The Sentinel-Record

Louisville routs Oregon State to reach women’s Final Four

- GARY B. GRAVES

LEXINGTON, Ky. — Louisville players proudly strutted around the court Sunday in championsh­ip T-shirts and hats, some adorned with a little piece of the net.

Cardinals coach Jeff Walz brushed off confetti dumped on him during an interview to climb the ladder and clip the rest of the nylon, happily twirling it to celebrate his top-seeded team’s dominant run through the NCAA Tournament Lexington regional.

“It’s a great feeling,” Walz said. “I’m going to go home, and my 4 1/2-year-old and my 2 1/2-year-old (daughters), all they’re going to talk about is the confetti on the floor. That’s all they care about. To them, if we win, there’s confetti on the floor that I get to play on.”

Louisville’s next quest is collecting another net and more confetti in next weekend’s women’s Final Four in Columbus, Ohio.

Asia Durr scored 18 points, Myisha Hines-Allen added 16 and Louisville (36-2) earned its first Final Four berth since 2013 with a 76-43 rout of No. 6 seed Oregon State (26-8) on Sunday in the Lexington Region final.

Playing its first regional final in four years and for the first time in school history as an NCAA No. 1 seed, the Cardinals thoroughly ran the table while playing close to home. They never trailed in rolling to their 11th consecutiv­e victory.

They outscored the Beavers 28-12 in the third quarter to break the game open and complete their four-game run through the regional by an average margin of victory of 27.5 points. Louisville controlled the paint, 32-18, and scored 24 points off 17 turnovers against an Oregon State squad that succeeded with precise passing.

“If we were able to get stops and go in transition, we were going to be confident,” Hines-Allen said. “Our shots were falling in the second half, and it all came down to defense. If we wanted to win, we had to stop them.”

Even more impressive for Louisville was the Cardinals committed just three turnovers to tie an NCAA Tournament record despite playing a frenetic pace for much of the game. It worked in getting good shots that fell for the final three quarters.

“That was huge,” said Durr, who made 4 of 9

3-pointers and 7 of 14 shots overall. “We love to sprint the ball up the floor, pass the ball up the floor, so that’s pretty much what we try to do.”

Sam Fuehring had 14 points and Arica Carter

10 for Louisville, which shot 48 percent. Players celebrated on the court before their red-clad following that traveled just under 80 miles east.

The Beavers struggled in their bid of adding Louisville to their remarkable run of NCAA upsets after previously ousting No. 3 seed Tennessee and No. 2 Baylor last week. Oregon State outrebound­ed Louisville, 32-28, behind 6-foot-5 Marie Gulich, who had 14 points and eight rebounds, but the team shot 35 percent in losing just their second game in the past 12.

“Hats off to Louisville, they played an outstandin­g game,” Ohio State coach Scott Rueck said. “They were on point defensivel­y, kept us off our spots early. Never let us get comfortabl­e, forced us into turnovers.”

The Beavers initially succeeded in limiting Louisville’s scoring, but they could not make baskets against a rotation of coverages on Gulich and tight defense on others, especially on the perimeter. Keeping pace with the Cardinals’ quickness was another struggle, especially during the pivotal third quarter in which Louisville took control.

The Cardinals were a little too fast at the start and missed easy chances, but the shots they took provided an early edge. Shooting

9-for-25 on threes against Oregon State’s zone was huge in spreading things out, and they hit another gear in the third quarter to put it out of reach.

Durr, who totaled 42 points this weekend, was named the region’s Most Outstandin­g Player. Joining her on the all-region team were teammates Hines-Allen, Carter and Fuehring, as well as Oregon State’s Gulich.

Louisville reached the Final Four in 2009 and 2013 under Walz, losing the championsh­ip both times to UConn Walz briefly became emotional as he let the victory sink in. Among those he thanked was former Louisville athletic director Tom Jurich, fired last fall in the wake of the school’s acknowledg­ement of its involvemen­t in a federal corruption investigat­ion of men’s college basketball.

Louisville will face the Mississipp­i State-UCLA winner in Friday’s Final Four semifinal in Columbus, Ohio.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? CARDINAL RULE: Louisville’s Jazmine Jones celebrates late in the Cardinals 76-43 rout of Oregon State Sunday in the NCAA Tournament Lexington Regional final in Kentucky.
The Associated Press CARDINAL RULE: Louisville’s Jazmine Jones celebrates late in the Cardinals 76-43 rout of Oregon State Sunday in the NCAA Tournament Lexington Regional final in Kentucky.

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