Men's Basketball | 8/21/2019 6:10:00 PM
By: Contact:
John Kelly Jr. |
Sports Information Director |
@jfkjr (212-776-6180)
New York, NY | After putting together one for the record books during his two years at BMCC, former Panther guard
Quran Dublin (Harlem, NY) will continue his illustrious college basketball career at the University of the District of Columbia in Washington, D.C. The University of the District of Columbia is an NCAA Division II program and a member of the East Coast Conference.
"There are so many memories at this school. So many memories on the court with these guys, this coaching staff," Dublin said. "I am going to remember everything in this gym. I love this place. It was the best decision of my life to come here (to BMCC)."
During his tenure at BMCC, the Harlem, NY native has been an unstoppable force in the BMCC backcourt. Over the past two seasons, he led the Panthers in scoring (24.6 ppg and 21.1 ppg), and free-throw percentage (.871 and .854) while ranking fourth and fifth nationally in three-point field-goal percentage (.505 and .497). He also finished among the top 10 and the top 25 in the nation in points per game.
Individual accolades have also come Dublin's way. He guided the Panthers men's basketball team to consecutive CUNYAC Conference Championships (2018 and 2019) and was named CUNYAC Player of the Year, Tournament MVP, and All-Region First Team in each of his first two seasons. He also received 2018-19 NJCAA All-American Honors (second in program history).
Dublin will close out his career with three program records to his name. He finished as the school's all-time leader in points (1,159), and three-point field-goals made (179) while his 205 career assists ranked third in program history and 89 career steals were fourth. He also became the first player in school history to reach the 1,000-point plateau.
He scored in double figures 48 times and reached the 20-point mark 23 times during his career. Additionally, he has also recorded seven 30 point outings and three 40 point performances (including, a career-high 45).