Roger Rubin: St. John's coasts past Providence in Big East Tournament quarterfinals

St. John's forward Bryce Hopkins dunks against Providence in the Big East men’s basketball tournament quarterfinal at Madison Square Garden on Thursday. Credit: Kathleen Malone-Van Dyke
St. John’s Big East Tournament quarterfinal against Providence was always going to be more than a game and not just for the obvious reasons.
This one and both regular-season contests had the storyline of Bryce Hopkins going against the team he left after last season to come to New York. And certainly the drama was stoked by how the regular-season meetings played out: Providence pulling the upset at the Garden and St, John’s prevailing in Rhode Island after Duncan Powell’s vicious takedown of Hopkins on a breakaway, the ensuing melee and the seven player ejections.
However, there was no chance that Red Storm coach Rick Pitino or star center Zuby Ejiofor were ever going to let Thursday’s game against Friars be about something personal or settling a score. Pitino is all about winning championships and Ejiofor has felt the exhilaration of capturing one. The 13th-ranked and top-seeded Storm already know they are going back to the NCAA Tournament, still they are very serious about defending that crown.
And St. John’s absolutely played like it against the Friars. The Storm scored 20 of the game’s first 25 points to take Providence out of things early and quickly repelled any comeback attempts to cruise to an 85-72 trouncing before a sellout crowd of 19,812 at the Garden.
St. John’s was sensational in a first half that ended with it up, 48-27. Its defense held a Friars team that made 14 three-pointers in a first-round win over Butler on Wednesday without a single one in the first 20 minutes and forced eight turnovers that it turned into a dozen points. It outrebounded Providence 26-13. The Storm shot 48% and its reserves outscored their Friars counterparts, 16-0.
St. John’s (26-6) led by at least 12 the final 20 minutes.
“The first half was brilliant on offense, brilliant on defense,” Pitino said. “The second half, it's tough to play with a lead against a good shooting team and they made some threes that were amazing. . . Outside of that, we played a great game and Bryce was tremendous.”
Ejiofor had 21 points, 10 rebounds and five assists and Hopkins had 14 points and 13 rebounds. Oziyah Sellers and Ian Jackson each added 14 points for the Storm, who will play the 5:30 p.m. semifinal Friday against No. 4 seed Seton Hall (21-11). St. John’s is in a semifinal for the third straight year after last making it in 2000.
The Red Storm last season won the outright regular-season title and then the Big East Tournament crown. Though they have 11 new players including four starters they are halfway down a road that only Big East Player of the Year Ejiofor and reserves Ruben Prey, Lefteris Liotopoulos and Sadiku Ibine Ayo have walked.
So Pitino, the master motivator, had everyone watch a six-minute video of clips from the 2025 tournament and St. John’s celebration afterward.
“It was unmatched,” a fired-up Dillon Mitchell said of viewing it. “It’s something you always want to be a part of and . . . we’ve got an opportunity to do it now. . . It’s definitely something that motivates you.”
Added Sellers, “It was inspiring — you couldn’t watch that and not be inspired.”
Asked Wednesday about why he wanted the team to see the six-minute video, Pitino replied “Everybody didn’t experience that and I wanted them to hear Madison Square Garden and what (winning) could be like.”
Hopkins, having spent three seasons with the Friars, is the one Storm newcomer who needed no additional inspiration. He played in a Big East Tournament. And he knew that all eyes would be on him, because of the transfer and the brawl, but also because he scored a total of 18 points on 6-for-27 shooting in the two regular-season games.
He rose to the occasion with a resounding dunk for the 20-5 lead that had the St. John’s fans rollicking and then scoring seven points on three straight possessions in a run to extend the margin to 46-23.
There was a lot of tension around the matchup because it’s my former team,” Hopkins said. “After the incident that happened in Providence, a lot of the messages that were coming through (was fans) showing support.
“This is the best time to play basketball, in March, and our goal is to win a Big East Tournament championship. Providence just so happened to be our first matchup so the biggest thing was just coming out today with a win.”
The goal of defending the championship is now the only thing. Could it bring NCAA Tournament dividends in seeding and location? Maybe. But the pursuit of that championship is the next thing and the Storm has one more goal before setting out after that one.
“The tournament is a different feel,” Mitchell said. “We understand what they did last year and now it's our year to make it happen. . . . Even though we weren't here, we're part of St John's and we represent St John's. What they did last year? We’ve got to defend it.”
