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Damezi Anderson calling out the defense

Men's Basketball

Davis Looks For NCAA Record As Men's Basketball Set To Take On Bryant In Paradise Invitational On Monday

Men's Basketball

Davis Looks For NCAA Record As Men's Basketball Set To Take On Bryant In Paradise Invitational On Monday

Graduate senior Damezi Anderson and the Titans will look to close out their Florida trip with a win.
DETROIT (11/20/2022) -- The University of Detroit Mercy men's basketball team will continue its busy 10-day stretch on Monday as the Titans take on Bryant in the final game of the Paradise Invitational on Monday. 
 
Game time is set for Noon at Florida Atlantic's Eleanor R. Baldwin Arena and will be broadcast live on FLO Sports, with an audio broadcast on the Michigan Sports Network with the Voice of the Titans Dan Hasty on the call.

This will be the first meeting between the two schools. 

Graduate senior Antoine Davis comes into the game with 115 consecutive games in double figures, tying the NCAA record with Chris Clemons (Campbell, 2015-2019) and Lionel Simmons (La Salle, 1987-90). He just scored a game-high 22 points at Florida Atlantic, the 80th time in his career he crossed the 20-point plateau.

Graduate senior Arashma Parks has topped his career high in rebounds twice in the last three games, grabbing nine at Boston College and 11 with a season-high eight points at FAU. Meanwhile, senior Jordan Phillips continued his strong play to start the year, scoring 16 points and is averaging 13.3 with 6.0 rebounds in four games. 

Bryant is 4-1 on the season as the Bulldogs are coming off a 91-85 victory at Florida International on Saturday. They fell to Florida Atlantic 85-74 in the first game of the Paradise Invitational on Thursday. 

Detroit Mercy is currently in a stretch of playing five games in 10 days as it started with a home game against Ohio on Nov. 16, the trip to Florida for two games, a home game against Charlotte on Nov. 23 and back on a plane to face Washington State on Nov. 25. 

Following the game, the Titans will host Charlotte on Wednesday in a Noon tip-off. Tickets start at just $10 and a number of ticket packages are available by clicking here

ALL-TIME SERIES
  • This is the first career meeting between Detroit Mercy and Bryant, who just tuned Division I in 2008-09.
  • The Bulldogs were in the NEC until this season, when they moved to the America East, but did win the NEC Championship last year to make the NCAA Tournament.  

ARE YOU HOME?
  • Detroit Mercy is 7-3 in regular season neutral site games since 2006-07.
  • The first win in that span came against America East foe Maine, a 57-50 win, in the CBE Classic at Marquette. 
  • The last neutral site games came in 2019-20 when the Titans defeated UC Irvine, 86-74, and fell to Louisiana Lafayette, 81-62, in Las Vegas in the MGM Grand Subregional.

LOOKING FOR #400
  • Head coach Mike Davis earned his first win as a coach on Nov. 14, 2000, when his Indiana Hoosiers defeated Pepperdine, 80-68, in Bloomington. 
  • He has 47 wins as a Titan head coach and his next triumph will be career victory #400. 

AGAINST THE AMERICA EAST
  • The Titans are 4-3 all-time against current members of the America East with a 2-0 mark against Albany, 1-0 record versus Maine, 1-1 against New Hampshire and 0-1 match-ups with UMBC and Vermont. 

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 graduate 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. 
  • The father-son coaching player duo is part of 23 at the Division I level, while the family coaching connection is part of eight in DI.

FREQUENT FLYER MILES
  • The Titans' non-conference road schedule will see them travel 5,230 miles, which includes 1,687 to Washington State and 1,116 to Florida Atlantic.

FROM ALL OVER
  • The Detroit Mercy men's basketball team will feature student-athletes from six states (Alabama, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, Tennessee and Texas) and two countries (Australia, Sudan).  

DID YOU KNOW?
  • The Titans have 43 players in their history who have reached 1,000 career points.
  • Only 60 other Division I programs have had more than 43 1,000-point scorers to their credit.

HIGHLY THOUGHT OF
  • Detroit Mercy currently has four players on its roster that were top 100 prospects coming out of high school. 
TJ Moss - 26th 
Gerald Liddell - 41st
Damezi Anderson - 92nd
A.J. Oliver - 98th
  • Aside from its four top-100 players out of high school, the Titans have seven players that previously played in high-major leagues that generally send multiple teams to the NCAA Tournament.
TJ Moss - South Carolina 
Gerald Liddell - Texas
Damezi Anderson - Indiana
A.J. Oliver - Clemson
Arashma Parks - Temple
Jordan Phillips - Arkansas
Buay Koka - Tulane

WE JUST LOVE LEARNING
  • Detroit Mercy currently has six players on its squad as graduate seniors, tied with Notre Dame for the most in the country. 

HIGHEST PRESEASON HONOR
  • Graduate senior Antoine Davis was named the Horizon League Preseason Player of the Year.
  • He was the Co-HL Player of the Year last season, the fifth Titan to be selected the HL Player of the Year, and the first player in conference history to make All-League four times - with every one of those a first-team selection.  
  • He led the HL in scoring at 23.9 points per game, shooting 42.9% from the field, 37.9% from three and 88.2% at the free-throw line to go with 3.6 rebounds per game and 28 steals. He led the league and was second in the nation in three-point field goals per game (3.90), HL leader and 23rd in the nation in free-throw percentage (88.2%), league leader and 58th in DI in three-point field-goal percentage (37.9%) and third in the league with 4.4 assists.

NATIONAL NOTICE
  • Antoine Davis has garnered some national attention on preseason watch lists. 
  • He was named a Preseason Third Team All-American by Dick Vitale.
  • Davis is one of the 20 candidates for the 2023 Bob Cousy Award by the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame.
  • He was recently named one of the 50 candidates for the Wooden Award for the nation's Most Outstanding Player. 
  • He was also named a top 50 candidate for the Naismith Trophy National Player of the Year.  
  • Last season he earned the Lou Henson Award All-American, First Team USBWA All-District V and NABC First Team All-District 12 selection.

AMONG THE BESTS
  • Antoine Davis owned the scoring crown in the Horizon League last year at 23.9 points per game, third in the nation, as he became the first player in HL history to top the league in scoring four times, passing Loyola's Alfredrick Hughes, who did it in three-straight seasons (1983, 1984, 1985).
  • He also finished top-four nationally for the fourth-straight year (26.1 for third in 2019, 24.3 for fourth in 2020 and 24.0 for third in 2021). 

RACKING UP THE POINTS
  • Antoine Davis now has 80 career 20-point games, 26 career 30-point outings and four 40-point contests in 115 games - reaching at least 17 points in 102 of them.
  • Davis' 115-straight games in double figures is tied for first in NCAA history with Chris Clemons (Campbell, 2015-2019) and Lionel Simmons (La Salle, 1987-90).
  • Last year, he posted 20 or more points 18 times, second most in the league, with a conference-best six 30-point outings, including a season-high 39 points at home against Milwaukee and on the road at Hofstra, the highest scoring mark in the HL and tied for the 25th best outing in Division I on the year. As a junior, 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.

ABOUT 2,700 POINTS
  • Antoine Davis is the highest active scorer in the country in total points with 2,827, 18th in NCAA history. 
  • At the moment, only 27 players have reached 2,700 at the DI level.  
  • It was his 18th point at Robert Morris last season on a three that put him at 2,500 career points, which was just the fourth time that a student-athlete has posted 2,500 with his dad as head coach following Pete Maravich (Press Maravich), Doug McDermott (Greg McDermott) and Allan Houston (Wade Houston). 
  • Only 12 players have reached 2,000 career points in the Horizon League as he is second in conference history in that category, 87 shy of the all-time record. 
  • Imagine that record with the idea that Davis and the Titans have seen 13 games canceled and not made up in the last two seasons due to the pandemic, at least one game missed due to the Titans not being eligible for the postseason in 2019-20, one game canceled at California in his freshman year due to smoke from wildfires, one contest he sat out against a non-DI as a senior and a game missed as a freshman and sophomore due to an injury. 

ONE LETHAL SHOT
  • Antoine Davis comes into the game fifth all-time in NCAA history with 3.86, three-point field goals per game. He drained five in the win over Ohio, four in the season opener against Rochester and three at BC.
  • He is coming off a game where he failed to hit a three for the first time in 48 games, but has made one in 110 of his 115 collegiate games. He has 62 career games with four or more triples, 22 with six or more, 10 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 conference leader and fifth in the country in total 3-pointers (113) last season, third in school history to join his 132 for second in 2019, 101 for fifth in 2020 and 83 for eighth in 2021.  
  • Davis is already the school and career 3-point record holder at 441 career triples as he passed former Titan All-American Rashad Phillips (348) for both records.
  • He is currently seventh in NCAA history in total 3-pointers at 441, just nine away from moving into the top five and 67 behind Fletcher Magee's NCAA record of 509.

CASHING IN ON THE FREE ONES
  • Graduate senior Antoine Davis, led the HL and was 23rd in the nation in free-throw percentage (88.2%) last year, good for sixth in school history as he is also first with 91.7% in 2021, 90.1% for fourth in 2020 and 85.7% for ninth in 2019. 
  • He owns the school record at 88.6% (496-of-600), eighth among active players and tied for 28th all-time in NCAA history.  
  • He has had numerous streaks of 10 or more free throws in his career, with a career-best of 57-straight between the end of his junior and the start of his senior year.

AD THE QUICKEST TO 1,000 & 2,000 & OWNS THE SCHOOL RECORD
  • With his 39 points at home against Milwaukee as a senior last season, Antoine Davis became the Titans' all-time leading scorer passing Rashad Phillips (2,319) with his 36th point and now has 2,805, second in HL history, 87 shy of that record. 
  • 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 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). 

DAVIS DISHING IT OUT
  • Antoine Davis can not only score, but he can get his teammates involved as he is sixth in school history with 489 assists.
  • The all-time record is 615 by Kevin McAdoo as he is now 126 shy of that mark. 
  • He has 48 games with five or more assists - including nine last season - and posted a nine-assist performance in the season opener.
  • His career-best is 10 at IUPUI and against Western Michigan last season. 

7-UP
  • Graduate senior A.J. Oliver is one of six players in Division I that will be in his seventh year of college basketball.
  • He enrolled at Clemson as a freshman mid-season in 2016-17, but did not see action that year. He then played 19 games for the Tigers in 2017-18 before transferring to Old Dominion, where he sat out the 2018-19 season before playing the last three seasons with the Monarchs.
  • The other players in their seventh year are:
  • DeAndre Dishman - Middle Tennessee
  • Juan Munoz - Hawaii
  • DeJuan Clayton - California
  • Jailyn Ingram - Georgia
  • Michael Henn - Penn State

A.J. LOOKING FOR ONE FINAL RUN
  • Graduate senior A.J. Oliver will look for one more run to the NCAA Tournament in his final collegiate season and he posted 12 points and five rebounds in the season opener and just had six points and a team-high six boards against Ohio. 
  • He played in 95 games with 54 starts at Clemson and at Old Dominion from 2017-22 and averaged 6.2 points and 2.7 rebounds per game, shooting 35.0 % from the field, 37.1% from three and 79.1% at the free-throw line.
  • Last season at ODU, he saw action in all 32 games with 11 starts and tallied 2.5 points, 1.9 rebounds and 1.0 assists per game.
  • In 2020-21, he started all 21 contests he appeared in and ranked third on the team with 9.7 points and led the squad with an 88.6 free-throw percentage and 33 triples.
  • In his first year at ODU, he played in 22 games with 21 starts and was third on the team with 11.3 points per game, led the team with 51, 3-pointers while also pulling down 4.9 rebounds per game, pouring in a career-high 21 points against FAU and grabbing a career-high 12 boards versus UTSA. 
  • Oliver joined Clemson mid-season in 2016-17 and did not play, but then got in 19 games for the Tigers in 2017-18, posting 2.1 points and 1.4 rebounds per game. His best game came in the ACC Tournament against Boston College, as he finished 3-for-4 from the field, including a perfect 3-for-3 on three-pointers for a season-best nine points off the bench before netting six points and registering six rebounds against Auburn in the second round of the NCAA Tournament. 

FROM THE LAND DOWN UNDER
  • Junior Jayden Stone had a massive game in the season opener, posting his first double-double with a career-high 15 points and 12 rebounds. He followed that up with a game-high 22 points with six rebounds, two assists and two steals at Boston College and 15 points with five caroms versus Ohio.
  • The Perth, Australia, native transferred to Detroit Mercy after playing his first two years at Grand Canyon, where he played in 30 games the past two seasons and averaged 3.4 points and 1.4 rebounds to go with 25 assists to just 16 turnovers. He shot 39.3% from the field and 30.2% from behind the arc, along with 82.1% at the free-throw line, scoring a career-high 14 points against Abilene Christian, hitting 5-of-7 from the field.
  • He was one of the top prospects in the state of Alabama, earning the 2019 Alabama 2A Player of the Year and First Team All-State as a junior.

HOOSIER IN THE MOTOR CITY
  • Graduate senior Damezi Anderson had a great start to his Titan career with a career-high 17 points, nine rebounds and three assists, going 6-of-13 from the field and 5-of-12 from behind the arc.
  • He followed that with 11 points and four boards at Boston College before fouling out with more than 10 minutes left in the game and 15 points and four rebounds versus Ohio. 
  • On the season, he is shooting 15-of-33 from the field and 11-of-27 from three. 
  • He started his career at Indiana before ending up at fellow Jesuit institution Loyola.
  • He did not play in 2021-22 at Loyola and saw action in four games the year before. Prior to that, he played for Indiana for two seasons, appearing in 39 games and averaged 2.1 points and 1.6 rebounds, including 2.8 points and 2.2 rebounds in 18 games as a sophomore. 
  • Coming out of high school, he was ranked #92 in the country by 247Sports and No. 114 in the nation by Rivals and was the No. 2 player in the state of Indiana.

LONE STAR PHILLIPS IS BACK
  • Senior Jordan Phillips saw injuries limit him to just three games last year, but he started this season with a bang recording his second career double-double by tying his career high with 18 points and 10 rebounds to go with two steals against Rochester.
  • He netted six points with seven rebounds and an assist at Boston College and added 13 points, three caroms and two assists versus Ohio and 16 points with four rebounds at Florida Atlantic.
  • He is currently shooting 42.1% from the field (16-of-38), 46.7% from three (7-of-15) and 73.7% at the line (14-of-19).
  • A native of Fort Worth, Texas, he transferred to the Titans after appearing in 64 games in his three seasons at Arkansas and UT Arlington.
  • He spent the last two years with the Mavericks and averaged 6.8 points and 3.1 rebounds in 47 games, shooting 34.0% from the floor, 33.0% from behind the arc and 76.0% at the free-throw line.
  • As a sophomore, he tallied 7.4 points and scored in double figures in nine of his 26 games, posting his first career double-double with 16 points and 10 rebounds against Little Rock and had a season-high 17 points versus Louisiana, a game in which he earned #5 on SportsCenter's Top 10 Plays on Jan. 15 for an and-one dunk. 
  • In 2019-20, he played in all 32 games with 21 starts and recorded 6.3 points and 3.5 rebounds. He netted a career-high 18 points at eventual Sun Belt champion Little Rock, connecting on a career-best four 3-pointers and had 14 points hitting three 3-pointers at #14 Oregon and also had 14 points with a career-best seven boards versus UC Santa Barbara.
  • As a freshman, he saw limited minutes in seven games at Arkansas and that was after coming out as a prep ranked as the 37th-best shooting guard in the country and just outside the top-100 rankings.

MEET MR. MOSS
  • Graduate senior TJ Moss has joined the Titans after a successful prep career in high school and playing at South Carolina and McNeese State and played 72 minutes in the first four games as he is returning from an undisclosed injury in the preseason. 
  • He had five points and a team-high four assists against Ohio in 22 minutes and three points and three rebounds with a steal at FAU.
  • He played in 64 games with eight starts prior to transferring to Detroit Mercy.
  •  Last year, he suited up in nine games at McNeese State and averaged 7.8 points, 2.3 rebounds and 1.8 assists per game, while collecting eight steals. He scored a career-high 17 points at TCU, where he was 5-of-12 from behind the arc, and had five assists and three steals. 
  • He spent his first three seasons at South Carolina in the SEC, where he played in 55 games for the Gamecocks, posting 3.3 points, 1.8 assists and 1.3 boards with 30 steals in his time. After playing in just seven games as a freshman before an injury ended his season, he saw action in 30 games and tallied 6.9 points, 5.0 assists and 2.9 rebounds as a sophomore, scoring a season-high 10 points against Kentucky.
  • He came back the next year to play in 18 games and dropped a season-best 15 points at Tennessee and also had seven assists against Arkansas and six assists in the SEC tournament against Mississippi.
  • As a prep, was a four-star prospect on ESPN.com and was once hailed as the 26th-best prospect nationally in the Class of 2018 by 247Sports.

TAKING YOU TO THE PARK
  • Graduate senior Arashma Parks just missed a double-double with a career-high 11 boards and a season-best eight points at Florida Atlantic. 
  • At Boston College, he grabbed a then career-high nine rebounds off the bench and scored six points with two rebounds against Ohio. 
  • On the year, he is tallying 5.8 rebounds and has hit all seven shots he has taken. 
  • He played the last four years at Temple of the American Athletic Conference, appearing in 49 games with 14 starts.
  • As a senior, he played in 19 games with 13 starts and averaged 1.1 points and 2.7 rebounds, along with tallying six assists.
  • After missing his freshman year due to an injury, he came back as a sophomore to play in 22 games and posted 2.5 points and 2.4 rebounds, putting in a career-high 10 points against St. Joseph's.

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Players Mentioned

Antoine Davis

#0 Antoine Davis

G
6' 1"
Graduate Student
Buay Koka

#33 Buay Koka

C
7' 1"
Graduate Student
Jordan Phillips

#12 Jordan Phillips

F
6' 7"
Senior
TJ Moss

#1 TJ Moss

G
6' 4"
Graduate Student
Gerald Liddell

#11 Gerald Liddell

F
6' 8"
Senior
Jayden Stone

#14 Jayden Stone

G
6' 4"
Junior
Arashma Parks

#15 Arashma Parks

F
6' 9"
Graduate Student
Damezi Anderson

#23 Damezi Anderson

F/G
6' 7"
Graduate Student
A.J. Oliver

#21 A.J. Oliver

G
6' 5"
Graduate Student

Players Mentioned

Antoine Davis

#0 Antoine Davis

6' 1"
Graduate Student
G
Buay Koka

#33 Buay Koka

7' 1"
Graduate Student
C
Jordan Phillips

#12 Jordan Phillips

6' 7"
Senior
F
TJ Moss

#1 TJ Moss

6' 4"
Graduate Student
G
Gerald Liddell

#11 Gerald Liddell

6' 8"
Senior
F
Jayden Stone

#14 Jayden Stone

6' 4"
Junior
G
Arashma Parks

#15 Arashma Parks

6' 9"
Graduate Student
F
Damezi Anderson

#23 Damezi Anderson

6' 7"
Graduate Student
F/G
A.J. Oliver

#21 A.J. Oliver

6' 5"
Graduate Student
G