Prior to the advent of national post-season college basketball tournaments, beginning with the National Invitation Tournament (NIT) in 1938 and the NCAA Tournament in 1939, virtually no third-party organizations selected basketball national champions. The Official NCAA Men's Basketball Records Book lists title selections of pre-tournament era teams by the Helms Athletic Foundation.
The 1957-58 Musketeers became the first school from Ohio to win a national championship in basketball by winning the 1958 National Invitation Tournament. Led by first-year head coach Jim McCafferty, the Musketeers defeated Niagara, Bradley, and St. Bonaventure to reach the NIT championship game at Madison Square Garden in New York. In the final, Xavier (19-11) defeated rival #11 Dayton 78-74 in overtime. Sport magazine called Xavier's Cinderella run "one of the greatest upsets in basketball history"
Don Donoher played three years of varsity basketball for Coach Tom Blackburn at the University of Dayton. Following graduation from Dayton in 1954, Donoher served a two-year enlistment in the United States Army. Returning to Dayton after the end of his service, Donoher accepted a part-time basketball scout position offered by Blackburn. In February 1963, Blackburn made Donoher the University's first full-time assistant coach.
Blackburn had been suffering from cancer for most of the 1963-64 season. On March 6, 1964, Tom Blackburn died from cancer – just 26 hours before the season finally against rival DePaul - and Don Donoher was formally named his successor. However, Dayton credits the entire 1963-64 season to Blackburn.
Don May scores over Lew Alcindor in the 1967 NCAA championship game.
In Dayton’s first and only Final Four, 6-4 forward Don May played a game for the ages against Dean Smith’s fourth-ranked North Carolina Tarheels in the 1967 NCAA Tournament Semifinal. May scored over, under, and around defenders en route to sinking thirteen straight field goals (he made 16 of his 22 attempts for the game). May finished with 34 points and 15 rebounds as the Flyers had a relatively easy time, winning 76-62.
1956 – On February 19, 1956, Dayton was ranked #2 in the AP Poll (behind # 1 San Francisco) and a convoy of Dayton fans packed the new Interstate 75 en route to the 7-year-old Cincinnati Gardens, where the Flyers beat the Musketeers 85-75 in front of a record crowd of 14,284.
Season Records: UCLA 24-3, Dayton 17-8. Two Bruins fouled out, and 5 of the 7 Flyers who played in the game finished it with 4 personal fouls.
Mike Sylvester [from Cincinnati Moeller Catholic H.S.] collected 36 points and 13 rebounds in the loss against UCLA, which had won seven straight national championships and was a 20-point favorite.
The game was tied 80-80 after regulation, 88-88 after one overtime and 98-98 after two overtimes. UCLA then pulled away from the Flyers in the third overtime. A Donald Smith shot with 14 seconds left in regulation went in, but UD had just called a timeout. A Smith jumper with 5 seconds left in regulation barley missed.
Dayton reached the national championship game in 1967, losing to UCLA and 7-foot-1 foot sophomore Lew Alcindor, who, of course, later changed his name to Kareem Abdul-Jabbar.
During the 1974 NCAA Tournament, Dayton took UCLA’s Bill Walton-led Final Four team to triple overtime before losing, 111-100.
In the West Regional Final (Elite Eight game) # 1 Georgetown beat # 10 Dayton 61-49.
Two rounds earlier, Dayton beat #2 seed Oklahoma 89-85, lead by Roosevelt Chapman who finished with a career-high 41 points.
[Excellent, lengthy article preceded by a photo with the caption: "Dayton's Roosevelt Chapman (right) runs into Georgetown's Patrick Ewing during the NCAA Western Regional championship on March 25, 1984."]
Coming out of high school, Roosevelt Chapman said he had more than 100 scholarship offers and chose Dayton over Georgetown. The 1984 Hoyas, though, were too deep, too strong, and too athletic. They held Chapman to 13 points and cruised to a 61-49 victory on their way to the national championship. Chapman's college career was over.
Even today, three decades since his last college game, Roosevelt Chapman remains a Dayton legend. He is the program's all-time leading scorer with more than 2,200 career points and still goes by the nickname "Velvet" that fans bestowed upon him for his even-keeled demeanor and for being "smooth as Velvet."
1. Kentucky-Louisville
2. Michigan State-Purdue
3. Kentucky-Tennessee
4. North Carolina-Duke
5. Villanova-Pittsburgh
6. Dayton-Xavier
Why It's Hot Now: Under Brian Gregory the Flyers have challenged the Musketeers' three-year reign atop the Atlantic 10, but haven't knocked them off. After Dayton won the first meeting last season, some of the Flyers jumped up on press row, a celebration that resonated with the X players. Before the second game, with the league title on the line, the two teams went chest-to-chest during warm-ups, a confrontation that worked against Dayton and in favor of Xavier, which easily beat the Flyers for the 24th straight time at home. The two campuses are about an hour apart, which means there are plenty of opportunities for the fans to taunt one another.
Upper Hand Historically: Dayton leads the all-time series 81-68, but Xavier has won 31 of the past 42 and seven of the past eight.
7. Oklahoma-Oklahoma State
8. California-Stanford
9. Kansas-Missouri
10. Michigan-Purdue
In a back-and-forth game from the tipoff that saw the score tied six times and lead change on 13 occasions, the Xavier Musketeers outlasted the Dayton Flyers 66-61 on Wednesday night. It came down to the final minute and a little bit of luck for the Musketeers.
In the 159th instalment of this rivalry, Xavier battled and fought in the game, something Dayton didn’t seem ready for.
Xavier and Dayton have met 159 times, the first time being in the 1919-20 season. The two teams have met 60 times more than any other XU opponent. Xavier is 14-9 overall and 7-3 in the Atlantic 10 Conference. Dayton is 13-11 and 3-7 in the A10.
Before a sold-out UD Arena crowd, the University of Dayton Flyers host their long-time rival Xavier Musketeers Saturday at noon ET on Tom Blackburn Court. The game will be televised nationally on ESPN2, carried by WHIO Radio and is available with live video, stats, and audio at DaytonFlyers.com.
SERIES STUFF
UD leads the all-time series 84-75, but lost the earlier matchup at Xavier on January 30th. In addition to this series being the most games against any opponent for both schools, the first Xavier varsity basketball game was against Dayton on Feb. 20, 1920 (UD won 24-18). The two teams have met at least once every year since 1946-47. Saturday’s game also features the 58th contest with the Blackburn/McCafferty Trophy on the line. Since 1980-81, the winning team receives the “Black/Mac” trophy, which is named after the two legendary coaches who put their two schools on the basketball map - Dayton’s Tom Blackburn and XU’s Jim McCafferty. The trophy series only covers regular season meetings, and XU leads the trophy series 37-20.
DAYTON - Semaj Christon scored a game-high-tying 17 points for Xavier (14-10, 7-4 in A10) in a 70-59 road loss to Dayton (14-11, 4-7 in A10) on Saturday.
Dayton will join Butler and Xavier next season in the new Big East, which is said to be looking at corporate offices in the metropolitan area.
Creighton and St. Louis come on board for 2014-15.
CINCINNATI --- Xavier University President Michael J. Graham, S.J., announced today that Xavier is joining a 10-team conference with fellow private schools Butler, Creighton, DePaul, Georgetown, Marquette, Providence, St. John's, Seton Hall, and Villanova.
The league, which will keep the Big East name after a negotiation with the football schools, begins play with a 10-team lineup in 2013-14. The league is expected to grow to 12, perhaps as early as 2014-15. Atlantic 10 members Saint Louis and Dayton are thought to be primary targets if/when the Big East expands again. The league also will continue to call Madison Square Garden in New York the home for its men's basketball tournament.
Multiple reports have valued the deal at $500 million over 12 years, which would be more money per school for the Catholic 7 than they earned from television in the old Big East.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Even though Xavier released its schedule Tuesday without long-time rival Dayton on it for the first time in 68 years, it doesn't sound like the hiatus is likely to last too long. A Xavier spokesman didn't immediately return an email seeking comment, but Archie Miller's comments are a positive sign this rivalry isn't likely to go the way of others killed off by conference realignment. Kansas will not schedule Missouri after the Tigers left for the SEC, Duke won't play Big Ten-bound Maryland after this season, and Syracuse and Georgetown have yet to commit to a non-league series.
The series between Xavier and Dayton may not be quite as nationally relevant as those, but there's plenty of history between the two long-time foes.
They've faced one-another at least once a year since the 1945-46 season, with the Musketeers winning 28 straight at home in the series but the Flyers boasting a 13-6 home record since the teams joined the Atlantic 10 in 1996.
Musketeers never trail in championship game of AdvoCare Invitational
LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. – The No. 23 Xavier Musketeers crashed the offensive boards to run away from the Dayton Flyers, winning 90-61 in the championship game of the AdvoCare Invitational. The Musketeers moved to 7-0 on the season.
Chris Mack’s Head Coaching Record
Season • Team • Overall W-L (Conference W-L) • Conference Standing • Postseason
2009–10 • Xavier • 26–9 (14–2) • T–1st in A10 • NCAA Sweet Sixteen
2010–11 • Xavier • 24–8 (15–1) • 1st in A10 • NCAA Second Round
2011–12 • Xavier • 23–13 (10–6) • 3rd in A10 • NCAA Sweet Sixteen
2012–13 • Xavier • 17–14 (9–7) • T–6th in A10
2013–14 • Xavier • 22–13 (10–8) • T–3rd in BE • NCAA First Four
2014–15 • Xavier • 23–14 (9–9) • 6th in BE • NCAA Sweet Sixteen
2015–16 • Xavier • 28–6 (14–4) • 2nd in BE • NCAA Second Round
2016–17 • Xavier •24–14 (9–9) • 7th in BE • NCAA Elite Eight
Chris Mack’s Head Coaching Totals: Overall: 187–91 (.673), Conference: 90–46 (.662)
Dayton Flyers 2016-17 Media Guide wrote:
Dayton’s Opponent – No. of Games Played
Xavier - 161 games played from 1920 to 2015. Dayton leads series 85-76 (.528).
DePaul - 69 games played from 1920 to 2004. Dayton leads series 35-34 (.507)
Marquette - 35 games played from 1966 to 2008. Marquette leads series 21-14 (.600), but Dayton won 5 out of the last 6 games between 1998 and 2008.
Butler - 23 games played from 1924 to 2013. Butler leads series 13-10 (.565).
Creighton – 11 games played from 1961 to 2009. Dayton leads series 7-4 (.636).
Seton Hall – 11 games played from 1948 to 2011. Dayton leads series 7-4 (.636).
Villanova – 10 games played from 1953 to 2009. Series tied 5-5.
St. John’s – 10 games played from 1939 to 1974. Series tied 5-5.
Providence – 8 games played from 1963 to 2015. Dayton leads series 6-2 (.750).
Georgetown – 3 games played from 1952 to 1984. Georgetown leads series 2-1 (.667).
Dayton’s W-L record vs. BIG EAST teams (341 games from 1920 to 2015):
Butler 10-13
Creighton 7-4
DePaul 35-34
Georgetown 1-2
Marquette 14-21
Providence 6-2
St. John’s 5-5
Seton Hall 7-4
Villanova 5-5
Xavier 85-76
Dayton vs. BIG EAST teams from 1920 to 2015: 175-166 (.513)
In the past seven years, Dayton is 24-11 (.686) against programs in BCS conferences.
• Dayton 79, Providence 77 -- 5 OT (January 28, 1982)
• Dayton 72, DePaul 71 (February 18, 1984)
• Dayton 98, Xavier 89 -- MCC Final (March 10, 1990)
• Dayton 80, Villanova 78 (December 22, 2002)
A review of the Dayton-Xavier series shows three distinct eras of team dominance:
1920-1949 – Dayton and Xavier played 28 games in 28 seasons. Xavier won the Early series 20-8 (.714). Series suspended 1943-45 due to World War II.
1950-1985 – Dayton and Xavier played 71 games in 35 seasons. Dayton won the Middle series 59-12 (.831).
1986-2015 – Dayton and Xavier played 62 games in 29 seasons. Xavier won the Recent series 44-18 (.710) starting with Pete Gillen's first season at XU.
This photo is from March 1978 Flyers vs. Notre Dame game at the Arena and of the student section storming the court after the win. As a student at the time, my housemate and I rarely missed a home game. Digger Phelps was the ND coach at the time and was bombarded with toilet paper rolls when introduced. He was not a happy camper and went right over to Don Donoher and got in his face about it.
Of course this whipped the crowd into a total frenzy. Chants of "Sit down Digger! Sit down Digger!" were repeated several times during the game and every time he stood up to question a referee’s call. What a game! If you look closely at the picture, you can see a toilet paper roll flying through the air. Great memories of watching Jim Paxson in those years.
Overall Admission Rate: 73% of 11,605 applicants were admitted = 8,489 admitted students.
Students Enrolled: 1,291 (15%) of 8,489 admitted students enrolled.
ACT Scores of Enrolled Freshmen
ACT Composite: 25 average
Range of middle 50%: 22-27
Score of 30 - 36: 11%
Score of 24 - 29: 53%
Score of 18 - 23: 35%
Score of 12 - 17: 1%
Overall Admission Rate: 58% of 16,968 applicants were admitted = 9,760 admitted students.
Students Enrolled: 2,604 (27%) of 9,760 admitted students enrolled.
ACT Scores of Enrolled Freshmen
ACT Composite: 27 average
Range of middle 50%: 24-29
Score of 30 - 36: 24%
Score of 24 - 29: 56%
Score of 18 – 23: 20%
Score of 12 - 17: 0%
Cost of Attendance: $50,880 • Tuition and Fees: $36,150
Cost of Attendance: $57,370 • Tuition and Fees: $40,940
Endowment: $150.9 million
Total Academic Staff: 667
Total Number of Students: 6,650 (4,485 Undergraduate and 2,165 Postgraduate)
Campus: Urban, 190 acres
Endowment: $500.4 million
Total Academic Staff: 1,017
Total Number of Students: 10,549 (8,353 Undergraduate and 2,196 Postgraduate)
Campus: Urban, 388 acres
Welcome to Best-Catholic-Colleges.com, your friendly source of facts about Catholic schools in USA. With our site you will find contact information, majors availability, and diploma selection, as well as nationwide, regional, and state rankings, campus safety ratings, and lists of local competitors for 253 Catholic schools.
Unlike many other sites promoting Catholic schools, our site is not sponsored by any school or college group. This allows us to remain unbiased when analyzing various governmental and independent sources of college data and to provide both positive and negative information about Catholic schools.
2015 Ranking - Top 50 Catholic schools:
12. University of Dayton
28. Xavier University
The 2017 Best Catholic Colleges ranking is based on key statistics and student reviews using data from the U.S. Department of Education. The top-ranked Catholic colleges are leading academic institutions that offer students an education and college experience rooted in Catholic traditions and faith. Click here to read more on how this ranking was calculated.
2017 Ranking - Top 168 Catholic Schools
Rank. School • Overall Niche Grade • Acceptance Rate • Net Price • SAT Range
9. University of Dayton • Overall Niche Grade: A • Acceptance Rate: 59% • Net Price: $32,965 • SAT Range: 1040-1250
29. Xavier University • Overall Niche Grade: A- • Acceptance Rate: 73% • Net Price: $28,111 • SAT Range: 980-1200
On April 5, 2016, Fieldhouse Flyer wrote:hoops22 wrote:
Dayton. We know how much Xavier hates them, which makes for a terrific rivalry game right off the bat, even if X normally wins the game. They'll also bring plenty of people to the BET, and while it's not a big market they're in, they do dominate it.
And by a big margin, with Wright State, Ohio State, Cincinnati, and Xavier and all getting very small slices of the Dayton College Basketball TV Market pie.
Dayton Moves up to Sixth Among Top College Basketball TV Markets – Dayton Flyers.com - March 9, 2016According to research analyzed by ESPN, Dayton's 1.7 market share was only behind Louisville (4.8), Raleigh-Durham (2.7), Kansas City (2.5), Greensboro-High Point (2.5), and Cincinnati (1.8).
Nielsen - Local Television Market Universe Estimates - January 1, 2016
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------The Crosstown Shootout is an annual men's college basketball game played between the University of Cincinnati Bearcats and Xavier University Musketeers. The two schools are separated by only 3 miles, making the archrivalry one of the closest major rivalries in the country. The game was first played in 1927, and has been played every year since 1946. In recent years, the game has been sponsored by Skyline Chili [and has been dominated by Xavier].
UC currently leads the series with a record of 50–34 (.595).
Xudash wrote:augkash wrote:
Lol @ all the hate from XU fans. And most people know about Dayton and its basketball program.
When it is all said and done, your biggest problem is that you are too close in proximity to a current Big East program. That program happens to be Xavier.
You guys haven't proven that you have a clue about putting together a sustainable basketball program that actually wins where it matters. This is not the time to bring up Archie Miller, because he is not going to stay at UD much longer. If anyone knows about career aspirations when it comes to a member of the Miller family, it would be a Xavier fan.
It simply does not make sense to have another program in Southwest Ohio, given the television metrics that exist for that region.
Finally, most people don't know about UD. That is a ridiculous position to take.
Fieldhouse Flyer wrote:
Dayton has more than 1½ times as many students as Xavier, and has more than 1½ times the number of alumni Xavier has. The vast majority of the University of Dayton alumni live outside of the Dayton metro area, and just 48 percent of UD’s students hail from Ohio. Most UD alumni are serious basketball fans - including me. We travel to Madison Square Gardens, Barclay Center, Chicago, Los Angeles, Hawaii, Puerto Rico, Orlando, (and anywhere else you can name) in our thousands - and in much greater numbers than our opponents' fans. And we’re not just coming from Dayton:
University of Dayton Alumni Chapters
Atlanta • Austin • Boston • Charlotte • Chicago • Cincinnati • Cleveland • Columbus • Dallas / Ft. Worth • Dayton • Denver • Detroit • Houston • Indianapolis • Los Angeles • Louisville • Miami • Milwaukee • Nashville • New York / New Jersey • Northwest Ohio • Orange County, CA • Philadelphia • Phoenix • Pittsburgh • Puerto Rico • Raleigh / Durham • Rochester • San Diego • San Francisco • Seattle • St. Louis • Tampa Bay • Washington DC / Baltimore • Western Michigan
In 2015-16, all 33 of Dayton's home and away games were televised, most of which were on major TV networks. All of these games were watched by tens of thousands of Dayton Flyers fans scattered all over the country.
Bill Marsh wrote:Bulldog_Muskie wrote:
I always had the perception that Dayton had a large commuter population and that they were a relatively concentrated fan base, never really cared to investigate though!
Like a lot of Catholic colleges, this once was the case, but currently almost half of Dayton's enrolment is out-of-state students. And even with in-state students, we're talking about many who come from other parts of Ohio, not just the Southwest corner of the state. Dayton is the largest private university in the state and it's been around for a long time, so they have a lot of alumni around the state and elsewhere around the Midwest, I don't know what their reach is for TV ratings, but I'm sure that it's more than the greater Dayton area or even just the Cincinnati-Dayton corner of Ohio.
Bill Marsh wrote:
Any state university represents the entire state, so that state is their market.
Although the Big East schools were founded to serve local needs, their current student bodies are mostly regional and in some cases national. They are no longer commuter schools.
When discussions about Dayton focus on them duplicating Xavier in the Southwest Ohio market, I have to wonder why some assume that Dayton alums and other fans throughout Ohio and other parts of the Midwest are not tuning into games just because they don't live in Dayton.
Obviously attendance is primarily based on local interest, but TV ratings can be drawn from anywhere.
Xudash wrote:
Dayton's record with respect to naming head coaches is abysmal. There is no other way to look at it.
Xudash wrote:
Finally, most people don't know about UD.
On September 7, 2017 Fieldhouse Flyer wrote:
Below is a listing of the notable head coaches for Dayton and Xavier, along with their career win totals for their respective schools:
Dayton Coach (Seasons) • Overall W-L (Pct.) • Conference W-L (Pct.)
Tom Blackburn (1948–1964) • 352–141 (.714)
Don Donoher (1964-1989) • 437–275 (.614)
Jim O'Brien (1989–1994) • 61–87 (.412) • 27–37 (.422)
Oliver Purnell (1994-2003) • 155–116 (.572) • 72–68 (.514)
Brian Gregory (2003-2011) • 172–94 (.647) • 70–58 (.547)
Archie Miller (2011-2017) • 139–63 (.688) • 68–34 (.667)
Anthony Grant (2017- ?) • 0-0 • 0-0
Xavier Coach (Seasons) • Overall W-L (Pct.) • Conference W-L (Pct.)
James McCafferty (1957–1963) • 91–71 (.562)
[five coaches] (1963-1985) • 259-332 (.438) • 35–35 (.500)
Pete Gillen (1985–1994) • 202–75 (.729) • 83–25 (.769)
Skip Prosser (1995–2001) • 148–65 (.695) • 81–27 (.750)
Thad Matta (2001–2004) • 78–23 (.772) • 39–9 (.813)
Sean Miller (2004–2009) • 120–47 (.719) • 57–23 (.713)
Chris Mack (2009-2017) • 187–91 (.673) • 90–46 (.662)
During the 2017-18 season, Chris Mack will get his 16th win of the season, which will also be his 203rd career win - surpassing Pete Gillen as Xavier’s winningest head coach.
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