Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Wildcats ace a tough test

VILLANOVA 90, WEST VIRGINIA 78

- Kyle Hightower

BOSTON - Villanova’s three-point party rolled past the intense pressure of West Virginia to bring the Wildcats to the doorstep of another Final Four two seasons after winning a national championsh­ip.

The top-seeded Wildcats continued their outside feast in the NCAA Tournament, downing the fifth-seeded Mountainee­rs, 90-78, on Friday night to earn their second trip to the regional finals in three seasons.

Jalen Brunson led Villanova with 27 points and Omari Spellman had 18 with eight rebounds as Villanova overcame the West Virginia press by hitting 13 of 24 shots from three-point range.

Daxter Miles had 16 points to lead West Virginia. Jevon Carter and Sagaba Konate

added 12 each.

Villanova (33-4) has now made 47 three-pointers for the tournament. The outside barrage helped the Wildcats overcome 16 turnovers and played into their Sweet 16 plan for the team nicknamed “Press Virginia”: Attack the stifling defense head-on.

“What a game, man. I hope that looked as good as it did from the bench, man,” Villanova coach Jay Wright said. “That was the most physically demanding, mentally draining 40 minutes we’ve played in a long time. They are so relentless.”

The Wildcats struggled at times, especially in the first half, but dug out of a six-point hole in the second half with an 11-0 run.

The Mountainee­rs (26-11) stayed close throughout, ramping up the pressure and making Villanova play faster than it wanted to early. But foul trouble throughout the second half was too much for West Virginia to overcome after it gave up the lead.

Carter was called for his third with 17:33 left in the game. That was followed by Miles being whistled for his third and fourth fouls over a two minute stretch that sent him to the bench with 15 minutes remaining.

Coach Bob Huggins said the fouls “absolutely” stifled the Mountainee­rs’ ability to keep pressure on Villanova.

“When the whistle keeps blowing it really takes away your aggression,” he said.

West Virginia adjusted for a while, taking advantage of a more than threeminut­e Villanova scoring drought to take a 60-54 edge with just over 11 minutes left.

But Villanova heated up again. Its 11point run was capped by a thunderous block and dunk on the other end by Omari Spellman that pushed the Wildcats back in front 65-60.

The Wildcats kept the momentum going, stretching the lead to 76-66 on a three-pointer by Brunson.

“The deeper you go, the better the teams are going to be,” Brunson said. “For us, most importantl­y, nothing changes no matter who we play, where we play, what time we play. We play every game like it’s our last.”

West Virginia never got closer than four points the rest of the way.

“I felt like we gave it everything we had,” Carter said.

“We just didn’t make shots tonight and Villanova did.”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Villanova’s Jalen Brunson drives past West Virginia’s Wesley Harris.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Villanova’s Jalen Brunson drives past West Virginia’s Wesley Harris.

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