Wednesday, January 13, 2016 6:00 p.m.
Gentile Arena, Chicago
Everyone knew that the Bradley Braves were going to struggle after a housecleaning and exodus resulting in only three holdovers from Geno Ford’s regime. The Braves’ new coach Brian Wardle spent five years at Green Bay and turned in a 95-65 record (including a 5-1 record against Loyola), winning 24 games in each of the last two seasons. Bradley won their opening game of the season by a single point, and have lost all 15 games since against Division I foes. Yet 2-15 Bradley enters their game against Loyola with a better RPI (259) than the 7-9 Ramblers (267).
Only Mike Shaw, Ka’Darryl Bell and Donte Thomas survived Bradley’s 24-loss 2014-15 season, and Shaw and Bell have since ended their senior seasons with injuries. Sophomore Thomas leads 10 (?!??!) freshmen filling out the roster. With the arrival of conference play, the youngsters are wilting under the heated competition; Bradley is averaging only 45.2 points on offense in conference, and only 39.5 in the past two games. No Bradley starter has finished a game in double-figure points since conference play began.
The Braves almost always start two guards, a center, and two forwards. In the backcourt are 6’3” Brit Dwayne Lautier-Ogunleye and 6’1” Antoine Pittman (out of Rockford Auburn, Fred Van Vleet’s high school program). The two principal ball handlers have shown some promise (19 points for Lautier-Ogunleye against Seton Hall, and Pittman leads the team in free throw percentage), but only average 8.6 and 7.4 points per game respectively. Neither starting guard averages more than 37% shooting from the field, and they combine for 90 turnovers against only 54 assists.
The frontcourt situation is a little brighter. Six seven sophomore forward Donte Thomas leads the team in points (8.9), rebounds (5.6) and field goal percentage (46.0%). Luuk van Bree, a 6’9” Dutch forward adds 4.2 rebounds and 6.9 points per game; he leads the team in made threes (21) and three point percentage (31.8%).
At center is 6’9” Callum Barker out of Australia, who nearly attended Loyola before heading to Peoria. Barker is getting a ton of playing time and averaging 5.8 points and 4.2 rebounds. He leads the team with eight blocks, but the big center has taken 24 three point attempts (for comparison, Loyola guard Earl Peterson has taken 20 three point attempts on the season) and hit on only three of them. His two point shooting percentage is an excellent 58.2%, but his many ill-advised three point attempts sink his overall shooting percentage to 44.3%.
Skinny 6’5” guard Ronnie Suggs (6.9 ppg), 6’7” forward Scottie James (4.4 points, 3.0 rpg), and 5’11” Joel Okafor get most of the time off the bench.
Not surprisingly given their dearth of experience, Bradley leads the nation in many dubious categories. The Braves are dead last in all of college basketball in turnovers (309 committed, 18.2 per game), and second from last in three point percentage (25.2%) and points per game (54.3). They are #1 in the nation in personal fouls (401 committed, 14 times players fouling out), and have put their opponents on the free throw line 461 times-- third most in college hoops.
After Loyola met Notre Dame on December 13, the Ramblers entered a streak of eight very winnable games concluding with Wednesday’s game against Bradley. The idea was Loyola would go 6-2 or 7-1 in the stretch; instead they’re headed into the Bradley game at 2-5 in those eight winnable games, and not playing with enough confidence or energy to give fans any confidence of a win even against 2-15 Bradley. Yet one of these two teams will avoid an 0-5 conference record on Wednesday… it might as well be the Ramblers.
Loyola game notes:
http://grfx.cstv.com/photos/schools/loy ... 112aaa.pdfBradley game notes:
http://grfx.cstv.com/photos/schools/loy ... a_brad.pdfTV/Streaming video: Comcast SportsNet
Vegas odds: Loyola by 13.5