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Adam Zagoria covers basketball at all levels. He is the author of two books and an award-winning journalist whose articles have appeared in ESPN The Magazine, SLAM, Sheridan Hoops, Sports Illustrated, Basketball Times and in newspapers nationwide.
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Saturday / November 23.

By AMAN KIDWAI

WASHINGTON D.C. — Rutgers Basketball has not been good for a very long time, but all indications are that’s eventually going to change.

Under first-year head coach Steve Pikiell, the Scarlet Knights (15-17) have more than doubled their win total from last season and now have their first winning streak in conference play after beating Ohio State, 66-57, in the first round of the Big Ten Tournament at the Verizon Center.

“We learned how to compete this year,” Pikiell said. “We couldn’t close out some games. But it’s a process when you’re building a program. It takes steps.”

Rutgers advances to face No. 6 Northwestern (21-10) in Thursday’s nightcap. After helping the program get its first Big Ten Tournament win and finally stringing together consecutive conference victories, guard Corey Sanders believes this could be a turning point.

“To come out the way we did and do something that nobody thought we could do besides our fans… we had faith the whole time,” he said. “I feel like we could do the same thing tomorrow against Northwestern.”

By: MIKE McCURRY

NEW YORK — The box score from Duke’s nine-point loss at Louisville on January 14th most closely resembles an artifact.

Grayson Allen dropped 23 points and 9 boards. Frank Jackson logged ten minutes. Amile Jefferson was absent, nursing a bruised right foot. Ditto for head coach Mike Krzyzewski and his surgically repaired back.

Flash forward to Wednesday, when Duke secured a 79-72 win over Clemson in the second round of the ACC Tournament, clinching a rematch with Louisville on Thursday in the form of a quarterfinal date (approximately 2:30 p.m. ET, ESPN).

By DENNIS CHAMBERS

NEW YORK — After losing their last six Big East Tournament games, St. John’s finally ended their rough stretch Wednesday night at Madison Square Garden.

In the 8-9 matchup that kicked off the 2017 Big East Tournament, St. John’s prevailed over Georgetown, 74-73. The Red Storm will face No. 1 Villanova, the defending NCAA champion, in a noon quarterfinal on Thursday.

Malik Ellison – who affected every area of the game with 11 points, eight rebounds, six assists, and three steals – recognized the long-standing rivalry between the two programs. The sophomore guard was happy to be a part of ending the losing streak.

PISCATAWAY, N.J. — This may have been the end of the line for the storied St. Anthony’s basketball program.

In what potentially could have been the school’s last boys basketball game ever — and the final game coached by the Naismith Hall of Famer Bob Hurley — Hudson Catholic downed the Friars, 64-61, to win the New Jersey North Non-Public B title at the Rutgers Athletic Center.

St. Anthony’s faces a financial crisis and needs approximately $500,000 to avoid closing its doors after this school year. SHOWTIME Sports is documenting St. Anthony’s season and its cameras covered the game.

Hudson Catholic’s “Big Three” of high-major Division 1 recruits was simply too much — even for Hurley’s legendary defense — as they combined for 60 points.

Junior point guard Jahvon Quinerly scored a game-high 25 before fouling out and junior small forward Louis King scored 20 points for the Hawks, whose coach, Nick Mariniello, had never before beaten St. Anthony’s. Junior guard Luther Muhammad added 15 points.

“This is just a great feeling right now, I can’t even explain it,” Quinerly said. “But our season’s not over. We got I think St. Pat’s next so we looking onto that but we’re excited right now. It’s our first time beating them. This is my first time beating them. Ever. It’s a great feeling.”

Hudson Catholic — and not St. Anthony’s — will meet The Patrick School in the Non-Public B final on Saturday at 5 p.m. at the Ritacco Center in Toms River, N.J.

It’s a rematch of a game played Dec. 18 at the City of Palms Classic in Fort Myers, Fla., in which The Patrick School prevailed, 65-63.

Kentucky-bound Nick Richards scored a career-high 28 points and 16 points to lead The Patrick School to a 71-62 victory over Roselle Catholic in the South B final at Jackson Liberty earlier Wednesday.

Ithiel Horton led St. Anthony’s with 17 points and Howard-bound guard R.J. Cole added 16 for St. Anthony’s.

Hurley did not want to speculate on the school’s future after the loss.

“The last thing in the world, you’d be sitting in a press conference after losing the North Jersey final, and be thinking about like something outside of what just happened to us,” Hurley said. “The expression my father used to use all the time, there’s a time and a place for everything. And discussing that right now is just not appropriate. We’re dealing with what just happened on the basketball court. There’s enough emotion for us going through that because we gave ourselves a chance to go to Saturday. We had the opportunity to go to Saturday and didn’t play well enough. And that’s hard.”

Mariniello estimated his school hadn’t beaten St. Anthony’s since the 1976-77 season, and he hopes it’s not the end of the run for the the storied program.

“You know what, I don’t want them to close,” Mariniello told me Tuesday. “We don’t want to see any Catholic schools close, and especially them because it’s a storied institution with a storied coach and we want to be able to compete against that.

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