Dayton Daily News

All fouled up? Former walk-on Uhl does the dirty work for Flyers

Alter grad fills unique role for No. 16 Dayton.

- By David Jablonski Staff Writer

DAYTON — Brady Uhl is earning his scholarshi­p for the Dayton Flyers — one foul at a time.

No one in the country commits more fouls per minute than Uhl, the third-generation Flyer and 6-foot-2 junior guard from Alter. Uhl averages 22.9 fouls per 40 minutes. That’s a deceiving stat, of course, because he has only played 15 minutes in nine games and committed eight fouls, and no one could pick up that many fouls in 40 minutes, outside of a pickup hoops game with no foul limits.

Uhl has an unusually specific role for No. 16 Dayton (20-4, 10-2). At the end of the first half, if Dayton has fouls to give without putting the other team at the free-throw line and wants to trim the shot clock to make it more difficult for opponents to score in the final seconds, Uhl enters the game.

“I’m always ready,” Uhl said earlier this season. “Coaches are always saying, ‘Stay locked in.’”

Uhl filled his role to perfection Tuesday during a 75-59 victory against Duquesne at UD Arena. He entered with 18 seconds remaining. Dayton had committed two fouls at that point, so it could commit four more non-shooting fouls before Duquesne would get a chance to shoot 1-and-1s on the seventh foul.

Duquense also had a fresh shot clock, so it could play for the final shot of the half. Uhl waited until six seconds remained to commit his first foul. He committed his second foul immediatel­y after the ensuing inbounds pass.

The third foul was more difficult. Duquesne guard Jimmy Clark III knew it was coming and tried to get off a shot at the same time as Uhl was committing the foul, but the official ruled the foul came before the shot.

Uhl, his job done, left at that point. Duquesne then took the ball out of bounds with 2.7 seconds remaining. The Dukes still scored. Clark beat Kobe Elvis along the baseline as a teammate picked Koby Brea. He scored on a

wide-open layup to cut Dayton’s halftime lead to 36-33.

Asked after the game about Uhl’s performanc­e, Dayton coach Anthony Grant said, “He understood the assignment. He did a great job. Unfortunat­ely, we didn’t finish it for him. That was a frustratin­g end to the half.”

Uhl had the same assignment at the end of the first half in games against Saint Louis, Oakland and Southern Illinois University Edwardsvil­le. Each time he fouled in the final seconds, and the opponent didn’t score at the buzzer.

It’s a small niche for Uhl, but it gives him a chance to play meaningful minutes. He has scored 15 points, in part by making 3 of 4 3-pointers, but that production has come at the end of games already decided. It was a different story last year when he made a 3-pointer to ignite a Dayton run in a victory against Saint Joseph’s in the first round of the Atlantic 10 Conference tournament.

Uhl is filling his new role as a scholarshi­p player. Dayton awarded the former walk-on a scholarshi­p in January, surprising him during practice.

“I had no idea it was coming,” Uhl said. “Coach just started talking about me. Then I got mobbed. It was a pretty special moment.”

Uhl had already paid his tuition for this semester, but UD told him the money would be reimbursed. He called his parents soon after practice ended. His dad Bill Uhl Jr. and grandfathe­r Bill Uhl Sr. were also scholarshi­p players for Dayton.

“My dad was a little emotional,” Uhl said. “My mom was very excited. It was just happiness.”

A-10 update: Two results Wednesday changed the look at the top of the Atlantic 10 Conference standings.

■ Richmond (17-7, 9-2) fell from first place to third with a 69-59 loss at home to Massachuse­tts (16-8, 7-5). UMass ended Richmond’s 12-game winning streak at the Robins Center. The Minutemen had lost six straight at the arena since 2012.

■ Loyola Chicago (187, 10-2) beat visiting Saint Joseph’s 64-59 to jump Richmond and move into a firstplace tie with Dayton. The Ramblers have won five in a row.

Defending champion Virginia Commonweal­th (168, 8-3) is the other top contender for the regular-season championsh­ip. VCU is 3-0 against the other top teams with home victories against Loyola, Dayton and Richmond.

Record book update: Dayton forward DaRon Holmes II scored 24 points Tuesday. He now has 1,543 in his career to rank 18th in school history. He passed Keith Waleskowsk­i (1,515) in the last game and Ryan Perryman (1,524) and Ramod Marshall (1,538) in this one.

Holmes was one of 30 players from across the nation named to the Naismith Trophy Men’s College Player of the Year midseason team Thursday.

March update: The NCAA bracket preview show will air at 12:30 p.m. Saturday on CBS. The Division Men’s Basketball Committee will share its current list of the top 16 seeds one month before Selection Sunday.

ESPN’s Joe Lunardi had Dayton as the No. 16 overall seed on Tuesday but moved Creighton into that spot Wednesday.

 ?? DAVID JABLONSKI / STAFF ?? Dayton’s Brady Uhl commits a foul during Tuesday’s win against Duquesne at UD Arena. Uhl often comes off the bench for just that purpose.
DAVID JABLONSKI / STAFF Dayton’s Brady Uhl commits a foul during Tuesday’s win against Duquesne at UD Arena. Uhl often comes off the bench for just that purpose.

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