Basketball
Bears drop game against SEMO that will sting for awhile
UCA comes close, but missed free throws in overtime lead to 76-73 loss to Redhawks on Thursday night

CONWAY, Ark. — Central Arkansas battled into overtime on Thursday before falling 77-73 to the Southeast Missouri Redhawks in non-conference action at the Farris Center.
UCA, which got 20 points apiece from senior Elias Cato and sophomore Brayden Fagbemi, misfired on three free throws in the overtime period. Fagbemi made two of two at the line with 12.5 seconds left to get the Bears within three at 76-73.

UCA guard Brayden Fagbemi driving against Southeast Missouri at the Farris Center. / Ted McClenning-AllBears+ Images
Sophomore Michael Evbagharu then stole a SEMO pass and Cato was fouled. Cato, UCA’s lone senior who also had seven rebounds to go with his 20 points, missed both free throw attempts. SEMO’s Marqueas Bell made 1 of 2 for a 77-73 lead with 6.8 to play before Brendan Terry missed two more for the Redhawks.
“Athletics and basketball and sports is a very finicky, and sometimes very cruel game,” said UCA coach John Shulman. “That’s why not everybody can do it. You’ve got a bunch of hurting kids in there, who have busted their tail ends and not getting rewarded for it.
“It is what is it. It’s the test. What are you going to do now. Are you going to keep on working or are you just going to feel sorry for yourself. That’s what’s hard. I hate it for the kids, because they deserved better tonight. They deserved better against Western Illinois. We deserved better but we didn’t get better, so what are you going to do. You just have to get back to work.”

UCA forward Elias Cato driving against Southeast Missouri at the Farris Center. / Ted McClenning-AllBears+ Images
The teams played to a 34-34 halftime tie, despite the Bears hitting just 1 of 6 from three-point range. For the game, UCA was an uncharacteristic 3-of-21 (14.3 percent) from beyond the arc.
“You have to get the foul line in that particular situation and miss, to understand what if feels like,” said Shulman. “I don’t know how many true freshmen are playing in America. But if we can all just take a deep breath and hang in there with these young kids … these are true freshmen, and they’re taking big shots.
“So let’s just see what those big shots look like in January (when ASUN play begins).”

UCA forward Michael Evbagharu driving against Southeast Missouri at the Farris Center. / Ted McClenning-AllBears+ Images
The game featured 15 lead changes and 17 ties, with six points the biggest lead for either team.
“It felt like a conference game,” said Shulman. “I thought Saturday (at WIU) felt like a conference game. And to be honest, I think we got better tonight. I wish we had a result. I wish we could say, hey look at us, we’re rocking and rolling. I can’t say that. But I feel a lot different than I did after Western Illinois.
“I thought our effort was really good. I think we got better tonight.”
The Bears will be at home again at 1 p.m. Sunday, facing UNC Asheville, which will play SEMO at 6:30 Friday night as part of UCA’s multi-team event
Basketball
UCA having to rebuilds roster under Shulman for second season
Coach taking on the challenge of building a fresh Bears squad, welcoming new recruits, key transfers for the upcoming season

CONWAY, Ark. — The hardwood inside the Farris Center sits nearly empty on a humid June afternoon, save for a handful of Central Arkansas basketball players running drills with fresh intensity.
Bears coach John Shulman watches from the sideline, clipboard in hand, as new and returning faces begin to forge the chemistry needed for the 2025-26 men’s basketball season.
Rebuilding is the word on campus, and for Shulman, it’s more than a buzzword, it’s a mandate.
After a season marked by inconsistency and roster turnover, UCA is entering a new era.
Shulman, who joined the Bears ahead of last season, must now assemble a competitive team nearly from scratch, piecing together transfers, freshmen, and a handful of veterans.
“Excited about the new additions to our program,” Shulman said in a recent social media post. “They bring experience and energy and enthusiasm. New vibe in our program.”
The 2025-26 roster features an eclectic mix. Among the most notable additions is Truman Byrne, a forward from Australia whose size and court vision have already drawn comparisons to past UCA standouts.
Byrne’s arrival signals Shulman’s intent to scout globally for talent, expanding the Bears’ reach beyond the typical Southern circuit.
Transfers play a critical role in this rebuilding project. Rashad Bolden, a senior transfer from Mississippi College, brings Division II success and a reputation for clutch shooting.
“I wanted to contribute right away,” Bolden said in an interview. “Coach Shulman showed me a blueprint for how I could help take this program to the next level.”
Another key recruit is Parker Applegate, a highly regarded transfer from Union University.
Applegate’s versatility and leadership could prove vital as the Bears attempt to gel in Shulman’s up-tempo system. With the NCAA transfer portal becoming the lifeblood of college basketball, Shulman’s ability to attract proven contributors is a sign of his program’s evolving reputation.
Returning players like Camren Hunter and Javion Guy-King will anchor a squad in flux, providing institutional memory and a sense of continuity amid sweeping change.
“You don’t win in this league without guys who know what it takes,” Shulman said at a recent media day. “The challenge is getting everyone on the same page, fast.”
The Bears’ transformation isn’t happening in a vacuum.
Across the NCAA, programs are experiencing unprecedented roster churn. More than 2,700 players entered the transfer portal before the April deadline, according to a recent report by ESPN. For mid-major schools like Central Arkansas, rebuilding every offseason has become the new normal.
Shulman’s coaching philosophy centers on defense and unselfish play, traits that can be tough to instill in a group assembled in a single summer. But he’s no stranger to high-turnover environments.
With a career record that includes 258 wins and experience coaching at multiple stops, Shulman has built teams from the ground up before.
The renewed roster also reflects a cultural shift within the program.
“We wanted to create a new standard,” Shulman told local reporters. “It’s about accountability and work ethic. The guys who bought in are still here. The guys who didn’t, well, we wish them the best.”
The message is clear that UCA is entering an era where opportunity must be earned every day.
Fans will get their first look at the revamped Bears when they open the season against Brigham Young, a tough test for a team still learning each other’s tendencies.
Early results may be uneven, but Shulman remains focused on progress rather than immediate perfection.
“I don’t have time to build this program, taking a five-year rebuild,” he said. “I don’t have time, [the players] don’t have time.”
While the team’s statistical goals, like improving on last year’s 70.2 points per game, are modest, the real measure of success will be how quickly the new pieces can come together.
Shulman’s pragmatic approach, honed over decades of coaching, leans on communication and flexibility.
“Every year is different,” he said. “You can’t coach this group the same way you coached the last.”
For the players, the opportunity to contribute immediately is a powerful draw.
“Coach let me know from day one, nothing is guaranteed,” said Applegate. “That pushes all of us to work that much harder.” The competition for playing time is fierce, and Shulman’s rotation could evolve deep into the season.
Off the court, the Bears are striving to reconnect with their fan base and the Conway community. New recruits have already participated in campus events and youth clinics, part of a broader push to generate excitement for the program’s new chapter.
“We want people to see the culture we’re building,” said Shulman. “This is a group that’s hungry and grateful for every chance.”
As the summer weeks pass and preseason draws closer, the sense of urgency is unmistakable.
For Shulman and UCA, the 2025-26 season is about more than wins and losses. It’s about proving that, even in an era of constant change, a program can reinvent itself with the right blend of vision, grit, and belief.
Basketball
Sugar Bears fall to No. 9 Kansas State 86-39
UCA lost its second game of the season to Kansas State, giving the Bears two losses to Power 4 Conference teams.

MANHATTAN, Kan. – Central Arkansas women’s basketball team got an up close look at what it takes to be one of the best teams in the nation on Sunday.
No. 9 Kansas State defeated the Sugar Bears 86-39, dropping their record to 4-2 to start the season. Both of UCA losses were to Power 4 Conference teams. Jade Upshaw and Randrea Wright led UCA in scoring with eight points each, Kinley Fisher had six points and Bree Stephens had five. Cheyenne Banks led the team in rebounds with four defensive rebounds.
It took some time for the Sugar Bears to adjust to the size and length of the Wildcats, and the first half was tough for UCA. Early turnovers created a double-digit deficit quickly, and UCA couldn’t find the offense to get back into it. It didn’t help that Kansas State has shooters at every spot surrounding their bigs, as the home team shot 53 percent from the field and 48 percent from deep.
The second half started off better for UCA, making five of their first six shots but Kansas State matched each bucket with one of its own. Despite signs of improved play in the second half, the Sugar Bears never threatened to close the gap with Kansas State. UCA did end up outscoring the Wildcats 14-9 in the game’s final quarter of play.
UCA returns home for its next game on Saturday against Little Rock at 1 p.m.
Basketball
UCA falls to Georgia Tech 87-68
The Bears dropped their fifth game to start to the 2024-25 campaign against Georgia Tech on Saturday afternoon.

ATLANTA – Central Arkansas men’s basketball team fell behind early against Georgia Tech and couldn’t comeback falling 87-68 at McCamish Pavilion on Saturday.
The Yellow Jackets jumped out to a quick 9-0 lead and never looked back, improving their record to 4-3 overall. UCA, who was missing five players for Saturday’s contest, fell to 2-5 to start the 2024-25 campaign.
“The first two minutes of the game, they punched us in the mouth,” said UCA head coach John Shulman. “We’re down 10-0. (associate head coach) Brock (Widders) said with 3:30 to go in the game, we were down one in the second half. So if we just take care of the first two minutes, it’s a two-point game with three to play.
“I thought their athleticism and size wore us down and we could never get over the hump. It was a 9 to 12-point game the entire game. At an ACC venue, at Georgia Tech. So it is what it is. Their size and length hurt us. But I can’t ask Elias (Cato) and Layne (Taylor) and Brayden (Fagbemi) and Michael (Fagbemi) to do a whole lot more than what they’re doing. They’re all playing too many minutes.”
Layne Taylor led the Bears with 20 poiints and three rebound while Elias Cato had 17 and 4 and Brayden Fagbemi had 15 and six.
The Bears kept cutting into their deficit but the Yellow Jackets kept responding down the stretch in the second half. A Taylor three-pointer got UCA within 51-45 early in the second half. Another by Fagbemi made it a 58-51 margin with 13:00 left.
A 10-2 run by Georgia Tech pushed it back out to a 15-point lead with 8:30 remaining before Taylor nailed another corner three. Georgia Tech could never quite pull away from the Bears, despite making 13 three-pointers and winning the rebound battle 41-28, but UCA could not get the margin to single digits.
UCA has three consecutive in-state foes coming up, all on the road. The Bears play at Little Rock on Wednesday, at UAPB on Saturday and vs. Arkansas on Dec. 14 at Simmons Bank Arena in North Little Rock.
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