Getting to the line
As a team, Arizona State ranks 35th nationally and 3rd in the Big 12 averaging 25.5 free throw attempts per game. Their 19.1 free throws made per game are 26th nationally and 4th in the conference. In 33 games last season, ASU had only five instances in which they attempted 27 or more free throws. They have already accomplished the feat seven times through only 16 games this year. In 2024-25, the Sun Devils had only two games where they attempted 34 or more free throws (in 33 games). They have already accomplished this MORE TIMES this season (3) through 16 games. This was their fourth game this year with 30 or more attempts.
Moe Odum has been the driving force behind the increased free-throw frequency. Odum is shooting 66-of-76 (86.6%) on the year, the third-highest mark in the Big 12. He is on track to finish Top-5 in program history in free throw percentage and tied for the best of any player with at least 70 attempts.
ASU single-season FT%
89.7 – DJ Horne, 2022 (35-39)
87.7 – Bryson Krueger, 2006 (50-57)
87.5 – Rihards Kuksiks, 2010 (49-56)
87.5 – Chris Beasley, 1984 (112-148)
87.4 – Stevin Smith, 1992 (76-87)
86.8 - Moe Odum, 2025 (66-76)*
86.3 – Derek Glasser, 2010 (113-131)
86.3 – Alex Austin, 1989 (69-80)
*Current pace
Earlier in the season, Arizona State enjoyed historic success from the free-throw line against UCLA. The Sun Devils finished 25-of-26 (96.2%) from the stripe, including connecting on their first 25 attempts of the game. It is the second-best free-throw shooting performance in program history and the best in a game in which the Sun Devils attempted 20 or more free throws.
Sun Devil best FT% (min. 15 att.)
1.000 (19-of-19) vs. Arizona, Feb. 4, 1978
.962 (25-of-26) at UCLA, Dec. 17, 2025
.950 (19-of-20) vs. UCLA, Feb. 12, 2004
.941 (16-of-17) at Oregon, Feb. 5, 2009
.938 (15-of-16) vs. Southern Illinois, Mar. 20, 2008
.938 (15-of-16) at Oregon, Jan. 24, 1998
.938 (15-of-16) vs. New Mexico, Jan. 5, 1973
.933 (14-of-15) at California, Jan. 6, 1996
.929 (26-of-28) vs. Grand Canyon, Dec. 9, 2021
.923 (24-of-26) vs. CS -L.A., Dec 19, 1981
ASU’s performance at the line was tied for the tenth-best at the NCAA Division I level this season.
Top Team FT% NCAA Division I 2025-26 season
30-of-30 (100%) - Tulane (vs Texas State, 11/8/25)
22-of-22 (100%) - Florida Atlantic (vs Saint Leo, 12/10/25)
21-of-21 (100%) - Yale (vs Akron, 11/24/25)
20-of-20 (100%) - Saint Mary's (vs Washington State, 1/10/26)
19-of-19 (100%) - Penn (vs Princeton, 1/5/25)
16-of-16 (100%) - Indiana (vs Alabama A&M, 11/5/25)
15-of-15 (100%) - Wright State (vs Oakland, 1/11/26)
15-of-15 (100%) - Holy Cross (vs Hampton, 11/16/25)
31-of-32 (96.9%) - San Diego (vs Grambling, 11/18/25)
25-of-26 (96.2%) - Arizona State (at UCLA, 12/17/25)
25-of-26 (96.2%) - Sacred Heart (Central Connecticut State, 11/24/25)
10-6 start
The Sun Devils have started 10-6 or better for the third time in the past four seasons. It is their seventh 10-6 start or better in the Bobby Hurley era. Five of their wins to start off 2025-26 have come away from home (4 neutral, 1 road). The 10-6 start comes against the nation’s 26th-strongest schedule (23rd in non-conference) according to ESPN, which has ASU slotted at 64 in their latest Strength of Record metric with two Quad 1 wins credited (Santa Clara, Oklahoma). The six teams to have defeated the Sun Devils are a combined 78-24 this season.
Seeking an 11-6 start
The Sun Devils are looking to start 11-6 or better for the first time since the 2022-23 season, a team that went on to make the NCAA Tournament. Should ASU claim the victory, it would be its fifth 11-6 start or better in the Bobby Hurley era.
Above the margins
Arizona State has been one of the best teams in the nation at taking care of the basketball. Through 16 games, they rank 64th nationally and 4th in the Big 12 in turnover margin (+2.6). The Sun Devils have posted 10 turnovers or fewer as a team seven times through 16 games.
Massamba is making his mark
Freshman center Massamba Diop has established himself as one of the top newcomers in college basketball. He leads all freshman nationally, shooting 65.7% from the field (88-of-135). That figure is good for 9th in the country regardless of class and leads the Big 12.
Diop is third on the team in points (14.6) and second in rebounds (5.6), producing at that level in only 28.1 minutes per game. He also has a team-high 31 blocks and is fourth on the team with 13 steals, doing all this while committing only 31 personal fouls in 16 games. He has 11 games with at least one steal and 13 games with at least one block. After starting the season 18-of-29 (62.1%) from the free-throw line, Diop has made 37 of his last 45 (82.2%) from the stripe.
He was impactful yet again against Kansas State, scoring 20+ points for the third straight game and 15+ points for the seventh consecutive contest. He was extremely efficient, finishing with 21 points, going 8-of-10 from the field and 5-of-6 from the free-throw line.

Stop, Diop, and roll
Diop is also establishing himself as one of the premier defenders in the entire conference. He proved it yet again during a 5-block effort in the win over Kansas State. Through three conference games, he already has two 5+ block performances. His 12 blocks in Big 12 play are the most of any player in the league.
Earlier in the year, he finished with seven blocks against Colorado, the most by a Sun Devil since Jordan Bachynski had eight vs. Arizona on Feb. 14, 2014. He is one of only two Big 12 players to record seven blocks in a game this season, joining BYU's Keba Keita. Diop is one of four freshman nationally to accomplish the feat and one of only two at the Power 5 conference level (Johann Grünloh, Virginia).
Diop now has 31 blocks on the season, which puts him 42nd nationally and 3rd in the Big 12 in the category. He ranks 5th among freshmen nationally in blocks, meaning he is top-10 in both field goal shooting and blocks for freshmen. He is one of only three freshmen who can make that claim (Caleb Wilson, North Carolina; Brandon Benjamin, Fairfield).
Record chasing
Diop is in the Top-10 among freshmen in program history with three 20-point performances.
Sun Devil freshman 20-point games (1972-73 to present)
18, Jahii Carson, 2012-13
16, James Harden, 2007-08
12, Ike Diogu, 2002-03
9, Luguentz Dort, 2018-19
7, Jamal Faulkner, 1990-91
5, Steve Beck, 1983-84
4, Christian Polk, 2006-07
3, Massamba Diop, 2025-26
3, Joson Sanon, 2024-25
3, Josh Christopher, 2020-21
3, Eddie House, 1996-97
3, Ron Riley, 1992-93
3, Byron Scott, 1979-80
3, Gary Jackson, 1972-73
Diop is already tied for fourth among freshmen in program history with 31 blocks this season.
Single-season Blocks by a Sun Devil freshmen
63, Jayden Quaintance, 2024-25
55, Mario Bennett, 1991-92
33, Jamal Faulkner, 1990-91
31, Massamba Diop, 2025-26
31, Ike Diogu, 2002-03
29, Jalen Graham, 2019-20
24, Shawn Redhage, 1999-2000
23, Romello White, 2017-18
23, Jeff Pendergraph, 2005-06
Diop is currently having the best shooting season by a freshman in program history, making 65.7% of his field goals.
Single-season FG% by a Sun Devil Freshman (min. 100 attempts)
.657, Massamba Diop, 2025-26 (88-of-134)
.652, Romello White, 2017-18 (120-of-184)
.608, Ike Diogu, 2002-03 (209-of-344)
.574, Mario Bennett, 1991-92 (159-of-277)
.570, Dwayne Fontana, 1990-91 (102-of-179)
.568, Eric Holloway, 1983-84 (79-of-139)
.545, Kyle Cain, 2010-11 (78-of-143)
.527, James Harden, 2007-08 (196-of-372)
.525, Jayden Quaintance, 2024-25 (93-of-177)
Diop is currently averaging 14.6 points per game, the sixth-most by a freshman in program history.
Single-season points per game by Sun Devil freshmen
19.0, Ike Diogu, 2002-03
18.5, Jahii Carson, 2012-13
17.8, James Harden, 2007-08
16.1, Luguentz Dort, 2018-19
15.4, Jamal Faulkner, 1990-91
14.6, Massamba Diop, 2025-26
14.3, Josh Christopher, 2020-21
13.6, Byron Scott, 1979-80
13.0, Ron Riley, 1992-93
12.6, Eddie House, 1996-97
12.5, Mario Bennett, 1991-92
12.0, Christian Polk, 2006-07
11.9, Joson Sanon, 2024-25
Diop is currently averaging 5.6 points per game, the ninth-most by a freshman in program history.
Single-season rebounds per game by a Sun Devil Freshman
7.9, Jayden Quaintance, 2024-25
7.8, Ike Diogu, 2002-03
7.1, Romello White, 2017-18
6.8, Mario Bennett, 1991-92
6.2, Marcus Bagley, 2020-21
6.2, Jamal Faulkner, 1990-91
6.1, Jeff Pendergraph, 2005-06
5.8, Johnny Nash, 1976-77
5.6, Massamba Diop, 2025-26
5.4, Kyle Cain, 2010-11
5.3, James Harden, 2007-08
5.2, Chris Sandle, 1984-85
Diop currently has the tenth-best free-throw shooting percentage by a freshman in program history, converting 74.3% from the stripe.
Single-season FT% by a Sun Devil freshman (min. 35 attempts)
.851, Steve Beck, 1983-84 (63-of-74)
.831, Shawn Redhage, 1999-2000 (59-of-71)
.825, Jeremy Veal, 1994-95 (33-of-40)
.821, Johnny Nash, 1976-77 (55-of-67)
.800, Josh Christoper, 2020-21 (44-of-55)
.795, Kevin Kruger, 2003-04 (35-of-44)
.791, Christian Polk, 2006-07 (34-of-43)
.778, Derek Glasser, 2006-07 (34-of-45)
.754, James Harden, 2007-08 (169-of-224)
.743, Massamba Diop, 2025-26 (55-of-74)
.737, Fat Lever, 1978-79 (28-of-38)
.735, Ike Diogu, 2002-03 (180-of-245)
Bench boost
A key to Arizona State's season has been the success of its bench unit. They have outscored or tied their opponent off the bench in nine of 16 games (9-0 record). For the first time this season, the Sun Devils won a game when losing the battle of bench points. ASU's bench still holds a 386-332 (+54) advantage in points this season.
When Pigs fly
Senior guard Anthony "Pig" Johnson has emerged as one of the nation’s best sixth men, coming off the bench to provide energy and scoring while living up to his nickname. “Pig” has 10 or more points in 13 of 16 games, with nine of those performances coming off the bench. After scoring 20+ in three of four games, Johnson delivered an 18-point outing on 5-of-10 shooting in only 23 minutes of action against Kansas State.
Earlier in the season against UCLA, Johnson went a perfect 14-of-14 from the free throw line, one of only 15 NCAA Division I players to make 14 or more from the stripe without a miss in a single game this season. Johnson had a stretch earlier in the season in which he made 25 straight free throws, spanning the NAU, Santa Clara, and Oregon State games. He continued his tear at the line, making 8-of-10 from the stripe against K-State. He is now 59-of-69 (85.5%) from the free-throw line over the past nine games. He went from 64.6% to 76.9% from the line on the season during that stretch. Johnson now has at least nine free throw attempts in eight of his last 12 games.
Johnson is second on the team, averaging 14.9 points per game. He produces that highly while playing only 23.5 minutes a game. He is third in the team in steals (19) and second in assists (31). Johnson also leads the team with 117 free throw attempts (40th nationally; 4th in Big 12) and 90 free throws made (41st nationally; 5th in Big 12). Johnson is on pace to have one of the most productive seasons in program history from the free-throw stripe.
Top-10 ASU single-season FTs made
248 – Ike Diogu, 2005
243 – Ike Diogu, 2004
204 – James Harden, 2009
180 – Pig Johnson, 2025*
180 – Ike Diogu, 2003
173 – Freddie Lewis, 1966
169 – James Harden, 2008
159 – Tra Holder, 2018
156 – Jahii Carson, 2014
154 – Bobby Lazor, 1999
Top-10 ASU single-season FT attempts
311 – Ike Diogu, 2005
298 – Ike Diogu, 2004
270 – James Harden, 2009
245 – Ike Diogu, 2003
234 – Pig Johnson, 2025*
234 – Mario Bennett, 1995
224 – James Harden, 2008
217 – Jahii Carson, 2014
215 – Tony Cerkvenik, 1961
213 – Paul Stovall, 1972
*32-game pace
T-Allen-ted
Graduate transfer forward Allen Mukeba continues to solidify his reputation as one of the premier rim protectors in all of college basketball. He is one of only 24 NCAA Division I players nationally with over 113 career blocks in 103 career games or fewer. He added to that total with a two-block performance against Kansas State, the fifth time this season he has had multiple blocks in a game. Mukeba added 10 points and eight rebounds, part of the dominant paint effort. He has played in over 100 career games (103) and scored over 1,000 career points (1,031). Mukeba is the second Sun Devil to reach the two career milestones this year, joining Moe Odum.
Telling the Troueth
Redshirt sophomore Sun Devil forward Santiago Trouet has fit in seamlessly since transferring in from San Diego. In the matchup with Top-10 Gonzaga and a formidable frontline, Trouet had 10 points and 11 rebounds while adding two blocks. Trouet had two consecutive double-doubles earlier in the year, becoming the first Sun Devil since Kimani Lawrence in 2021 to accomplish the feat. Only two Sun Devils finished with two or more double-doubles all of last year, and Trouet accomplished the feat in only three games.
In the win over Kansas State, he registered his eighth career double-double and third of the season (10 points and 10 rebounds). He currently leads the team in rebounds per game (5.7) and has had the most rebounds in a team-best eight of the 16 games. He is the first Sun Devil with three or more double-doubles since Devan Cambridge in the 2022-2023 season.
Empty the notebook
- Over the past five games, the Sun Devils are 104-of-127 (81.8%) from the free-throw line. In the prior 11 games, they were just 202-of-281 (71.9%).
- After Noah Meeusen finished with a season-high four steals against BYU, he tacked on another multi-steal performance against Kansas State. He has now two or more steals nine times through 13 games. He now leads the team with 23 steals this season and averages 2.9 steals per 40 minutes.
- The 48 rebounds against K-State were not only a season high, they were also the most since the Sun Devils grabbed 48 against San Diego on Dec. 3, 2024. It is the most in a conference game for Arizona State since finishing with 56 at Cal on Feb. 13. 2023. ASU is now 6-0 when out-rebounding its opponent this season.
- Coming into the game, Kansas State was 35-4 when scoring 80 or more points in a game under Jerome Tang. Arizona State hands them just their 5th loss in 40 games as the Wildcats fell in the game 87-84.
- Coming into the game, P.J. Haggerty was shooting 52.2% (120/239) from the field. The Sun Devils held him to just 36.8% (7/19) from the field.
- Kansas State went 9-11 (82%) from the free-throw line in the first half. In the second half, that dropped to 6-10 (60%) due to the impact from the Curtain of Distraction and 942 Crew.
- Kansas State’s second-leading scorer, David Castillo, came into the game averaging 12.9 points per game. Arizona State held him to just three points of 1-of-7 shooting in 26 minutes.
- Kansas State came into the game with a 50-9 record when leading at halftime under head coach Jerome Tang, the last four seasons. The Sun Devils handed them a rare loss in this situation and it is also the first loss for Kansas State when leading at the half this season (previously 8-0).
- ASU shot just 12-of-30 (40%) in the first half. They improved that to 18-of-34 (52.9%) in the 2nd half.
- Under the Bobby Hurley era, this is his sixth season in which the Sun Devils have had at least four games with 30 or more free throw attempts.
- Arizona State had a 50-to-28 advantage in points in the paint, which was a season high. The last time the Sun Devils had 50 points in the paint was a win against Sam Houston (11/29/23).
- It is only the third time this season that Kansas State has been outscored by 20+ in the paint. Arizona State joins No. 10 Nebraska and No. 1 Arizona in accomplishing the feat against the Wildcats.
- The Sun Devils finished with 10+ blocks and 5+ steals for the second time this season (Colorado).
- ASU won the game despite Kansas State making 13 three pointers compared to just three from the Sun Devils. It is the fewest made three pointers in a win by Arizona State since going 3-of-15 from deep in a win over Utah on Feb. 12, 2023.
- ASU is 53-6 (.898) when it shoots 50 percent from the field under Bobby Hurley. They are 3-0 when it has happened this season, with wins over Washington State, NAU, and Santa Clara.
- The Maroon and Gold have been effective in transition, ranking 31st nationally with 16.1 fast break points per game.
- Coach Hurley's squad is 5-0 when allowing 70 points or less this season. They are also 6-0 when outrebounding their opponent.
2025-26 Men's Basketball schedule
(All times MST)
11/4 at 7 p.m. vs. Southern Utah (ESPN+) - W, 81-64
11/9 at 1 p.m. vs. Utah Tech (ESPN+) - W, 81-66
11/14 at 9 p.m. vs. Gonzaga (ESPN2) - L, 65-77
11/17 at 7 p.m. vs. Georgia State (ESPN+) - W, 75-62
11/20 at 10 p.m. at Hawai’i 10 p.m. (Spectrum Sports/ESPN+) - W, 83-76
11/24 at 9:30 p.m. Maui Invitational First Round vs. Texas (ESPN2)* - W, 87-86
11/25 at 6 p.m. Maui Invitational Semifinals vs. Washington State (ESPN)* - W, 100-94
11/26 at 12:30 p.m. Maui Invitational Finals vs. USC (ESPN)* - L, 75-88
12/6 at 8 p.m. vs. Oklahoma (CBSSN)* - W, 86-70
12/9 at 7 p.m. vs. Northern Arizona (ESPN+) - W 73-48
12/13 at 5 p.m. Santa Clara (TNT/TruTV)* - W, 82-79
12/17 at 8:30 p.m. at UCLA (FS1) - L, 77-90
12/21 at 1 p.m. vs. Oregon State (ESPN2) - L, 75-78
1/3 at 3 p.m. vs. Colorado (ESPN2) - L, 89-95
1/7 at 7 p.m. at BYU (Peacock) - L, 76-104
1/10 at 1 p.m. vs. Kansas State (Peacock) - W, 87-84
1/14 at 8:30 p.m. at Arizona (FS1)
1/18 at 3 or 4:15 p.m. at Houston (ESPN or ESPN2)
1/21 at 7 p.m. vs. West Virginia (Peacock)
1/24 at 8 p.m. vs. Cincinnati (CBS Sports Net)
1/27 at 5 p.m. at UCF (ESPN+)
1/31 at 4 p.m. vs. Arizona (ESPN2)
2/4 at 7 p.m. at Utah (CBS Sports Net)
2/7 at 12 p.m. at Colorado (TNT/TruTV)
2/10 at 6, 7, or 8 p.m. vs. Oklahoma State (CBS Sports Net)
2/17 at 9 p.m. vs. Texas Tech (ESPN or ESPN2)
2/21 at 2 p.m. at Baylor (ESPN or ESPN2)
2/24 at 7 p.m. at TCU (CBS Sports Net)
2/28 at 1:30 p.m. vs. Utah (TNT/TruTV)
3/3 at 7 p.m. vs. Kansas (FS1)
3/7 at 12 p.m. at Iowa State (FS1)
*Neutral Sites
Non-conference schedule breakdown | Conference schedule breakdown
Constant competition
Bobby Hurley has once again assembled one of the nation’s toughest schedules. The Sun Devils have six games on their schedule against teams in the latest AP Top-25, including facing FIVE of the current AP Top-11. ASU will play a total of 9 teams that received at least one vote in the latest rankings.
ASU opponents in the AP Top-25
1. Arizona (Jan. 14 road game; Jan. 31 home game)
2. Iowa State (Mar. 7 road game)
7. Houston (Jan. 18 road game)
9. Gonzaga (Nov. 14 home game)
11. BYU (Jan. 7 road game)
15. Texas Tech (Feb. 17 home game)
RV Kansas (Mar. 3 home game)
RV UCF (Jan. 27 road game)
RV USC (Nov. 26 neutral game)
Road warriors
Does any team in the nation have a tougher road schedule on paper in the preseason than Arizona State? It would be tough to argue. The Sun Devils are in the midst of a four-game stretch in which they will play three of the Top-10 teams in the current AP Top-25 rankings (No. 9 BYU, No. 1 Arizona, and No. 7 Houston). Arizona State is the only team in the country that will be able to make that claim this season.
Coach Hurley’s squad arguably has the toughest road schedule in the country when you factor in non-conference trips to UCLA (11-5; 10-0 at home) and Hawai’i (12-3; 11-1 at home with lone loss to ASU). Future Big 12 road trips include visits to No. 3 Iowa State, No. 25 UCF, Colorado, Baylor, TCU, and Utah. ASU has also faced USC, Texas, Oklahoma, and Santa Clara away from home (neutral sites), as well as past/future matchups with several other programs knocking on the door of the Top-25 in road environments.
Impact transfers
A six-man transfer class immediately bolstered the Sun Devil Men’s Basketball roster. It is one of the premier transfer classes in program history. Moe Odum finished fourth in the nation, averaging 7.5 assists per game last year. Marcus Adams Jr. was an All-Big West Second Team selection, while Allen Mukeba landed on the Second Team All-Horizon League. Adante’ Holiman earned All-Sun Belt Conference Third Team distinction. Santiago Trouet made a big jump at San Diego a season ago and has three years of eligibility remaining. Scottsdale native Bryce Ford returns to the Valley after a successful run at Toledo. Odum and Adams Jr. were both rated as four-star prospects by 247 Sports.
G Moe Odum, Pepperdine
F Allen Mukeba, Oakland
F Marcus Adams Jr., Cal State Northridge
G Adante' Holiman, Georgia Southern
F Santiago Trouet, San Diego
G Bryce Ford, Toledo
International presence
Sun Devil Men’s Basketball has a roster with players from all over the World. Seven different countries are represented on the 2025-26 roster.
Sun Devils by country
United States (9)
Belgium (2)
Serbia (1)
Senegal (1)
Italy (1)
Montenegro (1)
Argentina (1)
Milestone watch
- Moe Odum played in 114 career games, the most of any Sun Devil
- Odum has the most career points of any Sun Devil (currently at 1,174 points)
- Odum reached 600 career assists earlier in the season, becoming only the third active Division I player to accomplish the feat (currently at 621 assists)
- Odum is one rebound shy of 300 career rebounds (currently at 299 rebounds)
- Allen Mukeba played in his 100th career game earlier in the season, becoming the second Sun Devil to reach the milestone this year (currently at 103 games played)
- Mukeba scored his 1,000th career points earlier in the season, becoming the second Sun Devil to reach the milestone this year (currently at 1,031)
- Mukeba is 1 rebound shy of 600 career rebounds (currently at 599)
- Mukeba is five assists shy of 150 career assists (currently at 145)
- Santiago Trouet is 45 rebounds shy of 400 career rebounds (currently at 355)
- Marcus Adams Jr. is 34 points shy of 600 career points (currently at 566)
- Marcus Adams Jr. is 8 rebounds shy of 200 career rebounds (currently at 192)
Conference of contenders
- All five Big 12 teams ranked in the AP Poll reside in the top 15, as the league ties for the most top-5, top-10 and top-15 ranked teams. No. 1 Arizona, No. 2 Iowa State, No. 7 Houston, No. 11 BYU and No. 15 Texas Tech comprise the Conference’s AP-ranked teams. Kansas is No. 25 in the USA Today Coaches’ Poll.
- This is the first time since Feb. 24, 2020 (Kansas, Baylor) and the 11th time since the Conference began play in 1996-97 that the Big 12 has occupied the top two spots in the AP Poll.
- Four Big 12 teams have started 15-1 or better, marking the first time any conference has had four teams win 15 of their first 16 games since the 2010-11 Big East, which produced a then-record 11 NCAA Tournament bids and the eventual national champion.
- After two Conference games, the Big 12 boasts nine teams in the top 45 of the NET rankings. 2. Arizona, 3. Iowa State, 9. BYU, 14. Houston, 17. Kansas, 20. Texas Tech, 34. UCF, 39. Baylor and 43. TCU ranks in the top 45.
- Home teams have started Big 12 play 15-9. Big 12 home teams are 14-1 when facing a Conference opponent outside the AP Top 15, while AP Top 15 teams have posted an 8-1 record in road Big 12 games this season.
- The Big 12 has four of the 12 longest active winning streaks in Division I, with Arizona and Iowa State’s 16-game streaks leading the way and tied for the third-longest nationally. BYU’s 12-game streak ties for sixth, while Houston’s nine-game streak tied for 10th. Houston’s 16-game win streak against Conference foes ranks as the nation’s second-longest.
- The 10 Big 12 teams with at least one AP Top 25 win this season represent the most of any DI conference as of Jan. 12. The Big 12 led with seven teams posting at least one non-conference ranked win and was the only league in 2024-25 to have every school with at least one top 25 victory.
- As of Jan. 12, the Big 12 boasts nine teams in the top 50 of the NET rankings. 2. Arizona, 3. Iowa State, 9. BYU, 12. Houston, 19. Texas Tech, 22. Kansas, 37. UCF, 42. Baylor and 43. TCU ranks in the top 50.
- Four of the last six national championships have featured a Big 12 school, including Houston’s appearance in the game last season. The run is highlighted by back-to-back national championships by Baylor in 2021 and Kansas in 2022.
- The Big 12 has been the top-ranked Conference in NET/RPI (before 2019) in nine of the past 12 seasons.
- The Big 12 boasted the nation’s top winning percentage in the 2025 NCAA Tournament (66.7%)
- Every Big 12 team had an AP Top 25 win last season, the only league to accomplish the feat.
- All four semifinalists in the 2025 Big 12 Championship reached the NCAA Sweet 16 for the first time in league history. The Big 12 produced 25% of the teams in the Sweet 16, Elite Eight and Final Four.
- 13 of 16 Big 12 teams reached the postseason, including seven who made the NCAA Tournament. It is the 11th consecutive Tournament to feature at least six Big 12 teams, with the Conference receiving at least seven bids in eight of those seasons.
- Eight of the top 14 recruits in the 2025 class are at Big 12 schools.
- The Big 12 has produced a first-round selection in each of the last 26 NBA Drafts.
Roster snapshot (numerical)
- #1 Santiago Trouet (RS-Sophomore/Forward/San Diego/Buenos Aires, Argentina)
- #2 Anthony "Pig" Johnson (Senior/Guard/University of Cumberlands/Midfield, AL)
- #3 Adante' Holiman (Senior/Guard/Georgia Southern/McAlester, OK)^
- #4 Bryce Ford (Junior/Guard/Toledo/Scottsdale, AZ)
- #5 Moe Odum (Senior/Guard/Pepperdine/The Bronx, NY)
- #7 Vijay Wallace (Junior/Guard/Triton College/Chicago, IL)^
- #8 Marcus Adams Jr. (RS-Sophomore/Forward/Cal State Northridge/Torrance, CA)
- #11 Kash Polk (Freshman/Forward/Argyle, TX)
- #12 Trevor Best (Freshman/Guard/Wilson, NC)
- #14 Andrija Grbović (Junior/Forward/Pljevlja, Montenegro)
- #15 Noah Meeusen (Sophomore/Guard/Zandvliet, Belgium)
- #22 Quentin McCoy (Sophomore/Guard/Chicago, IL)
- #23 Allen Mukeba (Graduate/Forward/Charleroi, Belgium)
- #24 Dame Salane (Freshman/Center/Biella, Italy)^
- #35 Massamba Diop (Freshman/Center/Rufisque, Senegal)
- #70 Jovan Ićitović (Freshman/Forward/Belgrade, Serbia)
^ Out for season due to injury/redshirt
2 returners; 6 Division I transfers; 2 JUCO/NAIA transfers; 5 international additions; 1 incoming U.S. freshman
The Hurley era
Bobby Hurley has won 178 games in 11 seasons at ASU, the second-most in program history.
Career wins at ASU
406, Ned Wulk (1957-82)
178, Bobby Hurley (2015-present)
159, Herb Sendek (2006-15)
About those Sun Devil wins
Coach Hurley has notched 177 wins at Arizona State and has done it while scheduling aggressively and not being afraid to play on the road. He has won 111 games in Arizona, but also has won at least five games in California (16), Nevada (14), Oregon (six) and Washington (five). Four wins have taken place in Utah, three in New York and Hawai'i, and two in Colorado, Nebraska, Kansas, Ohio, and Pennsylvania. Single wins have taken place in Florida, Georgia, New Jersey, Massachusetts, Texas, and West Virginia. Thanks to the November Hawai'i trip, Hurley has now won in a total of 19 different states while at ASU.
Jeff Pendergraph in the Hall of Fame
A cornerstone of the Sun Devil Men’s Basketball program from 2005 to 2009, Ayres left an indelible mark on ASU Basketball. He was part of the 2025 Sun Devil Athletics Hall of Fame class. Over 126 games, he averaged 12.6 points, 7.5 rebounds, and shot an impressive 58 percent from the field. His senior season was his finest, as he led the nation in field goal percentage at 66 percent, averaged 14.5 points and 8.2 rebounds per game, and earned First-Team All-Pac-10 honors. Notably, he delivered a 31-point, 11-rebound performance in a decisive win over Stanford in January 2009.
Ayres ranks sixth all-time in scoring (1,588 points), second in rebounds (942), and his 2008-09 field goal percentage is the school record. He is the only player in program history to lead the team in rebounding four consecutive seasons and helped guide ASU to a 25-win campaign and NCAA Tournament berth in his senior year.
Following his collegiate career, Ayres was selected in the 2009 NBA Draft and went on to play six seasons in the NBA, including a championship run with the San Antonio Spurs in 2014, before continuing his career overseas.
His consistency, leadership, and inside dominance made him a pillar during a pivotal era of transition for ASU basketball.
Linking the program
Season ticket benefits
Sun Devil season-ticket holders receive the most benefits:
- Best ticket prices
- Personal service representative
- Same seat for all home games
- Option to purchase season parking
- Priority on postseason tickets
- Ability to manage and renew your tickets online
- Access to exclusive season-ticket holder events and behind-the-scenes tours
If you are a current season-ticket holder and have questions, please call or text our VIP service line at 480-727-0000 to speak to your Sun Devil service representative.
Mini plans
Sun Devil Men’s Basketball mini plans are still available for the 2025-26 season. Build your plan by choosing any six home games.
Group tickets
Group ticket packages for the 2025–26 season are now available for any home game. Group discounts, packages, and experiences start at just 15 tickets. If you are interested in learning more about group tickets and experience options, please call or text 480-727-0000 or email grouptickets@asu.edu to contact a Sun Devil ticket sales representative.
Single-game tickets
Single-game tickets for the 2025–26 season are available for all home games and are going fast. Don’t miss your chance to check out the Sun Devils in action.
Sun Devils on social
For exclusive content, the latest updates, and more information on the Sun Devil Men’s Basketball program, follow our X and Instagram accounts, like our Facebook page, and visit sundevils.com.
Head coach Bobby Hurley (X: @BobbyHurley11)