Chattanooga Times Free Press

Undefeated Gamecocks easy pick to be women’s No. 1 overall seed

- BY DOUG FEINBERG

EDITOR’S NOTE: The NCAA women’s tournament bracket will appear in Tuesday’s Times Free Press.

South Carolina coach Dawn Staley has her team six wins away from finishing off a historic feat.

The Gamecocks are attempting to become the 10th women’s college basketball team to go undefeated for an entire season as the they enter the NCAA tournament as the No. 1 overall seed.

Staley’s squad has been challenged a few times this year but has always pulled through. The reigning national champions will play Norfolk State in the first round of the tournament, the NCAA selection committee revealed Sunday night.

“It didn’t take a loss for us to learn from the lessons of a close game,” Staley said. “Now we found ourselves in a position where we can’t afford to lose.”

While the Gamecocks, led by star Aliyah Boston, have been a lock to be the top seed for most of the season, several schools were vying for the other No. 1 seeds, including Indiana, Iowa, Stanford, Utah and Virginia Tech. Iowa, currently led by electrifyi­ng guard Caitlin Clark, has been a top seed twice before, in 1988 and 1992.

The committee ultimately chose Indiana (27-3), Virginia Tech (27-4) and Stanford (28-5) to join South Carolina (32-0) as No. 1 seeds. Indiana and Virginia Tech are first-time No. 1 seeds. Stanford has been a top seed 13 times now, including in the past three tournament­s.

“We spent a lot of time on a variety of things. certainly the No. 1 line and the right teams hosting,” selection committee chair Lisa Peterson said.

The tournament begins Wednesday with two First Four games, then two more a day later. The full madness starts with 16 games Friday and 16 more the next day.

South Carolina may have the easiest path to the Final Four in Dallas, because it won’t have to go far from home before then. The Gamecocks, who are the 18th team to reach the NCAA tourney unbeaten, will play their first two games on campus before potentiall­y heading 90 minutes away to Greenville for one of the two regionals. The Gamecocks won the Southeaste­rn Conference tournament at that site a week before the NCAA’s 68-team bracket was revealed.

“It’s great. When we got shipped out to Stockton (California, in 2017), we thought it was a drag, but we end up winning the national championsh­ip. So there are blessings in all types of situations,” Staley said. “We’re blessed that Greenville was a region. We’re blessed that we did enough to get to sent to this region and we have to make it work for us. We know it won’t be easy.”

The NCAA changed its format this season and is having two regional sites for the Sweet 16 and Elite Eight rounds. Greenville hosts one and Seattle the other. Once again the top four teams in each region will host the opening two rounds.

The other top teams in South Carolina’s bracket are No. 2 seed Maryland, No. 3 Notre Dame and No. 4 UCLA. The Gamecocks beat both Maryland and UCLA this season.

“I like it. Some familiarit­y. Take care of Norfolk State, then see where that takes us,” Staley said. “I don’t want to put the cart before the horse. Sometimes when you’re in a tournament setting like this it’s always a good thing to have played someone.”

Indiana is the other top seed in Greenville. Utah is the No. 2 seed with LSU third and Villanova fourth.

Connecticu­t, which was the most recent team to go unbeaten and win the title in 2015-16, is looking to extend its own history and reach the Final Four for the 15th consecutiv­e year. The Huskies have had a difficult season with injuries but finally started to get healthy heading into March. Star guard Azzi Fudd, who missed 22 games with a knee injury, returned for the Big East tournament and helped the Huskies win it.

Geno Auriemma’s team, which has won a record 11 national championsh­ips, is a No. 2 seed in Seattle. The Hokies are the top seed in that part of the bracket. Ohio State is seeded third and Tennessee fourth.

The Lady Volunteers, who have been in every NCAA tournament since it started in 1982, were runners-up to South Carolina in the SEC tourney after knocking off LSU in the semifinals. Tennessee (23-11) has the chance to play twice in Knoxville, opening with Saint Louis (17-17) on Saturday; the winner of that game faces either Iowa State (22-9) or Toledo (28-4) two days later.

Stanford is No. 1 in the other Seattle regional. Iowa is the No. 2 seed, Duke third and Texas fourth.

The Atlantic Coast Conference has eight teams in the tournament with the Big Ten, Pac-12 and SEC each having seven. The Big 12 has six and the Big East five.

Four teams will be making their first appearance in the tournament: Sacramento State, Saint Louis, Southeaste­rn Louisiana and Southern Utah.

Columbia, Kansas, Massachuse­tts and Oregon were the first four teams out of the field.

 ?? AP PHOTO BY MIC SMITH ?? South Carolina star Aliyah Boston holds up the SEC tournament trophy after the Gamecocks beat Tennessee on March 5 in Greenville, S.C.
AP PHOTO BY MIC SMITH South Carolina star Aliyah Boston holds up the SEC tournament trophy after the Gamecocks beat Tennessee on March 5 in Greenville, S.C.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States