Saturday, March 14, 2026
Mullins’ maturation coming at perfect time as UConn chases Big East championship
St. John’s advances to Big East championship game with dominant win over Seton Hall
By Sam Federman (@Sam_Federman)
NEW YORK — Two days in a row, St. John’s reminded the Big East why it won the regular season championship with a dominant 18-2 season. And it didn’t take long to do it either day.
The Red Storm scored on each of its first four possessions, grabbing a few offensive rebounds in the process, to take an eight-point lead and force a Seton Hall timeout. It came after the Johnnies opened up a 15-point lead in the first few minutes of Thursday’s quarterfinal against Providence.
Riding that early lead, St. John’s held off a push from Seton Hall, a team head coach Rick Pitino said “breaks everybody,” to topple the Pirates, 78-68, at Madison Square Garden and advance to its second straight Big East championship game. It sets up a chance for back-to-back Big East tournament titles for the first time in program history.
“From (Joe) Lapchick to (Lou) Carnesecca, they dominated, and then they went into hibernation like a bear,” Pitino said of the St. John’s program and its history. “And then these guys got them out of hibernation. But Dillon (Mitchell) and Joson (Sanon) don’t realize how good St. John’s was back in the day.”
What happened last year doesn’t matter, let alone 50 years ago, before the formation of the Big East. All that matters is that when St. John’s steps between the lines, the Red Storm is going to set the tone, and fast.
“That’s what we’ve been preaching all season,” Zuby Ejiofor said. “Going in there in the first four minutes and setting the tone to be as physical as possible. That’s something we live for, and we’ve still got a lot of areas to improve, but this is a truly special moment. It’s not every day you have an opportunity to win a Big East title in MSG.”
“I think we’ve been through a lot early on in the season,” Dillon Mitchell added. “One of the hardest things, like Coach P said, is playing with a lead, and that's something we’ve learned from. We don’t want to get into a position where we’re down 15 like we were against Xavier and Seton Hall and trying to fight back. So it’s just staying level-headed as a team, coming together, and it really starts with off-the-court stuff for us, just hanging out all the time, chatting, and just being together. It really helps on the court, so when we get to those positions, we know to trust each other and have each other’s back.”
With the same professionalism it showed during Thursday’s matchup with Providence, the Red Storm was businesslike in its approach. After Seton Hall made a run to finish the first half down by eight, St. John’s came out of the second half with another run, even longer than the one it had to open up the first half.
“At the end of the half, you’ve gotta play like it’s 0-0,” Ejiofor said. “No matter what the score is. And I think we did a great job coming out with the energy.”
St. John’s went on an 11-0 run to open up the second 20 minutes, which was enough to hold off the run that it knew Seton Hall would make. The Pirates’ fans started to make their voices heard, cutting the lead to six, but Ejiofor drew a mismatch against Seton Hall point guard Budd Clark in the post, and scored at the end of the shot clock.
Seton Hall never got that close again. It took another two-plus minutes for the Pirates to score, and by the time they finally did, the Johnnies were back ahead by 13.
“At that time, you’ve really just gotta stay composed,” Ejiofor said. “I live for these moments, having an opportunity to go win and advance.”
St. Joe’s spurts away from Davidson and into A-10 semis
Steve Donahue’s group used a late second-half surge to cruise to a 70-58 win over Davidson, and win its seventh game in a row.
A pair of 12-2 scoring runs helped the Hawks pull away from the Wildcats, setting up a showdown tomorrow afternoon against Phil Martelli, Jr.’s VCU Rams. The winner plays for the championship on Sunday, and thus, the right to play in the NCAA Tournament.
St. Joe’s defense has been its calling card this season, and it was the catalyst for the Hawks’ scoring runs in their win over Matt McKillop’s Wildcats. The defense, turned into transition opportunities for their lightning quick guard duo of Derek Simpson and Khaafiq Myers, has really added another gear to one of the hottest teams in the A-10.
“Our defense is always our cornerstone,” said Donahue.
“We don’t foul, we really guard, and make it difficult. I thought there were stretches in that game that we took Davidson out of what they wanted to do. When we do that, you can feel the energy.”
When St. Joe’s defends the way it did Friday, it leans on its speed to get out and get easy baskets. The Hawks had 20 fast-break points against Davidson.
“We’re very good in transition, and that has a lot to do with Derek Simpson,” Donahue said of his point guard. “His ability to go foul line to foul line, he’s extremely athletic, and on top of that, he’s got great vision. Those stretches were fueled by the defense, and when that happens, you see us move the ball and share it.”
It helps when you have a blur in transition like Simpson, who was officially named to the all-A-10 first team this week. The Rutgers transfer turned in another stellar performance Friday, with 16 points, five rebounds, six assists and just two turnovers. He was totally in control in transition and the half-court, no matter the different defensive looks McKillop showed.
For the second year in a row in the quarterfinals, Justice Ajogbor, who was named the A-10’s Co-Defensive Player of the Year, turned in a monster performance to send the Hawks to the conference’s final four.
A season ago, Ajogbor registered seven blocks in an overtime win against Dayton in Washington, D.C. On Friday, he was just two points off of a career-high that he set just six days ago, putting up 18 points, 10 of which came in the second half. He threw down a couple of huge dunks, and some baskets in deep that Davidson quite frankly just did not have the manpower in the paint to stop.
Offensively, a lot more has been asked of Ajogbor. The ball is in his hands in the short roll more as teams double-team Simpson and force the ball out of his hands. Additionally, when his teammates can get into the paint and throw a lob to him, or hit him with a dump-off pass, Ajogbor has cashed in. It’s been quite the development in Donahue’s eyes.
“He’s getting more opportunities than he ever has,” Donahue said of the Harvard transfer Ajogbor, against whom he coached while at Penn. “We run an offense that’s predicated on the big being able to handle the ball. He’s really gotten better. There’s a noticeable confidence when he gets the ball in tight spots that he’s able to finish.”
Ajogbor is all about winning at the end of the day, though. The points are great, but there is a larger goal ahead. He doesn’t want the Hawks’ season to come to an end in the semifinals for a third straight year.
“I always do whatever it takes to win, and that’s how I think about playing basketball,” he said. “If my teammates pass me the ball, then I’m going to play my role.”
St. Joe’s is now just one game away from playing for an automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament. Three months ago, this scenario seemed like an impossibility. Now, the Hawks have earned another opportunity to compete together, inching closer to their ultimate goal of playing in March Madness.
“We always trusted ourselves and trusted the staff,” Ajogbor said. “I think we all have to believe we had what it took in that locker room. To kind of vindicate ourselves is an awesome feeling.”
“But the goal isn’t to get to the semifinals again. We’re looking forward to tomorrow, but we know what we’ve got to do to get to where we want.”
UConn and St. John’s, one more time, for all the marbles, represents the beauty of college basketball
Friday, March 13, 2026
5 Thoughts: Seton Hall falls in Big East tournament semifinals
By Jason Guerette (@JPGuerette)
NEW YORK — After Seton Hall’s quarterfinal win over Creighton yesterday, Shaheen Holloway said that a semifinal matchup against St. John’s on Friday evening was one of the things “you play basketball for.”
Sha Sounds Off: St. John’s
On Seton Hall performing to his standards:
“I thought we did. I thought, for the most part, I thought that this group was really fun to coach. For me, as a coach, they did give me everything I asked for, that you could ask for, nothing more than that. They definitely lived up to the three Ds. They carried themselves well on and off the court. So I told these guys, this stings because we didn’t play well tonight at all. We didn’t play well tonight. I thought if we played well, we had a chance, but to be honest with you, the game wasn’t as close as the score. They dominated us because they came out and they swung first and we didn’t swing back. Normally, that’s not us, and that’s what’s disappointing about it.”
On an NCAA Tournament pitch:
“I’ll be honest with you, I told these guys in the locker room: I think if the committee really sits down and has good minds in there like I know they do, if they look at our resume and look at what we did, and our body of work is really good, it’s way better than a lot of people. When he says on the bubble, I’m not sure why our league’s not getting the recognition that we deserve. But when you look at it and you look at a team that has 17 wins and don’t have…is not following in their league, I don’t understand it. I think if they look at our body of work, I thought we went out, I thought we challenged ourselves. I thought we did well in our league. Obviously it didn’t end well today, but I thought we did enough. But like I said, that’s not up to me.”
On his conversation with official Matt Potter:
“I don’t know, I’m just fighting for my team, that’s it. All year long, I’ve been fighting for my team. Do I like us having 9-for-12-something free throw line for number 30? No. Do I like it? No, I don’t like it. But this has been going on all year, so we just dealt with it. We didn’t complain, we just dealt with it and then we just move on.”
On his biggest takeaway from tonight’s loss:
“We can’t come out the way we came out. We can’t spot a good team 10 points early. Today, I thought we spotted them 10 points early, and then we were playing catchup from there.”
On this season being an improvement:
“I don’t know, I don't look at that. Last year is last year. I know that’s something that you guys gotta bring up, but last year is last year. This is a complete different team. There’s two guys from that team that were here last year. Is it a building block? I mean, this is why I brought these guys here. I thought that we could have this kind of season, and a little better. I thought that we let some games slip away. But no, it’s just continuing to keep building and getting better and better.”
On potentially playing in the College Basketball Crown:
“Right now, we’re not even looking at that. Right now, we’re just concerned about hopefully hearing our name called on Sunday and then take it from there.”
Jayden Ross, UConn bench shine in blowout quarterfinal win over Xavier
By Sam Federman (@Sam_Federman)
NEW YORK — When UConn played its best basketball of the season during non-conference play, its bench was its biggest asset.
The Huskies not only survived the early part of the season while dealing with a hodgepodge of injuries to Braylon Mullins and Tarris Reed, Jr., but built up one of the nation’s top resumes.
While the Huskies have still lost just four games, the grind of Big East play has taken a toll on UConn’s depth, which has been inconsistent throughout the last few months. Now down Jaylin Stewart due to an injury of his own, it puts the onus on the three key reserves — Eric Reibe, Malachi Smith and Jayden Ross — to relieve the starters at the five, in the backcourt, and on the wing, respectively.
And they were all that they needed to be and more on Thursday, as UConn thumped Xavier, 93-68, to advance to a sixth consecutive Big East tournament semifinal. Ross was a plus-16 in 22 minutes, scoring nine points with four rebounds and three assists. Smith made two key threes in the first half and was a plus-14 in 23 minutes. Reibe scored nine points and grabbed four rebounds in 14 minutes when Reed sat on the bench.
“If we get that type of bench production,” head coach Dan Hurley said, “we’re going to win a lot of games the rest of this college basketball season.”
“They gave us a big spark,” Alex Karaban added. “When we got out to a big lead with the starting group, they came in there and just continued. There was no dropoff.”
Karaban may be the greatest beneficiary of the bench’s improved production.
When Hurley joked that his captain was “moving like a cargo ship,” after playing 25 minutes against Creighton, a game where the bench didn’t quite give enough, Karaban has had to play more and more minutes. He played 40 in each of the last two games of the regular season, including the loss to Marquette.
Because of how well Ross played on Thursday, Karaban only needed to play 30 minutes.
“Alex has been playing 40 minutes, and that’s not sustainable and it’s diminishing returns,” Hurley said. “So to be able to get Alex manageable minutes, and get J-Ross to 22 minutes, he brings an element on the perimeter defensively that we desperately need.”
“We’ve had a whole season to prepare,” Ross said. “And we’ve seen all the ups and downs of the season and almost all situations of the game. So I think now it’s just about putting it all together.”
Ross had two pick-sixes and helped limit Xavier’s wings throughout the night.
“It’s not anything new,” Smith said of Ross’ performance. “We know what he can do, you know what he does. When he’s just making plays, it’s just a boost for our team. Getting out in transition and getting dunks, those are game-changing plays, especially being in the Garden and being in Storrs South. It’s just amazing that he’s making plays, getting on the rim.”
Smith was also crucial. When Silas Demary, Jr. picked up two fouls in the first half, there was no dip when the backup point guard came into the game.
“The halftime situation could’ve been much different for us,” Hurley said. “But I thought Malachi was awesome in the first half.”
Even on one of Reed’s biggest nights of the season, Reibe gave UConn the one-two punch down low, and that more finesse-based look in the post.
Only one Husky starter played more than 30 minutes. Against Marquette, three UConn starters played more than 30 and another played 30. On nights where the bench thrives, UConn thrives.
“The level doesn’t drop with the substitution to the bench,” Reibe said. “We all just gotta keep it high and maybe even build up a bigger lead.”
Every year since rejoining the Big East, the Huskies have been one of the final four standing on Friday night. Against Georgetown, UConn will look to advance to its second Big East championship game of that stretch.
If it will, its reserves will be a massive part.
Villanova now shifts to Selection Sunday, NCAA Tournament, after shocking loss to Georgetown in Big East quarters
By Kyle Morello (@Kylemorello4)
NEW YORK — A night that was supposed to be the start of a new era of Villanova postseason basketball felt all too familiar on Thursday night at Madison Square Garden.
The Wildcats were outclassed by 11th-seeded Georgetown in the last game of quarterfinal Thursday at the Big East tournament, losing 78-64 and failing to make the semifinals for a fourth consecutive season.
Villanova entered the Big East tournament as the third seed, its highest finish since the 2022 tournament, when the Wildcats cut down the nets as the No. 2 seed. They were the clear third-best team in the league all season long and had rarely lost to a team worse than them. Only their home loss to Creighton in January was to a team not named St. John’s or UConn in Big East play. They had already beaten Georgetown twice this season. But as the old saying goes, it’s hard to beat the same team three times in a season.
Especially on a stage like this.
“I think when you have a young basketball team that has played really well all year long, and has had some struggles in big games, that’s part of the growing process and the learning process,” head coach Kevin Willard said after the loss.
Georgetown used its interior presence to give Villanova fits all night. The Hoyas outrebounded the Wildcats, 46-25, and had as many offensive rebounds as Villanova did defensive rebounds (16). Georgetown also outscored Villanova 36-20 in the paint, and 17-8 in second-chance points.
But it was more than that for Villanova. For a team ranked 42nd nationally in offensive rating according to KenPom, the Wildcats were anything but quality on Thursday. They had multiple stretches of scoreless streaks, including a 6:45 stretch to end the first half where they made just one basket.
“I thought a little bit of our offense late in the first half dictated a little bit of our defense,” Willard lamented. “That was probably the first time all year that our offense kind of shifted to our defense, instead of the other way around.”
The offense and rebounding was naturally going to take a hit without starter Matt Hodge, who tore his ACL in the loss to St. John’s on February 28. Malachi Palmer has stepped up to fill Hodge’s role, but it’s left a hole in a bench unit that wasn’t very deep to begin with.
“I think Malachi has done a really good job stepping in for Matt,” Willard said. “Where we struggle is when Malachi comes out of the game, so that’s something that I have a couple days where I’ve gotta try to figure out what we’re doing when (Tyler Perkins is) at the four. We just haven’t had much practice time since Matt’s gone down. We’ve been very delicate in practice.”
As Willard stated, it’s something Villanova will have just a few days to work on. Selection Sunday is just two days away, and the Wildcats’ first NCAA Tournament game will likely be four or five days after that.
As for figuring out how to win on the big stage, well, there’s no better time than their first game back in the big dance after a three-year drought.
Kevin Willard quote book: Georgetown
On Madison Square Garden and its atmosphere playing a factor:
“I think when you have a young basketball team that has played really well all year long and has had some struggles in big games, that’s part of the growing process and the learning process. That doesn’t stop you from boxing out, though. I mean, I think, again, they had more offensive rebounds than we did defensive rebounds, so I don’t think it was so much the setting this time. I just think Ed’s done a great job all year with his team. They have eight losses of four points or less. They beat Clemson at home, they went to Maryland and won. Before the big guy (Vincent Iwuchukwu) got hurt, they were really playing well. So this is a good basketball team. And Jeremiah Williams, I’m happy for him, because he's back playing like he did when he was at Rutgers. When he’s aggressive and getting in the lane, they’re tough to stop.”
On Malachi Palmer at the four spot:
“I think Malachi’s done a really good job stepping in for Matt. Where we struggle is when Malachi comes out of the game, so that’s something that I have a couple days where I gotta try to figure out what we're doing when Perk’s at the four. We haven’t had much practice time because since Matty’s gone down, we’ve been very delicate in practice. So I think that was one of the issues we had with the offensive end, we just haven’t been able to practice as good as we’ve been able to practice all year.”
On adjustments before the NCAA Tournament:
“I’ve gotta help the young guys out a little bit in these games. We struggled a little bit to run offense when Malachi wasn’t in there and we kind of got stuck going a little bit one-on-one. That’s kind of what I mean. I gotta help them a little bit with not being able to put them in that situation so much. And it was just unfortunate, with Malachi going out and Perk in there, we just kind of get stuck with a very simplistic offense, where with Malachi and Matt, we were able to do a lot more.”
On shooting 7-for-29 from three-point range:
“I thought we got a lot of really good looks throughout the game. They’re playing big drop coverage. They were in huge drop, so you’ve gotta take advantage of that and be able to do it. And unfortunately, Dev had a tough night, but Dev’s been great all year. So again, you’ve gotta take the shots that they give you, and I thought they did a good job in drop. It’s just, you’ve gotta make some of those shots.”
On the NCAA Tournament serving as a clean slate:
“No, again, part of my message to these guys a little bit is just enjoying this a little bit. We’ll let this one sting, we’ll go back and watch film on Sunday. They’re going to get a couple days off, which I think is well-deserved. We’ll come back Sunday and practice and watch film, and after Selection Sunday, it’s a whole new season. You’ve gotta give Georgetown credit, they played really good tonight.”


