Women’s Basketball Survives 2 OT thriller over Japan will face Canada in Gold Medal Game

Women’s Basketball Survives 2 OT thriller over Japan will face Canada in Gold Medal Game

GWANGJU, South Korea – July 11, 2015 – The USA Women’s World University Games trailed by as many as 15 points Saturday night, but the USA outscored Japan 16-12 in the second of two overtime periods to win its semifinal matchup, 102-98, and advance to Monday night’s gold-medal game.

It was only the second overtime game for the United States in World University Games history, and the first that needed two additional periods to decide. The USA had not played an overtime game at the WUGs since dropping a 93-89 decision to Yugoslavia at the 1987 games in Zagreb, Yugoslavia.

“That was one of the craziest games I’ve seen in a while or been part of as a coach,” said USA head coach Joe McKeown (Northwestern). “I want our players to be able to enjoy it and move forward. We’ll get ready right away for the gold-medal game. That’s why we came here.”

The United States had a few chances to put the game away a bit earlier. Nearing the end of regulation, Mercedes Russell (Tennessee/Springfield, Ore.) knifed inside to score off a pretty feed from Sydney Wiese (Oregon State/Phoenix, Ariz.) to put the USA ahead, 77-75 with 1:07 to go. The teams traded missed 3-pointers before Japan’s Manami Fujioka was able to tie the game with 10.5 seconds to go.

McKeown used a timeout to draw up a play, but Russell missed the shot. Japan got the rebound before Wiese stole the ball and shoveled it ahead to Russell as the second ticked down. Russell got off a last-ditch effort from about five feet, but her attempt drew iron as the horn sounded, sending the game into overtime.

Erica McCall (Stanford/Bakersfield, Calif.) dented the scoring column first for the United States when she scored

inside on an assist from Jordin Canada (UCLA/Los Angeles, Calif.) 16 seconds into the extra session. Following a Japanese basket, Canada scored a bucket of her own before Aerial Powers (Michigan State/Detroit, Mich.) nailed a 3-pointer to put the United States ahead, 84-79, with 3:34 to go. Nursing a two-point lead, Russell scored 1:20 later to put her team ahead, 86-82, but that was the last time the USA could put the ball in the net.

The last sequence of the first overtime was hectic. McCall pulled down a rebound on the defensive end with 25.7 seconds to go. Canada missed a shot with about 10 seconds to go, but Russell came up with the rebound. Her attempt was off, but McCall was fouled in a scramble and sent to the line with two free-throw attempts and no time left on the clock. Unfortunately she was unable to convert and another five minutes went up on the clock.

“Emotional is the right word,” said McCall when asked to describe the win. “That was absolutely crazy. After those two free throws, I was going ballistic, but my teammates all helped me keep my composure by telling me that we’re going to be ok, we’re going to fight back and get it. I can only thank them for helping me out in that situation.”

McCall and the USA made it a mission to leave little no doubt. The Stanford Cardinal forward scored at the 4:41 mark of the second overtime and the United States would never trail again. The lead grew to as many as eight points, but Japan would not bow out quietly. McCall stepped to the stripe once again with 24 seconds to go and buried a pair to put the USA at the century mark with a 100-95 lead.

A late 3-pointer by Masami Honda made it a two-point game with under 10 seconds to play, but Courtney Williams (South Florida/Folkston, Ga.) went 2-for-2 at the line to put the victory on ice and send the United States in Monday’s gold-medal game.

“I think we kind of had a chip on our shoulder,” said Russell about the second overtime. “We had to make a gap, and we had to put the thing away. We had to tell them that we weren’t here to lose.”

Japan was red-hot from the field to start the game. With the game tied 6-6 with just under three minutes gone by in the opening period, the Japanese unleashed a 14-4 run that put the USA in a double-digit deficit, 20-10, with 4:03 to go. Japan would eventually push the cushion to 15 points, 26-11, with 96 seconds to go after Masami Honda connected from downtown.

Japan shot an improbably high 63 percent (12-of-19) in the first period with 12 field goals, including four from 3-point range. On the other end of the floor, the United States went only 6-of-17 (35 percent) with five turnovers.

The United States steadily chipped away at its 14-point first-quarter deficit as the second period began. The team would come as close as four after a free throw from Russell made it 37-33 with 3:42 to go in the half. A late jumper by Masami with 2.3 seconds to go in the second quarter helped Japan take a 43-36 lead into the locker room.

“We knew we needed to start it on defense,” said Powers. “We knew we could score and it had to start with stops on defense. After the first quarter, we were all saying that we had three whole quarters left, so there’s no need to panic and no need to get down on ourselves. We’re basketball players. They hit us in the mouth first, but we need to fight back.”

Powers got to the charity stripe early and often in the third quarter and her aggressiveness, plus some clutch free-throw shooting, helped tie the game a 45 points apiece with 6:11 remaining in the third period. After Japan has taken back the lead, Wiese got a steal in the backcourt and a bucket to tie the game at 52-52 with 2:23 to go. The USA went ahead 57-54 when Williams beat the shot clock with a 3-ball from the left wing, but Japan scored four unanswered points to close the period, grabbing a 58-57 lead.

Powers also gave her team its largest lead of the fourth quarter, 71-66, when she stole the ball and scored a layup with 5:35 remaining. Japan went on a 5-0 run that would set up the dramatic finish.

Russell poured in a game-high 25 points and she tied Powers with a game-high 14 rebounds to secure her third double-double at the World University Games. She also played a game-high 47 minutes. Powers chipped in with 24 points for her first double-double of the tournament. Two other players also achieved the statistical feat in the four-point win. McCall added 19 points and 11 rebounds, while Williams finished with 17 points and 10 rebounds. Williams also matched Canada with a game-high five assists, while she and Powers added three steals apiece.

The USA pounded Japan on the offensive glass. The squad, which owned a decided height advantage, corralled 26 offensive rebounds, leading to 30 second-chance points. Japan, on the other hand, had 16 offensive rebounds, but only five second-chance tallies. Overall, the United States owns a rebounding margin of +20.6 at the 2015 World University Games. It has pulled down 103 offensive rebounds alone, an average of 20.6 per game.

The United States advances to play another North American unit, Canada, for the gold medal on Monday night at 6 p.m. local time (5 a.m. EDT/4 a.m, CDT) at Yeomju Gymnasium. It will televised on ESPNU. The two met in a scrimmage before the World University Games began with the USA winning the workout, 68-51. Canada won the last matchup at the World University Games in 2001, claiming a 68-67 victory in Beijing, China. The USA did go on to win a gold medal that year, defeating host China in the final, 87-69.

“It should be a great game,” said McKeown. “Canada played really, really well against Russia tonight. We’re going to have to really guard them. For fans of the World University Games, you’re going to see two teams have had a great tournament. It should be a lot of fun.”

The USA is 106-15 all-time at the World University Games with nine gold medals to its credit, plus six silver medals. The USA has won gold medals in the past five WUGs in which it has competed (2001, 2005, 2009, 2011, 2013).

McKeown is assisted by collegiate head coaches Holly Warlick from the University of Tennessee and Tanya Warren from the University of Northern Iowa.

Players eligible for the 2015 USA World University Games teams must be U.S. citizens who currently are enrolled as full-time college students with remaining eligibility for the 2015-16 school year.

Held every other year, the World University Games is organized by the International University Sports Federation (FISU). The WUGs are a multi-sport competition open to men and women who are between the ages of 17 and 24 (born between 1/1/88 and 12/31/98), who are enrolled as a full-time college student with remaining eligibility for the 2015-16 school year.

 

Additional Quotes: USA Women’s World University Games Team 102, Japan 98 (2OT)

 

USA head coach Joe McKeown (Northwestern)

Thoughts on the win over Japan:

That was one of the craziest games I’ve seen in a while or been part of as a coach. I want our players to be able to enjoy it and move forward. We’ll get ready right away for the gold-medal game. That’s why we came here.

 

On playing from behind in the first quarter:

We had worked against [Japan’s offense] a little bit. They did the same things they did to Australia in the quarterfinals, and that they’ve done the whole tournament. We just were a step behind them. They made shots and they kept us off balance. We switched our defense a little bit at the start of the second quarter and that helped us get going.

 

What was your message with your team down big after a quarter:

The biggest thing to remember when you’re playing with a 24-second clock and four quarters is that its early and you have a lot of possessions. We had to shore up defensively. We were scoring. It’s not like we couldn’t score, we were just breaking down defensively. We kept saying that we’ll make a run, just keep shooting. It was a crazy game.

 

On the resiliency:

There are so many plays going through your head after a game like that, that could’ve gone either way. I’m proud of how resilient we all were.

 

On Erica McCall:

I’m proud of Erica McCall. She was in a unique position with nobody at the line and no time left. I think it was a great experience for her. I think she showed so much fight and heart after that moment, and to me that’s the reason why we won.

 

On the facing Canada for the gold medal:

It should be a great game. Canada played really, really well against Russia tonight. We’re going to have to really guard them. For fans of the World University Games, you’re going to see two teams have had a great tournament. It should be a lot of fun.

 

Mercedes Russell (Tennessee/Springfield, Ore.)

How does it feel to win a game like that?:

I’m feeling super relieved. We had a long one, but we pulled it out and we’re all excited for Monday. It should be a great game.

 

On overcoming the slow start:

I wouldn’t say anything was surprising. We knew they were fast and that they were going to drive and kick and shoot threes. I think we had a slow start on defense. Come Monday, we’re not going to be able to do that. If teams keep pushing us and pushing us, eventually we’re going to fall. From the start of the game, offensively and defensively, we have to be ready.

 

What were you telling each other to get back in the game:

We just had to keep going on runs. It was pretty evident that we had a height advantage against them, so we had to keep crashing the offensive boards and going up strong to get and-ones.

 

On asserting themselves in the second overtime:

I think we kind of had a chip on our shoulder. We had to make a gap, and we had to put the thing away. We had to tell them that we weren’t here to lose.

 

Erica McCall (Stanford/Bakersfield, Calif.)

On the win against Japan:

Emotional is the right word. That was absolutely crazy. After those two free throws, I was going ballistic. My teammates all helped me keep my composure by telling me that we’re going to be ok, we’re going to fight back and get it. I can only thank them for helping me out in that situation.

 

On Japan’s style of play:

They were quick and scrappy. They knew how to attack and kick out. We really just had to adjust. Help side is a really big thing that you’re used to doing in college basketball and right now in these situations, we had to limit our help. They’re a really good team and I’m glad we could pull it out.

 

On adjustments later in the game:

The biggest thing was just talking to each other, communication. We had to know where our teammates were and who was coming through, cutting. Communication was definitely the biggest thing.

 

On facing Canada for the gold medal:

I think they’ll bring a lot of inside-out play, using their posts. They’ve got quick guards who like to attack.

 

Aerial Powers (Michigan State/Detroit, Mich.)

On the win against Japan:

I feel like I’ve never played in a game that crazy. Maybe my freshman year against Dayton, but here we’re playing for something big. We’re playing for the gold. They came out firing tonight, they were hot. For us to get the lead, and to win the game was truly incredible.

 

On Japan’s quick start:

They were hitting threes, draining threes. At first we thought they were going to shoot a lot, but they were driving us to the rack and getting wide-open layups because we were not helping as much. Then after that we kind of got off our game plan. They started knocking down threes and building up the lead.

 

On adjustments throughout the game:

We knew we needed to start it on defense. Don’t worry about offense. We knew we could score and it had to start with stops on defense. After the first quarter, we were all saying that we had three whole quarters left, so there’s no need to panic and no need to get down on ourselves. We’re basketball players. They hit us in the mouth first, but we need to fight back.

 

On taking control offensively:

That’s the player I’ve always been. I like that situation and being in control a little bit. When I saw open spots, I just took it. A lot of times they were helping so much that they would foul me and I would go up and draw the foul. I was able to knock my free throws down.

 

On facing Canada for the gold medal:

I know they have bigs just like we do. We know it will be a back and forth game. We’ll just have to wait and see.