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Posts Tagged ‘notre dame’

Baylor and Virginia NCAA Champs

Wednesday, April 10th, 2019

April 10, 2019

On Sunday night, April 7, at Amalie Arena in Tampa, Florida, the Baylor University Lady Bears defeated Notre Dame 82-81 to win the NCAA Division I Women’s Basketball Tournament. Baylor senior guard Chloe Jackson provided the winning margin with a go-ahead lay-up with just 3.9 seconds remaining in the game. Jackson led Baylor with 26 points and was named the tournament’s Most Outstanding Player (MOP). It was the third NCAA (National Collegiate Athletic Association) women’s basketball title for Baylor. The Lady Bears previously won in 2005 and 2012. Notre Dame won NCAA titles in 2001 and 2018.

Baylor Bears players celebrate their win over the Notre Dame Fighting Irish at Amalie Arena on April 7, 2019 in Tampa, Florida.  Credit: © Justin Tafoya, Getty Images

The Baylor Lady Bears–including Most Outstanding Player Chloe Jackson (24)–celebrate their NCAA title at Amalie Arena in Tampa, Florida, on April 7, 2019. Credit: © Justin Tafoya, Getty Images

Baylor dominated early, taking a 43-31 lead into halftime. But Notre Dame stormed back, making up the deficit and battling to a 74-74 tie with 5:18 left in the fourth quarter. The evenly-matched teams then battled down the stretch, with Baylor prevailing by a single point. Led by Jackson and senior center Kalani Brown (20 points), the Lady Bears overcame Notre Dame’s scoring tandem of Arike Ogunbowale (31 points) and Marina Mabrey (21 points). In the Final Four semifinals, Notre Dame took out perennial powerhouse Connecticut, and Baylor downed Oregon.

Kyle Guy #5 of the Virginia Cavaliers attempts a shot against the Texas Tech Red Raiders in the first half during the 2019 NCAA men's Final Four National Championship game at U.S. Bank Stadium on April 08, 2019 in Minneapolis, Minnesota.  Credit: © Tom Pennington, Getty Images

Virginia guard Kyle Guy (5) attempts a shot against Texas Tech defenders during the NCAA men’s title game at U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on April 8, 2019. Credit: © Tom Pennington, Getty Images

On Monday night, April 8, at U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis, Minnesota, the University of Virginia Cavaliers defeated the Texas Tech Red Raiders 85-77 in overtime to win the NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball Tournament. Virginia, led by guards De’Andre Hunter (27 points) and Kyle Guy (24 points), carried a tight 3-point lead into halftime and held the advantage for most of the second half. Texas Tech rallied, however, to take a 3-point lead of their own into the game’s final minute. With just 12 seconds on the clock, a Hunter 3-pointer evened the score at 68-68 to send the game into overtime. The Cavaliers pulled away in the extra five minutes, outscoring the Red Raiders 17-9 for the title. Virginia’s Guy took home tournament MOP honors. 

It was the first NCAA championship game for both Virginia and Texas Tech, who knocked out Auburn and Michigan State, respectively, in the Final Four semifinals. Virginia entered the tournament as a number-1 seed, and Texas Tech was a 3 seed. Virginia’s first title was especially sweet following the team’s epic collapse in last year’s NCAA tournament. In 2018, Virginia became the first number-1 seed to lose to a 16 seed—the lowest—when the University of Maryland-Baltimore County (UMBC) Retrievers shocked the Cavaliers 74-54.

Tags: basketball, baylor, march madness, ncaa, notre dame, texas tech, virginia
Posted in Current Events, People, Recreation & Sports | Comments Off

Notre Dame and Villanova Champs

Tuesday, April 3rd, 2018

April 3, 2018

On Sunday night, April 1, at Nationwide Arena in Columbus, Ohio, the University of Notre Dame Fighting Irish women’s basketball team defeated the Mississippi State University Bulldogs 61-58 to win the NCAA Division I Women’s Basketball Tournament. Notre Dame junior guard Arike Ogunbowale hit a 3-point shot as time expired to win the game and complete a stirring comeback. It was Notre Dame’s second NCAA (National Collegiate Athletic Association) women’s basketball title (the team’s first came in 2001). For Mississippi State, it was the team’s second-straight heartbreaking loss in the championship game. The Bulldogs lost to champion South Carolina in 2017.

Arike Ogunbowale #24 of the Notre Dame Fighting Irish drives to the basket against Roshunda Johnson #11 of the Mississippi State Bulldogs during the championship game of the 2018 NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Final Four at Nationwide Arena in Columbus, Ohio. Credit: © Justin Tafoya, Getty Images

Notre Dame’s Arike Ogunbowale drives to the basket against Roshunda Johnson of Mississippi State during the championship game of the NCAA Division I Women’s Basketball Tournament at Nationwide Arena in Columbus, Ohio, on April 1, 2018. Credit: © Justin Tafoya, Getty Images

The Irish struggled early, trailing 30-17 at halftime. But Notre Dame stormed back in the third quarter, making up the deficit and battling to a tie to start the fourth. Led by Ogunbowale (18 points) and junior forward Jessica Shepard (19 points), the Irish overcame Mississippi State’s scoring tandem of junior guard Victoria Vivians (21 points) and sophomore center Teaira McCowan (18 points). Tied at 58 in the final seconds of the game, Notre Dame’s Ogunbowale dribbled into the corner and threw up a contested shot that swished through the net as time expired. For Ogunbowale, it was her second-straight gigantic game-winning shot. In the Final Four semifinal against perennial powerhouse Connecticut, Ogunbowale drained a jumper with 1 second left to give Notre Dame a thrilling 91-89 victory in overtime. Ogunbowale was named the tournament’s Most Outstanding Player (MOP). Mississippi State downed Louisville in its Final Four semifinal.

Mikal Bridges #25 of the Villanova Wildcats drives to the basket against Zavier Simpson #3 of the Michigan Wolverines in the second half during the 2018 NCAA Men's Final Four National Championship game at the Alamodome on April 2, 2018 in San Antonio, Texas. Credit: © Ronald Martinez, Getty Images

Villanova’s Mikal Bridges goes high to the basket against Michigan’s Zavier Simpson during the championship game of the NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball Tournament at the Alamodome in San Antonio, Texas, on April 2, 2018. Credit: © Ronald Martinez, Getty Images

On Monday night, April 2, at the Alamodome in San Antonio, Texas, the Villanova University Wildcats downed the University of Michigan Wolverines 79-62 to win the men’s NCAA title. Michigan, led by junior forward Moritz Wagner, started strong and carried a 21-14 lead beyond the 11-minute mark in the first half. From that moment on, however, it was all Villanova. Wildcat sophomore guard Donte DiVincenzo alone outscored Michigan in the waning minutes of the first half, which ended 37-28 solidly in Villanova’s favor. The second half was Villanova’s, too, and the team steadily pulled away, leading by as many as 20 points. The Wildcats’ national player of the year, junior guard Jalen Brunson, had a lackluster 9 points, but a third guard, junior Mikal Bridges, added 19 points, and redshirt freshman forward Omari Spellman was a force inside, pulling down 11 rebounds, adding 8 points, and repeatedly getting under the skin of the Wolverines’ Wagner. The red-headed and Italian-named DiVincenzo—affectionately known as “The Big Ragu”—began the game on the bench as the sixth man, but finished with 31 points and earned tournament MOP honors.

It was the second national title for Villanova head coach Jay Wright, and Villanova’s third title overall. The Philadelphia school previously cut down the final nets in 1985 and 2016. It was Michigan’s seventh championship game. The lone title for the Wolverines of Ann Arbor, Michigan, came in 1989. Villanova dominated this year’s tournament, winning all games by 12 points or more, including the team’s 16-point pasting of Kansas in the Final Four semifinal. Michigan hoed a tough road to the title game, eclipsing tournament darling Loyola University Chicago in its Final Four semifinal.

 

Tags: college basketball, mississippi state, NCAA tournament, notre dame, university of michigan, villanova university
Posted in Current Events, People, Recreation & Sports | Comments Off

UConn Reigns!

Wednesday, April 9th, 2014

April 9, 2014

The University of Connecticut established itself as the undisputed monarch of college basketball, winning both the NCAA men’s and women’s championships in a 24-hour period. It was only the second time in NCAA history that one school won both championships in the same season, and it was Connecticut who accomplished the feat first, back in 2003-2004.

The women’s victory on April 8 was no great surprise. Coach Geno Auriemma’s team came into the finals against opponent Notre Dame with a 39-game winning streak and overwhelmed the previously undefeated Fighting Irish 79-58. It was the school’s second-consecutive women’s title and gave Auriemma his ninth NCAA championship, breaking the record of eight he had shared with former Tennessee coach Pat Summitt. Breanna Stewart led UConn with 21 points and was named the Most Valuable Player of the Final Four for the second straight year.

Connecticut’s men’s victory on April 7 was a far different story. UConn was seeded 7th in its tournament and was established as a clear underdog against the red-hot University of Kentucky team. Kentucky’s roster was packed with freshmen who seemed destined to become National Basketball Association millionaires after the next NBA draft. But behind the steady play of guards Shabazz Napier and Ryan Boatright, UConn jumped out to an early lead and fought off several Kentucky surges to take the title with a 60-54 victory. The school became the lowest seed ever to win the NCAA men’s basketball championship. The victory was a personal triumph for UConn’s 42-year old coach Kevin Ollie, who won the title in only his second year at the school.

Additional World Book articles:

  • Basketball
  • Basketball (1995) (a Back in Time article)
  • Basketball (1997) (a Back in Time article)
  • Basketball (2013) (a Back in Time article)

Tags: basketball, breanna stewart, college basketball, geno auriemma, kevin ollie, ncaa, notre dame, ryan boatright, shabazz napier, university of connecticut, university of kentucky
Posted in Arts & Entertainment, Current Events, Recreation & Sports | Comments Off

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