Box Score
By JANIE McCAULEY
AP Sports Writer
SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) - Tara VanDerveer knows it's not often her Stanford
team will win shooting 31 percent and getting outrebounded by 12.
The Cardinal coach had one explanation after it happened.
"That was a really strange game," she said.
Nicole Powell made all six of her free throws in the final 2:22 on the way
to 24 points to lead No. 12 Stanford to a 51-46 comeback win over Arizona in
the Pac-10 tournament championship game Monday night.
Susan Borchardt added 11 points with three 3-pointers as top-seeded Stanford
(24-6) earned an automatic bid into the NCAA tournament by ending Arizona's
six-game winning streak. The Cardinal rallied from 16 points down to win their
second straight tournament title and also came from behind to beat UCLA a night
earlier.
"We came out and they seemed to hit everything they were shooting," said
VanDerveer, in her 18th season as coach. "And we looked frantic. I don't look
at the score when it's that bad. We owe our Pac-10 championship to our zone
defense."
That defense held second-seeded Arizona (24-8) to its lowest offensive
output in nine seasons, scoring just 15 points in an ugly second half, and the
Cardinal scored their fewest points in a victory this season.
Powell struggled offensively for much of the game but outplayed star Arizona
center Shawntinice Polk in crunch time to earn tournament MVP honors.
Polk, a 6-foot-5 sophomore who was Pac-10 freshman of the year last season,
grabbed 18 rebounds, one off her career high and two shy of the tournament
record.
The Wildcats, who were 6-of-26 in the second half, are still a lock for an
NCAA berth. They were still upset about letting this one get away.
"With a team like Stanford, you can't be comfortable with a 16-point
lead," Arizona guard Aimee Grzyb said. "We've seen it on TV many times when
they've come back."
Polk played another smart game to stay out of foul trouble. She fouled out
of seven games this season.
She altered shots and dominated the middle all tournament, but missed two
free throws with 1:28 remaining and another with 42.4 to play.
Dee-Dee Wheeler had 12 points with a key 3-pointer late and was Arizona's
only player to score in double figures.
After Borchardt made a 3-pointer with 6 minutes left, Kelley Suminski
converted a three-point play 59 seconds later to pull the Cardinal within
42-41. Sebnem Kimyacioglu then swished a 3 from the left wing - her only basket
and only shot - at 3:51 for Stanford's first lead of the game, 44-42.
Powell scored Stanford's first six points of the second half and the
Cardinal pulled within 35-34 on Suminski's 3-pointer at 13:40, but then went
without a field goal for 7:40.
"None of us panicked. We knew we'd come around and play the way we played
all season," Suminski said.
VanDerveer hinted after Stanford's semifinal win over UCLA that maybe by
playing zone against the Bruins her team would have more energy in the title
game. They didn't seem to tire in the second half.
"The first half, we played loose and we played confident," Arizona coach
Joan Bonvicini said. "We were able to go inside and we were able to shoot
outside and control the tempo. When they went to a zone, we were a little
hesitant. It was really some decision making."
When Stanford collapsed three players on Polk late in the first half, Polk
flipped the ball to Grzyb for a 3-pointer during a 12-2 Arizona spurt.
The teams split their regular-season meetings and shared the Pac-10 title
after both went 14-4 in conference play. But Stanford earned the higher seed
based on a complicated tiebreaker - which came down to Arizona splitting the
season series with UCLA and Stanford sweeping the Bruins.
Borchardt, playing with her right knee wrapped after straining it during
Saturday's 80-55 win over California, scored the final eight points of the half
to pull the Cardinal within 31-23 at the break.
Stanford effectively switched to a zone defense to disrupt Arizona's
offensive flow, holding the Wildcats scoreless over the last 4:39.
Polk already had six rebounds in the first 5˝ minutes and Stanford missed
eight easy lay-ins and four other shots from close range in its 31-percent
first half (10-for-32) to fall behind by as many as 16.
At one point, the stat sheet read: Arizona 17, Nicole Powell 8. Stanford
began the game 4-for-14 - with Powell going 4-of-6 - and didn't get points from
anyone other than Powell until Chelsea Trotter's short jumper at 10:21.