PROVIDENCE, R.I. - Scottie Reynolds learned a lesson starting the game on the bench.
Once in the game, he delivered a teachable moment of his own to 15th-seeded Robert Morris: Don’t let a Final Four-tested team like Villanova off the hook.
Reynolds was benched, his shot wasn’t falling and his Wildcats were on the brink of having their NCAA tournament run end in the biggest of upsets. He responded with a clutch performance at the foul line in the final minutes of regulation, and No. 2 seed Villanova survived a scare from Robert Morris in a 73-70 overtime victory Thursday in the NCAA tournament.
“I always think we’re going to win, I always think we’re going to find a way,” coach Jay Wright said.
Trailing 55-47 with 4:19 left in the second half, Reynolds attacked the basket and led a fearless rally from the free-throw line. His reliable stroke was absent, but he never stopped hustling in the second half, and Reynolds’ sliding save of a loose ball at Robert Morris’ end led to two free throws that cut the lead to 55-51.
The Colonials (23-12) coughed up the ball again, Reynolds was fouled again and he delivered again on both attempts from the line and it was 55-53 with 2:10 left.
Robert Morris committed their 21st turnover and — notice a pattern? — fouled Reynolds. Two more from the line and it was tied 55-all with 1:48 left in regulation.
All those missed jumpers — Reynolds was 2 of 15 from the floor — seemed forgotten.
“He is a live-by-the-sword, die-by-the-sword kind of guy,” Wright said. “And I’ll die by his sword any time because we’ve won so many. Even when he was missing them, I was saying, ’If that’s how we’re going to go down, I’ll go down with him any time.”’
The Wildcats (25-7) weren’t going down. They’ll play 10th-seeded Saint Mary’s, which beat Richmond 80-71, on Saturday.
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The Northeast Conference champion Colonials left the court to a standing ovation — even from Villanova’s mascot.
The Wildcats, trying to reach their second straight Final Four, entered having lost five of seven and were a surprising pick for the No. 2 seed in the South Regional.
That was only the start of the shockers.
First came the news that Reynolds, their team leader and top scorer had been benched. Then Robert Morris nearly sent them all packing way earlier than expected.
Wright made the bold move to sit Reynolds at the start of the game to make a “teaching point.” He declined to reveal the reasons behind the disciplinary action against Villanova’s leading scorer.
Reynolds said he got the message.
“You have to be excellent all the time, put it like that,” Reynolds said. “You can’t have any flaws, even if it’s so minor, even an inch, because that’s the margin of victory.”
Reynolds and Cory Fisher were both benched for the start, but their punishment didn’t last long. Reynolds sat out 4 minutes and Fisher checked in about 30 seconds later.
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