The Morning Call

Gillespie helps ’Nova continue streak

- By Dan Gelston

PHILADELPH­IA — Villanova had reminders everywhere of how just successful it’s been in recent seasons: Two national championsh­ip trophies were displayed for photo ops and former great Jalen Brunson was honored in a pregame ceremony.

Collin Gillespie and Jermaine Samuels gave the Wildcats a glimpse of just how great the future could be for the program.

Gillespie hit six 3-pointers and scored a career-high 30 points, Samuels had 16 rebounds and Eric Paschall had 24 points to keep No. 14 Villanova unbeaten in the Big East with a 77-65 victory over Georgetown on Sunday.

The Wildcats (18-4) have won 10 straight games and are 9-0 in the conference for the first time since 2009-10.

“I want to see how far we can take this ride,” coach Jay Wright said.

The Wildcats got rolling late at their off-campus home, the Wells Fargo Center, where they are 32-3 since 2012-13 — and their win percentage boosted by six straight wins over the Hoyas in Philadelph­ia.

Phil Booth — who missed 10 of his first 12 shots — scored on a driving layup, then buried a 3 to snap a tie and give Villanova a 58-53 lead with 5:41 left. Villanova, which was called for four fouls on one possession late in the game, got a Gillespie bucket to stretch the lead and hold off the Hoyas.

The Wildcats were again a two-scorer show. Booth, who was leading Villanova this season with 18.7 points, mostly sat this one out until crunch time. He missed his first six 3-pointers while Paschall had some surprising help from Gillespie.

After Paschal converted a three-point play to give the Wildcats a 46-43 lead, he had com- bined with Gillespie to score 39 of their points. Gillespie, a 6-foot-3 sophomore guard, had flashes of scoring bursts this season. He scored a career-high 21 in a loss to Penn and 19 in a loss to Furman. But in a Big East battle, Gillespie was clutch in a win.

“Just playing with confidence,” Gillespie said.

Gillespie made 6 of113s and was 10 of 12 from the free-throw line to show he can be a scoring factor when needed in the stretch run.

“We just gave him too much airspace and he was able to knock down all those 3s,” Georgetown coach Patrick Ewing said.

James Akinjo led the Hoyas (14-8, 4-5) with 19 points. The Hoyas had averaged 83.2 points on the season yet scored no field goals over a 6-minute stretch late in the game.

 ?? MITCHELL LEFF/GETTY IMAGES ?? Villanova’s Collin Gillespie shoots the ball over Georgetown’s Mac McClung Sunday at Wells Fargo Center in Philadelph­ia. Villanova defeated Georgetown 77-65.
MITCHELL LEFF/GETTY IMAGES Villanova’s Collin Gillespie shoots the ball over Georgetown’s Mac McClung Sunday at Wells Fargo Center in Philadelph­ia. Villanova defeated Georgetown 77-65.

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