Your guide to the women’s Sweet 16: Pair of 1-seeds advance, Morrow and Betts star


Half of the Elite Eight is set. No. 1 seeds UCLA and South Carolina advanced with wins Friday, as well as No. 2 seed Duke.

But third-seeded LSU Tigers upended No. 2 seed NC State in the Spokane 1 Regional to join the party.

Which teams will join the Bruins, Gamecocks, Blue Devils and Tigers?

The regional semifinals resume Saturday (1 p.m. ET, ABC) when Notre Dame and TCU clash in a rematch from a November nonconference game.

We’re tracking every game as the march to the Final Four continues. Here’s your guide — complete with analysis from on-site reporters in Birmingham, Alabama, and Spokane, Washington — to Friday’s games.

Jump to: Relive the action | Full results, analysis

Final: LSU 80, NC State 73

How LSU won: In a game with huge momentum swings, LSU threw the final punch. After the Tigers fell behind by five points with 4:29 left to play, Mikaylah Williams and Sa’Myah Smith took over, scoring LSU’s final 16 points to give LSU the lead for good. Williams had a slow start from the floor (4-for-15) but ended the game by making four of her final five attempts. She also was LSU’s primary facilitator, finishing with six assists. She scored or assisted on 30 points. Smith, who has been recovering from a November 2023 knee injury, has been in great form this March, recording her second straight game with at least 20 points and 10 rebounds — and providing the Tigers’ frontcourt a huge boost as LSU seeks to return to the Final Four.

But LSU wouldn’t have been in position to win without a stellar outing from Aneesah Morrow, who became the first player with at least 30 points and 15 rebounds in a Sweet 16 game or later since Stanford’s Nneka Ogwumike in the 2010 Final Four. Over half her points came from second-chance field goals (16), and she nearly had as many offensive rebounds (nine) as NC State (10).

Though the Wolfpack guards had their moments, the Tigers held stars Aziaha James and Saniya Rivers to a combined 6-for-21 from the field. Zoe Brooks and Zamareya Jones did all they could to keep up, but NC State fell flat down the stretch, failing to score in the final two minutes.

LSU’s keys to the Elite Eight: With Morrow making a difference early, and Williams and Smith serving as closers late, LSU withstood a quiet performance from Flau’Jae Johnson (1-for-8 from the field, 3 points), who took a hard fall toward the end of the game. LSU is 16-0 this season when Johnson (who was averaging 18.8 PPG coming into the Sweet 16) scores at least 20 points. She is 29-1 over her career when she hits that mark, the third-best record by an SEC player over the past 25 seasons.

Still, the Tigers are headed to their 11th Elite Eight appearance and third straight under Kim Mulkey. Players come and go — Angel Reese and Hailey Van Lith from last year’s star-studded squad have moved on. But more often than not, Mulkey finds a way. — Alexa Philippou

MORE: What’s next for NC State: Who’s coming back? Portal priorities?


Final: UCLA 76, Ole Miss 62

How UCLA won: Two words: Lauren Betts. Ole Miss was no match for the junior center and provided one of the more dominant performances this March, converting 15 of 16 shot attempts for 31 points. And it wasn’t just her play on the offensive end that caused the Rebels problems. Betts limited them to 2 of 16 shooting on shots she contested. In fact, until early in the fourth quarter, Betts single-handedly had more points in the paint than Ole Miss. Betts is the third player in the last 25 seasons with multiple 30-point, 10-rebound games in a single NCAA tournament, and the first since Brittney Griner in 2013.



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