Hawks Win First-Round Thriller

Led by 14 points by Langston Galloway, including a pair of clutch free throws with 1.4 seconds remaining, Saint Joseph’s defeated Xavier in the first round of the Atlantic 10 Tournament in Brooklyn. The Hawks blew a late five-point lead and were down by one until Galloway’s free throws. Isaiah Philmore missed a layup at the buzzer that would have won it for Xavier.

Both teams shot poorly from the field in the first half but the game heated up down the stretch. Staten Island-raised Halil Kanacevic led a Hawk surge before fouling out. He ended the game with 11 points, 8 rebounds, and 6 assists. His back-court mate Ron Roberts finished with only 8 points and missed three key free throws near the end that nearly cost St. Joe’s the game.

In what was almost his last game in college, senior Tay Jones continued his slump with a 1 for 10 night from the field scoring 11 points, mostly on free throws. Despite his struggles, Jones surpassed Ahmad Nivins for third place on Saint Joseph’s all-time scorers list.

The Hawks will now face VCU at the Barclays Center on Friday.

Saint Joseph’s Beats Temple in Important Rivalry Game

The Hawks finally put together a full, efficient team effort in their defeat of city and conference rival Temple. By pounding the ball inside rather than relying on three-pointers, Saint Joseph’s was able to display a cohesive half-court offense. SJU improved to 13-7 overall and 4-3 in conference.

Ron Roberts led Saint Joseph’s with 18 points and 12 rebounds and Halil Kanacevic continued his own personal hot streak with 12 points and 9 rebounds. The two forwards combined with CJ Aiken and his 16 points to give the Hawks a dominant presence in the paint. Only 21% of St. Joe’s attempts against Temple were three-pointers, compared with 41% on the season, and it paid off. Saint Joseph’s scored 40 points in the paint compared to only 16 by Temple.

The game was remarkably well-disciplined as there were only 16 total turnovers including only 5 by Temple. The Hawks only recorded 9 fouls on the night.

The Hawks eliminated a 9-point deficit late in the second half to go up by 4 on the Owls who were led by an outstanding performance by Khalif Wyatt who ended up with 34 points. Wyatt made a long three to cut the deficit to one point with under 10 seconds to go and Tay Jones missed the front end of a one-and-one but Temple was unable to score with 7 seconds remaining.

Team captain Langston Galloway continued his puzzling regression with 8 points and no three-pointers. The only major contributor from the Hawk backcourt with Jones who scored 16 points to go along with 4 assists and 5 rebounds.

Saint Joseph’s now travels to Dayton for a Wednesday night tilt.

The Hawks and Expectations

Through fifteen games, Saint Joseph’s has been, in a word, disappointing. The undeniably talented Hawks have shown great potential at times (Notre Dame) and have looked terribly mediocre (Fairfield) at others. More often than not, the half-court offense has been stagnant and the defense has given up far too many offensive rebounds. The short bench has led the fanbase to refer to SJU as having a 6.5 man rotation, at times, and it has arguably caused the Hawks to falter late in games. In the win against Duquesne, Saint Joseph’s made one field goal in the final six minutes of the game and were lucky to leave Pittsburgh victorious.

In a recent article on Philahoops, Aaron Bracy frames this year’s St. Joe’s team as being a victim of expectations. “The problem, though, is many Hawks fans and college basketball observers expect Phil Martelli’s unit to be 14-0”, Bracy writes. This is simply false. I’d argue that most Hawk fans expected SJU to be anywhere from 10-4 to 12-2 at this point, which is perfectly reasonable considering the talent this team possesses. When national writers said the Hawks had their best team on paper since 2004, they didn’t mean they expected Saint Joseph’s to go undefeated throughout the regular season.

Hawk fans probably expected a loss to a very good Creighton team on the road. A home loss to ranked Butler was not expected but was understandable and forgivable. Consecutive losses to Fairfield (at home) and Villanova however, were unacceptable to a fanbase that hasn’t seen a tourney appearance since 2008 and is getting more and more restless.

Bracy himself had the Hawks ranked as the best team in Philadelphia at the beginning of the season. Now he ranks them fourth. Were his expectations too high?

Statistically, the Hawks have regressed in many categories. Points per game, assists per game, field-goal percentage, and three-point percentage are all down. The team’s offensive efficiency has marginally improved but the defensive efficiency has plummeted. How does one explain that for a team that has returned every player and now includes six upper-classmen compared to last year’s one? Was it really too much for the fanbase to expect an improvement from last year’s 20-win team?

Numerous media outlets have pointed out that starters have been absent for a good part of the season. This would be a valid point if Saint Joseph’s hadn’t been playing at full strength in three of its four losses. The lone loss coming without a starter was the game against Fairfield in which Saint Joseph’s shot just 33%. Spinning the narrative to say the Hawks have not had a chance to “mesh” would be silly as the core of this team has been playing together for three years now.

There were good reasons there were lofty expectations surrounding this team and, thus far, they simply haven’t lived up to those expectations. The blame should not fall on the fans. It falls on the players but mostly the coaching staff for their inability to take advantage of the obvious talent they possess and improving only marginally since last season. Much of the lack of player development falls on the coaches.

Do the Hawks have an opportunity to make up for their slow start? Absolutely. The majority of their conference slate remains and potential quality wins against VCU, Temple, Saint Louis, and others await. Was it really too much for the fanbase to expect enough of an improvement from last year’s 20-win team for an NCAA birth and a top-four A10 finish? Not in the slightest.

#14/17 Butler Beats St. Joe’s For First A-10 Win

Once again, Saint Joseph’s failed to put two quality halves together and lost to Butler after leading 40-35 after the first half. Butler opened their A-10 slate in style on the road after trailing for most of the contest.

Butler’s star guard Rotnei Clarke led both teams with 28 points on 21 shots. Chris Wilson led Saint Joseph’s with 15 points, all of which came in the first half. He inexplicably took zero shots in the second and sat out for large portions of the half in a baffling decision by Phil Martelli.

Early on, SJU lived and succeeded by the three but they would ultimately go cold and their lack of half-court cohesion eventually became obvious to the restless sellout crowd. After shooting over 50% in the first half, the Hawks finished at 36%. Saint Joseph’s shot 5-25 in the final 20 minutes of the game. It is a loss that will haunt SJU if they are ultimately left on the wrong side of the bubble. As SJU announcer Matt Martucci tweeted post-game, “I think there’s no other way to describe tonight except a missed opportunity….big time”.

Another telling quote came from Chris Wilson, “I definitely think coaching is what sets them on another level… That was the main thing I noticed, just how together and how well-coached they were”. It’s not anything many Saint Joseph’s faithful would necessarily disagree with after this frustrating season but it is telling coming from a key player.

A fast-paced game slowed to a lull in the second half for most everyone but Clarke who even appeared to forget how big he was in a tussle with 6’8″ Ron Roberts. Roberts finished with 12 points, 9 boards, and 4 blocks for the Hawks. His teammate CJ Aiken added 13 points, 7 rebounds, and 3 blocks.

Saint Joseph’s now looks to travel to Duquesne on Saturday after the home letdown.

Saint Joseph’s Defeats City Foe Drexel

In a game that was more highly anticipated in the preseason than it was the day of, Saint Joseph’s decided to come out to play but not until the second half. The Hawks were up 23-18 at the half but both teams shot poorly and there was little flow until the second half. SJU went on a 13-0 run at the end of the half but it was far from pretty.

Led by what was arguably CJ Aiken‘s best game of the season, the Hawks won 63-49. The junior forward scored 19 points on a perfect 6-6 shooting night. He also had six blocks to increase his season average to 3.2. Over the past two games, a rare aggressiveness has overtaken the NBA prospect and he has heavily contributed to the Hawks short two-game winning streak. Langston Galloway and Tay Jones both shot poorly from the field but contributed at key moments and added 13 and 11 points respectively.

Before the season began, Saint Joseph’s and Drexel were both favored by many to win their respective conferences but coming into this New Year’s Eve contest, they had a combined record of only 10-11 which, added to each student body being away for break, took much of the luster out of the matchup.

Halil Kanacevic returned in a non-starting role from his two-game suspension but he struggled offensively and defensively and played less minutes than he is accustomed to. He finished 1-8 from the field with 2 turnovers.

The Hawks return to action against Morgan State in Baltimore on January 5th before their highly anticipated home matchup and A10 opener against #17 Butler.

St. Joe’s Outruns, Outshoots Iona in High-Scoring Game

Chris Wilson readies for a free throw against Iona

After two brutal and unexpected losses, Saint Joseph’s desperately had to win a game against a team that beat them in triple overtime last year. At 96-91, it was close yet again, but they got the job done and avoided falling to .500 with a frenetic game against the Iona Gaels. Iona led 47-45 at the half but SJU jumped out to a quick lead that they slowly built after the half.

Tay Jones scored a season-high 32 points and surpassed 1,500 for his career in a hot-shooting night that saw him go 12-19 from the field and 4-7 from three. Jones, who had been suffering from a sore groin, was held to 3 points in the Hawks home loss to Fairfield last time out. His injury appeared to be fully healed as he consistently beat his man off the dribble and created shots for himself and his teammates. He also had four assists and four steals.

SJU received a stunning five points out of their 96 total but three starters scored over 20. Langston Galloway shot 50% from the field and from the perimeter for 23 and CJ Aiken added 22, including a few impressive dunks to go along with his 9 rebounds and 4 blocks. Most importantly, however, was that he “was assertive” as Phil Martelli put it after the game. For much of the season, Aiken has been secluded in the corner, beyond the perimeter and it clearly makes a difference when he spends time in the paint.

Due in part to the absence of Halil Kanacevic, who was serving the second game of a two-game suspension, the Hawks were out-rebounded overall and especially badly on offense. The difference seemed to be the pace of the game which favored SJU as they’ve failed all season to get their half-court offense consistently in sync. Even though they again relied heavily on three-pointers (11-22), this time making them, the Hawks also scored 40 points in the paint even without their biggest player. Their ability to penetrate regularly led to more open opportunities than they’ve had in many games this season. In his post-game press conference, Martelli alluded to reducing the reliance on threes as the season progresses.

Coming into the game at fourth in the nation in scoring, Lamont Jones finished with 25 for the Gaels.

Saint Joseph’s will next travel a few miles to West Philly as they face City Six rival Drexel on New Year’s Eve for a 4 PM tip.

Notes
-96 points was the most the Hawks have scored in regulation since 2008
-Tay Jones became the 16th player in Saint Joseph’s history to surpass 1,500
-Hagan Arena posted a sellout of 4,200 even as the students were away for holiday break

Poor Shooting Dooms SJU in Home Loss

Still reeling from a brutally close loss to rival Villanova, Saint Joseph’s desperately needed a win to regain their confidence and swagger. Instead, they dropped a game at home to Fairfield who came in ranked 127th on KenPom. The game was close from the beginning but the Hawks shot 33% from the field and failed to build a sizable lead when they had the opportunity to do so.

Derek Needham scored 24 points for Fairfield including an off-balance heave from three to win it. He made more three-pointers (5) than the entire Hawks team (4). Abadou Sidibe added 10 points and 9 rebounds and consistently out-muscled SJU’s bigs in the second half.

For the first time since a loss to Florida State, the Hawks offense got players the shots they wanted but no one seemed to be able to make those shots aside from dunks and there were even a number of those that were missed. Ronald Roberts wowed the crowd with a few thunderous dunks in the first half but he was contained in the second as he only scored two points in the final frame. He finished with 19 points and 11 rebounds.

Langston Galloway heated up in the second half after a slow first by scoring three three-pointers but his fellow guard Tay Jones failed to score a field goal and had only three points in a rather lackluster performance.

The Hawks felt the absence of Halil Kanacevic who served the first game of a two-game suspension for a hand gesture during the Villanova game. Papa Ndao and Isaiah Miles failed to score filling in for him.

The Hawks will not have six days to dwell on their atrocious shooting performance before they take on Iona at home on December 28th.

Hawks Lose Bitter Holy War

As the idea of Saint Joseph’s and Villanova becoming in-conference rivals becomes more and more likely, the two close rivals squared off for their annual matchup. On paper, SJU had this won before tip. For the first time in years, the Hawks had the bragging rights coming into their biggest rivalry game of the year. If the teams had been measured by talent and potential instead of points scored over two halves, the Hawks would have won by a large margin. Instead, they go back to Hawk Hill after losing by 4 and dropping to 5-3 on the young season. Saint Joseph’s had been up by 5 points with two minutes to go but failed to score again.

In a game where neither team shot better than 38% (SJU: 38%, Nova: 36%), the contest was partially decided by second-chance points as Villanova had 13 offensive boards to Saint Joseph’s 6. Midway through the second half, Hawk forward Halil Kanacevic riled the Villanova students up by shooting them a lewd and immature “hand gesture“, as the commentators continually referred to it, which signaled a shift in momentum. Villanova students are not known for being the loudest in or out of the city of Philadelphia but it turns out a middle finger pointed in their direction is enough to get them yelling. With only a few minutes remaining, a rattled Kanacevic missed two important free throws and James Bell sank a three-pointer at the other end that ended up being the winning shot.

Langston Galloway finally broke out of his slump with a 22-point outburst on 6-10 three-point shooting but he made 4 costly and uncharacteristic turnovers. Tay Jones added 16 but shot a poor 4-14 from the floor and played too aggressively at times, being called for two offensive fouls. The Hawks esteemed frontcourt was absent for much of the game as Kanacevic and CJ Aiken only accounted for 10 points combined. Ron Roberts added 10 on his own but there were very few highlight-reel alley-oops or dunks that were frequent in last year’s Holy War at Hagan Arena. Again unable to stimulate Phil Martelli’s stagnant half-court offense, the Hawks continued to settle for threes as 10 of the 18 made field goals came from beyond the arc.

The game was physical, tense, and even ugly at times. Nova coach Jay Wright was called for a technical in the first half after loudly disagreeing with a call. Following Kanacevic’s gesture, CJ Aiken received a technical for blocking a shot and then looking at a player who fell during the block. It appeared the referees felt they needed to make up for not T-ing up Kanacevic as Aiken clearly did not do enough to warrant a technical. The Hawks committed 18 turnovers to Villanova’s 13.

The Hawks now have an eleven day break to take finals and let this bitter loss simmer before they take on Fairfield at home on December 22nd.

Hawks Impress in OT Win Over #20 Notre Dame

For the third time in the last four tries, Saint Joseph’s defeated a ranked opponent as the Hawks won an exciting game against #20 Notre Dame at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn during the Coaches vs. Cancer Classic.

Up 37-36 at the half, St. Joe’s overcame an 8-point deficit late in the second half to force overtime. The Hawks outscored the Fighting Irish 13-4 in the extra period aided by Notre Dame star forward Jack Cooley fouling out. Junior forward Ron Roberts paced SJU with 21 points, including several thunderous dunks, and 16 rebounds, 8 of which were on the offensive side.

Team captain Langston Galloway overcame a poor shooting night by his standards as well as the loss of a tooth after a scramble for a loose ball to tie the game up and force overtime. He finished with 13 points on 5-13 shooting and “worked on every single possession” as coach Phil Martelli put it in his press conference.

After Monday night’s opening blowout of Yale in which the team looked sluggish at times, Saint Joseph’s looked much more cohesive in a half-court offense led by much improved sophomore guard Chris Wilson. Wilson played aggressively but smartly while scoring 19 points and committing only 1 turnover in 41 minutes of play and helped lead the Hawks to an amazingly efficient 1.23 points per possession. Senior point guard Tay Jones will be back for tonight’s tilt against Florida State but Wilson is likely to get the starting nod again after his fine performance against the Irish.

If there was one thing to cause worry in the minds of Hawk faithful, it was the many wide-open looks Notre Dame had from 3-point range. Defensively, St. Joe’s is still getting used to the three bigs lineup of Halil Kanacevic, CJ Aiken, and Roberts which has left open looks for opposing shooters over the first two games. Fortunately for the Hawks, Yale and Notre Dame have failed to capitalize on many of these but the three must improve at switching on the perimeter as Phil Martelli alluded to after the game.

Tonight’s championship game at Barclays against Florida State starts at 9:30 PM EST.

St. Joe’s Wins Ugly Blowout

Saint Joseph’s, as expected, won its opener at home despite 11 turnovers and poor shooting performances from both the field and the free throw line. The Hawks were led by captain Langston Galloway who scored 20 points on six of nine shooting including two of four from behind the arc.

Juniors Halil Kanacevic and Ron Roberts each had double-doubles but Kanacevic had five turnovers and Roberts only shot 3-12 from the floor. The team shot a putrid (or “deplorable”, as Phil Martelli called it) 16-30 from the free throw line headlined by a 1-5 night from point guard Chris Wilson who filled in for Tay Jones. CJ Aiken had three blocks but also committed four rare fouls and was delegated to the bench for much of the game. He finished with 8 points and three rebounds.

Without lone senior and starting point guard Jones, Saint Joseph’s struggled in the half-court offense and looked lost at times. It was Yale’s 25% shooting that kept SJU’s lead sizeable throughout the game. The Hawks larger lineup, while inefficient at times, was too much for Yale to handle as the Hawks collected five blocks and out-rebounded the Bulldogs 39 to 29. Defensively, the Hawks looked dominant against a rebuilding Yale team that launched 25 3-pointers and only made 6. Saint Joseph’s stingy defense also forced 20 turnovers.

Saint Joseph’s will now face #22 Notre Dame in Brooklyn at the new Barclays Center. They will most likely have to step up their collective game against a superior team after appearing to go through the motions and shake off the rust in much of their opener.