No. 1 South Carolina women top No. 5 NC State

Published 12:00 am Wednesday, November 10, 2021

By Aaron Beard

AP Basketball Writer

RALEIGH — The top-ranked South Carolina Gamecocks sure looked ready for their marquee season-opening matchup of Final Four contenders. They got off to a quick start, played with composure to protect the lead and never let fifth-ranked North Carolina State look comfortable.

Zia Cooke scored 17 points and South Carolina never trailed in its 66-57 win against N.C. State on Tuesday night, earning an impressive road win that ended the Wolfpack’s long nonconference home winning streak.

The Gamecocks scored the first six points and had a response any time the Wolfpack tried to make a move. Cooke paced an offensive team effort that shot 49%, while preseason Associated Press All-American Aliyah Boston controlled the paint and helped shut down Elissa Cunane — N.C. State’s star and the preseason Atlantic Coast Conference player of the year.

“I thought we came in just well-prepared,” Gamecocks coach Dawn Staley said. “We didn’t know how many points we were going to be able to score because of what they were going to do as far as sagging (inside). So we just had to make sure that we locked down.”

Boston finished with eight points, six rebounds and five blocks for South Carolina.

Raina Perez and Jakia Brown-Turner were the only Wolfpack players to find any rhythm, each finishing with 18 points. Cunane finished with eight points on 4-for-11 shooting with three rebounds despite failing to hit a basket until the third quarter — a major problem for an offense that relies on her as the interior presence.

N.C. State shot 41% overall, never managing to consistently string together enough stops or solid scoring possessions to catch South Carolina. Not even having a loud home crowd again in Reynolds Coliseum helped.

“That’s why they’re No. 1 in the country,” Wolfpack coach Wes Moore said. “They just really defensively took us out of anything. We looked very lost out there most of the night.”

The Wolfpack got within a point three separate times in the third quarter, the last coming at 37-36 on Brown-Turner’s baseline drive. But South Carolina countered by scoring on five straight possessions and seven of eight to end the third quarter.

The Gamecocks went on their finishing kick early in the fourth, with Cooke knocking down a transition 3-pointer near the South Carolina bench to push the margin to 51-41 with 7:57 left. Destanni Henderson (14 points) added a jumper with the shot clock winding down, then Boston scored inside against Cunane while being fouled for a 55-41 lead with 4:51 left.

It also helped that South Carolina committed zero fourth-quarter turnovers. N.C. State got no closer than eight, ending a 40-game home nonconference winning streak.

N.C. State entered the season with its highest expectations in recent memory with the return of the top eight scorers from a two-time ACC Tournament champion that went on to earn the program’s first No. 1 seed in the NCAA Tournament. N.C. State got limited work from Kayla Jones, who came off the bench in her recovery from knee surgery, and is without Jada Boyd due to a hand injury. Moore said the team is “still a work in progress” when it comes to blending in new transfers Diamond Johnson (Rutgers) and Madison Hayes (Mississippi State). “Probably not a great night to play the No. 1 team in the country,” Moore said.

UP NEXT: N.C. State hosts Wofford on Friday night, part of a season-opening five-game homestand that includes power-conference matchups with Florida and Kansas State.

No. 24 VaTech stops Davidson

BLACKSBURG, Va. (AP) — Aisha Sheppard hit 7-of-10 3-pointers and scored 25 points to lead No. 24 Virginia Tech to a 76-57 win over Davidson on Tuesday night in the season opener for both teams.

Purdue transfer Kayana Taylor added 18 points for the Hokies, who have won 61 straight nonconference home games and eight straight season openers. Sheppard set the Virginia Tech record with 87 3-pointers last season when the Hokies ended a 15-year  NCAA Tournament drought.

Adelaide Fuller paced the Wildcats with 15 points.