NCAAW
Associated Press 251d

Drexel women shock top-seeded Stony Brook to win CAA championship

Women's College Basketball, Stony Brook Seawolves, Drexel Dragons

WASHINGTON -- Amaris Baker and Brooke Mullin led a long-distance attack and the Drexel women's basketball team shocked Stony Brook 68-60 in the championship game of the Coastal Athletic Association tournament on Sunday to advance to its third NCAA tournament.

The Dragons became the second straight 7-seed to win the CAA, while the Seawolves joined the list of top seeds who have not won the tournament since 2017.

Baker had 19 points, going 4-of-5 from 3-point range, while Mullin, a grad transfer from Villanova and the niece of NBA Hall of Famer Chris Mullin, had 16, hitting 4 of 9 3-pointers. Erin Sweeney, scored a career-high 16 for the Dragons (19-14), who won their seventh straight game, the previous three in the CAA tournament by a total of five points. They won the championship in 2021 as a 3-seed.

"This team, the way they played the last four games, it just shows their resilience," coach Amy Mallon said. "We talked all year long it was going to be a year of rebuilding ... and they just proved to everybody that anybody can be a Cinderella team. We had not one kid on the all-conference team, not one kid made anything, but together as a team, they're winners."

The Dragons went 11-of-19 from 3-point range, their third time in double figures for makes. It was their second-highest total of the season and first time above 50%. They were 23-of-46 from the floor overall.

Gigi Gonzalez, the CAA Player of the Year, had 19 points for the Seawolves (27-4), who saw their nine-game winning streak end. They last made the NCAA tournament in 2021 as the American East Conference champs. Victoria Keenan added 14 points, Khari Clark scored 12 with 13 rebounds and Shamarla King added 10 points.

Baker hit a 3-pointer and Hetta Saatman followed with a jumper to give the Dragons a 64-50 lead midway through the fourth quarter. Stony Brook went to full-court pressure and Drexel never made another field goal. The Dragons had only three attempts as the pressure led to six turnovers. When Clark scored with 1:10 to play, it was a four-point game.

Drexel had the ball as the clock dipped under one minute, and the teams combined to commit three turnovers over 15 seconds.

Stony Brook missed a layup and eventually sent Grace O'Neill to the line, where the 81% shooter made a pair with 28.6 seconds left. Another missed layup sent O'Neill back to the line, where she missed two with 22.1 seconds left. Then O'Neill took an offensive foul and Chloe Hodges wrapped it up at the free throw line with 17 seconds to play.

Stony Brook finished 5-of-22 behind the arc and shot 31% overall. Drexel played only seven players, and five finished with four fouls.

Drexel forced eight turnovers and held the Sea Wolves to 3-for-16 shooting in the first quarter to take a 16-9 lead.

Stony Brook continued to struggle from the field in the second quarter, going 4-of-13, but went 7-of-9 from the foul line in falling behind 36-26 at the break.

The Seawolves began to find the range in the third quarter, getting back-to-back 3s from Keenan and King to pull within 43-40. But after the teams traded baskets, Sweeney and O'Neill drained long shots to push the lead back to nine. It was the 3 from O'Neill, who just beat the buzzer from the left corner, that returned the momentum back to Drexel.

The Dragons got up only nine shots in the quarter but went 3-of-3 from long range.

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