- Marquette Golden Eagles
-
Marquette Golden Eagles University Marquette University Conference(s) Big East NCAA Division I Athletics director Steve Cottingham Location Milwaukee, WI Varsity teams 10 Basketball arena Bradley Center Other arenas Al McGuire Center Mascot Golden Eagles Nickname Golden Eagles Fight song Colors Blue and Gold Homepage www.gomarquette.com The Marquette Golden Eagles (formerly known as the Marquette Warriors, Blue and Gold, Hilltoppers, and Golden Avalanche (football only)) are the intercollegiate athletic teams of Marquette University.
Marquette's athletic teams participate at the NCAA Division I level and are members of the Big East Conference. The men's basketball team are the 1976-7 NCAA National Champions, 1974 NCAA Finalist, 1970 National Invitational Tournament Champions, and 2003 Final Four participants.
Contents
Sports
Men's basketball
Main article: Marquette Golden Eagles men's basketballMarquette Basketball is 9th in the NCAA for postseason appearances all-time (40), including 26 NCAA Tournament appearances (17th all time). The Warriors, coached by Al McGuire, won the 1977 NCAA Tournament and were runners-up in 1974. Maurice "Bo" Ellis was a member of each of those teams, and remains the only Marquette player to appear in two Final Fours.
In 2003 Marquette, coached by Tom Crean and led by Dwyane Wade, Robert Jackson, Steve Novak, and Travis Diener, defeated top-ranked Kentucky to reach the Final Four. In that game, Wade became one of only four players in NCAA Men's Tournament history to record a triple-double. Wade was named an AP All-American two years in a row and won Conference USA Player of the Year while at Marquette.
The 2007–2008 season men's basketball roster included guards Dominic James (2005–06 Big East Rookie of the Year), Wesley Matthews, Jerel McNeal (2006–07 Big East Defensive Player of the Year), and David Cubillan, forward/guard Dan Fitzgerald (2002–03 "Defensive Player of the Year" in Minnesota), as well as Senegalese forward, Ousmane Barro. The Golden Eagles went through the entire 2006–2007 season ranked in the top 25 in both the Associated Press and ESPN/USA Today Polls with the exception of one week.[1] [2].
Marquette men's basketball players whose jerseys have been "retired":
- Dwyane Wade (3)
- Don Kojis (44)
- Doc Rivers (31)
- George Thompson (24)
- Maurice "Bo" Ellis (31)
- Butch Lee (15)
- Earl Tatum (43)
- Dean Meminger (14)
- Maurice Lucas (20)
- Marquette has also retired numbers 77, 38, and 11, in honor of coach Al McGuire, trainer Bob Weingart and the Apollo 11 crew, respectively.
The team plays in the nearby home of the Milwaukee Bucks, the Bradley Center.
Conference Affiliations
Independent 1916–1989 Midwestern Collegiate Conference 1989–1991 Great Midwest Conference 1991–1995 Conference USA 1995–2005 Big East 2005–present Marquette Warriors Men's Basketball 1976–77 NCAA Champions Jim Boylan | Bo Ellis | Butch Lee (MOP) | Ulice Payne | Gary Rosenberger | Bernard Toone | Jerome Whitehead
Coach Al McGuire
Assistant Coaches: Rick Majerus | Hank RaymondsWomen's basketball
Marquette's women's basketball is currently coached by Terri Mitchell, 2007 Big East Women's Basketball Coach of the Year. The program has experienced success in recent years under Mitchell's direction, including a run to the championship game of the WNIT, where the women finished as runners-up in 2006, and won the championship in 2008. Most recently, the team made it to the second round of the NCAA tournament in 2011, where they were defeated by top-seeded Tennessee. Marquette women's basketball has qualified for the NCAA tournament seven times since 1994.[3] The team now plays in the Al McGuire Center, named after the former Marquette men's coach.
Soccer
The men's and women's soccer programs of Marquette have achieved varying degrees of success. In 2006, the men's team won just one game and finished last in their conference while the women made a run into the NCAA postseason tournament. Coach Louis Bennett recently joined the men's program after years of accomplishment at nearby UW–Milwaukee to help the team match the women's success. In June, 2007, alumnus Dennis Klein donated $1 million to spearhead a new, $5 million European-style soccer stadium for Marquette. The new stadium is set to open in September 2008.[4] Both teams currently compete at Valley Fields.
Men's golf
Marquette University fields only a men's team for golf. Former head coach, Tim Grogan, was honored as Big East Conference Men's Golf Coach of the Year in 2006 and 2008. The Golf Team holds Marquette's only BIG EAST Championship, which was won in 2008. Mike Van Sickle, class of 2009, was named to the PING Division I All-American Honorable Mention list in June, 2007 and 2008. He was a first-team All-American in 2009. Van Sickle currently holds the school record for single-season average at 70.00 strokes per eighteen holes, and most sub-par rounds at 86. [5]
Cross-country and track
The Marquette University cross-country and track teams have a rich history of achievements. The teams have produced five Olympians, 13 NCAA Champions and 27 All-Americans.[6] Except for Dwyane Wade, Marquette's most successful student-athlete was track and field sprinter Ralph Metcalfe, a world-record holder and Olympic gold-medalist.
Lacrosse
On December 16, 2010 the university announced that it would be adding men's and women's lacrosse teams to begin play as independents in the 2012–13 academic year, before becoming full members of the Big East Conference in men's and women's lacrosse in 2013–14.
Football
See also: 1936 Marquette Golden Avalanche football teamMarquette University's football team was known as the "Golden Avalanche" prior to the program being terminated in 1960. Marquette football posted several successful seasons in the 1920s and 1930s including undefeated seasons in 1922, 1923, and 1930. From 1922 to 1923 Marquette held a 17–0–1 record and outscored its opponents 374–15. The 1930 Marquette squad had seven games in which it held the opposition scoreless and held a 155–7 scoring margin. From 1920 to 1936 Marquette held a 90–32–6 record. In 1937 the 20th ranked Marquette Golden Avalanche had a 7–1 regular season record and appeared in the first Cotton Bowl Classic against Texas Christian University, losing 16–6. NCAA football was last played by Marquette in 1960, after accumulating several years of budget deficits for the university. Their last successful season was 1953. Since then, they had accumulated a 10–44–3 record, including two straight seasons (1956 to 1957) without a win or even a tie. Marquette Stadium, the football team's home since 1924, was dismantled in 1978. The sport has since been brought back at the club level.
Club sports
At the club level, Marquette's men's and women's teams are some of the most successful in the country. The men's volleyball team won the NIRSA club championships in 2005 and finished No. 3 in 2006. They have finished in the Top 10 seven out of the last nine years. The women's team has also finished in the Top 10 in the country each of the last 10 years. The men's and women's rowing and rugby union teams, the men's lacrosse team, the club football team, the club baseball and softball teams and the club hockey team also have been dominant in years past for the Golden Eagles. Marquette added several new club teams in 2006, including wrestling, running club, women's soccer, and water polo.
Notable athletes
Basketball
- Dwyane Wade – guard, Miami Heat, NBA All-Star, NBA Finals MVP, USA Gold Medalist
- Doc Rivers – Current head coach of the Boston Celtics, former head coach of the Orlando Magic, former point guard for the Atlanta Hawks, Los Angeles Clippers, New York Knicks, & San Antonio Spurs
- Jim McIlvaine – Washington Bullets, Seattle SuperSonics, New Jersey Nets
- Steve Novak – forward, Houston Rockets, Los Angeles Clippers, Dallas Mavericks, San Antonio Spurs
- Wesley Matthews – guard, Utah Jazz, Portland Trail Blazers
- Lazar Hayward – forward, Minnesota Timberwolves
- Jerel McNeal – guard, Rio Grande Valley Vipers of the NBA D-League, New Orleans Hornets
- Travis Diener – Orlando Magic, Indiana Pacers, Portland Trail Blazers, Dinamo Sassari
- Bo Ellis – Denver Nuggets
- Don Kojis – former NBA All-Star forward for the Baltimore Bullets, Detroit Pistons, Chicago Bulls, San Diego Rockets, Seattle SuperSonics, Kansas City-Omaha Kings, and forward for the gold medal winning United States men's national basketball team in the 1963 FIBA World Championship where he was named to the All-Tournament Team.
- Butch Lee – Atlanta Hawks
- Maurice Lucas – Portland Trail Blazers, New Jersey Nets, New York Knicks, Phoenix Suns, Los Angeles Lakers, Seattle SuperSonics
- Tony Smith – Los Angeles Lakers, Charlotte Hornets
- Dean Meminger – New York Knicks
- Jim Boylan – NBA assistant coach for the Milwaukee Bucks, former Chicago Bulls interim head coach
- Gene Berce – Tri-Cities Blackhawks
- Ed Mullen – National Basketball League
- Earl Tatum – Los Angeles Lakers
- George Thompson – Milwaukee Bucks
- Chris Crawford – Atlanta Hawks
- Jerome Whitehead – Played for six National Basketball Association teams in an 11-year career
- Bill Chandler – NBA coach
- Frank Murray – former Marquette football coach, inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1983
- Jim Chones – Los Angeles Lakers
Football
- Ward Cuff – defensive back – place kicker – fullback/halfback, New York Giants
- George Andrie – defensive end, Dallas Cowboys
- Ray Buivid – tailback, Chicago Bears
- Ron Drzewiecki – halfback, Chicago Bears
- Red Dunn – quarterback, Green Bay Packers
- Gene Ronzani – former head coach, Green Bay Packers
- John Sisk, Jr. – Chicago Bears
- Milt Trost – Chicago Bears
Track and field
- Ralph Metcalfe – Olympic gold-medalist in the 4×100 m Relay, as well as Olympic silver-medalist in the 100 m dash in both 1932 and 1936.
Soccer
- Hayden Knight – Dallas Sidekicks
- Jeremiah Bass – Minnesota Thunder
- Max Stoka – Chicago Fire
External links
Big East Conference Football members Cincinnati Bearcats • Connecticut Huskies • Louisville Cardinals • Pittsburgh Panthers (leaving by 2014) • Rutgers Scarlet Knights • South Florida Bulls • Syracuse Orange (leaving by 2014) •
West Virginia Mountaineers (leaving in 2012) •Non-football members DePaul Blue Demons • Georgetown Hoyas † • Marquette Golden Eagles • Notre Dame Fighting Irish † • Providence Friars • St. John's Red Storm • Seton Hall Pirates • Villanova Wildcats †
† schools that field football teams outside of the Big EastCategories:- Marquette Golden Eagles
- College sports teams in the United States by team
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.