NEW YORK (AP) — With another St. John's championship salted away, Zuby Ejiofor walked slowly to the sideline with seconds remaining, tears trickling down the senior forward's face as he lowered his 6-foot-9 frame for multiple hugs.
Moments later, in a fitting scene dripping with symbolism, he and Hall of Fame coach Rick Pitino climbed a ladder together to cut down the nets at Madison Square Garden.
No argument anymore about who owns the Big East these days. St. John's has toppled UConn.
Ejiofor had seven blocks, nine rebounds and three steals to anchor a tenacious defensive performance that carried No. 13 St. John's to its second straight Big East Tournament title Saturday night with a 72-52 blowout of sixth-ranked UConn.
Ejiofor and Bryce Hopkins each scored 18 points for the top-seeded Red Storm (28-6), who became the first team to win consecutive Big East Tournament titles since Villanova took three in a row from 2017-19.
“What a beautiful moment. What a surreal moment," said Ejiofor, who broke the record for blocks in a Big East championship game. “We had a target on our backs all year.”
Adding to their resurgent rise under the 73-year-old Pitino, the Johnnies joined UConn in 1998 and '99 as the only Big East programs to win both the regular-season and tournament crowns in back-to-back seasons.
It was the fifth Big East Tournament title in school history and the first time the Johnnies have accomplished the feat in consecutive years. They are 11-1 when seeded No. 1 at MSG, one of their home courts during the regular season.
“This championship means the world to us. It means the world to our fans,” Pitino said during the postgame celebration on the court. “I'm so proud of every one of our players.”
Ejiofor was selected the tournament's Most Outstanding Player, his latest in a string of accolades this week that included Big East Player of the Year, Defensive Player of the Year and Scholar-Athlete of the Year. He's the first player to win all those awards in the same season.
Oziyah Sellers scored 14 points for St. John's, which took two of three meetings this season between the two conference powerhouses and turned the tables after an embarrassing 72-40 loss at rival UConn on Feb. 25.
“We never mentioned revenge,” said Pitino, whose team has won six straight games and 19 of 20. “We just talked about championship.”
The dominant Johnnies never trailed in the tournament, either. Over the past two years, they won their six games in this event by an average of 16 points — all by double digits.
In a matchup of the past two Big East Tournament champions, the second-seeded Huskies (29-5) were held nine points below their previous season low. They went the last 8:02 without a field goal, missing 13 straight shots while falling to 1-4 against St. John's the last two seasons.
UConn remained tied with Georgetown for the most Big East Tournament championships at eight.
“I didn’t crush them in there,” said Dan Hurley, who coached the Huskies to consecutive national championships in 2023 and '24. “They’re crushed. The group is crushed. We laid an egg in something that we desperately wanted to win. I mean, we just laid an egg.”
Banging away with Ejiofor down low in their beefy matchup of All-Big East big men, Tarris Reed Jr. scored 13 of his 17 points in the second half for UConn. Point guard Silas Demary Jr. was helped off the floor late with a left ankle injury, which could be costly heading into the NCAA Tournament.
Hurley said he initially heard the injury was a very mild sprain and hopes “it’s not something that lingers.”
With their fans in a split crowd roaring at The Garden, the Red Storm ran out to a 10-0 lead, built a 17-point cushion late in the first half and went into the break with a 40-27 advantage.
It was the largest halftime deficit this season for the Huskies, who committed 11 of their 17 turnovers and shot 36% from the field in the opening 20 minutes.
“Huge credit to St. John’s. They just really jumped us to start the game,” Hurley said. “They've got a team that’s built incredibly well to play in this conference."
St. John’s extended the margin to 18 early in the second half before the Huskies responded with a 13-2 spurt that trimmed the gap to 49-42 with 12:34 left, revving up their own chanting fans. But that was as close as they got.
Thinking his players looked tired, Pitino took a timeout and said he told them: “'Johnnies don't fatigue. Johnnies don't surrender.'”
When play resumed, Hopkins hit a jumper and Ejiofor drained a 3-pointer before scoring in the post. Dylan Darling later scored the first six points of a 13-0 surge down the stretch capped by another 3 from Ejiofor, and the Red Storm won going away.
"We knew they were going to make their runs. But we knew we had to fight back and that’s exactly what we did,” Ejiofor said.
It was the third time UConn and St. John’s squared off for the Big East Tournament title, after splitting matchups in 1999 and 2000. And this marked the first time the championship game featured two of the conference’s seven charter members since the Johnnies beat the Huskies 80-70 in that 2000 game.
The hot-tempered Hurley was whistled for a technical foul 7:26 into the game after stamping his feet loudly on the sideline, apparently wanting a foul called as Demary made a reverse layup.
St. John’s scored the first eight points in all three tournament games this week and led for more than 118 of 120 minutes.
Pitino won his 16th conference tournament title, fifth in the Big East after three with Louisville. He is the first Big East coach to win back-to-back at two schools.
“Three straight nights we didn’t relent at all. That’s a great sign offensively and a great sign defensively going into the (NCAA) Tournament,” Pitino said.
Up next
UConn figures to be a high seed in its sixth straight NCAA Tournament, which will set a program record.
St. John’s is headed to consecutive NCAA Tournaments for the first time since making three straight from 1998-2000. It will be Pitino’s 25th appearance, with six schools.
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