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    UConn Women's Basketball
    Thursday, April 25, 2024

    UConn advances to national championship with 80-51 win over Oregon State

    UConn's Breanna Stewart is met with a high-five by coach Geno Auriemma as she exits the game in the fourth quarter of Sunday's 80-51 win over Oregon State in the NCAA Final Four semifinals at Bankers Life Fieldhouse in Indianapolis. The Huskies will play for a record fourth straight NCAA championship on Tuesday night against either Syracuse or Washington. (Sean D. Elliot/The Day)
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    Indianapolis — Seniors Moriah Jefferson, Breanna Stewart and Morgan Tuck have received the majority of the attention for the UConn women's basketball team this season. With good reason, too. Stewart is the nation's top player. All three of them are All-Americans.

    What sometimes might go unnoticed is the true strength that the top-ranked Huskies possess as a whole. They are much more than the Big Three. And they proved it on the game's biggest stage Sunday against Oregon State.

    Tuck delivered 21 points, three rebounds and three assists. Yet, every member of UConn's primary rotation made an impact in an 80-51 victory in the NCAA national semifinals before 15,227 at Bankers Life Fieldhouse. The Huskies have reached the tournament final for the 11th time (10-0).

    "I think it shows how good our team is," Tuck said. "Stewie is the best player in the country, but she has a great supporting cast and we're able to step up and make plays. And even when our subs are coming off the bench, they're contributing right away. So I think that's what makes us a really, really great team. We don't have to go rely on one person to get it done.''

    The Huskies (37-0) will face former Big East foe Syracuse, an 80-59 winner over Washington, in the title game Tuesday (8:30 p.m., ESPN) with an eye on history. They are seeking to become the first team in Division I women's basketball history to win four straight national championships.

    A win over the Orange (30-7) would also represent UConn's record 11th national championship, giving Geno Auriemma more than any other men's or women's Division I basketball coach. Legendary men's basketball coach John Wooden won 10 at UCLA.

    "I think it sunk in when we were going to the locker room, getting back to the locker room we were all excited," Stewart said. "We know that we have one game left. We're exactly in the position that we want to be in. And now it's practice (Monday). National championship game Tuesday."

    The win did not come without some misfortune for UConn. Starting forward Katie Lou Samuelson (seven points, three rebounds, two assists in 17 minutes) missed the entire second half after breaking a bone in her left foot. Her season is over.

    "I guess it happened on the very first possession that we had where she drove it to the basket and she said she felt something but didn't really say anything and just continued to play on it," Auriemma said. "And it wasn't until late in the first half that we found out that there was something wrong. And then before the second half started, Rosemary Ragle, our athletic trainer, told me she has a broken bone in her foot and she's out. And we just addressed it with our team real quick and play on."

    Samuelson returned to the bench wearing a boot on her foot with eight minutes left in the third quarter. Soon after Auriemma would place his hand on the back of the neck of an emotional Samuelson and whispered something in her ear to console her.

    Stewart also provided Samuelson with some words of encouragement after leaving the game for good with 2:48 remaining in the fourth quarter.

    "I think that we were aware of what was going on," Stewart said. "And, especially as a freshman, being in the Final Four that's not what you want to happen. That's not ideal. She wants to be in the game playing with us. And I think my thoughts coming off the bench was just being there to kind of comfort her. I don't know how much it's going to help. But kind of giving her the idea that we got this.''

    Stewart scored 14 of her 16 points in the second half and added eight rebounds and two steals. Jefferson had 10 points, three rebounds and seven assists. She also became UConn's career leader with 654 assists.

    Kia Nurse finished with nine points and five assists for UConn. Gabby Williams added eight points, five rebounds and two steals in 15 minutes off the bench. Freshman reserve Napheesa Collier produced six points, two rebounds, two blocks and two steals in 14 minutes.

    UConn, which has won 74 straight games and a record 23 straight NCAA tournament games, shot 56.7 percent from the field.

    "It's one thing to play against a great player because you can gang up on them and figure out a way to get the ball out of their hands if you want to," Auriemma said. "But to try to beat a really good team that's playing well together, that's difficult to do. So if you're going to win these games, you're not going to be able to come out here and just say, 'OK, Stewie. Get it done.' It's not going to happen. Invariably your team has to win these games. And that's what happened (Sunday)."

    Tuck immediately took the lead for the Huskies, scoring 13 points (5-for-7 FG) in the first 7:18. UConn built a 24-8 lead without a point — or a shot attempt — from Stewart.

    Stewart, who picked up two fouls in the opening 2:05, did not take her first shot until there was 6:55 left in the second quarter. She did not score until making a jumper in the lane with 3:00 left in the first half. The hoop gave UConn a 41-26 lead.

    "At this point in the season, there's nothing to save anything for," Tuck said. "We have to make sure that we don't underestimate a team. Oregon State is a great team that made it to the Final Four. So you have to come out and try to punch them first."

    The Huskies ended the first half with a 15-2 run, holding the Beavers scoreless over the final 3:19, to open a 47-26 lead at halftime. UConn was aided considerably by the effort of Williams (six points, two steals) and Collier (four points, two steals) off the bench.

    UConn led by as many as 34 in the second half.

    Sydney Wiese led Oregon State (32-5) with 13 points and five rebounds. Ruth Hamblin added 10 points, 11 rebounds and six blocks.

    The Beavers, making their first Final Four appearance, shot 33.3 percent from the field and committed 18 turnovers.

    "Hats off to UConn,'' Oregon State coach Scott Rueck said. "They played a phenomenal game. I thought they obviously shot the ball extremely well. With a team like that, you've got to kind of pick your poison. And that team made us pay no matter what we did. And that's why they are who they are. Offensively they really made us work and kept us off balance. And credit them."

    UConn coach Geno Auriemma comforts freshman Katie Lou Samuelson on the bench after she came out for the second half with a boot on her left foot during play Sunday's 80-51 win over Oregon State in the national semifinals at Bankers Life Fieldhouse in Indianapolis. UConn announced that the freshman suffered a broken bone in her left foot and will not play in Tuesday title game. (Sean D. Elliot/The Day)
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    UConn's Moriah Jefferson controls the ball after colliding with Oregon State's Deven Hunter during the first half of Sunday's NCAA Final Four semifinal game at Bankers Life Fieldhouse in Indianapolis. UConn leads 47-26 at halftime. (Sean D. Elliot/The Day)
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    UConn's Breanna Stewart, left, and Katie Lou Samuelson double-team Oregon State's Ruth Hamblin during the first half of Sunday's NCAA Final Four semifinal at Bankers Life Fieldhouse in Indianapolis. The Huskies lead 47-26 at halftime. (Sean D. Elliot/The Day)
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