Ray Meyer coached at DePaul for over 40 years, from 1942 to 1984. After going to the Final Four of the 1979 NCAA Division I Basketball Tournament, Meyer's team was the No. 1 seed in its regional three years in a row in 1980, 1981 and 1982. Success continued with multiple NCAA appearances under his son, Joey Meyer, throughout the 1980s.
DePaul was independent for much of its basketball history. DePaul joined the Great Midwest Conference in 1991 which later merged with the Metro Conference in 1995 to become Conference USA, in which DePaul was a member through 2005. DePaul left for the Big East Conference for the 2005–06 season, and remained a member of the reconfigured Big East in 2013.
Lack of Success since 1989
Since the 1989-90 season, DePaul has won one NCAA tournament game in the 29 seasons that have transpired. DePaul has not qualified for the NCAA Tournament since the 2003-04 season, and has been to only two NCAA Tournaments since 1991-92. The Blue Demons have not been to postseason play at all since 2006-07. DePaul has finished last in the Big East eight of the past ten seasons concluding with a tie for last in the 2017-18 season.
From 1981-1986 DePaul was in the Top 25 year in and year out for home game attendance and most of the years they were Top Ten in fans, but what happened to those days? When Legendary coach Ray Meyer retired in 1984 after 42 seasons of coaching DePaul basketball, his son Joey Meyer stepped in and did pretty well, taking the team to the post season 7 out of his first 8 seasons at DePaul. Times would not be good though from 1986-1989 the Demons got caught for multiple NCAA violations and had to vacate all NCAA tournament appearances and wins. Attendance took a turn for the worst during this time of woe and has not recovered since.
No. of Games Played – Opponent (All-Time W-L) • First Game • Last Game
127 – Marquette (48-79) • 1917-18 • 2019-20
106 - Notre Dame (44-62) • 1911-12 • 2018-19
69 - Dayton (34-35) • 1920-21 • 2005-06
61 - Saint Louis (34-27) • 1924-25 • 2008-09
46 - St. John’s (20-26) • 1931-32 • 2019-20
44 – Providence (12-32) • 1960-61 • 2019-20
43 – Georgetown (11-32) • 1941-42 • 2019-20
38 – Creighton (16-22) • 1937-38 • 2019-20
38 – Villanova (8-30) • 1938-39 • 2019-20
27 – Xavier (11-16) • 1938-39 • 2019-20
26 - Seton Hall (8-18) • 1941-42 • 2019-20
20 – Butler (7-13) • 1938-39 • 2019-20
11 – UConn (1-10) • 2003-04 • 2012-13
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Page 132: Dayton vs. Big East Conference Teams: 175-166 • Pages 133-143: ALL-TIME SERIES RESULTS
No. of Games Played – Opponent (All-Time W-L) • First Game • Last Game
160 – Xavier (84-76) • 1920-21 • 2015-16
69 - DePaul (35-34) • 1920-21 • 2005-06
64 - Saint Louis* (36-28) • 1951-52 • 2018-19
41 - Notre Dame (13-28) • 1908-09 • 1994-95
35 – Marquette (14-21) • 1966-67 • 2008-09
24 – Butler (11-13) • 1924-25 • 2012-13
11 – Creighton (7-4) • 1960-61 • 2009-10
11 - Seton Hall (7-4) • 1948-49 • 2011-12
10 - St. John’s (5-5) • 1939-40 • 1973-74
10 – Villanova (5-5) • 1952-53 • 2009-10
8 – Providence (6-2) • 1962-63 • 2014-15
3 – Georgetown (1-2) • 1951-52 • 1983-84
3 – UConn (2-1) • 1981-82 • 2014-15
* Includes UD’s two wins over Saint Louis on January 18, 2020 and February 8, 2020.
The professional baseball team known as the ‘Chicago Cubs’ for the last 115 years began in the late 1860’s and was officially known as ‘The Chicago Base Ball Club’. It was common at the time for sportswriters to refer to teams by their uniform colors, and it happens that Chicago's club, which, adopted white and were immediately tagged by reporters as ‘White Stockings’. On April 29, 1870, the ‘Chicago White Stockings’ played their first game against the Union Club of St. Louis, and soundly defeated the Unions 7–1.
During the 1875 season, the White Stockings president William Hulbert poached Cap Anson from Philadelphia Athletics. Anson's mark was so deep that by the mid-1890s sportswriters had dropped the ‘White Stockings’ name in favor of the ‘Chicago Colts’, or more commonly, ‘Anson's Colts’. The ‘Colts’ name remained in circulation through the 1905 season. The name ’Cubs’ first appeared in print in 1902 and gained popularity over the next four years, before becoming the sole nickname in 1906.
Wikipedia wrote:
1789 • Georgetown University is founded • Catholic (Jesuit)
1818 • Saint Louis University is founded • Catholic (Jesuit)
1831 • Xavier University is founded • Catholic (Jesuit)
1842 • Villanova University is founded • Catholic (Augustinian)
1842 • Notre Dame University is founded • Catholic (Holy Cross)
1850 • University of Dayton is founded • Catholic (Marianist)
1851 • Northwestern University is founded • Private
1855 • Butler University is founded • Private (Christian)
1856 • Seton Hall University is founded • Catholic (Diocesan)
1870 • Loyola University Chicago is founded • Catholic (Jesuit)
1870 • St. John's University is founded • Catholic (Vincentian)
1878 • Creighton University is founded • Catholic (Jesuit)
1881 • Marquette University is founded • Catholic (Jesuit)
1881 • University of Connecticut is founded • Public
1890 • University of Chicago is founded • Private
1898 • DePaul College is founded • Catholic (Vincentian)
1907 • The college is re-chartered as ’DePaul University’
1917 • Providence College is founded • Catholic (Dominican)
1998 • DePaul University became the largest Catholic university by enrollment in the United States.
The Chicago White Sox are a Major League Baseball team based on the South Side of Chicago. They are one of eight charter members of the American League, having played in Chicago since the inaugural 1901 season.
The Black Sox Scandal was a Major League Baseball game-fixing scandal in which eight members of the Chicago White Sox were accused of throwing the 1919 World Series against the Cincinnati Reds in exchange for money from a gambling syndicate led by Arnold Rothstein, Aiden Clayton, and Aaron Nelson.
DePaul Blue Demons
Icon: Ray Meyer • Seasons coached: 1942-1984
Key accomplishments: 13 NCAA tournaments, 2 NCAA Final Fours (1943, 1979), 1 NIT championship (1945)
Ranking the Ray Meyer Chasers:
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------When selecting its field, NIT organizers had a simple goal: Put the nation’s best teams in a single elimination competition — no matter where the selected schools were located.
“In those years, the NIT was a more prestigious tournament than the NCAA,” former DePaul head coach Ray Meyer wrote in his autobiography Coach. “It was played in New York, while the NCAA was played on scattered campuses in smaller towns. The schools took home thousands of dollars as their share of the gate receipts for playing in Madison Square Garden. In the NCAA eliminations, they were lucky to make expenses. So the NIT meant a lot more to a struggling private school like DePaul.”
Don Donoher played three years of varsity basketball for Coach Tom Blackburn at the University of Dayton. Following graduation from Dayton in 1954, Donoher served a two-year enlistment in the United States Army. Returning to Dayton after the end of his service, Donoher accepted a part-time basketball scout position offered by Blackburn. In February 1963, Blackburn made Donoher the University's first full-time assistant coach.
Blackburn had been suffering from cancer for most of the 1963-64 season. On March 6, 1964, Tom Blackburn died from cancer – just 26 hours before the season finally against rival DePaul - and Don Donoher was formally named his successor. However, Dayton credits the entire 1963-64 season to Blackburn.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------While Ray Meyer guided the Demons to a 724-354 record, his son's teams struggled in recent years. They lost their last 13 games last season to finish 3-23. That came on the heels of an 11-18 mark the previous season.
NEW YORK - The BIG EAST Conference announced that five institutions have accepted invitations for membership into the league. Those schools are: University of Cincinnati, DePaul University, University of Louisville, Marquette University, and the University of South Florida. The additions were authorized by a vote of the league’s Presidents.
“DePaul has capitalized on an extraordinary opportunity to join the BIG EAST and we look forward to the rivalries we will develop in this new league”, said the Rev. John P. Minogue, C.M., president of DePaul. “have great respect for the leadership and the universities in Conference USA. We have made many good friends there, and we wish the conference well as it pursues its own destiny.”
“I am excited for student-athletes, coaches, alumni and fans”, said Jean Lenti Ponsetto, DePaul’s Director of Athletics. “This invitation to the BIG EAST allows us to renew rivalries with some old friends and positions DePaul to compete against institutions who share similar philosophies both academically and athletically.” All five universities, which currently compete in Conference USA, will begin BIG EAST Conference play in the 2005-06 academic year.
In 1940, Americans closely followed the news of Germany's armed forces overrunning most of Europe, while Japan was using its military aggressively in East Asia. Public opinion in the United States was changing sharply from isolationism to the possibility of military action against the Axis powers of Italy, Japan and Germany.
On September 16, 1940, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed into law the Selective Training and Service Act, which was another name for the draft. It required all men between the ages of 21 and 45 to register for the draft. While there were wartime drafts during the Revolutionary War, the Civil War and World War I, this draft was different. It was the nation’s first peacetime draft.
Following Japan's surprise attack on Pearl Harbor, Hawaii in 1941, Congress amended the act to require all able-bodied men ages 18 to 64 to register with their local draft board for military service for the duration of World War II plus six months after. In practice, however, only men 18 to 45 were drafted.
During the course of the war, more than 10 million men were inducted into the Army, Navy and Marines through the draft. However, most men who served, as well as a lot of women, volunteered for the military.
8-Team Field: Dartmouth, DePaul, Georgetown, NYU, Oklahoma, Texas, Washington, Wyoming
Quarterfinal: DePaul 46, Dartmouth 35
Quarterfinal: Georgetown 55, NYU 36
Semifinal: Georgetown 53, DePaul 49
Final: Wyoming 46, Georgetown 34
8-Team Field: Bowling Green, Canisius, DePaul, Kentucky, Muhlenberg, Oklahoma A&M, St. John's, Utah
Quarterfinal: DePaul 68, Muhlenberg 45
Quarterfinal: St. John's 44, Bowling Green 40
Semifinal: DePaul 41, Oklahoma A&M 38
Semifinal: St. John's 48, Kentucky 45
National Championship game: St. John's 47, DePaul 39
1944-45: Defensive goaltending is banned. (i.e. the new ‘George Mikan’ rule)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------8-Team Field: Bowling Green, DePaul, Muhlenberg, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Rhode Island, St. John's, Tennessee, West Virginia
Quarterfinal: DePaul 76, West Virginia 52
Quarterfinal: St. John's 34, Muhlenberg 33
Semifinal: DePaul 97, Rhode Island 53
Semifinal: Bowling Green 57, St. John's 44
National Championship game: DePaul 71, Bowling Green 54
Toppin Has Been Named In Five Of The Six Major Player Of The Year Awards
1980 • Second Round • #8 UCLA 77, #1 DePaul 71
1981 • Second Round • #9 Saint Joseph's 49, #1 DePaul 48
1982 • Second Round • #8 Boston College 82, #1 DePaul 75
1984 • Second Round • #1 DePaul 75, #8 Illinois State 61 •••• 1984 Sweet Sixteen • #4 Wake Forest 73, #1 DePaul 71, OT
Seed No. • Team • Conference • Average Seed No.
1 • Kansas • Big 12 • 1.00
1 • Gonzaga • West Coast • 1.00
1 • Baylor • Big 12 • 1.01
1 • Dayton • Atlantic 10 • 1.08
2 • San Diego State • Mountain West • 1.97
2 • Florida State • ACC • 2.01
2 • Villanova • Big East • 2.21
2 • Creighton • Big East • 2.31
3 • Seton Hall • Big East • 3.30
5 • Butler • Big East • 4.90
8 • Providence • Big East • 8.14
9 • Marquette • Big East • 8.87
The 1978–79 DePaul Blue Demons were led by head coach Ray Meyer, in his 37th season, and played their home games at the Alumni Hall in Chicago. After starting the regular season unranked, the Blue Demons won 22 of 27 games to earn a top ten ranking and the #2 seed in the West region of the NCAA Tournament. DePaul began tournament play by defeating USC and Marquette, then knocked off #1 seed UCLA, avenging a season-opening loss, to earn the program's second trip to the Final Four. The team fell to the #1 ranked and unbeaten Indiana State – led by NCAA Player of the Year Larry Bird – in the National Semifinals. They finished the season with an overall record of 26–6.
Michigan State won the national title with a 75–64 victory in the Championship game over Indiana State, who came into the game undefeated, but couldn't extend their winning streak. Magic Johnson of Michigan State was named the tournament's Most Outstanding Player.
The final game marked the beginning of the rivalry between future Hall of Famers Magic Johnson and Larry Bird. As of 2016, it remains the highest-rated game in the history of televised college basketball. Both Johnson and Bird would enter the NBA in the fall of 1979, and the rivalry between them and their teams (respectively, the Los Angeles Lakers and Boston Celtics) was a major factor in the league's renaissance in the 1980s and 1990s. The game also led to the "modern era" of college basketball, as it introduced a nationwide audience to a sport that was once relegated to second-class status in the sports world.
DePaul was seeded #2 in the West Region, behind #1 seed UCLA. . DePaul had a bye in the First Round of the 40-team tournament.
Second Round (Round of 32): #2 DePaul 89, #7 USC 78
Regional Semifinal (Sweet 16): #2 DePaul 62, #3 Marquette 56
Regional Final (Elite 8): #2 DePaul 95, #1 UCLA 91
National Semifinal (Final Four): #1 Indiana State 76, #2 DePaul 74
National Third Place Game: #2 DePaul 96, #9 Penn 93
National Championship Game: #2 Michigan State 75, #1 Indiana State 64
Game No. • Date • Game Type • AP Ranking Opponent • Result • Venue
1. Sat, Nov 25, 1978 • REG • @ #2 UCLA • Lost 85-108 • Pauley Pavilion
6. Wed, Dec 13, 1978 • REG • @ Butler • Won 81-62 • Hinkle Fieldhouse
10. Sat, Dec 30, 1978 • REG • Creighton • Won 88-70 • Alumni Hall
13. Tue, Jan 9, 1979 • REG • @ Providence • Won 84-75 • Dunkin' Donuts Center
15. Sat, Jan 20, 1979 • REG • @ Dayton • Lost 64-68 • University of Dayton Arena
22. Sat, Feb 17, 1979 • REG • @ Villanova • Won 69-66 • The Palestra
24. Sat, Feb 24, 1979 • REG • #9 Marquette • Won 61-60 • Alumni Hall
25. Fri, Mar 2, 1979 • REG • #2 Notre Dame • Won 76-72 • Alumni Hall
27. Sun, Mar 11, 1979 • NCAAT • Southern California • Won 89-78 • Pauley Pavilion
28. Thu, Mar 15, 1979 • NCAAT • #10 Marquette • Won 62-56 • Marriott Center
29. Sat, Mar 17, 1979 • NCAAT • #2 UCLA • Won 95-91 • Marriott Center
30. Sat, Mar 24, 1979 • NCAAT • #1 Indiana State • Lost 74-76 • Jon M. Huntsman Center
31. Mon, Mar 26, 1979 • NCAAT • #14 Pennsylvania (Third Place game) • Won 96-93 OT • Jon M. Huntsman Center
89 Games • 24.5 PPG • 7.9 RPG • 3.3 APG • 54.6 FG% • 76.8 FT%
Mark Aguirre is recognized as one of the best college basketball players ever. Along with George Mikan and Ray Meyer, his name is one of the most synonymous with DePaul basketball. Although he played only three seasons at DePaul, Aguirre remains the school’s all-time leading scorer.
In his first season at DePaul in 1978-79, Aguirre set Chicago and the college basketball world on its ear by leading the Blue Demons to the Final Four with a 26-6 record. Aguirre averaged 24 points and 7.6 rebounds as a freshman and made DePaul’s Alumni Hall the place to be in the city.
Aguirre did not disappoint as a sophomore, leading the Blue Demons to a 26-2 record and No.1 ranking for most of the season. He averaged 26.8 points and 7.6 rebounds. Aguirre also was named to the 1980 U.S. Olympic team.
His junior season was almost identical to his sophomore year except for one thing, the Blue Demons had a new home arena - the Rosemont Horizon. Aguirre helped pack the new suburban home, averaging 13,369 fans per game.
DePaul became a fixture on national television and Aguirre averaged 23 points and 8.6 rebounds a contest for a team that would finish the year 27-2 and ranked No. 1. Once again, Aguirre was named a
consensus first team All-American. In his three years at DePaul, Aguirre led the Blue Demons to a 79-10 (.888) record.
1. Indiana State
2. UCLA
3. Michigan State
4. Notre Dame
5. Arkansas
6. DePaul
1. DePaul
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------1. DePaul
DePaul saw an 11-point lead fade in the last 6:13 and missed three free throws in the closing minute that could have secured the lead. Dayton (15-8) posted its second straight home-court victory over DePaul. Larry Schellenberg hit two free throws with 13 seconds left to bring Dayton to 71-70. DePaul's Raymond McCoy was fouled, but missed his first free throw with 11 seconds left. Schellenberg rebounded and passed to Roosevelt Chapman, who fed Young for the winning shot and Dayton's only lead of the second half.
Dayton 72, DePaul 71 (February 18, 1984)
One of the most famous games and memorable games in UD Arena history came in 1984, when Dayton upset AP No. 3 DePaul with "The Shot" at the buzzer.
It was the 250th game at UD Arena and DePaul was coming in ranked No. 3 at 19-1. With the game being nationally televised on NBC, you had that feeling something special was about to happen.
Finding itself down 11 at 65-54 with six minutes left in the game, UD started to turn it up. The Flyers went on a run scoring six straight unanswered points, closing the gap to 65-60 with 3:32 remaining. A long jumper by guard Sedric Toney with 1:09 to go would make it 69-66. With 37 seconds left, Larry Schellenberg tipped in a miss to put the Flyers within one. After two Dallas Comegy free throws, Schelly nailed two of his own to make it 71-70.
The next 11 second would go down in UD basketball history as one of the most thrilling game-ending shots. After fouling Blue Demon Raymond McCoy on the inbound, it looked like UD would fall just short of a great comeback. But McCoy missed and Schellenberg came down with the rebound. In what seemed like slow motion, he dribbled up the court and found teammate and UD's all-time leading scorer Roosevelt Chapman. Instead of taking the shot, Chapman incredibly dished it off to Ed Young who banked in the eight-footer over Marty Embry as time expired."It was a great pass from Chap. I had no idea how much time there was," said Young "I just shot and looked up to see one second on the clock."
"The Shot" would propel the Flyers into the NCAA tournament for the first time in 10 years, and UD would go on to make the tournament's Elite Eight.
Player • Class • Position • Height • Summary
Roosevelt Chapman • SR • G • 6-4 • 21.8 Pts, 9.1 Reb, 2.4 Ast
Ed Young • SO • F • 6-7 • 13.4 Pts, 6.6 Reb, 1.6 Ast
Sedric Toney • SR • G • 6-2 • 11.6 Pts, 2.5 Reb, 2.9 Ast
Damon Goodwin • SO • F • 6-6 • 10.1 Pts, 4.6 Reb, 1.5 Ast
Larry Schellenberg • JR • G • 6-3 • 6.6 Pts, 3.8 Reb, 4.4 Ast
Dan Christie • FR • G • 6-1 • 3.6 Pts, 0.9 Reb, 1.8 Ast
Anthony Grant • FR • F • 0.8 Pts, 1.0 Reb, 0.1 Ast
The 1984 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament involved 53 schools playing a single-elimination tournament. It began on March 13, 1984, and ended with the Championship Game on April 2 in Seattle. This was the last tournament in which some teams earned first round byes as the field expanded to 64 teams beginning in the 1985 tournament when each team played in the first round. It was also the second year with a preliminary round; preliminary games would not be played again until 2001.
Georgetown, coached by John Thompson, won the national title with an 84–75 victory in the final game over Houston. Thompson became the first African-American head coach to lead his team to any NCAA Division I title.
Winning Coach: John Thompson (1st title)
MOP: Patrick Ewing (Georgetown)
Top Scorer: Roosevelt Chapman (Dayton) – 105 points
Midwest Regional – St. Louis, Missouri
First Round: #1 DePaul - Bye
Second Round (Round of 32): #1 DePaul 75, #8 Illinois State 61
Regional Semifinal (Sweet 16): #4 Wake Forest 73, #1 DePaul 71 OT
West Regional – Los Angeles
First Round: #10 Dayton 74, #7 LSU 66
Second Round (Round of 32): #10 Dayton 89, #2 Oklahoma 85
Regional Semifinal (Sweet 16): #10 Dayton 74, #6 Washington 58
Regional Final (Elite 8): #1 Georgetown 61, #10 Dayton 49
First Round: #1 Georgetown - Bye
Second Round (Round of 32): #1 Georgetown 37, #9 Southern Methodist 36
Regional Semifinal (Sweet 16): #1 Georgetown 62, #5 UNLV 48
Regional Final (Elite 8): #1 Georgetown 61, #10 Dayton 49
National Semifinal (Final Four): #1 Georgetown 53, #1 Kentucky 40
National Championship Game: #1 Georgetown 84, #2 Houston 75
The Flyers’ all-time leading scorer guided UD on an Elite Eight run in 1984 that included a 41-point, 8-rebound performance against second-seeded Oklahoma in the 89-85 second-round win. Victories against LSU, Oklahoma and Washington led UD to a regional final loss against eventual national champion Georgetown.
Chapman finished his UD career with 2,233 points - an 18.9 points-per-game scoring average over four seasons. Even though he was 6-foot-4, he also ranks eighth overall in rebounds (956, 8.1 per game), third in blocks and seventh in steals.
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. -- DePaul coach Ray Meyer's impending retirement may give DePaul an emotional boost that Wake Forest will have trouble contending with in the NCAA Midwest Regionals, Deacons coach Carl Tacy said.
'I am sure DePaul will be the sentimental favorite,' Tacy said at a news conference Tuesday. 'Even my wife said that if we couldn't win the whole thing, she'd like him (Meyer) to. She'll be loyal Friday night or she will have to find another way home.' The Deacons will have to be ready for DePaul, Tacy said.
'We not only have to prepare for a great basketball team but Coach Meyer's retirement gives us a sixth man to compete against Friday,' he said.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Ray Meyer's sentimental journey came to an end tonight. The 70-year-old coach of DePaul fell three games short of his retirement goal when a layup by Danny Young gave Wake Forest a surprising 73-71 overtime victory in the Midwest Regional.
For DePaul and Meyer, the ending was even more shocking because DePaul had led throughout the game and appeared to be safely in front by 8 points with 3 minutes left in regulation time. But the Blue Demons played recklessly all night. A basket at the buzzer by Delaney Rudd of Wake Forest tied the score at 65-all and forced the overtime period.
NEW YORK - The BIG EAST Conference announced that five institutions have accepted invitations for membership into the league. Those schools are: University of Cincinnati, DePaul University, University of Louisville, Marquette University, and the University of South Florida. All five universities will begin BIG EAST Conference play in the 2005-06 academic year.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------DAYTON, Ohio - DePaul handed the Dayton men's basketball team its first home loss of the season Saturday night at UD Arena, 61-54, behind a 22-7 run midway through the second half. The Flyers stretched their lead to four at 34-30 to begin the second half before DePaul answered with an 8-0 run over the next 2:40 to build a 38-34 lead with 15:25 left in the half. From there the Blue Demons would build a double-digit lead over the next seven minutes and held a 52-42 advantage with 8:32 remaining before the Flyers began to chip away at the lead.
The Flyers had started the season 5-0 at home for the 11th time since UD Arena opened. Dayton is now 438-172 all-time at the Arena (.718). Dayton leads the all-time series with DePaul 35-34, but the Blue Demons have won three in a row: 70-59 last season at DePaul, and 76-69 in double overtime in the First Round of the 2004 NCAA Tournament in Buffalo, NY. Brian Gregory falls to 0-3 versus DePaul.
Late in Meyer's career, America would adopt him as a national treasure. His pained expressions and gap-toothed grins, once merely coaching idiosyncrasies, became trademarks.
But Chicago knew him long before he was a lovable legend. Chicago knew him when he was just a hard-working coach with a loud voice, a soft heart and big dreams. His rise from obscurity beneath the "L" tracks to national prominence as coach of DePaul's 1979 NCAA Final Four team helped illuminate the qualities that made him a successful and enduring professor of the game.
"Above all, he was a wonderful, wonderful man," said Don Donoher, the retired University of Dayton coach who competed against Meyer for years. "He was one of the class acts, revered by everyone in college basketball. A giant has fallen."
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------"Ray Meyer was a tough competitor as a player and as an opposing coach. Later, he was always kind of a cuddly, avuncular type of presence that everybody instinctively liked."
Many attributed that likability to a genuine selflessness that came naturally to Meyer. In 1964, DePaul was in Dayton to play the Flyers the night legendary coach Tom Blackburn died of cancer. Meyer told his team to leave for home, but Libby Blackburn, the widow, interceded because she said her husband would want them to play. Meyer honored Mrs. Blackburn's wishes, and DePaul won 79-73 in the last game of the regular season.
Don Donoher, 16-14 in his career against Meyer at Dayton, remembered hanging out with Meyer in his office after St. Joseph's had upset the Blue Demons at Dayton in the first round of the 1981 NCAA tournament. "He just shrugged his shoulders and said, `What are you going to do?"' Donoher said. "He was heartbroken, but he was with friends. No matter who was in the room, Ray Meyer was always among friends.
Wintrust Arena at McCormick Square, previously referred to as DePaul Arena or McCormick Place Events Center, is a 10,387-seat sports venue in Chicago's Near South Side community area. It is the current home court for the men's and women's basketball teams of DePaul University and serves as an events center for McCormick Place.
Before the actual announcement, the arena was publicized by the Chicago Sun-Times as a 12,000-seat arena that would cost $300 million. The arena was announced in May 2013, with construction planned to begin in 2014, and use expected to begin with the 2016–17 season. The start of construction was delayed to November 2015, with completion delayed until the 2017–18 season. Although DePaul had been seeking a new home arena — it used Allstate Arena in suburban Rosemont starting 1980 — it rejected a November 2012 ten-year offer to play rent free at the United Center. Instead, DePaul planned to use Allstate Arena on a recurring one-year basis until it had a new home. On November 16, 2016, DePaul and the Metropolitan Pier and Exposition Authority (MPEA or "McPier") announced that the new event center at McCormick Square would be called Wintrust Arena. The announcement came after the signing of a letter of intent that contemplated a definitive 15-year sponsorship agreement between DePaul and Wintrust.
ESPN reported the expected cost of the arena was $173 million - $70 million from DePaul University and $103 million from public funds. It was built to host concerts, conventions and other events in addition to DePaul Basketball games. As the building approached completion, its capacity was announced as 10,387 seats for basketball.
The decision for public participation in the funding of DePaul's athletic facility was controversial because it was announced 6 days prior to the Board of Education's decision to close 50 public schools due to a $1 billion deficit. When the Chicago City Council approved funding on July 24, 2013, the Chicago Reader reported the vote as though money was taken from the schools and spent on the arena because the spending plan included $68 million in budget cuts for the Chicago Public Schools. The Chicago Tribune revealed that the land for the project had not yet been acquired four days after the City Hall funding vote.
……… Wintrust Arena in May 2018 ………
On October 31, 2018 Fieldhouse Flyer wrote:
ATTENDANCE 2017-18
17,000 • Creighton
12,996 • Dayton
12,323 • Marquette
11,828 • Villanova
10,475 • Xavier
9,547 • Providence
9,134 • St. John's
8,554 • Butler
8,456 • Seton Hall
7,531 • Georgetown
6,147 • DePaul
On April 10, 2019 Fieldhouse Flyer wrote:
ATTENDANCE 2018-19
15,980 • Creighton
15,821 • Marquette
12,941 • Dayton
10,034 • Xavier
9,542 • Providence
9,193 • St. John's
9,053 • Villanova
8,507 • Seton Hall
8,419 • Butler
7,212 • Georgetown
3,847 • DePaul
On March 22, 2020 Fieldhouse Flyer wrote:
ATTENDANCE 2019-20
17,314 • Creighton
15,145 • Marquette
13,363 • Dayton
11,299 • Villanova
10,328 • Seton Hall
10,311 • Xavier
10,064 • Providence
8,617 • Butler
7,931 • Georgetown
6,236 • St. John's
5,187 • DePaul
In Part I above Fieldhouse Flyer wrote:
Jan 9, 1982 • Rosemont Horizon* • AP #5 DePaul 71, Dayton 69 • Attendance: 12,320
Jan 21, 1983 • Rosemont Horizon • DePaul 56, Dayton 52 • Attendance: 12,339
Feb 22, 1984 • Rosemont Horizon • AP #5 DePaul 79. Dayton 59 • Attendance: 13,027
Feb 6, 1985 • Rosemont Horizon • Dayton 67, AP #18 DePaul 63 • Attendance: 16,803
Jan 4, 1986 • Rosemont Horizon • DePaul 66, Dayton 52 • Attendance: 12,731
Feb 7, 1987 • Rosemont Horizon • AP #5 DePaul 88, Dayton 65 • Attendance: 14,280
Jan 14, 1988 • Rosemont Horizon • Dayton 79, DePaul 72 • Attendance: 10,935
* Rosemont Horizon opened in Chicago in 1980 with a capacity of 17,500 for basketball and was renamed Allstate Arena in 1999.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------On April 1, 2020 Fieldhouse Flyer wrote:
Survey Year • Institution Name • Revenues Men's Basketball Team
2018 • Marquette University • $21,856,683
2018 • University of Dayton • $16,281,364
2018 • Villanova University • $14,428,932
2018 • Xavier University • $13,916,975
2018 • Georgetown University • $13,573,946
2018 • Providence College • $11,117,186
2018 • St. John's University • $10,028,677
2018 • Creighton University • $8,590,055
2018 • Butler University • $8,228,482
2018 • Seton Hall University • $7,506,127
2018 • DePaul University • $6,793,520
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------One tribute touched Ray Meyer more than any of the others Sunday when DePaul University dedicated the basketball court at Allstate Arena to Meyer and his late wife Marge. That was the turnout of so many of his former players from his 42 years as DePaul's coach. "Seeing so many of you players is my greatest enjoyment of the day," Meyer said at a brunch honoring him before the DePaul-Notre Dame game. "Players make the coach. My players became part of my family. I loved them all."
The players returned the favor to Meyer and his wife. "One time we had a party at the house," Meyer recalled, with a twinkle in his eye. "The players told me I might as well leave. They were having more fun with Marge." Marge Meyer died in 1985. The couple had been married 46 years. "My only regret is that she couldn't be here to enjoy this ceremony," Meyer said. "She was such a part of my life and such a part of the DePaul teams. It's only fitting that the honor be for both of us."
Meyer celebrates his 90th birthday this week. Meyer likened it to the outpouring of affection he received in 1979, when a nation of fans adopted the little school hard by the "L" tracks and the grandfather/coach who took DePaul to the Final Four. More than 40 of Meyer's former players, plus his six children, 17 grandchildren and numerous great-grandchildren took part in a halftime ceremony in which the playing surface was officially named the Ray & Marge Meyer Court.
Don Donoher, a long-time friendly rival of Meyer from his days as the coach at Dayton, was on hand in his role as a Cleveland Cavaliers scout.
"Basketball is a game, not life itself," Meyer said. "I will always remember this day. I'm overwhelmed and grateful."
If Lenti Ponsetto had any clue how to run a college program, she would have told Leitao to forget about coaching the Big East Tournament. Instead, the Massachusetts native will be allowed to stand on the sidelines in New York and embarrass the program for one final time. When the season comes to an end at Madison Square Garden, Leitao should announce he won’t be returning next season. He at least owes that much to the fans who have had to watch his pathetic brand of basketball for five years.
CHICAGO - DePaul University and men's basketball coach Dave Leitao have mutually agreed to a multi-year extension for Leitao to lead the program. The extension continues the current contract through the end of the 2023-24 season.
"We are happy to reach an agreement to continue the improvement and stability that Coach Leitao has instilled in our men's basketball program," said athletics director Jean Lenti Ponsetto. "His vision of academic excellence, athletic excellence and community service mirrors DePaul's mission in developing outstanding student-athletes and future leaders in our society."
DAYTON, Ohio - Jim O'Brien was fired on Wednesday as basketball coach of the University of Dayton, effective at the end of the season. [Updated} Dayton was 6–21 (1–11) this season and 61-84 in five seasons under O'Brien. The Flyers were 22-10 in their first season under O'Brien in 1989-90, but have not been above .500 since then. Dayton was just 4-26 (3–11) in 1992-93.
1. Kansas (28-3) • 1,623 points (All 65 First-place votes)
2. Gonzaga (29-22) • 1,547 points
3. Dayton (29-2) • 1,505 points
4. Florida State (26-5) • 1,381
5. Baylor (26-4) • 1,337
6. San Diego State (30-2) • 1,279
7. Creighton (24-7) • 1,154
8. Kentucky (25-6) • 1,118
9. Michigan State (22-9) • 1,023
10. Villanova (24-7) • 1,011
15. Seton Hall (21-9) • 727
23. Butler (22-9) • 165
ATLANTA – The Atlanta Tip-Off Club has announced that University of Dayton men's basketball coach Anthony Grant has been named the 2020 Ladder Naismith Men's Basketball National Coach of the Year. Grant, a 1987 Dayton grad, is the first coach to win the Naismith Coach of the Year award while coaching at his alma mater since Jim Boeheim in 2010.
Grant had already been named Men's College Coach of the Year by the NABC, the USBWA, the Associated Press, The Sporting News, Fox Sports and CBSsports.com. Dayton went 29-2 this year, setting UD's record for wins in a season despite not having the benefit of post-season play. Both of UD's losses were in overtime on neutral courts to teams expected to be in the NCAA tournament field – No. 1-ranked Kansas and Colorado. The Flyers earned a No. 3 ranking in both the Associated Press and USA Today Coaches polls. After being picked to finish third in the Atlantic 10 Conference's preseason poll, UD was the first team to go 18-0 in the conference in 35 years.
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