Saints guaranteed a postseason game whether they win MAAC tourney or not
With its win Monday, the Siena men's basketball team clinched the No. 1 seed in the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference Tournament and at least a share of the conference regular-season title.
But Fairfield coach Ed Cooley thought the Saints deserved something else, too.
"Why they're not in the Top 25 is beyond me," Cooley said. "I think they deserve a lot more national respect than they're getting."
The way the Saints are rolling, that may only be a matter of time. Siena won its 15th consecutive game in beating the Stags, 69-67, before 7,184 at Times Union Center.
With a 14-0 league record, Siena has sewn up first place. So when the MAAC Tournament comes to Albany next month, the Saints will be the No. 1 seed in the arena where they now have won 34 straight games.
Just as important, Siena also is assured of postseason play for the third consecutive year. If the Saints don't get in the NCAA Tournament, they are guaranteed a spot in the NIT.
"You have two ways that you can control your own destiny into the postseason," Siena coach Fran McCaffery said. "This is one of them. Now there's another one -- we can win three games in March."
The Saints (21-4 overall) needed some clutch baskets down the stretch to hold off a banged up but gutsy Fairfield team, but was it any surprise that Siena got exactly what it needed at exactly the right time?
Edwin Ubiles led Siena with 18 points and hit a big hook shot in the final minute. Ryan Rossiter, who scored 17, and Alex Franklin, who finished with 12, each contributed a key offensive rebound, too.
"We don't have one guy who does everything, and that's where our success comes from," Rossiter said.
That success is getting Siena national attention.
The Saints, who own the country's longest winning streak, picked up 18 votes in the most recent Associated Press Top 25 poll, which was released Monday afternoon. They got 28 votes in the coaches' poll, too.
"I watch ESPN a lot, and I see the Top 25 teams," Ubiles said. "Comparing us to them, I think we definitely can compete with some of those teams."
The Saints didn't deliver their finest performance in beating the Stags (16-8, 9-5), but when it doesn't win going away, Siena still finds a way.
Fairfield, which played without starters Yorel Hawkins (knee) and Lyndon Jordan (ankle), received a game-high 26 points from Derek Needham, the favorite for the league's Rookie of the Year award.
Siena led by as many as 10 points in the first half and took a 36-28 lead to the intermission. But behind Needham, Fairfield never wilted.
With 1:15 left in the game, Siena was clinging to a 63-58 lead. When Ubiles missed a pull-up shot, Siena badly needed an offensive rebound -- and that's just what Rossiter provided. His put-back through traffic gave Siena a seven-point edge.
Then, with the Saints ahead just 65-62, Ubiles beat his defender, drove and hit a hook from the baseline, putting Siena up by five points with 25 seconds left.
Two free throws from Clarence Jackson -- who finished with 12 points -- sealed the game, though a 3-pointer from Needham in the final seconds narrowed the final score.
"We've played in so many games like this one," McCaffery said. "It's not something that's going to rattle us. We're going to come down, we're going to get a shot, we're going to play solid defense and we're not going to turn it over."
In other words, the Saints do what a Top 25 team would do.
With its win Monday, the Siena men's basketball team clinched the No. 1 seed in the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference Tournament and at least a share of the conference regular-season title.
But Fairfield coach Ed Cooley thought the Saints deserved something else, too.
"Why they're not in the Top 25 is beyond me," Cooley said. "I think they deserve a lot more national respect than they're getting."
The way the Saints are rolling, that may only be a matter of time. Siena won its 15th consecutive game in beating the Stags, 69-67, before 7,184 at Times Union Center.
With a 14-0 league record, Siena has sewn up first place. So when the MAAC Tournament comes to Albany next month, the Saints will be the No. 1 seed in the arena where they now have won 34 straight games.
Just as important, Siena also is assured of postseason play for the third consecutive year. If the Saints don't get in the NCAA Tournament, they are guaranteed a spot in the NIT.
"You have two ways that you can control your own destiny into the postseason," Siena coach Fran McCaffery said. "This is one of them. Now there's another one -- we can win three games in March."
The Saints (21-4 overall) needed some clutch baskets down the stretch to hold off a banged up but gutsy Fairfield team, but was it any surprise that Siena got exactly what it needed at exactly the right time?
Edwin Ubiles led Siena with 18 points and hit a big hook shot in the final minute. Ryan Rossiter, who scored 17, and Alex Franklin, who finished with 12, each contributed a key offensive rebound, too.
"We don't have one guy who does everything, and that's where our success comes from," Rossiter said.
That success is getting Siena national attention.
The Saints, who own the country's longest winning streak, picked up 18 votes in the most recent Associated Press Top 25 poll, which was released Monday afternoon. They got 28 votes in the coaches' poll, too.
"I watch ESPN a lot, and I see the Top 25 teams," Ubiles said. "Comparing us to them, I think we definitely can compete with some of those teams."
The Saints didn't deliver their finest performance in beating the Stags (16-8, 9-5), but when it doesn't win going away, Siena still finds a way.
Fairfield, which played without starters Yorel Hawkins (knee) and Lyndon Jordan (ankle), received a game-high 26 points from Derek Needham, the favorite for the league's Rookie of the Year award.
Siena led by as many as 10 points in the first half and took a 36-28 lead to the intermission. But behind Needham, Fairfield never wilted.
With 1:15 left in the game, Siena was clinging to a 63-58 lead. When Ubiles missed a pull-up shot, Siena badly needed an offensive rebound -- and that's just what Rossiter provided. His put-back through traffic gave Siena a seven-point edge.
Then, with the Saints ahead just 65-62, Ubiles beat his defender, drove and hit a hook from the baseline, putting Siena up by five points with 25 seconds left.
Two free throws from Clarence Jackson -- who finished with 12 points -- sealed the game, though a 3-pointer from Needham in the final seconds narrowed the final score.
"We've played in so many games like this one," McCaffery said. "It's not something that's going to rattle us. We're going to come down, we're going to get a shot, we're going to play solid defense and we're not going to turn it over."
In other words, the Saints do what a Top 25 team would do.