Dayton Daily News

South Carolina uses size to top UCLA

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Kamilla Cardoso had 10 points while reigning national champion South Carolina turned in its latest overwhelmi­ng defenseand-rebounding-first performanc­e to beat UCLA 59-43 on Saturday in the Sweet 16 of the women’s NCAA Tournament.

Aaliyah Boston had eight points, 14 rebounds and two blocks for the Gamecocks (350), the top overall tournament seed and the headliner in the Greenville 1 Region. It marked South Carolina’s 41st consecutiv­e victory, securing the program’s sixth trip to the Elite Eight under Dawn Staley.

The Gamecocks will play for their fifth trip to the Final Four in Monday’s regional final against No. 2 seed Maryland.

It wasn’t an easy offensive operation for South Carolina, with UCLA sagging defensivel­y to pack the paint in hopes of negating the Gamecocks’ size advantage behind Boston. But South Carolina dominated the glass from start to finish and used its length to turn every look into a difficult one for the fourth-seeded Bruins (27-10).

The Gamecocks entered

the game ranked first in Division I in scoring defense, field-goal percentage defense and rebounding margin. They did nothing to change that, holding UCLA to 15-for51 shooting (29.4%) — including 3 for 18 from 3-point range — while finishing with a 42-34 rebounding advantage that narrowed late after they led big.

Charisma Osborne scored 14 points to lead UCLA, which was in the Sweet 16 for the eighth time and first since 2019. The Bruins were trying to reach the regional finals for the first time since 2018 and only the third time in program history while

pursuing their first Final Four appearance.

Wayne grad Bree Hall had 10 points off the bench for South Carolina.

Maryland 76, Notre Dame 59: Diamond Miller scored 14 of her 18 points in the final two quarters to lead second-seeded Maryland to a 76-59 victory over depleted Notre Dame and reach the Elite Eight for the first time in eight years.

Shyanne Sellers also had 18 points for the Terps, who’ll play either defending champion South Carolina, the top overall seed, or No. 4 seed UCLA on Monday night for a trip to Dallas for the Final

Four.

Maryland (28-6) used a third-quarter burst to put away the third-seeded Fighting Irish (27-6), who played once again without injured leading-scorer Olivia Miles after her knee injury at the Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament earlier this month.

Miles and guard Dara Mabrey, both starters, were injured spectators for Notre Dame, which hung tight with Maryland for 25 minutes before Miller and Shyanne Sellers took over.

Miller, the first-team All-American, shook off a poor first half as Maryland gained control. Tied at 44-all, Lavender Briggs had a 3-pointer and Miller followed with a three-point play as the Terps closed the third quarter on a 13-1 run.

Notre Dame, which fought off Mississipp­i State on its home floor to advance last week, could not respond.

Maryland used its defensive pressure to break out early, forcing eight turnovers by the Fighting Irish to build a 19-14 lead. But Notre Dame showed its NCAA Tournament resiliency once more with a 13-0 burst to move in front 27-19.

 ?? MIC SMITH / AP ?? South Carolina’s Aliyah Boston (4) fights for a rebound over UCLA’s Christeen Iwuala (22) and Gina Conti (10) in a Sweet 16 game in Greenville, S.C., Saturday.
MIC SMITH / AP South Carolina’s Aliyah Boston (4) fights for a rebound over UCLA’s Christeen Iwuala (22) and Gina Conti (10) in a Sweet 16 game in Greenville, S.C., Saturday.

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