logo
Hall, Kitts rally top-seeded South Carolina to Sweet 16 in 64-53 March Madness win over Indiana

Hall, Kitts rally top-seeded South Carolina to Sweet 16 in 64-53 March Madness win over Indiana

NBC Sports24-03-2025

COLUMBIA, S.C. — Bree Hall had 11 points and Chloe Kitts scored all her 10 points in the second half as top seed South Carolina pulled away after trailing at halftime to beat ninth-seeded Indiana 64-53 on Sunday in the women's NCAA Tournament and reach the Sweet 16 for the 11th straight time.
The Gamecocks (32-3) will take on either fourth-seeded Maryland or fifth-seeded Alabama in the Birmingham 2 Regional next week. Those teams play Monday night.
Not that anyone at Colonial Life Arena was locking South Carolina into that game after a dreadful first-half performance where they shot just 10 of 29 and trailed the Hoosiers 26-25 at the break. But the Gamecocks came out on fire in the third quarter, hitting nine of their first 10 shots for a 20-7 run to take control.
Gamecocks coach Dawn Staley said it was a cacophony of player voices during halftime, all identifying what the players had not done the first two quarters and how to get back to being themselves after the break.
'It's not like a board meeting where there's one person talking at a time,' Staley said, smiling. 'It is chaos.'
Whatever the process, it certainly worked for South Carolina, who hit shot after shot to move in front. When Kitts' 3-pointer put her team ahead 38-30, she held her arms up in celebration as the cheers rained down.
Hall's 3-pointer closed the surge to take the game in hand and improve to 18-1 in their past four NCAA Tournaments. The run has included NCAA titles in 2022 and 2024. The team lost to Iowa in the national semifinals in 2023.
'We were all just missing our easy lay-ups, and there wasn't really flow in game' the first two quarters, Kitts said. 'Then the second half, we turned it around.'
Indiana couldn't get closer than seven points the rest of the way.
Shay Ciezki had 12 points to lead Indiana.
Sania Feagin added 10 points for South Carolina, which improved to 18-0 in home NCAA Tournament games.
Indiana guard Chloe Moore-McNeil said the third quarter, where the Hoosiers got outscored 26-14 and had five of their 16 turnovers, was a mixture of South Carolina stepping up and her team making errors it hadn't in the first half.
'Obviously, they're the No. 1 team in the country in terms of transition offense and capitalizing on people's turnovers,' Moore-McNeil said. 'I think, yeah, they did have pressure on us, but at the same time, I think we did have some careless mistakes.'
Takeaways
Indiana: The Hoosiers made sure they wouldn't get blown out early, but didn't have enough to handle the deep, talented defending champions over 40 minutes.
South Carolina: The Gamecocks got a wake up call from Indiana for a second straight year. After sleeping on a big lead in last year's Sweet 16 before a 79-75 win, they struggled with the Hoosiers the first two quarters before pulling away. Count on coach Dawn Staley to use that poor first half as a lesson to this team going forward.
Evening it out
Indiana coach Teri Moren said it may be time to reopen discussions about the women's tournament going to full neutral sites like men's basketball. Moren said she has felt that advantage, having hosted first- and second-round games at Indiana's Assembly Hall the past two years.
'I think we've got to get to a point where we sort of mirror what the guys do and have neutral sites because matchups matter,' she said. 'But home-court advantage matters. Again, I've been a recipient.
'So I think that's going to be something that may change as we move forward with women's basketball,' she continued.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Caitlin Clark Had No Words After WNBA's Big Announcement
Caitlin Clark Had No Words After WNBA's Big Announcement

Yahoo

time38 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Caitlin Clark Had No Words After WNBA's Big Announcement

Caitlin Clark Had No Words After WNBA's Big Announcement originally appeared on Athlon Sports. Indiana Fever star Caitlin Clark is still dealing with the left quadriceps strain she suffered on May 24 against the New York Liberty. Advertisement While she's set to miss her fifth straight game on Tuesday, she reminded everyone why she was among the favorites for WNBA MVP in the four games she did play, averaging 19.0 points, 6.0 rebounds and 9.3 assists. Several hours before Tuesday night's game against the Atlanta Dream, the WNBA announced Clark's backcourt partner, Kelsey Mitchell, as the Eastern Conference Player of the Week. "For the first time this szn, Kelsey Mitchell is named the Eastern Conference Player of the Week," the league wrote on social media. Mitchell has stepped up, especially over the last two games with Clark out. In the Fever's 85–76 win over the Washington Mystics on June 3, she put up 24 points, two rebounds and three assists. Then, in Saturday's 79–52 win over the Chicago Sky, the former Ohio State Buckeye added 17 points, five rebounds and two assists. Advertisement Following the announcement that Mitchell had won, Clark took to social media, reposting the news with no words. Caitlin Clark's Instagram story.@caitlinclark22/Instagram Mitchell was drafted No. 2 overall by the Fever in the 2018 WNBA Draft. She's spent her entire career in Indiana and re-signed on a one-year, $249,244 contract, making her the highest-paid player in the league this season. The 5-foot-8 guard is a two-time WNBA All-Star and was named to the All-Rookie Team in her first season. Heading into Tuesday's game, she's averaged 17.4 points, 1.8 rebounds and 2.9 assists per game. Related: Price Tag of Caitlin Clark's Luxury Watch Before Angel Reese Game Revealed Related: Candace Parker Doesn't Entertain Caitlin Clark – Angel Reese Rivalry This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 10, 2025, where it first appeared.

Gray scores 23 points to power Dream over Fever 77-58 as injured Clark misses 5th straight game
Gray scores 23 points to power Dream over Fever 77-58 as injured Clark misses 5th straight game

Associated Press

time39 minutes ago

  • Associated Press

Gray scores 23 points to power Dream over Fever 77-58 as injured Clark misses 5th straight game

ATLANTA (AP) — Allisha Gray scored 23 points, Brionna Jones added a season-high 21 and the Atlanta Dream beat Indiana 77-58 on Tuesday night as the Fever again played without Caitlin Clark. Gray contributed a steal and a blocked shot in an 11-0 run in the third quarter that gave the Dream a 47-37 lead. Gray's 3-pointer stretched the lead to 54-42 late in the quarter. Atlanta outscored Indiana 23-9 in the decisive period. Natasha Howard had 15 points and 10 rebounds for the Fever. Indiana coach Stephanie White announced on Monday that Clark would miss her fifth consecutive game with a left quadriceps strain. White said before Tuesday night's game that Clark participated in 'a little practice' on Monday and added it was in a 'controlled environment.' White said Clark, who was with the team and watched from the Indiana bench, would participate in more practice this week. 'The most important thing for us is to not position ourselves to have any setbacks,' White said. Indiana guard Sophie Cunningham, who has been limited to four games by a right ankle injury, also was held out. It was the third meeting between the Eastern Conference teams this season, including two in Atlanta. The Fever took an 81-76 win before a sellout crowd at State Farm Arena, home of the NBA's Atlanta Hawks, on May 22. Atlanta won 91-90 at Indiana on May 20. The return visit to Atlanta was scheduled for 3,500-seat Gateway Arena, the usual home of the Dream, even before it was known Clark would not play. Up next The Fever will return home to face the New York Liberty on Saturday, and the Dream will host Chicago on Friday night. ___ AP WNBA:

Second-half nightmare costs Indiana Fever in loss to Atlanta Dream
Second-half nightmare costs Indiana Fever in loss to Atlanta Dream

Indianapolis Star

time40 minutes ago

  • Indianapolis Star

Second-half nightmare costs Indiana Fever in loss to Atlanta Dream

ATLANTA – The Indiana Fever dropped to 2-1 in Commissioner's Cup play with a loss to the Atlanta Dream on Tuesday night, 77-58. The two teams were tied going into a halftime, but a strong third quarter from the Dream allowed them to pull away in the second half. Fever forward Natasha Howard led Indiana with 15 points and 10 rebounds, while Kelsey Mitchell had 11 points. The Fever are now 4-5 and have a few days off before they play the New York Liberty on Saturday afternoon at Gainbridge Fieldhouse. Here are three observations: The Atlanta Dream play physical, and that's something the Fever — and teams around the league — have come to expect. But Atlanta was still able to impose its will on Indiana, especially when it came down to the third quarter. Indiana went into halftime tied with Atlanta at 33, but came into the third quarter sluggish. The Fever only scored four points through the first seven minutes of the third quarter and made multiple bad-pass turnovers, giving up possessions to the Dream. Atlanta took advantage of their edge in transition, too, turning those turnovers into easy layups. Indiana could never really find a rhythm in the third, returning to that discombobulated offense that plagued them in the first two games that Fever point guard Caitlin Clark was out. They also struggled defensively, allowing Brionna Jones to take control of the paint for eight points for the Dream. Allisha Gray, an early Most Improved Player candidate, also had eight points in the third quarter alone. By the end of the quarter, what was a tied game turned into a 14-point lead for the Dream; Indiana scored nine points in the third, and Atlanta scored 23. And that deficit became insurmountable. Indiana was not happy with the referee's calls (or lack of them) in the second half on Tuesday. Fever guard Kelsey Mitchell picked up a technical foul with about 30 seconds left in the third quarter. It came after she was called for a foul, and seemed to say something to the referees or a Dream player that prompted officials to give her the tech. Fever coach Stephanie White got the Fever's second technical of the night with about three minutes left in the game after a 3-point miss from Natasha Howard led to a scrum under the basket for the rebound. Dream forward Shatori Walker-Kimbrough came up with the ball, and White was called for the tech after saying something to officials on the sideline. In the end, those two extra points for Atlanta didn't matter much — they were up by double-digits for most of the second half. Aari McDonald's time with the Fever is becoming more and more limited, but she's impressed in what could be an audition for a permanent roster spot — whether it be on the Fever or another team around the league. McDonald, who signed with the Fever on a hardship contract on June 1, hit the ground running and played 27 minutes for the Fever against the Mystics just two days later. She's been a spark in all three of the games she's played in, scoring at least seven points each time. On Tuesday night against the Dream, she came off the bench to score nine points in eight minutes in the first half, leading the Fever going into halftime. She's a disruptor defensively, even standing at just 5-6, and she has provided a spark off the bench that the Fever needed in this stretch with both Caitlin Clark and Sophie Cunningham out. More: How long can Aari McDonald stay on Indiana Fever? Explaining WNBA hardship contracts McDonald played most of the fourth quarter in place of current starting point guard Sydney Colson, too, as the Fever tried to focus on defense. She finished with 12 points, two assists, and one rebound in about 23 minutes. The Fever coaching staff have consistently referred to McDonald as a "consummate professional," but they know her time in Indiana is coming to an end. Once either Clark or Cunningham return (likely this week) and the Fever get back up to 10 available players, McDonald's contract will automatically be terminated.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store