The Guru’s Local/National March Madness Report; Saint Joseph’s and La Salle Advance in A-10; Drexel Keeps Winning; Villanova Awaits Saturday’s Foe; Tennessee Given Quick Exit by Alabama in SEC for Seventh Straight Loss
By Mel Greenberg @womhoopsgurux
HENRICO, Va. – For all that has become nostalgic in terms of the men’s hey day in the Big 5 this time of year, for the moment it was boom times for the local women Thursday here in the Atlantic 10 tournament where Saint Joseph’s and La Salle advanced into the quarterfinals while Drexel continued to roar toward a strong regular season ending ahead of the Dragons participation in the Coastal Athletic Association next weekend in the nation’s capital and Villanova is getting ready to make a run for the title game in the Big East tournament this weekend.
Nationally, the unthinkable is happening to a pair of legendary programs where this has usually been a prep week for each for going deep in the NCAA tournament.
The coaching carousel also quickly began to spin locally adding to a few others in programs called Power 4 by their identity, but many have beliefs of the vacancies no longer considered prime positions worth pursuing.
Let’s start with the play here where after the day began in Round 2 of Loyola, Chicago (14-16) downing Saint Bonaventure (16-15) narrowly 61-59, fifth seed Saint Joseph’s (20-10) came out for Game 2 blazing away with a bunch of three-pointers at the outset, applied the brakes to a Dukes (12-19) rally to within six points and then went on to a lopsided 66-45 finish in a game they led all the way.
“Today was a day where we got beat by a better team, a more disciplined team,” said veteran Duquesne coach Dan Burt. “I voted for Cindy (Griffin) coach of the year, She’s done a great job adjusting to the physical quality of today’s rules.
“We didn’t expect them to go 5-for-6 from the three-point line and 7-for-8 to start the game and kind of blitz us a little bit,” he said, bringing accountability to himself and the way the Dukes ended way short of their preseason expectations.
Gabby Casey, an all-conference second team selectee, scored 16 for Saint Joseph’s , while Aleah Snead and Faifth Stinson each scored 10 points, while Jill Jekot, a Penn State transfer had nine points and 11 rebounds.
“Really proud of the way we came out today, starting the first quarter with a really great start,” Griffin said. “We were making shots, the ball was moving, we were making stops.
“We knew we had to get production from all five spots and that’s got to continue all tournament. I am proud of the way we competed, and our defense was tremendous as well.”
The Hawks limited the opposition to just three makes beyond the arc and forced 20 turnovers.”
Duquesne’s Alexis Bordas was high scorer for her team with 13 points while Reina Green had 11 points and nine boards, one rebound short of a double.
Jekot said a hot start from the outset and out of the halftime break was a topic all week to prepare for the trip here in suburban Richmond.
“(Griffin) always says to throw the first punch, which helped us get a lead and ultimately helped us get the win.”
Griffin talked about the team-by-committee approach this season losing three strong front line players, two to graduation and the third to a transfer to Louisville.
“We pick up for each other and that’s who we are. That’s the complimentary assist that you see. The ball really moves; it doesn’t stick a whole lot.”
Loyola will start the quarterfinals playing top-seed Rhode Island at 11 a.m.
The Rams (25-4), who tied with defending A-10 tournament champion George Mason (21-8)for first place, are coached by Tammi Reese, the backcourt mate of Dawn Staley, when the Cavaliers in the early 1990s shot to No. 1 and advanced to three street Women’s Final Fours.
Saint Joseph’s at 1:30 p.m. will play fourth-seed Davidson, which split the series this season though Jekot was out with an injury when Saint Joseph’s traveled to play the Wildcats.
Dayton (17-13), which has made progress under coach Tamika Williams Jeter, a former UConn star in the early part of the last decade, followed the Hawks’ game and advanced to the quarters with a 62-54 win over George Washington (15-17), ending the Revolutionaries’ season.
The Flyers meet George Mason at 5 p.m., completing a trio of USA Network broadcasts for the first three of the four games on Friday.
Then it was La Salle’s turn to end the day’s activities and the Explorers (18-12), who tied Saint Joseph’s for fifth but was dropped to the sixth seed because of the Hawks 2-0 sweep of the series, did not disappoint, winning 59-51 over Saint Louis (12-21), also in a wire-to-wire leading performance to move into Friday’s 7:30 p.m. nightcap (CNBC) against preseason favorite Richmond (25-6, 15-3).
It’s La Salle’s first quarterfinals appearance since 2021.
Ashleigh Connor, a former player on the Saint Louis team La Salle beat, had 16 points, seven rebounds and eight assists, while committing just one turnover.
Aryss Macktoon had 15 points with a career-matching best 14 rebounds in a game the Explorers dominated the boards 49-42 with 22 on the offensive glass.
“I was pleased we were able to go out and handle business,” said La Salle coach Mountain MacGillivray. “I was pleased with the defensive performances of our post players.
“Aryss set the tone from the beginning of the game on the boards. We outrebounded them. That’s not what we do best,” he explained. “You know if we outrebound our opponents thast we’re going to be in great shape, won the turnover battle, that’s our recipe for success and it came to life tonight.”
Alyssa Koerkenmeier had 18 points with 12 rebounds.
“I feel we have grown in every single area,” Connor said, nothing that she still has friends on Saint Louis, but yea, it was good to beat them and move on. “Having that year under our belts, we went through a lot of adversity and this year we’ve built and grown off of that.
“We’ve closed out games we didn’t close out last year and grown in the turnovers we’re committing.”
A year ago, the Explorers played a season having lost a bunch of players and being like an expansion squad but this year with eight returning players experience made its quality throughout the season including an upset of Rhode Island recently who were unbeaten when they visited Broad & Olney late last month.
MacGillivray noted how the team found a way to win on a poor shooting night.
“A big part of our growth is putting all four quarters together,” Macktoon said. “Last year we had some trouble playing together, but this year we have been playing 40 minutes hard and going at the other team.”
Drexel Keeps Rolling
The Dragons (20-8,13-4) are still in regular season mode, but what a mode it is with one game left Saturday at 2 p.m. (FloCollege) visiting Towson in suburban Baltimore where a win will give them second seed, which is also good enough to to earn an automatic spot in the WNIT if they don’t land in the NCAA by winning the conference tournament.
They will place at least third which keeps them out of the way of top seed Charleston until reaching the title round by advancing, and that advancement gets a boost with a double bye.
Drexel started its final road trip of two games Thursday winning 70-56 over Hofstra in Hempstead, Long Island outside New York City.
Laine McGurk scored 15 points, shooting 7-for-14 from the field, while Amaris Baker scored 13, Molly Rollo scored 10, and Bria Watkins had 12 points, her first game in double figures during what is her rookie season.
In getting Drexel’s first 20-win season since 2022-23 it is also the first win at Hofstra since the same season.
Villanova, meanwhile, with a second-place finish and first round bye, awaits Friday’s winner between 10th-seeded DePaul and seventh-seeded Providence who the Wildcats will meet Saturday at 7:30 p.m. in the Big East quarterfinals at the Mohegan Sun in Uncasville, Conn.
Coach Denise Dillon’s team is trending toward a lock for a spot in the NCAA tournament after a two-season drought.
The top seed is No. 1 UConn, defending its 12th NCAA title and unbeaten once more to date at 31-0.
On Saturday, Penn finishes its season having missed the four-team Ivy Madness, but the Quakers can get some senior day revenge at 2 p.m. at The Palestra (ESPN+) hosting Brown, whose double overtime win over Penn was costly.
Seeding is still undetermined with No. 23 Princeton, playing Yale, tied for 1st with Columbia, which has the tiebreaker having swept the Tigers.
Harvard is a game behind.
The National Scene: Wither Stanford and Tennessee?
Upsets were felt as Power 4 conferences started getting into the meat of their tournaments.
Stanford, which missed the NCAAs last season for the first-time in three decades, was a first-round knockout in the ACC tournament, which moved to Duluth, Ga., from a long stay in Greensboro, N.C.
The Cardinal fell to Miami in overtime on Wednesday, while Thursday was calmer with Clemson beating Virginia 63-50; Notre Dame over Miami 69-54; Syracuse over California 70-59; and Virginia Tech 62-54 over Georgia Tech.
On Friday, Duke hosts Clemson; NC State meets Notre Dame; Syracuse meets Louisville; and North Carolina plays Virginia Tech.
Down in Greenville, S.C., the SEC tournament saw Alabama hand Tennessee its seventh straight loss, losing on Day 2 after dropping the last six of the regular season.
On Friday in the quarterfinals South Carolina plays Kentucky; LSU plays Oklahoma; Vanderbilt plays Ole Miss; and Alabama plays Texas.
In the Big Ten, Illinois nipped No. 18 Michigan State and Oregon upset No. 14 Maryland.
In Friday’s quarterfinals, No. 2 UCLA meets former PAC12 rival Washington; Minnesota meets Ohio State, Illinois meets Iowa; and Oregon plays Michigan.
In the Big 12 Kansas State upset Texas Tech 58-51; and Arizona State upset Iowa State.
On Friday, Kansas State plays Oklahoma State; BYU plays TCU; Arizona State plays West Virginia and Colorado meets Baylor.
Meanwhile, in the last week, joining VCU, the coaches at Penn State, Rutgers, Boston College and Pittsburgh were all fired.
