
Photo by: Kayden Kircher
St. Cloud State Men’s Basketball Set for First Round Playoff Game Against Bemidji State
2/24/2025 5:34:00 PM | Men's Basketball
Huskies look to advance to the Sanford Pentagon
St. Cloud, Minn.- St. Cloud State Men's Basketball (19-11, 15-7 NSIC) are set to host Bemidji State in the first round of the NSIC Tournament on Wednesday, February 26. Tipoff is set for 7:30 p.m.
Follow the Huskies
Tickets to the game are available at scsutickets.com. Live stats will be provided by St. Cloud State The game will be streamed live for free on the NSIC Network and broadcasted on the Varsity Network. Steve Linzmeier, the Voice of St. Cloud State Basketball, can be heard on the both the audio broadcast and livestream.
Last Time Out
St. Cloud State wrapped up their regular season this past weekend as they hosted RV Minnesota State and No. 23 Winona State.
Friday's game against Mankato saw the Mavericks strike first in the game as a three-pointer put them up 11-4 five minutes into the game. Back-to-back layups for the Huskies offense started to pile momentum for SCSU as the teams battled back and forth. A layup by Nate Dahl cut the deficit to three points with 10:47 left in the half. From that layup, the Mavericks then went on an 8-0 run to lead by double-digits as they now held the momentum. MSU held that lead steadily the remainder of the half as they went into the break up 39-25. In the second half, St. Cloud State could never find a flow to their offense. From the 15:36 mark of the first half, SCSU had nearly a nine minute drought where they did not make a field goal. Luke Winkel made a three with 6:42 left in the game to end that drought, but the Huskies were down 16 points. St. Cloud State trailed by 15+ points the entire second half with their largest deficit at 22 points. The Huskies would lose 70-52. St. Cloud State had shooting splits of 33.3% from the field, 27.8% from three, and 56.3% from the free throw line. Lee Marks III was the only Husky to score in double-digits as he tallied 11 points, six rebounds, and two steals. This was Marks' fifth game scoring 11+ points this season and fourth game with 6+ rebounds. Kynan Philippe scored nine points and grabbed five rebounds while making two threes. This was his 16th multi-three game this season.
Against Winona State, the defense of St. Cloud State got off to a strong start as they held the Warriors scoreless through the first six and a half minutes of the game to lead 4-0. Following the first field goal by WSU, the teams battled back and forth for the next nine minutes of the half as Winona State held a 21-19 lead with 4:21 left in the half. Luke Winkel would tie the game up with a layup and then SCSU would take the lead off a three by Kynan Philippe. The Huskies kept it rolling on both ends as following a defensive stop, Wyatt Hawks put back a layup off an offensive rebound. Another miss by the Warriors led to a big three by Anish Ramlall as he capped off the 10-0 run. St. Cloud State ultimately went into halftime leading 31-24. The Huskies came out of halftime on fire from three as they made their first six shots from beyond the arc. A triple by Philippe put SCSU up 51-41 with 11:37 left in the half. SCSU continued to hum on both ends as a layup by Ramlall extended the lead to 18 with 5:36 left in the game. From that layup, everything then began to click for the Warriors as a 16-0 run cut the deficit down to two points with 32 seconds remaining. WSU would foul and send Philippe to the line with 23 seconds remaining. The Australian came up big with two makes to push the lead up to four. Coming out of a timeout by SCSU, Luke Haertle missed a three that was collected by Winkel who would be fouled. The freshman also came up big at the line as he extended the lead to multiple possessions with two makes as there was now nine seconds left in the game. A bucket by Winona with three seconds left led to more free throws by Winkel. He ultimately sealed the game with a make as St. Cloud State came away with a 70-65 win against No. 23 Winona State. The Huskies were on fire from deep in the second half as they connected on eight on their 13 three-point attempts while shooting 54.2% from the field. Luke Winkel stuffed the stat sheet with 18 points, five rebounds, six assists, three threes, and two steals. He also shot 6/12 from the field. This was Winkel's seventh game with 18+ points and seventh with 6+ assists. Kynan Philippe scored a career-high 18 points while tying his career-high in three-point makes with four. The Australian also grabbed seven rebounds. This was Philippe's third game with 4+ threes.
St. Cloud State Statistical Leaders (total-average)
St. Cloud State Team Stats (NSIC Ranking)
Region Risers
Last Wednesday, the inaugural region rankings were released, and St. Cloud State was listed as a team under consideration.
For the first regional rankings, ten teams are listed as under consideration in alphabetical order per region. Those teams included:
RV Concordia-St. Paul
RV Minnesota Duluth
RV Minnesota State Mankato
Minot State
MSU Moorhead
No. 20 Southern Nazarene
RV Southwest Minnesota State
St. Cloud State
No. 4 Washburn
No. 23 Winona State
St. Cloud State is part of the Central Region which is composed of three conferences, the Northern Sun Intercollegiate Conference (NSIC), Great American Conference (GAC), and Mid-American Intercollegiate Athletics Association (MIAA). The top eight teams in the region advance to the NCAA Regional Tournament on March 15-16, 18 which will be hosted by the top seed. Automatic bids are granted to the winners of the NSIC, GAC and MIAA postseason tournaments, with the remaining five spots being awarded on an at-large basis.
The NCAA Men's Basketball Selection Show will air on www.NCAA.com on Sunday, March 9 at 10 p.m. (CT). The NCAA Elite Eight will take place on March 25, 27, 29 at The Ford Center in Evansville, Indiana.
Regional rankings will be released each of the next two weeks on Wednesdays prior to the selection show on March 9. The next two releasing's of rankings will have teams ranked as opposed to listed.
NSIC Tournament
Following the conclusion of the regular season, St. Cloud State finished fifth in the NSIC standings. The winner of this game against Bemidji State will travel to the Sanford Pentagon to face the No. 4 seed in Minnesota State on Sunday, March 2 at 4:30. The full NSIC Tournament bracket can be found here.
Postseason History
Wednesday's game against Bemidji State will mark the third consecutive NSIC Tournament appearance for the Huskies during the three seasons of the Quincy Henderson era. The past two seasons have seen SCSU fall in the first round, but both those games have come on the road. This will be the first home playoff game for St. Cloud State since the 2018-19 season where they defeated Upper Iowa 91-72. That same season also saw the Huskies reach the NCAA Tournament, which was also the last time they made it. St. Cloud State is 1-0 all-time against Bemidji State in the playoffs with the lone meeting coming in the 2010-11 season.
Series History
In the all-time series against Bemidji State, St. Cloud State holds a 107-47 advantage while having swept the regular season series against the Beavers.
The first meeting between the teams took place in Bemidji where the Beavers got off to a fast start as they led 7-0 two minutes into the game. A three-ball by Anish Ramlall capped off a 7-0 run for SCSU as they tied the game at the 15:56 mark. Neither team would hold a lead larger than four points for almost the entirety of the first half. Trailing 24-25 with 3:40 left in the half, the Huskies started to take control with a 9-2 to end the half as they led 33-27 at the break. SCSU carried over their late first half momentum into the second half as they expanded their lead to double-digits after an and-one by Wyatt Hawks to set the score at 46-34 following an 8-0 run. The Beavers battled to get the lead back under 10 as St. Cloud would now only lead by six. With momentum starting to swing in favor of BSU, Lee Marks III weathered the storm with a big three-point make. Nathan Bunkosky then came away with a steal on the defensive end which led to a jumper by Vance Peiffer to put the Huskies back up by 11 with 12:09 remaining. The Beavers continued to make runs late into the half, but the Huskies always had an answer and ceased any momentum BSU had with a run of their own. SCSU started to close out Bemidji State as Anish Ramlall splashed a corner three and was fouled, resulting in a four-point play which he capitalized. Kynan Philippe knocked in a straight away three to put the Huskies up 12 points. Bemidji cut the lead down to 10 points with a layup, but Lucas Morgan cashed a corner three to give St. Cloud State a 79-66 advantage. The Huskies led by 9+ points in the final three minutes of the game as they went on to win 88-75 for their third consecutive win. Nate Dahl paced the Huskies in scoring with an uber efficient 23 points to go along with five rebounds and three assists. Dahl shot 7/10 from the field, 2/5 from three, and a perfect 7/7 from the free throw line. 23 points is a career-high for Dahl and was the third game this season where he has scored 20+ points. Luke Winkel stuffed the stat sheet with 13 points, five boards, and three assists and steals. The steals were a career-high for Winkel. He shot 4/9 from the field while making five of his six free throw attempts. Winkel has scored 13+ points in four of his past five games.
The second game was played at Halenbeck Hall. Through the first seven minutes of the game, neither team was able to take control of the game as the teams traded leads. A three by Luke Winkel gave St. Cloud State a little breathing room as they led 21-17 at the 12:18 mark of the first half. Two buckets by John Sutherland tied the game at 21, but SCSU started to take command as Izaac Neal gave the Huskies valuable minutes off the bench. Neal threw down a dunk to give the Huskies the lead at 23-21. Following back-to-back stops, Nate Dahl drove in the lane and finished inside as Bemidji State called a timeout. Out of the break, Neal showed off his vertical with a block on Sutherland and then a few possessions later made a hook shot to push the lead up to six points. The Huskies defense held the Beavers scoreless for nearly four minutes, but they ended the half on a hot streak as they knocked in five of their next six threes to lead 38-37 going into halftime. The second half saw the Huskies come out with a sense of urgency as a three-pointer by Anish Ramlall capped off a 12-4 run as St. Cloud State now led 49-42. The Huskies had an answer for every run by the Beavers in the second half, but BSU did not go away quietly. With 3:26 left in the game, the Huskies lead would be cut down to only two points. Lucas Morgan came up big for the Huskies as he finished a layup to get the lead back up to four points. SCSU forced a miss on the ensuing Beaver possession which ultimately to Wyatt Hawks getting fouled on a layup where he made both free throws. Now leading 65-59 with 2:06 left in the game, St. Cloud State kept the Beavers at bay as they made 11 of their final 12 free throw attempts. The Huskies would go on to win 78-71 for their 14th win of the season. Luke Winkel was the game's leading scorer with 19 points on an efficient 6/11 shooting. Winkel went 5/5 from the free throw line while dishing out four assists and nabbing a steal. This was the fourth game where Winkel has scored 19+ points and 12th game with 4+ assists, including the past five games. Lucas Morgan stuffed the stat sheet as he totaled 12 points and six rebounds and assists. Morgan also made all six of his free throw attempts. Morgan has scored 12+ points in six of his past seven games. The six assists were a season-high.
Scouting Bemidji State
The Bemidji State Beavers come into the playoffs as the 12 seed following a 10-18 regular season where they went 7-15 in conference. BSU ended the regular season on a four-game losing streak following loses to Augustana, Wayne State, Concordia-St. Paul, and Minnesota Duluth. The Beavers came into this season projected to finish fifth in the conference after they went 13-16 with a 9-13 conference record to place ninth. Last year, Bemidji State reached the NSIC Tournament where they would be defeated by Sioux Falls.
The Beavers return their First Team All-NSIC performer in John Sutherland, who is leading the team in scoring with 15.7 points per game in his 16 appearances this year. He is shooting 59.2% from the field to go with 6.8 rebounds and 4.6 assists. Tate Olson and Malang Athian have stepped up in Sutherland's place throughout the year. Olson is nearly averaging a double-double with 11.9 points and 8.9 rebounds per game. He is shooting 49.8% from the field and 37.4% from three. Athian is averaging 10.6 points and 4.0 rebounds while shooting 43.8% from the field and 36.6% from three. John Pecarich is the final Beaver to score in double-figures with 11.5 points per game while shooting 43.1% from three.
Head Coach Mike Boschee enters his 13th season with Bemidji State in the 2024-25 season. Boschee has tallied a 148-175 record during his tenure and is currently the all-time winningest coach in program history.
Bemidji State Statistical Leaders (total-average)
Bemidji State Team Stats (NSIC Ranking)
For all the latest on St. Cloud State Men's Basketball, stay tuned to scsuhuskies.com and follow the team on Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook.
Follow the Huskies
Tickets to the game are available at scsutickets.com. Live stats will be provided by St. Cloud State The game will be streamed live for free on the NSIC Network and broadcasted on the Varsity Network. Steve Linzmeier, the Voice of St. Cloud State Basketball, can be heard on the both the audio broadcast and livestream.
Last Time Out
St. Cloud State wrapped up their regular season this past weekend as they hosted RV Minnesota State and No. 23 Winona State.
Friday's game against Mankato saw the Mavericks strike first in the game as a three-pointer put them up 11-4 five minutes into the game. Back-to-back layups for the Huskies offense started to pile momentum for SCSU as the teams battled back and forth. A layup by Nate Dahl cut the deficit to three points with 10:47 left in the half. From that layup, the Mavericks then went on an 8-0 run to lead by double-digits as they now held the momentum. MSU held that lead steadily the remainder of the half as they went into the break up 39-25. In the second half, St. Cloud State could never find a flow to their offense. From the 15:36 mark of the first half, SCSU had nearly a nine minute drought where they did not make a field goal. Luke Winkel made a three with 6:42 left in the game to end that drought, but the Huskies were down 16 points. St. Cloud State trailed by 15+ points the entire second half with their largest deficit at 22 points. The Huskies would lose 70-52. St. Cloud State had shooting splits of 33.3% from the field, 27.8% from three, and 56.3% from the free throw line. Lee Marks III was the only Husky to score in double-digits as he tallied 11 points, six rebounds, and two steals. This was Marks' fifth game scoring 11+ points this season and fourth game with 6+ rebounds. Kynan Philippe scored nine points and grabbed five rebounds while making two threes. This was his 16th multi-three game this season.
Against Winona State, the defense of St. Cloud State got off to a strong start as they held the Warriors scoreless through the first six and a half minutes of the game to lead 4-0. Following the first field goal by WSU, the teams battled back and forth for the next nine minutes of the half as Winona State held a 21-19 lead with 4:21 left in the half. Luke Winkel would tie the game up with a layup and then SCSU would take the lead off a three by Kynan Philippe. The Huskies kept it rolling on both ends as following a defensive stop, Wyatt Hawks put back a layup off an offensive rebound. Another miss by the Warriors led to a big three by Anish Ramlall as he capped off the 10-0 run. St. Cloud State ultimately went into halftime leading 31-24. The Huskies came out of halftime on fire from three as they made their first six shots from beyond the arc. A triple by Philippe put SCSU up 51-41 with 11:37 left in the half. SCSU continued to hum on both ends as a layup by Ramlall extended the lead to 18 with 5:36 left in the game. From that layup, everything then began to click for the Warriors as a 16-0 run cut the deficit down to two points with 32 seconds remaining. WSU would foul and send Philippe to the line with 23 seconds remaining. The Australian came up big with two makes to push the lead up to four. Coming out of a timeout by SCSU, Luke Haertle missed a three that was collected by Winkel who would be fouled. The freshman also came up big at the line as he extended the lead to multiple possessions with two makes as there was now nine seconds left in the game. A bucket by Winona with three seconds left led to more free throws by Winkel. He ultimately sealed the game with a make as St. Cloud State came away with a 70-65 win against No. 23 Winona State. The Huskies were on fire from deep in the second half as they connected on eight on their 13 three-point attempts while shooting 54.2% from the field. Luke Winkel stuffed the stat sheet with 18 points, five rebounds, six assists, three threes, and two steals. He also shot 6/12 from the field. This was Winkel's seventh game with 18+ points and seventh with 6+ assists. Kynan Philippe scored a career-high 18 points while tying his career-high in three-point makes with four. The Australian also grabbed seven rebounds. This was Philippe's third game with 4+ threes.
St. Cloud State Statistical Leaders (total-average)
- Points- Luke Winkel (380-13.1)
- Rebounds- Wyatt Hawks (226-7.5)
- Offensive rebounds- Wyatt Hawks (68-2.3)
- Assists- Luke Winkel (115-4.0)
- Steals- Nate Dahl/Luke Winkel (41-1.4)
- Blocks- Wyatt Hawks (33-1.1)
- Stocks- Wyatt Hawks (54-1.8)
- Field goals made- Wyatt Hawks (129-4.3)
- Three-point field goals made- Kynan Philippe (53-1.8)
- Free throw makes- Nate Dahl (124-4.1)
- Minutes- Nate Dahl (861-28.7)
St. Cloud State Team Stats (NSIC Ranking)
- 75.9 points per game (8th) | 72.3 points per game allowed (7th) | 3.5 scoring margin (8th)
- 45.2 field goal percentage (10th) | 35.1 three-point percentage (8th) | 72.0 free throw percentage (7th)
- 45.2 opponent field goal percentage (11th) | 33.9 opponent three-point percentage (6th)
- 35.5 rebounds per game (8th) | 10.0 offensive rebounds per game (5th)
- 32.9 opponent rebounds per game (4th) | 2.6 rebounding margin (7th)
- 12.5 turnovers per game (13th) | 13.0 turnovers forced per game (2nd) | 0.73 turnover margin (6th)
- 2.87 blocks per game (9th)
- 8.07 steals per game (2nd)
- 12.10 assists per game (11th)
- 7.5 three-point field goals made per game (9th)
Region Risers
Last Wednesday, the inaugural region rankings were released, and St. Cloud State was listed as a team under consideration.
For the first regional rankings, ten teams are listed as under consideration in alphabetical order per region. Those teams included:
RV Concordia-St. Paul
RV Minnesota Duluth
RV Minnesota State Mankato
Minot State
MSU Moorhead
No. 20 Southern Nazarene
RV Southwest Minnesota State
St. Cloud State
No. 4 Washburn
No. 23 Winona State
St. Cloud State is part of the Central Region which is composed of three conferences, the Northern Sun Intercollegiate Conference (NSIC), Great American Conference (GAC), and Mid-American Intercollegiate Athletics Association (MIAA). The top eight teams in the region advance to the NCAA Regional Tournament on March 15-16, 18 which will be hosted by the top seed. Automatic bids are granted to the winners of the NSIC, GAC and MIAA postseason tournaments, with the remaining five spots being awarded on an at-large basis.
The NCAA Men's Basketball Selection Show will air on www.NCAA.com on Sunday, March 9 at 10 p.m. (CT). The NCAA Elite Eight will take place on March 25, 27, 29 at The Ford Center in Evansville, Indiana.
Regional rankings will be released each of the next two weeks on Wednesdays prior to the selection show on March 9. The next two releasing's of rankings will have teams ranked as opposed to listed.
NSIC Tournament
Following the conclusion of the regular season, St. Cloud State finished fifth in the NSIC standings. The winner of this game against Bemidji State will travel to the Sanford Pentagon to face the No. 4 seed in Minnesota State on Sunday, March 2 at 4:30. The full NSIC Tournament bracket can be found here.
Postseason History
Wednesday's game against Bemidji State will mark the third consecutive NSIC Tournament appearance for the Huskies during the three seasons of the Quincy Henderson era. The past two seasons have seen SCSU fall in the first round, but both those games have come on the road. This will be the first home playoff game for St. Cloud State since the 2018-19 season where they defeated Upper Iowa 91-72. That same season also saw the Huskies reach the NCAA Tournament, which was also the last time they made it. St. Cloud State is 1-0 all-time against Bemidji State in the playoffs with the lone meeting coming in the 2010-11 season.
Series History
In the all-time series against Bemidji State, St. Cloud State holds a 107-47 advantage while having swept the regular season series against the Beavers.
The first meeting between the teams took place in Bemidji where the Beavers got off to a fast start as they led 7-0 two minutes into the game. A three-ball by Anish Ramlall capped off a 7-0 run for SCSU as they tied the game at the 15:56 mark. Neither team would hold a lead larger than four points for almost the entirety of the first half. Trailing 24-25 with 3:40 left in the half, the Huskies started to take control with a 9-2 to end the half as they led 33-27 at the break. SCSU carried over their late first half momentum into the second half as they expanded their lead to double-digits after an and-one by Wyatt Hawks to set the score at 46-34 following an 8-0 run. The Beavers battled to get the lead back under 10 as St. Cloud would now only lead by six. With momentum starting to swing in favor of BSU, Lee Marks III weathered the storm with a big three-point make. Nathan Bunkosky then came away with a steal on the defensive end which led to a jumper by Vance Peiffer to put the Huskies back up by 11 with 12:09 remaining. The Beavers continued to make runs late into the half, but the Huskies always had an answer and ceased any momentum BSU had with a run of their own. SCSU started to close out Bemidji State as Anish Ramlall splashed a corner three and was fouled, resulting in a four-point play which he capitalized. Kynan Philippe knocked in a straight away three to put the Huskies up 12 points. Bemidji cut the lead down to 10 points with a layup, but Lucas Morgan cashed a corner three to give St. Cloud State a 79-66 advantage. The Huskies led by 9+ points in the final three minutes of the game as they went on to win 88-75 for their third consecutive win. Nate Dahl paced the Huskies in scoring with an uber efficient 23 points to go along with five rebounds and three assists. Dahl shot 7/10 from the field, 2/5 from three, and a perfect 7/7 from the free throw line. 23 points is a career-high for Dahl and was the third game this season where he has scored 20+ points. Luke Winkel stuffed the stat sheet with 13 points, five boards, and three assists and steals. The steals were a career-high for Winkel. He shot 4/9 from the field while making five of his six free throw attempts. Winkel has scored 13+ points in four of his past five games.
The second game was played at Halenbeck Hall. Through the first seven minutes of the game, neither team was able to take control of the game as the teams traded leads. A three by Luke Winkel gave St. Cloud State a little breathing room as they led 21-17 at the 12:18 mark of the first half. Two buckets by John Sutherland tied the game at 21, but SCSU started to take command as Izaac Neal gave the Huskies valuable minutes off the bench. Neal threw down a dunk to give the Huskies the lead at 23-21. Following back-to-back stops, Nate Dahl drove in the lane and finished inside as Bemidji State called a timeout. Out of the break, Neal showed off his vertical with a block on Sutherland and then a few possessions later made a hook shot to push the lead up to six points. The Huskies defense held the Beavers scoreless for nearly four minutes, but they ended the half on a hot streak as they knocked in five of their next six threes to lead 38-37 going into halftime. The second half saw the Huskies come out with a sense of urgency as a three-pointer by Anish Ramlall capped off a 12-4 run as St. Cloud State now led 49-42. The Huskies had an answer for every run by the Beavers in the second half, but BSU did not go away quietly. With 3:26 left in the game, the Huskies lead would be cut down to only two points. Lucas Morgan came up big for the Huskies as he finished a layup to get the lead back up to four points. SCSU forced a miss on the ensuing Beaver possession which ultimately to Wyatt Hawks getting fouled on a layup where he made both free throws. Now leading 65-59 with 2:06 left in the game, St. Cloud State kept the Beavers at bay as they made 11 of their final 12 free throw attempts. The Huskies would go on to win 78-71 for their 14th win of the season. Luke Winkel was the game's leading scorer with 19 points on an efficient 6/11 shooting. Winkel went 5/5 from the free throw line while dishing out four assists and nabbing a steal. This was the fourth game where Winkel has scored 19+ points and 12th game with 4+ assists, including the past five games. Lucas Morgan stuffed the stat sheet as he totaled 12 points and six rebounds and assists. Morgan also made all six of his free throw attempts. Morgan has scored 12+ points in six of his past seven games. The six assists were a season-high.
Scouting Bemidji State
The Bemidji State Beavers come into the playoffs as the 12 seed following a 10-18 regular season where they went 7-15 in conference. BSU ended the regular season on a four-game losing streak following loses to Augustana, Wayne State, Concordia-St. Paul, and Minnesota Duluth. The Beavers came into this season projected to finish fifth in the conference after they went 13-16 with a 9-13 conference record to place ninth. Last year, Bemidji State reached the NSIC Tournament where they would be defeated by Sioux Falls.
The Beavers return their First Team All-NSIC performer in John Sutherland, who is leading the team in scoring with 15.7 points per game in his 16 appearances this year. He is shooting 59.2% from the field to go with 6.8 rebounds and 4.6 assists. Tate Olson and Malang Athian have stepped up in Sutherland's place throughout the year. Olson is nearly averaging a double-double with 11.9 points and 8.9 rebounds per game. He is shooting 49.8% from the field and 37.4% from three. Athian is averaging 10.6 points and 4.0 rebounds while shooting 43.8% from the field and 36.6% from three. John Pecarich is the final Beaver to score in double-figures with 11.5 points per game while shooting 43.1% from three.
Head Coach Mike Boschee enters his 13th season with Bemidji State in the 2024-25 season. Boschee has tallied a 148-175 record during his tenure and is currently the all-time winningest coach in program history.
Bemidji State Statistical Leaders (total-average)
- Points- Tate Olson (332-11.9)
- Rebounds- Tate Olson (249-8.9)
- Offensive rebounds- Tate Olsen (34-1.2)
- Assists- Tate Olsen (80-2.9)
- Steals- Jareon Mayo (20-1.0)
- Blocks- Malang Athian/ Tate Olson (8-0.3)
- Stocks- Jareon Mayo (23-1.1)
- Field goals made- Tate Olson (127-4.5)
- Three-point field goals made- John Pecarich (62-2.2)
- Free throw makes- Malang Athian (40-1.5)
- Minutes- Tate Olson (915-32.7)
Bemidji State Team Stats (NSIC Ranking)
- 72.9 points per game (10th) | 76.6 points per game allowed (11th) | -3.7 scoring margin (12th)
- 45.8 field goal percentage (6th) | 34.9 three-point percentage (10th) | 69.9 free throw percentage (11th)
- 45.3 opponent field goal percentage (12th) | 36.0 opponent three-point percentage (12th)
- 34.3 rebounds per game (11th) | 8.0 offensive rebounds per game (12th)
- 34.3 opponent rebounds per game (8th) | 0.0 rebounding margin (10th)
- 12.1 turnovers per game (12th) | 8.8 turnovers forced per game (14th) | -3.39 turnover margin (15th)
- 1.64 blocks per game (15th)
- 5.25 steals per game (11th)
- 14.93 assists per game (2nd)
- 9.0 three-point field goals made per game (4th)
For all the latest on St. Cloud State Men's Basketball, stay tuned to scsuhuskies.com and follow the team on Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook.
Players Mentioned
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