Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

TOP 25 WOMEN

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NO. 1 CONNECTICU­T 82, TULANE 56

UNCASVILLE, Conn. — Katie Lou Samuelson scored 21 points to lead No. 1 Connecticu­t to a rout of Tulane in the quarterfin­als of the American Athletic Conference Tournament. Napheesa Collier added 19 points and Azura Stevens chipped in with 15 points and 9 rebounds for Connecticu­t (30-0), which has won 30 games for the 13th consecutiv­e season and 23rd overall. Kolby Morgan had 21 points to lead Tulane, which finishes its season at 14-17.

NO. 3 BAYLOR 94, TCU 48

OKLAHOMA CITY — Kalani Brown scored 28 points and No. 3 Baylor (30-1) rolled past TCU (19-12) in a record-setting Big 12 semifinal for its 27th consecutiv­e victory. Baylor’s 46-point victory was the most-lopsided Big 12 Tournament game ever, topping Iowa State’s 37-point victory over Nebraska in 2000. Lauren Cox had 19 points and 11 rebounds, and Alexis Morris scored a season-high 18 points for Baylor. Jordan Moore and Amy Okonkwo each scored 12 points for TCU.

NO. 4 LOUISVILLE 74, NO. 5 NOTRE DAME 72

GREENSBORO, N.C. — Asia Durr scored 17 points and Sam Fuehring converted a key three-point play in the final minute, helping No. 4 Louisville (32-2) beat No. 5 Notre Dame (29-3) to win its first Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament title. Arica Carter finished with 16 points and hit four three-pointers, Fuehring and Myisha Hines-Allen each finished with 15, and Durr — the ACC Player of the Year — hit four free throws in the final seconds to help the top-seeded Cardinals win their first conference tournament since 1993. Jessica Shepard had 23 points and 10 rebounds, and Arike Ogunbowale added 20 points for the second-seeded Fighting Irish (29-3), who failed to win the ACC Tournament for the first time since joining the league. They had won the previous four years.

NO. 6 OREGON 77, NO. 16 STANFORD 57

scored No. SEATTLE 6 Oregon a career-high — (30-4) Sabrina 36 won points Ionescu its first and Pac-12 Conference tournament title beating No. 16 Stanford (22-10). Ionescu, who was the Pac-12 player of the year, was brilliant early, scoring 12 points in the first quarter. She took over late in the third quarter as Oregon held a double-digit lead most of the second half. Ionescu scored 19 points in the second half. Alanna Smith led Stanford with 17 points, but Brittany McPhee struggled and finished with just 12 points.

NO. 7 TEXAS 68, WEST VIRGINIA 55

Jatarie White scored 11 points to help No. 7 Texas (26-5) beat West Virginia (21-11) in a Big 12 semifinal. Ariel Atkins, Joyner Holmes and Alecia Sutton each scored 10 points for the Longhorns, who have won 12 of 13. Texas will play No. 3 Baylor for the title tonight. Naomi Davenport scored 17 points and Kristina King added 12 for West Virginia, which was the defending tournament champion.

NO. 13 OHIO STATE 79, NO. 17 MARYLAND 69

INDIANAPOL­IS — Kelsey Mitchell scored 25 points and No. 13 Ohio State (26-6) beat No. 17 Maryland (25-6) to win the Big Ten women’s basketball tournament. Maryland ended the third quarter on a 12-2 scoring run and continued to climb back into the game early in the fourth. The Terrapins pulled within two points with about four minutes left to play in the game but the Buckeyes were too much for Maryland. Maryland shot an abysmal 23 percent while Ohio State shot 57 percent from 20 points the floor. for Maryland Kaila Charles and Kristen scored Confroy added 17 points for the Terrapins.

NO. 20 SOUTH FLORIDA 80, EAST CAROLINA 44

20 East UNCASVILLE, South Carolina scored Florida (16-15) 23 Conn. (25-6) points — in to to Maria the a lead rout quarterfin­als Jespersen No. of of the American Athletic Conference Tournament. Kitija Laksa added 21 points for the Bulls (25-6), who jumped out to a 9-2 lead were never threatened. USF led by 12 points at the half and used a 20-6 run to build that to 6033 after three periods. Freshman Lashonda Monk had 11 points to lead East Carolina, which beat SMU in the tournament’s opening round and finishes its season at 16-15.

NO. 25 MERCER 68, EAST TENNESSEE STATE 53

Southern ASHEVILLE, Conference N.C. — MVP Three-time Kahlia Lawrence added an NCAA Tournament berth to her resume, scoring 29 points and leading No. 25 Mercer (30-2) to a victory over East Tennessee State (20-11) in the championsh­ip game. Alex Williams added 14 points and KeKe Calloway 11 for Mercer, whose only appearance in the NCAA Tournament was at the Division II level in 1985.

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