February 29, 2008
Complete Release in PDF Format 
The No. 17 Irish men's basketball team hits the road again on Sunday
afternoon against the DePaul Blue Demons. Notre Dame, coming off a
five-point loss at Louisville on Thursday night, will once again try
for a school-record 12th BIG EAST regular-season victory.
(17/17) Notre Dame (21-6, 11-4 BIG EAST)
vs.
DePaul (10-17, 5-10 BIG EAST)
Sunday, March 2, 2008 * 1:00 p.m. (EST) * Allstate Arena (18,500) * Rosemont, Ill.
MEDIA INFORMATION
Television: ESPN Regional: Eric Collins (play-by-play analyst),
Dickey Simpkins (color analyst). Game will be shown locally in South
Bend on WMYS (Channel 69), Digital TV on WMYS (Channel 269)
Radio: Jack Nolan (play-by-play analyst) and LaPhonso Ellis (color analyst). Notre Dame Sports Properties originates the Notre Dame Radio Network which includes: WLS 890 AM in Chicago, Ill. (Chicagoland area and
Midwest); WZOW 97.7 FM and 102.3 FM in South Bend, Ind.; ESPN 950 AM
in Indianapolis, Ind.; WLYV 1450 AM in Fort Wayne, Ind. and
Northeast, Ind.; WLUV 96.7 AM in Rockford and DeKalb, Ill., and
Beloit and Janesville, Wis.; WLUV 1520 AM in Rockford and DeKalb,
Ill., and Beloit and Janesville, Wis.; WEFM 95.9 FM in Michigan City
and Gary, Ind.; ESPN (WRSW) 1480 AM in Warsaw, Ind.; WAMW 107.9 FM
and 1580 AM in Washington, Ind., Sirius Satellite Radio Channel 159
and www.und.com.
Real-Time Stats: Live in-game statistics are available for all home
games, via the Notre Dame athletic website (www.und.com).
Notre Dame vs. DePaul
Notre Dame and DePaul renew their series for the 98th time
this afternoon in the second meeting of the season between the two
schools. The Irish were victorious at the Joyce Center (89-80) on
February 2 as Luke Harangody led four Irish players in double figures
with 29 points and 14 rebounds, while Kyle McAlarney added 17 in the
victory.
This is the second straight year that the Irish and Blue
Demons have met twice during the regular season, DePaul won the
first matchup at Allstate Arena 67-66 and then Notre Dame earned a
78-54 win at the Joyce Center in the second meeting.
Notre Dame has won six of the last eight meeting and leds
the all-time series 53-44. The two schools have met five times as
BIG EAST foes with the Irish leading 3-2. The visiting team has had
little luck winning on the opponents home floor as the home team has
won each of the five contests.
Notre Dame is 5-12 all-time at Allstate Arena (formerly the
Rosemont Horizon) and are 2-11 overall against DePaul. The last win
for the Irish win at Allstate was against DePaul (82-69) on December
14, 2003 but has lost each of the last two games they have played in
the building. Notre Dame also has played Northwestern (0-1), Virginia
(1-0) and Loyola-Chicago (2-0) at Allstate.
Notre Dame saw its three-game win streak come to an end on
Thursday night in its 90-85 loss to Syracuse at Freedom Hall. The
Irish have only lost back-to-back games on one occasion this season
and that was to Baylor and Georgia Tech at the Paradise Jam in St.
Thomas, USVI.
With its 94-87 win over Syracuse one week ago on February
24, Notre Dame extended its school-record Joyce Center home win
streak to 36 games and won its 17th consecutive BIG EAST home game, a
mark that ranks second all-time and is just three shy of the league
record of 20 straight victories. The Irish have not lost at the
Joyce Center since February 25, 2006 with an 80-72 setback to
Marquette.
Notre Dame is ranked for the fourth consecutive week after
making its debut three weeks ago at 22nd in the Associated Press and
21st in the ESPN/USA Today rankings. The Irish moved up four spots
in both polls this week and are ranked 17th.
Notre Dame has played six ranked opponents and are 2-4 in
those matchups.
The Irish have won 19 of their last 23 games and are off to
an 21-6 start through 27 contests of the season which also matches
the best start by an Irish team under head coach Mike Brey. Brey's
2002-03 squad was 21-5 following its 26th game of the season before
suffering its sixth loss of the season in its 27th contest to fall to
21-6.
Notre Dame's win over Syracuse on Sunday gave the Irish
their 11th BIG EAST regular-season win of the season, tying the
marks of both the 2000-01 and 2006-07 teams as they finished with
identical 11-5 records. Since becoming a member of the BIG EAST
Conference, no Notre Dame team has won 12 BIG EAST regular-season
contests. Last year, the Irish won 12 league contests - 11 during
the regular season and one in the BIG EAST Championship - which
marked the most-ever BIG EAST wins by a Notre Dame team in a single
season.
Prior to the Louisville game. Notre Dame's 11-3 start
matched the best-ever start by an Irish team in BIG EAST play. The
2000-01 Irish squad went 11-3 through the first 14 contests en route
to winning the BIG EAST West Division title (with an 11-5 record).
Notre Dame's has reached double-digit wins in BIG EAST play
for the fifth time in eight seasons under head coach Mike Brey.
With its 21-6 record, Notre Dame has posted five 20-win
seasons in eight campaigns under Mike Brey. He is only the second
coach in school history to register five 20-win campaigns in his
first eight seasons. Digger Phelps was the only other coach to post
five 20-win campaigns in his first eight years of his 20-year tenure
at Notre Dame.
Back In The Polls
Notre Dame made its inaugural appearance three weeks ago in
top 25 as the Irish debuted at 22nd in the Associated Press ranking
and 21st in the ESPN/USA Today poll and have risen this week to 17th
in both of the rankings. Coach Mike Brey's squad appeared for the
first time in the polls last season in the sixth week (second week of
December) following back-to-back wins over Maryland and Alabama that
pushed the Irish record to 7-1 in the campaign.
McAlarney Cops Second BIG EAST Player of the Week Honor
Kyle McAlarney was named BIG EAST Player of the Week for
the second time this season after averaging a league-leading 22.5
points in wins over Pittsburgh and Syracuse last week. McAlarney
joined teammate Luke Harangody as the league's only two-time honorees
this season.
McAlarney scored 15 points in the come-from-behind win over
Pittsburgh and then notched his third 30-plus point outing of the
season as he finished with 30 points. En route to his 30-point
performance, he set a Notre Dame school record with nine three-point
field goals (on 11 attempts).
BIG EAST Win Streak
Notre Dame's 17-game BIG EAST homecourt win streak is its
longest since the Irish joined the conference in 1995-96 and is the
second-longest in conference history.
20 - Pittsburgh (6 games in 2003-04, 8 games in 2002-03 and 6 games in 2001-02)
17 - Notre Dame (1 game in 2005-06, 8 games in 2006-07 and 8 games in 2007-08)
During the streak, the only two teams that the Irish have not played
during the break are Georgetown and St. John's.
Chasing History
When Notre Dame takes to the court for its final home game
on March 5, the Irish will be looking to make history. A win would
be the second straight undefeated season at home for the Irish at the
Joyce Center (18-0 a year ago). No Notre Dame team has finished
back-to-back seasons undefeated at home. The Irish also would become
the first BIG EAST team to finish back-to-back seasons undefeated at
home (8-0 in 2006-07).
BIG EAST Turnaround
Under head coach Mike Brey's tenure, Notre Dame has had
only one losing season. That season was in 2005-06 when the Irish
finished 6-10 after beginning the BIG EAST campaign with a 1-8
record. Since that 1-8 start, Notre Dame has gone 27-11 (.711) over
the last 38 regular-season games.
Five 20-Win Seasons Under His Belt
With its 21-5 record, the Irish have reached the 20-win
mark for the fifth time in eight seasons and second consecutive year
under head coach Mike Brey. Notre Dame's 20-win campaigns under Brey
have been in 2000-01 (20-10), 2001-02 (22-11), 2002-03 (24-10) and
24-8 (2006-07). In the 103-year history of the program, Notre Dame
teams have won 20 or more games on 32 occasions.
Series Record vs. DePaul
Other than Marquette (119 meetings), Notre Dame has not
faced any other opponent more often than DePaul. Sunday's game will
the 98th meeting in the series with Notre Dame leading the series
53-44. The Irish have won six of the last eight meetings since 2001.
Harangody On Wooden and Naismith Top 30 Midseason Lists
Sophomore forward Luke Harangody has been named to the John
R. Wooden Award Top 30 Midseason list. The Wooden Award is presented
annually to the nation's top basketball player. Harangody was not
part of the Wooden or Naismith Preseason lists. Two other BIG EAST
players - Roy Hibbert (Georgetown) and Sam Young (Pittsburgh) - also
were selected to the top 30 list for both awards.
Success On And Off The Court
The 2007 fall semester grades are in and the Irish once
again achieved great success in the classroom with the team compiling
an overall 3.135 grade point average for the semester which marked
the sixth time in eight semesters that the Irish finished with a
combined 3.00 or better. Nine of 14 players earned a 3.000 or better
- Tim Abromaitis (3.500), Tim Andree (3.479), Ryan Ayers (3.067),
Luke Harangody (3.250), Zach Hillesland (3.654), Tory Jackson
(3.333), Tom Kopko (3.733), Tyrone Nash (3.000) and Luke Zeller
(3.500).
Notre Dame In The Top 15 Of NCAA Statistics
Notre Dame ranks in the top 15 of the NCAA statistics in
two categories: assists (4th-18.6), rebounding margin (10th-7.5) and
three-point field goal percentage (7th-40.9).
Golly Good Gody
Luke Harangody's 40-point performance against Louisville on
Thursday night was the first-ever 40-point outing for an Irish player
in BIG EAST game. He connected on 16-28 field goals and was 3-4 from
three-point range. Heading in to contest, Harangody had attempted
just four three pointers in 58 career outings and had missed all four
of those atempts. He also finished with 12 rebounds to record his
17th double-double of the season.
Harangody also became the first Irish player to score 40
points in a game since since Monty Williams tallied 42 points against
Valparaiso in a 94-74 victory on November 28, 1993 at the Joyce
Center.
He also became the ninth different Irish player to score 40
points in a game on 35 occasions. The other Notre Dame to reach that
mark include: Austin Carr (23), Adrian Dantley (4), Larry Sheffield
(2), Lloyd Aubrey (1), Tom Hawkins (1), Bob Whitmore (1), Collis
Jones (1) and Monty Williams (1).
En Fuego
With his nine three-pointers against Syracuse, Kyle
McAlarney broke the Notre Dame single-game three-point mark.
McAlarney finished 9-11 from the field in the contest en route to his
third 30-point outing of the season as he finished with 30 minutes.
Other than hitting all three of his free-throw attempts, McAlarney
scored all of his points from three-point range. The previous mark
was 8 shared by Keith Friel (vs. Syracuse, 1998), Matt Carroll (vs.
Syracuse, 2003) and Colin Falls (vs. Pittsburgh, 2005 and Seton Hall,
2006).
Looking To Join The Club
Senior Rob Kurz and sophomore Luke Harangody are both
approaching the 1,000-point mark. Kurz, who played in his 100th
career game against Pittsburgh on February 21, has 934 career points
in 102 outings, while Harangody has 925 points in 59 career games.
Kurz owns a 9.2 career scoring average, while Harangody is averaging
15.7 points per game for his career. Notre Dame has had 46 players
score 1,000 or more points during the program's 103 seasons. The
last Irish player to reach the 1,000-point mark was Colin Falls
during his senior campaign in 2006-07.
No Sophomore Slump
Irish sophomore Luke Harangody has had anything but a
sophomore slump this season as he is currently averaging 21.0 points
and 10.6 rebounds. He also has scored 566 points. Comparing his
current sophomore season to that of past Irish players, his 566
points presently is the fifth-highest total by an Irish sophomore and
his current 21.0 scoring average matches that of John Shumate in
1972-73.
Where Charity Prevails
Notre Dame owns a decisive advantage from the charity
stripe over its opponents. The Irish have outscored their opponents
450-251 from the line in 27 games in 2007-08 and 269-155 against BIG
EAST foes. Notre Dame is shooting 74.1 percent overall from the line
(compared to 63.5 percent for opponents) and 76.4 (compared to 64.0
for opponents) in BIG EAST games. In the win over Marquette, Notre
Dame was 24-31 (.774), while Marquette was just 5-8 (.625). The
Irish were a perfect 6-6 from the line in the final 26 seconds of the
game. Against Pittsburgh, Notre Dame finished 18-20 from the charity
stripe.
Irish Show Overtime Resilience
Notre Dame's win over Providence on January 31 marked its
first overtime game since March 20, 2006 when the Irish dropped an
87-84 double-overtime decision at Michigan in the second round of the
NIT. It also was the first overtime for the Irish after losing five
straight overtime decisions (all during the 2005-06 campaign). Notre
Dame's last overtime win prior to the Providence victory was a 93-92
victory against Georgetown at the Joyce Center on February 1, 2003 -
nearly five years to the day.
Now That's Something To Talk About
Notre Dame's current record-setting 36-game home win
streak spans three seasons - the final two games played during the
2005-06 campaign, the entire 2006-07 season (18 games) and 16 games
in 2007-08.
Notre Dame's 81-74 overtime against Providence was the first
overtime game during the streak.
Notre Dame trailed the Panthers by 11 (51-40) with 13:53 to play in
the contest which marked the largest deficit at home for the Irish
this season.
The Irish have only trailed twice at home this season at halftime -
Cincinnati (32-27) and Pittsburgh (35-30).
Getting In A Second Half Gear
For just the second time this season, Notre Dame trailed
at the intermission (35-30) in its eventual 82-70 victory over
Pittsburgh on Thursday night. The Irish outscored the Panthers 52-35
in the second half in their eventual 82-70 victory. In fact, Notre
Dame erased an 11-point second half deficit (51-40) - its largest of
the season - and outscored the Panthers 42-19 in the final 13:44 of
the contest. The final 12-point margin of victory was the largest of
the game for the Irish.
Irish Find Comfort Away From The Joyce Center
After starting off the season 0-2 in its first two BIG
EAST road games, Notre Dame has won three of its last four league
road games. Notre Dame earned its first BIG EAST road win of the
season on January 26 with its 90-80 victory over Villanova at the
Wachovia Center. The Irish shot 50.9 percent from the field (27-53),
47.4 percent from three-point range (9-19) and 71.1 percent from the
charity stripe (27-38).
The Irish picked up their second road win of the season in
as many games with its 95-69 win over the Pirates and was the largest
margin of victory in a BIG EAST road game since an 89-62 (22 points)
over St. John's on March 6, 2004.
Notre Dame's third league road win was against Rutgers as
the Irish pulled out 71-68 win as head coach Mike Brey's squad won at
the RAC for the second straight year.
In its first two BIG EAST road losses to Marquette (92-66)
and Georgetown (84-65), Notre Dame lost by a combined 45 points and
shot just 36.1 percent from the field (43-119), 25.0 percent from
beyond the arc (11-44) and 72.3 percent (34-47) from the free-throw
line.
A Tale Of Two Halves
The first and second halves for Notre Dame against
Cincinnati in its 91-74 victory couldn't have been more different
than night and day. In the first half, the Irish trailed 34-27 at
the break (the first time they had trailed at home at halftime this
season) after shooting only 24.0 percent from the field (6-25). In
the second-half, the Irish outscored the Bearcats 64-40 as they shot
69.2 percent (18-26) from the field, 66.7 percent (6-9) from
three-point range and 84.6 percent (22-26) from the free throw line.
Luke Harangody scored 24 of his game-high 25 points in the
second half. It was the largest scoring output by an Irish player in
a half since Chris Thomas scored 27 of 39 points in the second half
of a 77-66 victory over Saint Louis on March 22, 2004.
The 64 points in the second half were the most points by
an Irish team in a half of a regulation game under head coach Mike
Brey.
The six first-half field goals matched the fewest ever
scored by an Irish team in a half under Brey.
Valuing The Basketball
In its back-to-back wins over Colgate and Eastern
Michigan, Notre Dame committed just eight and nine turnovers,
respectively, marking the only time this season that the Irish had
fewer than 10 turnovers in back-to-back contests. In the Irish win
over Brown on December 29, the Irish had seven turnovers, including
just one in the first half. Two of the strengths of Notre Dame
basketball teams under head coach Mike Brey have been distributing
and taking care of the basketball. The Irish are averaging 18.8
assists per game and 13.4 turnovers for a 1.40 assists-to-turnover
ratio. Notre Dame has dished off 20 or more assists in 11 games this
season. The 24 turnovers committed by Notre Dame in the loss at
Marquette were the most ever for an Irish team under head coach Mike
Brey.
Double The Pleasure
Luke Harangody recorded a career-best sixth straight
double-double against Connecticut on February 13 when he scored a
career-high 32 points and matched his career-high with 16 rebounds.
He had that streak snapped against Rutgers when he finished with 10
points and eight rebounds.
Harangody has 17 double-doubles on the season and 17 in the
last 23 contests, including 12 of 15 BIG EAST games.
The last Irish player to register six consecutive
double-doubles was Ryan Humphrey in 2001-02 when he ended his career
a double-double in the final 11 games of his career.
Where There's A Will There's A Way
Tory Jackson had a rather slow start to the BIG EAST
season, but over the last nine games, in which the Irish are 7-2, the
sophomore guard is averaging 11.6 points (104), 6.1 rebounds (55),
6.1 assists (55) and 2.3 steals (21).
Jackson has recorded three double-doubles this season,
which included back-to-back outings against Rutgers and Pittsburgh.
He had one of the most unlikely double-doubles that any player under
6-0 could have when he scored 16 points and grabbed a career-high 13
rebounds in the win over Pittsburgh. Jackson also had five assists,
three steals and one blocked shot in 37 minutes without committing a
turnover. He registered his second career double-double in the
previous game versus Rutgers when he scored a season-high 17 points
and dished off 10 assists.
Prior to Thursday's game at Louisville in which he scored
just five points, Jackson's five-game double-figure scoring streak
matched the longest of his career.
Record-Setting Home Performance
Notre Dame put an exclamation point on its record-setting
25th consecutive wins at the Joyce Center on December 8. In the
108-62 win over Northern Illinois, the 108 points were the most
points scored by the Irish under head coach Mike Brey in a regulation
game (ND scored 116 vs. Georgetown in a four overtime contest in
2002), while the 46-point margin of victory was the third-largest
during the Brey era. In addition, Notre Dame shot a blistering 72.0
percent from the field in the first half which marked the best
shooting performance by an Irish team in the first half under Brey.
The Irish also owned a 52-27 advantage on the boards.
Tough Tory
Tory Jackson suffered a cornea abrasion in his right eye
late in the first half of Notre Dame's win over Connecticut on
January 5. Jackson returned to play all 20 minutes of the second
half and finished the game with 11 assists (matching a career-high),
six points, seven rebounds and four steals. He hit two key free
throws with 1:52 to play which gave the Irish a six-point lead.
McAlarney Shines On The Big Stage
Staten Island native Kyle McAlarney made his return to New
York City and Madison Square Garden a happy one on December 4 as he
led his Irish to a 68-59 victory over Kansas State. McAlarney
finished with 18 points in the contest on 6-13 shooting from the
field (2-5 from three-point range). He scored 14 points in the
second half, including nine straight in the final 2:10 of the
contest. McAlarney nailed a three-pointer with 1:30 to play and
converted four key free throws down the stretch.
McAlarney Shines - Part II
Kyle McAlarney netted a career-high 32 points in the win
over Connecticut which was the first 30-plus performance of his
career and the first time this season that an Irish player had topped
the 30-point. He was 13-19 from the field and 6-7 from three-point
range. Prior to McAlarney's performance, the last Notre Dame player
to score 30-plus points in a game was Russell Carter (32 points in a
71-68 loss to St. John's at Madison Square Garden on January 23,
2007).
Unstoppable Luke
Luke Harangody leads the Irish in scoring and rebounding
averaging 21.0 points and 10.6 rebounds. He leads the team with 17
doubles and owns a 25-game double-figure scoring streak - the longest
on the team and in his career. He has netted double figures in all
but one game (Monmouth) and has finished with 10 or more rebounds in
17 contests. Harangody also tops the Irish with 15 games of 20 or
more points.
Thirty Something
Kyle McAlarney has scored 30-plus points in three of Notre
Dame's 15 BIG EAST games. He had a career-high 32 points in Notre
Dame's win over Connecticut on Jan. 5 and then tallied 30 points
against Villanova on Jan. 26 and in the recent Irish win over
Syracuse on Sunday. The last player to score 30-plus points in
multiple games during the BIG EAST regular season was Chris Quinn in
2005-06 when he registered four 30-plus point performances - 37 vs.
Pittsburgh, 31 vs. Providence and Louisville and 34 vs. Seton Hall.
Luke Harangody has two 30-point performance and one
40-points effort. He registered the first 30-point performance of
his career when he scored a then career-high 31 points in Notre
Dame's overtime win against Providence as he connected on 11-22 shots
from the field and was 9-10 from the free-throw line. In addition to
scoring 31 points, he also grabbed 14 rebounds. He then topped that
with a career-best 32-point effort in the loss at Connecticut and
matched his personal best with 16 boards. Harangody recorded Notre
Dame's first 40-point performance since 1993 when he scored 40 points
and grabbed 12 rebounds against Louisville.
Twenty Something
Luke Harangody's 22 points in the win at Seton Hall marked
his fourth straight game with 20-plus points. Heading into the
contest, he had scored 20-plus in three straight contests on three
different occasions.
Kyle McAlarney also had a three-game 20-plus point outing
streak of his own that came to an end against Kansas State.
McAlarney registered his first 20-point outing of the season against
Youngstown State when he tallied 23 points (a then career best). He
followed that up with another career-high outing for the second time
in as many games when tallied 25 points versus Colgate. In the
Eastern Michigan outing, McAlarney led the Irish for the second
straight game with a 21-point performance.
Harangody became the first player since Chris Thomas to
score 20-plus points in four straight games in 2003-04 (his junior
year) - Pittsburgh (23 points), Connecticut (31 points), Seton Hall
(26 points) and Syracuse (25 points).
The last player to record 20-plus points in five straight
contests was Ryan Humphrey in 2001-02 - St. John's (29), Providence
(21), St. John's (21), Connecticut (21) and Charlotte (20).
Elite Company
Notre Dame joined an elite group last year when it
registered its 1,600th win against Providence on February 15, 2007.
In its 103rd season, Notre Dame has 1,627 victories. Only 12 other
schools have reached the mark: Kentucky, North Carolina, Kansas,
Duke, Syracuse, Temple, St. John's, Pennsylvania, Indiana, Utah and
UCLA.
One Is A Lonely Number
Rob Kurz is the lone senior among the 14 players on this
year's Irish roster. The last time Notre Dame had only one senior on
the roster was during the 1983-84 when Cecil Rucker was the only
senior member of that team that consisted of four juniors, five
sophomores and three freshmen. The 1988-89 Irish squad featured no
seniors on that team and was comprised of five juniors, two
sophomores and five freshmen.
Eight Straight Postseason Appearances
Notre Dame's appearance in last year's NCAA tournament
field marks the fourth NCAA berth for the Irish in seven years.
Since 2000, Notre Dame has appeared in either the NCAA or NIT
tournaments each of the last eight years. The Irish played in the
2000 NIT and then earned consecutive NCAA tournament berths - 2001,
'02, '03 - followed by NIT appearances in '04, '05 and '06. This
current postseason streak matches the longest stretch since making
eight straight from 1983-90 (NIT in 1983 and '84 and NCAA from
1985-90).
Monmouth Notables
The 33 points allowed by Notre Dame in the 76-33 win over
Monmouth on November 16, 2007 were the fewest ever under head coach
Mike Brey and the eight points in the second half were the fewest
ever by an Irish team in a half since the inception of the
three-point shot.
The 33 points allowed were also the fewest given up by a
Notre Dame team since January 4, 1950 in a 54-33 win at home against
Butler. It also marked the fewest points scored by an Irish opponent
in a road or neutral site game since Kentucky's 34-28 win over the
Irish on December 29, 1981 in Louisville, Ky.
The 43-point margin of victory matched the seventh-highest
for an Irish team under Mike Brey.
"D" The Key Against Monmouth
En route to its 76-33 victory over Monmouth on November 16,
Notre Dame held the Hawks without a point in the final 10:31 of the
contest and outscored Monmouth 23-0 down the stretch. In fact, the
Irish held the Hawks to just eight points in the second half and just
11 points overall in the final 24:52 of the contest. Notre Dame also
limited Monmouth to just nine field goal attempts (all misses) in the
final 8:17 of the game.
Home Cookin'
Notre Dame's 18-0 record at home last season marked just
the third time since the opening of the Joyce Center in 1968-69 that
an Irish team finished undefeated at home during the regular season.
It also marked the most wins ever for a Notre Dame team in a single
season. Only two other Notre Dame squads ever completed a season
undefeated at home - the 1973-74 and 1985-86 squads both finished
their campaigns with identical 15-0 records. The Irish were the only
BIG EAST team to finish the season undefeated at home. Dating back to
the 2005-06 campaign, Notre Dame has won 36 consecutive games at home
following the win over Syracuse - an active streak that is third
among all Division I teams and is the longest in school history as
well as the longest during Mike Brey's tenure.
Notre Dame's current streak dates back to the final two
games of the 2005-06 campaign as Irish defeated DePaul (66-61) in the
regular-season finale and Vanderbilt (79-69) in the first round of
the NIT. Notre Dame's last loss at home was an 80-72 setback to
Marquette on February 25, 2006.
Joyce Center Streakin'
Notre Dame broke the Joyce Center home win streak mark on
December 8 with its 108-62 win over Northern Illinois. Here's a look
at the Joyce Center streaks:
36 - Began with a 66-61 win over DePaul on 3/4/06 (current streak)
24 - Began with a 94-68 win over Xavier on 2/3/73 and ended
with a 94-84 loss to Indiana on 12/11/74
22 - Began with an 88-68 win over Pittsburgh on 1/26/77 and
ended with a 69-68 overtime loss to DePaul on 2/12/78
16 - Began with a 92-70 win over Fairfield on 12/9/82 and
ended with a 51-47 loss to UCLA on 12/3/83
16 - Began with an 89-76 win over West Virginia on 2/20/02
and ended with a 87-79 loss to Connecticut on 2/24/03.
'AYERS' Ball
Junior Ryan Ayers is having the best season of his career
as he is shooting 47.1 percent from the field (74-157) and 47.1
percent (48-102) from three-point range. His 8.3 points per game also
mark a career best. Last year, he began the season 0-12 from the
field before hitting his first field goal in the sixth game of the
year. Heading into this season, he owned a 38.5 career field goal
percentage and 37.5 percent mark from three-point range. Ayers netted
a career-high 17 points Louisville connecting on a career-best 5-6
from three-point range. He has reached double figures in eight games.
Quietly Goes About His Business
Perhaps no player in the Irish lineup is as steady as Rob
Kurz. The senior forward is the team's third-leading scorer (12.3)
and second-leading rebounder (7.7) and has scored in double figures
in all but ninecontests. He has recorded eight double-doubles with a
season-high 23 points and career-high 14 boards coming in wins over
North Florida and Rutgers. Kurz is shooting 43.3 percent (97-224)
from the field and 37.7 (29-77) from three-point range.
Zeller In Double Figures
Luke Zeller has scored in double figures in three games
this season with his most recent double-figure outing coming against
Marquette when he scored 11 points. It was the first time in double
figures since matching his career-high against Colgate (14 points) on
November 26. Zeller also reached double figures in the first game of
the season against Long Island when he netted 12 points.
Zeller On The Boards
Zeller had his best rebounding effort of his career as he
registered 10 rebounds against Marquette on January 12 which marked a
career-high for the Irish junior. His previous career-best had been
nine rebounds on three occasions.
The 'Peoples' Choice
Sophomore Jonathan Peoples scored a career-high 12 points
in 11 minutes in Notre Dame's loss at Georgetown. Prior to that his
personal-best had been nine points against Seton Hall last season.
Peoples was 5-6 from the field and 2-2 from three-point range in
addition to grabbing four rebounds.
The Irish All-Time
The 2007-08 men's basketball campaign marks the 103rd
season of basketball and 13th as a member of the BIG EAST Conference.
In 103 seasons, Irish teams have posted a 1627-890 record for a .646
winning percentage. In BIG EAST play, Notre Dame owns a 113-102
(.526) record all-time in conference regular-season play.
Always In It
Since the 2005-06 campaign, Notre Dame's 28 losses have
been by a combined 177 points for an average of 6.3 points per game.
The 14 setbacks in '05-'06 were by a total of 59 points (4.2
points). The only double-digit loss was to North Carolina State
(61-47). The Irish suffered 10 BIG EAST losses during the regular
season and those were by a combined 35 points (3.5).
Putting Up The Points And Winning Impressively
Notre Dame averaged 81.0 points per game last season, the
best points per game average ever under Mike Brey. Following the
Louisville game, the Irish are scoring at an 81.0 clip. Notre Dame
has topped 80-plus points on 15 occasions, 90-plus points six times
and the century mark once.
BIG EAST Formula For Success Under Brey
Since his arrival at Notre Dame, Mike Brey has led Notre
Dame to a 77-50 (.606) record in BIG EAST regular-season games and a
3-7 mark in tournament play for an overall record of 80-57 (.584)
against league foes. In Brey's first season, the Irish posted their
first-ever winning record in BIG EAST play and won the BIG EAST West
Division title with an 11-5 mark. Prior to Brey's arrival at Notre
Dame, Irish teams had a 35-53 (.398) regular-season record since
joining the league in 1995-96.
Keeping It Close
In the 84 losses suffered by Irish teams in Mike Brey's
seven-plus seasons, only 21 have been by 10 or more points and have
been by a combined 576 for an average of 6.9 points per game. Notre
Dame's 26-point loss (92-66) to Marquette on January 12 was the
largest ever for an Irish team under Brey, while the loss to
Georgetown (84-65) was the second-largest.
297 And Counting
Heading into today's game against DePaul, Notre Dame has
hit at least one three-pointer in 297 straight games, a mark that
dates back to the 1998-99 campaign. The last time an Irish team
failed to hit a three-pointer was a 101-70 loss to Connecticut at the
Hartford Civic Center on Jan. 12, 1999 as Notre Dame finished 0-7
from beyond the arc in the game. The 2005-06 Irish squad set the
single-season record with 288 three-pointers and fell just one field
goal short of that mark (287) in 2006-07.
Home Sweet Home
Since the inaugural season in 1968-69 at the Joyce Center,
Notre Dame owns a 490-141 record all-time for a .777 winning
percentage. The Irish are 105-27 (.795) at the Joyce Center during
Mike Brey's seven-plus seasons.
Road Warriors
In Mike Brey's seven-plus seasons, his Irish teams have
compiled a road record of 58-57 (.504) that includes a 38-40 (.487)
in true road games and a 20-17 mark (.541) in neutral site contests.
A BIG EAST Family
The Kurz family name is familiar name in BIG EAST circles
this season. Rob Kurz' younger sister, Laura, is a member of the
Villanova women's basketball team. She played for two years (2004-06)
at Duke before tranferring to Villanova. After sitting out last
season, the junior forward has very similar numbers to her older
brother Rob. Rob is currently the third-leading scorer for the Irish
(12.3 ppg.) and second-leading rebounder (7.7), while Laura is the
Wildcats' leading scorer (15.0 ppg.) and rebounder (6.0).