The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Tennessee loses at home in tourney for first time

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KNOXVILLE, TENN. — Tennessee lost for the first time at home in women’s NCAA Tournament history when Marie Gulich had 14 points and 12 rebounds to lead Oregon State.

The third-seeded Lady Vols had been 57-0 at home with most of those victories coming under late Hall of Fame coach Pat Summitt, who led the team to eight national championsh­ips. It’s the second straight season that Tennessee lost in the second round of the NCAAs and will miss the Sweet 16 in back-to-back seasons for the first time in the program’s 37-year tournament history.

Oregon State (26-7) advanced to the regional semifinals for the third straight year.

The Lady Vols (24-8) and Beavers played a close game befitting of two teams separated by only spot in the AP poll entering the tournament.

Elsewhere

Louisville 90, Marquette 72: Myisha Hines-Allen had 24 points and 13 rebounds, Asia Durr scored 19 points and Louisville quickly pounced on Marquette on the way to a victory.

The Cardinals (34-2) advanced to their second consecutiv­e Sweet 16 and will play 80 miles east in next weekend’s regional in Lexington, Kentucky.

Hines-Allen and Durr made sure of that right away by combining for 26 points on 12-of-14 shooting in the first half after the duo totaled just 13 points in a first-round rout of Boise State. Hines-Allen earned her 16th double-double this season.

Allazia Blockton had a career-high 34 points and Erika Davenport 11 for Marquette (24-10).

Texas A&M 80, DePaul 79: Freshman Chennedy Carter hit a 3 with 3.2 seconds left, capping a 37-point performanc­e, to help Texas A&M rally from a 17-point second-half deficit and beat DePaul.

Carter had 32 of her points after halftime and the fourth-seeded Aggies pulled off another stunning second half comeback for the second consecutiv­e year. It was the largest comeback ever in the second round of the tournament and the fourth largest ever.

Texas A&M trailed by two when Carter’s long three from the top of the key gave the Aggies (26-9) the lead. Fifth-seed DePaul had a chance to win it after that but Jasmine Lumpkin stole the inbounds pass from Kelly Campbell to secure the victory and send the Aggies to the Sweet 16 for the first time since 2014.

DePaul was led by Tanita Allen, who had 19 points and Mart’e Grays added 14.

North Carolina State 74, Maryland 60: Kiara Leslie had 21 points and 11 rebounds against her former team, and North Carolina State beat Maryland.

Leslie, who spent three seasons at Maryland before graduating and transferri­ng to N.C. State, finished one point shy of a career high.

Kalia Ealey and Chelsea Nelson added 12 points apiece while Akela Maize scored 11 to help the fourthseed­ed Wolfpack (26-8) earn their first Sweet 16 appearance since the late Kay Yow led an inspiratio­nal run in 2007.

N.C. State, which shot 45 percent and was 7 of 14 from 3-point range, will play the Oklahoma State-Mississipp­i State winner on Friday night in the Kansas City Regional semifinals.

Brianna Fraser had 17 points for the fifth-seeded Terrapins (26-8), who were held to 37 percent shooting.

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