The Day

South Carolina picks up pace and rallies past Stanford

- By STEPHEN HAWKINS

Dallas — South Carolina was able to speed up the tempo after halftime, A'ja Wilson managed a double-double even while almost constantly surrounded by defenders and Dawn Staley finally got a win against Tara VanDerveer.

With all that, the Gamecocks are going to their first national championsh­ip after beating Stanford 62-53 Friday night in the women's national semifinals. The Cardinal led early, but struggled after star Karlie Samuelson sprained her ankle.

"I can't even put into words the feeling that I have right now. This is a very special team," said Wilson, who had 13 points and 19 rebounds. "I feel like we've earned this spot that we're in now. We know that we're not done. But just the feeling of just making history at your school is just something really special."

Allisha Gray scored 18 points for the Gamecocks (32-4), who lost in the semifinal of their only other Final Four appearance two years ago.

Down 29-20 at halftime, South Carolina went ahead to stay with 13 straight points in the third quarter.

"The second half, I thought we just imposed our will from a defensive standpoint, sped the game up, and got playing at a pace which benefited our style of play," Staley said.

Stanford (32-6) took a big hit when Samuelson hurt her right ankle with

about 4 1/2 minutes before halftime, after the Cardinal had taken an eight-point lead with a 13-1 run.

"Karlie twisting her ankle really kind of gave us a tough time," VanDerveer said. "She's really been the glue to our team all year. She talks, she makes big shots. If someone told before the game she won't score, I'd say we're in trouble. ... Psychologi­cally and physically, it was a challenge."

Samuelson was injured when she was making a move toward the basket, and stepped on the foot of South Carolina guard Bianca Cuevas-Moore. Samuelson's right foot then slid onto the floor before twisting awkwardly. The senior guard grabbed near her ankle with both hands after falling down.

Two teammates came off the bench to carry Samuelson off the floor. She returned for the first 73 seconds after halftime, and got back in several times after that without making much of an impact.

"It hurt really bad when it happened," said Samuelson, who was scoreless in 25 minutes. "I sprained my ankle and we just didn't get the win."

The senior guard's younger sister, Katie Lou, played for UConn in the second semifinal game Friday night. The fourtime defending national champion Huskies played Mississipp­i State.

Erica McCall had 14 points and 14 rebounds for the Cardinal, but made only 7 of 19 shots. Alanna Smith had 14 points and 12 rebounds.

South Carolina went ahead 35-33 when Wilson, with defenders around her like most of the night, found Cuevas-Moore open for a 3-pointer that she hit.

 ?? SEAN D. ELLIOT/THE DAY ?? South Carolina’s Aikiah Herbert Harrigan celebrates as the Gamecocks take the lead for good in the second half of Friday’s 62-53 win over Stanford in the first national semifinal at American Airlines Center in Dallas.
SEAN D. ELLIOT/THE DAY South Carolina’s Aikiah Herbert Harrigan celebrates as the Gamecocks take the lead for good in the second half of Friday’s 62-53 win over Stanford in the first national semifinal at American Airlines Center in Dallas.

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