Skip To Main Content
Skip To Main Content
#DetroitsCollegeTeam

University of Detroit Mercy Athletics

Buay Koka Block Shot Sequence 2
Graduate senior Buay Koka and the Titans will look to reject another in-state rivals chance at a win at Calihan Hall.

Men's Basketball

@DetroitMBB Welcomes Central Michigan Into Town On Sunday

DETROIT (12/14/2021) -- The University of Detroit Mercy men's basketball team will have one final non-conference game on the season and one last showdown before the holidays as the Titans get ready for a visit from Central Michigan on Sunday, Dec. 19.

Game time is set for 1:00 p.m. and will be broadcast live on ESPN+ and the Watch ESPN App with Jeremy Otto and Earl Cureton on the call. Fans can also listen to the action on the radio on WLQV 92.7 FM & 1500 AM FaithTalk Detroit with the Voice of Detroit Mercy basketball Dan Hasty.

Detroit Mercy and Michigan First Credit Union are teaming up once again to benefit Detroit Public Schools K-5 this holiday season. Titan Athletics will be taking donations online and in-person at all home men's and women's basketball games throughout the month of December. All proceeds will be donated to Detroit Public Schools K-5, with Michigan First Credit Union contributing a matching donation of all funds raised.

To make an online donation, click here.

Detroit Mercy is coming off finals week and an 83-64 victory over Western Michigan this past Saturday as senior Antoine Davis and junior Madut Akec both recorded double-doubles and four Titans scored in double figures.

Davis is currently fourth in the nation in scoring at 21.9 points per game and is just 60 points shy of the school record.

Central Michigan has dropped seven in a row and is 1-9 on the season. The Chippewas have lost to a pair of Horizon League teams falling 84-77 at Youngstown State and 71-67 against UIC. Former Titan Jermaine Jackson Jr. leads the team averaging 11.7 ppg. 

Following the game, the Titans will enjoy the rest of Christmas week before getting back into Horizon League play as Youngstown State comes to Calihan Hall on Dec. 30 (7:00 PM) and Robert Morris on Jan. 1 (3:00 PM). 

ALL-TIME SERIES
  • These two programs have not met since 2010, but the Titans have won three in a row and eight of the last nine and lead the series, 21-11.
  • Detroit Mercy is also 12-3 all-time at home in the match-up, winning six of the last seven in Calihan Hall.  
  • The first-ever meeting between the two schools was way back in 1913 as the Titans defeated Central Michigan, 24-21.

HOME SWEET HOME
  • The Titans started their home campaign with an 83-64 victory over Western Michigan and have now won eight in a row at home dating back to last season. 

TOUGH SCHEDULE
  • A nine-game road trip started the season for the Titans. 
  • The nine-straight games away from Calihan Hall was the second-longest streak away from the Motor City since the end of the 2000-01 campaign when the Titans played 10-straight with two road games to end the season, three neutral site games in the conference tournament, and then five games in the NIT as they made a run to the semifinals.
  • Meanwhile, the eight non-conference foes totaled a 116-101 record last year and had teams from the SEC, ACC and Mountain West, conferences that produce multi NCAA Tournament teams. 
  • The eight non-conference opponents are 43-19 (.693) on the year with Wyoming at 8-1, Toledo at 7-2, Louisville and Mississippi State 6-2, Kent State 5-3, Northeastern 6-4 and Hofstra 5-5. 

FAMILIAR FACE
  • Central Michigan graduate senior Jermaine Jackson Jr. was a Titan as a freshman and was selected to the HL All-Freshman Team after finishing fourth on the team in scoring averaging 10.5 points to go with a team-best 2.7 assists, 3.0 rebounds and 1.2 steals.
  • He led all league rookies in made 3-pointers (53) – tied for third on the team - and free throw percentage (.851), and was second in assists and third in scoring.
  • He is the son of former Titan assistant coach and former Horizon League Player of the Year Jermaine Jackson '99, who helped the team to a pair of NCAA Tournaments and wins in back-to-back years over St. John's (1998) and UCLA (1999). 

ALL IN THE FAMILY
  • Nothing new for the Titans to have a family connection in the program and this season, Detroit Mercy will once again feature three Davis' in head coach Mike Davis, assistant coach Mike Davis Jr. and senior guard Antoine Davis.
  • From 2010-13, the Titans had head coach Ray McCallum and star guard Ray McCallum, winning the HL title in 2012 and earning a trip to the NIT in 2013.
  • Also, the legendary Bob Calihan coached his son, Bob Calihan Jr., for one season as he transferred to U-D from Loyola for his senior season in 1968-69.  

STAT RANKINGS
  • The Titans currently rank 25th in free throw percentage (77.9%), 46th in total 3-pointers (94), 49th in the nation in 3-point field goals per game (9.4) and 98th in least turnovers per game (12.1).
  • Individually, senior Antoine Davis leads the nation in total 3-pointers (43), third in 3-point field goals per game (4.3), fourth in scoring (21.9), free-throw percentage (94.4%) and minutes played (38:26), 26th in assists (5.4) and 92nd in three-point field goal percentage (38.7%), while his 39 points at Hofstra is tied for the fourth-most in the country this year and the eight triples he made in the contest is tied for the seventh most. 
  • Junior Madut Akec is 29th in double-doubles (4), 66th in rebounding (8.3) and 84th in minutes played (34:16).

LONG RANGE TITANS
  • The Titans have connected on at least nine 3-pointers in six games this season, tying a season-high with 15 at Hofstra and against Western Michigan. 

CASHING IN ON THE FREE ONES
  • Senior Antoine Davis, who claimed fourth in DI in free-throw percentage with a league-best and school-record 91.7% (88-of-96) last season, currently owns the school record at 89.3% (402-of-450).
  • He is currently fourth in the nation in free-throw percentage (94.4%) as he is 34-of-36 on the year. 
  • Going back to last season after he was just 3-of-6 in the second game against Wright State, he has made 95 of his last 99 attempts (95.9%), spanning 25 games. He saw his school record and active NCAA-best 57-straight free throw streak come to an end at Louisville. As a sophomore, he had a streak of 37 in a row at one point. 
  • His career 89.3% is also the highest among active returning players in the nation and 19th all-time in NCAA history. 

RACKING UP THE POINTS
  • Senior Antoine Davis now has 64 career 20-point games, 21 career 30-point outings and four 40-point contests in just 92 collegiate games and has also scored in double figures in all 92 games - reaching at least 17 points in 74 of them.
  • Davis was in double figures for the 92nd consecutive game his last time with 20 points against Western Michigan as he passed former Arizona State standout and top-10 NBA pick Ike Diogu (2002-05) for the seventh-longest streak in NCAA history and is now just five behind Oregon State's Tres Trinkle (2016-20) for sixth place as he entered the season with a chance at the NCAA record, held by La Salle's Lionel Simmons (1986-90) and Campbell's Chris Clemons at 115 (2015-19). 
  • Last year, he recorded a HL-best 15, 20-point games, five 30-point outings and a conference high-tying 46 points, just two off his career-high and a HL Tournament record with his 46 coming against Robert Morris in the first round of the playoffs. 
  • The 46 points was tied for the league and nation high with Cleveland State's D'Moi Hodge (vs. Purdue Fort Wayne). 
  • Last season he reached at least 23 points in 13-straight, the best 20-point streak by a Titan since Spencer Haywood's 16-straight in 1968-69 - but to Haywood's resume, most of those were 30-point games.

AD THE QUICKEST TO 1,000 & 2,000, ON A QUEST FOR SCHOOL RECORD
  • Antoine Davis scored 27 points at Notre Dame in the 2019-20 season, but it was his free throw for 26 that made history giving him 1,000 career points in just 39 games, passing the great Dave DeBusschere - a NBA Hall-Of-Famer - as the fastest Titan to reach 1,000.
  • DeBusschere accomplished the feat in his 43rd collegiate game.
  • Davis became the 43rd player in school history to eclipse 1,000 career points and just the third second-year player joining DeBusschere (who did it as a junior as freshmen could not play) and sophomore Ray McCallum in 2010-11.
  • Last year, he passed DeBusschere again (1,978) for third in Titan history as he crossed the 2,000-point plateau in his 81st game, quicker than the other two 2,000-point scorers in John Long (2,167 total - 2,000 in game 102) and Rashad Phillips (2,319 total - 2,000 in game 116). 
  • He now has 2,259 career points and is now just 60 in back of Phillips for the all-time school mark. 

ABOUT 2,000 POINTS
  • Senior Antoine Davis has 2,259 career points, the second-leading active scorer in the country in total points, although all of his have come against DI competition. 
  • At the moment, 608 NCAA players have amassed over 2,000 career points at the DI level and if he is able to get to 2,500, only 73 players have achieved that mark.
  • Only 12 players have reached 2,000 career points in the Horizon League as he is sixth in conference history in that category, 655 shy of the all-time mark.

ONE LETHAL SHOT
  • Antoine Davis comes into the year fifth all-time in NCAA history with 3.90, three-point field goals per game.
  • He has connected on a 3-pointer in 88 of his 92 collegiate games and also has 50 career games with four or more triples, 18 with six or more, nine games with seven or more, and has thrice connected on 10 in his career, tying a school record as well as breaking a conference tournament record. 
  • He was the league leader and second in the nation in 3-point field goals per game (3.77) last season, and that marked the third-straight year that he has been top 10 nationally in 3-point field goals per game. 
  • Davis is already the school and career 3-point record holder at 359 career triples as he passed former Titan All-American Rashad Phillips (348) for both records with his second trey at UIC.
  • The NCAA record book registers the top 30 for all-time 3-pointers and No. 30 stands at 379 by a familiar name to head coach Mike Davis in Robert Vaden, who was recruited and played for coach Davis at Indiana and at UAB. 

GOING AFTER YOU DAD
  • Head coach Mike Davis is quick to point out that Antoine Davis is not the defender that he was in college, but in terms of offense, the son has won the battle.
  • Coach Davis starred at Alabama from 1979 to 1983 and totaled 1,211 points in 121 career games, going 478-of-1003 (47.7%) from the field with 238 assists.
  • Antoine now has 2,259 career points, 400 assists and 124 steals.  
  • Compared to his brother, current assistant coach Mike Davis Jr., Antoine has him beat as well as he recorded 143 career points, 33 assists and 25 steals in three seasons at UAB from 2006-09. 

AMONG THE BESTS
  • Senior Antoine Davis ended last year leading the Horizon League and ranking third in the country in scoring at 24.0 points per game, marking the third-straight season he finished in the top four nationally in scoring (26.1 for third in 2019 and 24.3 for fourth in 2020).
  • He also became just the second player in HL history to lead the conference three times joining Loyola's Alfredrick Hughes (1983-85) as he could put just himself on that pedestal if he were to lead the league again this year as he currently sits on top and fourth in the country at 21.9 ppg. 

DAVIS DISHING IT OUT
  • Senior Antoine Davis can not only score, but he can get his teammates involved as he stands 10th in school history with 400 career assists. 
  • He has 41 games with five or more assists - including six this season - and as he set his career-best with 10 at IUPUI and against his last time out against WMU.
  • It was the most assists by a Titan since Jermaine Jackson Jr. had 13 against Siena Heights in 2017-18.

ROLLING 2 DOUBLES
  • Senior Antoine Davis (20 pts., 10 ast.) and junior Madut Akec (18 pts., 12 reb.) each had a double-double against Western Michigan, the first time the Titans had two players post a double-double in the same game since 2018. 

MADUT DOING IT ALL
  • Junior Madet Akec is averaging 15.0 points and a team-best 8.3 rebounds, 16 steals and four blocks. He is shooting a team-best 50.9% overall.
  • He currently stands fourth in field goal percentage, fifth in rebounding, eighth in scoring and ninth in steals in the HL.  
  • He has also scored in double figures in nine games and is tied for second in the HL with four double-doubles and four 10+ rebounding outings.  
  • Akec just recorded his fourth double-double of the season with 18 points and a team-high 12 rebounds against WMU. 
  • Akec scored a career-high 20 points with seven rebounds at IUPUI and added 19 points - 17 in the second half and 10 in a row at one point - and eight boards at UIC.  
  • He made an immediate impact with the Titans at Wyoming, posting his first career double-double with career-high 14 points and a career-best 13 rebounds.
  • He came back upping his then career-high to 15 points with seven boards, two assists, two blocks and a steal at Toledo and exceeded his career-high with 19 points and five steals to go with a team-high 10 boards for his second double-double at Louisville. 
  • He competed in 33 games at USF the past two seasons, redshirting as a freshman, and tallied 2.3 points and 1.4 rebounds, while shooting nearly 50.0% (14-of-31).  
  • A native of Tonj, South Sudan, he grew up in Melbourne, Australia, before prepping at Victory Rock in Bradenton, Florida.
  • His brother, Deng Adel, played basketball at Louisville and played in the NBA with Toronto, Cleveland and Brooklyn and is currently playing overseas in Wales.

A MCADOO IS BACK
  • Kevin McAdoo had the distinction of making the first basket of the season, hitting a triple at Wyoming and then had a career game, tying his career-high with 23 points and hitting five 3-pointers at Toledo. 
  • At Mississippi State, he scored 13 points and handed out four assists and then had 10 points at UIC.  
  • The name McAdoo is special in Titans' history as his father, Kevin McAdoo Sr., is the school's all-time assist leader with 615 earning four letters between 1982-86.
  • He played last year at Bradley after playing his first two at Eastern Michigan. 
  • Last season, he saw action in 17 games with eight starts and averaged 6.0 points, 1.8 rebounds and 1.5 assists per game, while posting a 1.5 assist-to-turnover ratio. 
  • He tallied a season-best 13 points at Missouri State and notched 10 points and a career-best five assists at Valparaiso.
  • In his first two years at EMU, he played in 59 games with 21 starts and recorded 6.7 points and 1.0 assists, shooting 42.4% overall and 34.4% from behind the arc. 
  • As a sophomore, he netted 8.6 points and 1.5 assists along with 30 steals and knocking down 40 triples, second on the squad. He scored a personal-best 23 points in the 2017-18 season finale against Sam Houston State and 20 points at Central Michigan in 2018-19.
  • As a prep at West Bloomfield High School, he averaged 25.0 points, 5.0 assists and 5.0 rebounds, leading his team to the final four and earning Third-Team All-State honors in his senior campaign. 

HIGH WATERMARK
  • Junior Noah Waterman - who returned to the Titans after missing four-straight games with an undisclosed injury - was a great addition to the Titan team a year ago. 
  • He scored eight points with five rebounds at IUPUI in his first real action.
  • He became eligible mid-season last season and played in 15 games with 12 starts and was third on the team in scoring (11.9), fourth in rebounding (4.5) and tied for the team lead with 10 blocks. 
  • He shot 55.5% from the field and 52.8% from the outside (38-of-72), scoring in double figures in eight games.
  • In the second meeting with Oakland on the road, he posted 12.0 points, 7.5 rebounds and 2.0 assists per game recording 18 points and a career-high eight rebounds and two blocks in the win, hitting 7-of-11 shots and 4-of-8 from three.
  • He netted 17 points with five rebounds and two blocks in the win at HL champions Cleveland State, going a career-best 5-of-7 from three with three of those in the final three minutes to seal the win and ended the regular season against Robert Morris netting 19 points in game one and a career-high 22 in game two, where he was a career-best 8-of-11 from the field with a career-tying five triples. 
  • He then had 19 points and pulled down five rebounds in the Horizon League Championship quarterfinals at NKU. 
  • A transfer from Niagara, Waterman played in seven games with five starts until an injury ended his freshman year.
  • In high school, he was 6-2 but hit a growth spurt and is now almost seven feet allowing him to play as a guard with his shooting skills. 

DJ LOOKING TO END HIS CAREER ON A HIGH NOTE
  • Graduate senior DJ Harvey joined the Titans this season for one more shot at making a run to the NCAA Tournament.
  • After missing a couple of games due to injury, he returned to tally eight points and five rebounds at Kent State and then netted seven points with eight boards versus Western Michigan. 
  • Harvey tied his career-high pulling down nine boards at Toledo and then netted six points with five boards at Mississippi State.  
  • He started his collegiate career playing two seasons at Notre Dame before playing the last two years at Vanderbilt. 
  • After sitting out his first season with the Commodores, saw action in 23 games with 10 starts in 2020-21 and tallied 6.3 points and 2.8 rebounds per game and that jumped to 14.5 points and 5.0 rebounds in the SEC Tournament. 
  • He shot 38.9 % overall, 36.8 % from three and 88.9 % from the free-throw line with 11 assists and 11 steals, netting double figures eight times, including a season-high 17 points and five rebounds in a win over Texas A&M in the SEC Tournament. 
  • Before that, he played 47 games with Notre Dame averaging 8.6 points and 3.7 rebounds, shooting 38.5 % with 47 triples.
  • Some of his big games as a member of UND included 18 points at Florida State, 18 points and a season-high eight rebounds against Georgia Tech, 19 points on a career-best four 3-point field goals against Jacksonville and a career-high 19 points with six rebounds and a steal at Illinois.
  • As a prep, he was ranked as the No. 1 player in the state of Maryland by 24/7 Sports and MaxPreps and nationally as No. 21 (MaxPreps), No. 43 (SI.com), No. 43 (Scout), No. 44 (247Sports), No. 47 (ESPN) and No. 51 (Rivals).

HL'S SIXTH MAN RETURNS 
  • A transfer from St. Bonaventure, Matt Johnson was selected the HL Sixth Man of the Year last season and returns to the Titans for another year. 
  • He started the season with nine points and five boards at Wyoming and tied for the team-high with four assists at Mississippi State before scoring 10 points with five rebounds, two assists and two steals at Louisville
  • He added 10 points at Hofstra and seven points, four rebounds and two assists at Northeastern and 10 points at UIC.  
  • He saw action in all 22 games with eight starts last season and averaged 8.5 points, 3.7 rebounds and 1.2 assists, while shooting 43.2% from the field, 39.2% from three and 94.4% at the free-throw line (17-of-18).
  • He ended the year fourth on the team in scoring, rebounding, assists and steals, scoring in double-digits eight times with three 20-point performances.
  • Johnson posted a then career-high 20 points (7-14 FG, 4-6 3FG) along with five rebounds, three assists, a block and a steal in his Titan debut at Michigan State and followed that up with 15 points and five boards at Notre Dame. 
  • He grabbed a career-high eight rebounds and scored 10 points against Wright State in game one and then tied his then career-best with 20 points with six caroms in game two. 
  • Later in the season, he recorded a career-high 24 points on a career-best 9-of-14 from the field with six 3-pointers to go with six rebounds against Purdue Fort Wayne.
  • Prior to Detroit Mercy, he played one year at St. Bonaventure and also at two junior colleges Pensacola State and Howard College. 

BIG WILLY STYLE
  • Senior Willy Isiani is back and as one of the most experienced Titans in his fourth year - all under coach Davis. 
  • He is coming off two impressive games with a then season-high 11 points at Kent State and then 15 points versus Western Michigan, the most since he netted 15 against the Golden Flashes last year. 
  • He scored eight points hitting a pair of three's at IUPUI and that was after six points on a pair of 3-pointers at Hofstra.
  • He has also grabbed at least three boards in four games, including seven points and five rebounds at Northeastern. 
  • Known as a shooter, he started to learn the post position grabbing a career-high 12 rebounds with eight points at Western Michigan last season, posting a career-high five assists with six rebounds and two steals at Michigan State and 10 boards with two blocks at Notre Dame last year. He also notched 15 points with seven boards and three assists against Kent State.  
  • A native of Tbilisi, Georgia, who is believed to be the first Titan from the country of Georgia, has connected on the three ball on 75 of his 110 career field goals.

SHAW MAKING AN IMPACT
  • Junior Jeramy Shaw has started to shine after a standout junior college career.
  • He scored a season-high five points and grabbed six rebounds at IUPUI. 
  • He scored his first DI point on a free throw at Toledo and netted his first basket at Hofstra, where he was fouled on the play and converted the and one at the line.  
  • Shaw was a NJCAA Second Team All-American last season at North Central Missouri College after averaging 16.4 points, 6.2 rebounds and 3.2 assists, shooting 55.9-percent from the field, 34.6-percent from three and 72.4-percent from the line. 
  • He scored in double figures in 21 of his 25 games, including a career-high 31 points at Southeast Community College, 29 points versus Metropolitan Community College, 28 points against State Fair Community College and 27 points against Kansas City Kansas Community College.
  • As a freshman, he tallied 9.6 points, 2.8 rebounds and 2.1 assists per game, shooting 52.7-percent from the floor. 
Print Friendly Version

Players Mentioned

Antoine Davis

#0 Antoine Davis

G
6' 1"
Senior
Willy Isiani

#41 Willy Isiani

F
6' 8"
Senior
Matt Johnson

#13 Matt Johnson

G
6' 4"
Senior
Noah Waterman

#1 Noah Waterman

G/F
6' 11"
Junior
Madut Akec

#5 Madut Akec

F
6' 7"
Junior
DJ Harvey

#4 DJ Harvey

G/F
6' 6"
Graduate Student
Kevin McAdoo

#21 Kevin McAdoo

G
6' 2"
Graduate Student
Jeramy Shaw

#11 Jeramy Shaw

G
6' 6"
Junior

Players Mentioned

Antoine Davis

#0 Antoine Davis

6' 1"
Senior
G
Willy Isiani

#41 Willy Isiani

6' 8"
Senior
F
Matt Johnson

#13 Matt Johnson

6' 4"
Senior
G
Noah Waterman

#1 Noah Waterman

6' 11"
Junior
G/F
Madut Akec

#5 Madut Akec

6' 7"
Junior
F
DJ Harvey

#4 DJ Harvey

6' 6"
Graduate Student
G/F
Kevin McAdoo

#21 Kevin McAdoo

6' 2"
Graduate Student
G
Jeramy Shaw

#11 Jeramy Shaw

6' 6"
Junior
G