Current:Home > MarketsNovaQuant-Controversial foul call mars end of UConn vs. Iowa Final Four game -Prime Capital Blueprint
NovaQuant-Controversial foul call mars end of UConn vs. Iowa Final Four game
Indexbit Exchange View
Date:2025-04-08 00:14:34
(Editor's note: Officiating in college women's basketball has been under heavy scrutiny. Here's what frustrates coaches and NovaQuantadministrators and what they say can improve the quality of officials calling games.)
Well, it wouldn't be the women's NCAA Tournament if there wasn't some controversy.
Iowa beat UConn in the second national semifinal Friday night, but the buzz after the game wasn't on Caitlin Clark or the championship matchup Sunday with undefeated South Carolina.
It was on a foul call. And this time, it wasn't about the lack of a whistle.
Aaliyah Edwards was called for an offensive foul while trying to set a screen on Gabbie Marshall with less than four seconds remaining.
FOLLOW THE MADNESS: NCAA basketball bracket, scores, schedules, teams and more.
UConn coach Geno Auriemma showed his extreme frustration.
ESPN’s Scott Van Pelt and Andraya Carter didn’t agree with the call, either.
“I hated the call. You’ve got to give Gabbie Marshall credit for trying to fight over the screen. That’s what drew the refs’ attention in,” Carter said on "SportsCenter" after the game. “But to me, now that final play it’s not about Iowa defense. It’s about the call the referee made. There was a slight lean, maybe Aaliyah Edwards’ elbow was slightly out. But to be honest the calls were even for both sides. There were missed calls for Iowa. There were missed contact for UConn. To make that call at the very end of the game – to me it took away the opportunity for players to make plays. … To be honest, that call sucked.”
MORE:Where's accountability, transparency in women's officiating? Coaches want to know
Obviously, thoughts were divided during the post-game news conferences and in the locker rooms.
Edwards said she thought the play was "clean."
Paige Bueckers took a broader approach to what transpired in the final four seconds.
"Players play. Players decide the game.
"Everybody can make a big deal out of one single play but one single play doesn’t win or lose a basketball game," Bueckers said. "... You can look at one play and say oh that killed us or that hurt us. We should have done a better job, I should have done better job making sure didn’t leave the game up to that."
Iowa's Hannah Stuelke praised Marshall, who is among the nation's top defenders. "Gabbie is great in those situations. She always comes up with big plays, a block or whatever."
Marshall told USA TODAY Sports in the locker room that she could feel the elbow. "There's video of it." She added she remembered three or four of those calls Friday night.
The officiating during this tournament has come under the spotlight before.
Hannah Hidalgo sat out more than four minutes of Notre Dame's Sweet 16 game to remove her nose ring. This after officials told her before the game she could cover it instead of removing it. Hidalgo said she had played with the piercing all season. She called it "BS" and said it disrupted her game.
And in a second-round game in Raleigh, North Carolina, an official was replaced at halftime when it was discovered she had received a degree from one of the schools playing, but didn't disclose it before tip-off.
Lindsay Schnell and Nancy Armour reported from Cleveland
veryGood! (86345)
Related
- North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
- You're not imagining it: Here's why Halloween stuff is out earlier each year.
- Trump, co-defendants in Georgia election case expected to be booked in Fulton County jail, sheriff says
- What does a panic attack feel like? And how to make it stop quickly.
- How to watch new prequel series 'Dexter: Original Sin': Premiere date, cast, streaming
- Blind Side family accuses Michael Oher of shakedown try
- NPR names veteran newsroom leader Eva Rodriguez as executive editor
- Don't believe his book title: For humorist R. Eric Thomas, the best is yet to come
- Current, future North Carolina governor’s challenge of power
- Pushing back on limits elsewhere, Vermont’s lieutenant governor goes on banned books tour
Ranking
- Sonya Massey's father decries possible release of former deputy charged with her death
- Maui wildfire survivors say they had to fend for themselves in days after blaze: We ran out of everything
- Denver police officer fatally shot a man she thought held a knife. It was a marker.
- Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway cuts its stake in GM almost in half
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- Minnesota woman sentenced to 7 years in prison in $7M pandemic aid fraud scheme
- Everything we know about the US soldier detained in North Korea
- New study finds far more hurricane-related deaths in US, especially among poor and vulnerable
Recommendation
Tree trimmer dead after getting caught in wood chipper at Florida town hall
India and China pledge to maintain ‘peace and tranquility’ along disputed border despite tensions
Ellen DeGeneres and Portia de Rossi's Life-Altering Love Story
Sister Wives' Kody Brown Addresses Painful Aftermath of His 3 Marriages Ending
Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
Russia hits Ukrainian grain depots again as a foreign ship tries out Kyiv’s new Black Sea corridor
Juvenile detained in North Carolina shooting death of 8-year-old girl
Is Kelly Ripa Ready to Retire After 2 Decades on Live? She Says...