Womhoops Guru

Mel Greenberg covered college and professional women’s basketball for the Philadelphia Inquirer, where he worked for 40 plus years. Greenberg pioneered national coverage of the game, including the original Top 25 women's college poll. His knowledge has earned him nicknames such as "The Guru" and "The Godfather," as well as induction into the Women's Basketball Hall of Fame in 2007.

Thursday, February 20, 2025

The Guru NCAAW Report: Temple, Villanova and Lehigh Gain Wins But Saint Joseph’s Upset at Rhode Island; Bueckers Leads No. 6 UConn Over Seton Hall While Watkins Leads No. 4 USC over No. 22 Michigan State

By Mel Greenberg @womhoopsguru

PHILADELPHIA — It was a  good night  here for Temple  in the Liacouras Center, out in the suburbs for  Villanova at the Wildcats’ Finneran Pavilion, and halfway up state for  Lehigh at the Mountain Hawks’  Stabler Arena in Bethlehem.

But it was terrible up in  New England where Saint Joseph’s went cold in the fourth quarter and once again got bedeviled by Rhode Island.

Let’s begin here with the Owls (16-10, 10-5), who erupted in the third period 31-7 on visiting  Wichita State (9-19,  3-12) and remained sizably ahead for a  70-51 victory Wednesday night in the American Athletic Conference.

 Coupled with Tulane’s 73-54 loss at Tulsa, the Owls  are now 1.5  games ahead of the Green Wave in fourth place with the regular season drawing to a close, which if secured means a double bye in next month’s conference tournament once again at Dickies Arena in Fort Worth, Texas.

The star of the show against the Shockers was Tarriyonna Gary, who poured 25 points, shooting 9-for-15 from the field and 7-10 from beyond the arc, the most from deep in just short of a year.

She lit the match in the third, scoring 12 points off 4-5 on three point attempts while defense forced  the opposition to eight miscues.

When one talks about runs at Temple, with baseball dropped  a while back, one is talking about these Owls, who over the last month have opened or developed leads that got away, this one had one of those early, or quickly fell behind and rallied.

In this one, the home team jetted off to an 18-10 first quarter and then got into turnover trouble and was outscored 18-7 on the way to a 28-25 halftime deficit before some adjustments did the trick.

Kaylah Turner added 15 points to the Temple attack while Princess Anderson scored  20 for Wichita State shooting 7-for-21 from the field.

“It was a good win for us,” said coach Diane Richardson, who a  year ago led the Owls on a run to finish in a three-way tie for the AAC crown. “We’re  pretty happy about it. We had to turn up our defense in the second half to get this thing done. Hats off to them.”

On her effort, Gary said, “It  felt  good.  I knew I needed to shoot the ball because they were playing us in a zone. I  was just ready to shoot, and my shots  just  been falling.”

Defense as Richardson emphasizes it produced what is now a three-game win streak getting 23 points in transition off 18 turnovers.

“Our defense really turns us  up,”  the Temple  coach said. “I think the extra effort in our defense really got us amped  up. That  carried into our offense, and then we were on a roll.

“When they see the ball go in  the basket and we  get turnovers, that really fires them up.”

It also helps to dominate the boards and after succumbing in that area earlier this month in a loss here to South Florida, the preseason favorite, resulting in a season sweep by the  Bulls, there’s been an uptick, including this one with the Owls holding a 44-36 advantage, of which 13 second chance points occurred off 11 on the offense glass.

“We’ve  been concentrating,” Richardson said. “Those losses that  we experienced had a lot to do with the lack of rebounding.

“Our staff has put in a lot of work on rebounding and boxing out every day in practice to pair that with our defense.”

The Owls are off until Tuesday when they visit Memphis at 8 p.m. on ESPN+ and then return here next Friday against Rice  for senior night at 7 p.m. They’ll finish up March 4 at Charlotte.

Bascoe Leads  Villanova Over Georgetown

Freshman Jasmine Bascoe rom Toronto, Canada, matched a career-high in her rookie season with 26 points, 19 of them in the first half, and Villanova yanked one back that was about to  get  away resulting in a 70-65  win over  Georgetown for a season sweep of the Hoyas.

Considering fifth-ranked Connecticut to be in a league of its own in Big East play, second-place and No. 23  Creighton has been the only member considered a lock for the NCAA tournament though Villanova continues to get mentioned in bubble talk from those who project the NCAA tournament bracket.

The win put the Wildcats  (16-11, 10-5) in a three-way tie for third with Seton Hall  and Marquette, but when it comes to seeds for next month’s return to the Mohegan Sun for the conference tournament, Villanova  would be fifth, meaning a  semifinal collision with the Huskies if advancing past the quarterfinals.

Unlike the beginning of the year and into early conference play where leads kept vanishing, including the buzzer-beating loss here to Seton Hall  and a setback in the first Marquette matchup in Milwaukee,  Villanova has been a  bit vintage of late  on an 8-of-10 streak and Denise Dillon’s squad will get a chance to keep things going visiting Providence Sunday at noon (FS1), hosting Butler Wednesday on Senior Night,  and then at 8:30 p.m. on March 2 at Creighton.

“You want to finish, keep climbing,”  said Dillon of positioning for the Big East tourney. “Continue just to climb. Put yourself in the best position possible and the results will  take care of themselves.”

Besides the transfer departure here last spring of Lucy Olsen to Iowa and Christina Dalce to Maryland, other teams also suffered losses, resulting in the perception of the Big East not its usual past  self but a Nova finish that could include two wins over Creighton  if the  Wildcats could get a  third seed might be the ticket.

In the game against Georgetown (4-11, 11-15), a  double-digit lead in the third became a one-point deficit with four minutes left in regulation before  the home team  turned up the defense a notch with an 8-0 push off three turnovers and a pair of blocks with Maddie Burke connecting on a  dagger trey from the corner.

With the Hoyas using Kelsey Ransom, who had 25 points and 10 boards, to cool Bascoe down in the second half, Maddie Webber offset  the move scoring 10 of her 15 points.

Bascoe was 4-5 on three-point attempts while while Webber was 3-7.

Deane Carter had 11 points and six  boards for Villanova, while Georgetown was bolster behind Ransom with 16 points and  11 boards from Ariel Jenkins, and Khadee Hession had 11 points.

“I’m proud of this group for the way we came out, but Georgetown did a heck of a job in the second half,” Dillon said of the outcome. “I’m proud of this group for the way we got together, reconnected, and took the game  in the end.”

Saint Joseph’s Upset at Rhode Island

A year after Rhode Island ruined the Hawks’ chances of ending their NCAA drought by knocking them out in the Atlantic 10 quarterfinals, the Rams (15-13, 10-5) struck again in the Thomas  M.  Ryan Center, though one could make the claim perhaps Saint Joseph’s self-destructed shooting 1-11 for the final nine minutes for a 70-65 loss after going up six in the first minute of the quarter.

However, all is not doom and gloom though some heavy lifting is required  starting with a must-win Sunday at home at 4 p.m.  (ESPNU)  with George  Mason that would give a tie-breaking sweep  of the Patriots.

Saint Joseph’s (20-6, 11-4) also has  a tie-breaking win over Davidson, directly behind and playing George  Mason Thursday.

Following Sunday, the finish next week is a trip  to Dayton and hosting Richmond March 1 looking for a split with  the Spiders  and then aiming to meet  them in a  few weeks in the title game of the A-10  Tourney, returning to  suburban Richmond.

As for the quick data  from  the trip to Rhode Island, Rhian Stokes and Laura Ziegler each scored 15 points, while Mackenzie Smith scored 11 points.

Harsimran Kaur scored  19 points, while Sophia Vital scored 11 with six assists, and three others on the home team also reached double digits in points.

Veteran coach Cindy Griffin did not make the trip, staying back for a medical procedure according to the university.

Talya Bruglar, who returned from a  six-game absence due to hand injury and  played in last week’s loss at  Richmond, scored nine points and is 12 away from entering  the top five career leaders in program history.

Lehigh Streak Continues in Patriot League While Holy Cross Downs Lafayette

It’s 11 straight for first place Lehigh (22-4, 13-1) after beating visiting Bucknell 73-59, a  run that’s the Mountain Hawks’ longest since reeling off 16 in 2009-10.

The triumph over the Bison (14-11,  8-5) earned a top four seed and quarterfinal hosting site in next month’s tournament on  March 10.

“It  feels great,” said Lehigh coach Addie  Micir.  “This group plays with joy and effort  the entire  way. They have been the same since  day one, so to have  this and so many people in the stands celebrating this has been  awesome.”

Maddie Albrecht had  20 points, Ella Stemmer scored 16, Whitney  Lind scored 13, and and  Meghan O’Brien scored nine.

Colleen McQuillen dished eight helpers and grabbed seven boards with four steals.

“Colleen is our engine,”  Micir said. “She just keeps going and going.  She’s been our real emotional leader too,  making sure everybody brings it every day, and that’s  what you want   Out of  your lead guard.”

Bucknell’s Ashley Sofikanich scored 14 points.

Lehigh on Saturday completes the home-and-home rivalry series looking for a  sweep Saturday when the Mountain Hawks visit nearby Lafayette at the Kirby Sports Center at 2 p.m. (ESPN+) in Easton, Pa.

On Wednesday, the Leopards (7-19. 4-10) fell to  defending champion Holy Cross 83-42 as Lindsay Berger scored a game-high 16 points with eight rebounds and seven assists for the Crusaders (16-9,  9-5).

Mary-Elizabeth Donnelly scored 15, Meg Cahalan scored  14 with seven boards, Simone Foreman scored  19, and Kaitlyn Flanagan scored six but dealt  eight assists.

Lafayette reserve Talia Zurinskas was the lone Leopard  in  double figures, scoring 13 points, followed by Abby Antognoli with nine points.

The  National  Scene

No. 5 Connecticut stayed perfect in the Big East with its 41st straight win over Seton Hall, this one 91-49 on the road at the Pirates’ Walsh Gym in South Orange, N.J., as Paige Bueckers had 23 points, nine boards, and five assists.

Seton Hall (18-8, 10-5) last beat the Huskies (25-3, 15-0), who were coming off the weekend thumping of defending NCAA champion South Carolina, 31 years ago on Jan. 5, 1994.  

A projected No. 1 pick in April’s  WNBA  draft, Bueckers moved into ninth place on Connecticut’s career scoring list past all-time great Diana Taurasi with 2,166 points.

Taurasi of the Phoenix Mercury and is the all-time WNBA leader went into the off-season contemplating retirement but has yet to announce her decision either way.

Meanwhile Princeton transfer Kaitlyn Chen and Aubrey Griffin each scored 15 for the Huskies,  while Ashlynn Shade collected 14 points and freshman Sarah Strong scored 10.

Seton Hall’s  Yaya Lops scored 15 while Jada Eads and Faith Masonius each scored 12.

Bueckers has scored in double figures 100 times in 111 games.

Connecticut is at Butler Sunday while Seton Hall is at St. John’s, which fell to No. 23 Creighton 65-62 on the road in Omaha, Nebraska.

Morgan Maly scored 14 of her 20 points in the second half for the winning Bluejays (22-4, 14-1), who had to rally from a five-point deficit at  the outset of the fourth quarter against the Red Storm (14-12, 4-11).

Creighton, which moved back into the AP  Poll this week, clinched a top two seed for next month’s Big East tournament.

In sweeping the season series, the home team also got got 16 points from Lauren Jensen and 11 from Molly Mogensen.

Lashae Dwyer scored 18 for St. John’s and Drexel  transfer Kylie Lavelle scored 14.

Watkins Leads Southern Cal over Michigan State

In a Big Ten game out west  between two ranked teams, No. 4 Southern Cal at  home in the Galen Center topped No. 22 Michigan State  83-75 as  sophomore sensation JuJu Watkins scored 28 points and Stanford  transfer  Kiki Iriafen scored 24 with 10 rebounds.

Grace VanSlooten matched a personal best with 29 points while Julia Ayrault scored 16 with 10 boards for the Spartans (19-7, 8-6).

Down by 21 late in the third, Michigan State went on a 15-4 run in the fourth before Kennedy Smith and Watkins  got the advantage  back to double digits for USC (24-2, 14-1), who is battling cross-time rival No. 3 UCLA for top seed in next month’s Big Ten tournament in Indianapolis.

Southern Cal clinched a double bye with the win.

On Sunday Michigan State hosts Indiana while the Trojans host No. 25 Illinois at final home games for both.

In the Big 12, two  other ranked teams played road games with No. 10 TCU winning 82-66 at Arizona State, while No. 19 Baylor won 84-62 at Colorado,  both hosts coming over with Arizona and Utah from the former Pac-12 this season.

The game at Tempe saw Madison Conner score all 22 of her points in the second half for TCU  (25-3, 13-2), which didn’t seal the win against the Sun Devils (8-19, 2-13) until late  in the fourth quarter.

Delaware transfer Tyi Skinner had 25 points for the home team, which is at BYU Saturday.

TCU hosts No. 17 West Virginia on Sunday.

In  the other game, Bella Fontleroy scored 21 for Baylor (23-5, 13-2),  while Jada Walker scored 17 points. The winning Bears  are  tied for  first  with TCU.

Jada Masogayo scored 16 and Johanna Teder scored  14 for the  Lady Buffs (17-9, 8-7).

Iowa State visits Baylor Saturday and then the Bears are at No. 12 Kansas  State on Monday.

Colorado is at No.  24 Oklahoma State  Saturday.

Looking Ahead

Just two locals are playing Thursday and both are near elimination from playing in their respective conference  tournaments.

Rider is at first-place Fairfield, Thursday, at 7 p.m. (ESPN+),  the host Stags have a  two-year win streak to date in the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference.

Rutgers starts a Northwest swing in the Big Ten, visiting Washington in Seattle at 9 p.m.

Elsewhere in the Big Ten, No. 8 Ohio State is at Indiana at 7 p.m. on Peacock, No.  21 Maryland at 7:30 p.m. is at Northwestern  on the Big Ten Network in suburban Chicago.

No. 25 Illinois is at  No. 3 UCLA at 9:30 p.m. on the Big Ten Network.

In the ACC, Stanford is at Virginia in Charlottesville on the ACC Network, which leads the night at 6 p.m. with No. 9 North Carolina  at  Syracuse. No. 1 Notre Dame at  7 p.m.  is at  Miami,  while  at the same  time No.   13   N.C.  State is at No.  20 Georgia Tech.

Louisville at  7 p.m. is at No. 11 Duke in Durham  at Cameron Indoor Stadium.

In the SEC, No.  18 Alabama is at No. 15 Tennessee in Knoxville at 6:30 p.m. while Arkansas at 7 p.m. is at No. 6 South Carolina on the SEC Network. Vanderbilt on the SEC Network at 7  p.m. visits No. 10 Oklahoma. Georgia at 9 p.m. is at  No.  7  LSU on the SEC Network.

On Friday locally, Drexel battling for first in the Coastal Athletic Association is at  Campbell at 7 p.m.,  while Delaware at the same  time is at Elon both on FloSports.

And that’s the report. 

 

 

   

 

 

 

 


Tuesday, February 18, 2025

The Guru NCAA Roundup: Rutgers Nears Big Ten Tournament Non-Qualifying After a 69-59 Loss to Visiting Northwestern; Olsen Scores 27 For Iowa in Loss at No. 8 Ohio State

By Mel Greenberg @womhoopsguru


In a game between two teams in the bottom area of the Big  Ten, Rutgers came up short Monday night, losing to Northwestern, 69-59, at home at Jersey Mike’s Arena in Piscataway, N.J.

The positives were individual for the Scarlet Knights (10-16, 2-13), Awa Sidibe scored a season-high 16 points with nine boards, while Zachara Perkins had a personal best  three blocks. Reserve Chyna Cornwell had 13 rebounds.

Destiny Adams scored 15 points and JoJo Lacey scored 11 and each of the latter grabbed seven boards

Northwestern (9-15, 2-11), which got a quick jump with a 25-12 first quarter, had a balanced attack with Caileigh Walsh scoring  13 points, Taylor Williams and Kyla Jones with 12 points, each, with Casey Harter and reserve Melannie Daley each scoring 11.

Two other Big Ten games were also played — No. 8 Ohio State at home in Columbus beat Iowa 86-78 overtime, while No. 21 Maryland at home  in te XFINITY Center in College Park beat Michigan 85-77.

In the former game, the host Buckeyes (22-3, 11-3), who are 1.5 behind the frontrunners of No. 4 Southern Cal (23-2, 13-1) and No. 3 UCLA (24-1, 12-1) got 29 points and four assists from freshman Jaloni Cambridge,, Cotie McMahon scored 25, and Cambridge’s sister Kennedy scored 16 points.

Villanova transfer Lucy Olsen scored 27 with seven assists for Iowa (18-8,  8-7).

In the game in College Park, Sasrah Te-Biasu had 21 for the Terrapins (20-6, 10-5) and Shyanne Sellers scored 18.

Sellers, who limped off the court in the game’s closing seconds, became the first in the program to gain career totals of 1,500 points, 500 rebounds, and 500 assists.

Michigan (18-8, 9-6)  got 26 points from  freshman Olivia Olson and seven boards, while Syla Swords  had 19 points and six rebounds.

Thirteen teams have clinched berths for the conference tournament next month in Gainbridge Fieldhouse but only two of the remaining five will qualify with field sizes after expansion being reduced in the Big Ten, Atlantic Coast and Metro Atlantic Athletic Conferences.

At the moment, the Big Ten bottom is Wisconsin 3-12, Northwestern 2-11, which are above the cut; Purdue 2-12, Rutgers 2-13, and Penn State 1-14 below.

Northwestern still has two games out of pocket — UCLA and Southern Cal — when the Wildcats opted out of a West Coast trip due to the wildfires nearby Los Angeles

The remaining games for each:

Wisconsin: host Northwestern; host UCLA; at Iowa.

Northwestern: host Maryland; at Wisconsin; host Nebraska; UCLA and USC postponed

Purdue: host Minnesota; at Ohio State; at Penn State; host Indiana

Rutgers: at Washington; at Oregon; host Penn State

Penn State: at Michigan; host Purdue; at Rutgers

 

Two other ranked games were played: in the Big 12, No. 17 West Virginia upset No. 12 Kansas State 70-57 at home in Morgantown, while in the SEC, No. 18 Alabama at home in Tuscaloosa beat Texas A& M 88-49.

 

In the game at West Virginia, JJ Quinerly scored 26 points and Jordan Harrison scored 18 for the Mountaineers (21-5, 11-4), the hosts forcing the Wildcats (24-4, 12-3) into a season-high 21 turnovers.

 

Kansas State (24-4, 12-3) got 17 points from Temira Poindexter, while Zyanna  Walker scored 12.

 

The Mountaineers are at No.10 TCU Sunday in Fort Worth, while the Wildcats hosts intra-state rival Kansas on Saturday.

 

In the SEC, Alabama (21-5, 8-4) got 18 points from Sarah Ashlee Barker, while Zaay Green had 16 points, six boards, and six assists.

 

The Aggies (10-14, 3-9) got 17 points from Jada Malone along with six rebounds off the bench.

 

The Crimson Tide are at No. 15 Tennessee in Knoxville, Thursday.

 

On Tuesday, there is only one game on the radar, which will update late to this file, in the Big 12 No.24 Oklahoma State is at Utah in Salt Lake City.

 

Looking Ahead

 

With nothing else on Tuesday, let’s go straight into the Wednesday locals, where Temple fighting for the fourth and final double bye in next month’s American Athletic Conference tournament in Fort Worth, Texas, hosts Wichita State at 7 p.m. at the Liacouras Center on ESPN+.

 

Villanova in the Big East hosts Georgetown at the Finneran Pavilion at 7 p.m. on FloSports.

 

In the Patriot League, first-place Lehigh hosts Bucknell at 6 p.m. at the Stabler Arena in Bethlehem, Pa., while Lafayette hosts defending champion Holy Cross at 6 p.m. at the Kirby Sports Center in Easton,Pa., both games on ESPN+.

 

Saint Joseph’s, after nearly a week off in the Atlantic 10, is at Rhode Island in the Ryan Center in Kingston at 6:35 p.m. on ESPN+.

 

Nationally, No. 5 Connecticut returns to the Big East the rest of the way, playing at Seton Hall at 7 p.m. in Walsh Gym in South Orange, N.J. on SNY.

 

No. 4 Southern Cal hosts No. 22 Michigan State in the Galen Center in Los Angeles for a Big Ten contest at 9:30 p.m. on the Peacock Network.

 

On Thursday, Rutgers begins its Big Ten swing to the Northwest playing at Washington  in Seattle at 9 p.m., while in the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference Rider at 7 p.m. is at First Place Fairfield in Connecticut on ESPN+.

 

And that’s the report.