St. Mary’s College of Maryland women’s basketball team defeated Wilson College 109-50 on Tuesday January 13 2026 at Gannett Field House in St. Mary’s City Maryland extending its perfect start in United East Conference play.
The Seahawks improved to 11-5 overall and 5-0 in conference while Wilson fell to 7-8 and 2-3 in league action. St. Mary’s controlled the game from the start building a 24-8 lead after the first quarter and increasing the margin each period including a 38-point fourth quarter for its largest United East win of the season. The victory marked the first time the Seahawks reached 100 points since February 18 2023 against Wells College.

PG 5′ 1″ Sophomore Credit: St. Mary's College of Maryland
Samantha Blaylock led St. Mary’s with 24 points on 9-of-13 shooting including 6-of-10 from three-point range in 15 minutes. Keira Mason contributed 16 points five rebounds and four assists while Olivia Liszt added 15 points three steals and three assists. Halimah Hajhassan and Saffiyah Gibson each scored eight points Marley Saunders had seven points Skylar Woodyard added six points and three rebounds and Tramarie Mobray finished with nine points six rebounds and six assists.
The Seahawks shot 47.6 percent from the field and 37.1 percent from three-point range forced 43 turnovers leading to 49 points off turnovers scored 23 fast-break points and had 75 bench points. Defensively St. Mary’s held Wilson to 34.2 percent shooting and only two made three-pointers.
Jewels Torres scored 21 points to lead Wilson but the Phoenix could not counter the Seahawks’ pressure and depth.
St. Mary’s will next play Saturday January 17 2026 at Lancaster Bible College in continued United East action.
The Seahawks’ performance reflects continued dominance in the United East Conference a league that includes institutions from Maryland Pennsylvania and New Jersey where St. Mary’s College of Maryland serves as a prominent Division III program in Southern Maryland.
Team statistics showed St. Mary’s with 38 rebounds to Wilson’s 37 and 27 steals to Wilson’s seven while forcing the high turnover count that fueled transition scoring. The Seahawks’ bench production underscored roster balance in a game that highlighted offensive efficiency and defensive pressure.
