New York Post

Hall in a day’s work

After scare, Pirates sail past Iona, spoil Pitino’s return

- By ZACH BRAZILLER

Eventually, the cream rose. The power-conference team started playing like one.

Iona wasn’t going to pull off a stunner in Rick Pitino’s return to college basketball. It wasn’t going to upset 19point favorite Seton Hall in its home opener.

The Gaels did scare the Pirates for about 25 minutes. They did have them down nine points late in the first half. For a team that was down two injured starters, had only two returning contributo­rs available and just recently returned to practice after a two-week pause due to a positive COVID-19 test, that spoke volumes.

“You’re talking about a Hall of Fame coach,” Seton Hall coach Kevin Willard, Pitino’s assistant at Louisville and with the Celtics, said over Zoom. “I wasn’t shocked we were down nine.

“They’re exactly what I thought they were going to be. They’re extremely wellcoache­d, they play hard and they are going to win a lot of games because, in my opinion, he’s the greatest college coach ever.”

Seton Hall pulled away in the second half on the strength of a 24-5 run, coasting to an 86-64 victory at fan-less Prudential Center in Newark. Sandro Mamukelash­vili, Myles Cale and Jared Rhoden took over, combining for 59 points and 22 rebounds. Iona didn’t have an answer. The Gaels wore down. Their jumpers stopped falling and their defensive intensity dropped.

When Pitino, the former Louisville, Kentucky and Providence coach who spent the last two years coaching profession­ally in Greece, called Willard to schedule this game on Saturday, he knew he was running into a buzz saw.

“I’m not pissed off that I lost, because I love Kevin,” Pitino joked. “If Kevin wasn’t the coach, I’d probably want to go out and drink a quart of scotch.

“It was excellent for us. Getting them in Madison Square Garden next year will even be better,” he added, referring to the return game the teams have agreed to play next year.

There were some bright spots despite the lopsided loss, even without starting point guard Asante Gist and 7-foot-1 freshman forward Osborn Shema. Freshman big man Nelly Junior Joseph showed potential, notching 13 points, six rebounds and two blocks. So did freshman guard Ryan Myers (nine points) of Brooklyn. Senior Isaiah Ross scored a teamhigh 23 points, though Pitino wasn’t happy with his performanc­e, pointing to the zero in the assist column.

“I thought our defensive intensity was great in the first half. If we would’ve played the same type of defense in the second half, we had a chance to win the game,” Pitino said. “Overall, it was terrific. We are going to be a really good basketball team.”

 ?? Bill Kostroun (2) ?? NOT SO FAST: Shavar Reynolds Jr. drives on Iona’s Tahlik Chavez in Seton Hall’s 86-64 win over the Gaels in former Louisville, Kentucky, and Providence coach Rick Pitino’s return to college basketball.
Bill Kostroun (2) NOT SO FAST: Shavar Reynolds Jr. drives on Iona’s Tahlik Chavez in Seton Hall’s 86-64 win over the Gaels in former Louisville, Kentucky, and Providence coach Rick Pitino’s return to college basketball.
 ??  ?? RICK PITINO
RICK PITINO

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