In Post # 1 billyjack wrote:
All things related to the Dayton Flyers program can be posted here.
Yesterday BEXU wrote:Fieldhouse Flyer wrote:
247 Sports 2017 Basketball Recruiting Composite Team Rankings - updated June 6, 2017
11 - Xavier
19 – Providence
23 - Creighton
27 - Villanova
34 – Butler
41 - Seton Hall
56 – Marquette
71 - Ohio State
73 - DePaul
75 - Georgetown
Dayton 93
Jordan Davis, Dutch Fork (Irmo, SC) - 3-Stars
Jalen Crutcher, Ridgeway (Memphis, TN) - 3 Stars
Jordan Pierce, Union Catholic (Scotch Plains, NJ) - 0 Stars
Naz Carter, Bishop Kearney (Brooklyn, NY) - 0 Stars
Obadiah Toppin, Mt. Zion Prep (Baltimore, MD) - 0 Stars
Obadiah Toppin is a 6’9″, 200-pound forward out of Ossining, New York. The big man is currently attending Mt. Zion Prep in Baltimore, and his recruitment is blowing up as of late. Toppin holds offers from Illinois, Mississippi State, Georgia, St. Bonaventure, and a host of others. There’s plenty to be excited about when it comes to Toppin.
More than a few recruiting sites and tweets describe Obadiah as a wing who can score from both inside and outside. Yep, despite being 6’-9″, Toppin was a guard previously, and he can still hit from downtown.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------DAYTON -- University of Dayton men's basketball coach Anthony Grant has announced that 6-foot-9 forward Obadiah Toppin has signed a letter of intent to attend the University of Dayton.
Toppin is regarded as a late bloomer who really took advantage of a prep season. When the Brooklyn native's family moved back to Ossining, N.Y. from Florida in 2014-15, he was a 6-foot-2 high school junior. Entering his senior season in 2015-16, he was listed at 6-foot-5, 170 pounds. He is currently listed at 6-foot-9, 200 pounds.
While at Mt. Zion Prep in Baltimore this past year, Toppin averaged 17 points, eight rebounds and four assists. As a senior in high school in his only varsity season, he was selected to the Lower Hudson High School Basketball Coaches Association Conference 1 All-Section Team and all-league. He led Ossining High School to a 17-5 record and its first conference title in 10 years. He averaged 20.6 points, 8.1 rebounds, 3.0 assists and 3.0 steals as a senior.
Obadiah Toppin joins fall signees Jordan Davis and Jordan Pierce, along with spring signees Jalen Crutcher and Matej Svoboda as Dayton's incoming class for the 2017-18 season. In addition, 6-foot-10 redshirt freshman Kostas Antetokounmpo will play his first season for the Flyers next year.
With the addition of Toppin, the Flyer roster for 2017-18 includes eight players who are listed at 6-foot-7 or taller.
Dutch Fork’s Jordan Davis has been honored as the state’s best player by the South Carolina High School Basketball Coaches Association. Davis, a guard, is having a breakout junior season and leads the Midlands in scoring at 22.6 points a game.
Jordan Davis has made his college choice.
The Dutch Fork senior guard and Class 4A Player of the Year verbally committed to play basketball at Dayton on Saturday after making an official visit to the school.
The 6-foot-4, 180-pounder is the first commitment of Dayton’s 2017 class, and had offers from several Division I schools including Cincinnati, Xavier, Miami, Kansas State, Butler, Virginia Tech, and East Carolina. Davis was scheduled to visit Kansas State next month, but said he won’t take any other visits.
Jordan Davis - 5A State Player of the Year
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------NJ Hoops: How tall are you and how much do you weigh?
JP: 7-foot, 250 lbs.
NJ Hoops: What were the other schools that you were considering?
JP: Temple, South Carolina, Florida Gulf Coast, Loyola Marymount, Kansas State, DePaul, and Seton Hall.
NJ Hoops: What other schools offered scholarships?
JP: There were 15 schools.
5. Jalen Crutcher 6’3 CG (Ridgeway HS) 2017
When he was younger, you saw the potential, long wiry with scoring ability with size. As the years have gone by, you saw potential start to produce and produce big time and now, he’s a D-1 commit (UT-Chattanooga) and one of the most feared guards in Memphis. He hit 7-3 pointers in their first win scoring 33 points putting it out there that he might be coming for the scoring title this year.
He has deep range on the three, 5-6 feet behind the line at times and the soft floater at the basket which I would love to see him use more often because he can do it when he wants. 20 plus for him should be a given and he must carry a Ridgeway team with some pieces but still fighting an uphill battle with Southwind and Houston for supremacy in district 15AAA. Crutcher is without a doubt, one of the best guards in the city.
"We are very excited to welcome Jalen to the Dayton Flyer Family," Grant said. "Jalen's game really fits our style of play. He has the ability to score the ball in a variety of ways while also possessing the IQ and skill set to generate and facilitate for his teammates.
Crutcher was one of the top guards in Memphis, Tenn. this season. A member of the Memphis Commercial Appeal's Class AAA All-Metro Team, he recently played in the 2017 Basketball Coaches of Tennessee/Tennessee Athletic Coaches Association all-star basketball game. The three-star recruit averaged 18 points, four assists and two steals per game last year.
The 6-foot-7, 205 lb. forward from Ostrava in the Czech Republic, Svoboda was the second-leading scorer in last year's FIBA U-20 European Championships in Helsinki, Finland. Svoboda averaged 19.0 points a game in the seven-game tournament. The leading scorer was Lauri Markkanen, a 7-0 forward who starred for Arizona last year and is now headed to the NBA.
Svoboda was the tournament's top three-point shooter, making 21 of 42 from behind the arc. He also averaged 7.3 rebounds and 1.9 assists at the 2016 championships.
He is currently an amateur playing on the CEZ Basketball Nymburk club in the NBL, the top professional Czech basketball league.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------13. Matej Svoboda – Dayton
The 6-foot-10 forward from Athens, Greece is prohibited from practicing with the team during the first semester after being ruled as a partial qualifier by the NCAA. Antetokounmpo will retain four years of eligibility, beginning with next season.
Antetokounmpo is a 2016 graduate of Dominican High School in Whitefish Bay, Wisconsin, a suburb of Milwaukee where his brother Giannis is a rising star for the Milwaukee Bucks. After moving to the United States (specifically Milwaukee) with his family midway through his sophomore year, Antetokounmpo developed to the point that he averaged 12.9 points, 7.1 rebounds and 2.4 blocks a game while shooting .639 (147-230) from the field as a senior.
He helped lead Dominican to an unprecedented fifth consecutive Wisconsin Division 4 state championship and was named First Team Division 4 All-State by the Wisconsin Basketball Coaches Association. Antetokounmpo was a consensus top 100 high school prospect.
7. Kostas Antetokounmpo – Dayton
Anthony Grant's $1.83 million annual salary at Alabama appears to place him among the 20 highest-paid men's basketball coaches in the country.
At least 13 coaches average more in guaranteed compensation than Grant, according to a review of published coaching salaries. Not every coach is accounted for because some work at private universities, which do not have to reveal salaries.
In a down economy, fewer programs are hiring basketball coaches this year. But many that are making changes have paid top dollar, potentially affecting the sport's salary structure -- not to mention adding more pressure on coaches.
Kentucky lured John Calipari from Memphis by making him the nation's highest-paid coach at $3.96 million per year. Arizona will pay Sean Miller, previously of Xavier, $2 million per year. Grant received slightly more than the $1.7 million annually that Virginia awarded Washington State's Tony Bennett.
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. -- Alabama men's basketball coach Anthony Grant has received a $100,000 raise and a one-year contract extension through 2019.
University system trustees approved a raise Thursday to $1.9 million from Grant's deal in April 2009. Grant got a two-year extension last year but no raise.
Grant came to Tuscaloosa from VCU, where he went 76-25 and made two NCAA tournament appearances. The Rams knocked off Duke in the first round in 2007. He was an assistant coach under Billy Donovan at Florida for 10 seasons, after spending time at Marshall and Stetson.
He signed a contract extension in 2012 to keep him at Alabama until 2019. Grant was making $1.9 million annually through 2019 with a buyout of some $4 million, which would be reduced if he lands another job. Grant finished with a 117-85 record in six seasons at the school.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Dayton Athletic Director Neil Sullivan and new Dayton Flyers coach Anthony Grant look at the program the same way.
“We both look at it as a destination job,” Sullivan said Thursday, hours after UD announced the hiring of Grant.
Dayton’s last three coaches have used the program as a stepping stone, leaving for jobs at Clemson, Georgia Tech and Indiana. Grant, 50, played for Dayton from 1983-87, so he has more connection to the program than Oliver Purnell, Brian Gregory and Archie Miller. He’s also older than those three coaches were they were hired — Purnell was 40 in 1994, Gregory was 36 in 2003 and Miller was 32 in 2011 — and at a different point in his career.
That doesn’t mean Grant will stay forever, but his hiring could bring long-term stability to the program.
“If you have high-caliber people, there’s a demand for that,” Sullivan said. “I think we acknowledge that. I’m never going to shy away from trying to attract the highest-quality performers we can. At the same time, you want to provide an environment where personal interest meets organizational need. I’m not trying to predict the future. At the end of the day, we’re certainly looking long term, but things change rapidly in this business. We were only interested in people who view the University of Dayton as a destination job.”
Sullivan would not list the specifics of Grant’s contract other than to say, “We’re not going to disclose the terms. He’s got a contract that pays him appropriately for his skill set.”
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------On June 16, 2017 Fieldhouse Flyer wrote:Burrito wrote:
The Big Ten conference has money to spend.
Recent hires:
Illinois hired Brad Underwood from Oklahoma State (6 years for $3 million per year)
Indiana hired Archie Miller from Dayton (7 years for $3.5 million per year)
Ohio State hired Chris Holtmann from Butler (8 years for $3 million per year)
Indiana’s Archie Miller becomes third-highest paid coach in Big Ten with $3.35 million per year deal – Land of 10/Indiana - March 27, 2017The new Indiana coach is set to make $3.35 million per season in a seven-year deal, the team announced Monday. The deal would make Miller the third-highest paid men’s basketball coach in the Big Ten. Only Michigan State’s Tom Izzo ($4,006,955) and Ohio State’s Thad Matta ($3,372,000) make more per season, according to numbers obtained by Sporting News.GumbyDamnit! wrote:http://sports.usatoday.com/ncaa/salaries/mens-basketball/coach/ – 2017 NCAAB TOURNAMENT COACHES' PAY - USA Today – March 2017
5 - Michigan State - Big Ten - Tom Izzo - Total pay: $4,251,751 (Maximum bonus: $350,000)
7 – Michigan - Big Ten - John Beilein - Total pay: $3,370,000 (Maximum bonus: $250,000)
14 – Maryland - Big Ten - Mark Turgeon - Total pay: $2,577,054 (Maximum bonus: $445,000)
15 – Villanova - Big East - Jay Wright - Total pay: $2,540,958 (Maximum bonus: --)
16 – Purdue - Big Ten - Matt Painter - Total pay: $2,453,795 (Maximum bonus: $901,874)
25 – Providence - Big East - Ed Cooley - Total pay: $2,036,454 (Maximum bonus: --)
28 – Wisconsin - Big Ten - Greg Gard - Total pay: $1,753,445 (Maximum bonus: $400,000)
29 - Minnesota - Big Ten - Richard Pitino - Total pay: $1,678,812 (Maximum bonus: $600,000)
31 - Seton Hall - Big East - Kevin Willard - Total pay: $1,560,379 (Maximum bonus: --)
33 – Xavier - Big East - Chris Mack - Total pay: $1,420,479 (Maximum bonus: --)
35 – Northwestern - Big Ten - Chris Collins - Total pay: $1,340,664 (Maximum bonus: --)
38 - Marquette - Big East - Steve Wojciechowski - Total pay: $1,224,030 (Maximum bonus: --)
40 - Creighton - Big East - Greg McDermott - Total pay: $1,153,488 (Maximum bonus: --)
?? – Butler - Big East - Chris Holtmann - Total pay: -- (Maximum bonus: --)
Chris Holtmann's contract at Ohio State will be 8 years, $3.1 million per year - Cleveland.com - June 9, 2017
Ohio State’s offer to Chris Holtmann matched the $3.1 million per year that Dayton offered to Archie Miller before he left:
Dayton Flyers made aggressive push to keep Archie Miller – Dayton Daily News – March 25, 2017Athletic Director Neil Sullivan said Miller was made salary offer that would have put him in top 10 in nation
“Without trying to paint a reactionary picture, I’m confident we have a top-10 compensation program in the country in any program, any conference,” Sullivan said. “Ultimately coach Miller made the decision he had to make for his future and in his interest. I can assure everybody it was a very aggressive pursuit on our behalf to see if he could remain our coach.”
Connecticut’s Kevin Ollie made $3.1 million in 2016 and was the 10th highest-paid coach in the country, according to USA Today.
Asked if money was a deciding factor in Miller’s decision, Sullivan said, “I don’t want to speak to his motivations, but I’m quite confident it wasn’t about increased compensation.”
In 2009, just two years ago, Gregory agreed to a five-year contract extension with the University of Dayton. That contract would have taken him through the 2017-18 season. Brian Gregory was making about $480,000 prior to the signing of the extension.
According to new reports, Gregory was making in the $750,000 area. Gregory had proven himself over his 8 seasons in Dayton.
The Atlanta-Journal Constitution got their hands on the email from Georgia Tech to Coach Gregory. Here is the salary piece of the email:
The employment contract will be for a term of six years. Your compensation as Head Men’s Basketball Coach will be the following:
Annual base compensation of $ 1,000,000, with no escalating value for at least the first two years:
Salary: $300,000
Radio/TV: $600,000
Apparel & Equipment: $50,000
GTAA Public Appearances: $50,000
That equates an even $1,000,000 of base compensation annually.
Flyers’ in-demand leader passed $1M in annual salary two years ago.
Miller, whose UD teams have won 78 games with three NCAA tournament appearances the past three seasons, made $1,160,390 in 2014, according to the most current tax forms released by the university. That salary reflected a 68 percent raise from what Miller made the prior year — $692,547.
UD would not reveal Miller’s current total compensation, but outgoing UD President Dan Curran indicated that the popular coach has received two raises since his pay was bumped to $1.16 million two years ago, after the Flyers advanced to the Elite Eight in the 2014 tournament.
“It’s been increased appropriately,” Curran said. “UD wants to keep Miller the highest-paid coach in the A-10”, Curran said.
Former men’s basketball coach Brian Gregory made $943,004 in 2010, his last full year of employment at UD.
Archie Miller was hired in April 2011. His first-year salary at UD was $335,152.
On April 23, 2017 Fieldhouse Flyer wrote:
How Much Is Your College-Basketball Team Worth? – The Wall Street Journal - March 31, 2016Rank - Team • 2015 Valuation
24 - Dayton • $80,600,000
26 – Xavier • $78,100,000
35 – Marquette • $59,600,000
College Basketball's 20 Most Valuable Teams - 2016 - Forbes - March 14, 201617 - Dayton • 2015 Team Value: $11.9 million • 2015 Revenue: $12.0 million • 2015 Expenses: $4.8 million • 2015 Profit: $7.2 million
19 - Xavier • 2015 Team Value: $11.5 million • 2015 Revenue: $12.1 million • 2015 Expenses: $5.5 million • 2015 Profit: $6.6 million
20 - Marquette • 2015 Team Value: $11.4 million • 2015 Revenue: $15.3 million • 2015 Expenses: $9.0 million • 2015 Profit: $6.3 million
Forbes obviously uses a different valuation methodology than The Wall Street Journal, and Forbes ranks only the top 20 teams, but Forbes provides more detailed information about each team than the WSJ rankings.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
How Much Is Your College-Basketball Team Worth? – The Wall Street Journal - March 30, 2017In an annual study, Ryan Brewer, an assistant professor of finance at Indiana University-Purdue University Columbus, assesses what every college team would be worth on the open market if it could be bought and sold like a professional franchise. The study analyzes each program’s revenues and expenses with cash-flow adjustments, risk assessments, and growth projections.
Rank - Team • 2016 Valuation • 2015 Valuation • % Change
21 - Dayton • $88,415,000 • $80,594,000 • +9.70%
28 - Marquette • $71,918,000 • $59,623,000 • +20.60%
29 - Xavier • $70,562,000 • $78,084,000 • -9.60%
38 - Connecticut • $57,962,000 • $137,895,000 • -58.00%
47 - Villanova • $50,534,000 • $40,445,000 • +24.90%
52 - Georgetown • $47,910,000 • $42,157,000 • +13.60%
55 - St. John's • $45,213,000 • $55,036,000 • -17.80%
73 - Providence • $31,734,000 • $29,656,000 • +7.00%
74 - Creighton • $31,619,000 • $28,084,000 • +12.60%
81 - Saint Louis • $28,094,000 • $18,570,000 • +51.30%
82 - DePaul • $27,210,000 • $42,911,000 • -36.60%
85 - Seton Hall • $25,715,000 • $27,689,000 • -7.10%
92 - Butler • $22,588,000 • $20,240,000 • +11.60%
History of the Former Dayton-Xavier Rivalry
• 1907 to 1937: The Beginnings of the 106-Year Dayton-Xavier Rivalry
• 1938 to 1949: Basketball Emerges at Catholic Schools
• The 1950's: Dayton Is Top Catholic Basketball School
• The 1960's: Dayton Is Top Catholic Basketball School ... Again
• The 1970's and 1980's: Dayton and Xavier Go in Opposite Directions
• The 1990's: Xavier Re-emerges on the National Scene
• 2000-2009: Xavier Basketball Moves Up the Charts
• The 2012-13 Season: Xavier's Last in the Atlantic 10 Conference
• November 2013 to April 2017: The Current Big East's First Four Seasons
• Dayton-Xavier Series Summary
BASKETBALL RANKINGS OF SELECTED UNIVERSITIES AND COLLEGES
1. Introducing the ESPN/Sagarin All-Time Rankings
2. The ESPN/Sagarin All-Time Rankings (1937-2009)
3. The ESPN/Sagarin Top 40 Programs of Each Decade
4. The Top 40 Programs of Each Decade – 2010-2019
5. The ESPN/Sagarin All-Time Rankings - Adjusted through the 2016-17 Season for Dayton and Xavier
6. How Much is Your College Basketball Team Worth? and 2016-17 Average Home Attendance
7. Basic School Information from Wikipedia (Schools listed in order of Year Founded.)
… 7.1 Selected Schools Ranked in order of Endowment Value
… 7.2 Selected Schools Ranked in order of Total Number of Students
… 7.3 Selected Schools Ranked in order of Number of Undergraduate Students
… 7.4 Selected Schools Ranked in order of Number of Postgraduate Students
… 7.5 Selected Schools Ranked in order of Campus Size
8. Cost of Attendance from CollegeData.com (Schools Ranked in order of Cost of Attendance.)
9. Academic Admissions Information from CollegeData.com (Ranked in order of Range of ACT Scores.)
10. ACADEMIC RANKINGS OF SELECTED UNIVERSITIES AND COLLEGES
Justin Ahrens (3 Stars): 6-foot-5, 181-pound Ahrens ranks as the No. 38 small forward and No. 6 overall player in the state of Ohio in the 2018 class.
Jerome Hunter (4 Stars): 6-foot-5 Hunter ranks as Ohio’s No. 5 overall player and the 25th-ranked small forward in the 2018 class.
Dwayne Cohill (4 Stars):The Buckeyes will want to add at least two more guards to their upcoming class. Kam Williams is entering his senior season and JaQuan Lyle unexpectedly left the team this past spring.
Ideally, that player would be Dwayne Cohill, a 4-star prospect and the No. 3 player in Ohio’s 2018 class. At 6-foot-2 and 170 pounds, Cohill ranks as the nation’s No. 3 combo guard and No. 57 overall player.
With the ability to fill the backcourt scoring void that will be left by Williams, securing a commitment from Cohill will undoubtedly be one of Holtmann’s top priorities in the coming months. While at Butler, Holtmann had offered the Cleveland Holy Name product a scholarship. And with his new gig, he has a better chance of landing him.
In addition to Ohio State and Butler, Cohill holds offers from Northwestern, Penn State, Virginia Tech, and Vanderbilt among others.
Pete Nance (4 Stars): 6-foot-8, 180 pound Nance ranks as the nation’s No. 9 small forward and No. 34 overall player.
Darius Bazley (4 Stars): 6-foot-9, 200-pound small forward Bazley ranks as Ohio’s second-best player.
COLUMBUS, Ohio – Two of Ohio's best players in the Class of 2018 have received Ohio State basketball offers ... again. Holy Name guard Dwayne Cohill and Pickerington North forward Jerome Hunter were offered by Chris Holtmann's new Buckeyes staff on Wednesday night. If you feel like you've heard this news before, it's because Cohill and Hunter were already Ohio State targets with offers. They were also targets of Holtmann's at Butler.
Dwayne Cohill is a four-star prospect rated the No. 60 player in the country, and the No. 3 combo guard in the Class of 2018. Jerome Hunter, also a four-star, is the No. 109 player in the country and No. 30 small forward in the class.
On June 16th, 247 Sports - Ohio State wrote:Top Target (2):
Dwayne Cohill (4-Star) - Holy Name (Cleveland, OH) – CG, 6’-2”, 170 lbs.
Jerome Hunter (4-Star) - Pickerington North (Pickerington, OH) – PF, 6’-7”, 195 lbs.
On July 18th, 247 Sports - Ohio State wrote:Top Target (1):
Dwayne Cohill (4-Star) - Holy Name (Cleveland, OH) – CG, 6’-2”, 170 lbs.
January 1, 2017 to September 10, 2017: 8 Crystal Balls: 7 Crystal Balls for Ohio State and 1 Crystal Ball for Penn State.
Dwayne Cohill, a 6-foot-4 shooting guard from Holy Name High School in Parma Heights, Ohio, announced Wednesday via Twitter he will be on campus Thursday. He ranks 92nd in the 2018 class, according to Rivals.com.
Cohill will visit Ohio State on Sept. 23, and has scheduled a visit to Virginia Tech on Oct. 20-22. Cohill also listed Vanderbilt, Clemson, UNLV, West Virginia, Texas, Pittsburgh, and Penn State in his final 10 in July.
It didn't take long for Dwayne Cohill to figure out where he wanted to go to college. After taking his first official visit this past weekend, he ended his recruitment with a verbal pledge to Anthony Grant and Dayton.
The Dayton Flyers earned a verbal commitment from a top-100 recruit in the class of 2018 on Monday.
Dwayne Cohill, a 6-foot-2 guard and four-star recruit from Holy Name High School in Parma Heights, Ohio, announced his commitment on Twitter. He's the highest-ranked recruit and first recruit from Ohio to commit to new Dayton coach Anthony Grant and his staff.
Chris Holtmann has missed out on another in-state recruit.
2018 guard Dwayne Cohill out of Holy Name High School in Cleveland announced his commitment to the University of Dayton on Monday night. Cohill was considered one of Ohio State's top targets in the 2018 class. He took an official visit to Dayton on Sept. 8, and it took just three days for him to announce his commitment. Cohill had scheduled his official visit to Columbus for September 23rd.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------First-year Dayton head coach Anthony Grant landed his first verbal commitment in the Class of 2018 Monday, and it’s a big one for the program. Dwayne Cohill, a 6-foot-3, 4-star guard, announced via Twitter that he’s decided to attend college in his home state, picking Dayton over programs such as Ohio State, Penn State, Pitt, Texas, West Virginia, UNLV, Vanderbilt, Virginia Tech, and Clemson.
Cohill was one of two highly regarded in-state prospects offered a scholarship by Ohio State head coach Chris Holtmann shortly after his arrival in Columbus, but in the end he was one of many high-major head coaches who were unable to sway the 4-star combo guard. Cohill had also scheduled official visits to Ohio State, Vanderbilt, and Virginia Tech. But with his decision to commit now, those planned visits are likely off the table.
Dwayne Cohill first top-100 recruit for Anthony Grant at UD
Recruiting Process
Cohill has been on Dayton’s radar for years. Former Dayton coach Archie Miller recruited him when he was a freshman. After Cohill’s freshman year, he traveled to UD with his high school team for a team camp and saw campus and UD Arena for the first time.
As Dyawne Cohill’s high school career progressed and he rose in the recruiting rankings, Dayton backed off in its recruiting of him.
Cohill said Miller told him he was too much of a “big-time player” to come to Dayton. “He didn’t know if I would actually think about it,” Cohill said.
“He didn’t want to waste his time. But I always tell everyone no school is too small or too big. Wherever I feel is perfect for me, that’s where I’m going to end up.”
Dayton introduced Anthony Grant as coach on April 1. Twelve days later, Cohill met Grant for the first time at an AAU tournament.
“At every game, there was a different coach,” Cohill said. “There were games when there were multiple assistants. Coach Grant made a lot of games. At my tournament in Kentucky, which was the second evaluation period in July, I think he made it to every game. Not often do you see a head coach put in that much time with one kid when he could be scouting 100 other kids.”
Dayton made it clear to Cohill he was their No. 1 priority, even as it offered scholarships to a number of players in the class of 2018 — nine at the last count, not including Cohill.
“A lot of schools preach to you that you’re their top priority, but they don’t 100 percent show it,” Cohill said. “They preached it and backed it up. They didn’t just talk a good game. They showed me I was 100 percent their top priority. That was something that really stood out to me.”
When Miller left for Indiana, there was cause for concern in Flyerland; a top-100 signee says otherwise.
It was realistic to assume there would be a big drop-off at Dayton in its first season after Miller left for Indiana, and to wonder how long it would take the 51-year-old Grant to get this program to those same heights -- or even if he could.
But this week's signing of Dwayne Cohill ought to put fellow Atlantic 10 schools on notice that Dayton will remain a nationally relevant program under its new coach.
"Dayton's always had a very rich basketball tradition," Grant said. "When you look at what Archie and his staff was able to do - it's exposed the world to what I experienced 30 years ago when I came to Dayton for first time."
His first team at Dayton will be young -- really young. When you have one of the most experienced teams in college hoops, as Dayton did last season, the pendulum swings the other way the next. Six of Grant's 11 scholarship players have never played a minute of college basketball. Junior Ryan Mikesell will redshirt after two offseason hip surgeries. Dayton fans who have gotten used to constant success may have to temper expectations this season.
But I wouldn't temper expectations for the future. That's what Grant's big signing this week told me: Talented players are going to see the same thing Grant saw 30 years ago and come to one of the most lowkey great basketball schools in the country.
Who’s Out: With their top three scorers gone ...
Who’s In: Dayton’s 6 Freshmen – HLOH post dated June 8, 2017
Projected Postseason Tournament: NIT
The four Flyer seniors – Charles Cooke, Kyle Davis, Scoochie Smith, and Kendall Pollard became the winningest senior class in Dayton history with 102 wins and were the first class to go to the NCAA Tournament all four years.
Four Flyers earned All-Conference honors. Kyle Davis was named Sixth Man of the Year, Scoochie Smith was named All-Atlantic 10 First Team, Charles Cooke was named All-Atlantic 10 Second Team, and Kendall Pollard was named All-Atlantic 10 Third Team. Cooke and Kyle Davis were also on the A-10 All-Defensive Team.
Anthony Grant’s first team at Dayton will be young -- really young.
When you have one of the most experienced teams in college hoops, as Dayton did last season, the pendulum swings the other way the next.
Six of Grant's 11 scholarship players have never played a minute of college basketball. Junior Ryan Mikesell will redshirt after two offseason hip surgeries. Dayton fans who have gotten used to constant success may have to temper expectations this season. But I wouldn't temper expectations for the future.
Obi Toppin being declared ineligible is the third hit Dayton has taken to its front court this offseason. Ryan Mikesell, who played in 32 games last season, will redshirt after undergoing two hip surgeries. And Sam Miller, who was also part of the team’s front court rotation last season, was suspended from school for the fall semester after he was arrested during the summer.
In Post # 1 ProprietyofLeyluken wrote:
Look at how the A10 slipped last year because they couldn’t retain Miller and Wade.
The departures of Xeyrius Williams, Matej Svoboda, Kostas Antetokounmpo, John Crosby, and Jordan Pierce gave the Dayton Flyers coaches five open scholarships to work with this spring. With the signings of Frankie Policelli, Michigan transfer Ibi Watson, and Chattanooga transfer Rodney Chatman, 11 of 13 spots have been filled.
Video 1: Obi Toppin vs. NBA stars – posted August 14, 2018
Video 2: Obi Toppin dunks from free-throw line – posted August 14, 2018
Video 3: Obi Toppin swishes a 95-ft. baseball shot – posted August 14, 2018
A 30-second clip posted this week had already been viewed over 200,000 times as of Wednesday morning, and it gives some clues about what Toppin could bring to the floor for UD this season.
Regarded as a late bloomer, Toppin went to prep school for a year after high school and signed with the Flyers in May 2017 over offers from Illinois and Mississippi State. He was 6-foot-8 then but said recently he has grown to 6’-10”.
The opportunity came out of nowhere. Obi Toppin, a New York kid and college basketball neophyte, was out at Rucker Park last week watching his brother play when a friend asked him if he was interested in one of the NBA’s most high-profile open runs. A mutual friend told him that Chris Brickley’s Black Ops games needed another player.
That’s how an unheralded forward from Dayton ended up sharing a court with Carmelo Anthony, CJ McCollum, and Enes Kanter, then dunking on them. In a day, Toppin went from a redshirt freshman who had yet to play a college game to the 6-foot-9 leaper throwing down a windmill on an alley-oop and jumping over Kanter.
“It was amazing,” he said by phone Wednesday. “Playing with them, it felt like I felt free. I felt I could play with them.”
The 2018 Bad Boy Mowers Battle 4 Atlantis field will include Wisconsin, Florida, Virginia, Butler, Dayton, Stanford, Oklahoma, and Middle Tennessee State.
Game 3: Butler vs. Dayton
Dayton picked as high as fourth and as low as 10th
Based on the early rankings, Saint Louis, George Mason, and St. Joseph’s are the favorites. No one really knows where to rank Dayton, Virginia Commonwealth, Massachusetts, and most of the teams in the middle.
David Jablonski (DDN): 1. Saint Louis; 2. George Mason; 3. St. Joseph’s; 4. Dayton; 5. Davidson; 6. Richmond; 7. Massachusetts; 8. Rhode Island; 9. Virginia Commonwealth; 10. St. Bonaventure; 11. Duquesne; 12. La Salle; 13. George Washington; 14. Fordham.
Zachary Weiss (DYST Pittsburgh.com): 1. Saint Louis; 2. George Mason; 3. Saint Joseph's; 4. Davidson; 5. Rhode Island; 6. Duquesne; 7. Massachusetts;
8. Dayton; 9. VCU; 10. St. Bonaventure; 11. Richmond; 12. La Salle; 13. George Washington.; 14. Fordham.
John O’Connor (Richmond Times-Dispatch): 1. Saint Louis; 2. George Mason; 3. Saint Joseph's; 4. Davidson; 5. Massachusetts; 6. Richmond; 7. VCU;
8. Dayton; 9. St. Bonaventure; 10. Rhode Island; 11. Duquesne; 12. George Washington; 13. La Salle; 14. Fordham.
Jon Rothstein (CBSSports.com): 1. Saint Louis; 2. Saint Joseph’s; 3. Davidson; 4. Rhode Island; 5. George Mason; 6. St. Bonaventure; 7. Dayton; 8. UMass;
9. VCU; 10. Duquesne; 11. Richmond; 12. La Salle; 13. George Washington; 14. Fordham.
Brad Cavallaro (BustingBrackets.com): 1. Saint Louis; 2. George Mason; 3. VCU; 4. Rhode Island; 5. Saint Joseph’s; 6. Duquesne; 7. UMass; 8. Davidson;
9. St. Bonaventure; 10. Dayton; 11. Lasalle; 12. George Washington; 13. Richmond; 14. Fordham.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------?? – Saint Louis Billikens (#1 in Atlantic 10)
57 - Davidson Wildcats (#2 in Atlantic 10)
61 - George Mason (#3 in Atlantic 10)
62 – Providence (#6 in Big East)
63 - Saint Josephs (#4 in Atlantic 10)
70 – Georgetown (#7 in Big East)
78 – Rhode Island (#5 in Atlantic 10)
88 – Massachusetts (#6 in Atlantic 10)
105 – Duquesne (#7 in Atlantic 10)
128 – Virginia Commonwealth (#8 in Atlantic 10)
FIELD GOAL DEFENSE – OPPONENTS’ FG SHOOTING PERCENTAGE
1. Saint Joseph's …………. .419
2. St. Bonaventure ……… .421
3. Saint Louis ………………. .428
4. Davidson …………………. .439
5. VCU …………………………. .450
6. George Mason ….………..451
7. La Salle ………....……… .452
8. Rhode Island …………… .453
9. George Washington … .453
10. Duquesne ……………… .453
11. Massachusetts ………. .456
12. Fordham …..…………… .464
13. Dayton ………….……… .470
14. Richmond……….……… .489
3-POINT FIELD GOAL DEFENSE – OPPONENTS’ 3-POINT FG SHOOTING PERCENTAGE
1. St. Bonaventure ………… .321
2. Rhode Island ……………… .332
3. Duquesne ….……………… .335
4. Saint Joseph's …………… .337
5. Massachusetts ………….. .347
6. Davidson …………………… .350
7. Saint Louis ………………… .350
8. VCU …………………………… .351
9. Fordham …………………… .351
10. George Mason ………… .353
11. George Washington … .357
12. Richmond ………………. .372
13. La Salle …………………… .381
14. Dayton …………………… .383
Nov. 16, 2017 – Hofstra (neutral) – Lost 72-69
Dec. 3, 2017 - Mississippi State (away) – Lost 61-59
Jan. 6, 2018 – Massachusetts (home) – Lost 62-60
Feb. 3, 2018 – Massachusetts (away) – Lost 86-82 (2OT)
Feb. 10, 2018 - VCU (away) – Lost 88-84 (OT)
March 8, 2018 – VCU (neutral; A10 Tournament) – Lost 77-72
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 6 guests