And some of it will be happening in the Southland’s backyard, literally, just call Galen Center or Pauley Pavilion, they’ll tell you.
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While the USC and UCLA men had losing records that shut them out of the brackets, the USC and UCLA women are powerful enough to host first-round games and potent enough to propel themselves to the Final Four.
The Trojans are a one seed, the Bruins are a two seed, and both will be home next weekend for the first two rounds of their brackets in an unprecedented one-city display of NCAA hoops domination.
USC freshman star JuJu Watkins and the Trojans earned a No. 1 seed and will host Texas A&M Corpus Christi to open the women’s NCAA tournament.
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“C’mon now, wake up and see what’s happening!” longtime UCLA coach Cori Close said. “It’s March Madness, you have two Southern California women’s teams hosting the first two rounds of the tournament, get on board, let’s sell out both arenas, let’s go, it’s pretty tremendous!”
Women’s college basketball these days is indeed pretty tremendous, with filled arenas and record television ratings and enough storylines to finally overshadow the men.
The women no longer have next, they have now.
“More and more people are like, ‘This is really an amazing thing,’ ” Close said. “Coach Wooden was doing this back in the day, he was saying women’s basketball is the purest form of basketball and he loved watching it, but nobody was really ready to listen at that point.”
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They’re listening now, with more folks watching women’s basketball than men’s basketball on Fox, with a midseason Louisiana State-South Carolina matchup even out-rating an NBA game between the Boston Celtics and Miami Heat.
“Amazing personalities, amazing exposure, more parity, it’s easy to get attached to women’s basketball because the players are there for four years,” Close said. “People go to men’s games to be entertained, they go to women’s games to be connected and inspired.”
Sure, it will be fascinating to see if the Connecticut men can repeat as national champions, but more compelling is the title defense of eccentric coach Kim Mulkey, charismatic star Reese, and the rest of the LSU women.
There’s an undefeated Gamecocks team standing in their way, and just last week the two teams brawled!
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Yes, it will be exciting to see if Purdue’s giant Zach Edey can live up to his massive expectations, but it’s the Big Ten superstar from Iowa who has captured the nation’s attention.
Perhaps you’ve heard of Clark? America’s most popular athlete, period? Recently set an NCAA career scoring record with a 35-foot heave from the stinking logo?
Certainly, men’s potential matchups such as Houston-Kentucky and North Carolina-Arizona are sweet, but they do not compare to the women’s potential showdowns featuring Iowa-LSU and South Carolina-Notre Dame.
Which brings this shining moment back to the USC and UCLA women, close neighbors with vastly different teams.
USC, 26-5, is a star-driven vehicle led by the incomparable freshman Watkins. She is the nation’s second-leading scorer at 27 points per game, trailing only Iowa’s Clark, and next season she should replace the WNBA-bound Clark as the game’s magnetic force.
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With Watkins hobbled and struggling last week, the Trojans’ three Ivy League transfers — McKenzie Forbes, Kayla Padilla and Kaitlyn Davis — and center Rayah Marshall led them to an upset victory over Stanford in the Pac-12 tournament title game. But make no mistake. The Trojans are JuJu’s team, and the next three weeks will be her stage.
The Bruins, 25-6 after losing to USC in the Pac-12 tourney semifinals, are a team without one true superstar, but with plenty of other stars.
A different player leads them in scoring, assists and steals — Lauren Betts, Kiki Rice and Charisma Osborne — and seven players average at least 20 minutes.
USC is hot, winning 12 of its last 13 games in a surge that few expected. UCLA used to be hot, began the season 14-0 and was ranked second in the nation before going 11-6 down the stretch and struggling with inconsistency.
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The Trojans are in a relatively light regional where the toughest challenges will probably come from underwhelming UConn and slumping Ohio State. The Trojans haven’t won a title in 39 years, but third-year boss Lindsay Gottlieb has brought this new culture to the verge of greatness.
“We’re just happy to be in it, to be dancing, to be playing at home, and to have challenges in front of us that I think this group is going to attack,” Gottlieb said.
UCLA will host Cal Baptist to open the women’s NCAA tournament at Pauley Pavilion. The Bruins’ tough region includes No. 1 Iowa and No. 3 LSU.
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The Bruins, meanwhile, are in a nightmare region that will require victories over LSU and Iowa to reach the Final Four. UCLA hasn’t won a title in 45 years, but Close has directed them to five Sweet 16 appearances in the last eight years and she, too, has her team believing.
“To steal from [Virginia coach] Tony Bennett, if you handle adversity wisely, it can buy you a ticket to a place you maybe never would have gone otherwise,” Close said. “How do we get to Cleveland for a Final Four? We handle that adversity wisely, we have a growth mindset, we let it teach our hearts to make us better.”
And to think, until two years ago, the ignorant NCAA didn’t allow the women’s tournament to affix itself to the phrase “March Madness.”
Bill Plaschke, an L.A. Times sports columnist since 1996, is a member of the National Sports Media Hall of Fame and California Sports Hall of Fame. He has been named national Sports Columnist of the Year nine times by the Associated Press, and twice by the Society of Professional Journalists and National Headliner Awards. He is the author of six books, including a collection of his columns entitled “Plaschke: Good Sports, Spoilsports, Foul Balls and Oddballs.” Plaschke is also a panelist on the popular ESPN daily talk show, “Around the Horn.” He is in the national Big Brothers/Big Sisters Alumni Hall of Fame and has been named Man of the Year by the Los Angeles Big Brothers/Big Sisters as well as receiving a Pursuit of Justice Award from the California Women’s Law Center. Plaschke has appeared in a movie (“Ali”), a dramatic HBO series (“Luck”) and, in a crowning cultural moment he still does not quite understand, his name can be found in a rap song “Females Welcome” by Asher Roth.