The Scottie Reynolds Play
Villanova’s buzzer-beater provided an abrupt, unexpected end to Pitt's most successful season ever.

Villanova guard Scottie Reynolds goes up for the winning basket against Gilbert Brown in the Elite Eight in Boston, Saturday, March 28, 2009. (Elise Amendola/Associated Press)

Villanova guard Scottie Reynolds (1) goes up for the winning basket against Pittsburgh's Gilbert Brown in the second half during a men's NCAA tournament regional championship college basketball game in Boston, Saturday, March 28, 2009. Villanova won 78-76 to advance to the Final Four. (AP Photo/Elise Amendola)

Villanova guard Scottie Reynolds goes up for the winning basket against Gilbert Brown in the Elite Eight in Boston, Saturday, March 28, 2009. (Elise Amendola/Associated Press)

The Scottie Reynolds Play

Villanova’s buzzer-beater provided an abrupt, unexpected end to Pitt's most successful season ever.

Craig Meyer

Craig Meyer
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
April 5, 2019

Craig Meyer

Craig Meyer
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
April 5, 2019

To this day, a full decade later, they think about it every so often, visions of the play that came to shape their respective careers appearing to them in a flash.

It always comes back to Scottie Reynolds, the quick and crafty Villanova guard whose heroics will forever be linked to their shortcomings. Jermaine Dixon will never forget seeing the back of Reynolds’ No. 1 jersey as he began his dash, with Dixon unable to do anything but futilely chase him. Bill Hillgrove can still see Reynolds streaking up the court, frantically weaving his way to immortality. For Gilbert Brown, it’s the thought of Reynolds charging toward him, standing as the last line of defense against what was quickly becoming an inevitability.

For each of them, it ends the same way, with the storybook finish they had long envisioned never materializing. A run at a Final Four that Pitt’s players had spent the better part of the previous four years building toward was dashed in an instant.

Villanova’s 78-76 win against the Panthers in the Elite Eight in 2009, capped off by Reynolds’ game-winning floater with less than one second remaining, provided an abrupt and unexpected conclusion to the most successful season in school history. It was the kind of play and game that haunts a program and its fans for generations, with Reynolds standing as a villain whose mere name drips with venom whenever it is uttered around Western Pennsylvania.

For those involved, that five-second snippet left them incomplete, allowing them to bask in glory for getting that far, but also, given all their accomplishments and the expectations they created, forcing them to live with a certain feeling of failure.

“Every time I see it, it just makes me sick,” Gary McGhee said. “I thought that was the year.”

Villanova guard Scottie Reynolds (1) goes up for the winning basket against Pittsburgh's Gilbert Brown (11) in the second half during a men's NCAA tournament regional championship college basketball game in  Boston, Saturday, March 28, 2009. Villanova won 78-76 to advance to the Final Four. (AP Photo/Stephan Savoia)
Villanova guard Scottie Reynolds (1) begins to celebrate his game-winning shot in front of Pittsburgh guard Jermaine Dixon (3) in the second half during a men's NCAA tournament regional championship college basketball game in Boston, Saturday, March 28, 2009. Villanova won 78-76 to advance to the Final Four. (AP Photo/Winslow Townson)
Villanova's Dante Cunningham, Scottie Reynolds (1), Shane Clark, second from right, and Reggie Redding celebrate Reynolds' game-winning shot, defeating Pittsburgh 78-76 during a men's NCAA tournament regional championship college basketball game in Boston, Saturday, March 28, 2009. Villanova advances to the Final Four. (AP Photo/Stephan Savoia)

Scottie Reynolds goes up against Gilbert Brown for the winning basket and is mobbed by teammates as he races toward Villanova's bench. (Associated Press photos)

Villanova guard Scottie Reynolds (1) begins to celebrate his game-winning shot in front of Pittsburgh guard Jermaine Dixon (3) in the second half during a men's NCAA tournament regional championship college basketball game in Boston, Saturday, March 28, 2009. Villanova won 78-76 to advance to the Final Four. (AP Photo/Winslow Townson)

Scottie Reynolds races toward Villanova's bench after making the winning basket against Pitt. (Associated Press photo)

Reynolds’ fateful basket may have been the final act of a gripping, back-and-forth game, but the various elements of that dramatic finish had been brewing for weeks and even months.

For a Pitt team that had spent the vast majority of its previous 35 games overwhelming and overpowering opponents, the Wildcats were a perfect foil. They had been through many of the same Big East slugfests and weren’t intimidated by Pitt’s physicality. They won the only previous meeting between the teams that season, 67-57, in the final college basketball game ever at Philadelphia’s Spectrum, a building that was so hot that day, ice water had to be poured down Levance Fields’ back to keep him cool.

Most of all, Villanova was a headache of a matchup for the Panthers. The Wildcats were teeming with quick guards and versatile big men who could stretch the floor and create a sense of discomfort for a Pitt team that, for all of its success, was a comparatively plodding group with a more traditional college lineup.

In the NCAA tournament, the two were placed in the same region, Pitt the No. 1 seed and Villanova the No. 3. The Wildcats faced little resistance on their way to the Elite Eight, routing UCLA by 20 in the second round and No. 2 seed Duke by 23 in the Sweet 16. The Panthers, meanwhile, looked vulnerable in a way they hadn’t for most of the season. They led No. 16 seed East Tennessee State by only two with fewer than four minutes remaining before winning by 10. The next round, it needed a late push to beat Oklahoma State by eight and needed every bit of Fields’ last-minute wizardry to eke by Xavier in the Sweet 16. That underwhelming run was perhaps an early indication that a team some believed was destined to earn the school’s first Final Four berth since 1941 wouldn’t do so.

Once in the Elite Eight, the Wildcats were the problematic opponent they projected to be, as Pitt never led by more than five and spent much of the night at Boston’s TD Garden playing from behind. Trailing by four with 20 seconds remaining, the Panthers scrambled to tie the game at 76 after a pair of free throws from Fields with 5.5 seconds to play.

Then it happened, a sequence of events and split-second decisions that sent one program into ecstasy and the other into agony.

Pittsburgh guard Levance Fields (2) throws his head band into the stands after losing to Villanova 78-76 during a men's NCAA tournament regional championship college basketball game in Boston, Saturday, March 28, 2009. Villanova advances to the Final Four. (AP Photo/Elise Amendola)

Levance Fields throws his head band into the stands after Pitt's 78-76 loss to Villanova in the Elite Eight. (Elise Amendola/Associated Press)

After Fields’ second free throw swished through the net, Villanova’s Reggie Redding collected the ball and hopped behind the baseline. With Dixon tightly on Reynolds, Redding stood hesitantly, long enough to where several Pitt players and coaches believed a five-second violation would be called (by the time he released the ball, it was more like four seconds).

Believing the Panthers were close to forcing a turnover with their pressure, Dixon made an all-important move from lurking behind Reynolds to positioning himself at the Villanova junior’s left hip, standing between Reynolds and Redding and, as he saw it, denying the pass.

A seemingly innocent shuffling of the feet was the first domino of many that would fall.

“I think Jermaine, he was one of our more heady defenders,” Brandin Knight said. “We kind of gave him free reign. We didn’t have to coach him. He was so good on defense that you kind of just trusted what he did. I think even in that case, he thought we had a five-second [violation] and that him taking away the pass would help. It was one of those things that backfired.

“From there, it was like ‘Oh [crap], oh [crap],’ the whole way going to the basket.”

With his point guard seemingly unavailable, Redding lofted it to teammate Dante Cunningham, standing just beyond the top of the key with Sam Young at his back. From virtually the second the pass left Redding’s hands and with Dixon now behind him, Reynolds darted up court. The ball spent no more than a second in Cunningham’s hands, as he pitched it a few feet over to the sprinting Reynolds, with Dixon trailing him by a few feet and Young unable to get in his way in time.

As the clock ticked below four seconds, Reynolds had just 35 feet of flooring and two Pitt defenders between him and the basket. He crossed over to his left near the free-throw line to get by a flat-footed DeJuan Blair, leaving Brown, with Reynolds in front of him and a Villanova player on either side of him, as the lone remaining obstacle.

“I felt like I was on an island,” Brown said.

At that point, Brown had a bevy of options but all of a half-second to make a decision. He had earlier come off the man he was guarding and thought it was best to do whatever he could not to foul Reynolds. With a four-inch advantage on his 6-foot-2 foe, Brown stood tall in the lane, feet firmly set and arms held straight above his head (walling up, as he described it). Reynolds threw his body into Brown and hoisted up a soft runner that hung in the air before swirling through the net, sending himself and his teammates into a frenzy.

“It was like ‘Oh [crap], oh [crap],’ the whole way going to the basket.”

After a review, 0.5 seconds were added back on the clock, but with the full length of the court to go, it was largely a formality, as a Fields heave from about 70 feet out slammed off the backboard. It was all over — the game, Pitt’s chance at history, everything.

“It just didn’t feel real,” Tray Woodall said. “I wish we were able to get our team into the Final
Four. We worked so hard for it, but I guess God had other plans.”

It was an end-of-game situation Reynolds said after the game that Villanova went through every practice, but the aftermath it created for Pitt wasn’t something that could be rehearsed.

The players returned to a locker room that was less angry and openly sorrowful than it was stunned. Players were dazed, staring blankly forward and trying to make sense of what had just happened as an unbreakable silence surrounded them.

“There was so little to be said and not much was said,” assistant coach Tom Herrion said.

“Everybody in that locker room thought we were probably going to win the national championship,” Ashton Gibbs said. “At least within our group, everybody thought, at a minimum, Final Four. We knew how close we were and we knew we were a better team than Villanova. To lose to them and lose to them like that, at the buzzer, when we had multiple chances to win the game, it was one of those things you regret.”

Opportunities like the one they had just had are fleeting, something they knew and a risk they took together. Now, it was gone.

Young, Fields and Tyrell Biggs, three of the team’s top five scorers, were seniors and 11 days later, Blair declared for the NBA draft, passing up on his final two years of college eligibility. Even for those returning, there was fear they would ever make it that far again.

“Unfortunately, that was the last great team we’ve had,” Hillgrove said. “We’ve had some good teams, but not a great team like that one.”

In the weeks, months and years that followed the loss, its participants were left to deal with the repercussions, each grieving or enduring in their own way.

There are the second-guesses, like whether applying that aggressive of a press was a good idea or whether a more conservative defense that may have prevented Reynolds from generating that kind of momentum would have been the better option. There are regrets, from Dixon trying to deny the pass the way he did to Blair reaching for the steal to Brown acting too late and too passively in halting Reynolds’ drive. There is, most of all, emptiness, even a lingering sadness.

From left, Pitt's DeJuan Blair, Levance Fields, Sam Young and Jermaine Dixon leave the court after losing 78-76 to Villanova in a men's NCAA tournament regional championship college basketball game in  Boston, Saturday, March 28, 2009. (Winslow Townson/Associated Press)

From left, DeJuan Blair, Levance Fields, Sam Young and Jermaine Dixon leave the court after losing to Villanova. It would be the final game with Pitt for Blair, Fields and Young. (Winslow Townson/Associated Press)

Ten years after the fact, Herrion has never watched a replay of the final basket. Brown estimates he has seen it three times. For Dixon, he’s reminded of it every March, especially as the Elite Eight approaches and television montages invariably include a gleeful Reynolds racing to the opposite basket in celebration. If that doesn’t do the trick, the students at the high school where he now works won’t hesitate to broach the subject with him. Woodall, now an assistant coach at Robert Morris, watches it often, dissecting the play’s intricacies and seeing what he can learn from them. Brad Wanamaker, in his first season with the Boston Celtics, has no choice but to relive it, as the building where it took place is his team’s home arena.

“When I first got here, it kind of brought back the memory a little bit,” he said. “I was just like, ‘[Crap].’”

Some players try to find whatever joy and humor they can in it, as enough time has passed that the wound isn’t so raw. Many of the players maintain a group message in which they’ll revisit what happened. Brown, who stood as Reynolds’ shot hovered over him, is the most common target of good-natured jokes between men who all these years later still see each other as brothers.

“You’re the most athletic dude on the floor and Scottie Reynolds, who you can’t slip a newspaper under, you let him shoot the [darn] shot over you,’” Knight recalled. “’How do you not block it?’”

Perversely, it’s one way of coping, of coming to terms with something decided long ago. Life, as many of them have assured themselves over the years, goes on.

With perseverance, however, comes pain from scars that never fully vanish.

“It still stings,” Dixon said.

Craig Meyer: cmeyer@post-gazette.com and Twitter @CraigMeyerPG

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