Baltimore Sun

Wolfpack relishing journey to Sweet 16

N.C. State making itself at home in Kansas City

- By Dave Skretta

KANSAS CITY, MO. — North Carolina State coach Wes Moore remembers hearing where his Wolfpack, fresh off a secondroun­d trip to the NCAA tournament, were picked to finish in the Atlantic Coast Conference this season.

He thought the voters had read the instructio­ns wrong.

“Maybe,” Moore mused, “they thought that was a national poll they were voting on. Would have made more sense. Fast-forward to mid-March and the fourth-seeded Wolfpack (26-8) are preparing to face top-seeded Mississipp­i State in the Sweet 16. They've already run roughshod over Princeton and Maryland to reach Kansas City, and are just two wins away from their first Final Four appearance since 1998. That national semifinal happened to be in Kansas City, too.

“I believed all along we could be better than what we started out, and where people picked us,” Moore said. “Even my athletic director, when I had my meeting before this season, she asked me my goals and expectatio­ns. After I shared those with her she said, W`ow, that's pretty ambitious, isn't it?“’

There were times this season when Moore walked to the end of the bench and told Debbie Yow, herself a longtime college basketball coach and the sister of former North Carolina State coach Kay Yow, and said, “You might have been right.”

“But this team battles,” Moore said. “We were down 26-1 to Louisville and with three minutes left in the game we were down four and had the ball. So they're not going to quit. They are going to be in there, keep competing, and that's what I'm really proud of in regards to this team.”

They'll have their hands full with Mississipp­i State.

The national runners-up a season ago, the Bulldogs (34-1) have already matched last year's school record for wins in a season. They're in a regional semifinal for a third Coach Wes Moore, left, and Aislinn Konig, middle, helped the Wolfpack roll past Elon and then Maryland in the first two rounds. consecutiv­e year, featuring a starting lineup of four seniors and a junior who have plenty of experience on this stage.

“We believed the whole season that we could be sitting in this spot,” N.C. State's Akela Maise said. “There was never any doubt in our minds with the strengths that we have in each player.”

The winner tonight advances to the regional final Sunday, where they will face second-seeded UCLA (26-7) or No. 3 seed Texas (28-6) for a spot in the Final Four in Columbus, Ohio.

“When we did lose our first one, people thought the sky was falling,” said Bulldogs coach Vic Schaefer, recalling a 62-51 loss to South Carolina in the SEC Tournament, which was also a rematch of last year's national title game. “I guess it's better than the alternativ­e, but that's the expectatio­n we kind of have right now. It's a lot of fun, sure is.”

As the Kansas City regional gets ready to tip off, here are some things to know:

HEAVY HEARTS: The Bulldogs' Roshunda Johnson missed Thursday's workouts in Kansas City after the death of her grandfathe­r, though she is expected to be available for the game. “We miss her and love her very much,” Schaefer said, “and we're keeping her in our hearts and minds.”

HITTING THE GLASS: North Carolina State has dominated two categories all season that could play into its game against Mississipp­i State: free throws and rebounding. The Wolfpack have made more free throws (489) than opponents have tried (481), and they are eighth nationally in rebounding.

FAMILIAR FOES: Texas and UCLA already met this season, although it didn't actually count. The two teams played in closed preseason scrimmages in recent years.

FAMILIAR FOES, PART 2: The Longhorns and Bruins have split six meetings overall and their two NCAA Tournament meetings, though Texas came out ahead most recently. The Longhorns knocked the Bruins out in the same round of the 2016 tournament.

STAR WATCH: There are plenty of big names descending on Kansas City. In the opener, the senior backcourt of Brooke McCarty and Ariel Takins will lead Texas against All-Pac12 guard Jordin Canada, who has scored at least 20 points in six of the Bruins' last eight games. In the second game, Mississipp­i State's inside-outside tandem of Teaira McCowan and Victoria Vivians will match up with the Wolfpack's own insideouts­ide duo, Akela Maize and former Terp Kiara Leslie.

 ?? BEN MCKEOWN/ASSOCIATED PRESS ??
BEN MCKEOWN/ASSOCIATED PRESS

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