UAH's Tommy Murr Leads This Feb. 17-23 Edition Of Video Game Numbers
UAH's Tommy Murr Leads This Feb. 17-23 Edition Of Video Game Numbers
Here’s a look back at some of the most outrageous performances on the hardwood across all three NCAA divisions from this past week.

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March starts this week, as is postseason play in NCAA Division III basketball (and soon to be elsewhere, too).
Translation: It’s the most wonderful time of the year for college hoops fans.
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The NCAA Tournament is looming, and Video Game Numbers is still going strong weekly on FloCollege as we highlight the best of the best from all levels of the sport. It was another big week for big-time games as a career triple-doubles record was broken, a 26-game winning streak was extended thanks to some huge outings from a star player and more.
Here’s a look back at some of the most outrageous performances on the hardwood across all three NCAA divisions from this past week:
NOTE: Stats are for the week from Feb. 17-23
Men's Basketball Stats
Division I: Barry Dunning Jr., F, South Alabama
Keep in mind that at one point, Dunning was a top-100 recruit, a former Alabama Mr. Basketball winner and a two-time Gatorade Alabama Player of the Year in high school. So even though prior stints at Arkansas and UAB didn’t really work out before the junior found his way to the Jaguars this offseason, just know that Dunning can hoop.
That helps make what he did last Saturday in South Alabama’s narrow overtime loss on the road at Texas State a little less surprising.
Clearly an opponent that he loves to play against as he dropped what was then a career-high 34 points on the Bobcats in his first game against them earlier this season, Dunning then completely one-upped himself in the rubber match in San Marcos this past weekend as he erupted for 46 points in a 93-92 defeat, tying the all-time single-game record at USA for points in a game and notching the joint second-most points scored in a single game by any player in D-I this season.
With nine 3-pointers made (also tying a school single-game record) and a perfect 11 for 11 mark from the free throw line, Dunning was unstoppable and certainly not the reason why the Jags came up short as he did all he could to try and get them to their 20th win of the season. His converted and-one with under five seconds to play in the extra period gave them a one-point lead, but the Bobcats then went the length of the court and made a layup of their own with under a second left to hand South Alabama a heartbreaking loss.
Dunning, who had only reached the 20-point mark twice in his career before hitting Texas State for big nights twice in his past three games, has now seemed to finally hit his stride as South Alabama (which is only one game back of James Madison for the Sun Belt Conference lead) tries to make a late push for a regular-season league title this week.
Division II: Tommy Murr, G, Alabama Huntsville
Since the Chargers lost their season-opener by one point in overtime to two-time reigning national finalist (and 2023 national champion) Nova Southeastern, they’ve won 27 straight games and earned a perfect Gulf South Conference slate going into the GSC Men’s Basketball Championship next week.
Murr, as the leading scorer for a UAH team that has already wrapped up a GSC regular-season title and is gunning for a national championship, has been the main driving force in the No. 3-ranked Chargers’ historic season, but the Athens, Alabama native’s recent stretch of games has been truly special.
In a wild 106-104 UAH win over Auburn Montgomery last Thursday, Murr exploded for a season-high 41 points as his team notched its 20th GSC victory of the season, a school record. Throw in eight assists and six rebounds with it as he flirted with a monster triple-double, and the former D-I player (at Lipscomb) proved why he’s one of the most lethal weapons in D-II hoops.
But Murr wasn’t done there. Two nights later in another road triumph at Montevallo, he had a huge double-double with 33 points and 10 assists while draining five 3-pointers, making it a total two-game tally this week of 29-for-39 shooting (74.4%), 7 for 10 on 3s and a 9 for 9 clip from the free throw line. Check him out in March as the Chargers chase their first-ever national title.
Making history‼️ 22-0 #theprocess pic.twitter.com/Svt7crXQVn
— UAH Men's Basketball (@UAH_MBB) February 28, 2025
Division III: Aamari Smith, G, Whittier
Smith looks bound to win the D-III scoring title as the nation’s current leader at 27.9 points per game — nearly two points more than the next-closest name on the list. And in the Poets’ final stretch of regular-season games this week before the Southern California Intercollegiate Athletic Conference Tournament this week (shown exclusively on FloCollege, if you’re interested), Smith made some of his last cases to be the SCIAC’s player of the year.
First, Whittier took it to Caltech on Wednesday in a 101-76 rout in which Smith — part of an ongoing stretch of 30-plus point games — went for a 30-piece on 9-for-15 shooting with a 12 for 13 mark from the free throw line, also having plenty of production on the defensive end with it to boot as he notched a season-high seven steals.
Smith wasn’t able to lead the Poets to a victory Saturday night against a red-hot Redlands team on an 11-game winning streak, however, as the Bulldogs won 83-79 with Whittier being officially locked into the No. 4 seed in the SCIAC Tournament with the loss. Still, Smith had a huge night in the Poets’ final game before the postseason: 34 points, two assists, two steals and two blocks.
At 17-8 overall, Whittier probably needs to win its conference tournament to earn a bid to the fast-approaching D-III Tournament, but with a guy like Smith who can light up the nets on any given night, the Poets have a fighting chance as the fate of their season is on the line this week.
Women's Basketball Stats
Division I: Katie Dinnebier, G, Drake
The reigning and defending Missouri Valley Conference Player of the Year appears on her way to contending for another one of that award, putting up better per-game averages in points (18.1 to 21.2), assists (6.9 to 7.4) and rebounds (3.0 to 4.4) to date from last season to this one.
A 42-point outing at Belmont the week before last saw her narrowly miss the cut in the previous edition of Video Game Numbers, but Dinnebier simply couldn’t be denied this week after two more strong performances.
On paper, Dinnebier’s outing last Thursday against Southern Illinois appears so-so: 18 points, four assists, two rebounds and a block. However, when looking deeper into her game against the Salukis (a dominant 82-40 Bulldogs victory), you quickly realize that she was ridiculously efficient in a blowout, shooting a perfect 7 for 7 from the field with a 3-pointer while sinking all three of her free throws attempted in just 19 minutes of work.
Back in the second MVC game of the week in Des Moines against Missouri State (which Drake lost by an 82-79 margin in overtime), Dinnebier was back to her classic full form, playing all 45 minutes in a marathon night in which she tallied 33 points (on 10-for-20 shooting), had eight assists and brought down six rebounds while also swiping away three steals and knocking down four triples.
Drake has made back-to-back NCAA Tournaments and is looking for a three-peat of trips this season, and with Dinnebier on their side, the Bulldogs have a great chance in the season’s final weeks before March Madness to do just that.
Division II: Emilee Weakley, G, Frostburg State
Want to know just how good Weakley has been for Frostburg State ever since she first stepped foot on campus as a freshman? Well, she can very realistically reach the 2,000-point mark for her career by the end of this season — and she still has another year of eligibility left to go.
The second time this season that Weakley, currently at 1,925 points for her career in less than three seasons, has been chosen to be the D-II women’s representative on Video Game Numbers (also being selected in the Dec. 1-7 edition), the junior and D-II’s current scoring leader (28.2 points per game) earned her way back onto the list with a sizzling week for the Bobcats in a pair of wins over Salem (West Virginia) last Wednesday and Point Park last Saturday.
The first of Frostburg State’s victories this past week featured Weakley’s most impressive performance as the Bobcats opted to heavily rest starters after getting up big on the Tigers, eventually coasting to a 90-47 blowout. In that game, Weakley was only needed for 23 minutes, yet she still put up 32 points with six rebounds and three steals on 12-for-17 shooting — with four 3-pointers on top of it — as FSU cruised past a D-II independent opponent.
Then, going back to Mountain East Conference play a few days later, Weakley was asked to do much more as she played all 40 minutes, but she merely kept on producing as she tallied up 36 points with 10 rebounds for a double-double, shooting 14 of 21 from the field along the way. It was the Bobcats’ fifth-straight win on the bounce, as well, as with Weakley, they’ll be continually dangerous both during the final week of the regular season and the upcoming MEC Tournament.
Division III: Mia Castillo, G, Baruch
Some star players only have Video Game Numbers-worthy performances a handful of times in their careers. Castillo, on the other hand, made a career out of putting up those types of performances.
Case in point: the City University of New York Athletic Conference’s all-time leading scorer is now also D-III women’s basketball’s all-time leader in triple-doubles, too.
Castillo and the Bearcats only had one qualifying game for this week’s edition of Video Game Numbers (their regular-season finale last Tuesday against Lehman), but it was all that she needed to make FloCollege’s weekly college hoops honor list as she led Baruch to a 79-60 victory off of the back of her seventh triple-double of her illustrious career (24 points, 11 assists, 10 rebounds).
With the previous D-III career triple-doubles record being a tie between Castillo and three others at six before her history-making game last week, the Bearcats’ greatest-ever player, who is up to a mind-boggling 2,320 points thus far in her career, additionally notched her eighth-straight game of at least 20 points in her team’s victory as it secured second place in the CUNYAC and will host a semifinal game Tuesday in the league tournament this week.
As one of the best all-around talents in D-III women’s hoops (27.8 points, 6.6 rebounds, 6.0 assists, 5.0 steals, 1.1 blocks per game as of this writing), Castillo will be a handful to contain for whoever else the Bearcats have left this season — including NCAA Tournament opponents if Baruch manages to snag the CUNYAC’s automatic bid.
2025 CAA Men's Basketball Tournament Schedule
First Round – Friday, March 7, 2025
- Game 1: #12 seed vs. #13 seed – 2 p.m. (FloCollege)
- Game 2: #11 seed vs. #14 seed – 4:30 p.m. (FloCollege)
Second Round – Saturday, March 8, 2025
- Game 3: #8 seed vs. #9 seed – 12 p.m. (FloCollege)
- Game 4: #5 seed vs. Game 1 winner – 2:30 p.m. (FloCollege)
- Game 5: #7 seed vs. #10 seed – 6 p.m. (FloCollege)
- Game 6: #6 seed vs. Game 2 winner – 8:30 p.m. (FloCollege)
Quarterfinals – Sunday, March 9, 2025
- Game 7: #1 seed vs. Game 3 winner – 12 p.m. (FloCollege)
- Game 8: #4 seed vs. Game 4 winner – 2:30 p.m. (FloCollege)
- Game 9: #2 seed vs. Game 5 winner – 6 p.m. (FloCollege)
- Game 10: #3 seed vs. Game 6 winner – 8:30 p.m. (FloCollege)
Semifinals – Monday, March 10, 2025
- Game 11: Game 7 winner vs. Game 8 winner – 6 p.m. (CBS Sports Network)
- Game 12: Game 9 winner vs. Game 10 winner – 8:30 p.m. (CBS Sports Network)
Championship – Tuesday, March 11, 2025
- Game 13: Game 11 winner vs. Game 12 winner – 7 p.m. (CBS Sports Network)
2025 CAA Tournament Participants
- Campbell
- Charleston
- Delaware
- Drexel
- Elon
- Hampton
- Hofstra
- Monmouth
- North Carolina A&T
- Northeastern
- Stony Brook
- Towson
- UNCW
- William & Mary
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