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WSU women fall to Arizona


COUGARS

We didn't post right after the game, but we do have to unedited version of our game story about the women's team loss to Arizona. Read on.
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• Here's the gamer ...

LOS ANGELES – Sometimes the ball just won't go through the net, gravity be damned.

Such was the case with 10.6 seconds remaining in Washington State University's Pac-10 women's basketball tournament opener Thursday night at USC's Galen Center.

The Cougars' KiKi Moore, named to the conference's all-freshman team this week, drove to the middle of the key, stopped and popped from 8 feet. The ball hit the right inside of the rim, spun down, around, down again, but agonizingly for WSU, out.

Ten seconds, a missed Arizona free throw, and a last-second attempt from just inside midcourt from April Cook later, it was over.

The game, with Arizona winning, 62-60. And WSU's season, as the underclass dominated Cougars finished 8-22 in coach June Daugherty's third Pullman season.

"We had quite a few of those today," said Daugherty of Moore's late game-tying attempt, citing WSU's 35.4 percent shooting.

Quite a few, sure, but none as important.

Despite Arizona not starting first-team All-Pac-10 post Ify Ibekwe, benched for the first 8 minutes for "team issues," according to coach Niya Butts, the Wildcats broke out to a 12-point, first-half lead. They built it to 14, 48-34, with 11 minutes, 23 seconds left, riding the 22 points of Soana Lucet and Ibekwe's 14 points and 10 rebounds.

With nothing left to lose, the Cougars picked up the pressure. Sophomore guard Jazmine Perkins, who suffered an ankle injury near the end of the first half, returned and, along with Cook and Moore, harassed the Wildcats (14-16 and headed for a game today with No. 2 ranked Stanford) into mistake after mistake.

"Once we went with Jazz, we just stayed with her, because we didn't want the ankle to tighten up," said Daugherty, who played the same five players all but a few seconds of the final 8 minutes.

And Cook, 2 of 9 from the floor at that point, heated up.

"We wanted to do our best to contain Cook, she can get really hot," Butts said. "But she knocked down a couple open shots."

Cook and Perkins combined for 16 of WSU's final 21 points, with Cook finishing with 18 overall and Perkins nine, all in the second half.

Only timely baskets from the 6-foot-2 Ibekwe and Pac-10 freshman of the year Davellyn Whyte – 13 points on 6 of 20 shooting – kept the Cougars at bay.

Still, when Perkins followed Moore's miss with 2:14 left, WSU had pulled within five. Three misses by Whyte later, Rosie Tarnowski hit her only 3-pointer – the last of WSU's nine – from the left corner, 58.1 seconds remained and the Cougars were within two.

And they immediately forced a shot-clock violation.

But neither Moore's jumper or, after Ashley Frazier missed the front end of a one-and-one, Cook's 40-foot hope that hit the left side of the rim, found it's way through the net.

"We got some good shots," Daugherty said. "You know, Kiki's rims out, Carly (Noyes') rims out from 2-feet away. The execution was good, they just didn't go.

"We had days when they go and days when they don't."

This was one of those don't days. And that's how the season ends.

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• That's it for now. We'll be back at some point in the next few days. Until then ...



Vince Grippi
Vince Grippi is a freelance local sports blogger for spokesman.com. He also contributes to the SportsLink Blog.

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