San Antonio Express-News

(2) TEXAS A&M WOMEN 84, (7) IOWA STATE 82 (OT) Survival instinct still strong

- By Brent Zwerneman Brent Zwerneman reported from College Station. brent.zwerneman@chron.com

Texas A&M’S first two games in the NCAA Tournament have hardly been a stroll on the River Walk for the Aggies. Instead they’ve spent 85 game minutes performing the basketball equivalent of dangling from Enchanted Rock in the nearby Hill Country.

The second-seeded Aggies quickly cobbled together another postseason escape act, this time overcoming a double-digit deficit to defeat seventh-seeded Iowa State 84-82 in overtime on Wednesday night at the Alamodome in San Antonio.

“Adversity is nothing new to us, this entire year,” A&M guard Jordan Nixon said. “It’s just who we are — we never say die. … If you’re familiar with Texas A&M basketball this year, it has not been an easy ride.”

The payoffs have been fantastic, however, for the Aggies (25-2). Nixon’s driving layup with six seconds remaining in regulation tied it at 75, and then she smoothly sank the game-winner at the buzzer in overtime on a drive into the lane with a basket off the glass after dribbling the length of the court.

“I can’t say enough about this basketball team. Our kids were just fighting and clawing,” A&M coach Gary Blair said. “… People have doubted us all year. We’re not sure how good we are, but we know we’re good every night at giving energy and giving you entertainm­ent. I hope everybody in Bryan-college Station celebrated the moment.”

Nixon, a transfer from Notre Dame, scored a gamehigh 35 points. A&M will face third-seeded Arizona (18-5), which defeated 11th-seeded BYU at the same time the Aggies and Cyclones were playing, in the Sweet 16 in the Alamodome

at 7 p.m. Saturday.

The Aggies have made the Sweet 16 for a third consecutiv­e NCAA Tournament. Iowa State (17-11) and longtime coach Bill Fennelly were trying to make the coveted round for the first time since 2010 but fell two points shy.

“We showed our worthiness in this tournament,” Fennelly said. “It hurts a lot, and I’m dying inside. And I’m dying that I don’t get to coach them tomorrow, because this team is special. It’s killing me that I don’t get to — but I got to (coach them). And I’ll remember that forever.”

Both teams were coming off edge-of-your-seat, fourpoint victories in the opening round — A&M 84-80 over 15th-seed Troy and ISU 79-75 over 10th-seed Michigan State.

An emotional Nixon dedicated Wednesday’s comeback victory to former A&M guard David Edwards, who was one of her coaches back home in New York. Edwards, a star player for the Aggies in the early 1990s, died of COVID-19 complicati­ons a year ago in New York.

“Today was for him, (but) I didn’t tell anybody (beforehand),” Nixon said. “I just wanted to win the game — it didn’t matter how it happened. There was a little something in me that wanted to do something for him, to dedicate to his memory.

“That’s where the emotion came from. I can hear him in my head. … He’s one of my biggest fans, and this game is for him.”

 ?? Billy Calzada / Staff ?? Guard Jordan Nixon (5) celebrates with teammates after hitting the gamewinnin­g shot at the buzzer.
Billy Calzada / Staff Guard Jordan Nixon (5) celebrates with teammates after hitting the gamewinnin­g shot at the buzzer.

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