Chattanooga Times Free Press

MTSU’s 18-point rally takes down Louisville

- BY BRETT MARTEL

BATON ROUGE, La. — Savannah Wheeler, the Conference USA player of the year, missed her first six shots, picked up two fouls and committed a turnover during the first 18 minutes of Middle Tennessee State University’s game against Louisville on Friday in the opening round of the NCAA tournament.

But when the 5-foot-6 guard finally scored her first points on a layup with 1:16 left in the first half, a game that Louisville had dominated early was about to change.

Wheeler scored 20 of her 22 points in the second half, and the 11th-seeded Lady Blue Raiders stormed back from 18 down to defeat the sixth-seeded Cardinals 71-69 in the Albany 2 quadrant of the bracket.

“I kept telling myself to keep staying aggressive and just keep playing within myself, and eventually one is going to fall,” said Wheeler, a fifth-year senior who hit five of her seven second-half shots, including all three 3-point attempts she put up. “We’re a team that we don’t give up. We keep playing hard. We keep fighting.”

Jalynn Gregory scored 24 for MTSU (30-4), which has won 20 straight games since losing 68-69 to Grand Canyon on Dec. 30.

Center Anastasiia Boldyreva had 11 points, 12 rebounds and three blocked shots for the Lady Raiders, who matched the third-largest comeback in tourney history to advance to the second round for the fifth time overall but first time since 2007. MTSU will play Sunday against reigning national champion LSU, a No. 3 seed and a 70-60 winner over 14th-seeded Rice in Friday’s second game at the Maravich Center.

Olivia Cochran had a doubledoub­le (17 points, 10 rebounds) and Nina Rickards scored 12 points for Louisville (24-10), but Cochran was whistled for her fourth foul in the middle of the third quarter, and she was subbed out with Louisville still holding a five-point lead.

“We made a big push when that happened,” MTSU coach Rick Insell said. “They didn’t have anybody else like her — and we didn’t either.”

When Cochran checked back in during the fourth quarter, MTSU had a slim lead and Cochran had little choice but to shy away from contact on the defensive end.

“We fouled too much,” Cochran said, her voice cracking. “Some of those calls were dumb fouls on me. Some of them were tough calls. … I’m sorry.”

The Cardinals had advanced to five straight regional finals before this season and hadn’t lost in the first round since 2006. The Atlantic Coast Conference program nearly came back from an eight-point deficit in the final two minutes.

Sydney Taylor’s 3 with five seconds left made it 71-69, and MTSU’s Ta’Mia Scott missed two free throws. That allowed Merissah Russell to try a halfcourt shot for the win that hit the backboard and rim.

“It’s on us as a team as and as players,” Russell said through tears as she made a point of defending her coach, Jeff Walz. “We know the culture here. We know the standard here, and this is not it. … This is not who we are. I feel like failure.”

Louisville built a big early lead in part by hitting four of its first five 3-point attempts, with a different player making each one.

The Lady Raiders missed 10 of their first 13 shots, and the first period ended with Russell stealing the ball from Boldyreva for a breakaway layup to give the Cardinals a 28-12 lead. Russell’s 3 made it 38-20 with 4:18 left in the second quarter, but MTSU’s comeback began soon after.

Scott’s layup, Gregory’s 3 and Wheeler’s layup cut it to 38-27 at halftime. Wheeler’s second 3 of the third quarter cut it to 44-40. And another Wheeler 3, followed by Scott’s three free throws after she was fouled on the perimeter, tied it at 48 with 1:33 left in the third.

Wheeler then finished an explosive drive through several converging defenders with a layup, capping an 8-0 run that put the Lady Raiders in front 50-48 and set up a tension-filled fourth quarter.

“That’s why she’s player of the year in our conference. That’s why she’s MVP of the conference tournament,” Insell said. “She’s a scoring machine.”

After shooting nearly 47% in the first half, the Cardinals made just 33.3% of their fieldgoal attempts in the second, when they missed six of seven tries from 3-point range. The Cardinals lost despite outrebound­ing MTSU 41-34 and outscoring the Blue Raiders 34-22 in the paint.

Walz also said that Taylor was trying to play through an illness.

“Sid gutted it out for 30 minutes, and Sid’s sick,” Walz said. “Sid’s never asked to come out of a game, and she asked five or six times. … You could see it energy-wise from her.”

 ?? AP PHOTO/GERALD HERBERT ?? MTSU guard Jalynn Gregory (10) celebrates with her teammates after the Lady Blue Raiders’ 71-69 upset of sixth-seeded Louisville in an NCAA tournament first-round game Friday in Baton Rouge, La.
AP PHOTO/GERALD HERBERT MTSU guard Jalynn Gregory (10) celebrates with her teammates after the Lady Blue Raiders’ 71-69 upset of sixth-seeded Louisville in an NCAA tournament first-round game Friday in Baton Rouge, La.

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