Dayton Daily News

Breaking down A-10’s performanc­e in non-conference play

BREAKING DOWN THE ATLANTIC 10 IN NON-CONFERENCE PLAY

- By David Jablonski Staff Writer Contact this reporter at 937244-7400 or email David. Jablonski@cmg.com.

DAYTON Dayton ton a list Beach, of Flyers Atlantic — Florida, Bob fan Arciero, from 10 publishes Confer- Boyn- a ence probabilit­ies tournament every seeding week on Twitter. His first table, released in the preseason, listed Virginia Commonweal­th as a 55.8% favorite to earn the top seed in March.

By Dec. 2, the Flyers had passed VCU as a 52.4% favorite, and their odds have improved every week. As of Dec. 23, they had a 65.5% chance of heading to the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York as the front-runner.

Take that for what it’s worth. As well as the Flyers have played, the grind of the conference season always features a few surprises, even for the best of Dayton teams. Also, the top seed guarantees nothing. The last two Dayton teams to earn the No. 1 seed lost in the semifinals (2016) and quarterfin­als (2017), respective­ly. The Flyers haven’t won the A-10 tournament since 2003, when it was held at UD Arena.

While it may be too early to talk about seeds, it’s the perfect time to discuss the A-10 race. Conference play begins Thursday with five games, including Dayton’s 7 p.m. game at La Salle (8-3). Each team plays 18 games between then and March 7.

Here’s a rundown of how the conference has fared in non-conference play.

■ Best team: Dayton (10- 2), which was picked to finish third in the A-10 preseason poll, leads the A-10 in all the various polls and rank- ings. It is No. 18 in the Associated Press poll, No. 10 (as of Thursday) in the Ken Pome- roy ratings and No. 13 in the NCAA Evaluation Tool.

■ Worst team: While Saint Joseph’s (3-9) has the league’s worst record, Ford- ham (5-6) likely will finish at the bottom of the conference for the third straight season. It’s the lowest-ranked A-10 team in the NET at No. 266.

■ Most disappoint­ing: Davidson (6-5), which was picked to finish second in the preseason poll, has won three in a row but will need to win at Vanderbilt on Monday to finish non-conference play with a winning record. The loss of Luke Frampton has played a role in David- son’s struggles. He started the first five games and aver- aged 9.8 points but is taking a personal leave of absence and won’t play again this season. Senior guard KiShawn Pritchetth­as has not played this season because of knee issues. Another expected to play a reserve role, David Czerapowic­z, will miss the season after hip surgery. “I think we’re in a very unique situation,” Davidson coach Bob McKillop told the Charlotte ber. things. injuries. times productive But we “We’re that But haven’t We Observer we minutes everybody have missing can done in put shown together. Decem- some some that has at enough. the haven’t inconsiste­ncy. shown That’s enough why Maybe there’s resil- we iency. a byproduct But resiliency of experience. becomes I think our guys are under- standing that more than ever before.” ■ Most surprising: Picked to finish eighth in the A-10, Duquesne (10-1) won its first 10 games. It was the program’s best start since the 1953-54 season. The perfect season ended with a 77-68 loss to Alabama-Birmingham. The Dukes dropped from No. 20 to No. 66 in the NET.

■ Best NCAA chances: ESPN’s Joe Lunardi put two A-10 teams in his most recent bracket prediction. Dayton received a No. 4 seed and a matchup with No. 13 Vermont in Albany. VCU was one of the last four teams to make his field and received a No. 12 seed and a matchup with Arkansas in the First Four in Dayton.

■ Most missed chances: While Dayton suffered overtime losses to two teams ranked in the top 30 of the NET, No. 4 Kansas and No. 27 Colorado, VCU (9-3) went 1-3 against top-60 teams, beating No. 58 LSU 84-82 and los- ing 59-56 to No. 45 Purdue, 72-69 to No. 46 Tennessee and 73-63 to No. 11 Wichita State. At No. 60, VCU is the third-highest-ranked A-10 team behind Dayton and No. 55 Richmond (10-2).

■ Best player: Dayton redshirt sophomore forward Obi Toppin looked like a shoo-in to become the first Dayton player to win A-10 player of the year until his scoring started to drop in December. He’s aver- aging 18.8 points after a season-low eight in an 81-53 victory against Grambling State on Monday.

While Toppin is still the favorite, he could be chal- lenged by players like Rhode Island guard Fatts Russell, who leads the league with 20.8 points per game, and Davidson star Kellan Grady (16.1).

■ Top newcomer: St. Joseph’s redshirt junior guard Ryan Daly, a transfer from Delaware, ranks second in the conference in scoring (20.4) and also leads the Hawks in rebounding (8.3) and assists (4.7).

■ Top freshman: Massa- chusetts center Tre Mitchell, the top-ranked A-10 recruit in the 2019 class (No. 82 in the nation, according to Rivals.com), ranks 10th in the league in scoring (14.2) and is averaging 6.3 rebounds.

UMass (6-6) has one of the youngest teams in the country. It ranks 342nd out of 353 Division I teams in experience. It started 5-0 and then lost six straight to top-100 teams.

■ Most improved player: George Washington senior guard Armel Potter is averaging 15.3 points after averag- ing 6.0 last season. He aver- aged 11.4 in his first two seasons at Charleston Southern.

■ Sixth man of the year: Dayton redshirt junior guard Ibi Watson earned his first career start Monday because Jalen Crutcher (concussion protocol) missed the game and scored a career-high 30 points. He has the 20th-best offensive rating in the country, according to KenPom. com. He averages 11.7 points per game and ranks fourth in the conference in 3-point shooting percentage (48.1).

■ Best victory: Dayton’s 78-68 victory against Saint Mary’s in Phoenix on Dec. 8 tops the list of best wins by A-10 teams. The Gaels rank 29th in the Pomeroy ratings and 37th in the NET.

■ Worst loss: George Washington (5-6) lost 68-64 at home on Nov. 16 to Morgan State, which ranks 303rd in the Pomeroy ratings.

■ Longest current winning streak: St. Bonaventur­e (8-4) started the season 1-4 but takes a seven-game winning streak into a road game at Buffalo (8-4) on Monday.

■ Worst losing streak: St. Joseph’s (3-9) recorded one of the best victories by any team in the A-10 on Nov. 13, beating Connecticu­t 96-87, and then lost eight straight and will start league play Thursday at Richmond with the worst record in the A-10.

■ Best stats: Dayton has the third-most efficient offense in the country and ranks first in effective fieldgoal percentage (61.9) and 2-point field-goal percentage (63.7).

■ Worst injury: Saint Louis (10-2) lost its third-leading scorer, freshman guard Gibson Jimerson, for the season when he injured his foot in practice Dec. 16. He averaged 10.8 points in 10 games.

■ Conference summary: Through Monday, the top eight A-10 teams boasted a combined record of 75-17. Eight teams ranked in the top 100 of the NET. After slipping to 11th in the Ken Pomeroy conference rankings last season, the A-10 ranks eighth. That’s where it ranked in 2016 and 2017 before falling to 10th in 2018.

 ?? DAVID JABLONSKI / STAFF ?? Dayton’s Jordy Tshimanga defends a shot by Grambling State’s Anthony Gaston on Monday. The Flyers won, 81-53, improving their record to 10-2.
DAVID JABLONSKI / STAFF Dayton’s Jordy Tshimanga defends a shot by Grambling State’s Anthony Gaston on Monday. The Flyers won, 81-53, improving their record to 10-2.
 ?? LAURENCE KESTERSON / AP ?? Saint Joseph’s guard Ryan Daly averages 20.4 points per game, but the Hawks have A-10’s worst record.
LAURENCE KESTERSON / AP Saint Joseph’s guard Ryan Daly averages 20.4 points per game, but the Hawks have A-10’s worst record.
 ?? J. ANTHONY ROBERTS/THE REPUBLICAN VIA AP ?? Coach Matt McCall and UMass are 6-6 after starting the season 5-0.
J. ANTHONY ROBERTS/THE REPUBLICAN VIA AP Coach Matt McCall and UMass are 6-6 after starting the season 5-0.

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