2025 Northeast Conference men's basketball tournament

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ClassificationDivision I
Season202425
Teams8
SiteCampus sites
2025 Northeast Conference men's basketball tournament
ClassificationDivision I
Season202425
Teams8
SiteCampus sites
Finals siteWilliam H. Detrick Gymnasium
New Britain, Connecticut
ChampionsSaint Francis (2nd title)
Winning coachRob Krimmel (1st title)
MVPJuan Cranford Jr. (Saint Francis)
Attendance10,349 (total)
1,478 (average per game)
3,204 (championship)
Top scorerDevin Haid (Central Connecticut)
(57 points)
TelevisionESPN2, YES, SNP, NESN+, NESN Nation, ESPN+, NEC Front Row
 2024
2026 
2024–25 Northeast Conference men's basketball standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
Central Connecticut142 .875257  .781
LIU124 .7501716  .515
Mercyhurst **97 .5631516  .484
Saint Francis88 .5001618  .471
Fairleigh Dickinson88 .5001320  .394
Stonehill *79 .4381517  .469
Wagner610 .3751416  .467
Chicago State412 .250428  .125
Le Moyne *412 .250923  .281
2025 NEC tournament winner
* 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

The 2025 Northeast Conference Men's Basketball Tournament was the postseason men's basketball tournament for the Northeast Conference for the 2024–25 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The tournament took place on three dates between March 5 and 11, 2025, and each tournament game was played on the home court of the higher-seeded school.

Wagner was the defending champion, but they were defeated in the quarterfinals.

No. 3 seed Saint Francis defeated no. 1 seed Central Connecticut in the tournament final and received the conference's automatic bid to the 2025 NCAA tournament. It was the first NEC title for St. Francis since 1991.[1] Central Connecticut's last NEC tournament championship was in 2007.

Tournament MVP Juan Cranford Jr. became the fourth player to win the award after being named NEC rookie of the year in the same season.[1]

This was the final men's tournament held under the "Northeast Conference" name. On October 2, 2025, the conference changed its name to its longstanding initialism of NEC.[2]

For the third straight year, the NEC changed its rules regarding eligibility for the conference tournament. Effective in 2025, 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.[3] The change was prospective rather than retroactive. Consequently, Le Moyne, in their second transition year, remained eligible for the 2025 tournament. This means the eight conference members other than Mercyhurst participated in the tournament. In 2024, the top eight teams in the conference regular-season standings qualified, and all transitioning NEC teams were eligible for the conference tournament.

Teams were seeded by record within the conference,[4] with a tiebreaker system to seed teams with identical conference records.[5] Although Mercyhurst was ineligible for the tournament, they could still have been involved in a tiebreaker and affected the outcome of a multi-team tie.[6]

Seed School Conf. Tiebreaker
1 Central Connecticut 14–2
2 LIU 12–4
3 Saint Francis 8–8 2–0 vs. Fairleigh Dickinson
4 Fairleigh Dickinson 8–8 0–2 vs. Saint Francis
5 Stonehill 7–9
6 Wagner 6–10
7 Chicago State 4–12 1–1 vs. LIU
8 Le Moyne 4–12 0–2 vs. LIU
DNQ Mercyhurst 9–7

Schedule

Game[4] Time* Matchup Score Television
Quarterfinals – Wednesday, March 5
1 7:00 p.m. No. 8 Le Moyne at No. 1 Central Connecticut 67–86 NEC Front Row
2 No. 7 Chicago State at No. 2 LIU 57–68
3 No. 6 Wagner at No. 3 Saint Francis 55–58
4 No. 5 Stonehill at No. 4 Fairleigh Dickinson 56–71
Semifinals – Saturday, March 8
5 12:00 noon No. 3 Saint Francis at No. 2 LIU 71–68 YES, SNP, NESN+, ESPN+
6 2:00 p.m. No. 4 Fairleigh Dickinson at No. 1 Central Connecticut 72–76OT YES, SNP, NESN Nation, ESPN+
Championship – Tuesday, March 11
7 7:00 p.m. No. 3 Saint Francis at No. 1 Central Connecticut 46–43 ESPN2
*Game times in ET (UTC−5 on March 5 and 8 and UTC−4 on March 11). Rankings denote tournament seed.

Tournament highlights

Quarterfinals

No. 1 seed Central Connecticut cruised past no. 8 seed Le Moyne, 86–67. Jordan Jones scored 19 points, grabbed five rebounds and dished four assists for the Blue Devils, who won their 12th straight game. Jaelen McGlone finished with 18 points and five rebounds, Devin Haid added 14 points, and Jayden Brown had six points and eight rebounds for Central Connecticut. Dwayne Koroma scored a game-high and career-high 24 points and added seven rebounds and two steals for the Dolphins. AJ Dancler finished with 15 points, seven rebounds and two assists, and Nate Fouts added 13 points, four rebounds, three assists and two steals for Le Moyne.[7][8][9]

Malachi Davis exploded for 35 points on 15-for-28 shooting from the floor and added seven rebounds and seven assists to lead no. 2 seed LIU to a 68–57 victory over no. 7 seed Chicago State. The Sharks had a seven-point lead with 15:34 to play, when they went on a 15–1 run to put the game away. Jamal Fuller scored 13 points and grabbed seven rebounds, and Shadrak Lasu finished with 10 points and 12 rebounds for LIU, who won their sixth straight game. Jalen Forrest scored 17 points to lead the Cougars. Gabe Spinelli had 15 points and four assists, and Quincy Allen had 11 points, six rebounds and four blocks for Chicago State.[8][10]

Riley Parker hit three free throws with two second remaining to break a tie score and lead no. 3 seed Saint Francis to a 58–55 win over no. 6 seed Wagner. Javier Ezquerra's layup with 12 seconds to play had tied the game for the Seahwawks, who trailed by 12 points with less than seven minutes remaining. Earlier in the game, Parker, who finished with 16 points, five rebounds and four steals, hit a halfcourt buzzer-beater after stealing the ball to give the Red Flash a three-point lead at intermission. Valentino Pinedo scored eight points, grabbed 11 boards and dished three assists, Daemar Kelly had 13 points and six rebounds, and Juan Cranford Jr. scored 11 points for Saint Francis. Zaire Williams finished with 16 points, six rebounds and two steals, Zavier Fitch had six points and eight rebounds, and Ja'Kair Sanchez had 14 points for Wagner. Ezquerra finished with nine points, five assists and two steals.[8][11]

No. 4 seed Fairleigh Dickinson built a 10-point halftime lead over no. 5 seed Stonehill on the strength of 52% first-half shooting from the floor, while holding the Skyhawks to 29.6%. Stonehill's shooting heated up in the second half, and they got within two points with 10:13 to play, but a late 9–1 run put away a 71–56 win for the Knights. Terrence Brown scored 23 points, grabbed five rebounds and handed out six assists for Fairleigh Dickinson. Bismark Nsiah added 12 points and three steals, Jameel Morris had five rebounds and three steals, and Jo'el Emanuel scored 11 points and grabbed five rebounds for the Knights. Louie Semona had 15 points, two assists and two steals, and Todd Brogna finished with 13 points, 10 rebounds and two assists for the Skyhawks.[8][12]

Semifinals

Juan Cranford Jr. led no. 3 seed Saint Francis in a second-half comeback that erased a 15-point deficit, and the Red Flash defeated no. 2 seed LIU, 71-68. Jamal Fuller scored 17 first-half points for the Sharks, who controlled the first half and led, 38–23, at the break. However, Saint Francis scored the first seven points of the second half to cut the deficit to eight points. A 13–1 run gave the Red Flash a five-point lead with 11:49 to play. Malachi Davis, who scored all 16 of his points in the second half, provided the response for the Sharks, leading them on a 20–10 spurt that put them in front, 67–62, with 2:59 remaining. However, LIU would not score a basket the rest of the way, as Saint Francis closed the game on a 9–1 run. Cranford was fouled with 1.4 seconds to play and the score tied at 68, and he hit three free throws. The Sharks inbounded the ball, and it was deflected out of bounds in the frontcourt. LIU inbounded again, but Blake Lander's three-point attempt at the buzzer missed. Cranford finished with 20 points, 17 of them in the second half. Chris Moncrief had 15 points, and Riley Parker added 13 points for the Red Flash. Fuller finished with 21 points and seven rebounds, and Lander scored 13 for the Sharks. The loss ended LIU's seven-game winning streak.[13][14]

No. 1 seed Central Connecticut needed overtime to get past no. 4 seed Fairleigh Dickinson, after the Knights staged a second-half rally to overcome a 17-point halftime deficit. The Blue Devils hit nine triples and got 17 points from Devin Haid to build their lead at the break. Central Connecticut pushed their lead to 21 points with less than 15 minutes to play, but their offense went cold, and Fairleigh Dickinson slowly eroded the Blue Devils' lead. After Jameel Morris hit a three-pointer with 1:22 remaining, the Knights were down by only two points. Terrence Brown's jump shot with 18 seconds left tied the score for Fairleigh Dickinson. Joe Ostrowsky had the last shot of regulation for Central Connecticut, but his jump shot was off the mark. A pair of free throws by Abdul Momoh gave the Blue Devils an early lead in overtime. Jordan Jones had six points, all of them on free throws, in overtime for Central Connecticut, who led throughout the extra session. In the closing seconds with the Blue Devils leading by two points, Jones intercepted a backdoor pass and hit two free throws to seal Central Connecticut's 76–72 victory. Haid finished with a career-high 29 points, shooting 12 for 16 from the floor and 4 for 6 from three-point range, five rebounds, three assists and four steals. Jones had 17 points and three steals. Jo'el Emanuel had 17 points, eight rebounds and two blocks, and Brown recorded 16 points, six rebounds and three steals for the Knights. Bismark Nsiah had 15 points, nine rebounds, three steals and two blocks for Fairleigh Dickinson. The Blue Devils' victory extended their winning streak to 14 games, the longest current streak in Division I.[14][15]

Final

Neither team led by more than four points in the NEC final. No. 3 seed Saint Francis held a 43–41 edge, until Joe Ostrowsky drove to the basket for a layup to tie the score for no. 1 seed Central Connecticut with 17 seconds to play. Saint Francis responded with a Daemar Kelly jump shot that gave them a 45–43 lead with eight seconds remaining. Chris Moncrief then stole the ball from Devin Haid, before the Blue Devils could get off a shot, and was fouled with 1.6 seconds left. Moncrief hit one free throw to stretch the Red Flash's lead to three points. Haid tried a deep three-pointer at the buzzer that bounded off the rim, giving Saint Francis a 46–43 victory and their first NEC tournament title since 1991. It was the first NEC tournament championship for head coach Rob Krimmel, who earned his first trip to the NCAA tournament. Tournament MVP Juan Cranford Jr. became the fourth player to win the award after being named NEC rookie of the year in the same season. Cranford scored 14 points to lead the Red Flash. Kelly finished with six points, seven rebounds and three assists. Haid scored 14 points, and Abdul Momoh had six points and 11 rebounds for the Blue Devils, who saw their 14-game winning streak, the longest active streak in Division I, come to an end.[1][16]

Bracket

Teams were 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 86
8 Le Moyne 67
1 Central Connecticut 76OT
4 Fairleigh Dickinson 72
4 Fairleigh Dickinson 71
5 Stonehill 56
1 Central Connecticut 43
Pairings are reseeded after the quarterfinals.
3 Saint Francis 46
2 LIU 68
7 Chicago State 57
2 LIU 68
3 Saint Francis 71
3 Saint Francis 58
6 Wagner 55

Game summaries

All times are in Eastern Time (UTC−5 on March 5 and 8 and UTC−4 on March 11)

Quarterfinals

NEC Front Row
March 5
7:00 p.m.
No. 8 Le Moyne 67, No. 1 Central Connecticut 86
Scoring by half: 35–51, 32–35
Pts: Koroma 24
Rebs: Dancler, Koroma 7
Asts: Amica, Fouts 3
Pts: Jo. Jones 19
Rebs: Brown 6
Asts: Jo. Jones 4
Central Connecticut advances to NEC semifinals
William H. Detrick Gymnasium
New Britain, Connecticut
Attendance: 2,013
Referees: Josh Burton, John Cahill Jr., Tommy Deneen
NEC Front Row
March 5
7:00 p.m.
No. 7 Chicago State 57, No. 2 LIU 68
Scoring by half: 28–36, 29–32
Pts: Forrest 17
Rebs: Allen 6
Asts: G. Spinelli 4
Pts: M. Davis 35
Rebs: Lasu 12
Asts: M. Davis 7
LIU advances to NEC semifinals
Steinberg Wellness Center
Brooklyn, New York
Attendance: 278
Referees: Phil Salusitio, Mike Nardone, Mike McClusky
NEC Front Row
March 5
7:00 p.m.
No. 6 Wagner 55, No. 3 Saint Francis 58
Scoring by half: 25–28, 30–30
Pts: Williams 16
Rebs: Fitch 8
Asts: Ezquerra 5
Pts: Parker 16
Rebs: Pinedo 11
Asts: Pinedo 3
Saint Francis advances to NEC semifinals
DeGol Arena
Loretto, Pennsylvania
Attendance: 724
Referees: Brandon Kamil, Sean Campbell, Greg Moyer
NEC Front Row
March 5
7:00 p.m.
No. 5 Stonehill 56, No. 4 Fairleigh Dickinson 71
Scoring by half: 20–30, 36–41
Pts: Semona 15
Rebs: Brogna 10
Asts: Nesbitt 3
Pts: Brown 23
Rebs: Brown, Emanuel, Morris 5
Asts: Brown 6
Fairleigh Dickinson advances to NEC semifinals
Bogota Savings Bank Center
Hackensack, New Jersey
Attendance: 1,000
Referees: Dave Powell, Dan Basile, Vasili Mallios

Semifinals

March 8
12:00 noon
No. 3 Saint Francis 71, No. 2 LIU 68
Scoring by half: 23–38, 48–30
Pts: Cranford 20
Rebs: Moncrief 4
Asts: Parker 3
Pts: Fuller 21
Rebs: Fuller, Lasu 7
Asts: Strickland 6
Saint Francis advances to NEC championship
Steinberg Wellness Center
Brooklyn, New York
Attendance: 613
Referees: Craig Lastres, Doug Aprahamian, Steven Ruppenthal
March 8
2:00 p.m.
No. 4 Fairleigh Dickinson 72, No. 1 Central Connecticut 76 (OT)
Scoring by half: 24–41, 42–25 Overtime: 6–10
Pts: Emanuel 17
Rebs: Nsiah 9
Asts: Brown, Emanuel, Morris 3
Pts: Haid 29
Rebs: Momoh 6
Asts: Momoh, Ostrowski 4
Central Connecticut advances to NEC championship
William H. Detrick Gymnasium
New Britain, Connecticut
Attendance: 2,517
Referees: Jim Ostwalt, Raymond Downs, Guy Pagano

Final

March 11
7:00 pm
No. 3 Saint Francis 46, No. 1 Central Connecticut 43
Scoring by half: 20–20, 26–23
Pts: Cranford 14
Rebs: Kelly 7
Asts: Kelly 3
Pts: Haid 14
Rebs: Momoh 11
Asts: Jo. Jones 2
Saint Francis wins NEC championship
William H. Detrick Gymnasium
New Britain, Connecticut
Attendance: 3,204
Referees: Edward Corbett Jr., Mikerlange Fleury, Brandon Cruz

Awards and honors

2025 Northeast Conference Men's Basketball All-Tournament Team[1]
  • Juan Cranford Jr., Saint Francis (MVP)
  • Riley Parker, Saint Francis
  • Devin Haid, Central Connecticut
  • Terrence Brown, Fairleigh Dickinson
  • Malachi Davis, LIU

Statistics

Source: [17]
Individual scoring
Rk Player School G Pts PPG
1Malachi DavisLIU25125.5
2Dwayne KoromaLe Moyne12424.0
3Terrence BrownFairleigh Dickinson23919.5
4Devin HaidCentral Connecticut35719.0
5Jamal FullerLIU23417.0
Jalen ForrestChicago State11717.0
7Zaire WilliamsWagner11616.0
8Juan Cranford Jr.Saint Francis34515.0
Louie SemonaStonehill11515.0
Gabe SpinelliChicago State11515.0
AJ DanclerSacred Heart11515.0
Individual field-goal percentage
Rk Player Team G FGM FGA FG%
1Dwayne KoromaLe Moyne1101283.3%
2Will AmicaLe Moyne13475.0%
3Todd BrognaStonehill15771.4%
4Bismark NsiahFairleigh Dickinson2111668.8%
5Gabe SpinelliChicago State15955.6%
6Valentino PinedoSaint Francis3122254.5%
Jamal FullerLIU2122254.5%
8Jaelen McGloneCentral Connecticut391752.9%
9Devin HaidCentral Connecticut3214052.5%
10Jo'el EmanuelFairleigh Dickinson2102147.6%
Individual three-point field-goal percentage
Rk Player Team G 3FGM 3FGA 3FG%
1Gabe SpinelliChicago State111100.0%
2Darin Smith Jr.Central Connecticut34757.1%
3Jaelen McGloneCentral Connecticut361250.0%
Zaire WilliamsWagner13650.0%
Nate FoutsLe Moyne12450.0%
Matthew RobinsonChicago State12450.0%
7Jo'el EmanuelFairleigh Dickinson251145.5%
8Riley ParkerSaint Francis371643.8%
9Ethan MeuserStonehill13742.9%
10Jalen ForrestChicago State12540.0%
Darrick Jones Jr.Le Moyne12540.0%
Individual free-throw percentage
Rk Player Team G FTM FTA FT%
1Jordan JonesCentral Connecticut31010100.0%
Juan Cranford Jr.Saint Francis366100.0%
Ja'Kair SanchezWagner166100.0%
Riley ParkerSaint Francis366100.0%
Gabe SpinelliChicago State144100.0%
Zavier FitchWagner122100.0%
Noble CrawfordChicago State122100.0%
Keyontae LewisWagner122100.0%
9Terrence BrownFairleigh Dickinson28988.9%
10Jamal FullerLIU27887.5%
11Malachi DavisLIU26785.7%
Davonte SweatmanCentral Connecticut36785.7%
13Devin HaidCentral Connecticut3101283.3%
Individual rebounding
Rk Player Team G ORB DRB Tot RPG
1Todd BrognaStonehill1371010.0
2Shadrak LasuLIU2109199.5
3Zavier FitchWagner14488.0
Chas StinsonStonehill14488.0
5Abdul MomohCentral Connecticut3714217.0
Brent DavisLIU286147.0
Jamal FullerLIU259147.0
AJ DanclerLe Moyne11677.0
Dwayne KoromaLe Moyne12577.0
10Jo'el EmanuelFairleigh Dickinson249136.5
Bismark NsiahFairleigh Dickinson267136.5
12Valentino PinedoSaint Francis3612186.0
Quincy AllenChicago State12466.0
Zaire WilliamsWagner12466.0
15Terrence BrownFairleigh Dickinson2110115.5
16Daemar KellySaint Francis3015155.0
Ja'Kair SanchezWagner12355.0
Churchill BoundsWagner13255.0
Ethan MeuserStonehill12355.0
Ocypher OwensLe Moyne13255.0
Individual assists
Rk Player Team G A APG
1Javier EzquerraWagner155.0
2Terrence BrownFairleigh Dickinson294.5
3Gabe SpinelliChicago State144.0
4Malachi DavisLIU273.5
5Will AmicaLe Moyne133.0
Matthew RobinsonChicago State133.0
Amir NesbittStonehill133.0
Nate FoutsLe Moyne133.0
9Joe OstrowskyCentral Connecticut382.7
10Bismark NsiahFairleigh Dickinson252.5
Jameel MorrisFairleigh Dickinson252.5
Individual blocks
Rk Player Team G Blk BPG
1Quincy AllenChicago State144.0
2Shadrak LasuLIU252.5
3Noble CrawfordChicago State122.0
Ethan MeuserStonehill122.0
5Jayden BrownCentral Connecticut351.7
Abdul MomohCentral Connecticut351.7
7Valentino PinedoSaint Francis331.0
Chidube EkwommaduFairleigh Dickinson221.0
Bismark NsiahFairleigh Dickinson221.0
Jo'el EmanuelFairleigh Dickinson221.0
Brent DavisLIU221.0
Matthew RobinsonChicago State111.0
Darrick Jones Jr.Le Moyne111.0
Individual steals
Rk Player Team G Stl SPG
1Bismark NsiahFairleigh Dickinson263.0
2Terrence BrownFairleigh Dickinson252.5
3Devin HaidCentral Connecticut372.3
4Brent DavisLIU242.0
Blake LamderLIU242.0
Zavier FitchWagner122.0
Dwayne KoromaLe Moyne122.0
Javier EzquerraWagner122.0
Louie SemonaStonehill122.0
Zae BlakeWagner122.0
Nate FoutsLe Moyne122.0
Zaire WilliamsWagner122.0
Chas StinsonStonehill122.0

Media coverage

See also

References

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