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No. 6 Stanford 53, California 50
Saturday February 01, 2003
By JANIE McCAULEY AP Sports Writer
BERKELEY, Calif. (AP) Stanford associate head coach Amy Tucker
kept telling Tara VanDerveer to put Nicole Powell in the low post.
She said it once at halftime, and again with 10 minutes left.
The Cardinal's head coach finally listened with five minutes
remaining and the idea worked.
The preseason All-America forward scored nine of her 19 points
in the final 5:44 and also had 10 rebounds as No. 6 Stanford held
off rival California 53-50 on Saturday.
Stanford beat Cal for the fourth straight time and 19th in 20
meetings. It was also the 10th straight win for the Cardinal (17-2,
9-1 Pac-10) at Haas Pavilion.
The Bears (7-12, 3-7) were in the game until going cold on
offense late and allowing Stanford to score 13 unanswered points.
Powell, the team's leading scorer, made just her second start of
the season since returning Jan. 3 from a lower back injury. She
also had two assists down the stretch and a blocked shot when Cal
had a five-on-three fast break in the final minute.
``Nicole has made some great plays for our team,'' VanDerveer
said. ``She is a piece of the puzzle that we're putting back in.
She's a big piece. Our team has to figure out how to play with
Nicole. What a great problem to have.''
Cal's Sarah Pool missed a 3-pointer at the buzzer. Stanford has
won its last four road games by a combined nine points, and has
come back in the second half to win five times on the road this
season.
The teams played for the second time in four days, and Stanford
was coming off one of its best defensive efforts of the season in
the 72-48 home victory Wednesday.
Kristin Iwanaga scored 12 points and Leigh Gregory added 11 for
the Bears, who had a season-low 11 turnovers. Nihan Anaz, Cal's
second-leading scorer, struggled again. She was 1-for-11 for two
points Wednesday, and shot 4-for-23 for nine points Saturday.
Sebnem Kimyacioglu, Stanford's third-leading scorer at 10.6
points per game, was held scoreless for the first time all season
on 0-for-5 shooting.
The Cardinal often forced the ball to Powell, they were sloppy
starting the second half and struggled to control loose balls.
The Cardinal were 2-for-7 from 3-point range in the game,
season-lows for makes and attempts. Stanford entered the game
averaging 19 attempts from long range. It also shot a season-low
five free throws.
``We controlled the game with our defense, but Powell made some
incredible shots at the end,'' Gregory said.
Cal built a 37-32 lead on a basket by Olga Volkova, and made it
40-36 on a 3-pointer by Iwanaga with 10:38 left. She scored again
at 7:43 after Anaz stole a Stanford inbound pass and flipped a
behind-the-back pass to Iwanaga as Anaz was falling out of bounds.
Gregory followed with a 3-pointer as the shot clock expired, only
her second of the season, for a 46-38 lead at 6:46.
``I didn't realize they were up by eight,'' Powell said. ``I
wasn't too worried. I felt we were still in the game and thought we
would win.''
Stanford's pressure defense wasn't as effective as earlier in
the week. It helped that the Bears hit some of their open shots,
including two 3-pointers in the first 8{ minutes, and were more
aggressive taking the ball to the basket and going to the boards.
Cal shot only 33 percent to Stanford's 46 percent. But the Bears
trailed only 28-27 at halftime, partly because they shot seven more
times than the Cardinal and had nine offensive rebounds.
Stanford has won 29 of the past 32 games in the rivalry that
began in 1975.
A moment of silence was held before the game in memory of the
seven astronauts killed Saturday when the space shuttle Columbia
exploded.
(Copyright 2003 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
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