Sunday, February 8, 2015

Seton Hall 67, Providence 40: Ray Floriani's Tempo-Free Analysis

Seton Hall cheerleaders during a routine at Walsh Gym. (Photo courtesy of Ray Floriani)

South Orange, NJ – Providence gave Seton Hall all they could handle the first time out. In the return contest, it turned out to be virtually no contest as the Pirates entertained a sellout crowd with a 67-40 triumph at Walsh Gymnasium on Friday. The pace and efficiency:

Possessions: 69
Offensive Efficiency: Seton Hall 97, Providence 58

The Four Factors:
eFG%: Seton Hall 46, Providence 28
FT Rate: Providence 20, Seton Hall 16
OREB%: Seton Hall 43, Providence 29
TO Rate: Providence 25, Seton Hall 22

What Providence did well: Get off to a good start. The first time around, Providence nearly pulled off the upset. Seton Hall captured the road contest after battling back from a 17-point deficit. This time out the Friars got out to an 11-6 lead the first four minutes. The quick start however, could not be sustained.

What Seton Hall did well: Defend. The efficiency margin on defense was outstanding. In addition, the Hall limited the Friars to just six second half field goals and a game eFG mark of 28%. The 25% TO rate imposed by the Pirates led to a 19-7 edge in points off turnovers.

Leading Scorers and OE:
Providence: Aliyah Miller (11 points, OE .357)
Seton Hall: Janee Johnson and Ka-­Deidre Simmons (17 points, OE: Simmons .700, Johnson .600)

Inside effort: Seton Hall dominated 30-14 in points in the paint and 18-6 in second chance points. Tabatha Richardson-­Smith, off the perimeter prowess, (10 points tonight) did the job on the boards with a game-high 13 rebounds.

Miller was the only Friar in double figures, an added testament to the defense of Seton Hall. Miller, a sophomore forward, also led coach Susan Robinson Fruchtl’s Friars with nine boards.

Evi Liskola led with 19 points the first meeting. This time out, the Friars junior guard/forward scored a very quiet eight points.

Providence is 5-18, (2-10 Big East) while Seton Hall is now 21-2 (10-1).

“I credit our fans and am very proud of them. This is beginning to be a very hard place (for visitors) to play....If you beat us, we want to make sure we gave our best effort. You beat our best.” Seton Hall coach Tony Bozzella

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.