St. John’s vs. Marquette, Duke vs. North Carolina

St. John’s vs. Marquette, Duke vs. North Carolina

I’ll never forget where I was when Ray Allen hit his off-balance leaner over Allen Iverson (the den of my childhood home), when Kemba Walker hit his step-back jumper against Pitt (a JFK Airport bar, having just explained to my new girlfriend — the future Mrs. Hoops — that I’d be writing a new college basketball gambling column on our first vacation together) or when Sterling Gibbs stunned top-seeded Villanova with no time left (working courtside). 

I can safely say I’ll also always remember where I was when Xavier’s Ryan Conwell banked in a buzzer-beater just inside half-court for the backdoor cover Thursday.

The roar inside the Garden made it clear I’m not alone. 

St. John’s (-4.5) over Marquette

The Golden Eagles have stood toe-to-toe with the Big East champs — losing by six, before the heartbreak of last week’s overtime buzzer-beater — but the Red Storm still have another gear, as they displayed in their blowout win over Butler.

As poor as St. John’s perimeter shooting has been this season, it should only improve upon the 8-of-39 performances in the two wins over Marquette, while maintaining its dominance on the offensive glass.

Shaka Smart can’t prepare his team for the Garden crowd, 40 minutes from watching the Red Storm advance to their first Big East Tournament title game in 25 years. 

Ucla (+1) over Wisconsin

The Badgers haven’t won back-to-back games in nearly a month — thanks to the inconsistent shooting of their only double-digit scorers (John Tonje, John Blackwell) — and lost their lone matchup against the Bruins despite hitting 15 of 30 3s against a top-15 defense.


UCLA Bruins head coach Mick Cronin reacts against the Southern California Trojans in the first half at Pauley Pavilion presented by Wescom.
UCLA Bruins head coach Mick Cronin reacts against the Southern California Trojans in the first half at Pauley Pavilion presented by Wescom. Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

UCLA’s Mick Cronin has lost his opening conference tournament game just once since 2016 while winning two conference championships and making three other title game appearances in that span. 

North Carolina (+7.5) over Duke

Neither side has beaten its rival three times in a single season since 2002. It would have been difficult to do so even with Cooper Flagg, facing a desperate, talented team that likely needs a win to secure an NCAA Tournament berth.

But with the next No. 1 pick expected to sit after leaving Thursday’s game with an ankle injury, the Tar Heels have far more reason to believe the outright upset is in play. 


Betting on College Basketball?


This season: 5-3 

2011-24 record: 378-340-12


Why Trust New York Post Betting

Howie Kussoy has long been the New York Post’s main handicapper in college basketball (since 2011) and college football (since 2013).

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