- South Carolina rebuilt its program with a defensive philosophy, and it sure paid off on Monday night. Markeshia Grant scored 21 points and the fifth-seeded Gamecocks forced 20 turnovers in a 72-61 victory over No. (NWI.com)
- NORFOLK, Va. — Stanford coach Tara VanDerveer glanced at the stat sheet and gushed as she examined Amber Orranges solid all-around game. She played like a senior, forget freshman, the Hall of Famer said. (Seattle Times)
- COLLEGE PARK, Md. — Laurin Mincy and Tianna Hawkins provided Maryland with the push it needed to avoid another agonizing exit from the NCAA womens tournament. (Huffington Post)
- Bria Hartley scored 13 of her 16 points in the first half and top-seeded Connecticut held Kansas State to an NCAA tournament record low for points in a game in a 72-26 second-round rout Monday night in Bridgeport, Conn. (San Jose Mercury News)
- SPOKANE, Wash. -- The expectations for the University of Miami women's basketball team were as high as they had been in two decades. But for the second season in a row, the end result was the same. (Miami Herald)
- DePauls Magnificent Seven hit the end of the line on Monday. (Chicago Tribune)
- Hartley scored 13 of her 16 points in the first half and top-seeded UConn set a womens NCAA tournament record for fewest points allowed in a 72-26 victory Monday night. (Times Herald-Record)
- ROSEMONT, Ill. — DePaul coach Doug Bruno gave Pat Summitt a big hug before the opening tip and a big dose of credit after the final buzzer. (Washington Post)
- The Gonzaga Bulldogs rode the wave of a deafening, sold-out crowd of 5,824 in McCarthey Athletic Center to a stunning 65-54 victory over eighth-ranked Miami in the second round of the NCAA womens basketball tournament. (Seattle Times)
- Sweet 16 berths were once a right of passage for the LSU Lady Tigers, who made it at least that far nine times from 1997 to 2008. (nola.com)
Tuesday, March 20, 2012
Ncaa women's tournament
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