Sports
Coming home · Placed in Kansas City Regional, Sooners' road to the Sweet 16 couldn't be more straighforward
Before the season began, the Oklahoma women thought they might return to the Final Four. Those hopes took a serious blow when Whitney Hand lost her season to a torn anterior cruciate ligament in late November.
Nonetheless, the Sooners got through the season with a 23-10 record, a No. 8 RPI thanks to a very difficult schedule and a No. 12 ranking in the final Associated Press Top 25, all of which added up to a what was announced Monday evening.
OU will return to its home court at Lloyd Noble Center for the first two rounds of the NCAA Tournament as the No. 3 seed in the Kansas City Regional, and will begin tournament play around 8:45 p.m. Sunday against South Dakota State, tournament champion of the Summit League.
"It looks like a pretty good bracket," Sooner point guard Danielle Robinson said.
That's the thing.
It looks like an extremely good bracket for the Sooners. So good, perhaps, that if they can get through two rounds on their home floor, as they should, the Final Four might be a very real possibility indeed.
If OU can get past the No. 14-seed Jackrabbits (23-10), they will face the winner of Sunday's 6:16 p.m. tip between No. 6-seed Georgia Tech (23-9) and No. 11-seed Arkansas-Little Rock (26-6) at a time to be determined a week from today.
And if the Sooners can win that game, they would very likely face No. 2-seed Notre Dame in Kansas City. A victory there would push OU into the regional final, quite possibly against No. 1-seed Nebraska (30-1).
It's those top two seeds that got the Sooners' attention upon learning of their Big Dance draw. OU has played and lost to both the Irish and the Huskers, but would relish a rematch with both.
"It think it's a good place for us," team captain and starting forward Amanda Thompson said. "We've got a couple of teams in our bracket that we've played before and it would be a nice matchup again."
OU fell 81-71 to Notre Dame the day after Hand was lost for the season. The game was played at the Paradise Jam in the U.S. Virgin Islands. After learning how to play without Hand all season since, and coming off a championship-game run at the Big 12 Tournament, making up 10 points on the Irish shouldn't come across as an impossible leap.
Back on Feb. 24, OU lost 80-64 to Nebraska, yet the score was misleading. The Sooners led by a point with less than 4 minutes to play on a day they missed16 layups.
"We felt like if we'd made just a few shots in that one, the outcome could have been different," OU coach Sherri Coale said.
So, should OU reach Kansas City, it might be very familiar with its opponents. Also in the Sooners' favor, the games will be fairly close to home. That's great news considering OU's fan base has always traveled well.
"I love the fact that we're staying in the Midwest," Coale said. "Really love the fact that if we play well enough to win two at Lloyd Noble Center we can go to Kansas City."
Of course, the Jackrabbits come first.
South Dakota State clipped Oral Roberts in its tourney final. Beyond that, OU knows very little. Today, the education should begin.
- Sports
-
-
Star power
A year ago at this time, Adrian Peterson’s place in the NFL was cemented. Not only was the dynamic Minnesota tailback looked upon as the top runner in the land, he was considered by many as the overall best player.
-
Judge’s ruling causes stir in cheer community
U.S. District Judge Stefan Underhill ruled July 21 that Quinnipiac University in Connecticut could not replace its women’s volleyball team with a competitive cheering squad. His reasoning was that cheerleading doesn’t fit the qualifications to be treated as an official collegiate sport.
-
The Jaguar way
Jenny Rollins first year as head fastpitch coach at Westmoore didn’t go as smooth as she would have liked. After taking over for Steve Schwarz last year, Rollins led the team to a 17-19 season and watched as her team was knocked out in the regional tournament.
-
For the kids · Thunder rookie takes time out to visit kids at camp
Cole Aldrich had his hands full Thursday afternoon. The 6-11, 250-pound Oklahoma City Thunder center was matched up against a group
-
Sooners place six players on all-conference
Oklahoma placed six players in seven slots on the preseason all-Big 12 Conference team Thursday. The seven positions were the most in the conference and the six players matched Texas for the league high.
-
US claims World Cup
OKLAHOMA CITY — It was Jennie Finch’s goodbye party, and Team USA sent her off the right way.
-
Surprise Cats headed to World Series · Southmoore summer squad headed for amateur Series
Shannon Enfield remembers the summer of 2008 very well. The Southmoore baseball coach was laying the groundwork for the program’s maiden voyage.
-
Players charged in hazing incident
PITTSBURG, Kan. -- Eleven members of the Seneca (Mo.) High School football team have been charged with a total of 39 counts of felo
-
Gym class hero
During his time at Moore High, track coach Chad Mashburn has learned how to spot talent, whether it’s kids who believe they are destined for greatness or those who don’t even know they have a shred of potential.
-
Thunder reaching out
The Oklahoma City Thunder are doing more than just building a winning basketball team. They are reaching out to communities outside of Oklahoma City to extend their appreciation for the support the entire state has shown them.
- More Sports Headlines
-





