January 10, 20241st2ndFinal
Southern Ill.443377
Valparaiso244468
Stats at a GlanceSIUVALPO
FG Percentage.510 (26-51) .510 (25-49)
3P FG Percentage.533 (8-15) .308 (4-13)
FT Percentage.680 (17-25) .737 (14-19)
Offensive Rebounds106
Defensive Rebounds2120
Total Rebounds3126
Turnovers1112
Steals73
Bench Points2317
LeadersSIUVALPO
PointsJohnson - 22
Stafford - 19
ReboundsRupert - 6
Schwieger - 7
AssistsJohnson - 7
DeAveiro - 5
StealsBrown - 2
Stafford - 2
BlocksRupert - 1
Schwieger - 2
Valpo to Continue Evenly-Matched All-Time Series with SIU on Wednesday
Sunday, January 7, 2024
Valpo to Continue Evenly-Matched All-Time Series with SIU on Wednesday
Jaxon Edwards has a team-high eight dunks this season.

Southern Illinois (11-4, 3-1 MVC)
at Valparaiso (4-11, 0-4 MVC) 

Game No. 16 – Wednesday, Jan. 10, 7 p.m. CT
Athletics-Recreation Center (5,000) – Valparaiso, Ind.

Next Up in Valpo Basketball: The Valparaiso University men’s basketball team will continue Missouri Valley Conference play on Wednesday night when Southern Illinois comes to town for a conference clash. The Beacons will attempt to get back to .500 at home for the season with a win on Wednesday. Click here for info on the pregame Valpo Fan Zone.

Last Time Out: Junior Isaiah Stafford returned to the Valpo rotation after missing the previous two games with an injury and made a big impact, scoring a team-high 19 points in Saturday’s 70-64 loss at UIC. The game was tied at 62 with 8:20 remaining, but Valpo went on a scoring drought of over seven minutes and did not hit a field goal for the remainder of the contest. The Flames, who missed seven of eight themselves down the stretch, used an 8-0 run during the long Valpo dry spell to cement the game’s outcome. Valpo possessed a 44-33 rebounding edge, its best margin on the boards this season.

Following the Beacons: Streaming – ESPN+ – Todd Ickow (play-by-play) and Jamie Stangel (analyst)

Radio – 95.1 FM, WVUR, ValpoAthletics.com, TuneIn Radio App – Noah Godsell (play-by-play) and Soren Burkholder (analyst)

Twitter updates - @ValpoBasketball

Links for video, audio and live stats will be available at ValpoAthletics.com.

Head Coach Roger Powell Jr.: Roger Powell Jr. (4-11) is in his first season as the head coach of the Valpo men’s basketball program. After helping guide Gonzaga to a 121-13 record during his four seasons as an assistant coach, Powell returned to Valpo, where he was part of head coach Bryce Drew’s staff from 2011-2016 and led the team to 124 wins in five seasons, including a program-record 30 victories and a National Invitation Tournament (NIT) title game appearance in 2015-16. He was part of head coach Mark Few’s Gonzaga staff as the Bulldogs reached the 2021 national championship game after winning their first 31 games of the season. During Powell’s first season on staff in 2019-20, Gonzaga was 31-2 at the time the NCAA college basketball season was halted due to COVID-19. The Bulldogs reached the Sweet Sixteen in each of his final three seasons on staff, including two Elite Eight appearances and the aforementioned trip to the 2021 national title game. Prior to his arrival at Gonzaga, Powell served as the associate head coach at Vanderbilt University under Bryce Drew from 2016-2019. During his stint as an assistant at Valpo, he was part of four Horizon League regular-season championships in a five-year period while also leading the 2012-13 and 2014-15 squads to Horizon League tournament titles and NCAA Tournament appearances. A product of Joliet West High School and a native of Joliet, Ill., Powell capped a prolific collegiate playing career at Illinois with a national title game appearance in 2005 before going on to a successful professional playing career.

Series Notes: Southern Illinois prevailed 66-62 in the only clash between these two teams last season (Feb. 14 at the ARC) to take a 15-14 lead in an all-time series that dates back to 1928. The Salukis also took a slight 6-5 edge in the 11 games that have occurred since Valpo joined The Valley. SIU has won four straight head-to-head meetings in a series that has seen four of the last five decided by four points or fewer. These two teams will face off in two of the next five games as Valpo will make the return trip to Carbondale on Jan. 24.

Scouting the Salukis

  • Own a five-game winning streak including MVC wins over UIC (62-50), Belmont (73-63) and most recently Illinois State on Saturday in Normal (71-64).
  • Did incur a 77-48 setback to Indiana State for their lone league loss on Nov. 28.
  • Larry Bird MVC Player of the Year candidate Xavier Johnson is the league’s leading scorer at 24.3 points per game.
  • Picked ninth of 12 in the MVC preseason poll despite going 23-10 and 14-6 in MVC play a year ago.

Back in Action

  • Isaiah Stafford returned to the floor on Jan. 6 at UIC after missing the previous two games with an injury that occurred on Dec. 19 vs. Samford. In his return to action, Valpo’s leading scorer turned in 19 points to pace the team.
  • The junior college transfer has led the team in scoring (outright or tied) in nine of his 13 games this season.
  • Stafford, who ranks seventh in the MVC in scoring at 16.4 points per game, has scored 17 points or more in eight of his 13 contests.
  • In the Dec. 9 game at Virginia Tech, Stafford became the first Valpo player with 14+ points, four or more steals and multiple blocks in a game since Ryan Broekhoff on Feb. 10, 2011 vs. Detroit Mercy.

Battling on the Boards

  • Valpo enjoyed its best rebounding margin of the season at +11 on Jan. 6 at UIC, outdoing the Flames 44-33 including 15-8 on the offensive glass.
  • This marked Valpo’s biggest rebounding edge since Feb. 11, 2023 vs. Illinois State (+11).
  • This was just the fourth time total and third against a Division-I opponent that Valpo won the battle on the boards this season. The team’s previous rebounding advantages were vs. Trinity Christian (+8), vs. Southern (+4) and at Elon (+3).
  • This was Valpo’s best rebounding performance in a road game since Feb. 19, 2022 at Evansville (+15).

Double-Double Details

  • Sophomore Jaxon Edwards enjoyed his first collegiate double-double with 12 points and 10 rebounds on Jan. 6 at UIC.
  • This marked Valpo’s second double-double of the season and first since Jerome Palm’s 12 points and 10 rebounds on Nov. 17 at No. 23 Illinois.
  • Edwards boasted his second double-figure scoring output in the last three games (15 points at Elon) and his sixth of the season. This marked his second double-figure rebounding performance and first since 15 on Nov. 17 at No. 23 Illinois.
  • Edwards also rejected three shots in the game against UIC, his fifth game this season with three or more blocks.
  • Edwards became just the fourth different and sixth total Valpo player since 2010 to record a stat line featuring 10 or more points, 11 or more rebounds and three or more blocked shots. He joined Kobe King (Feb. 5, 2022 vs. Indiana State), Vashil Fernandez (three times, M.R. 1/18/16 at Youngstown State) and Ryan Broekhoff (Nov. 18, 2011 vs. Akron).
  • Edwards slammed home his team-leading eighth dunk of the season in the game against UIC. Four of those jams have come in the last three contests.

Other Notes Wrapping Up Jan. 7: UIC 70, Valpo 64

  • Four Valpo players finished in double figures – Isaiah Stafford (19), Darius DeAveiro (11), Jaxon Edwards (10) and Kaspar Sepp (10).
  • Edwards paced the team with 11 rebounds, while Cooper Schwieger had eight to tie a season high set way back on Nov. 6 vs. Trinity Christian. Ola Ajiboye squeezed seven boards.
  • The game featured eight ties and 18 lead changes.
  • Valpo lost the turnover battle for the second straight game after a stretch of six straight either winning or tying the turnover battle. UIC’s seven giveaways were the second-fewest by a Beacon opponent this season (Drake, six).
  • The Beacons held the Flames to 6-of-24 (25 percent) from 3-point distance, the lowest clip by a Valpo opponent in the last 12 games after Green Bay was 2-of-18 (11.1 percent) on Nov. 14.
  • UIC entered the game leading the nation with an average of 6.9 blocked shots per game, but it was the Beacons who rejected seven shots while the Flames turned away two. The seven blocks marked Valpo’s highest total in the last 11 games since registering seven on Nov. 17 at No. 23 Illinois.
  • This was Valpo’s fourth loss by six points or fewer in the last seven games.

Darius Delivering  

  • Over his last 11 games, junior point guard Darius DeAveiro is averaging 9.1 points and 5.9 assists per game.
  • A breakout season for DeAveiro continued in a big way on Jan. 3 vs. Bradley, when he posted a career-high 19 points to go along with seven rebounds, four assists and one steal while committing just one turnover.
  • Since 2010, DeAveiro became just the seventh Valpo player with at least 19 points, seven rebounds and four assists in a game while committing one turnover or fewer. He joined a star-studded list of six Valpo greats who were all first-team all-conference performers – Brandon Wood, Ryan Broekhoff (twice), Alec Peters (3x), Tevonn Walker, Javon Freeman-Liberty (twice) and Ben Krikke. DeAveiro was the first to do it since Krikke on Jan. 25, 2023.
  • DeAveiro’s career-high 19 points against the Braves easily outdid his previous career best of 11, which was reached twice this season (Nov. 21 vs. Western Illinois, Nov. 29 vs. Drake). It also marked the first time in his collegiate career (68th game) that he led the team in scoring.
  • DeAveiro’s seven rebounds vs. Bradley led the team, his second straight outing with seven boards after squeezing seven on Dec. 29 at Elon. Before the Elon game, DeAveiro’s season high in the rebounding department was four and his career high was six, achieved back on Nov. 27, 2021 vs. Trinity Christian.
  • The four-assist game against Bradley snapped DeAveiro’s streak of nine straight games with five or more helpers. (Since you cannot assist your own made basket, it’s hard to put up a big assist total when you’re the one doing all of the scoring!)
  • DeAveiro’s 11 points on Jan. 6 at UIC represented his third straight double-figure scoring output. After scoring in double figures in just two of his first 66 collegiate contests, he has done so in three straight.
  • DeAveiro has improved from the 3-point arc, where he is 13-of-44 this season after going 3-of-16 a year ago and 4-of-19 as a freshman.

Handing Out Helpers

  • Just 15 games into the season, Darius DeAveiro has 81 assists, already surpassing his previous single-season career high of 68, set in 25 games last year. He’s up to 199 career assists, one shy of 200 entering Jan. 10 vs. Southern Illinois.
  • DeAveiro ranks 30th nationally and second in the MVC with 81 total assists and ranks 31st in the country and second in the league with 5.4 assists per game.
  • DeAveiro is on pace to become just the third Valpo player in the last 30 years to average at least 5.4 assists per game. The last to do so was Ali Berdeil in 2003-04 (6.0) and before that it was Bryce Drew in 1994-95 (6.0).
  • His 10 assists in this season’s game vs. Samford tied a career high set on Nov. 13, 2022 vs. Western Michigan.

Williamson Captures MVC Honor

  • Valpo’s Jahari Williamson was named the Missouri Valley Conference Freshman of the Week on Jan. 2 following his career-high 24 points on Dec. 29 at Elon.
  • Making his first collegiate start in the game against the Phoenix, Williamson knocked down five 3s and was a perfect 7-of-7 at the free-throw line. He also had five rebounds and two assists. The scoring output outdid his previous season best of 20 that came on Dec. 16 vs. Chicago State.
  • Williamson’s 24 points marked the most by a Valpo rookie since Javon Freeman-Liberty had 27 on Feb. 5, 2019 at Illinois State.
  • Williamson became the third Beacon to achieve a Missouri Valley Conference weekly award this season, joining Isaiah Stafford (Nov. 20, Newcomer of the Week) and Cooper Schwieger (Nov. 27, Freshman of the Week). This year’s team has already tied for Valpo’s second most weekly awards in a single season since joining the MVC and needs just one more weekly honor to tie for the program’s most since joining the conference.
  • Valpo became the first Valley team this season to have two different players who have won the MVC Freshman of the Week Award (Williamson and Schwieger).
  • Stafford’s recognition came after he averaged 24.0 points per game against Green Bay and No. 23 Illinois including 30 against the Fighting Illini. Schwieger’s came after a week where he averaged 15.0 points and 5.0 rebounds in wins over Western Illinois and Southern.

Notes Wrapping Up Jan. 3: Bradley 86, Valpo 61

  • Bradley extended its head-to-head winning streak to six in the lone regular-season matchup between the two teams.
  • Valpo played shorthanded as leading scorer Isaiah Stafford was sidelined by a knee injury for the second straight game.
  • Walk-on Anthony Sciarroni scored his first collegiate points by knocking down a 3. The former Valpo football player who joined the basketball team this season played a season-high 11 minutes. This marked the second game this season where he was part of the rotation, joining the Dec. 6 game at Central Michigan.
  • Freshman Kaspar Sepp knocked down his first collegiate 3-pointer on just his second attempt of the season.
  • Valpo shot 50 percent (10-of-20) in the second half, but turned it over 15 times over the final 20 minutes after the team had turned it over no more than 14 times in any entire game this season previously. Valpo finished the game with an uncharacteristic 20 turnovers, the team’s most in a regulation game at the ARC since Jan. 8, 2017 vs. Detroit Mercy and most in any contest since Dec. 10, 2022 at Ole Miss.
  • Bradley’s 86 points were the most scored by a Valpo opponent in a regulation game at the ARC since Dec. 31, 2011, a 90-87 win over Green Bay.

We Are Young

  • Valpo’s 2023-24 roster is a new-look group that is among the nation’s most inexperienced teams.
  • The Beacons rank 356 of 362 in the KenPom “experience factor” at 0.54. The experience factor is calculated using eligibility class weighted by minutes played.
  • The only more inexperienced teams nationally, per KenPom, are Notre Dame, Boston, Saint Francis, Siena, Northwestern State and Idaho.

Rookie Report

  • Cooper Schwieger is averaging 10.4 points per game and 4.6 rebounds per game this season.
  • The Overland Park, Kan. native ranks second in the Missouri Valley Conference in scoring average among freshmen at 10.4 points per game. He is behind only Drake’s Kevin Overton (13.0 ppg).
  • Schwieger ranks second among MVC freshmen with 0.9 blocks per game and is third in rebounds per game among rookies at 4.6, behind Evansville’s Joshua Hughes (4.7) and Valpo’s Kaspar Sepp (4.7).
  • Schwieger is one of 14 freshmen nationally averaging at least 10.4 points, 4.5 rebounds and 0.8 blocks.

Sepp Surging

  • Kaspar Sepp is averaging 6.7 points per game over his last seven games after totaling eight points in the first four games that he played this season, including three where he played and did not score.
  • Before the last five games, Sepp had not scored in any of the team’s previous seven games, three where he played and did not score and four where he did not play (coach’s decision).
  • Sepp tied a season high with 10 points on Jan. 6 at UIC, matching his first career double-figure effort from Dec. 9 at Virginia Tech. He went 4-for-4 shooting in the game against the Flames

20-Point Tandem

  • On Dec. 29 vs. Elon, Cooper Schwieger and Jahari Williamson both eclipsed 20 points, marking the first time a Valpo tandem turned that trick since Ben Krikke and Kobe King did it on Feb. 14 of last season vs. Southern Illinois.
  • This marked the first time in over 30 years that a pair of Valpo rookies each reached the 20-point threshold. No freshman tandem had achieved that feat since at least the start of the Homer Drew head coaching era in 1988-89.
  • This marked the first time Valpo had a pair of 20-point scorers in a true road game since Dec. 18, 2019 at High Point (Javon Freeman-Liberty and Eron Gordon).

Underclassmen on Display

  • A young and inexperienced team was even more young and inexperienced on Dec. 29 at Elon as junior Isaiah Stafford was sidelined with an injury.
  • Three of the five starters in that game were freshmen and four were underclassmen, including rookie Jahari Williamson, who made his first collegiate start.
  • Of the team’s 78 points at Elon, 51 (65.3 percent) were scored by freshmen and 68 (87.2 percent) were scored by freshmen and sophomores.
  • Williamson scored a career-high 24 points, knocked down five 3s and was a perfect 7-of-7 at the free-throw line. He also had five rebounds and two assists. He outdid his previous season best of 20 that came on Dec. 16 vs. Chicago State.
  • Cooper Schwieger went 7-of-11 from the field for a season-high 21 points with the bulk of his damage coming after halftime. Over the final 20 minutes, he scored 15 points on 6-of-7 shooting. Schwieger outdid his previous personal best of 18 that occurred on Dec. 2 at Belmont.

Jahari’s Jumpers

  • Jahari Williamson returned to the rotation on Dec. 16 vs. Chicago State after missing the previous two games due to an illness. He made a significant impact, tallying 20 points and going 4-of-6 from 3-point territory.
  • Williamson enjoyed his second 20-point output in a three-game span when he went 5-of-8 from 3 and produced a season-high 24 points on Dec. 29 at Elon.
  • On Jan. 3 vs. Bradley, Williamson scored 12 points, his third double-figure scoring output in a four-game span, more than he had in his first eight games of the season (two).
  • Before that four-game stretch, Williamson had been held to six points or fewer in six of his previous seven games.

Notes Wrapping Up Dec. 29: Elon 82, Valpo 78

  • Cooper Schwieger scored 15 points on 6-of-7 shooting in the second half alone as part of his 21-point barrage. He has scored 15 or more points four times this season including each of the last two games.
  • Jahari Williamson’s 24-point outpouring marked his second 20-point game over the last three contests.
  • Jaxon Edwards posted 15 points, slammed home a pair of dunks and squeezed a team-high eight rebounds. He was in double figures by halftime.
  • Edwards had his highest scoring output in the last 10 games and posted his fifth double-figure scoring output this season.
  • Elon shot 52.7 percent for the game while Valpo’s shooting numbers represented a tale of two halves – 26.7 percent before the break and 61.3 percent after.
  • Elon owned a 32-2 edge in bench points.
  • Valpo grabbed 13 offensive rebounds including five from Edwards and four from Ola Aijboye.
  • Valpo made nine 3s, tied for the team’s highest total against a Division-I opponent this season.
  • Valpo won or tied the turnover battle for the sixth straight game, committing 11 to Elon’s 13.
  • In addition to his 10 points and six assists, Darius DeAveiro had a career-high seven rebounds. This surpassed his previous watermark of six that had stood dating all the way back to Nov. 27, 2021 vs. Trinity Christian.

Who’s Next?

  • Justus McNair signed his National Letter of Intent to continue his basketball career at Valpo during the November signing period.
  • The Joliet West senior and Joliet, Ill. native has a deep connection to head coach Roger Powell Jr. His parents grew up with Powell in Joliet.
  • McNair, a 6-foot-3 guard, lists going to state in eighth grade as a favorite basketball memory. He also highlighted last season’s Joliet West sectional championship appearance, fueled by a late-season, 14-game winning streak and a 29-6 record.
  • Powell on McNair: “I’m extremely excited about this young man from Joliet, Ill., my hometown. He’s a tough, physical and athletic guard who will add even more athleticism and ability to shoot the ball to our team next year. I’m fired up and can’t wait to get him here and help us continue to build a winning tradition.”

The Game’s Biggest Stage

  • Valpo head coach Roger Powell Jr. owns the unique distinction of having played and coached in the national championship game.
  • Just 12 coaches in the last 25 years have coached in the national title game after previously playing in the national title game, and two others have coached in the national championship game after being a rostered player but not seeing action in the national title game as a student-athlete.
  • In the last quarter of a century, only two coaches have coached in the national title game after previously playing in the national title game at a different school – Roger Powell Jr. and Kenny Payne.

Name                          Year, Team as Player             Year, Team as Coach

Sean May                    2005, UNC                              2022, UNC
Roger Powell Jr.        2005, Illinois                          2021, Gonzaga
Jeff Capel                    1994, Duke                             2015, Duke
Nate James                  1999 & 2001, Duke                2015, Duke
Jon Scheyer                2010, Duke                             2015, Duke
Ricky Moore               1999, UConn                           2014, UConn
Kenny Payne              1986, Louisville                     2014, Kentucky
Danny Manning          1988, Kansas                          2008 & 2012, Kansas
Chris Collins               1994, Duke                             2010, Duke
Jim Thomas                1981, Indiana                          2002, Indiana
Johnny Dawkins         1986, Duke                             2001, Duke
David Henderson        1986, Duke                             1999, Duke
Quin Snyder                1986, Duke                              1999, Duke - DNP
Jeremy Case               2008, Kansas                          2022, Kansas - DNP

“The Rev” in the Community

  • Since head coach Roger Powell Jr. was hired to lead Valpo’s program, he has made numerous community engagement appearances including IBCA State Wide Clinic, Popcorn Fest, Valpo Kiwanis, Boys & Girls Clubs of Northwest Indiana, Big Shoulders NWI, the Valpo Athletics Coaches Tour and many more.
  • An engaging speaker with an active social media presence, Powell has launched a video series featuring local restaurants called “Powell Party of Six,” showcasing the Powell family meals in the community. Episode 1 featuring Burgerhaus was released prior to the season with more editions to come.
  • Nicknamed “The Rev” because of his strong faith and calling as a preacher, Powell’s hire as Valpo head coach made an immediate media splash. The news was featured prominently in the Chicago Sun-Times, on CBS 2 Chicago’s 4 p.m. news and WGN-TV’s GN Sports. He appeared on the Mully & Haugh morning show on 670 The Score in Chicago and Indiana Sports Talk with Bob Lovell out of Indianapolis.

What They’re Saying About Coach Powell

  • Bryce Drew, Valpo Legend, Former Valpo Head Coach, GCU Head Coach: “I am very excited for Roger to be a head coach. He is more than ready to lead his own program, so this is perfect timing for him. I will be cheering for Roger and the Beacons!”
  • Homer Drew, Legendary Valpo Head Coach: “We’re really happy and thrilled to see Roger return to Valparaiso University. His love for the University and the community of Valparaiso makes him a great fit. Roger is an excellent teacher; he has tremendous knowledge of the game of basketball. He has been part of the Drew family since he arrived on campus and was an assistant coach for Bryce. He is a dedicated and hard recruiter, and being from the Chicago area, he has a lot of friends and contacts in that area.”
  • Mark Few, Gonzaga Head Coach: “Roger has been a very instrumental part of our program these past four years. He is the total package as a coach, and one of the best human beings I have ever been around. He will not only be a great addition to the University, but a positive force in the surrounding community. We look forward to watching his teams grow not only on the floor, but also in their life away from basketball.”
  • Chris Standiford, Gonzaga Athletic Director: “I am happy for Roger and his family. His positive energy and winning attitude will serve him well as a head coach. Valpo is getting a great coach, and more importantly, a terrific person.”
  • Scott Drew, Baylor Head Coach: “Roger is not only an outstanding basketball coach, but an even better person and representative of Valparaiso University. The community will welcome him as they already know him and his family. He will do a tremendous job.”
  • Tommy Lloyd, Arizona Head Coach: “Roger Powell is a first-class individual. He is well liked by the players he coaches and his colleagues in the business. I have no doubt that Roger’s passion, energy and fire will help bring back the glory days of Valpo Basketball!”
  • Alec Peters, Valpo’s All-Time Leading Scorer: “The amount of love and passion that Coach Powell is going to put into the program is going to be unmatched. His energy, competitiveness and character are going to show up every day and everyone will feel it.”

Inside the Assistants

  • Valpo’s staff features two coaches who have played in the national title game – Powell and A.J. Moye. Powell has also coached in the national title game.
  • Powell, Moye and Matt Gordon have all either coached or played in the Final Four.
  • Powell, Moye, Gordon, Pat Baldwin and Lubos Barton have all either coached or played in the NCAA Tournament.
  • Assistant coach Pat Baldwin brings head coaching experience to the staff as he spent five seasons at the helm at Milwaukee before serving as an assistant coach under Patrick Ewing at Georgetown during the 2022-23 season. He also worked under Chris Collins as an assistant during a successful run at Northwestern, so he has recent stops in the Big Ten and Big East to go along with head coaching experience.
  • Assistant coach Matt Gordon spent the last two years in the Big 12 Conference at Oklahoma as Director of Recruiting and Special Assistant to head coach Porter Moser. He joined Moser in Norman, Okla. after they previously worked together for a decade at Loyola. Gordon knows what it takes to win in the Missouri Valley Conference as he played a key role in a turnaround that saw the Ramblers post a 156-80 (.661) record during his seven seasons as an assistant coach. He helped the team to two Sweet Sixteen appearances in a four-year period including a historic run to the Final Four.
  • Assistant coach J. Moye was a standout during his playing days at Indiana, where he took the Hoosiers to the 2002 national title game before beginning a professional playing career. He trained professional and collegiate players from 2011-2023 as part of Rising Talent Development (Mamba Sports Academy), serving as the Master Basketball Trainer for Kobe Bryant’s academy. Moye played against Powell in the Big Ten and they later finished out their playing careers as teammates with Skyliners Frankfurt in Germany in 2010-11.
  • Director of Recruiting & Player Development Lubos Barton returns to Valpo over two decades after wrapping up his storied career donning the brown and gold. After retiring from his professional playing career, Barton stayed in the game of basketball by beginning his coaching career overseas in 2016. A member of the Valpo Athletics Hall of Fame Class of 2017, Barton was a standout on the court from 1998-2002, leading the team to three Mid-Continent Conference regular-season titles, three conference tournament championships and three NCAA Tournament appearances.
  • Special Assistant to the Head Coach Quintin Garrison served as the associate head coach at Trinity International University from 2018-2023.
  • Video coordinator / Director of Basketball Operations Sean Taylor served as SIUE’s graduate assistant/video coordinator from August 2021 to May 2023.
  • Associate Director of Sports Performance Vijay Blackmon is in his second season as the strength & conditioning coach for Valpo men’s basketball. He previously worked with strength & conditioning as part of Bryce Drew’s Grand Canyon program.

Inside the Roster

  • The 2023-24 roster features four returning letterwinners and 11 newcomers. The team lost 11 letterwinners from last season including all five starters.
  • This marks the first time since the 2013-14 season that Valpo has no starters returning from the previous season. The 2012-13 NCAA Tournament team started all seniors – Ryan Broekhoff, Kevin Van Wijk, Erik Buggs, Will Bogan and Ben Boggs. The 2013-14 season featured a five-member freshmen class led by Alec Peters.
  • Prior to this season, Valpo had at least two returning starters in nine consecutive years.
  • The 12 scholarship players on the roster include three returners, five true freshmen and four transfers. Valpo also has three walk-ons – one returner, one former Valpo football player and one transfer.
  • The 12 scholarship players are comprised of two seniors, two juniors, two sophomores and six freshmen (five true; one redshirt).
  • The half dozen freshmen represent the team’s most since 2008-09, when the team also had six on the roster – De’Andre Haskins, Cameron Witt, Nick Shelton, Andrew Ferry, Erik Buggs and Logan Jones.
  • This year’s roster features players from five different countries – The Netherlands, Canada, Estonia, South Sudan and the United States. In addition, six states are represented – Indiana, Illinois, Ohio, Maryland, Virginia and Kansas.

Returnee Rundown

  • Junior guard Darius DeAveiro ranked 14th in the Missouri Valley Conference in assists per game last season. He ranked fifth in the league in assist to turnover ratio at 1.89. During his rookie year in 2021-22, he finished the season as one of two freshmen nationally with 50 or more assists and fewer than 25 turnovers. He was named a captain by head coach Roger Powell Jr. prior to the season.
  • Senior guard/forward Connor Barrett is the team’s leading returning scorer and the longest-tenured member of the program. Now in his fourth season at Valpo, Barrett saw action in 31 of the team’s 32 games a year ago and scored a season-high 13 points including three made 3s on Dec. 18 vs. Elon.
  • Senior forward Jerome Palm was named a captain by head coach Roger Powell Jr. prior to the season. He joined Valpo last year after a pair of junior college seasons. He had a season-high 11 points to go along with nine rebounds on Dec. 1 at Belmont.

Newcomer Notes

  • Sophomore guard Jaxon Edwards has experience in the Missouri Valley Conference after playing in 11 games during the 2022-23 season as a freshman at Murray State. He led Cathedral to the 2021-22 Indiana 4A state championship in high school.
  • Freshman guard Sherman Weatherspoon IV played at Golden State Prep in Napa Valley, Calif. in 2022-23, averaging 25 points, eight rebounds and four assists.
  • Sophomore forward Ola Ajiobye played in 30 of 31 games with 14 starts at Central Michigan as a true freshman in 2022-23.
  • Freshman guard Jahari Williamson played for Canada’s U19 World Cup Team in Summer 2023 after participating in the U18 2022 Canada Games for Team Ontario.
  • Freshman forward Lucas Scroggins spent the 2022-23 season at Bosco Institute in Crown Point.
  • Freshman forward Cooper Schwieger averaged 11.2 points, 7.4 rebounds and 3.3 assists at Link Year Prep in Branson, Mo. last season.
  • Junior guard Isaiah Stafford averaged 12.5 points per game to help John A. Logan to the junior college national title and a 33-2 mark in 2022-23 after spending his freshman season at Southern Indiana in 2021-22.
  • Freshman forward Kaspar Sepp played for the Estonian national team during the 2023 summer after helping Estonia beat Finland to earn a promotion to the “A” division during the 2022 summer.
  • Redshirt freshman Lual Manyang received a medical redshirt in 2022-23 due to a preseason injury at Hofstra.

The Dot Farewell Tour

  • Longtime Valpo men’s basketball official scorekeeper Dot Nuechterlein has announced that she will retire from her duties at the scorer’s table following the 2023-24 season.
  • Nuechterlein, age 86, began as the official scorer at Valpo in 1984. Her four-decade long tenure as the holder of an official scorebook featured two seasons doing so at Columbia while she lived in New York City during a brief hiatus from Valpo.
  • According to Nuechterlein, she was the first female to serve as full-time official scorer for a Division-I men’s college basketball team when she took over the post at Valpo in 1984.

Beacon Bits

Random facts on each Valpo player.

  • #0 Jaxon Edwards – Played football up until high school but stopped after eighth grade when he injured his hand.
  • #1 Jerome Palm – Started playing basketball at age 15.
  • #2 Connor Barrett – Is an avid golfer.
  • #3 Anthony Sciarroni – Spent three years on the Valpo football team before joining the men’s basketball program as a walk-on.
  • #4 Sherman Weatherspoon IV – Father Sherman Weatherspoon III is a Northwest Indiana native and Gary Roosevelt product... Enjoys clothes, going on walks, nature and hiking.
  • #5 Ola Ajiboye – Enjoys meeting new people, playing table tennis, swimming and being around people.
  • #6 Darius DeAveiro – Played soccer until his freshman year of high school, when he gave up the sport to focus on basketball. Played on the state team for soccer at age 13 and traveled significantly for the sport, including a trip to England.
  • #7 Jahari Williamson – Owns numerous golf medals.
  • #10 Lucas Scroggins – Loves to draw and hopes to pursue an art-related career.
  • #13 Cooper Schwieger – Twin brother Carson plays at Wright State. A lot of people think they are identical, but they are fraternal twins.
  • #19 Isaiah Stafford – Enjoys spending time with family as well as playing board games, card games and video games.
  • #20 Joe Vick – Walk-on whose favorite sports memory is playing in Bankers Life Fieldhouse (now Gainbridge Fieldhouse).
  • #21 Kaspar Sepp – His national team coach is former teammates with Valpo assistant coach A.J. Moye and his prep coach is Moye’s former roommate.
  • #34 Lual Manyang – Favorite TV show is Shark Tank and his favorite athletes are Giannis Antetokounmpo and Kobe Bryant.
  • #35 Luke Carroll – Walk-on who enjoys golfing and fishing in his spare time.

Tradition of Excellence

  • Valpo has 14 NCAA Tournament appearances and four NIT berths in the program’s proud history, with the team’s postseason success highlighted by a Sweet Sixteen run in 1998.
  • The program has produced nine All-Americans, won 15 regular season conference championships and 10 conference tournament crowns.
  • Valpo also boasts eight NBA players, 10 conference players of the year and 20 20-win seasons.
  • Nine of the team’s NCAA appearances have come since 1996.
  • Valpo has developed a myriad of professional basketball players over the last quarter century, most notably a pair of recent NBA players. Ryan Broekhoff (class of 2013) signed a contract with the Dallas Mavericks in the summer of 2018 after spending five seasons playing internationally in Russia and Turkey. Alec Peters (class of 2017) was the 54th pick in the 2017 NBA Draft by the Phoenix Suns. Peters appeared in 20 games for the Suns in 2017-18, highlighted by a 36-point performance in the season finale against Dallas – a new single-game high by a Valpo alum in the NBA. He has gone on to a successful career overseas with CSKA Moscow (2018-2019), Anadolu Efes (2019-2020) and Kirolbet Baskonia (2020-2022) and Olympiacos (2022-present).
  • Valpo has produced over 50 professional players in the last three decades.