BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) There will be no Final Four trip for
Tennessee this year, not even a regional final.
|  | | Tennessee's Sarah Edwards walks off the court after the top-seeded Vols were stunned by Xavier. |
Xavier brought the Lady Vols' season to a stunning end, sending
them to their earliest exit in the NCAA tournament in seven years.
The Musketeers overcame top-seeded Tennessee's height advantage
and athleticism with sharp shooting and outstanding team play to
earn an 80-65 victory Saturday in the Mideast Regional semifinals.
Xavier (31-2) built a 10-point lead in the first half, fought
off Tennessee's repeated comeback attempts and, remarkably, won
going away for its 21st straight victory.
"We didn't want to go into this game intimidated," Xavier's
Nicole Levandusky said. "If you go into a game like that, you're
already defeated. You've got to go in with positive thinking, 'We
can beat this team,' and that's exactly what we did."
Tennessee's unmatched tradition, which includes six national
championships, and all of Pat Summitt's coaching acumen could not
save the Lady Vols (31-3) in this one.
It was the first time Tennessee failed to reach the regional
finals since a 1994 semifinal loss to Louisiana Tech.
Instead it will be fourth-seeded Xavier, which before this
season had only one NCAA tournament victory, advancing to Monday
night's regional championship against Purdue, which eliminated Texas on Saturday.
|
 |
|
|
Sat, March 24
Xavier's biggest forte -- and what helped them tremendously in their upset of Tennessee -- is that they are a very balanced group. They have five players who average in double figures. They are also very disciplined. They don't beat their opponents with exceptional quickness or size.
They don't have one particular asset that makes them great. They have everything that makes a team well-rounded: depth, discipline, desire. Every time an opponent tries to key on one player like Nicole Levandusky or Jennifer Phillips, then Amy Wall or someone else steps up from the outside.
Opponents of Xavier should be wary of concentrating on one particular player, because they can beat anyone with their balance.
|
|
|
"We hope this puts us on the map," Xavier's Amy Waugh said.
"We've been looking to get some national recognition all year. But
we're not satisfied. We want to go to the Final Four."
Sensing defeat, Summitt sat passively on the bench as the final
two minutes were played and Xavier made enough free throws to stay
safely ahead. Her anger surfaced afterward.
"I am more upset with this team and disappointed in this team
than I am for this team," Summitt said. "This team did not
deserve anything other than the outcome they got."
Summitt's players showed little emotion as Levandusky dribbled
out the final seconds and no tears were evident as they trudged to
the lockerroom while the Xavier players celebrated at midcourt.
It was, indeed, a victory to get excited about. Consider this:
When Tennessee won its fifth national title at Cincinnati in 1997,
Xavier was one of the host schools and had just completed a 10-17
season.
Now the Musketeers are one game from the Final Four.
"Our rap is that we're slow and we're non-athletic," Xavier
coach Melanie Balcomb said. "I don't think we're that slow and I
don't think we're that non-athletic."
Tennessee had made five Final Four trips in the past six years
and won three national titles. But there won't be another for
seniors Semeka Randall and Kristen Clement, who were part of a
ballyhooed freshman class that helped the Lady Vols go undefeated
in winning the 1998 championship.
The third member of that class and the team's best player,
Tamika Catchings, has not played since tearing a knee ligament Jan.
15.
"They beat us in transition. We got killed," said Randall, who
was 0-for-9 and scoreless in her final game. "Things happen for a
reason. For some odd reason, this happened to us."
As usual, Xavier had balanced scoring, which is what makes the
Musketeers so hard to defend. Levandusky led with 19 points,
Jennifer Phillips scored 17, Waugh had 14, Taru Tuukkanen 12 and
Reeta Piipari 10.
"When you play a team like that, you can't have breakdowns on
defense," Summitt said. "They made us pay every time we had a
mental breakdown."
Tennessee outrebounded Xavier 43-33 but shot only 38 percent.
Gwen Jackson led Tennessee with 16 points and nine rebounds. Ashley
Robinson scored 12, while Kara Lawson and Tasha Butts each had 10.
Xavier made nine of its first 12 shots in jumping to a 21-11
lead, forcing Tennessee into a game of catchup.
Down 40-36 at halftime, the Lady Vols pulled into five ties in
the second half, the last at 58-58 on Michelle Snow's turnaround
jumper with 10:06 remaining.
Eight seconds later, Levandusky hit a baseline jumper, Waugh
followed with three free throws after being fouled on a 3-point
shot and the Musketeers went on to outscore Tennessee 22-7 the rest
of the way.
"You can score, but if you don't stop your opponent from
scoring, you won't win," Robinson said. "Regardless of whether we
were hitting our shots, if we would have stopped them on defense,
we probably would have won this game."
Send this story to a friend
|
|
ALSO SEE
Women's College Basketball Scoreboard
Xavier Clubhouse
Tennessee Clubhouse
AUDIO/VIDEO

Amy Waugh nails a fall-away 3-pointer against Tennessee.
avi: 1282 k
RealVideo: 56.6 | ISDN | T1
Taru Tuukkanen drives in for an excellent layup.
avi: 985 k
RealVideo: 56.6 | ISDN | T1
Michelle Snow fires a jumper from the top of the key.
avi: 1405 k
RealVideo: 56.6 | ISDN | T1
Kristen Clement draws the foul and gets the bucket.
avi: 1178 k
RealVideo: 56.6 | ISDN | T1

Coach Pat Summit was extremely disappointed in the Lady Vols' effort against Xavier (Courtesy: NCAA Productions).
wav: 174 k
RealAudio: 14.4 | 28.8 | 56.6
Coach Melanie Balcomb felt Xavier was at its best against Tennessee (Courtesy: NCAA Productions).
wav: 105 k
RealAudio: 14.4 | 28.8 | 56.6
|