By Jake Copestick (@JakeCopestick)
PHILADELPHIA — Nobody in the Drexel program panicked when they got off to an 0-3 start in Coastal Athletic Association play.
In the grind of a conference schedule, there’s no time for panic. For Zach Spiker’s crew, there was only time for their process.
Since the turn of the new year, Drexel is 6-2, with their two losses coming by a combined four points. The Dragons were picked 10th of 13 teams in the CAA preseason poll, and currently sit in a tie for third place. It’s not only their process that got them here, but their ability to defend at a level that very few, if any, teams are playing higher than.
According to Bart Torvik, Drexel owns the best effective field goal percentage defense in the country in 2026, allowing opponents to shoot just 40.5 percent in that regard. On KenPom, Drexel owns the best defense in the CAA through ten conference games. Opponents are shooting just 25.4 percent from three, and 44.6 inside the arc, not only both CAA bests, but far below what the nation’s average is in those respective categories.
The numbers are nice to have, but that’s not what motivates these Dragons. They’re keen on sticking with their day-to-day process. If they attack that the right way, then the results will follow. They’re much more worried about that than what the metrics say.
“We’re not so much worried about becoming the best defensive team in the nation, but we’re more focused on sticking to our process,” said junior guard Kevon Vanderhorst. “We’re not overly focused on the numbers, but if we stick to our process, we know that we’ll meet those numbers.”
Legendary Philadelphia 76ers play-by-play voice Marc Zumoff had a deep bag of phrases he would say on the game broadcast, where he spent four years next to Malik Rose, his color commentator, a recent Drexel Hall of Famer who was a 2,000-point scorer for the Dragons in the late 1990s. One of Zumoff’s most iconic lines was, “locking all windows and doors,” whenever the Sixers put together a nice defensive possession.
Even in the blistering cold of January, there are no drafts coming through this Drexel defense as it locks up whoever steps in front of them.
Since January 1, the Dragons have held three teams to a season-low in points, including giving up just 37 points at home to Stony Brook. It was the least amount of points that Drexel has given up in three years. In its last seven games, in which Drexel has won six, they’ve given up more than 60 points just once.
“It’s a testament to the guys in the locker room, for them to come together and accomplish a common goal,” said assistant coach Will Chavis. “When people come into the gym, we want to shut them down.”
It’s a group that’s still learning each other, but starting to figure things out defensively as it continues to get game reps under its belt. Experience has been the Dragons’ best teacher, and they’re making progress, but nowhere near a finished product.
“We’ve been getting used to playing with each other defensively,” said Vanderhorst, who had the game-winning layup as time expired in Saturday’s win over North Carolina A&T. “We’re developing that trust to know, this guy has my baseline, this guy has my gap. That’s definitely showing on the court. I’m proud of our guys for the growth that we’ve had, but there’s still a lot of things that we have to hone in on.”
Drexel is sub-300th in the country in Division I experience, according to KenPom. This is a team that had nine guys return from a year ago, some of whom did not play significant minutes. Add in a few transfers that didn’t come from the Division I level in center Martin de Laporterie, who came to Drexel via the junior ccollege route, and one from a Division III school in Eli Beard, and by the numbers, the Dragons appear to be lacking in that department. However, don’t let those figures fool you. Spiker knows his team has more experience and seasoning than what the metrics say.
“We have more veteran voices than what may appear on paper,” he said. “Garfield Turner has seen a few things. Shane Blakeney has been around for a little bit. Victor Panov is a veteran player. The guys embrace the process. We had a hard start to conference play. Let’s stick with it, keep going and stay focused.”
Blakeney draws the opponent’s toughest assignment routinely. Spiker lauds his defensive prowess, and thinks he has all-CAA potential on that end. However, Blakeney will be the first to tell you that he can’t do it alone.
“It’s on our first five guys as much as it is with me,” he said. “If one of us falls short, the other team could get going. As far as defense in general, we’re taking more pride in guarding, knowing the scouting report, and focusing on that each and every possession, but we’re not finishing possessions the way we want to.”
Finishing possessions, and games for that matter, is a point of emphasis for this Drexel team. Drexel has three losses this year, and two in CAA play by three points or less. A possession here, a possession there, and this could be a team with a better record than it has right now.
“You take the American game, Hofstra game, and Towson game, we’re 15-8 right now,” Chavis said. “Three possessions, and we could be 15-8. That’s how fragile it is. But this group is still hungry to learn and get better. They haven’t packed it in and said we know everything, we’re the best that we can be. That’s where you want to be in February."
Drexel will get two more opportunities this week at Campbell and Elon to keep improving, keep finishing, and keep going by their process as the season’s most critical juncture approaches.
“The learning curve is still there, and we have a lot to improve on,” said Chavis. “But it’s a really rewarding thing when you have a group that cares more about the outcome of the game more than their individual accolades.”

