Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Paschall and Booth impress in ’Nova debut

- By Dan Gelston

VILLANOVA >> The home team started to head out for the second half toward its rehabilita­ted court when it somehow got lost in a maze of exits and sprinted out the wrong end.

“Everything’s a first,” coach Jay Wright said. “We’re figuring it out.”

The Wildcats will quickly get used to the intricacie­s of their digs.

They already seem quite at home, and as dominant as usual, at the new-look Pavilion.

Eric Paschall scored 26 points, Phil Booth had 17 and No. 9 Villanova opened its national championsh­ip defense with a 100-77 win over Morgan State on Tuesday night.

“I feel like we have great potential,” Paschall said.

The Wildcats always do — they’ve won 12 straight games dating to last season and won their 16th consecutiv­e season opener.

The new kid on the block that shone the most was the refurbishe­d Pavilion, which closed for a season and forced the Wildcats to play a year in Philadelph­ia’s Wells Fargo Center. Villanova’s on-campus court underwent a $65 million facelift that would have made the Property Brothers jealous.

The Wildcats couldn’t put a price tag on their sweetest accessory — the 2018 national championsh­ip banner raised high above midcourt. Under Wright, Villanova has won two of the last three national championsh­ips, and seating for this season is at a premium. StubHub had lower level tickets selling for $375 shortly before tip, and a gym that for three decades had a skeleton crew of concession stands suddenly had deep-pocketed donors noshing on fried shrimp, $10 Wildcat burgers and taking a nip of top-shelf booze.

“Man, it was loud, it was jumping the whole time,” Wright said. “I thought the crowd was great. There’s a different vibe in here. It’s definitely louder. It’s pretty cool.”

Bad news for the Big East, the Wildcats have more of a homecourt edge.

The Pavilion’s courtside press row seating was stripped to make room for 88 courtside seats, there was club seating for the first time and the concourse also wrapped 360 degrees. The lights were dimmed for an NBA-worthy lineup introducti­on — kind of a big deal considerin­g in the old joint derisively known as the “ski lodge,” it took 20 minutes for the entire building to light up once the switches were flipped.

On opening night, the Pavilion was lit.

Artificial noise was pumped in and fans were encouraged to stand until the Wildcats scored their first basket. It didn’t take long. Collin Gillespie hit a 3 and the Wildcats hit from long range much like they did against Michigan in the title game in San Antonio, Texas.

They just didn’t look like the same Wildcats.

AP Player of the Year Jalen Brunson plays for the Dallas Mavericks. Omari Spellman is with the Atlanta Hawks. Mikal Bridges landed in Phoenix after a draft-night trade with the 76ers, and Donte DiVincenzo — who scored 31 points in the title game win over Michigan — is with the Milwaukee Bucks. That’s a ton of talent that walked out the door, but the Wildcats were eager to showcase the replacemen­ts. With the Wildcats up 15 in the first half, they had Booth, who has two national championsh­ips, and four freshmen on the court.

“We actually weren’t trying the lineups. We were trying for fresh bodies,” Wright said.

 ?? LAURENCE KESTERSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Villanova’s Phil Booth (5) center, laughs with Saddiq Bey, left, and forward Eric Paschall (4) after beating Morgan State 100-77.
LAURENCE KESTERSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Villanova’s Phil Booth (5) center, laughs with Saddiq Bey, left, and forward Eric Paschall (4) after beating Morgan State 100-77.

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