LSU women’s basketball set to host winless Texas Southern

LSU women’s basketball set to keep it rolling after their upset victory over Iowa State

The LSU Lady Tigers’ last time out they beat No.14 Iowa State 69-90. The Lady Tigers are now ranked No.24 in the country. They are now 6-1 on the young season. Up next for LSU are the winless Texas Southern Lady Tigers.

So far this season, LSU is averaging 72.6 points per on 44.7% shooting from the field. Under new head coach Kim Mulkey, LSU scores more efficiently by pushing the tempo. The Lady Tigers are also doing an outstanding job on defense by holding opponents to 36.2% shooting from the field.

Texas Southern is led by women’s basketball legend Cynthia Cooper-Dyke. However, they come in only averaging 43.8 points per game. Texas Southern does not score much, but they play hard and show on the defensive end. The Lady Tigers come into the match forcing close to 17 turnovers per game.

Players To Watch

LSU

Khayla Pointer is LSU’s leading scorer, averaging 18. 5 points per contest. She also averages four assists per game. The team’s second-leading scorer, Alexis Morris, averages 14 points per game. Against Iowa State, Pointer and Morris combined to score 45 points, including a career 25 from Morris.

Texas Southern

Texas Southern’s top scorer, Shalexxus, averages 10.5 points per game. In addition, Niya Mitchell grabs 8.3 rebounds per game and adds 9.3 points, while Ashley Austin leads the team with 1.8 assists per game while averaging 6.5 points.

Prediction

It should be a relatively easy game for LSU, Texas Southern struggles scoring, and LSU plays good defense. Expect Lady Tigers to win by double-digits.

UConn’s Paige Bueckers avoids season-ending injury, but will miss extended time

Paige Bueckers seriously injured her left knee in UConn’s most recent win, but the damage won’t keep her out for the whole season.

Non-contact, lower extremity injuries are never fun. They come at random times, are unavoidable and leave athletes in somewhat of a confused and helpless state. Some of the most famous athletes have had their careers altered by such occasions; think Kobe’s Achilles, DeMarcus Cousins’ Achilles and Shaun Livingston’s knee. So we all collectively held our breath when No. 3 UConn Huskies guard Paige Bueckers went down, untouched, late in UConn’s 73-54 win over Notre Dame and writhed in pain.

Fortunately, we can breathe again. On Tuesday, UConn described Bueckers’ injury as a tibial plateau fracture that would require six to eight weeks of recovery time.

Considering the range of outcomes, two months isn’t the worst thing in the world. Bueckers avoids surgery and still has a chance to return this year in time for the postseason — barring any setbacks. Thinking optimistically, Bueckers underwent ankle surgery in May and it didn’t seem to have any negative impact on her performance this season (21.2 points, 6.2 assists, 5.5 rebounds per game). So, don’t expect to see a diminished version of the superstar once she fully recovers.

What’s likely out of the picture now, however, is an opportunity to collect the Naismith, AP Player of the Year or Wooden Awards; honors given to college basketball’s most outstanding individual players. Bueckers won all three awards last season and became the first freshman to ever take home any of the honors en route to the Final Four.

The Huskies could slip a bit in the polls as they move on without Bueckers for the time being. Additionally, their championship odds are listed at +200 but could fall at your preferred books as the season progresses. Such a drop might make for the perfect opportunity to buy the dip on UConn if you believe Bueckers will be back and in form for the madness that ensues in March and April.

Given the circumstances, it’s a solid news day for fans of the sport as well as Bueckers and her supporters.

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Paige Bueckers’ very rare knee injury, explained

This is such a weird injury but it shouldn’t derail Paige Bueckers’ career

The college basketball world breathed a collective sigh of relief on Tuesday after UConn finally revealed the extend of Paige Bueckers’ knee injury.

For those of you out of the loop, Bueckers went down with a non-contact knee injury on Sunday against Notre Dame. She went to make a move and her knee just buckled underneath her.

Folks feared the worst after seeing it happen live, naturally. Again, this was a non-contact knee injury. Those things are literally never good. You can only hope for minimal damage at that point.

That’s why when UConn announced the injury was a tibial plateau fracture, people were a bit relieved.

They tweeted the news out on Tuesday.

Obviously, this still stinks. But compared to the alternatives of a potential ligament injury? This seems fine. It doesn’t throw too much of a wrench into her already stellar college career.

But this injury is still weird, though. A tibial plateau fracture? That’s a rare one. Folks had lots of questions about what it actually is and how it works.

Don’t worry. We’ve got you covered. Here’s more information about what this is and how it can be dealt with.

Best college hoops bets: Women’s Big Ten-ACC Challenge duels to watch

Previewing some of the top games on Thursday’s women’s college basketball slate.

One of the great things about women’s college basketball this season is how much parity there is. Throughout the opening month of the season, even the best teams have looked human at times. South Carolina remains the No. 1 team in the nation through three weeks, but the Gamecocks have been through a couple of dogfights in order to stay there. The defending champion Stanford Cardinal already has two losses, and the rest of the top-10 have taken turns beating up on one another.

The action doesn’t stop as we roll into December and Thursday’s slate fall in line with what’s already been a fun and competitive beginning to the season. Here’s what to expect from the Big Ten/ACC Challenge games between Indiana-NC State, Duke-Iowa and Louisville-Michigan.

All odds via Tipico Sportsbook

Best college hoops bets: Put your money on UCLA-Villanova and Louisville-Arizona

Detailing the best college basketball games of Friday’s slate.

The dust is settling from college basketball’s first few days of action, and the results went mostly as expected. There were many highlights and some moderately surprising upsets, but all of the featured games between contenders were competitive, while the highly-touted teams across the nation were all impressive. Before the workweek officially closes, both the women’s and men’s side has gifted the college basketball audience with some Friday treats to roll into the weekend.

Friday’s action is highlighted by two early-season matchups between ranked teams with Final Four and championship aspirations. Let’s take a look at what the buzz is about.

All odds courtesy of Tipico Sportsbook

 

NCAA basketball’s must-watch games on opening day

Highlighting the featured games on college basketball’s opening day slate.

College basketball season is officially here! No more countdowns to track, previews to read, or podcasts to listen to. Instead, today is the day to sit back and take in what you’ve been anticipating for months. One of the best things about the opening day, historically, is that there are always a handful of teams willing to forgo the “feeling out” process and immediately give fans a prizefight. Such is true for the 2021-22 season as a few men’s and women’s championship contenders are set to open the season against one another in what should be an entertaining beginning to the season.

All odds via Tipico Sportsbook

Arizona women’s basketball coach Adia Barnes isn’t apologizing for impassioned postgame speech

Arizona women’s basketball coach Adia Barnes isn’t apologizing for her postgame speech, which included a middle finger and an expletive.

The Arizona women’s basketball team stunned top-seeded UConn 69-59 in the Final Four on Friday night to advance to the national championship. But it’s not the victory itself that has people talking, it’s a moment during the Wildcats’ postgame huddle that has drawn plenty of attention.

Arizona’s Final Four victory was the kind of moment that you live for as a player and as a coach. So you can’t fault Arizona head coach Adia Barnes for being extremely enthusiastic after her Wildcats took down arguably the best women’s basketball team in the country to advance to the championship game.

In the moments following the victory, ESPN cameras captured Barnes’ impassioned speech to her team in a huddle, which happened to include a middle finger and an expletive, and it didn’t take long for the moment to go viral.

Barnes addressed the viral moment during a Saturday morning press conference, where she explained that she believed she was sharing a private moment with her team after pulling off the upset. But she also made it clear that she’s not going to apologize for what she said and did.

“I honestly had a moment with my team, and I thought it was a more intimate huddle,” Barnes said. “I said to my team something that I truly felt and I know they felt, and it just appeared different on TV, but I’m not apologizing for it because I don’t feel like I need to apologize. It’s what I felt with my team at the moment. I wouldn’t take it back. We’ve gone to war together. We believe in each other. So I’m in those moments, and that’s how I am, so I don’t apologize for doing that. I’m just me, and I have to just be me.”

Plenty of people love that Barnes was just being herself, and the Wildcards have earned some new fans that will be pulling for Arizona to once again upset a top seed — this time in Stanford — in the national championship game on Sunday at 6 p.m. ET.

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UConn’s Christyn Williams put on a show in the first half of women’s NCAA Sweet 16 game vs. Iowa

UConn’s UConn’s Christyn Williams scored a career-high 18 points in the first half and managed to contain Iowa guard Caitlin Clark.

The NCAA women’s basketball tournament kicked off the Sweet 16 round with an anticipated match-up featuring two of the most exciting players in college sports in UConn’s Paige Bueckers and Iowa’s Caitlin Clark.

But it was another player that stole the show in the first half of Saturday’s first Sweet 16 game.

UConn guard Christyn Williams had an impressive first half for the Huskies, where she scored a career-high 18 points in the first half. She shot 8-of-14 from the field, including 2-of-6 from behind the three-point line. That helped give the No. 1 Huskies a 49-35 lead over No. 4 Iowa at halftime.

But Williams’ feat is even more impressive given she had the difficult task of defending one of the best players in college basketball in Clark, who was held to just seven points in the first half.

The winner of this Sweet 16 game will advance to the Elite 8, where they’ll face the winner of No. 2 Baylor and No. 6 Michigan.

Fans ripped the NCAA for bragging about the updated weight room at women’s tournament

This back-patting effort isn’t right.

While the NCAA is working to correct the major discrepancies between the men’s tournament bubble in Indianapolis and the women’s bubble in San Antonio, teams and their fans are still rightfully angry that this is even an issue.

Simply, the women’s teams have received unequal and subpar treatments.

One of the biggest inequalities was in the weight room, highlighted by strength and performance coaches for the women’s teams, including Stanford’s Ali Kershner. They also noted that their teams’ access to improved equipment would happen after they make it to the Sweet 16.

Saturday, ESPN’s Holly Rowe explained how the facilities in the women’s tournament bubble work and what recent upgrades have been made since the masses voiced their outrage, especially after one of the NCAA’s excuses was a lack of space.

Still, the NCAA failed the women’s tournament teams in so many ways, and then it tried to brag about the latest upgrades to the women’s bubble.

Between the “Let’s gooooo” and the exclamation point, the tone of this back-patting tweet is all wrong. It makes it seem like this was the plan for the women’s teams the whole time and the equipment was just delayed a bit.

And college basketball ripped the NCAA apart for it’s too-little, too-late response.

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All the ways the NCAA has failed its Women’s March Madness teams

The NCAA has never prioritized the health and safety of its athletes and yet every level seems like a new low.

It’s not just the weight room.

On Thursday afternoon, Ali Kershner, the performance coach at Stanford, posted a jarring image of the workout facilities that the women’s NCAA tournament teams had access to compared to the men. The men, who are in Indianapolis, had a giant room equipped to the gills while the women, who are in San Antonio, had one rack of dumbbells and a stack of yoga mats.

Kershner’s pictures went viral and, bowing to public pressure, the NCAA released a weak statement blaming the lack of equipment on “limited space.”

That frail excuse was debunked just as quickly, as Oregon player Sedona Prince showed in her viral TikTok.

The weight room sparked such outrage not because people have grown accustomed to men and women receiving the same treatment, but because the discrepancy was so outrageous and so obvious, it was a slap in the face.

And yet, that wasn’t even the most glaring example of the unequal treatment between the men and the women during the NCAA tournament. As news of the weight room made its way through social media, other stories started to emerge.

First, the food.

Here’s a side-by-side of images taken from Prince’s TikTok, and from a tweet posted by Alan Bishop, Director of Sports Performance for Men’s Basketball at University of Houston, of the food that men and women are getting.

At the least, the dining experince for the men certainly looks better.

Also noteworthy, the difference in the swag bags.

It may seem like a minor thing, but the amount and quality of free goods sent to the athletes shows where the priorities of the organization lie, and it’s not in making the women feel welcome. As people pointed out on social media, the NCAA was so petty that the puzzles included for the men had 500 pieces, while the women got ones with only 150 pieces.

It’s absurd but the real insults keep going.

As The Athletic pointed out, the NCAA also refused to make allowances for child care for coaches during the tournament, which primarily effects the female coaching staff of women’s teams.  The NCAA will offer no childcare stipend, and for mom’s who choose to bring their breastfeeding children, that child counts against the team’s traveling party.

These choices are utterly thoughtless and negatively impact women the most.

Finally, there are the COVID tests. As first reported by Amanda Christovich, the NCAA is using PCR tests for men’s teams and daily antigen tests for the women’s teams.

The PCR tests are often called the ‘gold standard’ of COVID testing. According to the FDA, “antigen tests are very specific for COVID-19, but are not as sensitive as molecular PCR tests. This means that there is a higher chance of false negatives than with many molecular tests.”

NCAA President Mark Emmertn told USA TODAY he wouldn’t get into a debate over testing.

“I’m not a medical expert so not going to get into a debate about PCR and antigen. All the health experts said the protocol that we’re using in all of our venues and all of our championships has no different at all in terms of our ability to mitigate risk,” Emmert said.

The difference in COVID testing are the starkest and most brutal reminder of all the other ways the NCAA has failed its female athletes during the tournament.

The weights, the food, the swag bags were all surface level markers that showed how little the NCAA cared about the women, but the different COVID tests are irrefutable proof of who and what the organization values.

The NCAA has never prioritized the health and safety of its athletes, which is why so many athletes have chosen to speak up via the hashtag, #NotNCAAProperty, yet every new level they sink to seems like an unexpected low.

In the end, all the NCAA does is reap the financial rewards from the hard work of unpaid athletic laborers, who have long tried to make their voices and concerns heard.

This is the latest example of their utter callousness, lack of thought and fierce allegiance to a financial bottom line that enriches no one but themselves. This is not just about the women getting the very short end of the stick, but shows the lack of care, gratitude and respect the organization actually has for its female athletes.

What’s happening inside the women’s tournament is an absolute disgrace, and one that just adds to the long list of the NCAA’s embarrassments.