< PreviousWE ROLL OUT A FULL-COURT PRESS … AND JUMP THROUGH HOOPS FOR MEMBERS, CONTRACTORS AND DEVELOPERS LOCAL 825 OPERATING ENGINEERS WILL SCORE FOR YOU. GREG LALEVEE IUOE VICE PRESIDENT AND BUSINESS MANAGER OF IUOE LOCAL 825 LABOR & MANAGEMENT – Our labor management organization – Engineers Labor-Employer Cooperative (ELEC) – is a tough advocate for builders, expert at blocking elbows and providing valuable assists. FAST BREAK – When you need to move, our Operating Engineers are ready to work, highly skilled and fully credentialed. LAY UP – Be part of a winning team. The Operating Engineers of Local 825 will score for you. Swish!Swish! BETTER BUILDING BEGINS HERE WWW.IUOE825.ORG BUILDING ON COMMON GROUND WWW.ELEC825.ORG81 WWW.VILLANOVA .COM 2019-20 VILLANOVA BASKETBALL VILLANOVA GAMEDAY NCAA TOURNAMENT IT arrived at V il lano v a in the fall of 2005 without fanfare. With the school’s first NCAA Sweet 16 Tourna- ment appearance in 17 years fresh in the rear view mir- ror, little heed was taken of an incom- ing crop of fresh- men who seemed destined to wait their turn behind a veteran core that included two All-Americans and a starting lineup of accomplished upperclassmen. Four years later that same class, consist- ing of Dwayne Anderson, Shane Clark, Dante Cunningham and Frank Tchuisi, completed their career as the cornerstones of a unit that will long be recalled on the Main Line. They exited the stage literally, on the elevated floor before more than 70,000 people at Detroit’s Ford Field, home of the 2009 Final Four. Behind them were the treasured memories of a remarkable farewell tour that included a school-re- cord 30 victories and the program’s first Final Four appearance since the 1985 NCAA championship. “Even through our last practice in Detroit the day before the Final Four,” said head coach Jay Wright, “this team kept getting better.” It was a glamorous and thrilling end for a no-frills contingent that simply went about its business calmly and with a clear purpose. Ahead was a BIG EAST Conference that would establish a new record in January with no fewer than nine of its members ranked in the Top 25. The challenges proved formidable in the early going. There were three losses in the first 18 days of January to top 25 squads – Marquette, Louisville and Connecticut – by a total of 14 points. But Villanova’s players got together in Cunningham’s hotel room in Florida before facing USF and that gath- ering helped ignite an impressive run that began with a hard-fought 70-61 win over the Bulls. Next, came a methodical 67-57 win over No. 3 Pitt in the final basketball game ever at the Spectrum that set the tone for the second half of the BIG EAST regular season. Villanova then hit its stride in February rolling to wins over Cincinnati, Provi- dence, Syracuse and Marquette. By the time the regular season wrapped up at the Pavilion win a 97-81 win over Provi- dence, Villanova was 13-5 and the owner of a double-bye to the BIG EAST Confer- ence Tournament in Manhattan. In New York, the Wildcats found them- selves up against Marquette for the third time in 12 weeks. VU built a large half- time lead, saw the Golden Eagles rally to reclaim the edge, and then watched as Reggie Redding found Anderson under the basket for a layup that nearly rimmed out as the horn sounded for a 76-75 win. On Selection Sunday, Villanova learned it would begin its NCAA Tournament journey just down the road at the Wacho- via Center in South Philadelphia as a No. 3 seed in the East Region. Patriot League champion American would be the opening round foe and the Eagles were firing in long-range bombs en route to a 12-point edge early in the second half. But Villanova’s veterans, led by Ander- son and Cunningham, methodically wore down American and the ‘Cats ultimately pulled away to an 80-67 victory. From start to finish against a storied UCLA program, Villanova was in com- mand. Fisher was electric in helping stake the ‘Cats to a 38-19 lead they never looked back from. The final was 89-69. With its fourth visit to the Sweet 16 in the past five seasons, the Wild- cats advanced to the TD Banknorth Garden in Bos- ton where anoth- er brand name of college basketball awaited. ACC Tour- nament champion Duke, the region’s second seed, never did get untracked against the ‘Cats with Villanova pull- ing away to a 77-54 win after halftime. That set up a return engagement with BIG EAST rival Pitt for a trip to the Final Four. It was a seesaw contest with 15 lead changes that captivated the sellout crowd from the opening tip to the final horn. Pittsburgh carved out a 67-63 lead with 3:24 left in regulation but an Anderson steal and 3-point play changed the tex- ture of the final minutes (the senior would finish with 17 points and be named to the All-East Region team along with Cunning- ham and Most Outstanding Player Reyn- olds). Villanova sank 5-of-6 free throws down the stretch and appeared to be in control with less than 10 seconds left. But an errant inbounds pass that sailed over the head of Cunningham on an inbounds play and a Wildcat foul allowed Pitt to tie the game at 76 on a pair of Levance Fields free throws with 5.5 seconds left. That set up one of the more notable plays in Villanova basketball history. With the official counting down near the five second limit to inbound the basketball, Redding lobbed a high pass to Cunning- ham near midcourt. Cunningham leaped high, collected the pass and immediately dished it off to a streaking Reynolds. The junior guard dribbled down the right side, eluded DeJuan Blair and drove into the lane, where he hung in the air and sent a shot over Jermaine Dixon towards the net. The shot fell, the horn sounded, and after a final desperation heave from Pitt’s Levance Fields was off line, Villanova cel- ebrated a trip to the Final Four. The Wildcats fell to eventual champi- on North Carolina in the national semifi- nals but the legacy of the class of 2009 was secure: through workmanlike toil, it had authored a truly spectacular final act. BACK ROW: Graduate Manager Adam Fisher; Administrative Intern Kyle Neptune; Assistant Coach Jason Donnelly; Shane Clark; Antonio Peña; Frank Tchuisi; Casiem Drummond; Head Coach Jay Wright; Maurice Sutton; Dante Cunningham; Taylor King; Dwayne Anderson; Corey Stokes; Assistant Coach Doug West; Team Chaplain Rev. Rob Hagan, O.S.A.; Graduate Manager George Halcovage. FRONT ROW: Head Athletic Trainer Jeff Pierce; Strength Coach Lon Record; Russell Wooten; Reggie Redding; Corey Fisher; Scottie Reynolds; Jason Colenda; Manager of Basketball Operations Keith Urgo; Associate Head Coach Patrick Chambers 2009 FINAL FOUR F10091_WD_GDAY Program_8.625x11.125.indd 19/19/18 10:28 AM83 WWW.VILLANOVA .COM 2019-20 VILLANOVA BASKETBALL VILLANOVA GAMEDAY NCAA TOURNAMENT ON the heels of consecu- tive upset defeats in the NCAA Tournament Round of 32 in 2014 and 2015, the prevailing sentiment greet- ing the 2015-16 Wildcats was that this team had something to prove. And that something could only be addressed in March. Villanova head coach Jay Wright disagreed with the prem- ise. He asked his team, which included two returning starters, to embrace the actual day-to- day grunt work it would take to even position themselves for another chance at postseason glory. The challenges were real. Holdover captains Ryan Arcidiacono and Daniel Ochefu were joined in the revamped starting lineup by juniors Josh Hart and Kris Jenkins along with freshman guard Jalen Brunson. The key reserves were sophomore guard Phil Booth, redshirt freshman Mikal Bridges and junior forward Darryl Reynolds. The Wildcats opened with four straight victories at the Pavilion by an average margin of 26.3 points. Next came a Thanksgiving stop in Brooklyn where they earned the NIT Season Tipoff title with wins over Stanford and Georgia Tech. They then took care of Saint Joseph’s on Hawk Hill for their seventh consecutive triumph. Next came a long journey to Pearl Harbor where the No. 9 Wildcats would take on No. 7 Oklahoma set against the backdrop of the 74th anniversary of the attack on the island. It was a thoughtful week- end of reflection off the court but Villanova proved no match for the Sooners on this warm day at Bloch Arena, falling 78-55. Villanova rebounded with a home-court victory over La Salle before flying south to meet another Top 10, squad, Virginia. The Cavaliers outlasted the Wildcats 86-74. The Wildcats went back to the workshop and posted home-court wins over Delaware and Penn, setting the stage for a BIG EAST Conference open- er at the Pavilion against undefeated, sixth ranked Xavier. A scary fall in the first two minutes suffered by the Musketeers’ Edmond Sumner changed the tenor of the meeting quickly. With Brunson battling the effects of a virus, Arcidiacono stepped forward with a brilliant offensive performance. The senior’s 27 points ignited the Wildcats’ offense as Villanova rolled past Xavier 91-64. VU reeled off six more BIG EAST wins, includ- ing a pair over Seton Hall, to carve a 7-0 confer- ence mark headed into a scheduled showdown with Providence. A winter storm delayed the game by a day to Jan. 24 and PC upended VU 82-79 in overtime. Less than two weeks later, the two teams met again in Providence. With Ochefu sidelined by the effects of a concussion, Reynolds started and pro- vided 19 points and 10 rebounds in 36 minutes to key a 72-60 win. VU was 10-1 in the BIG EAST and poised for a promotion from its No. 3 national rank- ing when the polls were released on Feb. 8. For the first time in its history, Villanova was ranked at the top of both the Associated Press and USA Today Coaches poll when the polls were announced. The Wildcats picked up wins over DePaul and St. John’s to remain at No. 1 for a second week. Wins at Temple and on Senior Day over Butler extended the run atop the polls into a third week. Xavier got the better of the Wildcats in the rematch on Feb. .24 in Cincinnati before Villanova closed out the year with three more BIG EAST wins to complete a 27-4 regular season. For the third time in as many seasons, VU’s 16-2 confer- ence record earned it the BIG EAST regular season championship. Villanova’s quest to repeat as BIG EAST Tour- nament champions took it to the title game game against Seton Hall. In a close game throughout, the Wildcats were unable to score on their final pos- session and Seton Hall won, 69-67. A No. 2 seed in the East Region of the NCAA Tournament brought the Wildcats back to Brooklyn for the second time. A late first half spurt helped carry Villanova past UNC Asheville 86-56 to set up a second round clash with Iowa, a team that had spent much of the season ranked in the Top 25. Villano- va cleared the second round hurdle with lit- tle fuss. Hart scored 19 points to spark a balanced attack in an 87-68 triumph. In the Sweet 16, Miami and Villanova were both challenged to contain the oppo- nents’ substantial fire- power. The Wildcats strung together enough second half stops to pull away to a 92-69 win in Louisville. That set up an Elite Eight clash with Kansas and this time Villanova won a gritty game unlike anything they had seen to this point in the NCAA Tournament. Some fine defensive work by Bridges and clutch free throws from Arcidiacono helped the Wildcats slip past the Jayhawks 64-59. Awaiting Villanova at the Final Four in Houston was Okla- homa. Against the Sooners, Vil- lanova earned the largest margin of victory ever recorded in a Final Four game, a 95-51 vic- tory. Hart’s 23 points and eight rebounds led the way. On championship Mon- day, the Wildcats and Tar Heels staged a classic. North Carolina took a 39-34 lead into halftime. The Wildcats opened a 67-57 lead near the end of the second half but North Carolina kept com- ing. The Tar Heels forged a 74-74 tie when Marcus Paige tossed in a deep 3-pointer while being hounded by a defend- er. 4.7 seconds remained on the clock. Jenkins inbounded the basketball to Arcidi- acono, who accepted the feed and began dribbling towards the frontcourt along the left side. As he crossed halfcourt, the Tar Heels defense shifted towards the Villanova guard. Behind him, Arcidi- acono heard Jenkins calling his name. Arcidiacono drifted two his right and sent a pass to a trailing, open Jenkins. Jenkins took the pass, stepped into the shot, and it fell through the net as the horn sounded. NRG Stadium erupted. The Villanova Wildcats were the 2016 NCAA national champions. BACK ROW (L-R): Graduate Manager Nick DiPaola; Equipment Director Lionel Brodie; Strength Coach John Shackleton; Head Athletic Trainer Jeff Pierce; Assistant Coach Kyle Neptune; Associate Head Coach Baker Dunleavy; Eric Paschall; Tim Delaney; Kevin Rafferty; Head Coach Jay Wright; Daniel Ochefu; Darryl Reynolds; Mikal Bridges; Kris Jenkins; Special Assistant to the Head Coach Jason Donnelly; Director of Student-Athlete Development Mike Nardi; Graduate Assistant Ryan Harkins; Graduate Manager Mickey Mikulski; Graduate Manager Mike Clark. FRONT ROW (L-R): Video Coordinator George Halcovage; Donte DiVincenzo; Jalen Brunson; Josh Hart; Ryan Arcidiacono; Patrick Farrell; Phil Booth; Henry Lowe; Assistant Coach Ashley Howard VILLANOVA 77, NORTH CAROLINA 74 4/4/16 • NRG STADIUM • HOUSTON, TX VILLANOVA • 35-5 TOT-FG 3-PT REBOUNDS # PLAYER FG-FGA FG-FGA FT-FTA OFF DEF TOT PF TP A TO BLK STL MIN 02 JENKINS, Kris f 6-11 2-4 0-1 0 2 2 4 14 1 3 0 2 21 23 OCHEFU, Daniel f 4-5 0-0 1-2 1 5 6 2 9 2 2 2 0 32 01 BRUNSON, Jalen g 1-4 1-2 1-2 0 1 1 0 4 0 0 0 0 22 03 HART, Josh g 4-9 1-3 3-4 1 7 8 3 12 1 2 1 1 38 15 ARCIDIACONO, Ryan g 6-9 2-3 2-2 0 2 2 2 16 2 2 0 1 37 05 BOOTH, Phil 6-7 2-2 6-6 0 2 2 0 20 0 1 1 1 25 25 BRIDGES, Mikal 1-1 0-0 0-0 0 2 2 4 2 0 0 1 0 15 45 REYNOLDS, Darryl 0-2 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 10 Team 0 0 0 Totals 28-48 8-14 13-17 2 21 23 16 77 6 10 5 5 200 FT % 1st Half: 14-24 58.3% 2nd half: 14-24 58.3% Game: 28-48 58.3% 3FT % 1st Half: 3-7 42.9% 2nd half: 5-7 71.4% Game: 8-14 57.1% FT % 1st Half: 3-4 75.0% 2nd half: 10-13 76.9% Game: 13-17 76.5% Deadball Rebounds: / NORTH CAROLINA • 33-7 TOT-FG 3-Pt Rebounds # Player FG-FGA FG-FGA FT-FTA Off Def Tot PF TP A TO Blk Stl Min 03 MEEKS, Kennedy f 1-8 0-0 2-2 6 1 7 3 4 0 2 0 1 21 11 JOHNSON, Brice f 6-10 0-0 2-3 1 7 8 2 14 1 1 1 0 31 44 JACKSON, Justin f 3-8 3-4 0-2 2 2 4 2 9 2 2 1 1 34 02 BERRY II, Joel g 7-12 4-4 2-2 0 3 3 2 20 4 3 0 0 37 05 PAIGE, Marcus g 7-17 4-7 3-4 2 3 5 3 21 6 1 0 1 34 00 BRITT, Nate 1-4 0-2 0-0 1 0 1 1 2 0 1 0 0 9 01 PINSON, Theo 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 2 0 3 0 0 0 12 04 HICKS, Isaiah 2-4 0-0 0-0 2 2 4 4 4 0 1 1 2 20 42 JAMES, Joel 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 Team 2 1 3 Totals 27-63 11-17 9-13 16 20 36 20 74 16 11 3 5 200 FT % 1st Half: 15-28 53.6% 2nd half: 12-35 34.3% Game: 27-63 42.9% 3FG % 1st Half: 7-9 77.8% 2nd half: 4-8 50.0% Game: 11-17 64.7% FT % 1st Half: 2-3 66.7% 2nd half: 7-10 70.0% Game: 9-13 69.2% OFFICIALS: Michael Stephens, John Higgins, Terry Wymer TECHNICAL FOULS: Villanova-None. North Carolina-None. ATTENDANCE: 74340 2016 NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP GAME Score By Periods 1st 2nd Total Villanova 34 43 77 North Carolina 39 35 74 2016 NCAA CHAMPIONSBest cookies ever! HopesCookies.com 610.527.4488 Get yours at 1125 West Lancaster Ave in Rosemont Baked fresh and shipped the same day! The perfect personal and corporate holiday gift!85 WWW.VILLANOVA .COM 2019-20 VILLANOVA BASKETBALL VILLANOVA GAMEDAY NCAA TOURNAMENT 2018 NCAA CHAMPIONS B efore the 2017-18 college basket- ball season began, the Villanova Wildcats understood that they would be without two elements that have often been crucial ingredients to success. Villanova’s roster included exactly zero scholarship seniors. What’s more, the Wildcats would also be without an on-campus home, due to the $65 million renovation project that transformed the original Pavilion into the Finneran Pavilion. The campaign would be a road show of sorts, with 12 games played at the team’s second home, the Wells Fargo Center, and others in neu- tral settings like Allentown, Pa., and Hempstead, N.Y. On paper, those loomed as signifi- cant obstacles. In reality, they became mere footnotes to as impressive a march through a season as Villanova has made its 98 years of Division I hoops. From opening night – a 75-60 triumph over Columbia – to the final Monday night of the season in San Antonio, Tex., the Wildcats were extraordinary. Junior floor leader Jalen Brunson teamed with classmates Mikal Bridges and Phil Booth to lead the way on a remarkable journey that hit an early high note with the program’s second Battle 4 Atlantis championship in five years. The Wildcats ral- lied from a 46-34 halftime deficit to upend Tennessee 85-76 in the semifinals and then held off UNI 64-50 in the title game in the Bahamas. Brunson was selected as the event’s Most Outstanding Player. It would only be the first of what turned out to be a series of awards in what would become the most decorated single season in program history. Villanova turned back the clock by hosting a regular season game in the Jake Nevin Field House – capacity 2,200 – for the first time since Jan. 4, 1986 when Penn came to campus on Nov. 29. In front of a raucous audience comprised mostly of students, the Wildcats rolled as redshirt freshman Omari Spellman flashed his upside with 14 points and seven rebounds in a 90-62 Philadelphia Big Five triumph. A trip to New York City for the Jimmy V Classic was a December highlight. A 28-point outburst by Bridges that included a highlight reel second half dunk helped lift VU past 2017 NCAA Finalist Gonzaga 90-72. The Wildcats took a 12-0 mark into the opening of BIG EAST play on Dec. 27 at DePaul and came away with a 103-85 victory in their first ever visit to Wintrust Arena. For the second time in three seasons, Butler handed Vil- lanova its first loss, on Dec. 30. Brunson’s 31 points weren’t enough as sizzling long range shooting pushed the Bulldogs to a 101-93 win before a raucous crowd at Hinkle Field House. The Cats’ quickly got back on track in January, climbing the BIG EAST standings thanks to a perfect month that also included an 81-61 non-conference win over former league rival Connecticut on Jan. 20. After posting a 98-78 victory over Creighton at the Wells Fargo Center on Feb. 1, the Wildcats stood at 21-1. Injuries that had begun to mount in January became more challenging in a month with nine games in 28 days. Three Wildcats – Collin Gillespie, Jermaine Samuels, and Phil Booth – were sidelined for multiple games with the same injury – a broken bone in the hand. Booth’s loss following a Jan. 23 win over Providence, was especially damaging. Then, when Eric Paschall went to the sidelines with a concussion following a Feb. 4 win over Seton Hall, the mountain grew steeper still. St. John’s knocked off Villanova 79-75 in South Phil- adelphia on Feb. 7. But the Wildcats bounced back with terrific effort, downing Butler 86-75 with Brunson and Donte DiVincenzo combining for 57 points. There would be two more BIG EAST defeats in the month – at Providence and at Creighton – but the most significant element is that the ‘Cats were regaining their health. Booth returned on Feb. 24 in a win over DePaul, joining Gillespie and Samuels who had returned earlier. Not long after their arrival in Manhattan, it was announced that Brunson was the recipient of both the BIG EAST Player and Scholar Athlete of the Year awards. It would begin a run of honors that saw him become the consensus National Player of the Year, becoming the first Wildcat to be named the winner of the John R. Wooden, Naismith and Oscar Rob- ertson Trophy as the country’s top player. The Wildcats contin- ued to roll in their first two games, downing Marquette 94-70 and then blitzing Butler 19-0 in the opening minutes to take control of a semifinal clash. The theat- rics of Bridges and Brunson helped carry the Wildcats past Providence in overtime 76-66 to produce the pro- gram’s third BIG EAST Tour- nament crown in four sea- sons. Bridges took home the Dave Gavitt Award as the event’s Most Outstand- ing Player. Villanova earned the No. 1 overall seed in the NCAA Tournament and travelled to Pittsburgh to meet Rad- ford in the opening round. The Wildcats built a 44-23 halftime lead over Radford and glided to an 87-61 win in the opening round. Booth and Bridges helped to contain Alabama star Collin Sexton in the second round. That, and a burst early in the second half car- ried VU past the Crimson Tide. Bridges finished with 23 points and DiVincenzo added 18. The Wildcats returned to Boston, the launching point of their 2009 march to the NCAA Final Four, for the 2018 Eastern Regional. In the semifinal, the Wildcats found them- selves in old school BIG EAST battle against their former conference rival West Virginia. The Mountaineers held a 57-51 lead with 11:08 remaining to play in regulation. Enter Brunson and Spellman. The duo fueled a monstrous closing burst that culminated in a 90-78 triumph. Two days later, the Wildcats downed another representative of the Big 12, holding off Texas Tech 71-59. The Wildcats thus punched their ticket to Texas, site of their 2016 NCAA national title victory. In the semifinals, Villanova drained an NCAA Final Four record 18 3-point- ers on their way to a 95-79 win over Kansas. Paschall was sensational, dropping in 10-of-11 field goal attempts while compiling 24 points. Two nights later, the Wildcats found themselves trailing Michigan by seven points after 9:01 of game action. That’s when the BIG EAST’s Sixth Man of the Year stepped forward with a performance for the ages. DiVincenzo would finish with 31 points as the ‘Cats pulled away for a 79-62 triumph. The Wilmington, Del., product would be named Most Outstanding Player. The story of Villanova’s march through the madness was its dominance. Villanova won all six of its NCAA games by double digits with an average margin of victory of 17 points per contest. Two days after returning to Philadelphia, the Wildcats were celebrated with a parade near City Hall. BACK ROW (L-R): Graduate Manager Nick DiPaola; Equipment Director Lionel Brodie; Strength Coach John Shackleton; Head Athletic Trainer Jeff Pierce; Assistant Coach Kyle Neptune; Associate Head Coach Baker Dunleavy; Eric Paschall; Tim Delaney; Kevin Rafferty; Head Coach Jay Wright; Daniel Ochefu; Darryl Reynolds; Mikal Bridges; Kris Jenkins; Special Assistant to the Head Coach Jason Donnelly; Director of Student-Athlete Development Mike Nardi; Graduate Assistant Ryan Harkins; Graduate Manager Mickey Mikulski; Graduate Manager Mike Clark. FRONT ROW (L-R): Video Coordinator George Halcovage; Donte DiVincenzo; Jalen Brunson; Josh Hart; Ryan Arcidiacono; Patrick Farrell; Phil Booth; Henry Lowe; Assistant Coach Ashley Howard VILLANOVA 79, MICHIGAN 62 4/2/18 • ALAMODOME • SAN ANTONIO, TX MICHIGAN • 33-8 TOT-FG 3-PT REBOUNDS # PLAYER FG-FGA FG-FGA FT-FTA OFF DEF TOT PF TP A TO BLK STL MIN 04 LIVERS, Isaiah f 0-2 0-2 0-0 1 3 4 1 0 0 0 0 1 20 13 WAGNER, Moritz f 6-11 1-4 3-4 0 7 7 4 16 1 4 0 0 33 01 MATTHEWS, Charles g 3-9 0-2 0-4 0 3 3 5 6 1 3 1 2 33 03 SIMPSON, Zavier g 4-8 0-2 2-3 1 2 3 1 10 2 3 0 1 34 12 ABDUR-RAHKMAN, M-A g 8-13 2-7 5-6 0 1 1 2 23 0 0 0 0 34 02 POOLE, Jordan 1-5 0-2 1-1 0 1 1 2 3 1 0 0 1 10 05 SIMMONS, Jaaron 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 3 15 TESKE, Jon 1-2 0-0 0-0 1 2 3 1 2 1 0 0 0 7 22 ROBINSON, Duncan 0-3 0-3 0-0 0 1 1 3 0 0 0 0 1 22 23 WATSON, Ibi 1-2 0-1 0-0 1 1 2 0 2 0 0 0 0 1 24 BAIRD, CJ 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0+ 51 DAVIS, Austin 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0+ 55 BROOKS, Eli 0-0 0-0 0-0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 Team 1 0 1 Totals 24-55 3-23 11-18 6 21 27 20 62 6 10 1 6 200 FG % 1st half: 11-28 39.3% 2nd half: 13-27 48.1% Game: 24-55 43.6% 3FG % 1st half: 2-13 15.4% 2nd half: 1-10 10.0% Game: 3-23 13.0% FT % 1st half: 4-7 57.1% 2nd half: 7-11 63.6% Game: 11-18 61.1% Deadball Rebounds: 4 VILLANOVA • 36-4 TOT-FG 3-Pt Rebounds # Player FG-FGA FG-FGA FT-FTA Off Def Tot PF TP A TO Blk Stl Min 04 PASCHALL, Eric f 2-5 1-3 1-2 1 7 8 4 6 0 2 1 0 27 14 SPELLMAN, Omari f 3-8 0-2 2-2 4 7 11 3 8 0 1 0 0 29 25 BRIDGES, Mikal f 7-12 3-7 2-2 2 2 4 2 19 1 2 0 1 36 01 BRUNSON, Jalen g 4-13 1-5 0-0 0 2 2 4 9 2 2 0 2 28 05 BOOTH, Phil g 1-4 0-3 0-0 1 1 2 4 2 0 0 0 1 23 02 GILLESPIE, Collin 0-0 0-0 4-4 0 5 5 0 4 1 0 0 1 16 10 DiVINCENZO, Donte 10-15 5-7 6-10 3 2 5 1 31 3 4 2 0 37 21 COSBY-ROUNDTREE, D 0-0 0-0 0-0 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 4 23 SAMUELS, Jermaine 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0+ 34 DELANEY, Tim 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0+ Team 0 0 0 Totals 27-57 10-27 15-20 12 26 38 18 79 7 12 3 5 200 FG % 1st half: 14-31 45.2% 2nd half: 13-26 50.0% Game: 27-57 47.4% 3FG % 1st half: 4-13 30.8% 2nd half: 6-14 42.9% Game: 10-27 37.0% FT % 1st half: 5-6 83.3% 2nd half: 10-14 71.4% Game: 15-20 75.0% Deadball Rebounds: 2,2 OFFICIALS: Michael Stephens, John Higgins, Terry Wymer TECHNICAL FOULS: Villanova-None. North Carolina-None. ATTENDANCE: 74340 2016 NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP GAME Score By Periods 1st 2nd Total Villanova 34 43 77 North Carolina 39 35 74 8.625" x 11.125" T.K. Smith Sports Marketing College Basketball Ad Villanova 19-4709 - SS 1 RGB - Digital File 9/30/19 n/a 19-4709-SS-Nova-8.625x11.125-R1.indd 110/18/19 2:58 PM XSEBBAd_VillanovaFinal_1410330A.indd 111/3/14 4:29 PMNext >