Miami holds off Indiana rally to advance in March Madness

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Miami's Jasmyne Roberts (4) and Haley Cavinder (14) react after Miami defeated Indiana in a second-round college basketball game in the women's NCAA Tournament Monday, March 20, 2023, in Bloomington, Ind. (AP Photo/Darron Cummings)

BLOOMINGTON, Ind. ā€“ Destiny Harden wanted the ball in her hands.

After losing to eventual national champion South Carolina on the road last March, after helping her team complete a historic comeback two days earlier and after seeing top-seeded Indiana tie the score on a 3-pointer with 6.6 seconds left, Harden wanted to close it out.

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She did.

Following a timeout, she got the ball into the middle of the lane and made the tie-breaking shot with 3.5 seconds left, giving ninth-seeded Miami a 70-68 road victory Monday night and its first Sweet 16 trip since 1992.

ā€œIt was the exact same play as last year so I should have known it was coming to me,ā€ Harden said. ā€œI just thank the coaches for trusting me, the players for trusting me and it feels good to come through and get to the Sweet 16.ā€

Mondayā€™s stunner capped two monumental moments this weekend for Miami (21-12) and a wild second round in the NCAA Tournament with two No. 1 seeds falling in consecutive days. Stanford was upset on its home court Sunday night ā€” marking the first time since 1998 two top seeds were eliminated before the regional semifinals.

It came as a huge shock to the 14,000 fans packed into Assembly Hall. But instead of celebrating the Hoosiers taking another big step forward, the fans watched in disbelief as Miami ran around and rolled around on the Hoosiers home court as All-American center Mackenzie Holmes broke down in tears before the handshake line formed.

The Hurricanes meant no disrespect.

ā€œI tell my players to act like youā€™ve been here before, but we havenā€™t been so we were being foolish,ā€ longtime Miami coach Katie Meier said. ā€œI looked around for any player who wanted to hug me.ā€

Lola Pendande led Miami with 19 points and seven rebounds.

Harden had 18 points including the biggest basket on a night she scored career point No. 1,000. She also played a key role in Saturdayā€™s rally from a 17-point halftime deficit.

The Hoosiers (28-4) never led in front of a raucous crowd that grew increasingly agitated with how the game was called and uneasy about how it played out. Indiana trailed from the moment Miami broke a 2-2 tie until Holmes' layup made it 58-58 with 3:53 left to play and fought its way back from a 12-point halftime deficit.

Yet in the waning moments, they blew two chances to take the lead in the final 40 seconds ā€” a missed layup from Chloe Moore-McNeil and an uncharacteristic errant midrange jumper from Grace Berger before Moore-McNeil finally tied it at 68 with a 3-pointer with 6.6 seconds left.

But the Hoosiers couldn't stop Harden then turned the ball over on their final possession, sealing their first home loss all season and the second for Indiana basketball in two nights to Miami, whose men's team also beat Indiana in the second round.

Holmes had 22 points and nine rebounds after sitting out Saturday with a sore knee. Berger finished with 17 points, six rebounds and six assists in her final home game.

ā€œIt's hard to put into words right now. Obviously, I'm very upset," Holmes said, her voice cracking as the tears again flowed. ā€œMy last game with Grace, she shouldn't go out like this. It's been great to play with her for four years. It hurts to go out this way.ā€

BIG PICTURE

Miami: The Hurricanes completed an incredible road trip by getting just enough to hold off the hard-charging Hoosiers. A year ago, they fell short against another No. 1 seed in the second round despite holding the Gamecocks to a season-low 49 points. This time, they're harassing defense got the job done.

Indiana: The best season in school history came to a shockingly early end. They won the first outright Big Ten regular-season title in school history, finished a school-best second in the final Associated Press Top 25 poll, picked up their first No. 1 seed ever and expected to be heading to Dallas. Instead, they must contemplate what life without Berger, one of the best players in school history, will look like.

SHE SAID IT

ā€œIt will be weird not to see Grace Berger walk through that door,ā€ ninth-year coach Teri Moren said, referring to her fifth-year star. ā€œShe's helped build this program and you know we're not sitting here today without her. We weren't sitting here a year ago, probably three years ago without Grace Berger on this roster."

UP NEXT

While the Hoosiers begin a long offseason, the Hurricanes head to Greenville, South Carolina, for a showdown with fourth-seeded Villanova, which was ranked No. 10 in the final Associated Press Top 25.

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AP March Madness coverage: https://apnews.com/hub/march-madness and https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-womens-college-basketball-poll and https://twitter.com/AP_Top25


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