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, January 31, 2019

Rider Upsets Marist to Strengthen 2nd Place in MAAC

By Mel Greenberg @womhoopsguru

POUGHKEEPSIE, N.Y. — Subfreezing temperatures, snow-coated streets from squalls that struck a few hours earlier, yet despite the weather elements that befell this region a few hours north of the Big Apple, everything was warm and sunny inside the Rider women’s delegation following the Broncs’ 68-58 win over host Marist Wednesday night in a Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference game in the Red Foxes’ McCann Arena.

An attack in which the Broncs had four players score in double figures reversed a situation that had suddenly looked much bleaker last weekend when Rider had been upset at home by Canisius after a 7-0 start in league play.

But unbeknownst for a bit until checking the scores elsewhere Marist had been upset on the same day at home by Manhattan.

Still, it was a loss that struck the wrong time with the most daunting road swing in the MAAC about to occur with the stop Wednesday here followed by Sunday’s trip to Quinnipiac, the state of Connecticut powerhouse which often gets eclipsed by the annual national championship contending Huskies located an hour away.

Though lots of season and key games are still to play out, the rocket conference start by Rider (11-8, 7-1 MAAC) seemed on the verge of being squandered though projections be damned, that’s why they play the games.

Two seasons removed from the program-best performance that led to a postseason WNIT automatic bid as the MAAC runners up, Rider’s win here strengthened the chance that another bid could occur with the Broncs in control of their own destiny.

Under the postseason setup, the highest conference finishers who do not land in the NCAA tournament via automatic or at-large bids receive automatic entry to the WNIT with the rest of the 64-team field filled via at-large invitations.

By beating the Red Foxes (15-7, 6-3), Rider returned to a two-game lead over Marist in second and one game behind Quinnipiac, a prohibitive favorite to continue to blast its way through the MAAC.

Had the Broncs lost, they would have dropped into a tie here but on the downside of a tie-break in that deadlock for the moment.

Now, Rider has the return game with Marist still to play 10 days away on Feb. 9th, a Saturday afternoon at 2 p.m. at home in Alumni Gym in Lawrenceville, N.J., and the Red Foxes have another game still to play with Quinnipiac.

So if the Broncs can win at home on Feb. 7 to complete a sweep of Monmouth, then an ensuing  sweep of Marist would put a tiebreak in the hands of coach Lynn Milligan’s team if there is a second-place tie at the finish before the last MAAC tourney occurs at Albany, N.Y., before moving to Atlantic City (N.J.) next season.

But remember, the only given in the MAAC has been most times Quinnipiac victories, which replaced a long Marist run after the Bobcats moved over from the Northeast Conference.

And it must also be noted that Red Foxes starting point guard Grace Vander Weide, a transfer from Missouri State, is temporarily sidelined with an injury.

For now, though it didn’t seem that influential at the time, credit Milligan for a strong non-conference schedule even though the record was 4-7.

But after the home loss to Georgetown prior to the onset of the MAAC portion of the schedule, Milligan pointed out that she thought the Broncs had experienced almost anything conference rivals are likely to display.

All that said, as for the game, after an early 4-2 lead by Marist, the Broncs struck with a 7-0 run to take a lead they never relinquished.

The differential grew to 10 in the second period before dropping to three at the half. 

It was back at 10 in the middle of the third before dropping to five but each time the Broncs made strong defensive answers and in the fourth and last stanza paced by Stella Johnson who had 16 of her 18 points in the second half, it got to 13 points to secure the upset.

"Being able to come back after our loss on Saturday with a short turn around I'm very proud of our effort," Milligan said. “Both teams were in the same situation,”

The Broncs are still unbeaten on the road in conference play and the 7-1 MAAC opening record is a program-best for both Milligan, now in her 12th season, as well as better than anyone else before, topping the 6-2 eight-game start two seasons ago.

“This is a nice win for us,” Milligan continued. “To come into one of the toughest places to play in the league and get a win is big. 

“ I think defensively we did a nice job. Amari Johnson stepped up and hit some shots early on to take the pressure off Stella. We did a good job of staying within the game plan. We made some mistakes, but we were able to bounce back from them."

Stella Johnson had just two points in the first half but finished the game shooting 7-for-12 overall from the field.

“What Stella does, no matter what her points are, she does a tremendous job getting everyone else on the team involved in the game,” Milligan said.

Lea Favre shot 6-for-8 from the field and matched Stella Johnson’s team-high 18 points. Amari Johnson shot 7-for-16 and finished with 15 points and a career-high 15 rebounds for a double double.

Lexi Posset shot 4-for-7 from the field and also scored 15 points and the Broncs as a team were a near-perfect 16-for-20 from the line particularly down the stretch when the Red Foxes tried to rally.

Marist’s Alana Gilmer shot 10-for-15 from the field and had a game-high 27 points while Rebekah Hand also scored in double figures for the home team with 11 points.

Rider was able to dominate inside, 38-20, and was 12-0 on fastbreak points.

Marist swept the series between the two schools last year but Wednesday’s triumph made it two wins here in the last three years by the Broncs.

"It was really disappointing for us to come off of the loss to Manhattan and just get beaten physically and mentally,” veteran coach Brian Giorgis said. 

"Kudos to Rider. 

“You knew coming in that Lynn had them playing well. They just played a lot tougher than we did, and right now our offense is a hot mess,” he added. “We don't have anybody on the same page.

“ Unfortunately we don't have chances to practice since we have games one on top of another, but next week we'll have time to work on some things."

Looking Ahead

The Rider game was the only Guru local D-1 game on the schedule.

On Thursday, just three games are on the slate. 

Fordham, under veteran coach and former Villanova star, Stephanie V. Gaitley visits La Salle in an Atlantic 10 contest.

In the Big Ten, No. 17 Rutgers hosts reigning WNIT champion Indiana at 7 as the Scarlet Knights try to maintain their one-game lead in the conference.

Also in the Big Ten, Penn State visits No. 23 Michigan State.

On Friday, Penn and Princeton get started in their back-to-back Friday/Saturday games in the Ivy League with Penn first visiting Ciornell while Princeton is atColumbia  and the two road teams reverse their stops  on Saturday.

Villanova on Friday is back home hosting Providence in the Big East looing for a split on the season, while in the Colonial Athletic Association, Delaware is at William & Mary while Drexel visits Elon in their first meeting since Elon won at Drexel last season in the title game of the CAA tourney.

On Saturday, besides the Ivy games, Temple is at Wichita State in the American Athletic Conference as the Owls look to win their third straight following AAC wins over East Carolina and at Tulsa.

We’ll look at Sunday games to come as we cover the slate through the front part of the weekend.

And that’s the report.

Monday, January 28, 2019

Mike Siroky’s SEC Report: Four Teams Inside AP Top 20


 By Mike Siroky
 
 Mississippi State continues to lead the Southeastern Conference of women’s basketball.

They are the last team unbeaten in SEC play at home, following the historical path  of whoever defends the home court wins the regular season in conference.

The Bulldogs are a win away from the magic NCAA entrant number of 20 wins. 

No SEC team has ever been denied a ticket to the big elimination with 20 wins. 

Those 6-7-8 entrants usually get in as first-round visitors for that reason alone because the league competition offers enough RPI. 

No. 19 Kentucky and Missouri with 17 wins each, are next up. Then No. 20 Texas A&M and Arkansas (16) each and Auburn (15).

State is among the top 15 in the country in 11 statistical categories. 

The Bulldogs lead the nation in scoring margin (34) and scoring offense (90). 

State is second in offensive rebounding (19), free throws made (311) and rebound margin (17.7).  The rebound marks are directly attributable to McCowan and Anriel Howard. The Bulldogs are fifth in field goal percentage (50.4).

The ranked teams all get in, of course. A spot in the league tournament elite eight is another marker worth pursuing, which is what happens when the top four seeds earn a double bye.

Tennessee, no longer ranked, followed its home loss to Arkansas with the expected demolition by No. 1 Notre Dame (though they only trailed by four with two minutes left in the third) then stopped the six straight failures against  LSU.

 They need a mighty rush and an upset win to get seven more victories and reach 20 as the league’s last potential NCAA entrant.

 They could hit 20 in the league tournament. ESPN broadcasters have already presented them as dead to the NCAA which will be more motivation.

No. 25 Missouri lost its second straight, then won at home, but dropped off the poll universe.

No. 16 South Carolina had a week off after taking care of Mizzou on Big Monday. They rose three spots in the national poll.

There are 15 finalists for the national Defensive Player of the Year. Five of them are from the SEC.

 Teaira McCowan and Anriel Howard from Mississippi State, Taylor Murray of Kentucky and Caliya Robinson of Georgia are so honored.

Here’s how the league’s ranked teams in the AP Top 20 did in the fourth week.

No. 6 Mississippi State (19-1)

The first order of business was to replace the non-senior starter, sophomore Chloe Bibby, lost to blowing out her left knee against South Carolina.

The immediate answer is classmate Andra Ezpinoza Hunter, the UConn transfer, though coach Vic Schaefer had not made it official two days out.

She is two inches shorter than Bibby. She had 22 3s made. 

At 5-11, she is two inches shorter than Bibby.

That leaves superb sub Breamber Scott available, with 15 3s made, compared to 36 by Bibby.

State had two more wins, at Florida and then against state rival Mississippi.

Of course, the monster in the middle, Teaira McCowan, is the answer to everything in StarkVegas. 

She once again won conference Player of the Week which we have advocated naming after her this season.

She is the only SEC player in the top 10 in the league in both scoring and rebounding average. She has a program-best 1,278 career rebounds.

It was an unsurprising 27-9 opening quarter. It was trending toward being a runaway.

By the time it was 28-10, Anriel Howard already had 19 points, 9-of-12 from the field, and five defensive rebounds.

 If you want to focus defense on McCowan, Howard is always ready. She ended one of four in double figures. Scott ended 5-of-8 from the field and scored 15 in 18 minutes.

But everyone would get plenty of time in this one, the 22nd straight SEC win and a conference-leading ninth straight.

It was 54-22 at the half.

It finished 90-42, yet another near the top of the league high score pile.

.McCowan only had to contribute one basket. Jordan Danberry hit 12, her 14th straight game in double figures.

Florida is scrambling under its second-year coach to merely have a winning record. It won’t happen this season, so maybe the NIT goal next season before real pressure gets on the coach to win in conference.

. They did upset Missouri. They drew 1,242.

“I am just really pleased with my team today”  Schaefer said. “I thought our guard play was really good. We set the tone early.

“ I thought that is where we really dictated the tempo. I thought Jazz (Holmes) was outstanding today defensively and running our team. I thought it started with her energy on the ball.

“The real thing I was pleased with was my bench, 43 bench points. Tonight our bench was really good. When we can score 90 points and Teaira just has two, it is a pretty good day for us.”

When Ole Miss came in to renew the state rivalry, State welcomed the new coach.

It has to be interesting to be in the same state with one team so superlative and the other just getting by with no institutional support.

This game sold out weeks early. 

The crowd was raucously chanting for the defense. It is a great time to be a Bulldog, but its must be even better for Schaeferz.

 He has imposed his plan not only on his team but also his campus.

So the rocking win, 80-49, was his from the jump. A 4-0 run in the second quarter led to a 43-22 halftime. 

State shot better than 56 percent in the 18-10 first 43-22 at half. 

McCowan had 17 at intermission, including 5-of-6 from the line. Howard continues to back up her decision to spend her graduate student season here from Texas A&M, with 13.

 Danberry had five rebounds and five assists. That intensity remained in the third quarter with the Rebels not edging much closer.

McCowan got up to 25 points and strolled to the training room for the end of the third after turning her ankle a bit. 

She returned after a tape job, a season-high 33 points and 11 rebounds. 

Howard had taken a knee to the thigh in the rough and tumble underneath but responded with her double/double, 16 points and 11 rebounds.

Schaefer said. “Our defense picked it up in the second quarter. We made our move on defense and that got us going. There are certain triggers. I think we can do more and get better and that’s my job.

“I thought (McCowan) looked as good as she has in a while. I call it being interested. I am still trying to get the best I can out of my kids, to get my kids ready every night. I can’t just play my kids 13-15 minutes a game. We have gotta be ready for when we need 40 minutes.
“I thought Jazz set the pace, especially on defense.”

State has been in the AP poll 87 straight weeks, including 51 weeks in a row in the Top 10. They have 31 straight home wins.

The ’Dawgs are the nation’s top scoring offense, averaging 90 and allowing 56.7, for the the highest scoring margin (34.2) in Division I.

This week, they are on a two-game road trip, against LSU and Alabama as they reset their sites on 30 wins before the NCAA eliminations.

 Rockin’ steady, they moved up one spot in the national poll.
 
No. 16 South Carolina (13-5)

This week, the only game is Ole Miss at home.

But then looms the annual confrontation with once and future No. 1 UConn.

 Like Tennessee-Notre Dame, these in-conference confrontations make little sense. Neither team needs the publicity. They’ve been in Final Fours recently.

 UConn, assured of dominating its weak conference, needs an RPI win, but a win helps neither in their leagues and a demoralizing loss is not worth the risk.

Muffet McGraw finally said the UT series would sensibly move to the fall from now on.

But back to business. SC is closer to 20 and one of four top SEC tournament seeds for the double bye,
Coach Dawn Staley works all this out.

No. 19 Kentucky (16-3)

Senior Maci Morris (16.3 points per game) is the consistent key for Matthew Mitchell.

It was homecoming after four road games, against No. 25 Missouri, one game after senior guard Taylor  Murray and freshman Rhyne Howard, the other two top scorers, missed a game with injuries. 

Howard is averaging 16.2 points and a team-best 7.1 rebounds per game with 43 3s made, 50 assists, 40 steals and 16 blocks. Murray is the only other Wildcats averaging double figures with 12.3 points per game while leading UK with 68 assists and 64 steals. 

Murray (12.3) is trying to build on limited play with a left knee injured against Tennessee. She has a bone bruise. She missed the previous game entirely.

But she was back to starting, hitting her first 6-of-7 for 13. Howard also returned.

Murray’s 21 were so important as Morris and Howard only scored four each.

Missouri was following a loss at South Carolina. They allow 56.4 points per game and score 65.8.

Senior aggravation is Sophie Cunningham but  15.9 points with a team-best 64 assists and 27 steals. She had 13 at the end of three. But she only scored two more baskets and was 5-of-12 from the field. 

The Tigers fell to the superior defense without a basket in the final five minutes.

UK had shown its defensive determination from the start, 12-10 after one and 21-18 at the half, when each side scored single digits.

 It was UK’s lowest output in a half, but they were willing to live on defense in the 52-41 win. They controlled the boards, 37-25. They gained 11 baskets off 20 turnovers.

 They drew 4,174.

“Tonight was going to be a lot about our grit,” said coach Matthew Mitchell. “It says a lot about our toughness, so much about our intensity and our defense and I thought they just really showed up on all four categories.”

He said Murray’s play was all self-motivation.

“I’m not taking credit for her spectacular play. She came out. We talked about how we had to get more disruptive and we had to make something happen with our defense because they were packing that lane and they were making it tough to score around the basket and her ability to force some turnovers up high on the floor where they couldn't transition back and we were able to get some layups off of our defense -- I thought that really sparked our team. 

“You know, she’s been struggling with her knee and I just thought she just started rounding into some form that you all have seen from her this season. It was an outstanding performance and she really was a catalyst that sparked the entire team, so a great performance.”

He addressed the injured players rounding back into shape.

“Well, you just think, the time that they missed from practice and games has affected them. Maci gutted through the game last Thursday night and then we tried to get her some treatment. She's really been off. We've been trying to get her feeling better.

“And so, I think it's going to take a little time to knock the rust off. I think tonight was a good step toward that. Rhyne was in a difficult game for her tonight. The strength of her game is shooting 3s and the mid-range jumper. It's tough for her around the basket right now. That's what I told her, these are the games she grows up in. This is where you learn how tough the game is, how physical it is.”

UK went on to No. 24 Texas A&M in a traditionally tough battle. They allow 56 points per game while scoring 70.

They start five sophomores, leading off with nationally ranked Chennedy Carter the best scorer in conference a 21.6 points per game. Guard Aaliyah Wilson is averaging 13.8 while another guard, Kayla Wells, is at 13.4. Forward N’dea Jones leads with 11.5 rebounds. Center Ciera Johnson averages 11.6 points and 8.3 rebounds.

A&M started quickly, 14-5, with Mitchell trying to alter momentum.

 Howard hit two 3s to and Morris another to keep UK in striking distance. The shooting percentages were 58-23 percent, reflecting the 19-11 A&M lead. 

The Aggies did not go to the bench yet. UK cut it to one, based on Howard’s four 3s.

A&M scored on six straight possessions make it 31-23, 18-4 points in the paint. But seven 3s led an 8-0 run. 

It was 33-31, Aggies, at the break. 

UK’s Howard led everyone with a dozen points. But no one was truly in control. UK had seven turnovers, A&M five steals.

Down the stretch, A&M built the lead to 10, but UK finished strong and cut the lead to one again.

 Significantly, the Aggies never lost the lead. Their strong shooting continued finishing at 56 percent, including 6-of-8 3s.
  
With less than four minutes left, Morris got hot, scoring 12 in a row to cut the lead to 72-67. 

On UK’s next possession, Morris found McKinney, who converted a layup to cut the lead to 72-69 with 1:40 to play. Carter missed a shot. 

The crowd roared when UK had the ball, was silent as Sunday church when A&M had it.

 Both coaches stood for the final few minutes. Blair was miming plays, his coat on the bench.

Howard was fouled on a 3 attempt with 9.9 seconds remaining. She made the first and third free throws and there was the one-point advantage, 72-71. 

Kentucky fouled A&M's Jones, who made one of two for the 73-71 final lead with 8.5 seconds to play.

The Wildcats called a timeout to advance the ball and set up the final possession. 

Howard attempted a mid-range jumper that rimmed out and A&M grabbed the rebound. 

Carter missed two free throws with 0.7 seconds left, but Kentucky's full-court heave at the buzzer came up short. The 4,753 in attendance were likely hoarse.

Morris scored 22, with five rebounds and four assists. Howard had 21 points, eight rebounds, four steals and two assists. No other Wildcat scored in double figures.­­­ They hit 11 of 29 3s. Howard had five – but only one after half as the team hit to after intermission -- and Morris four.

Carter and Kayla Wells led Texas A&M with 20 points apiece. Johnson had a career-high 19 points. At 5-2, they are in second place in the league. 

The five straight wins are the most in conference since 2016. They have clinched a winning season for the 15th season and have won three straight against the Kats, 5-4 since joining the league. 

A&M is tied for third in conference with Arkansas at 5-2. UK is next at 4-3.

“You have to give Texas A&M all the credit,” Mitchell said. “They really fought hard today and made the plays necessary to win. This was obviously such a close game, and they made one more play than we did. 

“We got into some real difficult situations in the game. I was proud of the fight our team showed. We gave ourselves the chance to win the game and possibly go into overtime.

“I am surprised on how we dominated the offensive glass. 13-6, double them up, we had more offensive rebounds than they did. That was a great development for us. We out-rebounded them, but you just have to give Ciera Johnson so much credit. She just stepped up and I thought the biggest difference in the game. Credit her for having an amazing offensive game.”

A&M coach Gary Blair was just as enthusiastic.

“This was a carbon copy of the Auburn game -- we got the big lead and let them back in. At the same time, with how hard both teams were playing, if we would have been down, I think we would have come back and had to make the decision at the end.

“Morris got hot, that is why she is a first-team All-SEC performer. Rhyne Howard will be the Freshman of the year in our league, she is that good. 

“I do not know if we did anything shut down Taylor Murray, last game she carried them to the win, but this game it was Howard and Morris. They have got three of the top 20 players in the league. So give them credit, you can imagine what the game is going to be like when we go back to Lexington. It is like this every time we play Kentucky.”

 At the end, he said, “We were trying to foul on the floor, and Shambria Washington fouled a three-point shooter. We have got to be more disciplined than that and we were lucky that was a lot of pressure because Howard missed one of the free throws.

“Then we ran our perfect inbounds play that we get all the time, and I called the wrong number. Defending the last play, we had a foul to give, so the ball was on the other side of the court. 

“We took Maci Morris away, Rhyne Howard had to make a play, that was not a great shot because she was not on balance. Give us a little credit for that. We contested, we did not foul, and we got the rebound.”

A&M center Johnson said, “I give a lot credit to the guards for just giving me the ball in the right place at the right time. All I really had to do was just go up. I think I really just did two moves in the paint, where some of them were shot fakes and layups.”

A&M sophomore guard Wells said of her opportunity, “That is basically every game. They are trying to take away Chennedy first, and then try to take away me. With them trapping Chennedy, and focusing on her, that gives me a lot of looks especially early.

 “We really focused on paint points this game because we knew that Maci Morris was a beast, especially driving. We wanted to stop her driving and slow their offense down. They came out pretty early hitting with Rhyne Howard, and she is a great player. We just had to try to take away her and Maci Morris’s touches too.”

Blair said the fouls his team had to deal with at the end limited aggressiveness on rebounds, but that Carter’s four fouls were legitimate.

“She has to earn to be aggressive without fouls,” he said. “It is tough being Chennedy Carter, with what she has to go through. She had only been to the line two times until the end, when usually it is 10 times.
“Cierra missed her first shot – the first all year -- when her shoulders weren’t square then hit her next eight. We though we could go inside. Remember, she is just a sophomore.”

This week, UK is home again for South Carolina, then Florida. The Kats dropped as much as anybody, four spots in the national poll.

No. 20 Texas A&M (14-4)

The Aggies started the week at unranked Auburn, a nice little 15-win team in that next group after the top four with at least three SEC wins: Kentucky, LSU, Alabama and Arkansas.

 They had already piled on Tennessee. So a win would take one away from that logjam.

The Aggies were playing their fourth of a five-game set with a three-game win streak.

“We don’t ever want to see .500 again in SEC play,” said junior guard Shambria Washington. “We’re going into every game now like it’s a must-win and trying to really get it going.”

Sophomore forward N’dea Jones had just set a school record with 21 rebounds and another for a second 20-plus  rebound game in the same season.

Auburn, already with 15 wins, had a week off to prepare after rallying from 20 points down at Vanderbilt.

Four Tigers — Janiah McKay (14.1), Daisa Alexander (12.8), Unique Thompson (12.7) and Crystal Primm (11.6) — average double figure points. But it is Auburn’s full-court pressure, the SEC leader  in steals per game (12.7) and an average 25.8 points off turnovers that makes them deadly.

 “We need to take care of the basketball and not turn the ball over,” said Jones. “Auburn is a really good basketball team, and they press basically the entire 40 minutes of the game.”

 The Aggies had won all 11 previous meetings with Auburn, sweeping  two last season with Chennedy Carter surpassing 20 points in each.

Auburn surprised them with a 17-12 first. And a 13-12 second. No Tiger was doing a lot but all the Tigers were doing enough in pursuit of a 16th win.

 Carter had two 3s among her 10 points but is locked into the “shooter must shoot” mentality and was 4-of-12 with little support.

 Auburn was hitting was hitting 36 percent from the field, A&M 37.

A&M shot 55.6 after intermission.

At the end with less than 17 seconds left and tied, Carter knew it was her game. Coach Gary Blair knew it was her game. The 1,656 in the stands knew it was her game. The guy in the popcorn stand knew it was her game.

Carter drove the length of the floor and made a game-winning runner in the 69-67 emphatic win.

  She scored.

Auburn had rallied from 11 down in the final four minutes after the Aggies won the third, 25-14.

 They tied it with 17 seconds left with a Janiah McKay layup. 

A&M had no timeouts left. 

“Coach had said ‘Move your feet don’t foul,’ but I ended up giving up the layup and AI knew I wanted to take the shot,” Carter said.

“I believe in myself and my teammates believe in me and I just to go make it. I couldn’t stress about it. At first, I was going to take the 3 but I said to myself, ‘Nah, take it to the rim.’ I have a good first step.

“Ciera Johnson, Kayla Wells, Sambria being a true point guard and then there’s me.”

Carter scored 28, her fourth of more than 20 in the past five games. She had 15 in the second half. She has been in double figures for 26 straight games, 51 of 52 career games.

 She hit a season best five 3s.

Wells scored 19, Johnson doubled for the third straight game with 11 and Jones had her sixth double/double of the season, 11 points and 15 rebounds. They only used six players, the first time in two seasons.

The Aggies had 11 offensive rebounds in the second half and scored 13 off those.

“I thought our young ladies played extremely hard,” Auburn coach Terri Williams-Flournoy said. “We continued to fight. We did everything we needed to do to win the basketball game, except at the end. We needed to make a stop at the end. Janiah did a great job to get us in the position to win the basketball game  and we needed to get a stop.”

“When she’s in the open floor, I’ll take my chances,” A&M associate head coach Kelly Bond-White said. “But even if she had missed it, our kids had ran the floor and I thought we were in rebounding position.”

 “We finally started running a little bit of offense in the second half instead of freelancing and hully-gullying, which is what we were doing in the first half,” A&M coach Gary Blair said.

This week, A&M stays home for Vanderbilt then is at Ole Miss, two winnable games. The win over UK bumped them the most of anybody, back into the Top 20, up four.

Saturday, January 26, 2019

The Guru Report: Temple Sees Daylight While Rider Takes First MAAC Setback

By Mel Greenberg @womhoopsguru

PHILADELPHIA — Two streaks got snapped in opposite directions while one other continued on the down side Saturday afternoon among the three Guru local Division I teams that saw action.

Temple was powered by Alliya Butts and Mia Davis with a combination of 48 points to control East Carolina 84-62 in McGonigle Hall as the Owls picked up their first win of the season in the American Athletic Conference.

Further north Rider’s perfect run to keep pace with Quinnipiac in the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference came to an end at the hands of Canisius, which rallied for a 62-49 triumph on the road in the Broncs’ Alumni Gymnasium in Lawrenceville, N.J.

And to the near north up Broad Street, La Salle looking for its first Atlantic 10 win and fourth overall got wiped out at home in the Tom Gola Arena as Richmond executed a 20-2 run in the third period and headed off in the winners column 74-60.

Temple coach Tonya Cardoza had started to see positive signs a week ago when the Owls did not get awed like times in the past when they hosted then-No. 2 Connecticut.

But then came a loss to Penn in the Palestra Wednesday, enabling the Quakers to finish second to Villanova in the Big Five and relegate Temple to third.

However, Cardoza became more hopeful since then off practices leading into Saturday’s game.

“It feels good to finally get a win and get the monkey off our back,” Cardoza said afterwards. “We had a couple good practices and they carried over to today and the way we played defense the last few days in practice, I thought we did a great job today.”

Overall Temple parted with a seven-game losing streak to improve to 5-14 on the season and 1-5 in the AAC. On the other bench, the Pirates fell to 10-9 overall and 1-5 in the league.

The game still threatened to possibly get away from the Owls until the third period when a 12-4 run accelerated their lead to 57-38 and it was like old times the rest of the way.

Long-range firing was the weapon of choice as Temple connected with 11 threes, their best since getting 13 in a road loss on Dec. 3 at nationally-ranked DePaul in Chicago.

The Owls also shared the ball well with a season-high 20 assists on 28 hoops of which Butts dealt six while scoring a season-high 28 points, helped by another high mark to date with five treys.

Davis collected her seventh double double with 20 points and a game-high 12 rebounds.

Marissa Mackins, having gained a career-best 19 points in the loss to Penn, was a force the other way with 10 rebounds for her best day in that category. Lena Niang scored 13 points and Emani Mayor had 11 to also reach double figures.

Alex Frazier had 19 points and 10 rebounds to gain a double double for ECU while Raven Johnson scored 18.

“In the UConn game we were really trying our best to stay in the game,” Cardoza said. “After the Penn game, it’s like what’s the difference. The last couple days I found they were really focused and trying to get things done the way that I want them.

“They way we defended today is the way we practiced the last two days and they carried over.”

Temple next goes to Tulsa for a Tuesday game at 8 p.m. EST before continuing to Wichita State next Saturday at 7:30. The Owls return home Tuesday, Feb. 5, to host Houston at noon, next door in the larger Liacouras Center for the annual School Day game, the last of two played in that venue this season.

That game will be televised on ESPN3.

Rider Falls in Canisius Rally

The Broncs ran into a road block in the fourth quarter at home, being held to eight points as Canisius snapped its own two-game losing streak and ended Rider’s best-ever 6-0 start in the MAAC via 62-49 victory.

At the outset, however, it seemed like recent business as usual would continue with coach Lynn Milligan’s squad bolting to an early 11-point lead only to allow the Golden Griffins (7-12, 5-3 MAAC) to get back into contention with a 21-13 attack in the second period and then seal things off in the final 10 minutes.

Amari Johnson had a game-high 21 points for Rider (10-8, 6-1) while Stella Johnson, a recent MAAC multi-player of the week honoree, had 15 points.

“It was a disappointing result today on our home floor,” Milligan said. “Credit to Canisius, they did a great job. Defensively, they were very strong.

“We didn’t shoot the ball well today, which hurt us and we had some lapses on defense, particularly in rebounding that hurt us. We had a little adversity today and we didn’t respond to it as well as we wanted to,” she continued.

“Just like we learned from six previous games, we’ll learn from this one and put ourselves in a better situation heading into Wednesday.”

The Broncs will hit the road Wednesday to meet perennial contender Marist in McCann Arena in Poughkeepsie, N.Y. The game will air on ESPN+ and Rider will seek to end a two-game losing streak to the Red Foxes.

Rider had beaten Canisius four straight. The 6-1 mark in conference matches the best seven-game MAAC start under Milligan and in program history following a similar run two seasons ago when the Broncs finished runnerup in the league.

Next Sunday the Broncs head to the first of two meetings with Quinnipiac and return home again Feb. 7 hosting Monmouth.

La Salle Upended by Richmond Third Quarter Surge

The Spiders had been winless in the Atlantic 10 until edging Saint Joseph’s at home Wednesday by a point and Saturday they finished a sweep of the Philly teams in the conference winning at La Salle 74-60 thanks to a 20-2 run in the third quarter.

The rout ruined the Explorers’ day getting four players scoring in double figures for the first time since the win earlier this season over Pepperdine in Providence’s tournament.

It looked promising for La Salle (3-18, 0-7 Atlantic 10) taking a 43-41 lead at the outset of the third until Richmond (5-15, 2-5) lowered the boom.

Shayla Sweeney had 11 points for the home team while Shalina Miller, Jeryn Reese, and Rayshel Brown each scored 10 points. Defensively, Miller blocked three shots and had seven rebounds while Reese had eight rebounds.

La Salle will continue to stay home Thursday hosting Fordham at 7 p.m.

Nationally Noted: Old Dominion on a Tear

Year two for former Tennessee star Nikki McCray continues to be quite the success after winning only eight games in her first season in charge of Old Dominion after her hire off Dawn Staley’s staff at South Carolina.

The Lady Monarchs on Alumni Day at home in the Ted Constant Center in Norfolk, Va., cruised over UTSA 72-47 in a C-USA game won despite the absence of Victoria Morris with a foot injury.

The opposition fell to 6-13 overall and 1-6 in the conference.

Special uniforms were given to honor the memory of all-time great Anne Donovan who died suddenly last June.

The Lady Monarchs (15-5, 6-2 C-USA) have won six straight and are off to their best 20-game start in 11 seasons.

“Anne Donovan meant so much to this university and this program,” McCray said afterwards. “The jerseys were a secret and it surprised our team. I think they fed off that and they never looked back.”

ODU next weekend visits North Texas and league-leader Rice.

Looking Ahead: Drexel and Nova Look to Key Sweeps

On the local front, Drexel on Girl Scout Day will look to get into sole possession of third, minimally, a game behind the front runners in the Colonial Athletic Association when the Dragons host a revived UNCW squad at 2 p.m. in the Dasklalakis Athletic Center.

At the same time, Villanova will be at St. John’s in the Big East looking to complete a sweep of the Metro teams and get some traction for postseason play.

Penn tunes up for the Ivy race ahead by hosting Division III Haverford at 1 p.m. at The Palestra.

Saint Joseph’s will try to shake off its loss at Richmond visiting Dayton at noon in the Atlantic 10 on ESPNU.

Delaware hosts Charleston at 1 p.m. looking to complete a weekend sweep in the CAA at the Bob Carpenter Center in Newark.

No. 14 Rutgers heads to Penn State looking to shake off the loss at Iowa in the Big Ten and stay at least a game ahead when meeting the Lady Lions at 2 p.m. in the Bryce Jordan Center on the Big Ten Network in State College.

Nationally, LSU is at Tennessee at 1 p.m. in the Southeastern Conference where the host Lady Vols have lost six straight, matching a program low, in fact the dip has other marks being matched also.

No. 6 Stanford in the Pac-12 is at No. 21 Utah at 2 p.m. where the host UTEs having beaten California on Friday night is looking to enhance its regained status.

Elon is at James Madison in their first CAA meeting since Elon upset JMU last year in the CAA semifinals.

No. 15 Kentucky is at No. 25 Texas A&M in a game where positioning in both the SEC and rankings become a factor.

And that is the report.








The Guru Report: Drexel and Delaware Score in CAA While ‘Nova’s Gedaka Leads ‘Cats to Big East Win at Seton Hall

By Mel Greenberg @womhoopsguru

PHILADELPHIA/NEWARK, Del. – Due to a matinee Education Day hosting Friday afternoon, the Guru was on the scene for both local wins in the Colonial Athletic Association leading with in reverse order Drexel cruising at home over Charleston 76-53 at night in the Daskalakis Athletic Center which followed the Delaware 65-53 bit of an upset of UNCW at home in the Bob Carpenter Center.

And the day became a total sweep by all three in action when Mary Gedaka keyed a single-handed 10-0 run to rally Villanova to a 70-66 win at Seton Hall at night in a Big East game in Walsh Gym to snap four-game losing streak in the conference.

Starting here back in the City of Brotherly Love, after getting help from elsewhere Drexel continued to help itself by making quick work of the Cougars with a 17-6 first quarter and on to a lopsided 25-point lead and ultimate victory.

Things looked bleak at the beginning of the month in terms of the conference race when the Dragons (12-5, 4-2 CAA) blew a halftime lead to Towson and then two days later fell to preseason favorite James Madison, both games played here. 

But last weekend UNCW (11-6, 4-2) stirred at home in Wilmington, N.C., upsetting JMU at the buzzer on a three-pointer from Rutgers transfer Shrita Parker and then she struck again with the winning points against Towson.

Up north at the same time Drexel took down Northeastern in Boston and Hofstra on Long Island.

Then Friday afternoon, Delaware (7-11, 2-4) ruined the desires of another weekend sweep by UNCW and several hours later Drexel with another stellar defensive effort combined with the Dragons’ highest point production of the season basically put Denise Dillon’s group back in the chase, trailing the two front-runners by just a game.

And while they are now tied with the Seahawks, Drexel will play UNCW 2 p.m. Sunday afternoon here with a chance to minimally take undisputed possession of third place.

“It’s our first win at home in 2019, so I’m real excited,” Dillon said of Friday nigfht’s performance. “It’s a good overall team win. We stuck together both ends of the floor and obviously we’re happy with the offensive production. It’s coming along nicely.”

Everyone got to play a bunch of minutes, spreading the wealth to provide more experience to the bench and also to dispense extra rest to the starters with a sterner test coming less than 48 hours away.

“We’re as good as our guards on both ends of the floor and when they’re playing defense like that, setting the tone, we can control the possessions and from start to finish control the game,” Dillon said.

Though Charleston (5-12, 1-5) became one of the few teams to score more than 50 points against Drexel in a Dragons victory, nevertheless the winners for the next 48 hours will continue to be the top defensive team in the nation after entering the night with a 47.5 defensive scoring average.

Drexel has been the only school holding opponents under a 50-point average.

As for the individuals for the home team, Bailey Greenberg was tops as she has been most games with 18 points while freshman Maura Hendrixson had more productivity with 15 points, Aubree Brown scored 14, and Hannah Nihill had a near double double with 10 points and eight assists.

Hendrixson was also deadly outside shooting 5-for-6 three-balls while the rest of the squad added four more.

Drexel forced 20 turnovers and got eight steals to help a doubling of the Cougars 24-12 in points off turnovers.

Charleston’s Ericka Broughton and Darien Huff each scored 12 points, Deja Ford scored 11, and Arynn Eady Scored 10 points.

Earlier in the day, UNCW came through to start its weekend Mid-Atlantic swing at Delaware before heading up to Drexel.

The Seahawks, as mentioned, caught notice with the wins over JMU and Towson last weekend in what is the second season under Karen Barefoot, who previously coached in the CAA when Old Dominion was a member.

The host Blue Hens have been on a roller coaster season under second-year coach Natasha Adair, for a large part caused by the preseason sidelining of Nicole Enabosi, the CAA player of the year, with an knee injury.

The game also had a déjà vu aspect with the second homecoming of former longtime Delaware coach Tina Martin, who is now on Barefoot’s staff.

This past Tuesday the Seahawks’ Parker for her game-winners was named the national women’s player of the week by the United States Basketball Writers Association (USBWA).

But Delaware rose to the occasion of 1,633 predominantly youngsters in the house and the two teams battled to a 28-28 tie at the break.

Then the Blue Hens took over by building an eight-point lead at the end of the third and holding the Seahawks firm the rest of the way.

It was Education Day for the home crowd but specifically it became a career day for Delaware junior Samone DeFreese, who evoked memories of the Elena Delle Donne era scoring a personal best 26 points and grabbing 11 rebounds.

She shot 10-of-19 from the floor for 52.6 percent while making all six free throw attempts while Makeda Nicholas scored 11 points.

It was the seventh straight win by Delaware over UNCW, which got 20 points from GiGi Smith and 10 from Parker.

Delaware held the Seahawks to 33.9 percent from the field and forced 21 turnovers leading to an 18-7 advantage on points off turnovers.

 The Blue Hens also dominated the inside 34-22 on points in the paint and 14-0 on second chance points, while depth showed with a 25-9 advantage from the reserves.

Defense also showed in steals, 11-2.

“Anytime you have a game with your fans, on your floor, and the way we competed today, we just clicked on all cyclinders,” said second-year coach Natasha Adair, who once coached at Charleston before moving to Georgetown in the Big East, and then taking the Delaware a job a year ago.

“We held a really good UNC Wilmington team to 53 points and that’s hard to do. Our kids just locked in, they locked into the defensive game plan, Samone DeFreese today sparked us offensively and she hadn’t had that kind of breakout game yet, and this is still a group that’s still learning how to play without Nicole Enabosi, and we want to be our best team in March.

“But I think today was an example of what we can do if we play together and we trust the game plan and I was very proud of our group today.”

Delaware, by the way, will follow Drexel from 12 months ago in hosting this season’s CAA tourney, the weekend right before Selection Monday night.

The next trick there needs to be a followup from Friday’s output for Delaware to establish a rhythm.

“I think the next one, they know in conference play they can’t take any opponent lightly. You can enjoy this for a couple more hours today and then we have to get ready for the Charleston game (1 p.m.) on Sunday,” Adair said.

“But they know, they know what they needed to do. Today, they did it, so we will take this momentum and keep going.”

Gedaka’s Outburst Carries Villanova to Rally Over Seton Hall

A fourth-quarter rally in which Mary Gedaka got 14 of her 20 points, including a 10-0 run, ended Villanova’s recent Big East miseries by snapping a four-game conference losing streak to beat Seton Hall 70-66 in the Pirates’ Walsh Gym in South Orange, N.J.

The Wildcats (12-7, 3-5 Big East) seemed doomed to the host Pirates (12-7, 4-4) when they began to stir and after Seton Hall answered a few ‘Nova challenges to lead 58-53 with 5 minutes, 27 seconds left in the game, Gedaka reeled off 10 of her team’s next 11 points to go ahead and hold on for the win.

In addition to Gedaka’s 20 points, she also grabbed nine rebounds and shot 8-of-10 from the field and 4-of-6 from the line. Adrianna Hahn went into 10th place all-time on the Wildcats career points chart, passing Denise Dillon, who now coaches Drexel.

 Hahn, whose career total is now 1,362 points, scored 16, shooting 6-for-10 from the field while Jannah Tucker had 14 points, primarily off four three-balls, while Emily Esposito scored 13.

Shadeen Samuels for Seton Hall had 27 points and 16 rebounds, while Inja Butina scored 22 points and grabbed eight rebounds, and Desiree Elmore scored 10 points.

The Wildcats had one of their better shooting nights connecting on 47.2 percent from the field in Walsh Gym, which has been a recent home away from home in winning 13 of the last 16 games played in the series there with the Pirates.

Villanova stays in the Metro area heading over to Jamaica, N.Y., on Long Island near Manhattan to visit St. John’s at 2 p.m. on Sunday.

The Red Storm, who almost upset Connecticut in November, and had struggled, beat Georgetown 59-51 at home in Carnesecca Arena. Dionna White was held to nine points while Curteeona Brelove scored 17 and grabbed 10 rebounds for St. Johns.

Marquette, which reached 10th for the first time in the Associated Press women’s poll, had little difficulty handling Xavier 90-44. DePaul, which had been ranked, won at Butler in Indianapolis.

The standings heading into Sunday’s second weekend round shows Marquette (17-3, 8-0) unbeaten in the Big East at the top, Butler (16-3, 6-2) two games back, then DePaul (14-6, 5-3), then a three-way involving Seton Hall (12-7, 4-4), Providence (12-8, 4-4), and Creighton (10-9, 4-4).,

Georgetown (9-10, 3-5) and  Villanova (12-7, 3-5) are tied, though the Hoyas would be listed first.

Nationally Noted: Utah Passes Test

After earning its first ranking in nearly 11 years, No. 21 Utah at home in Salt Lake City topped California 87-74 in a Pac-12 contest. Megan Huff had 18 of her 24 points in the second half for the Utes (17-1, 6-1), who had been ripping through the unranked squads.

The Bears (12-6, 3-4) had been ranked until recently. Kristine Anigwe had 24 points and 15 rebounds for  California. 

Meanwhile, UCLA, in a rebuilding mode after a strong year last season, upset No. 16 Arizona State 61-59 on the road in Tempe on Japreece Dean’s three-pointer with nine seconds left in regulation in another Pac-12 game.

Looking Ahead: Rider Looks to Keep Pace With Quinnipiac at the Top

Rider will be looking to stay unbeaten and tied with perennial champion Quinnipiac at the top of the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference when the Broncs host Canisius at 2 p.m. in Alumni Gym in Lawrenceville, N.J.

Just two other Guru locals on Saturday take the floor and both are struggling.

Temple will host East Carolina at 2 p.m. in McGonigle Hall in an American Athletic Conference game while La Salle, which just missed upsetting preseason favorite Duquesne in the Atlantic 10 at home, will meet Richmond at home in the Tom Gola Arena at 2 p.m.

The Explorers are still looking for their first conference win and will host a Spiders team that edged Saint Joseph’s by a point at home to get their first. 

On Sunday, the Drexel, Delaware, and Villanova games have been addressed; No. 14 Rutgers will try to get back on a winning track in the Big Ten visiting Penn State at 2 p.m. in the Bryce Jordan Center, while Penn at 1 p.m. will host Division III Haverford at 1 in the Palestra and Saint Joseph’s will visit Dayton at noon in the Atlantic 10 in a nationally televised game on CBS Sports network at noon.

Nationally, Marquette can put more distance from the rest of the Big East visiting Butler, No. 8 North Carolina State as the last unbeaten team in Division I visits Georgia Tech in an Atlantic Coast game, and Utah’s next dual test in the Pac-12 is a visit to No. 6 Stanford.

And that’s the report.  








 

```   

Thursday, January 24, 2019

The Guru Report: Penn Tops Temple for Second in Big 5; Narrow Losses Hit Rutgers, Saint Joseph and La Salle

By Mel Greenberg @womhoopsguru

PHILADELPHIA — The Penn women  did what was necessary to beat Temple 71-62 and finish second in the Big Five at 3-1 overall Wednesday night while at the same time relegating the Owls to third at 2-2 here at the Palestra where the winning Quakers played all four of their City Series games at home.

But for the other three teams in the Guru local D-1 fold who took the floor elsewhere it was a series of just-missed opportunities with La Salle at home falling to Duquesne 66-62 at Tom Gola Arena while Saint Joseph’s on the road got nipped by Richmond, 46-45, both local setbacks in the Atlantic 10, and No. 14 Rutgers narrowly suffered its first hit in the Big Ten, falling at No. 17 Iowa, 72-66.

By ranking, the last one of the aforementioned trio of games is an upset but more likely a push considering the host Hawkeyes at home in Iowa City with weekly Big Ten honoree Megan Gustafson were the higher ranked team until recently.

But first let’s deal with the event we covered here where Penn once again showed that the days of doormat status in the Big Five are over, though Temple did cause the Quakers faithful a big of a squirm down the stretch.

“Out of the gate, I thought we came out strong, Temple really gave us a good push in that second quarter,” said Penn coach Mike McLaughlin. “They’re very good on the glass. We really opened it up in the third and fourth quarter, we limped a little to the finish line, we didn’t finish as well as we wanted but good points as we go into the Ivy stretch.

“The two other times we won the Big Five, we were 3-1 and that’s what we were today. So this is a lot to celebrate for them. I try to explain to them always what Philadelphia is about. What the basketball life, what (men’s coach) Steve’s (Donahue) telling his guys. What they’re seeing on a daily basis and what they achieved.”

Ashley Russell scored 18 to lead Penn while the inside force of Princess Agahayere and Eleah Parker each scored 14 points with Parker getting another double double with 10 rebounds and she also blocked four shots.

Idle since last Wednesday’s collapse here that gave Villanova the undisputed 4-0 City Series crown, playing Temple with identical local 2-1 records was certainly something of value for Penn (10-3) during the loll in the Ivy schedule that goes into play beginning next weekend with a series of Friday-Saturday games into mid-March and the third annual Ivy tourney for an NCAA bid.

The Owls (4-14), who had looked respectable in a loss at home to then-No. 2 Connecticut on Saturday, arrived here on the short trip from North Broad Street minus one talented player with the undetermined injury to promising freshman Alexa Williamson.

The Quakers made it to the half at 35-27 leading all the way, though with single-digit differentiasls in which Temple was able to reel the Quakers in a few times when they threatened to jump way out in front.

The explosive burst then occurred in the third beginning with Aghayere’s three-ball and powering all the way to a 19-point differential that settled one point less at 64-48 at the end of the period.

The game seemed virtually over with the large lead holding at 17 on Russell’s shot for the Quakers at 71-54 with 4 minutes, 49 seconds left in the game but Temple’s Marissa Mackins, a 5-8 freshman guard from Durham, N.C., became a two-way threat with steals and points to cut the margin in less than two minutes to 11 with 3:24 left in regulation.

Mackins had a career-high 19 points for Temple, shooting 7-for-12 from the field, including 5-of-10 three-balls while Mia Davis scored 15.

“It was much better in transition than before, we were spread out a little more than the other night,” McLaughlin said of the execution of the offense. “The ball moved better. We reversed the ball better.”

Enough time remained to bypass a Penn team whose last points were at that 4:49 mark but Temple was also shut down, scoring just one basket the rest of the night leading to the final score.

It’s the second year that Penn has won three-games in the Big Five after sharing last year’s chase success with Villanova and the program that spent long gaps without ever winning one of these local tilts also shared a title at 3-1 in 2015.

Though Temple is 51-20 against the Quakers, current Owls coach Tonya Cardoza in her 11 seasons is now 7-7 in the series while McLaughlin in his 10th season in 5-6.

Furthermore, Penn had won just 14 Big Five games in the 30 seasons before McLaughlin’s arrival from Division II powerhouse  Holy Family in Northeast Philadelphia. Wednesday’s win surpassed that total with 15.

After Sunday when Penn hosts Division III Haverford here at 1 p.m., the league slate continues with a Friday visit to Cornell at 7:30 p.m. and then from upstate New York back down into Manhattan to play Columbia at 5:30 p.m. on Saturday.

“People don’t realize what it takes to play in our league,” McLaughlin said. “After Friday’s game, it’s four hours on a bus, getting into Columbia at 2 a.m. and then having to turn around and play the next day. That’s the challenge to be really focused to win that game,” McLaughlin said.

Penn opened the Ivy season earlier this month winning at preseason favorite Princeton. Following the league schedule in mid-March, the third annual Ivy tournament this season moves from the Palestra into New Haven, Conn., to play at Yale with the top four teams of the ancient eight playing in the field.

“We were just talking in the locker room how much pride Penn has in the Big 5 and just the fact we were 3-1 the last two years,” Russell said. “Years ago people considered one win in the Big 5 huge. We kind of asserted ourselves this season, though we kind of slipped up last week.

“But finishing up beating Temple, they’re a good team and winning at the end is huge for us.”

The game here was the last in the completed round robin. On Sunday with Saint Joseph’s beating visiting La Salle at Hagan Arena in the first of two Atlantic 10 contests, that also was the the designated city game, thus the host Hawks finished fourth at 1-3 and the Explorers were 0-4.

Temple now returns to the American Athletic Conference the rest of the way, beginning Saturday when East Carolina visits at 2 p.m. in McGonigle Hall, where all remaining home games will be played except on Feb. 5, a Tuesday at noon when Houston plays in the larger Liacouras Center for the annual education day event.

Rutgers Felled by Iowa

Rutgers coach C. Vivian Stringer was back in her old haunts where she led Iowa to national prominence in Carver-Hawkeye Arena, but the joy of the ongoing win streak in the Big Ten was cut short with the No. 17 Hawkeyes edging the No. 14 Scarlet Knights 72-66 that ended the best unbeaten conference start for the visitors now reduced to 7-1 and 15-4 overall.

The loss also snapped a 10-game win streak dating back to November and while Rutgers remains in first, the cushy two-game lead is reduced to one.

Iowa improved to 14-4 overall and 6-2 in the conference.

The Scarlet Knights had a chance to go ahead after pulling within a point with 1:41 left but that was the high water mark of the Scarlet Knights rally.

Stasha Carey had 17 points for Rutgers, while Arella Guirantes scored 12 points, and Ciani Cryor scored 11.

Iowa’s Megan Gustafson, who has won a slew of the Big 10 weekly player citations, lived up to her reputation in this one, scoring 31 points, shooting 13-of-16 and also completing a double double with 12 rebounds.

Kathleen Doyle grabbed 17 points.

There were 10 ties and 10 lead changes in the first quarter resulting at 21-21 at the end of the period. 

A five-point Rutgers lead at the beginning of the second period was negated into minus five the other way off a 10-0 Iowa run, while the half ended with a slim 35-33 lead held by Iowa.

Late in the third Rutgers stayed in close pursuit but Gustafson and Stewart made it 53-48 with 10 minutes left the rest of the way.
 
      Makenzie Meyer made it a six-point lead in the fourth period and that was enough to outlast the visitors from the East who gave up their most points this season as well as the worst shooting percentage with the Hawkeyes nailing half their efforts from the field against the Knights.

Staying on the road, Rutgers goes for a season sweep Sunday visiting Penn State, the Knights’ longtime regional rival at 2 p.m. at the Bryce Jordan Center in State College.

Saint Joseph’s and La Salle Suffer Narrow A10 Setbacks As Opponents Rally


La Salle just missed a breakthrough upset and Saint Joseph’s had a looming victory get away on the road in the slimmest of margins in two Atlantic 10 games played by the locals.

For the Explorers at home against preseason conference favorite Duquesne, they were poised for their first conference win of the season and fourth overall at home at Tom Gola Arena until the Dukes rallied in the final 10 minutes to escape back to Pittsburgh with a  66-62 triumph.

In a game of runs and counter-runs at the outset, La Salle (3-17, 0-6 Atlantic 10) bolted to a 39-32 lead at the half.

All but one of those points were whittled over the next 10 minutes to leave the Explorers barely ahead going into the final stanza.

Up two with 4:27 left,La Salle then succumbed to a 14-6 run by Duquesne (11-8, 5-1), which moved into a first-place tie at the conference after George Washington upset VCU.

Davidson is a half-game behind in the win column while Dayton dropped a full game behind tied with George Washington in fourth after a triple overtime loss at Saint Louis.

The Explorers’ Rayshel Brown had a game-high 14 points, her fourth straight game of 10 or more points while Shalina Miller made it two straight games with double doubles, this time collecting 13 points and grabbing 11 rebounds. Jeryn Reese also hit the boards and got a career best with 11 rebounds.

Duquesne’s Julijana Vojinac had 13 points and nine rebounds, while Libby Bazelak scored 11, and Kadri-Ann Lass scored 10.

Saturday might have seen a matchup of teams looking for their conference wins except Richmond, which visits La Salle at 2 p.m., finally got the first one for the Spiders at home edging Saint Joseph’s 46-45 in the Robins Center in a low-scoring affair in Virginia.

The Hawks ( 6-13, 2-4) held an eight-point lead at the outset of the fourth quarter only to be unable to maintain it over the next 10 minutes against the Spiders (4-15, 1-5), who by winning dropped La Salle into 14th and last place.

Inability to score with one-point more in the bank, Saint Joseph’s lost a rebound battle on the missed shot as Richmond went the other way giving the Hawks a brief life with a missed layup until the visitors were charged with a foul away from the ball.

Amy Duggan sank what became the game-winner for Richmond with a pair of free throws with 16 seconds left in regulation.

Alyssa Monaghan, who had a game-high 14 points and Hawks best seven rebounds, went for redemption but the shot was off the rim as time expired.

Katie Jekot also scored in double figures with 11 points.

Jaide Hinds Clark had 10 points and 10 rebounds for a double double for Richmond while Daiji Ruffin added 10 points as a reserve. 

The Hawks stay on the road Sunday going to Dayton for a national broadcast at noon on ESPNU.

Looking Ahead: Tennessee Welcomes Notre Dame

First, looking at the local slate over the next few days, Penn State is the only D-1 local playing Thursday, heading for a season sweep at 8 p.m. at Wisconsin in the Big Ten before welcoming Rutgers on Sunday.

On Friday, the two locals in the Colonial Athletic Association are Delaware hosting UNCW at noon at the Bob Carpenter Center in Newark while Drexel on dollar dog night hosts Charleston in the Daskalakis Athletic Center at 7 in West Philadelphia.

On Sunday the two CAA visitors switch with Delaware hosting Charleston at 1 p.m. and Drexel hosting UNCW at 2 p.m.

UNCW comes through having upset CAA frontrunners James Madison and Towson last weekend so Drexel has a chance to stay on the leaders as does UNCW with a sweep.

The only other Friday  D-1 local action has Villanova visiting Seton Hall needing a Big East win before heading Sunday to St John’s also looking for a win in Jamaica, N.Y.

Two Saturday games were already mentioned involving Temple and La Salle but up in Central New Jersey near Trenton, Rider will be hosting Canisius at 2 p.m. in Alumni Gym in Lawrenceville looking to stay unbeaten in the Metro Atlantic Conference.

All the local Sunday action was noted off Penn State to host Rutgers; Saint Joseph’s to visit Dayton; Haverford at Penn; the two CAA games at Delaware and Drexel; and Villanova at St. John’s.

Nationally, on Thursday, Tennessee in a rare five-game plunge steps outside the SEC and back into non-conference to host Notre Dame. The Irish hold the No. 1 ranking.

As for the rest of the national stuff we’ll get to it on the next report.

   



 

Tuesday, January 22, 2019

Mike Siroky’s SEC Report: Mississippi State Still Dominant

By Mike Siroky
 
Mississippi State shrugged off a loss to a starter in the first 25 seconds of its supposed showdown with South Carolina, another runaway.

But the world of women’s college basketball and the Southeastern Conference in particular is the shuddering shutdown of Tennessee.

Interestingly, their fall from the rankings made room for two conference mates to reappear. Missouri was just in time for the bad blood showdown at South Carolina.

The conference also solidified its reputation as the top women’s basketball league by producing a weekly show on its own network, a live, 30-minute, SEC Now. 

It starts the night of weekly Thursday night women’s basketball doubleheaders. There are feature stories as well as game previews.
The best new face is last season’s consensus All-America, then WNBA Rookie of the year A’ja Wilson.

She teams with ESPN analyst Steffi Sorensen, a former Florida Gator,  and SEC Network anchor and fellow Gamecock Alyssa Lang for the first two editions. They will come back with a half-hour recap show. 

Wilson be part of studio coverage of the SEC Women’s Basketball Tournament.

They did swell from the jump. Wilson has the advantage by having dominated Mississippi State during her career, but acknowledges now it is State’s turn in the spotlight. Post-game they all wondered at what the heck has happened to Tennessee.

And she started on the night when South Carolina visited Mississippi State, a rivalry defined as much by her play as any other matchup. Wilson was wonderful in retelling what it is Dawn Staley does to motivate the Gamecocks  and surprised at the result.

This does not say what happens to the old, retired coaches who had been studio wonks, though Andy Landers has certainly made a wonderful impact on ESPN pregame and analysis. Wilson breaks the mold for use of current athletes and is a delightful addition.

Mississippi State is on track to have 20 in January after three weeks of Southeastern Conference of women’s basketball.

Now unranked Tennessee (12-5)

The sad thing in the latest era of Lady Vol history is that losing against the Tide is no   longer news. The majority of the team has never beaten them. UT does not deserve national mention. They were blown out, 86-65, by a team that only drew 2,000.

Last week they fell six spots in the national poll. This week, out completely, or minus five, 11 spots in two weeks. They solidified that with a fifth straight loss.

Earlier, Tennessee entered Tuscaloosa on a record three-game league losing streak by two, two and four points. The Lady Vols had never lost four straight since before Pat Head really stated the program following her play in the 1976 Olympics.

The players supporting sophomore Evina Westbrook (16.3 points per game) take turns having no-show finishes.

Alabama had won four straight against UT, including a pair last season. Before that, UT had won 42 straight in the series. 

UT has fallen to the bottom of the Top 20, still perfectly capable of winning any game or losing any game. 

Yes, the Holly Warlick tradition is to lose some games in January, but never this many and seldom by a blowout to an unranked team.

They also come back at the end of the season which is to say they will be in the NCAA draw, somewhere on the road, likely in the UConn bracket.

Yes, seven of the top nine Vol scorers are first or second-year players. That reflects back-to-back recruiting classes of merit. Another one is under way. It appears things will naturally get better as they mature now.

But it also underlines recruiting misses before Warlick put out that fire by hiring a real recruiting assistant.  

And would-be upperclassmen transferred away, one of which is starting at point for South Carolina. A senior-level leader would have foreclosed on those close losses as well as settled the kids down the way Warlick did as an All-American point in the late ’70s.

At any rate, Alabama was at home, averaging 65 each game, which is what Tennessee had been allowing, and had a trio around 13 points each. 

They had just been blown out by equally unranked Texas A&M, by 27. 

For the season, Tennessee is second-worst in points allowed, lagged only by Vanderbilt, which is why the Lady Vols are also next-to-last in the SEC.

UT was averaging 14 points more. 

So what. Not lately. In the SEC, it’s 68. 

Which made the edge three points when UT hit its offensive average. Tennessee’s defensive averaged is last in the league, 72.

Westbrook did her part, 19 points and 11 rebounds with five assists. Freshman Zaay Green is proving the acceptable No. 2, 14 points with 11 rebounds.

Tennessee has no serviceable center. Also missing in action this time was former 15.5 scorer Rennia Davis, no points. 

Two other starters came up with four points apiece.

How bad was it? 

Tennessee was 3-of-23 in the fourth. They lost the quarter, 28-10.

Alabama cannot even point to tradition in its own winning. Their top scorer is a junior college transfer, Cierra Johnson, She scored 17 and was one of five in double figures.

She also hit a 3 ahead by 24 with 25 seconds left. Sort of twisting the knife, which is only revisited if Tennessee rights the ship.

She reveled in her mischief post-game. The SEC announcers laughed with her, because that is what you do to Tennessee now, just laugh.

With its second SEC win, Alabama naturally turned around and lost its next game, also at home to 3-3 LSU. Johnson scored 27, including 14-of-15 free throws.

Warlick presided over another autopsy discussion.

“We didn’t have any energy, No emotion. Alabama just wanted it more than us,” she said.

“It’s hard to watch. I don’t have any answer.

“Alabama played with more heart and energy.”

UT played Arkansas Monday night and predictably lost again,

In the kerfluffle of this season is this is when the university gave Warlick an extension which has a buyout. 

The old contract was to expire after this season They gave her three more years. When the NCAA started women’s hoops, everyone was on a one-year renewable.
This gave universities the chance to simply not renew and eliminated court  cases over being fired, which happened when Linn Dunn was let go by Purdue after having recruited a national-caliber team which indeed won a title with a replacement coach, Carolyn Peck,  who never did anything again at successive schools.

Warlick’s new deal puts her in the middle of SEC coaching salaries.

It came from an old friend from the Pat head days, new athletic director Phil Fulmer, the last UT football coach to win a national title. Both his basketball teams are disappointments.

At home for Arkansas,  Davis was benched due to lack of scoring. She is in that gaggle who would have made a difference with any points in the losing streak.

The Razorbacks started with 9-of-12 from the line and 3-of-4 3s by junior Alexis Tolefree, one of the holdovers from the previous coaching staff.

But Tennessee was just 26 percent from the field, missing 9-of-10 in the stretch, 0-for-8 in  the last four minutes of the quarter which set up Arkansas by five. The lead grew to a dozen early in the second quarter. 

Tennessee had no answers, 1-of-13 from the floor. It was 40-31 at halftime.

Tennessee calmly whittled away and had it down to four with possession in the third. They persevered and tied it at 63, then went up by four with a 7-0 fourth on a Davis 3.

Arkansas had three with at least a dozen each, but Westbrook was 10-of-15 for UT and had 22. Rookie Zaay Green, the second most-dependable Vol, had 15.

Cheridene Green kept UT in it, battling underneath.

With 17 seconds left, UT had the ball down 1. Westbrook drew a foul with 10 seconds left and tied it with her first free throw of 23 points. She put them ahead by one with the second.

Arkansas did not waver.

 Senior Malica Monk drove right down court and scored, 80-79.

With 3.6 seconds left, UT had no plan.  They had come back from 13 down, had the lead late at home. 

And lost.

Mike Neighbors said, “We had worked too hard for this. I am so happy for Malica Monk. She stayed with us and earned this opportunity. We are growing up. To win a game we weren’t supposed to, that is big. You trust your seniors.”

Now the Lady Vols incredibly interrupt the conference season for a home whooping against No. 1 Notre Dame. 

That schedule is on the coach. We have said for four seasons this makes no sense. An unlikely win does not help in conference play. 

The expected loss only further disillusions a team which had just lost five, two by two, one by four and this one by one.

“We dug ourselves into a hole and couldn’t finish the job,” Warlick said. “We can’t give up 3s and we gave up 12. We weren’t doing some things we should have been doing and then they stepped it up.

“We played better defense but still not good enough. Right (confidence) is bit very good. We’ve lost so many tight situations. I didn’t have to coach effort. That’s huge.

“Notre Dame is big for us because it’s our next game. We’re gonna prepare and be ready and fight and put our kids in the best opportunities.

“We’re gonna keep plugging along and get this thing turned around.”

No. 19 South Carolina (13-5)

After the loss at Mississippi State, South Carolina still had the mission of defending the home court. First up was newly-ranked No. 25 Missouri. SC fell three spots in the poll.

Who better than Missouri to welcome at home. This was the only matchup of ranked teams all night. 

Carolina brought in 12,004 fans.

They eased them out, 79-65.

The centerpiece was supposed to be smarmy Mizzou senior  guard Sophie Cunningham.

Last season, she caused a confrontation against South Carolina. She was ejected from one of the games.

The Mizzou athletic director said afterwards racist taunts were given to his players and said Staley created the atmosphere.

This despite the fact SC is the team with a majority of black players and his own team is primarily not.

Eventually, the conference sanctioned him after Staley filed a defamation lawsuit. The school paid $25,00 and he had to publicly apologize. The lawsuit ended in a $50,000 settlement which Staley directed to a charity.

Missouri coach Robin Pingeton said nothing, either in support or about what happened.

After Cunningham flagrantly elbowed a Tennessee player in the face on a drive this year, the Tigers went silent on social media. If they are to be believed, the team decided to do it in their own, a further indictment of Pingeton not controlling things. 

The Tennessee coach, Holly Warlick, swears she didn’t see it and it was not her place to comment. 

Which is how players get away with things. Pingeton also said nothing. The ESPN analysts on the game laughed it off.

Staley had hoped to get the teams together before this game to talk it out. But Pingeton arranged for her team to get to Columbia late Sunday, avoiding the meeting.

So came Monday’s national cablecast.

SC scored after every turnover by Missouri. 

The lead was 11-3, but two fouls on team leader Te’a Cooper for SC, who had been guarding Cunningham. The Bulldogs had two other point guards on the court.

South Carolina slowly built a lead, to 11 with 4:23 in the half. Cunningham had six.

Alexis Jennings had six rebounds in the 18-9 edge there. Mikiah Herbert Harrigan had scored a dozen, more than the opponent combined.

Bianca Cuevas-Moore, one of the three SC point guards, was 3-of-4 on 3s, with 11 points.

Missouri had two single free throws in the closing four minutes and SC pushed it to a 14-point lead at the half and maintained that for the second half.

Cunningham scored 25, 14 in the second half, with four 3s. She ended with four fouls.

The refs stayed in control, calling a double-technical at one tussle, not involving Cunningham. There were 45 fouls called. SC was 17-of-20 at the line.

Missouri’s stay in the Top 25 may be one week.

SC won with their best player, Cooper, hobbled with fouls. Herbert Harrigan and Tyasha Harris each scored 16, Cuevas-Moore and Jennings 14 each.

“This could have been somewhat of a trap game for us, but it wasn’t,” Staley said.

“They knew they played well (at Mississippi State). They wanted to get back on the winning side of things. I think it’s all about preparation – our coaching staff, what we decide on that is important to concentrate on – and we did that over the past two days.”

They have a week off before playing Vanderbilt.

No. 7 Mississippi State (17-1)

State skipped two Sundays and still won twice.

First was at Auburn, 85-59.

They have not lost when they score first.

They started quickly again. Teaira McCowan earned an early rest with 12 points as the ’Dawgs took a 10-point quarter lead. She had as many as did the Auburn team. She has 13 games with 20 or more points and 15 or more rebounds this season, despite limited time in the blowouts.

She is the SEC McCowan Player of the Week again. They really ought to follow our lead and rename it for this season. She also a National Player of the Week honor.

Auburn’s center was also sitting, but because of two fouls

Everything was going well. All the visitors need do was match whatever Auburn did. The visitors spread the joy. Jordan Danberry and Chloe Bibby each had six.

More importantly, 6-5 freshman reserve State center Jessica Carter was in, showing the development learned by contesting McCowan in every practice.

State had 10 points off eight turnovers.

McCowan was whistled for a hooking foul, though replays showed she did not. There was 3:15 left in the half. Auburn cut it to four. But Bibby hit a 3, stole the ball and Andra Espinoza-Hunter hit a 3. It was 10 again, 38-28 at the break. State was 11-of-14 from the line, Auburn 3-of-7.

McCowan started the second half with a third foul. Yikes

But no.

State increased the lead to 19, pirouetting off its defense. When Auburn center Unique Thompson sat down with four fouls, she had no points after averaging a double/double all conference season. She did not even have a shot attempt. The 1,908 in attendance did not appreciate that.

It was simply closeout time McCowan had her 14th double/double, 22 points and 10 rebounds, 9-of-10 from the field 4-of-4 from the line, without playing the fourth quarter. It grew to a 25-point margin with more than four minutes left.

“There’s a reason (State) is the No. 6 team in the country,” Auburn coach Terri Williams-Flournoy said.

“I thought we did a very good job; we were only down by 10 at the half. It’s just a very tough game to continue to play that way. 

“They got some transition buckets that kind of blew the lead (open). We just have to move on. There's nothing that we can dwell on about this game. “

Auburn has been averaging 13 points less in conference play than before that, 66. They were 11 under that this time, right at the State defensive average.

Here came was has been an absolute joy of competition, the once and future monsters if the league, South Carolina visiting as the only ranked teams (SC at No. 15) and only undefeated conference teams in the matchup of the week. 

They are two of the teams not to lose at home in conference, SC had won 12 of the past 13 meetings/

Now there is one undefeated in conference.

It started with the usual flurry of overexcitement, missed chances and turnovers. Then Danberry broke underneath for a layup. A minute later she hit another. Te’a Cooper made a layup then fed Tyasha Harris for a 3.

Danberry scored again. Harris hit another 3. 

Reserve Breamber Scott is a replacement for Bibby. She scored a State layup. A Cooper layup was offset by two Anriel Howard free throws. Jazzmun Holmes hit a State jumper, but Mikiah Herbert Harrigan answered underneath. 

McCowan and Cooper traded layups. McCowan made a layup then hit one of two free throws, then two more.

But in the final seconds, Bianca Cuevas-Moore hit a layup and Cooper a 3. The lead was just 26-23 off those unanswered defensive failures.

Cooper had 11, but forwards Alexis Jennings and Herbert Harrigan each had two fouls trying to contain McCowan. Danberry had seven points and McCowan eight.

At the start of the second, SC went on an 11-4 spree. Cooper was 6-of-8 and had 14. State reeled them in and trailed by two. Howard picked up a third foul, so in came Carter. SC was hitting 79 percent from the field, keeping them in the game. They also had 6-of-7 3s.

The inevitable fall of the shooting percentage leveled out. SC was at 54 percent.
State maintained and led by eight with seven minutes left.

McCowan was McCowan, 18 points and 19 rebounds on her way to 28 and 24. 

They maintained a nine-point lead with two and a half left. Schaefer had 11 points from Scott off the bench. That was significant.

SC coach Dawn Staley had stuck with senior starters Alexis Jennings and Cuevas Moore and that was as significant as they scored four and two. 

State thundered into an easy 89-74 win, four in double figures. They won the closing quarter by 14. 

Cooper scored 27. The visitors needed 10 3s to make it even that close.

“Teaira McCowan – she’s one of the all-time greatest when she’s hooked up and playing,” Schaefer said. "She’s been really interested the last two ballgames. I like this side of T.

“She’s been really interested, very focused on technique and very determined."

McCowan is just the second player in the SEC over the past 20 years to have five career games of at least 20 points and 20 rebounds, joining former LSU star Sylvia Fowles.

"My teammates found me," McCowan said. "I knew coming in it was a big game, so I couldn't take a night off. I just had to go and execute the game plan that the coaches gave me throughout the week.

“They’d make a shot and we’d make a shot, they had a run and we had a run. We just needed to make our runs a little longer.”

“I thought we just haven’t been winning, in my opinion, with the toughness plays,” Schaefer said.

“We lost the toughness plays in the first quarter, so that’s a toughness play. Know the clock, contest it and make them go to the hole, and there isn’t enough time. That’s toughness. Not getting the rebound on the free throw, that’s toughness.

“Of course, you are sitting there thinking, ‘Is this going to come back and haunt you?’ But no, it didn’t. Our kids really buckled down on defense and held them to 10 points in the fourth quarter. 

“I thought, as the game went on, and if you are in my practice, we don’t work too much on zone. To see us play it that much tonight and play it that well.

“As the game went on, we got more comfortable with it and became aware of what they were trying to do to us. It’s funny, we did work on it more going into this game than I have all year long. As it turned out, we sure needed it.”

“It helps us,” Staley said. “This road loss helps us, even though we lost. It helps us in the RPI, it helps strength of schedule and that’s what playing in the SEC does.”

SC welcomes Missouri next.

The Bulldogs have been in the Top 10 for 52 straight weeks. They should close the month with three more wins, at Florida, Mississippi and at LSU.

State sophomore forward Bibby – the only non-senior starter -- blew out her left knee 25 seconds into the game. She was in obvious pain. She was helped off the floor and didn't return.

The 6-1 guard is one of the few consistent outside shooters. She's averaged 12.6 points per game while leading 3s in shooting percent (45) and makes (36).

Schaefer already knew Bibby was seriously injured, which was confirmed the next day.

“Chloe Bibby has worked her tail off to be where she is and to see that happen to her just rips your guts out -- rips your heart out,” Schaefer said. “It's very difficult.”

The effervescent Australian is obviously far from home. She is expected to be in the finalist pool for her country’s 2020 Olympics, having already played on the 16-under and 18-under national team.

She will eligible as soon as she recovers, sometime next season,  and can still travel with the team. She was the only non-senior starter.

No. 15 Kentucky (16-3)

The Kats’ only encounter was at LSU, where the Tigers averaged 63.3 points per game this season allowing 52.9. Junior forward Ayana Mitchell leads the team with 13.4 points per game and 9.9 rebounds per game, hitting 57.8 from the field with a team-best 30 steals.

Still, UK had won four of the most recent five games in the series.

Senior Kat Maci Morris (16.8 points per game) skipped the previous game and classmate Taylor Murray (12.3) is trying to build on limited play with a knee injured against Tennessee. They are the No.2 and No.3 scorers on the team.

Murray is again MIA after injuring a knee in the Tennessee loss. 

We reported last week they are learning to play without her, despite an effort for a few minutes in the next game. She has a patella bone bruise.

A previously unannounced injury to leading scorer Rhyne Howard, the undisputed SEC Rookie of the Year until now, also eliminated her from this game.

 Her loss is game-changing.

But boy was Morris back. She scored 20 in the 64-60 road win.

KeKe McKinney hit the dagger, a 3 with a minute left. She had hit 8-of-31 3s all season.

Jaida Roper started at point guard . She drove the lane and kicked out to a wide-open McKinney, who didn’t hesitate to pull the trigger.

“Last year I wouldn’t have hit that shot. But I was confident, and luckily it went in,” McKinney said. “I was like, ‘Boom girl, you did that.’ That’s what my reaction was.”

She closed the game with a free throw. Those were four of her six points.

Of the shot, UK coach Mathew Mitchell said, “You can try and call something but they’re going to switch everything hard on the initial action ... you’ve got to read the situation,” Mitchell said. “They were not going to let Maci Morris touch the ball.

“The one thing we said was ‘Do not shoot a contested shot’ ... that was beautiful. That was great, great execution.”

They drew 1,452.

UK started on a 21-5 run before LSU ended the half on a 9-0 run hitting three 3s in the final two minutes of the second quarter.

The Kats hit 9-of-13 from the field in the first 10 minutes, while LSU was 5-of-16. UK scored eight points off six LSU turnovers, while LSU scored six points off five UK miscues.

LSU answered UK's 16-point lead in the first half with a 17-2 run.

Next, Missouri visits, then Kentucky is at also unranked Texas A&M in a traditionally tough battle. The Aggies lost their first two in conference, then have won three straight.

 Only Missouri, State and South Carolina have won all their SEC home games after Texas A&M won Sunday at Georgia. Those ’Dawgs have lost three of four, with the only win, of course, over Tennessee.

No. 24 Texas A&M (16-3)

The Aggies lost the first two SEC games, then have won three straight, including giving Georgia its first conference loss at home. So they are worthy of being reranked’

The latest wizardy was winning at Georgia, right after Georgia has embarrassed Tennessee. It stopped a 10-game winning streak and obviously was the first SEC  home loss, leaving just South Carolina and Mississippi Stet unbeaten at home in the league.

 No one has won the conference with a home loss for several seasons.

If there is another All-American in conference other than Teaira McCowan, it is
A&M guard Chennedy Carter.
 She never met a shot opportunity she didn’t like.

She scored a season-high 31 at Athens. Teammate and N'dea Jones grabbed 21 rebounds—tied for the second-most in school history.

Jones had brought dozens of fans to Georgia, as that is her home state and this was her first game in Georgia since leaving for A&M.

A&M won easily, 76-66 .

The visitors led, 36-28 at halftime, but Georgia rallied to tie it at 55 with eight minutes to. The Aggies scored on each of their next five possessions to take control of the game with a 12-2 run.

 Carter's 31 points is her first 30-plus of the season, and the eighth of her career. Shambria Washington scored a career-high 15, Kayla Wells also scored 15 and Ciera Johnson had her sixth double/double of the season with 10 points and 11 rebounds.

Georgia coach Joni Taylor noted A&M had more free throws than did her team, 18-of-25 compared to 7-of-9, but owned up as to why.

“I think we need to be more aggressive,” Taylor said. “We fouled them, and we didn't get to the line enough. That starts with getting the ball inside and attacking. They were playing some zone, so we don't get as many opportunities as when they are playing man, but this is the second game that we had single-digit free throw attempts. It means we aren't being aggressive enough to get the ball inside." 

Gary Blair of A&M said, “Firstly, I would like to commend Georgia for having a great crowd (4,773). That is the largest crowd we’ve played at this year because it just so happens that South Carolina, Tennessee and Mississippi State have come to our place.

“We needed to play in front of a crowd like that, that was so good. Georgia, we’re all about the same as far as ability. We all have scorers, rebounders and impact players.

"Fouls can determine a ball game. They got in to more foul trouble than we did. I mean all you have to do is look at the stats, that’s pretty good free throw shooting. But, when Georgia came back and tied it at 55, we stared it in the face and did something about it. It all started with rebounding and defense first."

 A&M won the boards, 47-31.

Jones said, “I think we learned that we can play in an environment like this. We are able to listen to our coaches and keep our composure. We were able to come and complete our goal, to win. It was a big stage, the crowd was good, the band kept booing us but I think we blocked it all out really well. We listened to each other and were really able to communicate with each other.”

Classmate Carter said, “Every game we start out with the confidence that we’re going to  come out and compete. 

“We knew that they were going to come out and throw different defenses at us. I want to say congrats to my teammates. We all stayed composed and calm, we held composure this ball game and led the entire time. That was a big thing for us and we led the entire time because of it.”

Texas A&M stays on the road, at Auburn, then comes home for Kentucky this week