St. John's, Pitino begin life as a
ranked team as part of the week's AP Top 25 national schedule
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[November 13, 2024]
By AARON BEARD
St. John's hasn't played with a national ranking in in nearly six
years. It's been even longer for Hall of Famer Rick Pitino to coach
a team highlighted in The Associated Press men's college basketball
poll.
That changes this week with the 22nd-ranked Red Storm returning to
the poll, marking the first time Pitino is leading a ranked team
since his time at Louisville. The first game comes at home Wednesday
against Wagner as part of the AP Top 25 national schedule this week,
followed by a matchup in Madison Square Garden against a New Mexico
team coached by his son Richard on Sunday.
Pitino — who won an NCAA championship at Kentucky in 1996 and a
later-vacated one at Louisville in 2013 — is focused on fixing flaws
that had his team down four at halftime against visiting Quinnipiac
over the weekend before taking over after halftime.
“Last year at this time we would've lost this game,” Pitino said
after that 96-73 win. “But this team did the right things to win
this game. I'm just hoping that this team evolves into the team that
we had at the end of the year last year, because right now
transition defense and man defense is a major, major weakness.”
Still, St. John’s (2-0) enters the week ranked No. 22 in KenPom’s
adjusted offensive efficiency by scoring 115.8 points per 100
possessions, while the defense is ranked 14th by allowing 94.7
points per 100 possessions.
The Red Storm hadn't been ranked since spending a week at No. 24 in
January 2019. And that was one of just 10 appearances since 2001
before Monday.
For Pitino, it marks the first time he will coach an AP Top 25 team
since the final poll of the 2016-17 season, not long before he was
fired at Louisville after that school became entangled in a federal
corruption probe into the sport.
The weekend game in the Garden offers a notable matchup, both with
the Lobos having beaten then-ranked UCLA on Friday and the
family-reunion angle.
“You don’t pay attention to the coach down at the other end,” Pitino
said. “I’ll coach against my son, and I don’t even want to look at
him. You just want to be totally focused. He's not going to want to
look at me. It's about New Mexico winning and us winning.”
Cramping watch
The annual Champions Classic features No. 1 Kansas meeting Michigan
State and the nightcap featuring No. 6 Duke against No. 19 Kentucky
on Tuesday in Atlanta.
The latter game features star Blue Devils freshman and preseason
Associated Press All-American Cooper Flagg. The 6-foot-9 forward has
shown off an all-around floor game but has also had cramping issues
in each of his first two college games.
“We've got to help him,” third-year coach Jon Scheyer said after
Friday's win against Army. “I'm not happy about it for him. We've
got to help him, and we will. Right after this, I can promise you,
I'm going to be meeting (with team staff), I don't care if it's all
night. We can't have that happening, bottom line.”
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Duke's Cooper Flagg (2) holds his jersey in frustration as he walks
off the court during a timeout in an NCAA college basketball game
against Army in Durham, N.C., Friday, Nov. 8, 2024. (AP Photo/Ben
McKeown)
A Final Four meeting that wasn't
The week's slate of ranked-against-ranked games is headlined by a
matchup that could've come in last year's national championship
game: Alabama vs. Purdue.
The second-ranked Crimson Tide visit the 13th-ranked Boilermakers on
Friday night. They met early last season, with Purdue edging Alabama
before both reached last year's Final Four from opposite halves of
the NCAA bracket. Purdue advanced to the final by beating surprising
N.C. State and Alabama fell in the second semifinal against a UConn
team on its way to history as a repeat champion.
Alabama, led by preseason AP All-American Mark Sears, enters the
week ranked third in KenPom's adjusted offensive efficiency (120.5)
while Purdue is ninth (118.5).
Road work
The Alabama-Purdue game is one of five true road games for ranked
teams on Friday night, including No. 9 Arizona visiting Wisconsin.
The list includes No. 15 Marquette traveling to Maryland, No. 20
Florida facing instate foe Florida State and No. 21 Ohio State
visiting No. 23 Texas A&M.
Watch list
While Illinois and Texas Tech led the list of vote-getters among
unranked teams, there's a notable matchup just outside the AP Top 25
with Wake Forest's visit to Xavier on Saturday.
Steve Forbes' Demon Deacons (3-0) are picked to finish third in the
Atlantic Coast Conference. But the program hasn't been to the NCAA
Tournament since 2017 and hasn't been ranked since February 2010,
putting Wake Forest alongside Stanford (March 2008), Boston College
(January 2009) and Georgia Tech (also February 2010) as ACC teams
that have been unranked for more than a decade.
Xavier (2-0) is picked third in the Big East and is one of the most
experienced teams in the country.
The game is the Skip Prosser Classic, named in honor of the former
Wake Forest and Xavier coach who died in July 2007 of a heart
attack.
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