basketball

Facing Louisville, Tide must 'Be Bama' to reach first Sweet 16 since 1998 this March Madness

By STEVE BITTENBENDERYahoo Sports

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — Alabama has a chance to reach the Sweet 16 for the first time in nearly 30 years when they face Louisville in the second round of the women’s NCAA Tournament on Monday. The Crimson Tide haven't made it that far since 1998.

“We have a program that every sport is good,” senior Jessica Timmons said Sunday. “We want this time to be for women’s basketball, and I think this will be proven this year. ” Getting there means sixth-seeded Alabama (24-10) must beat Louisville (28-7), a team that nearly took down South Carolina in December.

The Cardinals have all 12 Sweet 16 berths under coach Jeff Walz as one of six programs to reach the regional semifinals at least 10 times since 2011. Coach Kristy Curry said the Crimson Tide must “be Bama. ” That means win the rebounding battle limiting second-chance looks and avoiding turnovers leading to fast breaks.

Alabama played against its tendencies in beating Rhode Island 68-55 in the first round. The Crimson Tide attempted a season-low 10 3-pointers but had their best overall shooting performance in a month at 53. 2% (25-for-47).

Walz isn't changing his game plan against Alabama, which beat three AP Top 25 teams this season. “You’ve just got to do the best you can to play one-on-one defense, try to keep them in front of you, and make them score over you,” Walz said. “Rhode Island was really trying to turn the heat up some, which was, I think, making Alabama drive more, and they did a great job of finishing.