William & Mary Tribe |
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University |
College of William & Mary |
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Conference |
CAA |
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Location |
Williamsburg, VA |
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Head coach |
Tony Shaver (14th year) |
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Arena |
Kaplan Arena (Capacity: 11,300) |
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Nickname |
Tribe |
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Colors |
Green, Gold, and Silver[1] |
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Uniforms |
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Conference regular season champions |
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1983, 1998, 2015 |
The William & Mary Tribe men's basketball team represents the College of William & Mary in Williamsburg, Virginia in NCAA Division I competition. The school's team competes in the Colonial Athletic Association and play their home games in Kaplan Arena.
Postseason berths
NIT results
The Tribe have appeared in the National Invitation Tournament three times. Their combined record is 0–3.
NCAA results
- None (have never qualified)
William & Mary is one of five original Division I teams in history to have never participated in the NCAA Tournament.[2] When the NCAA split its classification into divisions in 1948–49, William & Mary was classified as a Division I school. Of all Division I schools today that were charter members of this new classification, only William & Mary, The Citadel, Northwestern, Army, and St. Francis Brooklyn have never reached the NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament at least once. The closest effort by the Tribe to reach the NCAA Tournament was a 75–74 loss in the 2014 CAA Tournament Final to Delaware. The Tribe also lost conference tournament championships in 1958, 1961, 1965, 1975, 1983, 2008, 2010, and 2015, now having gone 0–9 in NCAA Tournament berth-clinching games.
Recent seasons
2008 season
The 2008 Men's basketball season was just another season for the Tribe, fifth in the Colonial Athletic Association and needing to win the tournament in order to have any chance at a postseason bid. It would have somewhat of a magical end, however, as they became the first team ever, in NCAA history, to score 4 baskets in 4 conference tournament games, with less than 8 seconds left in each game:
First round: David Schneider 3-pointer with less than a second left to beat Georgia State, 58–57(ironically enough, exactly one year earlier, this was how Georgia State beat William and Mary)
Quarterfinals: Nathan Mann 3-pointer with 7.5 seconds left to beat Old Dominion, 63–60
Semifinals: Laimus Kisielius layup with 3 seconds left to beat VCU, 56–54. The Tribe fans stormed the Richmond Coliseum court.
Championship Game: Danny Sumner 3-pointer with no time left(this had no effect on the outcome; the basket DID count, but George Mason had already won the game) made the final score 68–59 in favor of the Patriots.
2010 season
Through February 17, 2010, the Tribe sported a 19–7 record, including upset road wins over heavily favored ACC opponents Wake Forest and Maryland. These wins and other impressive showings, including a hard-fought loss to Connecticut, garnered William and Mary votes in the AP and coaches' polls during several weeks early in the season. After reaching the CAA Finals and ending their regular season with a 22–10 record (12–6, CAA), the Tribe earned its second NIT berth in school history.
Rivalries
William & Mary's traditional rivals have included in-state opponents Old Dominion University, James Madison University, the University of Richmond, Virginia Commonwealth University, and George Mason University. However, of these teams, only the James Madison Dukes are still members of the Colonial Athletic Association. The Richmond Spiders, VCU Rams, and George Mason Patriots have all moved on to the Atlantic 10 Conference while the Old Dominion Monarchs left for Conference USA in 2013. Some of these teams are maintained as part of William & Mary's out of conference schedule each year along with other Virginia schools like Virginia, Virginia Tech, Hampton, Radford, VMI, and Liberty.
Series records
- Records through the 2015–16 season (Feb. 1)
Opponent | Match Ups | Record (Pct.) | Last Game |
Richmond | 200 | 97–103 (.487) | Dec. 3, 2014 |
VMI | 118 | 77–41 (.653) | Nov. 27, 2013 |
Virginia Tech | 117 | 41–76 (.350) | Dec. 17, 2005 |
James Madison | 90 | 42–48 (.467) | Jan. 31, 2016 |
Old Dominion | 87 | 20–67 (.229) | Dec. 1, 2015 |
Virginia | 80 | 29–51 (.367) | Dec. 5, 2015 |
George Mason | 66 | 27–39 (.409) | Feb. 23, 2013 |
VCU | 51 | 12–39 (.235) | Feb. 1, 2012 |
Program records
Through the 2014–15 season, March 9
Career leaders
Points
Rebounds
Rank | Rebounds | Player | Years |
1 | 1,679 | Jeff Cohen | 1957–61 |
2 | 1,270 | Bill Chambers | 1950–53 |
3 | 886 | Ben Pomeroy | 1964–67 |
4 | 869 | John Mahoney | 1951–55 |
5 | 783 | David Cully | 1992–96 |
Assists
Rank | Assists | Player | Years |
1 | 409 | Scott Coval | 1982–86 |
2 | 369 | John Lowenhaupt | 1974–78 |
3 | 368 | David Schneider | 2006–10 |
4 | 358 | Brendan Connor | 1989–93 |
5 | 351 | Randy Bracy | 1995–99 |
Field goal percentage (min. 475 attempts)
Rank | Field goal pct | Player | Years |
1 | 58.2% (277–476) | Marcus Kitts | 2007–11 |
2 | 56.6% (470–831) | Tim Rusthoven | 2011–14 |
3 | 56.0% (478–853) | Carl Parker | 1992–96 |
4 | 55.2% (392–710) | Mike Strayhorn | 1979–83 |
5 | 54.6% (329–603) | Ben Blocker | 1988–92 |
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Free throw percentage (min. 200 attempts)
Rank | Free throw pct | Player | Years |
1 | 89.9% (259–288) | Scott Coval | 1982–86 |
2 | 82.6% (238–288) | Mike Arizin | 1972–74 |
3 | 82.4% (360–437) | Keith Cieplicki | 1981–85 |
4 | 82.1% (398–485) | John Lowenhaupt | 1974–78 |
5 | 82.0% (182–222) | George Spack | 1970–73 |
Three-point field goal percentage (min. 200 attempts)
Rank | 3-Pt field goal pct | Player | Years |
1 | 41.9% (150–358) | Greg Burzell | 1986–89 |
2 | 41.3% (119–288) | Bobby Fitzgibbons | 1995–97 |
3 | 40.2% (325–809) | Marcus Thornton | 2011–15 |
4 | 40.2% (213–530) | Quinn McDowell | 2008–12 |
5 | 38.3% (161–420) | Julian Boatner | 2011–14 |
Blocks
Rank | Blocks | Player | Years |
1 | 248 | David Cully | 1992–96 |
2 | 139 | Adam Duggins | 1999–03 |
3 | 110 | Marcus Kitts | 2007–11 |
4 | 107 | Thomas Roberts | 1989–93 |
5 | 95 | Carl Parker | 1992–96 |
Steals
Rank | Steals | Player | Years |
1 | 207 | Bill Barnes | 1978–82 |
2 | 175 | Randy Bracy | 1995–99 |
3 | 166 | David Schneider | 2006–10 |
4 | 160 | John Lowenhaupt | 1974–78 |
5 | 148 | Mike Strayhorn | 1979–83 |
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Single-season leaders
Points
Rebounds
Assists
Rank | Assists | Player | Year (games) |
1 | 168 | Scott Coval | 1984–85 (27) |
2 | 159 | Nick D'Antoni | 2003–04 (28) |
3 | 128 | Bill Barnes | 1981–82 (28) |
4 | 124 | David Schneider | 2007–08 (33) |
5 | 123 | John Lowenhaupt | 1976–77 (30) |
Field goal percentage (min. 200 attempts)
Rank | Field goal pct | Player | Year |
1 | 59.9% (164–274) | Carl Parker | 1995–96 |
2 | 57.9% (195–337) | John Lowenhaupt | 1977–78 |
3 | 57.2% (115–201) | Gary Bland | 1983–84 |
4 | 56.9% (235–413) | Keith Cieplicki | 1984–85 |
5 | 56.3% (126–224) | Corey Cofield | 2003–04 |
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Free throw percentage (min. 80 attempts)
Rank | Free throw pct | Player | Year |
1 | 91.7% (111–121) | Scott Coval | 1985–86 |
2 | 87.5% (77–88) | Dave Daugherty | 1966–67 |
3 | 87.4% (111–127) | Tony Traver | 1982–83 |
4 | 86.6% (116–134) | Quinn McDowell | 2010–11 |
5 | 86.4% (114–132) | John Lowenhaupt | 1977–78 |
Three-point field goal percentage (min. 75 attempts)
Rank | 3-Pt field goal pct | Player | Year |
1 | 45.5% (70–154) | Quinn McDowell | 2010–11 |
2 | 45.1% (73–162) | Daniel Dixon | 2014–15 |
3 | 44.1% (75–170) | Greg Burzell | 1987–88 |
4 | 43.6% (34–78) | Brendan Connor | 1991–92 |
5 | 43.5% (57–131) | Bobby Fitzgibbons | 1995–96 |
5 | 43.5% (93–214) | Marcus Thornton | 2012–13 |
Blocks
Rank | Blocks | Player | Year (games) |
1 | 91 | David Cully | 1994–95 (27) |
2 | 84 | David Cully | 1995–96 (25) |
3 | 71 | David Cully | 1993–94 (26) |
4 | 60 | Marcus Kitts | 2010–11 (32) |
5 | 53 | Adam Duggins | 1999–00 (28) |
Steals
Rank | Steals | Player | Year (games) |
1 | 112 | Jim McDonough | 1975–76 (25) |
2 | 58 | John Lowenhaupt | 1975–76 (28) |
3 | 57 | Randy Bracy | 1997–98 (26) |
John Lowenhaupt | 1977–78 (26) |
5 | 56 | David Schneider | 2007–08 (33) |
Mike Strayhorn | 1982–83 (29) |
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NCAA records
- Individual
- Bill Chambers, highest single game rebound total, 51, February 14, 1953 vs. Virginia (rules changes since then make this record unlikely to be broken)
- Team
- In 2009–10, they became the first team in NCAA history to score baskets in four consecutive conference tournament games with less than eight seconds remaining in each game
Accolades
Southern Conference (1936–1977)
ECAC South (1977–1982)
William & Mary joined the Colonial Athletic Association, its current conference, in 1982–83. The CAA's predecessor was the ECAC South, which existed between 1977–78 and 1984–85. The CAA recognizes the 1982–83 through 1984–85 seasons as part of its basketball history but not any earlier. The CAA was formally founded in 1982–83 as the ECAC South Basketball League. It was renamed the Colonial Athletic Association in 1985–86 when it added championships in other sports (although a number of members maintain ECAC affiliation in some sports).
Season |
Player of the Year |
Defensive Player of the Year |
Coach of the Year |
First Team All-ECAC |
Second Team All-ECAC |
Third Team All-ECAC |
Rookie of the Year |
1977–78 |
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1978–79 |
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1979–80 |
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1980–81 |
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Mike Strayhorn |
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1981–82 |
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Colonial Athletic Association (1982–present)
Retired jerseys
Banners honoring the 1983 NIT berth, Keith Cieplicki, Bill Chambers
Banners honoring Chet Giermak, John Lowenhaupt, Jeff Cohen and
Lynn Norenberg
William & Mary has retired five men's basketball jerseys in its program's history. Uniform numbers are not retired, only ceremonial jerseys. Banners depicting the all-time greats hang in the rafters of Kaplan Arena (the banner in white is for Lynn Norenberg, the only W&M women's basketball player to have a jersey retired). There also hang banners which commemorate their 1983 National Invitation Tournament and 2010 National Invitation Tournament bids.
Players in the NBA
References
External links
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Teams | |
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Championships & awards | |
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Seasons |
- 1982–83
- 1983–84
- 1984–85
- 1985–86
- 1986–87
- 1987–88
- 1988–89
- 1989–90
- 1990–91
- 1991–92
- 1992–93
- 1993–94
- 1994–95
- 1995–96
- 1996–97
- 1997–98
- 1998–99
- 1999–00
- 2000–01
- 2001–02
- 2002–03
- 2003–04
- 2004–05
- 2005–06
- 2006–07
- 2007–08
- 2008–09
- 2009–10
- 2010–11
- 2011–12
- 2012–13
- 2013–14
- 2014–15
- 2015–16
- 2016–17
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