Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

UWGB can’t close it out

- Ron Richmond

EUGENE, Ore. – Defensive intensity triggered the kind of offensive avalanche that Minnesota coach Marlene Stollings has come to expect.

All it took was for Kenisha Bell to get the Golden Gophers rolling downhill.

Bell scored 24 of her 26 points in the second half to lead No. 10 seed Minnesota to an 89-77 victory over No. 7 UWGreen Bay in the first round of the women’s NCAA Tournament on Friday.

After trailing by 10 points at the break, the Golden Gophers shot 16 of 28 (57%) in the second half and finished on an 18-5 run to pull away handily.

“I was frustrated (at halftime) that we weren’t following the game plan as expected,” Bell said, “but we picked it up second half. We just had to calm each other down and fix it as a team.”

Destiny Pitts, the Big Ten freshman of the year, added 20 points for the Golden Gophers (24-8), who will play Oregon in the second round of the Spokane Regional on Sunday.

Minnesota outscored the Phoenix (29-4), 30-13, in the fourth quarter, with half the points coming at the foul line. The Golden Gophers made 22 of 23 free throws in the second half and 25 of 29 overall.

“A lot of our offense in the second half was generated off our defense and the fourth quarter was obviously tremendous,” Stollings said. “Those fundamenta­l things that you work so hard on way back in June come into play in this moment in this tournament.

“We were just exceptiona­l at the line.”

Gadiva Hubbard had 16 points and Carlie Wagner 15 for Minnesota, which shot 27 of 59 (46%) for the game and 10 of 18 from three-point range. The 89 points were nearly twice what UWGB gave up as the nation’s scoring defense leader at 46.1 points per game.

The Phoenix had an edge in nearly every statistica­l category, but it also committed five of its 12 turnovers in the fourth quarter and shot just 4 of 14.

“What I was most focused on after halftime was that our activity level defensivel­y picked up,” Stollings said. “We were a little too stagnant, and we have almost a whole team that’s not been on this stage before — no excuse — but it took us a little while to get in a flow, wake up and get moving.

“Once we did, we never really looked back.”

Allie LeClaire and Jessica Lindstrom, the Phoenix’s only seniors, had 17 and 11 points, respective­ly. It was the fourth year in a row that Green Bay was ousted in the first round.

“They really thought that this was their year,” UWGB coach Kevin Borseth said. “This was the year they were going to break the door down and get to the other side.

“It’s difficult to get in this tournament to start with, and then when you get in here and you draw a Power Five school, it’s hard. Those teams are good. So I told them I was very proud of their effort. Jessica and Alison were great leaders and I was very lucky to be their coach.”

The Phoenix was in the tournament for the ninth time in 10 years but fell to 6-18 in 18 appearance­s. The team is now 2-12 under Borseth.

 ??  ?? Minnesota’s Kenisha Bell shoots over UW-Green Bay’s Madison Wolf on Friday.
Minnesota’s Kenisha Bell shoots over UW-Green Bay’s Madison Wolf on Friday.

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