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    UConn Women's Basketball
    Monday, May 06, 2024

    Stanford was up to challenge

    Stanford, Calif. - Days before this game, Geno Auriemma credited Stanford and Hall of Fame coach Tara VanDerveer for continuing to play UConn when many teams no longer see the point in being beat up by the best program in women's basketball.

    Auriemma understands the importance of such games for both sides, and even a little bit more so after the Cardinal's latest stunner.

    "What games like today illustrate is how damn hard it is to go undefeated," Auriemma said. "We didn't just lose to a team that doesn't have any good players. Sometimes, because of who we are, the biggest story is that we lost ... not that Stanford played great and won, and that would be unfortunate. That would be a disservice to Stanford, but that's the reality, that's the world that we're in."

    Amber Orrange made a go-ahead jumper with 1:38 left in overtime and the tying 3-pointer with 1.4 seconds remaining in regulation to send No. 6 Stanford to the 88-86 upset of No. 1 UConn on Monday night and end the Huskies 47-game winning streak.

    "I think people got their money's worth in that game," VanDerveer said.

    This marked the second time VanDerveer's Stanford teams have ended a UConn-winning streak at home in Maples Pavilion. The Cardinal snapped the Huskies' NCAA record 90-game unbeaten run on this same floor in 2010. Connecticut went 40-0 last season on the way to its second straight championship. The Huskies lost for the first time since falling to Notre Dame in the 2013 conference tournament.

    Orrange led the way this time, and Stanford's students rushed the floor to celebrate right along with her.

    The senior guard's basket in overtime made it 85-84, then Stanford's smothering defense took over. The Cardinal forced UConn into several poor shots, a 5-second violation and prevented the Huskies from getting off a final attempt. Orrange also came up big at the end of regulation to force the extra session, hitting her 3-pointer from the wing to tie it.

    "I was surprisingly calm when I took the shot," Orrange said. "I really loved how resilient our team was at the beginning of the game."

    Lili Thompson scored 24 points and Orrange 17 for Stanford (2-0), which has watched both Chiney and Nneka Ogwumike depart to the WNBA as top picks over the last few seasons.

    "I think it just shows that we're very determined this year, we're not just willing to be written off," Stanford's Bonnie Samuelson said.

    Breanna Stewart scored 23 points and Saniya Chong had 20 for the Huskies (1-1), who lost for the first time in November since falling to North Carolina on Nov. 21, 2004.

    UConn looked out of sorts for much of the night at Maples Pavilion in a rematch of last season's NCAA semifinals - and it didn't help that Kaleena Mosqueda-Lewis never got going. Mosqueda-Lewis, coming off a 30-point, 10 3-pointer outing in the opener Friday night at UC Davis, struggled all night to find her shot.

    The Cardinal concentrated on Stewart and made others try to beat them.

    "They totally outplayed our guards on both ends of the floor," Auriemma said. "They had a great game plan, that I'm sure everybody else is going to copy."

    Mosqueda-Lewis went without a field goal until she made a 3-pointer with 9:40 left in the game, having a tough time getting open looks facing swarming defense by Karlie Samuelson.

    "It seemed like there was a lot of disconnect on the court," Stewart said. "It's up and down, our chemistry."

    The Huskies have plenty of time to regroup before playing their home opener Sunday against Creighton.

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