MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -After watching Northern Iowa shock top-seeded
Kansas in the men's tournament on Saturday night, Nebraska women's
coach Connie Yori turned to her husband and said, ``I hope it's not
UNI's year.''
Her Cornhuskers proved that it definitely is not, on the women's side at least.
Kelsey Griffin had 22 points and nine rebounds to lead Nebraska to
an 83-44 victory over 16th-seeded Northern Iowa in the first round of
the NCAA women's tournament Sunday night.
Dominique Kelley added 11 points for Nebraska (31-1), the top-seeded team in the Kansas City regional.
``That was definitely motivation that you have to bring it every
night in order to stay playing,'' Griffin said of the Panthers' upset
of the Jayhawks. ``We definitely needed that.''
Lizzie Boeck had 10 points and eight rebounds for Northern Iowa
(17-16), one day after the Panthers men's team busted brackets across
the country by ousting Kansas in the second round of the tournament.
After a shaky start, the Huskers bounced back from a loss to Texas
A&M in the Big 12 tournament semifinals to show that they are still
a team to be reckoned with in this tournament.
The Huskers, who were 15-16 a year ago when Griffin missed the
season with a foot injury, went 29-0 in the regular season and have
designs on challenging blue bloods UConn, Tennessee and Stanford - the
other three No. 1 seeds - for a national title.
On a day when two 11-seeds and a 12th seed scored upsets, Nebraska
wasn't about to become the second No. 1 seed in women's tourney history
to lose in the opening round.
``I definitely think it helps with our nerves,'' guard Lindsey Moore
said. ``We got that first one under our belts, calm down and actually
focus and be able to execute.''
Yori didn't take it easy on Northern Iowa coach Tanya Warren, her teammate in college at Creighton.
The Huskers blew the game open with a 22-7 spurt to start the second
half, forced 17 Panthers turnovers and made 10 of 20 3-pointers to move
on to the second round.
From the way the Panthers started, it was clear they were still
inspired from the men's team shocker the night before. Ali Farokhmanesh
and the ninth-seeded men upended the tournament's No. 1 overall seed in
Kansas with a combination of clutch shot-making and a refusal to back
down against the best the Big 12 had to offer.
The Panther women were similarly undaunted early against the
Cornhuskers, the Big 12 regular season champs. The Northern Iowa
defense pestered Nebraska into a slow start from the field, forcing
misses on seven of the Cornhuskers' first nine attempts.
``We thought it was our turn,'' senior Danielle Wubbens said. ``The
men, they did something great and we thought we could do something,
too. We gave it our best shot. The ball just wasn't going through the
hoop tonight.''
Midway through the period, the Huskers were clinging to a 20-18 lead
before they turned up the heat on defense to start to overwhelm the
Panthers, who shot 29 percent for the game and 2 for 23 from 3-point
range.
Nebraska had eight steals in the opening period and forced 12
turnovers. A 3 by Yvonne Turner gave Nebraska a 35-24 lead just under
three minutes before the half, and the Panthers never challenged after
that.
Panthers guard Jacqui Kalin, an All-Missouri Valley Conference
player and the team's leading scorer during the regular season, missed
her first 11 shots and finished with two points on 1-for-12 shooting.
``I'm extremely proud of this group and what they accomplished,''
said Warren, whose Panthers beat Bradley, Illinois State and Creighton
to win the conference tournament title and get to their first NCAA
tournament. ``Hopefully this is the start of some good things for this
program.''