Central Connecticut Blue Devils men's basketball

Central Connecticut Blue Devils
2017–18 Central Connecticut Blue Devils men's basketball team
University Central Connecticut State University
Head coach Donyell Marshall (2nd season)
Conference Northeast Conference
Location New Britain, Connecticut
Arena William H. Detrick Gymnasium
(Capacity: 2,654)
Nickname Blue Devils
Colors Blue and White[1]
         
Uniforms
Home
Away
NCAA Tournament appearances
2000, 2002, 2007
Conference tournament champions
2000, 2002, 2007
Conference regular season champions
2000, 2002, 2007

The Central Connecticut Blue Devils men's basketball team is the men's basketball team that represent Central Connecticut State University in New Britain, Connecticut, United States. The school's team currently competes in the Northeast Conference and were coached by Howie Dickenman from 1996 until his retirement in 2016. The team last played in the NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament in 2007. On April 6, 2016, the school hired Donyell Marshall as the team's head coach.[2]

History

Mascot of the Central Connecticut State University athletic teams

Central's first year of competition was the 1934–35 season under coach Harrison J. Kaiser, after whom the athletic building is named. CCSU joined the NCAA Division I ranks in the 1986–87 season, marking 2017-18 as the 32nd season at the Division I level.

Classification

Years Classification National Tournaments Seasons
1986–87 to Present NCAA Division I 3 appearances 32
1965–66 to 1985–86 NCAA Division II 6 appearances 21
1934–35 to 1964–65 NAIB/NAIA 10 appearances 29

Home court

Years Venue Seasons
1964–65 to present Kaiser Hall – Detrick Gymnasium 53
1946–47 to 1963–64 Memorial Hall 19
1934–35 to 1945–46 Teachers Gymnasium 10

Conference affiliation

Years Conference Seasons
1997–98 to Present Northeast Conference 21
1994–95 to 1996–97 Mid-Continent Conference 3
1990–91 to 1991–92, 1993–94 East Coast Conference 3
1986–87 to 1989–90, 1992–93 Division I Independent 5
1972–73 to 1982–83, 1985–86 Division II Independent 12
1983–84 to 1984–85 New England Collegiate Conference 2
1967–68 to 1971–72 North-East Collegiate Basketball League 5
1934–35 to 1940–41, 1960–61 to 1966–67 Independent 13
1941–42 to 1959–60 New England Teachers College Conference 18

Postseason

NCAA Division I Tournament results

The Blue Devils have appeared in three NCAA Division I Tournaments. Their combined record is 0–3.

Year Seed Round Opponent Result
2000#15First Round#2 Iowa StateL 88–78
2002#14First Round#3 PittsburghL 71–54[3]
2007#16First Round#1 Ohio StateL 78–57[4]

NCAA Division II Tournament results

The Blue Devils have appeared in six NCAA Division II Tournaments. Their combined record is 6–8.

Year Opponent Result Round
1984American InternationalW 102–90Regional Consolation
South Dakota StateL 74–59Regional First Round
1983AssumptionL 99–89OTRegional Consolation
American InternationalL 65–64Regional First Round
1971AssumptionL 105–77Regional Finals
StonehillW 111–99Regional First Round
1969AssumptionL 98–77New England Consolation .
SpringfieldL 91–80New England First Round
1967Long Island – BrooklynL 114–76Regional Finals
Buffalo StateW 90–73Regional First Round
1966Kentucky WesleyanL 84–76National Quarterfinals
AssumptionW 96–87Northeast Finals
Philadelphia TextileW 96–75Eastern Second Round
Potsdam StateW 94–82Eastern First Round

NAIA National Tournament results

The Blue Devils have appeared in 10 NAIB/NAIA National Tournaments at Municipal Auditorium in Kansas City, Missouri. Their combined record is 1–10.

Year Round Opponent Result Ranking
1948First Round
Second Round
Montana
Xavier (Ohio)
W 63–52
L 39–57
1949First RoundIndiana CentralL 59–72
1950First RoundWestminster (Pa.)L 62–70
1959First Round#12 Westminster (Pa.)L 76–79
1960First Round#6 GramblingL 68–92
1961First Round#11 Southwest Texas StateL 59–70
1962First Round#16 William Jewell (Mo.)L 52–57
1963First RoundAthens State (Ala.)L 71–72#16
1964First RoundSaint Mary’s (Texas)L 62–64#14
1965First Round#9 Augsburg (Minn.)L 87–103

NCAA Division I Conference awards

Player of the Year

Northeast Conference

Defensive Player of the Year

Northeast Conference

East Coast Conference

  • 1991 – Patrick Sellers

Rookie of the Year

Northeast Conference

  • 2012 – Kyle Vinales
  • 2008 – Shemik Thompson

All-Conference First Team

Northeast Conference

Mid-Continent Conference

All-Conference Second Team

Northeast Conference

  • 2015 – Matt Mobley
  • 2009 – Ken Horton
  • 2002 – Damian Battles, Ricardo Scott
  • 2001 – John Tice
  • 2000 – Corsley Edwards, John Tice
  • 1999 – Rick Mickens, Charron Watson
  • 1998 – Rick Mickens

Mid-Continent Conference

  • 1997 – Sean Scott

All-Rookie Team

Northeast Conference

  • 2016 - Austin Nehls
  • 2014 - Matt Mobley
  • 2012 – Kyle Vinales
  • 2008 – Ken Horton, Shemik Thompson
  • 2004 – Obie Nwadike
  • 2003 – Justin Chiera
  • 2001 – Ron Robinson
  • 1999 – Corsley Edwards
  • 1998 – Marijus Kovaliukas

Mid-Continent Conference

Coach of the Year

Northeast Conference

Other awards

All-American Selections

First Team

Second Team

  • Richard Leonard – 1984 & 1983
  • Steve Ayers – 1982
  • Bill Reaves – 1971 & 1970

Third Team

  • Steve Ayers – 1981

Honorable Mention

  • Ken Horton – 2011

UPI Selection

  • Eugene Reily – 1966

All-New England selections

First Team

  • Rich Leonard – 1984
  • Steve Ayers – 1982
  • Bill Reaves – 1971
  • Howie Dickenman – 1969

Second Team

  • Corsley Edwards – 2002
  • Rick Mickens – 2000
  • Byran Heron – 1989
  • Ken Hightower – 1984
  • Rich Leonard – 1983
  • Steve Ayers – 1983
  • Billy Wendt – 1973
  • Howie Dickenman – 1968
  • Paul Zajac – 1967

Third Team

  • Greg Roberts – 1978
  • Jere Quinn – 1977
  • Robert Charbonneau – 1977

Blue Devils in the NBA

  • Corsley Edwards – 2002 NBA Draft – Round 2, Pick 29 / Sacramento Kings (10 games played)
  • Keith Closs – 1997 Free Agent / Los Angeles Clippers (130 games played)
  • Howie Dickenman – 1969 NBA Draft – Round 17, Pick 210 / Phoenix Suns[5] (did not play)

References

  1. CCSU Identity Manual (PDF). May 1, 2011. Retrieved April 6, 2016.
  2. "Ex-UConn star Marshall to coach Cent. Conn. St". ESPN.com. Retrieved 2016-04-06.
  3. "Pitt's Knight back on the prowl". ESPN.com. Retrieved June 7, 2018.
  4. "Oden's double-double leads top seed Ohio State over CCSU". Associated Press. Retrieved June 4, 2018.
  5. 1969 NBA Draft on databaseBasketball.com
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