HAWKEYE HEARTACHE
Virginia becomes first double-digit seed to reach Sweet 16 by upsetting Iowa in 2OT
AP PHOTO - Iowa forward Hannah Stuelke walks off the court after a second-round loss to Virginia in the Women’s NCAA Tournament on Monday at Carver-Hawkeye Arena in Iowa City.
IOWA CITY — Kymora Johnson scored 28 points as 10th-seeded Virginia became the first First Four to reach the regional semifinals after an 83-75 double-overtime win over No. 2 seed Iowa on Monday in a women’s NCAA Tournament second-round game.
The Cavaliers (22-11) won three games in five days, defeating Arizona State 57-55 in Thursday’s First Four game, following that with an 82-73 overtime win over Georgia in Saturday’s first-round game, and then the Hawkeyes (27-7), who were playing in front of a sellout home crowd of 14,332.
“We were just so resilient in this game,” Virginia coach Amaka Agugua-Hamilton said. “Iowa is a really good team. They’re a 2 seed for a reason. No matter what they threw at us, we just did not get rattled. We just believed that we were going to win this game before it even started. Every time they punched, we punched back, stayed poised.”
It’s the first time Virginia has advanced to the second weekend of the tournament since 2000. It’s also the first time a 10-seed has reached the Sweet 16 since Creighton did it in 2022. The Bluejays also beat Iowa in the second round that year to advance.
“We had to do a lot of rebuilding when we got here in all facets of the program, even just rebuilding the community, the energy,” said Agugua-Hamilton, in her fourth season as the Cavaliers’ coach. “But resources, players, culture, everything. I knew it was going to be a large task, and it was no small feat. But at the same time, I knew we were going to get it done.”
“Just coming into March, we’re a confident team, and I think we believe in all the work that we’ve put in,” Johnson said. “Not a lot of people have. They’ve written us off. We came into March trying to show what Virginia is about.”
Iowa had chances to win the game in regulation and at the end of the first overtime. Chazadi Wright’s turnaround jumper with one second left in regulation missed, then the Hawkeyes missed two shots at the end of the first overtime, a 3-pointer by Taylor Stremlow and a putback attempt by Ava Heiden.
“They made some big plays,” Iowa coach Jan Jensen said of the Cavaliers. “When you win in March, you make big plays.”
Johnson had 14 of her points in the two overtimes. She played all 50 minutes.
“Hungry and tired,” Johnson said when she was asked about how she felt. “But blessed and happy to be able to get the dub and be able to play 50 minutes.”
Paris Clark had 20 points for the Cavaliers. Romi Levy had 13 points. Caitlin Weimar had 12.
Heiden led Iowa with 26 points. Wright had 21 points. Hannah Stuelke had 15 points and 19 rebounds for her 10th double-double of the season.
Virginia shot just 39.3% in the first half, but took advantage of Heiden picking up two fouls in the first 4 1/2 minutes as well as Iowa’s poor 3-point shooting. The Hawkeyes were 10 of 32 from the field in the half, but only 1 of 12 in 3-pointers.
Difference in efficiency
Iowa took 84 shots in the game, 21 more than the Cavaliers. But Virginia shot 44.4% for the game, while the Hawkeyes made just 36.9% of their shots.
“They hit some clutch shots,” Iowa guard Kylie Feuerbach said.
Hometown player
Johnson, a junior, grew up two miles from Virginia’s campus in Charlottesville, and it took her some convincing to play for the Cavaliers.
“It took probably two months, my first two months there to even get her to come and talk to us,” Agugua-Johnson said. “I literally passed her house on the way home every day. Once she did and once we clicked, we knew we had a special kid.”
“When she first called me, I’m going to be honest, I was not coming to Virginia, but I gave it a couple rings and finally picked up,” Johnson said. “As soon as the first conversation happened, I knew this was where I destined to be. I followed my heart and it led me to Virginia.”
Johnson led the Cavaliers in scoring at 19.3 points per game this season.
Virginia 83, Iowa 75, 2OT
VIRGINIA (22-11) — Amanze 2-7 0-1 4, Smith 1-3 1-2 3, Clark 7-10 3-5 20, Johnson 7-20 10-11 28, Levy 6-12 0-0 13, Hurd 0-1 0-0 0, Ring 1-5 0-0 3, Weimar 4-5 4-4 12, Brown 0-0 0-0 0, White 0-0 0-0 0. TOTALS 28-63 18-23 83.
IOWA (27-7) — Stuelke 7-12 1-6 15, Heiden 11-22 4-4 26, Feuerbach 1-7 1-2 4, Stremlow 2-13 0-0 5, Wright 8-22 2-4 21, Hays 0-0 0-0 0, Deal 0-3 0-0 0, Houston 2-5 0-0 4. TOTALS 31-84 8-16 75.
Virginia 13 15 11 18 8 18 — 83
Iowa 13 10 25 9 8 10 — 75
3-Point Goals–Virginia 9-27 (Clark 3-4, Johnson 4-12, Levy 1-5, Hurd 0-1, Ring 1-5), Iowa 5-29 (Feuerbach 1-7, Stremlow 1-10, Wright 3-9, Deal 0-3). Assists–Virginia 15 (Clark 4, Johnson 4), Iowa 22 (Stremlow 7). Fouled Out–Virginia Amanze, Iowa Feuerbach, Heiden. Rebounds–Virginia 42 (Smith 10), Iowa 50 (Stuelke 19). Total Fouls–Virginia 18, Iowa 19. Technical Fouls–Smith, Stuelke. A–14,332.




