STORRS, Conn. (AP) This one wasn't for the Big East
championship. This one was for Shea Ralph.
Sue Bird hit a fadeaway jumper at the buzzer to lift No. 2
Connecticut to an emotional 78-76 victory over No. 1 Notre Dame on
Tuesday night and give the Huskies their 10th Big East tournament
championship.
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Tuesday, March 6
Shea Ralph's injury is a huge blow to the Huskies.
Losing a player to injury is never easy. But to lose someone this late in the season and this close to the NCAA Tournament could be too much to overcome emotionally. Three years ago the Huskies were in a similar position after Nykesha Sales was lost for the season with an injury. At the time, the Huskies had nearly a month to recover and regroup before the postseason arrived, but they didn't get over it.
Of course, this season's team has much more depth, something that became even more obvious after All-American Svetlana Abrosimova went down on Feb. 1. And when you look at UConn's roster and see everybody who is healthy, you can't help but think the Huskies will be OK.
However, emotion is such a huge part of the NCAA Tournament that losing not one but two seniors might be too tall of an order to overcome emotionally.
With Ralph lost for the season, junior point guard Sue Bird needs to step up even more and provide the leadership, emotional spark and energy that have become Ralph's trademark contributions. But on the positive side, Bird's the kind of player who seems to do her best when the pressure is on -- the bigger the obstacle, the better she performs.
And while UConn looks to have tied up the No. 1 seed in the East, we must also remember that the Huskies have a lot of talent at the forward position, and that younger players like Diana Taurasi have had more than a month to develop into the go-to type player the Huskies will need if Ralph isn't on the court.
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Bird raced down court with the inbounds pass with 5.1 seconds
left after Ruth Riley made the second of her two free throws after
missing the first. Bird drove down the left side of the lane and
fired the winner.
The Huskies (28-2) were without Ralph, who likely tore a
ligament in her left knee late in the first half. Team doctors
confirmed the ligament damage and will schedule an MRI.
"She's given so much to me, I wanted to give something back to
her," said Bird as she struggled with her emotions.
Ralph, a senior guard, went down with 5:18 left while scrambling
for her missed layup. She clutched her face, rolled on the court
crying as her coaches and trainers rushed out.
"She knew right away as soon as we went over there. She knew
what it was," said coach Geno Auriemma. "I knew what it was.
She's not going to react like that unless it's what it was."
Ralph returned in the second half wearing an air splint and
watched from courtside as her teammates regrouped and played one of
the closest games of the season.
"Our players worked so hard to win that game," Auriemma said.
"We went with who we had out there and what we had available.
Never underestimate the heart of a champion."
The game-winner was sweet redemption for Bird, who lost her
dribble out of bounds with 16.3 seconds and UConn up 76-75. The Irish
worked the ball inside to the 6-foot-5 Riley, who was fouled by
Kelly Schumacher.
The play after Riley's free throw was designed to go straight to
Bird.
"No time outs. No nothing. We were going to win or lose on the
last shot of the game she's going to take," Auriemma said. "I
didn't want (Notre Dame) to set up a defense to decide who gets our
last shot."
It was the eighth straight tournament title for the Huskies
(28-2), who avenged a Jan. 15 loss to the Irish (28-2). Notre Dame
has been to the title game four times since joining the conference
six years ago, and has lost each time to UConn.
"I thought for the first 39 minutes and 59 seconds, it was an
excellent basketball game," Irish coach Muffet McGraw said. "At
the end of the game the crowd was a definite factor."
On paper, the Huskies were the visitors because they were the
No. 2 seed in the tournament to the top-seeded Irish. But there was
no question who had home court advantage.
Bird finished with a team-high 15 points that included a
half-court 3-pointer at the buzzer to close out the first half and
give UConn a 52-46 lead at the break.
|  | | Shea Ralph is surrounded by teammates after injuring her knee during Tuesday's game. | Riley, the Big East player of the year, had a game-high 23
points and nine rebounds.
Riley's 3-point play with 5:24 left started a 7-3 Notre Dame run
and the Irish pulled even at 73-73 with 3:51 left. UConn regained
the lead on Bird's 3-pointer with 49.8 seconds remaining. Riley
brought the Irish within one at 75-76 with an inside bucket and
tied it on Notre Dame's next possession, setting up Bird's heroics.
"I have a lot of confidence in that situation," said Bird. "I
just took the ball and went. There was no doubt in my mind that it
was going in after it hit the front of the rim."
The officials reviewed the tape to make sure time was on the
clock when Bird launched the game-winner. And after a few anxious
moments in the sold out 10,000-seat Gampel Pavilion, the basket was
counted.
"I think it was hard because we didn't have a time out," Riley
said of Bird's shot. "We just wanted to get our matchups. We knew
Sue would attack us like a good point guard does."
The Irish, the best 3-point shooting team in the nation at 46
percent, shot 40 percent on 9-of-25 from behind the arc.
UConn's Schumacher, Asjha Jones and Swin Cash had six
rebounds each.
Kelley Siemon finished with 16 points for Notre Dame.
There were seven lead changes, and UConn never led by more than
seven points and focused on shutting down Notre Dame's 3-point
game. Riley didn't face many double teams and the teams played even
in the paint, scoring 42 points apiece.
UConn freshman Diana Taurasi, the tournament MVP, scored 14
points before fouling out.
Ralph's injury is the second major one to hit the team this
year. All-American Svetlana Abrosimova was lost for the season with
a torn ligament in her left foot. She was injured in the Feb. 1
loss to Tennessee.
In closing moments of the game that would decide the No. 1 team
in the nation, UConn's top three players -- Ralph, Abrosimova and
Taurasi -- could only watch.
"As long as we have five on the floor. We have a chance,"
Auriemma said.
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ALSO SEE
Women's College Basketball Scoreboard
Notre Dame Clubhouse
Connecticut Clubhouse
Ralph's career at UConn over with torn ACL
AUDIO/VIDEO

Sue Bird drives the length of the court and hits the game-winner to give the Huskies the Big East title.
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Sue Bird drills the half-court shot as time expires in the first half.
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Shea Ralph drives to the basket, but goes down hard with a knee injury.
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Shea Ralph pokes the ball free and Kennitra Johnson gets the ball back to Ralph for the hoop and the harm.
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Ruth Riley dominates the interior for the Irish.
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Niele Ivey finds a slashing Jeneka Joyce for the alley-oop layup.
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An emotional Geno Auriemma speaks following the Connecticut victory.
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