Irish senior center Garrick has averaged 11.3 points and 11.0 rebounds in Notre Dame's last three games.

Notre Dame And Indiana Set To Meet At Third Annual Crossroads Classic

Dec. 13, 2013

Full Game NotesGet Acrobat Reader

Game 11
Indiana (8-2)
vs.
Notre Dame (7-3)

Crossroads Classic
Saturday, Dec. 14, 2013
3:15 p.m. (ET)
Bankers Life Fieldhouse
Indianapolis, Ind.

TV/INTERNET:
ESPNU/WatchESPN
Dave O’Brien (play-by-play)
Dan Dakich (analyst)

LIVE STATS

IRISH AND HOOSIERS RENEW RIVARLY AT CROSSROADS CLASSIC
– Notre Dame (7-3) will meet Indiana (8-2) in the third annual Crossroads Classic on Saturday, Dec. 14 at Bankers Life Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, Ind., at 3:15 p.m. (ET). The contest is the first game of the doubleheader with Butler and Purdue matching up in the second.
– This is the third year of the Crossroads Classic. Notre Dame and Indiana met in the first year of the event in 2011 with the Hoosiers earning a 69-58 victory in 2011. Last year, the Irish played Purdue and defeated the Boilermakers 81-68.
– Notre Dame heads into the contest coming off a 73-69 setback at home to North Dakota State.
– Saturday afternoon’s contest will be broadcast by ESPN/WatchESPN with Dave O’Brien (play-by-play) and Dan Dakich (analyst) calling the action.
– A free audio broadcast will be available on WatchND.tv. Jack Nolan will handle play-by-play duties, while former Irish standout Jordan Cornette will serve as the analyst. The broadcast can also be heard on The Notre Basketball Radio Network headed by WSBT 96.1 FM and 960 AM in South Bend. A complete affiliate list is available on page 5 of this notes packet. The broadcast also is available on Sirius 93/XM 191.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY Eric Atkins
– Irish point guard Eric Atkins is celebrating his 22nd birthday today.

CANISIUS GAME TIME CHANGE
– Notre Dame’s game against Canisius on Sunday, Dec. 29 has moved to a 5:00 p.m. (ET) tipoff from the original 2:00 pm (ET) start time. The contest is now scheduled to be televised by ESPNU.

END OF A GRUELING STRETCH
– Today’s contest concludes a grueling stretch for Notre Dame that will see the Irish play six games since Dec. 1.
– This afternoon’s game will be the fourth in a week for Notre Dame.
– Following today’s game against Indina, Notre Dame will have be off for a week for final exams before facing Ohio State in the showcase game of the BlackRock Gotham Classic at Madison Square Garden on Saturday, Dec. 21 at 7:30 p.m. (ET).

PLAYING THE HOOSIERS
– Notre Dame and Indiana will be meeting for the 70th time on Saturday afternoon and for just the second time since November of 2008. The Hoosiers lead the all-time series 48-21.
– Notre Dame has won two of the last three meetings.
– The matchup will be the 10th ever between the two schools in Indianapolis. Prior to the 2011 meeting, the last game played between the two schools in Indianapolis was during the 1959-60 season at Butler’s Hinkel Fieldhouse. Notre Dame is 2-7 against Indiana in Indianapolis.
– Head coach Mike Brey is 2-4 against the Hoosiers during his Notre Dame tenure.

IRISH AGAINST THE BIG TEN
– This will be the second tim the Irish will be facing a team from the Big Ten Conference this season. In fact, three Big Ten teams are on the Notre Dame schedule in 2013-14.
– Notre Dame dropped a 98-93 decision to Iowa in Iowa City on Dec. 3 in the Big Ten/ACC Challenge.
– Following today’s game agains the Hoosiers, Notre Dame will take on Ohio State next Saturday (Dec. 21) in Madison Square Garden in the BlackRock Gotham Classic Showcase game.
– The Fighting Irish are 232-208 (.527) all-time against teams from the Big Ten.
– Notre Dame is 6-11 under Mike Brey against the Big Ten.

FIGHTING IRISH IN INDY
– Under Mike Brey, Notre Dame is 5-4 in Indianapolis, inlcuding a 3-3 mark in Bankers Life Fieldhouse.
– The Fighting Irish defeated Purdue 81-68 on Dec. 15, 2012 the last time they played inside the venue. Prior to the win over the Boilermakers, Notre Dame’s last victory at Bankers Life Fieldhouse , was a 92-60 win over Lafayette on Nov. 14, 2006. Brey’s third victory at Notre Dame was a 69-51 triumph over No. 14/15 Cincinnati on Nov. 25, 2000, inside Bankers Life Fieldhouse.

PAT’s IMPACT
– Junior swingman Pat Connaughton is averaging career-bests of 13.9 points (third-leading scorer) and 7.1 rebounds (second-leading rebounder). He has been in double figures in scoring this season in all but two games (Santa Clara and Army).
– Connaughton has topped the 20-point mark in two of the last three games. He netted 21 points and grabbed 11 rebounds in the win over Delaware and finished with 21 points in the loss to North Dakota State.
– His current five-game double-figure scoring streak is the longest of his career.
– He also leads the team with three double-doubles.
– Connaughton has been in the starting lineup in 60 consecutive games since his freshman season.

GRANT ROLLING
– Before Wednesday night’s game against North Dakota State in which he scored nine points, Jerian Grant had been the only Irish player to score in double figures in all nine contests.
– In the previous outing two nights earlier against Bryant, Grant registered his second consecutive 20-plus point outing and fifth of the season.
– He leads Notre Dame in scoring with a career-best 18.7 points-per-game average.
– Grant has topped the 20-point mark in four of the last seven games and 13 times overall in his career.
– He netted a career-best 26 points in the season opener versus Miami (Ohio) and also scored 25 points in last Saturday’s win over Delaware as he connected on a personal-best 10 field goals. He also scored 20 points in wins over Santa Clara and Cornell.
– Grant recorded his first double-double of the season against Iowa on Dec. 3 when he finished with 13 points and 10 assists.
– With his 20-point performance against Cornell on Dec. 1, Grant became the 55th player in Notre Dame history to score 1,000 career points.

HIGHLY UNUSUAL
– Notre Dame’s loss to North Dakota State on Wednesday night was the second non-conference loss for the Irish at Purcell Pavilion this season. The last time a Notre Dame team lost two non-conference games at home was during the 2004-05 campaign when the Irish fell to DePaul (84-73), UCLA (75-65) and Holy Cross (78-73).

GRANT AND ATKINS … A DYNAMIC DUO
Jerian Grant’s backcourt mate Eric Atkins also reached the 1,000-point mark earlier this season when he netted his 1,000th-point against Indiana State on Nov. 17.
– Grant and Atkins have combined to play in 190 contests and make 160 starts. Together they have scored 2,171 points, dished off 905 assists and made 236 steals.
– Grant has a career scoring average of 13.5 points per game and has started 77 of 77 outings in his two-plus seasons playing. Atkins has earned 83 career starts in 111 contests during his three-plus seasons and has averaged 9.9 points per game.

ASSISTING THE IRISH
– Senior point guard Eric Atkins’ career assist-to-turnover ratio of 2.41 ranks first among all active Division I players, while teammate Jerian Grant’s 2.38 mark ranks him second. Ohio State’s Aaron Craft is third on the list (2.28).
– Akins has 481 careers assists and just 199 turnovers. The career assist total currently ranks 12th nationally.
– This season, Atkins has 48 assists and just 11 turnovers for a 4.9 assist-to-turnover, which is the fourth-best mark in the country.
Jerian Grant currently ranks 28th in career assists (424) among active players nationally. Grant has a team-best 61 assists this season to go along with just 15 turnovers for a 4.1 assist-to-turnover ratio, which is ninth nationally.
– As a team, Notre Dame has the country’s best assist-to-turnover ratio (1.96) this season. The Fighting Irish also are second nationally in assists per game (19.2).

DOUBLE THE PLEASURE
Pat Connaughton’s 17 points and 11 rebounds (matching a season-high) against Bryant last Monday night marked the second straight double-double for the Irish junior. His team-best three double-doubles this season have come in the last five games and he has five to his credit in the 79 games that he has played.
Garrick Sherman also recorded a double-double in the win over Bryant. His 14 points and career-high 13 rebounds marked the first double-double of his career. He followed that up with his second consecutive double-double as he finished with 10 points and 10 rebounds.

PUTTING UP THE NUMBERS
– The Irish topped the 90-point mark for the third consecutive game in its 98-93 loss at Iowa on Dec. 3. It was the third time in the Mike Brey era that Notre Dame has netted 90-plus points in three consecutive outings. The last time was during the 2002-03 campaign when the Irish did it against Texas (98-92 win), DePaul (102-71 win) and Canisius (93-75 win).
– Notre Dame topped the 100-point mark in its win over Cornell on Dec 1. It was the first time the Irish went over the century mark in a game decided in regulation since a 106-65 win over Sacred Heart on Dec. 19, 2011, and was the 15th time during Mike Brey’s 14-year tenure that one of his Irish teams scored 100-plus points.
– That game followed up Notre Dame’s 93-point effort against Army on Nov. 24.
– In the win over Cornell, the Fighting Irish had six double-figure scorers (including all five starters) for the first time this season (Jerian Grant 20, Eric Atkins 19, Pat Connaughton 18, Garrick Sherman 12, Demetrius Jackson 11 and Zach Auguste 10).
– Prior to Notre Dame’s game against Delaware on Dec. 7 in which the Irish shot 49.1 percent from the field, Notre Dame had shot better than 50.0% from the field in three consecutive games. The Irish shot a season-best 56.5% (35-62) from the floor against Army, 54.3% (38-70) versus Cornell and 51.5% (35-68) at Iowa.

TAKING CARE OF THE BASKETBALL
– Notre Dame is averaging 19.2 assists per game and just 9.8 turnovers. In five contests, the Irish have dished off 20-or more assists and in six of 10 games and have committed fewer than 10 turnovers.
– The Irish dished off a season-high 28 assists against Cornell and committed just five turnovers in the game (one in the second half).
– In the loss at Iowa, Notre Dame had 20 assists and seven turnovers. For the second straight contest the Irish turned the ball over just once in the second half after having six first-half turnovers.

SECOND-HALF SURGES
– In back-to-back outings against Army and Cornell, Notre Dame outscored its opponents 60-35 (combined 120-70) in the second half in each of the two contests. The 60 points put up in both of the games were the most in any half for the Irish since a 62-point first-half effort against Georgia Southern on Nov. 12, 2010. They were the most second-half points for the Fighting Irish since they went for 64 against Cincinnati on Jan. 15, 2008.
– The Irish shot 75% (24-32) from the floor in the second half against Army. That matched the highest percentage in any half for Notre Dame under head coach Mike Brey. The Irish also shot 75% (18-24) in the first half against West Virginia on Jan. 9, 2010, and in the second half (18-24) versus Niagara on Dec. 21, 2012.
– Notre Dame was 23-37 from the field (54.3%) in the second half against Cornell.
– Notre Dame’s 19 second-half assists (on 24 made field goals) versus the Black Knights tied the most in a half for an Irish team under the direction of Brey. The Fighting Irish also dished out 19 assists in the first half of a 99-71 win over Canisius on Dec. 19, 2000.
– The Irish outscored Iowa (50-46) in the second half in the loss to the Hawkeyes.

TRUE FRESHMAN START
– Irish freshman Demetrius Jackson earned the first start of his young career on Dec. 1 against Cornell. It marked the first time since the 2011-12 campaign that a true freshman was in the Notre Dame starting lineup.
– Current junior Pat Connaughton was the last true freshman to start for the Irish in 2011-12. He started 18 of the 34 games he played in during his first season.
– Jackson scored 11 points against the Big Red in 27 minutes of action while also dishing off four assists and committing just one turnover.
– He has scored in double figures in four of Notre Dame’s last seven contests and is averaging 8.1 points, 2.9 rebounds and 2.1 assists in the seven games he has played.
– Jackson’s best game was against Santa Clara as he netted 13 points and grabbed eight rebounds, both career bests.

CASHING IN FROM THE CHARITY STRIPE
– Notre Dame ranks 11th nationally in free throw percentage (.775). Senior guard Jerian Grant is shooting a team-best 86.2% (50-58) from the charity stripe (minimum 10 attempts). Senior center Garrick Sherman is connecting on 82.5% (33-40) of his attempts.

DRAINING FROM DEEP
Eric Atkins (134), Pat Connaughton (127) and Jerian Grant (126) and rank 13th, 14th and 15th, respectively, in Notre Dame history in three-point field goals made.
– Connaughton is 28-of-64 (.438) from three-point range this season, while Grant is 17-of-42 (.405) and Atkins is 17-of-45 (.378).
– Notre Dame ranks 14th nationally in three-point percentage this season (.402). The Irish made a season-high 12 treys (on 25 attempts) versus Cornell on Dec. 1.

EARNING HIS STRIPES FROM THE LINE
– Senior center Garrick Sherman’s career high 29-point performance against Iowa on Dec. 3 was highlighted by him connecting on 12-of-18 shots from the field and he made all five of his free throw attempts in a career-high 32 minutes.
– Sherman is having his best season from the line as he has connected on 82.5% of his attempts (33-40). Heading into the season, Sherman was just 31-47 (66.0%) from the line at Notre Dame and was a career 55.7% (49-88) free-throw shooter.
– Before shooting 5-7 from the line against Delaware a week ago, Sherman connected on a career-best 13 straight free throws and has made 25 of his last 29 attempts.

Jerian Grant NAMED TO WOODEN AWARD AND NAISMITH WATCH LISTS
– Senior guard Jerian Grant was one of 50 players named to both the John R. Wooden Award and Naismith Award Preseason Watch lists.
– Grant has a team-best 18.7 points-per-game average this season. He scored a career-high 26 points against Miami (Ohio) in the season opener.
– He was the only Irish player who had scored in double figures in each of Notre Dame’s first nine games.
– Grant has topped the 20-point mark four times this season.
– He also leads the Irish in assists (61) and steals (21). Grant is 17-of-42 (.405) from three-point range and 50-of-58 (.862) from the free throw line this season.
– Grant registered his fourth career double-double on Dec. 3 when he scored 13 points and dished off 10 assists against Iowa.

ATKINS AND CONNAUGHTON TO CAPTAIN THE IRISH
– Senior point guard Eric Atkins and junior guard/forward Pat Connaughton have been elected team captains for the 2013-14 campaign.
– For Atkins, his selection proves to be historic, as he becomes the first three-time captain in the 109-history of the program, while Connaughton is in his first season in the captaincy role.

PLAYING TOGETHER
– The backcourt trio of seniors Eric Atkins and Jerian Grant along with junior Pat Connaughton has logged significant playing time together over the past two-plus seasons. Notre Dame’s four returning starters from 2012-13 (including senior forward Tom Knight) have started a combined 246 contests with 223 of those starts coming from the Atkins-Grant-Connaughton combination.

PLAYING WELL IN PURCELL
– The Fighting Irish are 124-11 in their last 135 games played at home. That .919 home winning percentage over the course of the last eight seasons ranks fifth nationally.
– Notre Dame is 59-5 (.922) in its last 64 home games.

FIGHTING IRISH FACTS
– Since the beginning of the 2010-11 season, Notre Dame is 35-2 when shooting 50% or above from the field, 61-5 when outrebounding its opponent and 64-5 when leading at halftime.
– The Fighting Irish went 5-4 against ranked teams last season. Over the last four-plus seasons, Notre Dame is 22-17 (.564) against teams ranked in the Associated Press top-25 poll, including a 12-2 mark at home.
– Notre Dame is 4-3 in its last seven showdowns with a team ranked in the top 10 of the Associated Press poll. The Irish are 17-26 against teams ranked in the top 10 of the AP poll under head coach Mike Brey.

ATKINS ON BOB COUSY AWARD WATCH LIST
– Senior Eric Atkins was named to the watch list for the 2014 Bob Cousy Collegiate Point Guard of the Year Award. Atkins is averaging 12.4 points and 4.8 assists per game this season and boasts a 4.4 assist-to-turnover ratio.
– Atkins has 1,101 career points and 481 assists.
– The annual honor, announced by the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame and is named for Hall of Famer and former Boston Celtic point guard Bob Cousy, recognizes the top point guards in men’s basketball. A committee of well-respected media members and influential people within collegiate basketball from around the country comprise the committee. This year’s watch list will be narrowed down to a final 20 in early February, then a final five in early March.

NOTRE DAME ADDS TWO FRONTLINE PLAYERS FOR 2014-15 CAMPAIGN
– Irish head coach Mike Brey recently announced the signing of two frontcourt players to his 2014-15 roster. Bonzie Colson, Jr., a 6-6, 200-pound forward out of New Bedford, Mass., and Martin Geben, a 6-9, 230-pound forward from Vilnius, Lithuania, have signed National Letters of Intent during the early signing period. The duo will enroll at Notre Dame in the fall of 2014.

DIGGER PHELPS TO BE INDUCTED INTO NOTRE DAME BASKETBALL RING OF HONOR
– Forty years to the day that one of the greatest moments in Notre Dame’s illustrious athletics history occurred, the man who engineered the stunning 71-70 victory over top-ranked UCLA on Jan. 19, 1974, that ended the Bruins 88-game win streak will be inducted into the Notre Dame Basketball Ring of Honor. Richard “Digger” Phelps will become the sixth inductee into the Ring of Honor at halftime of the Fighting Irish men’s basketball game against Virginia Tech on Jan. 19, 2014.
– Phelps, who led Notre Dame to a sterling 393-197 record (.666) over his 20 seasons (1971-91) on the Irish hardwood, will become the first coach inducted into the Ring of Honor. The all-time winningest men’s basketball coach at Notre Dame, he will join Austin Carr, Adrian Dantley, Skylar Diggins, Luke Harangody and Ruth Riley. Diggins was inducted at the Notre Dame women’s basketball game against Valparaiso on Nov. 16.

NOTRE DAME STUDENT-ATHLETES AGAIN RANK #1 IN NCAA GRS
– For the eighth time in nine years, the University of Notre Dame ranks number one on a percentage basis in terms of number of Graduation Success Rate (GSR) 100 scores, among all NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision schools.
– Twenty of 22 athletics programs at Notre Dame compiled graduation rates of 100 percent, including the men’s basketball team, according to the ninth year of GSR measurements developed by the NCAA. It’s the first time Notre Dame’s programs have combined for 20 perfect scores-after four previous years with 19.
– None of the Football Bowl Subdivision (formerly NCAA Division I-A) programs in the country had a higher percentage of 100 GSR scores than did Notre Dame with its .909 number (20 of 22).
– In addition, Notre Dame ranked second among all FBS institutions with nine perfect scores among 22 sports (.409) in the federal graduation rate analysis.

IRISH ENTER THE ACC
– Following 18 seasons in the BIG EAST Conference, Notre Dame is entering its first season as a member of the Atlantic Coast Conference. Notre Dame will face each of the other 14 ACC member schools at least once during this season’s 18-game conference schedule. Along with home-and-away dates with its “partner schools” Boston College and Georgia Tech, Notre Dame will meet both North Carolina and Virginia twice during the season. The Fighting Irish also will play host to Clemson, Duke, North Carolina State, Pittsburgh and Virginia Tech. Notre Dame’s other road opponents are Florida State, Maryland, Miami, Syracuse and Wake Forest.
– The 2014 ACC men’s basketball tournament is scheduled for March 12-16 at the Greensboro Coliseum in Greensboro, N.C.
– Notre Dame was picked to finish fifth in its inaugural season of Atlantic Coast Conference play according to a vote of media in attendance at the league’s annual “Operation Basketball.” Duke was picked to win the ACC title.
– Senior guard Jerian Grant was named to the five-man Preseason All-ACC Team.

BREY NO STRANGER TO THE ACC
– Perhaps no person is better prepared to navigate the Irish basketball program into its new basketball conference home than head coach Mike Brey. A Rockville, Md., native, he grew up a Maryland Terrapin basketball fan and his first coaching job in the collegiate ranks was as an assistant coach at Duke for eight seasons.
– Beginning in 1987-88, he helped Blue Devil head coach Mike Krzyzewski take his teams to six NCAA Final Fours and four national title games while winning back-to-back national titles in 1991 and 1992. The Blue Devils posted a sterling 216-65 record for a 76.8 winning percentage during his tenure at the school. Brey recruited and worked daily with four of the greatest players in that program’s history — Danny Ferry, Christian Laettner, Bobby Hurley and Grant Hill.

POSTSEASON STRETCH
– Notre Dame has earned appearances in the postseason in each of the last 14 seasons, which marks the longest stretch in school history. The Irish have been to the NCAA Championship on nine occasions and the National Invitation Tournament (NIT) five times during this current stretch. Under head coach Mike Brey, Notre Dame has played in the NCAAs nine times, including a current stretch of four straight trips, and NIT four times.

NOTRE DAME LOOKS TO NOTCH ANOTHER 20-WIN CAMPAIGN
– The Irish have recorded seven straight 20-win seasons. It’s the first time in program history that Notre Dame has compiled seven consecutive 20-win campaigns. The Fighting Irish have reached the 20-win plateau 10 times in 13 seasons under head coach Mike Brey.
– Last season’s 25 wins were tied for the second-most of the Brey era. The most wins for the Irish under Brey are 27 (27-7) in 2010-11.

DOUBLE DUTY
– Junior guard/forward Pat Connaughton also is a standout pitcher on the Fighting Irish baseball team. He has appeared in 22 games, including 20 starts, and boasts an 8-6 career record with a 2.43 earned-run average (ERA). He has logged 92.2 innings and has notched 69 strikeouts. As a sophomore, Connaughton went 4-2 and posted a 1.71 ERA.
– He recently was named the No. 46 prospect among 2014 draft-eligible players by Perfect Game in the publication’s post-fall college top-50 list. The publication ranked Connaughton as the No. 22 right-handed pitcher.
– Connaughton was selected by the San Diego Padres in the 50th round of the 2011 Major League Baseball Amateur Draft.

BREY TO BE INDUCTED INTO GEORGE WASHINGTON ATHLETICS HALL OF FAME
– In January, Irish head coach Mike Brey will be inducted into the George Washington University Athletics Hall of Fame. Brey will be honored by his alma mater on the eve of Notre Dame’s matchup with Maryland on Tuesday, Jan. 14, during a special halftime ceremony at the Colonials’ men’s basketball game against VCU at the Charles E. Smith Center.
– Brey played one season (1981-82) at George Washington after transferring from Northwestern State. During his one season on the Colonials’ roster, he averaged 5.0 points and 4.8 assists while serving as team captain. He led George Washington in assists that season with 116 in 24 games and earned his bachelor’s degree in physical education.
– Brey is among seven former student-athletes comprising the 2014 George Washington Athletics Hall of Fame class. In addition to Brey, the class includes Greg Condon (`03, Baseball), Kwame Evans (`96, Men’s Basketball), Cathy Joens (`04, Women’s Basketball), Elena Meyer (`07, Softball) and Kim Warner (`04, Women’s Soccer).

KNIGHT A NOMINEE FOR NABC GOOD WORKS TEAM
– Senior forward Tom Knight is among 117 nominees for the 2014 Allstate NABC (National Association of Basketball Coaches) Good Works Teams. The award recognizes a select group of college basketball student-athletes who have made significant contributions to the greater good of their communities through volunteerism and civic service.