2024–25 Northeast Conference men's basketball standings
Conf. Overall
Team W   L   PCT W   L   PCT
Central Connecticut 12 2   .857 21 6   .778
LIU 10 4   .714 14 15   .483
Mercyhurst** 8 7   .533 14 16   .467
Fairleigh Dickinson 7 7   .500 11 18   .379
Saint Francis 7 8   .467 12 17   .414
Wagner 6 8   .429 14 13   .519
Stonehill* 6 8   .429 14 15   .483
Le Moyne* 4 10   .286 9 20   .310
Chicago State 4 10   .286 4 25   .138
* ineligible for the 2025 NCAA tournament due to transition from Division II
** ineligible for both the 2025 NEC tournament and the 2025 NCAA tournament due to transition from Division II
2025 NEC tournament winner
As of February 22, 2025

The 2024–25 Northeast Conference men's basketball season began with practices in October 2024, followed by the start of the 2024–25 NCAA Division I men's basketball season on November 4. Conference play started on January 3, and will end on March 1, 2025. This is the 44th season of Northeast Conference men's basketball. Central Connecticut and Merrimack were the 2023–24 regular-season co-champions, but only Central Connecticut is defending their title, since Merrimack left the NEC and joined the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference (MAAC). Wagner is the defending conference tournament champion.

The NEC tournament will be held in March with the higher-seeded team hosting each game. All eight eligible teams qualify for the tournament; Mercyhurst is ineligible until 2027. The winner will advance to the 2025 NCAA Division I tournament, unless that team is ineligible, in which case another team will represent the conference.

This is the first season of NEC membership for both Chicago State, which joined after two seasons as a Division I independent,[1] and Mercyhurst, which began its transition from Division II.[2]

Offseason

Following the resignation of Gerald Gillion to become the associate head coach at LIU,[3] Chicago State promoted assistant coach Scott Spinelli to head coach. Spinelli had been an assistant for the Cougars during the 2023–24 season.[4]

Merrimack and Sacred Heart left the conference after the 2023–24 school year to join the MAAC.[5]

For the third straight year, the NEC changed its rules regarding eligibility for the conference tournament. Teams transitioning from Division II may participate in the NEC tournament starting with the third year of their transition. Therefore, Mercyhurst will not be eligible for the NEC tournament until 2027.[6] The change is prospective rather than retroactive. Consequently, Le Moyne, in their second transition year, remain eligible for the 2025 tournament.

Head coaches

Team Head coach Previous position Year at school Overall record NEC record NEC tournament championships NCAA tournament record
Central Connecticut Patrick Sellers Fairfield
(asst.)
4 38–57 25–25 0
Chicago State Scott Spinelli Chicago State
(asst.)
1 0–0 0–0 0
Fairleigh Dickinson Jack Castleberry Fairleigh Dickinson
(asst.)
2 15–17 9–7 0
Le Moyne Nate Champion Florida Southern
(asst.)
5[a] 61–56 9–7 0
LIU Rod Strickland NBA G League Ignite
(program director)
3 10–48 7–25 0
Mercyhurst Gary Manchel Ohio
(asst.)
22 373–219 0–0 0
Saint Francis Rob Krimmel Saint Francis (asst.) 13 155–210 100–110 0
Stonehill Chris Kraus Stonehill
(asst.)
11[b] 148–143 12–20 0
Wagner Donald Copeland Seton Hall
(asst.)
3 32–29 15–17 1 1–1
Notes
All records, appearances, titles, etc. are from time with current school only.
Year at school includes 2024–25 season.
Overall and NEC/NCAA records are from time at current school and are before the beginning of the 2024–25 season.
Previous jobs are head coaching jobs unless otherwise noted.
  1. ^ Le Moyne did not play during the 2020–21 season due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Consequently, this is Champion's sixth year as the team's head coach but only his fifth season.
  2. ^ Stonehill did not play during the 2020–21 season due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Consequently, this is Kraus's 12th year as the team's head coach but only his 11th season.

Preseason

Preseason coaches' poll and rankings

The table below shows the preseason rankings of NEC teams based on a poll of the conference's coaches[7] as well as each team's preseason Pomeroy rating among the 364 Division I teams.[8]

Rank Team Pomeroy
rating
1 (tie) Central Connecticut (5) 303
Wagner (4) 272
3 Fairleigh Dickinson 352
4 Le Moyne 335
5 LIU 354
6 Chicago State 340
7 Mercyhurst 356
8 (tie) Saint Francis 351
Stonehill 358

() first-place votes

Preseason All-NEC team

Source: [9]

Player School
Malachi Davis (Redshirt Junior, Guard) LIU
Jo'el Emanuel (Junior, Forward) Fairleigh Dickinson
Darrick Jones Jr. (5th-yr. Senior, Guard) Le Moyne
Jordan Jones (Senior, Guard) Central Connecticut
Jeff Planutis (Graduate, Forward) Mercyhurst

Regular season

Early-season multi-team events

Source: [10]

Team Event Host Record
Central Connecticut None
Chicago State Sunshine Slam Northeast Conference 0–3
Fairleigh Dickinson Metro NY/NJ Classic Fairleigh Dickinson, Army and Manhattan 1–1
Le Moyne Island U Invitational Texas A&M–Corpus Christi 1–1
LIU Lafayette Classic Lafayette 0–3
Mercyhurst Cal Classic California 1–2
Saint Francis Hoya MTE Georgetown 0–2
Stonehill Urban-Bennett Invitational Robert Morris 1–2
Wagner None

Pre-conference season highlights

Le Moyne traveled just over three miles for their season opener at Syracuse on November 4, 2024. The Dolphins shocked the Orange by holding them to 32% shooting from the floor in the first half and led by five points at intermission. With Le Moyne leading by a point, a 9–0 Syracuse run gave the Orange a 76–68 lead with 4:31 to play. However, the Dolphins responded with a 6–2 spurt, getting three points each from Will Amica on a triple and Freds Pauls Bagatskis on three free throws. Trent Mosquera's three-pointer cut the Syracuse lead to two points with 1:02 left, and another triple from Bagatskis made it 83–82 with 22 seconds on the clock. After the Orange hit one of two from the line, the Dolphins turned the ball over with six seconds to play, and Syracuse hit two more free throws, handing the Dolphins a heartbreaking 86–82 loss. Bagatskis scored 18 points to lead five Dolphins in double figures.[11][12]

After starting the game 0 for 4 from the floor, Mercyhurst found their shooting touch and earned their first win as a Division I program in just their second game, 78–73, at Morgan State on November 6. Freshman Mykolaus Ivanauskas scored 16 points and grabbed seven rebounds off the bench to lead the Lakers. Mercyhurst trailed, 71–69, with just over a minute remaining, when senior Aidan Reichert scored to tie the game. Graduate student Jeff Planutis scored the final seven points for the Lakers, first hitting a three-pointer with 29 seconds left that gave them the lead and then sinking four free throws in the closing seconds.[13][14] Prior to this season, the only win over a Division I opponent for Mercyhurst came on December 28, 1974, on a neutral floor against Delaware State.[15]

After opening the season with a tight 59–55 loss at Providence,[16] Central Connecticut got 13 points each from Jordan Jones, Darin Smith Jr. and Jayden Brown and secured a 73–67 win at Saint Joseph's on November 8. The Blue Devils used a 9–0 second-half run to erase a four-point deficit. Clinging to a three-point lead, Smith hit a contested triple as the shot clock expired with 2:29 to play. On Central Connecticut's next possession, Davonte Sweatman, who finished with 11 points, hit a 27-footer off a pass from Jones, who had lost control of the ball in the lane but recovered possession. Abdul Momoh was 4 for 5 from the floor and finished with nine points, 11 rebounds and two blocks. The Blue Devils' win was their first over a team ranked in the KenPom top 100 in nearly 12 years.[12][17]

Valentino Pinedo led a Saint Francis comeback from a 15-point deficit at Campbell on November 10. Pinedo tied the game with a layup with 1:39 to play and tied it again with a tip-in with 49 seconds left. After the Red Flash got a stop on the defensive end, Pinedo was fouled with one second left. He missed the first free throw but hit the second, after the Fighting Camels used a timeout to ice him, and gave Saint Francis a 65–64 victory. Sophomore Ace Talbert scored 18 points to lead the Red Flash and shot 4 for 6 from beyond the arc.[12][18]

LIU got 17 points and five assists from Malachi Davis in a 63–54 victory at Air Force on November 11. The Sharks held the Falcons to 36% shooting from the field. Freshman guard Jalen “Roc” Lee scored 12 points off the bench, shooting 5 for 10 from the floor, for LIU.[19][20]

Mercyhurst earned their first home victory against a Division I opponent, defeating Canisius, 62–52, on November 13. The Lakers were down one point midway through the second half and went on a 12–0 run, keyed by six points from Aidan Reichert, to snatch control of the contest. Bernie Blunt III scored 16 points to lead Mercyhurst.[20][21]

Stonehill earned a 26-point win, their largest margin of victory as a Division I team against a Division I opponent, when they defeated New Orleans, 80–54, in an Urban-Bennett Invitational game on November 15. Josh Morgan had his first career double-double with 20 points and 10 rebounds for the Skyhawks. Stonehill held the Privateers to 26% shooting from the floor.[20][22]

LIU built a 24-point lead with under 11 minutes to play at Charlotte on November 23. The 49ers then held the Sharks scoreless for 7:44 and went on an 18–0 run to get within 67–61 with 3:23 remaining. In the final two minutes, senior guard Terell Strickland scored on a layup and then found Jamal Fuller for a dunk with 34 seconds left to push the Sharks' lead to 75–70. Malachi Davis had a career high 31 points for LIU and was 4 for 4 from the free-throw line in the final 16 seconds. Charlotte missed a three-pointer at the buzzer, and LIU held on for a 79–76 victory, the first in program history over an American Athletic Conference opponent. Freshman Shadrak Lasu had his first career double-double with 11 points and 10 rebounds for the Sharks. Strickland finished with 13 points and seven assists.[23][24]

Stonehill faced an eight-point second-half deficit in their November 25 home game against East Texas A&M. The Skyhawks got within two points and had possession with 13 seconds to play. Todd Brogna drove to the basket, was fouled and hit a pair of free throws with 2.2 seconds left. Chas Stinson forced a quick turnover, as the Lions tried to inbound the ball, and then was fouled driving to the basket. With 0.8 seconds on the clock, Stinson drained both free throws to give the Skyhawks a 67–65 win. Josh Morgan scored a game-high 20 points on 6-for-13 shooting from the floor, including 4-for-8 from beyond the arc, to lead the Skyhawks. Morgan surpassed 1,000 career points in the game. Brogna added 16 points for Stonehill.[25][26]

Saint Francis saw their 21-point lead disappear in their November 26 home game against Lehigh, when the Mountain Hawks tied the score at 78 with 1:45 to play. However, Bobby Rosenberger III hit a three-pointer that sparked a game-ending 10–0 run to give the Red Flash an 88–78 victory. Riley Parker scored 23 points and dished out seven assists to lead Saint Francis. Rosenberger finished with 21 points and eight rebounds.[26][27]

Le Moyne shot 60.4% from the floor, a new program record for the Division I era, and held off a late charge in an 81–77 win at Manhattan on November 29. After the Jaspers cut the Dolphins' 16-point lead down to two, AJ Dancler hit a triple with 1:12 to play to stall the rally. A pair of free throws by Robby Carmody with nine seconds left sealed the Le Moyne victory. Dwayne Koroma scored 17 points on 8-for-9 shooting from the floor and added five rebounds and five assists. Ocypher Owens led the Dolphins with 18 points and nine rebounds and added six assists. Zek Tekin finished with 16 points and eight assists for Le Moyne.[26][28]

Abdul Momoh led a strong finish by Central Connecticut in their 69–67 home victory over UMass Lowell on December 1. Momoh scored on drives to the basket on three straight possessions, while the Blue Devils got stops at the defensive end, to flip a one-point deficit with less than three minutes to play to a five-point lead. Sophomore Matt Frazier entered the game with one second remaining to guard the River Hawks' inbounds pass, and he deflected it and stole the ball to secure the win. Darin Smith Jr. scored 14 points to lead Central Connecticut and added three steals. Momoh finished with 13 points and five rebounds. Devin Haid scored 12 points and grabbed eight rebounds for the Blue Devils.[26][29]

Stonehill earned an impressive home win over Quinnipiac, the pre-season favorite in the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference,[30] on December 1. The Skyhawks shot 53.2% from the field and 54.2% from three-point range in their 88–74 victory. Josh Morgan scored 22 points to lead Stonehill. Louie Semona came off the bench to add 18 points for the Skyhawks.[26][31]

Le Moyne hosted Army in a thriller on December 3. The Black Knights had a 14-point lead with less than five minutes to play, but the Dolphins stormed back and tied the game on Dwayne Koroma's layup with four seconds left. Army held another late lead in overtime, but AJ Dancler tied the score at 82 for Le Moyne. Zek Tekin then stole the ball, but his three-pointer at the buzzer was off the mark. Tekin's pair of free throws in the closing seconds of double overtime tied the game again. Ryan Curry's three-pointer with six seconds remaining in triple overtime broke a tie and gave Army a 103–100 lead. Dancler shot a three-pointer at the buzzer, but it was off the mark, and Army held on for the win. According to the KenPom win probability metric, the game was the third most exciting game up that that point in the Division I season. Koroma and Ocypher Owens each had their first career double-double for Le Moyne. Koroma finished with 19 points, 15 rebounds and two steals. Owens had 14 points and 11 rebounds. Tekin matched Koroma for team-high scoring honors with 19 points and added seven rebounds, five assists and three steals. Jalen Rucker scored 34 and added 13 rebounds, five assists and six steals for Army.[32][33]

Central Connecticut led by as many as 11 points in their December 4 game at UMass but found themselves trailing by two with less than four minutes to play. Davonte Sweatman's free throws tied the game, and Devin Haid came up with a steal and a layup and then converted the three-point play to give the Blue Devils a three-point lead. The Minutemen answered, but Abdul Momoh's clutch scoring down the stretch kept Central Connecticut in front. His layup off a pass from Jordan Jones gave the Blue Devils a four-point lead with 28 seconds to play, and Central Connecticut held on for a 73–69 victory, their second of the season over an Atlantic 10 opponent. Momoh scored nine points in the game, all of which came in the final 5:50. Haid scored 18 points to lead the Blue Devils and added seven rebounds.[33][34]

Wagner earned their fourth victory in five games, when they won at Maryland Eastern Shore, 63–61, on December 8. The Seahawks had a 15-point second-half lead only to see the Hawks tie the score with 1:10 to play. Ja'Kair Sanchez and R.J. Greene each hit a pair of free throws to secure the win. Greene scored 18 points to lead Wagner and grabbed five rebounds. Keyontae Lewis finished with 11 points and seven rebounds for the Seahawks.[33][35]

Stonehill trailed by 13 points with 10 minutes to play in their December 15 game at Boston College. After a 15–6 run featuring four three-pointers, the Skyhawks trailed by only two points with 21 seconds to play. However, the Eagles went 4 for 4 from the free-throw line in the closing seconds to secure a 73–69 win. Todd Brogna, who hit one of the triples during the late charge, scored a career-high 25 points, shooting 10 for 16 from the floor. Ethan Meuser hit the first two three-pointers, sparking the run, and finished with 11 points for Stonehill.[36][37]

Jayden Brown recorded his first career double-double with 16 points, 12 rebounds and three blocks to lead Central Connecticut to a 64–63 win at Fairfield on December 18. Two straight layups by Jordan Jones gave the Blue Devils a 60–58 lead, and Brown hit another layup off a pass from Jones to extend Central Connecticut's advantage to four points. After a Stags basket, Devin Haid's driving layup restored the Blue Devils' four-point edge with 46 seconds to play. Central Connecticut had a one-point lead and three fouls to give on Fairfield's final possession with 14 seconds to go. The Blue Devils used all three fouls to burn eight seconds off the clock. The Stags tried a three-pointer at the buzzer that missed, giving Central Connecticut the victory. The game featured only one made free throw. Central Connecticut was 1 for 1 from the line, while Fairfield went 0 for 2. Jones finished with 12 points and seven assists for the Blue Devils, and Haid added 13 points.[38][39]

Conference season highlights

Central Connecticut opened their conference schedule with a 74–59 win at Saint Francis on January 3, 2025. The Blue Devils held the Red Flash to 30% shooting from the floor in the second half to break open a game that was tied at intermission. Jordan Jones scored 26 points on 11-for-15 shooting from the floor and a 4-for-7 clip from beyond the arc to lead Central Connecticut. Devin Haid added 18 points and eight rebounds for the Blue Devils. Valentino Pinedo and Riley Parker each scored 12 points for Saint Francis. Pinedo also pulled down eight rebounds.[40][41]

LIU hosted Le Moyne at Barclays Center in the NEC opener for both teams on January 3. The Sharks shot 56% from the floor and 54% from distance and defeated the Dolphins, 78–62. Malachi Davis scored 24 points on 10-for-16 shooting to lead LIU and added four rebounds, five assists and three steals. Jamal Fuller scored 20 points on 8-for-12 shooting from the field for the Sharks. Ocypher Owens had a double-double for Le Moyne with 19 points, 12 rebounds and five blocks. Robby Carmody added 16 points and two steals for the Dolphins.[41][42]

After losing their NEC opener at home to Chicago State,[43] Wagner was looking to even their league record, when they welcomed Fairleigh Dickinson on January 5, in the start of conference play for the Knights. The Seahawks raced to an early 17–4 lead. However, Fairleigh Dickinson went on a 20–4 run and claimed a three-point advantage at halftime. The Knights seized control of the game in the second half and secured a 71–59 victory. Terrence Brown and Bismark Nsiah each had a double-double for Fairleigh Dickinson. Brown matched his career high with 28 points and posted a new career best with 10 boards. Nsiah finished with 11 points, 12 rebounds and nine assists. Zae Blake scored 20 points to lead Wagner and added two steals.[41][44]

Abdul Momoh had a double-double with 17 points and 10 rebounds to lead Central Connecticut to a 62–50 win at Mercyhurst on January 5. Jordan Jones added 12 points for the Blue Devils, who overcame a one-point halftime deficit to improve to 2–0 in the NEC. Aidan Reichert scored 15 points to lead the Lakers, and Jeff Planutis added 10 points and eight rebounds.[41][45]

Jamal Fuller scored 16 points and grabbed seven rebounds to lead LIU to a 53–39 home win over Chicago State on January 5. Malachi Davis added 12 points for the Sharks, who improved to 2–0 in NEC play and also got 10 points and seven rebounds from Brent Davis. Gabe Spinelli scored nine points to lead the Cougars. Jalen Forrest added eight points, nine rebounds and two blocked shots for Chicago State.[41][46]

LIU had a two-point lead in their January 10 game at Stonehill but closed the affair on a 15–7 run to earn an 80–70 victory. Malachi Davis scored the first 13 Shark points during the run and finished with 27 points on 12-for-18 shooting from the floor. Jamal Fuller added 14 points and seven rebounds for LIU. Louie Semona scored 17 points to lead the Skyhawks, and Chas Stinson added 14 points, four assists and two steals.[47][48]

In a battle featuring the NEC's preseason co-favorites, Wagner visited Central Connecticut on January 10. Ja'Kair Sanchez hit a running bank shot with under 30 seconds remaining that gave the Seahawks a four-point lead, and they held on for a 62–57 victory, handing the Blue Devils their first home loss of the season. Sanchez finished with 19 points and seven rebounds. Zaire Williams added 18 points for Wagner. Davonte Sweatman scored 14 points to lead Central Connecticut, and Jayden Brown added 12 points and six rebounds.[48][49]

Saint Francis used 65% second-half shooting to build a nine-point lead in their January 12 game at Fairleigh Dickinson but had to hit four free throws in the closing seconds to secure a 75–71 win, after the Knights had closed to within two points. Riley Parker scored 18 points on 7-for-10 shooting, including 3 for 3 from distance, to lead the Red Flash. Juan Cranford Jr. added 14 points and five rebounds for Saint Francis. Jo'el Emanuel finished with 24 points, 10 rebounds and two steals for Fsirleigh Dickinson.[48][50]

LIU emerged from the second week of league play as the NEC's only undefeated team in conference games at 4–0. The Sharks went on a 9–2 run to close the first half and take a 24–16 lead at intermission of their January 12 game at Central Connecticut. LIU held a nine-point advantage, when the Blue Devils went on a 13–2 run to forge ahead, 49–47, with 4:27 to play. The Sharks went on a 7–0 run to reclaim the lead. After Central Connecticut cut the lead to two points, the Blue Devils had possession in the closing seconds, but Brent Davis stole the ball to secure a 54–52 win for LIU. Terell Strickland had 12 points, seven rebounds and five assists for the Sharks, and Malachi Davis added 12 points and three steals. Devin Haid finished with 20 points and seven rebounds for Central Connecticut.[48][51]

Malachi Davis scored 10 points in the final four minutes of the game to lead LIU to a 64–51 home win over Saint Francis on January 18. Davis finished with 23 points, and Jamal Fuller added 10 points and eight rebounds for the Sharks, who remained undefeated in NEC play. Juan Cranford Jr. scored 10 points to lead the Red Flash.[52][53]

Chicago State had their highest scoring output of the season in their 88–72 win over Le Moyne on January 18, the first home win of the campaign for the Cougars. Chicago State shot 54.7% from floor and 57.9% from beyond the arc. Jalen Forrest scored 24 points and grabbed eight rebounds to lead the Cougars. Gabe Spinelli added 14 points, seven assists and five steals for Chicago State. AJ Dancier had 19 points, six rebounds and five assists for the Dolphins, and Dwayne Koroma added 12 points, 10 rebounds and three steals.[53][54]

LIU earned their sixth straight NEC victory to start league play, 72–63 overtime home win over Mercyhurst on January 20. Malachi Davis had 23 points, nine assists and three steals for the Sharks, and Jamal Fuller added 20 points, 12 rebounds and four blocks. Jeff Planutis scored 18 points to lead the Lakers, and Aidan Reichert added 15 points and four steals.[53][55]

Zaire Williams hit a pull-up bank shot from the lane with 1.9 seconds left in double overtime to give Wagner a 70–68 home win over Saint Francis on January 20. Williams finished with 15 points and seven rebounds. Ja'Kair Sanchez scored 24 points and grabbed five rebounds for the Seahawks. Riley Parker had 19 points and two steals to lead the Red Flash, and Valentino Pinedo had a double-double with 12 points and 11 rebounds.[53][56]

Stonehill erased a 64–45 deficit with a 20–0 run over five minutes and took a one-point lead with 1:55 to play in their January 20 game at Le Moyne. After the shellshocked Dolphins reclaimed the lead, Hermann Koffi hit a triple with nine seconds left to put the Skyhawks in front, 72–71. Robby Carmody was then fouled with four seconds to play and drained both free throws to give Le Moyne a 73-72 victory. Carmody had 20 points and seven rebounds for the Dolphins. AJ Dancler finished with 19 points, seven rebounds and nine assists for Le Moyne, and Dwayne Koroma added nine points and 11 rebounds. Koffi scored 18 points to lead the Stonehill. Louie Semona had 14 points and six rebounds, and Todd Brogna had 12 points and six rebounds for the Skyhawks.[53][57]

Riley Parker, playing with his father in the stands, scored 29 points on 9-for-14 shooting from the floor, including 4 for 8 from three-point range, and hit all seven of his free throws to lead Saint Francis to a 74–64 home victory over LIU on January 24. Riley's father was watching his son play for the first time in the United States and traveled 26 hours from Australia to attend the game. Valentino Pinedo added 12 points and nine rebounds for the Red Flash. Jamal Fuller had 25 points and nine rebounds for the Sharks, who suffered their first NEC loss of the season after six straigt wins. Brent Davis added nine points and four steals for LIU.[58][59]

Jake Lemelman's back-to-back triples broke a tie and gave Mercyhurst a 64–58 lead with less than a minute to play in their January 24 home game against Wagner. The Lakers held on for a 71–66 victory. Aidan Reichert scored 23 points on 9-for-12 shooting from the floor, including 3 for 3 from distance to lead Mercyhurst. Lemelman finished with eight points and three assists.[60] Zae Blake scored 18 points and had two steals for the Seahawks.[59][61]

Gabe Spinelli drove the length of the floor for Chicago State's game-tying layup with 5.1 seconds to play at Stonehill on January 24. After a timeout, the Skyhawks pushed the ball to the frontcourt and called another timeout with 3.1 seconds left. Stonehill inbounded the ball to Josh Morgan, who spun around his defender, drove the baseline and hit a contested layup with 0.2 seconds remaining, giving the Skyhawks a 75–73 victory. Louie Semona scored 21 points to lead Stonehill. Morgan finished with 11 points. Spinelli scored 25 points to lead the Cougars, and Jalen Forrest added 23.[59][62][63]

Jeff Planutis hit two mid-range jump shots late in double overtime that carried Mercyhurst to an 85–80 home win over LIU on January 26. Bernie Blunt scored 27 points to lead the Lakers, and Planutis added 23. Blunt and Planutis each had three steals. Brent Davis scored 20 points to lead the Sharks. Jamal Fuller had 14 points, eight rebounds, five assists, two steals and three blocks for LIU.[59][64]

LIU hosted Central Connecticut in a battle for first place on January 30. The Sharks claimed an early 7–2 lead, but the Blue Devils tightened their defense, holding LIU to 29% shooting from the floor in the first half, and earned a nine-point lead at the break. Central Connecticut went on an 8–0 run in the second half that gave them a 24-point lead with 8:15 remaining and went on to a 63–50 victory. Jordan Jones scored 17 points to lead the Blue Devils and added five rebounds, two assists and three steals. Max Frazier had five blocked shots for Central Connecticut. Terell Strickland had 19 points and three steals for LIU.[65][66]

Aidan Reichert's driving layup with 31 seconds to play gave Mercyhurst a 58–56 lead in their January 30 home game against Saint Francis. Bernie Blunt III hit four free throws in the final eight seconds to put away a 62–58 victory for the Lakers. Blunt scored 22 points to lead Mercyhurst. Jeff Planutis had 18 points on 6-for-11 shooting from the floor, and Reichert added 16 points for the Lakers. Daemar Kelly scored 14 points to lead the Red Flash, and Riley Parker added 12 points and seven rebounds.[66][67]

Overtime heroics by Jalen Forrest led Chicago State to a 73–67 home victory over LIU on February 1. The Cougars overcame a nine-point deficit in the final five minutes of regulation to force the extra session, knotting the score at 58 on a three-pointer by Noble Crawford with 42 seconds left. Forrest scored only five points in the game's first 40 minutes, but he had 14 of the Cougars' 15 points in overtime. His deep triple with 30 seconds to play gave Chicago State a 68–64 lead. Forrest then came up with a steal and took it down the floor for a basket to extend the Cougars' lead to six points with 21 seconds to go. Forrest had 19 points and six rebounds. Gabe Spinelli added 16 points, seven rebounds and three steals for Chicago State. Crawford finished with nine points. Malachi Davis scored 32 points to lead the Sharks. Brent Davis had eight points and seven rebounds for LIU, and Terell Strickland added eight points, six rebounds and four assists.[66][68]

Bernie Blunt III and Jeff Planutis each drained a pair of free throws in the final eight seconds to secure a 67–60 victory for Mercyhurst at Fairleigh Dickinson on February 1. The win was the fourth straight for the Lakers. Planutis scored 17 points to lead Mercyhurst. Terrence Brown had 19 points to lead the Knights and added three steals. Jo'el Emanuel recorded 10 points, eight rebounds and two steals for Fairleigh Dickinson.[66][69]

Jalen Forrest scored a career-high 37 points in Chicago State's 85–78 come-from-behind home victory over Mercyhurst on February 6. Forrest was 8-for-18 from the floor, 4-for-8 from beyond the arc and 17-for-20 from the free-throw line. Noble Crawford added 14 points and four steals for the Cougars. Aidan Reichert had 20 points and seven rebounds for the Lakers, who had their four-game winning streak snapped. Jeff Planutis added 15 points and two steals, and Mykolas Ivanauskas had 13 points and 12 rebounds for Mercyhurst.[70][71]

Saint Francis head coach Rob Krimmel became the first coach in program history to win 100 games in DeGol Arena, when the Red Flash defeated Le Moyne, 86–78, on February 6. Krimmel trails only Saint Francis men's volleyball coach Mike Rumbaugh for most wins in the venue in any sport. Riley Parker scored 18 points to lead the Red Flash. Daemar Kelly added 14 points, and Juan Cranford Jr. had 13 points for Saint Francis. AJ Dancler led the Dolphins with 22 points and seven assists. Robby Carmody added 19 points and two steals, and Dwayne Koroma had 15 points, nine rebounds and three steals for Le Moyne.[71][72]

Bismark Nsiah scored 18 points and grabbed 10 rebounds to lead Fairleigh Dickinson to a 69–58 home win over Wagner on February 8. Nsiah scored 16 of his points in the second half, and his four free throws in the final minute put the game away for the Knights. Terrence Brown had 12 points, and Dylan Jones added 11 points for Fairleigh Dickinson. Zaire Williams had 15 points, six rebounds and three steals for Wagner.[71][73]

Jamal Fuller scored five straight points to extend LIU's lead to seven points with 1:33 to play, and the Sharks went on to a 62–59 home victory over Stonehill on February 8. Malachi Davis scored 24 points to lead LIU and added three steals. Fuller finished with 12 points and three steals. Louie Semona had 23 points and seven rebounds for the Skyhawks, and Chas Stinson added 10 points and five assists.[71][74]

Saint Francis secured the program's first ever win in the state of Illinois with an 81–69 victory at Chicago State on February 8. Jeremy Clayville scored 17 points to lead the Red Flash. Valentino Pinedo added 14 points and seven rebounds for Saint Francis. Gabe Spinelli scored 23 points and had four assists for the Cougars. Jalen Forrest added 17 points and two steals, and Quincy Allen had 14 points, eight rebounds, two steals and two blocked shots for Chicago State.[71][75]

Todd Brogna scored a team-high 18 points and grabbed eight rebounds to lead Stonehill to a 79–74 home win over Saint Francis on February 13. The Skyhawks shot 12 for 29 from three-point range. Ethan Meuser had 17 points on 5-for-7 shooting from the floor and a 4-for-5 clip from beyond the arc, and Hermann Koffi finished with 17 points on 5-for-10 shooting from distance for Stonehill. Valentino Pinedo had 24 points, seven rebounds and two blocks, and Daemar Kelly scored 12 points and blocked two shots for the Red Flash. Riley Parker had 10 points and six assists for Saint Francis.[76][77]

Dylan Jones exploded for 25 points in Fairleigh Dickinson's 91–49 home romp over Chicago State on February 13. Jones shot 8 for 12 from three-point range. Terrence Brown scored 17 points, grabbed nine rebounds and had three steals for the Knights. Quincy Allen had 15 points, nine rebounds and two blocked shots for the Cougars.[77][78]

Wagner trailed by six points with under a minute to play in their February 13 game at Le Moyne, but the Seahawks found themseves inbounding the ball from midcourt with one second to play and the deficit trimmed to three points. Zaire Williams found space in the corner and drained a three-pointer at the buzzer to send the game to overtime. AJ Dancler scored eight of the Dolphins' ten overtime points, including a three-point play with 1:48 to go that gave Le Moyne a six-point lead. Dancler finished with 17 points, all of them scored after halftime, four rebounds, three assists and two steals, and the Dolphins snapped their five-game losing streak with a 72–68 victory. Deng Garang added 15 points, one rebound, two assists and two steals for Le Moyne. R.J. Greene led Wagner with 15 points and seven rebounds. Williams finished with 10 points, eight rebounds and two assists.[77][79][80]

Louie Semona scored 30 points and grabbed five rebounds to lead Stonehill to an 85–73 home win over Mercyhurst on February 15. The Skyhawks had season bests of 55.6% shooting from the floor and 1.36 points per possession. Todd Brogna added 16 points and 10 rebounds for Stonehill. Shemar Rathan-Mayes had 19 points and four assists, and Aidan Reichert scored 16 points and grabbed six rebounds for the Lakers.[77][81]

AJ Dancler's step-back triple was the dagger that secured Le Moyne's 80–75 home win over Chicago State on February 15. Dancler finished with 19 points, seven rebounds, five assists and a steal. Deng Garang added 15 points two rebounds, three assists and two steals, and Dwayne Koroma shot 7 for 9 from the field, finishing with 14 points, 13 rebounds, two assists and a steal for the Dolphins. Koroma's five double-doubles on the season were the most among NEC players. Jalen Forrest scored 22 points to lead the Cougars. Quincy Allen had 18 points, eight rebounds, three assists, two steals and three blocked shots for Chicago State.[77][82][83]

Central Connecticut clinched home-court advantage in the NEC tournament quarterfinals with their eighth straight win, an 83–67 home triumph over Saint Francis on February 15. Jordan Jones scored 24 points and had seven assists to lead the Blue Devils, who improved to 19–6 overall and 10–2 in NEC play. Devin Haid added 21 points and seven rebounds for Central Connecticut. Valentino Pinedo had 15 points, and Daemar Kelly added 11 points and four assists for the Red Flash.[77][84]

LIU joined Central Connecticut in guaranteeing a home game in the NEC quarterfinals with a 62–58 home win over Fairleigh Dickinson on February 15. Malachi Davis scored 21 points and had three steals for the Sharks, who improved to 13–15 overall and 9–4 in NEC play. Jamal Fuller scored 19 points and grabbed five rebounds for LIU. Terrence Brown scored 22 points and had four steals, and Bismark Nsiah had eight points, six rebounds, four assists and two steals for the Knights.[77][85]

Conference matrix

The table below summarizes the head-to-head results between teams in conference regular-season play. The home team's score is shown in boldface type. Future home games are shown in italics.

Source: [86]

  Central Connecticut Chicago State Fairleigh Dickinson Le Moyne LIU Mercyhurst Saint Francis Stonehill Wagner
vs. Central Connecticut 64–81
75–81
60–71
66–87
  • 70–93
  • Feb 27
  • 54–52
  • 50–63
50–62
63–73
59–74
67–83
63–71
41–67
  • 62–57
  • Mar 1
vs. Chicago State 81–64
81–75
58–48
91–49
  • 72–88
  • 80–75
  • 53–39
  • 67–73OT
  • 78–85
  • Feb 27
  • 81–69
  • Mar 1
68–52
75–73
  • 52–64
  • 64–52
vs. Fairleigh
Dickinson
71–60
87–66
48–58
49–91
86–912OT
74–78
  • 62–58
  • Mar 1
67–60
65–60
75–71
85–80OT
  • 54–65
  • Feb 27
59–71
58–69
vs. Le Moyne
  • 93–70
  • Feb 27
  • 88–72
  • 75–80
91–862OT
78–74
78–62
76–61
  • 63–79
  • 82–78
86–78
81–76OT
  • 72–73
  • Mar 1
  • 73–61
  • 68–72OT
vs. LIU
  • 52–54
  • 63–50
  • 39–53
  • 73–67OT
  • 58–62
  • Mar 1
62–78
61–76
  • 63–72OT
  • 85–802OT
  • 51–64
  • 74–64
60–70
59–62
  • 47–60
  • Feb 27
vs. Mercyhurst 62–50
73–63
  • 85–78
  • Feb 27
60–67
60–65
  • 79–63
  • 78–82
  • 72–63OT
  • 80–852OT
  • 73–59
  • 58–62
  • 69–76
  • 85–73
65–69
66–71
vs. Saint Francis 74–59
83–67
  • 69–81
  • Mar 1
71–75
80–85OT
78–86
76–81OT
  • 64–51
  • 64–74
  • 59–73
  • 62–58
64–60
79–74
70–682OT
68–66
vs. Stonehill 71–63
67–41
52–68
73–75
  • 65–54
  • Feb 27
  • 73–72
  • Mar 1
70–60
62–59
  • 76–69
  • 73–85
60–64
74–79
  • 61–73
  • 63–57
vs. Wagner
  • 57–62
  • Mar 1
  • 64–52
  • 52–64
71–59
69–58
  • 61–73
  • 72–68OT
  • 60–47
  • Feb 27
69–65
71–66
68–702OT
66–68
  • 73–61
  • 57–63
Record 12–2 4–10 7–7 4–10 10–4 8–7 7–8 6–8 6–8

Record against other conferences

Games against ranked non-conference opponents

The table below shows games played by NEC teams against opponents ranked by the Associated Press at the time of the game.

Date Visitor Home Site Score NEC record
Nov. 4 LIU No. 24 Ole Miss SJB PavilionOxford, MS Ole Miss, 90−60[87] 0−1
Nov. 6 Wagner No. 25 Rutgers Jersey Mike's ArenaPiscataway, NJ Rutgers, 75−52[88] 0−2
Nov. 10 Fairleigh Dickinson No. 15 Creighton CHI Health Center OmahaOmaha, NE Creighton, 96−70[89] 0−3
Nov. 13 Le Moyne No. 3 UConn XL CenterHartford, CT UConn, 90−49[90] 0−4
Nov. 13 Wagner No. 22 St. John's Carnesecca ArenaQueens, NY St. John's 66−45[91] 0−5
Nov. 27 Stonehill No. 10 Marquette Fiserv ForumMilwaukee, WI Marquette, 94−59[92] 0−6
Nov. 30 Chicago State No. 15 Wisconsin Kohl CenterMadison, WI Wisconsin, 74−53[93] 0−7

Rankings

The table below shows the rankings of NEC teams among the 364 Division I teams throughout the season. The preseason ranking is the Pomeroy rating. The remaining weekly rankings are the NET rankings reported by the NCAA beginning with the initial release at the start of week 5. NET rankings are not updated during the NCAA tournament. The rankings shown for week 20 are the final rankings at the conclusion of regular-season and conference-tournament play.

Legend
  Increase in ranking
  Decrease in ranking
  Pre
[8]
Week 5[94] Week 6[95] Week 7[96] Week 8[97] Week 9[98] Week 10[99] Week 11[100] Week 12[101] Week 13[102] Week 14[103] Week 15[104] Week 16[105] Week 17[106] Week 18 Week 19 Week 20 Final
Central Connecticut 303 204 141 134 135 134 135 185 188 180 167 163 160 154
Chicago State 340 359 360 358 356 357 354 354 353 355 355 355 356 358
Fairleigh Dickinson 352 338 339 329 319 318 304 311 322 302 311 312 300 310
Le Moyne 335 283 328 326 313 323 335 333 340 346 348 347 349 350
LIU 354 307 314 303 317 319 301 281 277 298 307 296 298 291
Mercyhurst 356 321 338 342 340 344 337 347 345 341 338 338 340 338
Saint Francis 351 238 240 257 299 299 320 309 321 318 323 315 321 314
Stonehill 358 268 265 267 274 269 268 275 268 295 291 294 293 304
Wagner 272 323 317 297 318 315 345 339 344 336 332 343 345 337

Postseason

NEC tournament

Games will be played on March 5, 8 and 11, 2025, at campus sites. Since Mercyhurst is ineligible, all eight eligible teams in the conference will participate.[107] Teams will be reseeded after each round with the highest remaining seeds receiving home-court advantage.

Quarterfinals
Wednesday, March 5
NEC Front Row
Semifinals
Saturday, March 8
YES/SNP/NESN+/NESN Nation/ESPN+
Championship
Tuesday, March 11
ESPN2
         
1 Central Connecticut
8  
 
 
4  
5  
 
Pairings are reseeded after the quarterfinals.
 
2 LIU
7  
 
 
3  
6  

NCAA tournament

Awards and honors

Weekly conference awards

Throughout the regular season, the Northeast Conference named players of the week and rookies of the week.

Attendance

Team Arena Capacity Game 1 Game 2 Game 3 Game 4 Game 5 Game 6 Game 7 Game 8 Total Average Pct. of capacity
Game 9 Game 10 Game 11 Game 12 Game 13 Game 14 Game 15 Game 16
Central Connecticut William H. Detrick Gymnasium 2,654 1,762† 888 871 1,144 739 1,303 816 1,126 11,895[109] 1,129 43%
1,133 1,042 1,071 1,650
Chicago State Jones Convocation Center 7,000 630† 101 145 216 200 185 85 275 2,367[110] 237 3%
295 235
Fairleigh Dickinson Bogota Savings Bank Center 1,852 375 2,498 1,076 486 376 753 176 508 7,097[111] 645 35%
346 246 257
Le Moyne Ted Grant Court 2,000 497 507 803 1,162† 306 491 479 573 7,522[112] 579 29%
370 472 520 481 861
LIU Steinberg Wellness Center
Barclays Center
2,500 (Steinberg)
17,732 (Barclays)
242 NR 241 343 318 350†[a] 129 304 2,992[113] 272 7%[b]
250 276 317 222
Mercyhurst Owen McCormick Court 1,100 702 987† 503 300 154 187 246 412 5,240[114] 476 43%
310 755 684
Saint Francis DeGol Arena 3,500 886 846 672 759 333 385 407 665 7,931[115] 721 21%
969 1,017† 992 NR
Stonehill Merkert Gymnasium 1,560 750 1,324† 1,052 722 112 390 625 1,265 10,072[116] 775 50%
974 872 411 727 848
Wagner Spiro Sports Center 2,100 529 105 201 407 232 147 191 704 4,825[117] 402 19%
217 250 807 1,035†
  1. ^ Game played at Barclays Center. Remainder of home games played at Steinberg Wellness Center.
  2. ^ Based on weighted-average capacity of 3,885
† Season high
Figures in bold indicate attendance was at or exceeded capacity.
NR = Attendance not reported for this game. The game is ignored in computation of totals and averages.

Media coverage

ESPNU will televise one conference regular-season game. YES will televise two conference regular-season games and both conference tournament semifinal games. SportsNet Pittsburgh will broadcast one of the regular-season games shown by YES as well as both tournament semifinal games. The other regular-season game shown by YES will be broadcast by SportsNet Pittsburgh+. One of the regular-season games shown by YES and one of the conference tournament semifinal games will be broadcast by NESN+, and the other regular-season and tournament semifinal game will be streamed by NESN Nation. A simulcast of all four games broadcast by YES will be streamed by ESPN+. In addition to the YES simulcasts, ESPN+ will exclusively stream two other conference regular-season games. The conference tournament final will be televised by ESPN2.[118] All home games of NEC teams not televised by a conference media partner will be streamed by NEC Front Row, the conference's streaming platform.

YES advised that it may show the conference semifinal games on tape delay, if they conflict with New York Yankees spring training games. The Yankees' spring training schedule shows a road game at 6 p.m. on March 8,[119] and YES has not historically televised spring training road games.

The 2025 NEC tournament final will mark the 38th consecutive year that the conference's championship game will be broadcast on linear television by an ESPN network.[118]

In addition to the conference's television agreements, four Fairleigh Dickinson home games will be broadcast by YES.[120]

See also

References

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