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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

NC State women upset No. 1 seed Texas, 76-66, to make Final Four

North Carolina State’s Zoe Brooks drives into the lane against Texas forward Madison Booker on Sunday at Moda Center in Portland.  (Tribune News Service)
By Jadyn Watson-Fisher</p><p>and Payton Titus Charlotte Observer

The Wolfpack women’s basketball team planned to get matching tattoos – even if some were temporary – if they made the Final Four. It’s time to book an appointment.

No. 3 seed N.C. State (30-7) defeated No. 1 seed Texas (34-4), 76-66, in the Elite Eight on Sunday after an elite – pun intended – performance in every area. It was arguably the team’s best performance all season as it held the Longhorns to one of their lowest-scoring outings of the season.

The shooting found a rhythm. The defense competed with desperation, even though it was often competing against larger bodies, and drew four charges. Zoe Brooks and Maddie Cox went diving onto the floor for loose balls, refusing to allow Texas to gain possession uncontested.

It also made great reads on offense. Just look at the number of assists. It recorded six on the first seven made shots. Those dropped in the second quarter, when Texas forced N.C. State into one-on-one.

Even when the ball went cold in the third and Texas made a run, the Wolfpack kept making clutch shots. It finished with 16 fast-break points.

“I think if we can get into (transition) early, that will help us. I feel like transition, it’s our bread and butter,” Saniya Rivers said on Saturday. “I feel like we’re a really fast team. We can get it out. Anybody can push. Anybody can score. I think that’s definitely going to be the key.”

The Wolfpack compared Texas’ defense to Duke, noting its ability to force turnovers and force opponents out of their offensive rhythms.

“When you’re trying to run a set or get the ball to a certain player, they make it tough,” coach Wes Moore said before the game. “If you’re not careful, you’ll end up continuing to retreat to get the ball, and now you’re catching it near half court. And you don’t score near half court. You’ve got to really make sure you’re doing backdoor cuts and you’re attacking the pressure.”

Texas rolled into Sunday’s regional final having won 15 of its previous 16 games, including seven straight. It averaged a 17.9-point margin of victory during that stretch and routed Gonzaga, 69-47, to advance to the Elite Eight.

The Longhorns disrupted N.C. State for a few stretches, including at the end of the first half, but the Pack had little problem with it. N.C. State found its shot in every area of the floor and put together three stretches with four straight baskets.

Aziaha James led all scorers with 27 points, including 21 in the first half. She started 5 of 5 from the perimeter and finished with seven triples. Four other Pack players notched double figures, with River Baldwin scoring all of her 16 points in the second half.

On the defensive end, N.C. State finished with seven blocks and six steals. Zoe Brooks contributed three, plus two straight deflections early in the fourth that don’t show up on the stat sheet.

The Wolfpack pulled off the victory, despite the game being somewhat overshadowed by the discovery that the distances of the 3-point lines were different. No changes were made to the court during the regional, and it was not noticed until Sunday.

N.C. State will play No. 1 overall seed South Carolina on Friday in Cleveland, Ohio. Rivers transferred toN.C. State from the Gamecocks’ program, where she won a national title in 2022. This is the second Final Four appearance in program history, with the first taking place in 1998.

(1) South Carolina 70: (3) Oregon State 58: Red, blue, orange, white and navy confetti fell on coach Dawn Staley’s head then spilled onto the floor.

Players crouched down, scooped up the excess pieces and threw them back in the air again, watching the colorful flecks of tissue paper float in the air through widened eyes. They made confetti angels and stored handfuls of it into their “Final Four” ball caps.

The Gamecocks celebrated with family, chosen and otherwise, after a 70-58 victory over Oregon State in the N.C.AA Tournament’s Elite Eight game. Behind their wide smiles and bright eyes, though, they’re already thinking about the task ahead. Yes, they’re Final Four bound again (for the fourth year in a row), but they didn’t come this far just to come this far.

They came here to win it all.

Two. More. Games.

“We don’t wanna get too excited, because last year we got too excited, and look what happened. Somebody hit us in the hole,” Raven Johnson, the nomenclator of this South Carolina team’s “revenge season,” said after Sunday’s regional finals game. “So we have unfinished business.”

“We’re trying to savor it,” sophomore Chloe Kitts said, “but we’re just so excited for the next step.”