< PreviousBass-Rudd Tennis Center Jim Patterson Stadium Cardinal Stadium KFC Yum! Center Thorntons Academic Center of Excellence Trager Stadium Cardinal Park Ulmer Stadium Swain Student Activities Center G. Garvin Brown III Rowing Center Marshall Center 38 University of Louisville n gocards.com UofL Athletics Facilities Louisville BasketballThe University of Louisville features impressive facilities that have enriched the campus and entire Louisville community. Every Cardinal sports team has a new facility since 1994, with most being built within the last 20 years. The state-of-the-art, 22,000-seat KFC Yum! Cen- ter has been the home of Cardinal Basketball since opening in 2010 (more info on preceding pages). The Cardinals kicked off their 1998 football season in Cardinal Stadium, a 60,000-seat on-campus facility that was expanded in 2010. Another expansion that enclosed the end zone was completed in 2018. L&N Federal Credit Union Arena, was expanded in 2017 as the home for UofL volleyball, and is the home of many athletic offices in the Swain Student Activities Center on the northeast corner of campus. Built in 1994, the Bass-Rudd Tennis Center was honored as the 1995 USTA College Facility of the Year. It was the first component of Cardinal Park, an area which features multiple playing facilities for the Cardinals: Ulmer Stadium (softball), Cardinal Track Stadium and Trager Stadium (field hockey). The University of Louisville Golf Club, located just east of Louisville in Simpsonville, Ky., is the home to the UofL men’s and women’s golf teams. Patterson Stadium, the recently expanded home to the Cards’ baseball team, opened in 2005, as did the Ralph Wright Natatorium and Trager Center fieldhouse. Planet Fitness Kueber Center provides a stellar basketball practice facility and offices as well as a practice home for women’s basketball and women’s lacrosse. UofL opened in 2008 the Marshall Center, a multi-sport weight training facility, and the Field Hockey Complex, to house offices and locker rooms for field hockey. The G. Garvin Brown II Rowing Center riverside boat house for the Cardi- nals’ rowing team opened in 2011. A state-of-the-art soccer stadium, Dr. Mark & Cindy Lynn Stadium, opened in 2014. The sparkling Thorn- tons Academic Center of Excellence opened in 2016 at the south end of the football stadium structure. Ralph Wright Natatorium Dr. Mark & Cindy Lynn Stadium University of Louisville Golf Club Lacrosse Stadium Trager Center Fieldhouse L&N Federal Credit Union Arena UofL Athletics Broadcast Center gocards.com n University of Louisville 39 UofL Athletics Facilities Louisville Basketball1 Louisville has been the highest-rated television market for college basketball on ESPN for each of the last 18 years, averaging a 4.2 rating during the 2018-19 season, well ahead of the No. 2 market (2.9, Knoxville). Louisville’s 2013 final game against Michigan is the top-rated television event all-time in the Louisville market. 4UofL Coach Chris Mack is just the fourth men’s basketball coach for Louisville in the last 50 years, following Denny Crum (1971-2001), Rick Pitino (2001-2017) and David Padgett (2017-18), who served as interim head coach for one season. 4Numbers retired by UofL including No. 8 Char- lie Tyra (1953-57), No. 31 Wes Unseld (1965- 68), No. 35 Darrell Griffith (1976-80) and No. 42 Pervis Ellison (1985-89). Each was a consensus All-America selection. 4 Division I schools in the nation, including Lou- isville, which have won 20 or more games in each of the past 18 seasons. Kansas tops the list with a current string of 31 consecutive years, fol- lowed by Duke (24), Gonzaga (22), and Louisville (18). However, the NCAA Committee on Infractions’ vacation of 123 victories in four of those years (2011-15) negates the official results. 7NCAA Public Recognition Awards over the past eight years for UofL for ranking among the nation’s top 10 percent in the Academic Progress Rate. Louisville and Stanford are the only two schools from Power Five conferences that have earned the APR recognition in at least seven of the last eight years. 7The eventual national champion has played in Louisville’s home arena, the KFC Yum! Center, in seven of the arena’s 10 seasons in existence. Louisville faced eventual champions Connecticut (2011, 2014), Duke (2015) and Virginia (2019) in home games, Kentucky won a pair of games in the 2012 NCAA second and third rounds in the KFC Yum! Center, 2016 Champion Villanova won the NCAA South Regional in Louisville, and UofL won the 2013 itself (later vacated). 9NCAA Tournament appearances for UofL Coach Chris Mack in his 11 seasons as a head coach, including guiding Xavier to a No. 1 seed in 2017-18. The Cardinals were primed for another appearance in 2020 before the season was stopped by COVID-19. 12All-time ranking in wins for a coach in his first 11 seasons by UofL Coach Chris Mack, who has 259 coaching victories entering the 2020- 21 season. 15Number of NIT appearances all-time for UofL, including winning the 1956 title when that national championshp was considered above the NCAA title. 17 Times Louisville has ranked among the top 50 nationally in field goal percentage defense over the last 18 years, including 13th in 2019-20 (.389). 18 The Cardinals have played a schedule ranked among the top 18 toughest by the ratings percentage index or NET in 11 of the past 13 seasons, including the nation’s fourth-toughest schedule by the NCAA’s NET ranking in 2018-19. 21 Number of Louisville players who have earned All-America status, the latest being consensus All-America third team pick Jordan Nwora in 2020. Six individuals have been consen- sus first team selections (Charlie Tyra, Wes Unseld, Darrell Griffith, Pervis Ellison, Clifford Rozier and Russ Smith). 21 UofL Coach Chris Mack’s uniform number as a player at Xavier. 28Number of times Louisville has either won or finished second in its conference cham- pionship over the last 41 years. UofL tied for second in the ACC in 2019-20 (sixth in 2018-19). 35Games over the last 10 seasons in which the Cardinals recovered from nine or more points down to win, including four occasions during the 2019-20 season. Two occurred in both games of the 2013 Final Four as UofL trailed by 12 against both Wichita St. and Michigan before rallying to win. 36 League-high total individuals that the Car- dinals have placed on the All-ACC Aca- demic Team over the last six years, including a league-high matching five selections in 2019-20. The Cardinals have posted a collective 3.0 or better grade point average as a team in 22 of the last 24 semesters. 38Consecutive seasons that Louisville has ranked among the top seven nationally in average home attendance (since 1982). The Cardinals averaged a school record 21,832 fans in 2010-11, UofL’s first season in the KFC Yum! Center. 35This year marks the 35th anniversary of the Cardinals’ second NCAA Champion- ship in 1986, a team guided by Hall of Fame Coach Denny Crum and Final Four MOP Pervis Ellison. It also marks the 65th anniversary of UofL’s 1956 NIT Championship team, coached by Peck Hickman and led by All-America forward Charlie Tyra. 49Times in the last 55 years that the Car- dinals have participated in post-season competition. COVID-19 stopped all postseason in 2020. 50Consecutive NCAA Final Fours staffed by the UofL statistics crew. 69Number of UofL players to score 1,000 or more career points, a figure that ranks second in the nation to North Carolina (77). Jordan Nwora was the latest to reach the milestone last season, finishing his three years with 1,294 points. Malik Williams will enter the season with 604 career points, the most on UofL’s current roster. Transfers Carlik Jones (1,552 points at Radford) and Charles Minlend (1,271 at San Francisco) have reached the 1,000-point plateau at other institutions. 75UofL players drafted by the NBA (25 first-round picks), including eight in the last seven years. All-America Pervis Ellison was the No. 1 overall pick in the 1989 NBA draft and five other former Cardinals were taken in the top three. Ray Spalding became Louisville’s latest selection in 2018 (56th overall pick, Philadelphia 76ers). Former UofL and current Utah Jazz guard Donovan Mitchell was the 2018 NBA Dunk Contest winner and was runner-up for the NBA Rookie of the Year. A total of 17 former Cardinals have played in the NBA over the last eight years. 107 This season is Louisville’s 107th in intercollegiate basketball. The Cardinals played their first official men’s basketball game on Jan. 28, 1912 when it lost 35-3 to Louisville YMCA, but UofL did not field teams in 1916-17, 1922-23 or 1942-43. Louisville has produced winning sea- sons in 72 of the last 75 seasons. 162 Victories for Louisville in the KFC Yum! Center, where the Cardinals enter 2020-21 with a 162-26 record in its first 10 sea- sons in the spectacular facility. UofL enters the season with a 89-6 record against non-conference opponents in the KFC Yum! Center. 653Times the Cardinals have been ranked in the weekly Associated Press poll, ranking UofL sixth most all-time. Louisville has fin- ished among the nation’s Top 25 teams in eight of the last 10 years. UofL is one of only five schools to be ranked in the AP Top 25 poll at least once during each of the last 18 seasons, excluding preseason polls ( others: Duke, Gonzaga, Kansas, North Carolina). 1746 Number of all-time victories for Louisville with a .652 winning per- centage entering the 2020-21 season, which ranks as the 11th-best in the nation. The figure does not include 123 wins vacated by the NCAA. 3MAttendance milestone the Cardinals passed for games in the KFC Yum! Center in 2018. A total of 3,733,429 fans have flocked to the arena to watch UofL play in the first 10 seasons entering 2020-21. 40 University of Louisville n gocards.com Cardinals By the Numbers Louisville BasketballLouisville Coaching StaffSuperb tactician. Teacher. Moti- vator. Accomplished. Aggressive competitior. Passionate. Likes to have fun. Slam dunk hire. All apt words that have been used to describe Chris Mack, the third-year leader for the University of Louisville’s tradition-rich men’s basketball program. Mack, whose teams have partici- pated in the NCAA Tournament in nine of his 11 seasons as a head coach, was named as the head coach at UofL on March 28, 2018 to much acclaim, a testament to his proven success throughout his career. Among active coaches, Mack’s .687 winning percentage as a head coach ranks him 18th in the nation among active coaches and his 259 victories are the 12th most amassed by a coach in their first 11 seasons. In his second season with the Cardinals in 2019- 20, Mack guided Louisville to a 24-7 record and a 15-5 ACC mark, which tied UofL for second in the regular season standings before the postseason was cancelled due to world health concerns. It was the best overall record through 31 games for a Louis- ville team in six years and marked the most conference victories for the Cardinals in their six years in the ACC. The Cards achieved a Top 15 ranking throughout the season, including two weeks as the nation’s top-ranked team in the AP and USA Today polls. Mack is one of 19 coaches in college basket- ball history to lead their team to a No. 1 ranking within the first two years at their school, and one of just nine to do it in the last 30 years. In his first season at Louisville, Mack guided the Cardinals to a 20-14 record and earned a No. 7 seed in the NCAA Tournament while facing the nation’s fourth-toughest schedule. Picked to finish 11th in the ACC, UofL achieved a 10-8 conference record and earned a tie for sixth in the final regular season standings. The Cardinals beat four Associated Press Top 25 teams and were No. 22 in the nation in the NCAA’s NET rankings. Louisville ranked among the nation’s top 30 teams in both offensive (27th) and defensive efficiency (24th). Entering the season, UofL had returned one starter and about a third of its scoring and rebounding from the previous year. Mack has built for the future as well, with Louisville’s 2019 signing class ranked ninth in the nation by ESPN.com, 10th by Rivals.com and 11th by 247sports.com. The Cardinals’ have continued with an impressive group of graduate transfers and high school products in the 2020 class of new- comers. Before joining UofL in nine sea- sons as the head coach at Xavier, Mack guided the Musketeers to a 215-97 record and eight NCAA Tournament appearances (the last five straight years), including reaching the Sweet 16 on four occasions and the Elite Eight in 2017. His teams won or shared three conference regular season championships while compiling a 105-49 league record over nine seasons in the Big East and Atlantic 10. His 2017-18 squad achieved a 29-6 record, won Xavier’s first Big East Conference regular sea- son championship and earned the school’s first-ever No. 1 seed in the NCAA Tournament. Mack was hon- ored as the 2018 Big East Coach of the Year, NABC District 5 Coach of the Year, and he became the all-time coaching wins leader with the Musketeers. Xavier finished third in the final Associated Press poll – its highest ever ranking -- and last year’s team was one short of the school record for victories. Mack signed a contract with the Cardinals for seven years, extending through the 2024-25 season. He is just the fourth head coach to guide the Cardinals in the last 49 years, fol- lowing Denny Crum (1971-2001), Rick Pitino (2001-17) and David Padgett (2017-18). Mack is the 21st head coach in Louisville’s 106-year history and the seventh in the past 74 years. Mack quickly embraced the Cards’ tradition by reaching out and continuing a dialogue with former UofL players and staff. On a broader scale, he has endeared himself to Cardinal fans with his engag- ing social media presence, direct approach, and his desire to instill toughness and cohesion in his team. Mack, 50, received the 2016 Henry Iba Award as the U.S. Basketball Writers Association (USBWA) National Coach of the Year while also earning the CBS Sports and Basketball Times magazine National Coach of the Year awards that season. He led Xavier to a 28-6 record in 2015-16 and achieved a No. 2 seed in the NCAA Tournament and a No. 5 rank- ing in the final AP poll, which at the time was the school’s highest seed and ranking in school history. His 2016-17 Xavier team made an NCAA Tournament run to the Elite Eight after entering the event as a No. 11 seed. His teams have reached the NCAA Sweet 16 on four occasions, in 2010, 2012, 2015 and 2017. As a player, assistant and head coach, Mack has been a part of 19 NCAA Tourna- ment appear- ances. Born Dec. 30, 1969 in 42 University of Louisville n gocards.com Head Coach Chris Mack Louisville BasketballCleveland, Ohio, Mack was the 2010-11 Atlantic 10 Conference Coach of the Year in his second year as a head coach. In addi- tion, he was the recipient of the 2011 Skip Prosser Man of the Year award, which was established in 2008 to honor those who not only achieve suc- cess on the basketball court but who display moral integrity off the court as well. He was the 2009-10 Basketball Times Rookie Coach of the Year when, in his initial year, he guided Xavier to a 26-9 record, shared the Atlantic 10 Cham- pionship and advanced to the NCAA Sweet 16. Mack served as a court coach for the 2016 USA Basketball Men’s U18 National Team training camp in the summer of 2016 at the United States Olym- pic Training Center in Colorado Springs, Colorado. Before rising to a head coaching position, Mack was a part of successful staffs throughout his career. He spent five seasons as an assistant on Sean Miller’s Xavier staff (2004-09) after serving on the staff of the late Skip Prosser at Xavier as director of basketball operations (1999-01) and as an assis- tant coach at Wake Forest (2001-04). In 10 seasons as an assistant or operations director, he helped his teams produce a 229-96 record (.705), win four regular season titles and one conference tournament champi- onship, and secure eight NCAA Tourna- ment appearances, advancing to three Sweet 16s and one Elite Eight. Those teams won at least 20 games in nine of the 10 seasons. Mack began his coaching career in 1993 as the junior varsity girls basket- ball coach at McAu- ley High School in Cincinnati. He was the varsity girls bas- ketball coach at Mount Notre Dame High School in Reading, Ohio, for four years (1995- 99), directing the team to four straight sectional titles and earning Cincinnati Post Coach of the Year honors in 1996. A 1992 Xavier graduate with a degree in com- munication arts, Mack was a two-time team captain as a player at Xavier under then head coach Pete Gillen. He won the 1993 Midwestern City Confer- ence (MCC) regular season championship (12-2 record) and reached the second round of the NCAA Tournament. Mack was the 1987-88 Cincinnati Post Metro Player of the Year at St. Xavier High School in Cin- cinnati before going on to start for two seasons at Evansville under Jim Crews, winning an MCC Regular Sea- son Championship and a trip to the second round of the 1989 NCAA Tourna- ment as a freshman at Evansville. He transferred to Xavier after his sophomore season. Mack and his wife, Christi, have two daughters, Lainee (15) and Hailee (14), and a son, Brayden (5). A native of Louisville, the former Christi Hester was the runner-up for Kentucky Miss Basketball as a senior at Holy Cross High School. She played basketball at Dayton, where she scored 1,268 career points and was later inducted into the university’s Athletic Hall of Fame in 2014. She served as the Director of Basketball Operations for the Xavier women’s basketball team (2001-03) and more recently as the head girls basketball coach at Cincin- nati’s Colerain High School Cardinals. Mack and his wife created the Mack Family Foundation in 2016, a family-centered foundation whose mission is to serve, inspire and aid less for- tunate children. The Mack family: Lainee, Brayden, Chris, Hailee and Christi. n Among active coaches, Mack’s 259 victories are tied for the 12th-most amassed by a coach in their first 11 seasons. n Among active coaches, Mack’s .687 winning per- centage ranks him 18th in the nation. gocards.com n University of Louisville 43 Head Coach Chris Mack Louisville Basketball Season School Overall Conference Postseason 2009-10 Xavier 26- 9 14-2 Atlantic 10** NCAA Sweet 16 2010-11 Xavier 24- 8 15-1 Atlantic 10* NCAA 2nd Round 2011-12 Xavier 23-13 10-6 Atlantic 10 NCAA Sweet 16 2012-13 Xavier 17-14 9-7 Atlantic 10 2013-14 Xavier 21-13 10-8 Big East NCAA 1st Round 2014-15 Xavier 23-14 9-9 Big East NCAA Sweet 16 2015-16 Xavier 28-6 14-4 Big East NCAA 2nd Round 2016-17 Xavier 24-14 9-9 Big East NCAA Elite Eight 2017-18 Xavier 29- 6 15-3 Big East* NCAA 2nd Round 2018-19 Louisville 20-14 10-8 ACC NCAA 1st Round 2019-20 Louisville 24-7 15-5 ACC *** Totals 259-118 130-62 (3 titles) 9 NCAA (11-9) 11 Seasons .687 .677 *regular season champion ** regular season co-champion *** 2020 postseason cancelled due to COVID-19 Chris Mack Head Coaching RecordBorn: Dec. 30, 1969 in Cleveland, Ohio Age: 50 Alma Mater: Xavier (1992) Married: Aug. 23, 2003 to the former Christi Hester, a member of the Dayton Athletic Hall of Fame and a runner-up as Kentucky’s 1996 Miss Basketball as a senior at Holy Cross High School in Louisville. Children: 3 — Lainee (15; born June 2, 2005), Hailee (14; born Sept. 9, 2006), Brayden (5; born Dec. 8, 2014). Personal 1993-94 Head Coach, McAuley High School (JV), Cincinnati, Ohio 1995-99 Head Coach, Mount Notre Dame High School, Reading, Ohio 1999-2001 Director of Basketball Operations, Xavier University (42-20, two years) 2001-04 Assistant Coach, Wake Forest University (67-29, three years) 2004-09 Assistant Coach, Xavier University (120-47, five years) 2009-18 Head Coach, Xavier University (215-97, nine years) 2018-current Head Coach, University of Louisville (44-21, two years) Basketball Coaching Experience Record Pct. Overall (11 years) 259-118 .687 At Louisville (2 years) 44-21 .677 NCAA Tournament (9) 11-9 .550 (9 NCAA appearances, 4 Sweet 16s, one Elite Eight) Conference Games 130-62 .677 (1 Big East, 2 Atlantic 10 Conference Championships) Conference Tournaments 11-10 .524 Last Five Years 125-47 .727 Collegiate Coaching Record 2010 Basketball Times Rookie Coach of Year 2011 Atlantic 10 Coach of the Year 2011 Skip Prosser Man of the Year Award 2016 Henry Iba Award/USBWA Coach of Year 2016 CBS Sports Coach of the Year 2016 Basketball Times Coach of the Year 2018 Big East Coach of the Year Collegiate Coaching Honors 1984-88 St. Xavier High School (Cincinnati) 1988-90 University of Evansville 1991-93 Xavier University Played three varsity seasons at St. Xavier High School in Cincinnati, Ohio, averaging 22 points, 11 rebounds, five assists and three steals as a senior when he was named the 1988 Cincinnati Post Metro Player of the Year. He finished his career with the second-highest single season and career scoring records. He was inducted into the St. Xavier Athletic Hall of Fame in 1988. Started two seasons at the University of Evansville under coach Jim Crews, winning a Mid- western City Conference (MCC) title and a trip to the second round of the 1989 NCAA Tournament as a freshman at Evansville. After his sophomore season, he transferred to Xavier, where he was a two-time team captain under coach Pete Gillen. Xavier won the 1993 MCC regular season cham- pionship (12-2 record) and reached the second round of the NCAA Tournament. He played briefly with Athletes in Action and professionally in Europe following his collegiate career. Basketball Playing Career Chris Mack at St. Xavier High School Coach, School Seasons W L 1. Roy Williams, Kansas 1989-99 305 72 2. Thad Matta, Butler/Xavier/Ohio St. 2001-11 292 88 3. Mark Few, Gonzaga 2000-10 291 73 4. Jamie Dixon, Pittsburgh 2004-14 288 96 5. Sean Miller, Xavier / Arizona 2005-15 283 99 6. Everett Case, NC State 1947-57 280 71 7. Denny Crum, Louisville 1972-82 263 74 8. Jim Boeheim, Syracuse 1977-87 261 84 9. Nolan Richardson, Tulsa/Arkansas 1981-91 260 92 John Calipari, UMass/Memphis 1989-96, 2001-03 260 101 Tim Cluess, LIU Post/Iona 2007-17 260 101 12. Chris Mack, Xavier/Louisville 2009-20 259 117 Jerry Tarkanian, Long Beach State /UNLV 1969-79 259 49 Best Career Coaching Starts in 11 Seasons by Wins (Minimum five years as a Division I head coach; includes record at four-year colleges only) Coach, Current School Yrs. Won Lost Pct. 1. Mark Few, Gonzaga 21 599 124 .828 2. Roy Williams, North Carolina 32 885 253 .778 3. John Calipari, Kentucky 28 734 215 .773 4. Mike Krzyzewski, Duke 45 1157 350 .768 Bill Self, Kansas 27 708 214 .768 6. Sean Miller, Arizona 16 405 147 .734 7. Tony Bennett, Virginia 14 346 129 .728 8. Bruce Pearl, Auburn 25 587 223 .725 9. Tom Izzo, Michigan State 25 628 241 .723 10. Gregg Marshall, Wichita State 22 525 204 .720 11. Ray Harper, Jacksonville State 21 414 171 .708 12. Rick Pitino, Iona 32 647 268 .707 Randy Bennett, St. Mary’s 19 440 182 .707 Jim Boeheim, Syracuse 44 964 399 .707 15. Bob Huggins, West Virginia 38 881 372 .703 16. Jamie Dixon, TCU 17 412 180 .696 17. Jay Wright, Villanova 26 594 267 .690 18. Chris Mack, Louisville 11 259 118 .687 19. Mick Cronin, UCLA 17 384 183 .677 20. Craig Smith, Utah State 9 205 99 .674 21. Brad Underwood, Illinois 7 156 76 .672 Will Wade, LSU 7 158 77 .672 23. Matt Painter, Purdue 16 362 179 .669 24. Michael White, Florida 9 209 105 .666 25. Steve Alford, Nevada 29 606 310 .662 Above records through the 2019-20 season Winningest Active Division I Men’s Coaches by Percentage 44 University of Louisville n gocards.com Chris Mack Facts and Figures Louisville Basketball n Jay Bilas, College Basketball Analyst “Chris Mack is one of the best young coaches in the game, and perhaps its most underrated, given just how accomplished he is. In an age of self promotion, Chris just keeps his head down, and quietly works, competes, and wins. Chris Mack is rock solid in every conceivable area.” n Bill Raftery, College Basketball Analyst “Chris is a superb tactician who reads game situ- ations in a cerebral fashion. His ability to evaluate talent is extraordinary. Team and individual growth prosper at the highest level under his tutelage. Louisville is blessed to have Chris as its head coach.” n Dick Vitale, College Basketball Analyst “Chris Mack was the perfect hire to continue the great tradition of UofL Basketball. He brings a wealth of winning experience after doing a brilliant job at Xavier. He is a teacher, motivator and com- municator, and the fans at Louisville are fortunate to have found someone with his talents.” n Pete Gillen, College Basketball Analyst, Mack’s Collegiate Coach at Xavier “Chris Mack was one of the smartest players that I ever coached as a Division 1 Basketball Coach for 30 years. He was very talented, but he also had a tremendous Basketball IQ. He has a little bit of “Huckleberry Finn” in him and he likes to have fun, but in a good way. Chris is a great family man, a fabulous basketball coach, and he is a terrific addi- tion to the Louisville Basketball Family.” n Chris Paul, Nine-Time NBA All-Star “Coach Mack made me a better player and a better person. Players love to play for him because he is passionate about their development and the suc- cess of the team. He is also very personable.” n Edmond Sumner, Indiana Pacers guard “Coach Mack is the same guy every day with the same high energy. I like that he gives you the good with the bad. Some coaches just give you the bad, thinking it’s going to benefit you. When you do something good, he’ll tell you if it’s good, but if you do something bad, he’ll give you the bad too.” n David West, Two-time NBA All-Star “Coach Mack is an aggressive competitor who hates to lose. We have a lot in common in that way.” n Jeff Goodman, Stadium “Biggest no-brainer (hire): Chris Mack to Louisville. From the day that Rick Pitino was jettisoned, Mack was the clear-cut leader. Let’s forget about the fact that his wife, Christi, is from Louisville. He fits be- cause he has already had success recruiting in the Midwest. He took the Musketeers to the Elite Eight in 2017. Plus, he had Xavier as a No. 1 seed this year. In his nine seasons as head coach, he’s gone to the NCAA tournament eight times.” n Matt Norlander, CBSSports.com “2018 Slam Dunks (hires): Simple eval here. Mack was Louisville’s top target; the school landed said target. Given Mack’s profile on the market in the past three years (he was viewed as an A-level candidate), Louisville did the best it possibly could have done. That’s a slam dunk. Mack, 48, brings not just a big name and buzz to the hire, but a track record to back up the noise. He went to the NCAA Tournament in eight of his nine seasons at Xavier, plus took X to the Elite Eight and got the school to its first 1 seed in history. He’s outgoing, good with the media and built to handle all that comes with the Louisville job.” n Chris Johnson, Sports Illustrated “Chris Mack’s choice to leave Xavier for Louisville is a testament to the Cardinals’ enduring appeal as a coaching destination. … Mack smoothed Xavier’s jump from the Atlantic 10 to the high-major ranks, took the Musketeers to the tourney in eight of his nine seasons and this spring beat out the eventual national champions for the regular-season Big East title. That Louisville was able to persuade Mack to leave his alma mater in spite of that sustained success reflects well on the Cardinals’ stature. Louisville can move forward confident it has an accomplished steward to navigate the program through this turbulent period.” Opponent W L Abilene Christian 1 0 Alabama 3 0 Albany 1 0 Akron 1 0 Arizona 2 0 Arizona St. 0 1 Auburn 1 1 Baylor 1 3 Bowling Green 2 0 Boston College 2 1 Buffalo 1 0 Butler 12 5 Central Arkansas 1 0 Charlotte 5 2 Cincinnati 6 3 Clemson 3 1 Colorado 1 1 Creighton 7 6 Dayton 8 4 DePaul 10 1 Drake 1 0 Drexel 1 0 Duke 1 1 Duquesne 4 0 East Tennessee St. 1 0 Eastern Kentucky 1 0 Eastern Washington 1 0 Evansville 1 0 Fairleigh Dickinson 1 0 Florida 1 0 Florida Gulf Coast 1 0 Florida State 1 4 Fordham 5 0 Gardner-Webb 1 0 George Washington 5 0 Georgetown 9 2 Georgia 2 0 Georgia State 1 0 Georgia Tech 2 1 Gonzaga 0 3 Hampton 1 0 Hawaii 0 1 Indiana 0 1 Indiana State 1 0 Iowa 1 1 IPFW 2 0 IUPUI 1 0 Kansas State 0 2 Kentucky 0 2 Kent State 4 0 LaSalle 3 1 Lehigh 2 0 Lipscomb 1 0 Long Beach State 1 2 LSU 1 0 Marquette 9 6 Marshall 1 0 Maryland 1 0 Massachusetts 2 2 Memphis 1 1 Miami (Fla.) 3 0 Miami (Ohio) 5 1 Michigan 2 0 Opponent W L Michigan State 1 0 Minnesota 1 1 Missouri 3 0 Morehead St. 2 0 Morgan St. 1 0 Murray State 1 0 NIcholls 1 0 North Carolina 2 2 North Carolina Central 1 0 NC State 2 1 North Dakota State 1 0 Northern Arizona 1 0 Northern Iowa 3 0 Northern Kentucky 1 0 Notre Dame 4 0 Old Domonion 0 1 Ole Miss 1 0 Oral Roberts 0 1 Pacific 0 1 Pittsburgh 4 1 Providence 6 5 Purdue 2 0 Rhode Island 4 0 Richmond 4 1 Rider 1 0 Robert Morris 2 0 Sacred Heart 1 0 St. Bonaventure 5 0 St. John’s 9 2 Saint Joseph’s 3 2 Saint Louis 5 1 San Diego 1 0 Seton Hall 7 6 USC Upstate 1 0 Southern 1 0 Southern Illinois 1 0 Stephen F. Austin 1 0 Syracuse 1 1 Temple 2 2 Tennessee 1 3 Texas Southern 1 0 Texas Tech 0 1 USC 1 1 Utah 1 0 UTEP 0 1 Vanderbilt 1 1 Vermont 1 0 Virginia 2 2 Virginia Tech 2 0 VCU 0 1 Villanova 1 10 Wake Forest 6 2 Weber State 1 0 Western Kentucky 2 0 Western Michigan 1 0 Wisconsin 1 1 Wofford 1 1 Wright State 1 0 Youngstown State 2 0 Mack Record vs. All Opponents UofL Coach Chris Mack and his wife Christi launched the Mack Family Foundation in August 2016 in Cincinnati and have continued the be- nevolent organization in Louisville. The Mack Family Foundation has two core objec- tives. First, to identify smaller charities, foundations and causes to help support that are centered on children. While larger charities do great work, the aim is to be in the trenches, see change up close and give financial support that will help underfunded organizations. Secondly, the Mack Family Foundation wants their children and the children of its supporter to help volunteer at their own events, learn about the charities and causes they serve, and to understand truly what it means to give back to those in need. Nine ‘Coach Mack’s Corner’ have been installed at area schools, including a seating area to read and bookshelves stocked with hundreds of age- appropriate books. What They’re Saying About Chris Mack gocards.com n University of Louisville 45 Chris Mack Facts and Figures Louisville Basketball Mack Family FoundationXavier University Nine seasons | 215-97 | (.689) 2009-10 at Xavier University (Won 26, Lost 9) Date Site XU OPP Nov. 13 Youngstown State (H) 83 57 Nov. 17 Bowling Green (H) 101 57 Nov. 21 Sacred Heart (H) 105 65 Old Spice Classic (Lake Buena Vista, Fla.) Nov. 26 Marquette (N) 61 71 Nov. 27 Creighton (N) 80 67 Nov. 29 Baylor (N) 64 69 Dec. 4 Kent State (H) 77 61 Dec. 8 Kansas State (A) 56 71 Dec. 13 Cincinnati (H) (2OT) 83 79 Dec. 19 Butler (A) 68 69 Dec. 23 Miami (Ohio) (H) 70 67 Dec. 29 LSU (H) 89 65 Jan. 3 Wake Forest (A) (2OT) 92 96 Jan. 7 La Salle (A) 68 62 Jan. 10 George Washington (A) 76 69 Jan. 13 Charlotte (H) 86 74 Jan. 16 Dayton (H) 78 74 Jan. 20 Temple (A) 72 77 Jan. 23 Rhode Island (H) 72 61 Jan. 28 Duquesne (H) 86 50 Jan. 31 Fordham (H) 108 60 Feb. 3 Massachusetts (A) 87 79 Feb. 6 Dayton (A) 65 90 Feb. 13 Florida (A) 76 64 Feb. 17 St. Joseph’s (H) 88 52 Feb. 20 Charlotte (A) 81 67 Feb. 24 Saint Louis (A) 73 71 Feb. 28 Richmond (H) (2OT) 78 76 Mar. 3 Fordham (A) 82 56 Mar. 6 St. Bonaventure (H) 93 72 Atlantic 10 Tournament (Atlantic City, N.J.) Mar. 12 Dayton (N) 78 73 Mar. 13 Richmond (N) (OT) 85 89 NCAA West Region 1st/2nd Rounds (Milwaukee, Wisc.) Mar. 19 Minnesota (N) 65 54 Mar. 21 Pittsburgh (N) 71 68 NCAA West Regional (Salt Lake City, Utah) Mar. 25 Kansas State (N) (2OT) 96 101 2010-11 at Xavier University (Won 24, Lost 8) Date Site XU OPP Nov. 12 Western Michigan (H) 68 65 Nov. 16 IPFW (H) (OT) 76 66 Paradise Jam (St. Thomas, U.S. Virgin Islands) Nov. 19 Iowa (N) 86 73 Nov. 21 Seton Hall (N) 57 52 Nov. 22 Old Dominion (N) 58 67 Nov. 27 Wofford (H) (3OT) 94 90 Dec. 1 Miami (Ohio) (A) 64 75 Dec. 9 Butler (H) 51 49 Dec. 18 Wake Forest (H) 83 75 Dec. 22 Gonzaga (A) 54 64 Dec. 28 Albany (H) 88 64 Dec. 31 Florida (H) 67 71 Jan. 6 Cincinnati (A) 46 66 Jan. 9 Rhode Island (A) 72 45 Jan. 12 Massachusetts (H) 79 50 Jan. 15 Dayton (H) 81 76 Jan. 19 St. Bonaventure (A) 79 65 Jan. 22 Temple (H) 88 77 Jan. 26 George Washington (H) 81 74 Jan. 29 Richmond (A) 85 62 Feb. 2 Charlotte (A) 62 66 Feb. 5 Saint Louis (H) 76 68 Feb. 8 Georgia (A) 65 57 Feb. 13 Duquesne (A) 71 63 Feb. 16 Saint Joseph’s (A) 74 54 Feb. 19 Fordham (H) 79 72 Feb. 22 LaSalle (H) 100 62 Feb. 27 Dayton (A) 66 62 Mar. 2 Charlotte (H) 68 48 Mar. 5 Saint Louis (A) 66 55 Atlantic 10 Tournament (Atlantic City, N.J.) Mar. 11 Dayton (N) 67 68 NCAA East Region First Round (Cleveland, Ohio) Mar. 18 Marquette (N) 55 66 2011-12 at Xavier University (Won 23, Lost 13) Date Site XU OPP Nov. 11 Morgan State (H) 74 63 Nov. 15 IPFW (H) 86 63 Nov. 18 Miami (Ohio) (H) 66 60 Nov. 25 Georgia (H) 70 56 Nov. 28 Vanderbilt (A) (OT) 82 70 Dec. 3 Purdue (H) 66 63 Dec. 7 Butler (A) 73 61 Dec. 10 Cincinnati (H) 76 53 Dec. 18 Oral Roberts (H) 42 64 Diamond Head Classic (Honolulu, Hi.) Dec. 22 Long Beach State (N) 59 68 Dec. 23 Hawaii (A) (OT) 82 84 Dec. 25 Southern Illinois (N) 87 77 Dec. 31 Gonzaga (H) 65 72 Jan. 4 La Salle (A) 70 80 Jan. 7 Fordham (A) 67 59 Jan. 11 Duquesne (H) 78 50 Jan. 14 St. Bonaventure (H) 77 64 Jan. 18 Saint Joseph’s (H) 68 55 Jan. 21 Dayton (A) 72 87 Jan. 25 Saint Louis (H) 68 73 Jan. 28 Charlotte (A) 74 70 Feb. 1 George Washington (A) 59 58 Feb. 4 Memphis (A) 68 72 Feb. 8 Rhode Island (H) 84 66 Feb. 11 Temple (A) 72 85 Feb. 18 Dayton (H) (OT) 86 83 Feb. 21 Massachusetts (A) 73 80 Feb. 25 Richmond (H) 65 57 Feb. 28 Saint Louis (A) 59 70 Mar. 3 Charlotte (H) 72 63 Atlantic 10 Tournament (Atlantic City, N.J.) Mar. 9 Dayton (N) 70 69 Mar. 10 Saint Louis (N) 71 64 Mar. 11 St. Bonaventure (N) 56 67 NCAA South Region 1st/2nd Rounds (Greensboro, N.C.) Mar. 16 Notre Dame (N) 67 63 Mar. 18 Lehigh (N) 70 58 NCAA South Regional (Atlanta, Ga.) Mar. 23 Baylor (N) 70 75 2012-13 at Xavier University (Won 17, Lost 14) Date Site XU OPP Nov. 9 Fairleigh Dickinson (H) 117 75 Nov. 13 Butler (H) 62 47 Nov. 17 Robert Morris (H) 61 59 Anaheim Classic (Anaheim, Calif.) Nov. 22 Pacific (N) 67 70 Nov. 23 Drexel (N) 69 65 Nov. 25 Drake (N) 74 70 Dec. 1 Purdue (A) 63 57 Dec. 6 Vanderbilt (H) (OT) 64 66 Dec. 9 Kent State (H) 62 55 Dec. 19 Cincinnati (N) 45 60 Dec. 22 Wofford (H) 55 56 Dec. 29 Tennessee (A) 47 51 Jan. 2 Wake Forest (A) 59 66 Jan. 10 Temple (H) 57 52 Jan. 12 George Washington (H) 71 56 Jan. 16 St. Bonaventure (A) 66 64 Jan. 19 La Salle (H) 70 63 Jan. 23 Charlotte (A) 57 63 Jan. 26 Saint Joseph’s (A) 49 59 Jan. 30 Dayton (H) 66 61 Feb. 2 Richmond (A) 71 73 Feb. 9 Duquesne (A) 73 65 Feb. 13 Fordham (H) 79 66 Feb. 16 Dayton (A) 59 70 Feb. 20 Rhode Island (A) 55 42 Feb. 23 VCU (H) 71 75 Feb. 26 Memphis (H) 64 62 Mar. 2 Massachusetts (H) 72 77 Mar. 6 Saint Louis (H) 77 66 Mar. 9 Butler (A) 62 67 Atlantic 10 Tournament (Brooklyn, N.Y.) Mar. 14 Saint Joseph’s (N) 57 58 2013-14 at Xavier University (Won 21, Lost 13) Date Site XU OPP Nov. 8 Gardner-Webb (H) 83 59 Nov. 12 Tennessee (H) 67 63 Nov. 15 Morehead State (H) 79 56 Nov. 20 Miami (Ohio) (H) 77 51 Nov. 25 Abilene Christian (H) 93 65 Battle 4 Atlantis (Paradise Island, Bahamas) Nov. 28 Iowa (N) (OT) 74 77 Nov. 29 Tennessee (N) 49 64 Nov. 30 USC (N) 78 84 Dec. 7 Bowling Green (H) (OT) 85 73 Dec. 10 Evansville (H) 63 60 Dec. 14 Cincinnati (N) 64 47 Dec. 21 Alabama (A) 77 74 Dec. 28 Wake Forest (H) 68 53 Dec. 31 St. John’s (H) 70 60 Jan. 4 Butler (H) 79 68 Jan. 9 Marquette (H) 86 79 Jan. 12 Creighton (A) 89 95 Jan. 15 Georgetown (H) 80 67 Jan. 20 DePaul (A) 84 74 Jan. 25 Providence (A) 72 81 Feb. 1 Seton Hall (H) 60 68 Feb. 3 Villanova (A) 58 81 Feb. 8 Providence (H) 59 53 Feb. 11 Butler (A) 64 50 Feb. 15 Marquette (A) 72 81 Feb. 19 DePaul (H) 83 64 Feb. 22 Georgetown (A) 52 74 Feb. 25 St. John’s (A) 65 53 Mar. 1 Creighton (H) 75 69 Mar. 3 Seton Hall (A) 62 71 Mar. 6 Villanova (H) 70 77 Big East Conference Tournament (New York, N.Y.) Mar. 13 Marquette (N) 68 65 Mar. 14 Creighton (N) 78 86 NCAA Tournament (Dayton, Ohio) Mar. 18 NC State (N) 59 74 2014-15 at Xavier University (Won 23, Lost 14) Date Site XU OPP Nov. 14 Northern Arizona (H) 93 60 Nov. 18 Long Beach State (H) 97 74 Nov. 21 Stephen F. Austin (H) 81 63 Nov. 24 Murray State (H) 89 62 Wooden Legacy (Fullerton, Calif.) Nov. 27 San Diego (N) 82 71 Nov. 28 UTEP (N) 73 77 Wooden Legacy (Anaheim, Calif.) Nov. 30 Long Beach State (N) 70 73 Dec. 6 Alabama (H) 97 84 Dec. 9 IUPUI (H) 66 43 Dec. 13 Missouri (A) 74 58 Dec. 20 Auburn (A) (2OT) 88 89 Dec. 28 Florida Gulf Coast (H) 71 57 Dec. 31 Georgetown (H) 70 53 Jan. 3 DePaul (A) 68 71 Jan. 7 Seton Hall (H) 69 58 Jan. 10 Butler (A) 76 88 Jan. 14 Villanova (A) 75 88 Jan. 17 Marquette (H) 62 58 Jan. 22 Providence (A) 66 69 Jan. 24 DePaul (H) 89 76 Jan. 27 Georgetown (A) 66 53 Jan. 31 Seton Hall (A) 82 90 Feb. 4 Creighton (H) 72 79 Feb. 7 Providence (H) 78 69 Feb. 10 Marquette (A) 64 44 Feb. 14 St. John’s (H) 70 78 Feb. 18 Cincinnati (A) 59 57 Feb. 21 Butler (H) 73 56 Feb. 23 St. John’s (A) 57 58 Feb. 28 Villanova (H) 66 78 Mar. 7 Creighton (A) 74 73 Big East Conference Tournament (New York, N.Y.) Mar. 12 Butler (N) 67 61 Mar. 13 Georgetown (N) 65 63 Mar. 14 Villanova (N) 52 69 NCAA West Region 1st/2nd Rounds (Jacksonville, Fla.) Mar. 19 Ole Miss (N) 76 57 Mar. 21 Georgia State (N) 75 67 NCAA West Regional (Los Angeles, Calif.) Mar. 26 Arizona (N) 60 68 2015-16 at Xavier University (Won 28, Lost 6) Date Site XU OPP Nov. 13 Miami (H) 81 72 Nov. 17 Missouri (H) 78 66 Nov. 20 Michigan (A) 86 70 Nov. 23 Northern Kentucky (H) 78 66 AdvoCare Invitational (Buena Vista, Fla.) Nov. 26 Alabama (N) 64 45 Nov. 27 USC (N) 87 77 Nov. 29 Dayton (N) 90 61 Dec. 5 Western Kentucky (H) 95 64 Dec. 8 Wright State (H) 90 55 Dec. 12 Cincinnati (H) 65 55 Dec. 19 Auburn (H) 85 61 Dec. 22 Wake Forest (A) 78 70 Dec. 31 Villanova (A) 64 95 Jan. 2 Butler (H) 88 69 Jan. 6 St. John’s (A) 74 66 Jan. 12 DePaul (H) 84 64 Jan. 16 Marquette (A) 74 66 Jan. 19 Georgetown (H) 72 81 Jan. 23 Seton Hall (H) 84 76 Jan. 26 Providence (A) 75 68 Jan. 30 DePaul (A) 86 65 Feb. 3 St. John’s (H) 90 83 Feb. 6 Marquette (H) 90 82 Feb. 9 Creighton (A) 56 70 Feb. 13 Butler (A) 74 57 Feb. 17 Providence (H) 85 74 Feb. 20 Georgetown (A) 88 70 Feb. 24 Villanova (H) 90 83 Feb. 28 Seton Hall (A) 81 90 Mar. 5 Creighton (H) 98 93 Big East Tournament (New York, N.Y.) Mar. 10 Marquette (N) 90 72 Mar. 11 Seton Hall (N) 83 87 NCAA East Region 1st/2nd Rounds (St. Louis, Mo.) Mar. 18 Weber State (N) 71 53 Mar. 20 Wisconsin (N) 63 66 46 University of Louisville n gocards.com Mack’s Collegiate Results Louisville Basketball2016-17 at Xavier University (Won 24, Lost 14) Date Site XU OPP Nov. 11 Lehigh (H) 84 81 Nov. 14 Buffalo (H) 86 53 Tire Pros Invitational (Orlando, Fla.) Nov. 17 Missouri (N) (OT) 83 82 Nov. 18 Clemson (N) 83 77 Nov. 20 Northern Iowa (N) 67 59 Nov. 26 Northern Iowa (H) 64 42 Nov. 29 North Dakota State (H) 85 55 Dec. 3 Baylor (A) 61 76 Dec. 7 Colorado (A) 66 68 Dec. 10 Utah (H) 77 69 Dec. 17 Wake Forest (H) 69 65 Dec. 20 Eastern Washington (H) 85 56 Dec. 28 Providence (H) 82 56 Dec. 31 Georgetown (A) 81 76 Jan. 7 St. John’s (H) 97 82 Jan. 10 Villanova (A) 54 79 Jan. 14 Butler (A) 78 83 Jan. 16 Creighton (H) 67 72 Jan. 22 Georgetown (H) 86 75 Jan. 26 Cincinnati (A) 78 86 Jan. 29 St. John’s (A) 82 77 Feb. 1 Seton Hall (H) 72 70 Feb. 4 Creighton (A) 82 80 Feb. 8 DePaul (H) 72 61 Feb. 11 Villanova (H) 57 73 Feb. 15 Providence (A) 63 75 Feb. 18 Marquette (A) 61 83 Feb. 22 Seton Hall (A) 64 71 Feb. 26 Butler (H) 79 88 Mar. 1 Marquette (H) 84 95 Mar. 4 DePaul (A) 79 65 Big East Tournament (New York, N.Y.) Mar. 8 DePaul (N) 75 64 Mar. 9 Butler (N) 62 57 Mar. 10 Creighton (N) 72 75 NCAA West Region 1st/2nd Rounds (Orlando, Fla.) Mar. 16 Maryland (N) 79 65 Mar. 18 Florida State (N) 91 66 NCAA West Regional (San Jose, Calif.) Mar. 23 Arizona (N) 73 71 Mar. 25 Gonzaga (N) 59 83 2017-18 at Xavier University (Won 29, Lost 6) Date Site XU OPP Nov. 10 Morehead State (H) 101 49 Nov. 13 Rider (H) 101 75 Nov. 16 Wisconsin (A) 80 70 Nov. 20 Hampton (H) 96 60 Continental Tire Las Vegas Invitational (Las Vegas, Nev.) Nov. 23 George Washington (N) 83 64 Nov. 24 Arizona State (N) 86 102 Nov. 28 Baylor (H) 76 63 Dec. 2 Cincinnati (H) 89 76 Dec. 6 Kent State (H) 96 70 Dec. 9 Colorado (H) 96 69 Dec. 16 East Tennessee State (H) 68 66 Dec. 19 Marshall (H) 81 77 Dec. 22 Northern Iowa (A) 77 67 Dec. 27 Marquette (A) 91 87 Dec. 30 DePaul (H) 77 72 Jan. 2 Butler (H) 86 79 Jan. 6 Providence (A) 72 81 Jan. 10 Villanova (A) 65 89 Jan. 13 Creighton (H) 92 70 Jan. 17 St. John’s (H) 88 82 Jan. 20 Seton Hall (A) 73 64 Jan. 24 Marquette (H) 89 70 Jan. 30 St. John’s (A) 73 68 Feb. 3 Georgetown (H) (OT) 96 91 Feb. 6 Butler (A) (OT) 98 93 Feb. 10 Creighton (A) 72 71 Feb. 14 Seton Hall (H) 102 90 Feb. 17 Villanova (H) 79 95 Feb. 21 Georgetown (A) 89 77 Feb. 28 Providence (H) 84 74 Mar. 3 DePaul (A) 65 62 Big East Tournament (New York, N.Y.) Mar. 8 St. John’s (N) 88 60 Mar. 9 Providence (N) (OT) 72 75 NCAA West Region 1st/2nd Rounds (Nashville, Tenn.) Mar. 16 Texas Southern (N) 102 83 Mar. 18 Florida State (N) 70 75 2018-19 at University of Louisville (Won 20, Lost 14) Date Site XU OPP Nov. 8 Nicholls (H) 85 72 NIT Season Tip-Off (Louisville, Ky.) Nov. 13 Southern (H) 104 54 Nov. 16 Vermont (H) 86 78 NIT Season Tip-Off (Brooklyn, N.Y.) Nov. 21 #5 Tennessee (N) 81 92 Nov. 23 Marquette (N) (OT) 74 77 ACC/Big 10 Challenge (Louisville, Ky.) Nov. 27 #9 Michigan St. (H) (OT) 82 78 Dec. 1 Seton Hall (A) 70 65 Dec. 5 Central Arkansas (H) 86 41 Dec. 8 Indiana (A) 67 68 Dec. 12 Lipscomb (H) 72 68 Dec. 15 Kent State (H) 83 70 Dec. 21 Robert Morris (H) 73 59 Dec. 29 #15 Kentucky (H) 58 71 Jan. 6 Miami * (H) 90 73 Jan. 9 Pittsburgh * (A) (OT) 86 89 Jan. 12 #12 North Carolina * (A) 83 62 Jan. 16 Boston College * (H) 80 70 Jan. 19 Georgia Tech * (A) 79 51 Jan. 24 #21 NC State * (H) 84 77 Jan. 26 Pittsburgh * (H) 66 51 Jan. 30 Wake Forest * (A) 82 54 Feb. 2 #9 North Carolina *(H) 69 79 Feb. 4 #11 Virginia Tech * (A) 72 64 Feb. 9 #22 Florida State * (A) (OT) 75 80 Feb. 12 #2 Duke * (H) 69 71 Feb. 16 Clemson * (H) 56 55 Feb. 20 Syracuse * (A) 49 69 Feb. 23 #3 Virginia * (H) 52 64 Feb. 27 Boston College * (A) 59 66 Mar. 4 Notre Dame * (H) 75 61 Mar. 9 #2 Virginia * (A) 68 73 ACC Tournament (Charlotte, N.C.) Mar. 13 Notre Dame (N) 75 63 Mar. 14 #5 North Carolina (N) 70 83 NCAA First Round (Des Moines, Iowa) Mar. 21 Minnesota (N) 76 86 *Atlantic Coast Conference game 2536 2324 2019-20 at University of Louisville (Won 24, Lost 7) Date Site XU OPP Nov. 5 Miami * (A) 87 74 Global Sports Shootout (Louisville, Ky.) Nov. 10 Youngstown State (H) 78 55 Nov. 13 Indiana State (H) 91 62 Global Sports Shootout (Louisville, Ky.) Nov. 17 North Carolina Central (H) 87 58 Nov. 20 USC Upstate (H) 76 50 Nov. 24 Akron (H) 82 76 Nov. 29 Western Kentucky (N) + 71 54 ACC/Big 10 Challenge (Louisville, Ky.) Dec. 3 #4 Michigan (H) 58 43 Dec. 6 Pittsburgh * (H) 64 46 Jimmy V Classic (New York, N.Y.) Dec. 10 Texas Tech (N) 57 70 Dec. 14 Eastern Kentucky (H) 99 67 Dec. 18 Miami (Ohio) (H) 70 46 Dec. 28 #19 Kentucky (A) (OT) 70 78 Jan. 4 #18 Florida State * (H) 65 78 Jan. 7 Miami * (H) 74 58 Jan. 11 Notre Dame * (A) 67 64 Jan. 14 Pittsburgh * (A) (OT) 73 68 Jan. 18 #3 Duke * (A) 79 73 Jan. 22 Georgia Tech * (H) 68 64 Jan. 25 Clemson * (H) 80 62 Jan. 29 Boston College * (A) 86 69 Feb. 1 NC State *(A) 77 57 Feb. 5 Wake Forest * (H) 86 76 Feb. 8 Virginia * (H) 80 73 Feb. 12 Georgia Tech * (A) 58 64 Feb. 15 Clemson * (A) 62 77 Feb. 19 Syracuse * (H) 90 66 Feb. 22 North Carolina * (H) 72 55 Feb. 24 #8 Florida State * (A) 67 82 Mar. 1 Virginia Tech * (H) 68 52 Mar. 7 #22 Virginia * (A) 54 57 *Atlantic Coast Conference game 2296 1974 + game played at Nashville, Tenn. One-point margins 6-7 Two-point margins 12-5 Three-point margins 12-10 Four-point margins 16-9 Five-point margins 14-10 All overtime games 14-10 Overtime games with over a five-point margin 5-1 Mack in Close Games gocards.com n University of Louisville 47 Mack’s Collegiate Results Louisville BasketballNext >