Womhoops Guru

Mel Greenberg covered college and professional women’s basketball for the Philadelphia Inquirer, where he worked for 40 plus years. Greenberg pioneered national coverage of the game, including the original Top 25 women's college poll. His knowledge has earned him nicknames such as "The Guru" and "The Godfather," as well as induction into the Women's Basketball Hall of Fame in 2007.

Sunday, January 11, 2026

The Guru’s Local/National NCAAW Roundup: Saint Joseph’s Edges La Salle; Broomall’s Doogan Scores 48 for Richmond in Triple OT Win Over Davidson

 By Mel Greenberg @womhoopsgurux

PHILADELPHIA – Overtime was the word of the day in several places, locally and nationally, but simple crunch time was the key here on Hawk Hill Saturday afternoon at Hagan Arena where Saint Joseph’s had to execute several rallies before downing local rival La Salle 69-60 in the first of two against the Explorers in their Atlantic 10 series.

Penn rallied at Brown and and played two overtimes before losing the Quakers’ Ivy contest 77-65 to the Bears in Providence, R.I.

But down the road in New Haven. Conn., Ivy front runner No. 24 Princeton didn’t have to push the metal for a change in the final minutes in winning 76-50 at Yale.

In the Patriot League, Lehigh is still unbeaten in conference play after downing Colgate 64-45 at home in the Stabler Arena in Bethlehem, Pa., but nearby in Easton, Lafayette at home in the Kirby Sports Center fell 97-58 to preseason favorite Navy.

Rider’s recent first season win in the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference (MAAC) was not extended off losing 62-49 at Marist in Poughkeepsie, N.Y.

Delaware was also an overtime victim losing to Sam Houston 73-65 at home in the Bob Carpenter Center in Newark and remaining winless off two road and two home contests in the Blue Hens’ debut in Conference USA.

On Friday, Drexel remained winless in the Coastal Athletic Association, losing 57-53 at Stony Brook on Long Island (N.Y.) and Temple dropped an American road game 94-82 to Tulsa in Oklahoma.

In the game here, the host Hawks (12-4, 3-2) who will be two weeks without Penn State transfer Jill Jekot after suffering a sprained ankle two games ago, built a 20-14 lead after the first period on the Explorers (10-6, 3-2), got tied 26-26 and then erupted on a 15-0 run to the end of the half.

But La Salle had an answer in the third outscoring Saint Joseph’s 24-8 to take a 50-49 lead into the final minutes. But reserve Emily Knouse got the Hawks back on top quickly at the start of the fourth quarter with one of her four makes from deep on eight attempts and it stayed close the rest of the way until the home team pulled away at the foul line down the stretch.

The biggest differential was on the bench, the Hawks outscoring the Explorers 26-4 with Knouse, a freshman from Archbishop Wood, scoring 14 points and Kaylinn Bethea, a freshman from Penn Charter, collecting nine. Gabby Casey led the winners with 15 points and seven boards, while Faith Stinson had 11 points and six rebounds.

Aryss Macktoon scored a game-high 19 points for La Salle, Joan Quinn collected 15 off also making four from distance, and Kiara Williams and Ashleigh Connor each scored 10 points.

Knouse said of the gritty contest, “We practice as hard as it is in games, for sure. Our coaches do a great job getting us prepared for tough games and tough situations like this.”

“‘Coach always emphasizes, `always be ready,’ and I think that as a bench, we’re always going to bring energy,” Bethea said. “One thing that we love to do, we pick our teammates back up. So, when we see someone falling down, we make sure that we respond in a positive way and bring everyone’s energy back up.”

“You analyze it in practice,” said veteran coach Cindy Griffin in her 25th season at her alma mater about the second unit. “You look at what the second group is doing, and the gap is getting closer. That is positive because it gives us all confidence, we can put these guys in and give us some great minutes.

“You look at the last couple of practices, KayKay and Meja (Jagerskog) have been doing an unbelievable job and Knousey, she’s always going to play smart and make the three, she’s really coming along and I’m just happy the way we responded after Wednesday’s game.”

The Hawks lost at Davidson.

Considering La Salle’s inexperienced roster in recent seasons, coach Mountain MacGillivray wasn’t going to settle for moral victories.

“It shows what we’re capable of and who we can be,” he said of the rallies, “but you need to be that for more than one of the four quarters.”

Of the third quarter attack, he observed, “I think when you have a big lead, you don’t want to lose it so maybe St. Joe’s was a little tight trying to hold onto that and we were a little desperate and that’s the nature of every basketball game when someone gets ahead.”

“We showed a lot of toughness,” Griffin said. “Aleah (Snead) was in foul trouble but she got a lot of big boards for us. Gabby is Gabby, I mean she just does so many things for us and she just ends up with 50/50 balls then KayKay and Meja coming in and doing a great job, the the toughness, that’s who we are.”

MacGillivray cited the change in the Atlantic 10 competition this season.

“A good portion of this league is capable of beating some of the teams at the top where I don’t know the center to bottom had much of a prayer last year,” he said.

This week La Salle will host Saint Louis Wednesday morning at John E. Glaser Arena (ESPN+) while that night the Hawks will be at St. Bonaventure (ESPN+).

The Ivies: Princeton off a 12-game win streak is starting to show signs of running away with the league a season after not finishing with the top seed.

The Tigers (14-1, 2-0), who are nationally ranked at 24th only losing at Big Ten power Maryland, took care of business early, paced by Madison St. Rose with 18 points, shooting 6-for-18 from the field, with five assists, while Ashley Chea collected 17 points with four boards and three assists.

Coach Carla Berube was able to go to her bench and provide the starters some rest and Emily Eadie responded with her best day in all categories, scoring eight points, grabbing six rebounds, dishing three assists, and swiping a pair of steals against the Bulldogs (4-11, 0-2).

Next weekend are home games in Jadwin Gym against Dartmouth (2 p.m.,) Saturday and Harvard (2 p.m.) Monday on Martin Luther King Day, both on ESPN+.

It was a tough afternoon for Penn (10-5, 0-2), however, after last weekend’s competitive loss to Princeton in The Palestra.

This one against Brown (10-4, 2-0) was competitive, also, in going into two overtimes after an early 12-point deficit in regulation, but after dropping two down in the Ivies without a win, next weekend’s Palestra hosting Dartmouth on Saturday and Harvard on Monday become imperative wins.

Mataya Gayle scored 18 points for the Quakers while Katie Collins, the reigning Big 5 and Ivy player of the week. had 13 points and 11 boards while Saniah Caldwell scored 16 points and Simone Sawyer 10.

Brown’s Grace Arnolie had a game-high 24 points.

Penn got some help in terms of the race for the three spots behind Princeton to get to another Ivy Madness, this season at Cornell in Ithaca, N.Y.

Columbia’s Perri Page hit a last second game-winning shot to lead the Lions to a 58-55 win at Harvard in Lavieties Pavilion in Cambridge, Mass.

At one point, the visitors (10-5, 1-1) were up 17 on the Crimson (8-7, 1-1), who executed a huge rally in the third period.

“At the end of the game, I thought Perri really stepped up and made some big-girl plays,” said Columbia coach Megan Griffin. “That’s exactly what you need from your senior leader.”

Page had 24 points, matching her career high achieved in last week’s home loss to Cornell,12 rebounds, five steals, two assists and a block.

“Harvard’s very, very tough,” Page said. “We’re going to see them again, obviously, and even in the tournament, I expect them to be there. Just to be able to tough this game out and grit it out, it means everything.”

Fliss Henderson, who connected on a 3-pointer for a 55-53 lead with 1:52 left in regulation, scored eight points, had nine rebounds, six assists, three blocks and two steals.

Harvard’s Abigail Wright scored 20 points, while Karlee White had 13 points and Saniyah Glen-Bello scored 12.

Columbia hosts Yale on Saturday.

The Patriot League: Down 13-4 to Colgate (5-10, 1-3) after one period, league-leading and defending champion Lehigh (8-7, 4-0) outscored the visitors the next three periods to stay perfect in league play.

Lily Fandre scored 21 for the Mountain Hawks, shooting 8-for-12 from the field, while Gracyn Lovette had a season-high 16 points, 13 in the second half, when the home team went from a one-point deficit to outscoring the opposition 44-24 over the next two quarters.

Lehigh hosts Boston U. Wednesday at 6 p.m. (ESPN+).

Nearby, Lafayette (6-9, 2-2) was handled by a hot-shooting Navy (9-6, 3-1) outfit that made 12 3-pointers and were 38-66 from the field.

Zanai Barnett-Gay was 8-for-13 from the field for the Midshipmen, including 3-for-5 from deep with 11 boards and scoring 26 points while Zoe Mesuch was 7-for-14 overall and 6-for-12 from distance for 22 points.

Lafayette’s Teresa Kiewiet scored 17, shooting 7-for-12, while Sauda Ntaconayigize was at .500 long-range shooting 3-for-6 and finishing with 12 points.

The Leopards Wednesday are at Bucknell in Lewisburg, Pa., at 5 p.m. (ESPN+.

Army (12-3. 3-1) under first-year coach and former Saint Joseph’s star and assistant Katie Kuester has won three straight after dropping the Black Knights’ league-opener to Lehigh, the latest Saturday beating Boston U. 64-57 as Reese Ericson scored 17 points and Kya Smith and Camryn Tade each scored 15 points.

Next up on Wednesday comes a visit from Holy Cross (9-6, 5-1) which beat American 65-48 at home in Worcester, Mass., as Simone Foreman had 16 points and seven rebounds.

The MAAC: In the Rider (3-13, 1-6) loss at Marist (6-10, 3-3), Alena Cofield was the sole Broncs player in double figures with 14 points and also grabbed seven boards.

The Red Foxes were led by Lexie Tarul scoring 22 points with nine boards while Daniel Williamson had 20 points and 10 rebounds.

Struggling from the field, Rider shot 29.5 percent off 18-for-61.

“We played well at times, but I think that stretch (21-14) in the third quarter really hurt us,” said Rider first-year coach Jackie Hartzell. “We played well in the fourth quarter, getting seven consecutive stops, but we just couldn’t capitalize on the offensive end. We hit thbe offensive boards hard and got extra possessions, but we just couldn’t put the ball in the basket.”

Saturday Rider will host Sacred Heart at Alumni Gym at 2 p.m. (ESPN+) in Lawrenceville, N.J.

Those visitors fell on the road Saturday 65-49 at Quinnipiac (12-4, 7-0), which is keeping pace with two-time defending champion Fairfield.

Delaware Falls in OT: A late rally got the Blue Hens (6-10, 0-4) to overtime but Sam Houston (10-4, 3-0) recovered in the extra period to keep Delaware winless in CUSA, its new league.

Sali Kolliegbo scored 24 for Delaware, Ella Wanzer had 12 points, while Lay Fantroy had nine points and 11 rebounds, and Jiya Perry scored nine points.

The Blue Hens next host Liberty Saturday at 5 p.m. (ESPN+).

 

Drexel and Temple Lose Road Tilts: On a quick road home weekend after losing its Coastal Athletic Association game at home in the Dakslakis Athletic Center last Sunday Drexel (7-6, 0-2) headed up to Long Island to face Stony Brook (7-9, 2-1) and fell short 57-53 in a close game.

Deja Evans led the visiting Dragons with 20 points while Laine McGurk hit two shots from deep and scored 13 points, but Amaris Baker was held to 10 points.

The game featured seven ties and eight lead changes and neither team got more than a lead by seven points.

Defensively, Drexel kept the Seawolves off the scoreboard for over five minutes but then went into its own drought in the closing 3:37 of the first period and was down a point.

The Dragons took the opening of the second on a 6-3 run but the home team negated that with a 7-0 finish of the first half.

And so it went the rest of the way with Drexel at the finish down three but with a chance to tie when McGurk went to the line after being fouled on an inbounds play beyond the arc.

She missed the first, connected on the second and then missed the third on purpose hoping the Dragons could cash in on an offensive rebound that ended up in the hands of Stony Brook which went to the line the other way and cashed in with the game’s final two points.

Drexel looks for a weekend split and first CAA win of the season Sunday hosting Hofstra at 2 p.m. (FloCollege).

Temple (7-8, 1-2), meanwhile, after a wide win to start the two-game road swing, evening its American opening record, fell behind by 21 at Tulsa (11-4, 3-0), moved within six in the final quarter only to have Tulsa answer with a 7-0 run to close the door.

The Owls, who pride themselves on defense, yielded the most points in a conference game since losing 109-74 to UConn on Feb. 9, 2019 before the Huskies decided to return to the Big East.

Temple wasted an effort by Kaylah Turner, who scored 31 points while Drew Alexander had a career-high 27 points shooting 8-for-17 from the field, including a personal best of five makes from deep while Saniyah Craig scored 14 points shooting 5-for-6 from the field with seven rebounds.

The Owls return home Tuesday hosting Tulane at the Liacouras Center at 7 p.m. (ESPN+).

Besides Drexel, three other locals play Sunday, Villanova looking to keep the momentum off the win Thursday over Xavier in the Big East going at Providence at noon on truTV.

If the Wildcats are to maintain their minimal one-game lead in second in the Big East, the game is a must-win against a Friar group that has been a thorn at times over the years.

The reason for the urgency is there’s another stop Thursday as Villanova heads to Storrs, Conn., to play top-ranked, unbeaten and defending NCAA champion UConn Thursday.

The Huskies Sunday play at Creighton before hosting the Wildcats next.

In the Big Ten, the local duo still looking for their first conference wins: Rutgers won’t be facing a ranked team when the Scarlet Knights visit Northwestern at 3 p.m. (B1G+) while Penn State hosts Illinois on the Big Ten Network at 3 p.m.

The National Scene: Doogan Scores 48

Some of the key games in conferences of the locals were mentioned in the local mix above but the top individual performance of the season went to Broomall’s Maggie Doogan who broke the program record at preseason favorite Richmond (14-4, 4-1) with 48 points in a 91-84 triple overtime home win in the Robins Center in Virginia over Davidson (12-6, 4-1), which suffered its first loss in the Atlantic 10.

Doogan was voted preseason player of the year in the conference.

Karen Elsner held the previous Spiders scoring mark at 39 set against Radford on Feb. 2, 1983 over four decades ago.

It’s the most ever in an A-10 game topping Rutgers all-American Sue Wicks, later to play for the WNBA New York Liberty, who had 44 on Dec. 5, 1987 at George Washington.

She also tied the Richmond mark with 17 field goals, shooting 17-of-28 from the field, 8-of-12 3-pointers and 6-6 from the line.

She also had 13 rebounds to attain her 18th career double double while Ally Sweeney had 18 points and Rachel Ullstrom 12.

Besides Princeton, the only other ranked team playing Saturday was No. 17 Texas Tech (18-0, 5-0) in the Big 12 winning 71-60 at Cincinnati (6-11, 1-4), which on Wednesday won its first ranked game in several decades downing No. 11 Iowa State.

Continuing the best start in program history, Texas Tech got 17 points each from Bailey Maupin and reserve Snudda Collins.

The Red Raiders are one of only four teams still unbeaten and the other three play Sunday.

No. 1 UConn is at Creighton in the Big East at 2 p.m. on truTV while No. 2 Texas is at No. 12 LSU at 3 p.m. on ESPN and at the same time No. 7 Vanderbilt at 3 p.m. on SECN+ is at Texas A&M.

The Commodores have a chance to move into the Top Five in the next Associated Press women’s poll Monday at noon in the wake of earlier losses this week by No. 5 Oklahoma and No. 6 Kentucky.

Other ranked teams in action Sunday not already mentioned, in the Big Ten No. 19 Ohio State is at No. 8 Maryland at 4 p.m. on Peacock, while No. 9 Michigan at 2 p.m. hosts Wisconsin at 2 p.m. on B1G+, No. 23 Washington is at Purdue same time, same network; No. 21 Southern Cal, in danger of falling out, is at Minnesota at 3 p.m. on B1G+ in Minneapolis; No. 14 Iowa is at Indiana at 5 p.m. on the Big Ten Network, No. 15 Michigan State is at Oregon at 5 p.m. on B1G+’ and No. 4 UCLA is at No. 25 Nebraska in Lincoln at 7 p.m. on the Big Ten Network.

In the SEC, No. 3 South Carolina hosts Georgia at 2 p.m. on the SEC Network; No. 20 Tennessee hosts Arkansas at 2 p.m. on SECN+, No. 5 Oklahoma is at No. 6 Kentucky at 4 p.m. on the SEC Network; and No. 18 Ole Miss hosts in-state rival Mississippi State at 6 p.m. on the SEC Network.

In the ACC, No. 10 Louisville hosts Pitt at 2 p.m. on the CW Network; No. 22 North Carolina is at Notre Dame, bounced out last week after a long run, in South Bend, Ind., at 1 p.m. on ESPN; and unranked Duke is at unranked Stanford at 5 p.m. on ESPN.

In the Big 12, No. 11 Iowa State hosts West Virginia at at 3 p.m. on ESPN, No. 16 Baylor hosts Kansas at 3 p.m. on ESPN+ and No. 13 TCU hosts Arizona State at 5 p.m. on ESPN+.+


 

 

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