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Aliyah Boston leads No. 1 South Carolina into women's final after win over Louisville

MINNEAPOLIS -- The team that has been No. 1 in women's basketball since this season began, South Carolina, will play for the NCAA championship Sunday.

The Gamecocks, the No. 1 overall seed, beat another No. 1, Louisville, 72-59 at Target Center in the women's Final Four semifinal Friday.

South Carolina (34-2) will be in the NCAA final for the second time in program history. The Gamecocks won the 2017 national championship game. South Carolina lost in the SEC final last month on a late 3-pointer by Kentucky, but now will compete for the title that means the most.

"I think we've had instances late in the season where we didn't take care of business in the fourth quarter," South Carolina coach Dawn Staley said. "So I know it's in the back of our players' minds. It was in the back of my mind. And we were up I think nine going into the fourth quarter, and I'm just like, 'OK, here we go.'

"I think just with anything, life in general, it's going to throw tests at you. You're going to have to pass the tests or you're going to have to retake them. I thought we've been put in positions where we didn't pass the test -- against Kentucky -- and they made us pay for it. And we had other instances during the tournament where we faced it, and we took it up to another level."

Turning it up another notch is exactly what the Gamecocks did Friday.

South Carolina junior post player Aliyah Boston saw her double-double streak end at 27 in the Gamecocks' Elite Eight win over Creighton. But she got right back into the double-double business Friday, finishing with 23 points and 18 rebounds. She also had four assists and looked every bit like someone who has won every national player of the year award thus far.

"With the awards, I'm really blessed," Boston said. "But my main focus is bringing home a national championship Sunday night, so I'm just really locked in on that."

Boston, who also won the Naismith defensive player of the year honor, anchored a Gamecocks' defense that made everything hard for Louisville, which finished its season 29-5.

After last year's 66-65 national semifinal loss to Stanford in which she missed what would have been a game-winning putback just before the buzzer, Boston was left in tears. She has seen the video of her anguished reaction far too many times since and has talked about being determined to not experience anything like that again in the Final Four.

"Thinking about last year coming into the season, we just knew we fell short," said Boston, who was shedding "happy tears" after the game. "But it's not something we continued to think about, because we knew this was a new team. We have a lot more depth, so we've just got to come to play every night."

The Friday game didn't have the kind of drama that last year's semifinal did, though. South Carolina got off to an 11-2 lead as the Gamecocks made five of their first 10 shots and the Cardinals just 1 of 6. And for the most part, that set the tone for the rest of the game. Louisville made its runs, but South Carolina controlled the contest.

South Carolina led 17-10 after the first quarter, during which the Cardinals were largely limited to jump shots. It was the first time since Jan. 23 vs. Wake Forest that the Cardinals had trailed after the opening quarter.

The Cardinals did fight back, though. At the 6:48 mark of the second quarter, forward Emily Engstler stole a pass and went in for the layup, giving Louisville its first lead at 20-19.

By halftime, the Gamecocks were up again 34-28, led by eight points and eight rebounds from Boston. The good news for the Cardinals is that they were within six despite guard Hailey Van Lith being limited to two points. The bad news is that Van Lith's night didn't get much better in the second half. After scoring at least 20 points in Louisville's first four games of the NCAA tournament, she was limited to nine Friday.

"They did a really good job of making it hard for me to even get the ball," Van Lith said. "They obviously were not going to let me get touches. They basically face-guarded me the whole game. I played a little passive, with their length. I needed to get going earlier and be more aggressive, but they did a good job of executing their game plan with me."

One of the players primarily responsible for limiting Van Lith was South Carolina guard Brea Beal, who is known for her defense.

"I think it's just a mentality to have every single game," Beal said. "You can't just turn it on and turn it off when you choose to. Especially now, you just have to lock in and know what your job is to do offensively and defensively."

Engstler picked up her fourth foul with 4.2 seconds left in the third quarter, after which the Gamecocks led 57-48. Then the transfer from Syracuse, who brought so much energy to the Cardinals this season, fouled out with 4:56 left in the game and buried her head in her hands on the Louisville bench. In her final college game -- she has declared for the upcoming WNBA draft -- she had 18 points and nine rebounds.

South Carolina had four other players besides Boston finish in double figures scoring: Beal had 12 points, Destanni Henderson 11 and Victaria Saxton and Zia Cooke 10 each.

South Carolina will face UConn in the national championship game; the Gamecocks beat the Huskies in the regular season 73-57 on Nov. 22 in the championship game of the Battle 4 Atlantis in the Bahamas.

"Is there an edge? No. There's not an edge," Staley said about having defeated both UConn and Stanford. "When you're playing for a national championship, it is the team that can get to their habits quickly and stay there."