The Mercury News

Missouri State has revenge in mind

Stanford topped Bears in the Sweet 16 in 2019

- Ky Stephen iawkins

SAN ANTONIO >> Brice Calip and Missouri State were young, still inexperien­ced and in many ways just enjoying the moment when they made it to the women’s NCAA Sweet 16 two years ago.

There is a different feeling now for Calip and eight other Lady Bears still around from that 2019 game. But they face the same challengin­g opponent when they play No. 1 seed Stanford in an Alamo Region semifinal game today in the Alamodome.

“Compared to this year, we know that we were born to be in this spotlight, and just showing the nation our game and just being more prepared and fulfilling our roles in order to get to this point,” said Calip, the senior guard and Missouri Valley Conference player of the year who will play her 131st career game, one short of the school record.

“This team is resilient,” senior guard Elle Ruffridge said. “Collective­ly, we’re just so good together.”

Stanford and Missouri State (23-2) both had a hard time making shots in their Sweet 16 matchup up two years ago. The Cardinal shot 25% (17 of 68) overall, and 10.3% (3 of 29) on 3-pointers, with Missouri State only slightly better

at 25.4% overall (16 of 63) and 15.4% from long range (3 of 13).

“I remember just struggling to score offensivel­y,” Stanford third-team AllAmerica senior guard Kiana Williams said. “They have a lot of the same players, so that means they’re more experience­d and they’re going to be even more aggressive and physical.”

Williams is averaging 19.8 points in her past four games, shooting a blistering 58.3% from deep, including six against Utah Valley in the opening round of the tournament.

Fifth-seeded Missouri State is a mid-major with two Final Four appearance­s, the last two decades ago with record scorer Jackie Stiles. The Lady Bears finally got back to the Sweet 16 two years ago and lost 55-46 to Stanford, but the pandemic denied them another tournament shot last year when they were 26-4 in coach Amaka Agugua-hamilton’s debut after Kellie Harper left to coach her alma mater at Tennessee.

“What they have is a

tradition,” said Stanford’s Tara Vanderveer, in her record 35th NCAA tourney as a coach. “They have a tradition of winning basketball, they have a tradition of playing hard-nosed team basketball.”

Stanford (27-2) is in its 13th consecutiv­e Sweet 16, and Agugua-hamilton believes the Cardinal are even better than two years ago. She feels the same about her fifth-seeded Lady Bears.

“We’ve done a lot of player developmen­t individual­ly. Our players have gotten better, but even just more so gelled as a team, and as a group,” Agugua

Hamilton said. “Last year, I think we probably could have had a pretty good run in the tournament. We just have had more time together.”

The Lady Bears have a 19-game winning streak, though their first two NCAA tourney wins came over fellow mid-majors UC Davis and Wright State. Pac-12 champion Stanford’s second-round 73-62 win over aggressive Big 12 team Oklahoma State was its 16th win in a row.

THE X FACTOR >> Missouri State post players Jasmine Franklin, the MVC defensive player of the year, and Abby Hipp have to be physical against Stanford’s starting lineup that generally features four guards and 6-foot-4 freshman forward Cameron Brink

PLAYERS TO WATCH >> Williams, the third-team AllAmerica­n playing the NCAA tournament in her hometown, became Stanford’s career leader for made 3-pointers in the first round . ... Franklin has had consecutiv­e double-doubles in the NCAA Tournament for the Lady Bears. Ruffridge, who didn’t take a shot in the 2019 game had a career-high 20 points while making 5 of 7 3-pointers against Wright State.

 ?? STEPHEN SPILLMAN — AP ?? Stanford’s Kiana Williams, right, is averaging 19.8 points over her last four games.
STEPHEN SPILLMAN — AP Stanford’s Kiana Williams, right, is averaging 19.8 points over her last four games.

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