Women's final pits UConn, Louisville
ST. LOUIS Louisville knocked off a pair of top seeds, Oklahoma and Maryland, to get to its first national title game in its first Final Four appearance.
That's nothing compared to the challenge that awaits the Cardinals.
Undefeated and top-ranked Connecticut is one win from its third undefeated season and only the fifth in women's basketball history after ending Stanford's 20-game winning streak with ease in an 83-64 rout in the second semifinal Sunday night.
The first all-Big East final, and only the fourth title game matching teams from the same conference, has the feel of a major mismatch. Connecticut (38-0) has already beaten Louisville by 28 and 39 points, the latter blowout on March 10 in the Big East tournament championship game.
Still, UConn coach Geno Auriemma would rather be playing somebody else no matter how lopsided the previous scores.
"I wish we were playing anybody but Louisville Tuesday. Anybody," Auriemma said. "The last team you want to play is the team you beat the way you beat them, and especially the last time we played them."
Big wins have been UConn's calling card all season, with an average winning margin of 31 points overall, and four earlier NCAA tournament blowouts by an average of 27.5.
So what might be different the third time around?
Attempting to emphasize a positive, Louisville coach Jeff Walz thought his school was competitive for 12 minutes in the first meeting at Storrs, Conn. Only 28 minutes shy of a full game.
The Cardinals' other hope is that the championship game setting will trump the track record. They advanced to their first Final Four with a 17-point victory over top-seeded Maryland in the Raleigh Regional final before ending Oklahoma's title hopes with a 61-59 victory in Sunday's first semifinal.
Louisville trailed by 14 points early and rallied from a 12-point halftime deficit behind Angel McCoughtry's 18 points and 11 rebounds.
"You're playing for the national championship," Walz said. "So it doesn't matter what the scores have been in the past."
Auriemma said neither of Louisville's upsets was a surprise to him, not with the McCoughtry factor.
"I've seen what Angel can do by herself, just take over games," Auriemma said.
