Warren Grimes
In a tournament that was physical and unprecedented in numerous
ways, USC won the championship over top-seeded Stanford. That was a disappointment for a Stanford team
that plays with unselfish chemistry. The
game did not seem that close, as Stanford lost every quarter except the third
(where the teams tied in points).
The tournament was very seedy – the higher seeded team won each
of the first ten games. That’s never
happened before. By way of contrast, in last year’s tournament,
seventh seeded Washington State won the championship by upsetting 3 higher seeded
teams.
The tournament broke records such as for double overtime
games. There had been none before, but
now there are two in the record books (OSU over Colorado and USC over UCLA).
There were stirring comebacks – OSU came back in the fourth
quarter to tie Colorado and win in double overtime. Stanford came back in the second half to defeat
both Cal and OSU.
In the tournament’s first game, Colorado set a record by
winning with a 40-point margin against bottom-seeded Oregon.
USC can now claim to be the best team in the conference. The Trojans are 4-1 against their biggest
rivals (Stanford and UCLA). USC this
year has become a powerhouse. Freshman
phenom Juju Watkins may be the best player ever to wear a USC uniform. She’s backed up by 4 other starting players
who have length, athleticism, and experience.
Three of the other starters are 5th year seniors who
transferred from Ivy League schools.
Stanford managed to hold Watkins to 9 points (2 for 15 shooting)
in the title game. Multiple player defense
worked well to hold down Watkins output, but allowed other USC players to shine
(McKenzie Forbes, who had transferred from Harvard, had 26 points). The
Stanford defense of having multiple players converge on a driving Watkins also
contributed to USC’s rebounding dominance (48 to 28). An interior defender focused on a driving
Watkins cannot simultaneously block out for the rebound.
Shooting well from the outside, Brink and Iriafen
contributed 19 and 18 points respectively but were unable to stop USC from
grabbing 18 offensive rebounds.
There is no shame in losing to USC. I can easily see USC getting to the Final
Four and possibly taking down the other USC (undefeated University of South
Carolina). Both USCs are talented, well-coached,
and appear to have great chemistry.
Lindsay Gottlieb does not quite have the resume of Dawn Staley but watch
out.
As for Stanford, the team has its own special chemistry and can
make a strong run to the final four. They
can learn from the defeat the importance of preventing an opponent from
dominating the boards. A question mark
is the point guard position, where Talana Lepolo is said not to be 100
percent. Against USC, Chloe Clardy came
in for 15 minutes, scoring 4 points with 2 assists, a steal, and 0 turns.
It is quite possible that the Conference’s top three teams
will get two number one seeds (Stanford and USC) and one number two (UCLA). Oregon State seems suited for a number four
seed, allowing them to play first and second round games on their home
court. I will be cheering first for
Stanford, but second for all the other Pac-12 teams in the tournament. All Pac-12 players and coaches appear to be
unified in their dislike of the conference’s demise. Here’s hoping the Pac 12 teams are ready to
show the world that this vanishing conference is going down with flags flying.
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