logo
Columbia women get first NCAA Tournament win ever, rallying to beat Washington 63-60 in First Four

Columbia women get first NCAA Tournament win ever, rallying to beat Washington 63-60 in First Four

Yahoo21-03-2025
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP) — Riley Weiss scored 14 of her 24 points in the fourth quarter to help Columbia rally from a 13-point halftime deficit and beat Washington 63-60 on Thursday night for the school's first-ever NCAA Tournament victory.
Cecelia Collins added 12 points for the Lions (24-6), who won the First Four matchup of 11-seeds. They'll face sixth-seeded West Virginia on Saturday.
Columbia trailed most of the game until the fourth quarter when Weiss got hot. Her two free throws with 18 seconds left gave the Lions a 61-57 lead. Elle Ladine came back hitting a deep 3-pointer a few seconds later to make it a one-point game.
Weiss then swished two free throws to make it 63-60 with 12 seconds left.
Washington (19-14) had one last chance but this time Ladine's 3-pointer was off. Perri Page grabbed the rebound and was fouled with 1.7 seconds left. She missed both free throws, but Washington had no timeouts left and their heave from 80 feet was short.
That set off a wild celebration by the Lions at midcourt.
Weiss completed a four-point play and made two other 3-pointers in the opening few minutes of the fourth to give the Lions their first lead of the game.
The game was tied at 54 before Susie Rafiu hit a layup just before the shot clock expired and then after a steal by Kitty Henderson, Marija Avlijas hit a 3-pointer from the wing to make it 59-54.
Columbia was playing in the First Four for the second straight year. Last season Columbia lost to Vanderbilt.
Coach Megan Griffith has turned the Lions into an Ivy League power over the past few seasons. The former Columbia point guard has led the program to three consecutive regular-season conference titles, including this year's outright crown.
Now the team has an NCAA Tournament win under its belt.
This was Washington's first NCAA appearance since 2017 when the Huskies reached the Sweet 16.
Sayvia Sellers finished with 21 points to lead Washington. Dalayah Daniels added 17 points and 11 rebounds.
Washington hit nine of its first 12 shots to go up 19-6 early. The Lions struggled from the field, missing their first nine 3-point attempts and were down 21-10 after the first quarter. The Huskies increased the advantage to 34-21 at the half as they held Columbia to just 30% shooting in the opening 20 minutes, including 2-for-15 from 3.
___
AP March Madness bracket: https://apnews.com/hub/ncaa-womens-bracket and coverage: https://apnews.com/hub/march-madness Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign up here.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Rich Eisen to anchor ESPN SportsCenter following Bengals-Commanders 'MNF' game
Rich Eisen to anchor ESPN SportsCenter following Bengals-Commanders 'MNF' game

Yahoo

time5 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Rich Eisen to anchor ESPN SportsCenter following Bengals-Commanders 'MNF' game

A familiar face will return to the anchor chair on ESPN's SportsCenter. For the first time in more than 20 years, Rich Eisen is set to host the network's flagship sportscast on Monday, Aug. 18, following the Monday Night Football preseason game between the Washington Commanders and Cincinnati Bengals. He will be joined on the set live from Los Angeles by ESPN NFL analyst Mina Kimes, according to a press release from the network. Eisen gained national acclaim during his stint at ESPN from 1996 to 2003 before leaving to become one of the first employees when the NFL Network launched in November 2003. The move comes on the heels of ESPN's announcement earlier this month of a non-binding agreement to "acquire NFL Network and certain other media assets woned and controlled by the NFL – including NFL's linear RedZone Channel, and NFL Fantasy – in exchange for a 10% equity stake in ESPN." Eisen's return to ESPN was already in the works, even before the megamerger. Plans were announced in May to move Eisen's popular three-hour weekday talk show from Roku to ESPN's new direct-to-consumer service. The "Rich Eisen Show" will make its debut Sept. 2 on ESPN+ and Disney+ in its familiar noon to 3 p.m. ET time slot. ESPN also says Eisen will make select appearances across ESPN studio programming going forward, while also retaining his prominent role at NFL Network. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Rich Eisen to reunite with ESPN for Monday Night SportsCenter

Meet the New Guy: Nathaniel Lowe
Meet the New Guy: Nathaniel Lowe

Yahoo

time5 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Meet the New Guy: Nathaniel Lowe

He's Nathaniel Lowe, recently of the Washington Nationals and quite possibly the only American to go by Nathanial since approximately 1872. In fact, he actually went by Nate early in his career, changing it back to his birth name only after his mama yelled at him. The Red Sox just picked him up off the scrap heap after he was designated for assignment by the Washington Nationals and then went unclaimed on the waiver wire. He's plays first base, which (incoming understatement alert!) has been somewhat of a problem position for the Red Sox ever since Triton Casas's early season injury. Well, you've already read the whole 'DFA'd by a team that's 24 games under. 500' thing so you probably already have a guess at what the answer to this question is. Lowe is slashing just .216/.292/.373 this year with 16 homers and his 26.5% strikeout rate is the 26th-highest in baseball. His savant page makes it clear he's going through his blue period, which is cool if you're Picasso, less so if you're a baseball player: But Lowe has been good before. He even won the Silver Slugger back in 2022, when he blasted 27 homers with the Texas Rangers while slashing .302/.358/.492. He's always been known for controlling the strike zone, laying off bad pitches, and taking walks. And while this has been the worst season of his career, he's still managed to show power against right-handed pitchers, hitting 14 homers and 10 doubles in 302 at-bats (though the .312 OBP he carries against righties isn't too impressive). Lowe is a baseball brother! His brother Josh is an outfielder with the Tampa Bay Rays, and isn't above doing annoying little brother things on the field: But that's really a Josh Lowe highlight, so here's another one of Nathaniel blasting a clutch postseason home run: Gazing up into the wild blue yonder and looking for his father, who flew fighter jets in the Navy for 20 years. It seems pretty clear that he's going to usurp Abraham Toro as the left side of a first base platoon with Romy Gonzalez. Toro has been abysmal of late, so it shouldn't be too hard for Lowe to be something of an improvement over there. Maybe Lowe even takes to Fenway's dimensions and has a mini resurgence down the stretch, which would be nice. Granted, I'm not really expecting that, but it's worth a shot.

What we've learned about the Seahawks' rookie class in the preseason
What we've learned about the Seahawks' rookie class in the preseason

New York Times

timean hour ago

  • New York Times

What we've learned about the Seahawks' rookie class in the preseason

RENTON, Wash. — The Seattle Seahawks selected 11 players in the 2025 NFL Draft, and 10 of them have played in the team's first two preseason games. The lone exception is fifth-round defensive lineman Rylie Mills, who is on the non-football injury list because of a torn ACL suffered in December. Ahead of Seattle's trip to Green Bay for joint practice with the Packers, let's run through what we've learned about the Seahawks' rookie class through four weeks of training camp and two exhibition games. Advertisement Zabel has been the team's starting left guard since being selected with the 18th pick. He has played 38 offensive snaps across four drives in the preseason; 21 as a run blocker and 17 in pass protection. On all four drives, he has been flanked by Josh Jones at left tackle and Jalen Sundell at center. Zabel has looked very comfortable and effective in Seattle's ground game, whether clearing paths on the front side of the perimeter runs or using his athleticism to cut off defenders on the back side of plays. He hasn't allowed a quarterback hit or pressure. The highest-drafted interior lineman of the John Schneider era, Zabel has been exactly what Seattle hoped he'd be against a mixture of first- and second-string defensive linemen in the preseason. 'It's not too big for him,' coach Mike Macdonald said of Zabel. 'There's poise there. His execution has been really good. Still plays out on the table for him, which is cool. There's an opportunity to grow, and he'll hit those things. He's done a phenomenal job, he's stayed hungry and he's chasing those little details that will make him a great player.' Indeed. 🙂‍↕️ — Seattle Seahawks (@Seahawks) August 17, 2025 Seattle traded up to select Emmanwori with the 35th pick. Emmanwori is 6-foot-3 and 220 pounds with 4.38 speed. He's a unique defensive player who, at least for now, is being deployed as a 'big nickel' defender at the second level. Seattle wants him in position to make plays in multiple ways, which is why in just 21 defensive snaps across two preseasons, he has blitzed off the edge and covered inline tight ends, running backs and slot receivers. Emmanwori has recorded three tackles, including one for no gain on a blitz against the Las Vegas Raiders on Aug. 7. He was targeted once in coverage versus Kansas City and gave up an 8-yard reception against tight end Jared Wiley. Emmanwori also seemed to be at the center of the miscommunication that left Kansas City running back Isiah Pacheco open for a 22-yard gain in the first quarter. Advertisement 'You felt Nick out there,' Macdonald said. 'He's got to get activated, get going. Being ready for the calls earlier in the game is going to help him. Especially going through a game prep, I think that'll help him throughout the week.' Emmanwori otherwise hasn't had many opportunities to make plays on the ball. He's been fast and physical in the run game when necessary, but wasn't involved in the action as a pass defender outside of the first few plays against the Chiefs. Emmanwori isn't expected to play in the preseason finale, but that could change based on how the joint practice goes. Arroyo, the 50th pick and the highest-drafted tight end of the Schneider era, has played 57 offensive snaps. He's the No. 3 tight end behind AJ Barner and Eric Saubert, but he's gotten on the field with all three units. Arroyo has hauled in all four of his targets for 33 yards and produced a pair of first downs, one in each game. He caught a 9-yard pass from Sam Darnold on the type of play-action bootleg that'll be a staple of Seattle's new offense. His 7-yard reception from Drew Lock in the third quarter versus Kansas City came on a similar concept. Arroyo can do more than catch passes on the move in the flat, but without a downfield passing game, those easy passes are a way to get their big, athletic tight end the ball in space. 'He's done a nice job,' Macdonald said. 'He's really working on his run game stuff. (Coach) Mack (Brown) is doing a great job with him, the vets in the room are doing a great job. He has caught the ball with strong hands, been decisive in his routes, playing fast. There's another level he can take it, he knows that, and he's going to get there.' Acquired with pick No. 92, which Seattle received from the Raiders in the Geno Smith trade, Milroe is QB3 behind Darnold and Lock. Milroe has led nine drives in the preseason and gone 9-for-15 passing for 107 yards (7.1 yards per attempt). Two of those drives ended in points, but Milroe hasn't put the ball in the end zone yet. Milroe has been sacked once and hasn't turned it over. A threat with his legs on scrambles and zone-read plays, Milroe has carried the ball eight times for 56 yards. Advertisement Milroe is a dynamic runner with a strong arm but still has a lot of room to grow as a pocket passer. He hit a few wide-open targets from the pocket against Kansas City but also had a pair of misses on potential touchdowns in the red zone, one to a running back in the flat and a back-shoulder fade to receiver Tyrone Broden. Those are throws he'll need to hit to eventually leapfrog Lock on the depth chart. 'He did well,' Macdonald said of Milroe on Friday night. 'There are some things operationally we still want to improve on. Couple throws right down there in the red zone, I think, could've been more on target.' Milroe is showing a lot of potential and would probably be more productive if given snaps with the first- or second-string offense. But for now, Seattle feels more comfortable playing Lock if Darnold were to suffer an injury. Milroe should get plenty of reps in the preseason finale against Green Bay before taking a back seat to the veterans once the season starts. Selected with pick No. 166, Horton has been the biggest riser in training camp. He had a solid debut in the preseason with three catches for 31 yards and a touchdown. Horton has been running with the starting offense in practice, but he was behind Marquez Valdes-Scantling in the pecking order against Kansas City. Neither wideout was targeted by Darnold, but Horton didn't get on the field with that unit until the final play of the drive. Horton didn't practice Sunday, but Macdonald said the ankle issue isn't serious. Regardless, Horton has shown enough in practice and the first preseason game to earn a spot in the rotation. He's shifty, speedy and athletic with the ability to stretch the defense vertically (he caught a deep ball on cornerback Riq Woolen in practice on Wednesday). Horton may end up being the starter on kickoff and punt return, too. Ouzts, a fifth-round pick, is the starting fullback and has been an asset in the run game. He also has two receptions for 30 yards on three targets (the third target wasn't catchable). Because of Ouzts' physicality in the run game and his tight end background, defenses must account for him as a blocker and treat him like a legitimate threat in the passing game. Ouzts isn't going to be a high-volume target, but his receiving skills help unlock more of the offense, as we've seen in the preseason. Cabeldue was drafted in the sixth round (No. 192) as a guard and Richman in the seventh round (No. 234) as a tackle. They've been third-stringers in camp, but Richman does occasionally come in as a sixth offensive lineman in jumbo packages with other units (he has also taken snaps at center in practice). Cabeldue took second-year lineman Sataoa Laumea's spot as the second-string left guard against Kansas City. Advertisement I wouldn't anticipate either player making the initial 53-man roster unless Seattle keeps 10 offensive linemen. In that scenario, Cabeldue should get the final spot. If Seattle keeps nine linemen, Cabeldue and Richman would seem on track to stick around on the practice squad. Martinez has rushed for 60 yards and a touchdown on 17 attempts in two preseason games. A seventh-round pick, Martinez is RB4 on the depth chart behind Ken Walker III, Zach Charbonnet and George Holani. Martinez is a physical player, and his 19-yard carry against Kansas City was the type of tough running the Seahawks envisioned when selecting him with the 223rd pick. In terms of making the roster, Martinez is in a battle with Holani and undrafted rookie Jacardia Wright, who has 82 yards and a touchdown on 16 carries (5.1 yards per attempt) and three runs of at least 10 yards. Like Martinez, Wright has a physical style, but he has also looked faster in the preseason. But since we're talking about guys at the bottom of the roster, that battle may be decided by special teams (they're both on multiple coverage units). White has played 35 offensive snaps, all with Milroe's third-string unit. The seventh-round pick out of UNLV has hauled in both of his targets for 34 yards and a pair of first downs. White is doing what he can with the reserves when given opportunities, but he's buried deep on the depth chart. He's among a handful of practice squad candidates along with Cody White, John Rhys Plumlee and rookie Tyron Broden. (Top photo of Elijah Arroyo: Joe Nicholson / Imagn Images) Spot the pattern. Connect the terms Find the hidden link between sports terms Play today's puzzle

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store