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Reading: No. 1-seeds UConn and UCLA turned strong second halves into Final Four tickets
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Home » This Week » No. 1-seeds UConn and UCLA turned strong second halves into Final Four tickets
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No. 1-seeds UConn and UCLA turned strong second halves into Final Four tickets

Yeti NewsBot
Last updated: March 29, 2026 11:16 pm
Yeti NewsBot
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No. 1-seeds UConn and UCLA turned strong second halves into Final Four tickets

UConn and UCLA Overcome Stubborn Foes, Punch Tickets to Final Four with Dominant Second Halves

The path to a national championship is rarely a straight line. It is a gauntlet of familiar ghosts and new challengers, each designed to expose a single flaw. On Sunday, the two remaining No. 1 seeds, UConn and UCLA, stared down that reality. Their journeys through the Elite Eight were masterclasses in championship poise, not early-round dominance. Both found themselves in dogfights, tested by the grit of lower seeds who refused to read the script. And both, with the season on the line, authored nearly identical second-half declarations, transforming tension into triumph and securing their spots in the Final Four.

Contents
  • A Rivalry’s Final Chapter and UConn’s Relentless Gear
  • UCLA’s Composed Response to a Physical Onslaught
  • Expert Analysis: The Hallmark of a Champion
  • Final Four Predictions: Clash of the Titans

A Rivalry’s Final Chapter and UConn’s Relentless Gear

For UConn, the ghost was a familiar one. As head coach Geno Auriemma has noted, Notre Dame has given UConn more trouble than any other program in women’s college basketball history. In what was perhaps the final act of this storied rivalry with the Irish’s conference departure, that old pattern held true—for three and a half quarters. The No. 6-seed Irish, undermanned but overflowing with fight, executed a game plan designed to muck up the game and frustrate the undefeated Huskies.

UConn’s superstar duo, Sarah Strong and Azzi Fudd, were smothered, combining for a season-low 10 first-half points. The rims, as Auriemma had criticized earlier in the tournament, seemed unkind. Yet, the Huskies led 32-25 at halftime, a testament to their depth. The source of life was an unexpected one: freshman Blanca Quiñonez. Showing preternatural calm in her first Elite Eight, Quiñonez’s fearlessness provided the scoring punch to keep the Irish at bay.

The third quarter began with the anticipated UConn surge, a 6-1 run to push the lead to 12. But Notre Dame’s brilliant guard, Hannah Hidalgo, answered personally, staving off the tide with a personal rally. The Irish hung around, breathing down UConn’s neck, turning the game into a possession-by-possession grind. The pressure was palpable; the Huskies’ historic season was in the balance.

Then, with under six minutes to play and the lead at a precarious nine points, the switch flipped. The rims that head coach Geno Auriemma had criticized eventually relented, and UConn’s offense found its ruthless rhythm.

  • KK Arnold attacked the paint for a tough finish.
  • Sarah Strong finally broke free for a mid-range jumper.
  • Azzi Fudd buried a signature three-pointer from the wing.

In a blink, a 9-point lead became 18. The final score, 70-52, belied the struggle that preceded it. UConn advances at a perfect 38-0, riding a 54-game winning streak and heading to its 25th Final Four in program history. They didn’t just beat Notre Dame; they broke them in the final minutes, a chilling reminder of their championship DNA.

UCLA’s Composed Response to a Physical Onslaught

While UConn battled history, UCLA faced a physical onslaught. The No. 3-seed Tennessee Lady Vols brought a trademark, bruising style to the Elite Eight, aiming to overwhelm the sleek Bruins with sheer force. For a half, it worked. UCLA’s offensive flow was disrupted, their shooters were harassed, and the game was played in a phone booth. The Bruins looked uncomfortable, their precision offense replaced by a scramble.

But great teams adjust. Halftime wasn’t for panic; it was for recalibration. UCLA emerged for the second half with a renewed focus on ball movement and exploiting spacing. They began to use Tennessee’s aggression against them, making sharp cuts and finding open shooters on the weak side. The Bruins’ defense, meanwhile, tightened its grip, turning Tennessee’s physical shots into contested, low-percentage attempts.

The transformation was systematic and devastating. A tight, low-scoring affair unraveled into a showcase of UCLA’s superior versatility. Star guard Kiki Rice took control, orchestrating the offense with calm authority, while forward Lauren Betts began to dominate the interior, securing key rebounds and altering countless shots. The Bruins methodically built their lead, stretching a narrow halftime margin into a commanding double-digit advantage. Their 78-65 victory was a testament to composure, proving they could win a street fight just as convincingly as a track meet.

Expert Analysis: The Hallmark of a Champion

What separates great teams from championship teams is not the ability to win easily, but the capacity to win when nothing is easy. Both UConn and UCLA displayed that quintessential trait. “You saw two No. 1 seeds get punched in the mouth today,” said one veteran analyst. “Notre Dame and Tennessee gave them everything they could handle—unique styles, maximum effort, strategic game plans. The response in the second half, particularly down the stretch, is what you’ll see in the history books.”

For UConn, the takeaway is the emergence of supplementary scorers like Blanca Quiñonez. In a tournament where every possession is magnified, having a freshman who is unafraid of the moment is an invaluable weapon. It allows stars like Strong and Fudd to breathe, knowing the offense doesn’t solely live and die with them.

For UCLA, the lesson is their adaptability. They won a game played at Tennessee’s preferred, rugged pace. This versatility makes them a nightmare to prepare for in a short-turnaround Final Four setting. They have proven they can win pretty, and now, they’ve proven they can win ugly.

Final Four Predictions: Clash of the Titans

The stage in Cleveland is now set for a monumental clash. UConn and UCLA will not meet in the semifinals, but their paths are fraught with elite challenges. The Huskies will likely face a fellow basketball blue blood, a team with the talent and pedigree to match their intensity for 40 minutes. UCLA will draw a dynamic opponent capable of matching their athleticism.

Key factors to watch will be:

  • UConn’s Health & Depth: Can their supporting cast continue to deliver under the brightest lights?
  • UCLA’s Poise: Having survived a physical war, will their offensive execution be sharper from the tip?
  • The Moment: Which team’s veterans can best steady the ship in what will be a pressure-cooker environment?

Both teams have answered their toughest call of the tournament. UConn exorcised a familiar demon with a trademark closing run, while UCLA proved its toughness extends beyond finesse. They didn’t just earn their Final Four tickets; they validated their No. 1 seeds through adversity. In Cleveland, they will find more of it, but as Sunday proved, they are built not just to survive it, but to thrive within it. The national championship will be won by the team that can replicate this Elite Eight formula one more time: withstand the storm, and then, with unshakable conviction, become it.


Source: Based on news from Yahoo Sports.

TAGGED:2024 March Madness2026 NCAA Tournament bracket submission timeNo. 1 seedsUCLA Final FourUConn Final Four
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