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Oakland YAYS

March 22, 2024 by Digital Sports Desk

PITTSBURGH – (Staff and Wire Service Report) – Oakland University was so far off the map before Thursday that casual fans of the NCAA Tournament needed reminding the school is in Michigan — not California.

Embed from Getty Images

The Golden Grizzlies received the No. 14 seed in the South Region, knocked off third-seeded Kentucky and became the latest small school to enter the March Madness pantheon.

“This changed everything,” coach Greg Kampe said Thursday. “There’s nobody in the country that doesn’t know what Oakland basketball is.”

Either Oakland or No. 11 seed North Carolina State will extend a stunning run to the Sweet 16 when they face off in the second round of the tournament Saturday.

Kampe has led Oakland (24-11) for 40 seasons, far longer than the school has competed at the Division I level. The Golden Grizzlies’ 80-76 upset of Kentucky marked the first time the program won a game in the Round of 64.

Jack Gohlke knocked down 10 of 20 3-point shots, becoming the fifth player in NCAA Tournament history to make double-digit 3s in a game. He scored 32 points, and Trey Townsend added 17 points and 12 rebounds after he posted up and made a turnaround jumper over 7-footer Ugonna Onyenso in the final minutes.

“It’s such a great thing to see our fanbase travel,” said Townsend, who averages 16.9 points, 7.9 rebounds and 3.1 assists. “We wanted Pittsburgh (or) Indianapolis because we knew they would travel if they could drive … Seeing them out there, my parents are here, my dad is right back there. To win with them here was a special thing for sure and we’re definitely not done yet.”

One question for Saturday’s game against the Wolfpack (23-14) is how the Golden Grizzlies will match up against NC State’s DJ Burns Jr., all 6-foot-9, 275 pounds of him.

Burns has been on a heater for NC State, which won five games in five days to storm through the ACC tournament before beating No. 6 Texas Tech 80-67 on Thursday. Burns has shot 24-of-34 for 55 points over his past three games.

“He was a local star for a whole year and now everybody in the national media is starting to understand that,” NC State coach Kevin Keatts said. “I mean, he’s just fun. He scores and he gets beat up all the time. And he’s almost gotta play through contact. But it is so fun to watch him.

“And you know, I consider him a closer for us. We put him in the game, and he closes the game.”

While four Wolfpack players have done the majority of the scoring this year — DJ Horne (16.9 ppg), Burns (12.5), Jayden Taylor (11.6) and Casey Morsell (11.4) — contributions are coming from up and down the bench.

Both Ben Middlebrooks (21 points) and Mohamed Diarra (17) put up career-high totals against Texas Tech, and Michael O’Connell scored in double figures in all five games of the ACC tournament before dishing six assists Thursday.

NC State and Oakland likely can appreciate one another’s paths to the Round of 32. Both teams, of course, are hungry for more.

“The whole thing down the stretch has been, once we knew we had won a ring, the whole banter in the locker room has been, what’s it going to say on that ring, right?” Kampe said. “What’s it going to say on that ring: just Horizon League champ? NCAA? Sweet 16? Final Four? I’ve put that thought in their mind, and they’ve really battled for it, and they understand that their life got changed (Thursday), but it could get changed a hell of a lot more if we keep this thing going.”

– Field Level Media

Filed Under: March Madness, NCAA, NCAA Basketball Tagged With: March Madness, Oakland

PGA Tour: Valspar Championship

March 21, 2024 by PGA Tour Brunch

PALM HARBOR – The PGA Tour concludes its annual “Florida Swing” with this week’s Valspar Championship, which begins Thursday on the Copperhead Course at Innisbrook Resort in Palm Harbor, Fla.

The field features two of the top 10 players in the world rankings, and our golf experts preview the event along with their favorite prop picks and best bets to win this week.

VALSPAR CHAMPIONSHIP
Location: Palm Harbor, Fla., March 21-24
Course: Innisbrook Resort, Copperhead Course (Par 71, 7,340 yards)
Purse: $8.4M (Winner: $1.512M)
Defending Champion: Taylor Moore
FedEx Cup Leader: Scheffler

HOW TO FOLLOW
TV: Thursday-Friday, 2-6 p.m. ET (Golf Channel); Saturday-Sunday, 1-3 p.m. (GC), 3-6 p.m. (NBC)
Streaming (ESPN+): Thursday-Friday, 7:30 a.m.-6 p.m. ET; Saturday-Sunday, 7:45 a.m.-6 p.m.
X: @ValsparChamp

PROP PICKS
–Matt NeSmith to Beat Webb Simpson (-110 at DraftKings): NeSmith tied for third here two years ago and is coming off a solid T26 at The Players after missing three of his previous four cuts. Simpson has plummeted to 235th in the world rankings and hasn’t finished better than T30 in his past seven starts dating back to September.
–Cameron Young to Finish Top 20 (+120 at BetMGM): Young is still seeking his first PGA Tour victory, which could come this week against a softer field. He’s +500 to win the tournament, but we like the safety net and a still solid payout until Young proves he can close on Sunday. He followed three consecutive top-20s with a T36 at Bay Hill and a T54 at The Players.
–Doug Ghim to Beat Min Woo Lee Round 1 (-110 at DraftKings): Ghim has quietly put together five consecutive top-20 finishes, highlighted by a T16 at The Players. He also finished T27 here last year and has more course knowledge than Lee, who is playing many PGA Tour stops for the first time as a tour rookie. Lee is the bigger household name, but he hasn’t been in top form, posting a T54 at TPC Sawgrass and a T44 at Bay Hill after a T2 at the Cognizant Classic.

2024 Prop Picks Record: 16-16-1

BEST BETS
–Xander Schauffele (+800 at BetMGM) wasn’t able to close the deal on Sunday — again — at The Players. Can he rebound mentally to claim a win against a more modest field? He does have five top-10s in seven events this season. His is the book’s biggest liability this week, as Schauffele leads the field with 19.4 percent of the money backing him to win.
–Sam Burns (+1100) followed four consecutive top-10s with a T30 and a T45 the past two weeks. But the 2021 and 2022 Valspar champion also finished sixth at Innisbrook last year. Burns is third this week with 6.4 percent of the total bets backing him.
–Jordan Spieth (+1400) opened the year with a third at The Sentry and added a T6 in Phoenix but has a missed cut and a DQ among his past three starts. He won the Valspar in 2015 and tied for third last year.
–Justin Thomas (+1400) is coming off his second missed cut in three starts following a string of seven consecutive T12s or better. He’s BetMGM’s third biggest liability this week, having drawn 10.9 percent of the total money.
–Brian Harman (+2000) missed out on a playoff at The Players by a single shot following a T12 at Bay Hill. He has missed the cut in five of his past six appearances at the event. Harman is the book’s second biggest liability as he has been backed by the second most bets and the third most money at 9.2 percent in both markets.

NOTES
–World No. 7 Patrick Cantlay withdrew on Sunday, leaving No. 5 Xander Schauffele and No. 8 Brian Harman as the lone top-10 players in the field. No. 20 Tom Kim also withdrew over the weekend.
–The closing three holes on the Copperhead Course are known as the “Snake Pit,” featuring a pair of difficult par-4s sandwiching the 200-yard par-3.
–University of Florida teammates Fred Biondi and Ricky Castillo are in the field. Biondi is coming off a T32 in Puerto Rico, while Castillo will be making his non-major PGA Tour debut.
–European Ryder Cup captain Luke Donald is among the sponsors invites, along with Ryan Palmer.
–Vijay Singh holds the tournament scoring record of 266 set in 2004, while Matt NeSmith (Round 2, 2022) and Padraig Harrington (Round 1, 2012) share the 18-hole record of 10-under 61.

–Field Level Media

Filed Under: PGA TOUR Tagged With: PGA Tour

Baseball Starts Season in Seoul

March 19, 2024 by Digital Sports Desk

SEOUL – (Staff and Wire Service Report) – Major League Baseball’s regular season begins Wednesday in Seoul, South Korea, and Tuesday the league announced the starting pitchers for that game and the 15 Opening Day games that will be played March 28.

No fewer than 20 of the 30 pitchers named are All-Stars, and four of the Opening Day starters will be appearing with a new team.

Those staff aces making their debuts for their new teams are Corbin Burnes of the Baltimore Orioles, Tyler Glasnow of the Los Angeles Dodgers, Frankie Montas of the Cincinnati Reds and Alex Wood of the Oakland Athletics.

In the Seoul Series opener, at 6:05 a.m. ET, Glasnow and the Dodgers meet Yu Darvish and the San Diego Padres with the teams playing again 24 hours later.

MLB Network will have all the preview material for Opening Day covered with nine studio shows airing March 27.

Highlighting the March 28 slate is the lone interleague matchup, ESPN’s national broadcast between last season’s World Series champion Texas Rangers and the Chicago Cubs in Arlington, Texas.

The Rangers will send right-hander Nathan Eovaldi against Cubs lefty Justin Steele.

The Dodgers, favorites to win the 2024 World Series, return from Seoul to host the St. Louis Cardinals March 28.

Prized free-agent acquisition Shohei Ohtani is expected to play his first home game for the Dodgers in that contest, an MLB Network-televised matchup against Cardinals right-hander Miles Mikolas.

A pair of leading American League contenders meet in Houston when the New York Yankees send Nestor Cortes against the Astros’ Framber Valdez.

There are also six divisional contests, highlighted by the Philadelphia Phillies’ visit to the Atlanta Braves in a rematch of the National League Division Series. The Phillies will send Zack Wheeler to the mound while ace Spencer Strider takes the bump for the Braves.

The Braves and Phillies combined to win 194 games last season.

–Field Level Media

Filed Under: MLB Tagged With: MLB, MLB Opening Day

Boston Back-to-Back: Wizards & Pistons

March 18, 2024 by Digital Sports Desk

BOSTON – (Staff and Wire Service Report) – The Boston Celtics will have a chance to improve the NBA’s best record when they face the visiting Detroit Pistons on Monday night. Boston (53-14) was missing three starters but extended its winning streak to five games with a 130-104 victory over the Washington Wizards on the road Sunday.

The Celtics played without center Kristaps Porzingis (right hamstring strain) and guards Jaylen Brown (ankle) and Derrick White (hand). Porzingis hasn’t played in Boston’s last five games.

Sam Hauser made 10 of 13 3-point attempts and tossed in 30 points before he left the game with an ankle injury in the third quarter. Payton Pritchard had a career-high 13 assists in the win.

“Just trying to play the right type of basketball – what we’ve been trying to do all year,” Pritchard said. “When I have the ball in my hands always trying to get my guys easy shots. I tell people all the time Sam is one of the top shooters in the league, so for us anytime he’s open we have to find him. It’s almost automatic. It was a good team win.”

Boston center Al Horford is unlikely to suit up Monday since he has not played in games on back-to-back nights this season.

The Pistons and Wizards are battling to stay out of the NBA’s cellar. The Pistons (12-55) are 14th in the Eastern Conference, one spot ahead of the Wizards (11-57), who own the league’s worst record.

Detroit is coming off Sunday’s 104-101 home loss to Miami. Evan Fournier scored a season-high 18 points for the Pistons. Cade Cunningham added 17 points and nine assists for Detroit, but went 1-for-6 from beyond the 3-point arc.

MIami prevailed when Bam Adebayo made a 3-pointer at the buzzer.

“When you lose a game like that it’s hard to come down on the guys about anything,” Pistons coach Monty Williams said. “We battled when it didn’t look great. We executed some situations well defensively, holding them to 25 points (in the fourth quarter) and the point total in the second half (44 points) speaks for itself. We had a chance to win a big-time game at home.”

Miami’s Duncan Robinson made 7 of 12 3-pointers and scored 30 points. The Heat outscored the Pistons 39-27 in the second quarter. Miami also beat Detroit 108-95 on Friday.

“It wasn’t so much our scheme as it was our awareness of who was hot in the situation,” Williams said. “Robinson just hit shot after shot, and we didn’t switch well onto him. He even got stuff at the basket, which is not what he’s known for. We did not have great awareness of his scoring ability in the second.

“We have to be more of a consistent team. We brought that up last game in the shoot-around, how consistency helps you keep your rhythm. We just haven’t been that consistent these last two games.”

Monday’s game will be the second time the Celtics and Pistons have met this season. Boston overcame a 21-point deficit to earn a 128-122 overtime victory in Boston on Dec. 28. Porzingis led all scorers with 35 points in the last meeting, and White tossed in 10 of his 23 points in overtime. Cunningham had 31 points and nine assists for Detroit.

The teams also will face each other Friday night in Detroit.

–Field Level Media

Filed Under: Boston Sports, Celtics, NBA Tagged With: Boston Celtics, NBA

TL’s Sunday Sports N☘️TES | March 17

March 17, 2024 by Terry Lyons

The View from O’Grady’s, Clare Island, Ireland 🇮🇪

 

March 17, 2024

By TERRY LYONS, Editor of Digital Sports Desk

NEW YORK – On Friday, the Big East Conference and Madison Square Garden announced that the BIG EAST Tournament will continue to be held at The Garden through 2032. The announcement guaranteed that The World’s Most Famous Arena will host 50 consecutive BIG EAST Tournaments.

MSG Entertainment and the BIG EAST have been partners since the Tournament was first played at the iconic venue in 1983 – the 50th consecutive event will take place in 2032. … (How old will you be?) … The BIG EAST Tournament continues to be college basketball’s longest-running post-season championship held at the same location.

“Our extension with MSG means the BIG EAST will have the privilege of playing our men’s basketball tournament at ‘The Mecca’ for five consecutive decades,” said conference Commissioner Val Ackerman. “This event, a New York City staple, has long been synonymous with tradition, rivalries and heart-stopping moments.”

Yes, it has.

BIG EAST memories run deep and remain important to so many who grew up alongside the basketball conference and its postseason tournament. In the early years, the late Dave Gavitt, as conference Commissioner, tried to spread the wealth around. From Providence to Syracuse to Hartford, the tournament bounced around the way most college basketball tournaments do, hosted by Gavitt and Providence College, then Syracuse University, the Dome Ranger and their strange Orange mascot and on to Hartford, where the University of Connecticut played all the “big games.”

In 1983, when St. John’s and Chris Mullin ruled, it was Madison Square Garden’s turn and the Johnnies defeated Boston College (85-77) in a very memorable final game. The light bulb popped-up, right over Gavitt’s head, as he realized the New York City location was special and centrally located between the likes of Georgetown (DC) and Chestnut Hill (Massachusetts). Teams, players and alum all loved the idea of meeting up every spring in “The World’s Most Famous Arena,” as the late John Condon announced to great patrons. Condon, the head of the sport of boxing for MSG, was also the famed public address announcer. His voice echoed over the 19,500 fans for both St. John’s and New York Knickerbocker games. It was too good to be true. The BIG EAST Tournament was dropped in our laps.

The event sold out every spring and the Garden sold more beer on BIG EAST Thursday (two doubleheaders) than on any day since the 1964 ECAC Holiday Festival invited Princeton (Bill Bradley), Michigan (Cazzie Russell), LaSalle, Cincinnati, Temple, Syracuse, Manhattan and St. John’s in one of the great in-season tournaments of all-time.

The rest has been a glorius history, a legacy that will surely extend to the Year 2032 but probably well beyond.

HERE NOW, THE NOTES: Aside from the annual BIG EAST Championship, there’s been plenty of great basketball from Conferences East to West. Here are a few thoughts that arise from watching the past few weeks, and especially teams who’ve looked good in their tournaments.

Mississippi State (21-12, 8-10 in SEC) put a hurtin’ on the Vols of Tennessee – (24-8) – (who were being considered a potential No. 1 bid team). Mississippi State lost to Auburn in the SEC Tournament Semis (Saturday), (Auburn 73,-66). The final is played on Sunday.

Iowa State (26-7, 13-5 in Big 12) – as of Saturday morning when this segment was written. Look out for the Cyclones.

We’ll see who gets to play Iowa State on the annual America? Who Can Dance Show.

Speaking of the Selection Show … It’s Sunday evening, March 17.  Dan Gavitt (son of Dave) will chair a group of college basketball experts who’ve been watching games and theoretically every team in every conference to know the good, bad and ugly. Can you imagine a bunch of oldsters hanging out at a high school auditorium to decide what couples should get invitations to the Big Dance?

That’s what happens Sunday evening.


black and white smartphone case
Photo by Elena Mozhvilo on Unsplash

ST. PATRICK’S DAY THOUGHTS AND TEASES FROM THE PAST: There are plenty of memories of being pulled from my desk chair at 645 Fifth Ave to head down to 47th Street or, better yet, just join-in with the lads marching straight up Fifth – following the green line painted on the asphalt.

One year comes to mind, when the Houston Rockets were lucky enough to be playing a road game in New York on March 18th, and the great PR man and color commentator of Rockets broadcasts – Jim Foley – was in town for St. Patrick’s Day. Foley liked to hang with a few longtime buddies, including tavern owner Jim, at Neary’s (East 57th Street). One year, long ago, I can remember meeting Jim (and Brian), walking into the bar and dropping average age by about 10 years! … Great place. Nothing but Guinness.

Then, there’s this gem from the great Mike McCarthy, former head honcho of Madison Square Garden Network, who voiced a little “tease” for the New York Knicks St. Patrick’s Day broadcast of yesteryear:

But, there’s no better way than to celebrate the spirit of St. Patrick’s Day than to read the words of the great Brian McIntyre.

Let’s turn the column over to him for a wee bit:

“I am proud to be of Irish descent and I’ve been fortunate to have celebrated St. Patrick’s Day in Chicago, New York, Boston and Houston over the years,” stated McIntyre to wet your appetite for his story. “When our son, Brendan, was about four years old, we went to a Mexican restaurant to pick up some take-out dinner. As we waited, Brendan asked me what “Mexican” is. I told him it’s a nationality, that we all came to America from some other country and that people who came from Mexico are Mexican. He looked at me and said what am I?

“My wife, Betty, who grew up in Chicago as I did, is Polish, so I told him he was part Irish and part Polish. He thought for a second and then quickly blurted, “I am not!” with all the indignation a four-year old named Brendan Patrick could summon. I still don’t know where that came from but I assured him he was.

When I got home, I told the story to my wife and she responded, ”I hope you told him the truth!” Which I had.

When I recounted the story for my dad, he responded, “I hope you lied to him!”

Happy St. Patrick’s Day to all.


TID-BITS: The once ubiquitous USA Today compiled a (partial) list of the salaries of many of the NCAA head basketball coaches. They took it another step and chose their five MOST OVERPAID and MOST UNDERPAID/UNDER-RATED.

The only commentary from here is the strong opinion that the following coaches should get an immediate raise: UConn’s Danny Hurley, Houston’s Kelvin Sampson, Creighton’s Greg McDermott, BC’s Earl Grant and Seton Hall’s Shaheen Halloway.


THEN THERE’S PITINO: And, as he’s been written about, criticized and everything in between, it must be said that St. John’s coach Rick Pitino took his team a GIANT STEP further in peaking with a five-game winning streak, with a BIG WIN over Creighton in the regular season and he made it six vs. Seton Hall in the tournament), to guide St. John’s to play on BIG EAST Friday for the first time since the year 2000. In other words, the prior Friday night Johnnies game at the annual BIG EAST tournament came as we were all preparing for the SYDNEY OLYMPIC GAMES! … St. John’s played a fast-paced, tough game against Conference No. 1 Connecticut and lost 95-90 (the game was nowhere near as close as the score).

Year 2 will be a bigger challenge as Pitino will lose his Sr. point guard Daniss Jenkins who was often the ONLY player competing on the court for St. John’s. Sophomore guard RJ Luis, Jr. will need to step-up in 2024-25. He excelled in his Sixth Man role this season. Additionally, 6-9 sophomore Zuby Ejiofor will need to improve in all aspects of the game. Pitino changed his offense to go fast-pace, high scoring in order to cover the team’s poor defense and appalling transition defense, and it worked. Let’s see if he goes high speed or improves team defense in the year(s) to come. Pitino deserves credit, but please ignore homer media takes that the coach’s rant after St. John’s blew a 12-point lead and lost to Seton Hall on Feb 18th had a galvanizing effect on his team. It was unacceptable and his apology was warranted. Somehow, winning a few games (six in a row) has a way of revising short term memories and history. That said, Pitino earned another clean slate. A true new canvas to paint a future for the St. John’s program. Within that step, I’d like to see a clear succession plan in place by the 2025-26 season. Just where are Jeff van Gundy (consulting for the Boston Celtics and noticeably improving the team and individual players) or Billy Donovan (head coach of the Chicago Bulls) when you might need ‘em?

AARON WHO? Can you imagine NY Jets QB and former All Pro quarterback Aaron Rodgers as the Vice President of the United States of America? Well, that what IND candidate Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. was considering when he made a “short list” of candidates. Having Rodgers as veep might be like having Senator Mitch McConnell quarterback the Green Bay Packers.


THE WEARIN’ OF THE GREEN: There’s no one who ever walked the earth who could wear the (Celtics) GREEN like the late, great Bill Russell.

Filed Under: While We're Young Ideas Tagged With: NCAA Basketball, TL's Sunday Sports Notes, While We're Young Ideas

NFL Report: Patriots Sign KJ Osborn

March 17, 2024 by Digital Sports Desk

FOXBOROUGH – (Staff and Wire Service Report) – The New England Patriots are bringing aboard one of the top remaining free agent receivers, signing former Minnesota Vikings wideout K.J. Osborn, according to multiple reports Sunday.

Osborn played a complementary role to standout Justin Jefferson in Minnesota, recording 158 receptions for 1,845 yards over the past three seasons.

He started 30 of his 59 games with the Vikings, contributing 15 touchdown receptions.

Osborn, who turns 27 in June, was a fifth-round pick by Minnesota in 2020.

The Patriots, who traded quarterback Mac Jones during this offseason, are likely to draft a QB with their first-round pick (No. 3 overall). New England’s receiver room is led by JuJu Smith-Schuster, Kendrick Bourne and Jalen Reagor.

–Field Level Media

Filed Under: NFL, Patriots Tagged With: New England Patriots, NFL

Celtics Face Lowly Wizards Tonight

March 17, 2024 by Digital Sports Desk

WASH DC – (Staff and Wire Service Report) – Teams at opposite ends of the NBA standings will meet Sunday evening when the Boston Celtics visit the Washington Wizards. Then, add to that equation with the fact it’s not a great idea to schedule a game against the Celtics on St. Patrick’s Day.

Boston (52-14) will look to improve on the league’s best record. The Celtics extended their winning streak to four games by beating the visiting Phoenix Suns 127-112 on Thursday.

The Wizards (11-56) have lost three in a row, 19 of their past 21 and own the worst record in the NBA.

For the Celtics, Jaylen Brown remained hot by scoring a game-high 37 points in Thursday’s victory over the Suns. Brown is averaging 28.9 points per game since the All-Star break.

“We’re all in this together, from the organization to the coaches to the players,” Brown said. “I think that’s what creates the environment is the respect level. There’s no hierarchies. We all come together and come to work, and everybody comes to do their job.

“Joe (Boston coach Joe Mazzulla) sets the tone just being prepared, first. He’s diligent. And then he allows us to be who we are. We’ve been very well-coached, we’ve been disciplined, and we haven’t had so many lapses this season.”

Boston tied its season-high by making 25 3-pointers against the Suns. Al Horford was 6 of 10 on 3-point attempts and finished with a season-high 24 points.

“I think we did a good job reading the game quickly, and then also our guys getting to the paint, and then the rest of us kind of benefited from that,” Horford said. “So they were attacking at the paint, and then once the defense converges, they’re kicking the ball out, and we continued to do that time in and time out. It seemed like we made the right play for most of the night.”

The Wizards are coming off Saturday’s 127-98 setback at Chicago, which dropped Washington’s record to 4-20 under interim head coach Brian Keefe. Corey Kispert led Washington with 16 points and Bilal Coulibaly added 15.

Washington’s Deni Avdija was a late scratch and didn’t play against the Bulls because of a right knee contusion. Kispert replaced Avdija in the starting lineup.

“He (Avdija) warmed up, but he couldn’t go by the end,” Keefe said.

Washington also was without Tyus Jones, who missed his first game of the season with a back injury.

“They hurt us deep in the paint,” Keefe said. “They were able to get the ball in the paint, score in the paint (and) offensive rebound in the paint. We probably didn’t do enough with resistance early in the game, but as the game grew, our fight actually got better. I was pleased with that.”

Boston has been without center Kristaps Porzingis for its past four games. Porzingis is dealing with a strained right hamstring, and Mazzulla said his status is day-to-day.

“Regardless of who’s in, who’s out, I think what you’ve seen is we’ve played a certain level of basketball, and that’s the most important thing,” Mazzulla said. “You create an environment in the locker room where guys are out, but you can maintain your level of physicality and your level of play on both sides of the ball. It’s the most important thing.”

Sunday’s game will be the third meeting between the teams this season. Boston prevailed 126-107 at Washington on Oct. 30, plus 133-129 in Boston on Feb. 9. The teams will play their final game of the season on April 14 in Boston.

–Field Level Media

Filed Under: Boston Sports, Celtics, NBA Tagged With: Boston Celtics, NBA, Washington Wizards

UConn, 31-3, Might Run the Table

March 17, 2024 by Digital Sports Desk

NEW YORK – (Staff and Wire Service Report) – Saturday’s results broke exactly how they needed to for the defending national champions. Those results caused a 180-degree opposite turn for St. John’s, Providence and Seton Hall – all the BIG EAST rivals who are likely to miss the big dance at the NCAA men’s basketball tournament which starts Tuesday in Dayton, Ohio.

No. 3 Purdue lost to Wisconsin in overtime in the Big Ten tournament semifinals while No. 7 Iowa State pasted No. 1 Houston for the Big 12 championship. Big East No. 1 and national No. 2 UConn took care of business in a hot-shooting second half to beat 10th-ranked Marquette 73-57, sweeping the Big East regular-season and postseason titles.

On the other end of the bracket spectrum, NC State upset Carolina, Oregon and Colorado will play for the PAC-12 title, Temple surprised all in the A-10 and the clouds settled over St. John’s coach Rick Pitino‘s home on a golf course he’ll soon be using daily.

At 31-3, UConn now could be in prime position to receive the No. 1 overall seed in the NCAA Tournament on Selection Sunday. Coach Dan Hurley claimed that no team at the top of college basketball combined a successful nonconference stretch, a regular-season conference title and a tournament run the way the Huskies have.

“We’ve been the best team in college basketball,” Hurley said. “Obviously March Madness next week, who knows what goes on there, but we’ve clearly been the best program in the country this year.”

How did they do it? Contributions from up and down the roster — some returnees from last year’s championship team, some newcomers, all pulling on the same rope.

All five starters — Tristen Newton, Cam Spencer, Alex Karaban, Stephon Castle and Donovan Clingan — have taken turns leading the attack, and all five had double-figure scoring averages on the season. It was Clingan’s time on Saturday, pairing 22 points with 16 rebounds as he carried the team through a first half of cold perimeter shooting.

The 7-foot-2 Clingan filled the starting center role after Adama Sanogo went to the NBA. Now Clingan is a projected lottery pick this June along with Castle, while Karaban is projected to go in the second round by reputable mock drafts.

That’s to say nothing of Newton and Spencer, who both made the All-Big East first team.

“We’re deep, and we’re deep with NBA players that are unselfish and about winning,” Hurley said.

The Huskies rely on more than their starting five, though, and they needed to dig deep Saturday. Backup big man Samson Johnson provided a much-needed dunk after they went scoreless for the first 6:33 of the game. And with UConn hampered by a 2-for-15 start from 3-point range, freshman Jaylin Stewart delivered.

Stewart subbed in just before the midpoint of the second half and promptly buried a 3-pointer that gave UConn its first lead larger than four all night. Newton drilled a trey less than a minute later, and the floodgates burst.

Spurred on by the pro-UConn crowd at Madison Square Garden, Stewart made two more triples to finish the night with nine points, his second-best total this season. He hadn’t made a 3-pointer since Valentine’s Day.

“Our league is especially tough on freshmen because the league is so physical,” Hurley said. “But we see on a daily basis what he displayed out there on the court. … He’s a future star. You’re looking at a future star at UConn.”

Newton had 10 assists one night after going for 25 points and nine assists in the semifinals against St. John’s. UConn racked up 73 assists over its three-game stay in New York.

“Everybody runs and everybody can score,” Newton said. “Just share the ball, and it’ll be like that for a long time.”

If that adds up to a No. 1 overall seed for UConn, it would set the Huskies up with the simplest path back to the Final Four, as they try to become the first team to win back-to-back national championships since Florida in 2006-07.

“I know we’ve never gotten a No. 1 overall seed in program history,” Hurley said, “so this is a group that seems to be making history in a place that it’s hard to make history.”

–Field Level Media

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Big East Basketball, UConn

UConn Earns No. 1 Seed in NCAA

March 16, 2024 by Digital Sports Desk

NEW YORK – (Staff and Wire Service Report) – UConn’s Donovan Clingan put up 22 points and 16 rebounds, Tristen Newton and Jaylin Stewart each drilled three critical 3-pointers and the BIG EAST’s top team and national No. 2 Connecticut Huskies  pulled away from No. 10 Marquette to win the Big East championship game 73-57 on Saturday night.

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The top-seeded Huskies claimed their first Big East tournament title since 2011, before the university left the conference from 2013-2020. After sweeping third-seeded Marquette during the regular season, UConn avenged a semifinal loss to the Golden Eagles in last year’s tournament.

UConn is likely to receive the No. 1 overall bid in this week’s NCAA tournament.

Newton had 13 points, 10 assists and five rebounds for UConn (31-3), which will be in the mix for the No. 1 overall seed in the NCAA Tournament. Stewart — a freshman who came in averaging 2.4 points per game — scored all nine of his points in the second half, when the Huskies overcame another slow start to shoot 63 percent from the floor.

UConn came out cold on offense, similar to its starts in the previous rounds against Xavier and St. John’s. A 19-5 second-half run powered by Newton and Stewart broke the game open.

Kam Jones tallied 13 points and eight rebounds and David Joplin added 12 points and six boards for the Golden Eagles (25-9), the defending conference tournament champions, who reached this year’s tournament final despite star guard Tyler Kolek sitting out all week with an oblique injury.

UConn missed its first eight attempts from the floor, including three layups, before Samson Johnson subbed in and dunked at the 13:27 mark. Marquette hardly took advantage at the other end, starting 2-for-11 from the floor.

Neither side led by more than four throughout the first half. The Huskies missed their first eight 3-point tries before going ahead 19-15 when Newton finally connected with 3:41 remaining.

Joplin deflected a pass for a steal and score, then blocked a shot that led to Jones’ 3-pointer at the other end to give Marquette a 22-21 advantage with 1:39 left.

After the teams traded baskets, Newton collected his dribble and knocked down another 3-pointer with three seconds left for a 26-24 UConn lead at the break.

Clingan’s catch and dunk through a foul prompted a brief UConn run that gave the Huskies a four-point lead. It wasn’t until Stewart connected from outside and Newton added a triple on consecutive possessions that the Huskies made it 47-41 with 9:27 to play.

Stewart knocked down his next two triples, Hassan Diarra added one and UConn’s flurry ultimately grew the lead to 60-44 with 5:54 left.

One last push by the Golden Eagles got them within 11 points down the stretch.

–Adam Zielonka, Field Level Media

Filed Under: Big East, March Madness, NCAA, NCAA Basketball Tagged With: Big East, Big East Tournament, Marquette, UConn

Big East Final: It’s UConn vs Marquette

March 16, 2024 by Digital Sports Desk

NEW YORK – (Staff and Wire Service Report) – A little over a year ago, Marquette was the last team to defeat UConn before the latter stormed its way to a fifth national title.

The Huskies didn’t lose again that season and dominated their way to the top of the Big East in 2023-24.

On Saturday, 10th-ranked Marquette is the opponent standing in the way of the second-ranked Huskies, who will seek their first Big East title since returning to the league in 2020.

The Huskies (30-3) took their first loss since the Marquette semifinal game when they fell by four points at Kansas on Dec. 1. They also are seeking their first conference tournament title since Kemba Walker’s magical run led them to five wins in five days in 2011.

The top-seeded Huskies are on a six-game winning streak and advanced to Saturday’s final thanks to a prolific offense. After scoring 87 in a 27-point win over ninth-seeded Xavier in Thursday’s quarterfinals, UConn was challenged at times in a 95-90 win over fifth-seeded St. John’s on Friday.

The Huskies are ready to face third-seeded Marquette (25-8), which claimed a 70-68 win over UConn in last season’s conference semifinals.

Tristen Newton scored 20 of his 25 points in UConn’s 52-point opening half Friday and added nine assists. Cam Spencer contributed 20 points and nine assists for the Huskies, who shot 57.4 percent from the floor, sank 11 3-pointerss and collected 23 assists.

“These are the environments that you want to play in,” Spencer said. “It’s a high-level basketball game, working towards something that we’ve worked for all year, and it’s — the Big East championship is something that we want to go get. Probably one of the highest, I guess, more intense games of this year, and rightfully so.”

Marquette is playing without Tyler Kolek due to an oblique injury. The guard could be out again for its second appearance in the title game, although he has begun practicing and is expected to play in the NCAA Tournament.

“We’ve played through a lot of adversity,” Marquette coach Shaka Smart said. “Obviously (Saturday) is going to a heck of a challenge for us.”

The Golden Eagles lost two of their final three regular-season games and opened the tournament with wins over Villanova and Providence. After allowing an average of 69.7 points a game during the regular season, the Golden Eagles allowed 65 and 68 in their tournament games and received clutch showings from Kam Jones and Oso Ighodaro.

Jones scored 23 points in Friday’s 79-68 win over the Friars and helped the Golden Eagles lead for virtually the entire way and fend off a late comeback attempt. Ighodaro added 20 vs. Providence after scoring his lone basket in overtime against Villanova on Thursday.

UConn dominated the first meeting against Marquette this season when the Huskies rolled to an 81-53 victory on Feb. 17 in Hartford, Conn. The Huskies held off a comeback attempt in their 74-67 win on March 6 in Milwaukee.

“Obviously UConn has some good players, has a good team,” Marquette’s Stevie Mitchell said. “So we’re obviously going to watch film, learn from previous games against them, and learn from this game and continue to move forward, but I think being the best version of ourselves is what we’re really focusing on the most.”

–Larry Fleisher, Field Level Media

Filed Under: Big East, March Madness, NCAA, NCAA Basketball Tagged With: Big East, Big East Tournament

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