Warren Grimes
In late January, Nunu Agara went out with her injury late in the Cal game and
missed the next five games. Without Agara, Stanford rotated just 7 players and
went 1-4. Pittsburgh was the only
W. Making the Big Dance seemed a
foregone conclusion before Agara went out.
Now, even with Agara back, it seems doubtful.
Agara came back for the Virginia game and played with energy
and intensity. It wasn’t enough. It was a one possession game at the end. But Stanford’s late fourth-quarter scoring
draught sealed the team’s fate.
There were some things to like about the Virginia game. The return of Agara is at the top of the
list. She scored 21 points while playing
for 38 minutes.
Hailey Swain had a great all-around game with a team-leading
6 boards, 5 steals, and 13 points. The
steals stand out – more of those could contribute to a strong season’s end.
Ogden (10 points) and Clardy (12 points) were also in double
digits.
The Stanford team, which seemed to have lots of depth at
season’s outset, no longer does.
Stanford played four players for 31 minutes or more, with Agara, Swain,
and Clardy all playing 35 or more.
Compare that to Virginia, which had only one player on the floor for
more than 25 minutes (Kymora Johnson played for 37 and was Virginia’s top
scorer). Virginia had 36 points from the
bench, compared to Stanford’s 6.
The lack of depth was more of a factor because of Lara
Somfai’s foul difficulties. She had her
first foul with just over 2 minutes gone in the first quarter. She sat down, then came back in the second
quarter only to draw her second.
Coming back at the end of the second quarter, she drew her third. These issues might not matter except that
Stanford really needs Somfai in the game.
Somfai is a strong candidate for conference rookie of the year, for good
reason. She managed to play for 25
minutes, but one wonders whether her contribution in the fourth quarter was
constrained by the four fouls hanging around her neck. Virginia, a physical team, outrebounded
Stanford 37 to 27, a stat that might have looked different if Somfai had been
in the game for more minutes.
Stanford shot under 20% from distance, another reason the
team came up short.
So what is the prognosis for the rest of the season? I can’t comfortably predict an NCAA bid, but
I very much want this team to show its best side in the next three weeks. The team is hard-working, seems to have good
chemistry, and is capable of winning its last four conference games. Add one or two wins in the ACC tournament and
you have an almost Cinderella ending to
a tough season.
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