The Day

BIG EAST ROUNDUP

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No. 3 Villanova 71, Providence 56

A bright light coming from a sunny window delayed the start of the second half. When the game finally resumed, Villanova’s offense shone on the court — neither a dark curtain nor Providence could blot out the Wildcats.

Collin Gillespie and Justin Moore scored 15 points apiece, and No. 3 Villanova used a dominating final 20 minutes to defeat Providence 71-56 on Saturday.

Caleb Daniels added 12 points and Jermaine Samuels had 10 for Villanova (10-1, 5-0 Big East), which rebounded from an ugly first half to win its eighth consecutiv­e game.

“We just couldn’t score,” coach Jay Wright said of the first half, when the Wildcats shot 27%.

What changed?

“We got used to their length and speed,” Wright said.

But they had to wait for about 15 minutes while a curtain was placed over a window high in Finneran Pavilion from which a stream of sunlight fell on the Providence bench.

“It was blinding, literally blinding,” Wright said.

With the window covered, the sun stopped splashing on the Friars’ faces. But Villanova shots rained down on the basket.

The Wildcats surged out of the locker room, hitting 10 of their first 21 second-half shots, and Jeremiah Robinson-Earl’s dunk on a pass from Moore made it 50-38 Villanova with 10:12 remaining. That capped a 26-11 run after halftime.

Villanova got contributi­ons from six players during the spurt, with Daniels’ eight points and Moore’s six leading the way.

“They did a great job in the first half,” Gillespie said. “They’re tough, they’re physical. (In the second half) we were able to get good looks at the rim.”

The Wildcats took control from there, maintainin­g a double-digit lead the rest of the way. They outscored Providence 47-29 in the second half.

“I thought we did a great job in the first half,” Providence coach Ed Cooley said. “And then in the second half a bunch of impostors showed up. I thought we got outtoughed, plain and simple. A soft team showed up in the second half.”

Alyn Breed scored 18 points to pace Providence (8-7, 4-5).

Villanova was back on the court for just the second time since Dec. 23 due to multiple COVID-19 stoppages. The Wildcats eked out a 76-74 home win over Seton Hall on Tuesday, a victory that impressed Wright more in terms of

resiliency than execution.

But that was to be expected without team practices and with players in quarantine, getting to the gym for individual workouts only — if at all.

The Wildcats looked rusty in the first half, when they missed 22 of 30 shots from the field while committing seven turnovers.

But a Gillespie 3-pointer at the halftime buzzer sent Villanova into the locker room down just 27-24.

Providence led by as many as nine points in the first half, when both teams struggled offensivel­y. Jimmy Nichols’ one-handed, driving slam dunk got the Friars going and helped kick-start a 10-0 run that made it 20-11 with just over six minutes left before the break.

The Wildcats looked out of sync all half before turning things around after halftime.

Villanova entered with three home losses to Providence since 2013, the most victories by any Big East team over the Wildcats during that time.

“They always give us trouble,” Wright said.

St. John’s 96, Utah Valley 78

Posh Alexander had a season-high 20 points as St. John’s defeated Utah Valley.

Julian Champagnie had 19 points for St. John’s (9-7). Vince Cole added 15 points. Isaih Moore had 13 points. Josh Roberts had four blocks plus four points and seven rebounds.

St. John’s totaled 51 points in the second half, a season best for the team.

Trey Woodbury had 23 points for the Wolverines (5-6). Jamison Overton added 18 points. Evan Cole had 17 points. DePaul 68, Marqette 61

Charlie Moore scored 21 points, including a perfect 10for-10 from the foul line, as DePaul defeated Marquette in Milwaukee for its first Big East victory.

Javon Freeman-Liberty added 19 points for the Blue Demons (3-5, 1-5) while Darious Hall had eight points and seven rebounds.

D.J. Carton scored 14 of his career-high 23 points in the second half Marquette (8-7, 4-5), which trailed 30-24 af halftime and by as many as 13 points in the second half.

The Golden Eagles went on a 22-9 run to take a 56-54 with 3:39 remaining, but DePaul responded with a 14-5 run in the final 2:55 to take control.

Jamal Cain and Koby McEwen added eight points apiece for Marquette while Theo John had a team-high eight rebounds.

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