Womhoops Guru

Mel Greenberg covered college and professional women’s basketball for the Philadelphia Inquirer, where he worked for 40 plus years. Greenberg pioneered national coverage of the game, including the original Top 25 women's college poll. His knowledge has earned him nicknames such as "The Guru" and "The Godfather," as well as induction into the Women's Basketball Hall of Fame in 2007.

Thursday, December 11, 2025

The Guru’s Local/National NCAAW Roundup: Princeton Tops Rutgers on Tall’s Career Night; Crooks Leads No. 10 Iowa State Over No. 11 Iowa

By Mel Greenberg @womhoopsguru

PRINCETON, N.J. – The tall tale out of Princeton’s 81-63 win here in Jadwin Gym against nearby Rutgers (7-4) was no lie.

Wednesday night’s narrative, in one of only two local action during finals period, came in the way of Fadima Tall, the 6-1 junior forward from Silver Spring, Md., who had career highs of 28 points and five steals as the Tigers (10-1) completed a sweep of the Big Ten rivals Scarlet Knights and Penn State.

Tall was 7-14 from the field and 4-9 from deep besides a near-perfect 10-11 on the line to collect her scoring totals while grabbing four rebounds.

The board work numbers were the only thing coach Carla Berube thought a bit low, initially, but then noticed that her team shooting 46.3% from the field diminished the number of missed shot opportunities to go after for second chances.

Olivia Hutcherson and Ashley Chea each scored 16 points and Madison St. Rose scored 11 points.

The trends of both teams showed in the final score: Rutgers (7-4) suffering another wide differential loss while Princeton, the top runner up in this week’s Associated Press women’s poll, again put the hammer down at the finish moving from a single-digit lead after three quarters to outscore the Scarlet Knights 30-19 over the final ten minutes.

At least the visitors had better success finding their way through the nets Wednesday as opposed to the drought Saturday night up the road back home against Iowa in a Big Ten opener at Jersey Mike’s Arena in Piscataway, N.J.

Nene Ndiaye shot 8-14 from the field, scoring 20 points, Kaylah Ivey scored 15, and Imani Lester scored 11.

Berube said looking at film of the Rutgers loss to Iowa was not a heavy concentration considering the size of the Hawkeyes.

"We’re looking more at teams like Stony Brook, Siena, to see how they played against them," Berube said.

Much of the damage was done in transition, Princeton forcing 23 turnovers as opposed to committing 15 miscues resulting in a 23-11 advantage on points off turnovers.

Both teams head to finals before returning on Dec. 20 with Princeton visiting Atlantic 10 tournament champion George Mason in Fairfax, Va., outside the nation’s capital and hosting Temple, Dec. 22, before opening Ivy League play at Penn in The Palestra on Jan. 3.

Which final did Tall say was personally most difficult?

"Anatomy, because you have to know all about the brain and every (detail) and I have until Tuesday."

Rutgers hosts Lafayette next and then after the short Christmas break, it’s Big Ten action the rest of the way beginning with a visit from No. 25 Michigan State on Dec. 28.

In the night’s other local action, Delaware’s comeback against George Washington fell short, losing 63-59 at the Bob Carpenter Center in Newark.

Kailah Correa led the host Blue Hens (5-3) with 18 points against the Revolutionaries (6-5), shooting 7-11 from the field, with four assists and three rebounds.

Trinity Vance added 10 points and Ande’a Cherisier was 5-9 from the field for 11 points with five rebounds.

Delaware is off until Wednesday hosting La Salle at 11 a.m. (ESPN+), the program’s annual Education Day event.

The next games involving the 13 local teams are Saturday with Temple hosting VCU at 2 p.m. (ESPN+) in the Liacouras Center, and Rider hosting Wagner the same time (ESPN+) at Alumni Gym in Lawrenceville, N.J., just down the road from here at Princeton.

On Sunday La Salle is at Md.-Eastern Shore at 3 p.m. and Penn State visits No. 3 South Carolina at 3:30 p.m. on ESPN at the Gamecocks’ Colonial Life Arena in Columbia.

The National Scene

The night’s key attraction produced an outcome as close as the rankings of both teams in the current AP women’s poll, an in-state matchup, nationally televised on ESPN in the annual Jimmy V Classic as No. 10 Iowa State (11-0) at home in Ames won the battle of unbeatens besting No. 11 Iowa 74-69.

Audi Crooks continued her sensational season to date, scoring 30 points with 10 rebounds against the Hawkeyes (9-1), while Addy Brown had 20 points and 12 boards, to foil the visitors’ comeback attempt.

Trailing by 17 points late in the third quarter, Iowa took off on a 26-12 run to move within three points near the end of the game.

Taylor McCabe’s three-point attempt to tie the score was blocked by Mackenzie Hare with 16 seconds left in regulation and Crooks then hit a free throw to gain her fourth 30-point game of the season.

Chazadi Wright connected on four makes from deep and totaled 21 points for Iowa, while McCabe’s 11 points were fueled by three makes from beyond the arc. Kylie Feuerbach and Hannah Stuelke each scored 10 points.

Iowa State’s Jada Williams, who had 11 points and five rebounds, also produced a career-high 12 assists, courtesy of Crooks’ scoring, her 78th straight game in double figures for the longest active streak in the nation.

Besides this game assigned the Jimmy V event, it was the annual CyHawk Series of which Iowa holds a 32-24 lead in the series.

The Hawkeyes in Iowa City host Lindenwood on Saturday while Iowa hosts Northern Iowa on Sunday.

The few other ranked teams who played won easy, No. 2 Texas (11-0) won 110-45 at Texas Rio Grande (3-5) in Edinburg as Madison Booker led the Longhorns with a triple double of 28 points, 10 rebounds, and 10 assists. Shooting 14-19 from the field the two-team AP All-American had the sixth triple double in program history.

The visitors owned the paint 60-6 and mined 39 points out of 29 turnovers.

Rori Harmon had a personal best 14 assists for the Longhorns.

Texas’ competition gets tougher next playing in Fort Worth Sunday against No. 13 Baylor. The Bears a former annual Big 12 rival before the Longhorns left last season for the Southeastern Conference.

No. 7 Maryland (12-0), now without three players the rest of the season due to knee injuries, including last season’s Rutgers transfer Kaylene Smikle, downed Delaware State 91-21 at home in the XFinity Center in College Park setting a program record against the visitors (3-8) for fewest opposition points allowed.

Ava McKennie and Lea Bartleme are also sidelined.

Indiana transfer Yarden Garzon and Oluchi Okananwa each scored 18 points for the Terrapins.

The previous low-point in scoring against Maryland came from Morgan State on Feb. 5, 1974.

Delaware State committed 30 turnovers giving Maryland a whopping 45-2 advantage in transition.

The Terrapins were coming out of their double-overtime 100-99 win at Minnesota Sunday in a Big Ten opener in which they scored 10 points in the final minute of the second overtime.

Maryland is off off until a week from Friday hosting Central Connecticut.

No. 22 Louisville (9-3) at home in Kentucky grabbed a 93-62 win over Ball State (8-3) as Skylar Jones scored 20 points and Saint Joseph’s transfer Laura Ziegler scored 15 points.

The visitors Sunday are at mid-major power South Dakota State, which edged host Northern Iowa 59-57, Wednesday, while Louisville in a key Atlantic Coast Conference game the same day hosts No. 12 North Carolina.

In other games of note Wednesday, San Diego State won 64-53 at Kansas State, while Arizona edged visiting Eastern Kentucky 87-83, and host Virginia handled Howard 76-50 at home in Charlottesville.

Thursday night No. 21 Ohio State hosts Northern Kentucky at 6:30 p.m. (B1G+), No. 9 Oklahoma hosts Little Rock at 7 p.m. (SECN+), and No. 19 Notre Dame hosts Morehead State at 7 p.m. (ACCNX).


posted by Mel Greenberg | 5:56 AM | 0 comments

Wednesday, December 10, 2025

The Guru’s Local/National NCAAW Roundup: Arizona State (11-0) Tops Last Year’s Win Total With Triumph at Penn State; Army Rolls at Cornell and Columbia Edges Host Seton Hall

By Mel Greenberg @womhoopsguru

In the sole local game Tuesday night on an overall light week due to finals Penn State got trounced for the second straight game, this time 74-60, the fork stuck by the Sun Devils from Arizona State (11-0) whose first-year coach Molly Miller from nearby Grand Canyon has quickly surpassed the visitors’ entire win total from the previous 10-win season.

Miller’s success recalls South Carolina coach Dawn Staley’s first year at Temple though Staley had zero coaching experience other than her work as one of the legendary point guards of all time.

The game in the Bryce Jordan Center was no work of art, both teams combining for 66 turnovers.

Gracie Merkle scored 17 points for the Lady Lions (6-3), Rutgers transfer Kiyomi McMiller collected 12 points, and Shayla Smith had a season-high 12 while Shaelyn Steele had five of the home team’s 17 steals and Penn State had a slim 39-35 rebounding advantage.

Gabby Elliott had 27 points for Arizona State and McKinna Brackens had 15 with 11 rebounds for a double double.

Penn State’s next stop won’t be easy visiting No. 3 South Carolina Sunday at 3:30 p.m. on ESPN.

Just two local games Wednesday night, Princeton is hosting nearby Rutgers at 7:30 p.m. (ESPN+) at Jadwin Gym while Delaware at 7 p.m. (FloCollege) is hosting George Washington at the Bob Carpenter Center in Newark.

The National Scene

Two ranked teams went on near identical cruises with No. 13 Baylor (10-1) at home in Waco, Texas, winning 90-36 over Alabama State (2-6) led by Taliah Scott scoring 30 points, shooting 7-11 from the field, including 5-7 from deep, and Jana Van Gytenbeek getting her first triple double with 10 points, 13 assists and 10 rebounds, while No. 24 Nebraska (10-0) at home in Lincoln handle nearby Omaha (1-9) winning 87-35 led by Callin Hake scoring 17 points.

Army (8-2) under first-year coach and Saint Joseph’s grad Katie Kuester had an easy time at Cornell (4-7) in Ithaca, N.Y., winning 76-52 as Camryn Tade and Reese Ericson each scored 17 points, and Kya Smith grabbed 11 rebounds.

Columbia (7-4) edged host Seton Hall 54-53 dropping the Pirates to 5-3 as Perri Page made a layup before regulation time expired while also leading three Lions in scoring double figures with 15 points and 10 rebounds.

On Wednesday night, No. 10 Iowa State hosts No. 11 Iowa in the women’s Jimmy V Classic at 7 p.m. on ESPN, while No. 7 Maryland hosts Delaware State at 6 p.m. (B1G+), No. 2 Texas is at UT Rio Grande at 7:30 p.m. (ESPN+), and No. 22 Louisville hosts Ball State at 9 p.m. on the ACC Network.

posted by Mel Greenberg | 9:17 AM | 0 comments

Monday, December 08, 2025

The Guru’s Local/National NCAAW Weekend Roundup: Villanova Claims Big 5 Crown With Win Over Saint Joseph’s; Penn and Drexel Take the Under Card

By Mel Greenberg @womhoopsguru

VILLANOVA – Completing one of the best weeks since the end of the Maddy Siegrest era three seasons ago, Villanova (8-2) in a tightly contested game Sunday afternoon at home in Finneran Pavilion claimed the second annual Big 5 Classic beating arch rival Saint Joseph’s 76-70, the final contest in a triple-header format that was entertaining across the board.

"Three games in seven days, with everyone having great momentum and great results behind them," said Villanova coach Denise Dillon. "I’m just super proud of this young group.

"These Big 5 games are always gritty, they’re tough. The coaches know each other so well, so they understand what the system and style is."

Penn (7-3) got the day’s activity started taking 5th place with a 65-52 win over La Salle (6-3) building a big lead, then sustaining a 15-0 run from the Explorers, and then after the differential shrunk to five points re-fired the engines to finish out rebuilding the advantage to double digits.

Next up Temple (4-5) took an early 11-6 lead into the second quarter, but Drexel (6-3), which lost to the Owls in pod-play last season and last weekend just missed upsetting Saint Joseph’s (6-3) on Hawk Hill in the game sending the winner to the title round, controlled the second half to take third place with a 59-52 victory.

Villanova, which had a sweeps weekend – the men won Saturday’s companion event at the Xfinity Mobile Center in South Philadelphia and the football team advanced to the third round of the NCAA playoffs – came into the game here after pulling a huge lopsided upset at No. 25 West Virginia followed by a win at Georgetown to open Big East play.

The Hawks took a narrow 19-16 lead in the first period, but the game stayed close and the Wildcats midway in the third period moved from a 44-43 advantage to score seven of the next nine points and maintain the upper hand the rest of the way.

Villanova thrived on its trademark three-point attack, doing so with an efficient 13-of-24 for 54.2% and also fired a near-perfect 13-of-16 from the line.

Brynn McCurry, named the MVP and who missed last season with an injury, tied her career-best with 21 points, shooting 6-11from the field and perfect 3-3 from deep and 6-6 from the line.

"I wouldn’t be able to do that without ny team." McCurry said. "I think everyone else talking with me and being able to create for others is what makes us so successful."

On Monday, McCurry was named Big East player of the week.

Jasmine Bascoe scored 13 with five boards and five assists, Kelsey Joens had 13 points with three makes from beyond the arc, and Denae Carter scored 10 with eight boards.

Saint Joseph’s Rhian Stokes scored a game and career-high 23 points and Gabby Casey, who missed the Rhode Island game Wednesday with an illness, scored 19 points. Aleah Snead had 14 points, seven rebounds, and four assists, and Faith Stinson scored nine with five rebounds and she matched a personal best with five blocks, last reached by the program for an individual two seasons ago.

"Villanova, they just hit a lot of threes today," said Saint Joseph’s coach Cindy Griffin, whose own team was 8-16 from beyond the perimeter. "They’ve been doing, but not as much.

"They’ve always been shooting threes, but not as well recently at a high percentage. That’s something we need to look at because it seems everyone is having good days (shooting threes) against us."

Villanova is off until Dec. 19 hosting Seton Hall at 7 p.m. while Saint Joseph’s next plays Dec. 20 opening its Hawk Classic against Le Moyne at noon.

Everyone is heading into finals the next two weeks and Penn coach Mike McLaughlin almost regrets the pause off the way the Quakers have played the last four games, going 3-1 with the loss a respectful defeat at now No. 2 Texas.

"I’ve seen a lot of growth," he said. "I don’t know if I would have said the same thing the end of August."

Katie Collins off her Ivy rookie of the year success continues to excel, scoring a game-high 20 points, shooting 9-15 from the field and grabbing nine rebounds, while sophomore Ashna Tambe had a career-best 11 points.

"This game had crazy ebbs and flows to it," McLaughlin said. "I think we finished the game the right way it's not an easy response when you have a big lead and kind of give it back a little bit, and that push and that response tells you about the character."

Penn basically won it with a 16-2 run to close out the first half and then Tambe’s play after the break put the Quakers ahead by enough points to survive the Explorers’ eruption.

La Salle coach Mountain MacGillivray agreed that while his team’s zone forced the Quakers into mistakes, the amount needed to close the deficit took its toll before being able to finish the attempted comeback.

Tina Njike was an additional force for the winners, scoring 14 points with 13 boards.

Njike also made both attempts from deep, an area she worked on over the summer to add to her game.

La Salle’s Aryss Macktoon had 15 points and seven rebounds while also grabbing five steals and dealing three assists.

Penn’s next game is at The Palestra 11 a.m. December 19 hosting Washington State while in that same period La Salle will be at Md.-Eastern Shore Sunday and at Delaware next Wednesday.

In the middle game, Drexel was paced by Molly Rullo’s career best 22 points, besides doing likewise with five assists in her first season with the Dragons. She also matched her best rebounding total of four while shooting 8-9 from the field and 5-6 from beyond the arc.

Deja Evans added 18 points and seven boards with three assists and three steals.

The first win ever against Temple returned Drexel to the style of play the Dragons showed in a 4-0 season start while the Owls displayed the quirks that have bedeviled them after the 2-0 opening week.

The winners used a 17-8 attack on the boards to stymy Temple in the second half.

"It was a tough game for us," said Owls coach Diane Richardson. "Drexel did a great job defensively against us, doing things that we didn't want to do. I thought that we sat back too long and trying to battle back in the fourth quarter, you just can't do those kinds of things, especially against a good team like that."

The absence of guard Tristen Taylor, who sprained her left ankle in the consolation win over Western Carolina in the tropics last weekend created a handicap.

"We Miss her," Richardson said. "She’s definitely a floor general. Has a great IQ and so, forcing Kaylah Turner to be the number one the entire game and to check the best player, it hurt us a little bit. And it's my fault for not having a couple backup point guards like Tristen.

"We thought coming in that we would have some advantages rebounding wise, because we have such great post players," Richardson continued. "But we turned the ball over a lot. I think they got down a little bit and just didn't have that sense of urgency. And Drexel did."

Temple is off until Saturday when the Owls dip back into the Atlantic 10 for an opponent hosting VCU at 2 p.m. (ESPN+) at the Liacouras Center.

Drexel returns to action next Tuesday on the second part of a doubleheader with the men at 3:30 p.m. (FloCollege) hosting Division III Chestnut Hill at the Daskalakis Athletic Center.

It was a family affair at the event. Dragons coach Amy Mallon, who spent time as an assistant to Harry Perretta here before later joining Dillon as an assistant at Drexel.

Now both his sons Mike and Stephen are on Mallon’s staff – Stephen recently married Siegrist, who was here and plays for WNBA Dallas and will play in the winter Unrivaled league next month.

The WNBA New York Liberty star Jonquel Jones, rehabbing from surgery and the adopted daughter of Richardson was also in the house while Harry Perretta was a studio analyst on the day-long coverage on NBC Sports Philadelphia.

Speculation has continued with no official announcement whether this event will move next year to Penn’s Palestra, which will be the fabled venue’s 100th anniversary season.

Princeton Keeps Rolling; Penn State and Rutgers Drop Big Ten Openers

It was another narrow outing but continuing with another positive result against a quality opponent Saturday as Princeton (9-1) travelled to Nashville, Tenn., and returned with a 70-58 win over Missouri Valley Conference contender Belmont.

Credit Olivia Hutcherson for moving from a Dr. Jekyll no points and one rebound performance in the first half to a Ms. Hyde act in the second half for the Tigers against the Bruins (4-5) with 19 points and 10 more boards to reach a career-high with 11.

Madison St. Rose added 15 points and Fadima Tall double doubled her way to 14 points and 11 boards.

Next up is hosting a visit in Jadwin Gym Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. (ESPN+) from nearby Rutgers (7-3) which several hours later Saturday night in a game personally witnessed got woman-handled by Iowa 79-36 at home in Jersey Mike’s Arena in Piscataway, N.J., enabling the Hawkeyes (9-0) to move up a spot to 11th Monday in the most recent Associated Press women’s poll.

There was more visible red apparel in the building than two years ago when Caitlin Clark was still a collegian for the Hawkeyes.

This one was over faster than the brief trip from an earlier stop at nearby Rider.

Iowa’s Ava Heiden scored 17 points, Taylor McCabe was 4-6 from deep for 14 points, a total equaled by teammate Journey Houston while Hannah Stuelke grabbed eight rebounds.

Rutgers’ Zachara Perkins was the sole Scarlet Knight in double figures with 11 points while Yacine Ndiaye grabbed eight boards.

Earlier Saturday, Penn State (6-2), unlike Rutgers, scored a lot of points in the Lady Lions’ Big Ten opener at home in the Bryce Jordan Center but Nebraska (9-0) scored a lot more winning 101-83 to stay unbeaten and replace West Virginia in the latest poll at 24th enabling the conference to tie its record set on the fifth poll last season with nine representatives.

Realignment was a factor with four quality teams added off the breakup of the Pac-12 which will reactivate next season with a mostly whole new roster including Washington State and Oregon State, now spending the second of two seasons in the West Coast Conference.

The Cornhuskers got 26 points off the bench from Amiah Hargrove, who was 10-14 from the field and 4-5 from deep. Britt Prince scored 20, Petra Bozan collected 17 and reserve Logan Nissley scored 14.

Four Penn State starters reached double figures led by Gracie Merkle with 23 points shooting 11-13 from the field, Rutgers transfer Kiyomi McMiller scored 22, Moriah Murray was 4-9 from deep, finishing with 16 points, and French freshman Tea Cleante scored 12.

No locals played Monday night, and Penn State has the only game Tuesday hosting the Big 12’s Arizona State (10-0), experiencing a remarkable turnaround to date under first year coach Molly Miller.

Rider is also under a first-year coach with the program in Jackie Hartzell, who guided the former Division II University of the Sciences into a national power joining the CACC lineup of Jefferson andHoly Family.

On Saturday at home in Alumni Gym in Lawrenceville, N.J., the Broncs (2-6) staged a second half comeback falling in the last seconds on two free throws giving Yale (3-7) of the Ivy League a 53-52 victory.

Though only there a short time and a number of positives in the contest, Hartzell has already moved beyond settling for moral victories.

"Credit to Yale, they made more plays than we did down the stretch," she said. " We are moving beyond the point of moral victories. We played well at Navy and George Mason, and now we want to win these games.

"We don't just want to just play well, we want to get the win, and as a team we're definitely disappointed that we didn't come out with the win."

This was the first meeting of the two schools.

Yale’s Marisa Chapman scored 16 points and Luisa Vydrova scored 10 while Rider got 18 points from Kristina Ekofo with nine boards and Deb Okechukwu scored 14.

Rider is off until hosting Wagner Saturday at 2 p.m. (ESPN+).

The Patriot League duo of Lafayette and Lehigh both suffered non-conference losses Sunday, Lafayette (4-6) at home in the Kirby Sports Center in Easton, Pa., falling 79-76 in overtime to Marist (3-6), while Lehigh (4-6) fell on the road 75-64 to Mount St. Mary’s (3-5) in Emmitsburg, Md.

In the Lafayette game the Leopards had all five starters scoring in double figures in the loss led by Teresa Kiewet with a season-high 25 points, which on Monday got her a second straight conference player of the week award.

The Red Foxes dominated the boards 50-30, 22 off the offensive glass for 20 second-chance points.

In the Lehigh game, the host Mountaineers owned the second quarter 30-18 to gain rnough advantage.

Jessie Ozzatu scored 23 for the Mountain Hawks, who next play on Dec. 20, the same day Lafayette travels to Rutgers.

The National Scene

There were no games of notation Monday but with the new poll, week 891, Tennessee, which went up one to 18, became the first with 800 appearances in what is now the 50th anniversary season since it was launched in November, 1976, in The Philadelphia Inquirer, with the AP joining distribution two years later.

"The consistency of this program over such a long period of time is incredible," Lady Vol head coach Kim Caldwell said. "It’s a testament to Pat Summitt and the standard of excellence she established, and to the coaches and players from that point on who have contributed to that legacy.

"This year’s team is grateful to play a small part in that, and our job is to keep working hard and building on to that history."

Holly Warlick and Kellie Harper succeeded Summitt followed by Caldwell’s hire last season.

Tennessee had held the longest appearance streak at 565 before it was snapped and since broken by No. 1 UConn, now at 612 over 32 seasons dating to the 1993-94 preseason poll.

In two notable games Sunday involving ranked teams, the first - UConn (9-0, 2-0) for its pre-game retiring Sue Bird’s jersey before winning 102-35 over DePaul (2-8, 0-2) at Gampel Pavilion in Storrs to run its regular season Big East win streak to 40.

The Huskies had 23 steals. Sarah Strong scored 20 with five boards, five steals and four assists while Azzi Fudd had all 16 of her points in the first half.

The differential was the largest in the series with the Blue Demons eclipsing a 47-point win in 2013.

Since passing retired Stanford coach Tara VanDerveer’s total early last season, UConn coach Geno Auriemma’s all-time record win total has reached 1259 without regard to gender or NCAA divisions.

The Huskies are off all week until Saturday’s visit Saturday to No. 16 Southern Cal in Los Angeles.

No. 7 Maryland (11-0) rallied in double overtime scoring 10 points in less than the final minute to win a Big Ten high-scoring 100-99 contest at Minnesota (6-3) in Williams Arena in Minneapolis.

Saylor Poffenbarger had 30 points and 10 boards for the Terrapins while Oluchi Okananwa scored 25 with eight rebounds.

Minnesota’s Grace Grocholski hit nine from deep and scored 31 points.

It’s Maryland’s first overtime road win since 2012 and first-ever road win in double-overtime bringing the Terrapins to 18-4 in extra period wins under Brenda Frese, including the comeback against then-ACC rival Duke to win the program’s sole NCAA title in 2006 in Boston.

"This game felt like March," Frese said. "That’s what you’re going to see playing in the best conference in the country. We’re going to have these battles every single night. "

In other games, Wisconsin (7-3) in an upset at home in Madison in a Big Ten game beat then-No. 20 Michigan State, a loss that dropped the visitors to 8-1.

Kansas State (6-5) pulled the other upset winning 61-60 over then-No. 13 Ole Miss (8-1) as Brandie Harrod scored on a layup with a second left in the annual Dan Snyder Classic in St. Joseph’s, Mo.

No. 5 LSU (10-0) after a one-game drop to the 90s last week in beating Duke returned to triple digits blasting host New Orleans 126-62 as Notre Dame transfer Kate Koval had a career-high 22 points.

Penn transfer Jordan Obi, who sat out last season with an injury after leaving the Quakers, was 7-10 from the field for 14 points as part of then-No. 17 Kentucky (10-1) winning at home 82-55 over Central Michigan (5-4).

posted by Mel Greenberg | 10:44 PM | 0 comments

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