Marquette vs. UW-Milwaukee (Preseason)
Posted: Fri Oct 20, 2017 9:14 am
On Sunday, Marquette will play an exhibition game against UW-Milwaukee at the Al McGuire Center.
100% of the net profits are being donated to hurricane relief around the country (Marquette legend Butch Lee is from Puerto Rico). Given the nature of the game as a charity fundraiser, there will be no live stream or television. Marquette received a waiver from the NCAA to play an extra exhibition game against a D-1 opponent in UW-Milwaukee.
I feel compelled to note that Marquette leads the all-time series over their purported cross-town rivals 39-0, in a series that dates back to 1917. It is the second-longest active winning streak by one college basketball team over another college basketball team (Syracuse has beaten Colgate 51 times in a row).
History of the MU-UWM "Rivalry"
For those fans of other Big East schools, who may not be as familiar, the Marquette-Panther High "rivalry" is a profoundly stupid rivalry because only one school gets excited for it, and because it arguably reached its interest zenith when games weren't even being played.
In 2003, UW-Milwaukee made their first NCAA Tournament appearance ever. UWM almost pulled a 12/5 upset in the first round over Notre Dame that year, while Marquette marched to the Final Four. At the time, Marquette and UWM hadn't met since a six-game series played from the 1993-94 season to the 1999-2000 season. Marquette won those six games by an average of 24 points.
Nevertheless, bloviating blowhard and UWM head coach Bruce Pearl pled his case to the local media, suggesting that Marquette wouldn't put UWM on the schedule because Marquette was "scared" that UWM might beat them (reasoning generally more common among nine-year-olds). It was further suggested that an annual game against UWM would be a far bigger draw for Marquette than any other regularly scheduled buy game. This sabre-rattling from UWM continued over the next few years, especially as UWM went to the Sweet 16 in 2005, while Marquette was resigned to the NIT. Marquette was open to a series with UWM, but only on the same terms that UWM gave the University of Wisconsin-Madison (4-for-1). Pearl wanted a home-and-home series, which was never going to happen between a Big East program and a Horizon League opponent for obvious reasons.
After Pearl left for Tennessee in 2005 and removed his ego from the equation, the grown-ups at UWM and Marquette agreed to a five-game series -- 4 games at Marquette, and 1 at UWM's home arena, to begin in the 2007-08 season. Marquette won the first game by 35 points, with Marquette setting a Bradley Center record for made field goals (40). MU won the four remaining games by an average of more than 14 points, and won by less than ten only once. Attendance for the game dropped each year. UWM has not appeared on the Marquette schedule since the 2011-12 season.
Regardless of the past drama, this should be a great event, and hopefully raises a lot of money for hurricane relief
100% of the net profits are being donated to hurricane relief around the country (Marquette legend Butch Lee is from Puerto Rico). Given the nature of the game as a charity fundraiser, there will be no live stream or television. Marquette received a waiver from the NCAA to play an extra exhibition game against a D-1 opponent in UW-Milwaukee.
I feel compelled to note that Marquette leads the all-time series over their purported cross-town rivals 39-0, in a series that dates back to 1917. It is the second-longest active winning streak by one college basketball team over another college basketball team (Syracuse has beaten Colgate 51 times in a row).
History of the MU-UWM "Rivalry"
For those fans of other Big East schools, who may not be as familiar, the Marquette-Panther High "rivalry" is a profoundly stupid rivalry because only one school gets excited for it, and because it arguably reached its interest zenith when games weren't even being played.
In 2003, UW-Milwaukee made their first NCAA Tournament appearance ever. UWM almost pulled a 12/5 upset in the first round over Notre Dame that year, while Marquette marched to the Final Four. At the time, Marquette and UWM hadn't met since a six-game series played from the 1993-94 season to the 1999-2000 season. Marquette won those six games by an average of 24 points.
Nevertheless, bloviating blowhard and UWM head coach Bruce Pearl pled his case to the local media, suggesting that Marquette wouldn't put UWM on the schedule because Marquette was "scared" that UWM might beat them (reasoning generally more common among nine-year-olds). It was further suggested that an annual game against UWM would be a far bigger draw for Marquette than any other regularly scheduled buy game. This sabre-rattling from UWM continued over the next few years, especially as UWM went to the Sweet 16 in 2005, while Marquette was resigned to the NIT. Marquette was open to a series with UWM, but only on the same terms that UWM gave the University of Wisconsin-Madison (4-for-1). Pearl wanted a home-and-home series, which was never going to happen between a Big East program and a Horizon League opponent for obvious reasons.
After Pearl left for Tennessee in 2005 and removed his ego from the equation, the grown-ups at UWM and Marquette agreed to a five-game series -- 4 games at Marquette, and 1 at UWM's home arena, to begin in the 2007-08 season. Marquette won the first game by 35 points, with Marquette setting a Bradley Center record for made field goals (40). MU won the four remaining games by an average of more than 14 points, and won by less than ten only once. Attendance for the game dropped each year. UWM has not appeared on the Marquette schedule since the 2011-12 season.
Regardless of the past drama, this should be a great event, and hopefully raises a lot of money for hurricane relief