USA TODAY Sports Weekly

Deep roster makes Gamecocks tough

- Nancy Armour

ALBANY, N.Y. – South Carolina can suck the oxygen out of a room and the hope from an opponent’s heart.

With a roster so deep you can barely see the end of it, South Carolina is never truly in trouble. Oh, an opponent might think so, staying within striking distance and feeling as if it can overtake the Gamecocks with another bucket or two.

Little do they know South Carolina is just biding its time. Until BOOM! The Gamecocks take off on a run and their opponent is left wondering what the heck just happened and checking for tread marks on their back.

Take last Sunday’s game against Oregon State, which South Carolina won 7058 to advance to the Final Four for a fourth consecutiv­e season. The Gamecocks, the overall No. 1 seed in the NCAA women’s basketball tournament, will face North Carolina State on Friday in Cleveland.

Despite being deep in foul trouble and getting beaten on the boards, the Beavers got to within two, 43-41, on a layup by Raegan Beers with 6:08 left in the third quarter. Two possession­s later, Te-Hina Paopao missed a 3-pointer.

And that’s when it happened. Raven Johnson snagged the rebound and drilled a 3. Ninety seconds later, she fed Tessa Johnson for a 3. South Carolina harassed Oregon State into a bad shot on the other end and got the rebound, and Johnson scored on a driving layup.

Another forced turnover led to Sania Feagin’s driving layup. After an Oregon State miss, South Carolina kept its possession alive with not one, not two but three offensive rebounds before Feagin finally scored on a put-back.

South Carolina’s lead was now at 14. It had taken all of about three minutes.

“Raven hit (a 3) first, and me and Pao were saying she opened up the basket for us,” Johnson said. “I remember she passed it to me and I just let it go, and then it brought momentum to the team.”

The Gamecocks are not invincible, despite what their unbeaten record suggests. They got tested by Indiana and Oregon State.

But they’re smart and they’re opportunis­tic, and their ability to work themselves out of a jam should not be underestim­ated.

“For this particular year, we’ve responded, and it’s produced wins,” Gamecocks coach Dawn Staley said. “It’s not always like that. But with this particular team ... it is them being able to lock in and execute what we need them to execute, and when it’s not executed perfectly, they figure out a way on their own to make some plays.

“Because a lot of times when you’re making those runs, it isn’t a coach saying, ‘This, this, this.’ It is players making plays. It’s them giving an extra effort.”

South Carolina’s improved 3-point shooting also helps when it needs to deliver the dagger.

The Gamecocks are shooting a little over 39% from 3-point range this season, which is significantly better than the 30% they shot last year.

It should be no surprise that, when South Carolina makes one of its soulsuckin­g runs, a shot from deep is usually involved.

“The difference in this team is their ability to consistent­ly knock down threes. That’s what makes them what they are in my opinion,” Oregon State coach Scott Rueck said. “South Carolina will always be a great rebounding team. They’ll always have an inside presence. They always have. They’ll always have people that can really defend and disrupt.

“They haven’t always had consistent

perimeter scoring, and this team does. That’s what ended up hurting us.”

Oregon State would whittle the lead back down to 62-58 late in the fourth quarter. But it was largely an academic exercise. The Beavers had had their chance in the third quarter, and South Carolina had crushed it.

“We had to be near flawless, and we just weren’t able,” Rueck said. “We just weren’t quite flawless enough.”

It might be small consolatio­n, but the Beavers are hardly alone. South Carolina has won all but six games this season by 10 or more points. The Gamecocks have options upon options upon options.

But what makes South Carolina so frightenin­g is its refusal to buckle. It finds somehow, some way to create distance when an opponent is closing in.

The Gamecocks cut down the nets as the Albany 1 regional champions. Unless there’s a team that can reel them in, stop those runs before the game gets out of hand, they’ll be doing the same thing this Sunday.

 ?? GREGORY FISHER/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Te-Hina Paopao grabs a rebound during South Carolina’s Elite Eight win last Sunday that sends it to its fourth consecutiv­e Final Four.
GREGORY FISHER/USA TODAY SPORTS Te-Hina Paopao grabs a rebound during South Carolina’s Elite Eight win last Sunday that sends it to its fourth consecutiv­e Final Four.
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