Yuma Sun

Indiana women open March Madness with 30-point win over Tennessee Tech

- BY MICHAEL MAROT

BLOOMINGTO­N, Ind. – All-american center Mackenzie Holmes started Indiana’s NCAA title quest on the bench.

She doesn’t intend to stay there long.

After watching Sydney Parrish score 19 points and grab eight rebounds and her replacemen­t, Lilly Meister, add seven points and three blocks in the top-seeded Hoosiers’ 77-47 rout of 16th-seeded Tennessee Tech, Holmes said she plans to return for Monday night’s second-round game.

“It’s something we had planned for a while. We’re trying to be cautious after I got banged up in the Big Ten Tournament,” Holmes said. “I’m being evaluated day by day and so we’ve got today, tomorrow and then we’ll see Monday.”

Holmes missed eight games last season with an injured left knee and still wasn’t 100% when the Hoosiers’ postseason run ended in the Sweet 16. While she acknowledg­ed it was frustratin­g to watch again Saturday, the Hoosiers really didn’t need her to advance through the first round.

With Parrish playing her role, Grace Berger adding 17 points, seven rebounds, four assists and three blocks and Meister and Alyssa Geary splitting minutes in place of Holmes, Indiana (28-3) looked the part of a No. 1 seed over the final three quarters.

But the Hoosiers may need Holmes against ninth-seeded Miami (20-12), a 62-61 winner over Oklahoma State in Saturday’s second game.

“I thought Berger was

exceptiona­l. She led in every way,” Tech coach Kim Rosamond said. “She was just tremendous, especially in the first half.”

Maaliya Owens had 17 points and nine rebounds to lead the Golden Eagles (23-10), who had won their previous eight. They just couldn’t hold up against the bigger, stronger, deeper Hoosiers – especially in front of a boisterous crowd that topped the 14,000 mark.

The score was tied at 18 after one quarter and Tennessee Tech took a 2220 lead on Anna Walker’s layup with 6:53 to go.

That’s when the Hoosiers flipped the game.

Meister tied the score with a layup, Lexus Bargesser broke free for backto-back fast breaks and when Berger made two free

throws with 2:55 left in the first half, Indiana led 37-22. The Hoosiers took a 39-27 lead into halftime.

Tennessee Tech never got within single digits again.

“We’ve always called it sharing the sugar around here and this is a team that’s unselfish, that’s balanced,” Hoosiers coach Teri Moren said after picking up her 200th career win. “This is a team that realizes it could be Grace’s night, it could be Syd’s night, it just doesn’t matter as long as we get the win.”

BIG PICTURE

Tennessee Tech: Whether it was the fatigue of playing seven games in 23 days, the 36 1/2-hour turnaround from their play-in game win over Monmouth

or simply the disparity in talent, the Golden Eagles’ remarkable run came to an unceremoni­ous end. But with much of the roster back from a team that made its first NCAA Tournament appearance in 23 years and won its first tournament game in 33 years, coach Kim Rosamond can build off the momentum of this season.

Indiana: The Hoosiers showed their expansive depth and just how solid this overall defense can play in Holmes’ absence. While the additional rest may keep Holmes healthier over the long haul, Indiana needs its best player scoring points, grabbing rebounds and creating havoc in the post if it hopes to win a national championsh­ip.

 ?? DARRON CUMMINGS/AP ?? INDIANA’S MACKENZIE HOLMES (middle) greets Yarden Garzon (12) during a timeout in the second half of a first-round game against Tennessee Tech in the women’s NCAA Tournament on Saturday in Bloomingto­n, Ind.
DARRON CUMMINGS/AP INDIANA’S MACKENZIE HOLMES (middle) greets Yarden Garzon (12) during a timeout in the second half of a first-round game against Tennessee Tech in the women’s NCAA Tournament on Saturday in Bloomingto­n, Ind.

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