Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Dixon pushes ’Nova past No. 19 Creighton

-

PHILADELPH­IA — Eric Dixon scored 18 of his career-high 31 points in the first half, Cam Whitmore added 17 and Villanova defeated No. 19 Creighton 79-67 on Saturday.

Dixon also set a career high with six 3-pointers for Villanova (15-14, 9-9 Big East), which has won five of six.

“My teammates kept finding me in spots that I’m comfortabl­e in,” Dixon said.

Arthur Kaluma scored 19 points and Ryan Kalkbrenne­r had 18 for Creighton (18-11, 12-6). The Bluejays have lost three of four following an eight-game winning streak.

“We ran into a buzz saw today,” Creighton coach Greg McDermott said. “Villanova was able to turn our defense inside out with Dixon’s ability to stretch the floor.”

The Wildcats have been the standard bearer for the Big East since the conference’s realignmen­t in 2013, but they took some lumps for much of this season without Hall of Fame coach Jay Wright, who retired after last season. Now, first-year head coach Kyle Neptune has the Wildcats playing the kind of basketball that led them to seven of the last nine conference regular-season titles, five Big East Tournament titles over that span and national championsh­ips in 2016 and 2018.

Villanova again looks like a team that no one wants to play in March.

“We just had to grow as a team,” Neptune said. “Thank God our guys have continued to get better and better. Our goal is always to be the best team we can be by the end. Hopefully we can reach that goal.”

The Wildcats have been playing better since the return of Justin Moore from injury. The senior guard had eight points and eight assists in his ninth game back after tearing his Achilles tendon.

“You can see it coming as you watch them on film since Justin has returned,” McDermott said. “You can see growth every game. Frankly, I was afraid of this. Unfortunat­ely, I was right.”

Dixon’s two free throws gave Villanova a 46-29 lead 2:57 into the second half to match the Wildcats’ biggest lead of the game. Creighton chipped away at the deficit and got within 52-45 with 12:37 remaining on Kalkbrenne­r’s two free throws.

But then Dixon heated up again, first hitting a 3 from the left baseline and then converting a traditiona­l 3-point play on a drive and free throw to push the lead back to 58-45 with 11:18 to play.

Creighton couldn’t recover. Whitmore put an exclamatio­n point on the victory with a driving, one-handed jam with 2:47 remaining.

Villanova improved to 5-4 since Moore returned to the lineup on Jan. 29 against Providence. The 6-foot-4 senior guard was projected to be a late firstround or early secondroun­d pick in last spring’s NBA draft before tearing his right Achilles tendon in the Wildcats’ NCAA Tournament semifinal victory over Houston.

Like his team, Moore’s game has picked up lately. He is coming off his best performanc­e, scoring 25 points while helping the Wildcats rally from a 13-point second-half deficit to win 64-63 at No. 16 Xavier on Tuesday.

Villanova finished the season 3-1 at the Wells Fargo Center, the home court of the Philadelph­ia 76ers and the Wildcats’ secondary home floor. They won all three games here last season and are 62-37 all-time.

 ?? MATT SLOCUM/AP ?? Creighton’s Arthur Kaluma, right, and Villanova’s Jordan Longino struggle for a rebound during the second half Saturday in Philadelph­ia.
MATT SLOCUM/AP Creighton’s Arthur Kaluma, right, and Villanova’s Jordan Longino struggle for a rebound during the second half Saturday in Philadelph­ia.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States