SPOKANE, Ore. — Freshman Kennedy Smith stepped into the void left by injured star JuJu Watkins, scoring 19 points to help Southern California hold off Kansas State 67-61 in the Sweet 16 of the women's NCAA Tournament on Saturday.
The top-seeded Trojans (31-3) were considered title contenders before Watkins tore her right ACL during a second-round victory over Mississippi State. Now they'll be underdogs in an Elite Eight rematch on Monday with Paige Bueckers and second-seeded UConn. The Huskies knocked the Trojans out of last year's March Madness in Watkins' first season.
Avery Howell, another freshman, scored 18 points for USC, which went on a 12-0 run during the third quarter to take a 46-39 lead, matching its biggest advantage of the day.
Kansas State (28-8) kept pushing, though, and tied it at 51-all early in the fourth on a layup by Ayoka Lee. Rayah Marshall responded with two straight buckets for USC.
A layup by Serena Sundell got the Wildcats within 60-59. Smith responded with a pair of free throws, and USC was solid enough at the foul line to close it out.
''We still have the common goal of obviously winning national championships and with JuJu going down there was a bit of adversity to face,'' Smith said. ''We talked to her before the game, she was rooting us on. So just keeping her in our heart and minds and playing for her as well as for each other.''
USC coach Lindsay Gottlieb said she was proud of her team's response to adversity.
''We felt going into this game that this was a game we have to attack and prepare for with the intent to win," Gottlieb said. "We knew it wouldn't be easy. But I thought when when it got hard out there and Kansas State is a really good team and poses a lot of problems, I thought you (saw) our team really stick together and compete.''