#laeticia amihere
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myrebelancestorsdiedforme · 5 months ago
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Laeticia Amihere Atlanta dreams 
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dianasprnce · 5 months ago
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every gamecock reunion so far this season has been adorable
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rickeajacksons · 1 year ago
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wnbajersey · 7 months ago
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female-buckets · 2 years ago
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Pay attention, class!
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goalhofer · 3 months ago
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2024 olympics Canada roster
Archery
Eric Peters (Kitchener, Ontario)
Virginie Chénier (Montreal, Quebec)
Athletics
Eliezer Adjibi (Ottawa, Ontario)
Duan Asemota (Ajax, Ontario)
Aaron Brown (Toronto, Ontario)
Andre De Grasse (Markham, Ontario)
Brendon Rodney (Brampton, Ontario)
Christopher Morales (York, Ontario)
Marco Arop (Edmonton, Alberta)
Kieran Lumb (Vancouver, British Columbia)
Charles Philibert-Thiboutot (Quebec, Quebec)
Mohammed Ahmed (St. Catherines, Ontario)
Ben Flanagan (Kitchener, Ontario)
Thomas Fafard (Repentigny, Quebec)
Craig Thorne (Quispamsis, New Brunswick)
Jean-Simon Desgagnés (Quebec, Quebec)
Jerome Blake (Burnaby, British Columbia)
Cameron Levins (Courtenay, British Columbia)
Rory Linkletter (Flagstaff, Arizona)
Evan Dunfee (Richmond, British Columbia)
Rowan Hamilton (Chilliwack, British Columbia)
Ethan Katzberg (Kamloops, British Columbia)
Adam Keenan (Victoria, British Columbia)
Damian Warner (London, Ontario)
Marie-Éloïse Leclair (Montreal, Quebec)
Sade McCreath-Tardiel (Toronto, Ontario)
Jasneet Nijjar (Surrey, British Columbia)
Audrey Leduc (Gatineau, Quebec)
Jacqueline Madogo (Ottawa, Ontario)
Lauren Gale (Ottawa, Ontario)
Zoe Sherar (Toronto, Ontario)
Jazz Shukla (Toronto, Ontario)
Kate Current (Cobourg, Ontario)
Simone Plourde (Montreal, Quebec)
Lucia Stafford (Toronto, Ontario)
Briana Scott (Vancouver, British Columbia)
Regan Yee (Vancouver, British Columbia)
Mariam Abdul-Rashid (Oshawa, Ontario)
Michelle Harrison (Saskatoon, Saskatchewan)
Savannah Sutherland (Saskatoon, Saskatchewan)
Ceili McCabe (Vancouver, British Columbia)
Malindi Elmore (Kelowna, British Columbia)
Crystal Emmanuel-Ahye (Toronto, Ontario)
Kyra Constantine (Brampton, Ontario)
Aiyanna Stiverne (Laval, Quebec)
Olivia Lundman (Nanaimo, British Columbia)
Camryn Rogers (Richmond, British Columbia)
Anicka Newell (Albuquerque, New Mexico)
Alysha Newman (London, Ontario)
Sarah Mitton (Queens Municipality, Nova Scotia)
Badminton
Brian Yang (Richmond Hill, Ontario)
Adam Dong (Burlington, Ontario)
Nyl Yakura (Toronto, Ontario)
Michelle Li (Markham, Ontario)
Basketball
Luguentz Dort (Montreal, Quebec)
Nickeil Alexander-Walker (Vaughan, Ontario)
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander (Hamilton, Ontario)
Melvin Ejim (Rocky View County, Alberta)
Jamal Murray (Orangeville, Ontario)
Dwight Powell (Toronto, Ontario)
Trey Lyles (Saskatoon, Saskatchewan)
R.A. Barrett; Jr. (Mississauga, Ontario)
Kelly Olynyk (Kamloops, British Columbia)
Andrew Nembhard (Vaughan, Ontario)
Dillon Brooks (Mississauga, Ontario)
Khem Birch (Russell Township, Ontario)
Shay Colley (Brampton, Ontario)
Samantha Hill (Toronto, Ontario)
Kia Nurse (Hamilton, Ontario)
Bridget Carleton (Chatham-Kent, Ontario)
Cassandre Prosper (Ottawa, Ontario)
Yvonne Ejim (Rocky View County, Alberta)
Natalie Achonwa (Guelph, Ontario)
Syla Swords (Sudbury, Ontario)
Kayla Alexander (Milton, Ontario)
Laeticia Amihere (Mississauga, Ontario)
Nirra Fields (Montreal, Quebec)
Aaliyah Edwards (Kingston, Ontario)
Kacie Bosch (Lethbridge, Alberta)
Paige Crozon (Humboldt, Saskatchewan)
Katherine Plouffe (Edmonton, Alberta)
Michelle Plouffe (Edmonton, Alberta)
Boxing
Wyatt Sanford (Montreal, Quebec)
Tammara Thibeault (Saint-Georges, Quebec)
Breakdancing
Phil Kim (Vancouver, British Columbia)
Canoeing
Alex Baldoni (Pau, France)
Connor Fitzpatrick (Dartmouth, Nova Scotia)
Laurent Lavigne (Trois-Rivières, Quebec)
Nicholas Matveev (Toronto, Ontario)
Simon McTavish (Sydney, Australia)
Pierre-Luc Poulin (Quebec, Quebec)
Lois Betteridge (Ottawa, Ontario)
Sophia Jensen (Chelsea, Quebec)
Sloan MacKenzie (Halifax, Nova Scotia)
Katie Vincent (Mississauga, Ontario)
Michelle Russell (Halifax Municipality, Nova Scotia)
Toshka Besharah-Hrebacka (Ottawa, Ontario)
Natalie Davison (Ottawa, Ontario)
Riley Melanson (Dartmouth, Nova Scotia)
Courtney Stott (Pickering, Ontario)
Cycling
Derek Gee (Ottawa, Ontario)
Michael Woods (Toronto, Ontario)
Tyler Rorke (Wilmot Township, Ontario)
Nick Wammes (Chatham-Kent, Ontario)
James Hedgcock (Hamilton, Ontario)
Dylan Bibic (Mississauga, Ontario)
Michael Foley (Milton, Ontario)
Mathis Guillemette (Trois-Rivières, Quebec)
Carson Mattern (Hamilton, Ontario)
Gunnar Holmgren (Oro-Medonte Township, Ontario)
Jeffrey Whaley (L'Assomption, Quebec)
Olivia Baril (Rouyn-Noranda, Quebec)
Alison Jackson (Vermilion, Alberta)
Lauriane Genest (Montreal, Quebec)
Kelsey Mitchell (Strathcona County, Alberta)
Sarah Orban (Calgary, Alberta)
Erin Attwell (Victoria, British Columbia)
Ariane Bonhomme (Gatineau, Quebec)
Maggie Coles-Lyster (Maple Ridge, British Columbia)
Sarah Van Dam (Victoria, British Columbia)
Isabella Holmgren (Oro-Medonte Township, Ontario)
Molly Simpson (Red Deer, Alberta)
Diving
Rylan Wiens (Saskatoon, Saskatchewan)
Nathan Zsombor-Murray (Pointe-Claire, Quebec)
Margo Erlam (Calgary, Alberta)
Caeli McKay (Montreal, Quebec)
Kate Miller (Ottawa, Ontario)
Equestrian
Chris Van Martels (Chatham-Kent, Ontario)
Karl Slezak (Tottenham, Ontario)
Mike Winter (Montreal, Quebec)
Mario Deslauriers (Venise-En-Quebec, Quebec)
Camille Carier-Bergeron (Laval, Quebec)
Naïma Laliberté-Moreira (Montreal, Quebec)
Jessica Phoenix (Uxbridge Township, Ontario)
Erynn Ballard (Caledon, Ontario)
Amy Millar (Perth, Ontario)
Fencing
Nicholas Zhang (Richmond, British Columbia)
Blake Broszus (San José, California)
Daniel Gu (Edmonton, Alberta)
Maximilien Van Haaster (Montreal, Quebec)
Fares Arfa (Laval, Quebec)
François Cauchon (Montreal, Quebec)
Shaul Gordon (Richmond, British Columbia)
Ruien Xiao (Markham, Ontario)
Jessica Guo (Toronto, Ontario)
Eleanor Harvey (Hamilton, Ontario)
Yunjia Zhang (Toronto, Ontario)
Pamela Brind'Amour (Sainte-Martine, Quebec)
Golf
Corey Connors (Jupiter, Florida)
Nick Taylor (Abbotsford, British Columbia)
Brooke Henderson (Naples, Florida)
Alena Sharp (Phoenix, Arizona)
Gymnastics
Zachary Clay (Chilliwack, British Columbia)
René Cournoyer (Repentigny, Quebec)
Félix Dolci (Saint-Eustache, Quebec)
William Émard (Laval, Quebec)
Samuel Zakutney (Montreal, Quebec)
Elsabeth Black (Halifax, Nova Scotia)
Shallon Olsen (Tuscaloosa, Alabama)
Cassie Lee (Toronto, Ontario)
Ava Stewart (Bowmanville, Ontario)
Aurélie Tran (Repentigny, Quebec)
Sophiane Méthot (Varennes, Quebec)
Judo
Arthur Margelidon (Montreal, Quebec)
François Gauthier-Drapeau (Alma, Quebec)
Shady Elnahas (Toronto, Ontario)
Ana Portuondo (La Prairie, Quebec)
Kelly Deguchi (Lethbridge, Alberta)
Christina Deguchi (Lethbridge, Alberta)
Catherine Beauchemin-Pinard (Saint-Hubert, Quebec)
Rowing
Jennifer Casson (Victoria, British Columbia)
Jill Moffatt (Victoria, British Columbia)
Abby Dent (Kenora, Ontario)
Caileigh Filmer (Saanich, British Columbia)
Kasia Gruchalla-Wesierski (Calgary, Alberta)
Maya Meschkuleit (Mississauga, Ontario)
Sydney Paine (Toronto, Ontario)
Jessica Sevick (Vancouver, British Columbia)
Kristina Walker (Frontenac Islands Township, Ontario)
Avalon Wasteneys (Victoria, British Columbia)
Kristen Kit (St. Catherines, Ontario)
Rugby
Caroline Crossley (New Westminster, British Columbia)
Olivia Apps (Victoria, British Columbia)
Alysha Corrigan (Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island)
Asia Hogan-Rochester (Toronto, Ontario)
Chloe Daniels (Langford, British Columbia)
Charity Williams (Victoria, British Columbia)
Florence Symonds (Vancouver, British Columbia)
Carissa Norsten (Waldheim, Saskatchewan)
Krissy Scurfield (Canmore, Alberta)
Fancy Bermudez (Edmonton, Alberta)
Piper Logan (Calgary, Alberta)
Keyara Wardley (Victoria, British Columbia)
Sailing
Justin Barnes (Pickering, Ontario)
Will Jones (Hamilton, Ontario)
Sarah Douglas (Toronto, Ontario)
Emily Bugeja (North Vancouver, British Columbia)
Antonia Lewin-LaFrance (Mahone Bay, Nova Scotia)
Georgia Lewin-LaFrance (Mahone Bay, Nova Scotia)
Shooting
Tye Ikeda (Calgary, Alberta)
Michele Esercitato (Calgary, Alberta)
Shannon Westlake (Georgina, Ontario)
Skateboarding
Cordano Russell (Carlsbad, California)
Matt Berger (Huntington Beach, California)
Ryan Decenzo (Delta, British Columbia)
Fay De Fazio-Ebert (Toronto, Ontario)
Soccer
Kailen Sheridan (Whitby, Ontario)
Gabrielle Carle (Lévis, Quebec)
Kadeisha Buchanan (Brampton, Ontario)
Evelyne Viens (L'Ancienne-Lorette, Quebec)
Rebecca Quinn (Toronto, Ontario)
Cloé Lacasse (Sudbury, Ontario)
Julia Grosso (Burnaby, British Columbia)
Jayde Riviere (Markham, Ontario)
Jordyn Huitema (Chilliwack, British Columbia)
Ashley Lawrence (Toronto, Ontario)
Adriana Leon (King Township, Ontario)
Jade Rose (Markham, Ontario)
Simi Awujo (Atlanta, Georgia)
Vanessa Gilles (Châteauguay, Quebec)
Nichelle Prince (Ajax, Ontario)
Janine Beckie (Douglas County, Colorado)
Jessie Fleming (London, Ontario)
Sabrina D'Angelo (Welland, Ontario)
Shelina Zadorsky (London, Ontario)
Surfing
Sanoa Dempfle-Olin (Tofino, British Columbia)
Swimming
Josh Liendo-Edwards (Toronto, Ontario)
Yuri Kisil (Calgary, Alberta)
Javier Acevedo (Toronto, Ontario)
Blake Tierney (Saskatoon, Saskatchewan)
Ilya Kharun (Las Vegas, Nevada)
Finlay Knox (Okotoks, Alberta)
Tristan Jankovics (Puslinch Township, Ontario)
Alex Axon (Newmarket, Ontario)
Jeremy Bagshaw (Victoria, British Columbia)
Patrick Hussey (Beaconsfield, Quebec)
Lorne Wigginton (Calgary, Alberta)
Apollo Hess (Lethbridge, Alberta)
Audrey Lamothe (Montreal, Quebec)
Jacqueline Simoneau (Saint-Laurent, Quebec)
Scarlett Finn (Toronto, Ontario)
Joannie Newman (Grande Prairie, Alberta)
Raphaelle Plante (Quebec City, Quebec)
Kenzie Priddell (Regina, Saskatchewan)
Claire Scheffel (Brantford, Ontario)
Florence Tremblay (Rimouski, Quebec)
Taylor Ruck (Scottsdale, Arizona)
Maggie MacNeil (London, Ontario)
Mary-Sophie Harvey (Trois-Rivières, Quebec)
Summer McIntosh (Toronto, Ontario)
Kylie Masse (Windsor, Ontario)
Ingrid Wilm (Calgary, Alberta)
Regan Rathwell (Ottawa, Ontario)
Sophie Angus (Toronto, Ontario)
Sydney Pickrem (Dunedin, Florida)
Kelsey Wog (Winnipeg, Manitoba)
Rebecca Smith (Red Deer, Alberta)
Ella Jansen (Burlington, Ontario)
Penny Oleksiak (Toronto, Ontario)
Brooklyn Douthwright (Riverview, New Brunswick)
Julie Brousseau (Ottawa, Ontario)
Emma O'Croinin (Edmonton, Alberta)
Emma Finlin (Edmonton, Alberta)
Table tennis
Edward Ly (Lachine, Quebec)
Eugene Wang (Aurora, Ontario)
Jeremy Hazin (Richmond Hill, Ontario)
Mo Zhang (Vancouver, British Columbia)
Taekwondo
Josipa Kafadar (Burnaby, British Columbia)
Skylar Park (Winnipeg, Manitoba)
Tennis
Félix Auger-Aliassime (Monte Carlo, Monaco)
Miloš Raonić (Monte Carlo, Monaco)
Bianca Andreescu (Vaughan, Ontario)
Leylah Fernandez (Boynton Beach, Florida)
Gaby Dabrowski (Ottawa, Ontario)
Triathlon
Tyler Mislawchuk (Macdonald Municipality, Manitoba)
Claude Paquet (Port-Cartier, Quebec)
Emy Legault (Montreal, Quebec)
Volleyball
Daniel Dearing (Toronto, Ontario)
Sammy Schachter (Richmond Hill, Ontario)
Luke Herr (Winnipeg, Manitoba)
Nick Hoag (Sherbrooke, Quebec)
Brodie Hofer (Langley, British Columbia)
Danny Demyanenko (Toronto, Ontario)
Stephen Maar (Aurora, Ontario)
Brett Walsh (Calgary, Alberta)
Xander Ketrzynski (Toronto, Ontario)
Lucas Van Berkel (Edmonton, Alberta)
Arthur Szwarc (Toronto, Ontario)
Justin Lui (Pickering, Ontario)
Fynn McCarthy (Lake Country Municipality, British Columbia)
Eric Loeppky (Steinbach, Manitoba)
Melissa Humaña-Paredes (Toronto, Ontario)
Brandie Wilkerson (Toronto, Ontario)
Heather Bansley (Toronto, Ontario)
Sophie Bukovec (Toronto, Ontario)
Water polo
Jessica Gaudreault (Ottawa, Ontario)
Rae Lekness (Calgary, Alberta)
Axelle Crevier (Montreal, Quebec)
Emma Wright (Whitby, Ontario)
Marilia Mimides (Toronto, Ontario)
Blaire McDowell (Fernie, British Columbia)
Verica Bakoc (Toronto, Ontario)
Elyse Lemay-Lavoie (Montreal, Quebec)
Hayley McKelvey (Delta, British Columbia)
Serena Browne (Montreal, Quebec)
Kindred Paul (Spruce Grove, Alberta)
Shae La Roche (Winnipeg, Manitoba)
Clara Vulpisi (Montreal, Quebec)
Weightlifting
Boady Santavy (Sarnia, Ontario)
Maude Charron (Rimouski, Quebec)
Wrestling
Alex Moore (Montreal, Quebec)
Amar Dhesi (Surrey, British Columbia)
Hannah Taylor (Cornwall, Prince Edward Island)
Ana Godinez (Burnaby, British Columbia)
Linda Morais (Tecumseh, Ontario)
Justina Di Stasio (Coquitlam, British Columbia)
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news247planet · 1 year ago
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#Coach #officiating #WNBA #Sports WNBA Coach Rips Officiating: ‘They Are Going to Nice Me for This’ https://news247planet.com/?p=415142
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sounmashnews · 2 years ago
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[ad_1] SYDNEY: Seattle ahead Breanna Stewart drilled a game-high 17 factors and grabbed eight rebounds as medical reigning champions the United States crushed Canada 83-43 to brush into the ladies's basketball World Cup ultimate on Friday. They opened with 15 unanswered factors and by no means relented, extending their wonderful World Cup win streak to 29 video games to arrange a gold-medal showdown in Sydney in opposition to Australia or China, who play later. Ever-dangerous Las Vegas Aces' star A'ja Wilson added 15 factors and 12 rebounds for the US as they zero in on a fourth straight title and eleventh total. Laeticia Amihere scored eight factors to guide a deflated Canada. The USA have been all the time overwhelming favourites of their tenth consecutive World Cup semi-final, having by no means failed to achieve the final 4 because the knockout stage was launched in 1986. In distinction, world quantity 4 Canada had received this far simply as soon as earlier than, in 1986, when in addition they crashed to the USA. The Americans' depth, protection and scoring expertise was on full show as soon as once more. They have killed it inside all event, sinking 55 factors a sport within the paint forward of the semi-final, whereas punishing errors. It was an identical state of affairs in opposition to Canada, who've taken massive strides below coach Victor Lapena however struggled in opposition to the velocity of their opponents. The USA's 15 straight factors in the beginning gave them a right away stranglehold and Canada by no means recovered, needing 5 minutes to get off the mark. While the US shot 79 %, Canada might solely handle 11 % as they fell 27-7 behind after the primary quarter. The margin solely grew within the second body to 45-21, with Stewart on the forefront. They placed on one other 22 factors within the third quarter to construct an enormous 38-point buffer going into the ultimate stretch earlier than cruising residence for an emphatic win. !(function(f, b, e, v, n, t, s) window.TimesApps = window.TimesApps )( window, document, 'script', 'https://connect.facebook.net/en_US/fbevents.js', );if(typeof window !== 'undefined') [ad_2] Source link
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aussie-wbb · 2 years ago
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Team Canada!
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#2 - Aislinn Konig, G
#4 - Sami HIll, G
#5 - Kia Nurse, G (2018 WWC, 2020 Olympics)
#6 - Bridget Carleton, SF (2018 WWC, 2020 Olympics)
#11 - Natalie Achonwa, C (2018 WWC, 2020 Olympics)
#13 - Shay Colley, G (2018 WWC, 2020 Olympics)
#14 - Kayla Alexander, C (2020 Olympics)
#15 - Laeticia Amihere, F (2020 Olympics)
#16 - Mael Gilles, G
#21 - Nirra Fields, G (2018 WWC, 2020 Olympics)
#22 - Phillipina Kyei, C
#30 - Taya Hanson, SG
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rickeajacksons · 1 year ago
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wnbajersey · 7 months ago
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junker-town · 4 years ago
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Key players to watch in the 2021 women’s Final Four
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These are the players who will determine the women’s Final Four.
The women’s Sweet 16 games had us on the edge of our seats as we watched many of the matchups come down to the final buzzer. The tournament has been nothing short of must-watch tv, and now we’re left with four great teams who all feel like they enter college basketball’s biggest stage with a legitimate chance to win it all. While some schools are used to these late tournament runs, it’s a brand new experience for others.
Of the four teams, UConn is the most experienced program when it comes to deep tournament runs. This is their 13th consecutive year reaching the Final Four, and they have done so 21 times in program history. Stanford also has plenty of experience, with this being their 14th Final Four appearance. Their last Final Four matchup was in 2017, where they lost to the eventual national champions, South Carolina.
The Gamecocks are a budding program and have seen a lot of success in recent years. In the last six years, they have one national championship and three Final Four appearances under legendary head coach Dawn Staley. On the other hand, Arizona finds itself in a similar position as South Carolina was a few years ago. They are making school history in their Final Four debut under head coach Adia Barnes.
But while experience, lack thereof, and winning tradition matter, it’s a clean slate when these teams step on the floor this Friday. Here is a look at each team’s key players who will define the women’s Final Four.
UConn Huskies (No. 1. seed)
Players to watch: Paige Bueckers, Christyn Williams, Evina Westbrook
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Photo by Carmen Mandato/Getty Images
To only be a freshman, Paige Bueckers has risen to the challenge and performed well in every game this tournament. Coming off a nail-biting win against Baylor, Bueckers logged 40 minutes, 28 points, three rebounds, and three steals. You can read more about Bueckers’ outstanding freshman campaign here.
Though Bueckers has rightfully been in the spotlight of the Huskies team all season, breaking multiple records in her first year, Christyn Williams and Evina Westbrook are two other players to keep an eye on during the Final Four.
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Williams was the 2018 No. 1 recruit in the country and has played a big part in UConn’s success throughout the tournament. Williams played unconscious in the second round of the tournament, helping UConn push past No. 5 Iowa. She ended the game with 27 points, leading all scorers.
Evina Westbrook seems to be the anchor of this young UConn team. A redshirt junior and a veteran, Westbrook has tournament experience as a Tennessee Lady Vol prior to becoming a Husky. UConn is hard to stop when Westbrook gets cooking. While she is averaging just under double figures, 9.7 points, and 4.6 rebounds, she seems to heat up when it matters most this postseason.
During the second-round game against Iowa, she logged 17 points and nine rebounds to help the Huskies put the game away and move on to the next round. Though her stats may not show it, Westbrook does much of the dirty work for UConn and brings a sense of maturity that cannot be taught or coached.
Arizona Wildcats (No. 3 seed)
Players to watch: Aari McDonald, Cate Reese, Trinity Baptiste
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Photo by C. Morgan Engel/NCAA Photos via Getty Images
Arizona is the new kid on the block in this Final Four and probably the tournament’s biggest wild card. Senior and two-time All-American Aari McDonald leads them. McDonald has been virtually unguardable this tournament.
At 5’6, she’s a speedy point guard in the open court that plays with a lot of heart. Her quickness is something most teams struggle with, not to mention she is a pest on the defensive end. She has racked up two Pac-12 Defensive Player of the Year honors for 2020 and 2021.
Against Indiana in the Elite Eight, McDonald registered 33 of her team’s 66 points. Yes, that’s half. She also went 5-for-6 from the three-point line. McDonald is the engine that makes Arizona go. Outside of her contributions to the team, Cate Reese and Trinity Baptiste will be keys to Arizona’s success in the Final Four.
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Baptiste is a veteran forward who is most effective for the Wildcats on the boards, averaging 8.5 this postseason. Reese is also averaging six rebounds. If these two can crash the glass and get into double figures scoring, they not only lighten the load for McDonald but make defenses play more honestly, opening up shots for their other teammates.
South Carolina (No. 1 seed)
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Photo by Carmen Mandato/Getty Images
Players to watch: Zia Cooke, Aliyah Boston, Laeticia Amihere
South Carolina is coming back to claim the NCAA championship they felt they were robbed of last year when the pandemic canceled the NCAA tournament. Headed into this Final Four, many of their players remember what that felt like.
In particular, sophomore guard Zia Cooke has been a terror in this tournament. She has averaged 14 points over the last four games and grabbed an average of 4.5 boards. In South Carolina’s Elite Eight win against Texas, she recorded 16 points and six rebounds. Though Cooke is young, she drives South Carolina’s up-tempo pace and puts her teammates in position to succeed.
To add, center Aliyah Boston is a key to South Carolina’s success as well. Standing at 6’5, she is a matchup nightmare for many teams with her physicality in the paint. Boston is averaging a double-double this postseason with 14.7 points and 10.9 rebounds. Keeping her on the floor and out of foul trouble is going to be paramount.
Finally, Laeticia Amihere and her shot-blocking ability is a hidden gem for the Gamecocks. In their win against Texas, she recorded nine blocks. If she can help keep opponents from converting in the lane, Amihere will help South Carolina continue to be a terror on defense. This would force opponents to settle for jumpers and threes and increases their chances of moving on to the championship game later this month.
Stanford Cardinal (No. 1 seed)
Players to watch: Kiana Williams, Cameron Brink
The Cardinals have been led by their front court for much of this tournament run, but it’s one of their smallest players, Kiana Williams, who makes the Cardinal so difficult to defend. The 5’8 guard is one of the best shooters in the country, and can knock it down from anywhere on the floor with extended range.
Williams is a senior from San Antonio, and has come home for her last hurrah. This postseason, she has averaged 16.1 points per game and is shooting 46.2 percent from beyond the arc on 7.4 attempts. Williams’ ability to stretch the floor has helped open things up for Stanford’s tremendous interior players.
Cameron Brink is another standout freshman in this year’s NCAA tournament for the Cardinal. She led the Pac-12 in blocked shots, logging 57 during the regular season, and 21 through this postseason. At 6’4, she is a presence in the paint, but she doesn’t live there. Brink has some finesse in her game and can knock down a pull-up jumper and threes with ease. Her versatility has created matchup problems for opposing teams throughout this run.
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With all the talent headed into this NCAA women’s Final Four, you will not want to miss any of these games. Games take place on Friday, April 2 and begin at 6 p.m. ET, with a battle between two No. 1 seeds, Stanford and South Carolina. From there, No. 3 Arizona and one seed Connecticut take the floor at 9:30 p.m. ET to secure the final sport in the championship game.
The women’s tournament has given us so many amazing moments so far. It feels like the best is yet to come in the Final Four.
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kalamu · 7 years ago
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INFO: Laeticia Amihere—Basketball Star -
http://ow.ly/Sr5Y30gmGO1
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ronniegolson · 5 years ago
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rickeajacksons · 1 year ago
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wnbajersey · 7 months ago
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