Virginia Tech Women’s Basketball Avenges 2021 Defeat, Beats Tennessee In Knoxville

Kayana Traylor helped the Hokies to a huge win on the road at Tennessee on Sunday. (Virginia Tech sports photography)

Kayana Traylor found herself wide open in the mid-range on the first possession of the second half for No. 9 Virginia Tech. A Tennessee basket just brought the Lady Vols within two points. The Hokies’ guard, who was in the starting lineup due to Ashley Owusu’s injury she suffered on Thursday, knocked the shot down with her left hand at the elbow.

Then again, Tennessee knocked down another shot to bring itself within two, to which Traylor was in the same spot again. Splash. Tech went on a 10-0 run in just over two minutes in the third quarter. Thanks to Traylor’s two baskets, the Hokies were once again rolling on offense, and the lead stretched to 12, 46-34.

The next time the game was that close was with 10 seconds remaining, though. The Lady Vols outscored Tech 13-8 in the fourth and closed the gap to two with. But Jordan Horston missed a game-tying basket in the paint over Elizabeth Kitley — a long shot that D’asia Gregg pulled in to seal the game for Virginia Tech — which gave the Hokies a 59-56 win in Thompson-Boling Arena in Knoxville, Tenn. on Sunday afternoon.

“During that stretch last year, they just kept making plays,” Tech head coach Kenny Brooks said about his team’s ability to finish on Sunday. “And we didn’t make as many plays as we probably wish we had. But we made a couple of layups. Liz had a big jumper after she really couldn’t get one to fall all night. I thought that Gregg was really good. She had a couple of loose ball rebounds.

“I told the kids, ‘Regardless of what’s going to happen, you want to be able to say I went to Tennessee. And how do you want to finish this? … [So I want it] to be something that they always remember. We made sure that they understood that before the game started.”

It was an unfamiliar, yet familiar role for Traylor, who started her first game on Sunday since last March’s season-ending loss to Florida Gulf Coast in the NCAA Tournament. She started 12 games for Tech last season and spent Sunday in the spotlight for the Hokies once again. 

But that path to starting on Sunday wasn’t simple — she missed Thursday’s game with a non-COVID illness. But after Owusu’s hand injury she suffered in the win over Nebraska, Traylor got another chance as a starter. She had a huge impact, too, shooting 7-of-11 with a team-high 18 points. She also overshadowed the struggles of Kitley and Georgia Amoore, who were a combined 5-of-27 with 16 points, though Cayla King contributed 11.

Cayla King was Tech’s second-highest scorer with 11 points against the Lady Vols. (Virginia Tech sports photography)

“It was just a little bit of sickness,” Traylor said about her illness, “but I was able to come back the day after our game and get a couple practices in. I felt good.”

It was one of those wins that wasn’t pretty on the offensive end, but the Hokies played well on defense and just well enough on offense to pull it out. It’s a sign the team is taking another step in the right direction, though. Tech’s stars had off-days, yet the program still won somewhere where winning is never easy.

“We have kids who are capable, and no one cares who gets the credit,” Brooks said. “They just want to win a basketball game, and that’s a recipe for success.”

Tennessee, too, was a man-down on offense with its leading scorer, Rickea Jackson, inactive on Sunday due to a “coach’s decision” that was announced by the Lady Vols prior to tip-off.

It was clear that both squads missed some offensive firepower from the tip. After Jasmine Powell turned the ball over, which resulted in a King steal, Amoore slowed the offense down. To that point, both teams were a combined 1-of-11, with the Hokies scoring the first two points on a Traylor basket. 

Calmly, Amoore passed the ball to Traylor, who drew two free throws. She knocked both of them down, to which Tech went on a 10-5 run before the media timeout hit in the first quarter. 

Tech’s shots then became more fluid. Kitley nailed a mid-range jumper over Tamari Key. Then King did the same, and then again from downtown, to which Amoore followed with a three of her own to give Tech a 14-5 lead halfway through the first quarter.

After missing its first six shots, Tennessee slowly grew into the matchup, knocking down five of its next seven shots. But Tech stuck around and led at the end of the period, 23-13.

D’asia Gregg and the Hokies made some critical plays down the stretch in the victory. (Virginia Tech sports photography)

The Lady Vols hit their stride in the second quarter, though, and trailed by four, 34-30, at intermission. They drew even closer at the start of the second half, too. Horston and Jasmine Powell traded baskets with Traylor to bring their squad to within two. But thanks to a 10-0 run that saw King drain two 3-pointers, Tech’s lead grew back to double digits with just over six minutes left in the third period.

“We had a couple of bad possessions defensively to start the second half,” Brooks said. “And [Traylor] came off the ball screen a couple times. But she had two or three of those mid-range jump shots.

However, like it had done all day, Tennessee slowly chipped away at the Hokies’ lead. The Lady Vols hung around in the third quarter and only trailed by eight points entering the fourth. Once it began, Tech’s lead was fluid, moving from eight points to six, then back up to eight by the middle of the period.

Then, the Lady Vols trimmed it down to four points with 45 seconds left on Key’s fifth bucket of the night. After that, three points in 13 seconds from Horston cut the margin to two points. And Virginia Tech struggled late, hitting just three field goals in the fourth quarter.

After Amoore turned the ball over on a jump ball, Horston got another chance to play hero ball, but the shot rang long and Gregg ended up with the basketball with a second left.

Gregg was then fouled and sent to the line for two more free throws. Like her first trip to the stripe, she made one to increase Tech’s lead to three, 59-56. Tennessee had one final heave at the buzzer, but Horston’s half-court prayer fell short of the rim, giving Tech its first signature win of the season.

“Just proud of our group,” Brooks said. “Eerily similar to last year where we control the game going into the last five minutes and we falter down the stretch. We learned a lot from that game, and even though we didn’t finish it the exact way we wanted to, I thought we were resilient.”

Box Score: Link 

17 Responses You are logged in as Test

  1. It’s embarrassing to watch ‘officials’ make so many really bad calls. Sure basketball is one of the toughest sports to call. But – seriously.

    No matter. It was a great day for VT basketball.

  2. Agree on the officiating. Playing 5 on 7 is tough. (Didn’t count the female official as not sure she ever used her whistle.) That jump ball at the end was the worst call I think I have ever seen. To add insult you could see the clock was at 10 sec and they proceeded to put 10.9 sec on the restart. Great job girls in one of the toughest arenas in the country!!

  3. Who let Tamika Catchins commentate? I haven’t heard English that bad since mush mouth tried to pronounce Fat Albert’s name. Good Lord! Give me a shot at it since it is apparent ESPN will hire anyone.

      1. To be honest, I didn’t. I just hit the replay, missed the intros and was wondering if once of the announcers had a stroke or speech impediment. More power to her – considering she is deaf she did a great job.

    1. She is deaf and is a great example for those to overcome their disabilities. Please research before posting hate. She has improved greatly over the years with commentary and works really hard. Imagine how hard it must be for her to put herself out there like that. Also she had great things to say about VT.

  4. It seemed like the break in the game had an impact on the Hokies, anyone comment on that situation?

  5. Whoever at the ACC who is in charge of the officiating for women’s basketball should be thoroughly ashamed. The women’s officiating is atrocious at best and its been that way for years. Today they allowed Tn players to hack Kittley as she shot or tried to, failed to call a single over the back when players were blocking out and called jump balls like they had a quota to achieve. One jump ball late in the game, two Tn players mugged Georgia before one of them may have actually touched the ball with a nail.. It’s truly sad. The poor officiating has taken much of the finesse from the women’s game and replaced it with out right thuggery!

    1. It was horrible – but it was at UT and that was a homer job and SEC vs ACC job also. The idiot dude called the jump ball before the UT even had a hand on the ball as she was over Georgia’s back with a minute left. BS-homer call at UT…par for the course.

    2. The UT boosters are in a contest with the Bama boosters to deliver sacks of cash to refs, prospects, and poll voters.

    3. The one over the back on Kitley that almost knocked her over (and no call) was seriously pathetic.

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