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Women’s college hoops season set to tip off

- By Doug Feinberg AP Basketball Writer

NEW YORK — As soon as Sabrina Ionescu announced she was returning for her senior season at Oregon, the women’s college basketball landscape changed.

The Oregon Ducks became the favorite to win the championsh­ip after falling in the Final Four last season to Baylor — the eventual title winners.

Ionescu has been one of the most electrifyi­ng players in college hoops the past few seasons, shattering the triple-double record. She’s the projected No. 1 pick in the WNBA draft next spring. The All-america guard has a lot of help at the Pac-12 school, including star forward Ruthy Hebard.

Don’t count Oregon coach Kelly Graves among those who already have handed the title to the Ducks, who earned the first AP Top 25 No. 1 ranking in school history last week.

Graves said that a few times a week someone would text him or tell him at the local Costco’s that they’ll see the Ducks in New Orleans, the site of this season’s Final Four. Graves has the same response to all of them: “I hope we’re Oregon guard Sabrina Ionescu gestures toward the bench during the second half of the team’s regional semifinal against South Dakota State in the NCAA women’s college basketball tournament, in Portland, Ore. there. You can buy yours we have to earn ours.”

The Ducks may have a tough time winning their own conference as the Pac-12 is once again one of the best in the country, with Stanford and Oregon State the main two challenger­s.

Even with the Ducks the favorite, this might be the first time in a while that there aren’t four clear-cut choices to reach the Final Four. Perennial contender Uconn will have to find replacemen­ts for graduated stars Katie Lou Samuelson and Napheesa Collier.

The Huskies have made the Final Four a record 12 consecutiv­e years. Coach Geno Auriemma sees this season more open than the past decade or so when his team has dominated.

“We were accused for a number of years of it being the same teams all the time,” the Hall of Fame coach said. “We were on the verge of becoming college football. So, it’s good that there’s new faces up there. Now, did a lot of those faces show up because the people that were already there backed up or because they got really, really good. I think it was a combinatio­n of the two. But that’s usually what has to happen. So, the fact that you can’t just sit here right now and go, ‘Here’s the Final Four,’ I think that’s a good thing. I think it helps keep interest around the country. I think it reminds everybody that hey, this is not given, it’s not entitled. You have to earn it.”

 ?? Ap-craig Mitchelldy­er, File ??
Ap-craig Mitchelldy­er, File

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