Women Bulls Upset #7 Rutgers 82-71, Advance to Second Round of NCAA Tournament

The University at Buffalo women’s basketball team defeated Rutgers 82-71 in the first round of the NCAA Tournament at Gampel Pavilion on Friday. With the win, the Bulls improve to 24-9 on the year and become the first MAC team to win an NCAA Tournament game in back-to-back years since MAC women’s basketball began in 1982.

Junior Summer Hemphill led the way for Buffalo with a game-high 23 points, while adding seven rebounds, two assists, two blocks and a steal. Cierra Dillard also cracked the 20-point plateau, pouring in 20 points while adding six assists, four rebounds and four steals. Also in double-figures were Hanna Hall and Autumn Jones with 12 points each. It marked the fourth straight game Buffalo had four players in double figures.

“I’m so fortunate to have a bunch of fighters who know what they are fighting for, head coach Felisha Legette-Jack said. “We just beat somebody today that I have so much respect for, both their history and their conference, all the things they stand for. But that team ran into a group of fighters. Fighters for their story, fighters for their sisterhood, fighters for something bigger than basketball and I am so grateful that I am in the locker room with a bunch of fighters who truly understand what this game is all about.”

It was a battle to start with the two teams trading baskets early on, but a Dillard step back triple put UB up 13-12 at the first media timeout. After Rutgers tied the game 15-15 the Bulls opened up a 5-0 run, capped by a Dillard three, to take a 20-15 lead at the 2:25 mark. Rutgers answered with a 4-0 run but Hemphill countered with an and-one to take a 23-19 lead and Jones would end the quarter in dramatic fashion, banking home a triple at the buzzer to give UB a 27-21 lead after one. The Bulls shot 8-for-16 from the field, including 5-of-8 from beyond the arc, in the opening quarter.

Rutgers’ Charise Wilson cut the UB lead to three early in the second quarter but the Bulls answered with a 5-0 run on a Hemphill bucket and Dillard three to extend the lead back to eight. The Scarlet Knights battled back, rattling off a 6-0 run to cut it to 34-32 but Jones scored on the other end to stop the bleeding as the Bulls maintained a 36-32 lead at the media timeout. Rutgers would stay hot out of the media, extending their run to 14-2 to take a 40-36 lead with 1:52 remaining in the half. The Bulls were held without a field goal for over five minutes but broke through in a big way courtesy of a Hall triple at the buzzer to cut the deficit to 43-41 at the break.

Rutgers opened the third quarter on an 8-2 run to take a 52-43 lead at the 8:14 mark. Buffalo clawed back, answering with a 10-0 run to retake the lead 53-52 at the 4:35 mark but Rutgers stopped the run with a three to take a 57-56 at the media timeout and then used a mini 4-0 run to take a 61-56 lead but Jones came up big again, draining her second triple of the game to cut the Scarlet Knights lead to 61-59 after three quarters of play.

The Bulls stayed tough, opening the fourth quarter on a 5-2 run to retake the lead 64-63 at the 8:08 mark and a Hemphill triple, just the fourth of her career, on the other side of a timeout put UB up 67-63 at the 7:12 mark. Rutgers would tie the game 69-69 but Hemphill had an immediate answer on the other end, powering up for the and-one to put UB up 71-69 at the final media timeout and then the Bulls put together a 5-2 run to go up 76-71 with 2:22 remaining and they would secure the victory from the charity stripe from there.

Buffalo shot 27-of-54 (50.0%) from the floor, 12-of-23 from beyond the arc, and converted 16-of-19 attempts from the free throw line, while holding Rutgers to just 4-of-21 from deep. The Bulls also won the rebounding battle 39-33.

Buffalo will face the winner of No. 2 Connecticut and No. 15 Towson in the round of 32 on Sunday. Time to be determined.

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Former President Donald Trump has a new demeaning nickname for Maggie Haberman, the New York Times reporter who revealed unflattering details about his criminal trial behavior and challenged his excuses for a lack of protesters outside.

The former president laid out his new insults Tuesday in a lengthy Truth Social rant in which he also argued his supporters had been blocked by police from gathering outside the Manhattan court house where his hush money trial is unfolding.

"Thousands of people were turned away from the Courthouse in Lower Manhattan by steel stanchions and police, literally blocks from the tiny side door from where I enter and leave," Trump wrote. "It is an armed camp to keep people away."

This is a repeat of an earlier claim debunked by reporters at the scene who say it is blatantly false.

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"Maggot Hagerman of The Failing New York Times, falsely reported that I was disappointed with the crowds," Trump declared. "No, I’m disappointed with Maggot, and her lack of writing skill, and that some of these many police aren’t being sent to Columbia and NYU to keep the schools open and the students safe. The Legal Scholars call the case a Scam that should never have been brought. I call it Election Interference and a personal hit job by a conflicted and corrupt Judge who shouldn’t be allowed to preside over this Political Hoax. New York Justice is being reduced to ashes, and the World is breathlessly watching. Hopefully, Appellate Courts can save it, and all of the companies that are fleeing to other jurisdictions. They can no longer take a chance on New York Justice!"

Haberman, who has been covering Trump for years, long enjoyed close access to him while he was in the White House, even posing with him for a smiling photo. But Trump's attitude toward Haberman has soured as she has covered his behavior in the courtroom, including his embarrassing inability to stay awake.

Trump's other claim in the post, that huge crowds of his supporters turned up to rally for him in Manhattan and were turned away by police, also appears not to be true, as NBC News' Vaughn Hillyard posted video footage of the streets around the courthouse open to traffic, and barely anyone demonstrating in support of the former president.

Haberman herself has also debunked the idea that local streets were closed off during the trial, a point that has further enraged Trump.

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