The Palm Beach Post

Noles ousted 71-64 in regional

UConn reach its 10th consecutiv­e women’s Final Four.

- Associated Press

STOCKTON, CALIF. — Kaela Davis scored 23 points and A’ja Wilson added 16 and top-seeded South Carolina held off No. 3 seed Florida State 71-64 in a furious finish Monday night to win the Stockton Regional.

Davis scored immediatel­y off the tip and again on a timely, brilliant left-handed drive with 1:42 to go.

Allisha Gray drove her way to 11 points for South Carolina (31-4) — and Dawn Staley’s Gamecocks are back in the Final Four for the first time since 2015 still chasing the program’s first NCAA championsh­ip.

Leticia Romero cut the South Carolina lead to 65-60 on a driving jumper with 3:51 left. Then Brittany Brown’s steal and layup at 3:25 made it 65-62, but the Seminoles wouldn’t get closer.

South Carolina has both basketball teams in the Final Four. The men’s program reached its first Final Four with a stunning upset of Florida on Sunday.

Imani Wright’s basket with 7:12 to play c apped a 6-0 burst and pulled Florida State within 60-53, then Gray answered. Romero knocked down a 3 moments later and it was a six-point game.

Tyasha Harris added 16 points for South Carolina, which made things uncomforta­ble all game for Florida State’s Spanish star, Romero. She was limited to 6-for-23 shooting for 16 points, six assists and six rebounds as Florida State fell short once more of the program’s first Final Four.

Davis, daughter of former NBA player Antonio Davis, delivered all day on both ends.

She shot 10 for 15 and is headed to her Final Four debut on Friday against Stanford. She transferre­d from Georgia Tech for the chance to do something special.

Two power programs from the South that scrimmaged together the past two preseasons faced off way out West in Northern California, a rematch of South Carolina’s six-point Elite Eight win against the Seminoles two years ago in Greensboro.

This one was plenty entertaini­ng, too — from big plays to a nail-biting final few minutes.

After Wright’s jumper at the 4:23 mark made it 30-27, South Carolina closed the half with a 10-2 spurt.

G r a y m a d e a p a i r o f pretty drives to key a late second-quarter run during which South Carolina hit five of seven shots as the Seminoles took a 40-29 lead into halftime.

Connecticu­t 90, Oregon 52: Napheesa Collier scored 28 points, Gabby Williams had 25 and UConn advanced to its 10th consecutiv­e Final Four by defeating Oregon at Bridgeport, Conn.

Top-seeded UConn (36-0) will face Mississipp­i State on Friday night in Dallas in the national semifinals. The win was the Huskies’ 111th consecutiv­e victory a nd moved c o a c h G e no Auriemma past Pat Summitt for the most NCAA Tournament victories.

Auriemma now has 113 and counting.

The Huskies jumped all over 10th-seeded Oregon (23-14), which had made an impressive run through the NCAA.

Leading 6-4, UConn scored 17 straight points. Saniya Chong got the game-changing burst started with consecutiv­e 3-pointers. Nearly 4½ minutes later she capped the burst with a layup that made it 23-4.

 ?? CHARLIE RIEDEL / AP ?? After Dana Altman cut down the net as Midwest Region champ, he spoke with coaching friends on how to help the Ducks deal with Final Four distractio­ns.
CHARLIE RIEDEL / AP After Dana Altman cut down the net as Midwest Region champ, he spoke with coaching friends on how to help the Ducks deal with Final Four distractio­ns.

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