UConn Huskies Dethrone Defending National Champion Stanford
No. 2 seed UConn defeated No. 1 seed and defending national champion Stanford 63-58 on Friday in the NCAA women's basketball tournament national semifinals to advance to the program's first national title game since 2016.
The Huskies (30-5) will take on 1-seed South Carolina (34-2) for the championship Sunday at 8 p.m. ET on ESPN. The Gamecocks have been the top-ranked team all season. They are 2-9 against UConn all time but have won two of the past three meetings, including a 73-57 win on Nov. 22 in the Bahamas.
UConn is 11-0 in the national title game in program history. The Huskies, whose last championship came in 2016, are looking to avoid their longest streak without a title since they won their first in 1995.
UConn coach Geno Auriemma's squad, which had the program's most regular-season losses since 2004-05 as it weathered the storm of extended midseason injuries to Paige Bueckers and Azzi Fudd, could become the first team since Baylor in 2005 to take down three No. 1 seeds on its way to winning the national title.
"Coming in, I don't think we're the best team there," Auriemma said. "I don't think we can win even if we play our A game. We need help. We need Stanford to not play their best game. We need them to miss shots they normally make. ... Fortunately for us, Stanford didn't have their best stuff, and we made a couple big plays, and by some unknown miracle, we're playing Sunday night."
Stanford entered the contest hoping to keep alive its goal of becoming the fourth team in NCAA tournament history to repeat as national champion, joining USC, UConn and Tennessee.
UConn led for 36:44, but Stanford cut an eight-point Huskies' advantage with 1:26 remaining to two twice in the final 25 seconds. Huskies senior Christyn Williams hit a pair of free throws with 11 seconds left, and sophomore Aaliyah Edwards added one with four seconds left to seal the win.
The contest featured a matchup between the two winningest coaches in the sport -- Auriemma and Stanford's Tara VanDerveer have combined 2,306 wins -- and was the fifth national semifinal matchup between the programs.
Bueckers and redshirt senior Evina Westbrook led the Huskies with 14 and 12 points, respectively. Stanford junior Haley Jones and sophomore Cameron Brink combined for 35 of the Cardinal's 58 points.
UConn's defense and rebounding didn't make much easy for the typically poised Cardinal. The Huskies controlled the glass, outrebounding Stanford by nine, and held Stanford to 4-for-23 shooting on 3s. Even when they did get open looks, the Cardinal made just six of 20 uncontested jump shots.
At times, Stanford looked aimless on offense, a glaring reminder of the absence of former point guard Kiana Williams, who led the Cardinal to their title last season before getting drafted into the WNBA.
"A lot of times in I think NCAA play, it's really, I want to say guard play [makes a difference]," VanDerveer said. "I give so much credit to Lacie [Hull] for what she did for us and Anna Wilson, who never really played point for us, to be able to step up and do what they did, but tonight we needed more. ... A lot of that is just, I think, the experience of running a team, and I think it caught up with us tonight."
UConn was called for nearly twice the number of fouls as Stanford in the first half; Edwards and Fudd played just eight and 11 minutes, respectively, in that span after each picked up two fouls. Then senior Olivia Nelson-Ododa, the Huskies' only big remaining after graduate Dorka Juhasz was lost to a season-ending wrist injury in the Elite Eight, was forced to play through her own pair of fouls. But Stanford failed to take advantage, holding the lead for just 34 seconds during the first 20 minutes and trailing by one at the half.
UConn extended its edge to eight early in the fourth quarter off a Williams 3 and Nelson-Ododa's trip to the line, and the Huskies led by eight again with 1:26 to play off a pair of Edwards' free throws.
Stanford made just enough plays and took advantage of some UConn turnovers down the stretch to make things close, and Brink's layup pulled the Cardinal within two with 18.4 on the clock before Williams' free throws sealed the game.
UConn women grind out Final Four victory over Stanford
The UConn women’s basketball team has never lost a national championship game, but the Huskies have had trouble getting there the last few years.
It’s been a long drought since 2016 for a program that has won 11 titles.
But Friday night, UConn was back. The Huskies held off defending champion Stanford 63-58 in front of 18,268 at the Target Center to advance to the national championship game Sunday, where the Huskies will face South Carolina at 8 p.m.
Paige Bueckers led UConn (30-5) with 14 points, Evina Westbrook had 12 and Christyn Williams had 10.
“I said the other day, points are hard to come by in this tournament,” UConn coach Geno Auriemma said. “Today was no different. You’re going to have to win some other way. You just have to tough it out. You have to rebound the ball better, play defense better, get to the loose balls, make the free throws.
“We did the things we needed to do when we had to do them. We came up big. It was pretty remarkable, to be honest with you.”
The UConn seniors — Westbrook, Williams and Olivia Nelson-Ododa — simply didn’t want their careers to end. Each struggled in their own way at times, but each also came up with big plays to fuel the win.
“We knew it was going to be a tough one,” Westbrook said. “Stanford’s a great team. They put up a great fight, it was a great game. But at the same time, in the back of our minds, we knew what we needed to do to win this game and I think our defense was the biggest emphasis for us, especially in that second half.”
Westbrook had nine points in the first half. Williams, who struggled to shoot much of the game, going 3 for 13 from the field, hit a 3-pointer at the end of the third quarter and another early in the fourth. Nelson-Ododa, who picked up her fourth foul with 4:22 left in the game, had a big basket and free throws early in the fourth quarter. She ended up with 10 rebounds and eight points.
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