University Athletic Association: Season 2013-14

UAA Ranking
 1. Wash.-St.Louis 14-0
 2. Emory 9-5
 3. Chicago Univ. 8-6
 4. New York U. 6-8
 4. Case W.Reserve 6-8
 6. Brandeis 5-9
 7. Carnegie Mellon 4-10
 7. Rochester 4-10

UAA Women 2013-2014
Official Web Site

Washington University - St.Louis 2013-14
Mark Edwards Mark Edwards Edwards
Chris Klimek
Klimek
Nick Burt
Burt
Matt Palucki
Palucki
Alan Aboona
Aboona
Tim Cooney
Cooney
# Name CM (INCH) Pos Bo NAT
33  Klimek Chris 196 (6'5'') F 91 USA
34  Burt Nick 196 (6'5'') F USA
35  Palucki Matt 198 (6'6'') F USA
10  Aboona Alan 185 (6'1'') G 92 USA
12  Cooney Tim 190 (6'3'') G 92 USA
11  Fatoki David 178 (5'10'') PG USA
24  Lacob Kent 185 (6'1'') G USA
51  Rapp Jordan 196 (6'5'') F USA
54  Patt Will 203 (6'8'') C USA
20  Silverman-Lloyd Luke 188 (6'2'') G USA
40  Staffeil Brandon 196 (6'5'') F USA
45  Garvin Tom 196 (6'5'') F USA
3  Kim Alex 183 (6'0'') PG USA
5  Malone Chandler 183 (6'0'') PG USA
14  Hooks Clinton 196 (6'5'') F USA
21  Bregman Michael 190 (6'3'') G USA
22  Nowels Tommy 183 (6'0'') PG USA
30  Owens Gabe 198 (6'6'') F USA
32  Rankowitz Peter 190 (6'3'') G USA
41  Mason Hassan 190 (6'3'') G USA
42  Koby Grant 196 (6'5'') C USA
44  Lasowski Patrick 196 (6'5'') F USA
52  Styczynski Mitch 198 (6'6'') F USA
Head Coach: Mark Edwards
Coach Assistant: Caleb Lawson
Coach Assistant: William Carey
Coach Assistant: Aaron Thompson


Washington-St.Louis Wins UAA Title and Gains Automatic Bid to NCAA Tournament - Mar 10, 2014

The No. 4-ranked Washington University in St. Louis mens basketball team secured its third-straight University Athletic Association (UAA) title and gained an automatic bid to the 2014 NCAA Division III Mens Basketball Championship with a 79-75 win at New York University Sunday afternoon.
The UAA Championship for Washington U. is the Bears fifth in the last six seasons and 13th in school history. Washington University is the first team in conference history to win three-straight conference crowns. The win also gave head coach Mark Edwards the 15th 20-win season of his career.
NYU used four offensive rebounds in the first six minutes of the game to score six second-chance points and grab an 11-8 lead with 14:38 left in the first half. After taking a timeout, the Bears answered with a 7-0 run, capped by a three-pointer by senior guard Alan Aboona (6'1''-G-92) off a kick-out from junior forward Nick Burt (6'5''-F), to take a 15-11 lead with 13:16 remaining in the half. NYU answered with a three after calling a timeout, but Washington U. went on an 8-2 run, including a pair of layups by senior forward Chris Klimek (6'5''-F-91), to stretch the lead to 23-17 with 10:33 to play in the opening half. The Violets battled back to within three (38-35) and had a chance to make it a one-point game with 1:13 left in the half, but missed both double-bonus free throws, and a layup by sophomore forward Brandon Staffeil (6'5''-F) gave the Bears a 40-35 advantage at halftime.
The Bears opened the second half with baskets by Klimek and senior guard Tim Cooney (6'3''-G-92) to take their largest lead of the game at 44-35. New York went on an 8-2 run to pull to within 46-43, but Aboona answered with his fourth three-pointer of the game to make it 49-43 with 16:41 to play. The Violets continued their hot streak and a three-pointer by Ryan Tana (6'1''-PG) tied the game at 52-52 with 13:15 left. On the Bears next possession, Aboona drained another three from the wing to regain the lead for the Bears. After three free throws by NYU, the Violets scored a bucket with 9:55 to play to take their first lead (57-55) since the 14:20 mark in the first half.
The teams traded baskets until Klimek picked up his fourth foul with 8:39 left in the game and NYU made a pair of free throws to give the Violets a 61-59 lead. Klimek made a free throw and a driving layup on the Bears next two possessions to tie the game again at 62-62 with 7:59 remaining. Washington U.s defense got back-to-back stops and a layup by Klimek and pullup jumper in the paint for Aboona made the score 66-62 in favor of the Bears with 6:25 on the clock. NYU made a pair of second-chance baskets to tie the game, but a layup by Aboona gave the Bears the lead for good (68-66) with 4:33 remaining. Aboona then got a defensive rebound on NYUs next possession and Burt found Cooney under the basket for a layup that made it 70-66. Aboona added a free throw to make it 71-66 before a three-pointer by NYU got the Violets to within 71-69 with 2:41 left.
Burt, playing with four fouls, blocked a fast-break layup and knocked the ball out of bounds off an NYU player with 2:15 remaining. After a timeout by the Bears, Aboona drove for an open layup to extend the lead to 73-71. Aboona and junior guard David Fatoki (5'10''-PG) combined to go 6-of-6 at the free-throw line in the final 1:11 to seal the four-point win for the Bears.
Washington U. shot 52.7 percent (29-55) from the field in the game, including 6-of-12 from three-point range, while NYU finished shooting 42.6 percent (29-68) and 5-of-21 from beyond the arc. The Bears converted 15-of-23 free-throw attempts, while the Violets were 12-of-22 at the charity stripe. Washington U. also finished with a 40-36 rebounding advantage. NYU pulled down 14 offensive rebounds to gain a 19-3 advantage in second-chance points, and also outscored the Bears 17-6 in points off turnovers.
Aboona scored a game-high 29 points, including 19 in the second half. He was 5-of-9 from three-point range, and also finished with five rebounds and five assists. Klimek finished with 17 points and eight rebounds, including five points in the final 8:39 while playing with four fouls. Cooney also got into double figures for the Bears with 10 points, three assists and a team-high three steals. Junior guard Matt Palucki (6'6''-F) tallied nine points, while Burt added three points, and equaled his career-highs with nine rebounds and six assists.

Courtesy of Washington-St.Louis


All-UAA 1st Team 2014
Alan Aboona
Aboona
Tim Cooney
Cooney
Jake Davis
Davis
Chris Klimek
Klimek
Evan Kupferberg
Kupferberg

Player of the Year: Chris Klimek (6'5''-F-91) of Wash.-St.Louis
Defensive Player of the Year: Tim Cooney (6'3''-G-92) of Wash.-St.Louis
Rookie of the Year: Jack Serbin (6'9''-F) of Carnegie Mellon
Coach of the Year: Mark Edwards of Wash.-St.Louis

1st Team
G: Alan Aboona (6'1''-G-92) of Wash.-St.Louis
G: Tim Cooney (6'3''-G-92) of Wash.-St.Louis
F: Jake Davis (6'5''-F-91) of Emory
F: Chris Klimek (6'5''-F-91) of Wash.-St.Louis
F: Evan Kupferberg (6'6''-F) of New York U.
G: McPherson Moore (6'2''-G-91) of Emory
F: Matt Palucki (6'6''-F) of Wash.-St.Louis

2nd Team
G/F: Christian Manoli (6'5''-G/F) of Carnegie Mellon
F: Dane McLoughlin (6'6''-F) of Case W.Reserve
G: Asad Meghani (6'0''-G) of Carnegie Mellon
G: Gabriel Moton (6'2''-G-91) of Brandeis
PG: Royce Muskeyvalley (5'11''-PG) of Chicago Univ.
PG: Ryan Tana (6'1''-PG) of New York U.
C: David Thompson (6'9''-C) of Case W.Reserve

Honorable Mention
Ben Bartoldus (6'3''-G) of Brandeis
Derek Retos (5'10''-PG) of Brandeis
Julien Person (6'7''-G) of Case W.Reserve
Michael Florin (6'0''-PG) of Emory
Alex Foster (6'8''-F) of Emory
Konstantinos Gontikas (6'9''-C-94) of New York U.
Derrick Davis (6'2''-G) of Chicago Univ.
Sam Gage (6'6''-F) of Chicago Univ.
Jordan Smith (6'1''-G) of Wisconsin
Tyler Sankes (6'8''-F) of Rochester
Nate Vernon (6'6''-G) of Rochester
Nick Burt (6'5''-F) of Wash.-St.Louis