Category: College Sports

  • Three schools later, TJ Power came to Penn with armor. He’s feeling ‘indestructible.’

    Three schools later, TJ Power came to Penn with armor. He’s feeling ‘indestructible.’

    TJ Power has only been looked at as a basketball player.

    A five-star recruit coming out of Worcester Academy in Massachusetts, his talents landed him at Duke, then his need for opportunity took him to Virginia, but a search for himself brought him to Penn.

    Three years at three schools? Power wouldn’t have it any other way.

    “That suffering tested my faith and my fortitude,” Power said of his collegiate career before Penn. “And like everyone says, that’s how you get stronger. But that’s real, like as a holistic human, I’m so much more mature and better off right now because I had to leave Duke. I had to make that decision. I had to leave Virginia. I had to go through those moments. And now I’m here, and I have armor. I feel like it’s indestructible.”

    After struggling for playing time at Duke and Virginia, Power, a 6-foot-9 forward, has soared under first-year Penn coach Fran McCaffery. Power is leading the Ivy League in minutes (34.7 per game), while averaging 15.7 points and a team-best 7.5 rebounds.

    Last weekend, Power posted his best performance of his collegiate career, scoring 38 points against Dartmouth on Friday and then helping Penn gain its first Ivy League Tournament berth in three years with a victory over Harvard on Saturday.

    “I’ve been playing better,” Power said before this weekend. “I think [McCaffery] knows this. I have another level that I can tap into here. I’m trying to get to it week by week. It’s different. I probably had the biggest minutes jump in college basketball history.”

    Penn forward TJ Power leads the Ivy League with 34.7 minutes per game.

    Penn will visit Brown on Friday (7 p.m.) for its final game of the regular season as winners of six of its past seven games, thanks to Power’s resurgence. Penn will then face Harvard in the first round of the conference tournament on March 14 in Ithaca, N.Y., with Yale playing Cornell in the other semifinal.

    ‘Took a chance’

    Power, who grew up in Shrewsbury, Mass., said his father would drive him around the neighborhood as a kid to find local churches and recreation centers to play in games. The pair usually ended their trips at Worcester Academy’s gymnasium.

    By his sophomore year, college coaches were rushing to see Power on the court, including McCaffery, then the head coach at Iowa.

    McCaffery attended Power’s AAU games, and his presence was quickly felt.

    “I had three offensive fouls in the first half,” Power said. “It was terrible, and you know how Fran is with refs. He wasn’t even my coach at the time. Obviously, he’s there to recruit me, and he’s yelling at the ref as I’m playing in an AAU game.”

    TJ Power averaged 6.7 minutes in 26 games as a freshman at Duke.

    As a senior, Power was named the Massachusetts Gatorade Player of the Year after winning a state prep school Class AA championship. He accepted an offer to Duke, but he and his family stayed close to McCaffery.

    Power averaged 6.7 minutes in 26 games as a freshman during the 2023-24 season, but that didn’t stop him from enjoying his experience as a Blue Devil.

    “Duke was one of the best years of my life,” Power said. “Honestly, people from the outside might not think that just because you know basketball and playing time and stuff, but that experience is once in a lifetime.”

    Power planned on staying for his sophomore year, but an “uphill battle” for minutes and competition from the incoming class, which included future NBA lottery picks Cooper Flagg and Kon Knueppel, made Power consider other options.

    Leaving Duke meant saying goodbye to his “best friends for life” Sean Stewart, Caleb Foster, and former 76ers guard Jared McCain, but the decision was best for his career.

    “Knowing this could go bad,” Power said, “where I’m not playing, the hardest decision I ever made was to leave there. I was really emotional about that because people look at transfers and they’re like, ‘Oh, they’re running from stuff.’ I never pictured myself as that, because I took a chance going to Duke.”

    Breaking point

    Before the 2024-25 season, Power entered the transfer portal and committed to Virginia, his second choice coming out of high school. Coach Tony Bennett and Power had grown close during the recruiting process.

    “I felt rejuvenated,” Power said. “I was going to go there and learn from him. We were really close. That whole summer, I played really well, we looked good, and he had said to me in the recruiting process, because they had struggled the year before, he was talking about how he wants to play faster and change the offense.”

    When it finally seemed as though Power found the right fit, Bennett announced his retirement before the start of the season.

    “One day in the fall,” Power said. “He comes back, and we’re going into the film room, like we always do, and he just sits down, starts crying, and tells us he’s going to retire.

    “I remember it was a feeling I’ve never had before, where my whole body started overheating, and the world was shifting. I was in the front row, sitting right in front of him. That was a hard moment. And I don’t know if I have fully moved on from that.”

    Ron Sanchez was named interim head coach, and despite his promise to stick with the offense Bennett wanted to implement, it was never the same for Power. He was injured to begin the season and started just five games, averaging 9.3 minutes in 24 games.

    Virginia finished 15-17, Sanchez was fired, and “everyone entered the portal.” According to Power, the new coaching staff didn’t want him.

    “​​You want to talk about emotional,” Power said. “My time at Virginia [was] some of the darkest moments of my life.”

    Power had not played consistent basketball in almost two years. He decided to visit Penn at the request of an old friend.

    After starting in only five games at Virginia, TJ Power transferred to Penn.

    McCaffery, whowas fired by Iowa, was rumored to be heading back to his alma mater.

    “I eventually got this job,” said McCaffery, who was hired by Penn in March last year. . “It was an easy discussion because he knew that I believed in him, and he knew that our style of play was perfect for him. He came down to campus on his own. I wasn’t even here.”

    Power added: “Penn is a great place, and I’ve come to learn that even more, but in the recruiting process, I was like, wherever Fran goes — I’m going. I’m playing for that dude. If Fran wasn’t here, I wouldn’t be here.”

    ‘I’m coming here’

    Power called his parents, bought a couple of train tickets and a hotel room, drove back to Virginia, and left that night on a train to 30th Street Station.

    Power had struggled with his connection to the game and his identity around it. Coming off the train at 1 a.m., Power reflected back on a moment when he enjoyed basketball and had a familiar request for his dad .

    “I want to see the gym,” Power said.

    Power and his parents pulled up to the Palestra.

    “My dad gets out, and just like our drive around Worcester, shakes on doors,” Power said. “We go to the Palestra front door. He shakes it three times. It opens, and I walk in, and for some reason, the lights are on. I’m standing right there, 1:30 in the morning. It’s just my dad and me. We’re looking at the Palestra. I’m coming here. I got to come here.”

    TJ Power came to Penn to play under coach Fran McCaffery. “If Fran wasn’t here, I wouldn’t be here.”

    Fran was committed to helping Power get back on track, which showed in their first few practices together.

    “If I struggled, he knows what’s on the other side of that wall once I climb it,” Power said. “So that was a huge factor in my decision. I wanted someone I could trust again, and someone who has my back when I inevitably struggle.

    “The first thing Fran said when he called me was, ‘We’re going to have fun playing basketball again.’ No other coach said that.”

    Power has returned to the form that made him a five-star recruit in high school. And he has found a home — on and off the court.

    After years of chasing the best opportunity to help him go pro or get the most playing time, Power chose Penn for another reason: to find who he is outside of the sport.

    “Basketball used to be my identity,” Power said. “People ask me, ‘Who am I?’ I play basketball, I’m a basketball player. When I switched that to my relationship with God coming first, and then my identity is built through that relationship with God. …

    “That path is so much more rewarding. My identity comes first, and … my mission is to play well, and I think that’s going to give me what I want.”

  • Why did Iowa State players follow Matt Campbell to Penn State? ‘He grows young men into men.’

    Why did Iowa State players follow Matt Campbell to Penn State? ‘He grows young men into men.’

    STATE COLLEGE, Pa. — It’s common for college football players to follow their head coach to a new gig. But it’s not always a given.

    When Brian Kelly left Notre Dame to become LSU’s head coach in 2022, only one player followed him to Death Valley. It was a silent showcase of support.

    So when Matt Campbell left Iowa State in December to become Penn State’s coach, his players didn’t have to follow him. But they did, and they did so in droves.

    “It just speaks to the type of guy Coach Campbell is,” said junior safety Marcus Neal Jr., an Iowa State transfer. “It shows that players really want to play for him. He’s a really good guy. I look at him as another father figure. I can go to him for anything, ask him for anything.”

    Twenty-four Iowa State players transferred to Penn State, which marked the largest contingent of players in the 2026 transfer window to follow their head coach to a new school. The next closest team had 18 players follow former North Texas coach Eric Morris to Oklahoma State.

    Why did so many Cyclones follow Campbell to Happy Valley? The answer is simple: He is who he says he is.

    “Campbell is a great people person. He was the main reason I went to Iowa State,” said redshirt junior offensive lineman Trevor Buhr. “He’s genuine. When he says something, he does it. He is one of the best leaders I’ve ever met. He’s honest, and he’s true to himself. There’s no what-ifs. You’re getting what you’re getting from him, and it’s been consistent [since] the first time I talked to him.”

    Campbell led the Cyclones to a 72-55 record during his 10-year run as coach. But it was his off-the-field leadership — what he does beyond football — that drove dozens of players and staff members to Penn State.

    The 46-year-old coach has an open-door policy. Players can come and go from his office as they please. Those who played for him at Iowa State said his genuine personality and accountable leadership style made them comfortable to go to him, football-related or not.

    That open-door policy extended to his house in Ames, Iowa, where his players would run pickup basketball games or eat a meal with other teammates.

    And believe it or not, Campbell can hoop, too.

    “Coach Campbell is a big relationships guy,” said senior defensive back Jamison Patton. “It’s an open-door policy. All the guys go over [to his house], and we know we’re going to hoop, hang out, get some food, just be around each other. The more we’re around each other, the more our relationship grows as a team, and especially with the coaches.”

    Added Neal: “[Campbell] got a nice little shot on him. He gets picked up. You ain’t going to pick somebody up if they’re not good.”

    Before Campbell officially accepted the Penn State job, he met with his Iowa State players to inform them of his decision and offered a heartfelt explanation on why he decided to leave. It was a moment of raw emotion that was difficult for Campbell, but he wanted to say goodbye in person.

    Several players said that final meeting replicated the type of person Campbell is. And it’s why a large portion of his players knew instantly they would follow their coach to Happy Valley.

    “There was never a doubt in my mind that I was going to go somewhere else,” said redshirt senior defensive back Jeremiah Cooper, who played four seasons under Campbell at Iowa State. “Once I hit the portal, I knew I was coming to Penn State. Coach Campbell changed my life, not just as a player, but as a man. He grows young men into men, and that’s all I can ask for as a coach and as a leader.”

  • Stifling defense and new-look rotations highlight Villanova’s blowout win at DePaul

    Stifling defense and new-look rotations highlight Villanova’s blowout win at DePaul

    Villanova entered Wednesday with a 9-3 road record, but the last true road game of the season for the Wildcats came with a new wrinkle, and a new starting lineup after Matt Hodge suffered a season-ending ACL injury Saturday night vs. St. John’s.

    Villanova coach Kevin Willard said Tuesday that the injury hurt the Wildcats, but “it’s not catastrophic.” They had the right answers to make up for missing their sixth-leading scorer, Willard thought, and while a sloppy first half didn’t make him look like much of a prophet, a much better second half helped Villanova turn a tight game into a rout and an eventual 76-57 win over DePaul.

    The Wildcats improved to 23-7 on the season and 14-5 in the Big East behind big nights from Tyler Perkins (20 points, six rebounds), Duke Brennan (15 points, 12 rebounds), and Devin Askew (14 points, five rebounds). It was their eighth conference road win, their most since 2016.

    Here are a few observations from the victory:

    Dominant defense

    DePaul is the second-worst scoring offense in the Big East and ranks seventh of the 11 teams in three-point shooting (33.1%).

    It’s on the defensive end where Hodge’s absence in the starting five won’t be felt in a major way. That’s not to say Hodge, a redshirt-freshman, hasn’t held his own, but inserting Malachi Palmer in the lineup gives Villanova more versatility. Palmer is two inches smaller than Hodge at 6-foot-6 and allows the Wildcats to effectively switch more, which was especially effective against DePaul’s pick-and-roll offense.

    Malachi Palmer gave Villanova a major boost on the defensive end Wednesday night.

    Villanova was aggressive on the ball defensively and created 16 DePaul turnovers, leading to 22 points off those turnovers. Villanova got its own good looks in the first half but shot just 27.6%. The Wildcats survived a slow start because they forced seven turnovers and limited DePaul to just 24 points. It was the third time this season Villanova allowed fewer than 25 points in an opening half.

    In the second half, Willard deployed more matchup zone and dared DePaul to try to shoot its way to a win. The Blue Demons were just 2-for-16 from three-point range, and many of those were either well-contested or forced into the hands of low-percentage shooters.

    Three Wildcats had at least two steals. Perkins had four, while Bryce Lindsay and Acaden Lewis had two apiece.

    New-look rotation

    Palmer, as expected, got the start and tied his season-high with 29 minutes, a mark he reached for the first time Saturday night in part because of Hodge’s injury early in the second half.

    Palmer, a sophomore, looked a little jittery to start but settled in during the second half. He finished with 10 points on 3-for-9 shooting (1-for-4 from deep) and added five rebounds.

    Askew was the first player off the bench as usual. Then freshman guard Chris Jeffrey and backup center Braden Pierce, a redshirt-freshman. Hodge’s absence will force Villanova into some awkward rotations when Palmer needs to rest. Willard had brief stretches with one big man and four guards on the floor, a unit that he won’t be afraid to roll with depending on matchups because of Perkins’ physicality and rebounding ability.

    Villanova forward Duke Brennan finished with 15 points and 12 rebounds against DePaul.

    What Villanova didn’t show Wednesday was a two-big look with Brennan and Pierce both on the floor. Willard said he’ll be willing to go to it, and the Wildcats have practiced it some, but DePaul did not have a ton of size to force Villanova to counter.

    Brennan played 35 minutes for the fourth time in a game that ended in regulation. Palmer played 19 of the 20 minutes in the second half while Pierce (two minutes) and Jeffrey (one minute) played sparingly. They finished with five and three minutes, respectively. An eight-man rotation was effectively a six-player rotation. It worked fine Wednesday night, and may work fine again Saturday in the regular season finale vs. Xavier, but tougher tests await in the postseason.

    No Stanford

    Hodge being out meant Zion Stanford, a West Catholic graduate and Temple transfer, potentially was in line for more of a role. The junior had seemingly fallen out of the rotation and hadn’t played since Feb. 4.

    But Stanford was not with the team in Chicago. He practiced Wednesday, according to sources, but didn’t travel with the team and the nature of his absence was unclear.

    Bouncing back

    Willard told the broadcast after the game that he “got after” his team a little bit in two days of practice following what was the worst Villanova loss in 29 years.

    Willard attributed the missed shots and carelessness offensively to still dealing with the emotional letdown of having Hodge out. But things settled down after halftime. The Wildcats changed up their defense and were much more efficient on the offensive end.

    It’s no surprise that it was Askew, Brennan, and Perkins — a graduate student, a senior, and a junior — who helped lead the way in the second half.

    One more, then the tournaments

    The regular season ends Saturday with a noon home game vs. Xavier. A win would give Villanova 15 conference wins for the first time since 2021-22, Jay Wright’s final season. That possibility may be a little less daunting considering Xavier’s Tre Carroll, the Big East’s leading scorer (18 points per game), went down with an injury Tuesday night. His status for Saturday is not yet known.

    The Wildcats are on their way to the NCAA Tournament for the first time since 2022, but first is the conference tournament next week in New York, where Villanova will be the No. 3 seed. They open up in the final game of the quarterfinals next Thursday (9:30 p.m.) vs. the winner of the No. 6 vs. No. 11 matchup.

  • What happened to the Big 5? The decline of Philly basketball’s one-time legendary alliance began a long time ago.

    What happened to the Big 5? The decline of Philly basketball’s one-time legendary alliance began a long time ago.

    One afternoon in early December, Bill Raftery and Tim Legler, both La Salle alumni, returned to campus for an hourlong panel discussion about their careers in sports media, only to have the conversation shift to a topic with broader implications.

    It was a point of pride for the university to welcome back Raftery, who has been college basketball’s preeminent analyst for more than a quarter-century, and Legler, who has reached a comparable status at ESPN with his insights into the NBA. But 33 minutes into the event, the first question from an audience member wasn’t about the origins of Raftery’s trademark catchphrases (The kiss! … Onions! … Laundry on the deck!) or Legler’s game-film breakdowns.

    Bill Raftery, now broadcaster, graduated from La Salle and was inducted into the Big 5 Hall of Fame.

    “Can we bring the Big 5 back to its glory?” a man in the auditorium asked. “Because it was a national thing, right? It wasn’t just a Philly thing.”

    These days, most people who follow college basketball, if they’re being honest, have to acknowledge that the Big 5 isn’t much of anything anymore. The round-robin rivalries among La Salle, Penn, St. Joe’s, Temple, Villanova, and more recently Drexel have lost most of their juice.

    That white-hot competition, fueled by the benign hatred that only proximity and familiarity can ignite, used to define Philadelphia hoops. It has cooled. Now, just one school, Villanova, enters each season with the baseline expectation that it will qualify for the NCAA Tournament, and the pipeline of local recruits that once sustained these programs has all but dried up.

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    Three of the six schools — Drexel, La Salle, and Penn — don’t have a Philadelphia native on their rosters. Interest in the city series has plummeted. A 2022 doubleheader at the Palestra drew an official attendance of just 3,300 people. And the Big 5 Classic, conjured in the aftermath of that alarming display of indifference, hasn’t revitalized the rivalries or restored any prestige to them.

    While this season has seen an uptick in the programs’ quality of play — Villanova is virtually assured of an at-large bid, and Penn, St. Joe’s, and perhaps Drexel could be strong enough to win their conference tournaments — that improvement hasn’t been enough to stem the dismal tide.

    Tim Legler, who led La Salle to the 1988 NCAA Tournament, said the Big 5 was once a “transformative” environment to play in.

    For their part, the panelists at La Salle mustered some nostalgia but weren’t optimistic. Legler, who grew up in Richmond, Va., remembered attending a Palestra doubleheader on a recruiting trip and marveling at the atmosphere: the streamers, the cheering, the chanting.

    “I turned to my parents and said, ‘This is the environment I want to play college basketball in,’” he said. “It was literally that transformative.”

    Still, he had no solution for salvaging the Big 5, and neither did Raftery, who suggested that smaller programs throughout the NCAA would soon be casualties of this new era of college basketball.

    “They’re trying to freeze [out] a lot of programs and leagues,” he said, “and I can envision maybe two or three conferences. They’ll run the whole thing, and the networks will pay for it. That’s the way it is.”

    It’s convenient to point to the sport’s lurch into modernity — into the era of Name, Image, and Likeness; of pay-for-play; of the permeable membrane of the transfer portal — as the cause of the decline. And it’s true: With the exception of Villanova, which is ensconced in the Big East and supported by engaged donors with deep pockets, college hoops’ evolution has made everything more difficult for the other, more vulnerable programs in the city. But this train has been rumbling down the tracks for a while, and its arrival should compel a reevaluation of the Big 5’s history, of the decisions and unstoppable forces that led it here, to the brink.

    To those Baby Boomers and GenXers weaned on the Big 5’s traditions, it’s surely incomprehensible and saddening to hear Raftery contemplate a world without it. But if the institution as Philadelphia knew it is fading away — and it appears to be, if it hasn’t already — the proper question isn’t Can it be saved? That one has been asked and is on its way to being answered.

    No, the better questions to chew on are these: How did the Big 5 survive, and at times thrive, as long as it did? And did any of the attempts over the years to preserve it and its identity actually contribute to its downfall?

    Villanova has become the only school in the Big 5 that enters each season with the baseline expectation that it will qualify for the NCAA Tournament.

    The seeds of rebirth and decline

    It’s tempting to picture the Big 5’s history as an unbroken string of unforgettable nights at the Palestra, great teams playing great games inside a gym packed to its uppermost corners with 9,000 people, give or take a few rascals who managed to sneak in for free. There were hundreds of such nights, to be sure. But it’s striking to put that past into a wider context and see how much certain changes and trends fostered and then jeopardized everything that made the Big 5 wonderful and unique.

    Those fond memories often gloss over a relatively fallow period for the Big 5 during the 1970s. Villanova had three consecutive losing seasons from 1972 to 1975. Temple went 16-37 over the ’74-75 and ’75-76 seasons and qualified for the NCAA Tournament once in an 11-year span from 1972 to 1983. St. Joe’s went 8-17 in ’74-75, the first of six straight seasons in which the Hawks missed the NCAAs. Penn was the exception, and La Salle held its own, but a Daily News back-page photo captured the overall listlessness perfectly: Harry “Yo-Yo” Shiffern, the lovable vagrant who was the city series’ unofficial mascot, fast asleep during a Palestra doubleheader.

    The Big 5 was in a collective funk, and it took a few pivotal developments to snap it back to prominence and position it to flourish further.

    Lionel Simmons (center) is the Big 5’s all-time leading scorer and fifth in NCAA history with 3,217 career points.

    College basketball’s landscape was flatter then. The NCAA Tournament went to 32 participants in 1975 and to 40 in 1979, and many of the qualifying programs were mid-majors. During the ’70s, each of these teams reached the Final Four: Jacksonville, St. Bonaventure, New Mexico State, Western Kentucky, Marquette, UNC Charlotte — and, in ’79, Penn. The Quakers upset North Carolina, Syracuse, and St. John’s before Magic Johnson and Michigan State pulverized them in the national semis. But their run was the most improbable of the decade, and their timing was impeccable.

    The following season, after a star turn at the Pan-American Games in Puerto Rico, La Salle’s Michael Brooks was named the Kodak National Player of the Year. As terrific as Brooks’ senior campaign was — he averaged more than 24 points and 11 rebounds, scoring 51 points in a triple-overtime loss at BYU — his candidacy for the honor was buoyed by Indiana’s Bob Knight, who had coached him at the Pan-Am Games and touted him to reporters.

    “If I were allowed to start my own team tomorrow,” Knight said in January 1980, “the first person I would pick would be Michael Brooks.”

    Such praise from the best, the most famous, and the most temperamental coach in the country carried weight, and Knight’s words elevated the reputations of both Brooks and Philadelphia basketball. That ascendance continued in March 1981, when St. Joe’s, under Jim Lynam, won the East Coast Conference tournament, knocked off top-ranked DePaul in the second round of the NCAAs, and advanced to the regional final before losing to the eventual national champs: Knight, Isiah Thomas, and the Hoosiers.

    Fran Dunphy coached more than 1,000 games as a Division I head coach.
    Villanova coach Rollie Massimino gathers in Center City with players Ed Pinckney, Wyatt Maker, Chuck Everson, Dwight Wilbur, Veltra Dawson, and Brian Harrington in 1985 after winning the national title.

    So the Big 5 was on its way back, regaining relevance among casual college hoops fans and among the sport’s cognoscenti. The two most significant factors in its renaissance, though, happened off the court. In March 1980, Villanova left the Eastern Eight and jumped to the Big East. And in August 1982, Temple hired John Chaney as its head coach.

    Those moves and the rewards they wrought thrust those two programs, and in turn the entire Big 5, into a higher realm. Villanova won the national championship in 1985 — an underdog triumphant, a marvelous story enhanced by the Wildcats’ status as a program in a major conference in a sport whose vast national reach was still expanding: Magic vs. Larry Bird in ’79, North Carolina State surviving and advancing in ’83, Dick Vitale, CBS, ESPN, Big Monday, Selection Sunday, March Madness consuming a month’s worth of America’s attention.

    Chaney was this wild-eyed, lesson-teaching, justice-preaching wizard, confounding opponents with his matchup-zone defense, crafting the hardest schedule in the nation every year to battle-test his teams, leading the Owls to a No. 1 ranking in 1988 and three Elite Eight appearances in a six-year span.

    Fran Dunphy led Penn to a 69-14 record and three NCAA Tournament appearances from 1992 to 1995.

    Nestled in the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference (MAAC) with schools of similar profiles, La Salle went to the NCAA Tournament four times and the NIT twice in Speedy Morris’s first six years as head coach and had another national player of the year: Lionel Simmons. From 1992 to 1995, Penn dominated the Ivy League under Fran Dunphy: a 69-14 record, three NCAA Tournament appearances and a first-round victory over Nebraska, Jerome Allen and Matt Maloney forming one of the best backcourts in the country. St. Joe’s went 26-7 and advanced to the Sweet 16 in 1996-97, the season that introduced that notorious wallflower Phil Martelli to the rest of the country.

    Those were high times. They wouldn’t last. In fact, by the time St. Joe’s enjoyed its remarkable 2003-04 season and Jay Wright was restoring Villanova to national-title contention, the seeds of the Big 5’s diminishment had already been planted.

    Former Temple coach John Chaney with players Lynn Greer and Quincy Wadley.

    Hard circumstances and poor decisions

    The factors that damaged the Big 5 were legion. Some applied to just one or two programs. Some applied to all of them. Some were mistakes, bad choices. Some were unavoidable and beyond the programs’ control.

    Start with La Salle. Given an opportunity in 1990 to build an 8,000-seat on-campus basketball arena — Tom Gola offered to raise the funding for it — the university said no. Then its leadership made what is commonly considered the disastrous decision to relocate from the MAAC to the Midwestern Collegiate Conference. The program has never recovered.

    Look at Temple. Chaney, a singular presence and attraction, retired in 2006. Though Dunphy, his successor, guided the Owls to six consecutive NCAA Tournament appearances, the university’s quest for football dollars led it to leave the Atlantic 10 for the American Athletic Conference — and abandon its basketball-first identity.

    Again: individual schools, individual issues. But those problems were byproducts of college basketball’s overall reshaping during the 1980s and ’90s. In retrospect, the most infamous moment in Big 5 history — the dissolution of the round-robin, at the insistence of Villanova and coach Rollie Massimino, after the 1990-91 season — was an acknowledgment of those changes, and the attempts to preserve the Big 5 as it had always been would inevitably fail.

    Phil Martelli led St. Joe’s to go 26-7 and advanced to the Sweet 16 in 1996-97.
    Former Villanova coach Steve Lappas jokes with the other Big 5 coaches during a taping of the Comcast basketball show in 1997.

    When Villanova pushed to cut back on city series games and Temple pushed for more of those matchups to be played at campus sites other than the Palestra, they weren’t merely trying to make things easier for themselves. They were responding and reacting to college basketball’s new conditions for success.

    Sneaker companies had begun financing all-star camps, AAU programs, and college programs. Now coaches didn’t have to rely on local high school teams to find players, and great Philly players were no longer making their names solely in the Public League, the Philadelphia Catholic League, or the Sonny Hill League. They were traveling to play AAU. They were seeing other cities, meeting other coaches. They weren’t as likely to stay home to play college ball.

    “The most important recruiting device is recognition,” Chaney told author Bob Lyons in Palestra Pandemonium: A History of the Big Five, “and recognition comes from national TV. … They don’t know what the Big 5 is outside of this area. They knew who Villanova was when they won the national championship, so you could always attach yourself to them. But it wasn’t going to get you very far because no one knew the history and tradition of the Big 5.”

    In that way and others, the inherent parochialism of the Big 5 worked against it. For instance, Dave Gavitt, the founding commissioner of the Big East, struck a deal in 1980 with ESPN, then a fledgling sports network hungry for programming, for the exclusive rights to televise the conference’s games. That arrangement made it difficult, if not impossible, for Villanova and any other Big East school to be involved in a 7 p.m./9 p.m. Palestra doubleheader and for a national television audience to watch that doubleheader.

    “We needed the game between Villanova and Georgetown at 8 p.m. to go on our network,” Gavitt told Lyons. “We couldn’t clear games at 7 p.m. because of the game shows that all the local stations carried.”

    Jalen Brunson and former Villanova coach Jay Wright at the Finneran Pavilion on Feb. 8, 2023.

    As it was, the Big 5 had a TV deal of its own, with the Philly-based premium cable channel PRISM, starting in 1978. Yet the PRISM commitment actually limited the exposure of some of the Big 5’s schools.

    During the 1989-90 season, as one example, the Atlantic 10 wanted to place a Temple-La Salle game on ESPN so that it would be telecast nationally. “ESPN,” Lyons wrote, “subsequently refused to carry it, however, because it did not want to black it out in PRISM’s trading area.”

    So hoops fans in the Delaware Valley could watch the game at home, but no one else could. At a time when college basketball was becoming more accessible, the Big 5 was cutting itself off from everyone who wasn’t already familiar with it.

    That history might seem ancient. It’s not. Wright’s tenure and the economics of the sport have placed Villanova on a separate tier from the other programs. And now that he, Chaney, Dunphy, Martelli, and Morris — the local legends who were the backbone of the Big 5 — aren’t coaching anymore, the remaining infrastructure hasn’t been strong enough to restore the teams to excellence and maintain the intensity of the rivalries.

    It’s a shame, but it was only a matter of time. Yes, the Big 5 was a Philly thing. Yes, it was a national thing. Yes, it was a glorious thing. And now it’s gone, and all the wistfulness and wishful thinking in the world won’t change the hard and inescapable truth: That glory isn’t coming back.

  • Father Judge graduate Kevair Kennedy named MAAC Player of the Year

    Father Judge graduate Kevair Kennedy named MAAC Player of the Year

    Merrimack guard Kevair Kennedy was unanimously named the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference Player of the Year on Wednesday.

    Kennedy, a former Father Judge standout, is the first freshman to win the honor. He led the MAAC with 18.5 points per game, while averaging 4.2 assists, which ranks fourth in the conference. He helped lead Merrimack (21-10) to the MAAC regular-season title, as the Warriors went 17-3 in its conference slate.

    Merrimack finished the regular season with the conference’s third-best scoring defense, allowing 67.5 points per contest and forcing the third-most turnovers. Kennedy leads the team in steals (1.9) and is averaging 4.6 rebounds.

    The Philadelphia native started all 31 games and scored at least 20 points in 15 games. Kennedy finished with a career-high 32 points in a 79-72 overtime win over Siena on Feb. 20.

    He won MAAC rookie of the week seven times and was named conference player of the week twice. Kennedy also was named freshman of the year and became the first player to win both awards in the same season.

    Kennedy won a Catholic League championship last season. He also propelled the Crusaders to a state title while averaging 16.1 points, 7.3 assists, and 6.6 rebounds.

  • Cardinal O’Hara alumna Maggie Doogan named A-10 Player of the Year for the second year in a row

    Cardinal O’Hara alumna Maggie Doogan named A-10 Player of the Year for the second year in a row

    Maggie Doogan left Cardinal O’Hara as one of the best players to come out of the Catholic League. Now in her senior year at Richmond, she’s staking her claim as one of the best to play in the Atlantic 10.

    For the second year in a row, Doogan was named conference player of the year after leading the Spiders (25-6, 15-3 A-10) to their third straight season with 25-plus wins.

    She became just the third player in the school’s history to reach the 2,000-point mark behind nine double-doubles this season. She set an A-10 single-game scoring record with a 48-point night against Davidson on Jan. 10 — the most points in a Division I women’s basketball game this season — and turned in a 35-point effort in Saturday’s win over St. Joseph’s.

    Speaking of the Hawks …

    This marked the first time in four seasons that a St. Joe’s player hasn’t been named a first-team all-conference selection. However, Gabby Casey led the Hawks as a second-team selection and was named A-10 Most Improved Player. A three-time conference player of the week, Casey, a junior guard from Quakertown, leads St. Joseph’s with 16 points and 6.4 rebounds per game.

    Aleah Snead earned third-team honors as the one-two punch with Casey in the Hawks’ offense. Snead, a junior guard and Penn Charter alumna, led the team in assists with 90 during the regular season and averaged 11.3 points.

    St. Joseph’s will open its A-10 tournament campaign as the No. 5 seed and will play the winner between No. 12 Duquesne and No. 13 Virginia Commonwealth in second-round action on Thursday (1:30 p.m., ESPN+).

    Gabby Casey (left) was named to the all-Atlantic 10 second-team, leading St. Joseph’s to the No. 5 seed in the upcoming women’s tournament.

    Macktoon leads La Salle

    After a much-improved season, La Salle took home several honors, specifically Aryss Macktoon, who picked up defensive player of the year and second-team all-conference honors and was named to all-defensive team.

    Macktoon, a redshirt sophomore guard who was joined on the A-10’s second team by teammate Ashleigh Connor, ranks among the top 10 in the nation in steals per game (3.3), highlighted by eight she had in a 81-70 road win over Lehigh in November. Macktoon broke the Explorers’ single-season steals record in Saturday’s win over Loyola Chicago. Macktoon also averages 15.2 points and leads La Salle in rebounding with 7.3 per game.

    Macktoon and Connor, a redshirt junior who leads the team in points (15.6 per game), and assists with 112, guided the Explorers to a No. 6 seed in the A-10 tournament, a big jump from their No. 14 seed in 2024-25.

    La Salle awaits the winner between No. 11 St. Louis and No. 14 Fordham in the second-round nightcap on Thursday (7:30 p.m., ESPN+).

  • Point guard Derek Simpson is assisting in St. Joseph’s turnaround: ‘We can be unstoppable’

    Point guard Derek Simpson is assisting in St. Joseph’s turnaround: ‘We can be unstoppable’

    It’s part of Derek Simpson’s job to be a good communicator, which has led the St. Joseph’s point guard to have some tough conversations.

    Before this season started, Billy Lange departed from the program for a role with the New York Knicks and newly hired assistant coach Steve Donahue was promoted to take over the helm. Then on Dec. 23, Deuce Jones II, the team’s leading scorer, left the team, and St. Joe’s went on to drop its first two Atlantic 10 games.

    It was time for a realistic evaluation. With 16 games remaining in the regular season, the players and coaches held a meeting to air out their grievances on Jan. 3.

    Derek Simpson is leading the team in assists this season.

    “It turned into like, ‘How do y’all want to do this?’” Simpson said. “Like ‘Derek, do you want to go out as a senior losing all these games?’ That was the question. ‘Justice [Ajogbor], did you come back this year to do all this [expletive]?’ It was eye-opening for a lot of us and it just helped us get some of our feelings out.”

    The Hawks went back to work. Practices improved, pregame shooting was taken seriously, and more importantly — they started to win.

    St. Joe’s is 19-10, riding a four-game winning streak entering Wednesday’s contest at Davidson (7 p.m.), and sit third in the Atlantic 10. Simpson has been one of the driving forces to the Hawks’ turnaround.

    “It’s just those connections and those questions we have to ask each other that we’ve been doing.” said Simpson, who’s averaging 13.7 points and a team-high 5.1 assists. “When those things get on the money, we hit the shot. It’s like ‘Oh yeah, we already talked about that.’ So it turns into, ‘We good now.’

    “Then all the fun starts to happen. Then we get the back door cuts, we get the dunks. If you’re not having fun, why are you playing the game?”

    ‘Go full throttle’

    Simpson has had that mindset since he was a child.

    His father, Ron, played basketball and is Rider University’s seventh all-time scoring leader. His mother, Kelli, swam and played tennis, while his sister, Courtney, was a soccer goalie at Loyola Maryland, and his other sister, Marissa, played softball.

    Safe to say, sports run in the family.

    Simpson often found himself on the sidelines of the South Jersey Titans, an AAU team Ron founded, watching the action as early as first grade.

    “That kind of got me into the sport,” Simpson said. “My dad was like, ‘If you’re going to play, might as well take it serious, just like anything else.’ So I played basketball and football growing up until eighth grade. I stopped football because it was getting too much. … My dad, my mom always encouraged me if you’re going to do something, you might as well go full throttle.”

    So that’s what he did, he played travel ball under his father, but eventually stopped because it was affecting their relationship.

    Lenape graduate guard Derek Simpson is the school’s all-time leading scorer.

    Lenape High School coach Matt Wolf recalled seeing Simpson play in a summer showcase as a rising freshman and was blown away.

    “We had three games that day,” Wolf said. “The first game I looked at the former head coach, and I said, ‘Oh man, he’s definitely varsity.’ Then the second game he played I looked at him like, ‘Oh man, he’s going to play a lot this year.’ Then after the third game [I] went, ‘Oh my God, he’s going to be the starting point guard as a freshman.’”

    Simpson made his impact at Lenape. He finished with 1,553 career points, the most in school history. He even played future teammate Dasear Haskins, then at Camden High School.

    Simpson is still close with his former coach. Wolf reaches out after every St. Joe’s game, and last Christmas, Simpson returned to his old stomping grounds with former players.

    Defining roles

    Simpson landed at Rutgers in the 2022-23 season, where he spent his first two years of college ball. He averaged 7.7 points across 66 games before entering the transfer portal as a junior. There, he bumped into familiar faces.

    Lange and former assistant coach Justin Scott recruited Simpson when he was in high school, and Lange clicked with his parents due to their South Jersey backgrounds.

    A few years passed, and the opportunity to come to St. Joe’s arose again. He joined a team that had lost guard Lynn Greer III, but had Xzayvier Brown, all-time leading scorer Erik Reynolds II, and Suns forward Rasheer Fleming.

    “Their stats, their achievements showed a lot in the games,” Simpson said. “Shooting the ball well, because they’re staying after practice for 30 minutes, just shooting, shooting, and shooting. Little details that they really picked up on were very eye opening to me.”

    However, the three left the program this past offseason. Simpson, who averaged 8.7 points last year, was primed for a bigger role. But there was an adjustment period, the team didn’t click at first. A lot of the players, even the returners, didn’t play together much.

    Simpson believes that has changed.

    “It turned to me having a ball in my hands most of the games,” Simpson said. “Not that I was ever bad at that — I was always really good at that. That was my strength. I never was on a team in college where I had an opportunity to just have the ball in my hands, so this was the opportunity and I kind of just slowly stepped into it.”

    Simpson became the main ball handler with ease, and it’s the first time since high school where he’s serving as a true point guard. His team leading assists are tied for first in the conference.

    With two games remaining before conference tournament, the Hawks are in position for a top-four seed, which gives them a double bye. The team has clicked as of late, and Simpson is confident that St. Joe’s can hit its stride in the tournament.

    “We can be unstoppable, honestly,” Simpson said.

  • The short- and long-term implications of Matt Hodge’s injury for Kevin Willard and Villanova

    The short- and long-term implications of Matt Hodge’s injury for Kevin Willard and Villanova

    It’s worth addressing the human part of Matt Hodge’s right ACL tear first.

    The Villanova forward was having a solid first college basketball season after an NCAA ruling prevented him from playing last year as a freshman. The long wait was worth it. Hodge made his 29th start in Villanova’s 29th game of the season Saturday night at Madison Square Garden. He hit two three-pointers and was on his way to reach his season average of 9.2 points per game before he crumpled to the floor early in the second half after making a move in the post.

    Hodge will undergo surgery to his right knee and miss the rest of the season.

    “It just really stinks that the kid was going to be able to play in his first Big East tournament, his first NCAA Tournament, that’s really where [my head] is at,” Villanova coach Kevin Willard said Tuesday.

    But this is March, crunch time in college basketball, and so while Willard was feeling bad for the player he recruited out of high school while still the coach at Maryland, Villanova has a game Wednesday night and another on Saturday before postseason play begins.

    Hodge was averaging more than 28 minutes in the 28 games prior to Saturday, and the 6-foot-8 forward going down leaves Willard with a big hole to fill for a team with limited frontcourt depth.

    Willard answered the obvious first question — who goes into the starting five? — by saying sophomore wing Malachi Palmer, who will likely get his first college start in his 52nd career game Wednesday night at DePaul. Palmer, a 6-6 sophomore wing, is the sort of obvious replacement. Save for 7-foot backup center Braden Pierce, Palmer is the biggest and most physical defender Villanova brings off the bench.

    Villanova guard Malachi Palmer could make his first on Wednesday night.

    Palmer had a relatively quiet first half of the season but has emerged in conference play as a willing defender and someone who can knock down three-point shots.

    “Obviously not having Matty stinks, but Malachi has played really well,” Willard said. “It does hurt us, but it’s not catastrophic.”

    While Palmer starting offers more of a traditional one-through-five lineup for Willard, there will be variations that have the Wildcats going smaller or bigger. The smaller unit would have Tyler Perkins — who at 6-4 is Villanova’s second-leading rebounder (5.5 per game) — guarding a forward in a lineup that also has three other guards — Acaden Lewis, Bryce Lindsay, and Devin Askew — on the floor.

    The bigger unit would be one that hasn’t happened yet this season: Pierce being on the floor at the same time as 6-10 starting center Duke Brennan. Neither big man stretches the floor with outside shooting ability. So, how would that work?

    Willard pointed to his two-big lineups last year at Maryland, where Derik Queen and Julian Reese played side-by-side and while Queen could shoot a little bit, he rarely attempted three-pointers. Lineups with Brennan and Pierce on the floor at the same time would feature more screening and more side-to-side action, Willard said. One big hides in the dunker’s spot, for example, while the other is rolling.

    Villanova has practiced with both bigs on the floor, Willard said, in case it ever needed to match up against bigger lineups. It’s a lineup the Wildcats could have had to use in the postseason with or without Hodge’s injury, now it’s one they could deploy as soon as Wednesday night.

    Temple transfer Zion Stanford, who has barely played in conference play, could factor into the rotation more significantly, too.

    Kevin Willard believes Villanova forward Matt Hodge will have a large role when he returns from injury next season.

    Those are the short-term implications, and Willard has two regularseason games to tinker with the rotation before the Big East tournament.

    But it being March also means it’s time to start considering next season’s roster. Willard said Hodge’s injury “does and it doesn’t” have major implications for the 2026-27 Wildcats. That’s because Willard is planning for Hodge to return and take on a big role. Willard said he expects Hodge to need around eight months to return from his injury, and he could be practicing by October.

    “We’re planning on Matt playing for us next year,” Willard said.

    There will still need to be plans for the portal, though. That means making sure to stockpile the roster via the portal or otherwise in case Hodge isn’t ready to go right away or, worse, has a setback. Villanova’s priorities for the portal were going to be adding talent and athleticism in the frontcourt anyway with Brennan graduating.

    From that standpoint, Hodge’s injury hasn’t changed a ton. But it will be on Willard’s mind as he and general manager Baker Dunleavy navigate the frenzy that is the transfer portal, which is only one month away.

  • Villanova forward Matt Hodge suffers season-ending knee injury

    Villanova forward Matt Hodge suffers season-ending knee injury

    Villanova forward Matt Hodge suffered a torn right ACL in the Wildcats’ loss to St. John’s Saturday night at Madison Square Garden, the school announced on Monday afternoon.

    He will undergo surgery and miss the rest of the season.

    The injury occurred in the second half when Hodge made a move in the post and fell to the ground. He was down on the floor in pain for a few moments before being helped to his feet. He struggled to put weight on his right leg and was helped into the locker room.

    Villanova forward Matt Hodge goes to the floor against St. John’s on Saturday with an injury that was later determined to be a torn ACL.

    The injury is a big blow to Villanova, which has two regular-season games remaining before beginning postseason play. Hodge, a 6-foot-8 redshirt freshman, has started all 29 games this season and is Villanova’s sixth-leading scorer at 9.2 points per game while shooting 36.8% from three-point range.

    He also plays about 28 minutes per game, and his absence will test Villanova’s depth. The Wildcats do not have much in their frontcourt, and playing without Hodge could force coach Kevin Willard to go a bit unconventional with the power forward spot.

    Willard has a few options. He could go for a small-ball lineup and insert sixth man Devin Askew, a 6-5 guard, into the starting five and use Tyler Perkins, a physical 6-4 guard and Villanova’s leading scorer, in a forward role. Or he could replace Hodge with the 6-6 sophomore Malachi Palmer. The decisions could be matchup dependent.

    Temple transfer Zion Stanford, a 6-6 wing, could move back into the back end of the rotation. The West Catholic graduate has played in just 10 games (5.1 minutes per) and has rarely seen the court in conference play. Hodge’s injury also highlights the loss of Tafara Gapare, a 6-9 athletic forward who left the team around the holidays.

    Villanova’s two centers, starter Duke Brennan and reserve Braden Pierce, have not shared the floor together, but Villanova’s lack of size could potentially lead to the big men sharing some minutes depending on opponent and game flow.

    Hodge, who was forced to redshirt as a freshman last season at Villanova due to an NCAA ruling regarding his academic eligibility after moving to the U.S. from Belgium, scored six points in 14 minutes before suffering his injury Saturday night.

    The Wildcats (22-7, 13-5) finish their regular season this week with a road game at DePaul on Wednesday and a home game Saturday vs. Xavier at Finneran Pavilion. They will be the No. 3 seed in the Big East tournament.

  • Temple men’s conference tourney hopes in jeopardy after sixth straight loss

    Temple men’s conference tourney hopes in jeopardy after sixth straight loss

    When February started, the Temple men’s basketball team was in a three-way tie for third place in the American Conference and in solid position to lock a top-four seed.

    Now, after its 80-74 loss to Rice on Sunday at the Liacouras Center, Temple has a six-game losing streak.

    During its previous five losses, Temple (15-14, 7-9) was plagued by cold shooting streaks. On Sunday, it was the defense. Rice (12-17, 6-10) constantly poked holes in Temple’s defense as it poured in 45 points in the second half.

    Temple is back to the drawing board with two games remaining in the regular season and tied for ninth place, the second-to-last spot to qualify for the conference tournament.

    “I think we fight right. There’s no quit,” said coach Adam Fisher. “We have to make sure that continues. The fight. You got to believe that, This is what it’s got to take. We’re right there. And you got to figure out, one bounce, one extra effort … We asked every guy, ‘Look at yourself, starts with me, and I’ll be looking, trust me.’”

    Statistical leaders

    Temple’s offense kept pace with the conference’s sixth-best scoring offense. Temple shot 50% from the field, led by guards Derrian Ford and Aidan Tobiason. Each finished with 20 points. Temple’s issues came in three-pointers, as it went 5-for-17.

    Meanwhile, Rice shot 52% from the field and won the rebounding battle 28-25.

    Guard Nick Anderson led the team with 21 points. Guard Trae Broadnax and guard Jalen Smith added 15 points apiece.

    What we saw

    Tobiason scored six points three minutes into the game to help Temple take an 8-4 lead. Guard Gavin Griffiths ended a 4½-minute scoring drought with a three-pointer followed by a layup and a free throw to complete a three-point play to put Temple’s lead at 15-11.

    But everything Temple threw at Rice was instantly answered, mainly through Anderson. Broadnax, Rice’s leading scorer, picked up two fouls in the first 12 minutes, forcing him to watch most of the half from the bench. Anderson stepped up in his place for 11 first-half points.

    Temple did well containing Rice, but then it crumbled as halftime neared. Rice went on a 12-9 run, but a Ford jumper kept Temple up at halftime, 36-35.

    After the break, Temple overcommitted on stopping Rice. Tobiason scored the team’s first six points in second half, but Rice contained him the rest of the way.

    A nearly five-minute field goal drought for Temple ended when Ford drilled a three-pointer to cut Rice’s lead to 65-64. However, that was the closest Temple ever got.

    “It’s not so much the second half,” Fisher said. “I think there’s things in the first half that you have to clean up and then it gets magnified in the second half.”

    Temple’s defense lets up

    Temple’s defense began to crack with the emergence of Broadnax and guard Jalen Smith. Broadnax got on the board with a jumper to tie the game at 42. Twenty-nine seconds later, Smith made a three-pointer to take the lead.

    With Anderson, the Rice trio scored 18 straight points in a six-minute span. Temple had little to no answers as 37 of Rice’s 45 second-half points were from the three guards.

    “Broadnax’s [is] their leading scorer, a veteran guy,” Fisher said. “He brings you into the post … Give him credit. He had a couple [of] tough shots.”

    Up next

    Temple will host Tulane (17-12, 8-8) on Thursday (7 p.m., ESPN2).