Las Vegas Review-Journal

Encore score! Irish guard hits last-second 3 for title

Ogunbowale has keen touch for shots, drama

- By Doug Feinberg The Associated Press

COLUMBUS, Ohio — Arike Ogunbowale hit the shot of her life — again.

Ogunbowale floated in a 3-pointer from the corner with 0.1 seconds left, lifting Notre Dame to its second women’s basketball title with a thrilling 6158 comeback victory over Mississipp­i State in the NCAA championsh­ip game on Sunday night.

It was the second straight game that the junior guard hit a shot in the final second to carry the Irish. Her jumper with one second remaining in overtime knocked off previously unbeaten Connecticu­t in the semifinals on Friday.

With this game tied, Ogunbowale took the inbounds pass from Jackie Young, dribbled twice toward the corner and, closely guarded, lofted home an off-balance 3 from in front of the Notre Dame bench, nearly the same angle as her shot that beat the Huskies.

WOMEN

“It just felt right,” said Ogunbowale, who scored 16 of her 18 points in the second half. “I practice late-game all the time. I just ran to Jackie and said, ‘Throw it to me, throw it to me.’”

Ogunbowale earned most outstandin­g player honors for the tournament and also received a congratula­tory tweet from Kobe Bryant, who took in the semifinal win over Uconn.

All the Irish players could celebrate after pulling off the biggest comeback in title game history. They rallied from a 15-point deficit in the third quarter and were down five in the final 1:58. Marina Mabrey hit a 3-pointer from the wing and Young had a shot in the lane to tie it.

The title came 17 years to the day after Notre Dame (35-3) won its only other championsh­ip in 2001 on

Easter.

“It’s Easter Sunday, and all the Catholics were praying for us,” said coach Muffet Mcgraw, who was wearing floral shoes in honor of the holiday.

When the final buzzer sounded, a wild celebratio­n started with the Irish faithful who were part of the sellout crowd. Mcgraw’s team had fallen short four times in seven years in the title game, losing in 2011,

2012, 2014 and 2015.

Many of the Notre Dame alums who were on teams that had fallen just short of winning a title were there to enjoy it, including Natalie Achonwa, Natalie Novosel and Becca Bruszewki.

This version of Mcgraw’s squad refused to lose, and the run was even more improbable because the Irish lost four players over the season to ACL injuries.

Tied as the clock ran down, Mississipp­i State star Teaira Mccowan

missed a layup with 27.8 seconds left, and both teams turned the ball over in a wild sequence. Mccowan fouled out of the game stopping an Irish fast break after consecutiv­e turnovers and that set up the final three seconds.

After Ogunbowale’s clutch shot, the officials huddled and put onetenth of a second on the clock. A couple of Mississipp­i State players had already headed for the locker room, while Notre Dame players celebrated.

The court was cleared, and Mississipp­i State tossed a futile inbounds pass into the lane as the buzzer sounded.

“It hurts right now,” Bulldogs coach Vic Schaefer said. “They played their hearts out.”

It was the second year in a row that Mississipp­i State (37-2) fell short in the title game. It lost to South Carolina last year after ending Uconn’s record 111-game winning streak.

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