New York Post

Seton Hall excited for Villanova test

- By ZACH BRAZILLER

Second-ranked Villanova is visiting, more than 16,000 tickets already have been sold, and Seton Hall basically can lock up a second straight NCAA Tournament berth with a second consecutiv­e upset.

Saturday afternoon in Newark figures to be an event, a rematch of last March’s Big East Tournament championsh­ip game in front of a capacity crowd and potentiall­y a sellout. For just the time since the Pirates began playing there a decade ago, the Prudential Center’s second deck will be open.

“It’s going to be real noisy. That’s what we want, though.” said Seton Hall junior guard Khadeen Carrington, who is coming off a career-high 41-point effort in Wednesday’s upset of No. 20 Creighton. “Those are my type of games.”

The only other time Prudential Center opened the second deck for a Seton Hall (16-9, 6-7 Big East) home game was against Syracuse on Feb. 16, 2013. It drew a crowd of 13,569 that day, and the Orange rolled to an easy victory, defeating an overmatche­d Seton Hall team.

The circumstan­ces are different now. The on-thebubble Pirates, coming off the upset of Creighton, are hoping to make back-toback NCAA Tournament appearance­s for the first time since 1991-94, and a victory Saturday basically would seal it.

Of course, that’s easier said then done. The defending national champion Wildcats and National Player of the Year candidate Josh Hart could clinch a fourth consecutiv­e Big East regular season title with a win on Saturday. Villanova hammered Seton Hall, 76-46, on Jan. 16 in Philadelph­ia.

“I think they out-toughed us last time in their home,” Carrington said. “They definitely played harder than us.”

That lopsided result came at the end of a brutal six-day, three-game road trip. The Pirates may be more equipped to handle Villanova now. They have won three of the past four games, just got back defensive stopper Ismael Sanogo (ankle) and are 10-1 at home this season, with the only loss coming to No. 24 Butler.

“It’s payback time,” Sanogo said. “We’re in our house this time.”

“A win Saturday,” Carrington added, “would definitely shock a lot of people.”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States