Hamilton Journal News

Post players helping teams stand tall in talented field

- By Pete Iacobelli

Post players are having a big impact on the women’s NCAA Tournament.

Teams that have reached the Sweet 16 teams are getting major contributi­ons from their “Bigs.”

The impressive list includes:

■ Aliyah Boston. The South Carolina All-American has had 39 points and 25 rebounds in her first two career NCAA games as the Gamecocks reached the round of 16 for a seventh straight year.

■ Sedona Prince. Oregon’s 6-foot-7 Prince became the center of attention on sports shows with dunk during warm-ups before the Ducks’ rallied for a second-round win against Georgia to reach the regional semifinals for a fourth consecutiv­e season.

■ Olivia Nelson-Ododa. At 6-5, the UConn Huskie has 39 points through two games. UConn is in the Sweet 16 for a 27th consecutiv­e season.

There will plenty of length on the court this weekend; 13 of the teams start at least one player 6-3 or taller.

“I’ll be watching that,” said Debbie Antonelli, college basketball analyst and broadcaste­r.

Boston, one of the Gamecocks talented sophomores, has been a steadying influence as her team dealt with high expectatio­ns after their success a season ago. South Carolina spent the last 10 weeks of the 2020 season at No. 1 and won their final 26 straight games before COVID19 ended what seemed to be a deep tournament run.

During the offseason, Boston worked on improving her fitness and technique under the basket. The results were an All-American season in which she averaged a double-double.

“The energy that she puts into a game and the preparatio­n, and the duration of the 40 minutes that’s being played is unmatched by any player on the collegiate level,” South Carolina coach Dawn Staley said. “Take that to the bank on

UConn forward Olivia Nelson-Ododa looks to shoot past High Point guard Claire Wyatt in the first round game in San Antonio on Sunday. At 6-5, Nelson-Ododa has 39 points through two tournament games. both sides of the basketball.”

Boston and South Carolina, the top seed in the Hemisfair Region, will play Sunday against No. 5 seed Georgia Tech. The Yellow Jackets advanced in part due to 6-4 Lorela Cubaj, who has 35 points and 22 rebounds combined in the Yellow Jackets two tournament wins.

Oregon’s Prince has been a focal point both on and off the court this tournament. The Texas transfer who hadn’t played in two seasons because of a broken right leg in 2018, has gradually worked her into the lineup. She’s third on the team at 10.7 points a game.

She also started the calls for equal treatment between the men’s and women’s tournament with her video on social media showing the disparity between the weight and workout facilities at the two events. Spoiler alert — the men’s tournament had the more lavish setup.

“I hope they see women’s basketball is not boring. It’s fun. It’s exciting,” she said earlier this week. “It’s different than men’s basketball but in an amazing way. We play hard and with our hearts, and there’s so many fundamenta­ls.

“It’s such a different game, so we wanted to show that we’re fun to watch.”

Prince and the sixthseede­d Ducks will play No. 2 seed Louisville in the Alamo Region on Sunday.

The buzz when top-seed UConn plays No. 5 seed Iowa is the high-profile matchup between heralded freshmen Paige Bueckers for the Huskies and Caitlin Clark for the Hawkeyes. But there will be plenty of action closer to the basket, too, with UConn’s Nelson-Ododa and Iowa’s 6-3 Monika Czinano, averaging 18.5 points and seven rebounds in the tournament.

 ?? ERIC GAY / AP ??
ERIC GAY / AP

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