UCLA rallies vs. Duke to make Women's Final Four

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UCLA rallies vs. Duke to make Women's Final Four
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UCLA rallies vs. Duke to make Women's Final FourDuke Blue Devils1hCharlotte GibsonUConn women shed slow start, reach Final FourUConn Huskies3hAlexa PhilippouStaley: Leading topic in recruitment is financialSouth Carolina Gamecocks5hCharlotte GibsonS.C. cruises into Elite Eight with 'room to grow'South Carolina Gamecocks1dKendra AndrewsMiles has her 'joy back,' powers TCU into Elite 8TCU Horned Frogs21hCharlotte GibsonUT on 'different planet' after Sweet 16 blowout winTexas Longhorns1dMichael VoepelWhat's next for Duke and Notre Dame after their Elite Eight exit?Vanderbilt Commodores2hCharlie CremeTracking the 2026-27 women's college basketball coaching changesMemphis Tigers6hESPNWomen's March Madness 2026: Ranking the Elite EightUConn Huskies21hCharlie CremeWomen's college hoops: UConn remains title favorite even as contenders odds shortenUConn Huskies8hDoug Greenberg'It's all or nothing': UCLA veterans ready for final NCAA title runUCLA Bruins4dCharlotte Gibson'The epitome of Texas basketball': These are Rori Harmon's LonghornsTexas Longhorns3dDave WilsonUConn star Azzi Fudd and the family behind her final MarchUConn Huskies6dSam BordenplayUCLA advances to the Final Four with win over Duke (1:40)UCLA uses big second half to come back and beat Duke to advance to the Final Four. (1:40)
SACRAMENTO, Calif. -- UCLA overcame a rare test from a tenacious Duke squad, rallying from a first-half deficit to win 70-58 on Sunday and advance to the women's Final Four for the second consecutive season.
The Bruins trailed the Blue Devils for the majority of the game before senior Gianna Kneepkens made a 3-point jumper for a 47-45 UCLA lead with 2:40 left in the third quarter. UCLA went on to outscore Duke 20-8 in the quarter and maintained its lead for the rest of the game.
Heading into Sunday's Elite Eight matchup, No. 1 seed UCLA had the upper hand as one of the most balanced scoring attacks in Division I. But the third-seeded Blue Devils quickly proved that their defense was up to the test, scoring 16 points from 12 UCLA turnovers and putting constant pressure on star senior Lauren Betts. In the first half, UCLA shot 6-for-12 on plays with a Betts touch, including seven turnovers. Without a Betts' touch, UCLA went 8-for-13 for 17 points and four turnovers, and trailed 39-31 at the break.
But Betts got going in the second half as the 6-foot-7 center finished with 23 points and 10 rebounds for her sixth career double-double in the NCAA tournament. She is the first player with 20 points, 10 rebounds and five blocks in a game in the Elite Eight or later since Brittney Griner in the 2012 national championship, according to ESPN Research.
The Blue Devils found success early from their guard trio: Ashlon Jackson, Taina Mair and Riley Nelson. The three Duke players scored or assisted on 35 of Duke's 39 points in the first half. Mair accounted for 12 points in the first half. By the end of the game, Mair had 21 points and seven rebounds. With six assists, Mair matched the Duke single-season record with 201 assists (set by Chelsea Gray in 2011-12).
The Bruins buckled down defensively in the second half and held Duke without a basket for the final six minutes of the third quarter. The drought didn't end until Mair hit a 3-pointer 1:30 into the fourth quarter that pulled Duke to within six points before UCLA pulled away.
UCLA, which fell to UConn last season in the program's first NCAA Final Four appearance, is chasing the school's first NCAA women's national title. (The school won an AIAW national title in 1978). The Bruins will face the winner of Texas or Michigan in Phoenix on Friday.



