No. 1 Gamecocks stay perfect in showdown win over No. 3 LSU
COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) — LSU coach Kim Mulkey understands dominance and saw it again on Sunday.
“It’s South Carolina, in my opinion,” she said flatly, “and it’s everybody else.”
Kamilla Cardoso had 18 points and 13 rebounds, Zia Cooke scored 17 points and the top-ranked Gamecocks (25-0, 12-0 Southeastern Conference) stayed perfect with an 88-64 victory over No. 3 LSU for their 31st straight win.
In the showdown of Division I’s final two undefeateds, it was no contest — something Mulkey has had experience with in the past.
Mulkey led Baylor to three national titles, her crown in 2011-12 coming with her 40-0 team. It won’t surprise her if these Gamecocks, already defending national champs, pull off that feat this season — especially the way they handled the rising Tigers (23-1, 11-1).
“They have things that we don’t have and a lot of teams in the country don’t have who aspire to be there one day,” she said.
That was obvious from the start. South Carolina broke out to an 18-2 lead. LSU cut things to five a handful of times, including early in the third period, but could not come any closer.
Aliyah Boston finished with 14 points and nine boards.
The game, billed as a showcase between reigning AP player of the year Aliyah Boston and Angel Reese, quickly become a highlight reel of South Carolina’s experience, talent and depth.
Boston and Reese entered this with a combined 39 double doubles this season. Instead, it was the 6-foot-7 backup Cardoso who collected double figure points and rebounds.
Reese, the 6-foot-3 dominator, couldn’t get going against the Gamecocks’ withering inside presence, going 5-of-15 shooting for 16 points and four rebounds for her first game this season without double figure boards.
Boston, South Carolina’s career record holder with 76 games in double figure points and rebounds, also came up short with of that standard. Not that it mattered as she twice blocked Reese’s shots in the third quarter as South Carolina took control for good.
Reese held her hands up, wondering where the foul was as she sat on the court.
Boston was grateful for the attention that led people to fill the building and tune in on TV. Her team’s approach, though, was simple: “Ehh, it’s just another game,” she said.
LSU cut a 10-point halftime deficit to 45-40 on Reese’s inside bucket midway through the third quarter. But South Carolina closed the period on a 19-8 burst finished by Brea Beal’s second 3-pointer.
Her teammates rushed her after time ran out, celebrating like they had won a title. The Gamecocks sure proved who runs things this year in the women’s game.
“When you have that type of commitment, you’re going to win games like this,” Gamecocks coach Dawn Staley said.
The sold-out crowd was loud and raucous from the jump and went crazy when Staley, a Philadelphia native, came out in a classic Eagles’ Randall Cunningham jersey for her team’s Super Bowl Sunday warm up with LSU.
The Gamecocks then gave them even more to yell about as they took off on an 18-2 start the first six minutes that threatened to run the Tigers out of the building. Cooke scored six points in the surge while Brea Beal had a 3-pointer and a three-point play.
Alexis Morris led LSU with 23 points.
Boston and Cardoso each had three blocks for the Gamecocks.
Aggressive guards all day! (Yes, we called @_Theblackqueen_ a guard 😏) pic.twitter.com/aooEJgl6oo
— South Carolina Women’s Basketball (@GamecockWBB) February 13, 2023
Notables
- South Carolina’s win against LSU marked the 25th of the season, leaving the Gamecocks the last remaining undefeated team in the NCAA
- The Gamecock offense started off hot, opening with a 14-2 run to start the game and finished the first quarter shooting 66.7 percent from the field. Zia Cooke led the way with nine points of 4-of-6 shooting.
- South Carolina’s defense held LSU’s top scorer Angel Reese to her second-lowest points of the season and snapped her 23 game double-double streak.
- South Carolina’s defense held LSU 22 points below its season scoring average, allowing just 35.3 percent shooting in the first quarter and 31.3 percent in the fourth.
- Kamilla Cardoso put up an SEC career-high 18 points to lead the team, going on her own 8-3 run in the fourth quarter to extend the Gamecocks’ lead to 21 with under four minutes to go. Her 13 rebounds made way for her fifth double-double of the season, with nine boards coming in just the first half.
- Aliyah Boston scored her 11th consecutive double-figure game of the season, putting up 14 points and nine rebounds and lead the way with three big time blocks over the Tigers.
- Brea Beal was one of five Gamecocks to finish with 10 or more points, contributing six in a 12-0 run to start the first period highlighted by a three in the middle.
HOW BOUT THAT FAMS?? Gamecocks lead 64-48 after the 3Q 😤
📺 ESPN https://t.co/1su2ba2s4T pic.twitter.com/9nvxCVLpPg
— South Carolina Women’s Basketball (@GamecockWBB) February 12, 2023
- Raven Johnson also scored a SEC career high 10 points, with six coming in the last three minutes of the game including the final jumper with 15 seconds left
1 Block
2 Angles
Brea 🤬 Beal@QueenBrea_1 pic.twitter.com/IARnsj2OmT— South Carolina Women’s Basketball (@GamecockWBB) February 13, 2023
The Reaction
STILL UNDEFEATED‼️
No. 1 South Carolina hands No. 3 LSU its first loss of the season in dominant fashion. pic.twitter.com/xv18CZZ2NA
— ESPN (@espn) February 12, 2023
Congrats ladies y’all showed out tonight per usual ! 👏🏾👏🏾 @GamecockWBB 🐔🤙🏾
— Doniyah (@Doniyah14) February 12, 2023
DOMINATION.@jerseymikes Naismith Women’s College POTY Midseason List players Aliyah Boston and Zia Cooke led unbeaten No. 1 @gamecockwbb over unbeaten No. 3 LSU💪 pic.twitter.com/ftnJbSEHOa
— Naismith Awards (@NaismithTrophy) February 13, 2023
“The only team that can beat South Carolina is South Carolina if they play poorly.”
–@Andraya_Carter after the @GamecockWBB win against LSU. pic.twitter.com/Pi0huKa5QG
— SEC Network (@SECNetwork) February 12, 2023