Arrow-right Camera
The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

LSU women upset West Virginia in NCAA 2nd round

LSU forward Sheila Boykin, left, and her teammates celebrate an upset over No. 2 seed West Virginia. (Associated Press)
Brett Martel Associated Press

BATON ROUGE, La. – When it was time to punctuate her second unforgettable performance in three days, Danielle Ballard whipped the basketball down with both hands and slammed it off the court.

She then leapt into teammate Theresa Plaisance’s arms, tugged at the “LSU” on her jersey and raised her arm in celebration before a jubilant throng of fans.

Ballard had 22 points and 15 rebounds, and seventh-seeded LSU overcame a late seven-point deficit, a key injury and foul trouble to upset No. 2 seed West Virgina 76-67 in the second round of the NCAA tournament on Tuesday night.

“I was like, ‘We did it again.’ I was super excited,” said Ballard, a sophomore guard, who had 24 points and 17 rebounds in LSU’s first-round win over Georgia Tech. “All of my frustration went out on the ball. … It was just a joyful moment.”

Playing the last 12 minutes with four fouls, Shanece McKiney had 13 points, seven rebounds and five blocks, while DaShawn Harden added 12 points for LSU (21-12), which advanced to the Sweet 16 for a second straight season – both times with a second-round upset on its home court.

The Lady Tigers also played most of the game without senior guard Jeanne Kenney, who not only averages 11.6 points but has been the team’s emotional leader. After Kenney left with a concussion in the first half, younger, less experienced players had to pick up the slack. Jasmine Rhodes was one of them, scoring 11 points on 5-of-7 shooting after not scoring in her previous five games.

“They chose to dig a little deeper and give a little more for Jeanne, because she’s been just that for them for a long time,” LSU coach Nikki Caldwell said. “I’m extremely proud of this team for realizing how great they can be.”

Next up for LSU is a rematch with Louisville. The two teams played in the preseason WNIT and the Cardinals came away with a 21-point win.

Caldwell said her players will probably be clambering for Louisville scouting reports and film clips, but she’s going to make them wait at least a little while.

“I’m not going to give it to them. I want them to understand what they just did and what they accomplished, with the challenges that we had, was amazing. I want them to enjoy the moment. … They deserve a full day to just enjoy beating a very good West Virginia team … to advance to another Sweet 16.”

Holding a seven-point lead 5:05 left, West Virginia was on the verge of winning the first second-round NCAA game in program history, but LSU stunningly seized control with a 16-2 run. Asya Bussie had 21 points and Bria Holmes 12 for West Virginia (30-5), which fell to 0-8 all time in second-round games.

“We won 30 basketball games this season but we felt like we gave one away here tonight,” said West Virginia coach Mike Carey said.

LSU appeared to be on its heels when Bussie’s free throw made it 63-56 and capped a stretch in which WVU scored 13 of 15 points at the foul line.

Ballard responded with runner, sparking a 6-0 run that pulled LSU back to 63-62 with 3:30 left.

A day earlier, Carey had said he liked his team’s chances in a close game.

Bussie’s layup with 3:02 to go was WVU’s only basket during a more than five-minute span, and LSU went up 72-65 when Ballard’s free throws capped the run.