Final Mar 12
RICH 65 5.5 o130.5
DAV 69 -5.5 u130.5
Final Mar 12
UVA 60 1.0 o129.0
GT 66 -1.0 u129.0
Final Mar 12
CIN 56 8.5 o136.5
ISU 76 -8.5 u136.5
Final Mar 12
CHAR 64 3.5 o136.5
RICE 61 -3.5 u136.5
Final Mar 12
SCAR 68 4.0 o139.5
ARK 72 -4.0 u139.5
Final Mar 12
WYO 61 -1.0 o136.0
SJSU 66 1.0 u136.0
Final OT Mar 12
GRAM 65 6.0 o126.0
SOU 62 -6.0 u126.0
Final Mar 12
FOR 88 4.5 o155.5
URI 71 -4.5 u155.5
Final Mar 12
ND 56 10.5 o145.5
UNC 76 -10.5 u145.5
Final Mar 12
COLO 67 7.0 o130.0
WVU 60 -7.0 u130.0
Final Mar 12
NW 72 -3.5 o128.5
MINN 64 3.5 u128.5
Final Mar 12
TEX 79 2.5 o149.5
VAN 72 -2.5 u149.5
Final Mar 12
BUT 75 -2.0 o147.5
PROV 69 2.0 u147.5
Final Mar 12
FRES 71 13.0 o139.0
NEV 86 -13.0 u139.0
Final Mar 12
LAS 78 4.0 o146.0
MASS 71 -4.0 u146.0
Final Mar 12
LAM 54 12.5 o134.0
MCNS 63 -12.5 u134.0
Final Mar 12
RID 64 8.5 o143.5
QUIN 78 -8.5 u143.5
Final Mar 12
UMES 70 16.5 o139.5
NORF 77 -16.5 u139.5
Final Mar 12
IOWA 77 5.0 o155.0
OSU 70 -5.0 u155.0
Final Mar 12
UTEP 60 7.5 o136.0
LIB 81 -7.5 u136.0
Final Mar 12
DEP 71 5.0 o144.0
GTWN 67 -5.0 u144.0
Final Mar 12
NAVY 52 4.0 o131.5
AMER 74 -4.0 u131.5
Final Mar 12
CAL 73 7.0 o139.0
STAN 78 -7.0 u139.0
Final Mar 12
LSU 62 9.5 o145.5
MSST 91 -9.5 u145.5
Final Mar 12
AFA 59 12.5 o130.5
UNLV 68 -12.5 u130.5
Final Mar 12
KSU 56 6.0 o138.5
BAY 70 -6.0 u138.5
Final OT Mar 12
SHU 62 3.5 o137.5
MW 66 -3.5 u137.5
Final Mar 12
FAMU 76 7.0 o136.5
JKST 91 -7.0 u136.5
Final 2OT Mar 12
USC 97 1.0 o153.0
RUTG 89 -1.0 u153.0
Final Mar 12
COPP 63 17.0 o142.5
SCST 68 -17.0 u142.5
Final Mar 12
HALL 55 10.5 o128.5
VILL 67 -10.5 u128.5
Final Mar 12
CSB 66 5.5 o143.0
UCSB 71 -5.5 u143.0
Final Mar 12
FIU 56 8.0 o133.0
JVST 65 -8.0 u133.0
Final Mar 12
DSU 57 12.5 o141.0
UVU 74 -12.5 u141.0
Final OT Mar 12
UCF 94 10.5 o155.5
KU 98 -10.5 u155.5
Final Mar 12
OKLA 81 3.5 o146.5
UGA 75 -3.5 u146.5
Final Mar 12
SYR 53 9.0 o150.0
SMU 73 -9.0 u150.0
Final Mar 12
CP 86 -1.5 o149.0
UCD 76 1.5 u149.0
Final Mar 12
MONT 91 3.0 o147.0
UNCO 83 -3.0 u147.0
Final Mar 12
UTA 75 8.5 o147.5
GC 98 -8.5 u147.5
Butler 8th Big East13-18
St. John's 1st Big East27-4

Butler @ St. John's preview

Madison Square Garden

Last Meeting ( Feb 26, 2025 ) St. John's 76, Butler 70

NEW YORK -- For the first time in nearly 40 years, St. John's enters the Big East tournament as the top seed.

After winning their first outright regular-season title since the 1984-85 season, the No. 6 Red Storm (27-4) open their quest to win their first conference tournament since 2000 when they face ninth-seeded Butler (14-18) Thursday afternoon in a quarterfinal matchup.

The Red Storm are the top seed in the tournament for the first time since 1986 - when they followed up their Final Four appearance by sharing the regular-season crown with Syracuse while Chris Mullin was a rookie with the Golden State Warriors.

"You got to stay focused on every little thing," Red Storm coach Rick Pitino said Wednesday after winning the Big East Coach of the Year award. "The NCAA Tournament, you just got to cut out all the distractions. You got to shut the phones off. You really, really got to focus."

Picked fifth in the preseason poll, St. John's (27-4) clinched the regular-season title with a 71-61 victory against Seton Hall March 1 at Madison Square Garden where it is 9-0. The Red Storm are also 18-0 at home and have been ranked in the AP Top 25 poll for eight straight weeks.

Among the reasons for the impressive regular season in coach Pitino's second year is the ability to win close games. The Red Storm are 8-4 in games decided by six points or fewer, which includes their 86-84 overtime win Saturday at Marquette when Zuby Ejiofor hit his second buzzer-beater this season.

"I think we're in the best shape of our lives," Ejiofor said Wednesday. "Honestly the practice session that coach puts us through we're a little bit more conditioned than most teams. We do whatever it takes to win. We're a gritty team."

After backing up Joel Soriano last season when St. John's reached the Big East tournament semifinals for the first time since 2000, Ejiofor earned the league's Most Improved Player award earlier this week for averaging 14.1 points and 8.2 rebounds.

Ejiofor often provided a nice secondary scoring option behind RJ Luis, who averages 18.1 points and was the first St. John's player since Walter Berry to be named Big East Player of the Year. Luis scored 28 in the regular-season finale and shot 26-for-48 in his final three games since shooting 4 of 18 against UConn on Feb. 23 in his return from a groin ailment.

St. John's swept both regular-season meetings with Butler, surviving a 1-of-21 showing from behind the arc in a 71-62 home victory on Jan. 4 and getting 24 points from Luis in its 76-70 win on Feb. 26.

"Obviously, they're the best team in the league, so this is a great opportunity for our guys," Butler coach Thad Matta said.

Butler advanced past the opening round for the first time in three years by earning a 75-69 wire-to-wire victory Wednesday over Providence. Pierre Brooks II led the Bulldogs with 25 points on 11-of-18 shooting for his ninth game of at least 20 points.

The Bulldogs gave up fewer than 70 points for the second time this season and allowed 37.7 percent shooting. At the same time, they got outrebounded 53-29 as Providence grabbed 25 offensive boards.

Brooks scored 29 points in the two meetings with the Red Storm, who held him to 11-for-29 from the field.

"It's a home game for St. John's," Brooks said. "It's going to be pretty packed in here, so we have to come in as one and come in calm and collected and try to get a W."

--Larry Fleisher, Field Level Media

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