USA TODAY Sports Weekly

NC State women advance thanks to Aziaha James and her long range

- Lindsay Schnell

PORTLAND, Ore. – For what it’s worth, it might not matter where the 3point line is when Aziaha James is in the building.

It certainly didn’t last Sunday. James was perfect from 3 in the first half (5 of 5) and pretty dang good in the second half (2 of 4), scoring 27 points and lifting third-seeded North Carolina State to a 76-66 win over top-seeded Texas in the Portland 4 Regional as the Wolfpack punched their ticket to Cleveland and the Final Four.

It is North Carolina State’s first trip to women’s college basketball’s promised land since 1998. And the Wolfpack are going because of another brilliant performanc­e from James.

Just two days after going off for 25 points in the second half versus Stanford in the Sweet 16, James tallied 21 points in the first half against the Longhorns.

It came under some strange circumstan­ces.

Roughly 15 minutes before tip-off, NCAA officials informed both North Carolina State coach Wes Moore and Texas coach Vic Schaefer that there was a discrepanc­y with the 3-point lines on the Moda Center court. According to Moore, the line in front of Texas’ bench was the correct distance while the line in front of the Wolfpack’s bench was a tad short. Although the NCAA declined to give exact measuremen­ts, the difference was noticeable on the floor.

The 3-point line is the same in men’s and women’s college basketball, measuring 22 feet, 1 inches from the center of the basket to the outside edge of the 3-point line and 21 feet, 7 from the corners. Coaches were given the option of delaying the game to bring in someone to fix it but decided to play.

With the way James was shooting, it might not have mattered where the line was. Her hot hand blitzed Texas as the Wolfpack shot 6 of 9 from deep before heading to the locker room.

“We got popped early and didn’t really handle that well,” Schaefer said of N.C. State’s hot start.

No kidding. The Longhorns were reeling at the break, having shot just 34% from the floor despite taking 12 more shots, mostly the result of 10 offensive boards. But Texas couldn’t convert, and James couldn’t miss.

Texas cut the lead to as few as six, 5448, with 1:06 to play in the third, but then there was James again, calmly knocking down a corner 3 and giving the Wolfpack breathing room.

“It took me too long to adjust,” admitted a tearful Shay Holle afterward, the Longhorns guard who’d drawn the assignment of checking James.

But Holle, who finished with 12 points and five boards, wasn’t ready to say James was “unconsciou­s.” She didn’t want to imply that this was only happening because James was having some sort of out-of-body experience.

“She’s super talented,” Holle said. “Good players play well in big games and she did that. I don’t want to take anything away from her. She’s more than capable, and she played a great game the game before this, too.”

It’s an incredible run for the Wolfpack, picked to finish eighth in preseason ACC polls this season. Notre Dame and Duke also advanced deep in the postseason but lost their Sweet 16 games. James said doubt from outsiders fueled the Wolfpack. The payoff was more than worth it.

“It feels amazing,” James said. “We showed up on the court every time and proved who we were every time.”

Perhaps the sweetest part of this win though: Just two years ago, the Wolfpack lost a 91-87 double-overtime heartbreak­er to UConn in the Elite Eight. That season, N.C. State was seeded No. 1 in its region but played second-seeded UConn in Bridgeport, 80 miles from Storrs and UConn’s campus. It was basically a home game for the Huskies. Moore was hot about it afterward; he told USA TODAY Sports then that he skipped the Final Four in Minneapoli­s because it was too hard to watch UConn play in the national semifinal.

Now he’ll get to coach in one of his own.

James was on the 2021-22 roster, one of just two members of this year’s team to experience that Elite Eight devastatio­n. But James, then a freshman, didn’t play in that game. She was available, but Moore likes to play veterans in the postseason. In a testament to her patience and belief in the Wolfpack system, though, she didn’t go into the transfer portal. Instead she went to the gym and worked on her shot.

“You hope they’ll be patient,” Moore said. “I notice all these teams, early in the year you’re playing a lot of freshmen and then when you get to (the postseason), your rotation is shrunk down. It’s hard on them. And you hope they’ll stick around. … I’m used to seeing kids develop. Aziaha is an unbelievab­le example.”

Her patience and practice reps clearly paid off. Now she’s basking in the aftermath.

“It feels so good to be a part of this,” James said. “People didn’t know my name my freshman year, but y’all know my name now.”

Surely South Carolina, the Wolfpack’s national semifinal opponent, will know her name, and her game, too.

 ?? TROY WAYRYNEN/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Guard Aziaha James celebrates the Wolfpack advancing to the Final Four.
TROY WAYRYNEN/USA TODAY SPORTS Guard Aziaha James celebrates the Wolfpack advancing to the Final Four.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States