Archive for the ‘Big East Basketball’ Category

#1 Pitt to face #4 Xavier with Elite 8 on the line

Thursday, March 26th, 2009

2009 NCAA Tournament - East Region - TD Banknorth Garden, Boston
No. 1 Pittsburgh (30-4) vs. No. 4 Xavier (27-7)
Time/Day/TV: 7:27 EDT/Thursday/CBS

Pittsburgh Road to the Sweet 16:
Defeated No. 16 East Tennessee State, 72-62 Defeated Oklahoma State, 84-76.

Pittsburgh leading scorers:
Sam Young 18.9, DeJuan Blair 15.8, Levance Fields 10.6

Xavier Road to the Sweet 16:
Defeated No. 13 Portland State, 77-59 Defeated No. 12 Wisconsin, 60-49

Pittsburgh Moment of Truth: The Panthers haven’t been pristine in their first two wins. In fact, they have had to overcome 32 turnovers. But they have managed to win.

Xavier Moment of Truth: The first 30 minutes of the second round game against Wisconsin concerned the Musketeers who were involved in a tight game. However, their defense in the final 10 minutes was the difference.

Key Matchup: Pittsburgh point guard Fields vs. Xavier defense. As difficult as it is for teams to move the ball efficiently, Fields must run the offense to the point where Xavier’s defense will not create as many problems. Fields averages 7.6 assists per game.

Who Wins and Why: Pittsburgh. This is the round that usually gives the Panthers problems. But with a menacing front court of Young and Blair, it will be hard for Xavier’s front court to match that.

By Kevin Lonnquist
DFN Sports Writer

Big East Tournament tips off today

Tuesday, March 10th, 2009

It’s that time of year college basketball fans! The Big East Tournament tips off later today and the 2009 NCAA Basketball Tournament will be selected on Sunday night. This year all 16 Big East teams are invited to the 2009 Big East Tournament, so let’s take a look at the matchups:

Big East Tournament 2009 - First Round - March 10, 2009

  • #9 Cincinnati v #16 DePaul - buy Big East merchandise
  • #12 Georgetown v #13 St. Johns
  • #10 Notre Dame v #15 Rutgers
  • #11 Seton Hall v #14 South Florida

Big East Tournament 2009 - Second Round - March 11, 2009

  • #8 Providence v Cincinnati/DePaul winner
  • #5 Marquette v #Georgetown/St. Johns winner
  • #7 West Virginia v #Notre Dame/Rutgers winner
  • #6 Syracuse v Seton Hall/South Florida winner

Big East Tournament 2009 - Quarterfinals - March 12, 2009

  • #1 Louisville v #8/9/16 winner
  • #4 Villanova v #5/12/13 winner
  • #2 Pittsburgh v #7/10/15 winner
  • #3 Connecticut v #6/11/14 winner

Games will continue on Friday with the semifinals and Saturday with the Big East Tournament Championship game to crown an automatic bid for the NCAA Tournament.

2009 Big East Tournament Schedule

Saturday, February 21st, 2009

The 2009 Big East Tournament schedule is set as all 16 teams will participate in the Big East Tournament for the first time this season. The Tourney tips off on Tuesday, March 10th with four games. March 11th will also feature four games as just 8 teams will remain heading into Thursday’s Big East Tournament Quarterfinals round. In the Quarterfinals we will get our first look at the #1-4 seeds who have byes up to this point. Finally, the Semifinal round features just two games as the Final Four teams work down to the two that will compete in the 2009 Big East Basketball Tournament Championship Game on March 14th.

Villanova tops Syracuse in Big East Tournament

Wednesday, March 12th, 2008

The Big East Tournament is underway and the Syracuse’s NCAA Tournament bubble may very well have burst. #8 seed Villanova trailed #9 Syracuse by one at the half before a 55-point second half by the Wildcats en route to a 82-63 win.

Follow the entire 2008 Big East Tournament online with Big East Fans!

Villanova puts an end to Huskies’ winning streak

Monday, February 25th, 2008

Once is accident.  Two is a trend.  Three became a problem on Saturday afternoon for No.13 UConn against Big East foe Villanova.   The Huskies have been living on the edge as of late.  They needed overtime and a Craig Austrie jumper with 0.2 seconds left to steal a win down in Orlando against South Florida, 74-73, and the Huskies were pushed to the brink earlier this week against DePaul.  UConn, down 13 at one point, used heart and desperation to battle back, using a 23-7 run in final 10 and a half minutes to silence the Blue Demons.  Two straight games the Huskies had poor starts and early troubles, yet managed to dig deep and pull out two consecutive come-from-behind victories.  However, the Huskies ran into a Villanova squad, a Wildcat squad that’s been playing with their own desperation of late, fighting for their tournament lives. They were losers of five straight, and many left them for dead as far as their chances of possibly making the NCAA Tournament, but don’t look now, Villanova is generating some worthy bubble talk, as far as the tournament goes.  The Wildcats have won three in a row since falling in the final seconds on a questionable call to Georgetown.  Villanova has sunk St. John’s and West Virginia convincingly, and now the Wildcats outlast one of the hottest teams in the country.  They’re not a lock by any means to even get an invite, but the door is still open for Villanova.  Their next two games will go a long way in telling whether or not the Wildcats are tournament worthy.  The Wildcats get Marquette at home on Monday night and travel to Louisville to face off against the Cardinals.   In hostile territory, UConn did exactly the opposite of what head coach Jim Calhoun wanted.  The Huskies got behind the eight-ball early, falling in a 14-2 hole.  The raucous crowd at the Wachovia Center was firmly planted behind the home Wildcats, and the Huskies were overwhelmed from the outset, trailing by as many as 15 in the first half.  UConn forget they had center Hasheem Thabeet inside.  Touches were few and far between for the big man, and the Huskies left the Wachovia Center losers for the first time in 10 games.For Villanova to entertain the idea of victory, Scottie Reynolds needed to be the best player on the floor, and he delivered.  Reynolds finished the afternoon with 18 points, 15 coming in the second half, but he wasn’t without help.  A pair of freshmen stepped up and played like seniors to help Reynolds shoulder the offensive load.  Antonio Pena had 10 points, and Corey Stokes finished with 18, all coming off the bench.  UConn’s shortened bench finished with only three points, while Villanova’s bench poured in 20 points.   The other major storyline in the game was the Wildcats’ master plan in defending Huskies big man Hasheem Thabeet.  Villanova was dead set on not allowing Thabeet to be a factor, not allowing Thabeet to be the X-factor he’s been during UConn’s 10-game winning streak.  Hats off to Villanova head coach Jay Wright.  Every time Thabeet got his mitts on the ball, the Wildcats collapsed on him like a cheap lawn chair.  Wright sent ball boys, statisticians, announcers, fans, anyone he could find to throw at Thabeet.  The game plan paid off.  Despite missing only a minute of the game, Thabeet finished with just eight points (two in the first half) and attempted only three field goals.  While the big man had 10 boards, the Wildcats did a good job of steering clear of Thabeet, who had only three blocks in the game.   From the opening tap, you knew that a third come-from-behind win wasn’t in the cards for the visiting Huskies.  UConn made only one of their first eight shots.  Hasheem Thabeet had exactly one more touch than I did in the first half (1).  A.J. Price, who finished with a team-high 16 points, started out just 2-of-9.  UConn had nine first-half cough-ups, and zero fast-break points.   All good things must come to end, and while one streak ends, another carries on.  While impressive and eye-opening, (the Huskies defeated four ranked teams during the streak) UConn’s 10-game winning streak is over.  Villanova’s officially gone streaking, winning their third in a row, but more importantly, the Wildcats are back on the tournament bubble, still giving themselves an opportunity to play ball in late March.

West Virginia pounds Rutgers, Marquette blows by Pitt

Monday, February 18th, 2008

Five players scored in double figures, as West Viriginia handed Rutgers their fifth consecutive loss 81-63 on Thursday night.  The Mountaineers have struggled of late, winning for just the second time in their last five outings.  West Virginia led 42-27 at the break and Rutgers never threatened in the second half.  Rutgers couldn’t keep a hold of the basketball, committing 17 turnovers that resulted in 29 easy points for the Mountaineers, who turned the ball over just four times. 

The Golden Eagles swarmed the Panthers, using a 17-0 run early as the second half began and No.25 Marquette routed No.24 Pittsburgh on Friday night, 72-54.  Jerel McNeal had 17 points for Marquette, and while Dominic James was held to just five points, he dished out an array of beautiful assists, 12 in all, and James didn’t turn the ball over once.

Pittsburgh got a huge emotional boost, returning guard Levance Fields to the lineup, who missed the last 12 games with a broken left foot.  Fields, as expected, struggled to get his legs under him the first time out, shooting 1-of-7 from the field for four points.  Sam Young led the Panthers with 18 points.  Pittsburgh had a hand in helping Marquette during their 17-0 run, committing eight turnovers in the opening nine minutes of the second half and misfiring on nine of their first 11 shot attempts.  The Golden Eagles dominated the Panthers in the paint as well, pounding Pittsburgh 16-2 in the lane.  Freshman DeJuan Blair was silenced, finishing with just six points and five rebounds, and it was a tough night as well for Ronald Ramon, who had four points on 1-of-7 shooting.  Overall, Marquette’s defense limited Pittsburgh to 37 percent shooting from the field.  The Golden Eagles picked up their first win against a ranked opponent this season.

Huskies make it 8 in a row, South Florida stuns Syracuse, Cincy topples St. John’s

Monday, February 18th, 2008

 No.17 UConn 84  No.18 Notre Dame 76

A.J. Price left Notre Dame with more questions than answers after Wednesday night, as Price led No.17 UConn past No.18 Notre Dame 84-76 in the match up of the week in the Big East.  The Huskies survived another dominating performance by Irish forward Luke Harangody, who had 32 points and 16 rebounds in the game.

Price dished out nine assists to go along with his 26 points, and he connected on four 3-pointers and shot 10-of-19 from the field.  Jeff Adrien added 13 points and nine boards and Craig Austie added 14, but it was Austrie at the defensive end matched up against Irish guard Kyle McAlarney that made the difference.  McAlarney was held to just 12 points this time around, after buring UConn (19-5, 8-3) for 32 in the first meeting earlier this season.  The Irish were unable to get other players on track aside from Harangody and head coach Mike Brey couldn’t find someone to step up in place of McAlarney.  UConn’s defense in the second half held Notre (18-5, 8-3) Dame to 33 percent shooting

 South Florida 89  Syracuse 78

As impressive as UConn’s victory over Notre Dame was, South Florida stole the show on Wednesday night, shocking Syracuse 89-78 behind the duo of Kentrell Gransberry and Dominique Jones.  Gransberry had 23 and nine rebounds and Jones scored a game-high 29 points.  South Florida (11-15, 2-11)blew a 16-point to DePaul in their last contest, but used a 20-1 run down the stretch to run away from the Orange.  Donte Greene led Syracuse (17-9, 7-6) with 17 points and Jonny Flynn added 16.  Flynn has now logged 40 minutes in each of the last six games.

 Cincinnati 60 St. John’s 43

Cincinnati surpassed their win total from a year ago with a 60-43 win over St. John’s.  John Williamson led the Bearcats with 25 points and 11 rebounds.  Cincinnati (12-12, 7-5) held St John’s a terrible night shooting, making just 12 field goals the entire game, five of which came from beyond the arc.  The Red Storm (10-14, 4-9) shot just 5-of-22 in the 1st half, and had their three game winning streak snapped in the process.  The Bearcats find themselves currently in the thick of the Big East Tournament picture. 

Beatdown Tuesday as Pitt, Marquette and Louisville cruise

Saturday, February 16th, 2008

No.23 Louisville 88  DePaul 68

Terrence Williams matched his season high of 22 points and David Padgett added 20 to help No.23 Louisville cruise past DePaul 88-68.  The Cardinals once again used a stifling defense to win their fourth straight, holding DePaul to 37 percent shooting.  Louisville (19-6, 9-3) jumped all over DePaul early, leading 23-8, and led 37-21 before DePaul’s 10-2 cut the lead to 39-31 at the half.  Dar Tucker’s 22 points off the bench couldn’t help the Blue Demons (10-14, 5-7) avoid their fifth loss in the last six games, and the Blue Demons are clinging to life in the playoff picture in the Big East, sitting in the 11th spot.

No.25 Marquette 89  Seton Hall 64

No doubt about this one, the Golden Eagles made it look effort-less against Seton Hall.  Marquette smothered the Pirates (15-10, 5-7) early and often, scoring the game’s first 15 points and leading 21-4 after just seven minutes of action.  Marquette (17-6, 7-5) led 40-22 at halftime, putting this one away in the first 20-minute frame.  Lazard Hayward led four Marquette players in double figures with 23 and a game-high nine boards.  The Golden Eagles pounded on the Pirates 43-29 on the glass.  Jeremy Hazell led Seton Hall with 18 points and Brian Laing finished with 17 and pulled down just three rebounds.  Marquette sweeps the season series with Seton Hall, and the Golden Eagles are winners of four of their last six.

No. 24 Pittsburgh 82  Providence 63

Providence hung around in the first half, trailing by five at the break, as the Friars wouldn’t allow the Panthers to run and hide.  Then, the second half came.

Pittsburgh held Providence to just six points in the first 11 minutes of action in the second half, allowing Pittsburgh to pull away from Providence 82-63.  Sam Young’s career-high 22 points propelled the Panthers (19-5, 7-4) to their 14th home win of the season and Ronald Ramon and DeJuan Blair finished with 15 points apiece.  It hasn’t been pretty for Providence (13-11, 4-8) lately.  They’ve lost six of their last seven, and are now winless against Pittsburgh in their last eight tries.  To make matters worse, the loss drops the Friars to 1-6 on the road this season in the Big East.

Wildcats done in by zebras on Big Monday

Saturday, February 16th, 2008

Sorry Villanova fans, I feel for you, I really do. 

The Wildcats’ most recent defeat to No.8 Georgetown signaled the end of Rivalry Week, but it wasn’t without some dramatics.  It was everything you’d expect.  Two big time rivals going head-to-head, with the memory of 1985 still fresh in everyone’s minds. 

As difficult as wins are to get in the Big East, the Wildcats nearly pulled off the upset over the Hoyas, a win that would given the Wildcats confidence, but new life going into the last leg of their schedule.  But instead, for the sixth time in the last seven games, the Wildcats were left with an empty and losing feeling.

Villanova guard Corey Stokes was whistled for a foul on Georgetown guard Jonathan Wallace with 0.1 seconds left in the game, and Wallace walked almost 70 feet the other, sunk both free throws and rescued Georgetown from the upset.  At first, I thought the whistle was blown because Wallace had stepped out of bounds, but it became apparent that the official signaled Stokes for a foul.

There’s a couple ways to look at this, but ultimately that was an awfully touchy call to make in such a crucial point in the game.  Certainly, you don’t hear any of the Hoyas refuting the call and rightfully so.  A win is a win is a win, and Georgetown was damn lucky to pull out the victory.  But I’m sorry, on a good, chilly day along the East coast in February, there are strong winds that have bumped or nudged Wallace harder than Stokes did.

What’s lost in all this is the fact that I have no clue how in the world Villanova was in the game.  They shot 25 percent in the game.  They were 4-of-31 shooting in the second half, and went 1-of-21 in the final 12 minutes of the game.  And still, Scottie Reynolds had a chance to win it on Villanova’s last possession of the game.  Again I’ll state:  Villanova shot 13 percent in the second half, and STILL almost won.

From the Georgetown side of things, this may be the most perplexing win of the season.  How they held Villanova to such a putrid night shooting from the field, especially holding them to one field goal in the last 12 minutes, and still came away with the win is head scratching.  Sometimes it’s just better to be lucky than good, and the zebras helped bail out the Hoyas in the end. 

Big East Fans to cover Big East Tournament

Friday, February 15th, 2008

Big East Fans is proud to announce that they will be providing 2008 Big East Basketball Tournament updates this season. The Big East Tournament will be held March 12-15 at Madison Square Garden in New York with the winner receiving the Big East’s automatic bid into the NCAA Tournament. Big East Fans will be providing Big East Tournament schedules, scores and updates throughout the 2008 Tournament beginning with march 12 games and through the Big East Tournament Championship Game on March 15th.