Dan Hurley’s UConn closing gap, but Villanova still Big East king

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He has resurrected programs at Wagner College and Rhode Island and now at UConn. And just because he hasn’t been at this as long as Jay Wright has at Villanova didn’t mean that Dan Hurley couldn’t remind everyone what a big-time Huskies team can look like in March in the Big East Tournament at the Garden. 

A Garden packed again with howling Huskies fans, just like the good old days before the school’s seven-year AAC hiatus and the pandemic’s treacherous tentacles, greeting Villanova as if it was Villainova … whose own fans were able to make their voices heard. 

Hurley couldn’t summon Kemba Walker for an epic step-back, couldn’t ask Ray Allen for a couple of clutch 3s, couldn’t summon Tate George for a buzzer-beater, couldn’t ask Richard Hamilton to be the best player on the court. 

Villainova, the 63-60 survivor, makes a coach, any coach, wish he could haunt and torment it with the ghosts of yesteryear. 

Villainova has a poise and a pride and a resilience and a tradition that is the envy of most. Its three-year stranglehold on the Big East Tournament was ended last year by Patrick Ewing’s Georgetown, but they could be on the verge of starting a new streak. 

So this was the Big East Tournament’s version of the heavyweight championship, the Wildcats getting surging Creighton in the Saturday night Final in what feels at the moment like an anticlimax. 

Jay Wright reacts during Villanova's win over UConn.
Dan Hurley freaks out over a call during the first half.
Robert Sabo

This was a pitched Big East brawl from the start. Following an Isaiah Whaley rejection of Jermaine Samuels, an animated Hurley marched onto the court before a timeout, looked up at one of the UConn sections, and waved his arms while mouthing “Let’s Gooooo!” The game wasn’t even six minutes old, UConn 14, Villanova 12. 

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