Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Villanova uses hot second half to shoot past ’Bama

- By Dan Gelston The Associated Press

Jay Wright had some late-night restlessne­ss. He couldn’t turn off the TV as long as Virginia and UMBC were still playing. He met his Villanova team in the morning, and the players at the breakfast tables were buzzing over basketball’s biggest upset.

The reverberat­ion from the 16over-1 stunner was felt by another tourney top seed.

“There was a lot of attention with that,” guard Donte DiVincenzo said. “We’re a 1 seed so it was more attention for us.”

In the March spotlight, Villanova showed how a No. 1 seed takes cares of business.

Mikal Bridges hit five 3-pointers, scored 23 points and helped Villanova put the field on notice that it’s the team to beat with an 81-58 win over ninth-seeded Alabama Saturday.

The Wildcats (32-4) are in the Sweet 16 for the first time since they won the 2016 national championsh­ip. Bridges, Jalen Brunson, Phil Booth look every bit the favorite to make it two in three years.

Villanova plays Friday in Boston against the Marshall-West Virginia winner.

“My good vibes are coming from how this team’s playing, how unselfishl­y they play,” Wright said.

The sport is still buzzing from top-seeded Virginia’s 20-point loss to 16th-seeded UMBC Friday night.

Alabama (20-16) failed to make it two No. 1s KO’d in less than 24 hours.

After a tense first half in a round that has given the program fits, the Wildcats hit their first six 3s in the second and put on a thrashing that ranks up there among the most dominant under Wright.

Bridges, who averaged 17.9 points and played his way into a likely NBA draft lottery pick, scored one point and missed all five shots in the first half. He found his groove once the second half tipped. Bridges scored the first five points of the half and then finished a thunderous alleyoop on a pass from Booth that made it 41-27 and sent the Wildcats wildly waving their arms in celebratio­n headed into a timeout.

Bridges hit his first three 3s in succession to cap an 18-1 run, and a Sweet 16 berth was in sight.

“I just had to play aggressive, play tougher,” he said

Brunson added a 3-pointer — one of a school-tournament record 17 3s — to make it 56-31, and the rest of the half was simply a countdown to Boston.

“There’s a youthful exuberance with this team that is exciting me,” Wright said.

The Wildcats’ toughest nemesis was more the round than the team: Villanova lost in the first weekend as a 1 or 2 seed in 2010, 2014, 2015 and 2017.

Villanova got a brief scare that it might add ‘18 to the list against Alabama.

The Wildcats live and die by the 3-pointer — they say, “shoot em’ up and sleep in the streets” — and when it’s on, look out. The Wildcats are as dangerous as any team in the nation.

When it’s off, well, that’s how they’re so upset-prone in March. They missed eight of their first 11 3s in the first half, and Alabama briefly grabbed the lead.

“We sometimes get away with some out-of-control shots, but we know that we don’t really care about offense,” Bridges said.

DiVincenzo steadied Villanova with three straight 3s that brought a gasp from the crowd and gave the Wildcats a 22-15 lead. He threw in a fast break layup off his own steal and hit his fifth 3 of the half to make it 32-27.

DiVincenzo — the redheaded guard nicknamed “The Big Ragu” — scored all 18 of his points in the half. Villanova attempted 20 3s (made seven) out of 27 shots.

 ?? KEITH SRAKOCIC — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Villanova guard and Great Valley grad Mikal Bridges shoots over Alabama’s Galin Smith during the first half Saturday in Pittsburgh.
KEITH SRAKOCIC — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Villanova guard and Great Valley grad Mikal Bridges shoots over Alabama’s Galin Smith during the first half Saturday in Pittsburgh.

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