St. John's' Zuby Ejiofor drives to the basket against Marquette...

St. John's' Zuby Ejiofor drives to the basket against Marquette during the second half of an NCAA college basketball game on Wednesday in Milwaukee. Credit: AP/Aaron Gash

Several players have gotten the star turn during the St. John’s winning streak that now stands at 12 games. Different members of the 17th-ranked Red Storm have been the leading scorer or the difference maker, the strong finisher or the big-play maker.

Two things have been growing strong through all 12 though: toughness and poise.

We saw them both again on Wednesday night when the Storm (21-5, 14-1 Big East) beat Marquette in Milwaukee to overtake No. 6 Connecticut, beaten by visiting Creighton, atop the conference standings.

Ian Jackson provided just one of many examples of that toughness when he returned from a first-half ankle sprain — one that has him in a walking boot and ruled out for Saturday’s noon matchup with Creighton (14-13, 8-8) at the Garden — to play another 13 minutes.

And the poise? It was there when St. John’s rallied from a seven-point deficit early in the second half and again when the Golden Eagles trimmed the margin to two with 27.5 seconds to play.

Storm coach Rick Pitino and the players said that these admirable qualities were forged in the disappointment of the big-game losses in the first two months of the season and hurt from being criticized as they tumbled from a preseason No. 5 national ranking to unranked.

That fall included high-profile losses to Alabama, Iowa State, Auburn and Kentucky.

“We learned how to stay together early on in the year when we were taking losses and figuring out what we’ve got to do to stay together,” Dillon Mitchell said. “Now, when we have times during the games where we're down or we're not playing our best, we stay together and we go out there and fight together. But it's all from the beginning of the year and how those experiences have helped us.”

“When you compete against great competition, you find out what's lacking and you find out what you did well,” Pitino said Friday before the team practice at the Garden. “So when you play against . . . those type of teams [we played], you learn the mistakes that you made against great competition and then you adjust.”

So much for thinking nothing good ever comes out of losing.

Thought to be one of the nation’s most-disappointing teams as recently as a Jan. 3 upset loss to Providence, St. John’s has been riding its blossoming toughness and poise to become the hottest high-major program in the country.

After Wednesday’s win, Bryce Hopkins described the journey the Red Storm have been traveling as “building a brotherhood” and Zuby Ejiofor echoed that sentiment Friday when he said, “Winning together, it builds connectivity with each other and it's good to see.”

St. John’s is going into Saturday’s contest having spent two full days atop the Big East standings. UConn had been tied or alone on top since conference play kicked off until the Bluejays exposed its defensive weaknesses in the upset. The Storm meet the Huskies in a biggie on Wednesday, but that result ended any chance of them seeing Creighton as a “trap game.”

“[Leading] feels good, but it ain’t going to mean [anything] if we come [Saturday] and lose,” Mitchell said. “Then none of it really matters. So just keep on building . . . [and] continuing this win streak.”

“When you experience losing, it's not a great feeling," Ejiofor said. "And then you get to experience winning at this level and you get obsessed with it. Seeing . . . everything we've been through — all the adversity that we've been through to start the season, all the narratives that were said about us — and just to see us overcome all that, it's been truly special.”

SUBSCRIBE

Unlimited Digital AccessOnly 25¢for 6 months

ACT NOWSALE ENDS SOON | CANCEL ANYTIME