 at halftime. Following a Missouri State time out with 3.1 seconds left in the half, Korver intercepted a pass at midcourt tipping it to Emmenecker who fed Houston who banked in a 35 foot shot at the buzzer.
Baskets by Houston and Young allowed Drake to tie the score at 40-40 with 18:55 left in the game but the Bears responded with a 9-0 run, including back to back three-point baskets by Dale Lambreth. Cox grabbed a team-high eight rebounds, while Houston and junior reserve forward Brent Heemskerk collected four apiece.
DRAKE HOLDS OFF NO. 8 BUTLER: Sophomore guard Josh Young scored a career-high 25 points, including three clinching free throws with 20 seconds to go, to lift No. 16 ranked Drake past No. 8 Butler, 71-64, in the O'Reilly ESPNU BracketBusters series last Saturday.
The contest lived up to its billing as the top game ever played in the short six-year history of the BracketBusters series. A sellout crowd of 10,000 in historic Hinkle Fieldhouse in Indianapolis saw the nation's top two mid-major programs battle on even terms with 15 lead changes in the game, while the score was tied 10 times. In the end, Drake's defense held Butler to just one basket in the last 8 minutes 18 seconds.
Drake snapped a nine-game winning streak for Butler (25-3), which led by four points midway through the second half, but went scoreless for almost 5 minutes during a decisive 9-0 run by Drake. After two free throws by Matt Howard gave Butler a 58-54 lead with 8:11 left, Drake went on a 9-0 run to grab a 63-58 lead it would never relinquish. Drake held Butler scoreless for 4:37 during the stretch.
Senior guard Adam Emmenecker started the comeback by hitting two free throws with 7:19 left to pull Drake within 58-56. A tip-in by forward Jonathan Cox tied the game at 58-58 and then Klayton Korver nailed a three-point basket at the top of the key with 5:33 remaining to give Drake a 61-58 advantage.
Emmenecker came up with a steal and fed Young for a layup to extend the lead to 63-58. Two free throws by A.J. Graves pulled Butler within 64-62 before Young was fouled beyond the three-point arc with 20 seconds left.
Graves added two more free throws before a fast-break layup by Leonard Houston and two more free throws by Korver with just over a second remaining closed out the scoring. Houston finished with 16 points, while Cox enjoyed his tenth double-double with 11 points and 11 rebounds for Drake. A three-point basket by Young gave Drake its biggest lead of the game at 41-35 with 18:42 left in the game.
Drake led most of the first half as Butler missed nine of its first 10 three-point attempts. Cox hit three straight layups, and Drake took several leads of four points before Butler started hitting from the outside.
Butler hit eight straight shots from the field, including two three-pointers by Pete Campbell and another trey by Graves for a 34-31 lead in the final minutes of the opening half.
Cox then scored again, and after Howard hit one of two free throws for Butler, Drake scored the final five points of the half on free throws?three by Young and two by Cox?for a 38-35 lead.
Drake outrebounded Butler, 34-27, with Houston tying a career high for the second straight game by collecting seven rebounds.
Emmenecker dished out seven assists and collected six rebounds. Young finished with three treys to move into seventh place on the school career three-point chart at 130.
DRAKE IN KNAPP CENTER: The Bulldogs have won 16 of their last 17 home games, dating back to last year and their last 11 nonconference home games. The 16-game home winning streak was the longest in the 15-year history of the Knapp Center. Drake owns a 126-93 home record in the Drake Knapp Center. Drake is the only private school in the Missouri Valley Conference which plays its home games at an on-campus site.
HOMECOURT ADVANTAGE: Drake has won seven home games this season by 25 or more points including a 92-55 home opening win past Cornell (Iowa) College, an 85-48 victory against North Carolina Central and a 79-44 win against Iowa State.
?Drake's 16-game home winning streak was the third longest in school history, trailing winning streaks of 18 from 1962-64 and 23 from 1969-71.
?Drake has held seven of its last 11 home opponents (Iowa State, Chicago State, Texas-Pan American, Southern Illinois, Indiana State, Missouri State, UNI) to a combined 51.2 scoring average.
?Drake has won 13 home games by an average margin of 18.8 points, including four games by 30 or more points, highlighted by a 79-44 victory against Iowa State which is the largest Bulldog victory margin in the 167 games played between the schools.
GETTING DEFENSIVE: Improved defensive play has been a key to Drake's 24-4 start. Drake has held 18 of its last 26 opponents ? Cornell, Milwaukee, North Carolina Central, Duquesne, Iowa State, Chicago State, Texas-Pan American, Iowa, Wichita State, Southern Illinois, Evansville, Indiana State, Missouri State, Bradley, Creighton (twice), UNI, Butler ? to a combined 39.4 (375-951) percent shooting from the floor.
?Drake held Butler to one basket in the last 8:18 of the game in a 71-64 win
?Drake held Northern Iowa without a basket in the last 5:33 of a 58-54 win Jan. 26.
?The Bulldogs held Indiana State to a season low 29.1 percent shooting in a Jan. 9 game.
?Drake held Missouri State without a basket in the last 4:18 of a 65-54 win.
?Drake forced Southern Illinois All-MVC guard Bryan Mullins into a season-high 7 turnovers.
?The Bulldogs held Wichita State to a home season-low 54 points.
?The Bulldogs held Iowa State to 44 points ? its lowest output since Feb. 2, 2003, when it scored 43 against Texas Tech.
?Drake held Duquesne, which was the nation's top scoring offensive team (95.9 ppg avg.), to 22.9 points below its scoring average, en route to winning the Iowa Realty Invitational title with a 77-73 victory.
?The Bulldogs limited Milwaukee to a season-low 32.8 percent shooting (19-58).
ROAD WARRIORS: The Bulldogs have won a school record 10 road games. The Bulldogs also won six straight MVC games on the road for the first time in school history.
ANALYZING THE STREAK: A combination of factors ? rebounding, hot shooting, defense ? were instrumental in the Bulldogs' recent 21-game winning streak:
?Drake outrebounded opponents, 34.5 to 30.6
?Drake averaged 8.0 steals, while forcing opponents into an average of 16.2 turnovers
?Drake outscored opponents, 73.7 to 59.4
?Drake averaged 9.5 three-point baskets per game
?Drake limited opponents to 42.1 percent shooting from the floor
BALL SECURITY: Drake has finished first or second in the MVC in steals since 2003-04, but taking care of the basketball also has been a key to the team's success this season. Drake is averaging a MVC low 12.0 turnovers per game. Drake set a school record for fewest turnovers in a game with four at Northern Iowa Feb. 16, bettering the previous mark of five set, ironically, against UNI in a Jan. 26 game at the Knapp Center.
FREE THROW ADVANTAGE: Drake leads the MVC in free throw percentage at 75.5 percent and has made more free throws (406) than its opponents have attempted (360). Drake has made 406 of 538 free throws, hitting an uncanny 58 of 65 shots in its last four games (18-19 @ UNI; 15-16 vs. Bradley; 18-20 @Butler; 7-10 @Missouri State). All five starters are shooting 77.1 percent or better from the free throw line, led by senior forward Klayton Korver who is shooting 88.9 percent (32-36).
HE'S B-A-C-K....TRIPLE THREAT YOUNG: After being sidelined for three games while recovering from a sprained right ankle, sophomore guard Josh Young returned to the Drake lineup, sinking a clutch three-point basket in overtime to key the Bulldogs' victory at Creighton Jan. 22. In the rematch in Des Moines he equaled a then career-high with 24 points, including six treys.
Young is the only player in the MVC who ranks in the top 10 in scoring, steals, three-point baskets and three-point field goal percentage. He leads the MVC in scoring (16.6 avg.), three-point baskets (77-3.08 avg.) and in three-point field goal percentage (.464). He is tenth in steals (36-1.44 avg.).
He already has surpassed his entire freshman total of 30 steals with at least four games left. When he hit six treys at Milwaukee Nov. 24, following a career-high seven three-point baskets against Cornell Nov. 14, Young became the first player in Drake history to make at least six three-point baskets in consecutive games.
Young is coming off a career-high 25 points at Butler Saturday, and has scored 23 or more points in six home games this season. He had 24 against Southern Illinois and Creighton. He also had 23 in a 92-55 victory past Cornell, a 79-44 romp past Iowa State and an 83-53 win against Chicago State. All seven baskets against Cornell were beyond the three-point arc to mark the first time a Drake player made seven three-point baskets in a game since Dontaie Smith made seven treys against Wichita State Jan. 11, 2001.
POINT OF ATTACK: Standing only 6-1, senior guard Adam Emmenecker's primary duty is to run Drake's offense in his first year as a starter. He leads the MVC in assists with 169 for a 6.04 average, earning his first career double-double with 10 points and a career-high 10 assists at Evansville. He tied a career high with five steals in the season opener against UC San Diego.
Emmenecker also is averaging 4.6 rebounds -- the most by any point guard in the MVC. He had a career-high eight rebounds in the MVC opener at Wichita State. He pulled down seven rebounds against Saint Mary's, Cornell, Duquesne, Iowa State and Northern Iowa.
With 128 rebounds, Emmenecker has more than tripled his entire 2006-07 total of 33 boards. He has scored 209 points, more than tripling his total of 57 from his previous three years combined.
WHAT A DIFFERENCE A YEAR MAKES: Consider the turnarounds Drake has made this season in defense and three-point shooting.
Drake ranked last in the Missouri Valley Conference in 2006-07 in three-point baskets made (6.06 avg.), three-point field goal percentage (.329) and scoring defense (74.2 avg.).
However, the Bulldogs have seen their perimeter attack make a 360-degree turn this season, leading the MVC in three-point baskets made per game (9.21 avg.), while ranking fourth in scoring defense (61.6 avg.). The Bulldogs rank sixth in the MVC in three-point field goal percentage (.370). Drake shot 52.4 percent (11-21) from three-point range in the victory against Iowa State. Drake shot 50 percent from beyond the three-point arc while making a season-high 13 treys in an 80-59 victory Nov. 24 against a Milwaukee team which ranked first in the Horizon League in three-point field goal percentage defense at .218.
Those were the most treys by a Drake team since the Bulldogs made 13 in a Nov. 27, 2000, home game against Delaware State.
WALK ONS APPROACHING ALL-MVC STATUS: Drake is the only team in the MVC and one of the few in all of major college basketball which has two former walk-ons in the starting lineup in junior forward Jonathan Cox and senior guard Adam Emmenecker. Their development has been paramount in Drake's success with the duo already drawing accolades from opposing league coaches as prime All-MVC candidates.
Cox, a fourth-year junior, who earned a scholarship in 2006-07, leads the MVC in rebounding (8.4 avg.). He has 10 double-doubles this season.
Emmenecker was put on scholarship prior to the start of the 2007-08 season and has responded by leading the league in assists with 169 (6.04 avg.). He has scored 209 points, more than tripling his entire career scoring output of 57 points from the previous three seasons.
During Tom Davis' tenure as head coach at Drake from 2003-07, former walk-ons Pete Eggers and Aliou Keita eventually earned scholarships while making their way into the starting lineup. Eggers was named the most valuable player on the 2004-05 team.
THREE-POINT MARK BROKEN: Drake has set a school single-season record for three-point baskets with 258, eclipsing the previous mark of 232 set in 2001-02.
Drake has made at least 10 three-point baskets in 12 games. Drake has made 86 treys in its last 10 games, matching a season high with 13 against UNI, followed by 12 in a home game against Creighton; 10 in road games at Indiana State, Illinois State and Southern Illinois; and 12 at Missouri State Saturday.
GETTING IT DONE OFF THE COURT TOO: Members of the Drake basketball team also have encountered success off the court with nine student-athletes recording grade-point averages of 3.0 or better during the first semester.
Four players in the starting lineup have earned MVC Scholar Athlete of the Week honors, headed by senior guard Adam Emmenecker, a two-time recipient, who also was named captain of the first team of the CoSIDA Academic All-American University Division team as well as Academic All-American of the Year. Emmenecker owns a 3.97 grade-point average with four majors: management, finance, business and entrepreneurial management. He has received only one B in his college career.
Other players, who own a cumulative GPA of 3.0 or better who have been nominated to the MVC Scholar-Athlete team include junior forward Brent Heemskerk (3.67 GPA), Klayton Korver (3.11 GPA), Josh Young (3.05 GPA) and Jonathan Cox (3.05).
Cox, Korver and Young have earned MVC Scholar Athlete of the Week honors this season.
ROAD TESTED: Drake owns a 7-2 record when trailing at halftime, including a 6-2 mark on the road with comeback wins in six MVC road games at Evansville (30-32), Bradley (27-29), Creighton (24-30), Indiana State (30-35), Illinois State (38-29) and Northern Iowa (28-29).
Drake shot 68.2 percent in the second half of a 71-68 comeback win at Evansville and 56 percent in the second half of its last two comeback wins at Indiana State (83-77) and Illinois State (73-70).
DRAKE IN BRACKETBUSTERS: Drake improved its record to 4-1 in the BracketBusters series, with previous victories at Akron (82-78 overtime) in 2004, San Jose State (73-57) in 2005, and Wisconsin-Milwaukee (84-76) last year. Drake lost at UC Irvine, 70-67, in 2006.
SOLID DEFENSE: During its 21-game winning streak, Drake held opponents to a combined 40.8 percent shooting from the floor. Only six teams have shot more than 40 percent from the floor ?Iowa, .420, Bradley .424, Missouri State, .431; Duquesne, .473, Illinois State, .549 , Creighton .419, Indiana State, .556, Illinois State, .549? during Drake's winning steak.
GO BIG BLUE: The state of Michigan has proved to be a fertile recruiting area for Drake with four players from the Wolverine state on the roster and 6-11 prep Sean Jones (Carson City) joining the team next year. Senior guard Adam Emmenecker (Saginaw) leads the MVC in assists (6.04 avg.). Senior Leonard Houston (Holland) ranks sixth in the MVC in scoring (14.2 avg.). Junior forward Brent Heemskerk (Grand Rapids) ranks among the MVC leaders in field goal percentage (.725). Sophomore forward Bill Eaddy (Ypsilanti) came off the bench to score a career-high six points at Indiana State.
MINI BUT MIGHTY: Drake might be one of the smaller teams in the Missouri Valley Conference but that hasn't hampered the Bulldogs' ability to rebound. Drake is second in the MVC in rebounding margin at plus 3.2 per game (33.8 to 30.6 avg.). The Bulldogs have outrebounded 19 opponents. The Bulldogs outrebounded Milwaukee, 40-31. Milwaukee?s Torree Johnson, who had earned double-doubles (21.5 ppg, 10.3 rpg.) in his team's initial four games, was held to nine points and a season-low six rebounds.
IT TAKES A THIEF: The Bulldogs ranks second in the MVC in steals, averaging 7.8 per game. The Bulldogs have achieved double figures in steals in seven games, collecting a season-high 15 steals in the opener against UC San Diego, as well as Iowa State and Chicago State. Senior guard Adam Emmenecker tied a career high with five steals in the opener against UC San Diego. Leonard Houston and sophomore guard Josh Young had three steals apiece.
Houston and Emmenecker had three against Iowa State. Drake had 14 steals in games against Cornell and North Carolina Central. Drake had 10 or more steals in nine games last year.
KORVER RISES TO OCCASION: Senior forward Klayton Korver is picking the right time to get hot. Korver has made 40 three-point baskets in his last 14 games, surpassing his combined total of 24 in Drake's first 14 games. For the second straight year in a home game against UNI, Korver equaled a career high with 23 points. But this time around he made a career-high seven treys (eight attempts). It marked the second time a Drake player had made seven treys in a game this season as Korver joined sophomore teammate Josh Young who hit seven treys against Cornell.
MAKING UP FOR LOST TIME: Senior guard Leonard Houston ranks sixth in the Missouri Valley Conference in scoring with a 14.2 average. He scored a career-high 23 points in home games against Cornell and Duquesne. He had 22 points at Illinois State.
Keep in mind Houston had appeared in 79 career games entering this season without starting a game. He scored a career-high 23 points in just 13 minutes of playing time in Drake's home opener ? a 92-55 victory past Cornell College. Houston made eight of 11 shots from the floor, while collecting three steals, three rebounds and one assist.
He matched that career high with 23 points, including a career-high four three-point baskets, against Duquesne en route to leading Drake to the title in the Iowa Realty Invitational. Houston had a game-high 18 points in an 85-48 victory against North Carolina Central. Houston opened the season with a then career-high 21 points against UC San Diego.
UNSUNG FRONTLINE DUO: Drake junior forwards Jonathan Cox and Brent Heemskerk might not be household names in the Missouri Valley Conference but the duo is starting to draw attention. Cox leads the MVC in rebounding (8.2 avg). Cox has enjoyed 10 double-doubles this season. Heemskerk is shooting 72.5 percent from the floor, making 66 of 91 shots. Heemskerk opened the season by making 16 of his first 17 shots from the field, including his first 11 straight shots.
YOUNG SWEEPS WEEKLY MVC AWARDS: Drake sophomore guard Josh Young swept both the Feb. 4 Prairie Farms/Missouri Valley Conference Player of the Week and Scholar-Athlete of the Week awards.
It marked the fourth time this season, including the third consecutive week, that a Drake men's basketball player earned the awards.
Junior forward Jonathan Cox earned MVC Scholar-Athlete of the Week honors Jan. 2 and was a recipient of MVC Player of the Week Jan. 14. Senior guard Adam Emmenecker earned both awards Jan. 22, while senior forward Klayton Korver earned both awards Jan. 28. Young also was named MVC Player of the Week Jan. 2.
Young averaged 21.0 points, 2.5 rebounds, 1.0 assists and 1.5 steals while leading the Bulldogs to a 75-65 triumph over Creighton on Jan. 30 and an 83-77 victory at Indiana State on Feb. 2.
Young, who has a 3.05 cumulative grade-point average in marketing and management, shot 59.1 percent (13-of-22) from the floor, including 10-of-17 performance from three-point range. He tied a career-high with 24 points versus Creighton and connected for 18 points, including 12 in the second half, to key the Drake win at Indiana State.
KORVER SWEEPS WEEKLY MVC HONORS: Drake senior forward Klayton Korver swept both the Missouri Valley Conference Player of the Week and Scholar-Athlete of the Week honors on Jan. 26. Korver averaging 18.5 points, 5.5 three-point baskets, 2.5 rebounds and 1.0 steals while leading the Bulldogs to two comeback victories. He owns a 3.11 grade-point average majoring in marketing.
Korver shot 50 percent from floor (12-24), including 55 percent (11-20) from three-point range. He had a team-high 14 points, and added four rebounds in the 68-60 overtime win at Creighton. All four baskets were three-pointers.He then tied a career high with 23 points vs. UNI, while making a career-high seven treys ? he was 7 of 8 from three-point range ? in a 58-54 victory.
WHAT A WEEK FOR THE WALK-ON: Former walk-on Adam Emmenecker had a week to remember. On Jan. 16, he capped a career-scoring high by beating the buzzer with a game winning rebound basket helping Drake escape with a 69-68 win at Bradley.
Three days later he topped that effort with a career-high 19 points, six rebounds, six assists and two steals to spur Drake to a come-from-behind 79-73 victory past co-league leader Illinois State.
SOLID RELIEF FROM THE BULLPEN: Senior guard Adam Emmenecker turned down a baseball scholarship at Boston College to join the Drake basketball program as a walk on. He stepped up his game during the three-game absence of injured guard Josh Young, the leading scorer in the Missouri Valley Conference. Emmenecker averaged 13.3 points, 5.6 rebounds and 5.6 assists in the three games, while shooting 60 percent from the floor (12-20). He scored 40 points in that stretch, surpassing a total of 38 points he had scored in the previous six games combined - a 6.3 avg.
EMMENECKER WINS TWO MVC HONORS: Drake senior guard Adam Emmenecker was named the State Farm MVC Player of the Week and the MVC Scholar Athlete of the Week Jan. 21.
Emmenecker, who has a 3.97 cumulative grade-point average in a triple major of finance, business administration and management, scored a career-high 12 points, including the game winning basket on a rebound to beat the buzzer in a 69-68 victory at Bradley. He also collected six rebounds, five assists and one steal. He had a career-high 19 points, including 14 in the second half, to help Drake beat Illinois State, 79-73. He also had six rebounds, six assists and two steals. He averaged 15.1 points, 7.0 rebounds, 5.5 assists and 1.5 steals while leading Drake to two victories. He also shot 55.5 percent from the floor and more than tripled his regular season scoring average of 4.9 entering last week.
COX NAMED MVC PLAYER OF WEEK: Drake junior forward Jonathan Cox was named the State Farm MVC Player of the Week Jan. 14 after averaging 15.5 points and 10.0 rebounds while leading the Bulldogs to two league victories. Cox also averaged 2.0 blocked shots and 2.0 steals in victories over Indiana State and Missouri State, while shooting 64.7 percent from floor (11-17) and 57.1 percent (4-7) from three-point range. He had 18 points, 14 rebounds, two steals and one blocked shot in helping hand Indiana State its first conference loss of season, 75-50, Jan. 9. He made six of eight shots from floor, including two of three beyond the arc. Cox had 13 points, six rebounds, three blocked shots and two steals in a 65-54 win past Missouri State. He made five of nine shots from floor, including two treys.
SECOND HALF ICE MAN: Forward Jonathan Cox has saved his best for last ? literally ? in the second half of three road games. Cox scored six of his 10 points in the second half, including a key three-pointer, in a 56-51 win at Iowa Dec. 14. He tallied 15 points -- all in the second half - in a 62-54 win at Wichita State. He scored 12 of his team-high 19 points in the second half of a 71-68 win at Evansville, scoring a trey to preserve the victory with 23 seconds halve.
PRODUCTIVE BENCH: After failing to score any points against Southern Illinois Jan. 2, Drake's bench was productive with 21 points at Evansville Jan 6. Junior forward Brent Heemskerk led the way with eight points, five rebounds, two assists and one steal. Junior guard Jacob Baryenbruch added two three-point baskets, while junior forward John Michael Hall collected five points and three rebounds.
SO MUCH FOR THAT LAYOFF: Any concerns that Drake might play sluggish in its MVC opener, following a 14-day layoff, were quickly erased at Wichita State Dec. 29. The Bulldogs had played just one game ? a 56-51 victory at Iowa Dec. 14 ? in a 20-day stretch before resuming action at Wichita State.
But Drake enjoyed a 30-25 halftime lead at Wichita State, building its advantage to as many as nine points in the second half.
It marked the second time Drake had earned a victory on the road this season following a long layoff, rolling to an impressive 80-59 victory at Milwaukee Nov. 24 after being idle since Nov. 14.
YOUNG NAMED MVC PLAYER OF WEEK: Drake sophomore guard Josh Young was named the State Farm Missouri Valley Conference Player of the Week Dec. 10 after averaging 20 points while leading the Bulldogs to three victories. He also shot 57.8 percent (11-of-19) from three-point range. He had 23 points, including four three-point baskets, while equaling a career high in rebounds (five) along with one steal in a 79-44 home victory past Iowa State.
Young collected 23 points, including six treys while equaling a career high in rebounds (five), along with setting a career high in steals (four) in an 83-53 first-round victory against Chicago State in the Drake Regency Classic. Young added 14 points and three steals while keying Drake to an 83-55 victory past Texas-Pan American in the championship of the Drake Regency Classic. He also was named to the Drake Regency Classic All-Tournament team.
ASSISTS PILE UP: After collecting a season-high 21 assists at Milwaukee, the Bulldogs eclipsed that figure with 22 against North Carolina Central. Senior guard Adam Emmenecker collected seven assists against North Carolina Central. Senior guard Leonard Houston collected a career-high six assists at Milwaukee, while senior guard Klayton Korver dished out a season-high four assists.
DRAKE IN MVC OPENERS: With a victory at Wichita State, Drake improved its record to 35-58 in its Missouri Valley Conference openers (15-32 road/20-26 home) and this marks the third straight year the Bulldogs have played their MVC opener on the road. The last time Drake won its MVC opener occurred in 2005-06 when it claimed a 79-68 victory at Evansville Dec. 28, 2005.
TOURNAMENT TIME: The Drake Regency Classic, presented by Hy Vee and Mediacom, marked the third tournament the Bulldogs have played after opening the season with a runner-up finish at the Saint Mary's (Calif.) Classic in Moraga, Calif. Drake captured the title in the inaugural Iowa Realty Invitational Dec. 1. It marked the second straight year Drake is playing in three-regular season tournaments. The Bulldogs opened the 2006-07 season finishing fourth in the Top of the World Classic in Fairbanks, Alaska; won the 2006 Drake Regency Challenge; and also captured the Sun Bowl Tournament in El Paso, Texas.
TOURNAMENT HISTORY: Drake improved its overall record of 62-38 in regular-season tournaments. The Drake Regency Classic was the fifth different regular-season tournament Drake has hosted. The Bulldogs own a 4-1 record in the Drake Regency Challenge which started in 2005. Drake also owns a 9-3 record in the Heritage Cablevision Drake Classic which was held from 1985-90, winning titles in 1985, 1986, 1987 and 1989. Drake hosted the AAA-Drake Classic in 1983 and 1984, posting a 2-2 mark. The Bulldogs also hosted the Corn Bowl at the Drake Fieldhouse from 1946-49, compiling a 4-3 mark.
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY: The Bulldogs' home opener with Cornell marked the fifth time in the last six years Drake has played a small college team from Iowa during the regular season. The Bulldogs set a Missouri Valley Conference record outlasting Grinnell, 162-110, Dec. 11, 2002. Drake opened the 2003-04 campaign beating Simpson, 87-72, at home. The Bulldogs also trimmed Cornell (Iowa), 102-62, Nov. 30, 2005, and Waldorf, 104-51, last season.
SIZING UP THE BULLDOGS: Keno Davis takes over the program from his father ? the legendary Dr. Tom Davis, who accumulated 598 victories during a 32-year college coaching career. Keno Davis is surrounded by some familiar faces, along with a talented cast of newcomers. Graduation claimed starting forward Ajay Calvin, along with guards Nick Grant and Al Stewart Calvin earned honorable mention All-Missouri Valley Conference honors last year while being the only player to rank in the top seven in the league in scoring (third, 16.3 avg.) and rebounding (seventh, 6.4 avg.). Both Grant, who led the MVC in steals (62-1.9 avg.), and Calvin were named to the MVC Most-Improved Team.
But Keno Davis calls on seven returning letterwinners, including five players who have had previous starting experience, with some new additions who will be expected to contribute quickly. Drake set a State Farm MVC Tournament single-game record with 15 three-point baskets in a 101-96 first-round overtime victory against Evansville last year. The nucleus of that perimeter attack is back, headed by forward Klayton Korver and guard Josh Young.
Korver is the team's top returning veteran who looks to close his collegiate career on a high note after being hampered the past two seasons with a knee injury. Korver made the 2003-04 All-MVC Freshman team but was redshirted in 2005-06 while recovering from knee surgery. He averaged 9.3 points last year, while leading the team with 63 three-point baskets. Korver made four or more three-point baskets in six games last year, including a career-high six treys en route to a career-high 23 points that sparked a 74-61 victory past Northern Iowa.
Young was one of two players named to both the MVC All-Newcomer Team and MVC All-Freshman team last season. He scored more points (342) than any freshman in The Valley. The three-time MVC Newcomer of the Week averaged 10.7 points, while saving his best for last. He scored in double figures in 10 of Drake's last 12 games, including a career-high 23 points with a career-high five treys, in the MVC Tournament win against Evansville.
Senior guard Leonard Houston, who averaged 4.5 points last year, has helped Drake's perimeter attack. Junior guard Jacob Baryenbruch is a returning two-year letterwinner as well. The backcourt had to deal with the loss of point guard Stewart, who set a Drake single-season record for assists with 174 last year, including a MVC season-high 12 against Missouri State. Adam Emmenecker, a three-year letterwinner at point guard, has figured in the equation.
In the front court, Davis is relying on 6-8 junior forward Jonathan Cox, a two-year letterwinner, along with 6-7 junior redshirt Brent Heemskerk and 6-5 sophomore Bill Eaddy. Cox averaged 5.6 points and 3.4 rebounds and was named to the All-Sun Bowl Tournament team after helping lead the Bulldogs to the championship crown. Cox scored a career-high 23 against Troy in the championship of the Drake Regency Challenge. Heemskerk averaged 5.6 points and 3.6 rebounds in 2005-06.
NEW KIDS ON BLOCK: Newcomers who are contributing are junior college transfers Alex White (Cochise College, Ariz.) and John Michael Hall (Abraham Baldwin College, Ga.) in the front court and Josh Parker, a freshman from Thornton High School in Harvey, Ill., in the backcourt. At 6-6, weighing 235 pounds, White earned All-Region I accolades while averaging 11.5 points and 9.1 rebounds to lead Cochise to 48 wins and two league titles the last two years. Hall averaged 12.8 points while leading Abraham Baldwin College to a 27-5 record in 2006-07, including a No. 11 ranking in the final National Junior College Athletic Association Division I poll.
ADDITION BY SUBTRACTION: Dr. Tom Davis might have retired as head basketball coach at Drake last March, but his successor -- his son Keno -- made sure to keep status quo the number of assistants with the last name of Davis. Keno Davis retained both assistant coaches, associate head coach Chris Davis (no relation) and Justin Ohl, while adding another Davis to the mix in Rodell (also no relation).
“We got the law firm going ? Davis, Davis, Davis and Ohl,” Keno Davis joked.
Rodell Davis played for Tom Davis at Iowa and was someone Keno also wanted to add to his staff some day. Rodell Davis spent the past four years as the head coach at Laramie (Wyo.) County Community College.
HIGH SCHOOL RECRUITS JOIN PROGRAM: High school standouts Sean Jones from Carson City, Mich., and Jared Vlastuin from Lennox, S.D., have signed national letters of intent at Drake University, indicating they will join the Bulldog men's basketball program.
Jones, a 6-foot 11-inch center who earned Michigan first team Class C all-state honors last season, is in his fourth year as a starter at Carson City-Crystal High School. Vlastuin, a 6-5 forward, earned second team South Dakota Class A all-state honors as a junior last season after averaging 17.2 points, 8.1 rebounds and 4.1 assists, while shooting 61.2 percent from floor.
Jones averaged 17.3 points, 10.5 rebounds and 5.4 blocked shots last season, while shooting 67.2 percent from the floor.Jones also earned first team Class C all-state honors by both the Detroit Free Press and Lansing State Journal, while being named the Greenville Daily News Player of the Year. Jones was named the 2007 Central Athletic Association Player of the Year after leading Carson City-Crystal High School to a 19-2 record.
en route to winning the league championship.Jones continues Drake's Michigan connection. The 2007-08 Drake roster includes four players who hail from Michigan; seniors Adam Emmenecker (Saginaw) and Leonard Houston (Holland), junior Brent Heemskerk (Grand Rapids) and sophomore Bill Eaddy (Milan).Jones played AAU basketball last summer for the Grand Rapids Storm and is the third member of the team to play at Drake, joining Houston and Heemskerk.
Vlastuin led Lennox to an 18-8 record including district and regional championships en route to a seventh-place finish in the 2007 South Dakota Class A state tournament.A two-time first team All-Big 8 Conference performer, Vlastuin also played AAU basketball for the South Dakota Heat which won the 2007 Hoosier Shootout in Indianapolis, Ind., during the July recruiting period. Vlastuin won the all-class state title in the long jump at the 2007 South Dakota High School Championships, soaring 23 feet 4.5 inches. That leap ranks fifth on the all-time South Dakota prep list. He also placed third in the triple jump and sixth in the high jump at the 2007 state track and field meet.
Vlastuin has competed on the Lennox varsity golf team since the eighth grade, winning medalist honors in the 2007 Big 8 Championships, while finishing 12th in the 2006 and 2007 state meets.
Vlastuin will be the second player from South Dakota on Drake's roster, joining UC Irvine transfer Adam Templeton, who attended Central High in Rapid City, S.D.
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