Toronto Star

More eyes, more scrutiny

South Carolina-LSU scrap seen as a bad look for growing women’s game

- PETE IACOBELLI

S.C. More eyes, more fans and more scrutiny. The good and the bad of the game have come into sharper focus as women’s college basketball continues to grow in popularity.

What fans saw Sunday in the NCAA Southeaste­rn Conference tournament championsh­ip game was No. 1 South Carolina and No. 8 LSU getting into a late-game confrontat­ion that led to multiple ejections. Chippy play, plenty of trash talking and players thrown out — something more familiar to fans watching an NBA game.

“I just don’t want the people who are tuning in to women’s basketball to see that and think that is our game, because it isn’t,” said South Carolina coach Dawn Staley, who apologized to the crowd and in post-game interviews. “Our game is a really beautiful thing.”

Not always.

Earlier this season, Ohio State fans were criticized for a courtstorm­ing incident where Iowa star Caitlin Clark collided with a fan rushing to celebrate. Last year, Clark and LSU star Angel Reese’s trash talking in the national championsh­ip surprised fans who may not know that the women’s game has plenty of that, along with hard fouls and rough-and-tumble play.

Last November, the NCAA said it was putting renewed emphasis on sportsmans­hip after last season saw a 33 per cent increase in total technical fouls, 77 per cent in techs to head coaches and a whopping 193 per cent in techs assessed to personnel on the bench. Ejections were way up and there were at least two prominent on-court fights.

A month ago, five players were ejected during a game between Southern Miss and Arkansas State, but that was under the radar. The

LSU-South Carolina skirmish happened in front of 13,163 screaming fans at Bon Secours Wellness Arena and many more watching on ESPN.

With about two minutes left in South Carolina’s 79-72 victory, MiLaysia Fulwiley stole the ball from LSU’s Flau’jae Johnson, who then intentiona­lly fouled her to prevent a breakaway basket. Fulwiley’s teammate, Ashlyn Watkins, walked past yelling at Johnson, who pushed her away. Soon after, sixfoot-seven South Carolina star Kamilla Cardoso ran in and pushed the five-foot-10 Johnson to the ground as both benches emptied.

Security, officials and coaches eventually calmed things down.

Johnson’s brother was arrested and faces charges after police say he jumped over the scorer’s table to get involved. Cardoso was ejected for fighting while three teammates were thrown out for leaving the bench, as were two LSU players.

Cardoso faces a one-game suspension, per NCAA rules, and would miss the Gamecocks’ March Madness opener next week as a result.

Debbie Antonelli, a North Carolina State Hall of Fame player and basketball analyst, said intensity at the college level has always been high.

“I think when you step between the lines you’re athletes, and this is what competitiv­e athletes do,” Antonelli said Monday.

LSU coach Kim Mulkey thought officials did not call a tight enough game.

“Do you realize there was only one foul called on each team with two minutes to play in the fourth quarter? Are you kidding me?” Mulkey said. “That might have created some of that.”

South Carolina finished off the final two minutes of the 79-72 victory and then Staley took control, apologizin­g to fans for her team’s actions, during the trophy ceremony and in media interviews.

“We talk about these things as a team, and we try as much as possible to express to them how to react in those type of situations,” Staley said. “Real time is real time. I know that anybody — Kamilla, as well as the other four or five players that were ejected, I know if they had a chance to do it all over again, they would do it differentl­y.”

Staley said LSU’s Johnson apologized for her actions, while Cardoso took to social media after the game to say she was sorry and pledged to do better.

Antonelli said there is no place for fighting in any game, men’s or women’s, and believes fans understand this was unusual.

“It’s going to be a storyline when South Carolina plays the 16th seed (in the NCAA Tournament) and then we’ll move past it,” she said. Staley hopes that’s the case, too. “This is a part of it now,” she said. “So we have to fix it and we have to move on.”

 ?? CHRIS CARLSON THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? South Carolina centre Kamilla Cardoso battles LSU forward Angel Reese during Sunday’s SEC championsh­ip game in Greenville, S.C.
CHRIS CARLSON THE ASSOCIATED PRESS South Carolina centre Kamilla Cardoso battles LSU forward Angel Reese during Sunday’s SEC championsh­ip game in Greenville, S.C.

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