The Guru’s March Madness Local/National Report Day 3: Rhode Island meets George Mason for A-10 Title; Villanova meets Seton Hall in a Big East Semifinal; The Four Majors Ticket Punching to Occur
By Mel Greenberg @womhoopsguru
HENRICO, Va. – The two teams who shared the regular season championship of the Atlantic 10 — Rhode Island (27-4) and George Mason (23-8) — will play for the tournament title and automatic bid to the NCAA championship here at the Henrico Sports & Events Center Sunday afternoon at 4 p.m. (ESPN2).
For the second straight year, the preseason favorite, Richmond (26-7), which was third just a game behind in the final standings, was dispatched in Saturday’s semifinals, but unlike last year’s last second win by Saint Joseph’s, the Spiders were thoroughly chewed up by their geographic rival Patriots from up the road in suburban Washington after taking a 12-8 lead out of the first quarter for a 60-45 victory.
In the opener, Rhode Island, coached by former Virginia star Tammi Reiss who shared the backcourt with Dawn Staley in the Cavaliers’ glory years, used a strong second half to finally break away from top-seed Davidson (21-12) to prevail 55-46.
George Mason, which ended up handling Saint Joseph’s in last year’s title game, gave Richmond the same treatment in a dominating fashion following Friday’s stirring overtime comeback on Dayton, winning before the game-clock expired, to advance.
The Patriots relied on their All-Conference First team duo of Zahirah Walton (24 points, nine rebounds) and Kennedy Harris (18 points) to take care of business while on the defensive side GMU was able to limit Richmond’s conference player of the year Maggie Doogan, out of Broomall in suburban Philadelphia and Cardinal O’Hara to 10 points on a 5-for-18 struggle from the field.
“The ladies were locked in today,” said George Mason coach Vanessa Blair-Lewis. “We knew we had to come out and be formidable on defense because they have a really good offensive squad.
“I really thought the ladies were locked in and Za and Ken put the nail in the coffin offensively.”
Richmond, with a big supporting crowd in the stands off the program’s near-by location, had more time to see their approaching demise opposed to the sudden sting of defeat 12 months ago applied by Saint Joseph’s finish.
“Obviously, a really tough one today both personally but also as a program,” said Richmond coach Aaron Roussell. “We wanted this and everybody knows how bad I wanted this for everyone in our program.
“When it ends it hits hard and it doesn’t feel good. We know we’re a really good team; it wasn’t our day today; we just didn’t have it. We went against a team that knows us very well. We had a sense it was going to to be one of those slugfests, but they made some big shots today and had some players step up.
In a make-or-miss sport, it didn’t go our way today.”
Following Richmond’s play in the opening period, George Mason harnessed the momentum in the next opening on an 8-0 run and applying the Spiders with a scoring drought of 5:40 that began late in the first period.
A 12-0 run in the third quarter by the Patriots provided a comfortable advantage and every time the Spiders would score as the game continued George Mason would come right back and answer the score.
“Before we left Fairfax, we said everybody had to be ready,” Blair-Lewis said. “This is everybody’s championship. This is everybody’s run run, so everybody has to be ready.
“There was no concern of putting Page (Greenburg) in nor would there have been anyone,” Blair said referencing a pair of rebounds enabling GMU to keep applying the heat.
“She knows the impact and what she has to do. She knew you have to rebound, especially this time in the game. Page has stayed ready.”
Rhode Island, meanwhile, is going back to the title game for the second time in three seasons, losing the previous one to Richmond’s first capture of Atlantic 10 bragging rights.
The Rams blitzed the conference going unbeaten on the league slate until La Salle delivered a stunner late last month in the game in Philadelphia.
Finland’s Albina Syla was the ticket in this one for Rhode Island scoring 22 points off 11-for-14 from the field, with 14 rebounds while the Rams’ fiesty guard Sophia Vital from Cambridge, Mass., added 10 points.
Davidson’s Charlise Dunn, who led the Wildcats in Friday’s tight quarterfinal victory over Saint Joseph’s, had 15 points, the only Davidson player scoring in double figures.
“The second half was our half,” Reiss said. “We got back to what we do discipline wise, and they executed a game plan to a T.
“I woke them up a little bit at halftime about what we had to do offensively and taking care of the basketball,” Reiss continued.
“Albina getting on the boards and starting us off, she just dominated the boards for us where no one else was going. We rode on her shoulders today. Soph was a one-man show, she was a gnat out there. They did a great job controlling the game.”
Davidson went into the halftime break up 29-25 off blockading URI from connecting from the field the final 5:32 of the half.
Following Reiss’ wake-up talk, the Rams took control in the third quarter as Syla scored 12 points and the Rams went into the final quarter up 41-38.
“I feel like I’m confident with everybody else, so I feel like it is time to be confident in myself,” Syla said of her performance. “That’s when you just get to turn it on and keep playing as hard as you can.”
The Rams went into a 12-2 run during the last period while Davidson was just under six minutes without a point as Rhode Island kept working to get further away from Davidson.
“We had these three goals at the beginning of the season and one of them was to have the best chemistry, to be the most together team and I think it is really showing,” Vital said. “We’re staying together and we’re really locked in on that one big goal, winning that championship.”
Villanova Takes Big East Opener on Bascoe’s Career Night
Out of a long break from Villanova’s season ender and the start of its play in the Big East tournament at the Mohegan Sun in Uncasville, Conn., earning a first-round bye, the second seeded Wildcats erupted in the third period and lived off Jasmine Bascoe’s career-best 31 points to have a cushion to sustain a late comeback from the Friars (15-18) and make it a 3-0 sweep on the season with a 73-65 victory as coach Denise Dillon’s team (24-6) moved into Sunday’s semifinals at 5 p.m. on Peacock, against Seton Hall (19-11).
The Pirates advanced on St. John’s 63-61 as Jordana Codio made two foul shots with a minute left for the winning points as Seton Hall played defense the rest of the way.
Codio was also hot with 35 points but will face Villanova having lost both games in the season series.
The Wildcats, who also got a double double from freshman Kennedy Henry with 13 points and 12 boards while Denae Carter was 5-for-8 from the field, as was Henry, scoring 10 points and grabbing six boards, will likely become a lock for the NCAA by advancing to the title game Monday night.
Henry also was 3-for-4 from distance.
On the other side, No. 1 UConn (32-0), the defending NCAA champion, continued to roll, easily dispatching Georgetown 84-39 to reach the semifinals playing Creighton (16-14), a 57-44 winner over Marquette (18-12).
Serah Williams, a transfer post player from Wisconsin, collected 12 of her 14 points in the first half, while Sarah Strong had 11 points, Azzi Fudd scored 10 to improve the winning streak to 48 games dating back to its launch last season following a loss at Tennessee.
KK Arnold added 12 points.
The Huskies have beaten the Hoyas 43 straight games, are also on 37-straight conference tourney game win streak.
Strong joined former Huskies Nykesha Sales, Jennifer Rizzotti, Rita Williams, Moriah Jefferson, and Gabby Williams as the only UConn players with 100 season steals on the women’s side.
The semifinal game involving coach Geno Auriemma,’s team is at 2:30 p.m. on Peacock.
Penn Gets Revenge While No. 23 Princeton Gets First
It was a bittersweet ending Saturday afternoon for the Penn women on senior day at The Palestra, the Quakers (17-10, 7-7) getting revenge with a 69-56 victory on Brown (16-10, 8-6), whose double overtime win earlier up at Providence knocked coach Mike McLaughlin’s team out of the four-team Ivy Madness this weekend at Cornell’s Newman Arena in Ithaca, N.Y.
Katie Collins and Simone Sayer each scored 17 points, Mataya Gayle had 13 with a perfect 3-for-3 from deep, and Brooke Suttle scored 10.
Elsewhere as seeds were to be decided for the tourney, the day started with No. 23 Princeton (24-3, 12-2) and Columbia (20-7, 11-3) tied for first and Columbia off a 2-0 sweep of the Tigers.
But that’s not how it ended.
Princeton at home in Jadwin Gym got off to a ragged start on Yale but rallied for a 78-55 victory over the Bulldogs.
Fadima Tall scored 22 points and Madison St. Rose had 17 enabling the Tigers to make good on the preseason forecast with a No. 1 finish and top seed because Harvard (17-10, 10-4) upset Columbia 68-64 and will face the Lions in the semifinal game while Princeton plays Brown on Friday, winners meeting Saturday for the NCAA automatic qualifier.
Princeton is the only team capable of an at-large from the Ivies this season as opposed to three overall teams made history advancing last season.
Temple Closes Out Regular Season With a Bounceback Win
Once endangered recently from not making the American tournament this week on Tuesday, the Owls recovered from a rock bottom loss to South Florida in Tampa on Wednesday to beat FAU 84-56 and finish at 14-16 and 8-10 overall in seventh place.
Coach Diane Richardson’s team will open in Birmingham, Ala., Tuesday playing tenth seed Tulane (11-19, 6-12) at 3 p.m.
The winner faces sixth-seed UTSA Wednesday at 3 p.m.
In the win Saturday over FAU, Kelian Cedano scored 16 points for a career-high and Savannah Curry shot 4-for-6 from the field for 12 points.
“I thought we played well,” Richardson said. “I thought our defense was great and we all played together.”
Drexel Earns Third Seed for Coastal Athletic Association Tournament
The Dragons’ winning ways were blunted Saturday in the regular season final, Towson, coached by former Maryland star and Philly great Laura Harper, winning 74-58.
As a result, Drexel (20-9, 13-5) will drop one spot lower to third, still with a double bye into Friday’s quarterfinals in the Coastal Athletic Association in the nation’s capital.
In the loss to Towson, Ameris Baker scored 25 points while Julia Garcia Roig dealt six assists.
Charleston will be the No. 1 seed and ECU the second seed.
Delaware, which lost its season finale the previous day, will open in Game #1in the Conference USA tourney as the eighth seed facing ninth seed Kennesaw Tuesday at 12:30 p.m. on ESPN+.
The National Scene
The first team into the field of 68 NCAA women’s tournament will be Western Illinois, which became the Ohio Valley champion Western Illinois, which beat Lindenwood 71-65.
On Sunday, the Power 4 conference champion entries into the national field will be decided.
In the Atlantic Coast Conference 12th ranked Louisville (27-6) meets 13th ranked Duke, the Blue Devils advanced with a slim 65-63 win over Notre Dame (22-10) as the Fighting Irish missed three straight shots in the final 11 seconds.
Taina Mair had 16 points for Duke with eight rebounds and Toby Fournier had 14 points and eighth boards while Hannah Hidalgo scored 24 points for Notre Dame with eight rebounds.
Louisville beat third seed North Carolina 65-57 to advance as Imari Berry scored 22 points and collected 10 rebounds.
Saint Joseph’s transfer Laura Ziegler had 13 points for the winning Cardinals.
In the Big 12, defending champion No. 10 TCU (29-4) goes against No. 15 West Virginia (26-6) at 5 p.m. on ESPN.
TCU downed Cinderella Kansas State 74-62 in Saturday’s semifinals as Marta Suarez, a Cal transfer, scored 14 of her 22 points in the third quarter.
Jordan Speiser had 16 points for the Wildcats.
On the other side, No. 15 West Virginia (26-6) got a go-ahead shot score from deep in the final minute from Gia Cook, who had 14 points in the Mountaineers’ 48-47 win over Colorado.
In the Big Ten, No. 2 ULA (30-1) kept pace nationally with the Big East’ UConn, beating No.11 Ohio State 72-62 in Indianapolis where the Bruins on Sunday will face No. 9 Iowa (26-5), which advanced with a 59.
Kiki Rice led UCLA with 17 points, with four teammates also scoring in double figures. The Hawkeyes (26-5) eliminated No. 8 Michigan 59-42 as Ava Heiden scored 16 points and Hannah Stuelke and Chazadi Wright each scored 13 points.
Iowa will meet UCLA at 2:15 p.m. on CBS.
In the Southeastern Conference, No. 3 South Carolina (31-2) meets No. 4 Texas (30-3) after Dawn Staley’s Gamecocks on Saturday continued to beat No. 6 LSU (27-5) as Raven Johnson scored a career-high 22 points and Joyce Edwards scored 15 of her 18 points in the second half.
Texas handled No. 24 Ole Miss 85-68 as Madison Booker had 31 points and 11 rebounds.
The Rebels had advanced to face the Longhorns upsetting No. 5 Vanderbilt.
In MAAC semifinals Sunday in Atlantic City, N.J., No. 25 Fairfield plays Merrimack, the two-time defending champions on the verge of returning the title game again Monday and facing last year’s opponent Quinnipiac, which meets Iona at noon on ESPN+ before the Stags play at 2:30 p.m. on ESPN+.
In the Southern Conference at noon on ESPNU Chattanooga plays Samford, while in the Summit League South Dakota State and North Dakota State play for the title at 4 p.m. on CBSSN.
The Big South winner gets determined between Radford and High Point at 6 p.m. on ESPN2.