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UK Women Fall To Baylor 90-72 In The Sweet 16

UK Athletics

Kentucky's run through the NCAA Tournament ended with a 90-72 defeat to the Baylor Lady Bears.

The Wildcats had no answer for stopping Baylor point guard Odyssey Sims who scored 25 points, including her 1,000th this season.

The victory came a year after the Lady Bears were eliminated in the regional semifinals by Louisville in one of the biggest upsets in women's basketball history. Baylor's now back in the regional final for the fourth time in five years.

This might be the most unexpected of the trips as the Lady Bears lost two-time AP Player of the Year Brittney Griner and four other seniors.

"With what we lost people didn't know what to expect," Baylor senior Makenzie Robertson said. "That game was motivation to prove people wrong. It means the world to get this far."

Coach Kim Mulkey didn't put any pressure on this young team during the season.

"We didn't talk about it being an Elite Eight team," she said. "We definitely wanted be in the NCAA tournament and let's see how good we are in the course of the year. I watched us get better and better. I knew we'd go pretty deep in this tournament."

Sims has been the key. She became only the second player to reach that milestone in a single season. She is 41 points behind Jackie Stiles' record of 1,062 for one year set in 2001.

Baylor's sensational senior guard had 47 points the last time the Lady Bears and Wildcats played. That was one of the most exciting games in the history of women's basketball. The Wildcats came away with a 133-130 four-overtime victory back in December.

This one fell far short of matching that thriller as Sims and Baylor put the game away by the half.

"You see how much we improved since the last time we played Kentucky," Mulkey said. "We have two freshmen posts who almost finished with a double-double."

Nina Davis finished with 20 points and eight rebounds while classmate Khadijiah Cave added a career-high 18 points and nine rebounds. Sophomore Niya Johnson had 11 points and 11 assists.

Now the Lady Bears (32-4) will face either Notre Dame or Oklahoma State in the regional final on Monday night.

Sims got off to a slow start, missing her first six shots before heating up by making 8 of her final 10 to finish the half. A steal and layup, a sequence she's done many times in her stellar career, with 12:40 left in the first half got her to 1,000.

"I had no idea. I knew I would reach it. I wasn't keeping up with it and just playing basketball," Sims said. "Records and awards don't mean anything right now, us making a run in this tournament and trying to go far is what matters."

She followed up the milestone play with a long pass to Davis for an easy score on the next play, pumping her left arm after the freshman finished off the play. That was one of her seven assists on the day.

Kentucky hung around and only trailed 28-24 after Makayla Epps' layup with 6:26 left in the half. That would be the last basket for the Wildcats until DeNesha Stallworth hit a layup with 9 seconds left. In between Sims took over. She scored eight points during a 17-2 run that blew the game open. Baylor led 49-32 at the half.

Kentucky missed nine layups in the first half and never got closer than 12 points down in the second half.

"I thought we were doing a good job at some things, wish we could have made some of those layups and the complexion of game would have been different," Kentucky coach Matthew Mitchell said.

Jennifer O'Neill, who had 43 points in the earlier game, had a rough afternoon. She missed all 12 of her shots and finished with just eight points — all on free throws.

"Leading scorer goes 0 for 12, not a real good recipe for moving forward in this kind of environment in the tournament," Mitchell said. "It's hard to fathom how that kid can go 0 for 12. She didn't try to do that. I thought she took some bad shots at times, but some were really good. They just didn't go."

Stallworth scored 19 points to lead Kentucky (26-9).

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