CHARLOTTE – Following two tough games in the
Bluegrass State that Queens split, the Royals returned to their home deck
Tuesday night. The stakes couldn’t have been higher for the home side. Queens
sat two games out of the ASUN lead and needed a win to keep its conference
title hopes alive and bolster its chances for a possible first-round home game
in the conference tournament.
Queens got one of the wins it needed. The Royals bounced
back from a tough, late loss at Eastern Kentucky Saturday afternoon, leading
Central Arkansas by nine or more points for nearly 35 minutes Tuesday night in
an 89-72 victory.
You know how it happened. Now, let’s take a somewhat unorthodox
dive…Inside the Numbers!
16: Queens canned 16 triples in the victory, a season-high for the Royals. Queens set its prior high of 14 in two games – in a November MTE against USC Upstate and …13 days ago at Central Arkansas. Queens tried a dizzying 45 threes in the win in Conway. Chris Ashby hit fewer threes Tuesday than in Conway – nine there, seven at home – but also tried 12 fewer than in the 63-47 Royals victory on the road. Queens’ prior Division I high came on January 14, 2023, as it shot 15-of-27 in a 107-78 win over North Alabama in Charlotte. The only higher output by any Division I Royal squad was on December 1, 2023, when it shot 22-of-41 in a 134-69 win over Carolina Christian.
Queens coach Grant Leonard on the shooting effort,
particularly from deep: “We do
concepts and we let the guys make reads and decisions. You could see them
change up their defense and it didn’t affect our offensive flow at all. We were
able to attack whenever they went zone or in those traps. We were able to get
the ball to the middle, get it out, and make the right decision. You saw a lob
to Kalib (Mathews), you saw a backside three to Chris, and those are
back-breaking plays as they’re trying to create a stop on a timeout or a dead
ball.”
55.2: The
Royals also turned in a season-high in three-point percentage, as they knocked
down 16-of-29 tries from deep. Chris Ashby led the home side with a 7-for-14
effort, but six Royals booked at least one triple in the game. Of the shooters
aside from Ashby who hit one, that group of five shot 75 percent (9-of-12) from
distance.
30: Queens
turned in one of – if not its best – points off turnover totals of the season.
The Royals converted 27 turnovers by Division 3 Lynchburg into 33 points
earlier in the campaign. This number was significant, given the Royals’ 18
turnovers at Eastern Kentucky. Queens compelled 18 Bear miscues Tuesday, which
was the highest total it has recorded against a D1 foe this year.
Leonard on turnovers:
“I was really happy that our guys were able to execute the gameplan. The
biggest thing is that I thought for large portions of the game, we played
harder, we were first to the floor, and our ball pressure created 18 turnovers.
Anytime there’s 18 turnovers for them and seven for us, it’s a huge deal.”
Central Arkansas coach John Shulman on turnovers: "Their pressure bothered us. Give
them credit, they pressured us defensively and we didn't handle it very well.
We had to go away from Princeton (offense) and do some ball-screen stuff, and
that's disappointing. If you're going to try to be a Princeton offense, you
have to be able to claim your space and we were never able to do that. We had
nine assists and 18 turnovers. Looking at that, we should have gotten beat by
40 points.”
36: The Queens
bench tallied 40.45 percent of its points Tuesday, logging 36 points and
allowing Leonard to perform some much-needed load management. The Royals
employed hockey line changes at times, allowing everyone to play no greater
than 27 minutes in the game. Queens is a top-15 unit in Division 1 in bench
scoring, and Tuesday's total was bolstered by Maban Jabriel (14) and Yoav Berman (10)
both reaching double figures.
Forward Leo Colimerio on the Queens bench: “Not a lot of teams have a great bench
like us. Our main focus was to get their starters tired and then get a run in
the second half. I feel like we did a good job. I feel like we have the best
bench in the conference and today it showed.”
Leonard on the bench and the team as a whole: “I think we have a true identity. I think
that there are times and moments where we play ‘take your soul’ hard, and that’s
when we’re really good. When we’re crushing teams on the glass and wearing
teams out with our bench – 36 bench points – for us, it’s a collective effort.
I think our guys understand our identity and understand their roles. They
really believe that if we’re the hardest-playing guys, we can make a run in the
conference tournament.”
7: Queens tied
its season-low in turnovers against a Division 1 foe. The Royals coughed it up
just seven times Tuesday, equaling the team’s turnover total in a home loss to
Lipscomb 10 days prior.
Leonard: “When
we take care of the ball, I think this group’s special.”
24: The Royals
helped on 24-of-28 buckets, making for the second-highest assists total Leonard’s
team has recorded this year. Queens dropped 25 dimes on 35 baskets in a 95-60
win at Stetson on January 16.
Leonard: “When
we don’t (get stagnant and play in isolation), when the ball flows and moves,
we’re really good.”
5: Queens
center Malcolm Wilson stuffed five Bear field goal attempts, cementing his
status as the nation’s leader in blocked shots. Wilson’s defensive presence
allowed the Royals to extend defensive pressure further up the floor. The game
marked Wilson’s 12th with five or more blocks this season.
Leonard on Wilson:
“It’s a big deal (having him in the middle). There were a couple
times when they broke our press and funneled it right to Malcom, and he was
able to erase a mistake or two. More importantly, it allows guys to feel like,
even in the half court and our base defense, they can pressure the ball, and if
they get beat, it’s not the end of the world. Having the nation’s leading
shot-blocker back there is just huge. It’s a confidence booster for our guys to
know they can really ramp up the intensity in the half-court.”
14: Jabriel
logged the second-highest points total of his freshman campaign. The Canadian
sank 5-of-8 tries – 4-of-6 from three – to finish within one point of his
15-point total at Ole Miss earlier in the year.
6: Queens
forward Leo Colimerio booked one-quarter of his team’s aforementioned 24
assists. This marked the ninth time this year the grad transfer has collected
five or more helpers in a game.
22: Queens
boarded just 22 misses Tuesday night. The total was their lowest in a victory
all season. The Royals tallied 20 in a loss at BYU earlier this season.
Ashby led all scorers with 25 for Queens, hitting 7-of-14 from
distance. Colimerio contributed 15 on 5-of-9 from the deck and 5-of-7 from the
line. Jabriel booked 14, with Mathews recording 11 and Berman 10.
Guard Brayden Fagbemi paced Central Arkansas with 19 points
on 7-of-10 shooting (4-of-6 from three). Forward Elias Cato returned to the
Bears’ lineup and added 15 on 3-of-7 shooting (8-of-9 from the line). Guard
Mike Evbagharu hit 5-of-9 tries to tally 12, while forward Nehemiah Turner
added 11.
Quick tempo numbers:
Central Arkansas: 1.091
PPP (66 trips), 45.5% scores, 27.3% turns, 47.9% shooting (23-48), 43.5% three-point
shooting (10-23), 88.9% free throw shooting (16-18)
Queens: 1.435 PPP (62
trips), 58.1% scores, 11.3% turns, 53.8% shooting (28-52), 55.2% three-point
shooting (16-29), 77.3% free throw shooting (17-22)
Both teams resume play Thursday. Queens welcomes Austin Peay
to Curry Arena for its final home game of the regular season. Tip time is set
for 7:00 (Eastern), with streaming coverage over ESPN+. Central Arkansas
travels to West Georgia to do battle with the Wolves. The Bears and Wolves are
tied for the final spot in the ASUN conference tournament with three games
remaining. Tip time from Carrollton is set for 7:45, with ESPN+ handling the
streaming coverage.
QUEENS 89, CENTRAL ARKANSAS 72
CENTRAL ARKANSAS (7-21, 3-12 ASUN)
Fagbemi 7-10 1-2 19, Turner 3-5 5-5 11, Evbagharu 5-9 0-0
12, McCormick 1-7 0-0 3, Cato 3-7 8-9 15, Etim 0-0 0-0 0, West 0-0 0-0 0,
Dehrmann 0-0 0-0 0, Mancell 0-1 0-0 0, Fox 3-6 0-0 8, Seixas 1-3 2-2 4. Totals 23-48
16-18 72.
QUEENS (17-11, 10-5)
Mathews 3-5 4-4 11, Cash 0-1 0-1 0, Ashby 7-15 4-4 25,
Colimerio 5-9 5-7 15, Wilson 1-1 0-0 2, Mann 0-3 1-2 1, Shine 0-0 0-0 0,
Jabriel 5-8 0-0 14, Nevill 0-0 0-0 0, Anderson 1-1 0-0 3, Pollard 3-4 1-2 8,
Berman 3-5 2-2 10. Totals 28-52 17-22 89.
Halftime: Queens 42-31. 3-Point
goals: Queens 16-29 (Mathews 1-1, Ashby 7-14, Colimero 0-2, Mann
0-1, Jabriel 4-6, Anderson 1-1, Pollard 1-1, Berman 2-3), Central Arkansas
10-23 (Fagbemi 4-6, Evbagharu 2-4, McCormick 1-6, Cato 1-2, Fox 2-3, Seixas 0-2).
Fouled out: NA. Rebounds: Central
Arkansas 31 (Evbagharu 5), Queens 22 (Jabriel 6). Total fouls: Central
Arkansas 17, Queens 17. Technicals: Turner (UCA).
Points off turnovers: Queens 30, Central
Arkansas 7. Points in the paint: Queens 24, Central
Arkansas 22. Second-chance points: Central Arkansas 7, Queens 5. Fast-break
points: Queens 12, Central Arkansas 4. Bench
points: Queens 36, Central Arkansas 12.