Former Blackhawk named captain of RPI Engineers
Kevin Davis (Photo Provided by RPI Athletics)
TROY – The 2019-20 Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI) men’s basketball team, which begins play on Friday night, will have two captains, head coach Mark Gilbride has announced. Kevin Davis, former Oxford Blackhawks stand-out is one of them.
A forward, Davis has played 76 career games, scoring 214 points (2.8 per game) with 305 rebounds (4.0). He also has 135 assists, 62 steals and 11 blocked shots. A mechanical engineering major, he set personal season-highs as a sophomore when he had 84 points (3.4 per game), 147 rebounds, 63 assists and 31 steals while averaging 26.4 minutes over 25 games. He was second on the team in rebounds, assists and steals.
Davis played a career-high 26 games and had a personal-best eight blocks last season when he helped the Engineers to a 15-11 record and a berth into the Liberty League Tournament.
Also on the roster are three juniors, five sophomores and seven freshmen. Among the returning juniors is forward Patrick Mahoney (Ossining, NY/Fordham Prep.), who averaged 14.1 points and 5.4 rebounds - both third on the team - on his way to earning All-Liberty League Honorable Mention.
Sophomore Dom Black (Arlington, MA/Arlington) is also back after placing second on the Engineers with 24 steals.
RPI begins the campaign on Friday against the University of Rutgers - Newark in the Hampton Inn/Rick Martin Tip Off Tournament, hosted by Westfield State University. Rensselaer plays either the host Owls or Utica College on Saturday afternoon and then travels to SUNY Cobleskill for a game on Tuesday night at 7 p.m. The first home game for the Engineers is Friday, November 22, against Mount Saint Mary College at 6 p.m. at East Campus Arena.
Founded in 1824, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute is America’s oldest technological research university. For nearly two centuries, the Institute has been a driving force behind breakthroughs in engineering and science in virtually every arena-from transportation and infrastructure to business, medicine, outer space, and cyberspace.
As it approaches its bicentennial anniversary, the Institute continues to define The New Polytechnic, a new paradigm for teaching, learning, and research that uses advanced technologies to enable fresh collaborations across disciplines, sectors, and regions, in order to answer the global challenges of our day.
A forward, Davis has played 76 career games, scoring 214 points (2.8 per game) with 305 rebounds (4.0). He also has 135 assists, 62 steals and 11 blocked shots. A mechanical engineering major, he set personal season-highs as a sophomore when he had 84 points (3.4 per game), 147 rebounds, 63 assists and 31 steals while averaging 26.4 minutes over 25 games. He was second on the team in rebounds, assists and steals.
Davis played a career-high 26 games and had a personal-best eight blocks last season when he helped the Engineers to a 15-11 record and a berth into the Liberty League Tournament.
Also on the roster are three juniors, five sophomores and seven freshmen. Among the returning juniors is forward Patrick Mahoney (Ossining, NY/Fordham Prep.), who averaged 14.1 points and 5.4 rebounds - both third on the team - on his way to earning All-Liberty League Honorable Mention.
Sophomore Dom Black (Arlington, MA/Arlington) is also back after placing second on the Engineers with 24 steals.
RPI begins the campaign on Friday against the University of Rutgers - Newark in the Hampton Inn/Rick Martin Tip Off Tournament, hosted by Westfield State University. Rensselaer plays either the host Owls or Utica College on Saturday afternoon and then travels to SUNY Cobleskill for a game on Tuesday night at 7 p.m. The first home game for the Engineers is Friday, November 22, against Mount Saint Mary College at 6 p.m. at East Campus Arena.
Founded in 1824, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute is America’s oldest technological research university. For nearly two centuries, the Institute has been a driving force behind breakthroughs in engineering and science in virtually every arena-from transportation and infrastructure to business, medicine, outer space, and cyberspace.
As it approaches its bicentennial anniversary, the Institute continues to define The New Polytechnic, a new paradigm for teaching, learning, and research that uses advanced technologies to enable fresh collaborations across disciplines, sectors, and regions, in order to answer the global challenges of our day.
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