By Bob Phillips
Katie Lou Samuelson (33) drives against Notre Dame's Jackie Young (5). Young had a career-best 32 points to lead the Irish over the Huskies in the national semifinal game, 91-89 in OT. |
Diminutive guard guard Arike Ogunbowale delivered the
knock-out punch for ND with one second remaining in overtime. This was the
fourth time the Irish have defeated the Huskies in the national semifinals
dating back to 2001, the year Notre Dame won its only national championship to
date. (2011 and 2012 were the other years the Irish knocked out the Huskies in
the national semifinals.)
Notre Dame was playing with a short roster thanks to not
one, not two, not three, but four
players out with torn ACLs. And up against a team that came into the contest
with an unblemished 36-0 record, the Irish’s challenge was immense. But largely
on the back of Ogunbowale (27 points) and Jackie Young (a career-best 32 points
to go along with , the Irish wore down the Huskies and ultimately prevailed.
Jessica Shepard added 11 points and 11 boards for Notre Dame, which improved to
34-3 and advances to the national championship game against Mississippi State
on Easter Sunday night.
Napheesa Collier led Connecticut with 24 points, while Azura
Stevens added 19, Katie Lou Samuelson 16, Gabby Williams 12, and Kia Nurse had
10 in her last game as a Huskie. Gabby Williams had a double-double (12 points,
10 boards) in what would ultimately also be her last game with UConn.
“There's nothing you can say to a college kid after
experiencing this two years in a row that's going to make them feel any better
about, you know,” UConn head coach Geno
Auriemma said. “We had an amazing run for five months. That's just the way
it is. One weekend in March gets to decide your season.”
And so now it’s back to the drawing board for Auriemma and
his Huskies. After Connecticut’s second straight heartbreaking loss in the
national semis, there has been some talk that the Huskies’ undisputed national dominance
might be on the wane. That’s highly unlikely, so long as Auriemma remains at
the helm of the Huskies’ ship, and according to The New York Times, Geno, now 64, has hinted that he may coach
until he’s 70. Not good news for the rest of college basketball.
And let us not forget, the nation’s top recruit, 5-11 guard
Christyn Williams from Arkansas, is Storrs-bound next season.
“UConn is still the king and queen and leader of the pack,” noted
Joanne P. McCallie, head coach at Duke. “Let’s look at the next four years.
That will be the pattern to evaluate.” Connecticut defeated Duke in the Albany
Region semifinals last week.
The Irish came out
firing on all cylinders, Geno, leading by 13 in the first quarter, and were
down five with 21 seconds to go in regulation. And then, there was the
overtime, where the Huskies met their match for the second straight year—both times
on a buzzer-beater.
“Some things
just don't need explanations, you know,” said Auriemma. “You really can't
describe what goes into… what goes into getting here and trying to win a
championship. It's very, very
difficult. For a long, long time, we made it look like it was easy, but it's
very, very difficult, as it's played
out the last two years.”
The Huskies led by seven points at intermission, and were up
by three at the third turn. But the Irish rallied, and were leading by five with
under a minute to go in regulation before Napheesa
Collier hit a 3-pointer with 15 seconds left and Kia
Nurse had a steal for a layup a few seconds later to tie it. After Notre
Dame turned it over with 3.6 seconds left in regulation, Gabby
Williams' runner was short, sending the game to overtime.
“I think it was one of those games where, obviously, it was
just a grind back and forth the entire game, and it was just a battle,” said
Nurse, the Canadian national and a sure-fire first-round pick in the upcoming
WNBA draft. “I think, like coach said, there were so many times they could have
put us away, and we clawed and clawed and clawed our way back into it and made
big play after big play. So I'm proud of my team and the way they played in
that section.”
“Well, there's really not a whole lot that you can say in a
moment like that, to have a game like that and then come up short,” a
disappointed Auriemma said after the game. “We knew we were playing a great
team, obviously, and we knew they had a lot of players that could decide the
game. They thought they had us put away a couple of times, and we kept coming
back and coming back, and we just ran out of time.”
Ironically, before the NCAA Tournament this year, Auriemma told
a group of UConn supporters to enjoy the current wave of success while they can
because “this isn’t going to last forever.”
Boy, was he ever right.
—with staff reports
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