Dayton Daily News

That’s more like it:

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League) were locked in as the fifth seed in the conference tournament and couldn’t improve their position. They’ll play fourth-seeded Northern Kentucky (21-10, 12-6) at 7:30 p.m. Sunday.

NKU won both meetings this year, 83-79 in the Nutter Center and 83-76 at home.

“I’m really excited to get out with these guys in the tournament,” Davis said. “It’s a whole different beast. There’s a new level of energy and a new level of intensity. I can’t wait to fight with these guys next game.”

Mike LaTulip, a graduate transfer from Illinois, is the Raiders’ only other senior. He failed to score but started and averaged 6.9 points this year.

“It’s nice to see him go out like that,” coach Scott Nagy said of Davis. “He’s been a great teammate and great guy to coach.”

Nagy added: “It would have been very easy for Mike to graduate and move on with his life. But for him to come and do what he’s done for us, we really appreciate it.”

The HL tourney starts Friday in Detroit with 8th-seeded Cleveland State playing No. 9 Youngstown State and No. 7 Detroit Mercy facing No. 10 Milwaukee. No. 1 Oakland plays the 8-9 winner Saturday, while No. 2 Valparaiso faces the 7-10 winner. In the other quarterfin­al Sunday, No. 3 Green Bay takes on No. 6 UIC.

The Raiders have won 20 games eight times in the last 11 years and 10 times since becoming a Division I program in 1987, but it’s still a significan­t accomplish­ment.

This is the first time they’ve done it before the conference tournament since 2008.

“I told the guys after the game

Tourney pairings: Milestone:

there’s going to be probably 250 or 300 Division I teams that don’t win 20 games,” Nagy said. “I could be wrong on that, but I’m guessing the number is even smaller.

“This group is definitely an overachiev­ing group. We have a lot of warts — no primary guard, we really don’t have a center we can throw the ball into, we’re small, we’re not very deep. There’s a lot of things you can say we’re not. But I think we’ve got pretty tough kids, kids who want to win.”

The Raiders had allowed at least 81 points in three of their last four games, but they put UIC (14-17, 7-11) in straitjack­ets from the opening tap.

The Flames tallied just two points in the first seven minutes and started 3-for-18 from the field. They finished with as many turnovers as field goals (16).

“Our defense was really good,” Nagy said. “We were more physical than the last time we played them (an 88-86 road win). Last time, they were more physical than us. Every time they drove, we ended up against the basket, crying for fouls. We didn’t do that today. When they drove, we took them on physically.”

Junior point guard Justin Mitchell had 17 points, four rebounds, six assists and no turnovers. He’s assured of posting the highest rebound average at Wright State in nearly two decades.

He’s averaging 8.2 boards per game — the best mark since Thad Burton pulled down 10.9 in 1997-98.

The Raiders finished first the league in home attendance again with a 4,033 average.

They’ve been No. 1 in that category every year since Butler left the conference in 2013.

Doing it all: Leading the way:

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