Davis leads No. 21 Tennessee over No. 2 South Carolina

Posted

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. - For just a moment, Kellie Harper allowed herself to break COVID protocol. The hug she got from Tennessee men's basketball coach Rick Barnes was just too important to pass up.

Harper was celebrating the biggest win in her two-year tenure with the No. 21 Lady Volunteers, a 75-67 upset of No. 2 South Carolina Thursday night.

Rennia Davis scored all 24 of her points in the second half to spearhead the dramatic victory.

Harper pointed toward a "fiery" halftime address that fueled the recovery.

"Coach said we were playing soft," Davis said. "I take that personally, not just because I didn't score. I thought we grew up in the second half."

"I told them to put their big girl pants on," said Harper.

Tennessee (13-5, 7-3 Southeastern Conference) recovered from a 12-point halftime deficit to pull off the stunner. Rae Burrell scored 19 points and Jordan Horston added 11 for the Lady Vols.

South Carolina (17-3, 12-1) had its 31-game SEC winning streak snapped. The last regular-season SEC loss came on March 3, 2019 to Mississippi State. Aliyah Boston had 17 points and 16 rebounds to lead the Gamecocks. Zia Cooke and Destanni Henderson each scored 15.

"Tennessee took it to us in the third and fourth quarters," said South Carolina coach Dawn Staley. "We had nothing to answer them. We couldn't make basketball plays. We couldn't make reads."

Trailing by three a couple minutes into the fourth quarter, the Lady Vols reeled off nine straight points and went up 68-62. Tennessee never took its foot off the gas.

South Carolina's 12-point halftime lead evaporated in the third quarter. Davis, who was held scoreless in the first half, had 13 points to get the Lady Vols going.

Tennessee took the lead with 2:05 left when Davis drained a 3-pointer.

Leading by two midway through the second quarter, South Carolina went on a 15-1 run and went into halftime on top, 37-25. Boston had four points in that spurt and grabbed 10 rebounds in the first 20 minutes. Henderson scored 10 points in the first half.

Burrell scored Tennessee's first eight points of the game and had 12 at the break.

LEAST PREPARED

After Sunday's loss at Texas A&M, the Lady Vols were stranded by the winter storm that ravaged Texas.

They didn't return to Knoxville until Tuesday night. Getting ready for a Thursday meeting with the No. 2 team in the country two days later was difficult.

"It was the least prepared we've been for a game this season," Harper said. "We told them to go out and be the best us we can be. Go out and let the players play."

BIG PICTURE

South Carolina: Despite a recent non-conference loss to Connecticut, the Gamecocks are on track for a No. 1 seed in the NCAA Tournament. With four players - Zia Cooke (15.8), Aliyah Boston (13.7), Destanni Henderson (11.6) and Victaria Saxton (10.0) - averaging in double figures, they have enough offensive weapons to cause teams trouble.

UP NEXT

South Carolina: With just a few regular season games remaining, the Gamecocks have a tough route. After playing No. 21 Tennessee, they entertain No. 17 Kentucky on Sunday. On the horizon next week is No. 5 Texas A&M.

Tennessee: The Lady Vols have a spot in the NCAA Tournament all but secured. What they're playing for now is seeding. While on that quest, Tennessee will travel to Georgia Sunday.