Loyola cruises to win over Southern Illinois in MVC tournament

The Ramblers will face Indiana State in the semifinals at noon Saturday on CBS Sports Network.

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Southern Illinois’ Ben Harvey (10) looks to pass as Loyola of Chicago’s Lucas Williamson, left, and Aher Uguak (30) defend during the first half of Friday’s MVC tournament game in St. Louis.

Southern Illinois’ Ben Harvey (10) looks to pass as Loyola of Chicago’s Lucas Williamson, left, and Aher Uguak (30) defend during the first half of Friday’s MVC tournament game in St. Louis.

Jeff Roberson/AP

ST. LOUIS — Freshman Jacob Hutson had 13 points and Lucas Williamson and Braden Norris each added 11 and No. 20 Loyola earned a 73-49 win over Southern Illinois on Friday in the quarterfinals of the Missouri Valley Conference Tournament.

Loyola (22-4) opened the game on a 10-0 run before Anthony D’Avanzo scored the Salukis’ first basket 5:23 into the game.

“We always talk about wanting to set the tone early,” Williamson said. “We always want to hang our hat on defense. It just sets the tone for the rest of the game.”

Hutson had never scored more than four points against a Division I opponent prior to this game.

“We have a lot of confidence in him,” Loyola coach Porter Moser said. “That kid’s development from the beginning of the year to this year is really, really great to see and well needed.”

The Ramblers have won three straight games against Southern Illinois (12-14) after sweeping a two-game set in Chicago to close out the regular season.

The Salukis were playing without guard Lance Jones, who was injured in the first half of Thursday night’s game against Bradley. Marcus Domask, the Missouri Valley Conference Freshman of the Year in 2020, also missed the final 16 games with a left foot injury.

“We kind of have a saying, we’re all we got, we’re all we need,” Salukis guard Trent Brown said. “It’s just always the next man up. There’s no quit in any person on our team.”

D’Vanzo led Southern Illinois with 18 points and freshman Dalton Banks, making his first career start in place of Jones, added 12 points.

The 49 points for the Salukis were a season low.

“Give a ton of credit to Loyola, they’re one of the best defensive teams in the country,” Salukis coach Bryan Mullens said. “That first eight minutes of the game we had some looks, some 3s, some post-ups that didn’t drop, and they were able to gain some confidence offensively and defensively.”

Loyola led 35-22 at halftime and held a double-figure lead for the final 27:29 of the game.

BIG PICTURE

Southern Illinois: The Salukis are 0-16 in their past 16 games versus ranked opponents, extending the longest such losing streak in school history. Their most recent win versus a ranked foe was a 64-62 triumph at home over then-No. 23 Wichita State on Feb. 5, 2013.

Loyola: The Ramblers are the first Missouri Valley Conference team to earn a top-two seed in the conference tournament for four straight seasons since Wichita State accomplished the feat during its last eight seasons in the conference from 2010-2017. The Ramblers lost in the opening round as a No. 2 seed last year to No. 7 seed Valparaiso.

“We’re creating a different story this year,” Moser said. “It was more not hanging over our head. It was more motivating us. That’s going to make us better.”

DYNAMIC DUO

Ramblers seniors Williamson and Cameron Krutwig continue to build on their mark as the winningest four-year players in school history with their 95th career wins.

STAYING IN SALUKIS’ LINEUP

With Jones’ injury, sophomore guard Trent Brown became the only Salukis player to start all 26 games this season.

UP NEXT

The Ramblers will face Indiana State in the semifinals at noon Saturday on CBS Sports Network.

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