- July 6th, 2007, 10:30 am
#95948
1. Matt Hildebrand:
18ppg with 5 assists as a senior; he was the unequivocal leader of the '94 team that put a major scare into then defendending champion, UNC, in the first round of the NCAA tourament; he is one of the top assists leaders in LU history; he is the all-time 3pt % leader; he is the all-time FT% leader of the D-1 era and he finished fourth in the nation in that category, twice; Additionally, he brought a number of intangibles to the table with his hard-nosed style of play.
2. Larry Blair:
LU's all-time scoring champion; led his team into the NCAA's during his freshman season with a very memorable performance in the Big South final; excelled as a scoring leader, despite the fact that he was frequently the primary focus of the opposing defense and often LU's only option.
3. Bailey Alston:
At 6-3 and with a long wing span, he was versitle enough to slide over to the wing spot. His strong inside moves, consistant close range scoring, solid defense, rebounding ability, and ballhandling skills, and slash moves make him a real asset at this position. What he lacks in three point scoring proficiency is more than made up for in Blair and Hildebrand.
4. Mike Coleman
Coleman averaged nearly 9 boards a game with a field goal percentage just under 65% during his three seasons as a starter; he was the team leader of a very memorable 91-92 squad that won 22 games after only 2 wins in D1 the previous season during LU's first D1 season; At 6-8, Coleman was a team-oriented player who brought many intangibles to the table and may represent the best combination of rebounding and inside scoring effciency ever at LU.
5. Peter Aluma:
Aluma was a formidable shot blocker and very solid defender in the paint; In addition, he was a smooth scorer with a soft touch for a big man; Aluma was an integral part of the memorable '94 team that hung tough with UNC in the big dance; he excelled, despite the fact that he was the constant focus of the opposing defense and often drew double and even triple teams whenever he touched the ball.
18ppg with 5 assists as a senior; he was the unequivocal leader of the '94 team that put a major scare into then defendending champion, UNC, in the first round of the NCAA tourament; he is one of the top assists leaders in LU history; he is the all-time 3pt % leader; he is the all-time FT% leader of the D-1 era and he finished fourth in the nation in that category, twice; Additionally, he brought a number of intangibles to the table with his hard-nosed style of play.
2. Larry Blair:
LU's all-time scoring champion; led his team into the NCAA's during his freshman season with a very memorable performance in the Big South final; excelled as a scoring leader, despite the fact that he was frequently the primary focus of the opposing defense and often LU's only option.
3. Bailey Alston:
At 6-3 and with a long wing span, he was versitle enough to slide over to the wing spot. His strong inside moves, consistant close range scoring, solid defense, rebounding ability, and ballhandling skills, and slash moves make him a real asset at this position. What he lacks in three point scoring proficiency is more than made up for in Blair and Hildebrand.
4. Mike Coleman
Coleman averaged nearly 9 boards a game with a field goal percentage just under 65% during his three seasons as a starter; he was the team leader of a very memorable 91-92 squad that won 22 games after only 2 wins in D1 the previous season during LU's first D1 season; At 6-8, Coleman was a team-oriented player who brought many intangibles to the table and may represent the best combination of rebounding and inside scoring effciency ever at LU.
5. Peter Aluma:
Aluma was a formidable shot blocker and very solid defender in the paint; In addition, he was a smooth scorer with a soft touch for a big man; Aluma was an integral part of the memorable '94 team that hung tough with UNC in the big dance; he excelled, despite the fact that he was the constant focus of the opposing defense and often drew double and even triple teams whenever he touched the ball.




- By olldflame