Skip To Main Content
Skip To Main Content

University of Texas Arlington Athletics

THE HOME OF UT ARLINGTON ATHLETICS
FOLLOW US
Azore Davis High Five
Link Kabadyundi

Men's Basketball By: Jason MacBain (@JaBain)

Winners Of 4 Straight, UTA Prepares For Challenging Road Swing

STATESBORO, Ga. – Riding a four-game winning streak, the UT Arlington men's basketball team (8-11, 4-2 Sun Belt Conference) kicks off arguably its toughest road trip of the league schedule on Thursday at 6 p.m. (CST) against Georgia Southern (12-7, 4-2 SBC) inside the Hanner Fieldhouse.
 
MAIN STORYLINE
UTA and Georgia Southern met just three weeks ago at the College Park Center – a 77-64 Eagles' win. Both teams enter Thursday's tilt with identical 4-2 conference marks, tied for 3rd place in the league behind only Texas State and Georgia State, both of whom are 5-1. Following action on Thursday, the Mavs – who along with Texas State have the longest winning streak in the Sun Belt – will make the trek to Atlanta to face Georgia State on Saturday at 12 p.m. (CST). Georgia Southern was picked to finish 2nd in the SBC preseason poll, while defending champion Georgia State was installed as the preseason favorites.
 
FOLLOW ALONG
The contest will be broadcast on ESPN+ by clicking here. The Voice of the Mavericks Josh Sours will have the call on the radio at KEXB 620 AM and streaming via the TuneIn App and iHeartRadio. Furthermore, for updates and behind-the-scenes photos and videos from not only this game, but all season, be sure to follow @UTA_MBB on Twitter and @UTA_Hoops on Instagram.
 
TWEETABLES – 5 Things To Know In 260 Characters Or Less
1) Helping aid in UTA's 4-2 SBC start is that the Mavs are averaging just 13.7 turnovers per game (15.9 in the non-conference), issuing 13.5 assists per game (10.5 non-conference) and making 19 free throws per game (15 non-conference).
2) The 82 points UTA scored on Saturday against Little Rock were tied for the team's most against a Division-I opponent this year. The Mavs are 7-0 this season when scoring at least 68 points.
3) UTA shot 87.2 percent (34-39) from the free-throw line versus Little Rock – tied for the 5th-best percentage in single game program history. Edric Dennis contributed 15 of those (15-17) – tied for the 9th-most makes in program history.
4) UTA ranks 21st nationally in 3-point percentage defense (29.4); the program single-season record is 30.2 in 1994-95.
5) The Mavs played their 100th regular-season Sun Belt game since joining the league in 2013-14 on Saturday against Little Rock. UTA has won 60 conference games (60-40); only Louisiana (64) and Georgia State (70) have more league wins in that time.
 
Bonus Tweet
Through UTA's first 19 games, head coach Chris Ogden has utilized 13 different starting lineups – believed to be the most such starting 5 combinations in the nation to this point.
 
WHAT A WIN WOULD DO
A victory over Georgia Southern puts UTA at 5-2 in the Sun Belt, which would match the Mavs best seven-game start in the league (since 2013-14). The 2015-16 and 2016-17 teams also commenced conference action 5-2 and finished 13-7 and 14-4, respectively, with the 2017 squad winning the SBC Regular Season Championship.
 
LOCKING IN ON D
In each of UTA's first six SBC games, the Mavs have faced a player who ranks in the top 10 in the conference in scoring, and all six times they have held that player below his season average:
 
2) Ty Cockfield: 20.9 (16 vs. UTA)
T-5) Rayjon Tucker: 19.7 (15)
T-5) D'Marcus Simonds: 19.7 (15)
7) Zac Cuthbertson: 19.2 (17)
8) Ronshad Shabazz: 18.4 (16)
10) Tookie Brown: 17.1 (4)
 
In addition to holding all six players below their season average, the Mavs have held all six SBC opponents below their conference scoring average. UTA ranks 2nd in SBC action by holding opponents to 67 points per outing (Texas State: 66.5).
 
Included in that stretch was UTA limiting two opponents (Coastal Carolina, 58; Arkansas State, 59) below 60 points – just the third time in program history the Mavs have held consecutive Sun Belt foes under 60 points.
 
The previous occurrences:
Jan. 18 & 23, 2014: Texas State (48), Troy (56)
Jan. 19 & 22, 2015: Texas State (55), ULM (57)
 
ABOUT GEORGIA SOUTHERN
In the first matchup this year between UTA and GS, the Eagles used a big 2nd-half surge to pull away from the Mavericks. Holding just a 46-43 lead midway through the closing stanza, Georgia Southern embarked on a 7-0 spurt as part of an extended 16-3 run over the ensuing five minutes to create a 62-46 lead, and UTA would get no closer than 13 the rest of the afternoon en route to the 77-64 setback.
 
With that victory, Georgia Southern took a 5-4 lead in the all-time series with UTA; however, all nine previous meetings have alternated wins and losses.
 
Georgia Southern ranks 7th in the nation in field-goal percentage at 50.3, while the Eagles are 10th in the country at 85.4 points per game. GS has five players averaging double-figure points, led by Tookie Brown at 17.1 and Quan Jackson at 16.2. In the first meeting with Georgia Southern, Jackson stepped up in Brown's down game, leading all scorers with 21.
 
SUITES AND SNEAKERS
As part of the Coaches vs. Cancer initiative, UTA coaches – along with all other SBC teams this weekend – will don Princess Lacey's laces in their sneakers and have the option of wearing an exclusive Coaches vs. Cancer tie designed by Vineyard Vines to raise awareness for Princess Lacey's Legacy, in memory of eight-year-old basketball fan Lacey Holsworth, and the fight against pediatric cancer.
 
Suits and Sneakers Week is a nationwide event that unites coaches across the country to raise funds and awareness about the fight against cancer and promotes the American Cancer Society as a source of inspiration and hope for those facing cancer. Coaches and their staffs across the nation wear sneakers with their suits during games to raise awareness and help save lives by raising funds and encouraging people to educate themselves about cancer prevention, screening and early detection.
 
BATTLE TESTED
After playing the 7th-hardest non-conference schedule in the nation, UTA began Sun Belt play by facing the preseason top-2 teams in the league: Georgia State (1) and Georgia Southern (2). Half of UTA's first eight conference games this month will be against those two teams.
 
ESPN published an article last month detailing the toughest non-league schedules in the country this year, of which UTA ranked the aforementioned 7th-most difficult; click here to read the full article (note: ESPN+ subscription required).
 
At the time of the non-conference schedule concluding, UTA played an incredible seven Quadrant 1 (Home 1-30, Neutral 1-50, Away 1-75) non-league opponents, based on the NET report (NCAA's new RPI), and all seven of those came on the road – the most in the nation.
 
THE FINAL TEST OF A TOUGH STRETCH
As part of UTA's gruelingly non-conference slate, the Mavs had a brutal stretch in which five of nine opponents played in the NCAA Tournament last year: Arkansas (L, 78-60; Nov. 23), Missouri (L, 65-45; Dec. 4), #8 Gonzaga (L, 89-55; Dec. 18), Texas (L, 76-56; Dec. 28) and Georgia State (L, 63-58; Jan. 3). Including UTRGV (College Basketball Invitational) and North Texas – the reigning CBI Champions who are receiving votes in the national polls – seven of those nine played in the postseason in 2018.
 
WINS WERE CLOSER THAN THEY APPEARED
Despite the tough schedule – especially on the road – in five of UTA's contests during its seven-game losing streak, it was a single-digit margin with less than 10 minutes remaining, with the lone exceptions being at Mizzou and at #8 Gonzaga.
 
Against Indiana, UTA got a 20-point 2nd-half deficit down to just one, 61-60, with 6 minutes remaining before falling 78-64. Versus Arkansas, the Mavs had it as a seven-point contest, 56-49, with 7 minutes left before falling 78-60. At Tulsa, it was a four-point game, 50-46, with 10 minutes showing before the Hurricane embarked on a 14-0 run over the next five minutes to put the game out of reach. Against UTRGV, UTA had the contest tied, 56-56, at the under-4 media timeout before the Vaqueros closed on an extended 20-9 run. And versus a North Texas team receiving votes in the national polls on Dec. 8, the Mavericks held a 54-44 lead with less than eight minutes remaining before falling, 63-61.
 
MILESTONE MARK
Brian Warren eclipsed 1,000 career points with a team-leading 12 at #8 Gonzaga on Dec. 18, and he enters Thursday's matchup with 1,097. In his first two collegiate seasons at Tyler Junior College, Warren tallied 842 points, and he has a team-best 255 this season in the junior's first year wearing the blue and orange.
 
ED'S RETURN
After missing the previous three games with a turf toe injury, UTA's leading scorer in terms of per-game average Edric Dennis, (14.4 per game) returned at Gonzaga, scoring eight points in 26 minutes in his first action since coming out of the Tulsa game on Nov. 27.
 
UTA BIO BLASTS
0 Brian Warren: Pulled down a season-high five rebounds at Gonzaga … second 20+ point game of the year at Appalachian State with exactly 20 … ranks 6th in the SBC in free-throw percentage at 80.2.
2 DJ Bryant: Has been extremely limited the last four games with a finger injury … 24-26 (92.3 percent) from the free-throw line this year ... career-high six steals at Cal Poly, two shy of matching the single-game program record.
4 David Azore: Ranks 2nd in the SBC in free-throw percentage (84.3); is the lone freshman in the top 15 of the conference … issued a career-high six assists at North Texas … first career double-double with a season-high-tying 16 points and career-best 11 rebounds at Appalachian State … did not play against Arkansas State with an ankle injury.
5 Edric Dennis: Scored a then-season-high 23 points on a year-best six 3-pointers at Texas on Dec. 28 … coming off a weekend in which he averaged 28.5 points (25 vs. Arkansas State; 32 vs. Little Rock) and went 23-27 (85.2 percent) from the free-throw line.
10 Radshad Davis: Game-winning 3-pointer with 1.9 seconds remaining at Coastal Carolina … passed out four assists at North Texas; he entered the game with five helpers all year … the 6-2 guard ranks 2nd on the team with 32 offensive rebounds.
13 Jabari Narcis: All seven points – his most versus a D-I team – and six of his seven rebounds at Indiana came in the 2nd half … six points, his 2nd-most this year, at Gonzaga.
20 Andres Ibarguen: After the missing the first six games of the year, the NCAA cleared him, and in his first two games with UTA – at Tulsa and versus UTRGV – the Mavericks outscored their first two D-I opponents of the year in the paint, and posted their two largest rebounding margins of the season at the time: +14 at Tulsa, +19 against UTRGV ... career-high 23 points versus UTRGV to go along with a season-best 13 rebounds.
21 Pedro Castro: Scored a career-high eight points at Missouri (had 12 total career points entering the game) … matched that point total at App State, and also pulled down a career-high six rebounds … passed out a career-high four assists versus Little Rock.
22 TiAndre Jackson-Young: First three double-figure point games came in three-straight outings at North Texas (12), at Gonzaga (10) and at Cal Poly (18) … scored all 14 points, including going 4-5 from 3-point range, in the 2nd half at App State …  followed it up by going 5-6 from 3-point range at Coastal Carolina.
23 Patrick Mwamba: Returned at Arkansas from an ankle injury which caused him to miss most of the previous three games … pulled down a career-high nine rebounds at Mizzou (15 total career rebounds entering the game) … has multiple steals in five games … has not played the last two games due to a foot injury.
 
ODE TO BOBBY
Chris Ogden coached his first-ever road game Nov. 20 at Assembly Hall, and as an ode to former legendary Indiana head coach Bobby Knight and the several connections the two have, Ogden wore a UTA-themed sweater on the sidelines. Ogden attended Knight's camp at IU when he was in 6th grade; his brother, Tanner, played for Knight at Texas Tech; Ogden and Knight's son, Pat, are extremely close friends.
 
KD SHOWS SUPPORT
Kevin Durant sat courtside next to the UTA bench on Nov. 16 at the College Park Center to watch the Mavericks take on Texas A&M-Corpus Christi. Durant – a nine-time NBA All-Star, 2014 NBA MVP and two-time NBA Champion with the Golden State Warriors – is close friends with Ogden dating back to their time at Texas. Ogden, who led the Longhorns to the 2003 Final Four as a captain, was an administrative assistant on the 2007-08 Texas squad – Durant's lone collegiate season with Texas.
 
SIRI, WHO ATTENDED UTA PRACTICE ON DEC. 20?
While traveling to San Luis Obispo to face Cal Poly on Dec. 21, UTA practiced at Cal Berkeley on Dec. 20. Prior to the start of the practice, Siri co-founder Adam Cheyer spoke to the team. The entrepreneur and his son, Noah, watched practice, interacted with players and staff after practice and then remained longer to shoot around and engage further with the Mavs.
 
OGDEN'S HOMECOMING
The UTA game at Texas on Dec. 28 represented a homecoming for Ogden, who played for the Longhorns from 1999-2003, reaching the NCAA Tournament each season, including the Final Four as a senior captain. Following his playing career, he joined the UT staff where he remained for the next 12 seasons – the first as a student assistant coach, the next four as an administrative assistant and the final seven as an assistant coach. Ogden's wife, Katie, is a 2006 graduate of the UT School of Law, and she also holds an undergraduate degree from Texas where she served as the student body president from 2002-03.
 
Ogden became the first former Longhorn player to return to the Erwin Center as a visiting head coach since Harry Larrabee (played on the Texas varsity from 1971-72 to 1973-74 seasons) brought his Alaska-Anchorage team to Austin on Dec. 20, 1985.
 
RE-TWEETS
1) UTA opened its season with a 90-66 win on Nov. 6 over UT Tyler – the Mavericks' fifth-straight season-opening win and 12th in the last 13 years. The 90 points were the second-most in a season opener for UTA since 1994 (99 vs. East Texas Baptist in 2011).
2) UTA started the year 3-1; four of the five times this decade that the Mavericks have commenced a season 3-1 it has resulted in a postseason and/or 20-win campaign.
3) The Mavericks went 21-13 overall last year (10-8 in the Sun Belt), finishing 112th in the RPI and reaching the Sun Belt Tournament Final for the first time in their five years in the league.
4) UTA has posted three-straight 20-win seasons. In the 59-year history of the program, the Mavs have only had seven 20-win campaigns, and five of them have come in the last 10 years.
5) UTA posted some solid early-season showings as the revamped Mavs already own victories over perennially-strong mid-major Northern Iowa and a UC Davis team which returns four starters from a Big West Regular Season Championship and NIT appearance.
6) Of the 1,194 points UTA has scored this year 1,253 (95.2 percent) are from players who did not play for the Mavs last season.
7) The 45 points UTA scored at Missouri on Dec. 4 were its fewest since tallying 44 at then-#1 Kentucky in 2014, and were tied for the 6th-fewest all-time in a road game.
8) UTA posted season highs in steals versus D-I opponents in consecutive December games: 10 at #8 Gonzaga and 12 at Cal Poly.
9) Tulsa (55.6 percent) is the only UTA opponent this year to shoot better than 42 percent from long range.
10) UTA's four non-conference wins will be the fewest in a season since recording three during the 2002-03 campaign; however, that team went on to finish 16-13 overall after going 13-7 in Southland Conference action.
11) UTA shot a season-high 48.3 percent from the floor at Appalachian State, and followed it up with a season-best 11 3-pointers at Coastal Carolina, culminated by a Radshad Davis game-winning triple with 1.9 seconds remaining.
12) UTA has now started 2-2 in Sun Belt play in four of the last five years, but went on to finish .500 or better in the conference each of those seasons – including last year's 10-8 mark and a regular-season championship 14-4 performance in 2016-17.
13) Arkansas State out-rebounded UTA, 42-31, on Jan. 17, representing the largest negative rebound margin the Mavs have had in a Sun Belt win in program history. The previous was a -8 margin (42-34) on Feb. 18, 2017, at Georgia State in a 68-67 UTA victory.
14) Earlier this month, UTA limiting two opponents (Coastal Carolina, 58; Arkansas State, 59) below 60 points – just the third time in program history the Mavs have held consecutive Sun Belt foes under 60 points.
 
 
A WHOLE NEW CREW
UTA lost its top-9 scorers and only returns two letterwinners from last year's team (three total letterwinners; one did not play because of an injury in 2017-18), and just one of those two was a scholarship player (DJ Bryant). The Mavericks had eight seniors graduate and one junior who transferred which accounted for the top-9 scorers not returning in 2018-19.
 
UTA welcomed 12 talented, and in many cases experienced, newcomers at the start of the season. UTA returns just 3.2 percent of its points from a season ago – the lowest percentage of any team in the nation. The Mavericks also return only 4 percent of their rebounds and 11 percent of their assists from last year.
 
However, seven of those newcomers are junior transfers who have a proven record of success at the collegiate level previously. Those seven junior newcomers combined to score 4,009 points, grab 1,788 rebounds and issue 749 assists over their first two years.
 
Least % of Points Returning From 2017-18
1) UT Arlington         3.2% (87 of 2,640)
2) Mount St. Mary's   4.4%
3) UNC Asheville       5.5%
4) Idaho                       6.9%
5) Oakland                  8.6%
6) Middle Tennessee  10.2%
7) Chattanooga           10.5%
8) Wichita State          12.1%
9) Duke                       13.8%
 
Least Career Points Returning (At Current School)
1) Mount St. Mary's   103
2) UT Arlington         130 (DJ Bryant: 85; Scott Muirhead: 41; Patrick Binzer: 4)
3) UNC Asheville       141
4) Chattanooga           241
5) Middle Tennessee  329
    Idaho                       329
 
Least Starts Returning From 2017-18
1) Idaho                       0
2) Mount St. Mary's   1
3) Wichita State          4
4) UNC Asheville       5
5) UT Arlington         7 (All DJ Bryant)
    Duke                       7
 
Fewest Returning Letterwinners
1 - Chattanooga
2 - UNC Asheville
2 - Drake
3 - UT Arlington
3 - Baylor
3 - Nicholls
3 - Duquesne
3 - Milwaukee
3 - Detroit Mercy
3 - Little Rock
 
Fewest Returning Minutes From 2017-18
1) Mount Saint Mary's           7%
2) UT Arlington                     7.9%
     UNC Asheville                  7.9%
4) Idaho                                   10.6%
5) Wichita State                      11.2%
6) Middle Tennessee               15.2%
7) Chattanooga                       15.24%
8) Oakland                              16.5%
9) Drake                                  17.4%
 
Teams With Zero Scholarship Seniors
Virginia
North Florida
UT Arlington
Duquesne
Cal State Northridge
 
ON THE RISE – 20-WIN SEASONS
UTA has posted seven 20-win seasons in its 59-year program history, but five of those have come in the last 10 years – including three in a row.
 
Year                Record            Postseason
2016-17           27-9                 NIT
2015-16           24-11               CIT
2011-12           24-9                 NIT
2017-18           21-13               ----
2007-08           21-12               NCAA
1990-91           20-9                 ----
1980-81           20-8                 NIT
 
MOST WINS IN TEXAS
Over the last 3+ seasons (2015-16, 2016-17, 2017-18, 2018-19), UTA owns the 4th-most wins of the 23 D-I schools in the state of Texas (entering games on Jan. 23; UTA was 2nd on the list entering this season):
 
1) Houston: 88-30
2) SMU: 83-33
    Stephen F. Austin: 83-35
4) UT Arlington: 80-44
    Baylor: 80-40
6) Texas Tech: 79-42
7) Texas A&M: 73-47
8) TCU: 70-52
    Sam Houston State: 70-52
10) Texas A&M-Corpus Christi: 68-48
11) Texas State: 67-51
12) Texas Southern: 65-57
13) Texas: 62-57
14) Lamar: 57-58
15) North Texas: 56-62
      Abilene Christian: 56-53
17) UTEP: 51-62
18) Rice: 49-67
      UTSA: 49-70
20) Houston Baptist: 45-66
21) UTRGV: 43-73
      Prairie View A&M: 43-73
23) Incarnate Word: 42-62
 
 
NON-CONFERENCE STRENGTH
UTA played a challenging non-conference schedule to prepare for the Sun Belt slate. Of its 12 D-I non-league opponents, nine had a .500 or better record last year, seven participated in the postseason in 2017-18 and five finished in the top 100 of the RPI (not including UC Davis which finished at 101).
 
Marquee Games (2017-18 Record | RPI | Postseason | Misc)
WIN, 74-65 | Nov. 10 vs. Northern Iowa | 16-16
WIN, 68-59 | Nov. 18 vs. UC Davis | 22-11 | 101 | NIT | Big West Regular Season Champions
LOSS, 78-64 * | Nov. 20 @ Indiana | 16-15 | RV In National Polls At Time Of Game
LOSS, 78-60 ^ | Nov. 23 @ Arkansas | 23-12 | 34 | NCAA | RV In National Polls At Time Of Game
LOSS, 72-58 % | Nov. 27 @ Tulsa | 19-12 | 89
LOSS, 65-45 | Dec. 4 @ Missouri | 20-13 | 49 | NCAA | RV In 2018-19 Preseason Polls
LOSS, 63-61 | Dec. 8 @ North Texas | 20-18 | CBI Champions | RV In National Polls At Time Of Game
LOSS, 89-55 | Dec. 18 @ Gonzaga | 32-5 | 22 | NCAA | Sweet Sixteen | #8 In National Poll At Time Of Game
LOSS, 76-56 | Dec. 28 @ Texas | 19-15 | 52 | NCAA
 
* 1-Point Game With 6 Minutes Left | ^ 7-Point Game With 7 Minutes Left | % 4-Point Game With 10 Minutes Left
 
UTA's four 2018 NCAA Tournament opponents on its non-conference schedule put the Mavericks in top-flight competition. The only teams in the nation who played more than four teams which went to the NCAA Tournament last year in their 2018-19 non-conference schedule are: North Carolina (6), Florida (6), Kansas (5), Kentucky (5), Creighton (5), Northeastern (5) and Canisius (5).
­­
PLANT YOUR FLAG – 2018-19 UTA Men's Basketball Motto
"Plant Your Flag represents you being you. Being proud of where you came from and representing that – standing up for something. It doesn't matter what it is. Claim something. And then play for it."
– Chris Ogden
 
As part of that 'Plant Your Flag' motto, UTA's roster features a diverse collection of individuals from all over the world:
 
Teams With The Most Foreign-Born Players
12 – Maine
10 – Saint Mary's
7 – Fairfield
      UNLV
      UIC
6 – Bradley
      Davidson
      FAU
      Hartford
5 – UT Arlington (tied with 11 other teams)
 
As part of the foreign-born players, below are the teams with the most continents represented on their roster:
5 – Maine
      Virginia
4 – UT Arlington (tied with 16 other teams)
Continents Represented: North America, South America, Europe, Africa
 
From NBA Academy Africa To UTA
NBA Academies, a network of elite basketball training centers around the world, include educational development for top male and female prospects from outside the U.S. and mark the NBA's signature elite player development initiative. The initiative exposes elite prospects to NBA-level coaching, facilities and competition and provides a global framework for them to maximize their success.
 
Five NBA Academy graduates have committed to D-I schools, in addition to UTA freshman Patrick Mwamba (NBA Academy Africa):

Three men from The NBA Global Academy in Canberra, Australia:
- Francisco Caffaro (Argentina): Virginia
- Jonathan Tchamwa Tchatchoua (Cameroon): UNLV
- Francisco Farabello (Argentina): TCU (for 2019-20 school year)

One woman from the NBA Academies Women's Program camp in Mexico City:
- Karla Martinez (Mexico): University of San Diego

SUN BELT SUCCESS
Since joining the Sun Belt Conference for the 2013-14 season, UTA has finished no worse than 5th place in the regular-season standings in the 12-team league. In 2016-17, the Mavericks won their first-ever SBC Regular Season Championship, and last season they were the preseason favorites to repeat. This year, UTA – due largely to its large roster turnover – was predicted to finish 11th in the SBC.
 
Sun Belt Strategic Men's Basketball Scheduling Plan
With the goal of improving the NCAA Tournament seeding for the Sun Belt's automatic qualifier, in addition to enhancing the resume of other teams to secure at-large berths, the following changes have been implemented beginning in the 2019-20 season:
 
Sun Belt teams will reserve two dates in the non-conference portion of their schedule to play against peer conference opponents. Each team will have one home opponent and one away opponent from this scheduling alliance.
 
In the next major portion of the strategic plan is centered around a 20-game smart schedule. The conference will split into two divisions (East: Appalachian State, Coastal Carolina, Georgia Southern, Georgia State, South Alabama and Troy; West: Little Rock, Arkansas State, Louisiana, ULM, UTA and Texas State). Each team will play a 16-game schedule with five home and five away games played against divisional opponents and three home and three away games against non-divisional opponents.  Based on the resulting standings of those 16 games, teams will then be placed in four pods - Pod A (#1, #2, #3), Pod B (#4, #5, #6), Pod C (#7, #8, #9) and Pod D (#10, #11, #12). Each team will play the other two pod members once home and once away for the final four games of the 20-game schedule. The regular season conference champion will be awarded based on the results of the full 20-game conference schedule.
 
NEXT UP
UTA faces Georgia State at 12 p.m. (CST) on Saturday.
 
CLEAR BAG POLICY
In an effort to enhance public safety and the fan experience, for all UTA men's and women's home games this season the College Park Center will implement a clear-bag policy. All purses, containers, backpacks or anything larger than a small clutch bag are prohibited, and items must be placed in a clear tote bag not to exceed 12" x 6" x 12". For more information, fans are encouraged to visit UTAMavs.com/BasketballGameday.
 
FOLLOW ALONG
To secure tickets for upcoming games and find out about additional gameday procedures, log on to UTATickets.com. Additionally, for updates, behind-the-scenes photos, videos and more engaging and personal content, be sure to follow the men's basketball program on Twitter (@UTA_MBB) and Instagram (@UTA_Hoops).
Print Friendly Version

Players Mentioned

DJ Bryant

#2 DJ Bryant

G
5' 11"
Junior
Edric Dennis

#5 Edric Dennis

G
6' 0"
Redshirt Junior
David Azore

#4 David Azore

F
6' 4"
Redshirt Freshman
Scott Muirhead

#15 Scott Muirhead

G
6' 3"
Redshirt Junior
Pedro Castro

#21 Pedro Castro

F
6' 6"
Redshirt Freshman
Patrick Binzer

#30 Patrick Binzer

G
6' 1"
Redshirt Junior
Radshad Davis

#10 Radshad Davis

F
6' 2"
Junior
Andres Ibarguen

#20 Andres Ibarguen

F
6' 5"
Junior
TiAndre Jackson-Young

#22 TiAndre Jackson-Young

F
6' 3"
Junior
Jabari Narcis

#13 Jabari Narcis

C
6' 9"
Junior

Players Mentioned

DJ Bryant

#2 DJ Bryant

5' 11"
Junior
G
Edric Dennis

#5 Edric Dennis

6' 0"
Redshirt Junior
G
David Azore

#4 David Azore

6' 4"
Redshirt Freshman
F
Scott Muirhead

#15 Scott Muirhead

6' 3"
Redshirt Junior
G
Pedro Castro

#21 Pedro Castro

6' 6"
Redshirt Freshman
F
Patrick Binzer

#30 Patrick Binzer

6' 1"
Redshirt Junior
G
Radshad Davis

#10 Radshad Davis

6' 2"
Junior
F
Andres Ibarguen

#20 Andres Ibarguen

6' 5"
Junior
F
TiAndre Jackson-Young

#22 TiAndre Jackson-Young

6' 3"
Junior
F
Jabari Narcis

#13 Jabari Narcis

6' 9"
Junior
C