Women Final Four starts: UConn favorite unless UCLA beats them

Women Final Four starts – March Madness is entering its final stage: The two semi finals will be played ย tonight – and they will be heavily contested:

Three of four teams in theย women’s Final Fourย are No. 1 seeds. None of the four have lost more than three games this season. All but one have been theย top-ranked teamย in the country at some point.

TWomen Final Four starts- thatโ€™s how strong the national semifinals are this year, with powerhouses UCLA, Texas, South Carolina and UConn competing in Tampa, Florida, for a national championship.

โ€œWhoever gets through this semifinal and final will have done it against the best of the best,โ€ said Texas coach Vic Schaefer, who has led his second school to the Final Four after getting Mississippi State there in 2017 and 2018. โ€œSo I think for all of us, we all understand it. Itโ€™s hard to do.โ€

UCLA, South Carolina and Texas are No. 1 seeds. UConn is a No. 2 seed but has certainly looked the part of a top-seeded team behind Paige Bueckers โ€” perhaps the biggest star in the tournament whoโ€™s the primary reason the Huskies are the betting favorite to win it all.

Texas (35-3) and South Carolina (34-3) are scheduled to face each other for the fourth time this season in the first of two semifinals on Friday at 7 pm ET.

Women Final Four starts: The first highlight of March Madness will be the game of the two best teams of this year at 9 pm ET. UConn (35-3) will play UCLA (34-2) in the game of the probable champions.

The championship game is on Sunday.

Here are a few things to know as the Final Four begins.

Bueckers’ last shot at a national championship

Bueckers will be the No. 1 overall pick in next month’s WNBA draft. First, she gets one more shot at the national championship that has eluded her during her career.

Bueckers earned AP All-America honors this season and was the Big East player of the year for the third time. She has UConn back in the Final Four for the second straight year after the Huskies were beaten by Caitlin Clark and Iowa in the semis last year.

She has averaged 35 points in her last three March Madness games, including career highs of 40 points and six 3-pointers in the Huskiesโ€™ย 82-59 rout of Oklahomaย in the Sweet 16.

โ€œI think last year I got so caught up in the pressures and the stakes of it all,โ€ Bueckers said, โ€œand trying to be perfect and worrying about the wrong things … Itโ€™s the last year regardless of what happens. So Iโ€™m just enjoying this last weekend.โ€

Gamecocks trying to be first repeat champs since UConn

Dawn Staley has her team in its fifth straight Final Four, and defending champion South Carolina is trying to become the first repeat national champion since the Huskies won four straight from 2013 to 2016. That Huskies four-peat was coach Geno Auriemma’s last title, though he has the Huskies in the Final Four for a record 24th time.

The Gamecocks, who went undefeated last season en route to the program’s third title, beat Texas twice this season but have been on the ropes a bit during the tournament.

The Gamecocks went back and forth with Marylandย in the Sweet 16ย before finally doing enough in the final few minutes to put it away. They beat Duke by four points in theย Elite Eightย despite their offense being mostly stymied.

โ€œI think we experienced a lot of things we didnโ€™t experience last year,โ€ said senior guard Te-Hina Paopao. โ€œEvery time we lost or did something, we learned from that opportunity and have grown from that opportunity.โ€

Star center Lauren Betts has UCLA in its first Final Four

UCLA won a national title in 1978 in the pre-NCAA era of womenโ€™s basketball but made its first Final Four in three tries.

Lauren Betts has been one of the most impactful players of the tournament, leading the Bruins to the semis with 21.2 points and 8.7 rebounds per game while shooting 75% from the field.

The 6-foot- 7 center had 17 points, seven rebounds and six blocks against LSU in the Elite Eight despite sitting the entire second quarter in foul trouble.

The junior’s teammates have praised her growth this season.

โ€œI think itโ€™s just me finally realizing the player I am,” Betts said. โ€œI think a lot of it has to do with not just the basketball side but the mental work that Iโ€™ve done this past season. … Also I have to give a lot of credit to this program and the amount of confidence that theyโ€™ve given me.โ€

Tonight the Women Final Four starts. Watch and support our hopeful ladies. One thing is sure, it will be exciting games to watch.

TOP HEADLINES

Caroline Garcia to Retire After French Open

PARIS โ€” French tennis player Caroline Garcia has announced her intention to retire from...

Global Stocks Vary; Oil Prices Drop as Treasury Yields...

HONG KONG โ€” As European markets opened with an uptick, Asian shares exhibited mixed...

NZ Parliament Uses Cookie Tin to Select Laws to...

WELLINGTON, New Zealand โ€” Under the watchful eye of a solemn official and before...

Germany’s Q1 Growth Doubles Initial Estimate

BERLIN โ€” In an unexpected turn, Germany's economy, recognized as the largest in Europe,...

Turkey investigates 63 military personnel for 2016 coup ties

In Istanbul, the Turkish authorities have issued arrest warrants targeting 63 active-duty military personnel,...

Iran, US in Rome for Fifth Nuclear Talks, Enrichment...

In Rome, the United States and Iran are gearing up for another round of...
USLive
Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.