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The Matchup
    South Dakota State is scheduled to play its first official road game of the season Wednesday night when it visits Iowa State. Game time is set for 6 p.m. inside the Hilton Coliseum in Ames, Iowa.
    The Jacks are 1-2 after taking sixth place in the season opening Bad Boy Mowers Crossover Classic last week in Sioux Falls. Meanwhile, the Cyclones are 1-0, winning their lidlifter over Arkansas-Pine Bluff 80-63 in Ames.
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The Series
    Wednesday will mark the seventh game of a series that Iowa State leads 5-1, but the Jackrabbits won the only matchup in which both were Division I.
    The Cyclones won the first five meetings (1952, 1958, 1963, 1968 and 1985).
    SDSU won in Ames on Dec. 23, 2008, 65-58. Ironically, that was the only road win the Jacks collected that season, as SDSU went 1-15 in true road games in 2008-09. Clint Sargent scored 18 points and corralled 10 rebounds, while Kai Williams also posted a double-double, tallying 12 points and 10 boards.
    Four current Jackrabbit staffers were in the Hilton Coliseum that night in different roles.
    Jackrabbit associate head coach
Rob Klinkefus was a member of SDSU's staff, working as an assistant for then-head coach Scott Nagy.
    SDSU assistant
Bryan Petersen started that game in Iowa State's backcourt, scoring eight points, grabbing six rebounds and dishing out four assists in 33 minutes.
    Meanwhile, current SDSU head coach
Eric Henderson and director of operations
Tyler Glidden were both on the Iowa State bench. Henderson was serving as the Cyclones' academic learning specialist, while Glidden was a student manager.
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Summit League Favorites
    South Dakota State was the pick to win the Summit League in the conference preseason poll, garnering 33 of 36 first place votes. The Jackrabbits return the Summit's coach and player of the year and feature three preseason all-league honorees.
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Douglas Wilson was voted as player of the year, while
Noah Freidel joined him on the first-team.
Matt Dentlinger was chosen as second-team all-league.
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Sanford Pentagon - Home Away From Home
    South Dakota's biggest city, Sioux Falls, has always been a second home to the Yellow and Blue. The record-setting crowds at the Summit League Tournaments are proof of that.
    The Jackrabbits are slated to play six regular season games this year in Sioux Falls, competing in two different tournaments at the Sanford Pentagon.
    SDSU opened the year in the Bad Boy Mowers Crossover Classic Nov. 25-27. The Jacks return to the Pentagon to play its three Dakota rivals in the Dakota Showcase, Dec. 10-12.
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Run of Success
    South Dakota State has played in eight consecutive postseasons, a run that would likely have grown to nine if not for the COVID-19 pandemic causing all the tournaments to be canceled last March. That includes five NCAA Tournaments, a pair of National Invitation Tournaments and one trip to the College Basketball Invitational.
    Only 16 programs in Division I have played in each of the last eight postseasons.
    During this string of success, the Jacks have won five Summit League Tournaments and claimed at least a share of six regular season league titles.
    The Jackrabbits have won 20 or more games each of the last three years and seven of the previous nine seasons.
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Frost Arena Effect
    No place in Division I men's basketball is harder for visiting teams to win in than Frost Arena. Don't believe us? Try this on for size...
    Since 2015-16, South Dakota State is 68-3 in Frost Arena. That's a .958 winning percentage at home over the past five seasons. Over that span, Kansas (77-6, .928) is second, and only Gonzaga (73-6, .924) and New Mexico State (72-6, .923) are over .920
    If that isn't enough, let's go back to 2011-12. SDSU has played 125 games at Frost in the last nine years, winning 119 of them. Six of those seasons, the Jacks didn't lose at home. Again, the .952 winning percentage is clearly at the top.
    Kansas (141-9, .940) and Gonzaga (135-9, .938) are the only two programs over the past nine years in the same discussion.
    The Jackrabbits have won 24 consecutive games at home, the third longest active streak in Division I men's hoops.
    Additionally, the Jackrabbits were one of 13 teams to go undefeated at home in 2019-20.
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SDSU Athletics Division I Success Unparalleled
    South Dakota State's run of overall success in men's basketball, women's basketball and football is unmatched during the past decade in Division I.
    The men's basketball program has reached eight consecutive postseasons. Football has done the same, playing in each of the last eight FCS Playoffs and nine of the last 11.
    Jackrabbit women's basketball has been just as impressive, playing in 13 straight postseasons, nine of those NCAA Tournaments, highlighted by a Sweet Sixteen trip in 2019.
    Only four schools saw both of their basketball programs make eight straight postseasons appearances - Baylor, Gonzaga, Saint Mary's and SDSU.
    When you include football - FBS bowls or the FCS playoff system - South Dakota State is the
only school whose football, men's and women's basketball team have played in each of the last eight postseasons.
    This dates back to the 2012 NCAA Basketball Tournaments and the 2012 FCS Playoffs.
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Efficient Post Scorers
    The combination of
Matt Dentlinger and
Douglas Wilson proved to be virtually unstoppable for Summit League teams a season ago, as the Jackrabbits won each of their last 13 games in which both men appeared.
    Wilson shot 62.8 percent last season, good for eighth in the nation.
    In league-only games, no one in the nine-team conference shot over 60 percent. Except for Dentlinger and Wilson, that is. Wilson finished Summit play at 64.1 percent, second only to Dentlinger, who dominated the league by converting 69.7 percent of his attempts.
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Dentlinger Honored Academically
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Matt Dentlinger was recognized for his academic achievements by the National Association of Basketball Coaches, being named to its 2019-20 Honors Court list. The NABC Honors Court highlights the talent and gifts of collegiate men's basketball student-athletes on the court and in the classroom.
    To be named to the Honors Court, student-athletes must academically be listed as a junior or senior with a 3.2 grade point average or above. Dentlinger, who was recognized as a 2020 CoSIDA Academic All-District performer earlier this year, boasts a 4.00 GPA in mechanical engineering.
    He was also one of five named to the academic all-Summit League team.
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Division I All-Americans
    Two Jackrabbits have reached Division I all-America status while leading South Dakota State to national recognition.
    Nate Wolters led the Jacks to their first two NCAA Tournaments in Division I. He averaged 21.2 points, 5.9 assists and 5.1 rebounds, earning honorable mention all-America honors from the Associated Press.
    Wolters followed that up with a senior season that saw him average 22.2 points, 5.8 assists and 5.5 rebounds. He won the Summit League Player of the Year and was named third-team all-America by the AP.
    The point guard from St. Cloud, Minn., graduated with a school record 2,363 points He was chosen in the second round of the 2013 NBA Draft by the Washington Wizards.
    Not long after that,
Mike Daum hit the scene, and the Kimball, Neb. native rewrote the SDSU record books again.
    Daum scored 15 points per game as a freshman, then averaged 20 or more in each of his final three seasons, ending his career with 3,067 points. He is one of just 10 players in the history of Division I men's hoops to eclipse 3,000 points in his career and ranks seventh all-time.
    "The Dauminator" was three times the Summit League Player of the Year, leading the Jacks to three NCAA Tournaments. An Associated Press honorable mention all-American in both 2017 and 2018, he was voted by both the National Association of Basketball Coaches and the United States Basketball Writers Association as a third-team all-American in 2019.
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Jacks Sign Two For 2021-22
    Head Coach
Eric Henderson announced that Broden Lien and Isaiah "Zeke" Mayo signed letters of intent, indicating they will enroll at South Dakota State next fall and join the Jackrabbit men's basketball program.
    Lien (6-8, 220, Flom, Minn.) will graduate from the Andrews Osborne Academy in Willoughby, Ohio, in May. He previously attended Norman County East High School in Ulen, Minn. A two-year starter, he was Pine to Prairie Conference co-MVP last year, averaging 24 points and 11 rebounds per game.
    Mayo (6-3, 170, Lawrence, Kan.) will graduate from Lawrence High School in May. He earned second-team all-state honors in the largest class in Kansas last year. Mayo posted averages of 16.4 points, 5.8 rebounds and 4.1 assists last year. Those numbers propelled him to the 2019-20 Lawrence Journal-World Boys Player of the year. He was also a finalist for the Class 6A player of the year.
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No Home Games Until January
    In this most irregular of years, South Dakota State does not have a non-conference home game scheduled. In fact, the Jacks are not expected to be at home until Jan. 8 when they open league play vs. Western Illinois.
    If the schedule does indeed play out this way, it would mark the first time since in 35 years that SDSU did not have a home game in November.
              To go a step further, you have to go back to the 1925-26 schedule to find a season the Jackrabbit men didn't host a game until January. That season, SDSU played 20 games total, and only two in December - road games at Wisconsin and St. Mary's (Minn.)
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-GoJacks.com