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Women's Basketball

NESCAC Quarterfinal: #4 Williams College 45, #5 Connecticut College 44 Hynes Posts Double Double with 17 Points & 13 Rebounds for Camels

Box Score

WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass.—Down 10 points at halftime, the Williams women's basketball team rallied to pull out a 45-44 victory over Connecticut College in Saturday's NESCAC quarterfinal at Chandler Gym. With the win—their second over the Camels in eight days—the Ephs earned a date in the semifinals with No. 5 Tufts, who beat the Ephs by four points earlier this month.

Devon Caveney scored what proved to be the game winning basket for the Ephs. The sophomore guard dribbled into traffic, spun and split a pair of defenders to make a layup and give Williams a 45-41 lead. Not to be outdone, the Camels' Carlee Smith drained a three from in front of her own bench with 2:13 to go, narrowing the gap to one. Conn coach Brian Wilson called timeout to settle his team, and prepare them for a furious final two minutes.

Improbably—and yet utterly appropriately, given the defensive play that characterized the game's first 38 minutes—neither team scored the rest of the way. A three-pointer from Caveney rattled in and out; the Camels' Mairead Hynes had her shot blocked by Williams' Oge Uwanaka. The stakes got higher: with 20 seconds left, the Camels' Willa McKinley stole the ball and drove up the court, only to have her layup attempt blocked by Ellen Cook, who was then fouled. But Cook missed the first free throw of a one-and-one set, and a rebound by Smith gave the Camels the ball with 5.6 seconds left.

Wilson called timeout. Then Eph coach Pat Manning called timeout. Then Williams' Amanni Fernandez wrestled the inbounds pass away from Hynes and passed to Katie Litman, who passed to Cook, who held the ball for one more second before the final horn sounded.

The finish was as thrilling as it was sudden. It also represented a dramatic turnaround from the first half, in which the Camels methodically built up a double-digit lead that grew as large as 12 points. Hynes, who earned her third straight double-double, carried Conn throughout the period, scoring 12 points and consistently bowling over Eph defenders in the paint.

Hynes' effect on the Williams post game was apparent, as the Ephs began settling for longer-range shots, none of which fell for them. Williams was 0-6 from three-point range in the half, and during one eight-and-a-half minute stretch made just two baskets, both mid-range jumpers from Kristin Fechtelkotter.

Meanwhile, Willa McKinley—on her way to a 14-point game, her highest total in over a month—made a pair of three-pointers late in the period, putting the Camels ahead 30-20 heading into the break.

But nothing went right for Conn for most of the second half, as the Ephs held the visitors to an astonishing six points in the first 14:46 of the period, turning a 10-point deficit into a seven-point advantage.

Much of the Ephs' success in the period was due to Uwanaka, who played her finest all-around game of the season. At times, the junior forward appeared to be willing her team to victory. With the score 31-24, she backed Hynes off the ball and drained a hook shot, blocked a shot from Hynes, kicked a pass out to Caveney for the Ephs' first three-pointer, stole the ball from Hynes and dished to Lauren McCall for another quick bucket. The game was tied 31-31; Uwanaka had almost literally done it all.

Yet just when the Ephs, who tied a season-high with 11 steals, appeared set to shut down the Camels for the rest of the game, McKinley banked in a 23-footer with the shot clock winding down. The Eph lead was back to four at 43-39, and the stage was set for a taut finish that had the crowd on its feet for the final two minutes.

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