The No. 3 Arizona Wildcats pulled off one of the biggest upsets of the year, defeating No. 1 UConn and Paige Bueckers, 69-59, in the Final Four.
UConn (28-2) picks up just its second loss of the season, having gone undefeated since a three-point defeat to No. 19 Arkansas in late January. The program was looking to win a national championship for the first time since 2016.
Now it's the Wildcats moving on to the title game for the first time in program history after making its Final Four debut on Friday.
Aari McDonald dominated from start to finish to hand UConn its fourth straight loss in the Final Four and keep the title drought alive in Connecticut going for at least another year.
Arizona now faces No. 1 Stanford on Sunday night for the championship.
Notable Performers
Aari McDonald, G, Arizona Wildcats: 26 points, 7 rebounds, 2 steals
Trinity Baptiste, F, Arizona Wildcats: 7 points, 6 rebounds, 1 block
Paige Bueckers, G, UConn Huskies: 18 points, 6 rebounds, 4 assists
Christyn Williams, G, UConn Huskies: 20 points, 5 rebounds, 2 steals
Aari Goes Off on Huskies
UConn freshman Paige Bueckers was unquestionably the most hyped player heading into the Final Four. Arizona's Aari McDonald made sure the Huskies guard didn't live up to it. In fact, McDonald supplanted Bueckers early on as the player to watch.
The senior guard was absolutely electric.
McDonald went off for 15 points in the first half with four three-pointers as the Wildcats had the Huskies on their heels early on. UConn never led at any point on Friday. McDonald was a large reason why.
Even when UConn found a way to slow her down in the third quarter, there was little the Huskies could do to keep her off the scoresheet. After posting just two points in the third, McDonald came right back with nine more in the fourth quarter to help close out a win against a flailing Huskies team.
It wasn't just that the Wildcats weren't supposed to be in this position—building a 14-point lead in the first half after entering the game as 14-point underdogs, per ESPN—it's that UConn is almost never in this position. Head coach Geno Auriemma's clubs are known for their discipline and defense but neither paid off on Friday.
As McDonald delivered dagger after dagger, all the Huskies could do was intentionally foul and try to extend the game. It didn't work.
Arizona's incredible run continues and the Huskies head home without a title after a magnificent season once again.
Bueckers, Huskies Bounced Again
It might not be long before UConn is hoisting another national title trophy again, but it'll at least be another year.
A program built by Auriemma that once had pundits questioning if any college team could compete with them has seen its armor significantly damaged. Auriemma is established enough that it's not worth questioning if UConn will be back. It's more a matter of when.
With Bueckers in the program, the answer is more than likely soon.
The Minnesota native became just the fifth freshman in women's basketball history to notch at least 100 points in an NCAA tournament, according to ESPN, joining Tamika Catchings, Cheryl Miller, Breanna Stewart and Clarissa Davis. This is only the start of what's likely to become an epic career.
But it was a rather forgetful night for the Huskies overall.
UConn shot just 35.7 percent from the field and struggled mightily getting to the rim. With 3:22 left to play, the Huskies made just four of their 19 layup attempts and made five three-pointers on the night total. That wasn't going to cut it against an Arizona club carrying all the momentum.
The Huskies couldn't shoot themselves back into the game late and Arizona wasn't going to be baited into mistakes.
What's Next
The NCAA women's tournament crowns its champion on Sunday night when Arizona and Stanford meet in San Antonio at 6 p.m. ET on ESPN.