No. 6 Virginia Tech Women’s Basketball Falls Late To No. 5 Notre Dame

Georgia Amoore and Virginia Tech couldn’t hang with Notre Dame in the fourth quarter. (Ivan Morozov)

In a top-10 clash in Cassell Coliseum, No. 5 Notre Dame pulled away from No. 6 Virginia Tech thanks to a dominant fourth quarter, winning 63-52 on Sunday afternoon.

Though the Hokies (10-1, 1-1 ACC) led for two-thirds of the game, they struggled in spurts offensively. The Irish took advantage, outscoring Tech 23-9 in the final frame. VT entered the period with a three-point lead, but the Irish (9-1, 1-0 ACC) used an 11-0 run over a five-minute span to seal the deal.

“Not the outcome we wanted,” Tech head coach Kenny Brooks said afterwards. “Disappointed that we kind of let it get away from us in the fourth quarter. … They had some players that made some plays, and kind of indicative of the outcome, we would come down and some shots we needed to make, we didn’t.”

Tech got out to a hot start and led 16-9 after 10 minutes, but things soon leveled out. Notre Dame slowly grew into the game; after making just three of its 15 field goals in the first quarter, it was 6-of-14.

Off the back of a triple-double vs. Merrimack, sophomore guard Olivia Miles struggled early for the Irish, missing eight of her first nine shots. Instead, the production came from many other places. Three other ND players joined Miles in double figures: Lauren Ebo (15 points), Sonia Citron (11) and Maddy Westbeld (10).

At the same time, Tech struggled, specifically after Georgia Amoore picked up her second foul at the 5:51-mark. The Hokies’ approach changed. They missed 15 consecutive baskets with the offense out of sync, which opened the door for ND. Brooks didn’t use his bench much at all either.

Kenny Brooks and Virginia Tech missed having Ashley Owusu on Sunday. (Ivan Morozov)

“When she got her second foul midway through the second quarter, it kind of took the air out of our momentum,” Brooks said.

With former All-American Ashley Owusu out due to a broken pinky on her shooting hand, D’asia Gregg was the lone sub for the entire afternoon. In the end, tired legs played an interesting role.

“I thought we were fatigued,” Brooks said. “They made some plays down the stretch and we just came up a bit short. … There were some shots we normally can make, but they made the plays when they had to.”

In the second quarter, however, Notre Dame roared back and tied the game at 22 before halftime. After the break, both sides heated up. The two heavyweights traded punches.

Tech’s success ran through Amoore, who scored 13 of her 20 points in that 10-minute span. The Hokies were also 4-of-6 from distance, and just like they had all season, they led entering the fourth quarter, 43-40.

“I just knew that we needed something, I just became more aggressive,” Amoore said.

Olivia Miles and Notre Dame had an efficient fourth quarter. (Ivan Morozov)

That’s when the tables turned, though. The Irish, who grew more efficient offensively with each quarter, couldn’t be stopped in the fourth. They made 9-of-15 shots, got to the free throw line (5-of-5) and the Hokies couldn’t keep pace.

Much of that was thanks to Miles. She scored 13 of her 16 points in the second half and finished with 13 rebounds, seven assists and five steals. And as Notre Dame did in seven of its nine previous games, it posted 40-plus points in the paint, finishing with 42.

The Hokies limited the three-ball – ND was 1-of-8 – but the combination of Ebo and Westbeld tore them up. On the flip side, Tech faced a very physical interior and scored just 16 points down low, the second-lowest mark of the year. Only Tennessee held VT to fewer (10).

“That’s always our gameplan, either pace or dominate inside,” Notre Dame coach Niele Ivey said. “That’s a great stat, 42 points in the paint. Credit to Ebo, I feel like she always comes in and gets a spark. She’s the most efficient post that I’ve coached.”

Elizabeth Kitley finished with 16 points and 20 rebounds, but she only attempted 12 shots. ND did a solid job limiting her opportunities, forcing Virginia Tech to find production from other places.

Notre Dame defended the Hokies well despite Elizabeth Kitley putting up 16 and 20. (Ivan Morozov)

The result: Kayana Traylor, Taylor Soule, Cayla King and D’asia Gregg combined for just 16 points and shot a combined 6-of-36 (16%). Defensively, the group had success, but as the game wore on, the Hokies couldn’t go punch-for-punch with the Irish.

It’s rare to see a group as talented as that one not be able to find success, but Tech didn’t have any answers. In fact, it’s just the third time in the last two years King hasn’t scored in a game. Tech lost each of the contests – to Liberty, Florida Gulf Coast and Notre Dame (Sunday), respectively.

Given the record crowd of 4,206 – the most fans at a game since 2008 – it was a disappointing result for the Hokies. But they’ll have more opportunities at top-10 wins as the season progresses against teams like North Carolina and NC State. They’ll be able to grow from Sunday’s defeat, starting on Wednesday at High Point.

“If you had told me that we had a chance to go 11-1 before the break,” Brooks said, “even with the preseason No. 13 ranking, I would’ve been like, ‘Okay, that’s really good.’ … They’ll let this sting and we’ll get back at it tomorrow and get ready for High Point.”

Box Score: Link 

13 Responses You are logged in as Test

  1. I think the loss of Owusu (spelling) was shown here. There was a very short VT bench in the game. I was shocked King didn’t have a point in the game. I was surprised that with 4 of ND players with 2-3 fouls early in the 3rd, Tech did not go into the paint more to get the starters to foul out. ND did user a deeper bench, perhaps to save the starters. Alas, I just HATE ND and wish we would crush them in everything from Football, Hoops, all the way to beer pong (not a varsity sport).

    GO HOKIES!!!

  2. Our interior defense *wasn’t* good and we let them drive right over and over. We have a good team and will learn from it

  3. Our interior defense was good and we let them drive right over and over. We have a good team and will learn from it

  4. We let them dictate the pace of the game after first quarter. Against bigger players the best offense is quickness.

    Passing the ball around the outside and jacking up a long shot before time expires is not an offense that is going to be successful.

  5. No knock against Kitley, but she struggles against physical centers (plays a little timid)- despite here height advantage. She should be getting to the stripe at least 15 times per game; if she missed her shot, at the very least she places the opponent in foul trouble. I’m sure Coach is working on that part of her game – GO HOKIES!

  6. From what I witnessed were bad shot selections, turn overs and no adjustments from the coach.

  7. We could not defend the size & strength of Ebo and the speed and skill of Miles. Ebo had her way with Liz. Kenny need to find someone on the bench to help. GO LADY HOKIES!!!!!!!

  8. Hard to miss 15 consecutive baskets; Or shoot 6 of 36 from the floor. Coach must not have been watching the game. Adjustments?

    1. She needed to take the ball to Ebo to make her play more defense. She passed it back out a lot.

  9. A team learns more from a loss than a win (so they say) – two good quarters and two bad quarters. I would rather VT beat ND in March anyway. On to the next game on Wednesday – WIN.

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