No. 7 Louisville women edge No. 11 Colorado 69-62
Louisville coach Jeff Walz asked Shoni Schimmel, a prolific
long-range shooter, to become more aggressive and drive the ball
inside.
Schimmel did just that against No. 11 Colorado on Saturday and
wound up with a season-high 30 points, including 13 on 16 free
throws, in No. 7 Louisville’s 69-62 win over the Buffaloes.
”She shot more free throws today than she has all season,”
Walz said. ”We’ve been talking to her about being more aggressive,
to take the ball to the basket and not always pulling up for jump
shots. She did that tonight.
Schimmel who secured the win for the Cardinals (12-1) in the
close game. Neither team led by more than six until Louisville
broke it open with a 7-0 run to go up 53-46 with 6:42 left.
Colorado (9-1) chipped away at the lead. Brittany Wilson’s layup
with 24 seconds left cut the gap to 65-62.
Schimmel sank two free throws to go up 67-62. The Buffaloes
couldn’t convert on the next possession and Schimmel’s layup sealed
the victory.
In last year’s 70-66 win over Louisville, Colorado held Schimmel
to four points.
”I watched the game clip and I worked on things that would help
me for today’s game,” Schimmel said.
When Louisville’s outside shots weren’t falling – the Cardinals
were 1 of 10 from 3-point range – it went inside, scoring 30 points
in the paint.
”What really hurt is today was dribble penetration,” Colorado
coach Linda Lappe said. ”It was tough for us to guard (Schimmel)
at times.”
Lexy Kresl led Colorado with 17 points.
Jen Reese, wearing a protective mask for a broken nose she got
in practice earlier this month, added 14 points and 14 rebounds for
Colorado.
Kresl had nine of the Buffaloes’ first 12 points and the
junior’s 3-pointer gave Colorado its first lead, 8-5. Louisville
battled back and went ahead 16-12 on a three-pointer by Shoni
Schimmel.
On two straight possessions, Asia Taylor twice completed a
three-point play after being fouled while making a layup,
bolstering Louisville’s advantage to 22-16 midway through the first
half.
Jude Schimmel’s two straight layups closed out the first half to
give Louisville a 33-29 halftime lead.
”We do a lot more half-court now, and they don’t expect us to
do that, and when they don’t expect it, we will run our regular
press,” Shoni Schimmel said. ”We just like to mix things up and
keep them on their toes.”
The Cardinals had 52 total rebounds, compared to 47 for
Colorado.
”We’ve been begging our players to do a better job on defensive
rebounding the whole season,” Lappe said. ”About five games ago I
said it was going to hurt us at some point. When you’re
outrebounding teams by 12 or 15, they don’t really understand what
they’re going to see when you face a team like Louisville, who
crashes hard and gets in there and puts pressure on you.”
The teams combined for 70 free throw attempts.
”Missing the free throw rebounds and not boxing out” were
miscues, said Kresl. ”They got a few too many opportunities on the
offensive boards.”