Louisville blows out Notre Dame in regular season finale

Woof.

Notre Dame was one game away from finishing the season unbeaten at home but that final game was the most difficult team on the home schedule as No. 4 Louisville routed the Irish for the second time in just weeks.  The following writeup is courtesy of Notre Dame athletics:

SOUTH BEND, Ind. – It was a tale of two halves for the No. 14 Notre Dame women’s basketball squad (21-7, 13-5) versus the visiting No. 4 Louisville Cardinals (25-3, 16-2). The Fighting Irish were plagued from a 1-for-18 shooting start from the field, while down on the other end Louisville started 7-for-7 from three, all in the first quarter, to jump out to a 31-3 advantage. The Irish outscored the Cardinals 49-32 in the second half, but ultimately fell 86-64. It marked Notre Dame’s first loss at home this season, dropping to 13-1 inside Purcell Pavilion.

Regardless of today’s outcome, Notre Dame has secured the double-bye in the upcoming ACC Tournament, but will have to await the result of tonight’s Virginia Tech/NC State matchup to determine whether it’s the No. 3 or No. 4 seed. Notre Dame’s first game will be on Friday, March 4 inside the Greensboro Coliseum.

How It Happened

Louisville just couldn’t miss in the first half, going 7-for-7 from beyond the arc in the first quarter alone to build a 31-3 lead. At one point in the first half the Cardinals were 19-of-24 from the field before finishing the half 23-of-34.

On the flipside, the Irish couldn’t find their rhythm, starting 1-of-18 from the field, and 6-of-27 by half. Add in the fact that the Cardinals owned a 26-8 rebounding advantage, the Irish found themselves in a 54-15 hole at the midway point.

The Irish got clicking on offense in the third quarter, where they outscored the Cardinals 19-17. Olivia Miles was the spark, shooting 4-for-4 in the quarter tallying eight points. As a whole, Notre Dame was 8-of-14 from the field.

The Irish finally got the three-ball going in the fourth, hitting four treys (Mabrey, Peoples, Brunelle x 2) before the media timeout. Mabrey and Peoples each had seven points in the quarter in which the Irish outscored the Cards 30-15.

All-in-all, Notre Dame shot 62 percent in the second half compared to 22 percent in the first. Four Irish finished in double figures: Dodson (12 pts), Mabrey (12 pts), Miles (13 pts) and Citron (10 pts). Citron led the team in boards with eight.