RIVERDALE, N.Y. โ You just never know what youโre going to see when you walk into a MAAC gym.
In the midst of what became an improbable 18-point second-half comeback win for Manhattan against undefeated Quinnipiac, Jaspers guard Terrance Jones ripped Asim Jones down from behind as he went up for a layup.
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It was a flagrant foul. Easy call for Brian OโConnell, John Cahill and Nathan Hall. But that was only the start of it.
The facts are unclear as to who egged whom first, but somebody somewhere took exception to what somebody said or did as the teams walked back to their benches. From there, both head coaches got into a shouting match, laced with expletives. Assistant coaches and players were in the mix as well, and the officials took a long time to separate the teams.
Tom Pecora and John Gallagher were both ejected from there and had to be escorted off the court. Neither wanted to leave. Once they did, both of them gestured to their respective fanbases, enlivening an already juiced-up Friday night crowd. After Jones made two flagrant free throws to put Quinnipiac ahead by six with five minutes left, Manhattan outscored the Bobcats 18-11 to win the game.
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Associate head coaches JR Lynch and Shaun Morris downplayed the events of the scrum after the game.
โI think it would be summed up as MAAC basketball on a Friday night in league play,โ Morris said. โThereโs tempers that flared. I think the referees did everything they could to kind of squash it.โ
โIt was two teams competing,โ Lynch said. โWe were competing, and things like that sometimes happen.โ
Morris did add that Quinnipiac may have taken extra exception to the play because star Jaden Zimmerman got hurt on a similar play last season, and it kept him out for much of the offseason recovering from hand surgery.
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โYou get pulled down from behind, that can cause some uneasiness,โ Morris said.
Mid-Major Madness requested a pool report from the officials, but was unable to obtain one.
In the moment, the head coaches did what their instinct was โ to stand up for their players through thick and thin. Quinnipiac couldnโt turn Pecora into their martyr with a win though.
โCoach P is a New Yorker through and through,โ Morris said. โHeโs not gonna take a lot of nonsense from people. Heโs gonna have his guys back, and our guys have his back. Thatโs why we feel so unfortunate that we let him down.โ
After Lynch and Jasper players finished speaking to the media, Gallagher took to the microphone to apologize to the Jasper fanbase for his actions.
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On Saturday, the league issued a formal reprimand to both head coaches. No suspensions were given. The two teams meet again in Hamden on Jan. 19. Weโll see if tempers flare again.
Manhattan
The Jaspersโ starting backcourt of Jaden Winston and Devin Dinkins combined for 40 points on Friday night and are averaging a combined 30.2 on the season. Each came through in big spots on Friday.
Winston scored 12 in the first half and then made a huge play in the final minute, drawing a mismatch with Keith McKnight and beating him to the basket for a runner off the glass to put Manhattan ahead by three. He finished with a game-high 22 points shooting 10-of-12 from inside the arc.
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Heโs nearly doubled his scoring average from 8.7 to 15.7. Winston has taken steps forward in efficiency inside the arc, at the foul line, and most importantly, beyond the arc. He has also increased his volume of 2-point attempts and free throws.
Winston doesnโt think heโs taken much of a scoring leap, but Dinkins does.
โHeโs being humble about it,โ Dinkins said. โHeโs put the work in for it, and the results are showing. Every time he has the ball heโs aggressive, knocking down the three ball with confidence.โ
When you pair that with Dinkins, already one of the MAACโs top players in terms of getting to the foul line and hitting threes, Manhattan has a backcourt that can outscore just about anybody else in the league. Dinkins came alive down the stretch with big plays of his own, including a wing three and a finger roll, each giving Manhattan different leads.
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Every time you roll the ball out, the Jaspersโ backcourt is going to give you buckets.
โThey created a bond that canโt be broken,โ Lynch said. โTheyโre in the gym together all the time. Theyโre always around each other. And weโre seeing it in action throughout these games.โ
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Anthony Isaacโs glass-eating
Manhattan is 361st nationally in defensive rebounding rate and 286th nationally in offensive rebounding rate. The glass is a clear weakness for this group, and sometimes, it feels like Anthony Isaac is holding it together by a thread.
The teamโs offensive rebounding rate is 6% higher with him on the floor than off, a major reason why the offense is 15 points per 100 possessions better with him as well.
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Isaac is always around the ball. Grabbing 13 rebounds is impressive enough, but the degree of difficulty on many of his rebounds was significantly harder because of the way these teams play. For Manhattan to only be a minus-eight on the glass in this game honestly felt like a miracle.
โWe know the impact that he has on the team,โ Lynch said. โAnd you can tell. Heโs a presence. He brings physicality to our group, and it showed today.โ
I wrote multiple times during the first few months of the season about how Manhattan struggled to close out games and maintain leads. It blew games against Wagner and Army, most notably, but Gallagher was convinced after losing to Furman that his team was ready for MAAC play.
He was right.
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The Jaspers trailed for most of the game against Rider, but came back to nick a win in the final minute. Then, the 18-point second-half comeback on Friday night against one of the favorites to win the conference.
Is this variance swinging in the right direction? Or has Manhattan turned a new leaf and evolved as a team to a new form?
โThese games are possessions,โ Lynch said. โAnybody can beat anybody. And thatโs what we saw today. We got the job done because these guys were mature and they executed late in the game.โ
Fraser Roxburgh had been struggling badly, but came through with back-to-back threes to tie the game at 70 as the clock ticked down.
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Manhattan knows that it needs more from him than what it has gotten, and hitting those shots could be a step in that direction.
โWe all smiled,โ Lynch said. โWe were all hyped for him. Heโs been battling.โ
Quinnipiac
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Best 12 minutes of the season?
When Amarri Monroe picked up his second foul, there were about 12 minutes left in the first half, and the Bobcats were ahead by three points.
At halftime, Quinnipiac led by 14, and Monroe didnโt play a minute in between. Thatโs 12 minutes on the road outscoring a MAAC opponent without your two All-MAAC studs by 11. Morris said it was some of the best basketball that QU had played all year long.
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โThe biggest thing was we were able to get in transition,โ Morris said. โWe wanted to make this game as much as we could go up and down, knowing how much they change their defenses, knowing how much they want to rely on trying to slow the game down and run their set plays.โ
Keith McKnight was incredible in that stretch, with multiple highlight reel dunks. He went into halftime by putting a poster on Marko Ljubicic. The freshman finished with 18 points and four assists. Sophomore Grant Randall also had a big game with 22 points and eight rebounds. Seeing those players step forward with Zimmerman still nursing that lower leg injury is huge.
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Zone took away dribble penetration
Quinnipiacโs guards donโt do a ton of dribble drive. More of that comes from the slashing play of Monroe, McKnight, Zimmerman and others. But the Jaspers different zone defenses made it difficult for the Bobcats to get a clear line to the basket.
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Jones was 0-for-9 from inside the arc, as the Jaspers turned him into a passer. He settled in and had 10 assists. Samson Reilly has only attempted 11 field goals inside the arc all year, and itโs clear that Quinnipiac loses a little bit of juice out of the backcourt without Zimmerman.
It even felt like Monroe couldnโt get to his spots like he usually does. After the first few possessions of the game, which included him bullying his man to the basket, he couldnโt throw his body around and generate easy advantages. On the final possession of the game, youโd love to be able to get Monroe downhill, but against the zone, he couldnโt drive and had to pass to Ronell Giles Jr., who missed a corner three.
โWhen they play that zone,โ Morris said. โYouโre not going to be able to dictate exactly what shot you can get.โ
If thereโs one play that is going to stick with me from this game aside from the flagrant foul, it came with 47 seconds left and Manhattan ahead by one.
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Monroe attempted to swing the ball back to the top of the key so Jones could initiate offense, but Jones couldnโt catch it. The ball bounced off of Jones and into the backcourt, giving Manhattan the possession it needed to extend the lead to three.
From there, Quinnipiac attempted a quick three, with Monroe trailing the play, instead of working for a better look. They got lucky, as McKnight grabbed the offensive rebound and put it in, but they put themselves in position to not be in position with prior mistakes.
The Bobcats turned it over 15 times with a turnover rate about 4% higher than the season average.
Other Notes Around the League
Merrimack 75, Mount St. Maryโs 65
You can change the players, you can change the year, but you still get the same feeling watching a Merrimack game. The Warriors are masters of game flow and game management, keeping the Mount at an armsโ length in the second half and answering whenever it needed a big basket. The Mountaineers are shooting just 24% from three in conference play and have made just five total in the last two games. Merrimack is now 4-0 in the MAAC for the second straight year and has won six of its last seven games.
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Canisius 85, Fairfield 81
Kahlil Singleton scored 28 of his 37 points in the first half to lead the Griffs to the win. The 37 is the most that any MAAC player has scored since Brycen Goodine, ironically, had 37 against Canisius in March 2024. Goodine is also the last MAAC player to outdo that 37 mark, as he scored 40 against Siena earlier that season. The win improves Canisius to 5-1 at home, with the only loss coming to Buffalo. Canisius had 22 assists and just six turnovers. Fairfield currently ranks 312th nationally in forcing turnovers. The Stags are now 0-4 in MAAC play for the first time since 2013-14, when it started 0-7 and finished 4-16. Chris Casey went back to the four-freshman starting lineup.
Niagara 64, Sacred Heart 61
The 58-possession slog was both teamsโ slowest game of the season. Niagara shut down both Mekhi Conner and Nyle Ralph-Beyer, holding them to a combined five points and one assist in 43 minutes. The Purple Eagles got Trenton Walters back from injury after he missed all of December, and he scored eight points in 21 minutes. Justin Page had a big second half, and Reggie Prudhomme came through with the game-winning shot in the final seconds. Itโs Niagaraโs first Division-I win since Nov. 10 against Delaware State. When Niagara allows fewer than 70 points, it is 4-0 and 0-9 otherwise.
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Iona 75, Siena 72
Despite Gavin Doty nearly singlehandedly bringing Siena back, the Saints fell in a tough road game at the Hynes Center. Toby Harris continued to shoot the lights out, making six threes for the third time this season. CJ Anthony responded to his worst game of the season on Monday with a 10-point, 13-assist double-double. With Tasman Goodrick out for Siena, Francis Folefac stepped up with a big performance, but it took a hit on the Saintsโ depth. That makes it three losses in a row for Siena, which still lacks a win against a top-200 team. The good news for the Saints? They donโt face another top-200 team until Jan. 22.
Saint Peterโs 69, Marist 59
The Peacocks held Marist to just 21 points in the second half and never trailed after a 17-2 run that spanned the end of the first into the early part of the second. This is the type of win that legitimizes Saint Peterโs now 4-0 start in MAAC play. Since Dec. 1, SPUโs only loss came in overtime on the road at Georgetown, and it ranks second in the conference in Torvik in that span. It may also be worth mentioning that SPU has allowed opponents to shoot just 23% from beyond the arc in conference play. Maristโs home game against Iona on Sunday became all the more important.
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LEAGUE NOTE: Home teams went 6-0 on Friday night. Through 24 league games, there have been just six road wins. No team has multiple road wins in conference play yet.