Purdue loses in-state battle, 72-61
SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP)
No. 4 Notre Dame smartened up quickly against sixth-ranked Purdue.
After mental mistakes by Notre Dame (8-0) allowed
Purdue to cut an eight-point lead to one in a span of just 1:44 at
the end of the first half, the Irish made sure they didnt make
the same mistakes at the end of the second half.
Instead, the Irish played intelligently while
the Boilermakers (8-2) made the mental errors.
The Irish turned a missed
free throw by the Boilermakers into a quick fast-break basket by Ericka
Haney who scored 16 and hit 6 of 8 free throws down the stretch
to clinch a 72-61 victory for only their third victory in 12
tries against the Boilermakers.
"Thats certainly not the best game weve
played, but it may be the smartest at the end of the game," said Ruth
Riley, who had 15 points and seven rebounds.
What made it more surprising was that the Irish
were able to do it with floor leader Niele Ivey sitting on the bench
because of leg cramps.
"Its great to have a game like this where
you have that opportunity to face adversity and see how your team
responds," Irish coach Muffet McGraw said. "When Niele went out there
was no letdown on the floor."
The Boilermakers had three straight possessions
in the final five minutes where they missed a shot and failed to rebound.
Riley then blocked shots on two of the next three possessions.
"I thought we took too many quick shots," Purdue
coach Kristy Curry said. "We were forcing things at the end. The last
four minutes we just did a poor job of execution. We never really
did anything we wanted to do."
With No. 3 Duke losing to Clemson 93-75, the Irish
are on the verge of their highest ranking.
"It really wasnt anything were looking
at because were happy to be where we are right now," McGraw
said.
The Irish also extended their home non-conference
winning streak to 19. The Irish, who had never started the season
with eight straight wins, last lost at home to a non-conference team
against No. 19 Wisconsin on Dec. 9, 1996. They also have won six straight
against top-10, non-conference opponents.
The crowd of 7,330 was the third largest for a
Notre Dame womens home game.
The 61 points were a season low for Purdue, which
had scored 80 or more points in five games this season. The Boilermakers
were hurt by poor free-throw shooting, making just 9 of 19. The Irish
made 11 of 18.
Alicia Ratay scored 19 points, including a pair
of 3-pointers late in the second half to spark a decisive 14-5 run.
With the Irish leading 58-56, Ratay hit a 3-pointer with 6:35 left.
She missed her next 3-point attempt, but the Irish got the rebound
and Ratay immediately hit another 3 to give Notre Dame a 64-57 lead.
"Im sure they were keying on her," McGraw
said. "She got a lot of shots off broken plays. They were definitely
guarding her, but she did a good job of using some screens."
Kelley Siemon had 10 rebounds as the Irish had
a 34-31 rebounding advantage.
Douglas led Purdue with 20 points, although she
had eight turnovers. Camille Cooper had 11 points and eight rebounds,
before fouling out with all five fouls coming in the second half.
"We came out strong in the second half and scored
a couple of quick baskets, then we went away from what we were doing,"
Douglas said. "They made it really difficult to get it inside."