St. Bonaventure carries the momentum of a dramatic comeback against George Mason against a Dayton squad that has waited a week to begin its Atlantic 10 tournament. The Dayton Flyers and St. Bonaventure Bonnies meet this afternoon, March 13, at 2 p.m. EDT in the Atlantic 10 quarterfinal action at PPG Paints Arena. Dayton enters rested after a first-round bye. St. Bonaventure survived a first-round 99-80 shootout with La Salle and a 63-57 grinder against George Mason less than 24 hours ago. Dayton beat the Bonnies in their only meeting this year, a 72-70 win on February 4.
| Metric | St. Bonaventure Bonnies | Dayton Flyers |
|---|---|---|
| Record (Conf) | 17-16 (4-14) | 21-10 (12-6) |
| Points Per Game | 76.8 (153rd) | 75.1 (199th) |
| Points Allowed | 74.7 (208th) | 70.1 (74th) |
| Offensive Rating | 112.9 (107th) | 108.7 (206th) |
| Defensive Rating | 109.8 (245th) | 101.5 (56th) |
| 3-Point % | 37.5% (23rd) | 33.9% (189th) |
| Field Goal % | 46.8% (84th) | 45.3% (179th) |
| Total Rebounds/G | 35.5 (174th) | 32.5 (310th) |
| Assists/G | 16.0 (64th) | 14.4 (140th) |
| Blocks/G | 4.6 (34th) | 4.1 (73rd) |
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Key Advantage
Perimeter Disparity: St. Bonaventure’s 37.5% three-point shooting is elite, while Dayton allows opponents to shoot 35.4% from deep.
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Market Analysis
The spread is Dayton -6.5 (-115), with a total of 140.5, and the moneyline implies roughly a 71% win probability for the Flyers against St. Bonaventure’s 29%. Dayton’s 101.5 defensive rating anchors the favorite pricing against a Bonnies defense allowing 109.8 points per 100 possessions. The 140.5 total reflects Dayton’s methodical pace and St. Bonaventure’s offensive rebounding strength, with both teams’ three-point tendencies pulling in opposite directions.
Coach Schmidt’s Memento and Bonnies Fatigue
St. Bonaventure coach Mark Schmidt announced last week he will retire after the season, but the Bonnies are playing now as if that timeline accelerated. The rally from 11 down against George Mason produced a 13-2 closing run and a 63-57 win that required every ounce of reserve. St. Bonaventure’s Frank Mitchell has been the interior engine, averaging 16.3 points and 10.3 rebounds, and his matchup against Dayton sophomore Amael L’Etang (15.2 points and 6.4 rebounds over the last 10 games) shapes the paint battle.
The physical toll is measurable. St. Bonaventure played 40 minutes Wednesday afternoon against La Salle, then turned around for a 9:30 p.m. tip Thursday against George Mason. Dayton’s week-long layoff to begin its tournament run creates a recovery asymmetry that shows in late-game execution metrics. In the first meeting, Dayton’s Javon Bennett scored 20 points, and Dayton escaped with a 72-70 win.
Dayton’s Defensive Standard and Turnover Generation
Dayton’s defensive approach generates stops through turnover pressure rather than shot-blocking dominance. The Flyers force 14.9 opponent turnovers per game, against a Bonnies squad that has been relatively secure with 11.4 giveaways per game. Dayton’s Javon Bennett leads the team with 1.5 steals per game, and his perimeter pressure will test Darryl Simmons II, who has averaged 16.9 points over the last 10 games for St. Bonaventure.
The rebounding margin favors St. Bonaventure on paper. The Bonnies average 35.5 total rebounds per game against Dayton’s 32.5, and St. Bonaventure’s 12.0 offensive rebounds per game generate second-chance opportunities that can neutralize half-court defensive pressure. Dayton allows opponents to recover 31.9% of available defensive rebounds, a middling mark that St. Bonaventure’s bigs can exploit if their legs hold up. Dayton’s advantage lies in controlling the game’s shape: the Flyers at a deliberate pace that limits possessions and forces opponents to execute in the half-court, precisely where St. Bonaventure’s fatigue should manifest.
