
IU Indianapolis plays Milwaukee after Goode's 23-point performance
Milwaukee Panthers (15-8, 8-4 Horizon League) at IU Indianapolis Jaguars (8-16, 4-9 Horizon League)
BETMGM SPORTSBOOK LINE: Panthers -10; over/under is 150.5
BOTTOM LINE: IU Indianapolis plays Milwaukee after DeSean Goode scored 23 points in IU Indianapolis' 84-79 victory over the Youngstown State Penguins.
The Jaguars have gone 5-5 at home. IU Indianapolis ranks eighth in the Horizon League with 13.5 assists per game led by Alec Millender averaging 3.4.
The Panthers have gone 8-4 against Horizon League opponents. Milwaukee ranks eighth in the Horizon League shooting 31.5% from 3-point range.
IU Indianapolis is shooting 42.7% from the field this season, 1.4 percentage points lower than the 44.1% Milwaukee allows to opponents. Milwaukee averages 6.1 made 3-pointers per game this season, 2.0 fewer made shots on average than the 8.1 per game IU Indianapolis allows.
TOP PERFORMERS: Paul Zilinskas is shooting 41.5% from beyond the arc with 3.0 made 3-pointers per game for the Jaguars, while averaging 17.2 points. Jarvis Walker is shooting 35.1% and averaging 14.0 points over the last 10 games.
Kentrell Pullian averages 1.7 made 3-pointers per game for the Panthers, scoring 13.2 points while shooting 35.5% from beyond the arc. Themus Fulks is shooting 44.1% and averaging 15.8 points over the last 10 games.
LAST 10 GAMES: Jaguars: 3-7, averaging 72.2 points, 28.8 rebounds, 13.1 assists, 5.9 steals and 2.2 blocks per game while shooting 41.4% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 79.1 points per game.
Panthers: 6-4, averaging 75.5 points, 35.7 rebounds, 12.8 assists, 7.2 steals and 3.5 blocks per game while shooting 45.6% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 70.3 points.
___

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Miami Herald
39 minutes ago
- Miami Herald
Panthers fans, many eager to attend Game 3, cheer as Florida evens Stanley Cup Final
Go Cats Go! The chants roared in Sunrise Friday, and they're only going to get louder next week. While the Florida Panthers breaking the hearts of Edmonton Oilers fans in Game 2 of the Stanley Cup Final up in Alberta, their delirious fans were warming up the barn by the swamp for their team's return to Broward County. The defending champs got the all-important split in Edmonton thanks to a thrilling 5-4 double-overtime victory Friday. Game 3 is back in Sunrise Monday, and if Game 2's Panthers watch party was any preview, expect a wild atmosphere. The lower level, packed for the start of the game, was far emptier when Brad Marchand ended it more than four hours later. But they made a major ruckus when the game winner went through the pipes. As a result, the Panthers don't need to win another road game if they take care of business in the swamp. But let's not get ahead of ourselves. This has all the makings of a series going seven games -- again. The Panthers and Oilers are as evenly matched as two teams can get. So if these teams go the distance for the Cup for a second straight year, Amerant Bank will be the place to be. Particularly for fans on a budget. The $15 entry fee for Friday's watch party – which benefitted the Florida Panthers Foundation – is pittance compared to the steep bill for Games 3, 4, and 6 (should the series get that far). 'This year, the prices have like tripled,' said Lorenzo Echeverria, 22, of Boca Raton. Echeverria was part of a big group that made the trip down the Sawgrass for Games 1 and 2. And he ponied up $500 for a seat in the last row of the building for Game 3. 'I didn't go the last couple of years, I was like, this year, I don't care what the prices we going. With Game 6, I think it is starting in like $1,000 I love the Panthers, but I got loans.' And an extensive wardrobe. Echeverria isn't a superstitious guy, but after the Panthers blew a 3-1 lead in Game 1, he changed up his threads. He went with the Matthew Tkachuk Four Nations Team USA sweater Friday night. After Florida's riveting come-from-behind win, he might never wash it. 'I think if we play our best hockey, there's no reason we go back-to-back.' Jackson Drowos, 13, wore his personalized Panthers jersey to the arena Friday. He'll wear it again to Games 3 and 4 – without laundering. Jackson's favorite player? Sam Bennett, who scored his 13th postseason goal in the first period Friday. His favorite part of Panthers games, which he attends with his dad Bryan? 'The atmosphere.' Credit the Panthers staff for making a game on TV feel like the real thing Friday night.


Miami Herald
44 minutes ago
- Miami Herald
Another overtime thriller. This time, the Panthers win to even Stanley Cup Final
Two games into this Stanley Cup Final rematch between the Florida Panthers and Edmonton Oilers. Two absolutely thrilling games of hockey, both of which went to overtime. And, most importantly for the Panthers, a split so far in the series as the games shift to South Florida. After falling in overtime in the series opener, Brad Marchand scored 8:05 into double overtime on Friday to give the Panthers a 5-4 win against the Edmonton Oilers in Game 2 on Friday at Rogers Place to level the best-of-7 series at 1-1. Game 3 from Sunrise's Amerant Bank Arena will be at 8 p.m. Monday. Florida used a two-goal second period to take a 4-3 lead and came oh-so-close to that score holding in regulation, but Edmonton's Corey Perry tied the game with 17.8 seconds left to force overtime for a second consecutive game. It's the first time since 2014 that a Stanley Cup Final series saw each of its first two games go to overtime. Perry picked up a rebound from a Ryan Nugent-Hopkins shot from the point, muscled past Florida's Eetu Luostarinen in the slot and managed to get the puck past Sergei Bobrovsky to even the game at 4-4. It was Edmonton's first goal since a Leon Draisaitl goal with 7:23 left in the first period, a wild frame that saw five goals (by Sam Bennett and Seth Jones for Florida; Evander Kane, Evan Bouchard and Draisaitl for Edmonton), 50 shot attempts and 11 penalties in the first 20 minutes. It ended a stretch of 47:11 in which the Panthers kept the Oilers off the board and mounted a comeback. Florida's second-period goals came from Dmitry Kulikov from the point and Marchand on a shorthanded breakaway to take a 4-3 lead with 7:51 left in the middle frame that looked like it would hold. The Panthers dominated the second period to the tune of a 34-13 edge in shot attempts plus advantages of 14-9 in shots on goal, 18-10 in scoring chances and 7-3 in high-danger chances. The second period was also Florida's best period in the series opener but the fizzled down the stretch, giving up the game-tying goal in the third and losing with 31 seconds left in overtime on a Draisaitl power-play goal. For 19:42 into the third, Florida kept Edmonton at bay. The Oilers managed to tie it, but the Panthers found a way in the end to win. And now the series is tied. This story will be updated.


New York Times
an hour ago
- New York Times
Brad Marchand plays 2OT hero as Panthers defeat Oilers in Game 2 of Stanley Cup Final
By Michael Russo, Daniel Nugent-Bowman and Chris Johnston EDMONTON — In another high-scoring classic, hard-hitting, sometimes nasty affair in the rematch between 2024 Stanley Cup finalists Florida and Edmonton, this time it was the reigning Cup champion Panthers who won in double overtime. One game after the Panthers coughed up a two-goal lead before losing in overtime, Florida overcame what could have been a crushing goal when ageless Corey Perry forced overtime with a tying goal with 17.8 seconds left in regulation on a six-on-five. Advertisement But 8:04 into the second overtime, fellow-ageless Florida forward Brad Marchand scored his second of the game to give the Panthers a 5-4 victory Friday night at Rogers Place. It was his fifth career playoff overtime winner. The win evened the best-of-seven Stanley Cup Final at one win apiece. The Oilers were handed their first loss since Game 1 of the Western Conference final to snap a five-game winning streak. It was just their fifth loss of the postseason. Perry's goal was the latest tying goal in Stanley Cup Final history. The previous record was by Tod Sloan in Game 5 of the 1951 final (19:28 of P3). At that point, it tied Marchand for the most goals amongst active players in the Stanley Cup Final, but Marchand would take it back in double OT with his 10th goal of his career. NHL playoff goal-scoring leader Sam Bennett scored for a fifth consecutive road game as the Panthers improved to 9-3 away from South Florida. Seth Jones scored a goal and an assist, and Dmitry Kulikov and Brad Marchand scored 3:46 apart in the second period to stun the rabid crowd. Anton Lundell and Nate Schmidt both had two assists each. Leon Draisaitl extended his point streak to eight games (14 points) with a goal and an assist, and Connor McDavid extended his point streak to seven (13 points) with three assists. It was McDavid's 33rd career multi-assist game, the third-most in NHL history behind Wayne Gretzky's 72 and Mark Messier's 40. Their production was part of a five-goal first period, the highest-scoring opening frame in the final since Game 5 in 2016 between the Pittsburgh Penguins and San Jose Sharks. Evan Bouchard scored a goal and two assists and had five shots on goal, while Evander Kane also scored for the Oilers. COREY PERRY!! WE'RE GOING TO OVERTIME!! 😱 #StanleyCup 🇺🇸: @NHL_On_TNT & @SportsonMax ➡️ @Sportsnet or stream on Sportsnet+ ➡️ — NHL (@NHL) June 7, 2025 Game 3 is Monday night in Sunrise. This story will be updated.