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Seton Hall at Baylor

Baylor Bears​

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TEAM INFO​

2022-23: 23-11, 11-7 (T-3rd Big 12)
NCAA Tournament – Second Round
Location: WACO, TX
Coach: SCOTT DREW (21st season)
Homecourt: FERRELL CENTER (10,347)
Key Departures: ADAM FLAGLER (15.6 ppg, 4.6 apg, 40% 3PT)
KEYONTE GEORGE (15.3 ppg, 2.8 apg, 4.2 rpg)
LJ CRYER (15.0 ppg, 2.0 apg, 41.5% 3PT)
FLO THAMBA (5.0 ppg, 4.6 rpg)
Key Newcomers: RAYJ DENNIS (transfer, Toledo)
JA’KOBE WALTER (freshman, McKinney, TX)
JAYDEN NUNN (transfer, VCU)
MIRO LITTLE (freshman, Sunrise Christian)
YVES MISSI (freshman, Prolific Prep)

Seton Hall Basketball Predictions Update Dec 6, 2023

After losing to Baylor 78-60 yesterday, Seton Hall is now projected to finish the regular season 15-16 (8-12 Big East).
The odds that the Pirates make the NCAA tournament are down to 14%, a decrease of 5% since yesterday.
We currently rank Seton Hall as the #72 team in the country, and the #9 team in the Big East.
Next game: Sat, Dec 9 vs. #54 Rutgers. Our power ratings give the Pirates a 55% chance to win.

Interesting article regarding the 14 sport NCAA D-1 rule

A can of worms is about to explode

32 Oregon Female Athletes File Sex-Discrimination Lawsuit Against University.​

The University of Oregon is facing a lawsuit from some of its female athletes over alleged violations of federal law by "depriving the of equal athletic financial aid and other resources."

According to Sportico, 32 athletes from the women's beach volleyball and club rowing team are accusing the school of violating Title IX by disproportionately allocating resources through its NIL collective.
"The named plaintiffs, which include 26 members of Oregon’s women’s beach volleyball team and six club rowers, accuse the soon-to-be Big Ten university of violating federal law by depriving them of equal athletic financial aid and other resources. Those other disproportionate resources, the plaintiffs allege, are the benefits UO athletes receive through Oregon’s NIL collective, Division Street, and Opendorse, which hosts the Ducks’ official NIL marketplace," Sportico's Daniel Libit wrote.

Richmond Scores 18, Pirates Downed at No. 6 Baylor


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Waco, Texas - Kadary Richmond (Brooklyn, N.Y.) scored 18 points on an efficient 8-for-13 shooting clip from the floor to go along with four rebounds, six assists and three steals as the Pirates were dealt a 78-60 defeat at the hands of No. 6 Baylor on Tuesday night in a BIG EAST-Big 12 Battle contest.

The Pirates trailed by double digits in the early stages of the second half, but Richmond and the Pirates were hanging around. A 7-0 run guided by a pair of Richmond buckets and a Dre Davis (Indianapolis, Ind.) three-pointer cut the deficit down to 50-47, however the Bears would eventually pull away for the victory.

Joining Richmond in double-figures was Davis, who scored 12 points and shot 2-of-3 from three-point range,

How It Happened

Seton Hall had the pick and roll game going early with Bediako and Richmond combining to score the teams first six points that gave the Pirates a 6-5 lead two minutes into the game. Baylor quickly jumped back in front on a three-point basket and a layup as the Bears eventually grew their lead to 13, 28-15, with 8:03 to go in the first half.

Freshman David Tubek (Juba, South Sudan) came off the bench and added a spark as he converted three free throws in less than a minute that cut Baylor's lead to 10, 28-18. After Tubek made a pair from the line, the Pirates went to a full court press and forced a turnover that led to a dunk for Richmond and made it an eight-point game, 28-20, at the 7:10 mark in the first half.

However, the Bears nailed three trifectas in the ensuing four minutes that pushed their lead back to 14, 39-25. Despite a 6-0 run for The Hall that got its deficit back to single digits, a Baylor three-pointer at the end of the half gave the Bears a 42-32 lead going into the locker room.

Down by 10 with 16:14 to play, a floater in the lane by Richmond, a three from Davis and a pair of free throws from Elijah Hutchins-Everett (Orange, N.J.) made it a 7-0 run for the Pirates and got them within three, 50-47, at the 13:15 mark. But Baylor rattled off an 8-0 spurt that got their lead back to 11, 58-47, with just over 11 minutes to go in the game.

Seton Hall got the lead down to single digits three more times down the stretch with the final time coming on a driving layup by Dylan Addae-Wusu with 7:41 left but Baylor's offense, one of the best win the nation, proved to ultimately be too much.

Inside The Box Score
  • Seton Hall shot 43 percent from the field, 31 percent from three (4-of-13) and shot 10-of-11 from the free-throw line (91 percent).
  • The Pirates allowed Baylor to shoot 51 percent from the field and 45 percent from deep.
  • Seton Hall had 13 assists and 11 turnovers and forced 12 Baylor miscues.
  • Baylor finished plus-three on the glass, 31-28.
  • The Pirates were whistled for 18 personal fouls and Baylor was called for 13 fouls.
  • Hutchins-Everett appeared in his first game since Nov. 11 and finished with a team-high seven rebounds.
News & Notes

  • The Pirates held the high-scoring Bears to their second-lowest point total of the season after Baylor's 77-point showing against Gardner-Webb on Nov. 12.
  • Seton Hall drops to 10-6 all-time against teams from Texas.
  • Richmond is up to 270 career assists and 125 career steals at in three seasons at Seton Hall.
  • Richmond now has 854 career points and Davis is up to 693 career points.
  • Richmond has now scored 18 or more points in three of the last four games.
  • Bediako has now scored in double-figures in each of the last seven games.
  • Bediako registered a season-high four blocks.

Up Next

Seton Hall will next face Rutgers in the annual Garden State Hardwood Classic on Saturday, Dec. 9 at Prudential Center at 8:30 p.m.

NCAA proposes rule to let schools, athletes enter NIL deals


NCAA president Charlie Baker proposed rule changes Tuesday that would allow Division I schools for the first time to pay their athletes in ways that are not tied to educational resources.

Baker shared the proposed changes in a letter sent to member schools. If Division I schools choose to adopt the rules, they would be allowed to enter into name, image and likeness deals directly with their athletes. The new rules would also create a trust fund for athletes at the richest tier of athletic departments and allow those schools to create its own set of rules for recruiting, transfers, roster size and a wide range of other policies.

"t is time for us -- the NCAA -- to offer our own forward-looking framework," Baker said. "This framework must sustain the best elements of the student-athlete experience for all student-athletes, build on the financial and organizational investments that have positively changed the trajectory of women's sports, and enhance the athletic and academic experience for student-athletes who attend the highest resourced colleges and universities."

The policy would bring a major change to the foundational tenet of NCAA's long-held business model that prevented schools from providing any non-academic-based compensation to athletes. Baker's letter said the change is necessary during a time when the revenue generated by top colleges is poised to grow significantly, and the legal pressure to compensate athletes continues to mount.

He wrote the new policy would help gender equity by demanding that schools provide equal NIL investments for their men's and women's teams on campus. The proposed new model would require the top tier of schools to set aside at least $30,000 per year for at least half of its athletes in "an enhanced educational trust fund."

The letter doesn't define a line for which schools would fall in that top-earning subdivision, but instead says the new framework would give schools the option to decide. The top schools, which according to letter are more impacted "by collectives, the Transfer Portal and NIL," would be allowed to create their own set of rules to help police those areas of the market for college athletes in unique ways.


Baker said in the letter that these new rules will help provide a model to show to Congress in the NCAA's ongoing quest for new federal laws to help in governing college sports. Baker and other NCAA leaders have been asking Congress for three years to create a law that would allow them to keep college athletes from becoming employees, create uniform rules for NIL deals and avoid future antitrust lawsuits. Those efforts have so far failed to gain significant momentum, with several key lawmakers telling the institutions that they need to make efforts to solve their own problems before the government intervenes.

Baker, who took over as the NCAA president in March, has said multiple times during his tenure that he believes the highest-earning echelon of college sports operates in a different reality than the overwhelming majority of NCAA schools.

"[This proposal] kick-starts a long-overdue conversation among the membership that focuses on the differences that exist between schools, conferences and divisions and how to create more permissive and flexible rules across the NCAA that put student-athletes first," he said. "Colleges and universities need to be more flexible, and the NCAA needs to be more flexible, too."

The letter did not provide a timeframe for when these proposals would be fleshed out. NCAA schools would have to vote to adopt the changes. Those stakeholders next meet in January in Phoenix at their annual convention.

Ike Obiagu , Congrats Passed CPA Exam

Jeffery Obiagu 🇳🇬
Jeffery Obiagu 🇳🇬Jeffery Obiagu 🇳🇬• 1st• 1stAudit Associate at EYAudit Associate at EY
2h • 2h •

Beyond excited to share that I’ve finally passed all 4 parts of my CPA Exams!! Couldn’t have done it without the support from my team at EY US, and also my family and friends. Also a huge thank you to Becker CPA for the review courses and to all my professors in the Seton Hall Stillman School of Business. As always, GO PIRATES!!
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Seton Hall Readies For BIG EAST-Big 12 Battle At No. 6 Baylor


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Game 8: No. 6 Baylor Bears (8-0) vs. Seton Hall Pirates (5-2)
Tuessday, Dec. 5 • Ferrell Center (Waco, Texas) • 9 p.m.
TV: ESPN2 • Pete Sousa & Fran Fraschilla
Web: WatchESPN.com | ESPN App
Radio: SHU Pirates Mobile App / Pirate Sports Network / SiriusXM 391 / SXM app 981 / Gary Cohen & Dave Popkin
Game Notes: Seton Hall | Baylor
Follow Along: Instagram | X | Live Stats

Notes You Need To Know
  • The Seton Hall men's basketball team will play its first true road game of the season on Tuesday as the Pirates travel to No. 6 Baylor in a BIG EAST-Big 12 Battle contest on ESPN2.
  • These two teams were originally scheduled to play a BIG EAST-Big 12 Battle game on Nov. 29, 2020 at Prudential Center in Newark before both teams mutually agreed to cancel the game amidst the unpredictable 2020-21 college basketball season.
  • The Pirates are 1-2 all-time in BIG EAST-Big 12 Battle games, which features a win vs. No. 7 Texas at Prudential Center in 2022-23.
  • After Tuesday, the Pirates will have been the road team in three of their four BIG EAST-Big 12 Battle games and they will have played three top 10 teams.
  • The Pirates' last trip to Lonestar State came during the 2002-03 season when The Hall faced Texas in the Space City Basketball Classic in Houston on Nov. 20, 2002.
  • This will be Seton Hall's first-ever true road game in the state of Texas.
  • The Hall is 10-5 all-time against opponents from the state of Texas.
  • Seton Hall has split its last two road games against non-conference opponents ranked in the top 10; a loss at No. 9 Kansas last season (91-65) and win at No. 4 Michigan on Nov. 16, 2021 (67-65).
  • Seton Hall has won three of its last five games against non-conference opponents ranked in the top 10 going back to 2019-20.
  • Tuesday will be the first-ever meeting between Seton Hall and Baylor.
  • Both head coaches graduated from BIG EAST schools; Shaheen Holloway went to Seton Hall and Scott Drew attended Butler.
  • The Pirates scored 85 points or more for the third time this season in an 88-75 win over Northeastern on Nov. 29.
  • Seton Hall was bolstered by 46 combined points from Kadary Richmond (21 points) and Al-Amir Dawes (career-high 25 points).
  • It marked the first time that Seton Hall teammates scored 20-plus points in the same game since Jared Rhoden and Bryce Aiken on Jan. 13, 2022 at DePaul.
  • Dawes was named to the BIG EAST Weekly Honor Roll on Monday after his career-high 25-point performance against Northeastern where he also grabbed five rebounds and dished out five assists.
  • Dawes ranks 17th in Division I among active players in career three-point field goals made.
  • Isaiah Coleman was named BIG EAST Freshman of the Week for the second time this season after scoring 11 points, grabbing three rebounds and tallying three steals.
  • After his initial BIG EAST Freshman of the Week on Nov. 20, Coleman continued to be a key contributor off the bench for the Pirates in San Diego where he averaged 21 minutes, 5.0 points, 3.0 boards, 2.5 steals and 1.5 assists per contest.
  • Jaden Bediako has two double-doubles so far this season and has scored in double-figures in six of Seton Hall's first seven games, his most through seven games in his four-year career.
  • Bediako leads the BIG EAST and ranks 10th in the country with 4.0 offensive rebounds per game and he ranks sixth nationally in offensive rebounding percentage (19.4 percent).
  • The Pirates lead the BIG EAST and rank 38th nationally in steals per game (9.1 spg) and they're paced by Dylan Addae-Wusu, whose 16 steals leads the conference.
  • Seton Hall has been highly efficient from the free throw line through six games where they've shot 79 percent (103-of-130), a clip that ranks second in the BIG EAST and 12th nationally.
  • Dre Davis' 91 percent clip (19-of-21) paces the Pirates from the charity stripe.

November: Rutgers thread

Here's some details from the DePaul/Rutgers 'secret' scrimmage

The 50 point margin being leaked is not correct. Rutgers beat DePaul by 32 points.

The game was 50 minutes long broken down into 5 separate blocks.

I have further details but I am not allowed to post more as the info is so sensitive that boxscores were destroyed after the game as to not embarrass anyone (DePaul).

I will say this in passing. The Rutgers guards dominated the DePaul guards who I am being told are not very good.
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