Bethune-Cookman enters the SWAC Men’s Basketball Tournament as the top seed and regular-season champions, boasting a dominant 14–4 conference mark that signals serious NCAA Tournament aspirations.
With a balanced attack and key returners from last year’s deep run, the Wildcats sit as the team to beat.
Here’s how the Wildcats got here.
The Wildcats locked up the No. 1 seed after winning four of their last five games to end the regular seasongular season. They paced the SWAC in scoring margin (+12.3 points per game) and held opponents to 41.8% field goal shooting, while ranking second in 3-point defense (31.2% allowed).
A 17–14 overall record (14–4 SWAC) underscores their consistency, with only two conference losses coming by a combined six points.
What makes the Wildcats so good
Guard Play and Depth: Jakobi Heady (All-SWAC First Team) logs 35.7 minutes per game, averaging 18.1 points to orchestrate the offense. Daniel Rouzan complements with 11.8 points and 5.0 rebounds, along with Doctor Bradley’s 11.9 points per game, making a formidable trio.
Interior Presence: The Wildcats lean on forwards who limit second-chance points while protecting the rim. Their bench provides the depth to wear down opponents over the long haul.
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How B-CU could fall
A late-season slip to Florida A&M exposed cracks in closing games, though it was rare that the Wildcats faltered down the stretch in games. In losses, however, Bethune-Cookman commits turnovers, can’t control the boards, and struggles from 3-point range.
Will they win the SWAC?
Expect Bethune-Cookman to reach the championship round, leaning on Heady’s poise and defensive pressure to win games. The biggest threat to the Wildcats might be in-state rival Florida A&M. The Rattlers knocked off B-CU in the regular season finale and have won their last four entering the tournament.
“In order for us to win it all, we have to play at a high level,” said B-CU coach Reggie Theus. “To get that done, we have to be better defensively and rebound the ball.”