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Milwaukee Area Technical College

Milwaukee Area Technical College
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Men's Basketball

Three Stormers Earn All-Region 4 Honors for 2025–26 Season

MILWAUKEE, Wis. — Milwaukee Area Technical College placed three players on the 2025–26 NJCAA Region 4 All‑Region Teams on Tuesday, tying Rock Valley College for the most selections in Division II.

Sophomore guard Jayden Hackett headlines the trio after earning First Team honors, an All‑American nomination and recognition as the Region 4 Midwest District A Player of the Year.

Sophomore point guard Raydelh Boutin also earned First Team honors, while sophomore guard Noah Daniels was named to the Second Team, giving MATC one of the deepest All‑Region groups in the district.

"Congratulations to all our guys on their much‑deserved recognition," MATC head coach Randy Casey said. "I'm incredibly proud of the dedication and passion they bring to this team every day. Jayden, Raydelh and Noah have each played major roles in our success this season, and having three players earn All‑Region honors is special. It reflects the strength of our entire roster, not just the individuals being recognized."

Jayden Hackett: MATC's Headliner
Hackett's selection as a First Team honoree, All‑American nominee and Midwest District A Player of the Year caps a dominant season in which the 6‑foot‑5 Green Bay native has established himself as one of the most productive and efficient shooters in all of NJCAA Division II.

"All I can do is just give thanks to God," Hackett said of earning Player of the Year. "He sees all the hard work that I put in, and I think this is just a reward from him."

A transfer from Delta College, Hackett arrived at MATC with a decorated resume that included NJCAA First Team All‑Region 12, First Team All‑MCCAA, First Team MCCAA Northern Conference and MCCAA Northern Conference All‑Freshman Team honors. He averaged 16.1 points, 5.6 rebounds and 1.6 assists as a freshman, but Delta finished just 11‑17 despite his consistent production.

Only after arriving in Milwaukee did his game fully open up, transforming him from a talented scorer into a catalyst for one of the country's most balanced and successful teams.

Hackett leads MATC in scoring at 16.9 points per game, piling up 576 points (27th nationally) while shooting 52.0 percent from the field, 44.2 percent from three and over 80 percent at the line. His 100 made threes rank fifth in the nation and second in Region 4, and his 44.2 percent accuracy from deep sits sixth in the region. The combination makes him one of the NJCAA's most dangerous high‑volume perimeter threats and a central piece of MATC's offensive identity.

"It's just a daily grind," Hackett said of what keeps him consistent. "It's one of those things where you've got to work at it whether you feel like doing it or not. Having that mental discipline to do it every day and do it consistently at a high level — that's what's gotten me to this point."

Hackett backs up that efficiency with a level of consistency few players in the country can match. He has topped 20 points in 12 games and reached double figures in 30 of 34 contests, all while impacting the game far beyond scoring. He contributes 5.6 rebounds, 72 assists, 41 steals and 13 blocks, giving MATC a do‑everything wing who creates matchup problems across the floor. Durable and dependable, he has started every game this season and ranks among the national leaders in minutes played, steadying the Stormers throughout their 24‑game winning streak and into the postseason.

Raydelh Boutin: The Engine at Point Guard
Boutin's First Team selection caps a season in which the sophomore point guard has grown into the steadying force behind one of the nation's deepest and most balanced teams. The New Jersey native arrived at MATC after a successful run at Raritan Valley Community College, where he helped the Lions win a Region championship and reach the NJCAA Division II National Tournament. Seeking a program built to contend for a national title, he found that opportunity in Milwaukee and instantly raised the level of the Stormers' backcourt.

At MATC, Boutin embraced the responsibilities of a true floor general for the first time in his career. He has started 30 games, logged a team‑high 936 minutes (38th nationally) and leads the Stormers in both assists (6.2 per game) and free‑throw percentage (87.8 percent). His 212 assists rank fifth in the nation and first in Region 4, and his 87.8 percent mark at the line ranks third in the region. His 2.2 assist‑to‑turnover ratio further underscores the poise and decision making that define MATC's offensive identity.

"It was an adjustment at first because this was really my first time playing point guard," Boutin said. "I was used to just being a scorer. Playing under Coach Casey — he's definitely a great point‑guard coach. He taught me a lot about reading defenses and how to pass the ball in different ways. It opened my game a lot. At first I was one‑dimensional. Now I can score, facilitate and play defense."

Boutin pairs his elite playmaking with efficient scoring, averaging 12.2 points per game on 49.1 percent shooting and nearly 34 percent from three. He adds 47 steals, nearly four rebounds per game, and elite late‑game reliability at the line (108‑for‑123, seventh nationally). When possessions tighten, he's one of Region 4's most trusted closers.

With national top‑five assist production nationally, elite efficiency and a veteran presence that steadies MATC in every big moment, Boutin's First Team honor reflects his emergence as one of the premier true point guards across the country in Division II.

Noah Daniels: The Marksman on the Wing
Daniels' Second Team selection reflects the rise of a returning sophomore who has quietly become one of MATC's most dependable scoring options and most dangerous perimeter threats. The 6‑foot‑4 West Allis native gives the Stormers a second high‑volume shooter alongside Jayden Hackett, forming a tandem that forces defenses to stretch thin and opens the floor for everyone else.

Daniels has appeared in 32 games with 28 starts and averages 12.7 points per game on 51.5 percent shooting. He has knocked down 64 three‑pointers at a 40.5 percent clip, placing him among the top‑20 most accurate shooters in Region 4. His shooting gravity bends defenses, creating driving lanes and spacing that fuels MATC's balanced, high‑efficiency attack.

"Definitely grateful," Daniels said of earning Second Team honors. "All glory to God, for real, because I didn't think I was even going to play this year. Being able to come out here and contribute to the team and do what we're doing this postseason is definitely a blessing."

His impact extends well beyond the arc as a floor spacer. Daniels adds 4.0 rebounds per game, serves as a secondary playmaker with 84 assists against just 44 turnovers, and brings defensive versatility with 44 steals and 21 blocks. His 407 total points, fourth‑most on the roster, also underscore the consistency and efficiency he brings on a nightly basis.

Team Depth Behind the Honors
Hackett, Boutin and Daniels may be the ones recognized this week, but they are far from the whole story. MATC's rise has been powered just as much by the two‑way play of Qi'Andre Washington, the interior presence of Turon Rivers and a rotation that runs deeper than most in Division II. The trio's All‑Region honors reflect the standard of a roster built on depth, toughness and shared responsibility. Those same qualities have carried the Stormers to 31 wins and an Elite Eight berth, putting them in position to chase the program's second national championship by weekend's end.

Click Here to see the full NJCAA  All-Region 4 List
 
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Players Mentioned

Noah  Daniels

#23 Noah Daniels

G
6' 5"
Sophomore
Qi’Andre Washington

#3 Qi’Andre Washington

PG
6' 0"
Sophomore
Raydelh Boutin

#10 Raydelh Boutin

PG
5' 11"
Sophomore
Jayden  Hackett

#20 Jayden Hackett

G
6' 6"
Sophomore
Turon Rivers

#21 Turon Rivers

G/F
6' 5"
Freshman

Players Mentioned

Noah  Daniels

#23 Noah Daniels

6' 5"
Sophomore
G
Qi’Andre Washington

#3 Qi’Andre Washington

6' 0"
Sophomore
PG
Raydelh Boutin

#10 Raydelh Boutin

5' 11"
Sophomore
PG
Jayden  Hackett

#20 Jayden Hackett

6' 6"
Sophomore
G
Turon Rivers

#21 Turon Rivers

6' 5"
Freshman
G/F

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