Goliaths

Michael Sanchez
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3 min read
Goliaths
( StuSeeger )
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Unlike the men’s tournament—where we have, perhaps, the most unlikely Final Four of all time—the women’s tournament has all the regal airs of a coronation. Will the University of Connecticut continue their otherworldly dominance? Will they meet up with Stanford—a team that many have claimed is actually the best in the country even as UConn was winning a record amount of games? Or will the (semi-)underdogs have a chance? Notre Dame’s Fighting Irish took out the Tennessee Volunteers on Monday night ending Pat Summitt’s revenge-quest on Geno and his UConn Huskies. The Fighting Irish are ranked as a No. 2 seed so it’s not like people were taking them for granted. But, usually, when the path goes through Tennessee, that’s where the path ends. Finally, on Tuesday night the second-seeded Texas A&M Aggies dismantled the Baylor Bears. Brittney Griner is one of the most exciting players in women’s basketball—if only for pure spectacle—but she and her team were completely destroyed by A&M.

With all the fuss on Stanford and UConn’s potential rematch —you might recall that they’ve
played once this season already—there’s a lot missing from the conversation about the contenders that will vie to keep them from that game.

On the one hand, Notre Dame enters their matchup with UConn with some nice momentum. UConn cruised past Duke, where the Fighting Irish had to scrap to get past the specter of Tennessee. (Notre Dame entered the game against the Vols with
a lifetime record of 0-20 against Tennessee.) Also, there’s a pesky knee injury that might be troubling Maya Moore.

On the other hand, Texas A&M seems ready and willing to take the fight to anyone. As they demonstrated against 6′ 8" Brittney Griner, they’re not in the NCAA Tournament bowing to any team, and that includes Stanford. Stanford roughed up the highest-scoring team in the nation in their Elite Eight matchup with Gonzaga—
holding them to only 60 points in a game where the Lady Zags scored 38 in the first half.

The Final Four games begin on Sunday. Texas A&M will try to play the spoiler for Stanford at 5 p.m. MST on ESPN and then Notre Dame will attempt to deny Geno Auriemma’s ladies their chance at the title game. Two teams will be vanquished and it’s likely the No. 1 seed titans will play each other on Tuesday night for all the marbles. That game promises to be one of the best seen in a long, long time—as long as neither of those pesky 2 seeds decide they have something to say about it.
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