Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Former CAC standout Christyn Williams leads No. 2 Connecticu­t past No. 1 Notre Dame.

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NO. 2 CONNECTICU­T 89, NO. 1 NOTRE DAME 71

SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Geno Auriemma believes there’s a lot to like about Connecticu­t’s latest star in the making, freshman Christyn Williams (Central Arkansas Christian).

Williams scored 16 of her season-high 28 points in the first quarter to help the No. 2 Huskies dominate No. 1 Notre Dame 89-71 on Sunday.

“Christyn adds a big dimension to our team,” Auriemma said of his 5-foot-11 guard from Little Rock. “She’s fearless. I was upset we didn’t give it to her more in the second quarter (when Williams had zero points). I wish she was 6-3. She is one of the rare individual­s that comes along that know who they are. She knows who she is.”

Williams hit 7 of 8 shots in the first quarter on way to making 11 of 16 in the game to lead five Huskies in double figures. Her 16 first-quarter points were one off her previous game high of 17 points against Purdue on Nov. 24.

“I didn’t even know I did that,” Williams said. “I was just being aggressive, listening to my coaches and playing off my teammates. We wanted this one bad.”

It was Williams’ basket with 6:36 left in the first quarter that gave UConn an 8-6 lead that it would not

relinquish against Muffet McGraw’s 7-1 Irish, who saw their 28-game winning streak at home ended by the Huskies. UConn has all three victories against Notre Dame in its last 100 home games at the Purcell Pavilion.

Napheesa Collier had 16 points along with 15 rebounds and 3 blocks, All-American Katie Lou Samuelson had 15 points after being held scoreless in the first half, Crystal Dangerfiel­d scored 13 points and Megan Walker added 12 for the 7-0 Huskies.

“I thought Christyn Williams was phenomenal,” McGraw said of the player the Irish also tried to recruit. “She was the real difference in the game.”

Jackie Young, who had 32 points in the teams’ last meeting in the NCAA semifinals when the Irish won 91-89 in overtime on Arike Ogunbowale’s first of two buzzer-beaters in the Women’s Final Four, led five Irish players in double figures with 18 points.

Ogunbowale finished with 17 points, but only 5 after halftime, and grabbed 10 rebounds for the Irish. Jessica Shepard had 13 points, Marina Mabrey 11 and Brianna Turner had 10 points and 4 blocks for Notre Dame.

“I thought a defensive transition was poor, I thought our half-court defense was poor, I thought our offensive execution was poor and then we lost our poise and that was unexpected,” McGraw said. “This time, the team we played was good enough to take advantage of it. We’re a better team than we showed.”

UConn led 27-22 after the first quarter and 44-41 at halftime despite getting no points from the 6-foot-3 Samuelson, who was 0-for-7 from the field. But she helped in other areas with 6 assists, 3 rebounds, 1 block and 1 steal.

The Huskies increased their lead to 65-59 heading into the final quarter and then steadily pulled away. Samuelson hit a three-point play for a 74-64 lead with 6:08 to play. She then hit a pair of technical free throws for a 7966 lead after Ogunbowale and Auriemma exchanged words and the Irish player was hit with a technical with 4:25 to play.

McGraw eventually took out Ogunbowale with 1:43 remaining when she received an unsportsma­nlike foul and Dangerfiel­d hit two free throws for an 89-70 lead.

NO. 6 MISSISSIPP­I STATE 67, NO. 10 TEXAS 49

AUSTIN, Texas — Mississipp­i State’s toughest test of the early season had a familiar result: another rout.

Jazzmun Holmes scored 17 points, Chloe Bibby had 14 and Teaira McCowan rebounded her way to a school record, helping the No. 6 Bulldogs roll over No. 10 Texas in the SEC/Big 12 Challenge.

The Bulldogs entered the marquee matchup of powerhouse programs braced for a slugfest after a series of early season blowouts. Mississipp­i State (8-0) has made it to the NCAA Tournament final the last two seasons and Texas (7-1) has advanced to the Sweet 16 or further each of the last four years.

The Bulldogs barely gave Texas a chance to take the floor before they were running the Longhorns off their home court.

UAPB 68, PAUL QUINN COLLEGE 52

Noe’ll Taylor scored 14 points and had 3 assists, while Shawntayla Harris had 13 points and 12 rebounds in leading the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff to a 68-52 victory over Paul Quinn College at Mims Arena in Little Rock.

The Lady Lions (1-3) shot 49.1 percent from the field (26 of 53) and won despite shooting 12 of 26 free throws and being outrebound­ed 38-30. They held Paul Quinn to 37.2 percent shooting from the floor (16 of 43), including 1 of 7 three pointers and forced 26 turnovers.

UAPB’s Mikeba Jones added 11 points and three assists.

UAPB led 9-8 after the first quarter, 28-22 at halftime and 47-39 after three quarters.

Paul Quinn (5-4) was led by Te’Ana Washington, who had 27 points.

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