Sunday, February 1, 2026

Askew, Perkins shepherd Villanova’s overhaul and resurgence in Willard’s maiden voyage on Main Line

Devin Askew has shot Villanova firmly into NCAA Tournament conversation as senior’s veteran presence has steered Wildcats. (Photo by the Big East Conference)


By Jake Copestick (@JakeCopestick)


VILLANOVA, Pa. — Devin Askew has 131 college games under his belt for a coach to evaluate from and see what he has in the sixth-year guard.


That is enough of a sample size for Kevin Willard to look at and see how Askew can fit into what he wants to do on the court, but it wasn’t until Askew visited Villanova that Willard really knew what he had.


“When you go into the portal, you have to really evaluate, watch film, and see what he has,” Willard said. “When (Askew) was on his visit, I think the best part about it is I just loved his maturity. He’s a terrific, terrific person. I think he’s getting rewarded for being a hard worker and a terrific person.”


Askew was rewarded handsomely Friday, as he poured in a team-high 20 points, 17 of which came in the first half in an 87-73 win over Providence. Villanova, now 16-5 overall, and 7-3 in Big East play, has benefited from the play of the sixth-year senior, and will need Askew to continue to keep up his play as the Wildcats look to break a three-year drought from hearing their name called on Selection Sunday. 


Askew’s maturity and veteran presence is big on a Villanova team that starts a freshman in star point guard Acaden Lewis, and a redshirt sophomore in Bryce Lindsay. That duo gets a lot of the attention, and rightfully so. However, it is the elder statesman in Askew that is playing his best basketball of the season, now that he is fully healed from a knee injury suffered in the preseason.


Having scored 20 or more points in four of the last six games, shooting over 50 percent from three-point range in that span, Askew is the second-best long-distance shooter in the Big East, and a Top 40 shooter nationally from deep. Now that he is fully healthy, he is turning it on at the right time.


“I’m trying to get Devin to play off of his strengths ever since he’s now at full strength,” said Willard. “He can shoot, he can score. He had a really bad injury, then missed two months. What I’m trying to get Devin to do is play off of his strengths more to start, and just go off that. I think he’s starting to realize how good of a shooter and a scorer he is, how much pressure he can put on defenses, and then he can play off of that. Two months of not playing or practicing, especially in September and October, he missed the two most important months as you’re trying to learn a new system, new offense, then get thrown into the fire. It’s just taken a little bit of time.”


Askew drained four threes in the first half Friday, and made all three of his free throws after being fouled on another attempt. His 17 points in the first half were the difference, as Villanova led by as many points, 45-28 at halftime. 


“I got a really good coach, who lets me let it fly,” said Askew.


“Good answer,” quipped Willard, sitting next to him in the media room.


Askew led Villanova in scoring in the first half, and it was another veteran player in junior Tyler Perkins that paced the Wildcats with 12 points in the second half, and was just behind Askew with 19 points for the whole game. 


Perkins is the lone Wildcat that played major minutes a season ago to stay with the program amidst the coaching change. Willard has lauded the energy that the Penn transfer has given the team all year, and is seeing Perkins get comfortable playing the way he wants, a far cry from the style he played under Kyle Neptune a season ago. 


“I think Perkins is even getting a little bit more confidence and a little bit more comfortable with a totally different style than he played previously,” said Willard.


Perkins, the team's second-leading scorer at just over 12 points per game, is a great connector for Villanova, providing shooting, rebounding, defending and versatility. He does a lot of things that translate to winning besides scoring, but is starting to really heat up in that area. Perkins has now scored 15 or more points in five straight games after his 19-point outing in Friday’s win.


As Perkins continues to build confidence as he gets more game reps in Willard’s style of play, and Askew figures to be at full strength health-wise, it's Villanova’s veteran players that are hitting their stride as March beckons at the next turn of the calendar. 


“Some of the early mistakes that we made, I think we’re learning from them,” Willard said. “I think we’re doing some better things offensively. I think these guys are getting more comfortable offensively.”

UConn still working its way to championship level, but potential is clearly visible

Alex Karaban (11) and Solo Ball (1) were part of UConn’s championship team in 2024. As good as this year’s Huskies are, head coach Dan Hurley (second from left) believes championship standard is still a work in progress. (Photo by Jessica Hill/Associated Press)

OMAHA, Neb. — February begins for UConn with a No. 2 ranking in the country, a 17-game win streak, and the best start to conference play for the program in over a quarter-century.

Usually, such a season would be cause for celebration at most programs no matter how it were to conclude. But not every program has a standard like that of the Huskies, nor does every program have a perfectionist as its coach the way UConn does with Dan Hurley.

Hurley eased up on his prior comparisons of this Husky team to his two national champions leading into UConn’s 85-58 win at Creighton Saturday. The coach doubled down on the relaxed stance following the game, emphasizing that the bar was so high to where his current project is still a world away — at least — from clearing it.

Still, there were signs Saturday. UConn shot 54 percent from the floor, made 16 three-point field goals, and outrebounded the Bluejays by a 37-24 margin, collecting 13 offensive caroms. The ball control that has been stressed since the calendar flipped to 2026 also took a leap forward, with the Huskies committing only eight turnovers.

“We were plus-13 on the glass,” Hurley recounted. “I think we had five early turnovers and three the rest of the game. We were sharp with execution, we did a good job in transition offensively to get some more opportunities.”

The opportunities are also recognized in the aftermath of the win, said Silas Demary, Jr., who even after posting 15 points, six rebounds and five assists, felt there was something UConn could do better.

“We gotta be shot makers,” Demary said, “but I’d say we’re trying to get the ball inside more and just be ready to hit our outside shots when they present themselves. You see it every day, you see it every game, Coach talks about it before we go out to the court. I think our biggest thing is just building on playing a full 40 (minutes).”

One of the thorns in UConn’s side over the years, who handed the 2024 Huskies one of their three losses, believes this team is actually stronger.

“I think this team shoots it better across the board,” Creighton head coach Greg McDermott assessed. “UConn’s terrific, especially when they shoot the basketball like that, and with (Braylon) Mullins back, he just provides so much spacing to their team. He’s got incredible range, gets it off really quick.”

“Obviously, they’ve had some great shooters. Solo (Ball)’s not going to continue to shoot 27 or 28 percent from the three-point line, he’s too good and that number is skewed in the wrong direction. He’s gonna be fine.”

McDermott, no stranger to developing four-year talents over his 16 years in Omaha, from Doug McDermott to Ryan Kalkbrenner and so many more in between, also credited the Husky veterans for their experience and selflessness, highlighting those factors as equal components to UConn’s 21-1 start.

“They share it and they’re unselfish,” he praised. “And with Tarris (Reed, Jr.) back, Alex (Karaban) back, Solo back, (Jaylin) Stewart back, (Jayden) Ross back, they have that core that really understands what Danny wants them to do. He really hit a home run with Silas at the point, and then you have Mullins, who’s going to play in the NBA a long time, too. So it’s a really talented roster.”

Hurley has never disputed the talent he possesses this season, but with a stretch of three road games following Tuesday’s home game against Xavier, remains content to temper expectations ever so slightly.

“The ’23 and ’24 teams, we played elite offense, we played elite defense, we rebounded the ball dominantly,” he said. “There are a lot of games like this, and that’s why I’m not comparing this team to those teams. We’ve got a long way to go before we’re championship-caliber.”

UConn routs Creighton for long-awaited dominant win

Braylon Mullins (24) led UConn with 16 points as Huskies shot 54 percent from field in rout of Creighton Saturday. (Photo by Dylan Widger/Imagn Images) 

OMAHA, Neb. — Dan Hurley admitted earlier in the week that it was a mistake to compare this UConn team to either of the two he led to national championships in the two seasons before last.

The coach again reiterated his roster is nowhere near that level, but the response he received Saturday was reminiscent of the squads that were the last teams standing in the NCAA Tournament.

A 14-3 run to end the first half sent UConn to the locker room with an 11-point lead over Creighton, and the second-ranked Huskies added to it out of the intermission, cruising to an 85-58 win over the Bluejays, their 17th in a row.

“We’ve been looking for a performance like this for a while here, where we were able to get some separation and play a full game,” a relieved Hurley declared. “We’ve been searching for a full 40 (minutes) and a relentlessness, a ruthlessness, and then just better quality. We made shots today. It looks a lot different when you’re making shots.”

Making shots was an understatement Saturday night. UConn (21-1, 11-0 Big East) shot 54 percent from the floor against a Creighton team still smarting from a 24-point loss at Marquette on Tuesday, and connected on 16 of its 31 three-point attempts to close the month of January on an emphatic note.

“We knew when we came into the game that the ball pressure wasn’t going to be the biggest point of emphasis for us on offense,” Braylon Mullins said after his 16 points led all Huskies in the victory. “We were coming off screens and we were just getting whatever was available, and we shot the hell out of it.”

“If you play elite-level offense, you shoot 54 percent from the field, make 16 threes, you’re plus-13 on the glass, you hold a really good offensive team to 40 percent from the field, and the three-point line defense we played, that’s bulletproof basketball,” Hurley proclaimed.

The beginning of the first half was anything but bulletproof for UConn, as Creighton scored the first points of the evening before Mullins, making his return after missing Tuesday’s game against Providence to rehab a concussion, splashed home the first of the Huskies’ 16 threes. Mullins and Solo Ball accounted for all of UConn’s first 12 points, all from deep, as the Bluejays stayed within earshot for the first 16 minutes of the contest. But a jumper by Silas Demary, Jr. with 4:17 remaining in the opening stanza put the visitors ahead for good, and ignited the aforementioned 14-3 spurt that built much-needed momentum for the final 20 minutes.

“It’s just us keeping our foot on the gas,” said Demary, who ended his night with 15 points, six rebounds and five assists. “I think Coach has been preaching just having that killer instinct, and I think today, we were just able to build on that. We were saying at halftime, those first four minutes (of the second half) are the most important of the half. I think that gets us going. We had to come out and start with a stop, and I think that’s what we did. We just kept building on that and did what we needed to do to kind of expand that lead, and do what we did in the second half.”

Creighton would briefly pull within single digits out of the intermission, but a Mullins three 30 seconds removed from the interlude brought the UConn advantage back into double digits to stay. The Huskies ballooned that cushion as high as 30 points on a night where Bluejays head coach Greg McDermott had no other recourse but to tip his hat in concession.

“It’s just one of those nights where they were all making shots,” McDermott lamented. “I didn’t have Jayden Ross flying off pin-downs, shooting threes and knocking them down on my bingo card tonight, and he was able to do that. There’s a reason they’re ranked No. 2 in the country. They’re a heck of a basketball team.”

UConn was able to further its best start to league play since its first championship season of 1998-99, and will look to sustain its hot streak when it opens February at home on Tuesday against Xavier. And while the job is not finished, the main objective is to bottle more results like Saturday’s up to cultivate the final piece of the puzzle.

“Obviously, the record, winning that many in a row and winning 21 is cool,” Demary reflected. “But I think we’ve gotta continue to just play a full 40, try to play as mistake-free as we can and just play together. I think we did a good job (of that), and I think we’re gonna start being able to do that consistently.”

Tigers rebound from letdown at Cornell with win at Columbia

By Andrew Hefner (@Ahef_NJ)


NEW YORK — Princeton finally snapped a streak it had been looking to lose for far too long on Saturday night.


After a 23-point loss at Cornell Friday, the Tigers bounced back 24 hours later with an 80-68 victory at Columbia. The win marked Princeton’s first road win since February 2025, which, ironically enough, also came at Levien Gymnasium against the Lions.


“So happy, especially after last night,” head coach Mitch Henderson said after Princeton broke a four-way tie for third place in the Ivy League standings. “It wasn’t pretty. With Dalen (Davis) getting hurt, Jack Stanton on one leg getting 21, that’s a hell of a night.” 


Columbia, one of those four teams sitting at 3-3 entering the contest, took down Penn on Friday and was looking to complete the weekend Ivy sweep. The Lions began the game with three players over 6-foot-8, a mismatch that hurt Princeton off the glass early. CJ Happy started off scoring with a big three for the visiting side, but three straight Columbia buckets quickly flipped the script. 


“They’re outrebounding everybody, including us,” Henderson remarked. “But I thought we were tough in the right moments, we figured it out. It was a very, very physical game.” 


The big plays off the boards kept Columbia in control for much of the first half, eventually extending a nine-point lead as Princeton just could not collect the ball in the paint. Five Tiger turnovers did not ease the pain much, but rough Columbia shooting kept Princeton very much in the game. The Lions went on to shoot 7-for-28 from beyond the arc.


“We’ve been in that spot this season a lot,” Henderson admitted. “We saw, I think, very clearly, that we weren’t moving the way we wanted to move offensively.”


Princeton was able to readjust, however, and took advantage of Columbia’s poor form, going on an 8-0 run late in the first courtesy of a Dalen Davis layup sandwiched by two Jack Stanton triples. Stanton, one of Princeton’s best all-around players, had not cracked double-digit scoring in four games, but three huge shots from beyond the arc in the first left him awfully close.


“I didn’t have to do a whole lot,” explained Stanton. “I just had to sit there and wait until I was open. My teammates got me involved, so props to (Jackson) Hicke and Dalen. All those guys did the hard work for me, and I was able to just execute.”


The sophomore guard went on to double his three-point count in the second, helping Princeton lock down the win with 21 points, while cracking 20 points for just the second time in his career and setting a career high with six three-pointers.


“Yeah, he’s doing great,” said Henderson of how he felt about Stanton’s performance, “Like, God, on one leg too, and we had him guarding (Kenny) Noland for most of the night. Just a terrific night.”


Princeton erased the nine-point deficit with ease, but was not aided by a concerning injury off a made layup to junior Davis on the same leg that left him sidelined for much of the non-conference slate earlier this season. 


“He's sprained his ankle, so we’ll see,” Henderson revealed. “It’s the same one and it’s been an issue for us and him, but we’ve got a week here to get ourselves on the right track.”


Even without Davis for the remainder of the game, the shots kept falling all around the floor for the Tigers as Malik Abdullahi started his night 5-for-5 from the field and eventually finished with 15 points and a game-high seven rebounds, and Jackson Hicke put up 18 points of his own. Princeton ended the evening with a season high 57.1 percent field-goal mark and 53.3 percent from three. 


Kenny Noland did not make the second half easy for the Tigers, though, as the senior guard racked up ten points in the first eight minutes of the final frame to keep the Lions even. Eventually, an overwhelming run down the stretch from the visitors left Columbia stunned, and down by as much as 14 in the final minutes of the game. 


“I think, mentally, we’re in a great spot now,” said Stanton, “Obviously a tough one last night at Cornell, but to get the split on a tough road trip like this, it was big-time for us.”


The well-traveled Princeton faithful were loud through much of the night over a nearly sold-out Columbia crowd and exited into the frigid New York City night with a big Ivy League win under their belts. 


Princeton will now head to The Palestra to face Penn next week, leading the all-time series for the first time ever, and will be looking to complete the season sweep over its cross-river rival. The Tigers also move up the Ivy rankings with the win, now in a two-way tie for third, vying for one of the all-important four spots at Ivy Madness come early March. 


“I thought Columbia was terrific. Hand it to them,” said Henderson, “But then we had this awesome run right there that really was like a defining point for our season.”

Saturday, January 31, 2026

FDU’s defense carries Knights to victory over Wagner

By Ray Floriani (@rfloriani)


TEANECK, N.J. — After the compilation of notes, diagrams and shot charts, it all came down to these numbers that just jumped off the stat sheet and begged for recognition.


A 38 percent field goal defense and a resounding 49-29 difference in rebounding. That went a long way in deciding FDU’s 52-45 victory over Wagner Saturday at the Bogota Savings Bank Center.


“We told the kids and that was on the board, ‘defense and rebounding,’” FDU coach Stephanie Gaitley said. “That’s our culture and I think it was evident in our stats.


Saturday’s game saw FDU improve to 19-4 (10-0 NEC), while the Seahawks are now 10-11 (6-4 NEC). Wagner had a four-game winning streak stopped. The last prior loss by the Seahawks was a 56-46 setback against these same FDU Knights. Regardless, Gaitley anticipated a battle and has the utmost respect for Wagner.


FDU led by ten following the first period. Wagner cut the difference to six at halftime. Entering the final stanza, the Knights owned a 14-point lead and the FDU faithful anticipated a victory. Wagner refused to go away.


With 42 seconds remaining, it was a two-possession game. The Knights were able to seal the verdict by virtue of two free throws each by Kailee McDonald and Leah Crosby in the final 23 seconds. Gaitley was not surprised they made that final surge.


“The last time we played them and beat them, you could see that’s a winning culture,” Gaitley said. “I said (to Wagner coach Terrell Coburn), ‘you guys are doing a great job.’


Points of Emphasis:

The Rat award winners: Given by the FDU staff to the player(s) personifying grit and toughness, especially on the defensive end.


“(Rebecca Osei-Owusu) and Leah (Crosby), they got our rat of the game,” Gaitley said. “Our offense wasn’t clicking, they both got a double-double and did a great job.


Crosby posted a game-high 12-point, 11-rebound

double-double. Osei-Owusu scored 10 while grabbing 12 boards, the latter a game-high. Osei-Owusu also did a nice job on Wagner’s post threat, 6-foot-3 Lijirin Doyinsola Modesayor, who finished with 10 points on 4-of-9 shooting.


“Becca did a great job countering what she could do,” Gaitley praised. “Becca slowed her down.


Kailee McDonald shot 0-for-7 from three in the first half. The Knights’ sophomore guard came out in the second half and hit her first attempt from downtown. She never wavered nor lost confidence in her shot.


McDonald epitomized the axiom of shooters needing short memories.


“I just needed to focus on what’s happening next,” McDonald said. “I needed to focus on the next shot and keep going.


A solid all-around player, McDonald pulled down eight boards, three on the offensive end.


“She is probably one of the best offensive rebounders I ever coached,” Gaitley said. “She just plays both ends of the court.


McDonald finished with 10 points, shooting 2-of-11 from deep. Her contributions in this win went far beyond her point total and shooting percentage.


“Obviously, I love defense,” McDonald added. “We know what to bring the second half of the season. We just have to keep our foot on the pedal.


Pressure: Wagner was able to stay within striking distance with its pressure that forced 18 FDU turnovers.


“We got a little rattled with the press,” Gaitley admitted. “Ava (Renninger) was hurt going into this game, but she did a great job getting through it after

pulling her groin in our last game.”


Renninger scored six points and handed out four assists. She did have six turnovers, but toughed it out, playing the full 40 minutes.


Notes: In tempo-free numbers, FDU posted an 83 offensive efficiency. The number that matters most to Gaitley was the defensive efficiency of 69, 12 under Wagner’s average.


FDU struggled on the offensive end, shooting 31 percent from the floor. The Knights were just 6-of-28) from three. Wagner had difficulty at the charity stripe, shooting only 8-for-18. The Seahawks’ norm from the line is 63 percent.


Doyinsola Modesayor and Irene Fernandez de Caleya led Wagner with 10 points each. Keana Foz added eight, including six when the Seahawks were making their last-period run.


Wagner visits Le Moyne on Thursday. FDU is also on the road against Stonehill, whom the Knights defeated at home, 78-54, this past Thursday.

St. Joe’s gets crucial A-10 win at La Salle to position itself for pivotal month of February

By Kyle Morello (@Kylemorello4)


PHILADELPHIA — Saturday afternoon marked the 56th time Saint Joseph’s and La Salle have shared the court together as Big 5 foes. Despite the deep familiarity between the two programs, it seemed to be a day of firsts at John E. Glaser Arena, which ended in a 67-58 win for the visiting Hawks.


It started off before the ball was even tipped. The two men on the sidelines, St. Joe’s head coach Steve Donahue and Darris Nichols for La Salle, had never coached against each other before. Not only that, but it was the first time either had coached in this double entendre version of a league game, where the two schools faced off as both Atlantic 10 opponents and Big 5 rivals. 


For Donahue in particular, who has coached in numerous Big 5 games as both an assistant and head coach at Penn, he knows how special these games are. 


“I’ve been through a lot of these in different ways,” he said. “Never thought I’d be involved in the St. Joe’s-La Salle one, and I was thrilled to be a part of it. I hope we can keep this going in this crazy era of NIL and what needs to be done for us to promote ourselves in our own league, because we do have something special. And I know this was an A-10 game, (but) I felt it was a Big 5 game. That’s just how I’m wired.” 


It was also a first of this instance for Nichols, who unlike Donahue, is in his first year coaching in the Big 5. Still, it’s easy to pick up on the energy this rivalry brings out in the fans.


“I felt some more energy than it’s been,” Nichols said. “Especially when you’re trying to build something and trying to create energy. You want it to feel like that every game.”


For the micro perspective of the game, it was another first for St. Joe’s Dasear Haskins. The redshirt sophomore forward tied a career-high with 20 points, and set a personal best with six threes made, all in the first half, too. Despite the team’s struggles shooting the ball from deep this season (St. Joe’s shoots 30 percent from beyond the arc), it doesn’t affect how Haskins or the rest of the team stays ready to make an impact.


“We believe in our work,” he said. “We work very hard. Our coaches trust in us a lot. All of us after practice were shooting and just bonding and stuff like that, so that little slump of us shooting wasn’t nothing for us. We stayed confident in each other and believe in our work.”


The Hawks are among the hottest teams in the A-10 right now. They’ve won six of their last seven games, and now sit at 6-3 through the first half of conference play. It’s the first time St. Joe’s has started league play 6-3 since the 2015-16 season, where the Hawks wound up winning the A-10 tournament and punching a ticket to the NCAA Tournament.


There’s no telling on how this season will end up for St. Joe’s. To say they’re destined for the same ending as that season would be quite a reach, especially with the prowess at the top of the conference (Saint Louis is pretty, pretty good if you haven’t heard). But there’s no denying that the Hawks are playing their best basketball in a long, long time. 


If the Hawks keep playing the way they have over the last few weeks, it could end up being another first (in quite some time) for St. Joe’s fans: A team that is defying expectations and has battled through adversity to become the best version of itself, as it enters the most critical time of the season.