GAME 1
KANSAS STATE (0-0) VS. UNC GREENSBORO (0-0)
Tuesday, November 4, 2025  |  7:01 p.m., CT  |  Bramlage Coliseum (11,010)  |  Manhattan, Kan.
TICKETS
Single-game tickets are available for as low as $14.There are a variety of season, mini-plan and group ticket packages available. These can be purchased online at kstatesports.com/tickets, by calling (800) 221.CATS or by visiting the Bramlage Coliseum Ticket Office, Monday-Friday, 8:30 am to 5 pm.
TELEVISIONESPN+ (online link)
- Ben Boyle (play-by-play)
 - Stan Weber (analyst)
 - Sophie Smith (sideline reporter)
 
RADIOK-State Sports NetworkFlagships: // KMAN 1350 & WIBW 580Satellite Radio: Ch. 390Online: Varsity Network [free] / www.kstatesports.com/watch [free]
- Wyatt Thompson (play-by-play)
 - Matt Walters (analyst)
 
LIVE STATSkstate.statbroadcast.comCOACHESK-State: Jerome Tang [Charter Oak State College â07]Record at K-State: 61-42/4th YearCareer Record: 63-42*/4th Year+vs. UNC Greensboro: 0-0UNC Greensboro: Mike Jones [Howard â87]Record at UNCG: 77-49/5th YearCareer Record: 252-199/15th Yearvs. K-State: 0-0SERIES HISTORYOverall: First meetingAt Home: First meetingAt Bramlage Coliseum: First meetingActive Streak: First meetingFirst Meeting: n/aLast Meeting: n/aJerome Tang vs. Mike Jones: First meetingK-STATE OPENS 2025-26 SEASON TUESDAY VS. UNC GREENBOROK-State officially opens the 122nd season of menâs basketball on Tuesday night when the Wildcats play host to UNC Greensboro (0-0) at Bramlage Coliseum. The game will tip off at 7:01 p.m., CT onâESPN+. It will be the first of 4 consecutive home games to start the 2025-26 season.This will be the first meeting between the two schools. K-State is 2-1 all-time vs. teams from the SouthernâConference (SoCon) in the first such meeting since a loss to Western Carolina in 2001.Led by fifth-year coach Mike Jones, UNC Greensboro returns just 3 lettermen from a squad that posted a 20-12 record and finished second in the SoCon with a 13-5 mark. The Spartans were picked 5th in the preseason SoCon poll out of 10 teams by the league coaches.LAST TIME OUT
- Juniors P.J. Haggerty (27 points) and Abdi Bashir Jr. (25 points) combined for 52 points, as K-State posted the second-most points in a home exhibition game with a 112-90 win over Division II Newman on Friday night before 6,901 fans at Bramlage Coliseum.
 - The 112 points tied for the third-most scored by the Wildcats in an exhibition game, including the most at home since a school-record 122-point effort against the University of Windsor on Nov. 29, 1979. Overall, it was the ninth 100-point game in the schoolâs exhibition history.
 - K-State shot 60 percent from the field, hitting on 42 of 70 field goal attempts, with 64 points in the paint, 34 fast-break points and 31 points off turnovers. The Wildcats had 27 assists on their 42 made field goals with 11 turnovers, while collecting 19 steals.
 - Haggerty led all scorers with 27 points, connecting on 11-of-14 field goal attempts, to go with a game-high 10 assists, 4 rebounds and 3 steals in 29 minutes, while Bashir added 25 points on 7-of-14 shooting, including 5 3-pointers. The duo was joined in double figures by senior Khamari McGriff and sophomore David Castillo, who each scored 11 points.
 
SEASON OPENER INS AND OUTS
- K-State is 94-27 all-time in season openers dating back to the first season in 1903, including an 82-10 mark at home. The Wildcats have a 30-3 record in openers played at Bramlage Coliseum, which includes a 16-game winning streak from 1995-2012. The losses came in 1993, 2013 and 2020.
 - K-State has won 19 of its last 22 season openers with home losses to Northern Colorado in 2013 and Drake in 2020 and to No. 21/22 USC in the Hall of Fame Series Las Vegas event in 2023 at the T-Mobile Center.
 - Head coach Jerome Tang is 2-1 in openers, as the Wildcats successfully opened his tenure with a 93-59 win over UTRGV on Nov. 7, 2022, before an 89-65 win over New Orleans to open 2024-25.
 - The Wildcats have been impressive at Bramlage Coliseum under Tang, posting a 39-10 mark with an 18-2 mark in non-conference play. Last season, the team went 10-6 at home (10-5 at Bramlage Coliseum) with losses to LSU, No. 12/11 Houston, Texas Tech, Arizona State and No. 10/10 Iowa State.
 
A K-STATE WIN WOULDâŠ
- Extend its winning streak in home season openers to 4.
 - Extend its record in season openers to 95-27.
 - Extend its record in home openers to 83-10.
 - Extend its record in openers at Bramlage Coliseum to 31-3.
 - Give K-State its first win over UNC Greensboro.
 
NOTES ON UNC GREENSBORO
- Led by fifth-year head coach Mike Jones, UNC Greensboro returns 3 lettermen (Domas Kauzonas, Clinton Efinda and Clyde Bailey II) from a squad that posted a 20-12 overall record, including a second-place finish in the SoCon with a 13-5 mark.
 - UNC Greensboro welcomes 12 newcomers, including 6 transfers and 6 true freshmen. The transfers include Antwann Jones (UCF), Jordan Brown (Gaston College), Valentino Pinedo (St. Francis), Justin Neely (Albany), Donald Whitehead Jr. (California Univ. of Pennsylvania) and Landon King (Brunswick Community College).
 - Among the 6 true freshmen are 3 from the international ranks, including 6-foot-7 forward Assane Mandian (Senegal) and 6-foot-2 guards Noah Norgaard (Denmark) and Lilian Marville (France).
 - UNC Greensboro is led by head coach Mike Jones, who has a 77-49 record in his fifth season at the school, including a 48-24 mark in SoCon play. He has a 252-199 overall record in his career, including a 174-150 mark at Radford (2011-21), where he led the Highlanders to 3 Big South titles, including a tournament championship and trip to the NCAAâTournament in 2018. He has had 8 20-win seasons in the last 12 years.
 
SERIESâHISTORY
- This is the first meeting between K-State and UNC Greensboro.
 - K-State is 2-1 against teams from the Southern Conference, all played at home. The Wildcats defeated Mercer, 89-60, on Nov. 29, 1997, and splitting 2 games with Western Carolina, including a 93-74 win on Nov. 14, 1997, and a 66-64 loss on Dec. 19, 2001.
 
RANKED AMONG THE NATIONâS BEST
- UNC Greensboro was one of the top defensive teams in the country in 2024-25, ranking 14th in 3-point field goal percentage defense (30.1), 15th in field goal percentage defense (40.0) and 25th in scoring defense (65.4).
 - Offensively, the Spartans ranked 26th nationally with just 9.9 turnovers per game and were 32nd in 3-point percentage (37.2).
 
FRIENDS FACE EACH OTHER
- K-Stateâs Mobi Ikegwuruka and UNC Greensboroâs Clinton Efinda have a long history, having started playing basketball together at 13 and 14 years old before making the U16 Irish National Team.
 - The friends were later reunited at Ellsworth Community College in Iowa Falls, Iowa, where they earned First Team All-Region XI honors in helping the school to a fourth-place finish at the NJCAAâDivision IIâChampionship in 2023-24. Ikegwuruka averaged a team-best 19 points and 10.3 rebounds per game, while Efinda was second in scoring at 15.2 points per game.
 
FAMILIAR FACES
- Antwann Jones will play at Bramlage Coliseum for the second time in his career after playing at UCFâin 2023-24, where he was part of Knightsâ squad who lost 77-52 to K-State. He had 2 assists and 2 rebounds, going 0-of-3 from the field, in 14 minutes.
 - Jones started his college career at Memphis in 2018-19 before spending time at Creighton (2019-21), Louisiana (2021-22), UCF, Bethune-Cookman (2024-25) and now UNC Greensboro.
 
DRISCOLL BEAT THE SPARTANS IN 2024
- Associate head coach Matthew Driscoll has a win over UNC Greensboro, as his North Florida team defeated the Spartans at home, 89-77, on Dec. 14, 2024. The Ospreys had 5 players score in double figures, as they shot 47.8 percent from the field, including 38.7 percent from 3-point range.
 
RECAPPING EXHIBITION PLAY:MISSOURI 100, K-STATE 91 [Exh.]
- Junior P.J. Haggerty paced all scorers with a game-high 23 points and 6 assists while senior Nate Johnson added 14 points, as K-State opened exhibition play with a 100-91 loss at Missouri on Oct. 24 at Mizzou Arena.
 - Haggerty scored his 23 points on 8-of-14 field goals, including 2-of-4 from 3-point range, and 5-of-7 free throws to go with his game-high 6 assists, 2 rebounds and 2 steals in 25 minutes. Johnson made 5-of-11 shots, including 2-of-5 from long range, to go with a team-high 6 rebounds.
 - Four Tigers scored in double figures, including 16 points each from junior Anthony Robinson II and graduate Jayden Stone, as Missouri connected on 54.8 percent (34-of-62) from the field with 54 points in the paint and 29 fast-break points. The Tigers return 3 starters and 7 lettermen from one of the most potent offenses in the country, ranking ninth nationally at 83.6 points per game.The Wildcats shot nearly 50 percent from the field (49.3 percent; 33-of-67), while getting 44 points in the paint and 35 points from their bench, as head coach Jerome Tang used a platoon-type system for much of the first half. Nine other players scored at least 5 points, including 7 points from junior Elias Rapieque and freshman Andrej Kostic.
 - Haggerty, Johnson and Rapieque were joined in the starting lineup by junior Abdi Bashir Jr. and senior Khamari McGriff, playing the first 3 minutes before being replaced by sophomore David Castillo, senior C.J. Jones, Kostic, sophomore Mobi Ikegwuruka and junior Dorin Buca for the next 3 minutes. The platooning went on every 3 minutes until the original starters came back in at the 8:43 mark in the midst of a 14-0 run by the Tigers.
 - Robinson scored 11 of his 16 points during the pivotal 14-0 run in which Missouri took control of the game. The Tigers flipped a 16-10 deficit into a 24-16 lead before a timeout by Tang with 8:43 to play. The lead grew to 46-32 with 2:10 remaining before the Wildcats closed to 47-39 on a layup by Haggerty.
 - K-State twice closed to within 6 points in the early moment of the second half, including 63-57 on a 3-pointer by Johnson and 65-59 on 2 free throws by Johnson. However, the explosive Tigers scored 17 of the next 21 points to take an 82-63 lead with 8:16 to play. The Wildcats scored the last 7 points, including a layup by Buca, a 3-pointer from Taj Manning and 2 free throws from Jones.
 
K-STATE 112, NEWMAN 9
- P.J. Haggerty and Abdi Bashir Jr. combined for 52 points, as K-State posted the second-most points in a home exhibition game with a 112-90 victory over Division II Newman on Friday night at Bramlage Coliseum.
 - The 112 points tied for the third-most scored by the Wildcats in an exhibition game, including the most at home since a school-record 122-point effort against the University of Windsor on Nov. 29, 1979. Overall, it was the ninth 100-point game in the schoolâs exhibition history.
 - K-State shot 60 percent from the field, hitting on 42 of 70 field goal attempts, with 64 points in the paint, 34 fast-break points and 31 points off turnovers. The Wildcats had 27 assists, while posting 19 steals.
 - Haggerty led all scorers with 27 points, connecting on 11-of-14 field goal attempts, to go with a game-high 10 assists, 4 rebounds and 3 steals in 29 minutes, while Bashir added 25 points on 7-of-14 shooting, including 5 3-pointers. The duo was joined in double figures by senior Khamari McGriff and sophomore David Castillo, who each scored 11 points.
 - Newman led for more than 6 minutes behind a barrage of 3-pointers, as 13 of its first 16 made field goals came from long range. The Jets finished with 18, including 5 from sophomore Jayden Schoen and senior Brandon Wilson.
 
HAGGERTY AMONG THE BEST
- Junior P.J. Haggerty is the among the best players to transfer to K-State, as he is coming off a career-best year in 2024-25, in which, he became the first Memphis Tiger since 2008 to be named an APâAll-American while becoming the first Division I player to average at least 21.5 points, 5.5 rebounds, 3.5 assists and 1.5 steals per game to go with 6.5 free throws per game since Ja Morant in 2018-19. He is the only Division I player to average at 21 points, 5.5 rebounds, 3.5 assists and 1.5 steals per game in each of the last 2 seasons.
 - Haggerty ranked third nationally in both scoring (21.7 ppg.) and total points (759) in 2024-25, while his 759 points were an AAC single-season record and the most since Dajuan Wagner (762) set the school season record in 2001-02.
 - Haggerty was a consensus Second Team All-American in his lone season at Memphis, while was just the second Tiger to be named the AAC Player of the Year as well as Most Outstanding Player at the AAC Tournament. He was also a finalist for the Jerry West Shooting Guard of the Year award, the Wooden Award and the Riley Wallace Award as the most impactful transfer.
 - Haggerty, who has also made stops at TCU (2022-23) and Tulsa (2023-24), has scored more than 1,400 points (1,433) in his college career, connecting on 48.4 percent from the field and 79.1 percent from the free throw line. He has scored in double figures in 64 of 72 career games with 25 games of 25 or more points, including two 30-point games and one 40-point game. He scored a career-high 42 points vs. Wichita State on March 14.
 
HAGGERTYâS PRESEASON ACCOLADES
- 2025-26 Jersey Mikeâs Naismith College Player of the Year Watch List
 - 2025-26 NABC Preseason Division I Player of the Year Watch List
 - 2025-26 Jay Bilas Preseason First Team All-American
 - 2025-26 @CBB Analytics Preseason First Team All-American
 - 2025-26 CBS Sports Preseason Third Team All-American
 - 2025-26 The Field of 68 Preseason Third Team All-American
 - 2025-26 Preseason All-Big 12 Team (coaches)
 - 2025-26 Jerry West Award Preseason Watch List (one of 20)
 
HAGGERTY ALSO GREAT AT LINE
- In addition to his scoring prowess, P.J. Haggerty is also great at getting to the free throw line, as he ranked in the top-3 nationally in both free throws made and attempted in the past 2 seasons, including second in attempts (309) and third in makes (237) in 2023-24 while at Tulsa and second in both makes (224) and attempts (274) in 2024-25 while at Memphis.
 - Haggerty has made 461 free throws on 583 attempts in the past 2 seasons, averaging nearly 7 makes on nearly 9 attempts in his last 66 games played.
 - Last season, Haggerty connected on 81.8 percent from the free throw line with an AAC-best 224 makes on 274 attempts. He went perfect from the line in 6 games, including 14-of-14 vs. Tulane on March 15 in the AAC Tournament. He made 27 straight free throws at one point during the season.
 - Haggerty drew 7.9 fouls per 40 minutes as a sophomore at Tulsa in 2023-24, finishing behind only National Player of the Year Zach Edey with 309 free throw attempts, while his 237 free throws were the third-most in the country.
 
BASHIR GOOD FROM 3
- Junior guard Abdi Bashir Jr. is among the best returning 3-point shooting in the country, as he led the NCAA in 3-point field goals/game (3.85) while he was second in total 3-point field goals (127) and 3-point field goals attempted (332) in 2024-25). He broke both the Monmouth and CAA single-season record for 3-pointers (327).
 - Bashir connected on a career-high 10 3-pointers in his 38-point performance against Rutgers on Nov. 18, 2024. The 10 treys tied for the second-most in Monmouth history. He made at least 5 3-pointers in 12 games, while he had 8 triples in back-to-back games vs. Northeastern (2/24/25) and Elon (2/27/25).
 - Bashir has made 178 3-point field goals in his 66-game college career on 38.4 percent shooting, which is nearly 3 made 3-pointers per game.
 - As a sophomore, Bashir led Monmouth and the CAA in scoring at 20.1 points per game, while he was 16th in scoring and 25th in total points (663) in the NCAA. He posted five 30-point games, which tied for the most in program history, while he scored 20 or more points in 13 other contests. He scored a career-high 38 points at Rutgers on Nov. 15, 2024, which were the most points scored against the Scarlet Knight since 1977.
 - Bashir also had notable performances against Michigan State (20 points), Wichita State (15 points), Stephen F. Austin (30 points), Seton Hall (28 points), Lehigh (22 points), Princeton (26 points) and Auburn (15 points) in 2024-25.
 
BASHIR ALSO A TWIN
- Junior Abdi Bashir Jr. and his brother Abdul are among 9 sets of twins playing Division Iâbasketball in 2025-26, including one of 3 sets of identical twins (Illinoisâ Tomislav and Zvonimir Ivisic and Texas Stateâs Dimp and Ky Pernell).
 - The Bashirs also one of 3 sets of twins playing at different schools, joining Ethan (Air Force) and Eli (Le Moyne) Greenberg and Tajuan (Seton Hall) and Takai (Oregon) Simpkins.
 
TWINS PLAYING DIVISION I BASKETBALL
- Abdi and Abdul Bashir (K-State, Auburn)
 - Micah and Marley Curtis (North Dakota)
 - Cameron and Cayden Boozer (Duke)
 - Dominykas and Dovydas Butka (Campbell)
 - Ethan and Eli Greenberg (Air Force, Le Moyne)
 - Tomislav and Zvonimir Ivisic (Illinois)
 - Dimp and Ky Pernell (Texas State)
 - Tajuan and Takai Simpkins (Seton Hall, Oregon)
 - Donny and MJ Yeager (Oakland)
 
âCATS PICKED 9TH IN BIG 12 POLL; HAGGERTY NAMED TO ALL-BIG 12 TEAM
- K-State was picked ninth in the 16-team Big 12 preseason poll, while junior transfer P.J. Haggerty was one of 10 selections to the Preseason All-Big 12 by the league coaches.
 - The Wildcats totaled 117 points in the preseason poll, just 3 points behind eighth-place Cincinnati and 27 points ahead of 10th-place TCU.
 - Reigning regular-season and tournament champion Houston was selected first with 224 points and 14 of the 16 first-place votes followed by second-place BYU (204 points, one first-place vote) and third-place Texas Tech (200 points). The rest of the top-7 included Arizona (179 points, one first-place vote), Iowa State (170), Kansas (163) and Baylor (137).
 - The rest of the preseason poll included eighth-place Cincinnati (120) followed by K-State, TCU, West Virginia, Oklahoma State, Utah, UCF, Colorado and Arizona State.
 - Haggertyâs selection marks the second straight year that a Wildcat has been named to the preseason all-conference team (Coleman Hawkins, 2024) by the league coaches. He is one of nine players in school history to be chosen for preseason all-conference honors dating to Manny Dies in 1998-99. Others include Jacob Pullen and Curtis Kelly in 2010-11, Rodney McGruder in 2012-13 and Marcus Foster in 2014-15 and Barry Brown Jr. and Dean Wade in 2018-19.
 
WHATâS BACK FOR K-STATE
- K-State returns 4 players (C.J. Jones, David Castillo, Mobi Ikegwuruka and Taj Manning) from the 2024-25 season, in which, the Wildcats posted a 16-17 record, including a tie for ninth in Big 12 play with a 9-11 mark.
 - Jones played in all 33 games with 9 starts in his first season in 2024-25 after starting his college career at UIC where he played in 62 games from 2022-24. He averaged 5.7 points, 1.7 rebounds and 1.5 assists in 18.9 minutes per game.
 - Castillo played in 32 games as a true freshman in 2024-25, averaging 2.4 points, 0.6 rebounds and 0.8 assists in 10 minutes per game.
 - Ikegwuruka played in 24 games as a sophomore, scoring in 15 games.
 - Manning has seen action in 22 games with a start in his K-State playing career, which dates back to the 2022-23 season.
 
WHATâS NEW FOR K-STATE
- The team welcomes 10 newcomers, including 5 Division I transfers (Abdi Bashir Jr., P.J. Haggerty, Marcus Johnson, Nate Johnson and Khamari McGriff), 4 international players (Dorin Buca, Andrej Kostic, Stephen Osei and Elias Rapieque) and one freshman (Exavier Wilson).
 - Bashir was the top 3-point shooter in the nation at 3.85 per game as a sophomore at Monmouth in 2024-25, where he was a First Team All-CAA selection.
 - Haggerty was a consensus Second Team All-American at Memphis last season, where he ranked third nationally in scoring at 21.7 ppg.
 - Johnson has scored more than 1,900 points in his college career, including more than 1,600 points at the Division I and II ranks at Wheeling and Bowling Green.
 - Johnson transferred after 3 seasons at Akron where he became the first Zip to be named both the MAC Player and Defensive Player of the Year in 2024-25.
 - McGriff was part of 99 wins in 4 seasons at UNC Wilmington, where he developed into the CAAâs Top Six man and was named to the All-CAA Tournament team.
 - Buca is one of the tallest players in school history at 7-foot-2, playing for Akern Libertas Livorno in 2024-25 in the Italian Series A2.
 - Kostic was a member of the Serbian U18 and U19 National Teams, winning gold at the 2023 European U18 Championship. He grew up in the KK Crvena Zvezda club team.
 - Osei played at Casper College in 2024-25, where he scored in 15 of 26 games with 3 20-point games and 7 double-doubles.
 - Rapieque was a member of the German U18 and U20 National Teams, playing at the 2023 and 2024 European U20 Championships. He grew up in the ALBA Berlin club team.
 - Wilson scored more than 1,700 career points in his prep career at Tolton Catholic High School in Columbia, Mo., which ranks second behind only Michael Porter Jr.
 
FIVE INTERNATIONAL PLAYERS
- K-Stateâs 5 international players (juniors Dorin Buca, Mobi Ikegwuruka and Elias Rapieque, sophomore Stephen Osei and freshman Andrej Kostic) are the most on any Wildcat team in school history.
 - Buca (Perugia, Italy), Kostic (Belgrade, Serbia) and Rapieque (Berlin, Germany) are the first Wildcat players from their respective countries.
 
RECAPPING LAST SEASON
- During a roller coaster of a season that included a 6-game losing streak followed by a 6-game winning streak, K-State could not overcome an up-and-down non-conference season, as the Wildcats finished with a 16-17 overall record, including a tie for ninth place with TCU in the new-look 16-team Big 12 with a 9-11 mark.
 - Among the 16 wins were 10 over teams that advanced to the postseason (3 NCAA Tournament, 1 NIT and 6 College Basketball Crown), including ranked wins over No. 3/3 Iowa State, No. 16/17 Cincinnati, No. 16/17 Kansas and No. 23/23 West Virginia.
 - K-State won 6 of its first 8 games before losing its last 3 non-conference games (at St. Johnâs, Drake and Wichita State) to enter Big 12 play with a 6-5 record. After a 70-67 win over No. 16/17 Cincinnati in the Big 12 opener, the Wildcats lost their next 6 league games (at TCU, at Oklahoma State, No. 12/11 Houston, Texas Tech, at No. 9/10 Kansas and at Baylor). After an impressive win over No. 23/23 West Virginia, the team rattled off 5 more victories, including an 80-61 win at No. 3/3 Iowa State and back-to-back home wins over No. 16/17 Kansas and No. 13/13 Arizona. However, the Wildcats couldnât keep the momentum going with 4 straight losses (at BYU and Utah, Arizona State and at UCF). The team won 3 of their last 4 before falling to Baylor at the Big 12 Championship.
 - Seniors Coleman Hawkins and David NâGuessan were both lauded for their outstanding seasons, as Hawkins was named to the All-Big 12 Third Team while NâGuessan was selected to the Honorable Mention team.
 - Hawkins was the only Division I player in the country to average at least 10 points, 6.5 rebounds, 4 assists, 1.5 steals and 1.0 blocks per game. The Wildcatsâ leading scorer (13.3 ppg.) and rebounder (7.2 rpg.), NâGuessan led the Big 12 with a 64.4 field goal percentage while ranking in the leagueâs top 20 in both scoring and rebounding.
 
1750 WINSâANDâCOUNTING
- K-State enters the 2025-26 season as one of the winningest programs in Division I history, as the Wildcats have posted a 1,756-1,255 (.583) all-time record which includes 32 NCAA Tournament appearances and 21 conference championships
 - The 1,756 wins are the 43rd-most in Division I history (one shy of Virginia in 42nd), including the seventh-most among current Big 12 schools.
 
SUCCESS IN NON-CONFERENCE PLAY
- K-State has posted a 188-62 (.752) record in non-conference play since the 2006-07 season. During that span, the Wildcats have a 146-18 (.890) mark at home venues (includes games played at Bramlage Coliseum, INTRUSTâBank Arena in Wichita and the T-Mobile Center in Kansas City) in non-conference play, including a 130-14 (.903) mark at Bramlage Coliseum.
 - K-Stateâs 12-1 non-conference mark in 2022-23 was the best since the 2009-10 team went a program-best 13-1. Last season, the team went 7-6 in non-conference play, including 4-1 in Bramlage Coliseum.
 





