The Guru’s March Madness Report: Day 4 as Rhode Island Unseats George Mason for First A-10 Crown; Villanova Advances to the Big East Title Round; No. 3 South Carolina Upset by No. 4 Texas in SEC Championship
By Mel Greenberg @womhoopsgurux
HENRICO, Va. – Just a short drive from here across the lower Appalachian Mountains from where Tammi Reiss hooked up with Philly’s Dawn Staley short of four decades ago to form one of the all-time collegiate women’s basketball backcourts and lead Virginia to its first ACC championship and onto national prominence, Reiss was back in the Old Dominion State Sunday afternoon to earn another date with history.
Now coach of Rhode Island, a program that had spent most of its history in the depths of the Atlantic 10, Reiss’ Rams (28-4) completed the mission that fell just short two seasons ago against nearby Richmond winning a defensive low-scoring slugfest to unseat reigning tournament champion George Mason 53-51 here at Henrico Sports & Events Center, earning URI it’s first automatic qualifier to the NCAA women’s tournament and second overall appearance.
The last one? They were an at-large choice in 1996.
The way Reiss partook in the Rams celebration after the game’s conclusion, brought recollections of all that energy she provided in Charlottesville and often showed the future coach in her persona the many times she took over postgame press conferences from Hall of Famer Debbie Ryan.
In year 50 of the conference’s existence and 30 years after appearing as a 10th seed losing to Oklahoma, Reiss made sure her team knew of what it had just accomplished after the squad reached the locker room.
“You’ve done something that in 50 years no one else has ever done,” Reiss revealed her post-game words to her players. “The first one feels so good. This one is special because it’s never been done at our school. You can only be first once.”
This tournament saw the high seed win each round, a first since 2001, although George Mason needed a late comeback on Dayton in the quarterfinals and Saint Joseph’s had a potential winning shot denied in the closing seconds against Davidson by an offensive charge call from the officials.
Finland’s post player Albina Gray, the tournament MOP, had nine points and 10 boards, but dominated Rhode Island’s comeback the previous day.
Brooklyn Gray and guard Sophia Vital also were cited, Gray scoring 16 points Sunday and Vital adding to four points she sprayed the stat sheet with seven boards, a pair of assists, two steals and a key make in the closing minutes.
For the Patriots (23-9), Zahirah Walton and Kennedy Harris were the other all-tourney picks, Walton scoring 10 points and Harris 15, while Mary Amoateng provided 13 points.
The two teams tied for first in the regular season a game ahead of preseason favorite Richmond, though Rhode Island went most of the way unbeaten in the A-10 until a stunning upset in Philadelphia delivered by La Salle.
At one point during Reiss’ press conference, speculating on a potential matchup, she grinned and said, “How about South Carolina,” where Staley has had a long coaching stint after leaving Temple in 2008 building the Gamecocks to one of the top programs in the nation.
Early on it appeared George Mason might be the first to go back-to-back in nine seasons taking a lead the way Davidson had done against the Rams in the quarterfinals.
“Give credit to Vanessa (Blair-Lewis) and her squad,” Reiss said. “I knew this game was going to be a drag out knock out war.
“We didn’t start the game with any discipline, so we really went in and settled them down a little bit. We had to remind our team who you are and what you do. They came out and executed, especially defensively.”
Speaking of the co-champions going in, Palmire Mbu said, “Today was our game to prove we were the real champions, and it just feels great.”
As the second half through the third and fourth quarters came along, Rhode Island, defending GMU into a 32.2% overall effort from the field, was able to build a slim lead and hold on to it.
“I thought it was a great game by two powerhouses,” Blair-Lewis said. “It was a slugfest nd both teams really stepped up and competed today. I’m proud of these ladies, three games in three days.
“I just think at the end of the day, we did not put the ball in the hole, the way we needed to. We are still regular seasons champions and to be able to get to this point again, somebody had to win, and somebody had to learn.”
Reiss when asked what the comparison was as a player helping to lead Virginia to its place in history and now Rhode Island, she responded, “It’s different as a coach. When you’re a player, you control the game.
“And I’ve always said, ‘players win games,’ so winning that first one at Virginia was so special.
“It’s why we all went to Virginia. They had never won one. We wanted to be the first. We didn’t want to be another horse in the stable. I always went there for that reason and to get to Final Fours, but as a player, it’s just absolutely fulfilling for all the hard work you do through the course of your career, and Brooklyn said it best, ‘Everything flashes in your mind. All those 6 a.m. track workouts, …, everything flashes when suddenly the buzzer goes off.
“As a coach, I don’t think about myself at all. All I thought about was them. I told them all I cared about was for them to have that feeling, because I know what it feels like as a player to cut down nets and win championships so as a coach it’s completely different.
“It’s like a mother. All you want your child to do is succeed. I have 14 children. It was so fulfilling, but in a different way.”
So far, the act of bid stealing at other mid-majors has been nil, raising the possibility that Richmond and George Mason could be taken by the NCAA as at-large bids.
The data points for the Patriots are a little further off from Richmond, whose coach Aaron Roussell noted after the Spiders’ loss the team had done all necessary to be ahead of the class when it comes to mid-major teams.
A key will be this weekend at Cornell, the site of the Ivy tourney, where No. 23 Princeton with another title, could be the only Ivy team in the field, opposed to three representatives a year ago caused when Harvard won the title.
Princeton is the only one this year believed to have enough to be rescued if failing to add another trophy.
Fast Start on Seton Hall Sends Villanova Against No. 1 UConn for Big East AQ Bid
The Wildcats (25-6) will be a heavy underdog to the defending national champion Huskies Monday night in the Big East title game at 7 p.m. (Peacock) at the Mohegan Sun in Uncasville, Conn., playing UConn (33-0) a third time.
But consider Villanova a lock for the NCAA tourney, after finishing the regular season second in the Big East and making it stand by gaining the title round for the sixth time and first since 2023 with a 62-48 win Sunday afternoon against Seton Hall (19-12), which will end a three-season drought since the run to the Sweet 16 led by Maddy Siegriest.
Coach Denise Dillon’s team also has a chance to be ranked Monday when the next-to-last Associated Press women’s poll is released at noon. The AP has tacked on a final vote right after national championship weekend.
On Sunday, Villanova jumped to a 12-0 lead and then held the Pirates off the rest of the way.
Brynn MccCurry scored 16 points for the Wildcats, who will break the absence of Philly teams on the women’s side. Jasmine Bascoe added 15 points while Seton Hall’s Zahara Bishop and Jordana Codio each scored 13 points.
Codio and Bascoe each passed 30 points in their respective quarterfinal games.
In the opening semifinal game, UConn pulverized Creighton 100-51, Sarah Strong having 23 points, seven rebounds, and six steals on the way to the Huskies’ 22nd straight conference championship, including seven when they were in the American Conference.
Coach Geno Auriemma’s squad has won 49 straight overall dating to a late season loss at Tennessee in 2025, and has won 38 conference tournament games
But it’s the first 100-point game for UConn in Big East tourney competition.
Southern Cal transfer Kayleigh Heckel added nine boards, eight boards and seven assists.
Kennedy Townsend scored 13 for Creighton (16-15).
The Huskies jumped to a 27-4 lead in this one, but in the last meeting at Villanova the Wildcats held a three-point halftime lead.
Strong is the first NCAA women’s star in Division I the last 25 seasons with 500 points, 200 boards, 100 assists, 100 steals, 50 from deep, and 50 blocked shots.
Azzi Fudd has 100 3-pointers on the season joining Kaleena Mosqueda-Lewis and Katie Lou Samuelson as the only Huskies women’s stars with 100 assists and 100 3-pointers the same season.
The National Scene
Eight teams Sunday joined Saturday’s Ohio Valley champion as those winning conference titles.
The most notable was in Greeneville, S.C. at the Southeastern Conference championship where No. 4 Texas (31-3), which joined the conference last season, beat No. 3 South Carolina (31-3), 78-61, as Madison Booker scored 18 points for the Longhorns while Joyce Edwards scored 13 for Dawn Staley’s South Carolina squad.
In the Big Ten in Indianapolis, No. 2 UCLA (31-1), which joined the conference last season, blasted No. 9 Iowa 96-45 to make it back-to-back titles as Utah transfer Gianna Kneepkens scored 18 points against the Hawkeyes (26-6).
Iowa’s Ava Heiden scored 15 points and grabbed four rebounds.
In the Big 12 in Kansas City, No. 15 West Virginia (27-6) deprived No. 10 TCU (29-5) of repeating as champions, winning 62-53 as Jordan Harrison scored 21 points and grabbed six boards for the winning Mountaineers while the Horned Frogs got 17 points from Notre Dame transfer Olivia Miles and 16 points with eight rebounds from Cal transfer Marta Suarez.
The top two teams in the ACC, last of the Power Four leagues here, met with No. 13 Duke (24-8), the top seed, rallying for a 70-65 overtime win against No. 12 Louisville (27-7), the second seed, in Duluth, Georgia, as Taina Mair scoring 19 points with 12 boards and Delaney Thomas matching her teammates’ total.
The Cardinals had led all but five minutes of regulation.
Imari Berry scored 18 for Louisville, while Mackenly Randolph scoring 17 points and grabbing 11 rebounds, playing all 45 minutes.
The Blue Devils’ season was like a reverse bell curved, ranked in the top 10, falling out of the poll, which is in its 50th season, with a 3-6 plunge and then going 21-2 the rest of the way.
Samford upset Chattanooga 72-67 to win the Southern Conference, while Quinnipiac (26-5) in the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference (MAAC) survived in overtime beating Iona 63-62, the Gaels falling to 20-12, and No. 25 Fairfield (27-4) ousted Merrimack 65-48 in the semifinals in Atlantic City, N.J. Setting up a rematch in Monday’s championship at 6 p.m. between the two-time defending champion Stags and Bobcats, who shared the league’ s regular season title.
In Sunday’s huge upset among mid-majors, in the Mountain West quarterfinals in Las Vegas, Air Force (15-17) upset No. 1 seed San Diego State 93-76 and making it unlikely the Aztecs (25-5) will be taken as an at-large entry setting up a stolen bid.
Next season in a big realignment among mid-majors in the West, the Mountain West and West Coast Conferences will lose members to a re-organized Pac-12 retaking Oregon State and Washington State, which spent two seasons in the WCC, and adding perennial WCC contender Gonzaga among its new lineup.
Besides championships in the MAAC and Big East on Monday, in the Sun Belt fourth seed James Madison (25-8) meets Troy (25-6) at 2 p.m. on ESPNU.
Most of the second and final wave of conference affairs this week begin Monday and run, in some cases, right to a few hours this Sunday ahead of the revelation of the NCAA field at 8 p.m. on ESPN.
The top 16 teams, in alphabetical order, but not by seed number, in a new move, will be announced Saturday on ESPN.