Butler vs. Indiana State
Exhibition
Wednesday, Oct. 29 • 7PM
Hinkle Fieldhouse • Indianapolis, Ind.
Â
TV/Stream:Â None
Radio/Audio: Fuego 92.7FM, Butler Sports App & ButlerSports.com • @MarkMinner & Nick Gardner (@n_gardner)
Â
The Series (Even though this exhibition won't count toward the series record): Butler Leads, 70-57
First Meeting:Â Jan. 15, 1904; Butler won, 28-16
Last Meeting:Â Dec. 7, 2016; Indiana State won, 72-71
Indiana State is Butler's most-played opponent as the teams have played 127 contests.
Matta of Facts
• The Bulldogs host Indiana State Wednesday night in Butler's second and final exhibition of the preseason.
• Butler dropped a 77-76 exhibition decision to Notre Dame Oct. 17; neither team had a player see more than 21 minutes of action.
•
Finley Bizjack led Butler with 16 points in the exhibition, hitting four three-pointers.
Efeosa Oliogu-Elabor and
Jamie Kaiser Jr. each scored 12 points for Butler.
• Indiana State head coach Matthew Graves is a 1998 Butler graduate who finished his playing career with 994 points. He was a member of Butler's coaching staff from 2001-13. Graves is currently on a medical leave of absence following heart surgery.
• Graves and Thad Matta are two of the four Butler graduates currently serving as Division I men's head coaches (joining Baylor's Scott Drew and the Miami RedHawks' Travis Steele).Â
• After graduating from Butler in 1990, Matta began his coaching career as a graduate assistant at Indiana State (1990-91 season).
• Butler's roster includes 11 newcomers in addition to Kaiser, who missed all of last season due to an ankle injury.
• Bizjack, a junior, returns for the Bulldogs after starting 30 games a season ago; sophomore
Evan Haywood is the only other returner to have started during the 2024-25 season (the final two games of the season).
• Butler returns only 15.3 percent of its scoring from a season ago (400 of their 2,616 points during the 2024-25 season). Bizjack accounts for 350 of those 400 returning points.
• Bizjack scored a career-best 30 points in Butler's season finale, a loss to Boise State in the quarterfinals of the inaugural College Basketball Crown in Las Vegas. Bizjack went a career-high 6-for-9 from three-point range in that game.
• Bizjack joins newcomers
Jalen Jackson,
Michael Ajayi,
Drayton Jones, and
Yame Butler as players on this season's Butler roster who have each scored 30 or more points in at least one game of their respective collegiate careers.
• Four of Butler's newcomers have earned all-conference first team honors at a previous institution: Jackson (Purdue Fort Wayne; 2024-25 Horizon League), Ajayi (Pepperdine; 2023-24 West Coast Conference), Jones (South Carolina State; 2024-25 MEAC), and
Yohan Traore (UC Santa Barbara; 2023-24 Big West).
• Thirty-one (31) BIG EAST players averaged double figures in scoring last season; Bizjack is one of only seven who return for the 2025-26 season -- Zuby Ejiofor (SJU), Solo Ball and Alex Karaban (UConn), Malik Mack (Georgetown), CJ Gunn (DePaul), and Chase Ross (Marquette).
• Thad Matta has averaged 24.3 wins per season and has won 70.1 percent of his games as a head coach in his 20 seasons on the bench.
• Butler's five-member freshman class --
Jackson Keith,
Efeosa Oliogu-Elabor,
Jack McCaffery, Azavier "Stink" Robinson, and
Bryson Cardinal was ranked No. 25 nationally by ESPN. Both McCaffery and Robinson were included among ESPN's Top 100 prospects in the class.
• Butler's entire coaching staff returns from last season.
• Butler was 14-5 when leading at halftime last season (and 1-14 when trailing after 20 minutes).
• Butler was 10-1 when scoring 80 or more points last season with the only loss coming in the season finale (100-93 to Boise State in the College Basketball Crown quarterfinals).
• Butler committed an average of only 13.6 fouls per game last season, the 13th-fewest total among teams nationally.
• A point of emphasis this season will be forcing more turnovers as Butler opponents turned the ball over only 7.74 times per game on average last season, a mark that was 354th nationally.
• Butler committed only one turnover in the regular season finale at Creighton March 8. Villanova also had only a single turnover in their Dec. 21 game at Creighton. Prior to the two occurrences this season, the last BIG EAST team to have only one turnover in a game was Louisville, which had one turnover Feb. 7, 2007 against Georgetown (Rick Pitino was the coach of that Louisville team).
Â
Representing Their Country
•
Efeosa Oliogu-Elabor led Team Canada to a fifth-place finish in the FIBA U19 Men's Basketball World Cup 2025 in Lausanne, Switzerland. Oliogu-Elabor averaged 12.9 points per game, while shooting 45 percent from the field and 85 percent from the free throw line during the tournament. He added 3.4 rebounds, 2.6 assists and 1.1 steals per game. He finished second on the team in scoring, registering double-figure points in five games highlighted by 21 points against Germany in pool play. Canada capped the event with a win over Australia in the fifth-place game, running their record to 5-2 overall in the event.
•
Finley Bizjack represented the United States in the 2024 U23 Nations League Americas, an international 3x3 event in July in Mexico City...over the course of the event, the American men posted an impressive 11-3 record, winning the Americas conference.
•
Kevin Ndzie played with the Cameroon Senior National Team in qualifying games for 2025 FIBA AfroBasket.
•
Yohan Traore and Victor Wembanyama were teammates on the French U16 national team that won a silver medal at the 2019 FIBA U16 European Championship.
Â
Bulldog Legend Gordon Hayward Named Executive Basketball Advisor for Butler Men's Basketball
Â
Butler Athletics Hall of Famer and 14-year NBA standout
Gordon Hayward will provide additional leadership within the Bulldog men's basketball program in the role of Executive Basketball Advisor.
Â
Hayward will volunteer his time in the newly-created position, working alongside head coach Thad Matta, General Manager/Director of Player Personnel
Tony Bollier, and Vice President/Director of Athletics Grant Leiendecker on the program's highest-level initiatives. Hayward will lean on his NBA experience to advise on talent evaluation and recruitment, player development, and team culture. He will serve in a mentorship role to student-athletes within the program, focusing on leadership and professional development.
Â
Hayward, who was inducted into the Butler Athletics Hall of Fame in 2022, retired from the NBA in 2024 after a successful 14-year career. Drafted by the Utah Jazz with the ninth overall pick in the 2010 NBA Draft after leading Butler to the national championship game, Hayward would average 15.2 points, 4.4 rebounds and 3.5 assists per game during his professional career. He was an All-Star in 2017 with Utah before signing with the Boston Celtics and his former Butler coach Brad Stevens as a free agent that summer. Following his seven seasons in Utah, he spent three seasons in Boston, three full seasons in Charlotte, and split his final 2023-24 season between Charlotte and Oklahoma City.
Â
Hayward starred at Butler for two seasons (2008-09 and 2009-10) before starting his successful NBA career. Hayward was selected as the Most Outstanding Player at the NCAA West Regional in 2010, leading the Bulldogs to the program's first Final Four appearance. At the Final Four, he was chosen as a member of the All-Tournament Team. He earned All-Horizon League first-team honors in each of his two seasons and was the 2010 Horizon League Player of the Year. In just two seasons, he scored 992 points and had 512 rebounds. Hayward earned Academic All-America third-team honors in 2009-10.
Â
Butler University Upgrades Iconic Hinkle Fieldhouse with Dynamic LED Video
Â
Technology consultant Anthony James Partners (AJP) provided design, procurement, and construction administration services for the upgrades, supporting Butler in selecting SNA Displays to manufacture and install more than 2,700 square feet of LED video display technology, including a center hung display system, baseline LED ribbons, multiple courtside tables, and other digital signage.
Â
The centerpiece of the project is a new LED center hung display consisting of four curved, 14-foot-tall video screens seamlessly connected to create a continuous 360-degree video surface. Each side features a 4 mm pixel pitch for increased pixel density and clarity. The center hung also includes custom static lettering along the top ring of the structure and a team-branded Bulldog logo facing downward toward the playing surface.
Â
Other video signage includes 3-foot-high LED ribbons along the second-level fascia at both ends of the Fieldhouse, two 19-foot-long vomitory displays between the second and third levels, and eight new courtside mobile scorer's tables equipped with LED screens. For recruitment and training purposes, the project also features two new ASPECTâ„¢ all-in-one 16:9 video screens from SNA Displays in an adjacent practice facility, directly integrated into the new control management system.
Â
Butler and North Carolina Agree to Home-and-Home Series Beginning in 2026-27
Â
Butler and North Carolina have agreed to a men's basketball home-and-home series that will feature games during the 2026-27 and 2027-28 seasons.
Â
The teams will play in Chapel Hill in either November or December of 2026 before the Bulldogs host the Tar Heels at Hinkle Fieldhouse in either November or December of 2027.
Â
The two programs have split six previous meetings. The teams first met during the 1928-29 season with Butler winning 43-20 at Hinkle Fieldhouse. Butler posted wins at both the 2012 Maui Invitational and the 2014 Battle 4 Atlantis. The most recent tip between the two teams came in the Sweet 16 of the 2017 NCAA Tournament. UNC posted a 92-80 win in Memphis, Tenn.