The Oklahoman

Reseeding Sweet 16: South Carolina still No. 1

- Lindsay Schnell

Welcome to the second weekend of the NCAA Tournament, where the games are sweet, the players are hungry and, according to the data, viewers can’t get enough of women’s basketball.

There wasn’t much madness in the first two rounds of the women’s tournament, save for second-seeded Ohio State getting beat at home, which was definitely a shocker. And yes, technicall­y Baylor winning at Virginia Tech was an upset according to seeds, but given than the Hokies were missing the threetime ACC player of the year, a lot of people expected that outcome.

Does a lack of upset action mean we’re due for chaos the next four days? One can only hope – unless you’re rooting for the overall top seeded South Carolina Gamecocks.

We can argue at a different time if that’s fun.

For now, let’s reseed the tournament based on which teams are left.

1. South Carolina

You’re not surprised, are you? The Gamecocks haven’t forgotten they were upset last year and in fact they still seem upset about it. They’re taking it out on anyone in their way – look out, Indiana – and seem eager to prove there won’t be a repeat of last spring.

2. Southern Cal

The Trojans have survived everything this season, from the toughest conference in America to a stifling zone Monday night designed to slow super freshman JuJu Watkins. But USC, playing in its first Sweet 16 since 1994, is much more than one player, and the Trojans will be ready to show that versus Baylor.

3. UConn

Geno Auriemma, who has coached a few impressive players in his time, said it best: The Huskies have got the best player in America in Paige Bueckers, and it’s hard to argue with the numbers.

They’ll go as far as she can carry them.

4. Texas

The Longhorns have yet to play like they’re missing an All-American, even though Rori Harmon is one of the most impactful players in the country on both ends of the floor. It helps that in Harmon’s absence, UT crowned another All-American in freshman Madison Booker. So far, Booker’s postseason inexperien­ce hasn’t been an issue.

5. LSU

You don’t have to like them, or their coach, to know the Tigers are plenty talented. Led by double-double queen Angel Reese, the defending national champs still haven’t played a complete game this season against top competitio­n – is that coming in Albany?

6. Iowa

It’s Caitlin Clark and everyone else – there’s maybe one other future WNBA player on this roster in sophomore Hannah Stuelke, but that’s it. But Clark is so spectacula­r, described as a generation­al player by nearly everyone who watches her, that she might be able to lead Iowa back to the Final Four.

7. North Carolina State

In a loaded ACC, the quietly excellent Wolfpack are often overlooked. We should probably stop doing that, given that N.C. State has five players who score in double figures, with any of them capable of taking over a game.

8. Oregon State

The Beavers, picked to finish 10th in the Pac-12 this season, have that always coveted inside-out attack and, according to the numbers, are the second-best defensive team left in the tournament, behind only South Carolina. They were rolling in mid-February before sophomore center Raegan Beers broke her nose and missed a few games, stalling their momentum. Can they get back to that level of play?

9. Colorado

As the joke goes, bring your football pads to match up with this team. The Buffs are tough, physical and make you work hard for every basket. They are also battle tested and have one of the best on-ball defenders in the country in Jaylyn Sherrod. But is it enough?

10. Gonzaga

Can we stop calling the Zags a midmajor team already? GU has one of the best and most experience­d lineups in the country behind forward Yvonne Ejim and twin guards Kayleigh and Kaylynne Truong. If they knock off topseeded Texas, will they finally get the respect they deserve?

11. Notre Dame

The Irish are practicall­y playing on fumes at this point, having lost another player (forward Kylee Watson) to a season-ending injury just before the NCAA Tournament. They’ve got a spectacula­r freshman point guard in Hannah Hidalgo, who has yet to well, play like a freshman. Is that coming at some point?

12. UCLA

There’s no question the Bruins, led by the best sophomore class in the country, are deep on talent. But they have a history of underachie­ving, which makes many leery of picking them to the Final Four. Can Lauren Betts and Charisma Osborne help change that narrative?

13. Baylor

The Bears are here because of terrific late-game execution and the play of Jada Walker, who had a career game in the second round. It doesn’t seem very realistic that scenario repeats itself.

14. Stanford

The Cardinal needed 41 points and 16 rebounds from Kiki Iriafen to survive Iowa State on its home floor, partially because its All-American couldn’t stay on the floor. Stanford can’t advance in the NCAA Tournament if Cameron Brink is on the bench in foul trouble; the Cardinal’s guards aren’t good enough to cover for her.

15. Indiana

The Hoosiers are one of a handful of teams to handle Iowa this year, which is certainly an impressive accomplish­ment, but does anyone really think they can hang with South Carolina and the Gamecocks’ athleticis­m?

16. Duke

It’s amazing that the Blue Devils have made it this far, and they’ve got the play of Reigan Richardson to thank for it. But the road likely ends here, given that at 68.8 points per game, Duke ranks 111th in scoring offense nationally. That’s 34 spots behind Oregon State, the other lowest scoring team left in the tournament.

 ?? JEFF BLAKE/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? South Carolina guard Bree Hall (23) and forward Sania Feagin (20) celebrate a play against North Carolina in the second half at Colonial Life Arena on Sunday.
JEFF BLAKE/USA TODAY SPORTS South Carolina guard Bree Hall (23) and forward Sania Feagin (20) celebrate a play against North Carolina in the second half at Colonial Life Arena on Sunday.

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