The MVC has created a new Stats Archive website for seven different conference sports.-
Of most interest will be the Men's and Women's Basketball stats pages-
Men's basketball- Includes year by year stats going back to the 1957-58 season-
Women's basketball- Year-by-year stats going back to the 1982-83 season-
This probably took a lot of work by the MVC, but it is a great archival web site for looking for old stats for the MVC and for every team, any year!
Thanks MVC!
Example: Here is the page for 1987-88, when Bradley won both the MVC regular season and the MVC Tournament--
Hersey Hawkins lead the MVC with a 36.3 ppg scoring average (the highest single-season scoring average in MVC history!), and he was also 3rd in rebounding with 7.8 rpg as a guard. He shot 84.7% on FTs, was tied for 4th in blocks with BU's Luke Jackson, shot 52.3% overall and 39.3% from three, and lead the MVC in steals!
Anthony Manuel lead the MVC with 12.0 assists per game. No other player in MVC history has ever averaged more than 9.3 apg for a season! In fact, no player in the NCAA has come close to 12.0 apg since 1988!
Of most interest will be the Men's and Women's Basketball stats pages-
Men's basketball- Includes year by year stats going back to the 1957-58 season-
Women's basketball- Year-by-year stats going back to the 1982-83 season-
This probably took a lot of work by the MVC, but it is a great archival web site for looking for old stats for the MVC and for every team, any year!
Thanks MVC!
Example: Here is the page for 1987-88, when Bradley won both the MVC regular season and the MVC Tournament--
Hersey Hawkins lead the MVC with a 36.3 ppg scoring average (the highest single-season scoring average in MVC history!), and he was also 3rd in rebounding with 7.8 rpg as a guard. He shot 84.7% on FTs, was tied for 4th in blocks with BU's Luke Jackson, shot 52.3% overall and 39.3% from three, and lead the MVC in steals!
Anthony Manuel lead the MVC with 12.0 assists per game. No other player in MVC history has ever averaged more than 9.3 apg for a season! In fact, no player in the NCAA has come close to 12.0 apg since 1988!
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