What: 2025 NIT Semfinal
Who: Chattanooga (27-9) vs. Loyola (25-11)
When: April 1, 2025/9:30 p.m. EST
Where: Historic Hinkle Fieldhouse (9,100)/Indianapolis, IND
What's Next: NIT Championship vs. North Texas/UC Irvine winner
Preview: While the NCAA Tournament continues to be a battle of college basketball big boy programs, with no mid-major or double-digit seed making travel plans for the tournament's second weekend, the National Invitational Tournament (NIT) has been where mid-major madness has the main item on the menu, with all four teams that have reached the penultimate stage of the tournament being from mid-major conferences.
While only two high-major programs decided to accept invitations to the tournament, the argument could be made that the tournament has been more thrilling with more mid-major teams having been added this season, and the quality of basketball has been outstanding.
For Chattanooga, Loyola-Chicago, North Texas and UC Irvine, Hinkle Fieldhouse will provide a fitting setting for the Final Four for a quartet of programs that represent a long, storied history, or for programs carving out a history and tradition in recent seasons.
Hinkle Fieldhouse currently serves as the home venue for Big East member Butler, and the setting was the setting for the 1952 Indiana State High School Basketball Championship game between South Bend Central and fictional Hickory High School in the fictional movie "Hoosiers", which was released in late February of 1987. The Indiana High School State Basketball Championships were played at Hinkle Fieldhouse every year from 1911 until 1994.
Hickory High School was loosely based on the actual high school program and its small school run to an Indiana High School title--Milan High School--which knocked off Muncie Central--a school ten times its size in the championship game in the actual championship game for which the movie is loosely based upon in 1954.
With its colors similar to that of Hickory, the small school story of Loyola-Chicago and its unlikely run all the way to the Final Four back in 2018 bore some notable similarities to the run made by the fictional run by Hickory High School and head coach Norman Dale (played by the late Gene Hackman) in Hoosiers.
Though the Ramblers wouldn't ultimately win the NCAA Tournament seven years ago, all that surrounded that run to the title game, highlighted by Sister Jean--a Catholic Nun who captivated the nation for her love of Ramblers basketball--almost seemed a fitting marriage for the Ramblers remarkable Cinderella run back in 2018.
Chattanooga and third-year head coach Dan Earl both know a little something about being a Cinderella having made a run all the way to the semifinals of the NIT for the first time in program history. The Mocs are in uncharted territory in the college basketball postseason, having played more games (37) this season than in any other UTC team in program history.
The Mocs would come close to reaching the semifinals back during that '85 NIT run, knocking off Clemson (W, 67-65) and then at Lamar (W, 85-84) to reach the Elite Eight of the '85 NIT only to see Denny Crum's Louisville Cardinals hand the Mocs a 71-66 setback at historic Freedom Hall.
That same Cardinals team, which had the players like "Never Nervous" Pervis Ellison, as well as fellow future NBA talents Milt Wagner and Billy Thompson, the Cardinals would go on the claim the national title a year later. The 2025 NIT appearance for Chattanooga marks its fifth in school history. With the 67-65 win over Bradley last Wednesday, UTC became the first SoCon team to reach the NIT Final Four since NC State did so way back in 1947.
The Mocs are also now playing into April for the first time in program history, and the 27 wins is tied for the second-most in program history and first since finishing 27-8 on the Mocs' SoCon regular-season and tournament championship runs back in 2021-22. The Mocs are also the only SoCon team to ever participate in an NCAA sanctioned event in April in the 105-year history of the league.
While all four NIT semifinalists have great traditions worthy of mention, only Chattanooga and Loyola Chicago have made deep runs in the NCAA Tournament, with the Mocs having reached the Sweet 16 of the NCAA Tournament back in 1997 after knocking off Georgia and Illinois, while the Ramblers are the only program to have won an NCAA Division I national title of the four participants, claiming that back in 1963 by defeating Cincinnati.
The Mocs enter the game with 10-consecutive true road wins, which is tied with Final Four bound Houston for the longest road winning streak of the season, and since there will be no more true road games this season, that's how the Mocs will head into the 2025-26 season.
The Mocs are currently 6-4 all-time in the NIT heading into Tuesday night's clash with the Ramblers and their 12-5 record on the road this season matches a school record, which was previously matched by the 2021-22 team that went on to win the Southern Conference regular-season and tournament titles.
As for the series all-time between the Mocs and Ramblers, Tuesday night's clash between the two will mark the third all-time clash between the two programs, with Loyola-Chicago having won both previous meetings against the Mocs, with the last time the two met being Dec. 18, 1989, which saw the Ramblers come in and shock the Mocs, handing Derrick Kirce and the Mocs a 61-59 setback at the Roundhouse.
One interesting thing to note about the history of both programs is that they have nearly identical win totals in their respective basketball histories, with Loyola-Chicago having won 1,480 games in its tradition-rich basketball legacy, while Chattanooga has 1,479 wins in its basketball history.
It's been a record-setting season for Chattanooga, having played more games (37), scored more points (2,865), dished out more assists (611), and made more field goals (1,012) than any other team in Mocs program history, while also setting new single-season marks for free throw percentage (77.0%), assist/turnover ratio (1.67) and least amount of turnovers per game (10.1).
A Look at the Ramblers:
It was seven years ago that the college basketball fans throughout the country were introduced to Sister Jean and Loyola Chicago, who at the time, were under the direction of Porter Moser, as the Ramblers made an unprecedented run to the Final Four of the NCAA Tournament before running out of gas against Michigan in the semifinals. Moser is now the head coach of the Oklahoma Sooners, where he just finished up his third season as the head coach of the Sooners, making way for Drew Valentine to officially take the reins of the Ramblers basketball program.
The Ramblers have been a stalwart in mid-major basketball ever since. Seven years later, the Ramblers find themselves in the semifinals of college basketball's other major tournament and under the direction of Moser, who helped lay the foundation for a program with such rich in college basketball tradition within its history.
The Ramblers' semifinal opponent is Chattanooga, and like the Ramblers, the Mocs also sport quite an extensive basketball tradition, which dates back to the hey-day of Ramblers hoops back in the decade of the 1960s, which includes the school's greatest accomplishment, which was winning the 1963 National Championship with a 60-58 win over Cincinnati.
While Chattanooga will be making its first-ever appearance in the semifinal round of the NIT, it will mark Loyola-Chicago's first appearance in this round of the competition since 1962.
The Ramblers have made a total of eight NCAA Tournament appearances in their history, including having made seven NIT appearances in their history and have made the championship game on two occasions. Like Chattanooga, the Ramblers have strung together back-to-back 20-win seasons, which has led to back-to-back NIT appearances.
The past two seasons have seen a strong turnaround for the program, which won only 10 games in head coach Drew Valentine's first season at the helm back in 2022-23 season, however, that season of struggles two years ago was a small blip on the radar in the recent history of Ramblers basketball, as Loyola Chicago has recorded 20 or more wins in a season in seven of the past eight campaigns, dating back to that historic 2017-18 season, which saw the Ramblers make that historic won all the way to the Final Four as a No. 11 seed en route to winning a school-record 32 games.
The Ramblers have been upset in the A-10 Tournament each of the past two seasons, falling to No. 7 seed St. Bonaventure (L, 74-75) last season and this season, the Ramblers fell at the penultimate stage of one of mid-major basketball's most prestigious conference tourneys, as Loyola fell to top overall seed and eventual tournament champion VCU, 62-55.
Since its selection to the NIT for a second-straight season, the Ramblers have reeled off road wins over San Jose State (W, 73-70) and San Francisco (W, 77-76) before returning to Gentile Arena to claim what was a 10-point win over Kent State (W, 72-62) in their most-recent outing.
Since making that Final Four back in 2018, the Ramblers have been a consistent winner in whatever conference they have played in, whether it be the Missouri Valley or the Atlantic 10. This season, the Ramblers welcomed the return of three starters off that team that ended up tying for the conference crown a year ago.
Leading the way for the Ramblers this season are a pair of strong, athletic guards that could cause matchup problems because of their size and physicality against Chattanooga's smaller, quicker guards that maximize their quickness to compensate for their size.
Both 6-4 Jayden Dawson (13.7 PPG, 3.1 RPG) and 6-5 Des Watson (13.0 PPG, 3.6 RPG) presided over one of the top backcourts in the Atlantic 10 this season. The duo is a big, physical backcourt that isn't seen as much in the Southern Conference as in the Valley, however, there overall backcourt in terms of size and physicality probably resembles UNCG or Wofford in the SoCon.
Like so many teams are doing these days, especially at the mid-major level and in the Southern Conference, the Ramblers employ four guards and a center.
Watson isn't a great outside threat, and of the three starters in set to start in the backcourt for the Ramblers, he is the worst of the shooters from long-range, knocking down 33.9% (65-of-192) of his long-range efforts this season.
Dawson is shooting a solid 36.3% (82-of-226) from three-point range this season, and his 82 three-point field goals this season, but a player that Chattanooga must be wary of at all times when he's on the floor is 6-4 guard Sheldon Edwards Jr. (11.8 PPG, 3.7 RPG, 105 threes), who has connected on one-third of the Ramblers' three-point field goals this season, having connected on 105 of the team's total of 306 long-range efforts this season. Lewis is connecting on a team-best 37.8% (105-of-278) from long-range this season.
Dawson, Watson and Edwards were all a solid trio that all boasted starting experience for the Ramblers during that strong regular-season a year ago, which saw Loyola-Chicago win 15 of its 18 league tilts in the always-tough and prestigious Atlantic 10. The trio has been a part of 48 wins over the past couple of seasons.
Watson scored a season-high 25 points in a March 14 Atlantic 10 quarterfinal win over Saint Louis (W, 72-64), while Edwards Jr. posted season and career-high of 35 points in what was a NIT Sweet 16 road win at San Francisco, which is among the Ramblers most impressive wins of the season. Edwards also posted his career-high in the month of March, as he posted 22 points for the second time this season in what was an 82-72 home win over Davidson.
Of that talented trio of returning starters in the backcourt, however, only one was able to garner all-conference honors this season, as Dawson garnered second-team All-Atlantic 10 honors in the postseason. He was the only Ramblers player to garner a spot on any of the three all-league teams.
Center Miles Rubin (9.1 PPG, 5.2 RPG, 45 blks) has been a force as a rim protector, however, as he garnered a spot on the league's all-defensive team. The 6-10 center started 30 of 33 games last season, setting a new school record for blocks (76) in a single-season. This season, Rubin went about setting a new single-season blocks record after setting a new originally milestone last season, as the back-to-back All-Atlantic 10 defensive selection has set a new mark with 82 blocked shots this season.
Rubin is a true rim protector and he's the first rim center of this type that the Mocs have seen since they faced off against Furman's Cooper Bowser in the SoCon semifinals.
Though Chattanooga is a highly-efficient offensive team, one area that their lack of size has bothered them this season is scoring around the basket, and that was particularly the case in the final of three meetings between Furman and UTC this season, which saw the Paladins upset the top-seeded Mocs, 80-77, in overtime of the conference tournament semifinals.
In the third matchup, a strategic shift was made by the Paladins, playing Bowser deeper in the paint to help alter Chattanooga's shots at the rim in an effort to disrupt the Mocs' highly-efficient offensive efficiency in the paint, which has been a big reason the Mocs have been so for the opposition to gameplan for defensively this season.
With so many teams concerned with Chattanooga's capabilities shooting the ball from the perimeter, it has opened up some easy buckets in the paint throughout the season for Chattanooga's big men. That will be something the Ramblers might want to avoid Tuesday night, and that is overcompensated and overcommitting to defend the three. The way you do that is by keeping Rubin deeper in the paint and as a stopper around that basket.
Rubin's ability to affect the game from a shot prevention/altering standpoint will be based on the depth at which the Ramblers coaching staff plays him at Tuesday night against the Mocs. Should they keep him closer to the basket as a true rim protector like Furman did in its semifinal matchup with the top-seeded Mocs, it could be something to keep an eye on. Rubin was particularly impressive on the offensive end the last time out in the win over Kent State, posting an 18-point an on 8-of-9 shooting effort from the field in the previous outing for the Ramblers.
Entering Tuesday night's NIT Final Four game against Chattanooga, Rubin ranks in the Top 15 in the NCAA in blocks-per-game, block percentage and total blocks.
Rounding out the projected starting five for the Ramblers, and what will be the fourth guard in the Loyola-Chicago lineup is 6-3 guard and "glue guy" and is comparable to say a guard like maybe Jah Quinones from Mercer or Brandon Morgan from Western Carolina. ]
He's not a great offensive threat, but he has a good knowledge of the Ramblers offense and posted starting experience two years ago as a freshman, and that experience has carried over to what is now his third season in the program, and he's been Loyola's floor leader over the latter third of the season.
Off the bench for the Ramblers, keep an eye on Georgia transfer and senior forward Jalen DeLoach (5.8 PPG, 4.2 RPG), who has seen action in all 36 games this season, which includes making four starts. DeLoach spent short stints at both VCU and Georgia prior to his arrival at Loyola-Chicago.
Another big guard that provides even more depth to the Ramblers physical backcourt that has arguably as much size as any UTC has seen this season, is 6-7 guard Kymany Houinsou (6.0 PPG, 4.8 RPG). Houinsou hasn't seen action in either of the past two games, however, has logged 23 starts this season after transferring in from Washington State prior to the 2024-25 season.
All told, the Ramblers enter their NIT Final Four clash with the Mocs averaging 73.6 PPG, while limiting its opposition to 68.7 PPG this season, as the Ramblers are shooting 45.7% (947-of-2,072) from the field through 36 games this season, while limiting the opposition to 41.6% (849-of-2,040) shooting from the field. As a three-point shooting team, the Ramblers shoot a solid 34.7% from downtown (306-of-883), while holding opponents to just 33.0% (266-of-806) from long-range this season.
Loyola is a solid defensive team, and they will want to get this game at a slower tempo than the Mocs are accustomed to, and it will be an interesting contrast of styles on display in the second of two NIT Semifinals.
A Look at the Mocs:
If you didn't know by know, Chattanooga has been among the most efficient basketball teams in all of the NCAA Division I landscape each of the past couple of seasons, and no matter if players transfer out or come in, third-year Chattanooga head coach Dan Earl has maintained an impressive efficiency despite all the transition. That speaks to the type of coach Earl is, as well as the top of staff he has, highlighted by top assistant Ander Galfsky, who has been with Earl even prior to Earl's three years as UTC's head coach, spending three seasons with Earl in Lexington before matriculating to the Scenic City.
If you know anything about the Mocs or for that matter the Keydets when Earl was there, you know his offenses operate almost seamlessly out of the motion offense, which has many Princeton-like principles within it and focuses on high skill-level passing the ball, spacing and shooting the three. When working in concert, it is a thing of beauty to see.
It will come as no surprise, then rank seventh nationally in assist-turnover ratio (1.67) and rank inside the top 30 in all of NCAA Division I in effective field goal percentage (56.4%), assists-per-game (17.0 APG) and rank just outside the Top 30 nationally in free throw shooting (77.7%).
Where the Mocs struggle offensively is on the offensive glass, ranking 311th according to KenPom in offensive rebounding percentage (25.4).
Defensively, the Mocs haven't been great, but have stepped up and played some good defense in the last two games, particularly in the second half in the win over Bradley, as well as for the complete 40 minutes in the win over Dayton.
All told, Earl is in his as an NCAA Division I Basketball coach, spending seven seasons at VMI before his arrival at UTC in the spring of 2022. This season, the Mocs had to replace everyone but their two top players, which both entered the season with a legitimate chance to garner the SoCon Player of the Year award, and though neither would ultimately win it, but what Honor Huff (15.3 PPG, 1.9 RPG, 2.3 APG, 35 steals, 124 threes) and Trey Bonham (14.2 PPG, 4.5 RPG, 2.8 APG, 49 stls, 12 blks) have provided UTC on a nightly basis is a two absolute dudes every time the Mocs have stepped out of the floor this season to take on an opponent, and while either one of them is capable of putting UTC on their proverbial backs to lead the team to a win on even given night, having both of them in a UTC uniform for each of the past two seasons has been a real treat for UTC fans.
And for head coach Dan Earl, it's been extra special to eventually be able to bring both immensely talented guards back into the fold for a team he coached, as the outstanding guard duo was first together during the 2020-21 season, which was the season just after the COVID-19 pandemic. Earl's 63 wins in three seasons are the most for any UTC coach in the NCAA Division I era for any Mocs coach, surpassing even great Mack McCarthy, who posted 62 wins in his first three seasons of his legendary tenure as Chattanooga's head basketball coach. As a result of having one of the best season's in program history, Earl was named the Southern Conference Coach of the Year in 2024-25.
With the state of how collegiate athletics is in the current NIL/transfer portal era, there are no guarantees, so it makes absolutely total sense after the Mocs fell to Furman, 80-77, in overtime in the semifinals of the Southern Conference Tournament that Honor Huff felt as though he had let his closest thing to a blood brother down by failing to lead the Mocs to ultimately to the Southern Conference Tournament crown in Asheville.
Not only was there some uncertainty about the immediate future for both players, but heartbreak also came out of the playing the "what if" game when it came to UTC's injured star post player Frank Champion in Asheville, as the graduate transfer from North Georgia College had been arguably UTC's best player over the latter portion of league play, and was key ingredient in helping the Mocs embark on a 12-game winning streak before eventually seeing that potential run at a 13th NCAA Tournament berth end at the hands of the Paladins. All told, Chattanooga comes into its contest against the Ramblers having won 15 of its last 16 games.
It's true that likely in the back of each player's mind they knew they still had a chance to play postseason basketball, but it just wouldn't be in the NCAA Tournament.
As heartbreaking as the loss in the SoCon Tournament to Furman was, it would wear off by the time the Mocs traveled just up I-24 a few nights later to face Middle Tennessee State in an opening round matchup against the Blue Raiders.
Bonham and Huff took the court on a different stage in the opening round win over the Blue Raiders, and it was one that Chattanooga hadn't competed in since 1985. Since then, the only Mocs postseason appearances have come in either the Big Dance, or one of college basketball's other less-advertised tournaments for mostly mid-major teams at the time, with one of those being the now defunct CollegeInsider.com Tournament, or CIT for short.
Huff, who put together one of his best shooting performances of his career in the three-point overtime loss to Furman, scoring 28 points and going 8-for-11 from long range, didn't have his best stuff in the first outing of the NIT, finishing with just six points.
It's a good thing for him then, however, that Bash Wieland (14.1 PPG, 4.1 RPG), a transfer from Bellarmine, picked the absolute right night to have his best night as a Chattanooga Moc, posting a career-high 31 points, while Bonham added 27 points in what was one of the most thrilling wins in recent memory for UTC Basketball, and it's first win in the tournament since 1985 in what was the Mocs' fifth overall appearance in college basketball's oldest tournament and first since '87.
In an NIT epic classic, this time the Mocs would leave the court with an overtime postseason victory, as the Mocs knocked off the Blue Raiders, 109-103, in triple overtime, setting up a huge home contest against one of Loyola-Chicago's common conference opponents, as the No. 1 overall seed in the region--the Dayton Flyers--visited McKenzie Arena for what would turn out to be maybe UTC's most complete home game of the season from start to finish.
Despite scoring only six points in the NIT opener against MTSU, Huff is having a record-setting season for the Mocs. Huff's 124 triples this season ranks second in UTC history and his 1,127 points in two seasons is the most-ever in two season over a two-season span, surpassing former Georgia transfer and two-time All-SoCon performer Derrick Kirce's mark of 1,113 points established over the course of the 1989-90 and '90-91 seasons. Huff is also a two-time all-league performer, claiming first-team All-SoCon status this past season, while his teammate and best friend Bonham was a second-team honoree.
In three NIT games so far, Huff has connected on 12 three-point field goals and is averaging 17.6 PPG in three NIT games.
Both Bonham and Huff were back to optimum playing performance by the time the Flyers flew into the Scenic City, looking to put an abrupt end to UTC's magical season, but on the dynamic duo that play for all the right reasons in an era when so many others have validated their own self-importance in NIL value from the transfer portal, both Bonham and Huff play for one another and for Huff, he wants to see his best friend for life and brother on the basketball hardwood to go out in a blaze of Blue and Gold glory this season for whatever the future may hold for the senior guard moving forward.
Following UTC's loss to Furman in the SoCon semifinals at the Harrah's Cherokee Center in Asheville, it was an emotional Huff that detailed that very bond of friendship and sacrifice the two shared and how he had ultimately let his friend, Bonham, down.
But that was then and the suddenness of the loss would soon give way to the joys of UTC's postseason success. Against Dayton, the Mocs, and in particular Bonham and Huff, did what they wanted to do, combining for 51 of the team's 87 points in what was a somewhat sizable win by 15 points over the Flyers.
Huff led the way with 26 points on a 7-for-12 effort from the field, including a 5-for-10 effort from long-range. Bonham added 25 points on 8-for-13 from the field and 3-of-5 from downtown, as Chattanooga closed the doors on another successful season at McKenzie Arena, as the Mocs posted an impressive 14-3 mark in the Roundhouse over the course of the season.
The Mocs 87-72 win over Dayton--a team that knocked off defending national champion UConn (W, 85-67) in demonstrative fashion in the Maui Invitational in late November--would ultimately in their 2024-25 season ended by Chattanooga.
Bonham, Huff and the rest of the Mocs basketball team, however, would face their most on-the-court adversity in the Elite Eight round of the NIT last week against another team from the state of Illinois, as the Bradley Braves had the Mocs on the ropes late in the first half in Peoria, leading the by as much as 16 (38-22) before the Mocs grabbed the momentum going into the half, as it was Huff's three with 1:06 left that would ultimately give the Mocs the momentum heading to the half against the Braves, starting UTC on what would be a remarkable comeback trail.
While Huff hit the shot that got the Mocs started down the victory trail, it was Bonham's consecutive threes on back-to-back possessions that ultimately allowed the Mocs to reach a new height of achievement as a program, with his first three give UTC a narrow three-point lead, 64-61, with 66 seconds remaining.
Then after Bradley's star guard Duke Deen answered with a long three that tied the game, 64-64, with 41 ticks remaining, it would be coach Dan Earl that drew up a play for a corner three to win that game, and it would be Huff and Bonham that would execute the well-devised play to perfection.
While Huff received the ball with an excellent look at a three from the left elbow, his extra pass to Bonham in the left corner was the better shot, and Bonham's three was nothing but nylon with 15 seconds remaining, putting the Mocs ahead for good. It was the type of play that it seemed only fitting for the two to make after having to endure the setback of Champion's injury prior to the SoCon Tournament, and then despite being the best team in the SoCon throughout the duration of the season, the Mocs became the first No. 1 seed to fail to win in Asheville since 2017.
Bonham and Huff's character would shine through, however, and it's why they find themselves in the NIT Final Four for the first time ever. So what's all the fuss about Bonham and Huff. It's the total effect both have upon the basketball game, and it's why the metrics love Chattanooga, and it's Huff and Bonham's versatility within their respective roles in Chattanooga's motion/Princeton-style hybrid offense, the inside-outside dynamic that this offense had with Champion as the main spoke or cog in the wheel made it nearly unstoppable at times during UTC's 13-game winning streak.
Without the skill level as an elite passer with Champion's injury, others have stepped up and assumed that role responsibility by committee. Champion's role in the high post for UTC was much the same as Furman has used its big men like Matt Rafferty, Jalen Slawson and Garrett Hien under Bob Richey, as the primary quarterback out of the high post. Before Champion, Sam Alexis occupied the same role, and then prior to that was Jake Stephens, who is one of the best passing bigs to come through the SoCon in recent memory.
Since Champion's injury, Garrison Keeslar (6.2 PPG, 3.0 APG, 4.5 RPG) has occupied the role Champion's vacated position at the four, and that has pushed either Collin Mulholland (5.6 PPG, 2.0 RPG, 1.4 APG) or Makai Richards (3.7 PPG, 1.8 RPG), depending on which is starting, down to the No. 5 spot in the starting lineup.
Keeslar is a solid distributor out of the high post and really shot some elite passing skill in the last game against Bradley, and he has 108 helpers this season to lead the Mocs. A player like Mulholland could end up being the real x-factor in this game for UTC, with his ability as a perimeter threat, and that can make life difficult for opposing centers that don't wish to run and chase player's all over the floor on the defensive end and could end up taking that rim protection away from the basket. It might as well be a defensive requirement when facing Dan Earl-led teams because more often than not, one or both big men can shoot the basketball with efficiency from long-range.
The future of what that overall skill in the post might look like next season for the Mocs, as the next edition of a Champion/Alexis/Stephens could be the Dutch-born Latif Diouf (3.2 PPG, 2.6 RPG). The 6-9, 240-lb native of Goulda, Netherlands is still coming into his own, but you can see all the tools and the skill he has already honed as a freshman and that only bodes well for Mocs basketball in the very near future as they won't have to look far for Champion's ultimate replacement next season. He will also add some size and shooting ability from the perimeter that, as talented as Champion ultimately was around the basket, lacked when it came to shooting from the outside.
Out of the Mocs' big men, Mulholland and Keeslar are clearly the ones to worry about, although Mulholland it seems is the the much better shooter by comparison, however, the stats indicate Mulholland is just slightly better, with 36.8%-34.9% edge in shooting from beyond the arc, but Mullholland has just really shot the ball extremely well from long range over the past month-and-a-half, with his favorite spot being the top of the key three. Keeslar's grit and toughness makes him UTC's glue guy.
Keeslar has really relished that role, and it's been that way virtually all season, dating back to early in conference play in an overtime win over Wofford, which saw Keeslar sacrifice his body and nearly suffer serious injury going after a loose ball that was going out of bounds against Wofford in a game that the Mocs overcame a 20-point deficit to get a remarkable come-from-behind win.
Diouf's upside is there for all to see, and it's only a matter of time before he becomes UTC's next great highly-skilled post player that can shoot from the perimeter, as well as distribute out of the high-post with high efficiency, while also possessing a solid mid-range game. Sean Cusano (4.5 PPG, 3.7 RPG), who spent the entire 2023-24 season out with an injury, has logged time in 33 of 36 games thus far in 2024-25, and that includes making four starts when Champion, Mulholland and Wieland all missing some time at the start of the season with some minor injuries, with Champion's being the most significant, as he missed the first month of the season.
The final player that has been outstanding in the backcourt this season for UTC is Wieland, and for at least the non-conference portion of the slate, Wieland was Chattanooga's best player. He currently ranks third on the team in scoring, and while he hasn't shot a lot of threes this season or made a lot, he can shoot them if left open, having knocked down 30-of-95 (31.6%) from long-range this season.
While Earl's teams normally hover around the 37% mark shooting from long-range, this Mocs team, though highly efficient offensively, is one of the more mediocre perimeter-shooting teams under Earl, connecting on 36.2% (349-of-964) this season.
Most of those Huff and Bonham alone have connected on a combined 187 of the team's 349 triples this season. Huff's 124 three-pointers are the second-most in a single-season in program history and currently ranks him third nationally, as he is just behind Monmouth's Abdi Bashir (127 threes) and Incarnate Word's Davion Bailey (126 threes). His 233 career triples ranks him third in school history, while he is tied for eighth in program history in career three-point field goal percentage, connecting at a 40.1% clip in his standout Mocs career. Huff is shooting a blistering 42.2% (124-of-294) alone this season from deep.
The final player to keep in mind as another "glue guy" type of identity role player Jack Kostel, who like Keeslar and Champion, comes from the NCAA Division II level by way of Alabama-Huntsville, playing for former UTC head coach John Shulman. Kostel is gritty and tough, and is a decent perimeter threat, but adds a good mid-range game and is a solid on-ball defender off the bench for UTC.
Prediction: While Loyola-Chicago is a 2.5-point favorite currently according to Vegas, I think this is a night where the Mocs get hot from long range and advance to the program's first-ever NIT championship game. Chattanooga 75, Loyola-Chicago 72