No. 15 St. John’s Red Storm Bounce Back With Dominant Victory Against Villanova Wildcats
Saturday night at Madison Square Garden, St. John’s didn’t just beat Villanova. They humiliated them. And somewhere in the middle of that beating, the Wildcats lost something they really can’t afford to lose.
St. John’s Was Absolutely Locked In
Let’s set the scene. Madison Square Garden. The mecca of basketball. No. 15 St. John’s, playing with the kind of swagger that comes from a team that actually believes in itself, put a 24-point hole in Villanova’s chest before the second half barely got going. That’s not a loss. That’s a statement.
St. John’s looked every bit like a ranked team Saturday night, dictating the pace, controlling the glass, and making Villanova look like they’d rather be anywhere else on earth. For a program trying to rebuild its identity under Head Coach Kevin Willard, this was the kind of gut-punch that leaves a mark.
Matt Hodge Goes Down Hard
And then, because the basketball gods have a twisted sense of humor, it got worse. With Villanova already drowning, starting Forward Matt Hodge tried to make a move near the basket, lost the ball, and crumpled to the floor clutching his right knee. The arena went quiet in that uncomfortable way it does when everyone realizes this isn’t a normal fall. Play stopped. Trainers rushed over. Hodge stayed down.
When he finally left the court, he didn’t put a single ounce of weight on that right leg. Helped off by teammates and staff, the 6-foot-8 redshirt freshman from Belgium looked like a guy who’d just had his night, and possibly his season, ripped away from him in the cruelest possible fashion.
What This Means for Villanova’s NCAA Tournament Hopes
Villanova entered Saturday’s game at 22-6. They’re sitting third in the Big East standings. By most projections, they’re headed to the NCAA Tournament for the first time in four years — a return to the big dance that Wildcat fans have been waiting on with the kind of patience that only truly devoted fanbases possess. But the road just got bumpier.
St. John’s exposed something on Saturday. Whether it’s a depth issue, a confidence issue, or simply a bad night against a hungry team, Villanova looked vulnerable. Add a potential long-term injury to one of their best players, and the comfortable path to March starts to look a little more uncertain.
Willard is in his first season running the program, and this is exactly the kind of adversity that defines a coaching tenure. How do you respond when the floor falls out? How do you keep a locker room together when injuries and blowout losses pile up in the same evening?
The Big East Race Isn’t Over
None of this means Villanova’s season is cooked. Far from it. But St. John’s reminded everyone Saturday night that they are a legitimate force in this conference. For the Wildcats, the injury to Hodge is the story that lingers long after the final buzzer.
