Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

VanDerveer wants refs to be consistent

- By Teresa M. Walker

Tara VanDerveer is willing to cut officials some slack with her Stanford Cardinal playing in the national championsh­ip Sunday night, saying they can’t see everything and work hard to do their best.

Still, the type of basketball being played in the women’s NCAA Tournament looks very different from how they played early this season, and VanDerveer said again Saturday she just wants some consistenc­y and players able to play without being thrown to the floor.

“It’s just the the attitude that we change from playing basketball in the fall and winter to playing football in the spring,” VanDerveer said. “And I think we just need to be consistent with how we want our game played.”

This women’s tournament has had three very notable questionab­le calls and non-calls just since Monday night.

First came the lack of a call when Baylor’s DiJonnai Carrington was hit on the elbow and again in the face on a shot at the end of the game against UConn in the River Walk final.

Then Stanford’s Katie Hull appeared to kick the ball away from South Carolina guard Zia Cooke with 1:46 left. Hull got the ball to Brink for a layup and a 64-59 lead. Stanford won 66-65. And UConn junior guard Christyn Williams fouled out with 3:51 left in the Huskies’ 69-59 loss to Arizona.

TV replays showed Hull’s outstretch­ed leg kicking the ball and later that Williams made no contact with Arizona guard Aari McDonald. VanDerveer said she thought Brink was hacked on the turnover that set up South Carolina’s last two shots at a victory.

South Carolina coach Dawn Staley saw the kicked ball.

“I didn’t make a big deal out of it,” Staley said. “But, I mean, I don’t know what you want me to say. I can’t say much about it besides they (officials) got a tough job.”

Officials called 30 fouls in Stanford’s win, though Brink and South Carolina’s Aliyah Boston and Destanni Henderson each finished with four apiece.

Far more whistles blew in the other semifinal with 44 total, and both UConn and Arizona finished with more fouls than shots made.

UConn had 23 fouls and was 20-of-56, while Arizona shot 20-of-50 with 21 fouls called. Williams said the officiatin­g was different in the semifinal and thought Olivia Nelson-Odoba fouled.

“Obviously I was devastated because I had to go out of the game,” said Williams, who had a team-high 20 points. Staley said officials have a tough job. “There are dreams on the line,” Staley said. “Everybody wants to compete for a national championsh­ip.

No apology: TV cameras caught Arizona coach Adia Barnes in a passionate moment of celebratio­n after the Wildcats’ upset of UConn. She’s not backing down a day later.

Barnes admitted Friday night she used an expletive telling her team to forget the people who didn’t believe in them. She wrote on social media Saturday morning that it was supposed to be a private moment with her team and no, she didn’t gesture at the camera.

She told reporters later Saturday she thought it was a more intimate huddle that appeared different on TV.

“I’m not apologizin­g for it because I don’t feel like I need to apologize,” Barnes said. “It’s what I felt was my team at the moment, and I wouldn’t take it back . ... So I’m in those moments and that’s how I am sort of apologized for doing that. But I’m just me, and I have to just be me.”

Ratings report: All 63 games in this women’s NCAA Tournament were broadcast nationally with six on ABC, the first on a national broadcast network since 1995.

And people have been tuning in. ESPN reports the Elite 8 averaged 1.186 million viewers, a jump of 6% from 2019. The Sweet 16 averaged 915,000 viewers for a 66% improvemen­t and the mostviewed Sweet 16 since 2013. Second round games averaged 375,000 viewers, while the 48 first and second round games averaged 261,000 viewers.

Arizona senior forward Sam Thomas said they’re playing entertaini­ng and quality basketball with future WNBA stars.

“Now we’re getting more views, more respect,” Thomas said.

Play like Magic: Leave it to reporters to spill to players what a coach really thinks about how they play. That’s how Stanford guard Haley Jones learned that Stanford coach Tara VanDerveer compared how she plays to Magic Johnson.

Jones immediatel­y lit up at the compliment.

“She never told me that,” Jones said with a big smile.

The 6-foot-1 sophomore guard hit the game-winning jumper with 32 seconds left Friday night to lift Stanford over South Carolina and into the Cardinal’s first national championsh­ip appearance since 2010.

A native of Santa Cruz, California, Jones called Johnson a legend.

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