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Monday, April 5, 2004

Lady Vols steal win from LSU


UT's Davis grabs loose ball, hits layup

The Associated Press

NEW ORLEANS - A disputed foul call with time running out, a spinning last-second shot and now a backcourt steal in the waning moments.

Tennessee may not dominate women's basketball like it used to, but the Lady Vols somehow found their way to an 11th NCAA championship game.

LaToya Davis scored with 1.6 seconds left after LSU's Temeka Johnson lost the ball in the backcourt, giving the Lady Vols a 52-50 victory over the Lady Tigers in their national semifinal game Sunday night.

"They have low blood pressure," Tennessee coach Pat Summitt said of her players. "My blood pressure right now is not even worth checking. ... I told them I was really proud of them but I don't know how much more of this I could take."

Little has come easy for the Lady Vols this postseason, but balance and remarkable resiliency have put them back in the title game. They now seek an unprecedented seventh overall championship on the heels of three straight two-point, last-second victories.

With the score tied 50-50 and the clock running down, once again Tennessee put the ball in the hands of Tasha Butts, who scored the winning points in the Lady Vols' last two narrow wins.

She missed this time, giving LSU the ball with 6 seconds left. But Tennessee trapped Johnson in the backcourt, forcing the turnover when Johnson tripped as she tried to advance past Ashley Robinson. The ball squirted out and Shyra Ely came up with it and quickly fed Davis underneath for an uncontested layup.

"I was just in the right place at the right time," said Ely, Tennessee's leading scorer who was held to four points on 1-of-11 shooting. "I just grabbed the loose ball and saw LaToya."

Tennessee, the lone No. 1 seed in the Final Four, will play Connecticut, a 67-58 winner over Minnesota. It will be the second straight title game between the two, and the fourth time in the last 10 years. Connecticut has won all three meetings.

"I guess the way we feel is we're supposed to be here because we keep on finding ways to win," Ely added.

LSU coach Pokey Chatman tried to deflect criticism from Johnson's late turnover, noting that LSU made only 12 of 20 free throws, had nine turnovers and allowed Tennessee to score 18 second-chance points.

"It's probably going to be unfortunate that we're probably going to talk about the last six seconds of this game and in my opinion that's not where this game was lost," Chatman said.

Seimone Augustus led LSU with 16 points and nine rebounds, but her shooting percentage plummeted from the previous games in the tournament. She carried the Lady Tigers to their first Final Four by making 67 percent of her shots.

Guarded mostly by Robinson, Augustus finished 7-for-21 against Tennessee. Johnson had nine points and eight assists for LSU.

"I had good looks. Shots just weren't falling," Augustus said.

Shanna Zolman led Tennessee (31-3) with 12 points, hitting a 3-pointer at the shot-clock buzzer with 1:38 left to give Tennessee a 50-46 lead.

LSU (27-8) rallied to tie it at 50 when Johnson drove and passed to Tillie Willis with 27.2 seconds left.

But Davis made the final basket. Tennessee players leapt and punched their fists in the air, while LSU looked stunned. LSU could not get off a desperation shot before the final buzzer.

It was the lowest scoring game in women's Final Four history. The previous was in the 1985 semifinal game in which Old Dominion defeated and Louisiana-Monroe 57-47.

Afterward, LSU forward Wendlyn Jones sat quietly in the Tigers' locker room, trying to grasp the abrupt end to her season.

"I can't believe that just happened," Jones said.

It was a heartbreaking ending to a feel-good run. Longtime coach Sue Gunter has been watching games from home since early this season because of respiratory problems.

Chatman took over and led the Tigers to their first Final Four. Gunter watched the semifinal from a nearby hotel room.

What she saw was fierce defensive intensity from her players, who frustrated Tennessee's shooters throughout the game only to come up short in the wild final seconds.

The Lady Vols had only three players score in double figures. Butts had 11 points and 11 rebounds, while Davis finished with 10.

Tennessee shot only 29 percent from the floor through the first 30 minutes, but LSU could not capitalize because Augustus started 4-for-15.

The Lady Vols, who started 0-for-9 from 3-point range, suddenly got the shooting they needed midway through the second half, with 3s by Sidney Spencer and Zolman and a strong inside basket by Tye'sha Fluker comprising an 8-2 run to tie the score at 34.

Tennessee is used to dominating its Southeastern Conference rivals. The Lady Vols were 31-7 against LSU, including an 85-62 victory on Feb. 29.

But Tennessee looked tight early, hitting less than 30 percent of its shots through the first 12:02 in falling behind 15-10.

It was the lowest-scoring first half of the season for the Vols, who were shooting only 29 percent (8-of-28) from the floor.

LSU (27-8) - Jones 2-4 4-7 8, Willis 2-4 0-0 4, Johnson 3-8 3-3 9, Augustus 7-21 2-2 16, Hodges 3-9 1-2 7, Williams 0-0 0-0 0, Hoston 1-2 1-2 3, Clavelle 1-2 0-2 2, White 0-0 1-2 1. Totals 19-50 12-20 50.

TENNESSE (31-3) - Davis 3-6 4-4 10, Ely 1-11 2-2 4, Robinson 1-3 0-4 2, Butts 4-14 3-5 11, Zolman 4-10 2-2 12, Spencer 2-6 2-2 7, Redding 0-0 0-0 0, Jackson 1-4 0-0 2, Fluker 2-3 0-0 4. Totals 18-57 13-19 52.

Halftime-LSU 25-19. 3-Point Goals-LSU 0-3 (Augustus 0-1, Hodges 0-1, Hoston 0-1), Tennessee 3-12 (Zolman 2-5, Spencer 1-1, Butts 0-3, Jackson 0-3). Fouled out-None. Rebounds-LSU 35 (Augustus 9), Tennessee 44 (Butts 11). Assists-LSU 9 (Johnson 8), Tennessee 4 (Butts 2). Total fouls-LSU 17, Tennessee 19.




OPENING DAY 2004
Fresh hope, old questions
Reds offer discounts to try to get more fans into seats
A symbiotic relationship
Larkin will put on reflectors after game
Reds-Cubs series preview
• SPECIAL SECTION: 2004 Reds Season Preview
Orioles 7, Red Sox 2
Bradley boosts Dodgers' offense

MEN'S BASKETBALL
Four months later, teams meet again
Daugherty: Big men know a thing or two
Okafor, Aussie set for rematch
Hewitt's words inspire Bynum

WOMEN'S BASKETBALL
Lady Vols steal win from LSU
Gritty Gophers can't top UConn
Dedication, determination pay off for Blue Devils' Beard
Strong get stronger in women's hoops
Women's Basketball Tournament at a glance

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