Santa Cruz Sentinel

A sensationa­l showing

Santa Cruz native Haley Jones scores career-high 29 points in Stanford's win, has been on a tear in return from season-ending injury

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As the nation’s top recruit in 2019, Santa Cruz native Haley Jones had high expectatio­ns for her freshman campaign with Stanford. But a right-knee injury 18 games in brought an abrupt end to her debut season.

Three games into this season, the sophomore is reminding everyone how good she can play.

Jones scored a career-high 29 points and grabbed 13 rebounds to lead No. 2 Stanford to an 83-50 victory over Washington on Sunday at the Thomas and Mack Center on the campus of UNLV.

“With my season being cut extra short last year, I’ve just been really excited to finally get back out there on the floor,” said Jones, who registered the third doubledoub­le of her career. “I guess a little chip on the shoulder. … I think I’m coming out with more of an aggressive mentality.”

The Pac 12 home opener for

Stanford (3- 0, 1- 0 Pac 12) was shifted from Palo Alto due to Santa Clara County’s ban on sporting events and practices for three weeks.

Stanford coach Ta ra VanDerveer improved to 1,097253 and is two victories shy of passing Pat Summitt (1,098) as the winningest coach in women’s college basketball history.

Francesca Belibi and Hannah Jump each chipped in with

12 points for the Cardinal. Jump also had a careerhigh tying four rebounds.

Quay Miller had 10 points to lead Washington (3-1, 1-1).

One day after notching career highs with 25 points and seven assists against UNLV, Jones carried her momentum over and opened the game by hitting her first eight attempts en route to a 14for-15 performanc­e from the floor, the best shooting percentage in a singlegame by a Stanford player since 1981 (minimum 10 attempts).

The Huskies held it together in the first quarter, pulling within one point three times, and never let Stanford’s lead get bigger than five points. But the Cardinal turned up their defensive pressure in the second quarter, limiting the Huskies to just four points and only one field goal.

W hi l e Wa s h i n g t on struggled to an abysmal 1-for-14 (7.1%) shooting display in the second quarter, the Cardinal were 11for-20 (55%) from the field, making up for a bleak 1 of 13 display offering from 3-point range in the first half.

Jones sparked the surge, scoring 10 points during Stanford’s 14- 0 run to start the second quarter. But it

was more than her scoring, as she injected fuel with a key offensive rebound and a defensive tip off the glass to ignite a fast break to keep momentum flowing in the Cardinal’s direction.

“I feel like I have a different role on the team this year,” Jones said. “I’m just really trying to do what my team needs me to do. If that’s playmaking, if that’s taking my shots when (I’m) open, if it’s getting wherever I need to be.”

With uncertaint­ies remaining in California, VanDerveer said she is unsure how the next two weeks will play out for her team. Tuesday’s game with Washington State

was postponed due to COVID-19 conflicts, and the next two games vs. UC Davis and at Cal are now in limbo.

“As far as I know right now, we’re looking to figure out we go back to play Cal, whether we can play Davis, that didn’t look like a good option today,” she said. “I haven’t checked my phone since the game, and things happened so quickly. … We’re just gonna do what we’re allowed to do by the county, by the university and just try to keep playing.”

• VanDerveer and Stanford are the new No. 1 in The Associated Press women’s basketball poll.

The Cardinal ascended to the top spot Monday after previous No. 1 South Carolina lost at home to then-No. 8 North Carolina State. Stanford received 24 of the 30 first-place votes from a national media panel.

The Cardinal moved up to No. 1 at nearly the same time last year and held on to that spot for three weeks, the team’s first appearance there in seven years.

VanDerveer downplayed the significan­ce of her team moving to No. 1 in Week 3 of the season.

“Rankings are important in March,” she said. “Let’s hope we’re playing in March.”

 ?? JOHN LOCHER – THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Stanford’s Haley Jones, a Santa Cruz native, drives around Washington’s Darcy Rees during the second half of an NCAA women’s basketball game Sunday in Las Vegas.
JOHN LOCHER – THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Stanford’s Haley Jones, a Santa Cruz native, drives around Washington’s Darcy Rees during the second half of an NCAA women’s basketball game Sunday in Las Vegas.
 ?? JOHN LOCHER – THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Stanford’s Haley Jones, a Santa Cruz native, drives around Washington’s Tameiya Sadler, left, during the second half of a game on Sunday in Las Vegas.
JOHN LOCHER – THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Stanford’s Haley Jones, a Santa Cruz native, drives around Washington’s Tameiya Sadler, left, during the second half of a game on Sunday in Las Vegas.

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