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Qunierly’s 27 points lifts No. 6 West Virginia over Columbia

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article image - Associated Press
Columbia's Kitty Henderson, left, and West Virginia's JJ Quinerly (11) battle for a loose ball during the first half in the first round of the NCAA college basketball tournament in Chapel Hill, N.C. Saturday, March 22, 2025.

Associated Press

CHAPEL HILL, N.C. — JJ Quinerly scored 27 points, including the 2,000th of her career, Jordan Harrison matched a career-high with 23 and sixth-seeded West Virginia led wire-to-wire in a 78-59 victory over 11th-seeded Columbia on Saturday in the first round of the women’s NCAA Tournament.

Quinerly also had seven of the Mountaineers’ 17 steals.

The Mountaineers (25-7) advance to face the winner of No. 3 North Carolina and No. 14 Oregon State on Monday. West Virginia will be looking for its first Sweet 16 appearance since 1992.

“Excited to advance, obviously. That’s the name of the game this time of year,” West Virginia coach Mark Kellogg said. “I thought for the most part, we were pretty good.”

West Virginia’s full-court press was a constant source of frustration for Columbia, which was coming off its first tournament win in program history. The Lions committed 11 turnovers in the first quarter, more than they had in all of Thursday’s First Four win over Washington, and 25 overall.

“For us, it’s just fun,” Quinerly said of playing defense. “Honestly, we love running around.”

Columbia (24-7) was led by Cecelia Collins’ 16 points. Riley Weiss scored 14, and Kitty Henderson contributed 13 points and nine rebounds.

West Virginia started fast, sinking its first five shots, including a pair of Harrison 3s, to go up 12-5. The Mountaineers finished the quarter shooting 71.4% from the field (10-of-14) while outscoring Columbia 24-15.

The lead only grew from there. West Virginia used a 12-2 run in the second quarter to stretch its lead to 39-16 and rolled into the half up 46-29. Its largest lead of the game was 22 points.

“West Virginia’s a great team and a super unique team in the women’s game,” Columbia coach Megan Griffith said. “They do what not a lot of teams do, especially defensively. March Madness is who can make the other team the most uncomfortable, and I thought that they did that successfully.”

West Virginia will play No. 3 North Carolina on Monday.

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