The Guru’s NCAAW Final Four Semifinals Roundup: A Philly Tango as Auriemma’s UConn Group and Staley’s South Carolina Squad Advance to Sunday’s Title Game
By Mel Greenberg @womhoopsguru
TAMPA, Fla. – The names may read South Carolina and UConn but after the Gamecocks (35-3) made it three out of four on their new Southeastern Conference rival Texas Longhorns (35-4) this season Friday night with a 74-57 triumph here in Amalie Arena followed by the Huskies (36-3) ripping overall No. 1 seed UCLA 85-51 in the NCAA Women’s Final Four national semifinals, the weekend games have transformed into Sunday afternoon’s Super Bowl of Philly women’s basketball coaches.
In this corner attempting the tournament’s first back-to-back championship since the 2015-16 conclusion of a four-peat by UConn featuring Breanna Stewart is South Carolina’s Dawn Staley while in the other looking to end an eight-year near-decade drought since pulling that feat is Huskies coach Geno Auriemma, whose team owns an NCAA record 11 titles by either men or women.
Auriemma, who grew up in Norristown and now has an ongoing NCAA best record of 1,249 victories by men or women, chuckled at the notion that a month-and-a-half after the NFL Eagles claimed their superiority over the Kansas Chiefs that within the same period in the home of the local NHL franchise UConn will be looking to make lightning strike twice in a second straight blowout of the Gamecocks this time enabling superstar Paige Bueckers to conclude an injury-ridden collegiate career realizing her dream of a national championship before moving on likely as the top choice in next month’s WNBA draft by the Dallas Wings.
“In the last seven, eight, nine years, they’ve played basketball at an exceptionally high level,” Auriemma said. “When you think about the Final Fours they’ve been to, to the consistency of their program and their ability to win national championships multiple times (three) and to be in position to win back-to-back ones, these are all things that are incredibly difficult to sustain in this day and age.
“We’ve certainly played each other a number of times in big, big, games. We’ve already played each other once in a national championship game,” he referenced the 2022 event won by South Carolina. “So, it does feel like the two most prominent right now in women’s basketball are playing for the right to be national champions.
“And we both deserve it. They deserve to be here. We deserve to be here. They have every right to win Sunday. We have every right to win Sunday. Past performances, what happened last year isn’t going to be a factor on what happens Sunday. Our 11 national championships aren’t going to help us win Sunday,” Auriemma said.
“So, the fact that we have Philadelphia connections, University of Virginia connections, and all that USA Basketball stuff we’ve done together, yeah, it’s a nice story. But I don’t think Dawn is going to give me kudos or any breaks for the senior citizen that I am. I don’t think she’s going to have any sympathy me for Sunday.”
Neither team had much sympathy for their opponents Friday night, Texas, a No. 1 seed that hadn’t been this far since 2003 when in the same round the Longhorns were about to clip UConn, only to lose when the now retired Diana Taurasi rallied the New Englanders to prevail and win another title over Tennessee two days later.
UCLA (34-3) was making the Bruins’ first NCAA Final Four appearance though in the pre-NCAA period they won an AIAW national crown under four-time all-American Ann Myers-Drysdale in 1978.
In Friday’s opener Texas took an early lead going up by eight on Staley’s group before the differential got sliced to one at the end of the first period. Early in the second, the Gamecocks pulled slightly ahead gave it back but was ahead at the half 38-35.
South Carolina looked like the thundering champions of the past in the third quarter dominating 20-9, an advantage to ride safely to the keys to one side of Sunday’s showdown.
Auriemma was perfect in 11 straight trips playing the title game until Staley stopped him in 2022 and she has won all three but in 2023 she fell in the semifinals to the Caitlin Clark Iowa bunch in the semifinals and then avenged the loss against the Hawkeyes in Clark’s farewell collegiate game last season in the championship in Cleveland.
Oregon transfer Te-Hina Paopao scored 14 in the grindout defensive outcome.
“Nothing that happened prior to here is going to help us on Sunday,” Staley said unknowing here opponent at the time but having lost big to both of them during the season, including the 87-58 loss at home to Connecticut at Colonial Life Arena in Columbia on Feb. 16
Preseason, the teams were No. 1 for the Gamecocks coming out of the championship of a year ago while UConn with Bueckers was second making it the seventh time the 1-2 Associated Press preseason squads made it to the title round in the 43-year history of the NCAA tourney.
In addition to Paopao, freshman Joyce Edwards had 13 points, 11 boards and six assists for the winners while Bree Hall was the third S.C. player in double figures with 11 points.
The Gamecocks were punishing inside with a 40-22 advantage.
Texas’ Madison Booker scored 11.
“Not our best tonight,” said Texas coach Vic Schaefer who was at the Final Four with Mississippi State in 2017 and 2018 and returned to the SEC this season when the Longhorns with Oklahoma jumped from the Big 12.
UCLA was also jumper, leaving with the trio of crosstown rival Southern Cal, Oregon and Washington from the collapsing PAC-12 to the Big Ten.
“But it wasn’t because they weren’t out there battling and trying,” Schaefer said of the loss. “We lost to the better team tonight.”
Staley’s team secret this season is a change with depth through the bench which leads the nation and the Gamecocks collected 35 points from the reserves against Texas.
Tessa Johnson got nine of those and Milaysia Fulwiley scored seven.
Of the early Texas lead, Paopao said, “Basketball is a game of runs. They went on their run. We went on our run. And we came out with the win, so I’m proud of our win.”
Through the realignment and way season played out with the two teams tying for the regular season title, the third meeting in the championship won by the Gamecocks and Friday night made it 17 times two teams met four times during the season.
Meanwhile in a season of firsts, getting to No. 1 in the poll, among others, UCLA, with its most wins ever, was stoped from getting to its first NCAA title game after making a first trip to the Final Four.
Connecticut freshman Sarah Strong, whose mother Allison Feaster was on the Harvard team that upset Stanford, the first 16-1 upset in tourney history, scored 22, while
Azzi Fudd scored 19, all in the first half, and Bueckers had 16, stopping a streak of three straight games over 30, one for 40 points.
Auriemma said having more good players breeds success that if it was just Bueckers’ performance Friday, 12 months ago, “we wouldn’t have made it to the Final Four. If she had the game, she had today the previous year, it would be almost impossible for us to win.”
In his opening remarks he lauded his team’s performance as perfect.
“We aren’t worried about the past,” Bueckers said. “Every single day you walk into the gym and live up up to the standard of playing UConn basketball. Not comparing yourself to other teams and players before. Wear the jersey with pride.”
Lauren Betts, the all-American center at UCLA, scored 26 points but no other teammate did nearly as well.
Fudd and Strong got UConn rolling, making this the team Huskies fans thought they’d see three years ago before the injuries began to pile up.
“It’s so much fun to watch her play with joy and be at this stage,” Bueckers said of Fudd. “You see all the ups and downs, the bad days, the good days and to be at this spot where it’s the light at the end of the tunnel and for her to perform and be at this stage, it means everything to us.”
UCLA had no graduating seniors, prompting Cori Close, the WBCA and AP coach of the year to note that once the sting of the loss wears off, there will be plenty to take from the setback to build for the future.
The last Big Ten team to win a title was Purdue in 1999.
In UConn being from the Big East, the Huskies, one of the few non-Power 4 schools to go deep in the field, were a two seed, beating No. 1 Southern Cal in the Elite Eight, at that point the Trojans without player of the year JuJu Watkins, who suffered a season-ending ACL right knee injury five minutes into the second round win at home in the Galen Center.
“Learn from this and be better next time,” Close said, conceding that both UConn’s talent and her team’s shortcomings were both contributors to the Bruins’ demise.
Asked to compare the Huskies to South Carolina, Close considered the measure not practical.
“It’s two different systems so it will be a matter of which can get its system going against the other.”
Paopao said of facing the Huskies, “We’re going to be prepared and be ready. It’s going to be a 40-minute battle.”
This is a record 24th Final Four for Auriemma and 18th of the last 19.
A win Sunday would make it three straight over No. 1 seeds, the fourth school to do so and the first since since Baylor in 2005 while the others traveling to a title were Tennessee in 1987 and Louisiana Tech in 1978.
“We prayed, we prepared and hoped to be playing on the last day of the season,” Bueckers said. We got that opportunity, so we don’t want to take it for granted.”