University of Tennessee Athletics
Lady Vols Fall in Final Seconds to LSU, 57-56
February 21, 2016 | Women's Basketball
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BATON ROUGE, La. -- Despite a 17-point second half from Diamond DeShields, Tennessee was unable to capitalize at the free throw line, losing 57-56 to LSU Sunday at the Maravich Center in Baton Rouge, La.
Although the Lady Tigers lost their 10-point halftime lead on multiple occasions in the second half, LSU (9-18, 3-11 SEC) ended its three-game losing streak to Tennessee (16-11, 7-7 SEC), who dropped to .500 in conference play.
Mercedes Russell missed a pair of free throws with Tennessee leading by one with five seconds remaining. Following the second miss, LSU's Alexis Hyder was fouled with three seconds left. Hyder made both free throws to give the Lady Tigers the 57-56 lead, and Andraya Carter was unable to hit the three-point shot at the buzzer.
DeShields led all scorers with 19 points on 8-of-13 shooting. Bashaara Graves added nine, while Russell and Te'a Cooper scored seven apiece. Alexis Hyder led the Lady Tigers with 15.
The Lady Vols used a 7-2 run to retake the lead at 50-49 following Mercedes Russell's made free throw with 2:54 remaining in the game, but that lead would slip in the final seconds of the game after Tennessee went 2-for-6 from the free throw line in the final 15 seconds of the game.
Free throws proved to be the difference in the game as LSU shot 82 percent (14-of-17) while Tennessee shot 56 percent (9-of-16) from the line.
DeShields gave Tennessee a second-half spark after scoring eight points on 3-of-4 shooting, including a 2-for-2 mark from the 3-point line, in the first four minutes of the second half. DeShields led the Lady Vols on a 14-2 run that gave Tennessee a 32-30 lead with 2:56 left in the third quarter.
LSU finished the first half on a 12-2 run to take a 28-18 advantage into the locker room. The Lady Tigers led by as many as 14, their largest lead of the game, in that spurt.
LSU was able to instill its defensive will in the first half, holding the Lady Vols to 30 percent shooting (8-of-27) and forcing 10 Tennessee turnovers. The 18 points scored by the Lady Vols marked a season low for first-half points.
Series vs. LSU
For Starters
Diamond Shines in Second Half
Miscellaneous Notes
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