CARDINAL COUPLE

CARDINAL COUPLE
We report on the joy and excitement of UofL women's sports here. Thanks for checking us out! Click the picture of Louie to hear the latest Cardinal Couple Radio Hour Podcast!!
Showing posts with label 2023 Cardinal Couple NCAA Tourament Pick 'EM. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2023 Cardinal Couple NCAA Tourament Pick 'EM. Show all posts

Saturday, April 1, 2023

Louisville Drops Exhibition Against Athletes Unlimited; Final Four Results -- SATURDAY CARDINAL COUPLE

Cards Fall in Exciting 3-2 Match


After defeating Kentucky in their opening spring match last week, Louisville brought in an all-start team from the Athletes Unlimited league. We've mentioned AU before on the show and on these pages, but the premise is that, instead of having set teams, the pool of players is drafted playground style each week by captains. While there's no box score available for this one, Louisville did mention the players with local ties that were representing the league in last night's match. Erin Fairs was the only former Cardinal on the team, but she was joined by former UofL volunteer coaches in Deja McClendon (Penn State, from Louisville) and Taylor Reid (Minnesota). A bit more of a stretch, there was also Morgan Hentz (Stanford) who is from Kentucky and Leah Edmond, who played for the Wildcats.

Louisville fell in an early hole in this one 9-3 in the first set, but closed down to pull within five before dropping the set 25-18. The Cards bounced back with a 25-20 win in the second, but their good vibes were dashed when they just missed the third set with a 25-23 AU victory. The Cards gave up a 23-21 lead in that one. The fourth saw Louisville take a quick lead, fall behind, and then stretch the lead back out to 23-16 before ultimately winning 25-20. Again, the teams were closely matched in the fifth set. Louisville was down 8-5 at the swap and needed a 4-0 run to pull within 12-11. Louisville got an ace from Elena Scott to try to cut into the AU match point at 14-13, but they needed another. The Cards fell 15-13.

It was a good night for Louisville, despite the loss. In these spring games, you're looking more for players to be getting healthy and begin gelling with each other as new faces are introduced. The newest face for Louisville, Charitie Luper, dazzled with 17 kills. She did so on .394 hitting on the outside and added three digs. Faces newer to the starting lineup had success as well. Elle Glock, who has taken the setter role, put up 47 assists and had seven digs, while Phekran Kong had eight kills and three blocks. Returning to full strength, Anna DeBeer had a double-double with 18 kills and 10 digs, and Elena Scott was her normal shining self with 19 digs and two aces. I can tell you Aiko Jones had at least one kill, because the gocards writeup mentions it, but without a box score, I can't tell you much more.

After the match, Coach Dani Busboom Kelly tweeted, "We expect to win every match we enter, but tonight was fun until the end. Felt like every point was a battle! Thank you [Athletes Unlimited] for stopping at Louisville and giving us an awesome spring challenge!" Louisville will be back in action with a road trip to Columbus to take on Ohio State next Saturday before they return home to host Tennessee in their spring finale on April 15th.

Softball Delayed


With the storms that rolled through yesterday stretching from the Gulf Coast to the Great Lakes, softball was postponed in Syracuse. They'll play a double header today before wrapping the series as scheduled tomorrow. Game 1 is scheduled for 10:30AM with game 2 coming at the conclusion of the first. 

WBB Joins MBB with No 1-Seeds in Championship


When Virginia Tech went cold from three, that spelled the end for them against LSU. Despite making nine 3-pointers, VT shot just 29% from range. They shot a whopping 54% from two, but, since they only made 14 2-point baskets, they couldn't keep up. LSU on the other hand, shot just 3-13 from range but made up for it by going 30-57 (53%) from two to keep ahead of the Hokies. The Tigers, a 70% free-throw shooting team, shot 10-16 from the line, compared to VT's 17-18, but LSU hit the shots they needed to, making all four free-throws in the final minute of the game. Angel Reese had 24 and 12 for the Tigers, while Alexis Morris added 27 points. Georgia Amoore had 17 on her on her way to scoring the most three pointers in an NCAA tournament (for now) and Kayana Traylor matched the scoring effort while adding nine rebounds. Elizabeth Kitley had 18 points and 12 boards, but all those efforts weren't enough as LSU won 79-72.

The prime time game was what everyone had their eyes on, as no one has stopped talking about Caitlin Clark since last week. Fear not, everyone, the love fest continued even without Louisville on the opposing bench. To her credit, Clark once again showed out, putting up 41 points and adding six rebounds and eight assists. Unlike against Louisville, Iowa showed they could miss, shooting just 30% from three, but they were 14-14 from the line and 49% from the floor overall. Monika Czinano added 18 points, but no other player was in double digits for the Hawkeyes. Their real test came on defense, where they held Aliyah Boston to just eight points. To be clear, South Carolina had plenty of other options, as Zia Cooke scored 24, Kamilla Cardoso added 14 (with 14 boards), and Raven Johnson had 13. 

After SC closed a nine-point first quarter deficit to one at the half, it seemed like there might be a game after all. As they did against Louisville, Iowa quickly opened it back up, growing their lead to nine with six minutes to go. The Gamecocks kept their heads down and pulled it back to two-point game with a minute remaining in the third. They turned over Clark to get a chance to tie or take the lead, but followed it up with a turnover of their own. Czinano hit a jumper to make it 59-55 heading to the fourth. A minute into the fourth quarter, South Carolina took their first lead of the game at 60-59. It was short lived, as a Clark three and a Czinano layup swung it back to 64-60 Hawkeyes abruptly. The fourth quarter was tight, with the lead never exceeding those four points, but Staley's squad was unable to ever regain the lead. After a Johnson jumper made it 75-73 with nine seconds to go, Clark walked to the line and sunk two free throws to make it a two possession game once more. Boston missed a shot with six seconds left and time ran out. Hawkeyes advanced 77-73.

Everyone on the podcast made a bit of fun of me for picking Iowa to beat South Carolina in my bracket, but who is laughing now? Well, not me, because I still won't win. Last night's results make it so that only Thomas and I have a win remaining, as we both picked Iowa as our champs. He's a win ahead of me, though, so I can't overtake him. None of that really matters, though, as we're both out of touch with the leaders. Four entries have 46 wins, so they'll come down to the final score tiebreaker in the championship. Those entries are WahooCard, Joe Hill, Karen Johnson, and Jared. Jeff sits behind that pack with 45 wins and can be joined by Thomas, while I can only get to 44 to match Jason, Daryl, and Sonja. 

Cardinal Couple Radio Hour Podcast


I'm out this week, and scheduling made things a bit messy. As such, I'm here to tell you that you've already missed the live recording of this week's show. Not to fear, though, as you can still check out the episode on YouTube or any major podcast platform. Tune in for the joy and excitement of UofL Women's sports. 

Cardinal Couple YouTube: Link
Anchor (podcast host): Link
Apple Podcasts: Link
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Overcast (free account required): Link
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RadioPublic: Link
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Until next time, Go Cards!

Case

Saturday, March 25, 2023

Cards Advance to Elite Eight -- SATURDAY CARDINAL COUPLE

Win Over Ole Miss is Louisville's 5th Straight in Sweet Sixteen


In a season in which Louisville's offense has looked suspect at times, the Cards faced an immense challenge in the defensive-minded Ole Miss Rebels. Mississippi was likely underseeded, with five of their nine losses coming against ranked opponents. To prove it, they had shut down Gonzaga, one of the top three point shooting teams in the country, in the first round. Still not quite convincing people, Ole Miss then took down the Stanford Cardinal at home, holding the number one seed to just 49 points. That mark was Stanford's second fewest points scored this season and only the third time they had been held to fewer than 60 points. The other two were against USC, games which the Cardinal and Trojans split. In the first two games of the tournament, Mississippi held their opponents to just 3-24 shooting from beyond the arc.

Knowing all of this, Louisville came out determined to play their own game. There were hiccups, of course, but Louisville largely did what they wanted to do offensively, weathering multiple hot and cold streaks from both teams and putting four Cards in double figures. Despite stretches in which the Cards went without scoring for far more minutes than were comfortable, Louisville last lost the lead with 3:41 remaining in the first half. Myah Taylor hit a second straight three to cap a 14-3 run and give Ole Miss a 29-27 lead.

After scoring seven points in the first quarter (originally scored eight but a three-pointer was overturned), Hailey Van Lith had gone cold in the second. It would be a trend that would repeat itself a bit later, but, for a critical moment, Van Lith found her shot. Her second (third) three of the game put Louisville back in front by one. Myah Taylor missed a three on the third time of asking and Louisville was fouled on the rebound. Taking advantage, the Cards scored on the ensuing possession to move their lead back to a full basket. Both teams struggled a bit in the final two minutes, but Louisville came out ahead, scoring the only points of the stretch with an Olivia Cochran jumper to put the Cards up five. After holding a 20-15 lead at the end of the first quarter, the Cards kept a five point advantage at the end of the second: 34-29. There certainly wasn't any weirdness like Louisville stretching their lead to nine points before going on a 4+ minute scoring drought.

HVL was interviewed on her way off the floor at halftime and said it felt great to play in front of her family but that they still had work to do and they were going to come out better in the second half. The third quarter started very evenly. Both teams were able to find the bottom of the net, with Louisville's five-point advantage remaining steady for the first six minutes of the quarter. Over that time, Louisville never stretched that lead beyond five and Ole Miss never reduced it to fewer than three. Two-point shots and free throws ruled the day. When the media timeout finally came at 3:40, Louisville seemed to flip a switch. Unable to widen the gap for so long, the Cards suddenly found a way, closing down on defense and making the offense work. Louisville pushed their advantage to nine in the final minute of the quarter before Ole Miss scored for just the second time over the stretch to bring the lead back down to seven. Right on cue, Merissah Russell hit one of the critical threes she's been wont to do recently to give Louisville a double-digit lead, prompting me to message our Cardinal Couple group, "Don't look back."

Holding a 52-42 lead opening the fourth, Louisville, at first, looked like they would heed my advice. Both teams went fairly cold to open the quarter, meaning Louisville wasn't able to ride the momentum they had to close the third and put the game out of reach. They moved the lead to 12 twice, but never got any farther ahead. After scoring seven points in that first quarter, Van Lith's shot continued to evade her, as she had scored just four points in the next two periods. The basket seemed to be mocking her at times, with mid range jumpers rattling inside the rim before coming back out. When Ole Miss cut the lead to eight with 4:06 remaining, Van Lith finally found the bottom of the basket again, moving the lead back to ten. After an offensive rebound, one of eleven pulled down by the Rebels, they found Angel Baker at the top of the key. The defense was slow to step out, and Baker (whose shot is not at all pretty, by the way) nailed a three to bring the lead down to seven. 

More important than the basket itself was that it allowed Ole Miss to set up their full court pressure. Louisville had managed it okay to this point, but as the Cards became passive, trying to run clock in a game that was much too close for that, the pressure started to creep in. Louisville continually inbounded the ball directly into the pressure and dribbled right into trap situations. It was a bit like they hadn't seen a full-court press before, and it got concerning rather quickly. It didn't really help that "Coach Yo" was allowed to be on the court, in many cases contributing to two- and three-man traps in the corner, but Louisville put themselves in the positions. Holding onto their seven point lead, it wasn't really the full-court press that broke through, rather the passivity yielding to Ole Miss's urgency. As soon as she got the ball across mid-court, HVL raised it above her head expecting to run clock. Taylor promptly swatted the ball up, out jumped Van Lith for the secondary tip, and sprinted down court for the fast break jumper. To her credit, Van Lith worked very hard to influence the shot, even providing a body bump to try to put Taylor off-balance. It would be easy to criticize that she didn't do more or get her hands up, but she was playing with three fouls and the two points would be more recoverable than losing HVL completely.

Hailey showed just how recoverable those two points were when she charged down the court and hit a jumper in the paint (very similar to the few that she had missed; shooters shoot) to push Louisville's lead back to 60-53. A foul sent Taylor to the line, where she missed the second. Liz Dixon secured the rebound, and, on the other end, Olivia Cochran powered through two defenders to make a layup and draw a foul on Tyia Singleton, ending her night. The free throw put Louisville up nine, which didn't last long. Ole Miss hit a jumper to move the lead back down to seven, but, just as Van Lith had before, Mykasa Robinson quickly got the points back. Growing tired of getting pinned down in half court traps and Louisville being out of rhythm, Kasa calmly worked the offense and navigated the defense deftly to get Louisville an open look. I'm just kidding. Kasa put her head down like a raging bull and sprinted through the pressing defenders on a bee-line for the basket. Her path was suddenly impeded by Angel Baker, so she stopped and put up the floater while crashing into the defender. The whistle blew and the ball fell through the hoop, while everyone watched the refs convene. Ultimately, they ruled a block and set Kasa to the line to try to convert Louisville's second straight three-point play. While it was a very close call that could have gone either way, replay proved the call correct. Baker was not in the circle, which seemed to be the point of issue for many on the floor, but an overhead view showed she was never set and slid/leaned into the contact as Kasa arrived.

As it stood, the free throw gave Louisville a 66-56 lead with 1:40 remaining in the game, and it began to feel a bit more like you could breathe. A pair of Rebel free throws were answered by another Robinson layup and a missed three set Ole Miss back to the line after a foul on the rebound. The free throws cut the lead to eight again, but time was heavily in favor of the Cards. Louisville was able to tick 17 seconds off before Ole Miss fouled to send Van Lith to the line. Having missed a free throw earlier in the game, HVL was determined to close this one out in front of her home fans. She calmly sunk the pair. Taylor scored quickly for Ole Miss and they wisely fouled immediately after the basket, but Van Lith, again, was clutch at the free throw line, moving Louisville's lead back to 72-62 with 33 seconds remaining. 

Ole Miss called their last timeout to discuss their options and to advance the ball, they worked a quick layup to Maddie Scott under the basket, but Morgan Jones was on hand for a block. In the shuffle for the ball, Ole Miss came out with it, but it took another nine seconds to get a shot off. When the three-pointer was off the mark and Merissah Russell came down with the rebound with just 19 seconds remaining, Ole Miss tipped their caps and let the clock run out. Louisville held on to win their fifth straight Sweet Sixteen game, advancing to face Iowa in the Elite Eight on Sunday.

As I mentioned earlier, and as they mentioned repeatedly on the broadcast, Hailey Van Lith was playing in front of what was effectively a home crowd. Dozens of family members had turned out for the game and HVL delivered. The hot 3-4 start from the floor cooled significantly, as she finished with just 7-18 shooting, but she kept her head in the game to finish with 21 points, five rebounds, four assists, and a steal compared to just three turnovers. One of those turnovers was an offensive foul and another was when she had her pocket picked clean, so it was a very strong outing for Louisville's star. She was 5-6 from the line, making all four of her free throws down the stretch, and she did it all without a break, playing all 40 minutes. 

Mykasa Robinson was Van Lith's running mate for all but two minutes on the floor. She shot 5-8 from the floor and, after missing a pair of free throws early, hit a big one to finish a three-point play late in the game. Kasa finished with 11 points, seven rebounds, five assists and just two turnovers and one foul. Her defensive impact doesn't stand out on the stat sheet, but at one point in the fourth quarter, Louisville had contested 74% of Ole Miss's field goal attempts in the half. Kasa's presence makes a difference there. Her other critical contribution came as the primary ball handler against a stifling full-court press. To play 38 minutes against that pressure and finish with just two turnovers was masterclass. 

Joining those two in double figures Olivia Cochran and Morgan Jones. Cochran finished with ten points and six rebounds, adding a block, a steal, and an assist. She made 4-5 free throw attempts and turned the ball over just twice. Like Van Lith, one of those came on an offensive foul. Cochran kept her head in this one, playing through frustrations and keeping herself in the game both mentally and physically. She committed just three fouls, with one of those coming very late. 

Morgan Jones had her best game since Louisville made the starting lineup change. Jones was a starter through January, scoring 13 in the loss to NC State and 15 in the loss at Wake Forest. Her average was buoyed by back-to-back 19 and 25 point performances against Virginia Tech and FSU. Unfortunately, the team was losing during that time. Since the lineup change, Jones has seen her minutes drop significantly, and her offense has suffered as a result. After breaking double-digits off the bench for the first time last week against Texas, she did it again with 11 last night. Jones was 4-8 from the floor, 3-3 from the line, and added seven rebounds, an assist, two blocks and two steals. She made a significant case for her role as a key player, and it will be interesting to see what Jeff Walz does moving forward.

In this game, Louisville played a short bench, with only three players subbing in for Louisville. With Nyla Harris playing just five minutes in her start, that position may be up for grabs. Jones had 25 minutes and Merissah Russell played 23. Russell and Dixon didn't score double digits, but both were danger-close with eight each. The three bench players totaled 27 points, outscoring Ole Miss's bench by 21. Though she struggled, Chrislyn Carr stayed engaged throughout the game. She finished with just one made basket for three points, but had an assist and just one turnover in her 21 minutes. CC was a threat on the floor and forced Ole Miss to account for her, even if the shot wasn't falling. Her presence forces the defense to open things up for Louisville's other offensive threats to punish. Plus, when she's hitting her shots, she's a force all on her own.

Ole Miss got 49 of their 62 points from three players, with Myah Taylor and Marquesha Davis dropping 19 apiece. Angel Baker added 11. Louisville did a good job forcing Maddie Scott to the bench early with foul trouble. Scott finished with just four points and five rebounds in 24 minutes and had to play passively to avoid fouling out. All six of Mississippi's bench points came from Snudda Collins. As was pointed out in the halftime show, Ole Miss was not a three-point shooting team. They shot below 30% from beyond the arc during the season, but they were content to attempt them against Louisville. Despite making a few in big spots, those big spot threes were the only ones they made. Keeping about on their average, the Rebels shot 4-15 from range, good for just 26.7%.

Louisville, on the other hand, took what the defense gave them. Making just one more three-pointer than Ole Miss, their advantage came in shooting three fewer. After allowing just 3-24 in the first two games, Ole Miss gave up 5-12 shooting from three to Louisville, part of what made the Cards outscore the Rebels' tournament defensive average by 22 points. 

The FRED and CASE Reports

Things are getting tight, as every game is win or go home. The little things matter even more, so let's see how the Cards handled our major categories. 

F-Free Throws: Robinson's 1-3 was really the low point of Louisville's effort from the line, as the Cards shot 13-17 overall. One miss each from HVL and Cochran and Jones 3-3 mark lifted the misses by Kasa. 76.5% is good for a lowercase 'f'.

R-Rebounding: This one is tough. Louisville won the rebounding battle 38-35. However, they had only nine offensive rebounds, giving up 11 to Ole Miss. Along with that, the Cards scored just one second chance point, a mark that they also lost to Ole Miss, who had 11. Both teams cleared about 72% of their rebounding opportunities on the defensive end, so it was very evenly matched. With Louisville having a size disadvantage at the guard spot and an advantage in the front-court, I am ultimately going to go with the big number winning out. Louisville gets a lowercase 'r', but just barely.

E-Effort/Execution: Louisville deserves heaping credit for their offensive performance against a very strong defensive team. The Cards committed just 12 turnovers, scattered throughout, and they scored 72 points on a team giving up 49.5 through two tournament games. They also kept their heads in the game, responding to scoring droughts and Ole Miss runs with poise. Louisville was outscored 9-5 in points off turnovers, 11-1 in second chance points, and 14-6 in fast break points. That said, they won the points in the paint battle and got far more bench production. Plus, they didn't lose any quarter scores, held the lead at the end of each period, and, most importantly, won the game. I grant a capital 'E' because I'm the one writing and I can do what I want.

D-Defense: Ole Miss scored 68.6 points per game this season, impressive for shooting just 29% from three and 67% from the free throw line. In addition to outscoring Ole Miss's defensive average by 16, the Cards held the Rebels below their season scoring average and below the scoring average of Louisville's opponents. The teams matched in turnovers, but Louisville had fewer fouls, more blocks, and more steals. They also forced Ole Miss to play outside of their system, with the 4-15 three-point shooting contributing to an overall 37% field goal percentage. Capital 'D'.

C-Care: Louisville turned the ball over 12 times. That's not great, but it's the same number as Ole Miss, and it's less than 75% of Ole Miss's season average of 16.4%. I can't give half a letter for tying in turnovers, so it must be a lowercase 'c'.

A-Assists: While their assist-to-turnover ratio was positive, it wasn't quite 1.5. Louisville finished with 13 assists on 27 made shots. It seems overly harsh to not get any letter here as the defense definitely played a part in Louisville's offense, resulting in a number of dribble drives. I'm going to be generous (I'm tired and happy Louisville won, ok? It's my metric) and award a lowercase 'a'.

S-Steals: Much more cut and dry with this stat. Louisville had more than Ole Miss, which is good, but fewer than our expected 7.5, which is less good. Lowercase 'e'.

E-Efficiency: Ah yes, an unexpected capital letter here. Louisville just managed to sneak 45.8% shooting, which is above our 45% expectation for field goal percentage. When they went cold a few times, it looked suspect, but the Cards actually shot consistently throughout the game. They were 7-15 in the first and third quarters, 6-13 in the second, and 7-16 in the fourth. As I mentioned earlier, HVL had a few shots in the fourth that were all the way down before coming back out. Louisville also shot over 75% from the free throw line, so that's a capital 'E'.

Overall, that's scores of f-r-E-D and c-a-s-E. No missing letters is representative of a strong showing from the Cards. At this stage of the tournament, strong showings will be needed to keep playing. Louisville already has their assignment for the next game. While it's easier said than done, the defensive scout is to shut down Caitlin Clark. If the Cards are going to make it to the Final Four, they can't let Clark go for 30. She might go for 20, and there might be nothing you can do about that, but a well-rounded offensive performance can see Louisville advance as long as they make someone else try to beat them instead of Clark. Make sure you get your nap in: Louisville's Elite 8 matchup is set for 9PM Sunday night.

Cardinal Couple Pick 'Em Challenge Update


We've got a couple of discrepancies, but they should be sorted out once the sweet sixteen has been played in full. I'm hoping for myself to be out of contention, as I have Iowa knocking off Stanford Sunday on their way to the championship. I'll gladly be wrong with the Hawkeyes facing multiple Cardinals instead of just one. I also lost a final four team when LSU beat Utah. My Greenville 2 bracket was one to forget, with Utah being my only correctly selected regional team there. 

As it stands the current order is below. Disputed scores are marked with an asterisk, and should be clarified later this weekend as I mentioned.

40-12: Jason, Karen J, Jared
39-13: Kenny S*, Katy, KStark Sr, Jeff, WahooCard, Daryl, Farris*
38-14: Arthur, Paulie, Joe Hill, Sonja*
37-15: David Watson, Thomas
36-16: Case, Vivian*
35-17: Blue Lou, Cindy, Curtis, Mike D
34-18: Becky
32-20: Bea, Chimps
30-22: Nick O*

Cardinal Couple Radio Hour Podcast


We should have a full house this week with plenty to discuss. Softball was postponed yesterday, but they played earlier in the week. Lacrosse is in action again today, and volleyball kicked off spring ball last night. More on both of those from Jeff tomorrow. Basketball will surely be the primary focus this morning, though, so be sure to tune in to this week's episode.  As always, you can check out the live stream of the show by going to the Cardinal Couple YouTube page and clicking on the live video. Jeff usually creates that about an hour before the show, which officially starts at 11 AM Eastern. If the live time doesn't work for you, there are plenty of playback options, so be sure to check out whichever is best for you!

Cardinal Couple YouTube: Link
Anchor (podcast host): Link
Apple Podcasts: Link
Google Podcasts: Link
Overcast (free account required): Link
Pocket Casts (free account and app required): Link
RadioPublic: Link
Spotify: Link





Until next time, Go Cards!

Case

Saturday, March 18, 2023

Softball Sweeps Double Header; NCAA Tourney Underway -- SATURDAY CARDINAL COUPLE

Softball Secures Series Win Over Pitt


With a weather altered weekend schedule, Louisville softball hosted the first two games of their weekend series against Pitt yesterday. Though the schedule was changed for incoming cold weather, it was already cold enough in the area to impact it further. Originally scheduled to start at 3PM, the start of yesterday's double-header was delayed, and the entire series potentially in jeopardy, as the temperature of the field turf had not climbed above the required 30 degrees. The games finally got underway at 4:30, and Louisville made sure it wouldn't matter if the teams could play today by winning both games to claim the series.

The Cards didn't let the cold get to them as they opened the first game hot. After Alyssa Zabala got a 1-2-3 inning in the top half, Korbe Otis walked, Sarah Gordon doubled her in, and Hannah File scored a pair with a home run to straightaway center. Louisville would load the bases and score one more run in the inning to make it 4-0 after one. Not content with such a lead, Zabala put the Panthers down in order again (kind of; she hit the third batter but a groundout ended the inning), and Louisville went back to work on offense. This time it was Gordon who opened the inning with a walk, but File's shot to left field was caught. Taylor Roby, third up in the inning, matched File's first inning performance with a shot to the berm. Daisy Hess doubled and Easton Lotus reached and advanced Hess by forcing an error on the pitcher. Having both players on base proved important, as they executed a double-steal to score Hess. Rounding out the scoring in the second inning, Ally Alexander singled through the gap to right field and a throwing error allowed Lotus to come all around to score. Louisville led 8-0 after two.

Pitt would put another runner on base in the third inning. This time it was, again, the third batter of the inning, and it was still not a hit. After a pair of outs, a walk put a runner on first before a pop up right to Zabala ended the inning. The bottom of the third brought the top of the order back up, and it picked up where it left off for the third time. Otis singled, as did Gordon, and the pair stood at second and third after an errant throw from left field. File popped out, but Roby sent one down the left field line to score both runners. Holly Aprile replaced Roby with a pinch runner, as she often does, but it turned out to be moot, as Roby could have walked the bases after Hess's homerun ball joined the previous two. 12-0 Louisville after three.

Facing the end of the game if their offense couldn't do something, Pitt finally got to Alyssa Zabala. A strikeout opened the inning, but it was followed by a walk and a single. Louisville nearly got out of the inning on a ground ball double-play, but the connecting throw was too slow. They got the runner at second but put runners on the corners with two outs. A single scored the first Pittsburgh run of the game, and a passed ball put two runners in scoring position to extend the threat. A ground ball ended things there. After three straight innings of nearly batting around, Louisville finally cooled off in the fourth, with the 8-9-1 hitters going down in order. 

The fifth inning saw Sam Booe come in to close things out for Zabala, if only to give her some rest and ensure the run-rule. Booe, perhaps, could have used a bit longer to warm up, as she didn't miss any bats in the inning. She got a foul out to open things before a single, double, and walk loaded the bases. A sacrifice fly made the score 12-2 and a pop-out made that the final score. Cards didn't bat in the bottom half. Final game time was 1:50, and the second game was scheduled to start at 7PM, giving the teams about a 30-minute break.

Taylor Roby got the start in game two, and she was aces for five innings. Roby scattered one hit and one walk over those five innings, with the hit not coming until the fifth. In the meantime, Louisville's offense was back in action, scoring four runs in four innings. It's not quite 12 runs over three, but it was sufficient for the most part. Louisville took the lead in the first with a sacrifice fly, were quiet in the second, and saw Sarah Gordon add to the list of home run hitters on the evening in the third. The fourth homer of the evening was also a two-run shot, which was quite the coincidence. Gordon also picked up a two-out double to score the Cards' fourth run in the fourth inning, giving her quite the day between the two games.

The fifth inning saw Pittsburgh's first hit come at the expense of Taylor Roby. A line shot went right back at the circle and hit Roby directly on the hand before skittering toward third. There was a brief delay for medical before Roby elected to stay in the game. She seemed as though she was ok, forcing what could have been a double play immediately after the hit and then getting a grounder to end the inning one batter later. She also seemed to have fine control of the bat, flying out to center in the bottom half. All of that is to say that there was no real indication that Aprile should have pulled her. That notice came too late. 

Every batter in the Pittsburgh 6th made contact. There were eight of them. Two singles opened the inning and a flyout advanced the lead runner to third. A single to left put runners on first and second and made the score 4-1. A foul out to the catcher gave the Cards two outs and it seemed like they would be able to wrap things up. Back-to-back doubles slashed that thought before a pop-up mercifully ended the inning. Louisville's 4-0 lead was erased, and the game was all square. 

Despite their offensive effort on the day, the Cards had no answer to the big inning, as they went down 1-2-3 in the bottom of the sixth. Having been pulled for rest in game one, Alyssa Zabala was called on to start the new game in the seventh inning. She picked up a ground out to open the inning but a single threatened to give Pitt life. Fortunately for the Cards, the defense was ready to react. The next batter flew to left, and Pitt decided to try to advance the runner on the out. Why? Your guess is as good as mine, but the throw into second was in time and the Pittsburgh runner was tagged off the bag to end the inning. With the Cards needing just one run to end it and the heart of the order up, they promptly gave themselves a pair of outs with a strikeout and a ground out. Small ball prevailed. Daisy Hess singled, and Vanessa Miller reached on a fielding error to keep the inning alive. The error proved costly, as Easton Lotus singled up the middle and Hess rounded third to score, unearned, and give the Cards the walk-off win. 

The two teams will be back in action this afternoon with a scheduled start of 1PM. After an overnight freeze, we'll see if they can get the game going on time. Regardless, coverage will be on ACC Network Extra, and Louisville will look to finish the sweep and extend their winning percentage to .667. Zabala is unlikely to get the start today, but, if she does, be on the lookout for the same pitcher to earn three wins in two days. UPDATE: Today's game has been postponed to tomorrow at 2PM in an effort to find warmer weather. It will still be streamed on ACC Network Extra.

Louisville Set to Face Drake in NCAA Round 1


Louisville pulled a five seed in this year's tournament, and, as a result, will play the first (and potentially second) round outside of the friendly confines of the Yum! Center for the first time since 2015. Nevertheless, that five seed is higher than many thought the Cards would get with some of the performances they had this season, so it could certainly be worse. Louisville drew Drake in the opening round, and it will be the first ever meeting between the Cards and Bulldogs. Drake was an automatic qualifier, winning the Missouri Valley Conference Championship after finishing fourth in the league. 

The winningest player in ACC
history looks to extend her lead.
Louisville's defense will be put to the test in this one, as the Bulldogs (22-9 overall) average 79.1 points per game. Their average scoring margin is 13.6. If you're doing the math on that one, it means they've won a bunch of games by a lot, and their losses have been close. One of those losses came in overtime to then fourth-ranked Iowa in their third game of the season. Iowa ended up being victorious 92-86. Drake followed that game  up with an 18-point victory over then 22nd-ranked Nebraska. To continue the odd series of results, Drake's fifth game was an 83-100 loss (in overtime!!) to UMass before they beat Howard by 37 two days later. The Bulldogs played just one more game against a ranked team, a 75-71 loss at Creighton on December 10th. They were scheduled to play Iowa State on the 22nd, but that game was canceled. 

Drake played just three games in which they scored fewer than 63 points. Those three all came in a two week span in the middle of conference play, and they were all road losses. Louisville will look to get that team instead of the one that averaged 82 ppg in their other 28 games. The Cards will have to force some of that themselves if they want to keep their 13-0 first round record under Jeff Walz intact. Tonight's game is at 7:30PM and will air on ESPN2.

Cardinal Couple NCAA Pick 'Em Update


Jeff will have more tomorrow after the first round has wrapped up, but the opening day of games was unfriendly to most of our entrants. The final tally of participants this season is 26, and Daryl leads the pack at 14-2. She was nearly undefeated on the day, but the SDSU upset gave her one loss and jinxed her for the rest of the evening. After Daryl come David, Karen J, Thomas, Jared, Vivian, Curtis, and Mike D at 13-3. Eleven brackets are tied at 12-4, and it seems we may be in for a close battle as the tournament continues.

Cardinal Couple Radio Hour Podcast


We'll be back this week with what should be a full house after the thinner broadcast last week. There's plenty to discuss, as lacrosse and softball have had busy weeks and, of course, basketball looks to get underway. As always, you can check out the live stream of the show by going to the Cardinal Couple YouTube page and clicking on the live video. Jeff usually creates that about an hour before the show, which officially starts at 11 AM Eastern. If the live time doesn't work for you, there are plenty of playback options, so be sure to check out whichever is best for you!

Cardinal Couple YouTube: Link
Anchor (podcast host): Link
Apple Podcasts: Link
Google Podcasts: Link
Overcast (free account required): Link
Pocket Casts (free account and app required): Link
RadioPublic: Link
Spotify: Link





Until next time, Go Cards!

Case

Friday, March 17, 2023

LAX falls to #1 UNC 20-7 -- SB schedule change -- FRIDAY CARDINAL COUPLE

FRIDAYS WITH DARYL 



Hello readers -- truth is I thought yesterday was Friday and I am ready to catch some games and enjoy a green beer as soon as I get off work today for SURE!!  

I guess I am feeling the effects of last weekend's time change & we've got lots of Cardinals coverage to get to so lets jump on into it. 

Erin Go Braugh, y'all. Happy St.Patty's Day !


LAX




UofL Lacrosse moves to 4-4 overall and 1-3 in the ACC after falling to #1 North Carolina 20-7 on Thursday at UofL Lacrosse Stadium... while the Tarheels remain undefeated on the season and continue their dominance. Nicole Perroni and Hannah Morris scored 3 goals apiece for Louisville.

After the Tar Heels took a 5-1 advantage in the second quarter, Perroni and Morris scored 3 to trim the UNC lead to 5-4 with 11 minutes before the halftime break but then UNC outscored the Cards 12-2 in the second half. the Cards did not score at all in the fourth quarter. Louisville lost the draw controls 21-10 in the game, 8-0 in the first quarter.



Head Coach of the LAXCards Scott Teeter said afterwards, " The possessions were probably two-to-one for them on the offensive end. Our defense gets tired. When you give great players the ball all the time, they make plays."

Sometimes, #1 in the nation will beat you. The Cards did "give it a go", though. 

UP NEXT 

UofL at Marquette at 1 p.m. on Sunday


Softball


Louisville vs Pittsburgh 
3:00 P.M. at Ulmer Stadium 
ACCNX




UofL is looking to bounce back from a mid-week loss to Charlotte with another ACC series that has been altered due to the weekend forecast in the Ville. The teams will meet in a doubleheader starting at 3 p.m. Friday with the series tentatively slated to conclude Saturday at Don Dobina Field at Ulmer Stadium. The schedule is subject to change due to weather conditions.


Louisville leads the series 22-5 dating back to the Big East days.  Holly Aprile is also no stranger to the Pitt program, it being her head coaching position prior to coming to Louisville for 10 years. In 2018 she earned ACC Coach of the Year honors after leading the Panthers to the ACC Coastal Division title and a runner-up finish in the ACC tournament.

 

This year, Pitt is 14-7 on the season and haven't faced an ACC opponent before meeting the Cards.  Louisville went 1-2 against the Duke Blue Devils this past weekend.  Seven of the Panthers' wins have come by four or more runs, including three wins by eight or more runs. Six of their seven losses have been decided by three or fewer runs.

Sarah Seamans leads the Panthers with a .444 batting average. 15 runs and six home runs.  Abby Edwards (4-4) leads in the circle carring a 2.98 ERA with 51 strikeouts in 48.1 innings of wor

WBB




The Cardinals got Drake in the first round and tip off is set for 7:30pm Saturday. The Bulldogs have qualified for the NCAA Tournament four times in the last six years and went to the WNIT quarterfinal last year. The Cardinals appeared in their fourth Final Four in program history in 2022.


(No, not the Canadian rapper..)



Wishing the Cardinals a safe and successful business trip to Austin, Texas.  Let's go, UofL !! 


Brackets




Thanks to those who have been contributing to the bracket pool this year and good luck! 

The Cardinal Couple NCAA 2023 Pick 'Em is getting a lot of play, but it's not too late to enter. You have to 11:30 Friday morning (Jared wants 10:30 but we won't refuse anything from 10;30 TO 11:30) 

Leave your picks in the column section of the article. Make sure and give us a total score. And, most importantly !!! Have fun and enjoy the games!

Winner gets their choice of a $25 Gift Card to Cracker Barrel or Starbucks and runner up gets the other card or a $15 Subway card -- your choice. 

Your entry don't cost a dime and you, yes you, could become a winner !!

As Always,
Go Cards

~Daryl