Connect with us

Sports

No. 18 St. John’s seeks share of Big East title at Seton Hall

Published

on

NCAA Basketball: Seton Hall at St. JohnJan 20, 2026; New York, New York, USA; St. John’s Red Storm forward Dillon Mitchell (1) celebrates in the direction of Seton Hall Pirates guard A.J. Staton-McCray (14) in the second half at Madison Square Garden. Mandatory Credit: Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images

No. 18 St. John’s is on the verge of clinching at least a share of the Big East Conference regular-season title.

Seton Hall’s improvement is so drastic from last season that it earned a bye in next week’s Big East tournament and is seeking a signature win to enhance its bubble status for the NCAA tournament.

All that is on the agenda Friday night when the regional rivals meet in the regular-season finale in Newark, N.J.

St. John’s (24-6, 17-2 Big East) will end the regular season before No. 4 UConn (27-3, 17-2) faces Marquette on Saturday. If the Red Storm and Huskies finish tied, the Big East said the NET ranking will determine the top seed. As of Wednesday, UConn was No. 8 and St. John’s was No. 22.

“It would mean everything,” center Zuby Ejiofor said after scoring 23 points to help the Red Storm overcome a 12-point deficit in the second half in Tuesday’s 72-69 win over Georgetown.

Advertisement

“We’ve put our heart and soul into every day, every practice, every game,” Ejiofor said. “More than anything, I want the guys to experience that moment of winning a championship because they deserve it. That’s what they came here for. They came here for a reason. They came here to win big.”

St. John’s can clinch a share of the regular-season title for the sixth time in school history and the first time in consecutive seasons since 1984-85 and 1985-86.

The Red Storm have followed up their humbling 32-point loss at UConn on Feb. 25 with a lopsided win against Villanova and the comeback against Georgetown.

Advertisement

In the final 14:08, St. John’s outscored the Hoyas 36-21 as Joson Sanon scored all 15 of his points in that span. Dylan Darling added 12 points, including the tiebreaking layup after a steal with 6:43 left.

“We had to really dig deep … and that’s what it’s all about with a good basketball team, digging down,” St. John’s coach Rick Pitino said. “We did a lot of good things with 10 minutes to go in the game to come away with a victory.”

Picked last in the conference’s preseason poll, Seton Hall (20-10, 10-9) will finish fourth after going 2-18 in the Big East last season.

The Pirates are 0-3 this season against St. John’s and UConn with the losses by a combined 14 points, including a 65-60 loss at St. John’s when Seton Hall lost a 15-point lead in the second half on Jan. 20.

Advertisement

The Pirates are 4-2 in their past six games. Seton Hall rebounded from last weekend’s four-point loss at UConn with a 77-68 win at Xavier. Adam Clark scored 16, although he injured his quad, according to coach Shaheen Holloway.

“Obviously, it’s a good accomplishment, but there’s a lot of work still to be done,” Holloway said on his postgame radio interview. “We’re fighting for something. Like I told these guys: Nothing else matters right now except Friday night, making sure our seniors go out on a good note.”

–Field Level Media

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Sports

No. 19 Miami (Ohio) chases regular-season perfection at Ohio

Published

on

Syndication: The EnquirerMiami RedHawks guard Peter Suder (5) reacts after hitting a jump shot over Ohio Bobcats guard Jesse Burris (21) in the second half of the NCAA basketball game at Millett Hall in Oxford, Ohio, on Friday, Feb. 13, 2026.

No. 19 Miami (Ohio) looks to continue its historic run when it visits archrival Ohio in a Mid-American Conference rematch to close out the regular season Friday night in Athens, Ohio.

The RedHawks (30-0, 17-0 MAC), the nation’s only unbeaten team, became just the 15th squad in Division I men’s basketball history to win its first 30 games of the season when they held off Toledo 74-72 on Tuesday in Oxford, Ohio.

Ohio (15-15, 9-8) has lost back-to-back games and is coming off a 94-82 setback at UMass on Tuesday in Amherst, Mass.

Miami entered the national spotlight this week after former Auburn coach-turned-TV analyst Bruce Pearl criticized the RedHawks for an undefeated record that he said was not worthy of the NCAA Tournament unless they capture the MAC tournament title in Cleveland next week.

Miami answered the criticism with a win over Toledo that clinched its conference-record 22nd regular-season MAC championship and its first in 21 years.

Advertisement

“I like Bruce,” Miami coach Travis Steele said. “I do. Hey, Bruce is a great guy. I’m not calling Bruce and asking him for his opinion. I could care less what the heck he says. We control our own destiny. Let’s prepare the right way. Let’s focus on the right things.”

The two teams met on Feb. 13 at Miami, with the RedHawks pulling away in the second half for a 90-74 win. Five different RedHawks scored in double figures, led by Brant Byers with 21 points and Peter Suder with 20.

Suder had 19 in Tuesday’s win over the Rockets. Antwone Woolfolk added 14 points and six rebounds.

Advertisement

“We gotta move on quick to Ohio,” Steele said. “We still got a lot of season left, but this is a big deal. This is awesome. I’m so happy for our guys. That was one of our goals that we had beginning the years when the regular-season title. Check.”

The RedHawks are aiming to become the first MAC team to finish the regular season unbeaten in both conference play and overall.

“I want to finish this season undefeated,” Steele added. “I want to win at Ohio. That’s a rivalry game. It’s a players’ game. Our guys are going to be excited to play. I know their guys will be excited to play as well. And then, can we go win the MAC tournament up in Cleveland? We want to leave absolutely no doubt, absolutely no doubt who the heck we are.”

In its last game, Ohio led 73-72 before UMass scored 11 straight and finished the game on a 22-9 run.

Advertisement

Jackson Paveletzke, who had 22 against Miami in the first meeting, led the Bobcats against the Minutemen with 24 points and seven assists. Javan Simmons added 16 points, grabbed five rebounds and had three assists. Kiir Kuany got his first career start, scoring 13 points and grabbing five rebounds.

–Field Level Media

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Sports

You could see the bat swing

Published

on

Former India captain Anil Kumble opined that Sanju Samson combated the threat of Jofra Archer in the T20 World Cup 2026 semifinal against England by looking to hit straight. Kumble added that Archer got his lengths wrong, which the Indian opener used to his advantage brilliantly.

Samson top-scored for the Men in Blue with 89 off 42 balls as India beat England by seven runs in the second semifinal of the T20 World Cup 2026 at the Wankhede Stadium in Mumbai on Thursday, March 5. Sent into bat, the defending champions posted 253-7 on the board and then held England to 246-7.

Samson had a tough time against Archer during the India-England home series in early 2025. The fast bowler dismissed the Indian batter thrice, overpowering him with pace and bounce. However, the opener was in complete control against Archer on Thursday, smashing him for boundaries with ease. During a discussion on ESPNcricinfo, Kumble analyzed the Samson-Archer duel and commented:

“I think the lengths that Archer bowled [was the difference]. It needs to be by the nose. Except for one ball, the line was wrong and then he [Samson] picked it up nicely for a six because the fine leg was up. But, what was really good about Samson was that he was looking to hit straight again.

“He played according to the merit of the ball and that’s how he exactly countered Jofra Archer. Because of the form that he is in, you could see the bat swing coming straight,” the former India leg-spinner added.

Samson struck eight fours and seven sixes in his stunning knock against England on Thursday. He was looking good for a hundred when he was caught at deep cover off Will Jacks’ bowling.


“One of the unbelievable knocks” – Faf du Plessis on Sanju Samson’s innings

Former South African captain Faf du Plessis praised Samson for not wasting his form and converting starts into impactful knocks. He described the keeper-batter’s innings against England in Mumbai as ‘unbelievable’. Du Plessis said:

“The worst thing you can do as a batter in form like that is lose your concentration and get a nice 20 and don’t play an impactful innings. He’s done that [got a big score] again in back-to-back innings. One of the unbelievable knocks.”

Before his scintillating 89 against England, Samson had scored 97* off 50 balls against the West Indies at Eden Gardens in Kolkata in India’s last Super 8 match of the T20 World Cup 2026.

Advertisement