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By Evelyn Lau
evelyn-lau@uiowa.edu
PALO ALTO, Calif. — For the first in eight years, the Iowa women’s basketball team (20-13) is advancing to the second round of the NCAA Tournament.
The No. 8 seeded Hawkeyes defeated No. 9 Rutgers (19-15), 70-63, in the Maples Pavilion in the first-round matchup at Stanford on Saturday.
Iowa had balanced scoring with junior Kachine Alexander leading the way. Alexander had 18 points, eight rebounds, and four assists.
Sophomore Kamille Wahlin and freshman Jaime Printy had 15 points a piece, Morgan Johnson added 12, and sophomore Kelly Krei had 10. The team is a perfect 14-0 when four or more players score in double figures in a game.
After injuries and illness hampered the team early in the season, the Hawkeyes have finished strong by winning 12 of their last 15 games.
“We’re extremely happy,” head coach Lisa Bluder said. “This is a team that has come through so much this year. I continue to be amazed by them. I continued to be so proud of their effort.”
Both teams had a sloppy start, but Iowa went on an 8-2 run to hold a 28-21 edge at halftime. During the second half, Rutgers turned to using a full court press to put defensive pressure on the Hawkeyes — causing 18 Iowa turnovers in the process.
With 4:12 left in the game, the teams were tied, 56-56. A string of plays by Wahlin helped put away the Scarlet Knights. The sophomore was fouled on a made layout for the three-point play and then hit a 3-pointer the very next possession to give the Hawkeyes a 62-56 advantage before free-throws sealed the victory.
Alexander was quick to commend her young teammates on their ability to remain calm and collected under the pressure of a close game.
“When we were going through that time with Rutgers really on a run, we had to stick together and stay together,” she said. “Usually with a young team they might just crumble, especially in the NCAA Tournament, but we really stuck it out and kept our composure the whole time and kept playing very well.”
This was the first time the Hawkeyes have defeated the Scarlet Knights, losing the two previous times the teams met back in 2005 and 2006.
For Rutgers head coach C. Vivian Stringer, the loss was bittersweet. As the former Iowa coach from 1983 until 1995, Stringer brought Iowa to their only Final Four appearance and No. 1 ranking in school history.
After the game, despite her disappointment, she still showed love to her old program.
“It’s always tough this tiem of the year, especially when you get bounced early on,” she said. “Honestly, if we had to lose to somebody, there’s no other team I would have rather have loss to than the Iowa Hawkeyes. We played hard, but Iowa was just better.”
The Hawkeyes are now 17-18 all-time in the NCAA Tournament and improve to 8-4 in the first round games. Iowa plays the winner of No. 1 Stanford vs. No. 16 University of California-Riverside on Monday at 8:30 p.m. (central time) for a chance to go to the Sweet 16.







