» Ahmad Nivins
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Christmas, Nivins earn Honorable Mention All-America honors

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March 31, 2009 | AP Press
PHILADELPHIA, Pa. – Seniors Dionte Christmas of Temple and Saint Joseph’s Ahmad Nivins have earned Honorable Mention All-America honors by the Associated Press.
Named the 2008-09 Atlantic 10 Player of the Year, Nivins shot 61.2 percent (205-of-335) from the field and joined former George Washington standout Alexander Koul (1995-97) as the only players in A-10 history to lead the league in field goal percentage three consecutive years. The 6-9 forward from Jersey City, N.J., also led the A-10 in both rebounding (11.8 rpg.) and minutes (39.34 mpg.) while finishing third in the league in scoring (19.2 ppg.).
Tabbed the A-10 Player of the Week five times this season, Nivins scored 20 or more points 14 times in 2008-09 and led the conference with 22 double doubles. He finished his SJU career as the third leading scorer in school history and the sixth leading rebounder with 1,789 points and 955 rebounds, respectively.
Christmas is the first Temple standout to earn All-America status since Mardy Collins also garnered Honorable Mention All- America as a senior in 2005-06.
A finalist for the Naismith Trophy and the Lowe’s Senior Class Award, Christmas led the Atlantic 10 Conference in scoring with a 19.5 average to become the only player in league history to accomplish the feat three times. The two-time first-team All-Atlantic 10 selection ended his brilliant career with 2,043 points to rank fourth on the Owls’ all-time scoring list. The 6-5 guard also set a new school record for three-pointers in a season (107), eclipsing his own mark (104, 2007-08), and career (319), breaking Lynn Greer’s record of 305 career three-pointers made (1997-02).
The Philadelphia native also became the first Owl player to record three consecutive 600-point seasons, finishing the season with 662 points. That total stands as 13th on Temple’s all-time single season points list. Christmas won three A-10 Player of the Week awards is his senior season, pushing his career total to 10, third most in league history. Only Xavier’s David West (14.’00-03) and Saint Joseph’s Jameer Nelson (13, ‘01-04), both National Players of the Year as seniors, have earned more A-10 Player of the Week honors.
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A-10 Tournament: Temple topples St. Joseph’s 79-65

AP Photo
March 12, 2009 | AP Press
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. — Ryan Brooks had 19 points to lead four players in double figures and lift Temple over Saint Joseph’s 79-65 in the Atlantic 10 Conference tournament on Thursday.
Sergio Olmos had 14 points and Semaj Inge and Craig Williams added 12 apiece for the defending champion Owls (20-11), who will now face No. 19 Xavier in a semifinal game Friday. Tasheed Carr matched his career high with 23 points and Ahmad Nivins had 21 points and 14 rebounds for Saint Joseph’s (17-15).
The Owl, who were in command for most of the game, led 43-28 at halftime and stretched their advantage to 22 points, 58-36, with 10:15 left. The Hawks then got as close as nine when Darrin Govens converted a layup to make it 65-56 with 4:31 remaining, but Lavoy Allen scored two straight baskets and the Owls maintained double-digit leads for the rest of the game.
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A-10 Tournament: Second-half surge carries Hawks past Charlotte

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March 11, 2009 | AP Press
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. — Tasheed Carr scored 17 of his game-high 22 points in the second half to lead Saint Joseph’s to a 72-62 win over Charlotte on Wednesday in the first round of the Atlantic 10 tournament.
Ahmad Nivins added 15 points and 14 rebounds for the Hawks (17-14, 10-7), who now face Temple on Thursday in a rematch of last year’s final. Garrett Williamson finished with 12 points for St. Joe’s, while Idris Hilliard had 10.
Lamont Mack had 19 points and 10 rebounds for the 49ers (11-20, 5-12), while Ian Andersen added 12 points and DiJuan Harris finished with 11 points and nine assists.
St. Joe’s trailed by as many as 13 points in the first half and were down 30-23 at the break. But they opened the second half with an 11-2 run and were in command for the rest of the game.
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A-10 Announces Men’s Basketball All-Conference Teams

March 9, 2009 | Atlantic 10 Website
PHILADELPHIA, Pa. – Saint Joseph’s senior forward Ahmad Nivins has been named the 2008-09 Atlantic 10 men’s basketball Player of the Year in voting conducted among the Conference’s 14 head coaches.
The A-10 coaches also selected Andrew Nicholson of St. Bonaventure as the Rookie of the Year, Duquesne’s Aaron Jackson as the Chris Daniels Award recipient as the league’s most improved player, Delroy James of Rhode Island as Sixth Man of the Year, Massachusetts’ Tony Gaffney as Defensive Player of the Year and Rhode Island’s Jim Baron as Coach of the Year. In addition, Kevin Lisch of Saint Louis was tabbed Student-Athlete of the Year in voting among the league’s sports information directors.

Ahmad Nivins – Saint Joseph’s Hawks (F)
Nivins enters this week’s Atlantic 10 Championship (Mar. 11-14) in Atlantic City tied with Temple’s Dionte Christmas for the scoring lead with an average of 19.2 ppg. A third-team selection a year ago, the 6-9 forward from Jersey City, N.J., leads the Conference in rebounding (11.7 rpg.), minutes (39.43 mpg.) and double-doubles (20), while his league-best .625 shooting percentage (193-of-309) puts him on pace to join former George Washington standout Alexander Koul (1995-97) as the only players in A-10 history to lead the league in field goal percentage three consecutive years. A member of the All-Defensive Team, Nivins is the fourth player in SJU annals to earn the league’s Player of the Year honor and first since sharpshooter Pat Carroll in 2004-05.
A five-time Player of the Week selection this season, Nivins is joined on the All- Conference first-team by Christmas, Jimmy Baron of Rhode Island, Aaron Jackson of Duquesne and Xavier’s B.J. Raymond. Christmas is vying to become the league’s first-ever three-time scoring champion, while James is the first Duquesne player to garner first-team distinction since Mike James in 1997-98. The All-Conference second-team consists of Gaffney, Richmond’s Kevin Anderson, Derrick Brown of Xavier, Rodney Green of La Salle and Dayton’s Chris Wright. The third-team includes Lisch, Lavoy Allen of Temple, Massachusetts’ Ricky Harris, Lamont Mack of Charlotte and Rhode Island’s Kahiem Seawright.
Xavier’s C.J. Anderson, David Gonzalvez of Richmond, Dayton’s Marcus Johnson, Chris Lowe of UMass, and Damian Saunders of Duquesne earned honorable mention acclaim.
A program-record six-time A-10 Rookie of the Week selection, Nicholson enters this week’s A-10 Championship as the top freshman nationally in both blocked shots (79) and field goal percentage (.607 – 150-of-246). The Mississauga, Ontario, native is tied for second on the team in scoring (12.8 ppg.) and third in rebounding (6.0 rpg.) and scored in double figures in 20 of the Bonnies’ 29 contests. The 6-9 forward is the first SBU freshman to garner Rookie of the Year honors since Alvin Lott in 1983-84.
Nicholson is joined on the All-Rookie team by Melquan Bolding of Duquesne, Fordham’s Jio Fontan, Dayton’s Chris Johnson and Kwamain Mitchell of Saint Louis.
With 113 blocks and 59 steals entering Massachusetts’ opening round contest versus Duquesne on Mar. 11, Gaffney is the first player nationally since Shelden Williams (Duke, 2005-06) to register 100 blocks and 50 steals in a season. The senior forward leads the A-10 in blocks (3.90 bpg.), ranks second in rebounding (10.2 rpg.) and steals (2.03 spg.) and pulled down at least 10 rebounds in 18 of the Minutemen’s 29 games.
The All-Defensive team is comprised of Gaffney, Allen, Nivins, Dayton’s London Warren and Garrett Williamson of Saint Joseph’s.
Jackson was tabbed the Atlantic 10’s Chris Daniels Award, presented to the Conference’s most improved player. A year ago, the Hartford, Conn., resident averaged nine points, 4.5 rebounds and 3.5 assists. This season, the senior guard has blossomed into one of the most complete players in the Conference, ranking in the top five of the league in scoring (third – 18.3 ppg.), assists (third – 5.79 apg.), field goal percentage (fourth – .543) and steals (fifth – 1.72 spg.). The versatile James has provided a spark off the bench for the Rams as a junior, averaging 10.3 points and 6.3 rebounds in just 24.2 minutes per game. The Brooklyn, N.Y., native ranks third on the team in assists (65) and has a pair of 20-point performances to his credit.
A two-time Academic All-Conference selection, Lisch is averaging a team-leading 14.2 points and also leads the Billikens in three-pointers (69) and steals (37) en route to earning All-Conference honors for the second consecutive year. In the classroom, the Belleville, Ill., resident boasts a 3.48 grade point average while majoring in Business Administration. He was named to the 2008-09 CoSIDA/ESPN The Magazine All-America third-team.
Joining Lisch on the Atlantic 10 Academic All-Conference Team is Baron, Massachusetts’ Luke Bonner, Jason Duty of Duquesne and La Salle’s Yves Mekongo Mbala.
Selected by the league’s head coaches and media to finish ninth in the A-10 preseason poll, Baron led Rhode Island to an 11-5 league mark and 22-9 overall record. URI enters the Championship as the second seed and boasts the league’s highest scoring offense, averaging 80.1 ppg. The only coach in league history to earn A-10 Coach of the Year honors at two different schools, Baron was tabbed as the Conference’s Coach of the Year in 1995 while at St. Bonaventure and at Rhode Island in both 2003 and 2007. In eight seasons at URI, Baron is 130-116 (.528) and 336-318 overall (.514).
2008-09 ATLANTIC 10 MEN’S BASKETBALL ALL-CONFERENCE TEAMS First-Team School Cl. Pos. Ht. Hometown PPG RPG Asts Stls Blks
First-Team
Jimmy Baron Rhode Island Sr. G. 6-3 East Grennwich, R.I. 16.8 2.7 60 22 2
Dionte Christmas Temple Sr. G 6-5 Philadelphia, Pa. 19.2 6.1 88 41 5
Aaron Jackson Duquesne Sr. G 6-4 Hartford, Conn. 18.3 5.7 168 50 3
Ahmad Nivins Saint Joseph’s Sr. F 6-9 Jersey City, N.J. 19.2 11.7 32 19 55
B.J. Raymond Xavier Sr. G/F 6-6 Toledo, Ohio 13.8 4.2 46 17 12Second-Team
Kevin Anderson Richmond So. G 5-11 Duluth, Ga. 16.2 2.9 82 44 2
Derrick Brown Xavier Jr. F 6-8 Dayton, Ohio 13.8 6.1 61 21 28
Tony Gaffney Massachusetts Sr. F 6-8 Berkley, Mass. 11.5 10.2 49 59 113
Rodney Green La Salle Jr. G 6-5 Philadelphia, Pa. 17.6 4.9 105 56 5
Chris Wright Dayton So. F 6-8 Trotwood, Ohio 13.1 6.5 29 28 37Third-Team
Lavoy Allen Temple So. F 6-9 Morrisville, Pa. 11.1 8.6 62 13 48
Ricky Harris Massachusetts Jr. G 6-2 Baltimore, Md. 18.2 2.9 44 37 5
Kevin Lisch Saint Louis Sr. G 6-2 Belleville, Ill. 14.2 3.4 75 37 1
Lamont Mack Charlotte Sr. F 6-7 Chicago, Ill. 15.1 5.6 27 24 10
Kahiem Seawright Rhode Island Sr. F 6-8 Uniondale, N.Y. 13.8 7.4 68 25 31Honorable Mention
C.J. Anderson Xavier Sr. G/F 6-6 Cincinnati, Ohio 10.2 5.6 68 19 17
David Gonzalvez Richmond Jr. G 6-4 Marietta, Ga. 15.6 4.6 59 39 14
Marcus Johnson Dayton Jr. G 6-3 Cleveland, Ohio 12.1 3.2 50 26 15
Chris Lowe Massachusetts Sr. G 6-0 Mount Vernon, N.Y. 12.1 3.0 190 22 2
Damian Saunders Duquesne So. F 6-7 Waterbury, Conn. 13.3 7.9 66 66 66Rookie Team
Melquan Bolding Duquesne Fr. G/F 6-4 Mount Vernon, N.Y. 9.0 4.1 34 28 6
Jio Fontan Fordham Fr. G 5-11 Patterson, N.J. 15.3 2.7 132 33 3
Chris Johnson Dayton Fr. G/F 6-5 Columbus, Ohio 6.5 5.4 18 17 5
Kwamain Mitchell Saint Louis Fr. G 5-10 Milwaukee, Wis. 10.0 3.2 106 35 1
Andrew Nicholson St. Bonaventure Fr. F 6-9 Mississauga, Ontario 12.5 6.0 7 79 16Defensive Team
Lavoy Allen Temple So. F 6-9 Morrisville, Pa. 11.1 8.6 62 13 48
Tony Gaffney Massachusetts Sr. F 6-8 Berkley, Mass. 11.5 10.2 49 59 113
Ahmad Nivins Saint Joseph’s Sr. F 6-9 Jersey City, N.J. 19.2 11.7 32 19 55
London Warren Dayton Jr. G 6-0 Jacksonville, Fla. 4.2 2.7 126 48 4
Garrett Williamson Saint Joseph’s Jr. G 6-5 Lower Merion, Pa. 5.9 3.7 135 43 36Academic Team
Jimmy Baron Rhode Island Sr. G 6-3 East Greenwich, R.I. Communication Studies
Luke Bonner Massachusetts Gr. C 7-1 Concord, N.H. Sports Management
Jason Duty Duquesne Jr. G 6-1 Cranberry Township, Pa. Accounting
Kevin Lisch Saint Louis Sr. G 6-2 Belleville, Ill. Business Administration
Yves Mekongo Mbala La Salle Jr. F 6-7 Elizabeth, N.J. Integrated Science & Business TechnologyPlayer of the Year: Ahmad Nivins, Saint Joseph’s
Rookie of the Year: Andrew Nicholson, St. Bonaventure
Defensive Player of the Year: Tony Gaffney, Massachusetts
Chris Daniels Most Improved Player of the Year: Aaron Jackson, Duquesne
Sixth Man of the Year: Delroy James, Rhode Island
Student-Athlete of the Year: Kevin Lisch, Saint Louis
Coach of the Year: Jim Baron, Rhode Island
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Carr scores 20 as Hawks soar past Fordham 71-54

AP Photo
March 7, 2009 | AP Press
NEW YORK — Tasheed Carr had 20 points and seven assists to lead Saint Joseph’s to a 71-54 victory over Fordham on Saturday, the Rams’ 10th straight loss.
Garrett Williamson added 11 points for the Hawks (16-14, 9-7 Atlantic-10), while Ahmad Nivins had seven points, 15 rebounds and two blocked shots. Saint Joseph’s finished with a 43-28 rebound advantage.
Alberto Estwick had 16 points and Jio Fontan added 15 on 5-for-24 shooting for the Rams (3-25, 1-15).
The Hawks opened the second half with a 10-0 run that gave them a 47-18 lead with 17:42 to play. The lead reached 30 points when Carr’s two free throws with 15:42 to go made it 53-23.
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A10CollegeHoopsExclusive: Owls shoot down Hawks on Senior Night, 68-59

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March 5, 2009 by John Lamb | A10CollegeHoops
PHILADELPHIA – Thursday night’s game has assuredly been circled on the calendar of many a Temple fan . Forget the fact that it was Senior Night for the Owls or that this game was essentially for a first-round bye in the Atlantic 10 tournament.
This was Temple and Saint Joe’s. For a myriad of reasons this rivalry has become the most heated and competitive rivalry in the Big 5 and is right up there with the clashes that Xavier and Dayton have yearly in the Atlantic 10.
Last year, Pat Calathes hit the game-winning three-pointer with 3.9 seconds left to steal a 68-67 victory at the Liacouas Center. This year, the Owls were looking for revenge on their home court.
Fittingly, Temple’s seniors led the way as the Owls (18-11, 10-5 A-10) clipped the Hawks (15-14, 8-7) 68-59.
Dionte Christmas led all scorers with 23 points. He had gone over a month without breaking the 20 point plateau. Temple coach Fran Dunphy stated after the game that Christmas let it be known that “he was not going to let [Temple] lose.”
“Today I told myself that, no matter what happened, I wasn’t going to let my team lose,” said Christmas. “One, we definitely needed to win this game and another, this was Senior Night – my last game here – and I didn’t want to go out the wrong way.”
Christmas was helped out by the contributions of Sergio Olmos and Semaj Inge. Olmos scored 14 point and, most importantly, played tough defense on Saint Joseph’s star Ahmad Nivins. Although he scored 17 points and pulled down 16 rebounds, the Hawks big man shot only 6-for-16 from the floor and found himself having to work for every inch down low against the Owls seven-footer.
“Serg didn’t get a whole lot of help, he was pretty much on [Nivins] by himself,” Dunphy said. “As good as he was offensively, and he was very good, I thought he was terrific defensively.”
Olmos understood that he had to bring his A-game to be successful in slowing down one of the A-10’s premier players.
“He’s a great player and you really have to be physical,” said Olmos, who has rebounded nicely since returning to the starting lineup. “When he wants he can get very deep position and he’s got plenty of moves down there. But I think I did a pretty good job and my teammates also helped me. I think it was a great team effort.”
Semaj Inge also added to his reputation for being a pain in the neck for the Hawks. He filled the stat sheet with a line to the tune of nine points, three assists, two blocks and four steals.
The Hawks were able to cut Temple’s lead to two points with just under 15 minutes left in the second half after a fast break dunk by Nivins. Whatever Dunphy told his players during the ensuing timeout seemed to resonate as the Owls broke the game open with an 18-6 run that was sparked by the three-point shooting of Craig Williams and Christmas.
Williams finished the game with 11 points and a career-high nine rebounds. His playing time had been scarce before tonight’s contest but Dunphy made it clear that he is an integral part of this team.
“[Williams] is critical because he adds such a different dimension to our team,” said Dunphy. “We need him. He had some personal issues that he dealt with for the Dayton game and he did not play very well or long against La Salle. He is an interesting player, a talented guy. He’s not a great athlete, he’s not going to get side to side real fast at any point and he’s not going to go up and dunk a lot of balls but he has great hands. When he catches the ball and rebounds the ball, it’s his.”
Juan Fernandez also had an impressive game for the Temple. The freshman point guard scored five points and dished out five assists to go along with four rebounds. He made two dynamic passes that drew plenty of “Oohs” from the crowd on back-to-back possessions early in the first half that led to easy layups for Williams and Inge respectively.
“[Fernandez is] a terrific basketball player. He got caught a few times on the defensive end tonight but he is a really good basketball player that knows what he is doing out there,” Dunphy stated. “I am hoping the next three and chance years will be spectacular years for him as well.”
It would not be a Big 5 game without at least one wacky stat. Only four of the eight Hawks who played tonight scored. The bench and starter Garrett Williamson shot a combined 0-for-12 from the floor. Needless to say, the Owls easily won the bench points battle 16-0.
For the game, the Hawks shot just 32 percent.
“We just played a Division I game and had four guys score,” said Hawks coach Phil Martelli when asked why his team has trouble scoring. “Some of it is skill set and some of it is a full out commitment to that way of playing. We had a number of layups that did not go in. Guys are trying they just didn’t make layups.”
Tasheed Carr led the Hawks with 22 points and five assists. Darrin Govens added 14 points and Idris Hilliard scored six.
The first 15 minutes of the game were controlled by the Saint Joseph’s as they led by as many as seven points. They seemed to have an answer for everything the Owls tried to do in the early going. It did not last for long as a Christmas three with 4:39 remaining broke a 21-21 tie and gave the Owls a lead that they never relinquished.
Saint Joe’s looked to establish themselves in the paint early and partly succeeded as Lavoy Allen picked up two quick fouls and watched most of the half from the bench. The Hawks, however, were only able to score four points in the paint to Temple’s 14.
Temple heads to Washinton D.C. on Saturday to take on the George Washington Colonials. If Duquesne is able to beat Dayton on the Flyers’ home court then Temple will move up the the three seed.
Saint Joe’s will travel to New York City to take on Fordham in a game that will go a long way in determining how the middle of the A-10 pack pans out going into the conference tournament.
POST GAME AUDIO:
Phil Martelli Post Game Press Conference
Fran Dunphy Press Conference
Dionte Christmas, Sergio Olmos and Semaj Inge Post Game AudioJohn Lamb can be reached at johnlamb@a10collegehoops.com
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Nivins double-double leads Hawks past Bonnies
March 1, 2009 | AP Press
PHILADELPHIA – Ahmad Nivins scored 22 points and pulled down 10 rebounds and Tasheed Carr added 17 points as Saint Joseph’s snapped a five-game losing streak with a 73-62 victory over St. Bonaventure on Sunday.
Nivins, playing in his last home game for the Hawks (14-14, 6-8 Atlantic 10), has scored in double figures in 40 straight games, and has recorded 19 double-doubles. He leads the A10 in scoring, rebounding and shooting percentage.
Chris Matthews had 15 points and Malcolm Eleby 14 for the Bonnies (14-14, 5-10 A10), who lost their 15th straight to Saint Joseph’s.
The Hawks never trailed in the game and led 52-42 with 7:29 remaining. The Bonnies rallied to within 57-52 on a layup by Andrew Nicholson with 3:36 to play, but Nivins hit a 6-footer, starting a 9-3 run, and the Bonnies never threatened again.
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Saint Joseph’s drops fifth straight game, falls to No. 22 Xavier

AP Photo
February 26, 2009 | AP Press
PHILADELPHIA — Back on the road for the first time since its clunker of a loss at Charlotte, Derrick Brown noticed a change in Xavier’s attitude.
“We got our road nastiness back,” he said.
One thing that hasn’t changed for the Musketeers is having another Atlantic 10 title in sight.
Brown had 18 points and 10 rebounds and B.J Raymond scored 18 points to lead Xavier (No. 22 ESPN/USA Today, No. 19 AP) past skidding Saint Joseph’s 68-54 on Thursday night.
“We were just trying to get it back in time and I think we’re in the right direction,” Brown said.
The Musketeers (23-5, 11-3) led almost the entire game and pulled away from the mistake-prone Hawks over the last four minutes to strengthen their spot at the top of the A-10 standings.
La Salle’s upset over Temple (9-4) opens the door for Xavier to win its third straight regular-season conference title with two games left.
“It says a lot [of our players] and our program,” coach Sean Miller said.
Ahmad Nivins scored 24 points for the Hawks, who lost their fifth straight game. Saint Joseph’s (14-13, 7-6) played without point guard Tasheed Carr (13.0 ppg), who sat out because of a concussion suffered Tuesday in practice.
The Hawks are on their longest streak under coach Phil Martelli since they dropped nine straight in 1998-99.
“The flaws have been there all year long,” Martelli said.
The Musketeers appear to have put their stunning five-point loss at Charlotte behind them.
Miller laughed at Brown’s remark and explained there was a simple definition to playing “nasty.”
“What he means deeper into that, is just being ready,” Miller said. “Being the team that looks the same whether we play at home or on the road.”
Brown and Anderson found their touch in the second half to make up for some sloppy play that let the Hawks whittle a double-digit lead down to six.
Brown put away the Hawks with two huge dunks that shook the rim and silenced the Palestra. Brown, who went over the 1,000-point mark, helped give Xavier a 56-44 lead and it would go up to 20 with steady trips to the free-throw line.
Maybe Carr would have steadied the Hawks and cut down the careless possessions. When Raymond buried a 3-pointer with 11:25 left to give Xavier a 50-36 lead, the Hawks had more turnovers (13) than field goals (11).
The final numbers were just as ugly: 19 turnovers and 17-for-46 shooting from the field. Xavier grabbed 17 offensive rebounds, led by Brown’s five.
Still, the Hawks had a shot through the first 30 minutes.
Garrett Williamson and Darrin Govens scored consecutive baskets, only to watch that single-digit deficit go back to 10 on Brown’s fall-down jumper.
That was it for the Hawks.
“You either hit first, or you get the hell beat of you and we got the hell beat of us on the backboards,” Martelli said.
Saint Joseph’s bounced Xavier in last year’s A-10 tournament semifinals and will need another upset to return to the NCAA tournament.
The Hawks were in prime position to threaten for their second straight at-large bid and were even in the hunt the A-10 title, after a 7-0 January in which they outscored the opposition by an average of 10 points per game.
“We were winning in January, and when the situation came up and we had to make a winning play, we did,” Martelli said. “We haven’t made a winning play in a couple of weeks.”
That sizzling streak seems about as far as way as their early season trip to Maui. Saint Joseph’s went 2-7 in February and will need to double that win total at the conference tournament in Atlantic City, N.J., to have any shot at a bid.
The Hawks were fortunate to only trail by five at halftime. They were dreadful from every corner of the court and missed 12 of their first 15 shots.
They were in the game because of a sizable edge from the free-throw line (9-for-10 to Xavier’s 1-for-3).
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Massachusetts defeats Saint Joseph’s 70-69, Chris Lowe all-time UMass leader in assists
February 22, 2009 | AP Press
PHILADELPHIA — Chris Lowe hit two free throws with two seconds remaining, and Tony Gaffney had 17 points and 10 rebounds, as Massachusetts nipped Saint Joseph’s 70-69 on Sunday.
Lowe scored 13 points and added seven assists to become the school’s all-time leader with 640, passing Carl Smith. Ricky Harris contributed 11 points for the Minutemen (10-15, 5-7 Atlantic 10), who snapped a two-game losing streak.
Tasheed Carr connected on a pair of free throws to give the Hawks a 69-68 lead with 6.4 seconds left.
Lowe took control of the ball at halfcourt, drove to the basket and was fouled by Ahmad Nivins.
Nivins had 21 points and 11 rebounds, his 18th double-double, Idris Hilliard added 12 points and 11 rebounds, Carr contributed 12 points and Garrett Williamson had 10 for Saint Joseph’s (14-12, 7-5).
The Hawks have dropped four in a row for the first time since the 2004-05 season.
Saint Joseph’s was 0-for-7 from 3-point territory, snapping a streak of 495 consecutive games with at least one 3-pointer made. The streak began at the start of the 1993-94 season.
The last time the Hawks went without a 3-pointer came in a 56-34 loss at Southwest Missouri State in the first round of the NIT Tournament on March 18, 1993.
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Billikens scrape by Saint Joseph’s 73-71

February 19, 2009 | AP Press
ST. LOUIS, MO — Kwamain Mitchell hit a career-high five 3-pointers and finished with 17 points to lead Saint Louis over Saint Joseph’s 73-71 on Wednesday night.
Kevin Lisch added 15 for points the Billikens (16-10, 7-5 Atlantic 10), who won for the fifth time in six games and sent Saint Joseph’s (14-11, 7-4) to a third straight loss.
The Hawks’ Ahmad Nivins recorded a conference-leading 17th double-double with 22 points and 11 rebounds, despite being held scoreless for the final 9:56 of the game.
Saint Louis used a 7-2 run early in the second half to take the lead for good at 53-48.
Mitchell’s final 3-pointer put the Billikens up 68-64 with 1:10 left.
A 3-pointer by Garrett Williamson brought the Hawks within 72-71 with 2.3 seconds remaining, but Lisch sank a free throw and Nivins’ desperation shot from 30 feet at the buzzer fell short.
Barry Eberhardt added 14 points and Willie Reed came off the bench to score 11 for Saint Louis.















