By Jake Copestick (@JakeCopestick)
NEW YORK — St. John’s played with a vengeance Saturday, one like it had just been throttled by 30 points in their previous game, missing its final 24 field goal attempts in a blowout loss at UConn.
Unfortunately for Villanova, they just happened to be the next opponent for the Red Storm.
Also compounding the Wildcats’ misfortune was Johnnies head coach Rick Pitino declaring Saturday night’s game the most important of the season for his 15th-ranked squad earlier in the week.
And just to add the icing on the cake, Pitino even donned his famous white suit despite saying he would keep it hanging in his closet.
St. John’s used a combination of angst from Wednesday’s loss, coupled with an urgency from Pitino’s rallying cry to totally overwhelm Villanova from start to finish, crushing the Wildcats, 89-57, in front of a sellout crowd at Madison Square Garden.
The margin of victory was the largest for St. John’s (23-6, 16-2 Big East) against Villanova in the 135th all-time meeting between the two original Big East members.
After Bryce Lindsay opened the scoring with a tough right-handed finish, St. John’s responded right away, with Dylan Darling finding a wide-open Dillon Mitchell for an easy two-handed dunk. It was a fitting play to set the tone for the night. That jumpstarted an 11-0 run by St. John’s, who grabbed the lead and not only never gave it back, but never allowed Villanova to get remotely close to it. The Wildcats held the lead for just a mere 22 seconds in Saturday’s contest. They also trailed by 30 points before halftime.
Offensively, the Red Storm poured it on Villanova all night, with Zuby Ejiofor recording just the fourth triple-double in school history, putting up 16 points, 12 rebounds, and 10 assists, while adding three blocks. The statistical feat put the senior forward on a short list that includes David Cain, Ron Artest, and Kadary Richmond.
“I think (Pitino) has the perfect player in Zuby,” Villanova head coach Kevin Willard lamented. “Zuby and him really match so well together. I think that’s why they’ve been so successful.”
The Red Storm shot nearly 53 percent from the field, and for a team that isn’t reliant on the three-point line to score, made eight of its 15 attempts from long distance. Ten different players scored for the Johnnies on Saturday, four of whom, including Ejiofor, scored in double figures.
“Zuby was incredible for us as a five man to get 10 assists,” said Pitino. “He was well rested because he took a day off against Connecticut.”
However, it was the defensive side of the ball where St. John’s really put it to the Wildcats. The Red Storm scored 29 points off of 16 Villanova turnovers, with 18 of those points in the first half, the most emphatic points coming when Ian Jackson brought the crowd to its feet with a windmill dunk off of a turnover by Villanova’s Chris Jeffrey. It was one of five steals for Jackson, and two of a team-high 19 points for St. John’s.
The size and brute force that the Red Storm’s front line possesses really bothered Villanova. Couple that with an aggressive duo of guards in Jackson and Dylan Darling, and it’s a recipe for an off shooting night.
St. John’s held Villanova to percentages in the thirties from both sides of the arc. Tyler Perkins, who had scored 15 or more points in 11 of Villanova’s last 12 games, was held to just six points. Bryce Lindsay, who made his first shot, went just 2-for-10 the rest of the game. Matt Hodge added six points in a season-low 13 minutes, because of injury. He tried to do a spin move in the paint early in the second half, and went down, unable to get up or put pressure on his right leg. Willard has no update on the severity of Hodge’s injury at the time.
“I thought that Darling is one of those guys who’s just a pest,” Willard said of St. John’s point guard. “Everyone looks at him like he’s not that good of a player, but man, he does so many good things. More than anything, I thought Darling set the tone defensively. He picked us up full-court, and then Jackson came in and just picked up that pressure.”
“And then you have their guards who know they can be aggressive because they have Zuby back there. It makes a huge difference. Then you have Mitchell who can really disrupt, you’ve got Bryce Hopkins, who played power forward last year, now playing small forward. That front line is really good.”
Willard worked for Pitino for a decade. He knows how intense he can be after a bad loss like the one St. John’s took on the chin on Wednesday night. He recalled what those times were like. They weren’t fun. At all.
“I’m not bullshitting you, I don’t have hair because of him,” he said. “I had a full set of hair when I started working for him. It’s the most miserable experience in life, like( you fear for your life everyday. Everyone laughs when I say that, but you think you’re going to get fired. It’s miserable. As he’s gotten older, he’s probably become more of a cranky old bitch than he was. You literally fear for your life when you walk in. Like ,when he walks in the facility, he’s walking in at 6:30 and you’ve been there since 5:30 thinking you have everything right. He comes in and asks you the one question that you don’t know. He’s that intense. He always has been.”
Pitino has a method to his madness. St. John’s responded in a big way, putting a beatdown on Villanova that the team from Queens had never done before.
For the Wildcats, it was their worst loss since a 93-56 defeat at the hands of Kentucky at Rupp Arena on February 9, 1997. Rick Pitino was the coach of that Kentucky team. Steve Masiello, now Pitino’s associate head coach at St. John’s, was a freshman walk-on for the Wildcats.
Willard is not overly worried about the result of the game. There are two games left for his team to fine-tune things before the Big East tournament, and ultimately, the NCAA Tournament. He offered the same message Saturday that he did a week ago after UConn ran away from his team in the second half.
“We’re going to move on,” he said. “We have two more games left. You get your ass kicked every once in a while.”

