Texarkana Gazette

Florida Gulf Coast women pull off upset of Missouri, 80-70

- By Janie McCauley

STANFORD, Calif.— Hands on her knees, China Dow watched intently as the clock ticked down. Finally, she could let out all the emotion and exuberance and began hugging everyone in sight.

The Florida Gulf Coast senior then skipped across the court in Maples Pavilion screaming in delight while waving her arms in the air toward the fittingly greenclad crowd on St. Patrick's Day.

For the Eagles, the gold was their all-out grit.

Dow scored 21 points and played stingy defense in the paint against Missouri star Sophie Cunningham, and No. 12 seed Florida Gulf Coast pulled off an upset in the Lexington Regional with an 80-70 win Saturday against the fifth-seeded Tigers.

"We're just putting our name on the map to let people know we are not just a soft, mid-major team," Dow said. "We can compete with the best of the best."

Cunningham took over on the low block to get Missouri (24-8) going and scored a season-high 35 points—most by a Tigers player in an NCAA tournament game—and made 14 of 16 free throws. But she didn't get much help.

Dow made two free throws with 1:12 left as the Eagles kept pushing until the final buzzer to run their winning streak to 11 games with a 21st victory in the last 22 games.

Florida Gulf Coast (31-4) will play Monday against the winner of Saturday's second game between No. 4 seed Stanford and 13th- seeded Gonzaga. If Stanford moves on, Hall of Fame coach Tara VanDerveer will face Eagles coach Karl Smesko after VanDerveer won her 900th career game against him at Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, in November 2013.

Leading scorer Rose Julien— averaging 13.4 points—added 12 points for Florida Gulf Coast, which is in the NCAA tournament for the fifth time in seven years with Division I postseason eligibilit­y and won an NCAA game for the first time since beating Oklahoma State in 2015.

The scrappy Eagles stayed within 36-32 on rebounds to Missouri without having a single 6-footer on the roster.

"It's an upset in terms of seeding, but we definitely came in with the mindset that this was a game we can win if we executed at a high level," Smesko said.

Lauren Aldridge's 3-pointer with 2:13 left in the third cut FGCU's lead to 54-50 then Tytionia Adderly immediatel­y hit from deep on the other end and the Eagles led 61-53 going into the fourth.

Florida Gulf Coast didn't immediatel­y get the kind of 3-point looks it is so used to, but the Eagles patiently kept pushing the ball in transition and drove to the basket and kicked out to start creating those crucial open looks from deep.

Mizzou won its SEC Tournament opener and earned a third straight NCAA berth, the first time the program has done so since 1984-86, but missed out on earning at least one victory in three straight tournament­s for the first time in school history.

Florida Gulf Coast got key minutes off the bench from Jessica Cattani, who hit two quick 3-pointers during an 8-3 second-quarter run, then Cunningham converted back-to-back layups for Missouri. Cattani finished with 10 points.

Late in the second after Dow hit a 3-pointer on the other end then pounded with Cunningham inside and other FGCU defenders swarmed, Cunningham still was able to find a way to almost underhand the ball up and into the hoop. Dow hit another 3 the next time down and her team led 41-32 at halftime.

HEIGHT ADVANTAGE

Even with a big performanc­e, Cunningham expected more of herself given her height advantage.

She shot 10 for 16 but also committed five of her team's 16 turnovers.

"Very good defensive team. We just need to value the ball more," Cunningham said. "They did push us out farther than we wanted to, credit to them."

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