Mode: | Basketball |
Year: | 2017–18 |
Team: | Loyola Ramblers |
Conference: | Missouri Valley Conference |
Short Conf: | MVC |
Coachrank: | 7 |
Record: | 32–6 |
Conf Record: | 15–3 |
Head Coach: | Porter Moser |
Hc Year: | 7th |
Asst Coach1: | Bryan Mullins |
Asst Coach2: | Matt Gordon |
Asst Coach3: | Drew Valentine |
Stadium: | Joseph J. Gentile Arena |
Champion: | Missouri Valley regular season and tournament champions Savannah Invitational champions |
Bowl: | NCAA tournament |
Bowl Result: | Final Four |
The 2017–18 Loyola Ramblers men's basketball team represented Loyola University Chicago during the 2017–18 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Ramblers, led by seventh-year head coach Porter Moser, played their home games at the Joseph J. Gentile Arena in Chicago. They were members of the Missouri Valley Conference. With a win against Evansville on February 18, 2018, Loyola clinched at least a share of its first-ever Missouri Valley Conference regular season championship.[1] With a win over Southern Illinois on February 21, the Ramblers clinched the outright MVC championship.[2] The Ramblers defeated Northern Iowa, Bradley, and Illinois State to win the MVC tournament. As a result, the Ramblers received the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA tournament. As the No. 11 seed in the South Region, they upset No. 6-seeded Miami (FL) on a last second three-pointer. In the Second Round, they defeated No. 3-seeded Tennessee to earn the school's first trip to the Sweet Sixteen since 1985. They then defeated Nevada in the Sweet Sixteen and Kansas State in the Elite Eight to advance to the Final Four for the first time since 1963. Their Cinderella run ended with a loss to the eventual runner-up Michigan in the national semifinal. The Ramblers' run also made the team's then-98-year-old chaplain Sister Jean a national and even international media figure.
The Ramblers finished the 2016–17 season 18–14, 8–10 in MVC play to finish in fifth place. They lost to Southern Illinois in the quarterfinals of the MVC tournament.
Name | Number | Pos. | Height | Weight | Year | Hometown | Reason for departure | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Glorind Lisha | 1 | G | 6'2" | 185 | Senior | Walk-on; graduated | ||
Matt Chastain | 22 | G/F | 6'6" | 190 | Freshman | Transferred to Illinois State | ||
Tyson Smith | 25 | G | 6'2" | 185 | Junior | Walk-on; didn't return | ||
Byron Burt | 30 | G | 6'5" | 190 | Junior | Eligibility ended | ||
Maurice Kirby | 31 | F | 6'9" | 240 | Junior | Graduate transferred to IUPUI | ||
Vlatko Granic | 32 | F | 6'8" | 230 | Junior | Playing professional in Croatia | ||
35 | G | 6'4" | 185 | RS Senior | Graduated |
Name | Number | Pos. | Height | Weight | Year | Hometown | Previous School | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Carson Shanks | 32 | C | 7'0" | 230 | RS Senior | Transferred from North Dakota. Was eligible to play immediately because he graduated from North Dakota. | ||
30 | G/F | 6'7" | 206 | Sophomore | Transferred from New Mexico. Under NCAA transfer rules, Uguak had to sit out the 2017–18 season, and had three remaining years of eligibility. |
In the conference's preseason poll, the Ramblers were picked to finish in third place in the MVC.[3] Senior forward Aundre Jackson was named to the preseason All-MVC first team.
The Ramblers won at least eight of their first nine games for the first time since the .[4] In their tenth game on December 6, they upset No. 5 ranked Florida, for the school's first win against a ranked opponent since a February 15, 2009 win over No. 15 Butler and the first against a top 5 team since a December 22, 1984 victory over No. 4 Illinois.[5] |-!colspan=9 style=|Exhibition|-!colspan=9 style=| Non-conference regular season|-!colspan=9 style=| Missouri Valley regular season|-!colspan=9 style=| Missouri Valley Tournament|-!colspan=9 style=| NCAA tournament
See main article: 2017–18 NCAA Division I men's basketball rankings.