Following his futile attempt to stop Maryland center Brionna Jones from using her size and weight to dominate both ends of the court, New Mexico State coach Mark Trakh found it easy to explain what went wrong.
“It was like PT boats trying to attack a battleship out there,” Trakh said. “We were bouncing off right and left.”
Jones had 22 points and 12 rebounds as top-seeded Maryland cruised to a 75-57 victory Saturday in the opening round of the NCAA tournament.
The top-seeded Terrapins (31-2) will bring a school-record 25-game winning streak into Monday night’s matchup against No. 8 seed Princeton (31-0). The Ivy League champions advanced earlier Saturday by defeating Green Bay 80-70 with President Barack Obama in attendance.
Obama’s niece plays for Princeton, and his bracket has the Tigers defeating Maryland to advance to the Sweet 16.
If the President stayed to watch the second game, he would probably concede that Jones and the Terrapins appear tough to beat. The 6-foot-3 Jones was bigger and stronger than any one player the 16th-seeded Aggies assigned to cover her, and a collapsing zone defense did little to slow her down.
“My teammates got me the ball when I was open, and I just worked hard to stay open against the zone,” Jones said.
Jones went 7-for-10 from the floor and 8-for-9 at the line, finishing just two points short of matching her career high. She was pulled with 5:50 left.
Brianna Freeman scored 15 and Sasha Weber added 14 for the Aggies (22-8), who were making their first appearance in the NCAA tournament since 1988. The WAC champions were outrebounded, 45-20, and went 5-for-21 from 3-point range.
“If we could have knocked down a few more of those open shots,” Trakh said, “it might have been a closer game.”
Senior guard Laurin Mincy scored 19 points for the Terrapins, who haven’t lost since Dec. 3. Maryland went ahead for good at 7-6 and led by 20 points with 12 minutes left.
After the Aggies turned their focus to stopping Jones in the second half, the Terrapins looked to their guards for offense. Mincy scored 13 points after halftime, sinking four of her five field-goal attempts.
“We did a good job sharing the ball,” Jones said.
Jones had 16 points in the first half to stake the Terrapins to a 42-32 lead. Her eight rebounds over the first 20 minutes matched New Mexico State’s total during that span.
Jones scored 11 of Maryland’s first 15 points, and the Terrapins used a 7-0 spurt to go up 22-12. It was 27-18 before Jones collected a rebound under her own basket and put back a layup to start a three-point play.
It was more of the same in the second half, even though the Aggies packed the paint when Maryland had the ball. Undaunted, Jones made two free throws shortly after halftime, added a short jumper for a 48-36 lead and sank two more at the foul line to make it 53-38 with just over 14 minutes to go.
Jones was removed a minute later after being called for her third foul, but by then the Terrapins had the game well in hand.
New Mexico State is 0-3 in the NCAA tournament, losing previously in the first round in 1987 and 1988. The Aggies looked at this season, and this game, as the first step toward greatness.
“Maybe next year we’ll get an 11 or 12 [seed],” Trakh said. “Our goal is to come back next year and win a NCAA tournament game.”
The Terrapins, who had 20 turnovers, know they have to protect the ball better against a strong Princeton defense on Monday.
“You can’t have 20 turnovers against Princeton,” coach Brenda Frese said. “You’ve got to be able to value possessions.”
The Terrapins improved to 26-9 in the NCAA tournament under Frese, including 13-2 in games at home. They have won at least one NCAA tournament or WNIT game in each of the last 11 years.
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