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Talented
UConn loom into Final Four
By CHUCK SCHOFFNER
Associated Press
SAN
ANTONIO Tennessee, Duke and Oklahoma have everything it takes
to win a national championship talented players, smart coaches,
ambition and drive.
They
also have a problem. The other team in this womens Final Four
is Connecticut.
That
would be unbeaten and No. 1-ranked Connecticut, with four All-Americans
in its lineup, a team so dazzling and skilled that its being
talked about as perhaps the best of all time.
Theyre
playing super, Tennessee coach Pat Summitt said Wednesday.
I turned on (a tape of) the Old Dominion game last night and
thought, Oh, I dont need to watch this and try to sleep.
Tennessee
(29-4) is the next team to get a shot at stopping the Huskies (37-0).
Theyll meet in the second national semifinal on Friday night
at the Alamodome, the largest venue yet for the womens championship.
Oklahoma
(31-3) plays Duke (31-3) in the first game. The championship game
is Sunday night.
Connecticut
looms so large over this event that even Summitt, who has won six
national titles and is making her 13th Final Four appearance, says
the Huskies are without question the nations dominant team
this season.
But
the Lady Vols had that same edge when they played Connecticut on
Jan. 5 and the Huskies outrebounded them 41-33 in winning 86-72.
Their
posts play with just incredible energy and aggressiveness,
Summitt said. Weve talked about our inside game and
our bigs having to play big. We have to be able to battle them on
the boards.
Even
if Tennessee wins that battle, the Lady Vols still must deal with
the nation's best backcourt, Sue Bird and Diana Taurasi.
Bird
is the all-knowing, all-seeing point guard. Taurasi is a fearless
shooter who scored 32 in the first meeting with Tennessee.
Connecticuts
performance against Old Dominion in the Mideast Regional final showed
Tennessee what it will be up against.
The
Huskies made their first 13 shots and 19 of their first 21 in racing
to a 49-28 lead. They ended up winning 85-64.
All
that talent, plus the determination of Bird and the three other
seniors Swin Cash, Tamika Williams and Asjha Jones
to set a standard for others to follow.
Duke,
in the Final Four for the second time, was left with just eight
players when sophomores Rometra Craig and Crystal White left the
team in December.
Plenty
of talent remained, however. Sophomore Alana Beard is a first-team
All-American. Iciss Tillis, another sophomore, can play in the low
post at 6-4 yet step outside and shoot 3-pointers. Freshman Monique
Curry is a relentless penetrator who has a knack for drawing fouls.
Theyve
taken Duke on a 22-game winning streak since a loss to Tennessee
on Dec. 27.
Oklahoma
is on a nice roll of its own, winning 17 of the last 18 en route
to its first Final Four appearance. The Sooners have a two-time
All-American in guard Stacey Dales and a good scorer in LaNeishea
Caufield, who is averaging 21.5 points in the tournament. They might
be the only team that can match Connecticut in passing and scoring.
OU
has won its four tournament games by an average of 22 points.
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