Tag Archives: UConn

NCAA Women’s Championship Live Updates: South Carolina Tops UConn

MINNEAPOLIS — It was a 40-minute championship game, yes.

But if South Carolina set out on Sunday to show that an N.C.A.A. title could be all but won in a contest’s first four minutes, even against a mighty, feisty, unbowed Connecticut, consider the hypothesis pressure-tested and proven on the sport’s greatest stage.

The makings of a rout would ebb in certain moments, but the Gamecocks eventually defeated the Huskies with ease, 64-49, to claim the second national championship in their history.

The principal trouble for UConn on a night full of them was that there was barely ever any time for a fight that never seemed all that fair.

By the first timeout of the evening, not even three and a half minutes into play, South Carolina had a 9-point lead and baskets from four starters. It had 7 second-chance points and 8 rebounds. UConn had a lone layup and, aside from a block, not much else it would wish to watch again.

It was an early and emphatic seizure of the glory that UConn had always — always — cultivated in national championship games, an onslaught so thoroughly stunning and tone-setting that the thicket of basketball fans inside the Target Center could have been forgiven for wondering whether they had paid handsomely to stumble into a first-round tournament contest back in Columbia, S.C.

Instead, they saw South Carolina win its second title in six seasons. Under Coach Dawn Staley, who took over in Columbia in 2008 and on Sunday became the first coach to beat UConn’s Geno Auriemma in a national championship game, the Gamecocks have gone from a middling program to a marquee one that has become a mainstay of the postseason and as much a destination for prized recruits as any place in the nation.

And that was before Sunday’s showcase in Minneapolis.

But South Carolina, unlike injury-prone UConn, was a wire-to-wire favorite to reach the championship game and deliver a title. The Gamecocks opened the season ranked first in the Associated Press poll, a spot they never surrendered, with a roster that included five returning starters and 11 returning letterwinners.

Aliyah Boston, a 6-foot-5 junior forward from the United States Virgin Islands, was the centerpiece from the start, a one-woman juggernaut of the hardwood with a double-double as a career average and, by season’s end, a reputation as perhaps “the hardest person in America to guard,” as Auriemma marveled on Saturday.

“She scores if there’s one, two, three, four people on her,” Auriemma said. “It doesn’t matter. She’s able to carve out the space she wants. She gets the ball on the rim whenever she wants. She rebounds whichever ball she goes after. She just has a knack.”

Credit…Andy Lyons/Getty Images

She also had talent around her. Zia Cooke, a junior guard, arrived in Minneapolis with three 20-point games this season. Brea Beal proved herself as one of the most menacing defenders in all of women’s basketball. Destanni Henderson was a preternaturally speedy senior guard who was among the Southeastern Conference’s assist leaders, and Victaria Saxton, a forward from Rome, Ga., starred off the boards and in slapping down shots.

They would lose only twice — by 1 in overtime at Missouri on Dec. 30, and by 2 to Kentucky in the SEC tournament championship game — before they stormed through the N.C.A.A. tournament. Entering the game on Sunday, two days after every South Carolina starter posted double-digit scoring outings in the Final Four contest against Louisville, the Gamecocks were averaging almost 70 points per game, holding their rivals to less than 45 and dominating play off the boards, with a tournament rebounding margin of plus-19.4, the best in the field.

They were also exceptional at holding opponents to single-digit point totals per quarter. Entering Sunday’s game, the Gamecocks had done it 39 times. The Huskies were an improbable victim for the 40th edition. But there they were after the first, after the Gamecocks had gotten off more than twice as many shots and collected four times as many rebounds.

Six South Carolina players scored in the first. Paige Bueckers, the extraordinary sophomore guard for UConn, managed not a point, and the Huskies finished the quarter trailing by 14.

The Huskies offense rumbled more in the second, with UConn’s rebounding improving sharply and Bueckers scoring 9 in the period. And though Boston played much of the quarter, UConn held her scoreless. The South Carolina advantage, made possible by its overwhelming command and capitalization on the night’s second chances, fell to 8 by the half.

The Gamecocks would push their lead more in the third. But the game tightened sharply when South Carolina’s scoring entered a dry spell of more than four minutes.

Credit…Elsa/Getty Images

Bueckers, though, opened a 10-point run for the Huskies with a jumper, part of an effort that included 14 points and 6 rebounds on the night. When Evina Westbrook brought UConn’s margin to 6 with a 3-pointer, the team’s second successful shot from behind the arc in 30 seconds, the Target Center echoed as if Connecticut had planted a flag at midcourt.

But Henderson, who had scored the first points of the evening for South Carolina and easily led her team’s scoring on Sunday, with a career-high 26 points, promptly pushed the margin back to 9 for the start of the final quarter. Henderson and Saxton soon used a succession of layups and free throws to reconstruct a double-digit lead for the Gamecocks.

On Saturday, Henderson had preached how South Carolina would need to simply “listen to our game plan and execute that.” She talked about how it could be “a great game, a great 40 minutes.”

For the Gamecocks, maybe aside from the 22 seconds at the start when they were merely tied, it was. All Auriemma could do, after all this time, was stand on the sideline, his arms crossed.

Read original article here

Women’s Final Four 2022 results: South Carolina and UConn win, will play for the national championship Sunday

The 2022 Women’s NCAA Tournament is down to two teams: South Carolina and UConn. The Gamecocks and Huskies each collected Final Four victories in Minneapolis on Friday, setting up a star-studded national championship on Sunday.

South Carolina, the AP’s wire-to-wire No. 1 team, opened the Final Four at the Target Center against No. 1 seed Louisville. The matchup was a true clash of giants, as both teams came into the contest having won all but one of their tournament games by double-digits. The Gamecocks came out on top, 72-59, to reach their second national championship in the last five years.

The national championship matchup locked in after UConn beat Stanford, the reigning national champion. UConn’s Paige Bueckers scored 14 points in the game to help top the Cardinal 63-58. 

Here’s what went down in each Final Four contest.

  • Three days after winning Naismith Player of the Year, Aliyah Boston showed exactly why she deserved the honor by dominating in an 72-59 win over Louisville. Despite facing double and triple teams, Boston led South Carolina with 23 points to go along with 18 rebounds and four assists. South Carolina will now have a shot at winning its first national title since 2017. Louisville’s Emily Engstler had 18 points, nine rebounds and four steals in a masterful losing effort.
  • UConn star Paige Bueckers powered the Huskies to a 63-58 victory over Stanford, the reigning national champion, by scoring 14 points to go along with four rebounds and five assists. The Huskies’ defense was equally critical to the win, as Stanford – which rallied to within two points in the final minute but fell just short – shot 35.4% from the field and made only 4 of its 23 3-point attempts. UConn will now be searching for its first national title since 2016 against overall No. 1 seed South Carolina.

2022 Women’s NCAA Tournament TV schedule, scores

All times Eastern | NCAA Tournament schedule

(1) South Carolina 72, (1) Louisville 59  7 p.m. | ESPN
(2) UConn 63, (1) Stanford 58 9:30 p.m. | ESPN

The 2022 national championship will air Sunday at 8 p.m. on ESPN, and you can stream the game on fuboTV (try for free).  

require.config({"baseUrl":"https://sportsfly.cbsistatic.com/fly-0193/bundles/sportsmediajs/js-build","config":{"version":{"fly/components/accordion":"1.0","fly/components/alert":"1.0","fly/components/base":"1.0","fly/components/carousel":"1.0","fly/components/dropdown":"1.0","fly/components/fixate":"1.0","fly/components/form-validate":"1.0","fly/components/image-gallery":"1.0","fly/components/iframe-messenger":"1.0","fly/components/load-more":"1.0","fly/components/load-more-article":"1.0","fly/components/load-more-scroll":"1.0","fly/components/loading":"1.0","fly/components/modal":"1.0","fly/components/modal-iframe":"1.0","fly/components/network-bar":"1.0","fly/components/poll":"1.0","fly/components/search-player":"1.0","fly/components/social-button":"1.0","fly/components/social-counts":"1.0","fly/components/social-links":"1.0","fly/components/tabs":"1.0","fly/components/video":"1.0","fly/libs/easy-xdm":"2.4.17.1","fly/libs/jquery.cookie":"1.2","fly/libs/jquery.throttle-debounce":"1.1","fly/libs/jquery.widget":"1.9.2","fly/libs/omniture.s-code":"1.0","fly/utils/jquery-mobile-init":"1.0","fly/libs/jquery.mobile":"1.3.2","fly/libs/backbone":"1.0.0","fly/libs/underscore":"1.5.1","fly/libs/jquery.easing":"1.3","fly/managers/ad":"2.0","fly/managers/components":"1.0","fly/managers/cookie":"1.0","fly/managers/debug":"1.0","fly/managers/geo":"1.0","fly/managers/gpt":"4.3","fly/managers/history":"2.0","fly/managers/madison":"1.0","fly/managers/social-authentication":"1.0","fly/utils/data-prefix":"1.0","fly/utils/data-selector":"1.0","fly/utils/function-natives":"1.0","fly/utils/guid":"1.0","fly/utils/log":"1.0","fly/utils/object-helper":"1.0","fly/utils/string-helper":"1.0","fly/utils/string-vars":"1.0","fly/utils/url-helper":"1.0","libs/jshashtable":"2.1","libs/select2":"3.5.1","libs/jsonp":"2.4.0","libs/jquery/mobile":"1.4.5","libs/modernizr.custom":"2.6.2","libs/velocity":"1.2.2","libs/dataTables":"1.10.6","libs/dataTables.fixedColumns":"3.0.4","libs/dataTables.fixedHeader":"2.1.2","libs/dateformat":"1.0.3","libs/waypoints/infinite":"3.1.1","libs/waypoints/inview":"3.1.1","libs/waypoints/jquery.waypoints":"3.1.1","libs/waypoints/sticky":"3.1.1","libs/jquery/dotdotdot":"1.6.1","libs/jquery/flexslider":"2.1","libs/jquery/lazyload":"1.9.3","libs/jquery/maskedinput":"1.3.1","libs/jquery/marquee":"1.3.1","libs/jquery/numberformatter":"1.2.3","libs/jquery/placeholder":"0.2.4","libs/jquery/scrollbar":"0.1.6","libs/jquery/tablesorter":"2.0.5","libs/jquery/touchswipe":"1.6.18","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.core":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.draggable":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.mouse":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.position":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.slider":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.sortable":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.touch-punch":"0.2.3","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.autocomplete":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.accordion":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.tabs":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.menu":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.dialog":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.resizable":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.button":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.tooltip":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.effects":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.datepicker":"1.11.4"}},"shim":{"liveconnection/managers/connection":{"deps":["liveconnection/libs/sockjs-0.3.4"]},"liveconnection/libs/sockjs-0.3.4":{"exports":"SockJS"},"libs/setValueFromArray":{"exports":"set"},"libs/getValueFromArray":{"exports":"get"},"fly/libs/jquery.mobile-1.3.2":["version!fly/utils/jquery-mobile-init"],"libs/backbone.marionette":{"deps":["jquery","version!fly/libs/underscore","version!fly/libs/backbone"],"exports":"Marionette"},"fly/libs/underscore-1.5.1":{"exports":"_"},"fly/libs/backbone-1.0.0":{"deps":["version!fly/libs/underscore","jquery"],"exports":"Backbone"},"libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.tabs-1.11.4":["jquery","version!libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.core","version!fly/libs/jquery.widget"],"libs/jquery/flexslider-2.1":["jquery"],"libs/dataTables.fixedColumns-3.0.4":["jquery","version!libs/dataTables"],"libs/dataTables.fixedHeader-2.1.2":["jquery","version!libs/dataTables"],"https://sports.cbsimg.net/js/CBSi/app/VideoPlayer/AdobePass-min.js":["https://sports.cbsimg.net/js/CBSi/util/Utils-min.js"]},"map":{"*":{"adobe-pass":"https://sports.cbsimg.net/js/CBSi/app/VideoPlayer/AdobePass-min.js","facebook":"https://connect.facebook.net/en_US/sdk.js","facebook-debug":"https://connect.facebook.net/en_US/all/debug.js","google":"https://apis.google.com/js/plusone.js","google-platform":"https://apis.google.com/js/client:platform.js","google-csa":"https://www.google.com/adsense/search/async-ads.js","google-javascript-api":"https://www.google.com/jsapi","google-client-api":"https://apis.google.com/js/api:client.js","gpt":"https://securepubads.g.doubleclick.net/tag/js/gpt.js","hlsjs":"https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/hls.js/1.0.7/hls.js","newsroom":"https://c2.taboola.com/nr/cbsinteractive-cbssports/newsroom.js","recaptcha":"https://www.google.com/recaptcha/api.js?onload=loadRecaptcha&render=explicit","recaptcha_ajax":"https://www.google.com/recaptcha/api/js/recaptcha_ajax.js","supreme-golf":"https://sgapps-staging.supremegolf.com/search/assets/js/bundle.js","taboola":"https://cdn.taboola.com/libtrc/cbsinteractive-cbssports/loader.js","twitter":"https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js","video-avia":"https://vidtech.cbsinteractive.com/avia-js/1.14.0/player/avia.min.js","video-avia-ui":"https://vidtech.cbsinteractive.com/avia-js/1.14.0/plugins/ui/avia.ui.min.js","video-avia-gam":"https://vidtech.cbsinteractive.com/avia-js/1.14.0/plugins/gam/avia.gam.min.js","video-ima3":"https://imasdk.googleapis.com/js/sdkloader/ima3.js","video-ima3-dai":"https://imasdk.googleapis.com/js/sdkloader/ima3_dai.js","video-utils":"https://sports.cbsimg.net/js/CBSi/util/Utils-min.js","video-vast-tracking":"https://vidtech.cbsinteractive.com/sb55/vast-js/vtg-vast-client.js"}},"waitSeconds":300});



Read original article here

Women’s Final Four 2022 live: UConn and Stanford face off; South Carolina tops Louisville, moves to title game

After making it to Minneapolis for the Final Four, South Carolina, UConn and Stanford are the only teams left hunting for a national championship.  

South Carolina, the AP’s wire-to-wire No. 1 team, opened the Final Four at the Target Center against No. 1 seed Louisville. The matchup was a true clash of giants, as both teams came into the contest having won all but one of their tournament games by double-digits. The Gamecocks came out on top, 72-59, to reach their second national championship in the last five years.

The national championship matchup will be set after UConn and Stanford play at 9:30 p.m. Stanford, the reigning national champion, will face a UConn squad coming off a thrilling 91-87 double-overtime victory against No. 1 seed NC State. 

Here’s some background for each Final Four matchup. 

  • Three days after winning Naismith Player of the Year, Aliyah Boston showed exactly why she deserved the honor by dominating in an 72-59 win over Louisville. Despite facing double and triple teams, Boston led South Carolina with 23 points to go along with 18 rebounds and four assists. South Carolina will now have a shot at winning its first national title since 2017. Louisville’s Emily Engstler had 18 points, nine rebounds and four steals in a masterful losing effort.
  • After missing 19 games with a knee injury this season, UConn star Paige Bueckers returned to her Naismith Player of the Year form by scoring 27 points – on 10-of-15 shooting – in a thrilling double-overtime win over NC State in the Elite Eight. Up next for Bueckers and UConn is a Stanford team that controlled the paint against Texas in the Elite Eight, blocking 11 shots and outrebounding the Longhorns by 17 in a 59-50 victory. The Cardinal are two wins away from becoming just the fourth women’s program to win back-to-back Division I NCAA Tournaments.

2022 Women’s NCAA Tournament TV schedule, scores

All times Eastern | NCAA Tournament schedule

(1) South Carolina 72, (1) Louisville 59  7 p.m. | ESPN
(2) UConn vs. (1) Stanford 9:30 p.m. | ESPN

All of the 2022 Women’s NCAA Tournament Final Four games will air on ESPN, and you can stream every game on fuboTV (try for free).  

require.config({"baseUrl":"https://sportsfly.cbsistatic.com/fly-0193/bundles/sportsmediajs/js-build","config":{"version":{"fly/components/accordion":"1.0","fly/components/alert":"1.0","fly/components/base":"1.0","fly/components/carousel":"1.0","fly/components/dropdown":"1.0","fly/components/fixate":"1.0","fly/components/form-validate":"1.0","fly/components/image-gallery":"1.0","fly/components/iframe-messenger":"1.0","fly/components/load-more":"1.0","fly/components/load-more-article":"1.0","fly/components/load-more-scroll":"1.0","fly/components/loading":"1.0","fly/components/modal":"1.0","fly/components/modal-iframe":"1.0","fly/components/network-bar":"1.0","fly/components/poll":"1.0","fly/components/search-player":"1.0","fly/components/social-button":"1.0","fly/components/social-counts":"1.0","fly/components/social-links":"1.0","fly/components/tabs":"1.0","fly/components/video":"1.0","fly/libs/easy-xdm":"2.4.17.1","fly/libs/jquery.cookie":"1.2","fly/libs/jquery.throttle-debounce":"1.1","fly/libs/jquery.widget":"1.9.2","fly/libs/omniture.s-code":"1.0","fly/utils/jquery-mobile-init":"1.0","fly/libs/jquery.mobile":"1.3.2","fly/libs/backbone":"1.0.0","fly/libs/underscore":"1.5.1","fly/libs/jquery.easing":"1.3","fly/managers/ad":"2.0","fly/managers/components":"1.0","fly/managers/cookie":"1.0","fly/managers/debug":"1.0","fly/managers/geo":"1.0","fly/managers/gpt":"4.3","fly/managers/history":"2.0","fly/managers/madison":"1.0","fly/managers/social-authentication":"1.0","fly/utils/data-prefix":"1.0","fly/utils/data-selector":"1.0","fly/utils/function-natives":"1.0","fly/utils/guid":"1.0","fly/utils/log":"1.0","fly/utils/object-helper":"1.0","fly/utils/string-helper":"1.0","fly/utils/string-vars":"1.0","fly/utils/url-helper":"1.0","libs/jshashtable":"2.1","libs/select2":"3.5.1","libs/jsonp":"2.4.0","libs/jquery/mobile":"1.4.5","libs/modernizr.custom":"2.6.2","libs/velocity":"1.2.2","libs/dataTables":"1.10.6","libs/dataTables.fixedColumns":"3.0.4","libs/dataTables.fixedHeader":"2.1.2","libs/dateformat":"1.0.3","libs/waypoints/infinite":"3.1.1","libs/waypoints/inview":"3.1.1","libs/waypoints/jquery.waypoints":"3.1.1","libs/waypoints/sticky":"3.1.1","libs/jquery/dotdotdot":"1.6.1","libs/jquery/flexslider":"2.1","libs/jquery/lazyload":"1.9.3","libs/jquery/maskedinput":"1.3.1","libs/jquery/marquee":"1.3.1","libs/jquery/numberformatter":"1.2.3","libs/jquery/placeholder":"0.2.4","libs/jquery/scrollbar":"0.1.6","libs/jquery/tablesorter":"2.0.5","libs/jquery/touchswipe":"1.6.18","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.core":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.draggable":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.mouse":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.position":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.slider":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.sortable":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.touch-punch":"0.2.3","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.autocomplete":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.accordion":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.tabs":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.menu":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.dialog":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.resizable":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.button":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.tooltip":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.effects":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.datepicker":"1.11.4"}},"shim":{"liveconnection/managers/connection":{"deps":["liveconnection/libs/sockjs-0.3.4"]},"liveconnection/libs/sockjs-0.3.4":{"exports":"SockJS"},"libs/setValueFromArray":{"exports":"set"},"libs/getValueFromArray":{"exports":"get"},"fly/libs/jquery.mobile-1.3.2":["version!fly/utils/jquery-mobile-init"],"libs/backbone.marionette":{"deps":["jquery","version!fly/libs/underscore","version!fly/libs/backbone"],"exports":"Marionette"},"fly/libs/underscore-1.5.1":{"exports":"_"},"fly/libs/backbone-1.0.0":{"deps":["version!fly/libs/underscore","jquery"],"exports":"Backbone"},"libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.tabs-1.11.4":["jquery","version!libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.core","version!fly/libs/jquery.widget"],"libs/jquery/flexslider-2.1":["jquery"],"libs/dataTables.fixedColumns-3.0.4":["jquery","version!libs/dataTables"],"libs/dataTables.fixedHeader-2.1.2":["jquery","version!libs/dataTables"],"https://sports.cbsimg.net/js/CBSi/app/VideoPlayer/AdobePass-min.js":["https://sports.cbsimg.net/js/CBSi/util/Utils-min.js"]},"map":{"*":{"adobe-pass":"https://sports.cbsimg.net/js/CBSi/app/VideoPlayer/AdobePass-min.js","facebook":"https://connect.facebook.net/en_US/sdk.js","facebook-debug":"https://connect.facebook.net/en_US/all/debug.js","google":"https://apis.google.com/js/plusone.js","google-platform":"https://apis.google.com/js/client:platform.js","google-csa":"https://www.google.com/adsense/search/async-ads.js","google-javascript-api":"https://www.google.com/jsapi","google-client-api":"https://apis.google.com/js/api:client.js","gpt":"https://securepubads.g.doubleclick.net/tag/js/gpt.js","hlsjs":"https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/hls.js/1.0.7/hls.js","newsroom":"https://c2.taboola.com/nr/cbsinteractive-cbssports/newsroom.js","recaptcha":"https://www.google.com/recaptcha/api.js?onload=loadRecaptcha&render=explicit","recaptcha_ajax":"https://www.google.com/recaptcha/api/js/recaptcha_ajax.js","supreme-golf":"https://sgapps-staging.supremegolf.com/search/assets/js/bundle.js","taboola":"https://cdn.taboola.com/libtrc/cbsinteractive-cbssports/loader.js","twitter":"https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js","video-avia":"https://vidtech.cbsinteractive.com/avia-js/1.14.0/player/avia.min.js","video-avia-ui":"https://vidtech.cbsinteractive.com/avia-js/1.14.0/plugins/ui/avia.ui.min.js","video-avia-gam":"https://vidtech.cbsinteractive.com/avia-js/1.14.0/plugins/gam/avia.gam.min.js","video-ima3":"https://imasdk.googleapis.com/js/sdkloader/ima3.js","video-ima3-dai":"https://imasdk.googleapis.com/js/sdkloader/ima3_dai.js","video-utils":"https://sports.cbsimg.net/js/CBSi/util/Utils-min.js","video-vast-tracking":"https://vidtech.cbsinteractive.com/sb55/vast-js/vtg-vast-client.js"}},"waitSeconds":300});



Read original article here

Women’s Final Four 2022 live: South Carolina and Louisville, UConn and Stanford facing off in Minneapolis

After collecting four NCAA Tournament wins apiece, South Carolina, Louisville, UConn and Stanford are the only teams left hunting for a national championship. The hunt will continue in Minneapolis, the host of Friday’s Final Four and the championship game on April 3. 

South Carolina, the AP’s wire-to-wire No. 1 team, will open the Final Four at the Target Center with a 7 p.m. game against No. 1 seed Louisville. It’s a true clash of giants, as both teams have won all but one of their tournament games by double-digits. 

The national championship matchup will be set after UConn and Stanford play at 9:30 p.m. Stanford, the reigning national champion, will face a UConn squad coming off a thrilling 91-87 double-overtime victory against No. 1 seed NC State. 

Here’s some background for each Final Four matchup. 

  • The top-seeded Gamecocks slammed the door on No. 10 seed Creighton’s Cinderella Run in the Elite Eight, winning 80-50 behind a 19-point, seven-rebound performance from Naismith Player of the Year and Defensive Player of the Year Aliyah Boston. Naismith Coach of the Year Dawn Staley will need a plan to contain Louisville guard Hailey Van Lith, who scored a team-high 22 in Louisville’s 62-50 win over Michigan in the Elite Eight. 
  • After missing 19 games with a knee injury this season, UConn star Paige Bueckers returned to her Naismith Player of the Year form by scoring 27 points – on 10-of-15 shooting – in a thrilling double-overtime win over NC State in the Elite Eight. Up next for Bueckers and UConn is a Stanford team that controlled the paint against Texas in the Elite Eight, blocking 11 shots and outrebounding the Longhorns by 17 in a 59-50 victory. The Cardinal are two wins away from becoming just the fourth women’s program to win back-to-back Division I NCAA Tournaments.

2022 Women’s NCAA Tournament TV schedule, scores

All times Eastern | NCAA Tournament schedule

(1) Louisville vs. (1) South Carolina 7 p.m. | ESPN
(2) UConn vs. (1) Stanford 9:30 p.m. | ESPN

All of the 2022 Women’s NCAA Tournament Final Four games will air on ESPN, and you can stream every game on fuboTV (try for free).  

require.config({"baseUrl":"https://sportsfly.cbsistatic.com/fly-0193/bundles/sportsmediajs/js-build","config":{"version":{"fly/components/accordion":"1.0","fly/components/alert":"1.0","fly/components/base":"1.0","fly/components/carousel":"1.0","fly/components/dropdown":"1.0","fly/components/fixate":"1.0","fly/components/form-validate":"1.0","fly/components/image-gallery":"1.0","fly/components/iframe-messenger":"1.0","fly/components/load-more":"1.0","fly/components/load-more-article":"1.0","fly/components/load-more-scroll":"1.0","fly/components/loading":"1.0","fly/components/modal":"1.0","fly/components/modal-iframe":"1.0","fly/components/network-bar":"1.0","fly/components/poll":"1.0","fly/components/search-player":"1.0","fly/components/social-button":"1.0","fly/components/social-counts":"1.0","fly/components/social-links":"1.0","fly/components/tabs":"1.0","fly/components/video":"1.0","fly/libs/easy-xdm":"2.4.17.1","fly/libs/jquery.cookie":"1.2","fly/libs/jquery.throttle-debounce":"1.1","fly/libs/jquery.widget":"1.9.2","fly/libs/omniture.s-code":"1.0","fly/utils/jquery-mobile-init":"1.0","fly/libs/jquery.mobile":"1.3.2","fly/libs/backbone":"1.0.0","fly/libs/underscore":"1.5.1","fly/libs/jquery.easing":"1.3","fly/managers/ad":"2.0","fly/managers/components":"1.0","fly/managers/cookie":"1.0","fly/managers/debug":"1.0","fly/managers/geo":"1.0","fly/managers/gpt":"4.3","fly/managers/history":"2.0","fly/managers/madison":"1.0","fly/managers/social-authentication":"1.0","fly/utils/data-prefix":"1.0","fly/utils/data-selector":"1.0","fly/utils/function-natives":"1.0","fly/utils/guid":"1.0","fly/utils/log":"1.0","fly/utils/object-helper":"1.0","fly/utils/string-helper":"1.0","fly/utils/string-vars":"1.0","fly/utils/url-helper":"1.0","libs/jshashtable":"2.1","libs/select2":"3.5.1","libs/jsonp":"2.4.0","libs/jquery/mobile":"1.4.5","libs/modernizr.custom":"2.6.2","libs/velocity":"1.2.2","libs/dataTables":"1.10.6","libs/dataTables.fixedColumns":"3.0.4","libs/dataTables.fixedHeader":"2.1.2","libs/dateformat":"1.0.3","libs/waypoints/infinite":"3.1.1","libs/waypoints/inview":"3.1.1","libs/waypoints/jquery.waypoints":"3.1.1","libs/waypoints/sticky":"3.1.1","libs/jquery/dotdotdot":"1.6.1","libs/jquery/flexslider":"2.1","libs/jquery/lazyload":"1.9.3","libs/jquery/maskedinput":"1.3.1","libs/jquery/marquee":"1.3.1","libs/jquery/numberformatter":"1.2.3","libs/jquery/placeholder":"0.2.4","libs/jquery/scrollbar":"0.1.6","libs/jquery/tablesorter":"2.0.5","libs/jquery/touchswipe":"1.6.18","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.core":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.draggable":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.mouse":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.position":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.slider":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.sortable":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.touch-punch":"0.2.3","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.autocomplete":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.accordion":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.tabs":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.menu":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.dialog":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.resizable":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.button":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.tooltip":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.effects":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.datepicker":"1.11.4"}},"shim":{"liveconnection/managers/connection":{"deps":["liveconnection/libs/sockjs-0.3.4"]},"liveconnection/libs/sockjs-0.3.4":{"exports":"SockJS"},"libs/setValueFromArray":{"exports":"set"},"libs/getValueFromArray":{"exports":"get"},"fly/libs/jquery.mobile-1.3.2":["version!fly/utils/jquery-mobile-init"],"libs/backbone.marionette":{"deps":["jquery","version!fly/libs/underscore","version!fly/libs/backbone"],"exports":"Marionette"},"fly/libs/underscore-1.5.1":{"exports":"_"},"fly/libs/backbone-1.0.0":{"deps":["version!fly/libs/underscore","jquery"],"exports":"Backbone"},"libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.tabs-1.11.4":["jquery","version!libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.core","version!fly/libs/jquery.widget"],"libs/jquery/flexslider-2.1":["jquery"],"libs/dataTables.fixedColumns-3.0.4":["jquery","version!libs/dataTables"],"libs/dataTables.fixedHeader-2.1.2":["jquery","version!libs/dataTables"],"https://sports.cbsimg.net/js/CBSi/app/VideoPlayer/AdobePass-min.js":["https://sports.cbsimg.net/js/CBSi/util/Utils-min.js"]},"map":{"*":{"adobe-pass":"https://sports.cbsimg.net/js/CBSi/app/VideoPlayer/AdobePass-min.js","facebook":"https://connect.facebook.net/en_US/sdk.js","facebook-debug":"https://connect.facebook.net/en_US/all/debug.js","google":"https://apis.google.com/js/plusone.js","google-platform":"https://apis.google.com/js/client:platform.js","google-csa":"https://www.google.com/adsense/search/async-ads.js","google-javascript-api":"https://www.google.com/jsapi","google-client-api":"https://apis.google.com/js/api:client.js","gpt":"https://securepubads.g.doubleclick.net/tag/js/gpt.js","hlsjs":"https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/hls.js/1.0.7/hls.js","newsroom":"https://c2.taboola.com/nr/cbsinteractive-cbssports/newsroom.js","recaptcha":"https://www.google.com/recaptcha/api.js?onload=loadRecaptcha&render=explicit","recaptcha_ajax":"https://www.google.com/recaptcha/api/js/recaptcha_ajax.js","supreme-golf":"https://sgapps-staging.supremegolf.com/search/assets/js/bundle.js","taboola":"https://cdn.taboola.com/libtrc/cbsinteractive-cbssports/loader.js","twitter":"https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js","video-avia":"https://vidtech.cbsinteractive.com/avia-js/1.14.0/player/avia.min.js","video-avia-ui":"https://vidtech.cbsinteractive.com/avia-js/1.14.0/plugins/ui/avia.ui.min.js","video-avia-gam":"https://vidtech.cbsinteractive.com/avia-js/1.14.0/plugins/gam/avia.gam.min.js","video-ima3":"https://imasdk.googleapis.com/js/sdkloader/ima3.js","video-ima3-dai":"https://imasdk.googleapis.com/js/sdkloader/ima3_dai.js","video-utils":"https://sports.cbsimg.net/js/CBSi/util/Utils-min.js","video-vast-tracking":"https://vidtech.cbsinteractive.com/sb55/vast-js/vtg-vast-client.js"}},"waitSeconds":300});



Read original article here

Scoggins: Paige “Buckets” returns — and she’s bringing UConn home to Final Four

BRIDGEPORT, CONN. – She couldn’t miss. Like almost literally.

Each time the ball left her fingertips, swish. One after another. All clutch shots, all necessary, all carrying the weight of a storied program’s expectations.

This has been a tough season for Paige Bueckers, physically and emotionally. But the basketball wizard from Hopkins returned Monday night.

Bueckers went into a phone booth and Paige “Buckets” reappeared. Her legend grew exponentially with a shooting exhibition that will revisited for many years.

“I would have loved to watch that game. Being in it was obviously crazy.”

Paige Bueckers

Bueckers made eight consecutive shots after halftime, scored 10 points in overtime and five more in the second overtime as UConn outlasted North Carolina State in a 91-87 regional final thriller that featured more clutch shots than will be possible to remember.

The outcome, in the opinion of UConn senior guard Christyn Williams, came down to one deciding factor:

“I was thinking, we have Paige Bueckers and they don’t,” she said.

Sometimes, it’s that simple.

The victory propelled UConn to its 14th consecutive Final Four this weekend in Minneapolis, allowing Bueckers to experience a grand homecoming. She put the entire UConn team on her back to make sure that happened.

Bueckers downplayed the personal significance of playing on her sport’s biggest stage in her hometown before admitting that “being home is nice, too. I’m not going to lie.”

She refused to be denied this opportunity, finishing with a game-high 27 points on 10-of-15 shooting. She didn’t miss after halftime until a jumper rolled out in the second OT.

When the outcome was finally secure and the Huskies could exhale, Bueckers screamed and thrust her arms into the arm and skipped down the court. She hugged teammates and danced and soaked in the moment and what is to come next.

Knee surgery sidelined Bueckers for 19 games and left her rusty when she returned. Coach Geno Auriemma tried to manage expectations as his star eased back after a two-month layoff, nobody sure if she would be able to capture the form that made her National Player of the Year as a freshman.

That Paige Bueckers was on display again in the most critical moment of their season.

“I had no expectation of when this would come, this kind of moment that she had,” Auriemma said. “Paige is different. She was made for these moments.”

Bueckers and her team had to work overtime to keep alive the program’s Final Four streak. The teams traded big shot after big shot, neither team wanting their season to end.

“That’s one of the best games I’ve ever been a part of since I’ve been at UConn, regular season or postseason,” Auriemma said.

Added Bueckers: “I would have loved to watch that game. Being in it was obviously crazy.”

Every time the Huskies looked like they might have things in hand, the Wolfpack had an answer.

N.C. State’s Jakia Brown-Turner drained a rainbow three-pointer from the deep corner with one second left in overtime to tie the score 77-77 and force a second extra session. That came after Bueckers had made two free throws with 6 seconds left.

N.C. State, which was trying to advance to its first Final Four since 1998, will look back at the end of regulation with regret.

With the scored tied 61-61, UConn’s Olivia Nelson-Ododa missed two free throws with 28 seconds left.

N.C. State squandered its final possession. The Wolfpack waited too long to initiate its offense and settled for a rushed three-pointer by Kai Crutchfield that didn’t come close.

Bueckers caught fire in the overtime sessions — and that was it.

“Once she makes one, the rim is like this big,” Williams said, extending both of her arms to make a big circle. “She’s going to keep making them, so give her the ball.”

Teammates gave her the ball and she delivered in the clutch. So calm, so cool.

“I was thinking, we have Paige Bueckers and they don’t.”

Christyn Williams

Bueckers didn’t get a fairy-tale sendoff in high school. The pandemic canceled both the state championship game and her dream of putting a celebratory bow on her illustrious prep career.

Who knows, maybe she will get that fairy-tale finish after all.

After what took place Monday night, anything seems possible.



Read original article here

Scoggins: Paige “Buckets” returned and brought UConn home for the Final Four

BRIDGEPORT, CONN. – She couldn’t miss. Like almost literally.

Each time the ball left her fingertips, swish. One after another. All clutch shots, all necessary, all carrying the weight of a storied program’s expectations.

This has been a tough season for Paige Bueckers, physically and emotionally. But the basketball wizard from Hopkins returned Monday night.

Bueckers went into a phone booth and Paige “Buckets” reappeared. Her legend grew exponentially with a shooting exhibition that will revisited for many years.

Bueckers made eight consecutive shots after halftime, scored 10 points in overtime and five more in the second overtime as UConn outlasted North Carolina State in a 91-87 regional final thriller that featured more clutch shots than will be possible to remember.

The outcome, in the opinion of UConn senior guard Christyn Williams, came down to one deciding factor:

“I was thinking, we have Paige Bueckers and they don’t,” she said.

Sometimes, it’s that simple.

The victory propelled UConn to its 14th consecutive Final Four this weekend in Minneapolis, allowing Bueckers to experience a grand homecoming. She put the entire UConn team on her back to make sure that happened.

Bueckers downplayed the personal significance of playing on her sport’s biggest stage in her hometown before admitting that “being home is nice, too. I’m not going to lie.”

She refused to be denied this opportunity, finishing with a game-high 27 points on 10-of-15 shooting. She didn’t miss after halftime until a jumper rolled out in the second OT.

When the outcome was finally secure and the Huskies could exhale, Bueckers screamed and thrust her arms into the arm and skipped down the court. She hugged teammates and danced and soaked in the moment and what is to come next.

Knee surgery sidelined Bueckers for 19 games and left her rusty when she returned. Coach Geno Auriemma tried to manage expectations as his star eased back after a two-month layoff, nobody sure if she would be able to capture the form that made her National Player of the Year as a freshman.

That Paige Bueckers was on display again in the most critical moment of their season.

“I had no expectation of when this would come, this kind of moment that she had,” Auriemma said. “Paige is different. She was made for these moments.”

Bueckers and her team had to work overtime to keep alive the program’s Final Four streak. The teams traded big shot after big shot, neither team wanting their season to end.

“That’s one of the best games I’ve ever been a part of since I’ve been at UConn, regular season or postseason,” Auriemma said.

Added Bueckers: “I would have loved to watch that game. Being in it was obviously crazy.”

Every time the Huskies looked like they might have things in hand, the Wolfpack had an answer.

N.C. State’s Jakia Brown-Turner drained a rainbow three-pointer from the deep corner with one second left in overtime to tie the score 77-77 and force a second extra session. That came after Bueckers had made two free throws with 6 seconds left.

N.C. State, which was trying to advance to its first Final Four since 1998, will look back at the end of regulation with regret.

With the scored tied 61-61, UConn’s Olivia Nelson-Ododa missed two free throws with 28 seconds left.

N.C. State squandered its final possession. The Wolfpack waited too long to initiate its offense and settled for a rushed three-pointer by Kai Crutchfield that didn’t come close.

Bueckers caught fire in the overtime sessions — and that was it.

“Once she makes one, the rim is like this big,” Williams said, extending both of her arms to make a big circle. “She’s going to keep making them, so give her the ball.”

BOXSCORE: Connecticut 91, N.C. State 87 (2OT)

Teammates gave her the ball and she delivered in the clutch. So calm, so cool.

Bueckers didn’t get a fairy-tale sendoff in high school. The pandemic canceled both the state championship game and her dream of putting a celebratory bow on her illustrious prep career.

Who knows, maybe she will get that fairy-tale finish after all.

After what took place Monday night, anything seems possible.



Read original article here

March Madness 2022 live updates: Villanova tops Houston; NC State, UConn, Louisville women advance to Elite 8 – USA TODAY

  1. March Madness 2022 live updates: Villanova tops Houston; NC State, UConn, Louisville women advance to Elite 8 USA TODAY
  2. Villanova vs. Houston – Elite Eight NCAA tournament extended highlights March Madness
  3. Villanova vs. Houston score, takeaways: Wildcats lean on defense to suffocate Cougars, advance to Final Four CBS Sports
  4. Michigan’s Naz Hillmon: Why the best player in program history is also its most important Detroit Free Press
  5. ‘Transformational’ Hillmon puts in the work for UM with chance at Final Four Detroit News
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

UConn women’s basketball team’s 145-game regular-season conference win streak ends after loss to Villanova

Villanova beat the UConn women’s basketball team 72-69 on Wednesday in Hartford, Connecticut, ending the No. 8 Huskies’ 145-game regular-season conference winning streak that dated back to March 2013 and was the longest in NCAA women’s basketball history.

Counting conference tournament games, the streak was 169 games.

UConn’s last loss to a conference foe in the regular season came at Notre Dame, which was followed by a loss to the Fighting Irish in the championship game of the 2013 Big East tournament. However, the Huskies rebounded to win the national championship that season, the first of four titles in a row.

UConn then moved to the American Athletic Conference in 2013-14 and didn’t lose to a conference foe in seven seasons in that league. The Huskies moved to a restructured Big East last season and went 18-0 in the regular season and won the conference tournament, beating Villanova 84-39 in the semifinals.

It was a very different matchup on Wednesday between the Huskies and the Wildcats, who moved to 16-6 overall and 10-3 in the Big East. Villanova has won eight in a row and 13 of its past 14.

“Our defense came up pretty big, for sure,” said Villanova’s Denise Dillon, who took over last season at her alma mater after longtime coach Harry Perretta retired. “We put up 72 against UConn. Saw a lot of players contributing.

“We’re just excited. We talked about shrinking the scoring gap against UConn. I’m so proud of this group.”

The Wildcats shot 51.8% from the field, including 45.5% (10-of-22) from behind the arc. Lior Garzon led Villanova with 19 points, while Maddy Siegrist (17 points, 12 rebounds) and Brianna Herlihy (15, 10) each had double-doubles.

“Games have to be won; they’re not preordained,” UConn coach Geno Auriemma said. “You’ve got to lose at some point, otherwise you’re not in a good conference. Losing to a good team like Villanova, they deserved to win.

“I thought today, they were way more physical than us. They just worked harder at it. This was just not a good day. Losing is part of basketball, and you have to figure out how it happened and then move on and get ready for the next one.”

Losing hasn’t been part of the Huskies’ conference slate for a very long time. But a lot has hit UConn this season, including injuries and health issues.

The Huskies on Wednesday were without center Olivia Nelson-Ododa, who didn’t feel well prior to the game and said she couldn’t play, and guard Caroline Ducharme, who has missed the past two contests after a head injury. Star guard Paige Bueckers has been out since sustaining a knee injury on Dec. 5 in a win against Notre Dame.

But UConn freshman guard Azzi Fudd, who returned recently from a foot injury, followed up her 25 points in a win over Tennessee on Sunday with 29 against Villanova. Fudd and guard Christyn Williams each played all 40 minutes for the Huskies, who used six players total.

Williams scored 24 points but said afterward that she felt the loss was her responsibility.

“With guys being out, we’re not going to use that as an excuse,” Williams said. “As long as we have five, we should be ready to go. As a senior, I have to make sure that my team is ready to go. This game is on me. I apologize to my teammates, and it won’t happen again moving forward.”

Asked his thoughts on Williams, Auriemma said, “I don’t like the idea that one person is responsible for it. I don’t think that’s ever the case.”

“You have to be able to score inside and outside. You’ve gotta have some kind of balance in your offense. You can’t rely just on how many jump shots you’re going to make that game,” he said. “It’s mind-boggling that we’re not able to score in the lane more than we do. And then, it’s hard to get good shots against a good defensive team in Villanova.”

Read original article here

UConn football has lifeless response to coach trying to fire them up

The UConn Huskies have hit a new low.

After struggling in their own division for years, the Huskies can’t seem to beat those from the lower level either as they fell 38-28 to FCS opponent Holy Cross in UConn’s home-opener at Pratt & Whitney Stadium.

CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM

The Huskies were also blown out 45-0 by Fresno State last week, but before the loss at home on Saturday afternoon, UConn defensive coordinator Lou Spanos took a fourth-quarter timeout and appeared to try to boost the energy of the team.

Check out the video:

“I would say that I’m disappointed. I thought that we would be able to do a little bit more than what we’re doing. It’s up to me to figure it out,” UConn coach Randy Edsall said of his team’s 0-2 start.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

UConn was trailing 38-28 with less than five minutes left and a comeback would not have been impossible, but it looked as if the players were ready to call it quits with time still left in regulation.

UConn will face Clemson and UCF later this year, with the Huskies’ next game against Purdue on Sept. 11 at 3 p.m.

Read original article here

2021 NCAA Women’s Final Four: No. 3 Arizona shocks No. 1 UConn as huge underdog, advances to title game

The Arizona Wildcats are headed to the national championship after a stunning upset win over  UConn Huskies in the NCAA Women’s Final Four. The Wildcats came into the national semifinal as 14-point underdogs and advanced to their first ever national championship game. They will face Pac-12 rival Stanford, who defeated South Carolina in the first Final Four matchup.

Arizona led wire-to-wire after racing out to a 16-10 lead after the first quarter, and held a 32-22 halftime lead. The Wildcats defense kept one of the highest scoring offenses in the nation under wraps. UConn was averaging more than 82 points per game coming into the matchup, and was averaging 86.5 points per game in the NCAA Tournament. 

UConn faced their largest deficit of the season on Friday night, down 14 points in the second half and never held a lead in the game. This is also UConn’s first double-digit loss in the NCAA Tournament since 2007.

Arizona’s Aari McDonald helped lead her team to victory, with 26 points and seven rebounds. UConn’s leading scorer was Christyn Williams, who fouled out on a controversial call late in the game. She had 20 points and five rebounds.

The Wildcats look to continue this momentum when they face No. 1 overall seed — and Pac-12 rival — Stanford in the national championship game on Sunday. Stanford beat Arizona both times they played during the regular season, 81-54 on January 1 in Tuscon and 62-48 on February 22 in Palo Alto. The two did not meet in the Pac-12 tournament after Arizona lost to UCLA in the semifinals.

This will be the first NCAA Division I basketball national championship game featuring two Pac-12 teams. The last time there was a conference matchup for the women’s national title was 2017 when South Carolina beat Mississippi State in an all-SEC final. 

require.config({"baseUrl":"https://sportsfly.cbsistatic.com/fly-231/bundles/sportsmediajs/js-build","config":{"version":{"fly/components/accordion":"1.0","fly/components/alert":"1.0","fly/components/base":"1.0","fly/components/carousel":"1.0","fly/components/dropdown":"1.0","fly/components/fixate":"1.0","fly/components/form-validate":"1.0","fly/components/image-gallery":"1.0","fly/components/iframe-messenger":"1.0","fly/components/load-more":"1.0","fly/components/load-more-article":"1.0","fly/components/load-more-scroll":"1.0","fly/components/loading":"1.0","fly/components/modal":"1.0","fly/components/modal-iframe":"1.0","fly/components/network-bar":"1.0","fly/components/poll":"1.0","fly/components/search-player":"1.0","fly/components/social-button":"1.0","fly/components/social-counts":"1.0","fly/components/social-links":"1.0","fly/components/tabs":"1.0","fly/components/video":"1.0","fly/libs/easy-xdm":"2.4.17.1","fly/libs/jquery.cookie":"1.2","fly/libs/jquery.throttle-debounce":"1.1","fly/libs/jquery.widget":"1.9.2","fly/libs/omniture.s-code":"1.0","fly/utils/jquery-mobile-init":"1.0","fly/libs/jquery.mobile":"1.3.2","fly/libs/backbone":"1.0.0","fly/libs/underscore":"1.5.1","fly/libs/jquery.easing":"1.3","fly/managers/ad":"2.0","fly/managers/components":"1.0","fly/managers/cookie":"1.0","fly/managers/debug":"1.0","fly/managers/geo":"1.0","fly/managers/gpt":"4.3","fly/managers/history":"2.0","fly/managers/madison":"1.0","fly/managers/social-authentication":"1.0","fly/utils/data-prefix":"1.0","fly/utils/data-selector":"1.0","fly/utils/function-natives":"1.0","fly/utils/guid":"1.0","fly/utils/log":"1.0","fly/utils/object-helper":"1.0","fly/utils/string-helper":"1.0","fly/utils/string-vars":"1.0","fly/utils/url-helper":"1.0","libs/jshashtable":"2.1","libs/select2":"3.5.1","libs/jsonp":"2.4.0","libs/jquery/mobile":"1.4.5","libs/modernizr.custom":"2.6.2","libs/velocity":"1.2.2","libs/dataTables":"1.10.6","libs/dataTables.fixedColumns":"3.0.4","libs/dataTables.fixedHeader":"2.1.2","libs/dateformat":"1.0.3","libs/waypoints/infinite":"3.1.1","libs/waypoints/inview":"3.1.1","libs/waypoints/jquery.waypoints":"3.1.1","libs/waypoints/sticky":"3.1.1","libs/jquery/dotdotdot":"1.6.1","libs/jquery/flexslider":"2.1","libs/jquery/lazyload":"1.9.3","libs/jquery/maskedinput":"1.3.1","libs/jquery/marquee":"1.3.1","libs/jquery/numberformatter":"1.2.3","libs/jquery/placeholder":"0.2.4","libs/jquery/scrollbar":"0.1.6","libs/jquery/tablesorter":"2.0.5","libs/jquery/touchswipe":"1.6.18","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.core":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.draggable":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.mouse":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.position":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.slider":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.sortable":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.touch-punch":"0.2.3","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.autocomplete":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.accordion":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.tabs":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.menu":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.dialog":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.resizable":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.button":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.tooltip":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.effects":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.datepicker":"1.11.4"}},"shim":{"liveconnection/managers/connection":{"deps":["liveconnection/libs/sockjs-0.3.4"]},"liveconnection/libs/sockjs-0.3.4":{"exports":"SockJS"},"libs/setValueFromArray":{"exports":"set"},"libs/getValueFromArray":{"exports":"get"},"fly/libs/jquery.mobile-1.3.2":["version!fly/utils/jquery-mobile-init"],"libs/backbone.marionette":{"deps":["jquery","version!fly/libs/underscore","version!fly/libs/backbone"],"exports":"Marionette"},"fly/libs/underscore-1.5.1":{"exports":"_"},"fly/libs/backbone-1.0.0":{"deps":["version!fly/libs/underscore","jquery"],"exports":"Backbone"},"libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.tabs-1.11.4":["jquery","version!libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.core","version!fly/libs/jquery.widget"],"libs/jquery/flexslider-2.1":["jquery"],"libs/dataTables.fixedColumns-3.0.4":["jquery","version!libs/dataTables"],"libs/dataTables.fixedHeader-2.1.2":["jquery","version!libs/dataTables"],"https://sports.cbsimg.net/js/CBSi/app/VideoPlayer/AdobePass-min.js":["https://sports.cbsimg.net/js/CBSi/util/Utils-min.js"]},"map":{"*":{"adobe-pass":"https://sports.cbsimg.net/js/CBSi/app/VideoPlayer/AdobePass-min.js","facebook":"https://connect.facebook.net/en_US/sdk.js","facebook-debug":"https://connect.facebook.net/en_US/all/debug.js","google":"https://apis.google.com/js/plusone.js","google-platform":"https://apis.google.com/js/client:platform.js","google-csa":"https://www.google.com/adsense/search/async-ads.js","google-javascript-api":"https://www.google.com/jsapi","google-client-api":"https://apis.google.com/js/api:client.js","gpt":"https://securepubads.g.doubleclick.net/tag/js/gpt.js","newsroom":"https://c2.taboola.com/nr/cbsinteractive-cbssports/newsroom.js","recaptcha":"https://www.google.com/recaptcha/api.js?onload=loadRecaptcha&render=explicit","recaptcha_ajax":"https://www.google.com/recaptcha/api/js/recaptcha_ajax.js","supreme-golf":"https://sgapps-staging.supremegolf.com/search/assets/js/bundle.js","taboola":"https://cdn.taboola.com/libtrc/cbsinteractive-cbssports/loader.js","twitter":"https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js","video-utils":"https://sports.cbsimg.net/js/CBSi/util/Utils-min.js"}},"waitSeconds":300});



Read original article here