The automatic suspension rules were implemented because of the early 90's behavior of programs like Georgetown, Seton Hall and Providence, which had become street gangs in uniforms. Those teams would show up at games looking to brawl, and there was a game with Georgetown against Arkansas around that time that was one of the more shocking and disturbing games I have ever witnessed.
.
Yeah. Those Catholic School thugs like those guys at St John's who beat up on helpless Donny Marshall in 1995.
COLLEGE BASKETBALL; St. John's Learns It's A Big East Out There
Published: January 09, 1995
St. John's wasn't supposed to be a contender for the Big East championship. In this season where teaching will take priority over titles, the Red Storm figures to be a speed bump in someone else's road to the conference title.
Despite eight victories in its first nine games, that reality became evident here today when sixth-ranked Connecticut exposed the Red Storm's inexperience and lack of depth en route to a 98-78 blowout before 16,294 at the Hartford Civic Center.
The Huskies, unbeaten in 10 starts and 3-0 in the Big East, were on a mission to impress a national television audience and voters in the polls. After losses by North Carolina, U.C.L.A. and Arkansas -- Nos. 1 through 3 this past week -- UConn could be ranked as high as third this week. "They play at a very high level," said St. John's Coach Brian Mahoney. "No wonder they're ranked that high."
The Huskies dominated from start to finish, expanding a 55-46 lead at halftime to a 27-point advantage at 79-52 with 9 minutes 17 seconds to play. Ray Allen, after a sluggish start, finished with 27 points, while
Donny Marshall added 18 before he and St. John's forward Charles Minlend were ejected with 3:56 to play after a fight.
The ejections carry automatic one-game suspensions for both players, meaning Minlend must sit out Wednesday's game against Miami at Alumni Hall, while Marshall cannot play in UConn's game at Pitt, also on Wednesday. Connecticut Coach Jim Calhoun and Mahoney were trying to get the suspensions lifted. Calhoun spent 30 minutes after the game talking with the Big East supervisor of officials, Art Hyland, but it's unlikely anything will change.
"It was just two guys battling," Mahoney said of the incident that took place under the St. John's basket with the Huskies leading by 87-68. "Hopefully, we can get together with the refs and straighten this thing out."
Losing Minlend for a game against struggling Miami hurt more than today's loss to the Huskies. St. John's was given little chance to upset UConn on what is, in effect, a Huskie home floor. From the opening tip, when UConn guard Kevin Ollie broke free for a driving layup and the game's first 2 points, the Huskies smothered St. John's.
UConn blew the game open during the first 10 minutes of the second half, when its defensive pressure and up-tempo offense overwhelmed St. John's. It started with an 11-2 run that included 8 points by Allen. The surge gave UConn a 54-34 lead, and later, when Allen strung together 10 consecutive UConn points and forward Rudy Johnson converted an offensive rebound, the Huskies were up by 81-52 with the sellout crowd roaring its approval.
"We tried to do some things we weren't capable of doing," said James Scott of St. John's. "That's why
we got out of sync. I think our inexperience showed today."
Despite the availability of point guard Maurice Brown, who was questionable with a sprained ankle, St. John's couldn't handle the Huskies' fullcourt trapping defense, which forced 16 turnovers and limited the Red Storm to 41 percent shooting. When St. John's did score, UConn would often quickly inbound the ball and race the length of the court for an uncontested layup. The Huskies, taller and more active, outrebounded St. John's, 47-34, and made 9 of 20 from 3-point range, while St. John's made only 1 of 11.
"They made us take shots we really didn't want to take," said Felipe Lopez, who led St. John's with 20 points. "If you get two or three turnovers, you start rushing and things get out of control."
Calhoun, normally his team's biggest critic, had to acknowledge his Huskies' performance at the start of the second half. "It was the best 10 minutes we've played this year," he said.
The incident between Marshall and Minlend started when center Travis Knight fouled Minlend as Minlend was trying to score along the baseline. As the play ended, he and Marshall tangled.
Marshall then slapped Minlend in the head-and-shoulder area. The two exchanged words, then Minlend swung at Marshall with what the officials described as "an open-handed punch."
Minlend was immediately ejected, and, after reviewing replays, the officials also ejected Marshall for provoking Minlend's retaliation.
"We were playing very hard and we just got carried away," said Minlend, who had a sub-par game, scoring 11 points on 3-of-11 shooting. "It was a little more intense than it was supposed to be. I wish it didn't happen."
It was the second time the two had tangled. In the Big East tournament last season, Minlend received a technical after the two exchanged angry words. Marshall said a head butt by Minlend triggered today's incident. "He head-butted me and I had my hands up to get him away," Marshall said. "I pushed him in the face and he pushed me back. We've been having a thing going since I first played him."
Despite the blowout, St. John's, 8-2 over all, tried to put a positive spin on its first Big East loss in three starts. "I think we'll learn some lessons from this one," Mahoney said. "It's early in the Big East. Nobody said there wouldn't be any bumps along the way."