Um Fordham, "those SJU teams would beat Iona"
Wrong. Since you're so fond of backing up your points with facts, why not google the game that Felipe Lopez and Zendon Hamilton played against Iona at MSG.
And for the record, no, Jeff Ruland wasn't on Iona at that time. Yet, they beat the snot out of us. Why? Experience.
Heres the article from the link I posted on the Iona/SJU game with Lopez and Zendon from NY Times
COLLEGE BASKETBALL;Iona Makes Its Season as St. John's Hits Bottom
By JERE LONGMAN
Published: December 28, 1995Sign In to E-Mail
The St. John's-Iona game was not decided until the final minutes last night, which was just as well. Neither team played deservedly of victory, though Iona displayed steadiness and a fierce determination down the stretch while St. John's folded in what has become a familiar retreat.
In a sloppy game filled with frayed shooting and inept ball handling, the Gaels finally prevailed, 70-57, in the Holiday Festival at Madison Square Garden, despite going eight minutes of the first half without scoring a single point. It was the first victory by Iona over St. John's since 1979.
If the game was unsatisfactorily contested -- neither team shot better than 38 percent while combining for 39 turnovers -- at least it was tense and riveting at the end, and full of significant meaning. Ambitious Iona (6-1) of the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference, acquired a victory that will make its season, while slumping St. John's (4-4) absorbed a defeat that may break its season and eventually cost embattled Coach Brian Mahoney his job.
Iona will face second-ranked Kentucky (8-1) in the championship game at 9 P.M. tomorrow. The Wildcats asserted themselves inside in the second half with forward Antoine Walker (27 points) and dominated a smaller Rider team on the offensive boards to win, 90-65, in the opener.
"It's probably one of the top five wins in the history of our program," said the elated Iona coach, Tim Welsh.
It may have been one of the five worst losses for St. John's, which committed 22 turnovers, collapsed in the face of Iona's 1-3-1 halfcourt trap and shot 21 for 66 (31.8 percent). The star guard Felipe Lopez shot a miserable 5 for 21, while center Zendon Hamilton went a frigid 6 for 15 and point guard Derek Brown negated 6 assists with 6 turnovers.
"We don't think it could get any worse," St. John's swingman Fred Lyson said. "We're hoping."
With 6 minutes 10 seconds remaining, Iona went ahead for good, 50-48, on a bank shot on the fast break by guard Bryan Matthew, who led the Gaels with 19 points.
St. John's pulled within 54-53 after a steal by Brown and a layup from Hamilton, but the erratically shooting Red Storm went cold as Iona went on an 8-0 run to go ahead by 62-53. The balanced Gaels, who got 17 points from forward Mindaugas Timinskas and 15 from center Mikkel Larsen while picking St. John's pocket for 15 steals, then kept hitting free throws as the lead widened to double figures. Iona wanted the game more and simply took it.