[Online Exclusive]: Women's squad falls to Purdue in second round, 61-54
Miss.
Miss.
Miss.
The first few got UCLA women’s basketball coach Kathy Olivier pacing up and down the sideline.
Miss.
Miss.
Miss.
The next bunch erased a comfortable Bruin lead that got the clearly partisan crowd on its feet, creating a hostile environment that seemed to make the rim a little smaller.
Miss.
Miss.
Miss.
UCLA saw its dreams of packing up and traveling to Cleveland, Ohio, for the Sweet 16 fade away with each clank off the iron and each unforgiving backboard bounce.
And there were another six missed shots before the Bruins awkwardly ended their season with a 61-54 loss to Purdue in the second round of the NCAA Tournament on the Boilermakers’ home court in Mackey Arena.
“I don’t know what happened,” senior guard Lisa Willis said.
The answers weren’t easy to place. A team that ranked in the top 10 nationally in scoring and featured three first-team All Pac-10 players went 0-for-15 from the field in the final 7:21 of the game.
No. 5 seed Purdue did not make a field goal in the last three minutes and won by six.
“A lot of the shots that we usually put in the basket didn’t fall,” said senior point guard Nikki Blue, who had 18 points, five rebounds and four assists. “I know I had a couple of good looks, but nothing fell,” she said.
No. 4 seed UCLA (21-11) played Purdue (26-6) for the final spot in the Sweet 16, and the game was a battle between the high-geared West Coast offense and the blue-collared Big Ten defense. The Bruins had the athleticism and quickness while the Boilermakers brought the relentless force.
Neither team led by more than six points in an evenly played matchup that had nine lead changes and seven ties. Both teams tried to play to their strengths. The Bruins pressured the Boilermakers, attempting to push the tempo and set a fast-paced transition game that could take advantage of their speed. Meanwhile, the Boilermakers were methodical in their half-court offense, looking to win with dominant play in the post by forwards Erin Lawless and Aya Traore.
“It was just an aggressive game that turned to defense,” Olivier said. “They have long, big women who play a physical brand of Big Ten basketball.”
UCLA, which took a 26-24 lead into halftime, trailed Purdue for only 22 seconds of the first 17 minutes of play in the second half. However, sophomore forward Lindsey Pluimers’ layup, which gave her club a 53-49 cushion with 7:21 left in the half, was the last time the Bruins would score a basket. The only other point came from a free throw by Blue.
When the Bruins could have delivered a decisive blow to the Boilermakers, the cold Indiana air overtook Blue, junior Noelle Quinn, and senior Lisa Willis. The triumvirate was a combined 16-for-49 from the field, and Quinn scored only nine points even though she played every second of the game.
Coming out of a timeout and down by just a point with 1:10 remaining, the closest the Bruins came to a basket was a four-foot finger roll by Willis that came up two feet short.
The miss seemed to rattle Willis, as she approach the nearest referee while the Boilermakers went on a fast break that put them up by three. Willis then got another opportunity but missed an off-balanced 3-pointer that would have tied the game with 52 seconds to play.
“It sucks we didn’t pull it out,” said Willis, who had 15 points and eight rebounds. “Because we’re in the tournament, that sucky feeling is amplified.”
Purdue built some momentum in the last few minutes of the contest as the home crowd of 3,766 cheered even louder. Prior to the game, Olivier and her players downplayed the significance of playing an NCAA Tournament game in the opponent’s home arena. Following the loss, Olivier reiterated that the environment did not affect UCLA but did make for some questionable officiating.
“I don’t think it affected us or Purdue,” Olivier said. “I think it affected the three other people out there on the court,” said Olivier, referring to the officials.
The Bruins’ senior point guard didn’t blame the loss on the location of the game but said that she didn’t like playing a postseason game in a not-so-objective environment.
“I think the crowd played a huge factor,” Blue said. “I don’t want to take credit away from Purdue, but I think it’s unfair that teams get to play at home in the NCAA Tournament. I’d like to see that changed for the future.”
Olivier didn’t want to speculate as to why her players, most notably her trio of standout guards, couldn’t make a shot in the last seven minutes of regulation.
“I though we got some good looks early on, but we didn’t get the best shots down the stretch, and we didn’t make our shots,” Olivier said.
Purdue will advance to play No. 1 seed North Carolina (31-1) in the Cleveland Regional semifinal on Sunday.
UCLA’s season abruptly ends just 50 hours after notching the program’s first NCAA Tournament win since 1999. Although it is the nature of the postseason, the sudden shift from a potential Sweet 16 birth to the season’s end in just a matter of minutes makes the flight back to Westwood a little surreal.
“It’s a weird feeling,” Olivier said.



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