NCAA PRESS CONFERENCE
BEVERLY, Mass. – The No. 11 nationally ranked Endicott men's basketball team defeated No. 23 SUNY Cortland, 58-57, in NCAA Tournament Second Round action on Saturday night in front of a packed house at MacDonald Gymnasium.
Tied 50-50 with 5:13 to play, the Gulls clamped down defensively, holding Cortland to a 2-for-8 showing from the field to punch their ticket to the Sweet 16.
Marcus Montagnino (Gloucester, Mass.) paced all scorers with 26 points (9-16 FG, 1-3 3PT, 7-10 FT) alongside nine rebounds, two assists, and a block.
Elijah Kinney (Nashville, Tenn.) also compiled 10 points, 10 rebounds, three assists, two steals, and a block in the victory. The double-double was his 19th this season, which ranks second in NCAA D3.
Matt Boen (Mansfield, Mass.) rounded out the list of double-digit scorers with 13 points.
SECOND HALF
The aforementioned trio took over the game on both ends of the floor with the game tied at 50-all.
Montagnino led the offense, scoring six of the team's eight points down the stretch.
Kinney also was a force on the defensive end (three rebounds, one steal), while Boen's all-around play helped seal the program's second-ever trip to the Sweet 16.
Montagnino started the scoring late in the matchup with free throw makes at 3:57 (52-50), and Boen followed with a hard-earned trip to the line himself, executing in a similar fashion (3:30, 54-50).
Cortland answered back, tying the game at 54-all via a layup (3:17) and two free throws (2:09).
Montagnino countered with a tough take at the 1:59 mark and swished a pair of free throws with 1:09 remaining on the scoreboard (58-54).
The Red Dragons punched back, yet again, this time with a make on a contested three-pointer to bring the game within one point (58-57, 0:45).
Cortland then had two chances to find the game-winner, but the Gulls denied the visitors both times in gritty fashion – emblematic of their nickname.
Boen had the first stop, slipping away from his defensive position near the free throw line before rejecting the first go-ahead chance in emphatic fashion with 0.4 ticks on the clock.
Following an Endicott 30-second timeout, Liam Dunfee (Nahant, Mass.) used every bit of his 6-6 frame to defend the baseline inbound, not allowing the Red Dragons to get into their set play efficiently.
Montagnino and Boen held down their end of the bargain on a low-post action and screen near the left wing before Cam Keliher (South Hampton, N.H.) contested the second potential game-winner just enough to send the MacDonald Gymnasium crowd into pandemonium.
FIRST HALF
The opening stanza featured two ties and six lead changes, as neither team was able to manufacture a double-digit advantage in the tightly contested matchup.
Endicott raced out to its largest margin on the scoreboard just 5:41 into the action (13-5) behind an early hot hand from Boen once again. The sophomore guard scored eight of the team's 13 points, highlighted by a pair of threes.
Following the media timeout at 11:06, the Gulls were able to produce the second-largest differential of the half, 17-10, with 8:39 remaining before each team traded haymakers the rest of the way.
The final five minutes featured four lead changes, but the last pendulum swing favored Endicott as Kinney connected on a buzzer-beating tip-in to head into the locker room up by one, 31-30.
Montagnino and Boen tied for the half-high in points with 10 each to highlight an offense that shot 52.2% from the field (12-23).
Endicott led for 14:11 in the first half, and held a slim 16-14 margin in the painted area.
BEYOND THE BOX SCORE
- Tonight's matchup was the first-ever meeting between the two programs.
- Endicott led for 24:07 of tonight's contest.
- Both teams ended the game even in the paint, 30-30.
- Neither squad had a scoring run larger than six points, both of which came in the first half.
- Montagnino has scored 20 or more points in five straight games (20 times total).
- The Gulls are 16-0 at home this season (program record home victories).
WHAT'S NEXT
No. 11 Endicott (28-1) will play Illinois Wesleyan (25-4) in the Sweet 16 round of the NCAA Tournament next weekend (date, time, location TBD).
No. 23 Cortland sees its 2025-26 campaign come to a close at 24-5.