EMMITSBURG, Md. β I never actually thought that I would make the trip down to Mount St. Maryβs for a game. Over the last three four years that the Mount has been in the MAAC, as Iβve made my schedule, I donβt even write their home games down on the list of games to choose from. Iβll probably continue to do that. It took a pretty extravagant effort to go in the first place on Monday, but Iβm extremely pleased that I did.
While the rest of the schools in the conference are in urban or suburban settings, the Mount is plopped down a few miles from town on either side of Highway 15. Thereβs nothing around. On one side, the athletic complex. On the other side, all of the academic buildings. If you stand in just the right spot on the side of the athletic complex, you see the golden twinkle of the Statue of Blessed Mother, nestled amongst the hilly backdrop, rising high above the blue triangular facade of Knott Arena in the foreground. Itβs a view unlike any other in the conference.
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The arena itself transports you to a different era. Its unique architecture and wooden bleachers give it an energy that exudes historical importance, even though itβs merely a 38-year old building. Then you look up and see the massive new videoboard in one end zone, and the balcony-style hospitality seating in the other end zone.
Mount St. Maryβs athletic director Brad Davis has pushed renovations and changes to many parts of the building since he took over, but he also takes pride in the charm that it offers. He said that people tell him that Knott Arena is βthe Hinkle of the MAAC.β I canβt say whether theyβre right or not, but thereβs an aura of mysticism that other venues in the conference just donβt have.
Iβve made the trip. I successfully battled the cutting gusts attempting to sweep my Nissan Kicks off of its wheels to make it and watch a basketball game between the Mount and Iona. The Mountaineers grabbed a 66-59 victory β their first MAAC win of the year β riding two 10-point scoring runs in the second half. Here are three takeaways from each team
Mount St. Maryβs
1. Anthony Arrington flipped the game
After missing the first 10 games of the season, Wofford transfer Anthony Arrington made his Mount debut against Loyola on Dec. 13. He slid right into the guard rotation on the bench, having played 21 minutes per contest over the last four.
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In the second half on Monday, Arrington scored seven points in a row for the Mount as part of the first of the two 10-0 scoring runs. He gave the Mount a 42-41 lead with a corner three, and the building erupted.
He also played a role in bottling up Iona star CJ Anthony. He supplements Xavier Lipscombβs physicality with another strong body off the bench, part of why the Mount was able to play the game that it wanted to play for a full 40.
βWe were able to put guys on him that could match his physicality,β Donny Lind said. βWe made it uncomfortable for him as much as we could. Heβs a really good player, and I was pleased with the effort we had.β
Arrington hasnβt been efficient offensively so far, but that second half stretch shows that he can provide a lift when needed.
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2. The McEldon factor
Luke McEldon is 6-foot-10, 255 pounds but has skill beyond being a straight bruiser. Thatβs becoming a rare archetype in the MAAC and at the mid-major level, and he balled out on Monday with 18 points on 9-of-12 shooting from the field.
The Mount got him involved early and often. He got post-ups against Lamin Sabally β whom he has two inches and 40 pounds on. He got dropoffs from the guards for layups, and he played with comfort and energy throughout the night.
βWe usually try to get the ball inside as often as possible early in the game,β McEldon said. βAnd from there we can play on the outside.β
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But on a night where the outside shots werenβt falling, it was McEldon and Justin Amadi pounding it down low all night. Even when McEldon picked up two fouls in the first half, Lind stuck with him for a few minutes, trusting him to not pick up a third while being the matchup problem that he is.
3. AK KΓ©bΓ©βs WOW factor
Itβs going to be hard to top AK KΓ©bΓ©βs alley-oop dunk during the second 10-0 run when it comes to picking out the best slam of the year in the MAAC. Arlandus Keyes let go of the ball when Kebe was still a foot or two behind the 3-point line, but suddenly, Kebe appeared at the rim, sneaking past Alliou Fall to grab the ball where only he could get it and flush it home.
It immediately forced an Iona timeout. The Knott Arena crowd was stunned. For a Mount St. Maryβs team that feeds off of energy and emotion β as we saw in the MAAC Tournament β it was a play that got the entire bench jumping.
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βIt was insane, it better be on SportsCenter,β Arrington said.
βWeβre working with him and focusing on those things that he can do that nobody else can,β Lind said. βWith his length and his athleticism, and the ability to get deflections, and the ability to make plays on defense that turn into offense, or a tip-in.β
It was just Kebeβs fifth game of the season, as he missed the first eight and the Loyola game, but the tantalizing moments are happening more often this year.
Iona
1. A game of runs
Iona leads the MAAC with 13 killshots (10-0 runs), and it even had one in the first half of this game. It nearly had another in the early part of the second half, scoring eight in a row to build a nine-point lead. However, the Gaels couldnβt stack possessions together in between runs once the threes stopped falling early on.
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Then, in the second half, the Mount put together two killshots. One to take a 42-41 lead, and then one to take a 58-46 lead, essentially salting the game away by holding the Gaels scoreless for more than four minutes.
Like the Quinnipiac game, a physical MAAC opponent just wore them down in the second half. Dan Geriot looks at when the Gaels had a 41-32 lead as a missed opportunity.
βItβs more like how do you keep hitting those singles, how do you keep pushing forward together?β Geriot said. βAnd a lot of the snowball that went the wrong way was based on our transition offense, and thatβs something that we have seen a little bit before, so we need to understand that, feel that, see it on film and continue to converse with the guys about it.β
2. Not CJβs night
CJ Anthony might be the single best story in the MAAC this season. Iβll tell you that story in a feature later this week. He took the league by storm in non-conference play but played his worst game of the season on Monday.
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Heβs essentially been able to control the game flow for Iona almost every night, and if he couldnβt, heβd hit a few big shots to make up for it. He didnβt have that against the Mount. He scored 10 points on 3-9 from the field, which isnβt a bad βworst game,β but it certainly felt as though he didnβt have the impact that he usually does.
The Mount put a few different bodies on him, threw pressure at him and mitigated his impact, but itβs all part of the process for Geriot.
βI think itβs him learning it,β Geriot said. βI talk about it all the time, we gotta go through this. Dealing with ball pressure is good for him, I believe we failed correctly tonight. I donβt believe we were out of sorts β we were out of sorts with our passing, and thatβs a big thing for us.β
3. Guarding down low
As previously mentioned, McEldon had a great night for the Mount. Iona as a team is much better defending the perimeter than the paint, and the Mountaineers leveraged different ways to get in the paint and feed McEldon to exploit that.
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Geriot thinks the Gaels need to read the plays better when the ball gets in the paint.
βWeβre giving up too much at the rim by overhelping,β he said. βWe got to continue to read our help, and thatβs how we become an elite defensive team.β
Sienaβs staff definitely saw how the Mount created points at the basket, and would love to see Justice Shoats and Gavin Doty hit those dropoffs to Tassie Goodrick (should he play) and Antonio Chandler on Friday night.
Other Notes Around the League
Quinnipiac 64, Marist 58
Maristβs three MAAC games this year have been 72, 75, and now 68 possessions. Of the 21 that it played last year, only four of them were 68 or more possessions. Asim Jones has scored in double figures in six of the last seven games for Quinnipiac, and the one time that he didnβt is QUβs only loss in that stretch. While Tarik Watson and Jason Schofield can rack up points when they get the ball in the post, I donβt always feel like the best use of Maristβs possessions is playing through the bigs.
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Merrimack 80, Sacred Heart 72
Merrimack was probably due for a better shooting night after going 26% and 27% against Princeton and Vermont, and Sacred Heart got caught in the crosshairs of that early. The Warriors started 5-0 last year, and are 3-0 to start this season despite five new starters. It was another 18 points and 7 assists for freshman point guard Kevair Kennedy, who is making a habit out of that at the moment. Sacred Heart is allowing opponents to shoot 61% inside the arc in MAAC play.
Manhattan 74, Rider 71
Davis Bynum had a game-high 19. He had just 17 total points on the season after the Broncs lost to Quinnipiac on Dec. 7. Heβs now set season highs in four successive games. Perhaps Rider playing through him and Shemani Fuller more will lead to more success. But Manhattan got big bench production from Anthony Isaac and Terrance Jones. The Jaspers are still a thin team, but have two punches off the bench this year instead of just one.
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Saint Peterβs 70, Fairfield 66
Zaakir Williamson had his first double-double in a Saint Peterβs uniform, but the Peacock guards crashing the glass (eight rebounds for Bland, seven for Eaton) might be the story of the game. Fairfield is a tremendous rebounding team, and Saint Peterβs got in there and beat them on the glass. We know that Braden Sparks, Brandon Benjamin and Declan Wucherpfennig can put numbers on the board, but the Stags need to find consistent offense beyond those three.