By Zachary Wilson (@zwilsonpxp)
STONY BROOK, N.Y. — Coming off a loss that snapped a five-game conference win streak, Stony Brook rebounded at home in front of a good crowd, including kids from the local children’s hospital as part of Children’s Hospital Day at Stony Brook Arena.
To start things off, Stony Brook won the tipoff, and 15 seconds later, a shooting foul was drawn by Richard Goods despite missing both free attempts afterwards. The shooting was stone cold in the first few minutes of the game, especially for Stony Brook, who missed its first five shot attempts, while both sides did not produce a single point in the first three minutes, until Northeastern struck first with back-to-back threes from Mike Loughnane and JB Frankel.
Then out of the first media timeout, the Seawolves would get on the board from Rob Brown III’s layup, then Tomas Valeninty’s triple made it a 6-5 Northeastern lead by the next media timeout. Before that, the Seawolves’ defense would hold the Huskies scoreless for over five minutes, forcing three turnovers.
After Loughnane got a fast-break layup off a Ryan Williams block, Stony Brook would go on an 8-0 run to pick up its first lead of the game, capped off by an Ethan Simmon three to make it 13-8 with 7:55 remaining in the first half.
Another scoring drought and turnover issue would befall the Huskies, as they would commit six turnovers in over nine minutes while being held without a single point in over three minutes. Along with that, they would lose a timeout on an unsuccessful challenge where the initial call was the ball going out of bounds off Northeastern, which led to Jonah Butler making both shots at the free throw line thereafter.
Despite allowing Stony Brook to hit the double bonus by the 6:56 mark of the first half and a 14-point lead at one point, the Huskies would hold their own for the remainder of the half by keeping Erik Pratt, one of the leading scorers in the CAA, scoreless for most of the frame. Frankel’s back-to-back shots from downtown made the score 29-19 in favor of Stony Brook at halftime, and gave him a game-high nine points after 20 minutes of action.
At the beginning of the second half, Goods would launch a three the first of many spectacular plays he would make for the Seawolves over the next 20 minutes. His triple would eventually be followed by a huge transition play by the Seawolves, starting with Quin Gorman’s block on Loughnane to Andrej Shoshkikj’s layup off Brown’s pass to put the Seawolves up, 36-21.
More theatrics by Stony Brook would be created in between a media timeout, including Pratt breaking the ankles of his defender for a downtown shot, then Shoshkikj lobbing the ball to Goods for a dunk that brought the arena to its knees.
Another challenge would fall on the Seawolves, as Pratt picked up his third foul with 13:34 remaining. After Loughnane got a layup off a steal, Shoshkikj answered with a drive to the basket for a layup and a foul on Luca Soroa Schaller to complete the three-point play, increasing the Seawolves' lead to 48-30.
The advantage would continue over the next few minutes, as the Seawolves put Petar Pinter into foul trouble with his fourth foul committed halfway through the second half. Then, Goods would slam the ball into the basket once again off of Simmon’s toss into the paint, giving Stony Brook its largest lead of the game, 57-38.
Despite a six-point run by the Huskies to come to within 13, the Seawolves would keep momentum on their side by drawing fouls on the next two possessions, maintaining a 61-44 lead with under four minutes to play.
Goods would get one more dunk in the second half from Shoshkikj to ice the game and give Stony Brook a 69-55 win over Northeastern, the lowest amount of points by the Huskies in a game this season. The win also gave the Seawolves a season sweep of Northeastern for the second time in three years, and moved them into a tie for third place in the CAA standings with Hofstra and Drexel.
Pratt would once again lead the team in points with 13, while Loughnane led all scorers with 17. The Seawolves’ defense would also hold the Huskies to only 33 percent shooting from the field and 25 from deep, while Stony Brook would shoot 48 percent from the field.
Coming up next, Stony Brook (15-10, 7-5 CAA) goes back on the road Thursday to face CAA preseason favorite Towson (13-12, 5-7 CAA), while Northeastern (6-17, 2-10 CAA) returns home the same day to host William & Mary (15-9, 6-6 CAA) to try and end its six-game losing streak.

