Texas tops TCU to advance to first Final Four since 2003

Texas tops TCU to advance to first Final Four since 2003BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — Texas coach Vic Schaefer first met Madison Booker when Booker was a middle schooler. Even then, he could tell that the future Longhorns wing would be a special talent. On Monday in Birmingham, Booker showed why despite being a sophomore she is already regarded as one of the sport’s biggest stars.

The top-seeded Longhorns’ 58-47 Elite Eight victory over No. 2 TCU was far from the prettiest of games, but Booker’s trademark mid-range jumper was as picturesque as any aspect of it. Her fadeaway with 2:02 remaining and Texas clinging to a six-point lead was a fitting finishing move. She ended up with a game-high 18 points and six rebounds, playing all but two minutes of the win.

Texas is moving on to its first Final Four since 2003. In recent years, the Longhorns had knocked at the door of the final weekend of the NCAA Tournament, having lost in the Elite Eight in three of the last four seasons. Not on Monday, though. Not against their in-state opponent. Texas’ 35th victory of the season is also a new program record.

TCU had a historic year as well. The Horned Frogs had never made a Sweet 16 before, let alone come within 40 minutes of a Final Four. Their 34 wins are a school record. But against Texas, TCU’s elite offense had to grind out every possession. Star guard Hailey Van Lith missed seven of her first eight shots. She finished with 17 points, but had to work for every one of them.

The Horned Frogs ended the first half with more turnovers (11) than made field goals (7). And although Texas’ offense was similarly slowed at points, Booker and Texas senior guard Rori Harmon, having scored 13 points, helped the Longhorns do just enough. That’s all that matters at this time in March.

A 6-0 Texas run late in the third quarter stretched the Longhorns’ lead to nine. It grew to 14 in the fourth quarter. Although TCU made a late charge, Booker helped stunt the Horned Frogs’ comeback. Texas is marching on to face top-seeded South Carolina on Friday night as a result.

Kyla Oldacre the latest X-factor off the bench for Texas

On Saturday, the spark off the bench was freshman Bryanna Preston, on Monday it was junior post Kyla Oldacre. She played just two minutes in the first half after picking up two quick fouls, but was a difference maker in the second half.

Her size helped limit TCU standout Sedona Prince, who had trouble moving her off the block and getting position in the post. Prince finished with just four points on 1-of-4 shooting and nine rebounds. But it was the boost on the offensive end that Oldacre provided that sent Texas to the Final Four.

Oldacre came into the game averaging nine points and shooting just five shots a game. She found her touch early with a nice move to get around Prince and finished at the basket and never slowed down from there. She finished with nine points, five rebounds, two steals and one block in the game.

As good as Texas’ stars are, it got a boost from the bench in the Sweet 16 from Preston and on Monday got another from Oldacre. —

TCU turnovers doom historic season for the Horned Frogs

TCU came into Monday’s game as one of the best teams in the country when it comes to taking care of the ball.

Led by Van Lith, the Horned Frogs were averaging just 12 turnovers a game, a top-20 mark in the country. Texas, though, pressured TCU all game and the Horned Frogs had no answer. They struggled getting the ball inbounded after a Texas basket and were called for three 5-second violations. Even when they got the ball in, they ...

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