Chattanooga Times Free Press

LSU, Iowa get rematch after Sweet 16 victories

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ALBANY, N.Y. — Angel Reese said she and her LSU teammates are embracing the role of “good villains” in the NCAA basketball tournament as they make a run toward repeating as national champions.

Flau’jae Johnson had 24 points and 12 rebounds, and Reese put up her 26th double-double of the season Saturday as LSU (31-5) beat UCLA 78-69 in the Sweet 16.

Reese had 16 points and 11 rebounds before fouling out late in the game for the Tigers, who closed on a 14-2 run. Aneesah Morrow had 17 points and Mikaylah Williams added 12.

And all the while the Tigers did their usual trash-talking, screaming and waving goodbye to their opponent.

“We’re the good villains,” Reese said. “We’re impacting the game so much, and all of us are supercompe­titive and want to win and do whatever it takes to win. We’re just changing the game.”

LSU advanced to the Elite Eight, where it will face Iowa on Monday night in a rematch of last year’s national championsh­ip game. The Hawkeyes beat Colorado in the day’s second semifinal in the Albany 2 Region.

Lauren Betts had 14 points and 17 rebounds for UCLA, which finished the season at 27-7. Gabriela Jaquez and Londynn Jones also put up 14 points each, and Kiki Rice scored 13 for the Bruins.

LSU led by seven points at halftime, but the Bruins, after making just two of their first 20 shots from 3-point range, hit four of their next five. Consecutiv­e 3-pointers from Jones keyed an 11-2 run that gave UCLA the lead at 45-44, and the teams were tied at 48 headed into the fourth quarter.

Jaquez hit a jumper that gave the Bruins a 67-64 lead with 2:46 left. LSU responded with its run, sparked when Reese blocked a shot by Betts, leading to a drive by Johnson that fouled out Rice.

“I think that I wasn’t scared of the moment,” Johnson said of her game. “I really loved the delight. I love that underdog feeling. Coach Mulkey told me go do what you do, and I did.”

Johnson had two early 3-pointers in the first half. Her spinning baseline drive and layup highlighte­d an 8-0 LSU spurt that put the Tigers up 25-18.

The Bruins made only one of 16 shots from behind the arc before Jones’ 3 from the left wing just before the halftime buzzer. That ended an 8-0 LSU run and cut what had been a 10-point lead to 34-27.

“Credit to LSU,” Bruins coach Cori Close said. “They got the shots that they wanted down the stretch, and we didn’t get the shots that we wanted. We did not execute the way that we needed to, and that’s one that’s going to sting for a really long time for me.”

› Iowa 89, Colorado 68

Let the hype begin! Caitlin Clark had 29 points

and 15 assists to lead top-seeded Iowa (32-4) past fifth-seeded Colorado (24-10), setting up the rematch with LSU.

“I think we’re excited. Anytime you have a chance to go up against somebody you lost to, it brings a little more energy,” Clark said. “I think overall it’s just going to be a really great game for women’s basketball. They’re really solid one through five. We know we are going to have to rebound the basketball.”

Said Iowa coach Lisa Bluder: “I think everyone’s pretty excited for it. These are two really good basketball teams. Unfortunat­e they are meeting this early. Everyone that’s left now is really good. LSU is certainly that. It’s going to be highly emotional and highly competitiv­e.”

Clark got the Hawkeyes going early, driving to the basket for easy layups or throwing fantastic passes. About the only thing missing from Clark’s day was one of her signature midcourt logo shots. She took a couple, but missed.

The all-time NCAA Division I scoring leader has dazzled off the court as well. She’s a transcende­nt player who has brought record ratings and attendance to the sport. The sold-out crowd was filled with girls and boys wearing No. 22 Iowa shirts who cheered at every play their favorite player made. Clark spent a few minutes after the buzzer signing autographs before she went back to the locker room.

Clark threaded the needle with a beautiful bounce pass to Hannah Stuelke for a layup before the end of the first quarter that gave the Hawkeyes a 22-14 lead. Clark had six points, six assists and three rebounds in the opening 10 minutes.

She finished the first half with 15 points and eight assists as the Hawkeyes were up 48-35 at the break.

Iowa scored the first six points of the third quarter, and Colorado could not get within single digits the rest of the way.

“We had the punch to begin the third quarter,” Bluder said. “Set the tone early in both the halves which was really important.”

The Buffaloes made their first back-to-back trips to the Sweet 16 since the 2002-03. They also were knocked out last year by Iowa, falling 87-77 in the same round.

Aaronette Vonleh scored 13 points and Frida Formann had 12 for the Buffs.

Clark got her teammates involved. Sydney Affolter scored 15 points, making all six of her shots. Kate Martin and Gabbie Marshall each added 14, combining to hit six 3-pointers.

PORTLAND 3 REGION

› USC 74, Baylor 70

PORTLAND, Ore. — AllAmerica freshman JuJu Watkins drove the length of the floor for a go-ahead three-point play with 3:13 left and finished with 30 points, leading the topseeded University of Southern California past Baylor and into the Elite Eight for the first time since 1994.

Watkins scored nine straight points for the Trojans in the closing minutes and powered a decisive 8-0 run. McKenzie Forbes added 14 points for USC (29-5), which will face UConn on Monday in the Portland 3 Region final for a spot in the Final Four.

“It was just a matter of turning the game around,” Watkins said. “And I knew I had to do

something.”

Sarah Andrews scored 17 points for Baylor (26-8), which was making its 20th straight March Madness appearance and was vying for its first Elite Eight spot since 2021, Kim Mulkey’s final season as coach of the Bears before heading to LSU.

USC won back-to-back national titles in 1983-84, but the Trojans’ deepest run in the tourney since was a regional final loss in 1994 under coach Cheryl Miller to Louisiana Tech.

Watkins surpassed Ohio State’s Kelsey Mitchell (873 points in 2014-15) for second on the all-time freshman scoring list. The 18-year-old Los Angeles native has 891 points, seven shy of the record set by San Diego State’s Tina Hutchinson in 1984.

“It really boils down to the trust that everybody has in me,” Watkins said. “Despite me not shooting well tonight, I think that when the game is on the line, I think my teammates trust me to go get a bucket. Luckily we came out on top of that one.”

The Bears used physicalit­y to counter USC’s size advantage and jumped to an early 7-2 lead. The Trojans, led by Watkins with eight points, had an 18-16 lead after the opening quarter.

USC stretched the lead to 24-19, but Edwards responded with a 3. The Trojans pulled ahead 35-24 late in the second period and led 37-31 at the half.

“I thought we made some mistakes, and there’s always going to be slippage in a game this big,” Baylor coach Nicki Collen said. “They got a heavy dose of Baylor basketball in the second half.”

› UConn 53, Duke 45

Paige Bueckers scored 24 points to lead the thirdseede­d University of Connecticu­t (32-5) and its injury-depleted roster back to the Elite Eight with a victory over No. 7 seed Duke (22-12)

A year after having to watch March Madness while sidelined by a knee injury, Bueckers was again the best player on the floor, lifting the Huskies into their 28th regional final. And this one will be among the more unlikely in coach Geno Auriemma’s 39-year tenure.

UConn dressed eight players and played only six. But it still has Bueckers, the 2021 national player of the year who has returned to that form after injuries limited or sidelined her for most of the past two seasons.

The Huskies’ victory set up the matchup fans had anticipate­d since the brackets were released — UConn vs. USC on Monday night with Bueckers squaring off against Watkins, the Trojans’ fab freshman.

 ?? AP PHOTO/STEVE DYKES ?? Southern California freshman JuJu Watkins looks to shoot as Baylor guards Jada Walker (11) and Aijha Blackwell defend during the first half of their NCAA tournament Sweet 16 game Saturday in Portland, Ore.
AP PHOTO/STEVE DYKES Southern California freshman JuJu Watkins looks to shoot as Baylor guards Jada Walker (11) and Aijha Blackwell defend during the first half of their NCAA tournament Sweet 16 game Saturday in Portland, Ore.

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