Hartford Courant

Champion Stanford

Stanford holds off upstart Arizona to win women’s NCAA title.

- By Doug Feinberg

SAN ANTONIO — Tara VanDerveer hugged each of her Stanford players as they climbed the ladder to cut down a piece of the net.

It took 29 years, but VanDerveer and the Cardinal are NCAA women’s basketball champions again.

Haley Jones scored 17 points and Stanford beat Arizona 54-53 on Sunday night, giving the Cardinal and their Hall of Fame coach their first national championsh­ip in 29 years.

“Getting through all the things we got through, we’re excited to win the COVID championsh­ip,” VanDerveer said. “The other one was not quite as close, the last one. But we’re really excited. No one knows the score; no one knows who scored. It’s a national championsh­ip, and I’m really excited to represent Stanford. It’s a great team. We did not play a great game today, however. But if we can win, not playing as well as weneed to, I’m excited.”

Jones was honored as the Final Four’s Most Outstandin­g Player.

“I just owe it all to my teammates. They have confidence in me when I don’t have confidence in myself,” Jones said. “I saw they needed me to come up big, and I did.”

The game wasn’t a masterpiec­e by any stretch with both teams struggling to score and missing easy layups and shots, but the Cardinal did just enough to pull off the win.

Stanford (31-2) built a nine-point lead in the fourth quarter before Arizona (21-6) cut it to 51-50 on star guard Aari McDonald’s 3-pointer.

After a timeout, Jones answered with a three-point play with 2:24 left. That would be Stanford’s last basket of the game. McDonald got the Wildcats within 54-53 with 36.6 seconds left, converting three of four free throws.

The Cardinal, after another timeout couldn’t even get a shot off, giving Arizona one last chance with 6.1 seconds left, but McDonald’s contested shot from the top of the key at the buzzer bounced off the rim.

“I got denied hard. I tried to turn the corner. They sent three at me. I took a tough, contested shot and it didn’t fall,” said McDonald, who fell near midcourt, slumped in disbelief while the Cardinal celebrated.

It’s been quite a journey for VanDerveer and the Cardinal this season. The team was forced on the road for nearly 10 weeks because of the coronaviru­s, spending 86 days in hotels during this nomadic season.

The players didn’t complain and went about their business. Now they have another NCAA championsh­ip. Along the way the Hall of Fame coach earned her 1,099th career victory to pass Pat Summitt for the most all time in women’s basketball history.

Now the 67-year-old coach has a third national title to go along with the ones she won in 1990 and 1992. That moved her into a tie with Baylor’s Kim Mulkey for third most all time behind Geno Auriemma and Summitt.

VanDerveer had many great teams between titles, including the ones led by Candice Wiggins and the Ogwumike sisters — Nneka and Chiney — but the Cardinal just couldn’t end their season with that elusive win in the title game until Sunday night.

It was the first women’s basketball championsh­ip for the Pac-12 since VanDerveer and Stanford won the title in 1992. The last time a team from the conference was in the title game was 2010 when the Cardinal lost to UConn. That game was also played in the Alamodome — the site of every game in this tournament from the Sweet 16 through Sunday’s championsh­ipgame.

The entire NCAA Tournament was played in the San Antonio area because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

While Stanford had history on its side, Arizona has been building under coach Adia Barnes, who was the fourth Black woman to lead her team to the championsh­ip game, joining Carolyn Peck, Dawn Staley and C. Vivian String er. Peck and Staley won titles.

Barnes starred for the Wildcats as a player in the late 1990 sand came back to her alma mat er five years ago. She guided the team to the WNIT title in 2019 and led the Wildcats to their first NCAA title game. This was the team’s first appearance in the NCAA Tournament since 2005 — although the Wildcats would have made the NCAAs last season had it not been canceled by the corona virus.

The Wildcats started the season No. 7 in the AP poll and moved up to as high as sixth — the best ranking in school history — for a few weeks.

McDonald, who followed her coach from Washington as a transfer, has been a huge reason for the team’s success. The 5-foot-6 guard, who is lightning quick, is one of the rare players in the game who can make an impact on both ends of the court.

She struggled against the Cardinal, finishing with 22 points while shooting 5-for-20.

 ?? ERIC GAY/AP ?? Stanford forward Francesca Belibi goes to the basket against Arizona forward Trinity Baptiste in the first half Sunday.
ERIC GAY/AP Stanford forward Francesca Belibi goes to the basket against Arizona forward Trinity Baptiste in the first half Sunday.

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